Also serving Sands Point, Baxter Estates, Port Washington North, Flower Hill and Manorhaven Vol. 119, No. 2
November 1 – 7, 2023
An Anton Media Group Publication
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INSIDE
SALUTE TO VETERANS She Vets
ial flags Unclaimed bur y Burn pit registr
We Honor Female Veterans
Neighbors in the News: Local garden clubs host joint meeting (See page 4)
(See page 3)
Calendar: Election Day is on Tuesday, Nov. 7 (See page 10) School News: Schreiber Theater Company announces new play (See page 12) Community: Annual Thanksgiving Day Run details (See page 16)
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Jojo Gold harvesting vegetables with Plant A Row for the Hungry. (Photo from Sandrine Gold)
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REPRESENTING SPECTACULAR PROPERTIES FROM CITY TO SEA.
REAL ESTATE ADVISORS Manhattan • Long Island • The Hamptons
The Founding Agents of Compass Long Island Nicholas Colombos
Angela Dooley
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Licensed Real Estate Salesperson Luxury Division | Council Member angela.dooley@compass.com M: 516.315.7781
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Can You Help Too?
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TOP STORY
A local family’s effort to strengthen the community
jprisco@antonmediagroup.com
D
uring the COVID-19 pandemic, local brothers David and Johnathan (Jojo) Gold began donating extra canned goods to Our Lady of Fatima’s food pantry to help those struggling during the lockdowns. Three years later, the boys have formed Can You Help Too to continue their efforts to help communities thrive. At the height of the pandemic, when people didn’t know what to expect, the Gold family stoked up on non-perishables. When the family noticed that store shelves and food pantries were struggling to provide canned goods, the brothers decided to take the cans they didn’t need and donate them to Our Lady of Fatima’s food pantry. Jojo, a junior at Schreiber High School, said, “We had such a surplus in canned goods. We realized we got way more than we needed. So we met with Sister Kathy at Our Lady of Fatima and were able to donate to people in need.” The Gold family told Sister Kathy that they would try to bring more canned goods occasionally throughout the pandemic. To help supply the donations, the boys got friends and families involved. This led to the boys gathering enough donations to drop off canned goods to Our Lady of Fatima once a month. The Gold brothers’ generosity and desire to help those in need had been instilled in them from a young age. Since 2012, the Gold family has volunteered at The Community Dinners. The Community
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Jojo has volunteered at Summer Together, where he has volunteered for two weeks at their camp for the last three summers. He also volunteers with Plant a Row for the Hungry to help grow vegetables. David and Jojo’s mother, Sandrine, shared that about a year ago, the founder of Plant A Row, Marvin Makofsky, approached Jojo to help advertise a series of events he was hosting at the library. This collaboration led Makofsky and Jojo to work together to achieve their goals of helping those in need in Port Washington. In recognition of Jojo’s dedication to serving the community, he has received multiple awards and recognitions. He has received two proclamations from the Town Jojo Gold and Dr. Geyer from the Long Delivering a donation bin to Smusht. of North Hempstead, a citation from the Island School For The Gifted. (Photos from Sandrine Gold) Nassau County Legislature and a citation from the New York State Assembly. Most Dinners were originally held at St. Peter’s One permanent drop-off site is in recently, Jojo received the Presidential Church, then moved to the Community Huntington at The Long Island School For Synagogue. According to the Can You Help The Gifted, where Jojo attended school from Volunteer Award from the Parent Resource Center for his volunteer work with the Too website, the dinners provide a free, Kindergarten to eighth grade. In addition PCR, Our Lady of Fatima, Plant a Row for relaxing evening of dinner and dancing to to the collection bin, Jojo started a Social the Hungry, The Community Dinners and families in need. For the last ten years, the Action Club. On Oct. 24, Jojo surprised the Summer Together. Gold family has volunteered four times a head of the school, Dr. Patricia Geyer with Jojo described being recognized as year to serve meals to families. a trophy. Each year he gives one to a local amazing. “These people are realizing how With years of volunteer work under their business that helps him collect food. In belts and support from the Port Washington 2022, the Sands Point Preserve Conservancy impactful everything and everyone is. Everyone has to be a part of stuff; not one community, David and Jojo were inspired to received the trophy and in 2021 it was person can change everything; it has to be start Can You Help Too. Beauty Fluff. multiple. It takes a community. Without the Since the start of Can You Help Too, the “People drop off canned goods, diapers community, this wouldn’t be working,” he team and reach of their work has grown. and baby formula,” said Jojo. “We usually “I’ve noticed that more people in town divide them up between two organizations. said. One of Can You Help Too’s biggest factors are joining,” said Jojo. “So more people and The canned goods go to Our Lady of Fatima, is its CommUNITY Project, the project businesses in town are getting involved.” and then the baby goods go to the Parent through which they get people involved and Can You Help Too has established a hand- Resource Center.” receive donations. ful of permanent donation boxes across Port David has recently left for college at “Getting the community involved is Washington. Drop-off locations include Syracuse University to study sports analytlike the best thing you can do,” said Jojo. The Growing Love Community Garden, ics. In his absence, Jojo has taken over Can “Because then it spreads into more, not just Smusht, Beauty Fluff Spa, The Sands Point You Help Too, with help from David from one area. It spreads nationwide because Preserve Conservancy, The Parent Resource a distance. David has started collecting Center (PRC), The Cooking Lab and Carlo’s non-perishables for the Syracuse University people have families living all over that can do the same for their communities.” Pizza. Visit the Can You Help Too website Food Pantry in Syracuse. To learn more about Jojo and Can You (canyouhelptoo.org) for more information Aside from donating items for people in on these drop-off sites. need, Can You Help Too donates their time. Help Too, visit canyouhelptoo.org
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NEIGHBORS IN THE NEWS Dellonutritionals Talks Sports Performance To Port Washington Row Team The lecture was here in Port Washington, given to the Port Rowing team in Hempstead Harbor in early September. Dellonutritionals owner, Maria Dello, CN, gave a lecture on Sport Performance and Recovery for endurance training and nutrition. Topics included the importance of staying hydrated and which drinks are safe and which actually can be dehydrating; which foods to eat before and after a workout session and which foods are best to avoid. Other topics included which daily habits can actually repair muscle; a full demo on reading labels and looking for sugars and hidden sugars, recovery meals and protein shakes. Dello says “Eat like an athlete and win.” —Submitted by Dellonutritionals
Port Rowing team members and coaches with Maria Dello. (Contributed phots)
Maria Dello talking to the Port Rowing team.
