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Serving Levittown, Massapequa, Farmingdale, Hicksville, Plainview & Old Bethpage Also serving: Island Trees, Wantagh, Seaford, Massapequa Park
Vol. 76, No. 24
June 29 – July 5, 2022
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In Farmingale: Women’s Club awards scholarships and appoints new board
Power To Feed Long Island Returns
PSEG Long Island hosts second annual food drive (See page 4)
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In Massapequa: Friends For Life hosts second Senior Day in The Park
(See page 18)
Island Harvest Food Bank CEO Randi Shubin-Dresner (at podium) thanks PSEG Long Island for its continued support in the fight against hunger at the kickoff of the utility’s Power To Feed Long Island food collection initiative at the Massapequa Stop & Shop on June 21.
Elaine Patterson
(See page 7)
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Massapequa Graduates A Talented And Kind Class
More than 500 blue caps flew in the air at Hofstra University’s Mack arena as Massapequa High School seniors were officially declared graduates on June 17. (Photos courtesy of the Massapequa School District)
T
he 524 graduates of Massapequa High School, clad in their blue caps and gowns, sat right next to each other at Hofstra University’s Mack arena, a sign that normalcy had returned for a class that experienced anything but that during the last three years. The evening ceremony on June 17 was back at the normal venue, after families witnessed graduation from their cars in the TOBAY Beach parking lot in 2020, followed by a socially distanced ceremony at Hofstra’s outdoor stadium last year. Principal Barbara Lowell said the goal was to give the Class of 2022 as typical a senior year as possible and that was mostly achieved. Herself a graduate of Massapequa High School 30 years ago, Lowell wants them to someday look back on their senior year with joy and fondness. This year’s graduates were the first to attend Massapequa’s fullday kindergarten program. The last
Valedictorian Matt McAuley and salutatorian Erin Goldrick were the top-ranked graduates in the class. few years were filled with twists and turns, and ups and downs, but Lowell said the graduates will be remembered for closing out their 13 years of school with courage, grace and success. “It is my honor to see them today as mature adults,” said Lowell, who first met this class in seventh grade when she was executive assistant to the principal at Berner Middle School. Lowell recognized several members of the graduating class who
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Principal Barbara Lowell greeted the Class of 2022 before the start of the ceremony. will be joining the armed forces or enrolling at a military academy after high school. They received large applause for their anticipated service to the United States. Valedictorian Matt McAuley, who will attend Cornell University, reflected on his educational journey in Massapequa, all the way back to kindergarten with a teacher whose last name was just slightly different—Mrs. McCauley. That was where he learned the most important lessons, not to
eat glue or run with scissors. His Magnet program teacher, Ms. Natke, reminded him that a good day starts the night before and his German teacher, Frau Kahn, imparted that learning can be both challenging and enjoyable. From his wrestling coaches, the advice was to be better today than yesterday. “Your measure of success should not be gauged by whether you are better than others, but by whether you are working your hardest to
improve and to reach your goals every single day,” McAuley said. Salutatorian Erin Goldrick, who is off to Providence College, spoke about the change that comes with graduating high school. Goldrick reminded her fellow graduates that leaving high school is not a loss, but rather an opportunity to use all of the lessons and memories to build an even brighter future. Senior class President Anthony Langone thanked the teachers, coaches and friends who have made a positive impact on his life. He noted the kindness and care that seniors have shown to each other over the years. General Organization President Paige Bilich also had a message about kindness in her remarks. “If Massapequa has taught us anything,” she said, “it’s that being kind to others will go a long way and it’s something that will bring us far in life.”—Submitted by the Massapequa School District
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TOP STORY
Pulling The Plug On Hunger
PSEG Long Island launches second annual ‘Power to Feed Long Island’ food drive
dgilderubio@antonmediagroup.com
W
hen PSEG Long Island teamed up with Island Harvest Food Bank last year to kick off the inaugural Power to Feed Long Island summer-long food drive, the goal was to get the equivalent of 21,000 meals donated. In the end, 22,000 donated meals were the result of Long Islanders coming out in force to donate food, supplies and essential care items at six different drop-off sites throughout the summer. This year’s goal is collecting 30,000 meals for local families. And while Stop & Shop provided a few of their stores for Long Islanders to help the less fortunate in 2021, this year all six donation locations will be at Stop & Shops in Massapequa, Carle Place, East Northport, Smithtown, Riverhead and West Babylon. It’s an initiative spurred on
summer months, there is a significant reduction in food donations to local food banks, pantries and programs. Compounding the issue, children are not in school where they can receive free and reduced-cost breakfast and lunch. In addition, the pandemic and increased inflation rate have further strained local food pantries and emergency feeding programs served by Island Harvest.
Anti-hunger advocates and government officials recently gathered at the Massapequa Stop & Shop to donate food and money and call on Long Islanders to take action to support neighbors facing food insecurity. Beginning July 1 and continuing through the end of September, collection drives will be set up at six different Stop & Shop supermarkets across Long Island, where community
PSEG Long Island interim President and COO Dave Lyons (center) and Power to Feed Long Island employee ambassadors (in orange shirts) celebrated the kickoff of the company’s summer-long anti-hunger initiative with (from left) Stop & Shop’s Stefanie Shuman, Island Harvest’s Randi Shubin Dresner, The Reverend Claire& Nesmith Nourish Babylon Soup Wishing everyone a Happy, Healthy, Safe of4th of July! Kitchen and Assemblyman Michael D’Urso.
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by the pandemic, when PSEG Long Island was looking for a way to interact with its charitable partner Island Harvest at a time when COVID-19 restrictions were dictating plenty of social distancing and isolation, according to PSEG Long Island Corporate Communications representative Amy DiLeo. “We’ve had a relationship with Island Harvest and last year we went to them and asked what we could do,” DiLeo said. “We knew that donations usually increase around the holidays. A lot of people like to give around Thanksgiving. Our concern was that because of the pandemic and that people were out of work, our community service had really dropped. Because of the pandemic, we couldn’t really do the face-to-face service that we had been doing. We were trying to figure out how we could get our employees involved in the community and figuring out the best way to do that. We went to Island Harvest and they explained that the pandemic had obviously put a dent in their food stores. Along with that, donations drop in the summer, which we didn’t know. We were being informed of that for the first time.” Hundreds of thousands of Long Island families struggle with hunger and food insecurity throughout the year. During the
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members can donate non-perishable food and essential care items. This year’s goal is to collect the equivalent of 30,000 healthy, nutritious meals for Long Island families struggling to put food on their tables. This goal recognizes Island Harvest’s 30th anniversary this year. “We are kicking off our second annual Power to Feed Long Island campaign with Island Harvest and Stop & Shop because hundreds of thousands of our neighbors still need our help,” PSEG Long Island interim president/COO David Lyons said. “Last year, PSEG Long Island’s Power to Feed Long Island created a venue for Long Islanders to help fight food insecurity, and they responded with bags, carts and trunks filled with thousands of pounds of food for their neighbors. Thanks to their generosity, we exceeded our 21,000-meal goal in 2021. This year, we are proud to donate and we encourage everyone to continue to be part of the solution, because there is still hunger in every ZIP code. This initiative is just one of the many ways PSEG Long Island and our employees support our communities.” While this year’s is a lofty goal, both PSEG Long Island and Stop and Shop got the ball rolling with the former donating $1,000 and the latter kicking in $1,000 worth of gift cards, which is the equivalent of 4,000 meals. Island Harvest estimates each dollar
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Suggested Donation Items
donated provides roughly two meals. DiLeo feels the seasonality of Power to Feed Long Island is a big part of what makes this program so crucial at tackling such a widespread problem. “There are hundreds and thousands of people on Long Island that are hungry every day,” she said. “It’s in every single zip code, which people really don’t understand. You don’t know people’s situations behind their closed doors. You don’t know who lost their job and you don’t know who’s been struggling for whatever reason. Summertime is a great time to help them boost donations and put food and supplies on their shelves so it can be distributed to different food pantries and other programs that are around on the Island and can be distributed directly to consumers.”
Island Harvest has a need for specific items, including: • Nonperishable Food Healthy varieties of canned foods, such as low-sodium beans, vegetables, soups, pasta sauces and tomato varieties, tuna and chicken, rice, pasta, nut butters, olive and canola oil, spices and pet food (no glass containers please). • Household Essentials Toilet paper, paper towels, hand sanitizer, laundry detergent and dish soap. • Personal Care Items Toothpaste, toothbrushes, deodorant, soap, shampoo, conditioner, feminine care products and shaving products, antibacterial wipes and washcloths. • Baby Care Items Diapers, wipes, formula, creams, ointments and baby wash. Additionally, information will be available from PSEG Long Island on electric service payment plans and programs and ways to save money through energy-efficiency options. —Submitted by Island Harvest
Local Agencies Receiving Aid From Island Harvest Massapequa St. Rose of Lima, 2 Bayview Ave. Powered by Christ, 138 N. Linden St. Church of God of Prophecy, 900 Old Sunrise Hwy.
Visit www.psegliny.com/feedLI [psegliny.com] For additional information on Power to Feed Long Island or to make an online monetary donation. Visit www.psegliny.com/myaccount/ customersupport/financialassistance [psegliny.com] for more information on PSEG Long Island’s assistance and payment programs for customers experiencing financial hardship. For information about Island Harvest and for help with food insecurity issues, call 631-873-4775.
Hicksville CNGC – Hicksville (non-emergency food pantry), 950 S. Oyster Bay Rd. Hicksville United Methodist Church, 130 W. Old Country Rd. St. Ignatius, 20 East Cherry St. Our Lady of Mercy Parish Services, 500 South Oyster Bay Rd. Boys & Girls Club, 79 West Old Country Rd. Farmingdale St. Killian’s Social Ministry, 140 Elizabeth St. Hope for the Future, 131 Verdi St.
Donation Sites Members of the public are encouraged to come to the Stop & Shop sites and donate non-perishable food items. Collection bins and a contactless, drive-thru, drop-off option will be available at each location. The first collection event will be held all day on July 1. The remaining five food drives will take place on subsequent Fridays as follows: • July 1 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. 702 Hicksville Rd., Massapequa • July 22 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. 291 West Main St., Smithtown • Aug. 5 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. 1615 Old Country Rd., Riverhead • Aug. 19 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. 95 Old Country Rd., Carle Place • Sept. 2 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. 3126 Jericho Tpke., East Northport • Sept. 16 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. 575 West Montauk Hwy., West Babylon —Submitted by PSEG Long Island
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JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
SCHOOL NEWS HICKSVILLE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL MATH TEACHER HONORED Old Country Road Elementary School math teacher Meredith McGuire was named Elementary School Mathematics Teacher of the Year by the Nassau County Mathematics Teachers Association (NCMTA) for the talent and creativity she brings to her classroom. The Hicksville teacher was recognized by her peers at the recently held NCMTA annual reception. Each year, NCMTA recognizes an elementary, middle school and high school
mathematics teacher of the year. The purpose of NCMTA is to promote an active interest in mathematics education by providing a forum for the interchange of ideas and by encouraging research to improve the teaching of mathematics at all levels, elementary through college. Congratulations to McGuire on this wonderful honor.
From left: NCMTA Teachers of the Year, Oceanside High School winner Rocio Saborido, Herricks Middle School winner Josephine Bruno, Old Country Road Elementary School winner Meredith McGuire with —Submitted by the Hicksville NCMTA President Gabriella Gizzi of the Roslyn School District. School District (Photo Courtesy of Hicksville Public Schools)
BETHPAGE HIGH SCHOOL SENIOR EARNS SCHOLARSHIPS FOR MUSICAL EXCELLENCE The Bethpage High School Music Department is proud to announce that senior Kayla An has received two prestigious scholarships: The Marguerite Suozzi Scholarship for Excellence in Music ($3,000) and the NYSCAME Senior Scholarship ($1,000). The Suozzi Scholarship for Excellence is granted by the Morgan Park Summer Music Festival and rewards a student who has demonstrated excellence in music performance and plans to continue studying music in college. The NYSCAME Scholarship is awarded by the Nassau chapter of the New York State Council of Administrators of Music Education. The NYSCAME scholarship is granted to worthy students based on musical accomplishments, contributions to their school music program, community music making, and their acceptance into
The Bethpage High School Music Department is proud to announce that senior Kayla An has received two prestigious scholarships: The Marguerite Suozzi Scholarship for Excellence in Music ($3,000) and the NYSCAME Senior Scholarship ($1,000). (Photo courtesy of the Bethpage Union Free School District)
AMES NINTH GRADE SCIENTISTS ACHIEVE IN MASSAPEQUA Students in science research classes at Massapequa High School’s Ames Campus not only participated in the 2022 Long Island Science Congress (LISC) competition, but were awarded for their outstanding projects. LISC is an adjudicated exhibit of science projects by students in Nassau and Suffolk county middle, junior high and senior high schools, sponsored by the Long Island section of the Science Teachers Association of New York State. Student works were based upon independent experiments performed by students under the guidance of Ames research
teacher, Carrie Kaplun. This year, 13 ninth-grade research students were recognized at this year’s competition. Finn Curley, Michael Lerch and Sofia Maran earned high honors with the Lloyd K. Chanin Memorial Award, which includes a $50 prize. Madeline Douglas, Mia Giannico, Amanda Kammerdener, Edward Pan, Shea Ringel and Delaney Sampson earned the Honors Award, and Ava Chaikin, Tyler Lopez, Cassidy Morrow and Katja Vardoulias received the Achievement Award. —Submitted by the Massapequa School District
a music degree program at the university level. An has been an extraordinarily active participant in the high school’s musical activities over the past four years, taking part in orchestra, band, jazz ensemble, choir, pit orchestra and a variety of small ensembles and solo performances. She plays violin, viola, euphonium and piano, and she sings, composes and arranges music for different musical ensembles. She has also been a member of the Tri-M Music Honor Society for many years and served as an officer of Tri-M for two years. An plans to attend Westminster College in Pennsylvania where she intends to study music composition and theory. The district commends An on her musical accomplishments and wishes her the best in her future endeavors. —Submitted by the Bethpage School District
LEVITTOWN STUDENT LIAISONS THANKED FOR SERVICE
Division Avenue High School senior Chris Powers (left) and MacArthur High School senior Khalil Garrett were recognized at a recent Levittown School District Board of Education meeting in appreciation of their service as student liaisons for the 2021-22 school year. Powers and Garrett provided the board with monthly reports on the happenings at their respective schools including events, club news, student achievements and athletic accomplishments. (Photo courtesy of the Levittown School District)
—Submitted by the Levittown School District
MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENT EARNS FRIEDLANDER UPSTANDER AWARD Plainview-Old Bethpage Middle School student Lauren Zweback has been named a Friedlander Upstander Award recipient by the Holocaust Memorial and Tolerance Center of Nassau County. Zweback was one of four students among 90 applicants across the Island to receive the award this year and the accolade earns her a $5,000 scholarship. The Center defines an Upstander as someone who sticks up for others and takes action to prevent bigotry, hatred and intolerance. POB Middle School students Soha Jhaveri, Rebecca Kunz and Maya Stromer also received recognition
Lauren Zweback earned the Friedlander Upstander Award for her efforts to combat intolerance. The accolade also comes with a $5,000 scholarship. (Photo submitted by the Plainview-Old Bethpage School District)
from the Center for their efforts. The scholarship is given in
conjunction with the Claire Friedlander Family Foundation. Claire Friedlander was a Holocaust victim who was saved by others who risked themselves to stand against prejudice and her family created the award in her honor. Visit www.pobschools.org for more information about the Plainview-Old Bethpage Central School District. Exciting activities happening throughout the district and programs celebrating student achievement can also be found on the district’s Facebook page at https://www. facebook.com/pobschools. —Submitted by the Plainview-Old Bethpage School District
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022
The Incorporated Village of Farmingdale Beautification Committee (not all volunteers shown).
Women’s Club Of Farmingdale Presents Scholarship Awards And Appoints New Board
A
t the recent Farmingdale High School Senior Awards Ceremony, the Women’s Club of Farmingdale (WCF) was very proud to be able to present five deserving seniors with the following monetary awards: Tasnim Rauzat $1,000 Women’s Club of Farmingdale Award Kevin Piraino $1,000 Abigail E. Leonard Award Juliana Young $600 Carla Peipert Art Award Margaret Tower $300 Joseph P. Connelly Award Jayden Patterson $300 Culinary Award In addition, through the innovative energies of the WCF Ways & Means Committee which was faced with unparalleled pandemic restrictions, monetary donations were made to St. Kilian’s Outreach, Operation Smile, St. Jude’s Red Wagons and Canine Companions. The awards and donations totaled approximately $5,000. The June 2 general meeting saw the appointment of a new president and executive board for a two-year term—2022-24. They include President Barbara Hoerner, 1st VP Lynda Leone, 2nd VP Margaret Barrett, Recording Secretary Lorraine Stanton, Corresponding Secretary Elaine Ryan, Treasurer Cathy Sewell and Auditor Ann Lomonte. Many thanks to these members for continually encompassing the volunteer spirit.” In addition, members supported a $687 donation to the Monastery of the Sisters of St. Clair in Italy, which is housing and feeding several dozen Ukrainian women and children refugees. In April, the WCF celebrated its 109th
From left: 2022-2024 Women’s Club of Farmingdale Executive Board: Elaine Ryan, Ann Lomonte, Cathy Sewell, Lorraine Stanton, Margaret Barrett, Lynda Leone, Barbara Hoerner (Photos courtesy of the Women’s Club of Farmingdale)
birthday with a lunch/meeting at Palmer’s Restaurant. Preparations were made by Luncheon Chair Linda Kreussling and her committee members, Angelina Dunlop and Judith Vazquez. Approximately 40 guests attended. Also in April, the club’s Welfare Committee visited Epic House in Farmingdale, bringing homemade cookies and candies and small gifts for the residents. The Incorporated Village of Farmingdale is looking especially beautiful through the efforts of the Village Beautification Committee, comprised of local residents and WCF members, who volunteered their time on several Saturday mornings to landscape the village with a picturesque variety of plants and flowers. —Submitted by WCF Publicity Chair Maria Ortolani
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JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
NEIGHBORS IN THE NEWS Massapequa Philharmonic Renews Music Director David Bernard’s Contract The Massapequa Philharmonic has announced that they have renewed David Bernard’s contract as their music director, securing his position with the orchestra through 2024. Since his appointment as music director in 2016, Maestro Bernard has led the expansion of the orchestra, driving its artistic growth and its position in the cultural fabric of Long Island. Bernard developed the orchestra’s foundation of community partnerships, including artistic collaborations with the Eglevsky Ballet, the Long Island Choral Society and the Nassau County Museum of Art. Bernard has brought world-class soloists to the orchestra’s concerts, including Adrian Daurov, Stanley Drucker, Zlatomir Fung, Spencer Myer and Inbal Segev. Under Bernard’s leadership, the orchestra has expanded its reach. It has been featured in major venues across Long Island, including the Tilles Center for the Performing Arts, the Madison Theatre at Molloy College and the Adelphi Performing Arts Center. Throughout his tenure, Bernard has focused on building audiences of all ages
for classical music. He has incorporated his “InsideOut Concerts” approach into performances throughout Long Island, transforming the symphonic concert into a fully immersive experience for audiences. He has also built a robust collaboration between the orchestra and the Massapequa Public Schools, hosting master classes for the students led by the orchestra’s world-class soloists, bringing younger students inside the orchestra during performances, InsideOut style, to help build band and orchestra programs, and working with faculty to coordinate classrooms with the orchestra’s concerts—drawing in students and their families to the orchestra’s season. “The Massapequa Philharmonic Orchestra is thrilled to continue working with David Bernard as our music director”, Massapequa Philharmonic President Jennifer Trested said. “Under his gifted leadership, the Massapequa Philharmonic has become a premier orchestra on Long Island. David Bernard is a skillful musician and conductor, with a gift for fostering
24th Annual Lazy Days Of Summer Scheduled For July 16 Levittown Community Council will hold its annual Lazy Days of Summer event, sharing it as a Levittown 75th Anniversary celebration on Saturday, July 16. A Levittown tradition for more than 20 years, the event is held at the East Village Green Park, Jerusalem Avenue and Meridien Road in Levittown. The day is a no-cost event with pony rides, a petting zoo, activities throughout the day, games and entertainment at one of Levittown’s beautiful village green areas. New to the event this year is a blow-up slide. All residents of Levittown and Island Trees are welcome to attend, bring a picnic lunch and enjoy the fun-filled, relaxing day. The event has been free to the community since its beginning and is made possible by Levittown Community Council members’ dues and the support of local residents and businesses. Deejay Tim Aldridge will be joining the celebration this year, as he has traditionally, and the event will feature teen musical group BBQ Band. Other activities and some surprises are in the planning stages. The event begins at 11:30 a.m. and runs through 2:30 p.m. Anyone interested in helping out, even if it’s for a couple of hours, can email levittowncouncil@yahoo.com or call event chairperson Louise Cassano at 516-735-5901 to let her know what hours you can help out.
