Glen Cove-Oyster Bay Record Pilot 7/6/22 edition is published weekly by Anton Media Group.

Page 1

• 1

I’m here to help life go right™ by being there to help protect you, with coverage from the #1 car insurer in the country. CALL ME TODAY. Bob Sztorc, Agent 62 School St., Glen Cove • 516-676-4141 bob.sztorc.btyz@statefarm.com Se Habla Español • statefarm.com®

Also Serving Glen Head, Glenwood Landing, Muttontown, Sea Cliff, Oyster Bay Cove, East Norwich, Bayville, Locust Valley Vol. 50, No. 36

July 6 - 12, 2022

The Next Move

Home Office, Bloomington, Illinois 61710

$1.00

www.GlenCoveRecordPilot.com elliman.com

Sea Cliff Office 263 Sea Cliff Avenue | 516.669.3600

Is Yours

© 2022 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY.

233707 S

I brake for auto insurance.

An Anton Media Group Publication

110 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON STATION, NEW YORK 11746. 631.549.7401.

Tour the Nassau Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center of Nassau County (see page 3)

LONG ISLAND WEEKLY

GROU P PUBLI CATIO N

LIIW W

AN ANTO N MEDIA

Journey Into The Past And Promise To Make A Better Tomorrow

LongIslandWeekly.com JULY 6 – 12, 2022

231907 S

LONG ISLAND WEEKLY

INSIDE

L LI IW IW LIW

LONG ISLAND WEEEKLY

SHERYL CROW’S WINDING ROAD

Singer-songwriter shares experiences in new documentary

SHERYL CROW’S WINDING ROAD

Town of Oyster Bay News: Town Board awards students during meeting (See page 4)

Presentation made on funding of East Norwich Fire Company (See page 4) Glen Cove News: Glen Cove Senior Center celebrates Flag Day, Father’s Day (See page 7) FREE SUBSCRIPTION OFFER See inside for details! Glen Cove/Oyster Bay Record Pilot (USPS 219-560)

HMTC is located in the Welwyn Preserve

(Photo by Jennifer Corr)

Embrace every day because every day counts

Life is a Journey INC.

FUNERAL DIRECTORS SINCE 1892

PRE- PLAN ROCKVILLE CENTRE, L.I. 516.764.9400

WOODBURY, L.I. 516.921.5757

BOCA RATON, FLORIDA 1.800.992.9262

Steven Kanowitz, Director • www.guttermansinc.com

233744 M

Postmaster: Send address changes to Long Island Community Newspapers, P.O. Box 1578, Mineola, N.Y. 11501. Entered as periodicals postage paid at the Post Office at Mineola, N.Y. and additional mailing offices under the Act of Congress. Published 51 weeks with a double issue the last week of the year by Long Island Community Newspapers, 132 East Second St., Mineola, N.Y. 11501 (P.O. Box 1578). Phone: 516-747-8282. Price per copy is $1.00. Annual subscription rate is $26 in Nassau County.


• 2

2

JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP

EAST ZONE

S U M M E RT I M E I N G A R D E N C I T Y

Legendary Sunday Brunch by Chef David Burke! The culinary feast ranges from traditional favorites like made to order omelets and carved meats to more eclectic fare, including a raw bar with lobster, fresh sushi, and a poke bowl station. A sumptuous display of fresh fruits, salads, charcuterie and cheeses, artisanal breads and house made pastries. For the final finish, a decadent dessert station with chocolate fountain. Includes: Mimosas, Bloody Mary’s, Coffee or Tea Reservations Required The Private Dining Room at Red Salt Room, the perfect space for a private brunch to celebrate any occasion!!! (36ppl max)

Speciality Summer Cocktails & Bites on The Patio Bar Weekday Specials in King Bar

45 7th Street, Garden City • gardencityhotel.com/dining • 516.877.9385

233789 S


• 3

ANTON MEDIA GROUP • JULY 6 - 12, 2022

3

TOP STORY

Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center Provides Somber Reminder T

he Mission of the Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center of Nassau County, located at 100 Crescent Beach Rd. in Glen Cove, is to teach the history of the Holocaust and its lessons through education and community outreach. The faculty at HMTC teach about the dangers of antisemitism, racism, bullying and all manifestations of intolerance, promoting resistance to prejudice and advocate respect for every human being. The museum presents a detailed and comprehensive chronicle of the Holocaust in six galleries, using multimedia displays, photographs, artifacts, archival footage, and testimonies from local survivors and liberators. It also looks at genocides and acts of intolerance that have happened in the years since 1945, asking visitors to think about the actions an individual can take to promote resistance to prejudice and to prevent the spread of hate. Unlike any other museum, the 3,300-square foot exhibition links this history to Nassau County, Long Island and the communities visitors live in. Artifacts from individuals who moved to Long Island factor prominently in the galleries. Similarly, firsthand accounts from survivors and liberators from Long Island can be heard throughout the exhibition. This focus on local connections emphasizes the individual stories of tragedy and heroism. Galleries focus on topics such as: Portraits of European Jews Before World War Two, The Rise of the Nazi Party, Lebensraum: The Occupation of Europe, The Nazi Camp System: Slavery and Murder, Death Marches: The Last Chapter of Nazism, Liberators: From Warriors to Caregivers, Displaced Person Camps, Justice after Genocide, Global and Local Intolerance Since 1945, Ordinary Heroes Standing Up to Intolerance and Perpetrators, Bystanders and Upstanders. The Children’s Memorial Garden at the Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center of Nassau County is the first garden of its kind on public grounds in New York State. The gar-

This is part one of a six part series covering Glen Cove and Oyster Bay’s museums.

Stanchions with quotes related to the Holocaust were also added to give visitors another opportunity for reflection and contemplation while in the garden. This one talks about the importance of children, and is placed right in front of a redwood tree planted in honor of children. In 1998 Jolanta Zamecka was asked to create a garden dedicated to the 1.5 million Jewish children murdered in the Holocaust and to all children throughout the world who died during World War Two. In 2019, Jolanta Zamecka and Bob Praver continued garden revitalization. A project to create an amphitheater for outdoor workshops and other events was completed in 2020. (Photos by Jennifer Corr)

The inside exhibit takes visitors through the timeline of the Holocaust, from before, during and after.

The exhibit ends with a question, ‘will you be an upstander or a bystander?’ den memorializes the 1.5 million Jewish children murdered during the Holocaust and to all children who died during World War II. After visiting HMTC’s museum or attending a program, the garden is a quiet place for contemplation and meditation. Holocaust survivors with their children and extended families have a beautifully serene space in which to remember and honor their loved ones. Garden tours are available April 15 through Nov. 15, weather per-

mitting, by appointment only. To book a garden tour contact Emily Wortmann at emilywortmann@ hmtcli.org or call 516-571-8040. Tickets for HMTC are $10 for adults, $5 for seniors 65-years-old and up, $5 for students. Groups of up to 15 can book a guided tour for $100. Visit www.hmtcli.org for more information. —Submitted by the Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center of Nassau County

HMTC also reflects on upstanders, those who stand up for what’s right, such as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.


• 4

4

JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP

Town Of Oyster Bay Bestows Accolades To Local Youth JENNIFER CORR jcorr@antonmediagroup.com

A

t the June 28 Town of Oyster Bay Board Meeting, the Town Board distributed awards to young members of the community, including students from Locust Valley and Syosset schools. “Folks we have some very special presentations to give out,” Town of Oyster Bay Supervisor Joseph Saladino said. The town board started with recognizing the fifth-grade winners of a poster contest that stemmed from last month’s Bike Safety Awareness month. Saladino said the town board has received dozens of entries from students across the town who used their artistic skills to promote bike safety. And while making a poster may be fun, the subject is very serious and important as bike accidents can result in injury, or even death, Saladino added. “These wonderful students took on leadership and taught the other students,” Saladino said. “They did such a great job with this endeavor.” Allison Lee of Syosset, Elisa Tan of Locust Valley and Veer Jaggi of Hicksville

were the winners. The town board then moved to honor Sabrino Guo of Oyster Bay Cove, who will be a senior at Syosset High School this fall. “Sabrina is the CEO and founder of Girl Pride International,” Saladino said. “Girl Pride International is a global girls empowerment organization which serves disadvantaged girls with access to resources like an education, access to scholarships, mentoring and counseling, ambassadorships, workshops and other forms of empowerment which is obviously very, very important. Sabrina’s writing, activism and humanitarian journey has been profiled by media nationwide and recognized by the White House.” Guo is also an award-winning journalist, poet and a model. “Sabrina you are an incredible person and we are in awe of your amazing legacy and accomplishments,” Saladino said. “I can’t wait to see what the future holds for you and how your talents will be making a difference for us, the residents of the Town of Oyster Bay.” Top: Allison Lee of Syosset, Elisa Tan of Locust Valley and Veer Jaggi of Hicksville won the bike safety poster contest from the Town of Oyster Bay. (Photos courtesy Town of Oyster Bay)

Bottom: Activist, writer and model Sabrina Guo, a rising senior at Syosset High School, received a citation at the June 28 Town of Oyster Bay Board meeting.

Town Of Oyster Bay Holds Hearing On 2022 East Norwich Volunteer Fire Company Agreement JENNIFER CORR jcorr@antonmediagroup.com

Deputy Town Attorney Elizabeth Faughnan stood in front of the town board at the June 28 Town Of Oyster Bay Board Meeting to discuss a proposed contract with the East Norwich Fire Company No.1. “We’re here today because of Town Law Section 184 which requires, if there is not a fire district with elected fire commissioners, it’s the town’s responsibility to provide for fire protection by entering into a contract with a fire company,” Faughnan said. “Here the fire company is East Norwich Fire Company No.1. We’ve had a contract with them for many years.” Four municipalities, Faughnan said, bear the cost of the annual budget for this fire company; Town of Oyster Bay, the Village of Brookville, the Village of Muttontown and the Village of Upper Brookville. “Recently, the villages re-examined the proportionate shares that each of the

Deputy Town Attorney Elizabeth Faughnan discussed funding of East Norwich Fire Co. 1 at the June 28 Town of Oyster Bay Board meeting. (Screenshot by Jennifer Corr) municipalities should pay,” Faughnan said. “And while it may appear that the Town of Oyster Bay’s portion, the cost of the contract, has increased, it’s only as the result of the fact that our proportion as against the other municipalities has increased. As a result, I come to you today requesting

approval for a contract in the total amount not to exceed $388,916.” According to the 2022 preliminary budget found on the town’s website, the town was allocating $291,105 to East Norwich Fire Protection. The cost of the contract is not paid by

the town residents at large, Faughnan said, rather it is paid by residents who live in the districts East Norwich Fire Company No.1 serves. The East Norwich Fire Department is a volunteer fire company comprised of more than 75 active members. The company is located at 900 Oyster Bay Rd. in East Norwich. On May 11, 1912, the East Norwich Volunteer Fire Company No 1 inc. was formally chartered under the membership corporation act of the State of New York. The East Norwich Fire Company is in the Fifth Battalion and covers approximately 10.2 square miles, which makes it the fifth largest Fire Protection District in Nassau County. Their mission is to provide high quality fire protection and EMS services to those in the fire district, to respond as quickly and efficiently as possible to all calls for assistance, to constantly train and educate ourselves in our chosen field and to help educate the community in protecting itself. —Additional information provided by the East Norwich Fire Company No.1


• 5

ANTON MEDIA GROUP • JULY 6 - 12, 2022

KO / White logo below this line

NNN

5

NN

N THIS MENTIDOENJOY A AD AN LIMENTARY* COMPLE OF WINE BOTT NNN

R E S TA U R A N T

NN

BAR

G R E AT N E C K ’ S N E W E S T R E S TA U R A N T O F F E R S A L F R E S C O D I N I N G

KO / White logo below this line

A Fusion of Italian & Asian Cuisine

OUR PATIO IS OPEN AIR AND INVITING!

Saturday and Sunday 7am - 11pm | Tuesday - Friday 4pm - 10pm | Friday - 12pm - 11pm CALL US TO MAKE RESERVATIONS TODAY AT 516 -773 -2000 www.marcopolosrestaurant.com | 30 Cutter Mill Road | Great Neck, New York 11021 *PROMOTION VALID FOR DINE IN ONLY WITH PURCHASE OF TWO ENTREES. ONE REDEMPTION PER GUEST CHECK. OFFER EXPIRES JULY 31, 2022.

Now Available 233798 S IGN-MP-FP-Anton-2022.indd 1

6/9/22 3:55 PM


• 6

6

JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP

COMMUNITY CALENDAR To place an item in this space, send information two weeks before the event to editors@antonmediagroup.com.

THURSDAY, JULY 7 Ice Cream Workshop Celebrate National Strawberry Sundae Day at Locust Valley Public Library, 170 Buckram Rd. in Locust Valley. Join Chef of d’Future by making homemade vanilla ice cream. Grades K-5 from 4 to 5 p.m. Grades 6-12 from 6 to 7 p.m. Visit www.locustvalleylibrary.org for required registration.

rock n’ roll band, in downtown Glen Cove at 7 p.m. in Village Square, the intersection of Bridge and School Street. The Downtown Sounds concert series is free.

SATURDAY, JULY 9 Dance in the Field Bring friends and family to join in community farming and enjoy an outdoor creative movement class at Orkestai Farm, 1395 Planting Fields in Oyster Bay, from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. Class led by a dancer from Moving On!, a Live Arts Company. What Shells Tell As part of the Garvies Point Muesum and Preserve, 50 Barry Dr. in Glen Cove, discover the varied life of the rocky shoreline including a wide assortment of seashells

Learn to make homemade vanilla ice cream at the Locust Valley Library.

(Photo courtesy Joy via Wikimedia Commons)

FRIDAY, JULY 8 Downtown Sounds Dance along to the steady bass and drum grooves of The Rustlers, a live country and

Learn about different shells at the Garvies Point Museum and Preserve. (Photo courtesy liz west via Wikimedia Commons)

ONGOING EVENTS Oyster Bay Cruise Night A series of events from the Oyster BayEast Norwich Chamber of Commerce that began May 31, every Tuesday evening during the summer on the streets of Oyster Bay there will be a show with all types of cars. Long Island’s most popular car show will take place every Tuesday though Sept. 6. Start time is 5:45 p.m. and the show will go on until dark. Car show fee is $5 per car. There will also be a family fun zone with chalk zones, various games and giveaways. Deep Roots Farmers Market Stop by Deep Roots Farmers Market, happening every Saturday through Nov. 19 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., at 100 Garvies Point Rd., to enjoy local artisans, foods and crafts. There will be 40 vendors every week offering locally grown produce, fresh fish, meat, dairy, eggs, honey, breads, baked goods, pastas, prepared foods and much more. There will also be weekly guest art and craft vendors, with live music. For more information, call 516318-5487.