Pulitzer Prize-Winning Biographer To Discuss Her Latest Book
Celebrating Rewild Long Island Student Volunteers Town of North Hempstead Councilmember Mariann Dalimonte joined New York State Assemblywoman Gina Sillitti in recognizing student volunteers from Rewild Long Island on Oct. 7. Participants in the Rewild Long Island Summer program worked on projects focusing on combating invasive plants and food security. Council Member Dalimonte presented certificates of recognition to celebrate their commitment to helping others.
FOL University, the Friends of the Library’s scholarly lecture series, will feature Pulitzer Prize–winning biographer Stacy Schiff discussing her latest book, The Revolutionary: Samuel Adams, which recounts Adams’ instrumental role in triggering the events that would lead to the American Revolution. Schiff will appear in conversation with John O’Connell, former President of the PWPL Board of Trustees. Though Samuel Adams is typically overshadowed by such towering contemporaries as Washington, Jefferson, and Adams’ second cousin, John Adams, Samuel’s behind-the-scenes machinations were a crucial factor in setting in motion the wheels of revolution. Schiff enthusiastically digs through much of the limited material available on her subject. She exhaustively dissects whatever was written about him by his contemporaries, and explores the numerous politically charged essays that he submitted under pseudonyms to newspapers. Schiff provides a penetrating analysis
of Samuel’s tactics and motivations, and traces his story from his unassuming and somewhat aimless roots as a failed businessman to his role as a highly influential American statesman. What is revealed is how his grounded idealism was present from the outset and remained consistent throughout his life. Schiff’s most recent books, Cleopatra: A Life and The Witches: Salem, 1692, were both #1 bestsellers. She also is the author of Véra (Mrs. Vladimir Nabokov), winner of the Pulitzer Prize; Saint-Exupéry: A Biography, a Pulitzer finalist; and A Great Improvisation: Franklin, France, and the Birth of America, winner of the George Washington Book Prize. The Revolutionary: Samuel Adams, will be available for purchase and signing. Patrons can attend in-person in the Lapham Meeting Room or watch on Zoom. Visit pwpl.org/events to register and for more information. —Submitted by the Friends of the Library
(Photo and information contributed by the Town of North Hempstead)
Garden Clubs Celebrate Together The Port Washington Garden Club and The Sands Point Garden Club held their annual joint meeting at the Port Washington Public Library. The members enjoyed assorted salads, hearty sandwiches and delicious desserts and beverages, along with ambience, provided by the members. The highlight of the meeting was the magnificent floral arrangements, created by floral designer Sean Beckert of S.F. Falconer Florist. A raffle was held and the lucky winners took home beautiful floral arrangements. We thank Fred of S.F. Falconer Florist for his continuous support and this wonderful program. (Photo and information contributed by the Port Washington Garden Club)
(Contributed photos)
Stacy Schiff
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023
Something Special In Soundview
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Updates From The MTA State Budget, the MTA’s operating budget is in “good shape,” said Lieber. The operating budget pays for running and maintaining the trains. The MTA has compiled the 20-year needs assessment, which prioritizes the needs of the MTA and LIRR. Considering the MTA is one of the oldest commuter railroads in the U.S., the system needs to be maintained and jprisco@antonmediagroup.com renewed. n Thursday, Oct. 19, the Metropolitan The 20-year needs assessment looks at the Transit Authority (MTA) and Long physical condition of the many components Island Rail Road (LIRR) hosted of the MTA system, such as bridges, power a Long Island Media Roundtable at the systems, tracks, train current and much Jamaica Central Control Building to discuss more. pressing topics for Long Islanders. “We need to address the fact that we have MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber and a great system, but it’s old, and it needs to be LIRR Senior Vice President of Operations renewed,” said Lieber. and incoming President Rob Free hosted the event. Mass Transit and Climate Change “We’re passionate about Long Island as Greenhouse gases are one of the major part of our MTA region, and we’re passionate contributors to climate change. Carbon about the Long Island Rail Road,” said Lieber. dioxide (CO2) is one of the most prominent “We think that if we can make this a model greenhouse gases emitted from cars. Mass of how people use mass transit to have better transit is one of the ways to reduce the lives and to have a more climate-friendly way amount of emissions from cars. of doing things in their lives, we can set an “Mass transit is the antidote to climate example for the rest of the United States in change,” said Lieber. “So everything we do to the way we’re trying to improve the railroad.” get people onto mass transit is a huge step for climate change.” Capital Program The MTA has made a plan by looking With Governor Kathy Hochul and the at how the MTA delivers mass transit and state legislature’s work on the New York how to make improvements. For example,
spent about $8 billion dollars since Sandy on protecting the system in many different ways from coastal flooding. And that actually had benefit in this last storm a couple of weeks ago.”
JULIE PRISCO
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From the left: LIRR Senior Vice President of Operations and incoming President Rob and MTA Chairman and CEO Janno Lieber. (Photo by Julie Prisco) they are looking into the specifics of moving toward electrification. In addition, they are working on redesigning the bus system, including more bike racks at train stations and updating the policy on electric scooters. In addition to helping reduce contributions to climate change, the MTA is working to better manage the LIRR and subways during large storms, which Long Island has seen more recently due to climate change. “We’re all experiencing the sudden torrential downpours and coastal flooding, which really permanently kills the system because of the salt water,” said Lieber. “We
Statistics Throughout the pandemic, ridership was at an all-time low due to lockdowns and working from home. Since lockdowns have been lifted and people are moving back into offices, ridership has increased. “[In mid-October] we saw the highest average weekday ridership since the pandemic, averaging over 231,000 customers a day. We also had our highest ridership day since the pandemic [on Oct. 12], with approximately 249,000 customers,” said Free. “We have seen a significant increase in our operational reliability. On-time performance for October, as of [Oct. 18] is 95.06 percent, above our goal of 94 percent.” Grand Central Madison ridership has been increasing as well. When the project first finished, the split between Penn Station and Madison was 70-30. “Now, it’s regularly north of 35 percent of riders going to Grand Central,” said Free. “By delivering the best service, we can meet our current customer’s expectations and attract new customers. We don’t want to just provide train service; we want it to be world-class service that our customers can be proud of.”