Maestro David Bernard (Photo courtesy of the Massapequa Philharmonic) musical communities within the orchestra, throughout Massapequa, and across Long Island. We look forward to many years of insightful and artistic musical leadership and collaboration.” Bernard, who is also music director of the New York City-based Park Avenue Chamber Symphony, said, “It is truly inspiring to see both the orchestra and the Long Island residents thrive through our performances and collaborations.
When successful, the Performing Arts are a symbiosis of artists, communities and audiences, and it has been a pleasure to work with the Massapequa Philharmonic musicians, board and our partners to deliver on this ideal. I am proud and delighted to continue to bring great music to Long Island as Music Director of the Massapequa Philharmonic.” —Submitted by the Massapequa Philharmonic
Town Officials Attend Farmingdale Soccer Day
The petting zoo is always a favorite attraction at the Lazy Days event. (Photo courtesy of the Levittown Community Council)
Residents in the areas of Levittown and Island Trees school districts may become members. Individual memberships are $10 a year; family memberships are $15. Organizations and local businesses are also eligible for membership for $50. The mission of the Levittown Community Council, which was established in 1998 following Levittown’s 50th anniversary, is to bring together the community residents and organizations to maintain unity and pride. —Submitted by the Levittown Community Council
Oyster Bay Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino (back row, third from left) joined with town board members Councilwoman Michele Johnson (back row, second from left) and Councilman Tom Hand (back row, far right) to attend Farmingdale Soccer Club’s “Soccer Day.” Soccer Day is the annual celebration and awards ceremony to mark the close of another successful season for Farmingdale soccer. Also in attendance was New York State Assemblyman John Mikulin (back row, second from right). —Submitted by the Town of Oyster Bay
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ANTON MEDIA GROUP • JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022
OBITUARIES BETHPAGE Caroline M. Cesareo, 96, of Bethpage passed away on June 9. Beloved wife of 70 years to the late Vincent. Loving mother of Janine, the late Laura (Vincent), Denise (Brian), Carolyn (Rick) and Vincent. Devoted grandmother of Alison, John, Jessica, David, Meredith, Scott, Eric, Ellen and Adriana. Cherished great-grandmother of Chloe, John Jr., Samantha, Julie, Joseph, Emma, Everett, Addison, Parker, Bennett, Maeve, Griffin, Sloane and Van. Dear sister of Jean and Ray. A funeral Mass was held Saturday, June 25 at St. Martin of Tours RC Church. Interment followed at St. Charles Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital; stjude.org.
BROOKLYN Wilfrid Raymond, 83, of Brooklyn, passed away on June 16. Beloved husband of Lucie. Loving father of Marie Y. Dimanche (Charlotin), Fritznel Jean Denis, Wilkens, Michaelle LaGuerre, Kerson (Judith), Garline, Feraldo (Ivy D. Fussell) and Reynold S. (Claudine). Cherished grandfather of Kervens, Stevens, Katelyne, Marleis, Kirsten, Daelan, Zachery, Reagan and Grayson. Adored great-grandfather of Elijah, Noah and Athena. Visitation and funeral services were held Saturday, July 2, at Arthur F. White Funeral Home, Inc. Entombment followed at Pinelawn Memorial Park.
President Roosevelt To Return Home To Oyster Bay For Independence Day Weekend Oyster Bay Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino and Town Clerk Richard LaMarca invite residents to Oyster Bay Hamlet during Fourth of July weekend to celebrate ‘Teddy’s Homecoming Jubilee.’ Residents are invited to gather at the Oyster Bay Bandstand on Sunday, July 3, at 2 p.m. to see President Roosevelt, who will be portrayed by famed Reprisor Joe Wiegand, come into town in an antique car and deliver a famous speech. The bandstand is located on Audrey Avenue and Shore Road, by the Oyster Bay Post Office. ‘Teddy’s Homecoming Jubilee’ is hosted by The Friends of Sagamore Hill and the Oyster Bay Main Street Association, in partnership with the Town of Oyster Bay. Famed Theodore
Roosevelt Reprisor Joseph Wiegand will arrive at the Oyster Bay stop on the Long Island Rail Road, from which he will head to the Oyster Bay Rail Road Museum. He will then be driven in an antique 1900s-era classic car, arriving at the bandstand to reenact President Roosevelt’s famous 1903 Independence Day speech. Following the reenactment of the president’s speech, residents are invited to join President Roosevelt for a ‘meet and greet’ at Teddy’s Bully Bar on Audrey Avenue. The establishment will offer signature cocktails celebrating President Roosevelt, with a portion of proceeds going to The Friends of Sagamore Hill. —Submitted by the Town of Oyster Bay
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COMMUNITY CALENDAR To place an item in this space, send information two weeks before the event to editors@antonmediagroup.com.
................. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29
Farmingdale Village Pops 40th Year 7:30 p.m. On the village green near Schneider’s Farm, weather permitting. 361 Main Street in Farmingdale, Also appearing on July 6, July 13, July 20, July 27 and Aug. 3, weather permitting. Visit www.farmingdalevillage.com for more information.
................. SATURDAY, JULY 2
Barre Fitness With Stefanie Perretta [Zoom] 9:30 a.m. Barre fitness is a full-body workout inspired by elements of ballet, yoga and pilates that focuses on low impact, high intensity movements designed to strengthen and tone your body. Equipment needed—2 to 3-pound weights, a chair and a mat. Register in advance for this meeting: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/ tZIuf-mrpjwtEtLPxipiwCXjw7S3q0Cld-xB After registering, you will receive a confirmation email from the Hicksville Public Library containing information about joining the meeting. Saturdays through Aug. 6. Poetry Workshop 9:30 a.m. Learn the craft of poetry with other writers and have your work workshopped and critiqued in a supportive space. Email
kyle.singh.gr@dartmouth.edu to register. Location is in the Training Room at Hicksville Library, 169 Jerusalem Ave. Saturdays through Aug. 6. For more information, visit www. hicksvillelibrary.org or call 516-931-1417.
Association website at www.oysterbaymainstreet. org for more information.
................. MONDAY, JULY 4
................. SUNDAY, JULY 3
Farmingdale Farmers Market 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. On the village green near Schneider’s Farm, weather permitting. 361 Main St. in Farmingdale. Through November, weather permitting. Visit www.farmingdalevillage.com for more information. Oyster Bay Market The Oyster Bay Market will return Sundays on a bi-weekly basis through Nov. 13 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Town of Oyster Bay Municipal Parking lot on Audrey Avenue in Oyster Bay. Sponsored by the Oyster Bay Main Street Association and back by popular demand, the mission of the Oyster Bay Market is to improve local food security, teach entrepreneurship skills, support local producers, makers and businesses, while enriching the cultural heritage of the community. Visit the Oyster Bay Main Street
All libraries are closed.
................. TUESDAY, JULY 5
Personal Enrichment In Retirement 10 a.m. Long Island PEIR (Personal Enrichment in Retirement) meets at the Plainview/Old Bethpage Library every Tuesday from 10 to 11:30 a.m. and from 1 to 2:30 p.m. in the large auditorium. Enjoyable and fascinating live lectures about art, music, science, current events, etc. are prepared and presented by members. For more information, call Rose Silber at 516-390-1278. Plainview-Old Bethpage Library, 999 Old Country Rd. Farmingdale Library Cinema: Death On the Nile (2022) 1:30 p.m. Stars Kenneth Branagh and Gal Gadot. While on vacation on the Nile, Hercule Poirot must investigate the murder of a young heiress. Rated PG-13. 127
minutes. No registration required. Space is limited. Tickets will be given out 30 minutes prior to the movie. One ticket per person. Location: Room A/B. Farmingdale Public Library, 116 Merritts Rd. For more information, visit www. farmingdalelibrary.org or call 516-249-9090. Movies On The Green: Encanto Dusk. On the village green by Schneider’s Farm, weather permitting. 361 Main Street in Farmingdale, Also screening on July 12, July 19, July 26, Aug. 2 and Aug. 16. Visit www.farmingdalevillage.com for more information.
................. WEDNESDAY, JULY 6
Farmingdale Village Pops 40th Year 7:30 p.m. On the village green near Schneider’s Farm, weather permitting. 361 Main Street in Farmingdale, Also appearing on July 13, July 20, July 27 and Aug. 3. Visit www.farmingdalevillage.com for more information.
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Faulkner: Enduring, Prevailing, Unvanquished tragedian. This comes hard for Americans, a people “unschooled in tragedy,” (Richard Weaver), a people where “a happy ending is our story” (Mary McCarthy). Faulkner had a sense of humor, breaking through in such stories as “Shingles For The Lord” or his final novel, The Reivers. There were his circumstances, also his thorough reading of the Old Testament and the works of William Shakespeare. Faulkner was drawn to the drama of life and with it, the drama of prose. From “Red Leaves:”
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his year, the twos have it. 2022. 2012. 2002. 1992. 1982. 1972. 1962. Stop right there. 1962? The Cuban Missile Crisis was the story of the year. Americans went to sleep on the evening of October 22 wondering if they would see the morning. Two famous Americans didn’t see a new morning that year. A year earlier, in 1961, Ernest Hemingway died, victim of a self-inflicted gun shot wound. His great rival, William Faulkner, died on July 6, 1962, after suffering another drinking binge. Dies the literature, dies the nation? Few, if anyone, will notice that this is the 60th anniversary of Faulkner’s passing. However, there’s never a good time not to write about the man and his work. More has been published on Faulkner than any other writer in the English language, save another William, Shakespeare by name. William Faulkner did have a brief New York connection. In his youth, he worked at a bookstore in Greenwich Village. His publishers were in the city. Faulkner polished up the ending to his 1929 classic, The Sound And The Fury while sitting cross-legged on a bed at a downtown hotel. He handed over the manuscript to his editor, remarking, “Here, read this. It’s a real son of a ----.” That it was. With The Sound And The Fury, Faulkner began to hit his stride. His friendship with Sherwood Anderson proved decisive. Anderson, who put small-town Ohio life on the map in a string of novels and stories, urged the young Faulkner to give up on the literary scene in New Orleans and instead, go back to northern Mississippi and zero in
William Faulkner receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature from King Gustav of Sweden. (Photo courtesy of Internet archive) on his “postage stamp.” Anderson added, also decisively, that there’s two things a man can never be: Ashamed of himself and where he came from. For Faulkner, that was like falling off a log. He grew up in the “front porch republic” that existed before World War II. In Faulkner’s day, Americans sat on the front porch and talked all night. Tall tales inevitably made their way back to the Civil War. The young Faulkner was fascinated by both his paternal and maternal grandfathers. His father was a bureaucrat laid low by the Depression. The grandfathers, however, were both veterans. One of them even constructed a monument to himself, one that stands today in Ripley, Mississippi, north of Faulkner’s Lafayette County postage stamp. As with writers of his generation, William Faulkner took the burden of history and placed it right on his shoulders. His world was different than those of say, Andrew Lytle, Caroline Gordon or Donald Davidson. Mississippi still suffered from the war and reconstruction: Poverty, occupation, crippled veterans, widows clad in black, an intractable race situation. The man made the most of it. William Faulkner is America’s great
Don’t you see? This whole land, the whole south is cursed, and all of us who derive from it, whom it ever suckled, white and black both, lie under the curse? Or from “Delta Autumn:” ‘This Delta,’ he [Ike McCaslin] thought. ‘This Delta.’ This land, which man has deswamped and denuded and derivered in two generations so that white men can own plantations and commute every night to Memphis and black men can own plantations and even towns and keep their town houses in Chicago…where cotton is planted and grows man-tall in the very cracks in the sidewalks, where usury and mortgage and bankruptcy and measureless wealth, Chinese and African and Aryan and Jew, all breed and spawn together until no man has time to say which is which, or cares. In 1950, the weight of the world did fall on his shoulders. Winning the Nobel Prize for Literature that year was an event. For years, such future Nobelists as Jorge Luis Borges and Jean-Paul Sartre sang Faulkner’s praises. Malcolm Cowley’s 1946 collection, The Portable Faulkner, put him back in the good graces of the critics, paving the way for the Nobel. In Stockholm, Faulkner displayed a different side, stunning a global audience with a
William Faulkner in a 1931 photo (Photo courtesy of Pininterest)
message of hope. I decline to accept the end of man… I believe that man will not merely endure: he will prevail. He is immortal, not because he alone among creatures has an exhaustible voice, but because he has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion and sacrifice and endurance. The poet’s… duty is to write about these things. It is his privilege to help man endure by lifting his heart, by reminding him of the courage and honor and hope and pride and compassion and pity and sacrifice which have been the glory of his past. The poet’s voice need not merely be the record of man, it can be one of the props, the pillars to help him endure and prevail. Novels, short stories, poetry, essays, reviews, speeches. Faulkner also spent much of the 1930s in Hollywood, writing film treatments for Warner Brothers. Jack Warner even boasted, “I have the best writer in the world working for me for peanuts!” (In time, Faulkner would tell Warner what he could do with his “peanuts.”) I’ll list two novels, Absalom, Absalom! (1936) and the before-mentioned The Sound And The Fury, as representative of the man’s corpus. That, reader, will have to wait until next week. In the meantime, keep in mind that Nassau County has the finest public library system in America. (Next week: Faulkner’s two great tragedies)
Four Seasons in Music: “Intersections” on Friday, July 8 at 7:00 p.m. Emmy Award-Winning “Time for Three” joins Ensemble-In-Residence “duoJalal”
Don’t miss this summer’s blowout concert in the magically transformed Black Box Theater in Castle Gould! Also, join us for an optional postconcert, fabulously catered, dinner in Castle Gould’s Great Hall. Call our ticket line at: 516-304-5076
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A FREE HOME ENERGY AUDIT CAN HELP YOU...
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ENTERTAINMENT & LIFESTYLE
LONG ISLAND WEEKLY
Steve Berlin’s Fave Los Lobos Albums BY DAVE GIL DE RUBIO
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full-time. “It was pretty crazy,” Berlin explained. “I thought the competition was formidable. The guys didn’t go because they didn’t think they were going to win. I thought, what the hell, I had the weekend off and went to see what would happen. It was a
lovely surprise and that stuff never gets old. People bitch and moan about the relevancy of the Grammys and to a certain extent, they’re not necessarily wrong. But it’s pretty fun.” A true pandemic record, Native Sons was initially supposed to start recording
ven though saxophonist/producer Steve Berlin has been an official member of Los Lobos since 1984, he’s still the new guy in the band. That said, he’s been part of a wild ride that found the quintet without a label for the three-year stretch between 2016 and 2018 despite being a multi-platinum act with a deep canon and a 2015 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame nomination (we’re still waiting for induction). The California quintet achieved redemption after signing with roots music-leaning imprint New West Records, which released 2021’s Native Sons and paid off via a Grammy for Best Americana Album. An album conceived at the height of the pandemic, its industry success came as quite a surprise to Berlin, who saw Lobos snag a 1983 Grammy for Best MexicanLos Lobos from left: Cesar Rosas, Conrad Lozano, David Hidalgo, Louie Perez, Steve Berlin American Performance right (Photo by Piero F. Giunti) before he joined the band
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in November 2019, but between touring commitments and how the coronavirus slammed the brakes on the world in March 2020, actual recording didn’t begin until June. And that wound up being limited to recording one week a month out of an abundance of caution until vaccines became available. The result was an L.A.themed collection of covers (save for the title cut) that paid homage to the band’s myriad influences. Among the artists interpreted are Berlin’s old band The Blasters, War, Jackson Browne, Buffalo Springfield and more obscure artists including East L.A. garage band Thee Midniters and Chicano music icon Lalo Guerrero. But rather than the project being a hodgepodge of covers, Berlin pointed out how all the selections had meaning attached to them. “I know that I had compiled a list of maybe 60 songs as a starter,” Berlin said. “It wasn’t like a Chinese restaurant, where we would pick and choose
see LOS LOBOS on page 10A
Funding for this advertisement was made possible (in part) by Grant Number 5H79SP081365-01 from SAMHSA. The views expressed in written materials or publications do not necessarily reflect the official policies of the Department of Health and Human Services; nor does mention of trade names, commercial practices, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government. 229434 S
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End The Stigma On Mental Health I grew up as a sensitive kid. So much so that when my elementary school gave out superlatives to graduating fifth-graders, the one I received was most self-aware. Growing up, I viewed my sensitivity as a weakness, a clear marker that separated me from my peers and gave high stakes to any social interaction I happened to find myself in. I didn’t really understand why I felt so different from other kids my age. Most seemed to wade through childhood keeping their head above water, impervious to insults and not getting bogged down in their own self-image. Middle school is when I had my first depressive episode. It was the summer going into eighth grade,and I got blindsided by a special brew of anxiety for the future and a persistent inner critic that wouldn’t give me any time to myself. Another wrinkle added to my situation was that my anxiety made me sick to my stomach so I could not keep
PARENTING PLUS Alex Levitt
down any food I ate. This first dance in the waters of depression lasted about three weeks, which seems like the most minor of blips compared to the length of time I have been depressed since then. I have lost count of how many times depression has darkened my door. When my symptoms re-emerged, it was dispiriting because I convinced myself I was past it and would never
“regress” in that way. Yet, I don’t regret any of it. It has made me stronger, surer of myself, and—most importantly to me—compassionate about other’s hardships. Through the trial of adversity, I decided to choose growth. Not that this was easy. My biggest hurdle was bypassing my own stubbornness. I had to take my experiences and view them as a chance to better myself instead of beating myself up over my perceived “weakness.” Mental health awareness and ending stigma is very important to me. Not just because of my own exposure, but because of the many friends and family members I have seen affected by various mental health issues. I continue to meet so many amazing and brilliant people who suffer internally because of something out of their control. My experience and that of others made me curious about what mental health services were offered at my school, Farmingdale State College. I saw that there was
one-on-one counseling on campus, but there was a lack of specialized services or peer support groups. In spring of 2021, I was part of the Student Government Association (SGA) at Farmingdale, and each semester a Senator is required to present his/her own resolution with the goal of improving services for students on campus. I couldn’t think of a better idea than to center my resolution on expanding the mental health services on campus. There used to be more student resources for this, but the pandemic had limited those services and had yet to return in full force with options for the students. My resolution was aimed at addressing the addition of more support groups for students to discuss issues they were experiencing during the school year, and to cover a wider range of mental health concerns, such as social anxiety, depression, addiction and other mood disorders.
It got passed on the Senate floor, but it still took a while for the changes to be instituted. Luckily, a fellow Senator helped things progress further this past fall by adding his own resolution calling for more mental health services, which in effect expanded upon my resolution. This past spring, I saw fliers and even an electronic sign in front of campus advertising support groups for students, whether for anxiety, depression or other mental health issues. There is always more to be done, but it is important that we fight to give those suffering a place where they feel they can be heard and that they are not alone. Alex Levitt is a senior at Farmingdale State College, where he is majoring in Professional Communications. He is an intern for North Shore Child & Family Guidance Center, Long Island’s pre-eminent children’s mental health organization. To reach the Guidance Center, call 516-626-1971.