July/August Yoga with Morgan Rose Join Morgan Rose on Friday mornings for nine-sessions of all-level yoga. The 8:15 a.m. class is in person only and the 9:15 a.m. class can be done virtually. Please have a mat, blanket and two blocks. The fee is $45, payable upon registration by check only to the Bayville Free Library, 34 School St in Bayville. For more information, call 516-628-2765. Cadillac’s Cruise The Cove The Glen Cove Mayor’s Office and the Cadillac Guys Car Club of Long Island, invite all to spend the evening at 1 Bridge St. in Downtown Glen Cove with some of the most beautiful Classic Cadillacs, while dancing under the stars to some great music. Attendees are encouraged to dine at one of the many local restaurants. Free admission for all. There will be events on July 12, Aug. 9 and Sept. 13.

CORRECTION: In the June 29 issue of the Glen Cove Oyster Bay Record Pilot, the calender listing for the “LGBTQ Crash Course & Workshop Pride Training” event incorrectly used the wrong pronouns for Glory Mayreis. The correct pronouns are they/them/theirs. The Glen Cove Oyster Bay Record Pilot apologizes for this mistake.

COSMETIC SURGERY TODAY

SAFE

CLEAN

while learning about the environment. This event is included with museum admission and will run from 11 a.m. to noon and 2 to 3 p.m. For more information, call 516-5718010.

STEPHEN T. GREENBERG, M.D., F.A.C.S. DOMINATES NY PLASTIC SURGERY

IMPROVE YOUR LOOK AND BE READY FOR THE BEACH THIS SUMMER!

Expert Wash-Dry-Fold Service

NEW WASHERS & DRYERS ARE HERE! Quicker Wash & Dry Means More Time for Summer Fun!

AIR CONDITIONED

• No more quarters - machines start with a card swipe (Cards Never Expire) • Washing machine removes more water from clothes so less drying time • Clothes come out of dryer softer & may actually last longer (ASK US WHY?) • Don’t forget our expert drop-off service clothes are clean, fresh & beautifully folded • Friendly attendants • Free Children’s books Nick’s Laundromat is a proud supporter of St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital and Glen Cove Special Olympics (in CVS-711 Shopping Center)

516-656-0573 • Free Parking

229184 S

214 Glen Cove Avenue • Glen Cove

plan specifically designed to target the areas of the body most affected by pregnancy and childbirth. Combining a tummy tuck, liposuction, breast lift or breast augmentation, fat transfer or cellulite reduction treatment significantly transforms your look. Another avenue to consider is the new noninvasive body sculpting treatment, Emsculpt which reduces fat and increases muscle mass in the abdomen and buttocks within 2 weeks without spending hours in the gym. Coolsculpting reduces fat in the treated area by 25%, without surgery! Combine these two for a fit and toned silhouette this summer! For a quick refresh this Summer, injectable fillers are effective in reducing lines and wrinkles on the face without surgery. Exciting products like Botox, Dysport and Xeomin and the New Jeuveau smooth crow’s feet and frown lines while Juvederm and Restylane restore facial contour and volume resulting in a lifted look. For over 25 years, Greenberg Cosmetic Surgery has been providing the proper mix of these procedures to provide the most successful improvements in appearance with a significant reduction in the signs of aging. Using the most state-of-the-art technology to obtain the best and most natural results, you can turn back the hands of time in a caring, safe and supportive environment. Remember, the perfect cosmetic surgery package can create the perfect you!

Dr. Stephen T. Greenberg is a board certified plastic surgeon who specializes in cosmetic surgery. He has offices in Woodbury, Southampton and Manhattan. For a complimentary consultation, call 516-364-4200 if you have a question for Dr. Greenberg, please e-mail him at docstg@aol.com, or visit the web at www.GreenbergCosmeticSurgery.com

232332 S

Several recent enhancements in technology have made cosmetic plastic surgery procedures safer and easier for the patient with a more natural outcome. Implementing a healthy plan including diet and exercise will help to achieve both a beautiful and realistic result. There are a variety of procedures available today to help you achieve the look that you desire, including breast augmentation, breast lift, breast reduction, liposuction, tummy tuck, fat transfer, cellulite reduction, full body lift, facelift and eyelid lift. Combining surgical with non-surgical procedures can produce amazing and significant improvements to your appearance. Utilizing the latest technology, Greenberg Cosmetic Surgery offers rapid recovery breast augmentation and liposuction packages where you can be back to your daily routine in 24-48 hours. Patients experience minimal swelling and bruising with a notably decreased recovery time. Recognizing the need for patients to quickly return to their normal activities, a Greenberg Rapid Recovery Procedure ensures both excellent results with a faster recovery period. In addition, there is a continued increase in the number of women having children at a later age who are seeking to obtain pre-pregnancy figure. New mothers can take advantage of the Greenberg Modern mommy Makeover, a very popular


AN A NTON MEDIA GROU P PUB LICAT ION

LONG ISLAND WEEKLY LongIslandWeekly.com JULY 6 – 12, 2022

LIIIW L W

LONG ISLAND WEEKLY

SHERYL CROW’S WINDING ROAD Singer-songwriter shares experiences in new documentary (Photo by Dove Shore)

10 Off* Get Your WITH cOde: Tickets Today! ANTON $

Broadway Comes to Babylon!

*Not to be combined. Discount valid off individual, premium mainstage tickets only.

the musical

SPONSORED by

July 14th - Aug 28th Argyletheatre.com 233743 S


2A JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • LONG ISLAND WEEKLY

FULL RUN

TRANSITIONING TO COLLEGE

@BRIDGES.YES

BRIDGING TO BALANCE YES COMMUNITY COUNSELING CENTER & BRIDGES THIS WORKSHOP IS DESIGNED FOR GRADUATING SENIORS AND PARENTS. ALL YOUNG ADULTS LEAVING FOR COLLEGE FOR THE FIRST TIME ARE INVITED TO ATTEND.

FEEL EMPOWERED NOW FOR THE FUTURE!

Wednesday, July 13 6:00pm to 9:00pm 152 Center Lane Levittown

SOCIAL & EMOTIONAL GROWTH Panel: question and answer CREATING HEALTHY RELATIONSHIPS Presented by: The Safe Center WHAT TYPE OF LEARNER ARE YOU? Study techniques to match your learning style DRUGS & ALCOHOL: WHAT TO EXPECT What you need to know COLLEGE TRANSITION: PARENT GUIDE Parenting during college years: What to expect

WWW.BRIDGESYES.ORG BRIDGES@YESCCC.ORG 516.719.0313 EXT 218

233755 S

SCAN OUR QR CODE TO REGISTER OR REGISTER AT


LONG ISLAND WEEKLY • JULY 6 - 12, 2022 3A

FULL RUN

BY DAVE GIL DE RUBIO

L

dgilderubio@antonmediagroup.com

et’s be clear—Sheryl Crow is someone who veers away from the off-stage spotlight whenever she can. As someone who cheerfully admits to “...living with my head in the sand,” she’d be the last person you’d expect to be front and center in a film project. But so it goes with Sheryl, the Amy Scott-directed documentary that recently bowed on Showtime. Featuring present-day interviews with Crow, along with a number of famous friends including Keith Richards, Brandi Carlile, Emmylou Harris, Joe Walsh, Jason Isbell and Laura Dern, this project traces the Missouri native’s path as the piano-playing daughter of big band musicians through the present day. Rather than having it become a sunshine and lollipops kind of hagiography, Scott succeeds at creating a chronological narrative that includes a mix of performances along with insights into obstacles Crow ran into. Among the pitfalls touched on are the alleged sexual abuse from former employer Michael Jackson’s late manager Frank DiLeo (along with battling various forms of sexism while having to constantly prove her mettle as an artist) and Crow having her album banned by Walmart after including a song addressing gun violence that name-checked the big box retailer as a source for purchasing weapons. It was an ambitious project the singer-songwriter wasn’t exactly eager to pursue. “When my manager [Stephen “Scooter” Weintraub] and Van Toffler, who I knew back in the early days from MTV and VH-1, came to me and said they had some interest from Showtime to do a documentary, I was really not on board with it,” Crow admitted. “I felt like I’m a very private person and didn’t feel like a retrospective was in order when I’m still alive and have so many more songs to write. For a while there, I sat with the idea and decided there was a world of story and living that is the story of a person and not necessarily a well-known artist. Everybody who has ever become a public figure has that story, so we dug in and my only prerequisite for it was that I didn’t want it to be a catalog of awards and a review of fantastic appearances. I wanted it to be the story of the person I am.” While Crow was ruminating over whether or not to dive into this documentary, the pandemic proved to be a perfect respite for her and sons Levi and Wyatt. “We kind of sequestered and to have that time where they could experience what it means to be bored and

Sheryl Crow Goes Down Long And Winding Road On New Documentary Sheryl Crow in a scene from her new Showtime documentary (Photo by Andrea Olarte)

not be entertained all the time,” she said. “They built a chicken coop, raised baby chicks, planted a garden and we rented an RV, went across the country and adopted a Bernese mountain dog. There were things that wouldn’t have happened and I wouldn’t have traded it. The second half of the pandemic, when they were back in school is when we dug in and started making the documentary.” Having picked Scott after seeing Hal, the latter’s 2018 documentary on late filmmaker Hal Ashby, Crow set to work going through storage, digging up photographs and sitting down and going down memory lane. Crow’s vulnerability is freely expressed, particularly when she recounts experiences like reliving her breast cancer battle along with admitting to suffering from bouts of depression. But it was all in keeping with the sexagenarian rocker’s goal of being honest in telling her story, particularly given how averse Crow is to the limelight. “I’m not a person who reads the press on me,” she said. “I don’t look at footage. It’s more enjoyable for me not to have a critical eye, but to just experience it and feel good about it. It was really fun to remember and see some of that old footage and to experience that it was joyful and it wasn’t the speed crash force in the rise to fame. Or the spinning of plates of how to keep the popularity and then the losing of one’s self. There was a lot of great memories along the way that was hilarious, poignant and fun to see. There were a lot of things I’d forgotten about. And then there are a lot of things that we talked about and that I remembered vividly and aren’t documented because nobody had cell phones. The parties I had at my house—there are so many great things. There were some great fun moments. But a lot of it was also very introspective and [involved] revisiting some hard stuff. There was hours and hours of reflecting and it was exhausting and super-emotional. But in the end, I hate to use that stupid word cathartic, but it was.”

Of course, it wouldn’t mean anything if the music wasn’t the fuel driving this engine starting with early hits like “Leaving Las Vegas,” “All I Wanna Do” and “If It Makes You Happy” through latter-day gems like “Home,” “Soak Up the Sun,” “Redemption Day” and “Prove You Wrong” (featuring Stevie Nicks and Maren Morris). A trio of new songs, “Forever,” “Still the Same” and “Live With Me” proves Crow’s creative spark is still burning strong. And while she publicly said 2019’s Threads was going to be her final album, she intends to continue writing and releasing songs. “It’s so nice to be able to write a song like ‘Forever’ and just put the dang thing out,” she said. “I just want to keep writing and putting songs out. I think putting records out now at my age is a little bit of a waste of time. People don’t listen to a full body of work, in order. I want to keep making music and putting it out. I’m going to do like David Bowie. I’m just going to put songs out every couple of months and people can make their own play lists.” That said, Crow’s year will find her touring with a band and then tentatively planning to go out solo while playing a multitude of instruments. For Crow, it’s less about the spotlight and more about sharing her music, particularly when she was asked what stardom means to her. “Fame is a mind-f***,” she responded. “I’m going to have to put $20 in the swear jar in my kitchen as soon as my kids read this. But seriously, it sounds so hokey, but we’re so grateful to be able to go out and play songs that our audiences, which look like Bonnaroo—there are people there my age with their kids and their kids—who are singing all these lyrics. And it’s just such an unbelievably awesome position to be in—to have songs that are generational and a soundtrack. We go out there and play our hearts out and it’s so much fun. It’s a different show. We’re so committed and so present. It’s a good time.”


4A JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • LONG ISLAND WEEKLY

FULL RUN

Faulkner Among The Ruins: The Tragedian BY JOE SCOTCHIE

jscotchie@antonmediagroup.com

Q

uinten Compson is the character that ties Faulkner’s two masterpieces, The Sound And The Fury (1929) and Absalom, Absalom! (1936) together. Read in sequence, Absalom, although published seven years later, should be read first. By telling the story of the doomed Sutpen family, Quinten is haunted by his own failures as a man, mainly his inability to defend his older sister’s honor. Then comes The Sound And The Fury for Quinten to causally detail his forthcoming suicide. Thomas Sutpen, the main character in Absalom, Absalom! is the West Virginia mountaineer determined to join the aristocrats. Rebuffed by his fellow Virginians, Sutpen is a man possessed. He makes his own fortune, acquires his own slaves and set offs toward northern Mississippi to construct his own mansion, Along the way, Sutpen makes a detour in Haiti, where he fights bravely in a civil war and fathers a son with an octoroon woman. In Mississippi, Sutpen marries and raises a family that includes a son,

Henry, and his daughter, Judith. The past comes back to haunt him. The Haitian lad, Charles, turns up at the Sutpen plantation, having met Henry at the University of Mississippi. Henry and Judith are mesmerized by Charles. An Ashley Wilkes-type, full of charm and derring-do, Charles turns Sutpen’s world upside down. The novel’s title comes from an Old Testament story about Absalom, a son of King David, who also yearns for an heir. Incest, miscegenation, and violence make their way into the novel. Charles courts Judith. Marriage is next. Sutpen, knowing that Charles is both a half-sibling to Judith and a mulatto to boot, cancels any wedding plans. Does Charles lose his aplomb? Does he taunt Henry over his romance with Judith? Henry’s manhood is now on the line. War intercedes. The Sutpen men serve with distinction with the patriarch receiving a hand-written note

The Sound And The Fury

(Photo courtesy of Wikipedia)

see FAULKNER on page 6A

Absalom, Absalom!

(Photo courtesy of Wikipedia)

Take charge of your health.

Catholic Health makes it easy.

When it comes to health care, our specialized physicians are committed to you. Maintaining your wellness begins with individualized care at Catholic Health. To schedule an appointment call (866) 887-1101, or visit chsli.org/primary-care

Ambulatory Care at Lake Success welcomes

Panagiotis Pagonis, MD Internal Medicine

4 Ohio Drive, Lake Success, NY 11042 Same day appointments and telehealth visits available. 233315 S


LONG ISLAND WEEKLY • JULY 6 - 12, 2022 5A

FULL RUN

Customized advice that changes with your needs. Everyone has different financial goals and priorities, and they change and grow as you do. That’s why it’s important for me to get to know you and understand what you’re working toward. Together, we can create a personalized financial plan that fits your needs today and helps you build the tomorrow you deserve.