Open Concept Colonial in Soundview
155 Soundview Drive, Port Washington, NY Upon entering, you’ll discover a welcoming, well-lit living area that seamlessly connects the living room, dining space, and kitchen, ideal for gatherings. Large windows flood the living room with natural light, leading to a spacious patio and pool. The kitchen boasts stainless steel appliances, granite countertops, and ample cabinet space, with a convenient breakfast bar island. Adjacent to the living area, a cozy den offers a more intimate space for relaxation and entertainment. The primary suite includes a spacious bedroom with an en suite bath and plenty of storage with walk-in and double closets. Two additional bedrooms feature generous space and large closets. Step into the backyard oasis with a refreshing pool and a deck. Whether you’re lounging poolside or hosting a barbecue, this outdoor space is perfect year-round, offering privacy in a lush, wooded setting. This home combines classic design and modern amenities, creating a serene, natural escape. Enjoy the convenience of a shuttle to the train station (with a fee) and proximity to Port North Promenade, restaurants, and major shopping at Soundview. MLS# 3511901. $1,299,000.
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Big Easy Gala
Landmark on Main Street celebrates the culture of New Orleans with Preservation Hall Jazz Band as one of the most caring and generous businesses of Port Washington. About Preservation Hall Jazz Band: At a moment when musical streams are crossing with unprecedented frequency, it’s crucial to remember that throughout its history, New Orleans has been the point at which sounds and cultures from around the world converge, mingle, and resurface, transformed by the Crescent City’s inimitable spirit and joie de vivre. Nowhere is that idea more vividly embodied than in the Preservation Hall Jazz Band, which has held the torch of New Orleans music aloft for more than 50 years, all the while carrying it Preservation Hall Jazz Band (Photo by Patrick Melon) enthusiastically forward as a reminder that the history they were founded to preserve at Landmark, access to the pre-show Rimsky Theater. Together Ellen and Bob is a vibrantly living history. Landmark on reception at Landmark, and preferred have sponsored numerous shows and have Main Street is a not-for-profit community seating at the show. Concert-only tickets attended over 100 Landmark concerts as center that enhances the spirit and enare $58 and include balcony seating for the they continue to support and enjoy what riches the lives of the communities of Port performance. they call their local gem. Washington and surrounding regions. S.F. Falconer Florist has been a pillar Landmark on Main Street is located at About the honorees: in Port Washington for more than 100 232 Main St. in Port Washington, New York. Ellen and Bob met while commuting on years and has been at the same location More information is available through our the Long Island Rail Road. They moved on South Maryland Avenue for over a box office at 516-767-6444. to Port Washington in 1979 for the better century. S.F. Falconer Florist has dedicated —Submitted by the LIRR commute and have been in Port ever themselves to contributing to many of the Landmark on Main Street since. Ellen spent many years as the Box town’s organizations and has been lauded Office Manager for the Landmark’s Jeanne
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Shelley Scotto is a real estate agent affiliated with Compass. Compass is a licensed real estate broker and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, condition, sale, or withdrawal without notice. No statement is made as to the accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footages are approximate. This is not intended to solicit property already listed. Nothing herein shall be construed as legal, accounting or other professional advice outside the realm of real estate brokerage. 1468 Northern Blvd, Manhasset, NY 11030. *Data per Real Trends America’s Best 2023 Rankings
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andmark on Main Street is bringing a taste of the Big Easy to Port Washington on Nov. 4, for the Big Easy Gala with Preservation Hall Jazz Band. Landmark will be honoring longtime supporters Ellen Brown and Bob Schwartz. The gala will also honor S.F. Falconer Florist for their contributions to the community throughout the years. The evening will begin at Harbor Links Golf Course in Port Washington with a special menu highlighting New Orleans cuisine featuring some classic New Orleans cocktails. The night then moves on to Landmark on Main Street’s Jeanne Rimsky Theater for a pre-show reception with catering from Biscuits and Barbeque Cajun restaurant and cocktail tasting from Wandering Barman in Brooklyn. The highlight of the night is a performance from the legendary Preservation Hall Jazz Band. The evening’s talent is generously sponsored by Rachelle and Damon Gersh. Tickets are available at three levels. Full evening tickets are $300 and include dinner at Harbor Links, the pre-show reception at Landmark, and VIP seating for the performance. VIP Pre-show reception tickets are $150 and include an open bar
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023
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NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
CALENDAR
WHAT’S HAPPENING IN YOUR COMMUNITY
FRIDAY, NOV. 3
Sandwiched In with Sal St. George 12 p.m.-1:30 p.m. (Library Lapham Meeting Room) In a salute to the upcoming Veteran’s Day holiday, join Adjunct Professor and TV and film historian Sal St. George, for an entertaining program celebrating some of television’s finest service comedies. Visit pwpl.org to register.
Over his career, Kearney has released five studio LPs, claimed the #1 spot on iTunes, topped multiple Billboard charts, made four entries into the Hot 100, amassed over 2.5 billion global streams. Visit landmarkonmainstreet. org for ticket information.
NOV 7TH
Election Day
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 8
The College Process For Teens 7 p.m.-9 p.m. (Library Hagedorn Meeting Room) This two-hour workshop will provide students and parents with an understanding of the cognitive and non-cognitive factors of the college process, and how to best support students as they navigate through high school and prepare for the application season in senior year. Visit pwpl.org to register.
SUNDAY, NOV. 4
Survive the Wild Family Workshop 10 a.m.-11:30 p.m. (Science Museum of Long Island, 1526 N. Plandome Rd.) Learn some handy survival skills as we learn to identify various plants, build shelters, and cook a tasty treat over an open campfire. Our Family workshops are fun for the whole family. Tickets must be purchased for all adults and children over the age of 3 that will be attending. Visit smli.org for more information. Kids Carnival and Bake Sale 10 a.m.-3:30 p.m. (St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church, 9 Carlton Ave.) St. Stephen’s Annual Kids Carnival and Bake Sale. We have, baked goods, homemade candy, carnival games and prizes, crafts, petting zoo, pony rides, hot chocolate, hot apple cider, coffee, popcorn, and more. Rain or Shine.