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s the approaching 10th anniversary of Superstorm Sandy reminds us of the effects weather can have on the electric system, PSEG Long Island is announcing that it is prepared for hurricane season and to meet peak demand during extreme heat situations this summer. The company’s ongoing electric infrastructure and storm hardening improvements help provide electric reliability to Long Island throughout the year. PSEG Long Island has incorporated numerous enhancements and upgrades to the electric grid, its systems and its storm processes, including its contingency procedures.
Electric Infrastructure Improvements
Across Long Island and the Rockaways, PSEG Long Island has prepared the electric infrastructure by focusing on substation, and transmission and distribution improvements, as well as by performing circuit and equipment inspections using drones, helicopters and infrared technology.
Storm Hardening Programs Completed Do you have a love of history? This landmarked property at 63 Murray Ave. in Port Washington sold on June 15 for $1,400,000. Beautifully sited on a large 100’x120’ landscaped property with winter water views and lovingly maintained architectural details, this three bedroom and three bathroom home features a wrap-around porch, original wood floors, diamond sash windows and millwork. The charming entry foyer, inviting living room with gas fireplace and dramatic dining room are further enhanced by nine-foot ceilings and abundant natural light. Three spacious second floor bedrooms with eight-foot ceilings offer lovely views which share a full bathroom. An updated eat-in-kitchen was expanded to include a powder room and informal dining area. This property offers a lower level with outside entrance, utilities and laundry area. It is close proximity to the train station, waterfront, shops and restaurants. Beach and mooring rights are available with membership dues. This custom built Colonial at 11 Guilford Rd. in Port Washington sold on June 16 for $2,200,000. It has been newly redesigned and meticulously updated to integrate high-end finishings with perfect functionality. It is a turn-key with four bedrooms and three bathrooms and delivers an ideal New Salem location, pleasing curb appeal and an inviting front porch. The attention to detail is evident upon entry: custom millwork, hardwood oak flooring, built-in foyer console and a chic powder room. The dining room’s stunning custom bar with wine fridge is a showstopper. The open concept chef’s kitchen has every amenity, with a marble center island and quartz counters leading to the great room with shiplap walls, a new mantel and gas fireplace. Sliding doors overlook the backyard oasis with patios, gorgeous landscaping and salt water heated pool. On the second floor, the spacious primary suite boasts a large walk-in closet, tray ceiling and a luxurious spa bathroom with double vanities, freestanding tub and radiant heated floors. Three additional bedrooms and a full bath are also on the second floor. The two-car garage is attached. The home has a full basement and central air conditioning.
Since the implementation of the FEMA-funded storm-hardening program funded in 2014, PSEG Long Island has completed storm hardening and reliability work on more than 1,000 miles of distribution mainline circuits. The sections of circuits that are storm hardened saw a 44 percent reduction in damage leading to outages compared to the rest of the distribution system. PSEG continues its storm hardening work with Power On, an initiative started in the spring of 2020 that will continue to improve reliability by strengthening distribution lines, targeting the most vulnerable circuits across Long Island. More than 190 miles of distribution mainline circuits have been storm hardened with stronger poles, thicker wire and other modern equipment. Arborists work throughout the year to identify and trim tree limbs in rights of way and along easements that could potentially cause outages during or after a storm. PSEG has removed more than 88,500 hazardous trees and large limbs along the distribution and transmission system and trimmed more than 21,000 miles of distribution and transmission line clearance in accordance with the industry best practice clearance standard. This standard preserves the health of the tree and directs future growth away from power lines. A new vine mitigation program identified, cut and treated more than 14,000 vine locations across Long Island. PSEG also prepares its dedicated workforce for summer by conducting annual hurricane and tropical storm drills and employee training; by developing emergency summer operating plans; and by performing summer-peak reliability analyses to ensure there is sufficient capacity to meet electric demand on high-heat days. —PSEG Long Island
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Homes shown here represent closed sales, sold by a variety of agencies and are selected for their interest to readers by the Anton Media Group editor. Except where noted, data and photos are provided courtesy of Multiple Listing Service of Long Island, Inc. and Zillow.
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Second Opinion Service A New Perspective on Your Financial Advice
In these uncertain times, we want you to know that we are here for you and those important to you. Sometimes it helps hearing another professional’s opinion to confirm what your advisor is telling you. Many successful families are in complex financial situations and with the uncertainty of our times and the volatility of the markets, many are questioning their long-term financial plans. They may wonder if their financial plans are truly protecting their hard-earned wealth. That is why Palumbo Wealth Management is offering a complimentary, objective review of current financial plans and advice to anyone who may need our help. Our Second Opinion Service is a confidential meeting that is scheduled remotely. With an initial discovery session, we perform a comprehensive analysis, identify gaps and offer sound solutions and a fresh perspective. Clients of Palumbo Wealth Management benefit from a disciplined and experienced team with a clear and comprehensive vision of wealth management. Wealth Management
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Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards, Inc. (CFP Board) owns the certification marks CFP®, CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER®, CFP® (with plaque design), and CFP® (with flame design) in the U.S., which it authorizes use of by individuals who successfully complete CFP Board’s initial and ongoing certification requirements. As a firm providing wealth management services to clients, Palumbo Wealth Management LLC offers both investment advisory services and brokerage services. Investment advisory services and brokerage services are separate and distinct, differ in material ways and are governed by different laws and separate arrangements.
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Living At Home With Dementia
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he Alzheimer’s Association’s “2022 Alzheimer’s Disease Facts and Figures” report reveals that 6.5 million people in the U.S. are living with Alzheimer’s disease. More than 10% of people aged 65 and older have Alzheimer’s or another type of dementia, including frontotemporal dementia, Lewy body dementia, vascular dementia, and combinations of dementia types. “As their care needs increase, people with dementia may choose to live in a memory care facility,” Gregg Balbera, president of Right at Home Nassau Suffolk said. “Most prefer to remain in their own homes as long as possible, among familiar surroundings and their established support system.” But, said Balbera, this requires care support, which often is provided by spouses, adult children or other family and friends. Today, 11 million people are providing this care. They help loved ones with self-care, such as bathing, dressing and using the toilet. They pay bills and handle other paperwork. They coordinate their loved one’s medical care. They provide “emotional labor,” keeping their loved one’s spirits up and depression at bay while coping with personality and behavior changes caused by the disease. While many caregivers say caring for their loved one is rewarding, dementia caregiving is hard work, both physically and emotionally. “It often affects the caregiver’s career, other family relationships, and their physical and cognitive health,” said Balbera. “And many family caregivers are at an age when they need care themselves.”
MEMORY CARE AT HOME
relationships, trained professional caregivers can assist with toileting and Professional in-home caregivers incontinence care, bathing, dressing provide companionship, supervision, and and grooming. an array of supports to create an environ- • Meal planning and preparation. ment that meets the needs of client and Dementia doesn’t change a senior’s family. dietary needs, but it does pose chal“Choose a caregiver who is trained in lenges to consuming those nutrients. memory care,” advised Balbera. “This Professional in-home caregivers can creates the understanding that a client’s HELP IS AVAILABLE FOR shop for groceries and prepare meals personality and behavior changes are the and snacks as recommended by the CAREGIVERS result of brain changes, which enables the client’s health care provider. They can As their loved one’s condition progress- caregiver to effectively respond to sympprovide supervision, assistance and es, it’s important for family caregivers toms such as hallucinations, sleep probcompany at mealtime. to access support services, which might lems, wandering, aggression and anxiety.” • A day filled with meaningful activities. include: “Exercise, mental stimulation and • Public senior-support services spending time with other people all CAREGIVERS HELP IN • Home safety modifications provide a sense of well-being for people MANY WAYS: • Support groups and counseling with dementia, and can help lessen • Education and advocacy • Keeping the home safe and suitable troublesome symptoms,” said Balbera. • Aging life care professionals (geriatric care for the client’s needs. Caregivers can “The caregiver and client might do managers) provide housekeeping and laundry. household chores together, listen to • Respite care They can remove fall hazards, and music, play games, work in the garden Family and friends also can help. And provide a watchful presence while or go for walks.” according to the Alzheimer’s Association still maintaining the client’s sense of • Health care reminders and transporreport, professional in-home caregivers independence. tation. Many people who are living “play important roles in delaying nursing • Hygiene support and personal care. with dementia have additional chronic home placement and reducing repeat Sensitive to preserving the client’s health conditions, such as heart disease, hospitalizations.” dignity and to normalizing family diabetes, arthritis or osteoporosis.
In-home caregivers can provide health and medication reminders, pick up prescriptions, and transport clients to the doctor’s office and other health care appointments. • Respite for family caregivers. Professional in-home care allows family to take time off for their own needs, confident that their loved one is well cared for. “With the professional caregiver providing basic day-to-day care, the person with dementia and family are freed to spend their time together doing things they enjoy,” he said. The Nassau Suffolk office of Right at Home is a locally owned and operated franchise office of Right at Home, Inc., serving the communities Centerport, Cold Spring Hills, Commack, Dix Hills, East Northport, East Setauket, Greenlawn, Halesite, Hauppauge, Huntington, Kings Park, Lake Grove, Lloyd Harbor, Melville, Nesconset, Old Bethpage, Plainview, St. James, Smithtown, Stony Brook, West Hills and Woodbury. Visit www.rightathomeli.com or call 516-719-5999 for more information. —Right at Home of Nassau Suffolk
4B JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022 • SENIOR LIFE
Welcome To Medicare Plan for your best care
BY BARRY KLITSBERG specialsections@antonmediagroup.com
I
f there is one thing people look forward to as they approach their 65th year, it’s Medicare insurance for their healthcare needs. Medicare is a federally run health insurance program for people who are 65 years of age or have collected Social Security Disability for 24 months. It is also available for individuals with permanent kidney failure or Lou Gehrig’s Disease. Unless you are already collecting Social Security, you will get your Medicare card automatically in the mail. If you are not yet collecting Social Security, you have to apply for Medicare during the three month period before your 65th birthday. You may apply for Medicare by calling the Social Security Administration at 1-800-772-1213 or online at: www.ssa.gov/medicare. Medicare coverage can be confusing for the uninitiated, as there are various options. Choosing the right plan for you requires careful consideration. If you need help understanding or choosing a plan, Family and Children’s Association (FCA) can help guide you through the process with free help available by calling the Nassau County Health Insurance
have a terminal illness. For most people Medicare Part A is premium free. Medicare Medical Insurance (Part B) covers physician and other outpatient services. These services include doctor visits, hospital outpatient services, lab tests; physical, speech or occupational therapy; and durable medical equipment for use in the home. The standard Part B premium amount in 2022 is $170.10. Most people pay the standard Part B premium amount. If your modified adjusted gross income as reported on your IRS tax return from 2 years ago is above a certain amount, you’ll pay the standard premium amount and an Income Related Monthly Adjustment Amount (IRMAA). IRMAA is an extra charge added to your premium. Prescriptions are covered through Barry Klitsberg Medicare Part D when you elect Part B coverage. Medicare Part C You may opt for Information Counseling and Assistance Medicare Advantage plans rather than Program (HIICAP) at 516-485-3754. using Part B. Medicare Advantage offers There are four basic parts of Medicare: a variety of managed care plans includHospital Insurance (Part A) covers you as ing Health Maintenance Organizations an inpatient in a hospital or skilled nursing (HMOs) and Preferred Provider or rehabilitation facility, or for skilled Organizations (PPOs). These plans generhome care after a hospitalization. Medicare ally have a network of providers. Part A also can cover hospice care if you In an HMO you must use providers in
that network. If you join a PPO, you can go out of the network, but you will have a higher copayment for out-of-network services. Medicare Advantage plans generally cover prescription drugs as well, and frequently cover non-Medicare services such as vision, dental and hearing services. Medicare Part D is prescription coverage. There are 19 drug plans in New York State. These plans vary in premium cost and formularies. There are Medicare supplement plans known as Medigap. These are standardized plans that can fill most of the Medicare gaps such as deductibles and co-insurance. In order to best determine which type of plan works best for you, it pays to make a free call to the Nassau County Health Insurance Information Counseling and Assistance Program, HIICAP hotline. HIICAP has no affiliation with insurance companies, agents or brokers. Call 516-485-3754. Barry Klitsberg is an assistant Health Insurance Information Counseling and Assistance (HIICAP) coordinator at Family and Children’s Association in Garden City and an aging services program specialist at U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
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6B JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022 • SENIOR LIFE
Life Insurance Quotes For Seniors what affects the cost of premiums and compare different plans. Here’s how life insurance works and some types of policies that may be available to seniors.
How does life insurance for seniors work?
Life insurance for seniors provides loved ones with financial security when the policyholder passes away by paying out a sum of money called a
death benefit. Some policies also come with a cash value growth component that will accumulate over time. Once the policyholder has built up enough cash value, they can withdraw from it, borrow from it, or surrender the policy to receive the full amount minus surrender charges. With any life insurance plan, policyholders have to pay monthly premiums to maintain their coverage. Life insurance premiums for seniors can depend on many other factors, such as: • Insurer: Each insurer will offer different premiums. • Policy terms: A higher death benefit and adding riders can increase costs. • Gender: Men tend to pay slightly higher premiums than women, since women often live longer. • Age: Life insurance tends to get more expensive with age, since an older policyholder is more likely to pass away while the policy is active. • Family health history: Insurers consider the health history of both the policyholder and their family when calculating premiums. • Smoker vs. nonsmoker: Smokers pay
more for life insurance than nonsmokers, all else held equal. • Hobbies and lifestyle: Hobbies like skydiving, rock-climbing, and car racing may be considered risky, leading to higher premiums. Types of life insurance for seniors
Here are two main types of life insurance policies that are available to seniors:
Final expense insurance Final expense insurance is a small whole life insurance policy designed to help a senior’s loved ones cover end-oflife costs, such as outstanding medical bills and funeral expenses. This life insurance policy typically comes with a smaller death benefit and lower premiums than standard whole life insurance policies. Final expense insurance also provides a cash value growth component that builds with each payment and grows at a fixed rate. Final expense insurance policies generally don’t require a medical exam, making them an excellent option for seniors who might not qualify for other types of permanent life insurance policies.
CONTINUES ON NEXT PAGE
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s people get older, they realize the importance of leaving a legacy and providing for their loved ones. Life insurance can be an excellent tool for ensuring beneficiaries are financially stable when the policyholder passes away. To find the right life insurance quote for seniors, it’s important to understand
SENIOR LIFE • JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022
CONTINUED FROM PREVIOUS PAGE Term life insurance Term life insurance provides policyholders with coverage for a defined time period, usually from 10 to 30 years. Since these plans don’t offer lifelong coverage, premiums tend to be much more affordable. Term life policies offer higher death benefits than final expense insurance, but coverage ends when the policy term ends. This means seniors may have to get a new policy to maintain coverage.
each policy, then compare different insurers to find a life insurance quote that fits their needs. —Fidelity Life
Seniors have several options for getting life insurance at a rate they can afford. Final expense insurance offers guaranteed lifetime coverage for end-of-life costs, low premiums, and a cash value component. And term insurance lasts a limited time but offers a higher death benefit for relatively affordable premiums. Seniors should take their time to evaluate
OVER
Social Security Announces Benefit Increase For 2022 Social Security and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits for approximately 70 million Americans have increased by 5.9 percent in 2022. The 5.9 percent cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) began with benefits payable to more than 64 million Social Security beneficiaries in January 2022. Increased payments to approximately eight million SSI beneficiaries have been distributed since December 2021. Some people receive both Social Security and SSI benefits. The Social Security Act ties the annual COLA to the increase in the Consumer Price Index as determined by the Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics. Some other adjustments that take effect in January of each year are based on the increase in average wages. Based on that increase, the maximum amount of earnings subject to the Social Security tax (taxable maximum) will increase to $147,000 from $142,800. Social Security and SSI beneficiaries
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are normally notified by mail starting in early December about their new benefit amount. Most people who receive Social Security payments will be able to view their COLA notice online through their personal my Social Security account. People may create or access their My Social Security account online at www.socialsecurity.gov/ myaccount. Information about Medicare changes for 2022 can be found online at www.medicare. gov. For Social Security beneficiaries receiving Medicare, Social Security will not be able to compute their new benefit amount until after the Medicare premium amounts for 2022 are announced. Final benefit amounts are communicated to beneficiaries in December through the mailed COLA notice and My Social Security’s Message Center. The Social Security Act provides for how the COLA is calculated. Visit www.socialsecurity.gov/cola to read more. —Social Security Administration
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8B JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022 • SENIOR LIFE
Reasons People Life is a Journey Without Children Should Still Have Embrace An Estate Plan every day because every day P counts eople without children may think there’s no need to have an estate plan and/or will. This misconception can be especially true for married couples who believe the estate will easily transfer to a surviving spouse. However, the truth is an estate plan can make life a lot simpler in the time leading up to and after someone passes away. Whether someone is married or not, here are four reasons why people without children still need an estate plan.
1
An Estate Plan Can Designate Healthcare and Legal Authority
An estate plan assigns decision-making authority for healthcare and legal decisions through critical documents like an advanced healthcare directive and power of attorney. And those without children still need to define these decision-makers, whether it’s a spouse, friend, sibling, niece or nephew. If someone falls ill, gets into an accident, or is otherwise incapacitated, their spouse or designated decision-maker needs the authority to make decisions on their behalf. And failure to get the proper documents in place could mean receiving care that doesn’t align with someone’s wishes.
2
An Estate Plan Ensures Financial Accounts Will Make an Impact
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charities could benefit instead. That means assets like, taxable brokerage accounts, savings/checking accounts, CDs, etc. can directly benefit people or causes meaningful to the deceased. Other accounts, such as retirement accounts, annuities and term life insurance policy death benefits are directed by their beneficiary designation, not a will. However, they can also be a key part of an estate plan as they avoid probate and can also avoid attorney’s fees. Updating beneficiaries should be done at the same time as keeping a will up to date.
3
An Estate Plan Outlines Who Will Care for Pets
An important consideration after someone passes away is what will happen to their furry loved ones. And for those without someone else at home to take over the responsibility, an estate plan is a perfect place to outline where pets will go and what, if any, financial support they’ll receive. Failure to appoint where pets should go could mean they’ll be much worse off after their human is gone.