Philip P Andriola, JD Private Wealth Advisor Chief Executive Officer of

Forbes Best-in-State Wealth Advisors, 2019-2021 Andriola, Goldberg & Associates, Ameriprise Client Experience Award, 2020-2021

Andriola, Goldberg & Associates

516.345.2600

A private wealth advisory practice of Ameriprise Financial Services, LLC

401 Franklin Ave, Ste 101, Garden City, NY 11530 philip.p.andriola@ampf.com | philippandriola.com

401 Franklin Avenue, Suite 101 Garden City, NY 11530 Not Federally Insured | No Financial Institution Guarantee | May Lose Value 516.345.2600

CA Insurance #0G20827 This ranking was developed by SHOOK Research and is based on in-person and telephone due diligence meetings to evaluate each advisor qualitatively, a major component of a ranking algorithm that includes client retention, industry experience, review of compliance records, and firm nominations; as well as a quantitative review that includes assets under management and revenue generated for their firms. Investment performace is not a criterion because client objectives and risk tolerances vary, and advisors rarely have audited performance reports. Rankings are based on the opinions of SHOOK Research, LLC and not indicative of future performance or representative of any one client’s experience. Neither Forbes nor SHOOK Research receive compensation in exchange for placement on the ranking. For more information: www.SHOOKresearch.com The Ameriprise Client Experience Award is earned by a practice based on three measurable statistics that reflect the value of goal-based advice to our clients: client experience rating; percentage of clients over a certain asset level in advice relationships; and, once the practice has exceeded a minimum amount of net flows, the percentage of net flows derived from assets under management. Investment advisory products and services are made available through Ameriprise Financial Services, LLC, a registered investment adviser. Ameriprise Financial Services, LLC. Member FINRA and SIPC. © 2022 Ameriprise Financial, Inc. All rights reserved.

Worried About the Stock Market? Here’s How to Reduce Your Investment Risk.

Philip P. Andriola, JD, is a Private Wealth Advisor and Chief Executive Officer with Andriola, Goldberg & Associates, a private wealth advisory practice of Ameriprise Financial Services, LLC.

Asset allocation. This strategy several companies that meet growth During times of market volatility like involves holding investments across criteria, you are protected in the we’ve seen since the start of 2022, it’s different asset classes to meet event one of those companies fails. natural to feel a bit skittish about the your investment objectives. Asset stock market. It’s a potent reminder He offers fee-based financial averaging. This classes include stocks, bonds, that there are risks to stock ownership. Your visionDollar-cost of retirement is unique, and yourand financial plan planning asset management investment strategy takes a cash and alternatives. Each asset Individual stocks are not guaranteed should be too. As an Ameriprise Private Wealth have strategies andAdvisor, has been inI practice disciplined approach to purchasing class has a different risk profile to grow and may lose value. The good investments. Theknowledge idea is to purchase for 24 years. To contact him: and to help you grow and preserve and upside potential. How the muchqualifications you news is that the stock market has more shares of stocks, bonds and/ assign to each asset classyour will wealth. Whether it’s investment management, historically delivered a higher rate of www.philippandriola.com tax strategies or mutual funds when prices are low depend on individual circumstances return than other forms of investment in 401 Franklin Avenue and purchaseI’ll fewer shareswith when you to find the right financial legacy planning, work such as your time horizon,or tolerance the same timeframe. With this in mind, Suite 101 prices are high. The principal here for risk, need for liquidity, tax there are strategies you can deploy solutions for your individual needs. And I’m backed by the is to be systematic in your purchasing. Garden City, NY 11530 Philip Pfrom Andriola, JD situation and your financial goals. to help insulate your portfolio strength and stability of one of America’s leading retirement Dollar-cost averaging over time Investors with a longer time horizon the natural up-and-down swings of the Advisor, Private Wealth (516) 345-2600 usually results in lower average cost of planning companies. so will market, while staying Chief invested for the Officerusually can tolerate more risk, Executive Investment advisory products and services are made shares in your portfolio, creating hold a larger percentage of stocks long term. available through Ameriprise Financial Services, LLC, a greater opportunity for profit as share Andriola, Goldberg & Associates registered investment adviser. within their portfolio. Investors with values rise. Advisory Council 2012-2016 Ameriprise Chairman’s Buy and hold. There alwayswealth be Investment products are not insured by the FDIC, NCUA A will private advisory practice of a shorter time horizon may hold or any federal agency, are not deposits or obligations of, day-to-day fluctuations in the stock Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc.or similar instruments more bonds FIVE STAR Find Wealth Manager 2014-2015 or guaranteed by any financial institution, and involve Your vision of retirement unique, and your financial plan anisally for smart investing. Talk market. Plunging stocks can cause You’ve prepared for a rewarding that offer greater security,should with be too. As an Ameriprise Private Wealth Advisor, I have investment risks including possible loss of principal and with your financial advisor to learn panic selling. Rising516.345.2600 stocks can inspire I can help fluctuation in value. lower yields. retirement. you the qualifications and knowledge to help you grow and preserve howit’s to investment implementmanagement, these and other overly optimistic purchasing. A buy-and401 Franklin Ave, Ste 101 your wealth. Whether tax strategies make the most ofPortfolio it. or legacy planning, I’ll work with you to findtothe right financial investment strategies help grow diversification. Portfolio hold investment strategy takes a longGarden City, NY 11530 solutions for youryour individual needs. And I’m backed by the investment portfolio. As with all diversifi cation is another strategy term view to investing. It discourages Philip P Andriola, JD edith.a.stahl@ampf.com strength and stability of one of America’s leading retirement Private Wealth Advisor, investments, past performance does designed to help you spread risk companies. buying or selling stocks in response to planning philippandriola.comChief Executive Officer not guarantee future results. No across your portfolio. It involves market dips and surges. Over time, Andriola, Goldberg & Associates Ameriprise Chairman’s Advisory Council 2012 - 2016 investment strategy is guaranteed to selecting a variety of investments wealth advisory practice of portfolios governed by this strategy tend A private Ameriprise Financial Services, LLC. Ameriprise Financial Services, Inc. FIVE STAR Wealth Manager 2014 - 2015 be(dba profitable or help you avoid losses. within each asset class to Services, help to deliver more robust long-term results Member FINRA and SIPC. The Five Star Wealth Manager award, administered by Crescendo Business LLC Five Star Professional), is based on 10 objective criteria: 516.345.2600 Common sense and a balanced minimize risk. For example, by putting than ones guided by emotional ©2022 Ameriprise Financial, Inc. 401 Franklin Ave, Ste 101 1. Credentialed as a registered investment adviserGarden or aCity, registered investment adviser representative; 2. Actively employed as a credentialed professional in the NY 11530 stock” money into approach tend to win the day. your “growth decisions. All rights reserved. edith.a.stahl@ampf.com

You’ve prepared for a rewarding retirement. I can help you make the most of it.

financial services industry for a minimum of five years; 3. Favorable regulatory and complaint history review (please note unfavorable feedback may have been philippandriola.com 232537 M discovered through a check of complaints registered with a regulatory authority or complaints registered through Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint The Five Star Wealth Manager award, administered by Crescendo Business Services, LLC (dbanew Five Star Professional), on 10 objective criteria: process*); 4. Fulfilled their firm review based on internal firm standards; 5. Accepting clients; 6.is based One-year client retention rate; 7. Five-year client retention 1. Credentialed as a registered investment adviser or a registered investment adviser representative; 2. Actively employed as a credentialed professional in the financial services industry for a minimum of five years; 3. Favorable regulatory and complaint history review (please note unfavorable feedback may have been rate; 8. Non-institutional discretionary and/or non-discretionary client assets administered; 9. Number of client households served; 10. Education and professional discovered through a check of complaints registered with a regulatory authority or complaints registered through Five Star Professional’s consumer complaint


6A JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • LONG ISLAND WEEKLY

FULL RUN

233106 S

FAULKNER from page 4A from Robert E. Lee. After the war, Henry’s moment of truth arrives. He does avenge his sister, but through most dishonorable means, shooting Charles in the back. The Sutpen family collapses. Henry flees the country. Judith perishes during an outbreak of yellow fever. The elderly Sutpen is undaunted. He remains fixated on fathering an heir. An old man, he seduces a teenage girl. The girl has a father. Sutpen becomes the second Sutpen man to meet a violent end. Sutpen, Charles, Henry, Judith—all dead. The mansion is burned to the ground. No wonder that Faulkner’s scholarship rivals that of Shakespeare. With Absalom, Absalom! the man went into the ring with The Bard—and scored some real points. For Cleanth Brooks, Faulkner’s most profound critic, the novel is much more than Southern gothic, “Sutpen’s virtues are those of a typical twentieth-century man. So are his vices—his dismissal of the past, his commitment to the future, and his confidence that, with courage and know-how, he can accomplish literally anything.” Quinten Compson acts as the novel’s main narrator. Sutpen’s second wife, Rosa Coldfield, has summoned Quentin to tell him the Sutpen story, hoping that the young man might someday record it. Instead, Quentin talks about the drama all evening on a cold New England night, coming to terms, tragically, with his failed manhood. Henry is a man of action. Quinten flashes back to his adolescence when local men had their way with his older sister, the stunning Candance (“Caddy”). He must fight at least one of them to save his sister’s honor. Quinten is beaten and humiliated by one Dalton Ames, a man who had impregnated Caddy. Henry fought and “won.” Quinten was beaten. He can’t go on. In The Sound And The Fury, the Compson family represents the landed gentry Faulkner revered. The downfall of the Compson family is especially moving. The reader knows that the best of America is passing with them. The Compsons have three surviving children: Jason, the embittered older brother; Candance, the young siren who flies the family nest and Benjy, the 36-year-old man-child. Before leaving town, “Caddy” gave birth to a girl she named after her dead brother. The girl is now 17 and set to leave the haunted household. Benjy is protected by his minder, Luster, and the latter’s mother, Dilsey, the maid who tries to keep the household together. Jason is resentful. Spoiled by his mother, he lives at home, works at a department store, frequents local brothels and dreams of making a killing on Wall Street. He, too, is a modern, 1920s-style character: America, he grouses, is now the “land of the wop and the home of the kike.” An anonymous “New York jew” prevents him from cashing in on his investments. Caddy has fled. Jason now must look

William Faulkner: First Encounters (Photo courtesy of Amazon.com)

after her daughter, while keeping an eye on the retarded Benjy. He hates his life and blames others for his fate. Since Quentin’s suicide, Mr. Compson succumbs to alcoholism. The female Quinten takes her life savings of $3,000 (serious money in those days) and tries to run off with a traveling showman. Jason wants the money for himself. Benjy and Dilsey retain their humanity. Both can give and receive love. Dilsey takes Benjy to her Easter Sunday service, dismissing the gossip of black parishioners over a retarded white man in their midst. The novel begins and ends with Benjy howling away. Its beginning remains unforgettable. Luster is scouring the rough of a local golf course, looking for stray golf balls he can trade in for coins to go to the motion pictures. On the links, golfers are yelling “caddy.” Benjy thinks that they are addressing his long-lost sister. On he goes, howling away. At the end, Luster drives Benjy home from the services. He makes a wrong turn and Benjy, his world out of joint again, howls on until Jason steps in and sets things right. Is Jason that bad? When need be, he is a reluctant lifeline to his younger brother. As with Absalom, Absalom! Cleanth Brooks believes the novel has a universal theme. “The book is…about the disintegration of a family, a tradition, and of a culture,” he observes. “The Southern setting… renders these lesions…more poignantly…because the South…is stubbornly traditional…and old-fashioned. But the disintegrating forces…are national and international.” Of the two, The Sound And The Fury is the easier read. All you need to do is turn off the television set and read the first chapter. You’ll remember the experience for the rest of your life. I guarantee it.


FULL RUN

LONG ISLAND WEEKLY • JULY 6 - 12, 2022 7A

BEAT THE HEAT AND SUMMER ENERGY BILLS Join tens of thousands of Long Islanders who have already lowered their energy bills. PSEG Long Island is providing free home energy audits. Every single Long Island homeowner can participate.

LONG ISLAND GREEN HOMES CAN HELP! A FREE home energy audit through Long Island Green Homes, (a $400 value), is your first step to savings. Call us at 800-567-2850 or visit longislandgreenhomes.org today to get started. Long Island Green Homes is a non-profit collaborative project of Long Island towns, organizations, and Molloy College that is helping Long Islanders improve their homes and make Long Island more sustainable. All energy auditors in our program are Long Island-based and certified by the Building Performance Institute.

800-567-2850 longislandgreenhomes.org 233333 S


8A JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • LONG ISLAND WEEKLY

FULL RUN

A Tribute To Hall Of Famer Gil Hodges

O

n Sunday, July 17, at 7 p.m., Ed Kranepool and Art Shamsky, two key members of the ‘69 Miracle Mets who were instrumental in the team’s success, will take attendees down memory lane, sharing seminal moments of that amazing season through video and personal stories. Babylon Village’s Argyle Theatre will host this celebration of the remarkable career and life of 2022 Hall of Fame Inductee Gil Hodges, who molded the perennial basement dwellers into a cohesive confident unit. Hear stories of famous stars like Tom Seaver, Jerry Koosman and Nolan Ryan along with seasoned veterans like Ed Charles and Donn Clendenon,

the grit of Jerry Grote, the lively wit of Tug McGraw, the workman-like play of Cleon Jones, Bud Harrelson and Tommie Agee and the numerous unsung heroes like Al Weis, Ken Boswell and so many others. The evening will include a fun-filled trip down memory lane through an inter-actional Q & A session. Sponsored by Connoisseur Media Long Island. Tickets are currently on sale for this event and are $30 for general admission and $50 for VIP Meet & Greet. Tickets may be purchased online at www. argyletheatre.com or by calling 631-2303500. The Argyle Theatre is located at 34 W. Main St. in Babylon. —Submitted by the Argyle Theatre

YES Community Counseling Center’s Bridges Presents Transitioning To College Night

233680 M

Transitioning to college is an exciting, emotional and often challenging time for both young adults and parents. YES Community Counseling Center’s BRIDGES Program is hosting Transitioning to College, a free workshop for parents and graduating high school seniors transitioning to college this fall. The program is on Wednesday, July 13, from 6 to 9 p.m. at YES Community Counseling Center, 152 Center Ln. in Levittown. The purpose is to empower young adults to navigate the challenges of starting college and assist parents during this sensitive milestone. The evening will kick off with a panel of speakers addressing young adult social/ emotional growth and common college transition issues. Next, The Safe Center Long Island will focus on creating healthy relationships, including sexual assault prevention. The final part of the program offers a choice of workshops from study skills to match one’s learning style to what college students should know about drugs

and alcohol. A separate parent discussion will focus on ways to support their child’s transition to college. Naloxone training will also be offered to both parents and young adults. Spanish translation services will be available for parent sessions. The College Transition program is also supported by YES Community Counseling Center’s PACT Initiative and Massapequa Takes Action Coalition. Visit www. bridgesyes.org to register online. YES’ BRIDGES program is funded through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration to support youth (ages 17 to 25) struggling with substance use and mental health concerns. BRIDGES is a mobile program for young adults that provides prevention, intervention, early treatment, recovery support, referral and access to wrap-around services. For more information, contact Caryn Sawyer at bridges@ yesccc.org or call 516-719-0313, ext. 218. —Submitted by the YES Community Counseling Center


LONG ISLAND WEEKLY • JULY 6 - 12, 2022 9A

FULL RUN

Getting Cash For The Summer is Easy Sell Us Your Valuables For The Highest Price

FRrEbE al

Ve isals ra App

Coins Currency Diamonds Gold Jewelry Military Platinum Silver Sports Cards Comic Books Watches

Att: Gold & Silver Investors Precious metals are hot! We are buying & selling bullion

GET PAID ON THE SPOT Attention Attorneys: Eastern offers Estate Appraisals for all items we purchase. We are a Federally Licensed Firearms Dealer and provide firearms removal, storage and appraisals. See Our Website www.USCOINS.com

We Pay the Highest Prices for All Your Valuable Items 642 Franklin Avenue Garden City, NY 11530

10:00 AM to 4:30 PM.