FRIDAY, NOV. 10
(Getty Images)
TUESDAY, NOV. 7
Election Day All day. Check out the Oct. 25 issue of the Port Washington News for information about the candidates running in your area. Strange Science Holiday Workshop 10 a.m.-3 p.m. (Science Museum of Long Island, 1526 N. Plandome Rd.) From creepy creatures with unique adaptations, to
Family Shorts 3 p.m.-4 p.m. (Library Lapham Meeting Room) As part of a series of film festival events, the Gold Coast International Film Festival is proud to present Family Shorts, a fantastic and fun program of short films perfect for the whole family! This 45-minute program is suitable for all ages and includes take-home Mat Kearney: The Acoustic Trio Tour movie-themed art activities. Visit pwpl. 7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m. (Jeanne Rimsky Theater) org to register. non-Newtonian solutions, we’ll explore the stranger side of science. Our Holiday Workshops allow kids ages 4-13 to really dig into the heart of science in a fun, friendly, camp-like atmosphere on the days they have off from school. Visit smli.org for more information.
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PUBLIC STATEMENT HEARINGS TO BE HELD IN PSC CASES 23-G-0225, 23-G-0226 – NATIONAL GRID NY AND NATIONAL GRID FOR GAS SERVICE On April 28, 2023, The Brooklyn Union Gas Company d/b/a National Grid NY (KEDNY) and KeySpan Gas East Corporation d/b/a National Grid (KEDLI)(collectively, the Companies) filed amendments to their gas tariff schedules proposing to increase their annual gas delivery revenues effective March 31, 2024. KEDNY proposes to increase its revenues by $414 million (a 28 percent increase in base delivery revenues or a 17 percent increase in total revenues). KEDLI proposes to increase its revenues by $228 million (a 24 percent increase in base delivery revenues or a 14 percent increase in total revenues). Although the actual bill impacts of these proposed changes on any particular customer class will vary based upon revenue allocation and rate design, the Companies state that a typical KEDNY residential heating customer will have a $30.95 average monthly bill increase and a typical KEDLI residential heating customer will have a $28.52 average monthly bill increase. The Companies state that the rate increases are largely due to the need to invest in critical infrastructure to comply with Federal and State pipeline safety mandates, increased costs to deliver expanded energy efficiency and other demand reduction offerings, and economic factors such as rising cost of material due to inflation, increased contractor costs, and increases in property taxes. The Companies state that their rate filings are focused on delivering safe and reliable service, meeting the needs of customers, and advancing the fossil fuel emission reduction goals of the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA). The Companies also propose a moderated program to effectively maintain the current pace of leak prone pipe replacements through a more targeted replacement strategy; aggressively repair gas leaks and target the repair of high-emitting leaks through the use of advanced leak detection technology; continue or expand customer oriented initiatives to ensure energy affordability, improve customer experience and maintain customer satisfaction; improve the resiliency of the distribution system by investing in automation, safety valves, and storm hardening projects; and continue or expand many CLCPA-supporting initiatives such as non-pipe alternatives, energy efficiency and demand response programs. PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that public statement hearings will be held before Administrative Law Judges James A. Costello and/or Maureen F. Leary on: DATE: Tuesday, November 14, 2023 LOCATION: Brooklyn Central Library The Dweck Center 10 Grand Army Plaza Brooklyn, New York 11238 TIME: Information Session 1:00 p.m. Public Statement Hearing 1:30 p.m. DATE: LOCATION: TIME: DATE: LOCATION: TIME: DATE: LOCATION: TIME: DATE: LOCATION:
TIME:
Tuesday, November 14, 2023 Brooklyn Central Library The Dweck Center 10 Grand Army Plaza Brooklyn, New York 11238 Information Session 5:00 p.m. Public Statement Hearing 5:30 p.m. Tuesday, November 14, 2023 Oneness Pentecostal Tabernacle 198-01 Linden Boulevard Jamaica, New York 11412 Information Session 6:00 p.m. Public Statement Hearing 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, November 15, 2023 JCC of Staten Island Bernikow Building 1466 Manor Road Staten Island, New York 10314 Information Session 6:00 p.m. Public Statement Hearing 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, November 15, 2023 Peter J. Schmitt Memorial Legislative Chamber – 1st Floor Theodore Roosevelt Executive & Legislative Building, Executive and Legislative Building Room 103 1550 Franklin Avenue Mineola, New York 11501 Information Session 6:00 p.m. Public Statement Hearing 6:30 p.m.
A more comprehensive notice is available at: https://dps.ny.gov/notices. Those wishing to comment on any aspect of these proceedings will have the opportunity to make a statement on the record before the ALJs. It is not necessary to make an appointment in advance, or present written material to speak at a hearing. Each public statement hearing will be held open until everyone who has registered to speak has been heard or other reasonable arrangements to submit comments have been made. 243254 M
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Where The Wild Things Are: The STAR Foundation
Exotic, unwanted and wild animals find shelter at LI animal facility the education program, which brings these animals around Long Island for teaching purposes. This is different from a petting exhibition in that the wild animals are only handled by certified staff. The programs are a way of educating the public about these animals and keeps them from being euthanized. “We don’t exploit our animals, we do not take anyone somewhere that’s going to cause them distress. If an animal is not happy with being handled and being shown to people, we don’t do it. So if the animal is adjusted to that, we feel it’s appropriate to use it for an educational purpose,” said Ketchum.
AMANDA OLSEN aolsen@antonmediagroup.com
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ori Ketchum, one of the directors of the Save The Animals Rescue Foundation, spends her days fielding calls, feeding creatures, and cleaning up poop. Lots of poop. Her facility in Middle Island is the premier rescue for injured wildlife, unwanted unusual pets, and abandoned exotic animals. When the NYPD seized a baby wallaby that was being exhibited illegally earlier this year, her team sprang into action. The wallaby is being cared for at the facility and will soon be housed in a permanent marsupial shelter. The rescue is a non-profit that is staffed by volunteers. They care for a huge variety of animals, from baby possums rescued from their mother’s dead body to abandoned tortoises and wounded owls. Neglected and discarded pets are a persistent problem. “You really shouldn’t have these animals in homes. Unfortunately a lot of the exotic animals are not actually designated illegal to have, it’s just impractical for the animal or the person who brings it home to have them.” Ketchum said. Escaped exotics are another way these animals find themselves in STAR’s care. “Either they lost it and didn’t know how to go about looking for something they weren’t supposed to have or dumped it and didn’t care. We get reports of people seeing these bizarre things. And you can never say ‘that’s impossible.’ Most people who have them aren’t going to come forward and say I lost this.” One example is the Tegu lizard now living at STAR. A woman found the lizard under her shed and was feeding it cat food. She called the rescue as the weather began to get cold, out of concern for the animal’s well being. Wild animals that are injured and cannot care for themselves may also be a candidate for rescue and rehabilitation, such as the great horned owl in care at press time. Others, such as the two oyster catchers, have sustained a disabling injury and should go to the long-term care of another qualified facility. Animals who are permanent residents and are docile enough may be added to
A fawn in care with two injured legs.