4
An Estate Plan Can Help Smooth Business Succession
Business owners have a unique obligation to their partners and employees to Many people work their whole lives to ensure the business can continue after accumulate assets and financial accounts. they’re gone. While business owners And often, they want that money to have should already have a succession plan meaning. But assets left without explicit di- established, a well-developed estate plan rection in a will could put financial accounts can help smooth the transition. in the hands of probate court. Depending Regardless of whether or not someone on state regulations, those without a spouse has children, they’ve still accumulated a could risk money falling to extended family lifetime’s worth of assets. An estate plan can members or someone they wouldn’t want to ensure assets are distributed according to receive the benefit of a lifetime of hard work. the deceased’s wishes and that care in the By designating where financial accounts final months of life goes according to plan. should go and using a will, loved ones or —Northwestern Mutual
SENIOR LIFE • JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022
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Reducing Stroke Risk
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offers free gym memberships, personalized fitness plans, workout videos, and group fitness classes. • Maintaining a relationship with a primary care provider is an important part of managing chronic conditions like hypertension that can lead to stroke. • Quit smoking, which increases your risk of a stroke, disease, and death. Talk to your health care provider and health plan about resources that might be available to help you quit. • Eat healthy foods, like those low in cholesterol and saturated fat, plus lots of fruits and vegetables If you know the signs and symptoms of a stroke and act quickly, it can mean the difference between life or death, major disability or a better quality of life. If you experience the sudden onset of any of these symptoms, seek medical care immediately: • Numbness or weakness in the face, arm, or leg—especially on one side of the body • Confusion or trouble speaking or understanding • Problems seeing in one eye or both eyes • Dizziness, loss of balance or coordination, or trouble walking • Severe headache with no known cause Every year strokes take a toll on far too many of us. Reducing the risks of this too-often devastating condition starts with educating ourselves about stroke and taking small steps to improve our overall wellbeing. —Dr. Steven Angelo, Chief Medical Officer, UnitedHealthcare Medicare & Retirement of New York and New Jersey Amanda Rees, CEO, Age Bold
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bout 795,000 people have a stroke every year, including thousands of people in New York, according to the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC). The good news is up to 80 percent of strokes are preventable and if one occurs, it is possible to treat and recover if caught early. Getting smarter about strokes is crucial as time is a major factor in preventing disability or death. Understanding the symptoms of stroke and risk factors can help you get help fast and reduce your risks. A stroke is a medical emergency caused by the interruption of the flow of blood to the brain as a result of a clot or internal bleeding. Our brains require a continuous supply of oxygen and nutrients. If blood flow stops, brain cells start to die in just a few minutes. Because of this, a stroke can have a serious impact on many functions of your body, including speech, respiration, movement, cognition, and bladder control. Strokes reduce mobility in more than half of stroke survivors 65 and over. In fact, stroke causes more serious long-term disabilities than any other disease, according to the National Institute on Aging. Individuals who survive strokes often need physical, speech, occupational therapy and other medical care. Older adults are at an increased risk of having a stroke. However, there are several ways you can help reduce those risks, including: • Make exercise part of your daily routine. Many people don’t know that many Medicare Advantage health plans include fitness benefits. For example, UnitedHealthcare’s Renew Active program
10B JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022 • SENIOR LIFE
Report Finds Challenges Understanding Alzheimer’s Development
T
he Alzheimer’s Association 2022 Alzheimer’s Disease Facts and Figures report found challenges faced by both doctors and the American public in understanding and diagnosing mild cognitive impairment (MCI). It is estimated that 10 to 15 percent of people with MCI—an early stage of memory or other cognitive loss—go on to develop dementia each year. The 2022 Facts and Figures report provides an in-depth look at the latest national statistics on Alzheimer’s disease prevalence, incidence, mortality, costs of care and impact on caregivers along with a new section on the dementia care workforce. An accompanying special report, “More than Normal Aging: Understanding Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI),” for the first time examined both public and primary care physicians’ understanding of real-world awareness, diagnosis and treatment of MCI and MCI due to Alzheimer’s disease in the United States. “Mild cognitive impairment is often confused with ‘normal aging,’ but is not part of the typical aging process,” said Maria Carrillo, Ph.D., chief science officer, Alzheimer’s Association. “Distinguishing between cognitive issues resulting from normal aging, those associated with MCI and those related to MCI due to Alzheimer’s disease is critical in helping individuals, their families and physicians prepare for future treatment and care.” New disease-related statistics for New York revealed the following: • Number of New York residents aged 65 and older living with Alzheimer’s: 410,000 • Estimated number of New York residents living with Alzheimer’s in 2025: 460,000 • Percentage change: 12.2 percent • Number of New York residents serving as unpaid family caregivers: 563,000 • Total hours of unpaid care provided: 835,000,000 “The new Facts and Figures report shows the impact of Alzheimer’s on families here in Long Island and across the entire nation,” Douglas E. Davidson, executive director of the Alzheimer’s Association, Long Island Chapter, said. “In Nassau and Suffolk counties, the Alzheimer’s Association is supporting the community with education to help people understand and recognize early signs and symptoms and with programs to help caregivers and people living with the disease.”
Karl V. Anton, Jr., Publisher, Anton Community Newspapers, 1984-2000 Publishers of Glen Cove/Oyster Bay Record Pilot Great Neck Record Manhasset Press Nassau Illustrated News Port Washington News Syosset-Jericho Tribune The Nassau Observer The Roslyn News Editor and Publisher Angela Susan Anton President Frank A. Virga Vice President of Operations Iris Picone Director of Sales Administration Shari Egnasko Editors Janet Burns, Jennifer Corr, Dave Gil de Rubio, Christy Hinko, Julie Prisco, Frank Rizzo, Joe Scotchie,
MCI common but still unknown
It is estimated 12-to18 percent of people age 60 or older have MCI. While some with MCI will remain stable or revert to normal, up to 15 percent go on to develop dementia each year. Identifying which people with MCI are more likely to develop dementia is a major goal of current research, potentially enabling earlier disease intervention and treatment. Despite the prevalence among aging Americans, the new report found more than four out of five Americans (82 percent) know very little or are not familiar with MCI. When prompted with a description of MCI, more than half (55 percent) say MCI sounds like “normal aging.”
Importance of early intervention
Of survey respondents who wanted to learn about Alzheimer’s disease during the MCI phase, more than half (70 percent) noted the need for planning and opportunities for treatment. Early diagnosis gives families time to make legal, financial and care decisions for the future, based on a patient’s concerns and priorities, and is associated with lower overall health care costs. The vast majority of primary care physicians (86 percent) said early intervention can slow progression of cognitive decline. Only one out of five physicians report being familiar with clinical trials available to their
patients with MCI, and only one out of four say they are familiar with new therapies in the pipeline to address MCI due to Alzheimer’s disease. When MCI is detected, primary care physicians most often recommend lifestyle changes.
Future outlook and opportunities
The last two decades have marked an increase in the development of a new class of medicines that target the underlying biology and aim to slow the progression of Alzheimer’s disease. As of February 2022, there are 104 disease-modifying treatments being evaluated in clinical trials or at various stages of regulatory approval. These potential therapies are aimed at slowing the progression of MCI due to Alzheimer’s disease and mild Alzheimer’s dementia, according to the Alzheimer’s Association.
Workplace shortages
This year’s report also includes a new section on dementia care workforce. Most states will have to nearly triple the number of geriatricians who were practicing in 2021 to effectively care for the number people projected to have Alzheimer’s dementia in 2050. Most states will need to double the number of home health and personal care aides. • In New York, there are approximately 568 geriatricians. By 2050, 44 percent more are needed to meet the needs of people projected to have Alzheimer’s. • New York had 437,300 home health and personal care aides in 2018. That number will need to increase by 60.6 percent to meet demand by 2028. —Alzheimer’s Association
Advertising Sales Ally Deane, Mary Mallon, Sal Massa, Maria Pruyn, Jeryl Sletteland Director of Circulation Joy DiDonato Director of Production Robin Carter Creative Director Alex Nuñez Art Director Catherine Bongiorno Senior Page Designer Donna Duffy Director of Business Administration Linda Baccoli
For circulation inquiries, email: subscribe@antonmediagroup.com Publication Office: 132 East Second St., Mineola, NY 11501 Phone: (516) 747-8282 Fax: (516) 742-5867 © 2022 Long Island Community Newspapers, Inc.
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Letters to the editor are welcomed by Anton Media Group. We reserve the right to edit in the interest of space and clarity. All letters must include an address and daytime telephone number for verification. All material contributed to Anton Media Group in any form becomes the property of the newspapers to use, modify and distribute as the newspaper staff assigns or sees fit. Letters to the editor can be mailed to: editors@antonmediagroup.com Additional copies of this and other issues are available for purchase by calling 516-403-5120.
SENIOR LIFE • JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022 11B
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LOS LOBOS from page 4A from that list. The list was an inspiration. As we went along, one song would remind us of another song. The songs had to mean something to somebody in the band and especially if it was something someone in the band felt passionate about.” With such a long and storied canon, Berlin shared what Los Lobos projects resonated most with him. ...And a Time to Dance (1983) “The first one [was pretty seminal] because it was the first one. And I wasn’t even part of that. I wasn’t even in the band. I was in The Blasters. I was producing it. That record was made while I was transitioning into being a full-time member.” How Will the Wolf Survive? (1984) “Making How Will the Wolf Survive?
FULL RUN
was profound because it was our first real record. We’d won a Grammy for that EP [... And a Time to Dance], so we were on the radar. We had risen up the food chain, if you will. We were not brand-new anymore, were doing well on the road and making a little bit of money. Things were certainly looking up. We were on Warner Brothers, so we knew we had to step up a little bit. We had a ball doing it. We didn’t feel much pressure, but we knew we had to do a great job. That was a big one.” Kiko (1992) “We were concerned that we were going to be dropped by our label because the [prior] record [The Neighborhood] didn’t do well. Long story short, we had to make a new record and we were pissed off at ourselves, the world and the music business. We did what we wanted to do and the way we wanted
to do it. We were all in a very experimental mood and [engineer Tchad Blake] was the main mad scientist. We would do something and he would do his thing and it would sound awesome. Any dumb idea sounded so great with whatever he was doing to it. He made everything work. A lot of times in the studio you’ll go down a road and then decide to rethink something. I don’t remember that ever happening because we never took a step back. We always just kept going forward. It was always cool and we just decided to keep going. It was really just joyous and fun. Making Kiko was tons of fun. If we’re enjoying ourselves, more often than not, it’s going to translate to the music. That was really fun.” The Ride (2004) “We did The Ride, which we produced ourselves and that was amazing. The Ride and the Super Seven records were similar
because we were making records with people that we respected and people that had powerfully influenced us, like Tom Waits, Richard Thompson, Mavis Staples and Bobby Womack. It was just sort of taking what we had learned on the way to making records and bringing people into our world or going into their world. The Ride and Super Seven records were fun because we got to see how our culture interacted with other people’s cultures. We certainly liked the culture that we had cultivated and it was pretty wacky and daring.” Los Lobos will be appearing with the Tedeschi Trucks Band on July 10 at the Great South Bay Music Festival, Shorefront Park, Patchogue. Visit www.greatsouthbaymusicfestival.com for more information. Visit www.longislandweekly.com for a longer story on Los Lobos.
A PET IS ONE OF LIFE’S GREATEST GIFTS
BRUCE A. BLAKEMAN NASSAU COUNTY EXECUTIVE
PRESENTS
CHRISTOPHER MORLEY PARK CONCERTS WEDNESDAY, JULY 6TH
JOHNNY MAESTRO TRIBUTE BAND
North Shore Animal League America rescues and cares for thousands of animals each year. By leaving a gift as part of your will or trust, you ensure your love of pets lives on.
7:00pm - 8:30pm
CHRISTOPHER MORLEY PARK 500 Searingtown Road | Roslyn
FREE ADMISSION BRING CHAIRS
Please call 516-572-0201 for up to date information. 233477 M
CONTACT US FOR INFORMATION LEADER IN THE NO-KILL MOVEMENT
516.812.7218 animalleague.org/greatestgift giftplanning@animalleague.org A 501(c)3 not for profit, charitable corporation Photos by Ellen Dunn
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ANTON MEDIA GROUP • JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022 11A
FULL RUN
WE LOVE OUR PETS
L
ong Island Orchestrating for Nature (LION), the leading animal advocacy organization on Long Island, has named Animal General of East Norwich its “2021 Veterinarian of the Year” for the animal hospital’s tremendous efforts and dedication to providing free and low-cost veterinary care to wildlife and domestic fowl rescued from cruelty, complete with a plaque featuring a chicken and a plant-based care package from Cindysnacks Vegan Market. “Whether we are asking them to carefully remove duct-tape from a goose who was strapped with fireworks, amputate the wing of a chicken maimed by animal sacrifice, bring back to life ailing birds saved from live slaughter markets, or treat animals suffering from years of neglect at Long Island petting zoos, we know that our rescues are in good hands when we bring them to Animal General for an appointment” John Di Leonardo, an anthrozoologist and president of LION said. VCA Animal General of East Norwich serves as the primary veterinarian for LION’s domestic fowl rescues, and Dr. Ellen Leonhardt, the practice’s medical director, as well as staff veterinarian Dr. Danielle Perrone, serve on the advisory board of Volunteers for Wildlife, a local wildlife rehabilitation organization. “VCA Animal General of East Norwich is proud of our on-going collaborative efforts, working alongside John Di Leonardo, Long Island Orchestrating for Nature (LION) and numerous other wildlife rescue groups within our community,” Dr. Leonhardt said. “We pride ourselves in helping the
Vet Of The Year underserved, moving towards a healthier and safer environment for these delicate creatures, each deserving individualized care, attention and veterinary medical expertise.” Among its notable victories, LION successfully opposed the expansion of SeaQuest Aquariums’ sordid mall aquarium chain into Oyster Bay in 2019, recently saved the lives of tens of thousands of animals over the course of just one week in Huntington, and has rescued hundreds of ducks, chickens and peafowl abandoned in Oyster Bay since 2016. LION previously recognized another Oyster Bay veterinary practice—Massapequa Pet Vet— with its Veterinarian of the Year award in 2018. —Long Island Orchestrating for Nature (LION) LION President John Di Leonardo (left) and Dr. Ellen Leonhardt
Vegan gifts from Cindysnacks awarded alongside the plaque
Bruno, Bailey and Callie are the Anton Pets of the Month. Email your pet’s photo to specialsections@antonmediagroup.com for consideration. Submitted by Michael Dell’Accio
IT TAKES A SPECIAL PERSON TO SAVE A SPECIAL PET
YOUR MONTHLY NORTH SHORE ANIMAL LEAGUE AMERICA PET SPONSORSHIP HELPS: Fund major operations and provide ongoing medical care.
Ensure that abused, neglected, or abandoned animals receive constant love and attention. Make you an essential part of a grateful pet’s life!
Choose a special pet to sponsor today! 1.877.BE.MY.PAL (1.877.236.9725) sponsor @ animalleague.org animalleague.org/sponsorapet 229231 S
12A JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
WORD FIND
FULL RUN
This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direc always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you hav pleted the puzzle, there will be 18 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle. By Holiday Mathis
By Holiday Holiday Mathis Mathis HOROSCOPES INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND By HOROSCOPES INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND ARIES (March 21-April 19). New habits are fragile. Unexpected and extra events
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Those on a fault-finding mission will have no problem finding it. You may want to avoid these types because their mission will only make yours more difficult. You’re on the hunt for fun, which will involve joining with agreeable people who keep it light and bring a spark of playful curiosity to the picture.
Everybody has one Solution: 18 Letters
WORD FIND This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direction but always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you have completed the puzzle, there will be 18 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
Everybody has one
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). The secret to your charisma may be known to others but not to you because the very nature of your charm is unselfconsciousness. Having fame and power isn’t your goal, though it may come as a byproduct of your passion and dedication to the goal. Part of your appeal is that you don’t care to whom you appeal.
© 2022 Australian Word Games Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.
Solution: 18 Letters
CANCER (June 22-July 22). There is a wealth of knowledge that happens at a deeper level than the one where words and explanations exist. You may feel more confident and articulate when you can explain what you know, and this is worth working on, but in the meantime your intuitive leanings shouldn’t be discounted. Act on instinct.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Pride goeth before the fall, but your definition of pride will matter here. Letting people know what you do isn’t about pride but usefulness. The process goes better when they trust you, so your credentials matter. Explaining your expertise isn’t bragging; it’s making the process easier for all. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Even favorable circumstances, fortuitous opportunities and wonderful events can come with their own kind of stress. Fun requires you to be in top condition! As you rest and take excellent care of yourself this week, you’ll also be helping yourself enjoy what’s coming. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You don’t need everything to go according to plan to feel good about it. Long ago, you acknowledged that you aren’t in charge of it all, and now you get to adopt the laid-back attitude to go with that realization -far more comfortable and charismatic than trying to control the uncontrollable.
Luca Abel Dick Hayley Roy Holly Luke Abner Edgar Rudy Edna Iker Mack Adam Russell Aiden Elena Ilsa Nancy Scarlette Luca Abel Dick Hayley Nash Roy Skye Alessandro Eliana Itzel Abner Ivy Edgar Holly NeilLuke Rudy Sylas Amos Elyse Edna Iker Mack Adam Russell Jake Nelson Ariyah Emery Tate Ilsa Nancy Aiden Elena Scarlette John Bode Emily Nash Alessandro Eliana Itzel Nina Skye Uriel Elyse Ivy Neil Amos Kyra Sylas Vera Erica Nora Cain Nelson Ariyah Emery Jake Tate Omar Cali Esme Laila John Nina Bode Emily Uriel Zara Laura Case Evan Nora Cain Erica Kyra Raul Vera Esme Laila Rayan Omar Cali Zara Lillie Finn Colt Raul Evan Laura Case Ford Lisa Rory Dane Lillie Rayan Colt Finn Davis Gene Rory Dane Louie Ford Lisa Rose Gene Louie W. 57th Rose STREET, 41st FROM KING FEATURESDavis SYNDICATE, 300 FLOOR, NEW YORK, NY 10019
Solution: There’s what’s his name olution: There’s what’s his name
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). To connect in perfectly mannerly ways, which fall neatly within the acceptable boundaries of mutually understood roles, were it even possible, would be pointless. The ensuing boredom would only ruin the social arena for all. So go on, make an honest mess and enjoy the unfolding excitement in relationships this week.
Crea tors Syndica Creators Syndicate CUSTOMER SERVICE: (800) 708-7311 EXT. 236te
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Perhaps the world “flirt” is too reductive to describe your interaction style, which has more to do with stirring up good vibes than it does with any social agenda. Nonetheless, someone thinks you’re flirting with them and loves it. Business will be friendly, and a friendship will lend itself to doing business, too. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Even if you do what everyone else is doing, your expression, experience and thoughts about it will be unique, as your mind is a filter unlike any other. Your creative stamp will be on all you do without any conscious effort on your part. Originality pours from your unselfconscious commitment to the moment you’re in. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). The list of things you’re looking out for today includes: the best in people, the sunny side, ways to help and means to uplift. The quest causes you to automatically fall into the flow of fortuitous words and actions. You don’t even have to think about the next correct move; it all flows naturally.
THIS WEEK’S BIRTHDAYS
It’s a better world because you’re here. This will be evident in the lives and smiles of those you help. Your own well-being is also proof. The responsibility to take magnificent care of yourself is the one from which all else happens. The single lifestyle choice that has the biggest impact will be the company you keep. A truly unusual meeting will take your professional life for an exciting ride. There’s also a daring element to your social life, and you’ll put a certain thrilling activity or game on repeat. COPYRIGHT 2022 CREATORS.COM
Date: 6/29/22 Date:
737 3rd StreetBeach, • Hermosa Beach, CA 9 9 0254 737 3rd Street • Hermosa CA 0254 310-337-7003 • info@creators.com CONTRACT BRIDGE — BY STEVE BECKER 310-337-7003 • info@creators.com
CONTRACT BRIDGE
FOR RELEASE THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 2022
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Your planning skills are cosmically touched, and it’s more than worth your time and energy to brainstorm, fantasize and commit to some logistics. What goes on in your head and on paper now will bring excitement to your experience later. Future-you will thank planner-you and praise your brilliance.
© 2022 Australian Word Games Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.
such as visits, travel, projects and other challenges could throw off your rhythms and delay your goals. So take advantage of the less hectic early week, perfectly suited to repeating behaviors you want to habituate so they’ll be ingrained when life gets trickier.