Sell with confidence in our private examination rooms 48 Years at the Same Location

1-800-835-0008

Call For The Current Price

233425 S

Coin & Jewelry Exchange Hours: Eastern Numismatics Business Monday-Friday


10A JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • LONG ISLAND WEEKLY

FULL RUN

Getting Literary And Lunar With The Tedeschi-Trucks Band BY DAVE GIL DE RUBIO

dgilderubio@antonmediagroup.com

I

f necessity is the mother of invention, then the isolation of the pandemic proved to be the rocket fuel for the Tedeschi-Trucks Band’s most ambitious project—the four-part opus I Am the Moon. Divided into I. Crescent, II. Ascension, III. The Fall and IV. Farewell, the duodecet’s fifth studio release was inspired by the same 12th century Persian poem that inspired the title track to the Derek and the Dominos 1970 opus Layla and Other Love Songs. Susan Tedeschi, who co-leads the 12-piece with husband Derek Trucks, still sounds a bit awestruck by the magnitude and complexity of an undertaking that came together as the TTB was trying to navigate getting through COVID-19 when all touring came to a screeching halt. “The pandemic was a good time to really sit back, look and re-evaluate,” Tedeschi explained. “At the same time, we did take care of our band and crew, even though we didn’t work for 18 months. While we had no money coming in, we did have some saved as a band. Primarily because we had lost Kofi [Burbridge] (Ed. note: The longtime band member died in 2019 at the age of 57) and we realized you get medical bills, things happen and you have to have money saved. Thank God we did. Then we had some help from the government and then we would sell our personal stuff to keep food on the table for everyone. A lot of our band and crew have kids—we were just making it through and keeping the dialogue open. Mike Mattison, being our Harvard grad of course, said we needed a project. He suggested we all dive into the original ‘Layla and Majnun’ poem from 12th century poet Nizami Ganjavi.” When the musical collective agreed to dive into these heady waters, the approach was to have all the band members read the poem and start writing. An early creative direction was rather than having it come from the man’s point of view, the decision was to view the songs from Layla’s perspective and how other people in the story may have viewed this relationship. The ideas started to flow and before long, the amount of material quickly piled up “We just kept writing while it was organically growing because we wanted to see where it was going to take us,” Tedeschi said. “When we started recording, we had a lot of songs [and realized] it was too much for a double-album because it wouldn’t all fit on a record. We weren’t sure if we were going to cut it down because we didn’t have any songs that we thought were fluff. They were all really great. So we made it

The Tedeschi-Trucks Band. Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi are front and center (Photo by David McClister)

into four records because we realize some of the best records like Axis: Bold As Love are only about 35 to 40 minutes long, which is a good amount to enjoy the music. Otherwise, you get overwhelmed with too much information because it’s too much stuff. Honestly, that was happening in the studio when we were doing it. I’d be asking what a particular song was. I couldn’t keep up with all these songs and there were so many of them. I was just having to do one a time and take my time.” While the earliest cracks at I Am the Moon started in July 2020, it wouldn’t be until January of this year when all four movements would be completed. Adding to the unique approach is a visual component in the shape of I Am the Moon: The Film, which has four parts attached to each album and all of the songs. Directed by documentary filmmaker/author/television writer Alix Lambert, the films are debuting on YouTube concurrent with each record’s release. It’s yet another quirky component Tedeschi is completely enamored with.

“During the pandemic, people were waiting for The Mandalorian to come out every two weeks or whatever and you’d get 30 or 40 minutes to ingest and enjoy it before you’re on to the next [episode],” she explained. “Not unlike these records that are coming out a month apart, it gives you something to look forward to. The other thing too is having it come out on YouTube live for free as a listening experience is something everyone can do together as a society—we have people all over the world in places like Japan and Brazil watching at the same time as people in California and Massachusetts were. Some people woke up in the middle of the night to see it. And then people would watch it the next day or whenever on YouTube. It was just a really cool, weird and different way to do it. We’ve gotten so much positive feedback from it.” In taking this out on the road, Tedeschi admits the TTB aren’t trotting any new material out until after the albums are released (“If you do that before it comes out,

everybody tapes it and it’ll be on YouTube and it won’t be fresh or new.”) That said, fans will have plenty to look forward to from the annual Wheels of Soul summer tour that’ll find them joined by Los Lobos to the multiple Beacon Theatre fall dates. “On the summer tour, our set is about an hour and 45 minutes and we’ll probably do a mix of all different things,” Tedeschi said. “Maybe a couple of songs from each of our albums like Revelator, Made Up Mind, Signs—whatever. And a couple of covers sprinkled in like Derek and the Dominos and some Allman Brothers. Then, we’ll do some of the new stuff. And whatever record is out, we’ll be able to introduce those songs. Derek is usually our set-list writer, so a lot of times you just don’t know until the day of. Last year I think we played 88 different songs during the Beacon run and now we have 125 songs. We’ll mix it up and it’ll be different and fun. It’s not predictable. Some bands will have the same set list every night and I don’t know how they do that every night. Aren’t you bored with yourself? This band doesn’t like to get bored.” The Tedeschi Trucks Band will be appearing with Los Lobos on July 10 at the Great South Bay Music Festival, Shorefront Park, Patchogue. Visit www.greatsouthbaymu sicfestival.com for more information. Visit www.longislandweekly.com to read a sidebar about Susan Tedeschi’s favorite albums.


LONG ISLAND WEEKLY • JULY 6 - 12, 2022 11A

233811 S

FULL RUN


12A JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • LONG ISLAND WEEKLY

These Speakeasies Are The Bees’ Knees

BY EMMA DUFFY

editors@antonmediagroup.com

T

he past is very much alive in New York. The honored speakeasies of the Prohibition era are still around today and can be found in both New York City and Long Island. Under years of unrelenting pressure from the Temperance movement, the government caved to pass the 18th Amendmen t. With its passage, the manufacture, sale and transportation of liquor ground to a halt. While those who pushed for Temperance felt triumphant, the rest of America refused to abide by the new law of the land. Not surprisingly, crime skyrocketed as people refused to stop drinking and instead took their drinking underground. New York became the epicenter of organized crime and during the height of Prohibition, there were 32,000 speakeasies in the state. The ratification of the 21st Amendment ended the need for speakeasies. However, that does not mean they lost their charm. There are two speakeasies in New York City that have stayed in business all this time since prohibition; one of which is The Back Room. The Back Room is open at 6 p.m. every day for customers to come and enjoy a taste of the past. There is not usually a password, but sometimes the doorman will heckle guests before allowing them in. If there is a password, it is most likely in use on Monday nights. On these nights at 9 p.m. there is live jazz. Admission is free and the password is posted on Facebook and Instagram. The Back Room oozes history and while there is seemingly nothing special about the exterior, once you enter the speakeasy, there is no doubt you are in the right place. The Back Room’s interesting

Charlotte’s Speakeasy’s spacious seating area matched with walls lined with vintage photos from the DeVito family and a vintage tin ceiling. (Photo by Emma Duffy) history includes it being one of two speakeasies that have stayed in existence since the 1920s. During the Roaring Twenties, a number of infamous gangsters regularly held meetings at the speakeasy. Meyer Lansky, Lucky Luciano, Bugsy Siegel, Frank Costello all enjoyed an illegal libation at The Back Room. That being said, there is definitely a bit of tainted history behind this bar. “A gangster was shot, right in front of here,” Back Room Event Coordinator/Manager Megan Bones said. “So people were really actually doing horrible things and we really did have those gangsters in our bar.” If the drinks and the history are not enough, Bones thinks there are other reasons people come to The Back Room. “People always want to go where they’re not supposed to go,” she said. Similar historic options are available for those who don’t want to leave Long Island for the experience. Charlotte’s Speakeasy in Farmingdale has reopened a historic space to complement the ice cream shop that stands above.

Charlotte’s Speakeasy is open on weekends and some Thursdays. Upon entering, it just looks like a normal ice cream parlor. However, at a bookcase that doubles as a hidden door, a bouncer will ask you for $5 and a password to enter. The password can be found on the website or if you are extremely stuck, people at the register will help out. This speakeasy was not always part of the plan. Upon buying the ice cream shop, it just looked like there were useless cellar doors in the back. Even after walking down the back steps, the basement did not seem like it was worth anything but storage. All of this changed when Mayor Ralph Ekstrand entered the ice cream shop and asked how they liked having a speakeasy in their basement. Brothers John and Nick DeVito, who own the shop, knew that it would be an expensive endeavor to open the place, but it would be worth it. It was important to the siblings to keep the history intact while renovating the space. The original tin ceiling from the 1920s is still in use. And while some of the posts

in the basement were torn down to make room, none off them were thrown out. They were re-purposed and the wooden posts are currently holding up the candles while the bar was constructed out of the recycled material. “What used to hold up the ceiling is now holding up your drinks,” DeVito said. The history of the place is felt by all who come, but especially by psychics. One visiting medium said she heard the previous owner speaking to her while she walked along the escape route. “She said, ‘He’s very happy you brought this place back. He feels alive again.’,” DeVito said. People come for the fun, the live jazz music, drinks, company, history and much more. There is something for everyone at Charlotte’s Speakeasy. They have noted that they have a very diverse crowd. This idea has astounding similarities to speakeasies in the past in which everyone came together, including women being at bars for the first time. They are glad to have people from all different ages and racial and cultural backgrounds. “Our place is a kind of welcome to everybody and it’s funny to see when you come down those stairs. Whoever you are, you’ll see yourself down here,” DeVito said. Visit www.longislandweekly.com to read a longer version of this story.

FULL RUN

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 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.

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 38 YEARS number for verification. All material contributed to Anton IN BUSINESS Media Group in any form becomes the property of the 1984-2022 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. Celebrating

Wishing you a happy 4th of July

Home of the Free

Because of the Brave

Maureen Polyé

Licensed Real Estate Salesperson O 516.582.5646 | M 646.239.0769 maureen.polye@elliman.com elliman.com © 2022 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY. STATION, NY 11746. 631.549.7401.

110 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON

231340 S


LONG ISLAND WEEKLY • JULY 6 - 12, 2022 13A

FULL RUN

Top 10 Baseball Caps Of All-Time BY CARTER GIL DE RUBIO editors@antonmediagroup.com

When it comes to sports apparel, baseball is in a league of its own. While the stylish jerseys can make for nice casual wear, it’s the caps that have truly taken on a life of their own. They’ve become representative of more than just a person’s allegiance to their favorite team, stretching out into social movements and pop culture expression. Major League Baseball has seen many hats come and go, and everyone has their favorites. Here is a modest list of the 10 best baseball caps of all time.

Atlanta Braves (1972-1980)

New York Yankees (1915-Present)

The unique “softball uniforms” the Atlanta Braves rocked in the ’70s gave way to their most colorful look in franchise history. This was the logo and cap Hank Aaron wore when he passed Babe Ruth, that lowercase “A” being the lasting image of one of baseball’s most historic moments. It’s a funky, stylish reminder of a decade built on individuality and pop.

Simple, yet enduring. The New York Yankees have sported this look for over a century, and it’s easy to see why. Not only is it the logo of the most accomplished sports franchise in history, but it’s become synonymous with hip-hop and urban culture as a whole. From Times Square to the Great Wall of China, you’ll find someone wearing this hat even if they aren’t a Yankees fan.

Arizona Diamondbacks (1995-2007)

Miami Marlins (2012)

Nowadays, the Diamondbacks are known for their deep crimson color pallet. But before that change in the mid-2000s. their uniforms sported teal, gold and purple. It was a unique set that to this day has yet to be matched and it showed in their caps. A variation of this look was what the team wore when they won their only World Series in 2001, but this colorful cap was certainly the basis for what came next.

Only worn for two games in their inaugural season under their new “Miami Marlins” branding, this citrus-colored hat was the perfect embodiment of the all-sizzle, no-pop team of that season. The bright color scheme was a bold yet perfect representation of the city of Miami, which makes it all the more painful we only got to see them worn in-game twice.

Los Angeles Angels (1961-1964)

Chicago White Sox (1982-1986; 2013-Present)

Back in the ’80s, the White Sox abandoned their monochromatic color scheme. This resulted in a simple, yet sleek design that gave the South Siders a distinct look and feel all their own. While short lived, back in 2013 the team brought the look back as an alternate uniform and gave a whole new generation of fans a chance to see their best look.

Montreal Expos (1969-2004)

Losing Montreal’s baseball team was a tragedy for baseball. Even worse was losing these incredible caps. The bright red, white and blue pops with color and immediately attracts the eye and is a stylish look with just about any outfit. The logo also holds complexity too, as the colors inside the giant M spell out the initials “E” and “B”, a subtle way of having the cap say “Montreal Expos Baseball” without drawing too much attention away from the M itself.

Milwaukee Brewers (1978-1993; 2020-Present)

Back when the Brewers were an American League team and banging on the walls of every stadium on their way to the 1982 American League pennant, Milwaukee was rocking an iconic look that defined the greatest era of their franchise’s history. The baseball glove logo created with the “M” and “B” is one of the most creative design choices in the sport. It was brought back permanently only a couple of years ago and baseball has been better for it since.