A volunteer comforts a rescued duck.
A baby fox. (Photos by STAR Foundation)
STAR is the only local facility that could properly care for the sloths from Sloth Encounters if they were to be removed. This is because of the very specific requirements to keep the sloths healthy and safe. “Sloths require a lot more than just some fencing and a house. They require 90 to 100 percent humidity. They grow algae on their hair that you need to have there. It’s part of their whole system. They poop like three pounds at a time. They have to have fresh leaves; you can’t just go snap off an oak branch, you have to have the right kind of vegetation. It has to be fresh and growing. We have a couple of glasswalled pens where we would temporarily house whatever comes in, do the best we can and move it on,” said Ketchum. Living at STAR would be temporary while arrangements were made to transfer them to one of several sanctuaries in the southern United States, where they would remain for the rest of their lives. Because they were not raised in the wild, these sloths cannot return to the jungles of South America, where they belong. Like most wild animals, sloths do not want to interact with people. Ketchum said, “one of the number one things about sloths is they don’t want to be handled. They’re not cuddly. They need to be left alone, they move slow. They have very delicate digestive systems and ecosystems on their bodies, and you shouldn’t be handling them. So taking them into people’s homes, to hold them and take pictures, is bad for them.” There is no way to know how many or what kinds of exotic animals are living on Long Island in private homes. In the past, there have been amnesty days
see STAR on page 5A
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Hochul Announces Renewable Energy Is Moving Forward In New York 70 percent of the state’s electricity to be from renewable sources by 2030
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overnor Kathy Hochul recently announced the largest state investment in renewable energy in United States history, demonstrating New York’s leadership in advancing the clean energy transition. The conditional awards include three offshore wind and 22 land-based renewable energy projects totaling 6.4 gigawatts of clean energy, enough to power 2.6 million New York homes and deliver approximately 12 percent of New York’s electricity needs once completed. When coupled with two marquee offshore wind blade and nacelle manufacturing facilities, this portfolio of newly announced projects is expected to create approximately 8,300 family-sustaining jobs and spur $20 billion in economic development investments statewide, including developer-committed investments to support disadvantaged communities. Today’s announcement supports progress toward New York’s goal for 70 percent of the state’s electricity to come from renewable
sources by 2030 – and nine gigawatts of offshore wind by 2035 – on the path to a zero-emission grid as required by the Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act. Following these awards, New York will now have enough operating, contracted, and under development renewable energy projects to supply 79 percent of the state’s 2030 electricity needs with renewable energy. “New York continues to set the pace for our nation’s transition to clean energy,” Governor Hochul said. “An investment of this magnitude is about more than just fighting climate change – we’re creating good-paying union jobs, improving the reliability of our electric grid, and generating significant benefits in disadvantaged communities. Today, we are taking action to keep New York’s climate goals within reach, demonstrating to the nation how to recalibrate in the wake of global economic challenges while driving us toward a greener and more prosperous
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future for generations to come.” This announcement comes after Hochul’s veto of a bill proposing to expand the wind project near Long Beach. In her veto memo, Hochul cites the duplicative nature of the bill, and her concern that it will cause confusion. Additionally, Hochul stated that objections by the City Council of Long Beach over the alienation of parkland contributed to her decision. “It is incumbent on renewable energy developers to cultivate and maintain strong ties to their host communities throughout the planning, siting, and operation of all large-scale projects. Here, the City Council of Long Beach, the host community for the wind power project, has made clear that, while it supports the State’s efforts to transition from the use of fossil fuels, it would not support or authorize any alienation of parkland in furtherance of this project.” —Information compiled by Amanda Olsen
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Tickets Available For Wine Tasting Hosted By Girl Scouts Of Nassau County The rescued wallaby has adjusted well. where people can surrender their exotics to local authorities, but they require careful planning to prevent facilities from being overwhelmed. There is proposed legislation to add an exotic animal definition to the state laws governing the possession of wild and domestic animals. Even if the change is made, there will always be a need for places like the STAR Foundation. STAR is always seeking dedicated adult volunteers and donations. They also have some legal pets for adoption. For more information, visit savetheanimalsrescue.org. For General inquiries or questions, email info@savetheanimalsrescue.org. For Urgent wildlife assistance, call (631) 736-8207.