By Steve Becker
God save the king! East dealer. Both sides vulnerable. NORTH ♠K62 ♥9 8 5 ♦ A K 10 ♣9 7 4 2 WEST EAST ♠8 ♠ Q J 10 9 4 3 ♥J 6 2 ♥A ♦87543 ♦QJ9 ♣ 10 6 5 3 ♣K Q J SOUTH ♠A75 ♥ K Q 10 7 4 3 ♦62 ♣A 8 The bidding: East South West North 1♠ 2♥ Pass 3♥ 3♠ 4♥ Opening lead — eight of spades. Declarer frequently has a choice of whether to win a trick in his own hand or in dummy. Obviously, no uniform rule can be applied to these situations — the right play depends strictly on the circumstances. Consider the present case, where West led a spade that South could win in either hand. His potential losers were a spade, a club and either one or two hearts. It was clear that he could hold himself to one trump loser by leading a trump from dummy toward his K-Q-10,
since the bidding had marked East with the ace. So declarer took the opening spade lead with dummy’s king in order to lead a trump. But when East won with the ace and returned the queen of spades, South was in trouble. He played the ace, trumped by West, and declarer later lost a club and a spade and went down one. South was certainly right in thinking that the first trump lead should come from dummy. But since it was almost certain from the bidding that East had six spades and West only one, declarer should have chosen his entries more carefully. To protect against a 6-1 spade division, South should have won the spade lead in his hand, led a diamond to dummy’s king and then led a trump. East would win and return a spade, but this would no longer pose a threat. West could ruff, but in that case dummy would play low, and South would lose only the ace of hearts, a club and a spade ruff. And if West did not ruff the spade return, dummy’s king would win, and South’s only losers would be a spade, a heart and a club. Declarer’s choice of where to take the first trick made all the difference between winning and losing the contract.
Tomorrow: Bidding quiz. ©2022 King Features Syndicate Inc.
6/29/22
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022 13A
FULL RUN
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
14 JUNE JUNE 29 29 -- JULY JULY 5, 5, 2022 2022 •• ANTON 14A ANTON MEDIA MEDIA GROUP GROUP
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Continued from page 7
GREAT NECK
tion in the hearing should notify the Village AdminisContinued from page 7 trator at least three business days prior to the hearing, so tion reasonable in the hearing should that efforts may notify thetoVillage Adminisbe made facilitate such trator at leastand three business attendance participadays prior to the hearing, so tion. that may Allreasonable relevant efforts documents be made to facilitate may be inspected at thesuch ofattendance and participafice of the Village Admintion. istrator, 4 Atwater Plaz a, All Neck relevant documents Great Estates, New inspected at the ofY may ork,beduring regular busifice hours. of the Village Adminness istrator,May 4 Atwater Dated: 31, 2022 Plaz a, Great BYNeck Estates, ORDER OF THNew E Y ork, PLduring regular busiANNING BOARD ness hours. K athleen L . Santelli, Dated:Village May 31, 2022 Administrator ORDER OF3-GN TH E 6-29- BY 2022-1T -#23365 PL ANNING BOARD K athleen L . Santelli, Administrator L Village EGAL NOTICE 6-29- 2022-1T PLEASE T AK -#E23365 NO T 3-GN ICE that the Village of Great Neck Plaza will hold a public hearNOTICE ing onL EGAL W ednesday, July 6th, PLEASE T ICE 2022 at 7:00T AKPMEto NO consider that the Village of Great a Conditional U se PermitNeck for Plaza willMontalbano, hold a publictohearRebecca oping ona W Dance ednesday, Julyto 6th, erate Studio be 2022 at as 7:00 PM toMechanix consider known Dance a Conditional U se Permit for located at 1 Cuttermill Road, Rebecca Montalbano, to opGreat Neck, NY. T he meeting eratebea held Dance be will on Studio Z O O Mtoand known as DanceforMechanix the information Z O O M located at 1 Cuttermill Road, will be posted on the Village Great Neck, T he meeting website at NY. greatneckplaza. will be held on Z O O M and com.
LEGAL NOTICES
PLEASE T AK E for FU RTZ O HER the information O M NO ICEposted that all inwillT be on persons the Village terested matter will be website inatthisgreatneckplaza. given com. an opportunity to be heard at theT AK public PLEASE E FUmeeting. RT HER BYthat O RDER O F T HE NO T ICE all persons inBO ARD O Fmatter T RU STwill EES terested in this be VILLAGE F given an opportunity to O be GREAT NECK PLAZ heard at the public meeting.A Rosen,O Mayor BYT O edRDER F T HE BO ARDPatricia O F T RUO ’ STByrne, EES Clerk-T reasurer VILLAGE O F 6-29-GREAT 2022-1T NECK -#233662PLAZGN A T ed Rosen, Mayor Patricia O ’ Byrne, L EGAL Clerk-T NOTICE reasurer Invitation to Bidders 6-29- 2022-1T -#233662GN BOARD OF EDU CATION GreatL EGAL Neck NOTICE U nion FreeSchool District Invitation to Bidders PUBOARD BL IC OF NOTICE is hereby given for separate sealed bids EDU CATION for: Additions Alterations Great Neck & U nion Freeat EMDistrict Baker Elementary School School. will be isreceived PU BL ICBids NOTICE hereby by theforSchool District given separate sealed until bids Tuesday, August 2, 2022 at for: Additions & Alterations 10:30am. In-person dropat EM Baker Elementary off will Bids be onwill Tuesday, AuSchool. be received gust 2, School 2022 from 8 :30am by the District until to 10:30am at the Phipps Tuesday, August 2, 2022 at Administration Building 10:30am. In-person dropsecurity desk at Authe off will be onlocated Tuesday, main entrance, 345 8 L :30am akevgust 2, 2022 from ille Road, Great Neck, New to 10:30am at the Phipps Y Administration ork, 11020. Building Bids will desk be opened security locatedpublicly at the and aloud on mainread entrance, 345Tuesday, L akevAugust 2, Great 2022 atNeck, 11:00am ille Road, New prevailing time by way of Y ork, 11020. video conference via publicly https:/ / Bids will be opened
zoom.us/ ID and readj oin aloud( meeting on Tuesday, 879 August 0058 2,4134 2022and at passcode 11:00am 467 912) or time dial inby( 646-558 prevailing way -of 86video 56) . conference via https:/ / T zoom.us/ he Contract j oin Documents ( meeting may ID be at and the Office of 879 examined 0058 4134 passcode the BBSinArchitects, 46791Architect, 2) or dial ( 646-558L 8656) andscape Architects and . Engineers, 244 East T he ContractP.C., Documents may Main Street, Patchogue New be examined at the Office of Y the ork, ( 631-47 5-0349 ) . T he Architect, BBS Architects, Contract Documents may only L andscape Architects and be obtained thru office of Engineers, P.C.,the244 East REV, 330 Route 17 A Suite Main Street, Patchogue New # Y 2, Goshen, New Y ork) .109 T 24 ork, ( 631-47 5-0349 he ( Contract 8 7 7 -27 2-0216) beginning on Documents may only Wednesday, Junethe29 office , 2022. be obtained thru of Complete of Suite ConREV, 330digital Routesets 17 A tract Documents # 2, Goshen, Newshall Y orkbe 109 ob24 tained (with a free user ( 8 7 7 -27online 2-0216) beginning on account) as a June download for a Wednesday, 29 , 2022. non-refundable ForComplete digital fee sets of of Conty-Nine ( $ 49 .00) shall Dollars at tract Documents be obthe following websites: www. tained online (with a free user bbsproj ects.com or www.usinaccount) as a download for a glesspaper.com ‘ public non-refundableunder fee of Forproj ects’ . ( O $ ptionally, in lieu of ty-Nine 49 .00) Dollars at digital copies, hard copieswww. may the following websites: be obtained directly from REV bbsproj ects.com or www.usinupon a deposit of One‘ public H unglesspaper.com under dred ( $ 100.00) Dollars proj ects’ . O ptionally, in lieufor of each complete set. Checks for digital copies, hard copies may deposits shall be made be obtained directly from payREV able the GREAT upon to a deposit of OneNECK H unU dred NION FREE Dollars SCH OOLfor ( $ 100.00) DISTRICT and be uneach complete set.may Checks for certified. bidbeaddenda will deposits All shall made paybe to registered abletransmitted to the GREAT NECK plan holders via email and U NION FREE SCH OOL will be available the be above DISTRICT and at may unreferenced websites. Any bidcertified. All bid addenda will der uiring documents to be be req transmitted to registered
LEGAL NOTICES shipped shall via makeemail arrangeplan holders and ments the printer and pay will bewith available at the above for all packaging and Any shipping referenced websites. bidcosts. holders who to have der req Plan uiring documents be obtained hard make copies arrangeof the shipped shall bid documents will need to ments with the printer and pay make determination if hard for allthe packaging and shipping copies of theholders addenda arehave recosts. Plan who q obtained uired for hard their use, andofcoorcopies the dinate directly with printer bid documents willtheneed to for hard copies of addenda make the determination if hard to be issued. T here will be copies of the addenda are reno charge for registered plan q uired for their use, and coorholders to obtain dinate directly withhard the copies printer of bid copies addenda. he bid forthe hard of T addenda deposit for hard copies to be issued. T here willwill be be receiptplan of no returned charge forupon registered plans specifications, in holdersand to obtain hard copies good withinT he thirty of thecondition, bid addenda. bid days afterforbidhard date,copies except will for deposit the bidder, be lowest returnedresponsible upon receipt of whose will be forfeited plans check and specifications, in upon award ofwithin the contract. good the condition, thirty T days he Contract awarded after bidwill date,beexcept for to lowest responsible bidthethe lowest responsible bidder, der or the bidswill willbe be forfeited rej ected whose check within 45award days of of the thecontract. date of upon the opening. T he will School District T he Contract be awarded reserves the discretionary to the lowest responsibleright bidto to derwaive or theany bidsinformalities, will be rej ected accept or rej ect any alternawithin 45 days of the date of tives, or toT he rej ect all bids and opening. School District advertise fordiscretionary new bids if in its reserves the right opinion best interest of the to waivethe any informalities, to School willany thereby be accept District or rej ect alternapromoted. tives, or to rej ect all bids and T advertise here willforbenew a pre-bid bids if insite its meeting held T hursday, opinion the beston interest of the July 14 District at 10:00am. Meet be at School will thereby the main entrance of EM Bakpromoted. er Elementary T here will beSchool. a pre-bid site Bidder noton withdraw its meetingmay held T hursday,
New orders only. Does not include material costs. Cannot be combined with any other offer. Minimum purchase required. Other restrictions may apply. This is an advertisement placed on behalf of Erie Construction Mid-West, Inc (“Erie”). Offer terms and conditions may apply and the offer may not be available in your area. Offer expires June 30, 2022. If you call the number provided, you consent to being contacted by telephone, SMS text message, email, pre-recorded messages by Erie or its affiliates and service providers using automated technologies notwithstanding if you are on a DO NOT CALL list or register. Please review our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use on homeservicescompliance.com. All rights reserved.
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bid days Julyuntil 14 atforty-five 10:00am.(45) Meet at after the bid opening, except in the main entrance of EM Bakaccordance with General Muer Elementary School. nicipal 103(11).its Bidder Law maySection not withdraw Dated: June 24, 2022(45) days bid until forty-five By O rder of opening, except in after the bid T accordance he Board O with F Education General MuGreat U nion Free nicipalNeck Law Section 103(11). School District Dated: June 24, 2022 6-29 -2022-1T -# 23369 7- GN By O rder of T he Board O F Education Great Neck U nion Free L EGAL School DistrictNOTICE T HE AL -#RET U RN O F 6-29ANNU -2022-1T 23369 7- GN T he Page and O tto Marx Jr. Foundation for the calendar year ended 2021 is L EGALDecember NOTICE available its RET principal T HE ANNUat AL U RN Oof-F fice at O 1983 Marcus T he located Page and tto Marx Jr. Avenue, Suitefor137, SucFoundation theLake calendar cess, NY 11042 for inspection year ended December 2021 is during regular hours available at itsbusiness principal ofby citizenatwho req Marcus uests it ficeany located 1983 within 180 days137, hereof. Avenue, Suite LakePrinSuccipal theinspection Foundacess, Manager NY 11042offor tion is Allan Levy. during regular business hours -# 233756GNit by6-29 any-2022-1T citizen who req uests within 180 days hereof. PrinEGAL NOTICE cipal L Manager of the FoundaVILLevy. L AGE OF tion INC. is Allan RU SSEL L GARDENS 6-29 -2022-1T -# 233756- GN NOTICE OF BOARD OF TRU L STEES MEETING EGAL NOTICE PL EASE TAK L AGE E NOTICE INC. VIL OF the RUMonthly of the SSEL L Meeting GARDENS Board of T rustees of the OF Inc. NOTICE OF BOARD Village of Russell Gardens TRU STEES MEETING will be heldTAKviaEZ OOM on PL EASE NOTICE Thursday, 14, 2022 at the MonthlyJuly Meeting of the 8:Board 00 P.M. of T rustees of the Inc. PLVillage EASEofTAKRussell E FU RTH ER Gardens NOTICE thatvia the Z public will be held OOMcan on
LEGAL NOTICES
watch the July meeting through Thursday, 14, 2022 at the oom App. If any inter8: 00Z P.M. ested member ofFUtheRTHpublic PL EASE TAK E ER would likethat to the provide comNOTICE public can ments, they meeting can be emailed watch the through before the App. meeting to Danthe Z oom If any interielle estedPennise, member Village of the Clerk public Treasurer would like attodpennise@rusprovide comsellgardens.com. Comments ments, they can be emailed submitted will be addressed at before the meeting to Danthe meeting. Please check the ielle Pennise, Village Clerk Village website for updates. Treasurer at dpennise@rusINSTRU CTIONS Comments TO ACsellgardens.com. CESS VIRTU ALat submittedTHwillEbe addressed MEETING: You can access the meeting. Please check the the zoom meeting at https:/ / Village website for updates. us02web.zoomus/j/857544 INSTRU CTIONS TO AC70845?pwd=qk4RE0wfOCESS TH E VIRTU AL 9 MEETING: Q 9 rU aH67RN5gO You canrLkDaccess the zoom meeting at https:/ / us02web.zoomus/j/857544
fU70845?pwd=qk4RE0wfOv.1 and click on “ Join a Meeting” and enter Meeting 9 Q 9 rU aH67RN5gO rLkDID 857 and 5447click 0845onand Pass-a fU v.1 “ Join code 955898. can Meeting also call Meeting” andYou enter into the 5447 Z OOM meeting at 1 ID 857 0845 and Pass9 code 29 205 609 9 ,You whencan prompted, 955898. also call enter the Zmeeting and passinto the OOM ID meeting at 1 code provided above. O n the 9 29 205 609 9 , when prompted, evening of July 14, 2022, log enter the meeting ID and passinto meetingabove. at 7 :55O nP.M. codethe provided the You will of be July placed14, on2022, hold unevening log til thethe meeting begins. into meeting at 7 :55 P.M. Dated: You will6/24/2022, be placed on hold unBy Order of the til the meeting begins. Board Trustees Dated:of6/24/2022, Danielle By OrderPennise, of the Village Clerk Treasurer Board of Trustees 6-29- 2022-1T -#233760- GN Danielle Pennise, Village Clerk Treasurer 6-29- 2022-1T -#233760- GN
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Local Fifth-Graders Tour Bethpage Water District’s Treatment Facility
Bethpage Elementary School students learn about water, treatment and conservation
A
s part of its ongoing efforts to educate the public about all the processes underway to deliver the community with nothing but the highest quality drinking water, the Bethpage Water District (BWD) recently hosted all fifth-graders from the Bethpage Union Free School District for a tour of one of their treatment facilities. BWD Commissioners and Superintendent Mike Boufis guided the students through the various treatment components, provided a lesson about the water cycle and where their water comes from as well as several ways the students could help conserve water this summer. “The youth of our community represent the future of Bethpage and it was a joy to see these students so enthusiastic and engaged while learning about their drinking water,” BWD Commissioner Theresa Black said. “When you learn and see something profound at a young age, it carries with you for the rest of your life. Our hope by showing these students what it takes to deliver them high quality water each and every day is that
FARMINGDALE L EGAL NOTICE NO T ICE O F SALE SU PREME CO U RT CO U NT Y O F NASSAU U .S. BANK NAT IO NAL ASSO CIAT IO N AS T RU ST EE FO R T HE CERT IFICAT ESHO LDERS CIT IGRO U P MO RT GAGE LO AN T RU ST INC. ASSET -BACK ED PASST HRO U GH CERT IFICAT ES SERIES 2007-AHL3,, Plaintiff, AGAINST RO BERT NICO LO SI, MARIA NICO LO SI, et al. Defendant(s) Pursuant to a j udgment of foreclosure and sale duly entered on January 21, 2020. I, the undersigned Referee, will sell at public auction at the North Side Steps of the Nassau Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on July 12, 2022 at 2:30 PM premises known as 45 Fallwood Parkway, Farmingdale, NY 11735. Please take notice that this foreclosure auction shall be conducted in compliance with the Foreclosure Auction Rules for Nassau County and the CO VID 19 Health Emergency Rules, including proper
they will have a greater appreciation for this most precious natural resource well into adulthood.” Nearly 200 students from Kramer Lane Elementary, Charles Campagne Elementary and Central Boulevard Elementary toured the BWD’s Plant 6, which is one of the most sophisticated water treatment facilities on the East Coast. District staff taught the students about the different types of treatment methods used at the facility, such as Advanced Oxidation Processes (AOP), Granular-Activated Carbon (GAC) and Air Stripping Towers. Students were able to see all of this equipment firsthand, providing them with a better understanding of the hard work the district does every day to keep their water safe. “In total, we conducted seven tours of our facility, and each group was as excellent as the last,” said John Coumatos, chair of the BWD Board of Commissioners. “The activities of the BWD are best understood when witnessed up close, and we hope our students grow to become as passionate
use of masks and social distancing. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Farmingdale in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York. Section 48, Block 508 and Lot 22-24. Approximate amount of j udgment $810,300.00 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment. nde #009694/ 2012. Jeffrey T oback, Esq., Referee, Aldridge Pite, LLP - A ttorneys for Plaintiff 40 Marcus Drive, Suite 200, Melville, NY 11747 6-29- 22-15-8-20224T -#233277- NO B/ FARM L EGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SAL E SU PREME CO U RT CO U NT Y O F NASSAU , U .S. BANK NAT IO NAL ASSO CIAT IO N, NO T INDIVIDU ALLY BU T SO LELY AS T RU ST EE FO R BLU EW AT ER INVEST MENT T RU ST 2017-1, Plaintiff, vs. DO NALD E. FRO ST , ET AL., Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly
Bethpage Water District Superintendent Mike Boufis explained how the district’s advanced oxidation process (AOP) systems work and everything they do to keep 1,4-dioxane out of the community’s water. (Photos courtesy of the Bethpage Water District)
about our water as we are. We greatly appreciate the school district coordinating these events with us and look forward to doing many more tours in the future.” Students also came out of the tours with knowledge of where their water comes from
and what they can do to conserve it. All in attendance also got a firsthand look at several fossils and other materials the district found in the process of drilling new wells, which helped the students better understand the geography of the community as well as the region’s sole-source aquifer system. Students were able to walk away with ideas on how they can implement these practices into their daily lives. “These students represent the future of our community, and thus the future of Bethpage’s water,” BWD Commissioner Scott A. Greco said. “The preservation and protection of our precious water source grows more vital by the day, making it crucial that young people have a better relationship and understanding of all that is required to deliver them high-quality drinking water. Based on what we saw throughout the tours, we are greatly encouraged by what the younger generations here in Bethpage have to offer their community and we are confident that the future of our water is in good hands.” —Submitted by the Bethpage Water District
LEGAL NOTICES entered on January 7, 2020 and an O rder Appointing Successor Referee duly entered on May 16, 2022, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on July 7, 2022 at 2:30 p.m., premises known as 43 W est W alnut Street, Farmingdale, NY 11735. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 49, Block 8 and Lots 9, 10 & 11. Approximate amount of j udgment is $303,539.70 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment Index #6 04672/ 2018. T his foreclosure sale will be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. CO VID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale. Robert Litt, Esq., R eferee Friedman Vartolo LLP, 85
Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Firm File No. 181189- 7 6-29- 22-15-8-20224T -#233319- NO B/ FARM L EGAL NOTICE SU PREME CO U RT O F T HE ST AT E O F NEW YO RK CO U NT Y O F NASSAU
DEU T SCHE BANK NAT IO NAL T RU ST CO MPANY, AS T RU ST EE FO R NEW CENT U RY HO ME EQ U IT Y LO AN T RU ST , SERIES 2005-D, ASSET BACK ED PASS-T HRO U GH CERT IFICAT ES, V. MARK BAT T AGLIA, ET AL. NOTICE OF SAL E NO T ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated O ctober 29, 2018, and entered in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Nassau, wherein DEU T SCHE BANK NAT IO NAL T RU ST CO MPANY, AS T RU ST EE FO R NEW CENT U RY HO ME EQ U IT Y LO AN T RU ST , SERIES 2005-D, ASSET BACK ED PASST HRO U GH CERT IFICAT ES is the Plaintiff and MARK BAT T AGLIA, ET
AL. are the Defendant(s). I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction RAIN O R SHINE at the NASSAU CO U NT Y SU PREME CO U RT , NO RT H SIDE ST EPS, 100 SU PREME CO U RT DRIVE, MINEO LA, NY 11501, on July 12, 2022 at 2:30PM, premises known as 23 RADCLIFF LANE, FARMINGDALE, NY 11735: Section 0053, Block 00170, Lot 00026: AL L TH AT CERTAIN PL OT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF L AND, WITH TH E BU IL DINGS AND IMPROVEMENTS TH EREON ERECTED, SITU ATE, L Y ING AND BEING AT SOU TH FARMINGDAL E, TOWN OF OY STER BAY , COU NTY OF NASSAU AND STATE OF NEW Y ORK Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment Index # 612550/ 2017. John G. K ennedy, Esq. - Referee. Robertson, Anschutz, Schneid, Crane & Partners, PLLC 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310, W estbury, New York 11590, Attorneys for Plaintiff. All foreclosure sales will be conducted in accordance with Covid-19 guidelines including, but not limited to, social distancing and mask wearing. *L OCA-
TION OF SAL E SU BJECT TO CH ANGE DAY OF IN ACCORDANCE WITH COU RT/CL ERK DIRECTIVES. 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-22 4T # 233386 NO B/ FARM L EGAL NOTICE NO T ICE O F SALE SU PREME CO U RT CO U NT Y O F NASSAU W ells Fargo Bank, N.A., Plaintiff AGAINST Brandon Shauger a/ k/ a Brandon S. Shauger; et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated December 17, 2018 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on July 21, 2022 at 2:30PM, premises known as 18 Frank Avenue, Farmingdale, NY 11735. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at Farmingdale, in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau, State of New York, Section 48 Block 270 Lots 409, 410, 411 & 412. Approximate amount of
j udgment $589,881.91 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment Index# 010101/ 2015. T he auction will be conducted pursuant to the CO VID-19 Policies Concerning Public Auctions of Foreclosed Property established by the T enth Judicial District. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “ Rain or Shine.” Janine Lynam, Esq., R eferee LO GS Legal Group LLP f/ k/ a Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792 Dated: April 21, 2022 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-22 4T # 233450 NO B/ FARM L EGAL NOTICE NO T ICE O F SALE SU PREME CO U RT - CO U NT Y O F NASSAU DEU T SCHE BANK NAT IO NAL T RU ST CO MPANY AS T RU ST EE FO R INDYMAC INDX MO RT GAGE LO AN T RU ST 2006-AR15, MO RT GAGE PASS-T HRO U GH CERT IFICAT ES SERIES 2006-AR15, Plaintiff, Continued on page 14
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JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
Friends for Life staff (Photos courtesy of Friends for Life Seniors Foundation)
Seniors enjoying their day at the park
Friends for Life staff at the photo booth
Friends For Life Party In The Park
O
Friends for Life staff members Gabrielle and Marleni
n Thursday, June 16, Friends for Life Seniors Foundation hosted its second annual event at Marjorie Post Park. Nearly 300 local seniors from the Massapequa community gathered together for a fun-filled “Senior Day in the Park.” The day started with opening comments from foundation founder Amy Recco, followed by sponsor announcements. All attendees enjoyed a lavish barbecue lunch, catered by Massapequa’s famous Broadway Gourmet, that included burgers, chicken, hot dogs, fresh corn and lots of delicious sides. Dessert consisted of juicy watermelon and Dilly Bars provided by Dairy Queen. Resident MVP DJ Michael Veccia played music that had the seniors jumping out of their seats, dancing and having loads of fun. More than 21 raffle baskets were on display throughout the day, many donated by sponsors and local businesses. Twenty-one lucky winners took home prizes including a complimentary pair of hearing aids, an iPad, miscellaneous gift cards to local restaurants, salons, retail stores and one amazing lottery board. In addition, attendees took away a photo souvenir with fun pictures taken with their friends and loved ones. A big shout out to Mother Nature, who delivered a beautiful cool day after a strong morning storm. It was amazing to watch the smiling faces and people enjoying a wonderful day together. Friends for Life Seniors Foundation looks forward to the next extravaganza.