It’s rare that the original model is the best, but these old-school Angels caps felt as if they were blessed by heaven itself. While the logo might be reminiscent of their crosstown rivals, the real standout is the gold piping on the top of the hat that is supposed to be the halo to their angelic attire. It’s a unique classic that should have been around much longer than only their first three years of existence.

Pittsburgh Pirates (1976-1987)

The unique box shape. The piping. Stargell’s Star’s decorating the sides and brims. The look of one of the most iconic teams in baseball history. There was nothing like it before and there was nothing like it since. What more could you ask?

Baltimore Orioles (1975-1989; 2012-Present)

The charm of their logo does a great job of masking the poor play on the field. The bright orange and white contrasts perfectly with the harsh black within and was the look and feel of some of this franchise’s bests moments. After a brief stint with a realistic oriole logo in the ’90s and aughts, the O’s brought back this iconic look a decade ago and it has endured since.

Carter Gil de Rubio is an Anton Media Group contributor.


14A JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • LONG ISLAND WEEKLY

FULL RUN

HOME & DESIGN

HOMES

Recently Sold

Home Price Increases Less Than One Percent

O

neKey MLS is the one source real estate marketplace for monthly statistics for residential real estate transactions from Montauk to Manhattan, north through the Hudson Valley and the Catskill Mountains. For April 2022, OneKey MLS reported a regional closed median sale price of $580,000, representing a $5,000 increase in the closed median sale price, or less than one percent higher than the reported figure in March 2022. Between March and April 2022, closed regional sales transactions, including residential, condo, and co-op sales, decreased to 4,629 from 5,264, representing a 12.1 percent month-over-month change. OneKey® MLS, the largest MLS in New York, aggregates the real estate transactional data from nine counties making up the regional MLS coverage area and reports individually on each county represented. The infographic demonstrates month-over-month closed median home price comparisons for the region. Whereas six of nine counties reported an increased closed median sale price, three of nine counties reported a decrease. Sullivan (22.3 percent), Westchester (9.3 percent), Orange (3.4 percent), Nassau (2.50 percent), Suffolk (2.4 percent), and Rockland (0.80 percent) Counties had month-over-month increases in closed median sale price. Queens (-7.90 percent), Bronx (-8.80 percent), and Putnam (-10.30 percent) Counties had month-over-month decreases. “In April, month-over-month regional home price gain was consistent with the slowing pace of the last several months of less than one percent month-over-month growth, an indication that the impact of inflation and rapidly rising mortgage rates are eroding the purchasing power from some would-be homeowners,” Jim Speer, CEO, OneKey MLS, said. “Home prices can’t exceed a buyer’s ability to pay, so with inflation and interest rates on the rise, we can expect to see home price appreciation continue slowing in part across our region.” Visit www.onekeymls.com/market-statistics for more statistical information about residential, condo and co-op sales transaction. —OneKey MLS

Why rent when you can own this immaculate and spacious one bedroom co-op at 400 Fulton St. in the private well-maintained Suburbia Complex in the heart of Farmingdale Village? This unit sold on June 17 for $285,000. The open-concept floor plan offers a great view of the complex’s in-ground pool. It is an upstairs unit with newer wall-to-wall carpeting. The kitchen has stainless steel appliances and an island, leading to formal dining and living rooms. The bedroom is large enough for a king-sized bed. The bathroom is updated and there is plenty of storage. The windows and security system are new. The complex offers lovely sitting areas throughout, a laundry room, bike storage, party room, barbecue area and parking spaces. This home is near transporation, shopping, dining and entertainment.

This beautiful split-level home situated on quiet block in prime West Farmingdale at 6 Paul Place sold on June 17 for $625,000. It has great curb appeal with a newer vinyl-sided exterior. It has a spacious living room and a large new eat-in-kitchen with custom KraftMaid cherry cabinets, granite countertops and stainless steel appliances. The upper level of the home has a new bathroom with porcelain tile and a Kohler bathtub. There are three bedrooms and three bathrooms. The master bedroom has a ceiling fan, walk-in-closet and a full bathroom. The home has Andersen windows and a 200-amp breaker. It has a brand new cast iron heating system. The private, oversized backyard is fully fenced in and includes a deck. This home is conveniently located near transportation and shopping. It is located within the Northside Elementary School District.

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.

REPLACE. RENEW. REPLACE. RESTORE. RENEW. RESTORE. Sleep plays a vital role Sleep in theplays body’s a vital cyclerole of healing, in the body’s growing cycle and of healing, growing and ® rejuvenating. The DUXrejuvenating. Bed’s unique, The customizable DUX® Bed’s component unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled system ergonomic providessupport unrivaled to ergonomic help you support to help you experience significantly experience higher quality signifisleep. cantly higher quality sleep.

MANHASSET 1522 Northern MANHASSET Boulevard 1522 Northern Boulevard 516-869-1700 www.duxiana.com 516-869-1700 www.duxiana.com

228055 S

® storeVisit neara you Resolve to invest in your Resolve health. toVisit invest a DUXIANA in your health. DUXIANA® store near you to discover the difference to discover The DUXthe Bed diff can erence make The in your DUX life. Bed can make in your life.


LONG ISLAND WEEKLY • JULY 6 - 12, 2022 15A WORD FIND

FULL RUN

This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direct always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you hav pleted the puzzle, there will be 16 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle. By Holiday Mathis

INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND Raise a glass

yourself lucky, indeed, as time is one of the better forces to have working for you. Even so, the gift is only as great as your management of it. You’ll prioritize your list and utilize the hours in the same manner you would were you working under greater constraint.

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 16 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.

Raise a glass Solution: 16 Letters

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). In regard to this goal you hold so dear, it will dawn on you that mere competence will not be enough to get you where you want to go with it. You’ll see the benefit of adopting a long-term perspective, as reaching mastery will be a step-by-step-process, a discipline and probably even a lifestyle. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Obviously, you’d like to see all the lovely places and people you possibly can in your lifetime, but your first priority is to make your home environment a beautiful destination. As you approach the goal from multiple angles this week, you will simultaneously improve the emotional and aesthetic environment.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). While often neutrality saves time and trouble, what’s going on now is different. This one is worth getting involved in, and you’ll avoid future regret by first trying to understand it better and then helping out the side who needs you. This is about defending the defenseless. Plan your next move, but don’t make it yet. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You have to buy the whole box of cereal even if all you really want is the marshmallow charms; so it goes in relationships. There’s something to wade through to get to the sweetest part. If it weren’t so, you might just get a toothache from all the sugar. You’ll appreciate the balance of desirable and less desirable qualities. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Truly, to know a person is to love them. Taking the time to gain an intimate understanding of someone is an act of devotion. It is not only your personal experience that teaches you. Social options of this week offer a chance to see a person in various contexts and through other people’s eyes. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You could settle into the mood of a place, but that leaves too much to chance. So instead, you’ll take charge of the environments you’re in this week, creating your preferred emotional temperature, which you’ll decide before you ever even get there. Truly, you bring the weather with you. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). This is your lucky week for dropping a fear. It’s much more simply done than you imagined it would be -- an action that’s brave and strong yet takes absolutely no effort or courage, only a decision to relax. Instructions: Imagine the fear is in your hand, and then let it go limp and fall away. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You may never agree with certain people who you work or live near, yet you will be strategic, flowing good energy to head off future bad vibes. You’ll be ready to stand when it matters, though in many instances you’ll find freedom in cautiously watching them exhaust their own energy in nonsense. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Problems that seem impossible to solve are solved every day. You’re closer to answers than you think, so don’t give up, but do relax because ideas about what to try next will come to you in stress-free moments -- for instance, while in the shower. It will also help to open your realm of influence.

THIS WEEK’S BIRTHDAYS

Your solar return energy swirls around finance first; you’ll take a risk on a lucrative opportunity and win. You’ll dream both silly and practical things and attract collaborators with your blend of quirkiness and logic. A new friendship will spark exciting escapades and mutually fulfilling joint ventures. More highlights: the keen sensitivity to sniff out the truth in just about any situation, comfortable time with your favorite companions and a deal in which you expect nothing and get everything. COPYRIGHT 2022 CREATORS.COM

Ales Anzacs Bar Mitzvah Bash Beer Cakes Confirmation Crackers Dance Diary Dips Doctor Ends

Engagement Fete Food Fridge Gala Ales Game Anzacs Bar Mitzvah Gifts Bash Gold Beer Hats Cakes Confirmation Helping Crackers Home Dance Idea Diary Dips Kids Doctor Ends

Sell Songs Spoil Steaks Sell Tape Songs Toast Spoil Triumph Steaks Visit Tape Toast Wins Triumph Yacht Visit

List Lottery Love Music Engagement Nana List Fete News Lottery Food Love Party Music Fridge Play Gala Nana Game Punch News Gifts Party Reply Play Gold Roses Punch Hats Helping Sadly Reply Home Roses Score Sadly Idea Kids

Wins Yacht

Score

FROM KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, 300 W. 57th STREET, 41st Solution: Precious memories Solution: Precious memories

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You go into relationships and other endeavors with openness and optimism. This does not preclude you from having a backup strategy. In fact, sometimes the Plan B in your pocket gives you confidence. A friend with a talent for identifying potential problems can help you avoid trouble. Run your plans by this person.

© 2022 Australian Word Games Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Desire brings its frustrations, but whether you get what you want or not, just wanting is a gift. It is lucky to know yourself and be in touch with your own appetites and preferences. Keep going. You will find satisfaction. In the meantime, could you celebrate your drive as a signal that you’re alive and on purpose?

Solution: 16 Letters

© 2022 Australian Word Games Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.

By Holiday Holiday Mathis Mathis HOROSCOPES By HOROSCOPES ARIES (March 21-April 19). Time is on your side, and for this you can consider

FLOOR, NEW YORK, NY 10019

Crea tors Syndica Creators Syndicate CUSTOMER SERVICE: (800) 708-7311 EXT. 236te

Date: 7/6/22 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 MONDAY, JULY 11, 2022

By Steve Becker

Famous Hand West dealer. Neither side vulnerable. NORTH ♠9 ♥ A K Q 10 9 8 3 ♦— ♣A K 6 5 4 WEST EAST ♠Q753 ♠A K 8 ♥— ♥2 ♦ Q 10 6 5 4 ♦A K J 9 8 7 3 2 ♣ J 10 8 3 ♣9 SOUTH ♠ J 10 6 4 2 ♥J 7 6 5 4 ♦— ♣Q 7 2 The bidding: West North East South Pass 2♦ 5♦ 5♥ Pass 6♥ Dble Opening lead — jack of clubs. Freak hands produce freak results, as witness this deal from the World Pair Olympiad many years ago. All kinds of results occurred at the 30 tables where the hand was played, but we report here only those of two American pairs who sat EastWest. At one table, with Robert Jordan and Arthur Robinson sitting EastWest, the bidding went as shown. The artificial two-diamond bid by North showed game-going strength but not necessarily diamonds. Jor-

dan then leaped to five diamonds, partly in the hope of making it and partly to jam the bidding. He later doubled six hearts but wound up taking second money when the Dutch declarer lost only a spade trick and scored 1,210 points. In fact, South would have made an overtrick if Robinson had led a diamond instead of a club. The other American pair, Marshall Miles and Phil Feldesman, had far better luck. The bidding at their table went: West North East South Pass 2♦ 5♦ Pass 7♦ Dble Here West, after South had passed, added a second pre-emptive bid to his partner’s. Over seven diamonds, North, who had not yet shown either of his suits, found himself completely frustrated. He doubled, for want of anything better to do, and everyone passed. South had to make a blind opening lead and, after great travail, selected the jack of spades. This allowed declarer to score four spade tricks instead of three, and he eventually got rid of his club loser on dummy’s seven of spades to make the grand slam for a score of 1,630 points! This was 2,840 points better than their compatriots had done with exactly the same cards!

Tomorrow: A brilliant defense. ©2022 King Features Syndicate Inc.

7/6/22


16A JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • LONG ISLAND WEEKLY

FULL RUN

Always dedicated to you! I take the stress out of buying or selling your home. • 30+ years experience in Long Island real estate • A personal touch from start to finish

Shelley Scotto Founding Agent of Compass North Shore Licensed Associate RE Broker shelley.scotto@compass.com M: 516.816.7428 | O: 516.517.4751 Shelley Scotto Is a Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker affiliated with Compass. Compass is a Licensed Real Estate Broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity Laws.

231651 S

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


LONG ISLAND WEEKLY • JULY 6 - 12,FULL 2022 RUN 17A

17 JULY FULL RUN6 - 12, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP

To Advertise here call 516-403-5170 • Email your ad to: mmallon@antonmediagroup.com EMPLOYMENT

233836 M

ANTIQUE LOVERS TAKE NOTE! BRIMFIELD IS HERE – ALL SHOWS! July 12-17, New shows open daily! BrimfieldAntiqueFleaMarket.com. Next Show Dates: September 6-11.

Drive Out Breast Cancer: Donate a car today! The benefits of donating your car or boat: Fast Free Pickup - 24hr Response Tax Deduction - Easy To Do! Call 24/7: 855-905-4755

DRIVER & WAREHOUSE Help wanted. Full time or Part time Please call 516-333-6266

Wheels For Wishes benefiting MakeA-Wish® Northeast New York. Your Car Donations Matter NOW More Than Ever! Free Vehicle Pick Up ANYWHERE. We Accept Most Vehicles Running or Not. 100% Tax Deductible. Minimal To No Human Contact. Call: (877) 798-9474. Car Donation Foundation d/b/a Wheels For Wishes. www. wheelsforwishes.org.

COMPANIONS / ELDERCARE CNA/Companion/Fully Vaccinated/ All references verifiable Gentle and optimistic, experienced with many medical conditions and also many kinds of people. Families I’ve worked for have told me I created a lovely situation that they never could have hoped for. Please call Grace 917-499-9520.