Girl Scouts of Nassau County announced today that tickets are now on sale for its annual wine-tasting fundraising event, which will take place on Thursday, November 16, 2023 at The Lannin in Eisenhower Park. Wine and Dine to Help Her Shine,” is an elegant evening in support of the Girl Scout mission to ensure that every girl in Nassau County can experience the benefits of being a Girl Scout without barriers. This year’s event allows guests to bid on luxury raffle baskets and participate in an auction highlighting wine-inspired experiences. The ‘Wine and Dine to Help Her Shine’ event encapsulates our mission to empower girls throughout Nassau County,” said Randell Bynum, CEO of Girl Scouts of Nassau County. “We have seen
firsthand how support from the community helps Girl Scouts learn, grow, discover—and shine. Aside from savoring exceptional wines and cuisine, this event is about investing in girls’ futures, breaking down barriers, and fostering a community that believes in the potential of every girl.” This event promises to be an inspiring evening as we showcase how girls are shining throughout Nassau County while featuring a diverse portfolio of unique wines that celebrate and elevate women, as well as some Long Island wineries. The wine selections will be thoughtfully paired with gourmet dishes meticulously crafted by award-winning executive chef, Tom Gloster. Guests can also bid on specialty raffle baskets and
exclusive event experiences, all while creating lasting memories and enjoying the newly renovated venue, situated amidst the picturesque Eisenhower Park. All proceeds raised will be dedicated to ensuring all girls in Nassau County have an opportunity to participate and thrive in Girl Scouts and have experiences that will help them shine! The event is both an opportunity to indulge in fine wines and cuisines, and witness firsthand how support for Girl Scouts of Nassau County transforms the lives of countless girls in the community. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit gsnc.org/ helphershine. —Submitted by Girl Scouts of Nassau County
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Where To Find Superior Nature Writing If you are reading this column I am thinking you might be interested in reading superior nature writing, either in periodicals or in books. I recommend several New York Times columnists, Margaret Roach, Margaret Renkl, Jennifer Ackerman, and Robin Wall Kimmerer. Most of them have also written excellent books. Margaret Wall Kimmerer is the author of the best selling book, Braiding Sweet Grass. If you are a subscriber to the New York Times then you have no problem going to their website and putting in each author’s name to see their list of articles. If you are not a subscriber you are still allowed ten free searches each month. Also if you know a subscriber they can gift you articles free. The first article that I remember noticing Margaret Renkl’s name attached was on June 13, 2022, “Helping Very Hungry Caterpillars Become Butterflies-It’s Complicated.” She writes about buying common milkweed plants at a plant nursery just because she sees Monarch caterpillars on the plants even though she has already got this plant in her garden. She wants to save the caterpillars. She keeps them protected indoors until they emerge from their chrysalis’ and then she releases them outdoors. In her yard the Monarch caterpillars are plagued by parasites from other insects and often don’t survive. She hates to interfere with nature but she wants to save Monarch butterflies, which are an endangered species. Jennifer Ackerman writes mainly about birds. After I read a very flattering review in the New York Times about her new book, What an Owl Knows. I borrowed the audiotape of it from the public library and am now listening to this wonderfully detailed and
ALL ABOUT BIRDS Peggy Maslow
North Shore Audubon Society
comprehensive book on owls. I am learning so much. She has also written other books such as The Bird Way, a new look at how birds talk, work, play, parent and think, which I will read next. I was introduced to her writing from her columns in the New York Times. One recent article on June 7, 2023, “What Owls’ Silent Flight Tells Us About the World, Being quiet and inconspicuous has its advantages,” is a good introduction to her book about owls. From her article on May 29, 2020, during the COVID pandemic, “What Birds Do for Us and What We Can Do for Them,” she writes how the lack of people during lockdown was a boon, it appears, for wildlife: “...birds appeared to be thriving with the dip in noise and light and air pollution, along with emptied-out parks and public gardens that are usually a crush of people and traffic congestion. Here in the United States, ravens normally on edge around their nests in Yosemite were more relaxed, even playful in the empty parking lots, and endangered piping plovers had the beaches to themselves.” Margaret Roach writes about native plant gardening. Reading The Ideal Lawn Needs Little Mowing, published on September
24, 2023, prompted me to buy poverty oat grass seeds to try on a patch of my lawn. Some other really interesting articles are about blind birders who rely on listening. “For Some Birders, Listening is Everything,” August 6, 2023, and local people saving monarchs by raising them in their homes, “Blazing Their Own Path Toward Saving the Monarchs, October 25, 2023. This article describes a woman’s successful efforts to stop the cutting of common milkweed along NYC roads by work crews. Monarch butterflies depend on this plant to feed their caterpillars. If you have any questions contact me at
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Karl V. Anton, Jr., Publisher, Anton Community Newspapers, 1984-2000 Publishers of G l en C ove/ O y s ter B ay R ec ord Pi l ot G reat Nec k R ec ord M anhas s et Pres s Nas s au I l l us trated New s Port W as hi ng ton New s S y os s et- J eri c ho T ri bune T he Nas s au O bs erver T he R os l y n New s E di tor and Publ i s her Angela Susan Anton Pres i dent F rank A. V irga V i c e Pres i dent of O perati ons / C F O I ris P icone D i rec tor of S al es Admi ni s trati on Shari Egnasko E di tors J anet B urns, J ennif er C orr, L auren F eldman, C hristy Hinko, Amanda O lsen, J ulie P risco, J oe Scotchie Adverti s i ng S al es Ally D eane, Mary Mallon, Sal Massa, Maria P ruyn, J eryl Sletteland D i rec tor of C i rc ul ati on J oy D iD onato D i rec tor of Produc ti on R obin C arter C reati ve D i rec tor Alex N uñ ez Art D i rec tor C atherine B ongiorno S eni or Pag e D es i g ner D onna D uf f y Pag e D es i g ner C hristina D ieguez D i rec tor of B us i nes s Admi ni s trati on L inda B accoli D i rec tor of Ac c ounti ng D arrie D olan
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Learning Mandarin As An Old Dog “I’m learning Mandarin.” I told my husband this eagerly as we were getting ready to go for a walk. I think I could have knocked him over with a feather. “Why??” was his incredulous response. Now, dear readers, lest you think that at my age, one cannot teach an old dog like me new tricks, the importance of continuing education, regardless of the topic, is vital to keep one’s mind agile. I got the idea from an old theatre friend of mine, who stated that she was learning Spanish on the Duolingo app and strongly recommended it. I was interested in Chinese and Japanese culture for many years, so I decided to give Mandarin a whirl. This is not the first time that I wished to learn a new language. In my early teen years, I often found myself at Levittown Public Library in the “Foreign Language” section. I pored over books for endless amounts of time, and finally settled on a book of the French language. To this day, I can only count to five. Oh, and I can ask a waiter for a bowl of soup. That’s the extent of my French. When I was a freshman at Division Avenue High School, students were offered the opportunity to take an elective, which
SEE YOU AROUND THE TOWN Patty Servidio