Seniors dancing to the live DJ
—Submitted by the Friends for Life Seniors Foundation
Some of the McKenna Senior Center Ladies
Friends for Life staff member Gabrielle gifting the winner of a raffle
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022
13
2022 Senior Day in the Park Thank you to our generous sponsors, volunteers, staff and everyone who made this year’s event a huge success! Broadway Gourmet Home Care Connect Masone Masonry NY Physical Therapy Oyster Bay Manor Assisted Living SCS Pooled Trust
PHOTO SPONSOR
The Hearing Connection
RAFFLE SPONSORS
Anton Media Group Anthony Napolitano Homes Carmella’s of Massapequa Denise & Co. Salon Rosa Blu Salon
SILVER SPONSORS
Coleman Financial Group Lynch Law Group
BRONZE SPONSORS
Brandywine Senior Living Contour Mortgage Jovia Mercato The Bristal Massapequa
DESSERT SPONSOR Dairy Queen
BEVERAGE SPONSOR Upfront Security
FRIENDS FOR LIFE SENIORS FOUNDATION Can’t wait to see you again next year!
233503 S
GOLD SPONSORS
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JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
LEGAL NOTICES Continued from page 11 AGAINST JAMES CENT AU RO , et al. Defendant(s) Pursuant to a j udgment of foreclosure and sale duly entered on May 2, 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 July 13, 2022 at 2:30 PM premises known as 21 8th Ave, Farmingdale, NY 11735. Please take notice that this foreclosure auction shall be conducted in compliance with the Foreclosure Auction Rules for Nassau County and the CO VID 19 Health Emergency Rules, including proper use of masks and social distancing. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Farmingdale, in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York. Section 48, Block 244 and Lot 83. Approximate amount of j udgment $527,228.09 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment. nde #000450/ 2016. Dominic Villoni, Esq., Referee, Aldridge Pite, LLP - Attorneys for Plaintiff - 40 Marcus Drive, Suite 200, Melville, NY 11747 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-22 4T # 233348 NO B/ FARM L EGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SAL E SU PREME CO U RT CO U NT Y O F NASSAU , U .S. BANK T RU ST NAT IO NAL ASSO CIAT IO N AS T RU ST EE O F T HE CABANA SERIES IV T RU ST , Plaintiff, vs. MICHAEL CSO RNAK , ET AL., Defendant(s). Pursuant to an O rder Confirmin Referee s Report and Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on O ctober 15, 2018 and an O rder Extending Sale Deadline and O ther Relief duly entered on January 21, 2022, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on July 18, 2022 at 2:30 p.m., premises known as 745-9 Conklin Street, U nit 9, Farmingdale, NY 11735. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 49, Block 88 and Lot 613 a/ k/ a 613U together with an undivided 4.02 percent interest in the Common Elements. Approximate amount of j udgment is $226,799.75 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #8858/ 2013. T his foreclosure sale will be held on the North Side Steps
LEGAL NOTICES
of the Courthouse, rain or shine. CO VID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale. Jane P. Shrenkel, Esq., Referee Friedman Vartolo LLP, 85 Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Firm File No. 201878-1 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-2022 4T # 233444 NO B/ FARM L EGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SAL E SU PREME CO U RT CO U NT Y O F NASSAU , U .S. BANK NAT IO NAL ASSO CIAT IO N, NO T IN IT S INDIVIDU AL CAPACIT Y BU T SO LELY AS T RU ST EE NRZ PASS-T HRO U GH T RU ST X , Plaintiff, vs. T HO MAS DELL AQ U ILA A/ K / A T HO MAS DELL AQ U ILA, JR. A/ K / A T HO MAS DELLAQ U ILA A/ K / A T HO MAS DELLAQ U ILA JR., ET AL., Defendant(s). Pursuant to an O rder Confirmin Referee Report and Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on April 11, 2019, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on July 14, 2022 at 2:30 p.m., premises known as 4 arfield Avenue, armin dale, NY 11735. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 48, Block 131 and Lots 97- 98. Approximate amount of j udgment is $343,622.15 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment nde 17-0002001. T his foreclosure sale will be held on the North Side Steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. CO VID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale. Mark Ricciardi, Esq., Referee Friedman Vartolo LLP, 85 Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff File No. 191 197- 10 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-22 4T # 233443 NO B/ FARM
scheduled a public meeting, which will take place in the Town H all Meeting Room, Audrey Avenue, Oyster Bay, New Y ork, on JU LY 7, 20, at 7: 00 P. M., to consider the following appeals: BY ORDER OF TH E Z ONING BOARD OF APPEAL S APPEAL NO. 22-276 FARMINGDAL E ROSAL IE K ESSL ER: Variance to construct a second kitchen in a one-family dwelling for use as a PARENT/CH IL D residence. S/ s/ o Bernard St., E/ o Elm Dr., a/ k/ a 16 Bernard Street, Farmingdale, NY JU NE 27, 2022 BY ORDER OF TH E Z ONING BOARD OF APPEAL S TOWN OF OY STER BAY , OY STER BAY , NEW Y ORK 6-29- 2022-1T -#233559NO B/ FARM
HICKSVILLE L EGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SAL E SU PREME CO U RT CO U NT Y O F NASSAU , W ELLS FARGO BANK , N.A., Plaintiff, vs. ELAINE DELARO SA, ET AL., Defendant(s).
Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on April 20, 2018 and an O rder to Appoint Substitute Referee duly entered on March 9, 2020, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on July 18, 2022 at 2:30 p.m., premises known as 24 Fulton Avenue, Hicksville, NY 11801. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 12, Block 313 and Lot 9. Approximate amount of j udgment is $677,234.25 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #4642- 14. T his foreclosure sale will be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. CO VID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale. Joan Agostino, Esq., R eferee L EGAL NOTICE Friedman Vartolo LLP, 85 PU BL IC H EARING Broad Street, Suite 501, CAL ENDAR New York, New York 10004, NOTICE OF PU BL IC Attorneys for Plaintiff. Firm MEETING BY TH E File No. 193762- 6 Z ONING BOARD OF 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-22 4T # APPEAL S 233438 NO B/ HIX Pursuant to the provisions of C hapter 246 , S ection 246L EGAL NOTICE 12 of the Code of the Town of Oyster Bay, notice is SU PREME CO U RT O F T HE hereby given that the Z on- ST AT E O F NEW YO RK ing Board of Appeals has CO U NT Y O F NASSAU
LEGAL NOTICES BET HPAGE FEDERAL CREDIT U NIO N, INDEX NO . 613215/ 2018 Plaintiff designates NASSAU as the place of trial situs of the real property SU PPL EMENTAL SU MMONS Mortgaged Premises: 37 W ASHINGT O N AVENU E NY 11801 Section: 12 Block: 320 L ot: 25 RO BERT H. MERCER, AS HEIR AND DIST RIBU T EE O F T HE EST AT E O F HENNE A. MERCER A/ K / A HENNIE MERCER A/ K / A HENNE MERCER; ALLAN MERCER, AS HEIR AND DIST RIBU T EE O F T HE EST AT E O F HENNE A. MERCER A/ K / A HENNIE MERCER A/ K / A HENNE MERCER; JEFFREY MERCER, AS HEIR AND DIST RIBU T EE O F T HE EST AT E O F HENNE A. MERCER A/ K / A HENNIE MERCER A/ K / A HENNE MERCER; JU LIET MERCER, AS HEIR AND DIST RIBU T EE O F T HE EST AT E O F HENNE A. MERCER A/ K / A HENNIE MERCER A/ K / A HENNE MERCER; U NK NO W N HEIRS AND DIST RIBU T EES O F T HE EST AT E O F HENNE A. MERCER A/ K / A HENNIE MERCER A/ K / A HENNE MERCER; any and all persons unknown to plaintiff, claiming, or who may claim to have an interest in, or eneral or specific lien upon the real property described in this action; such unknown persons being herein generally described and intended to be included in the following designation, namely: the wife, widow, husband, widower, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors, and assignees of such deceased, any and all persons deriving interest in or lien upon, or title to said real property by, through or under them, or either of them, and their respective wives, widows, husbands, widowers, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors and assigns, all of whom and whose names, except as stated, are unknown to plaintiff; U NIT ED ST AT ES O F AMERICA – INT ERNAL REVENU E SERVICE; NEW YO RK ST AT E DEPART MENT O F T AX AT IO N AND FINANCE; CO MMISSIO NER O F NASSAU CO U NT Y DEPART MENT O F SO CIAL SERVICES; K EYSPAN GAS EAST CO RP DBA NAT IO NAL GRID, “ JO HN DO E #1” through “ JO HN DO E #12,” the last twelve names bein fictitious and unknown to plaintiff, the persons or parties intended being the tenants, occupants, persons or corporations, if any, having or claiming an interest in or lien upon the premises, described in the complaint,
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Defendants. T o the above-named Defendants YO U ARE HEREBY SU MMO NED to answer the complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer, or, if the complaint is not served with this summons, to serve a notice of appearance on the Plaintiff s Attorney within 20 days after the service of this summons, exclusive of the day of service (or within 30 days after the service is complete if this summons is not personally delivered to you within the State of New York) in the event the U nited States of America is made a party defendant, the time to answer for the said U nited States of America shall not expire until (60) days after service of the Summons; and in case of your failure to appear or answer, j udgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. NOTICE OF NATU RE OF ACTION AND REL IEF SOU GH T TH E OBJECT of the above caption action is to foreclose a Mortgage to secure the sum of $150,000.00 and interest, recorded on December 29, 2003, at L iber M 25675 Page 769, of the Public Records of NASSAU County, New Y ork, covering premises known as 37 WASH INGTON AVENU E H ICK SVIL L E, NY 11801. The relief sought in the ithin action i a final j udgment directing the sale of the premises described above to satisfy the debt secured by the Mortgage described above. NASSAU County is designated as the place of trial because the real property affected by this action is located in said county. NOTICE Y OU ARE IN DANGER OF L OSING Y OU R H OME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company ho filed thi fo eclo e proceeding against you and filing the an e ith the court, a default j udgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to the mortgage company will not stop the foreclosure action. Y OU MU ST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF TH E ANSWER ON TH E ATTORNEY FOR TH E PL AINTIFF ( MORTGAGE COMPANY ) AND FIL ING TH E ANSWER WITH TH E COU RT. Dated: June 2, 2022 RO BERT SO N, ANSCHU T Z , SCHNEID, CRANE & PART NERS, PLLC Attorney for Plaintiff Matthew Rothstein, Esq. 900 M erchants Concourse -
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Suite 310 Hicksville Fire District W estbury, NY 11590 20 E. Marie St. 516-280-7675 Hicksville, NY 11801 7-13-6; 6-29- 22-2022-4T 6-29- 2022-1T -#233664#233547- NO B/ HIX NO B/ HIX L EGAL NOTICE PU BL IC H EARING CAL ENDAR NOTICE OF PU BL IC MEETING BY TH E Z ONING BOARD OF APPEAL S Pursuant to the provisions of C hapter 246 , S ection 24612 of the Code of the Town of Oyster Bay, notice is hereby given that the Z oning Board of Appeals has scheduled a public meeting, which will take place in the Town H all Meeting Room, Audrey Avenue, Oyster Bay, New Y ork, on JU LY 7, 20, at 7: 00 P. M., to consider the following appeals: BY ORDER OF TH E Z ONING BOARD OF APPEAL S APPEAL NO. 22-277 H ICK SVIL L E NAJIM FAQ IRI: ( A) Variance to allow existing 10.04 ft. by 12.25 ft. shed exceeding maximum building coverage than permitted by O rdinance. ( B) Amend pecific Plan as presented for Appeal No. 67-430 and granted by Decision of the Z oning Board of Appeals, dated O ctober 11, 1967. S/ s/ o Genesee St., 50 ft. W / o W est Ave., a/ k/ a 5A Genesee Street, Hicksville, NY JU NE 27, 2022 BY ORDER OF TH E Z ONING BOARD OF APPEAL S TOWN OF OY STER BAY , OY STER BAY , N EW Y ORK 6-29- 2022-1T -#233562NO B/ HIX L EGAL NOTICE NO T ICE is hereby given that the fiscal affairs of the HICK SVILLE FIRE DIST RICT for the period beginning January 1, 2021 and ending on December 31, 2021 have been examined by an independent public accountant; namely, Robert A. Johnson. CPA P.C., 75 Prospect Street, Suite 402, Huntington NY 11743 and that the report of external audit or management letter prepared in conj unction with the external audit by the independent public accountant has been filed in my office where it is available as a public record for inspection by all interested persons. Pursuant to Section 35 of the General Municipal Law, the governing board of the HICK SVILLE FIRE DIST RICT may in its discretion, prepare a written response to the report of external audit or management letter prepared in conj unction with the external audit by the independent public accountant and file any such response in my office as a public record for inspection by all interested persons not later than ninety (90) days after the presentation and filin of said report or management letter. Dated: June 22, 2022 Ana Stephens District Secretary
L EGAL NOTICE BOARD OF EDU CATION H ICK SVIL L E U NION FREE SCH OOL DISTRICT TOWN OF OY STER BAY H ICK SVIL L E, NEW Y ORK 11801- 4800 RFP #062922 - 2022/2023 DISTRICT PRINTING AND PU BL ICATIONS T he Board of Education of Hicksville U nion Free School District of the T own of O yster Bay, Nassau County, New York, in accordance with Section 103 of Article 5-A of the General Municipal Law, hereby invites the submission of proposals no later than 11 :00 AM on July 13, 2022: RFP #062922 - 2022/ 2023 DIST RICT PRINT ING AND PU BLICAT IO NS for use in the Schools of the District. Proposals will be received no later than 11 :00 AM on July 13, 2022 in the usiness Office at the icksville U .F.S.D. Administration Building on 200 Division Avenue, Hicksville, New York 11801, at which time and place all proposals will be publicly opened. pecifications and proposal forms may be obtained by contactin the Office of the Purchasing Agent at kmcmahon@hicksvillepublicschools.org. T he Board of Education reserves the right to rej ect all proposals and to award the contract to other than the lowest responder for any reason deemed in the best interest of the District. Any proposal submitted will be binding for O ne Hundred T wenty (120) days subseque nt to the date of RFP opening. BO ARD O F EDU CAT IO N HICK SVILLE U NIO N FREE SCHO O L DIST RICT T own of O yster Bay, Nassau County New York 6-29- 2022-1T -#233671NO B/ HIX
LEVITTOWN L EGAL NOTICE NO T ICE O F SALE SU PREME CO U RT CO U NT Y O F NASSAU JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., Plaintiff AGAINST Desiree Lobello; et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated December 5, 2019 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on July 18, 2022 at 2:30PM, premises known as 93 Cotton Lane, Levittown, NY 11756. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements Continued on page 15
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022
LEGAL NOTICES Continued from page 14 erected, situate, lying and being at Levittown, in the T own of Hempstead, County of Nassau, State of New York, Section 51 Block 207 Lot 37. Approximate amount of j udgment $263,188.38 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment Index# 604200/ 2017. T he auction will be conducted pursuant to the CO VID-19 Policies Concerning Public Auctions of Foreclosed Property established by the T enth udicial istrict. oreclosure Auctions will be held “ Rain or Shine.” ennifer Etten er, Esq., Referee LO GS Legal Group LLP f/ k/ a Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792 Dated: April 21, 2022 For sale information, please visit www.Auction.com or call (800) 280-2832 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-22 4T # 233451 O / E LEGAL NOTICE PREME O R O E A EO E YOR CO U NT Y O F NASSAU E AR O A , N.A., Plaintiff, v. A E M EY A/ /A A E . M EY A/ /A A E P E , AM P E ,E A , efendant. O E O A E ORE O RE P EA E A E O E T HAT n pursuance of a ud ment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the office of the ounty Clerk of Nassau County on anuary 30, 2018, and the Nunc Pro T unc O rder Amendin the ud ment of oreclosure and Sale duly entered in the Office of the assau County Clerk on March 02, 2022 , Oscar Prieto, Esq. the Referee named in said ud ment, will sell in one parcel at public auction on uly 19, 2022 at North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 at 2:30 PM, County of Nassau, State of New York, the premises described as follows: 28 Candle Ln Levittown, NY 11756 SBL No.: 51-144-11 ALL T HAT T RACT O R PAR E O A situate in T own of Hempstead, County of Nassau, State of New York T he premises are sold subj ect to the provisions of the filed jud ment, nde o. 005651/ 2013 in the amount of $ 486,689.52 plus interest and costs. T he aforementioned auction will be conducted in accordance with the Court System’ s CO VID-19 mitigation protocols and as such all persons must comply with social distancing, wearing masks and screening practices in
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effect at the time of this foreclosure sale. Foreclosure Auctions will be held Rain or Shine. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, then the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the foreclosure auction. Richard S. Mullen oods Oviatt ilman P Plaintiff’ s Attorney 500 Bausch & Lomb Place Rochester, NY 14604 T el.: 855-227-5072 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-22 4T 233345 O / E LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE PREME O R CO U NT Y O F NASSAU PMor an hase ank, ational Association, Plaintiff AGAINST Peter Rizzo a/ k/ a Peter A. Rizzo, r. An elina Rizzo et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a ud ment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated September 6, 2019 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, Y 11501 on uly 26, 2022 at 2:30PM, premises known as 3174 Esse Lane, Levittown, NY 11756. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at Hicksville, in the T own of Hempstead, County of Nassau, State of New York, Section 51 Block 265 Lot 1. Approximate amount of j udgment $254,658.41 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment Index# 612678/ 2018. T he auction will be conducted pursuant to the CO VID-19 Policies Concerning Public Auctions of Foreclosed Property established by the T enth udicial istrict. oreclosure Auctions will be held “ Rain or Shine.” eor e Esernio, Esq., Referee LO GS Legal Group LLP f/ k/ a Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792 Dated: April 12, 2022 7-13-6; 6-29- 22-2022-4T 233533- O / E LEGAL NOTICE O EO A E PREME O R . A SAU CO U NT Y. L& L ASO A E O CO RP., Pltf. vs. T IMO T HY R E, et al, efts. nde #610224/ 2021. Pursuant to j udgment of foreclosure and sale entered Feb. 22, 2022, I will sell at public auction on the North Side steps of the Nassau Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on August 3, 2022 at 2:30 p.m. prem. k/ a District 5, Section 45, Block 254, Lot 19. Sold subj ect to terms and conditions of filed jud ment and terms of sale. Foreclosure
auction will be held “ rain or shine.” If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, then the court appointed referee will cancel the sale. ANT HO NY A A A, Referee. E Y E Y, Attys. for Pltf., 12 T ulip Dr., Great Neck, NY. #9426 7-20-13-6; 6-29- 2022-4T 233574- O / E LEGAL NOTICE O E O A E PREME O R O Y O A A E E A A O A R CO MPANY, AS T RU ST EE, R OR RE ERE O ER O O EA MOR A E OA R 200 - , A E - A E ER A E , ER E 2006-6, Plaintiff AGAINST OR MA RO A/ /A LO RI PU PA MAU RO , MIAE . MA RO, et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a ud ment of oreclosure and ale duly entered anuary 27, 2020, 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 August 2, 2022 at 2:30PM, premises known as 84 ROPE A E, E O , Y 11756. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at Hicksville, T own of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 51, Block 207, Lot 8. Approximate amount of j udgment $621,533.02 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment Index #613177/ 2018. T he aforementioned auction will be conducted in accordance with the NASSAU County CO VID-19 mitigation protocols and as such all persons must comply with social distancing, wearing masks and screening practices in effect at the time of this foreclosure sale. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “ Rain or Shine” . Michael Alpert, Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC 1775 ehrle rive illiamsville, NY 14221 18-003524 71614 7-20-13-6; 6-29- 2022-4T 23357 - O / E
MASSAPEQUA LEGAL NOTICE PREME O R O E A EO E YOR CO U NT Y O F NASSAU NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE E E A AT IO NAL T RU ST C O MPANY, AS R EE, OR CARRINGT O N MOR A E OA R , ER E 2005- 5 A E - A E PA T HRO U GH C ER A E , Plaintiff, v.