233771 M

ATTENTION VIAGRA USERS: Generic 100mg blue pills or generic 20mg yellow pills. Get 45 plus 5 free $99 + S/H. Call Today. 877-707-5523

HOME SERVICES

233663 M

Network Administrator Design, Upgrade, Maintain & Administer entire computer network; Develop, test, implement & maintain operating system & related software; Establish & implement standards for computer operations for compatibility between hardware & software, according to specifications & parameters; Troubleshoot & resolve software, operating system & networking problems; Schedule, perform & monitor system backups & when necessary, perform data recoveries; Recommend hardware & software upgrade, according to growth statistics & disc space forecasts; Install & configure DHCP Client/ Server. 3 yrs of exp as Network Administrator in Related Occupation is reqd. Please apply w/2 copies of resume. Garden City Sleep Center 1101 Stewart Avenue Suite# 101 Garden City, NY 11530 233750 M

DIRECTV for $79.99/mo for 12 months with CHOICE Package. Watch your favorite live sports, news & entertainment anywhere. First 3 months of HBO Max, Cinemax, Showtime, Starz and Epix included! Directv is #1 in Customer Satisfaction (JD Power & Assoc.) Some restrictions apply. Call 1-888-534-6918 DISH TV $64.99 For 190 Channels + $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. Promo Expires 1/21/23. 1-866-595-6967 Eliminate gutter cleaning forever! LeafFilter, the most advanced debris-blocking gutter protection. Schedule a FREE LeafFilter estimate today. 15% off and 0% financing for those who qualify. PLUS Senior & Military Discounts. Call 1-877-763-2379 Never Pay For Covered Home Repairs Again! Complete Care Home Warranty COVERS ALL MAJOR SYSTEMS AND APPLIANCES. 30 DAY RISK FREE. $200.00 OFF + 2 FREE Months! 866-440-6501

ADVERTISE HERE CALL 516-403-5170

The Generac PWRcell, a solar plus battery storage system. SAVE money, reduce your reliance on the grid, prepare for power outages and power your home. Full installation services available. $0 Down Financing Option. Request a FREE, no obligation, quote today. Call 1-888-871-0194 Use Happy Jack® Kennel Dip as an area spray to control lyme disease ticks, fleas, stable flies, & mosquitoes where they breed. At Tractor Supply® (www.fleabeacon.com) WIREMAN/CABLEMAN Flat TVs mounted, Phone, TVs & Computer wiring installed & serviced, camera & stereos, HDTV – Antennas – FREE TV www.davewireman.com Call Dave 516-433-WIRE (9473) 631-667-WIRE (9473) or Text 516-353-1118 233377 S

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE GREAT NECK 900 SQF 1BED APT. $348,000. Elevator laundry parking RENOVATED. 3 blocks from train. TXT/CALL DANA 347-420-7905

TUTORING FREE ONLINE TUTORING for kids. 30 min classes. For Kids, By kids. Any grade or subject. Web: www.TogetherWeGlue.org

MARKETPLACE

CUSTOM MAD FURNITUE INCLUDINRE CABINET G S

BEFORE INDOOR/OUTDOOR RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL

FURNITURE REUPHOLSTERY Sofas • Love Seats • Chairs

NEW CHAIR SEATS $49 Dining Room or Kitchen

(Fabric Samples Avail.) Piping Extra

CANING $99 ea.

RUSH SEAT

Repair or Convert to Cushion DANISH CORD • SPLINT • RATTAN

MARKETPLACE

Loose & Broken Chairs Reglued & Repaired Stripping & Staining 10% SENIOR DISCOUNT FREE ESTIMATES FREE PICKUP & DELIVERY

Pro Piano Man

(516) 791-0690 Cell (917) 406-4807 Marda1552@yahoo.com

Tuning, repairs, restorations, moving and storage. Selling pianos starting at $399. Buying Yamaha® and glossy black/white pianos.

An Electrician

When You Need One

K.J. KENNY, INC.

AFTER

ONE DAY FLOORS 15-YEAR RESIDENTIAL WARRANTY POLYUREA - NOT EPOXY

4X STRONGER THAN EPOXY • NO HOT TIRE PICK-UP! WON’T CHIP OR PEEL • EASY TO CLEAN • 1 DAY INSTALL GARAGES • LAUNDRY ROOMS • PATIOS • WALKWAYS • OFFICES BASEMENTS • RECREATION ROOMS • SCHOOLS • SHOWROOMS COMMERCIAL KITCHENS • VET CLINICS • LOCKER ROOMS

CALL FOR YOUR ESTIMATE TODAY!

Licensed Electrical Contractors 233273 M

I now move house contents on LI to Florida.

BEST SATELLITE TV with 2 Year Price Guarantee! $59.99/mo with 190 channels and 3 months free premium movie channels! Free next day installation! Call 888-508-5313

Including Matching Stain

ADVERTISE HERE CALL 516-403-5170

Call Bruce for the best service. 516-330-7138

BATH & SHOWER UPDATES in as little as ONE DAY! Affordable prices - No payments for 18 months! Lifetime warranty & professional installs. Senior & Military Discounts available. Call: 866-393-3636

233363 S

COMPUTER & IT TRAINING PROGRAM! Train ONLINE to get the skills to become a Computer & Help Desk Professional now! Now offering a $10,000 scholarship for qualified applicants. Call CTI for details! (844) 947-0192 (M-F 8am-6pm ET)

ARE YOU BEHIND $10k OR MORE ON YOUR TAXES? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, & resolve tax debt FAST. Call 888-869-5361 (Hours: Mon-Fri 7am-5pm PST)

HEALTH / WELLNESS

EMPLOYMENT

***AAA*** AUTO BUYERS $Highest$ Ca$h Paid$. All Years/ Conditions! WE VISIT YOU! Or Donate, Tax Deduct + Ca$h. DMV ID#1303199. Call LUKE 516-VAN-CARS. 516-297-2277

FINANCE

233493 S

AUTO / MOTORCYCLE

Ultimate Medical Academy Online | Medical Billing and Coding. Prepare for a Career in Medical Billing & Coding w/an Online Degree at Ultimate Medical Academy! Students Come First. Flexible Online Learning. Student support services. Call 877-568-2462

233783 M

A nonprofit organization in Great Neck, NY is seeking sealed bids for sales and installation of security related enhancements. This is a New York State Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services grant funded project. The project includes (i) installation of one or more: technology (such as CCTV, access control, alarms, sensors, X-ray machines, magnetometer), security film, doors, locks, windows, bollards, planters, barriers, lighting, fencing, privacy fencing, gates, (ii) training programs, and (iii) security personnel. Bids will be accepted until 5:00 PM on 7.15.2022. Work is expected to commence by the week of 8.15.2022 and be completed by 9.23.2022. All interested vendors will be required to demonstrate preliminary qualifications and licensing for this work, acknowledge receipt of the proposal documents, and provide company name, business address, telephone, fax and email address, and primary contact name. Selection criteria will be based on knowledge of surveillance and security, adherence to projected work schedule, prior experience, references, and cost. Specifications and bid requirements can be obtained by contacting us at DHS440B@gmail.com

HOME SERVICES

233672 S

ANNOUNCEMENTS

746-7611

106 Second Street Mineola, NY

CONCRETE COATINGS

516-676-8469

iPaintFloors.com and facebook.com/ipaintfloors 233505 M


18A JULY FULL RUN 6 - 12, 2022 • LONG ISLAND WEEKLY

ANTON MEDIA GROUP • JULY 6 - 12,FULL 2022 RUN 18

MARKETPLACE Complete Compassionate Care For your loved one ♥

Annmarie Reidy

E

( 516) 7 46-0045

We Rip Out or Remove Anything & Everything! We Clean It Up & Take It Away!

www.grammanplumbing.com 233492 M

RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL

Bonded & Insured

516-538-1125 FREE ESTIMATES

American Caregivers Association Certified

S ince 1 9 4 8

233784 S

COMMUNITY SERVICE

FREE TUTORING by Kids for Kids TOGETHER WE G.L.U.E.

National Caregivers Registry Member 233463 M

COMPLETE JUNK REMOVAL

516 503 6114

DON’T MISS OUT ON YOUR NOW BOOKING FOR 2023 LOCAL NEWS. Small Ship Cruise Vacations Experience the beauty and history of the St. Lawrence and Ottawa Rivers Get Your on a classic Canadian riverboat. Request our free travel brochure. Subscription Today! Auctions_Intnl2x2_ChautauquaCnty_06.22.crtr - Page 1 - Composite 253 Ontario St., Suite 200, Kingston, ON K7L2Z4

233670 M

Give your child a head start for the upcoming school year. Skilled students offer free peer to peer tutoring in areas of expertise. Visit www. T ogether W e G lue.org

Call 516-403-5120 to find out about our FREE year promotion!

TICO #2168740

Tax Foreclosed Real Estate Auction Chautauqua County • Online Only

500+ Parcels: Lots, Acreage, Homes, Commercial Properties Online Auction Start: Saturday, July 9 TH, 12PM

2-DAY AUCTION CLOSING!

Day 1: Cities of Jamestown and Dunkirk: Thursday, July 21 ST starting at 8:30AM Day 2: All other Towns/Villages: Friday, July 22 ND starting at 8:30AM

**Action Required**

To participate in this online only auction, please visit our website and complete the “Online Bidder Registration Packet”. Originals must be received at our office no later than Tuesday, July 19 TH.

For complete information, visit www.ChautCoAuction.com or call 800 -536-1401, Ext. 110

“Selling Surplus Assets 7 Days a Week Online”

233419 S

Equal Housing Opportunity

OWA_CMYK_CalmChaos

CHIMNEY KING ENT. INC.

Sunday, August 02, 2020 11:42:45 AM

SINCE 1982

Done By Fire Fighters That Care! STAINLESS STEEL LINERS CLEANING & REPAIR SPECIALISTS

Fireplaces • Gas/Oil Chimneys • Damper Repairs Draft Problems Corrected • Animals Humanely Removed Stainless Steel Liners & Chimney Caps Installed Waterproofing • Chimneys Rebuilt

Chimneys Repaired, Rebuilt & Tuckpointing FREE ESTIMATES

MASONRY SPECIALIST

516-766-1666 • 631-225-2600 www.chimneykinginc.com

Fully Licensed & Insured Nassau County License # H0708010000 Suffolk County License # 41048-H • NYC License # 2061397-DCA

233483 S

Federal, New York State and local laws prohibit discrimination because of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, disability, familial status, age, marital status, sexual orientation or disability in connection with the rental, sale or financing of real estate. Nassau also prohibits source of income discrimination. Anton Community Newspapers does not knowingly accept advertising in violation of these laws. When you suspect housing discrimination, call Long Island Housing Services’ Discrimination Complaint Line at 800-6606920. (Long Island Housing Services is the Fair Housing Agency of Nassau and Suffolk Counties.)

Prepare for power outages today WITH A HOME STANDBY GENERATOR

$0 MONEY DOWN + LOW MONTHLY PAYMENT OPTIONS Contact a Generac dealer for full terms and conditions

REQUEST A FREE QUOTE CALL NOW BEFORE THE NEXT POWER OUTAGE

(877) 516-1160

FREE

7-Year Extended Warranty* – A $695 Value!

*To qualify, consumers must request a quote, purchase, install and activate the generator with a participating dealer. Call for a full list of terms and conditions.


19 JULY FULL RUN 6 - 12, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP

LONG ISLAND WEEKLY • JULY 6 - 12, FULL 2022 RUN 19A

MARKETPLACE Saving a Life EVERY 11 MINUTES

alone

Prepare for Power Outages & Save Money

I’m never

DID YOU MOVE?

Life Alert® is always here for me. One touch of a button sends help fast, 24/7. with

GPS !

Help at Home Help On-the-Go ®

Batteries Never Need Charging.

I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!

PWRcell, Generac’s fully-integrated solar + battery storage system, stores solar energy that can power your whole home during utility power outages and save you money on your electric bill.

For a FREE brochure call:

1-800-404-9776

REQUEST A FREE QUOTE!

ACT NOW

CALL US WITH YOUR NEW ADDRESS

TO RECEIVE

A $300 SPECIAL OFFER!* (888) 871-0194

516-403-5120

$0 DOWN FINANCING OPTIONS!** *Offer value when purchased at retail. **Financing available through authorized Generac partners. Solar panels sold separately.

and do not miss any issues!

DON’T MISS OUT ON YOUR LOCAL NEWS.

BACKED BY A YEAR-ROUND

15% & 10 %

2

D

R

1

’S

GU

TT

EXCLUSIVE LIMITED TIME OFFER!

NATIO

N

TH

CLOG-FREE GUARANTEE E

ER GUA

OFF

FINANCING THAT FITS YOUR BUDGET!1 Promo Code: 285

Subject to credit approval. Call for details.

1

CALL US TODAY FOR

A FREE ESTIMATE

YOUR ENTIRE PURCHASE *

+

5% OFF

TO THE FIRST 50 CALLERS ONLY! **

SENIORS & MILITARY!

OFF

LIFETIME WARRANTY

1-855-478-9473

*For those who qualify. One coupon per household. No obligation estimate valid for 1 year. **Offer valid at time of estimate only 2The leading consumer reporting agency conducted a 16 month outdoor test of gutter guards in 2010 and recognized LeafFilter as the “#1 rated professionally installed gutter guard system in America.” CSLB# 1035795 DOPL #10783658-5501 License# 7656 License# 50145 License# 41354 License# 99338 License# 128344 License# 218294 WA UBI# 603 233 977 License# 2102212986 License# 2106212946 License# 2705132153A License# LEAFFNW822JZ License# WV056912 License# WC-29998-H17 Nassau HIC License# H01067000 Registration# 176447 Registration# HIC.0649905 Registration# C127229 Registration# C127230 Registration# 366920918 Registration# PC6475 Registration# IR731804 Registration# 13VH09953900 Registration# PA069383 Suffolk HIC License# 52229-H License# 2705169445 License# 262000022 License# 262000403 License# 0086990 Registration# H-19114

Call 516-403-5120

LEGAL NOTICES

WE INSTALL

YEAR-ROUND!

Mon-Thurs: 8am-11pm, Fri-Sat: 8am-5pm, Sun: 2pm-8pm EST

Get Your Subscription Today!

ADVERTISE HERE CALL 516-403-5170

Keyspan Gas East Corporation d/b/a National Grid

PURPOSE:

THE FILING OF NEW TARIFF AMMENDMENTS TO P.S.C. NO. NO. 11 GAS GAS TO COMPLY WITH THE COMMISSION’S ORDERS DATED JUNE 16, 2022, IN P.S.C. CASES 14-M-0565, et al., AND DATED DATED JUNE 17, 2022, IN P.S.C. CASE 19-G-0310, et al.

Notice is hereby given that Keyspan Gas East Corporation Corporation d/b/a National Grid has filed new tariff amendments with with the the Public Service Commission to comply with the Commission’s Commission’s Orders dated June 16, 2022, to become effective August August 1, 1, 2022, 2022, and June 17, 2022, to become effective July 1, 2022. Keyspan Gas East Corporation d/b/a National Grid (“KEDLI”) filed tariff tariff revisions revisions in in response to a New York State Public Service Commission (“PSC”) order order establishing establishing Phase 1 of the Gas Bill Relief Program. Phase 1 of the Gas Bill Relief Program Program provides customers with active accounts who are currently enrolled in in the the Energy Energy Affordability Program (“EAP”) or who enroll in the EAP on or before December December 31, 31, 2022, or who received benefits from New York State Emergency Rental Rental Assistance Assistance Program or the Home Energy Assistance Program – Regular Arrears Supplement Supplement program, a one-time bill credit for any arrears balance on their bill as as of of and and prior prior to to a bill date of May 1, 2022. The PSC Order also establishes the Arrears Arrears Management Management Program (“AMP”) Surcharge to recover costs of these bill credits.