was a study in foreign language. The only options were Spanish, French, and German. Most of my classmates signed up for First Year Spanish. I didn’t want to be like everyone else, so I opted for French. Sadly, the class was closed because there were only eleven students interested. That’s not to say that the class wasn’t available; the teacher closed the class after he had a small enough class that was easily manageable. I was crushed. The closing of First Year French meant that I had one of two options: choose Spanish, like everyone else, or take German. My father, ever the optimist, chirped, “Just think! You can try to get a job at Lufthansa when you graduate with four years of this language!” All I could
think about was how “hard” the language was. It wasn’t flowy and beautiful like romance languages. It had hard edges and when spoken, made the speaker sound like he or she was pissed off at the world. After my guidance counselor’s suggestion, I took those four years of German and won the German Award in my senior year. I was also taught The Lord’s Prayer and a love poem by my biology teacher, who was fluent in Deutsch. (Rest in peace, RD, and thanks for the lessons.) I never got a job at Lufthansa when I graduated, nor did I use those four years of study to benefit me in any way. I realized as I got older that I probably would have done very well had I taken Spanish, as it would have assisted me in my career as a registered nurse. There were many times when I required an interpreter for my patient care, and had I known even a smidge of that language, it could have made the experience of my patients a little less stressful. When my daughter entered Hicksville High School, she began her four-year elective study in Italian. I was very proud of how quickly she was able to let the words flow off her tongue and how naturally she spoke, and even prouder when she carried
on a basic conversation with a stranger at an event we attended. She also learned ASL (American Sign Language), a skill that she was able to use at an event at Mill Neck School. As a mom, I cannot even begin to tell you how the pride swelled in my heart (and eyes) as my daughter carried on a conversation with several deaf students. After watching an episode of The Big Bang Theory, where Sheldon attempts to teach himself Mandarin to make sure that his orders from a local restaurant are correct, I decided that Mandarin would be a wonderful challenge. Retirement is grand, but it is also a little boring in the afternoons. There is only so much The Waltons, Mike and Molly and The Big Bang Theory that a person can watch without going bananas. (Since my most recent flare, afternoons are “rest times”.) Hence, the Mandarin experience began. To date, I think the overall experience is going very well. I have learned about 150 words in the past three weeks. I can count to ten (higher than my French!), I can say “hello” and “goodbye”, and I can also identify some easy beverages and foods. I’m up to Chapter Four through Duolingo, and I’m happy (Wo hen gaoxing)
that I’m able to understand a little bit when I watch some Chinese dramas. Last week, as I was walking our dog Luna, I inadvertently overheard a conversation between two people. As one of the participants in the conversation drove off, we heard the other as she entered her house shout out, “Shi shi!” My husband looked at me quizzically, as if to ask, “What does that mean?” With a slight grin, I said, “She just said ‘yes, yes’!” Learning a second language in adult years helps to keep the brain young. It improves cognitive functions such as memory and intelligence. It lowers the risk of brain aging, dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. It can boost one’s memory and helps with creativity. Learning a second language also helps to improve your concentration and listening skills. If you are game, I strongly recommend the Duolingo app, or even just the Duolingo website on your browser. The exercises are challenging but are also easy enough to get through within a few minutes. Brain health is important as we age, so why not try something new? You can, in fact, teach an old dog new tricks. Tuo you xiersi (to your health)!
midnight. Meteors will radiate from the constellation Leo, but can appear anywhere in the sky.
opposite side of the Earth as the Sun and its face will be will be fully illuminated. —With information from seasky.org
Look Up November 3 Jupiter at Opposition. The giant planet will be at its closest approach to Earth and its face will be fully illuminated by the Sun. It will be brighter than any other time of the year and will be visible all night long. This is the best time to view and photograph Jupiter and its moons. A medium-sized telescope should be able to show you some of the details in Jupiter’s cloud bands. A good pair of binoculars should allow you to see Jupiter’s four largest moons, appearing as bright dots on either side of the planet. November 4, 5 Taurids Meteor Shower. The Taurids is a long-running minor meteor shower producing about 5-10 meteors per hour. It is unusual in that it consists of two separate streams. The first is produced by dust grains left behind by Asteroid 2004 TG10.
The second stream is produced by debris left behind by Comet 2P Encke. The shower runs annually from September 7 to December 10. It peaks this year on the night of November 4 and the morning of the 5th. The second quarter moon may block most of the dim meteors this year. Best viewing will be just after midnight from a dark location far away from city lights. Meteors will radiate from the constellation Taurus, but can appear anywhere in the sky. November 13 - New Moon. The Moon will located on the same side of the Earth as the Sun and will not be visible in the night sky. This is the best time of the month to observe faint objects such as galaxies and star clusters. November 13 Uranus at Opposition. The blue-green planet will be at its closest approach to Earth and
its face will be fully illuminated by the Sun. It will be brighter than any other time of the year and will be visible all night long. This is the best time to view Uranus. Due to its distance, it will only appear as a tiny blue-green dot in all but the most powerful telescopes. November 17, 18 Leonids Meteor Shower. The Leonids produce up to 15 meteors per hour at its peak. This shower is unique in that it has a peak about every 33 years where hundreds of meteors per hour can be seen. That last of these occurred in 2001. The Leonids is produced by dust grains left behind by comet Tempel-Tuttle. The shower runs annually from November 6-30. It peaks this year on the night of the 17th and morning of the 18th. The crescent moon will set before midnight, leaving dark skies. Best viewing will be from a dark location after
November 27 - Full Moon. The Moon will be located on the
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As animals prepare to migrate and hibernate for the winter, there’s lots to look at with your own, homemade telescope at this time of year (not to mention the night sky!).
Materials:
- Two empty paper towel tubes - Scissors - Masking tape - Paint, markers, or crayons to decorate your telescope - Optional: two convex lenses. If your parents have old reading glasses they aren’t using, ask them to help you remove the lenses from the frame. Make sure the glasses are reading glasses and not glasses for helping to see things far away. If you don’t have old reading glasses to use, you can ask your parents to order convex lenses online. Pick one of your empty paper towel tubes to be the inside tube, and one to be the outside tube. Take the inside tube and carefully cut that tube lengthwise. Wrap one edge of the cut side slightly over the other edge and hold it in place with one hand to keep this smaller shape, then slide the outside tube over the inside tube in your hand, and
Telesco es
Animal Fact! Nile
let go. If it doesn’t slide smoothly, take it out and try again. If you’re using lenses, place one lens at the end of your telescope (on the free end of the outside tube), and use masking tape to secure it in place with the curved side facing in. Place the other lens with the curve facing out, toward your eye, and use masking tape es io to secure it in place. Look into I jump when I walk the end of the inside tube, and and sit when I stand. slide the outside tube to bring What am I? objects you see into focus. And remember, NEVER look directly s er at the sun with your telescope! Kangaroo.