LEGAL NOTICES OR A/ /A PA A PA A PA A
. PA A O OR O, E Y A. O A/ /A E Y O, E A , Defendant. P EA E A E O E T HAT n pursuance of a ud ment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the office of the ounty Clerk of Nassau County on December 22, 2021, I, Ralph . Madalena, Esq. the Referee named in said ud ment, will sell in one parcel at public auction on uly 21, 2022 at North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 at 2:30 PM, County of Nassau, State of New York, the premises described as follows: 42 Surrey Lane Oyster ay a/k/a Massapequa Park, NY 11762 SBL No.: 48-526-17 ALL T HAT T RACT O R PAR E O A situate in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau, State of New York. T he premises are sold subj ect to the provisions of the filed jud ment, nde o. 612008/ 2018 in the amount of $500,039.36 plus interest and costs. T he aforementioned auction will be conducted in accordance with the Court System’ s CO VID-19 mitigation protocols and as such all persons must comply with social distancing, wearing masks and screening practices in effect at the time of this foreclosure sale. Foreclosure Auctions will be held Rain or Shine. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, then the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the foreclosure auction. Richard S. Mullen oods Oviatt ilman P Plaintiff’ s Attorney 500 Bausch & Lomb Place Rochester, NY 14604 T el.: 855-227-5072 6-29- 22-15-8-20224T -#233214- NO B/ MASS
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names and whose place or places of residence are unknown and cannot after dilient inquiry be ascertained, distributees, heirs-at-law and next-of-kin of the said VINE O E , deceased, and if any of the said above distributees named specifically or as a class be dead, their legal representatives, their husbands or wives, if any, distributees and successors in interest whose names and/ or places of residence and post office addresses are unknown and cannot after diligent inquiry be ascertained. GREETINGS A PETITION having been duly filed by AR ARA CU RRY, residing at 29 Michel Ave, Farmingdale, NY 11735 YOU ARE HEREBY CITED TO SHOW CAUSE before the Surrogate’ s Court, Nassau County, at 262 O ld Country Road, Mineola, New York, on uly 13, 2022 at 9:30 o’clock in the fore noon of that day, why a decree should not be made in the estate of E O E , lately domiciled at 41 Harrison Ave, Massapequa Y 11758 admitting to probate a Will dated uly 15, 2009 a copy of which is attached, as the ill of E O E , deceased, relating to real and personal property, and directing that [ X ] Letters T estamentary to BARBARA CU RRY [ ] Letters of T rusteeship to _ [ ] Letters of Administration c.t.a. issue to _ _ [ ] Further relief sought (if any) _ O . MAR ARE . RE Y O . MAR ARE . RE Y, urro ate Dated, Attested and Sealed, May 26, 2022 ebra eller eimbach, Chief Clerk (Seal) T his Citation is served upon you as required by law. You are not obliged to appear in person. If you fail to appear, it will be assumed that you consent to the proceedings, LEGAL NOTICE unless you file written veriRRO A E O R - fied objections thereto. You NASSAU CO U NT Y have a right to have an attorPRO A E A O ney-at-law appear for you. E PEOP E O E Name of Attorney: A EO E YOR ilentz oldman pitzer By the Grace of God Address 14 all t, Y Y Free and Independent 10005 File No.2010-362990 212-264-7309 To, Barbara O ’ Neill, Brian kberry@wilentz.com O ’ Neill, Maureen Z errenner, 6-29- 22-15-8-2022-4T evin hite, on hite, Ei#233373- NO B/ MASS leen Neuendorf-heirs at law of Eileen O eill hite, ames O ’ Neill,Stephen Mark,MarLEGAL NOTICE aret Mark,Mary Elizabeth NOTICE OF SALE Dorrie,Stanley Mark- heir PREME O R O at law of ames O eill, Y O A A , E Elizabeth Mark, atherine E A A O A Mark,Christopher Mark, Pa- T RU ST CO MPANY, AS tricia O eill,Elizabeth oolR EE OR MORan aka Elizabeth immerA A EY A man,Robert O ’ Neill- heirs at CAPIT AL I INC. T RU ST law of ames O eill,Mary 2005- E , MOR A E O ’ Neill-heir at law of Robert PA - RO ER O ’ Neill, Christopher Steele, A E , ER E 2005- E , aren teele, iane euren- Plaintiff, vs. A A dorf- heirs at law of Ellen ER, E A ., efendant(s). O eill hite and any and Pursuant to an O rder Conall unknown persons whose firmin Referee Report and names or parts of whose ud ment of oreclosure and
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LEGAL NOTICES
Sale duly entered on February 15, 2022, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, Y on uly 18, 2022 at 2:30 p.m., premises known as 50 Elizabeth treet, Massapequa, Y 11758. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 53, Block 43 and Lots 1, 3, 5 and 7. Approximate amount of j udgment is $728,104.53 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment Index #6 11004/ 2017. T his foreclosure sale will be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. CO VID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale. Referee does not accept cash, only bank or certified checks made payable to ominic A. illoni, Esq., as Referee ominic A. illoni, Esq., Referee Friedman Vartolo LLP, 85 Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Firm File No. 203021-4 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-22 4T # 233439 N O B/ MASS LEGAL NOTICE PREME O R CO U NT Y O F NASSAU E E E RE , Plaintiff -against- ST ACY E AA A M RAOR O E E A E O ERA E E , et al Defendant(s). Pursuant to a ud ment of oreclosure and Sale dated September 27, 2019 and entered on September 30, 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 rive, Mineola, Y on uly 15, 2022 at 2:00 p.m. premises situate, lying and being at Plainedge, T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau, State of New York, bounded and described as follows: E at a point on the northerly side of Cheryl Road, where the same is intersected by the westerly end of a curve having a radius of 10 feet which curve connects the northerly side of Cheryl Road and the westerly side of Imogene Drive; being a plot 77 feet by 86.81 feet by 87.36 feet by 68.91 feet by 15.71 feet. Section: 52 Block: 389 L ot: 4 All bidders must wear a face mask/ shield at all times and social distancing must be observed by all bidders at all times. Bidders who do not comply with the face mask and/ or the social distancing mandate will be removed
from the auction. Said premises known as 18 ERY ROA , OR MA APE A, Y Approximate amount of lien $635,212.24 plus interest & costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment and T erms of Sale. Index Number 2060/ 2017. O A , E ., Referee eichner Ellman rause LLP Attorney(s) for Plaintiff 1211 Avenue of Americas, New York, NY 10036 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-22 4T # 233422 NO B/ MASS LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE PREME O R O Y O A A , PM PE A Y MOR A E / /A M PE A Y MOR A E , Plaintiff, vs. OREE RE Y A/ /A OREE . RE Y, E A ., efendant(s). Pursuant to a efault ud ment and ud ment of oreclosure and Sale duly entered on April 17, 2019, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court rive, Mineola, Y on uly 18, 2022 at 2:30 p.m., premises known as 236 Boundary Y Avenue, Massapequa, 11758. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 52, Block 16 and Lot 67. Approximate amount of j udgment is $292,714.04 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment Index # 612584/ 2018. T his foreclosure sale will be held on the North Side Steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. CO VID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale. ruce R. ekritsky, Esq., Referee Friedman Vartolo LLP, 85 Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Firm File No.: 200987- 1 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-22 4T # 233416 NO B/ MASS LEGAL NOTICE PREME O R O E A E O E YOR CO U NT Y O F NASSAU E ERA A O A MOR A E A O AO ( A E MAE ) A CO RPO RAT IO N O RGAE A E ER E A O E E A E O AMER A, V. MY E MA O, E A . NOTICE OF SALE Continued on page 16
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JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
LEGAL NOTICES Continued from page 15
LEGAL NOTICES
Myrtle Avenue, Glendale, NY. File No. LF- 138 #9382 7-13-6; 6-29- 22-2022-4T NO T ICE IS HEREBY #233488- NO B/ MASS GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated November 13, 2019, LEGAL NOTICE and entered in the Office of PUBLIC HEARING the Clerk of the County of CALENDAR Nassau, wherein FEDERAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC NAT IO NAL MO RT GAGE MEETING BY THE ASSO CIAT IO N (“ FANNIE ZONING BOARD OF MAE” ) A CO RPO RAT IO N APPEALS O RGANIZ ED AND EX IST ING U NDER T HE LAW S Pursuant to the provisions , S ection 246O F T HE U NIT ED ST AT ES of C hapter 246 O F AMERICA is the Plaintiff 12 of the Code of the Town of Oyster Bay, notice is and MYLES MACCHIO , ET AL. are the Defendant(s). I, hereby given that the Zonthe undersigned Referee will ing Board of Appeals has sell at public auction RAIN scheduled a public meeting, O R SHINE at the North which will take place in the Side Steps, 100 SU PREME Town Hall Meeting Room, CO U RT DRIVE, MINEO LA, Audrey Avenue, Oyster Bay, NY 11501, on July 19, 2022 New York, on JU LY 7, 20, at 2:30PM, premises known at 7:00 P. M., to consider the as 15 RO O SEVELT BLVD, following appeals: BY ORDER OF THE MASSAPEQ U A, NY 11758: ZONING BOARD OF Section 66, Block 144, Lot APPEALS 11: ALL T HAT CERT AIN APPEAL NOS. 20-353 & PLO T , PIECE O R PARCEL 16-462 – AME N D ME N T O F LAND, SIT U AT E, LY- MASSAPEQUA ING AND BEING AT AMI- MICHAEL PRATT: T YVILLE, T O W N O F O YS- Amend pecific Plans as preT ER BAY, CO U NT Y O F sented for Appeal No. 20-353 NASSAU AND ST AT E O F and granted by Decision of the Z oning Board of Appeals, NEW YO RK , Premises will be sold subj ect dated O ctober 15, 2020 and to provisions of filed ud - for Appeal No. 16-462 and ment Index # 612992/ 2017. granted by Decision of the Maria Sideris, Esq. - Ref- Z oning Board of Appeals, eree. Robertson, Anschutz, dated November 17, 2016, Schneid, Crane & Partners, to allow existing in-ground PLLC 900 Merchants Con- swimming pool with less rear course, Suite 310, W estbury, yard setback. New York 11590, Attorneys N/ s/ o Cabot Rd., 289.12 ft. for Plaintiff. All foreclosure E/ o Gloucester Rd., a/ k/ a 95 sales will be conducted in Cabot Road, Massapequa , accordance with Covid-19 NY guidelines including, but not APPEAL NO. 22-267 limited to, social distancing MASSAPEQUA and mask wearing. *L O CA- BRIGID & JOHN WALLS: (A) Variance to allow existing T IO N O F SALE SU BJECT T O CHANGE DAY O F IN shed having less side yard ACCO RDANCE W IT H setback than permitted by O rCO U RT / CLERK DIREC- dinance. (B) Amend pecific Plan as presented for Appeal T IVES. 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-22 4T # No. 66-30 and granted by De233459 N O B/ MASS cision of the Z oning Board of Appeals, dated January 20, 1966. N/ s/ o S. Merrick Rd., 180 LEGAL NOTICE W / o E. Shore Dr., a/ k/ a 83 S. NO T ICE O F SALE SU PREME CO U RT . NAS- Merrick Road, Massapequa , SAU CO U NT Y. HO F I NY GRANT O R T RU ST 5, Pltf. APPEAL NO. 22-268 vs. BAY SHO RE HO LD- MASSAPEQUA INGS GRO U P INC., et al, RACHEL HOLLYWOOD: Defts. Index# 617172/ 19. (A) Variance to allow existPursuant to j udgment of fore- ing roof over patio with gas closure and sale dated June 1, fireplace havin less front 2021 and order dated March yard setback and exceeding 17, 2022, I will sell at pub- ma imum ross oor area lic auction on the north side than permitted by O rdinance. steps of the Nassau County (B) Variance to allow existSupreme Court, 100 Su- ing pool equi pment having preme Court Drive, Mine- less front yard setback than ola, NY on July 21, 2022 at permitted by O rdinance. (C) 2:30 p.m. prem. k/ a 440 Jef- Variance to allow existing 6.6 ferson Street, Massapequa , ft. by 10.1 ft. shed having less NY a/ k/ a Section 53, Block side yard setback than permit1, Lot 232. Approx. amt. of ted by O rdinance. (D) Varij udgment is $252,246.52 plus ance to allow existing 7.6 ft. cost and interest. Sold sub- by 12.1 ft. shed having less j ect to terms and conditions rear yard setback than permitof filed jud ment and terms ted by O rdinance. (E) Variof sale. Foreclosure auction ance to allow existing roof will be held “ Rain or Shine.” over patio with as fireplace, If proper social distancing 6.6 ft. by 10.1 ft. shed and 7.6 cannot be maintained or there ft. by 12.1 ft. shed exceeding are other health or safety maximum building coverage concerns, then the Court Ap- than permitted by O rdinance. pointed Referee will cancel (F) Variance to allow existing the foreclosure auction. W IL- driveway having less side LIAM ELLERT O N, Referee. yard setback than permitted DEU T SCH & SCHNEIDER by O rdinance. (G) Variance LLP, Attys for Pltf., 79- 37 to allow existing 5 ft. high
LEGAL NOTICES
iron fence exceeding maximum height across front yard than permitted by O rdinance. N/ s/ o Fairview Rd., 120 ft. E/ o Cedar Shore Dr., a/ k/ a 131 Fairview Road, Massapequa , NY APPEAL NO. 22-269 MASSAPEQUA DANIEL SNOW: Variance to erect 5 ft. high fence exceeding maximum height across side/ front yard, front yard and maximum height within 30 ft. of intersection than permitted by O rdinance. SW / cor. of Robert Ave. & Plymouth Dr., a/ k/ a 11 Robert Avenue, Massapequ a, NY APPEAL NO. 22-270 MASSAPEQUA NEW YORK AMERICAN WATER: Special U se Permit to construct and maintain well building #6 on W est side of Sunrise Mall parking lot. N/ s/ o Sunrise Hwy., 125 ft. E/ o Eastgate Rd., a/ k/ a O ne Sunrise Mall, Massapequa , NY APPEAL NO. 22-271 MASSAPEQUA NEW YORK AMERICAN WATER: Special U se Permit to construct and maintain well building #7 on W est side of Sunrise Mall parking lot. N/ s/ o Sunrise Hwy., 125 ft. E/ o Eastgate Rd., a/ k/ a O ne Sunrise Mall, Massapequa , NY APPEAL NO. 22-272 MASSAPEQUA DANIEL SCHWARTZ: Variance to erect 6 ft. high fence exceeding maximum height than permitted by O rdinance. S/ s/ o Massachusetts Ave., E/ s/ o Ash Place, a/ k/ a 2 Massachusetts Ave., Massapequa , NY APPEAL NO. 22-273 MASSAPEQUA RESIDENTIAL EXPERIENCE IN ADULT LIVING a/k/a PROJECT REAL: Variance to install 24.33 ft. by 42 ft. temporary trailer having less side yard setback and rear yard setback than permitted by O rdinance. NE/ cor. of Camp Rd. & Joyce Ave, a/ k/ a 3 Camp Road, Massapequa , NY APPEAL NO. 22-274 NORTH MASSAPEQUA JANINE JANGEL: (A) Variance to allow existing 6 ft. high fence exceeding maximum height across side/ front yard than permitted by O rdinance. (B) Variance to allow existing air conditioning unit in front yard. SW / cor. of Amherst Dr. & Harriet Pl., a/ k/ a 45 Amherst Drive, North Massapequa , NY APPEAL NO. 22-275 NORTH MASSAPEQUA ELISE PERRY: Variance to allow existing pool equi pment having less front yard setback than permitted by O rdinance. S/ s/ o Richmond Ave., E/ s/ o N. Central Ave., a/ k/ a 218 N. Richmond Ave., North Massapequa , NY APPEAL NO. 22-203 MASSAPEQUA CEDAR CARMANS, LLC: Variance to install 15.9 ft. by 6.5 ft. illuminated wall sign (W est side of building) exceeding maximum height
than permitted by O rdinance. E/ s/ o Carmans Rd., 288 ft. N/ o Bernard St., a/ k/ a 97 Carmans Road, Massapequa , NY JUNE 27, 2022 BY ORDER OF THE ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS TOWN OF OYSTER BAY, OYSTER BAY, NEW YORK 6-29- 2022-1T -#233560NO B/ MASS LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SU PREME CO U RT CO U NT Y O F NASSAU , W ILMINGT O N T RU ST , NAT IO NAL ASSO CIAT IO N, NO T IN IT S INDIVIDU AL CAPACIT Y, BU T SO LELY IN IT S CAPACIT Y AS T RU ST EE O F MFRA T RU ST 20142, Plaintiff, vs. GW EN ANZ ELO NE, ET AL., Defendant(s). Pusuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on O ctober 30, 2019 and a Short Form O rder duly entered on May 4, 2022, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on August 1, 2022 at 2:30 p.m., premises known as 40 Greatwater Avenue, Massapequa , NY 11758. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 66, Block 78 and Lots 34, 35 & 36. Approximate amount of j udgment is $716,327.83 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment Index #1 0147/ 2013. T his foreclosure sale will be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. CO VID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale. John W illiam Steigler, Esq., Referee Friedman Vartolo LLP, 85 Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Firm File No. 171361-1 7-20-13-6; 6-29- 2022-4T #233583- NO B/ MASS LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SU PREME CO U RT CO U NT Y O F NASSAU , CIT IMO RT GAGE, INC., Plaintiff, vs. ANT HO NY CALLARO T A A/ K / A ANT HO NY J. CALLARO T A, ET AL., Defendant(s). Pursuant to an O rder Confirmin Referee s Report and Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on February 6, 2019, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public
LEGAL NOTICES auction at the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on August 1, 2022 at 2:30 p.m., premises known as 37 New Hampshire Avenue, Massapequa , NY 11758. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 52, Block 137 and Lots 7-10. Approximate amount of j udgment is $412,1 61.11 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment nde 003098/ 2017. Cash will not be accepted. T his foreclosure sale will be held on the North Side Steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. CO VID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale. Mark E. Goidell, Esq., Referee K nuckles, K omosinski & Manfro, LLP, 565 T axter Road, Suite 590, Elmsford, NY 10523, Attorneys for Plaintiff 7-20-13-6; 6-29- 2022-4T #233609- NO B/ MASS LEGAL NOTICE NO T ICE O F SALE SU PREME CO U RT . NASSAU CO U NT Y. L& L ASSO CIAT ES HO LDING CO RP., Pltf. vs. MICHAEL ANT HO NY ARANGO , et al, Defts. Index #607977/ 2020. Pursuant to j udgment of foreclosure and sale entered March 17, 2022, I will sell at public auction on the North Side steps of the Nassau Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on August 1, 2022 at 2:30 p.m. prem. k/ a District 23, Section 53, Block 145, Lot 25. Sold subj ect to terms and conditions of filed j udgment and terms of sale and the right of the U nited States of America to redeem within 120 days from the date of sale as provided by law. Foreclosure auction will be held “ rain or shine.” If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, then the court appointed referee will cancel the sale. JANE P. SHRENK EL, Referee. LEVY & LEVY, Attys. for Pltf., 12 T ulip Dr., Great Neck, NY. #9391 7-20-13-6; 6-29- 2022-4T #233571- O B/ MASS LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SU PREME CO U RT CO U NT Y O F NASSAU Nationstar Mortgage LLC d/ b/ a Champion Mortgage Company, Plaintiff AGAINST Archibaldo Victor a/ k/ a Archibaldo R. Victor, Jr.; et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated June 5, 2019 I, the un-