IA G

ED

M

In addition, the PSC has approved an alternative recovery mechanism mechanism to to recover recover deferrals of unbilled fees that resulted from laws enacted during the the COVID-19 COVID-19 Pandemic. The PSC Order also establishes the Late Payment Charge and and Other Other Waived Fees (“LPCO”) Surcharge to recover associated lost revenues. revenues.

With purchase of a new Safe Step Walk-In Tub. Not applicable with any previous walk-in tub purchase. Offer available while supplies last. No cash value. Must present offer at time of purchase. CSLB 1082165 NSCB 0082999 0083445

FINANCING AVAILABLE WITH APPROVED CREDIT

Notice is hereby given that starting on July 1, 2022, the LPCO Surcharge Surcharge and and on on August 1, 2022, the AMP Surcharge will commence on customer bills bills and and will will be be included in the Delivery Rate Adjustment line. The LPCO and AMP surcharge surcharge is is located on the KEDLI website. For Residential customers: https://www.nationalgridus.com/Long-Island-NY-Home/Bills-Meters-and-Rates/?re https://www.nationalgridus.com/Long-Island-NY-Home/Bills-Meters-and-Rates/?re gionkey=nylongisland&customertype=home and Business customers customers https://www. https://www. nationalgridus.com/Long-Island-NY-Business/Bills-Meters-and-Rates/?regionkey= nationalgridus.com/Long-Island-NY-Business/Bills-Meters-and-Rates/?regionkey= nylongisland&customertype=business. Copies of the proposed revisions are available for public inspection and and can can be be obtained on the Company’s website at https://www.nationalgridus.com. https://www.nationalgridus.com.

233799 M

1-855-916-5473

A N

TO

FREE SHOWER PACKAGE PLUS $1600 OFF

N

Call today and receive a

R O

U P

TEXT:


JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • HEALTHY LIVING

FULL RUN

UPCOMING SHOWS AT BELMONT PARK

BARRY MANILOW

ROGER WATERS

SCORPIONS

THE WHO

SMASHING PUMPKINS

ANDREA BOCELLI

SATURDAY, AUGUST 6

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7

SATURDAY, AUGUST 13

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14

SEPTEMBER 7

DECEMBER 13

ON THE BORDER OF QUEENS AND NASSAU COUNTY 30 MINUTES FROM PENN STATION VIA LIRR

GET TICKETS AT UBSARENA.COM

233765 S


• 7

ANTON MEDIA GROUP • JULY 6 - 12, 2022

Celebrating At The Glen Cove Senior Center

here has been plenty to celebrate at the Glen Cove Senior Center. June 14 - Flag Day Celebration The Island Winds Orchestra entertained us with an amazing medley of songs. Their

group is comprised of retired music teachers from all over Long Island. They introduced the history of every song they played, and we all sang and danced along. It was a fabulous day.

June 17 – Father’s Day Celebration “A father’s smile has been known to light up a child’s entire day.” The Glen Cove Senior Center would like to thank everyone that joined us for our

The Glen Cove Senior Center celebrated Flag Day on June 14.

Father’s Day Celebration. We enjoyed a delicious lunch, special guests, and wonderful live music. —Submitted by Glen Cove Senior Center

The Glen Cove Senior Center celebrated Father’s Day on June 17.

(Photos courtesy the Glen Cove Senior Center)

Don’t Miss a Single Issue!

A BRAND NEW ANTON COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER THAT WILL DELIVER YOUR LOCAL NEWS AND WHOLE LOT MORE

21 Vol. 50, No.

e The Next Mov Is Yours REAL ESTATE AN ANTON MEDIA GROUP

SPECIAL • SPRING 2022

G U I D E

INSIDE

© 2022 DOUGLAS

ELLIMAN REAL

230737 M

ESTATE. EQUAL

Gas Relief tax ‘holiday’ Mulling a gas

ATE REAL EST GUIDE Home prices on Long Island

e Sea Cliff Offic 9.3600 11746. 631.549.7401. Avenue | 516.66 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON STATION, NEW YORK 263 Sea Cliff . 110 HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

$1.00

(See page 3)

FIRST-TIME HOMEOWNING on Long Island

Home prices Tips for a perfect move

Now: Oyster Bay test kits Free at-home

Only 26 $

00

E R LIF O I N SE UARY

FEBR 26 – ARY

DIA N ME

for one year

RY 16

FEBRUA

- 22,

2022

CIAL

Use PROMO CODE 1YXT2022 to add a

(See page 11)

Now: Glen Cove local business Spotlight on

FREE YEAR!

(See page 12)

s: School New Cove local Grant for Glen R

IA GRO

ON MED

AN ANT

&

w centers Senior ndemic the pa g DS wnsizin Y NEE do r fo YBOD Tips EVER LIT TLE TLC A ly or Live-in,Health Catyreprecautions: th Care

ons

ION OFFE FREE SUBSCRIPT details! See inside for Pilot (USPS

nizers Harmo Islandthe soul Long fr m o g n si eather 1

UP SPE

Competition Robotics NYS

Order online: antonnews.com.subscription or

219-560)

11501. Record Mineola, N.Y. P.O. Box 1578, offices under the Act of yster Bay mailing Glen Cove/O to Long Island Community Newspapers, N.Y. and additional Community Newspapers, by Long Island copy is $1.00. Annual address changes at the Post Office at Mineola, week of the year Price per Postmaster: Send postage paid issue the last 516-747-8282. Entered as periodicals51 weeks with a double 1578). Phone: 11501 (P.O. Box Congress. Published St., Mineola, N.Y. 132 East Second is $26 in Nassau County. subscription rate

the Luxury Leaders in 1911 Market Since you. for

to work of Elliman 0400 Put the power Office | 516.759. Locust Valley

HOUSING OPPORTUNITY. ESTATE. EQUAL NY 11746. 631.549.7401. ELLIMAN REAL STATION, © 2022 DOUGLAS ROAD, HUNTINGTON 110 WALT WHITMAN

228477 M

elliman.com

Glen Head, Glenwood Landing, Muttontown, Sea Cliff, Oyster Bay Cove, East Norwich, Bayville, Locust Valley

CALL 516-403-5120 TODAY!

We’re not just your local newspaper we’re a member of your community

WINT ER DIN ING AN AN

TON

GR

TO AN AN

(See page 4)

(See page 14)

22 1, 20

JANU

IAL

SPEC OUP

Compani

Hour rm Home ximum safe itizers. h ma d san ort Te or Sh ed ones wit ting, an ency

Long for your lov , rapid tes alth Care Ag e He , gloves g to car Home 09 Arrivin 95 masks miere m KN ’s Pre 719-09 ions.co Island Long 516-LCcompan

Heal Home

www.T

24/7 CALL E FOR FRE ION TAT CONSUL

anges Big chhe SAT for t

Valen takeo tine ut op tions Croc PkRpO otF comfo E rt foIL od S IN Loca conq l bakers cake uer coffe e mark et

GROU

P SPEC

IAL •

D AVENPORT

A Min Now Ac eola cepting Landm ark...

RES

36

Reser

P RESS

TAU RAN Special T Occasio starting n Din ner at $

1

AN AN

vatio

TON ME

DIA GR

ns Va

for comm Packag 95 christenin unions, gradu per perso es n ation business gs, anniv ersaries, s, rehearsal funct banq engageme dinners, uet roomions and nt partie s avai more s, lable - 120

CIA L

Aged ATUR ING Stea Fresh ks • Prim : Fresh Main e Seafood e Lobs Rib ter Rack of Lam • Pasta b • Pot Dishes Chil Roa Daily ean Sea Bass st Grilled Specialtie King Crab s BanzinoLegs And Muc More! h

peop

• 516

248.83

00 22956

7M

HeartINSIDE $1m fo Health r Alzhei Founda m tion er’s Eve

WA ryone’s Fa RD vorite Eye LA • Com Docto N pre

L CHOO PRES COVE GLEN

PLUS! 45 + THEMED SPECIAL SUPPLEMENTS TOO! Drs.

Call

for an Les is happy appoin Goldb to ann tment ounce erg NG that ISLA, Alan ND Markshe has join Hyde EY an Park, E SU d Eu ed NY 11 RG nice

LO

e n Cov at Gle YMCA 1-8270 516-67

NO L YEAR rs LLING ENRO 23 SCHOOths to 5 yea -20 mon 2022 ages 18

ms for Progra

042

Lee EO • 51 at NS 6.627 .5113 • ww w.long

AR Y 9

y

FE

le 70 Ma in Str Catering We eet • Room follow NY s... tables State Mineol Guide up to a • ww 10 peopl lines e and w.dave 6 feet apart. nportp ress.c om

HO

• FEB RU

e’s Da

CH DENTAILDREN’S LH MONTHEALTH

for 20

OU P SPE

lentin

E, • Laser hensive MD r Eye Car • LAS Cataract , FA ing Surger e • Cor IK/PRK CS NEW nea y Shap n For Spe /Dry Eye LOCATIO • Botox cialist re N!!! 516.6 re Cosme r Now! Child t Futu 1981 tic 27.51 Registe childcare Marcu 13 rg/ s Ave gh ri , SuiteYMCALI.o B A E115 R • New W FO

AT YMCA

2022

MED ICIN E

e

m with away · Sail amp tra c · Hofspening re-o

MEDIA

GU IDE

islande

yesurg

3M

61710

eons.c

om

22996

Se Habla

Illinois Bloomington, , Sea Cliff, Home Office, ng, Muttontown t Valley Glenwood Landi Bayville, Locus cordPilot.com Glen Head, Also Serving Bay Cove, East Norwich, www.GlenCoveRe Oyster 2022 March 23 - 29, elliman.com

Local Politics • School News • Community Calendar • Local Sports Entertainment • Puzzles & Games • Events & Happenings • Classifieds

2M

An Anton

Neigh

Bob Sztorc, Agent

11542 • Glen Cove, NY tatefarm.com 62 School Street • bob.sztorc.btyz@s 516-676-4141 Español • statefarm.com®

23016

not a commo

Buy Quality. bor Service®

24 Hour Good Publication Media Group

M

Insurance is

228595 S

Fresh content delivered to your mailbox each week! e... dity like gasolin

229357

T

7

132 East Second Street, Mineola, NY 11501 • 516-747-8282 • AntonMediaGroup.com • Advertising@AntonMediaGroup.com

- 15, 202

2


• 8

8

JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP

SCHOOL NEWS

Seniors Triumph At North Shore High School Sports Night 2022 For more than 20 years, North Shore High School’s gym and fields have been packed with student athletes, parents, and faculty members for the annual Sports Night competition. Donning white, the seniors upheld their title winning the 2022 Sports Night event on June 9. As with tradition, the freshman competed in green while the sophomores wore blue and the juniors were dressed in yellow. Congratulations to the seniors and all of the students for demonstrating such team spirit and sportsmanship. During the fun and exciting evening, the interclass competitions including tug of war, various relay races, cage volleyball, and the famous obstacle course took place to a roaring crowd! In addition to the athletic competitions, traditionally an Academic

North Shore High School held its annual Sports Night Competition. (Photos by North Shore School District)

Bowl takes place prior to give students the chance to showcase not only their physical attributes, but their academic knowledge. Congratulations to the seniors for win-

ning the Sports Night athletic competition. Without the support from the administration, class advisors, faculty, and parents there would be no sports night. Thanks to

everyone who made this another exciting and fun evening. —Submitted by the North Shore School District

Oyster Bay High School’s Yearbook Program Earns National Honor Oyster Bay High School’s yearbook program was recently presented with the 2022 National Yearbook Program of Excellence award at the bronze level from Jostens. The award-winning yearbook program is led by co-editors and seniors Kristen Purcell and Natalie Varolian, under the direction of Dr. Deirdre Faughey, Oyster Bay High School yearbook adviser. The National Yearbook Program of Excellence recognizes engaging yearbooks that reflect a broad representation of the student body while helping students develop 21st century skills such as communication, collaboration, and information and communication technologies (ICT) literacy. “I am so proud of the hard work and ded-

Members of Oyster Bay High School’s yearbook staff with the 2022 yearbook. (Photo courtesy Oyster Bay-East Norwich Central School District)

ication of this yearbook staff,” Dr. Faughey said. “With the visionary leadership of Kristen and Natalie, the team came together to create a book that will serve as a beautiful memory of this school year.” Jostens’ National Yearbook Program of Excellence Awards are presented twice a year based on the yearbook’s arrival date at the school. The award was presented to the Oyster Bay High School yearbook program for achieving defined criteria in between one and three of the following categories: creating an inclusive yearbook, generating school engagement and successfully managing the yearbook creation process. —Submitted by the Oyster Bay-East Norwich Central School District

Glen Cove Resident Earns Induction Into Local Radio Hall Of Fame Joseph Manfredi, an instructor in the SUNY Old Westbury Media & Communications program and station director for OWW, Old Westbury Web Radio, was inducted into The WCWP/88.1 FM, Long Island University, Hall of Fame on Saturday, June 1. “I am truly humbled by this recognition, and what a great celebration of radio, the field of broadcasting, and all of my students and alumni that spans over two decades at two great institutions,” said Manfredi of his induction. “Plus, to share this wall with so many greats in the industry is an honor.” The WCWP/88.1 FM Hall of Fame began in 2012 and inductees are graduates from the Post Campus of Long Island University. All inductees have extensive experience in radio, television, or both and include Fred Gaudelli, former executive producer of ABC Monday Night Football and NBC Sunday Night Football and currently executive producer of Amazon Prime’s Thursday Night Football; Rita Sands, ABC News and the first full-time female anchor on WCBS News Radio 880; and Ted David, part of the

launch team for CNBC Television and later a news anchor for News 12. A resident of Glen Cove, Manfredi is the radio station Manager of OWWR, Old Westbury Web Radio, the college’s official student radio station. In this role, he oversees all studio operations, staffing, and distribution of programming, including the scheduling and supervision of students, faculty, alumni and community volunteers for programming. Additionally, he teaches courses in history, theory and production related to radio and multimedia as a faculty member in the American Studies/Media & Communications Department. In 2010, Manfredi received the Excellence in Education as Faculty and Station Manager of OWWR Award. He is a founder and chair of the MAC (Media Arts Celebration) Awards held annually at the college. His work at OWWR has been published and featured in Radio Magazine, Radio World and Radio World International. Prior to coming to SUNY Old Westbury, Manfredi was the director of operations of the

Benjamin and Elizabeth Abrams Communications Center, WCWP/88.1 FM and Web Radio WCWP at LIU, where he taught in the Media & Communications department, and received the 2006 Faculty Member of the Year Award. Across his career, Manfredi has earned numerous awards, and has hosted, produced, engineered, and performed voice-overs for a variety of radio programs and advertisements. He is also a member of the Society of Professional Journalists, the Radio Television Digital News Association, Audio Engineering Society, College Media Association, Fair Media Council and Press Club of Long Island. He continues to serve as a judge at both the regional and national levels for the industry including the Edward R. Murrow Awards, and Mark of Excellence Awards. OWWR, Old Westbury Web Radio is the official radio station of the SUNY Old Westbury on the air 24 hours a day, seven days a week. OWWR provides student, faculty, alumni and community volunteer programming that broadcasts online, on

Peter Belotti, Jr., right, CBS Sports radio producer, congratulates Joe Manfredi after introducing him as the newest member of The WCWP/88.1 Hall of Fame. (Photo courtesy Michael Chimeri)

cell phones, and via any wireless device or tablet. OWWR is a variety station that features news, sports, talk, and offers a wide variety of music programming. —Submitted by SUNY Old Westbury


• 9

ANTON MEDIA GROUP • JULY 6 - 12, 2022

9

American Cancer Society’s Third Annual Red, White & Blue Bash A Success

T

he Long Island Young Professionals of the American Cancer Society (also known as YPACS) hosted its third annual Red, White and Blue Summer Bash at the Crescent Beach Club, Bayville in mid-June. More than 150 supporters enjoyed entertainment by Diamond Dig, a live Fire Dancer demonstration, beach games, dancing, signature drinks and a gourmet barbeque amidst a spectacular beach front setting, while raising more than $35,000 to benefit the American Cancer Society programs and services including the NYC Hope Lodge. Honorees for the 2022 Red, White and Blue were CEO of KGI Group Kim Poulos Lieberz, of Farmingdale, and Angela Calvo, a lifelong leader and volunteer across Long Island. Details about our honorees are found at www.acsredwhiteblue.org. “The American Cancer Society is thankful to our Red, White, and Blue sponsors,

including Dan’s Paper/Long Island Press, Henry Schein, Barito Tacos & Cocktails, Bridge Capital Solutions, Estee Lauder/ Nordstrom, Event Profs, Jokas Wild, New York Backdrops and KGI Design Group,” said Stephanie Robb, Development Manager at American Cancer Society. This spirited evening affair supported the Society’s life-saving mission to celebrate lives, save lives and lead the fight for a world without cancer. Complete details are available online www.acsredwhiteblue.org. —Submitted by the American Cancer Society Pictured from left to right: Brittany Lawton, American Cancer Society Associate Director; Corporate Honoree Kim Poulos Lieberz and Stephanie Robb, ACS Development Manager. (Submitted by the American Cancer Society)

OBITUARY Richard Basso of Malone, NY passed on June 9, 2022, at the age of 47. He is the beloved husband of Randi. Loving father of Riley and Giacomo. Loving

GLEN COVE L EGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SAL E SU PREME CO U RT CO U NT Y O F NASSAU , 50 CLINT O N MANAGEMENT LLC, Plaintiff, vs. RENFA LI, ET AL., Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on March 25, 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 3, 2022 at 2:30 p.m., premises known as 16 Robin Court, Glen Cove, NY 11542. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the City of Glen Cove, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 30, Block 88 and Lot 81. Approximate amount of j udgment is $34,836.1 1 plus interest, fees and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed Judgment Index No. 612501/ 2021. T his foreclosure sale will be held on the North Side Steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. CO VID-19 safety

son of Richard Basso and the late Lydia Flores. Richard is survived by many family members and friends. Memorial visiting was at Whitting Funeral

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. Brian J. Davis, Esq., R eferee Robert Bichoupan, P.C., 175 East Shore Road, Suite 270, Great Neck, New York 11023, Attorneys for Plaintiff 7-20-13-6; 6-29- 2022-4T #233568- GCO B/ RP L EGAL NOTICE NO T ICE O F LEGAL PO ST PO NEMENT O F SALE SU PREME CO U RT NASSAU CO U NT Y HSBC BANK U SA, N.A., Plaintiff against GEO RGE LINCO N, et al Defendant(s) Attorney for Plaintiff(s) Fein Such & Crane, LLP, 1400 O ld Country Road, Suite 103N, W estbury, NY 11590. Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered September 20, 2017, I will sell at public auction to the highest bidder at North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on July 12, 2022 at 2:30 PM. Premises known as 35 Duck Pond Road, Glen Cove, NY 11542. Sec 23 Block 25 Lot

Home, 300 Glen Cove Ave., Glen Head, NY 11545. Funeral Service and Military Honors was on Saturday, June 25 at Whitting Funeral Home. Burial of

cremains was on Monday, June 27 at Long Island National Cemetery. Further information at www. whitting.com.

LEGAL NOTICES 2. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, situate, lying and being in the City of Glen Cove, County of Nassau and State of New York. Approximate Amount of Judgment is $837,270.45 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subj ect to provisions of filed Judgment Index No 011077/ 2012. T he foreclosure sale will be conducted in accordance with 10th Judicial District’ s Covid-19 Policies and foreclosure auction rules. T he Referee shall enforce any rules in place regarding facial coverings and social distancing. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, then the Court Appointed Referee shall cancel the foreclosure auction. Foreclosure Auctions will be held “ Rain or Shine.” Michael Cardello, Esq., Referee SNNY045 7-6-2022-1T -#233803GCO B/ RP

OYSTER BAY L EGAL NOTICE PU BL IC NOTICE VIL L AGE OF L ATTINGTOWN NOTICE IS H EREBY

GIVEN that a public hearing will be held before the Board of T rustees of the Incorporated Village of Lattingtown, Nassau County, New York, at the Lattingtown Village Hall, 299 Lattingtown Road in said Village on W ednesday, July 20, 2022 at 4:30 p.m. If, due to the current Covid-19 pandemic, the hearing cannot be conducted in-person, the hearing will be conducted via Z oom video conference. T he link to participate in the hearing will be posted on the Village’ s website: www.lattingtown.org T he hearing will be on the renewal of the cable television Franchise Agreement with Cablevision Systems Long Island Corporation, for renewal of its cable franchise agreement with the Village. All interested persons will be heard on Cablevision’ s compliance with the requi rements of the terms and conditions of the existing franchise agreement, along with the Village’ s and its residents needs and requi rements for cable related services under the new proposed franchise agreement. A copy of Cablevision’ s Franchise Agreement with the Village of Lattingtown is on file at Humes & W agner, LLP, attorneys for the Village, where it may be reviewed on

Monday thru Friday between the hours of 9: 30 am and 4:30 p.m. during usual business days until the time of the hearing. All persons interested will be given an opportunity to be heard at said hearing. Any person needing special assistance in attending, please notify the Village Clerk (516676-6920) at least 48 hours in advance of the hearing.

By O rder of the Board of T rustees Dawn Gresalfi Village Clerk/ T reasurer Dated: July 6, 2022 7-6-2022-1T -#233774GCO B/ O B

the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on June 24, 2022. O ffice location: Nassau County. SSNY designated as agent for service of process. SSNY shall mail process against the LLC to: LLC c/ o Chalos & Co, P.C., 55 Hamilton Ave, O yster Bay L EGAL NOTICE NY 11771. Purpose: any lawNO T ICE O F FO RMAT IO N, ful purpose or activity. 67 K ent, LLC. Articles 8-10-3-; 7-27-20-13-6-2022of O rganization filed with 6T -#233805- GCO B/ O B

To Submit L egal Notices for L L Ps, L L Cs, Summonses, Orders to Show Cause, Citations, Name Changes, Bankruptcy Notices, Trustees Sales, Auction Sales, Foundation Notices

Visit our website at antonmediagroup.com or call L egal Advertising at ( 516) 403-5143 Fax us at ( 516) 742- 6376 or email us at legals@antonnews.com


• 10

10

JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP

S

Town Of Oyster Bay Pools Are Open

upervisor Joseph Saladino and Councilwoman Laura Maier announced that all Town of Oyster Bay pools are open for the season. The Town of Oyster Bay operates five pool facilities, including Bethpage Community Park, Marjorie Post Community Park, PlainviewOld Bethpage Community Park, SyossetWoodbury Community Park and a saltwater pool at Tappen Beach in Glenwood Landing. “The warm, sunny days of summer are nearly upon us and all residents may start visiting our pools daily beginning Saturday, June 25,” Saladino said. “Town pool memberships offer families and senior citizens access to many great amenities, including upgraded restrooms, pool deck furniture, picnic benches and sunshades.” Pool hours are through Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 5 and will be from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily, weather permitting. Additionally, extended hours until 8 p.m., will be offered as follows (weather permitting) at the following locations on the following schedule: • Monday: Syosset-Woodbury • Tuesday: Plainview-Old Bethpage

• Wednesday: Bethpage • Thursday: Marjorie R. Post

• Fridays: All pools open late including Tappen

Pool memberships can be obtained at each park location. Memberships are available at community park pools for both park district residents and non-park district residents. Daily admission rates, nanny memberships and group access are also available. In addition to the great new amenities at our facilities, the town is offering swimming lessons at local pools to members age five and older. Applications to register for swimming lessons will be available at each facility, with four swim lesson sessions available to choose from. The town will also offer a swim team this summer at outdoor pools located in Syosset-Woodbury Community Park and Marjorie R. Post Community Park in Massapequa. Town of Oyster Bay residents aged 6 to 16 are eligible to register for the swim program. Practices will be held on Monday, Wednesday and Fridays, from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. beginning Wednesday, June 29. Swim meets will be held Saturday mornings and class meets will be held Tuesday afternoons. Schedules will be distributed the first week of practice. —Submitted by the Town of Oyster Bay

Scouts Invited To Help Reduce Water Pollution Through New Environmental Program To help reduce water pollution in our town, Oyster Bay Town Councilwoman Vicki Walsh invites Scouts to participate in the Town of Oyster Bay’s new Storm Drain Medallion Marker Program. This program involves the placement of green medallions, with the slogan “only rain in the drain” onto the face of town storm drain covers, thus reminding residents how critical it is for the safety of local waterways that only rain pass through curbside storm drains. “As water flows from outdoor surfaces like streets, parking lots, and driveways, it enters curbside storm drains that eventually discharge directly into our waterways. There is no treatment process before this water reaches a river, lake, or other water body, so any litter that comes in contact

with it is transported along with the clean water,” Walsh said. “Contaminants are then able to enter into the Long Island Sound, South Shore Bay and other bodies of water where swimming and boating take place. Therefore, it is vitally important for our water quality and environmental state that these contaminants never enter our waterways, which is why the Town launched this educational initiative.” The Town of Oyster Bay Department of Environmental Resources will provide volunteers all necessary supplies, including the medallion, adhesive glue to attach the medallion to the storm drain, a map of storm drain locations that need a medallion and safety instructions. Scouts can choose to place medallions in their local commu-

nity or be assigned a location in the Town of Oyster Bay. Spring and Summer offer the best weather for this initiative. Visit www.oysterbaytown.com/ stormdrains to complete a form if you are interested in volunteering. Only one person per team needs to register. You can register for multiple supply kits at one time. Call the Department of Environmental Resources at 516-677-5943 with any questions. —Submitted by the Town of Oyster Bay A group of Girl Scouts apply a Town of Oyster Bay Storm Drain Medallion Marker to remind residents that only rain belongs in the drain. (Photo courtesy Town of Oyster Bay)

Saladino Announces ‘Dressed To Kilt’ Charity Fashion Show To Benefit The Navy SEAL Foundation

Oyster Bay Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino announced recently that ‘Dressed to Kilt,’ the most prestigious and exciting Scottish fashion event in the world, will be coming to the Town of Oyster Bay this summer. Dressed to Kilt, founded by Scottish actor Sir Sean Connery in 2003, is an annual charity fashion show that raises funds to benefit the Navy SEAL Foundation. The show will take place on the evening of Saturday, July 23, at the Mill Neck Manor Estate in Mill Neck. “Dressed to Kilt is a well-established

charity fashion event that has a long history of serving veterans on both sides of the Atlantic. In previous years, the show has raised funds for organizations such as The Erskine Hospital, Paralyzed Veterans of America, and The Wounded Warrior Project, all benefiting the brave men and women who fought in protection of our freedoms,” Saladino said. “It’s sure to be an entertaining evening on Oyster Bay’s beautiful Gold Coast and all for a great cause.” This year’s theme is ‘Dress for Adven-

ture- From the Highlands to the Hamptons,’ featuring clothing for all things outdoorsy, including but not limited to hunting, shooting and fishing. Participating models in the show will include Navy SEAL veterans, US Congressional Medal of Honor recipients, A-list celebrities and athletes. The show is open to the public and includes a pre-show cocktail party, a post-show buffet, open bar and dancing. Visit www.dressedtokilt.com to purchase tickets. —Submitted by the Town of Oyster Bay

Grab your kilt for Oyster Bay’s Dress to Kilt event. (Photo courtesy Wikimedia Commons)


• 11

ANTON MEDIA GROUP • JULY 6 - 12, 2022

EAST ZONE

Dr. Leon Schwechter Dr. Javier Morales

11

Dr. Craig Grobman Dr. Neena Shah

ADVANCED INTERNAL MEDICINE GROUP, P.C. EXPERTS in ADULT and GERIATRIC PRIMARY CARE TREATING CHRONIC and ACUTE CONDITIONS For over 35 years our Physicians have aimed to develop relationships with patients and families that help us provide personalized care. • Expert Diabetes Care • Providing Inpatient Care at St. Francis Hospital “The Heart Center” • Full on Site Lab for Same Day Results • 24/7 On Call Doctor’s • Friendly & Knowledgeable Staff • Ask Us About Our House Call Service

WE’RE LOOKING TO EXPAND OUR STAFF! CONTACT US TODAY TO JOIN THE TEAM!

Covid19 Testing & Telemedicine Also Available Please call us today at

516.352.8100

or visit us online at www.advancedinternalmedicinegroup.com

2200 Northern Boulevard • Suite 133, East Hills 233809 S


• 12

JULY 6 - 12, 2022 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP

Elevate your Real Estate

Career in 2022

At Douglas Elliman, Our People Are Our Priority. We are a network built by agents, for agents, with the reach and resources to take your business to new heights. If you are ready to take the next step, contact Anthony (Tony) Piscopio, Senior Executive Manager of Sales, North Shore.

Anthony (Tony) Piscopio Senior Executive Manager Of Sales O 516.953.4248 | M 516.395.1556 anthony.piscopio@elliman.com

© 2022 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY.

110 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON STATION, NY 11746. 631.549.7401.

231927 S

ISSN: 2831-3429

Sea Cliff Office 263 Sea Cliff Avenue elliman.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.