LEGAL NOTICES
dersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on August 4, 2022 at 2:30PM, premises known as 19 East Hamilton Avenue, Massapequa , NY 11758. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at Massapequa ; W est Amityville, in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau, State of New York, Section 66 Block 128 Lots 354 & 355. Approximate amount of j udgment $447,424.61 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment Index# 008164/ 2016. T he auction will be conducted pursuant to the CO VID-19 Policies Concerning Public Auctions of Foreclosed Property established by the T enth Judicial District. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “ Rain or Shine.” Dalia Z aza, Esq., R eferee LO GS Legal Group LLP f/ k/ a Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792 Dated: April 29, 2022 7-20-13-6; 6-29- 2022-4T #233639- NO B/ MASS LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SU PREME CO U RT CO U NT Y O F NASSAU PNC Bank, National Association, Plaintiff AGAINST T homas Busch a/ k/ a T homas A. Busch; et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated O ctober 10, 2017 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on August 3, 2022 at 2:30PM, premises known as 45 Park Lane Place, Massapequa , NY 11758. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at Massapequa , in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau, State of New York, Section 65 Block 97 Lots 382, 383, 384, & 548. Approximate amount of j udgment $435,512.99 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment nde 006777/ 2016. T he auction will be conducted pursuant to the CO VID-19 Policies Concerning Public Auctions of Foreclosed Property established by the T enth Judicial District. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “ Rain or Shine.” Geoffrey Prime, Esq., Referee LO GS Legal Group LLP f/ k/ a Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624
(877) 430-4792 Dated: May 17, 2022 7-20-13-6; 6-29- 2022-4T #233640- NO B/ MASS
OLD BETHPAGE LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING CALENDAR NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING BY THE ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS Pursuant to the provisions of C hapter 246 , S ection 24612 of the Code of the Town of Oyster Bay, notice is hereby given that the Zoning Board of Appeals has scheduled a public meeting, which will take place in the Town Hall Meeting Room, Audrey Avenue, Oyster Bay, New York, on JU LY 7, 20, at 7:00 P. M., to consider the following appeals: BY ORDER OF THE ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS APPEAL NO. 22-278 OLD BETHPAGE CLAIRE AND PETE GEORGATOS: (A) Variance to construct platform with steps to grade with less side yard setback than permitted by O rdinance. (B) Variance to allow existing shed having less side yard setback than permitted by O rdinance. (C) Variance to allow two (2) existing above ground propane tanks exceeding maximum distance from dwelling and with less side yard setback than permitted by O rdinance. (D) Variance to allow e istin pool filter and pool heater having less side yard setback than O rdinance. (E) Variance to construct 2 story rear addition, rear platform with steps to grade, 2 story side addition and side platform with steps to grade exceeding the maximum ross oor area permitted by O rdinance. SW / s/ o Robert Street, E/ o Park Drive, a/ k/ a 19 Robert Street, O ld Bethpage, NY APPEAL NO. 22-279 OLD BETHPAGE PATRICIA ERVEN: Variance to construct driveway with less side yard setback than permitted by O rdinance. S/ s/ o Farragut Road, W / o Dahill Road, a/ k/ a 12 Farragut Road, O ld Bethpage, NY APPEAL NO. 22-280 OLD BETHPAGE DAVID REIMER: (A) Variance to construct one story addition and portico with less front yard average setback than permitted by O rdinance; also encroachment of eaves and gutters. (B) Variance to allow existing rear raised patio having less side yard setback than permitted by O rdinance. (C) Variance to construct a second story addition exceeding the maximum permitted height and having less roof pitch than permitted by O rdinance. (D) Variance to allow existing driveway having less side yard setback than Continued on page 17
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022
LEGAL NOTICES Continued from page 16 O rdinance. S/ s/ o Prescott Place, W / o Pine Drive, a/ k/ a 37 Prescott Place, O ld Bethpage, NY JU NE 27, 2022 BY ORDER OF TH E Z ONING BOARD OF APPEAL S TOWN OF OY STER BAY , OY STER BAY , NEW Y ORK 6-29- 2022-1T -#233564NO B/ O LD BET H
PLAINVIEW L EGAL NOTICE NO T ICE O F SALE SU PREME CO U RT - CO U NT Y O F NASSAU ELIZ O N MAST ER PART ICIPAT IO N T RU ST I, U .S. BANK T RU ST NAT IO NAL ASSO CIAT IO N, AS O W NER T RU ST EE, Plaintiff, AGAINST DALJIT K BO PARAI, et al. Defendant(s) Pursuant to a j udgment of foreclosure and sale duly entered on December 9, 20 19. I, the undersigned Referee, will sell at public auction at the North Side Steps of the Nassau Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on July 13, 2022 at 2:30 PM premises known as 173 Morton Blvd, Plainview, NY 11803.
LEGAL NOTICES
Please take notice that this foreclosure auction shall be conducted in compliance with the Foreclosure Auction Rules for Nassau County, and the CO VID 19 Health Emergency Rules, including proper use of masks and social distancing. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Plainview, in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York. Section 47, Block 10 and Lot 8. Approximate amount of j udgment $572,755.67 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment. nde #2880/ 2017. Ralph Madalena, Esq., Referee, Aldridge Pite, LLP - Attorneys for Plaintiff - 40 Marcus Drive, Suite 200, Melville, NY 11747 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-22 4T # 233349 N O B/ PLV L EGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SAL E SU PREME CO U RT CO U NT Y O F NASSAU , W ILMINGT O N SAVINGS FU ND SO CIET Y, FSB, AS O W NER T RU ST EE O F T HE RESIDENT IAL CREDIT O PPO RT U NIT IES T RU ST V-E, Plaintiff, vs. MICHAEL LU X ENBERG, ET AL., De-
fendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale After Inque st and Appointment of Referee duly entered on August 23, 2018, and an O rder Extending Sale Deadline and O ther Relief duly entered on February 2, 2022, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on July 19, 2022 at 2:30 p.m., premises known as 31 K alda Lane, Plainview, NY 11803. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the T own of O yster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 12, Block 620 and Lot 8. Approximate amount of j udgment is $347,976.24 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed ud ment Index # 611837/ 2017. T his foreclosure sale will be held on the North Side Steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. CO VID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale. Charles Casolaro, Esq., Ref-
LEGAL NOTICES eree Friedman Vartolo LLP, 85 Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Firm File No. 193605 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-22 4T # 233449 N O B/ PLV L EGAL NOTICE PU BL IC H EARING CAL ENDAR NOTICE OF PU BL IC MEETING BY TH E Z ONING BOARD OF APPEAL S Pursuant to the provisions of C hapter 246 , S ection 24612 of the Code of the Town of Oyster Bay, notice is hereby given that the Z oning Board of Appeals has scheduled a public meeting, which will take place in the Town H all Meeting Room, Audrey Avenue, Oyster Bay, New Y ork, on JU LY 7, 20, at 7: 00 P. M., to consider the following appeals: BY ORDER OF TH E Z ONING BOARD OF APPEAL S APPEAL NO. 22-281 PL AINVIEW MICH AEL WIENER: ( A) Variance to allow existing shed having less side yard setback than permitted by O rdinance. ( B) Variance to allow existing pool heater having less side yard setback than permitted by O rdinance. E/ s/ o Colgate Drive, S/ o Bucknell Drive, a/ k/ a 54 Col-
LEGAL NOTICES
gate Drive, Plainview, NY APPEAL NO. 22-282 PL AINVIEW JOSEPH & AMANDA PU L IAFICO: ( A) Variance to construct rear roof over porch having less rear yard setback and exceeding the maximum permitted building covera e and ross oor area than permitted by O rdinance. ( B) Variance to allow existing 8 ft. high fence exceeding maximum height than permitted by O rdinance. W / s/ o Jacob Drive, SW / o Ruth Place, a/ k/ a 5 Jacob Drive, Plainview, NY APPEAL NO. 22-241 PL AINVIEW SEPH ARDIC SY NAGOGU E OF PL AINVIEW: ( A) Variance to allow existing place of worship having less lot size than permitted by O rdinance. ( B) Variance to propose little to no landscape buffer between residential and commercial zones along both side property lines. ( C) Variance for the reduction of off-street parking spaces. Reduction of spaces to 2 when 42 parking spaces are requi red. S/ s/ o Country Dr., 95.38 ft. W / o Manetto Hill Rd., a/ k/ a 51 Country Drive, Plainview, NY JU NE 27, 2022 BY ORDER OF TH E Z ONING BOARD OF APPEAL S TOWN OF OY STER BAY ,
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LEGAL NOTICES
OY STER BAY , NEW Y ORK 6-29- 2022-1T -#233563NO B/ PLV
Arts of Or filed with ecy of State of NY (SSNY) on 1/11/18. Office location assau County. SSNY designated as agent upon whom process may be served and shall mail copy of process against LLC PLAINVIEW/ to: 7014 13th Avenue, Suite OLD BETHPAGE 202, Brooklyn, NY 11228. Purpose: any lawful act. 7-6; 6-29- 22-15-8-1-2022L EGAL NOTICE 6T -#233232- NO B/ PLV-O LD Notice of formation of BET HPAGE W ICK ED CO O L LIFE LLC.
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JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
SPORTS
The Four-Sport Athletes Of MacArthur High School
JAMES ROWAN
Ryann Murphy plays four sports for MacArthur
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T
he four-sport letter winner in high school athletics has long been a thing of the past. Such a notion has been relegated to the pages of the classic Chip Hilton novels. The rise of travel sports and off-season training has led many young athletes to focus on just one or two sports. Perhaps the greatest high school athlete in Long Island history was Jim Brown. Brown lettered in five sports while playing at Manhasset High School in the 1950s. He went to play lacrosse and football at Syracuse University and had a Hall-of-Fame career as a member of the Cleveland Browns. While the four-sport athlete remained common through the 1960s, it eventually became a rarity. The legacy of athletes like Jim Brown lives on at MacArthur High School in Levittown. The Generals had three four-sport athletes this year. Senior Matthew Cassidy played soccer, basketball, lacrosse and spring track. Senior Ryann Murphy played volleyball, basketball, badminton and spring track. Junior Jack Mauer played soccer, football, winter track and spring track. Each of them also excelled in the classroom. “It’s a big commitment on the students physically, it takes a toll on their bodies,” said Matthew Bocksel, who coaches JV soccer and varsity track at MacArthur. “Proper rest and recovery is key to managing the extra workload. All three of these athletes excel in the classroom. Their discipline and time management in seasons that they dual-sport is a testament to their character.” Cassidy was an All Conference soccer player and won the Nassau County pole vault title. Murphy was named All County in both volleyball and badminton. In basketball, Cassidy and Murphy were named Defensive Player of the Year by the Levittown Tribune. Mauer was part of the 4x400 relay team that won the Nassau County
Jack Mauer running for the Generals. (Photos courtesy of MacArthur High School)
title in winter and spring track. MacArthur boys soccer coach Andrew Atkins, whose team went unbeaten in the regular season and won the Conference title, labeled Mauer and Cassidy “high-character individuals.” In describing Cassidy, Atkins said, “I believe he is able to excel in many different sports because he is a highly intellectual player. He always seems to be in the ‘right’ spot and is willing to sacrifice his body to make the play—in every sport he plays.” Of Mauer, Atkins said, “Softspoken off the field but a beast on it. A selfless, team-first athlete, he played out of his normal position this year to benefit the team in soccer.” MacArthur girls basketball coach Dave Radtke had this to say about Murphy: “She was one of my favorite players ever to coach. She was the most humble athlete that I have ever come across. Ryann cared more about her team’s success than her own personal achievements. The definition of the perfect teammate.” Bocksel added this about Murphy: “She’s fast, can jump out of the gym and has the eye-hand coordination that translates very well to the volleyball and basketball courts. She is ultra-competitive and driven to win. She would rather score zero points and have her team win the game than score 30 points and have the team lose.” These athletes juggled multiple practices, games, as well as academics and jobs. Perhaps the greatest talent each of them
possessed was that of time management. “Depending on the season, the average night involves coming home around six or seven p.m.,” Mauer said. “Once I get home, I shower and eat, then start my school work, usually finishing around 10 p.m. However, on days of winter track meets, I would get home on average at 11 and finish my homework around 1 a.m.” “It is very difficult to accommodate the demands of being a part of multiple sports,” Murphy said. “It can be a struggle to make it to practices, games and all the other things that come with being a member of a team. For me, this past spring was extremely stressful to manage two sports along with starting a new job during this time.” If juggling four sports wasn’t enough of a challenge, academics is also a huge part of this group’s success. Each one of them are members of the National Honor Society and maintained an A average. The MacArthur coaches viewed each of these students as teamfirst athletes, which explains why they dealt with some guilt when dual-sporting. “It was very hard to balance my schedule,” Murphy said. “At times it felt like I was letting my teammates and coaches down because I was either missing practices for work or the other sport, but they were all very understanding.” Added Cassidy “Whenever you are not with your team, there is some guilt. But I was lucky that
MacArthur’s Matt Cassidy on the soccer field all my coaches and teammates understood what I was doing and supported me. I am very thankful for that.” Many of the MacArthur’s teams made the postseason. In the fall, Mauer went to the playoffs in both soccer and football. Murphy’s volleyball and basketball teams won Conference titles. The longer seasons led to less recovery time between sports. So how does an athlete quickly transition from one sport to another? “Transitioning from volleyball to basketball is definitely a little hard just because it is two very different games,” Murphy said. “Going from being on the same side of the court as your whole team and not having much contact with other girls to then playing an aggressive sport like basketball was somewhat hard.” Added Mauer, “There was no rest in between the end of football and soccer and the beginning of track,” he said. “Track shape is very different from football-soccer shape, as track running is more focused on distance and speed while football-soccer is short burst running. The change from the fall sports to winter track usually leaves my legs very sore for about a week.” Cassidy described transitioning from one sport to two sports as “a shock to the system.” “I found it most difficult to pull this off at the beginning of the spring season when I had to adjust to a very long schedule very fast,” Cassidy said. “It took me a while to figure out how to go to all
my practices and still be able to complete my homework without having to go to bed extremely late.” How is this for a busy week? On May 17, Cassidy played in MacArthur’s 18-7 lacrosse win over Herricks in the quarterfinals. The next day, he won the Nassau County pole-vaulting title with a personal best jump of 12 feet. On Friday, May 21, the MacArthur lacrosse team played at Hofstra University, losing an overtime heartbreaker to Calhoun, 10-9 in the Nassau County semifinals. “It was a really memorable week, filled with both highs and lows,” Cassidy said. “When we lost in overtime at Hofstra at the end of the week, I couldn’t believe it. We had put in so much hard work during the lacrosse season, it was devastating for it to end that way.” One thing each of the athletes agree upon is that, without the understanding of their coaches none of this would be possible. Bocksel agreed, saying that all the MacArthur coaches communicate well with each other and work together to balance the workload. “I couldn’t be more grateful for all my coaches and for my parents who have been so supportive of me throughout my athletic career,” Murphy said. “My coaches have been supportive through all these seasons. They helped me gain so much confidence in myself and shaped me in ways I could never imagine.” —James Rowan is an Anton Media Group contributor.
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