Did you know?
Even without glass lenses, your telescope will make far-away things look clearer and more ‘in focus’ because of something called the pinhole effect, which
roco ile
Nile crocodiles, according to the United States Geological Survey, are primarily aquatic predators that eat fish, turtles and other reptiles, small and large mammals (including zebra and buffalo), birds, carrion, invertebrates and any other animal it can overpower. Female crocodiles lay from 25 to 80 eggs dug out of the sand and aggressively guard the nest. The moms, and sometimes dads, continue to care for their young
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by transporting them to the water and defending them against predators. According to National Geographic, the young crocs live under their mom‛s protection for up to two years. Nile crocodiles can be found in many parts of Africa. They live an average life span of 45 years and span 16 feet. They weigh approximately 500 pounds.
(Photo courtesy Leigh Bedford via Wikimedia Commons)
involves limiting the amount of light that reflects off the things around us into the lenses in our eyes. To test this out, try forming one of your hands into a loose fist, close one eye, then look through the hole in the middle at a far-away object. (Photo by Shakhinas Creations on Instructables)
L Send us Want to see your name in the paper? your stuff! Email your jokes, riddles, and drawings to editors@antonmediagroup.com, then check the kids page to see if we pick your work. 243309 M
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2B NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 • SALUTE TO VETERANS
THE MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ARMOR
Reminds a New Generation that We Owe Our Freedoms to the Valor of Our Veterans
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SALUTE TO VETERANS • NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 3B
COVER STORY
Celebrating Groundbreaker Tess Garber LAUREN FELDMAN
lfeldman@antonmediagroup.com
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orn on August 29, 1923, Tessie Shirley Pierce had no idea the name she would create for herself as a woman in the military. Moving to Cleveland at the age of five offered Tess and her family the ability to connect with the Cleveland Jewish Center, fostering and nurturing her roots as a Jewish woman. Her commitment to the protection and advancement of the Jewish people was put to the test during the outbreak of WWII. Garber’s brothers enlisted in the military at the onset of the war. She recalled feeling left out. There was no reason, in her opinion, why women should not have the opportunity for military service. She enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1942 and was the only woman at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina. There, she held steadfast to Jewish practices, including a Kosher diet and engaging in religious observances. She was eventually assigned to the signal division in 1943, which brought her to the Marine Corps headquarters in Arlington, Virginia. Tess was one of only eight in the Women’s Reserve (WAVES). While other branches of the military had focused training for the different sexes at the time, the Marines did not. Everyone was expected to commit to the same regimen. The women Marines were the only ones taking the same training as the men,” she recalled. Her time in the service was not totally devoid of sexist undertones, however. She recalled a time when she was told to clean the toilets with a small brush. “I don’t remember them telling the men to ever do that,” she said. Garber travelled with the Signal Corps to Washington D.C. to operate as a typist. She was responsible for passing on secure information, as well as notices of those who passed away in active combat. “I spent most of my time in the service... It was not a pleasant job. I had to notify people of deaths, wounds, being taken prisoner. It was really heartbreaking... But all these things were a part of what I agreed to do. Whatever they needed me to do, I would do.” Being not only a woman, but also Jewish, it was unclear what Garber’s experiences were going to be upon entering the service. “I was very lucky,” she said. “The first day I was there, I came back from my duties and took my tie off. I was wearing a Jewish star—my mother never let me leave home without it—and as I walked down to get my mail, a [woman] reached out and grabbed my arm. She said, ‘I see you’re one of the tribe.’ Which confused me because I didn’t know what tribe she
Tess (center) in her uniform (Photo courtesy of the Garber family)
Tess holds a photo from her time in the service. (Photo courtesy of Gary Glick)
was talking about.” That is how Garber met Eleanor, a lifelong friend who introduced her to other Jewish women serving at the base. Altogether, they formed a small but close cluster of half a dozen, and spent a lot of time together, attending events at the local temples. “It was a good adventure for me. I learned a lot from these girls,” she said. “All of them had been, with the exception of myself and one other girl from Denver, were all from New York. I certainly
never dreamed I’d one day become one of those New Yorkers,” she joked. In 1945 she crossed paths with Army veteran Morris Garber, a man who had weathered eight battles in the North African campaign. The duo connected and married in 1946. 1947 brought Tess into the folds of international diplomacy. She assumed a typist position with the United Nations and relocated to Long Island; first to Long Beach, before eventually settling in Jericho, which Tess still calls home. There, she continued to promote the Jewish cause by joining the Midway Jewish Center. She would also go on to work for 33 years in the Nassau Library System, while bolstering the importance of recognizing Jewish service in the military, as well as providing women with more substantial opportunities to serve their country. Tess recently turned 100 years old. She was honored by the Jewish War Veterans at one of their meetings. She was awarded a certificate, which read, “On behalf of the Jewish War Veterans of the United States of America, we
congratulate you upon reaching a One Hundredth birthday milestone. “Thank you for your service in the U.S. Marines and for your devoted service on behalf of JWV SGT Gleir-Levitt Post 655. “Your commitment and unwavering service has brought great credit upon yourself, JWV, and your country.” She survived her husband Morris, who passed away in 2011, after 65 years of marriage. In the century since she was born, much has changed for Jews, women, Americans, and those who live in the center of those identities. By forefronting the dedication and commitment to serving one’s country, we both celebrate the achievements of our nation, as well as counter the bitter taste of recent and historical tragedies. Garber was (and still is) a phenom promoting women’s inclusion in the armed forces, swimming against the tide to promote the importance of women’s involvement in the war effort. She serves as a poignant reminder of the sacrifices made by trailblazers facing adversity, and the unwavering bravery of the human spirit. —Additional information provided by the Jewish Historical Society of Long Island website
4B NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 • SALUTE TO VETERANS
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Burn Pit Registry: What To Know
n 2014, VA launched the Airborne Hazards and Open Burn Pit Registry for veterans and service members who were exposed to open air burn pits at military sites in Iraq and Afghanistan. It contains health information collected from thousands of veterans and active duty service members who completed a questionnaire online. VA is studying the health of exposed veterans and service members through the Burn Pit Registry and other research efforts. If you served in eligible locations you can participate in the Burn Pit Registry. Even if you do not have any current symptoms, VA encourages you to take part.
Here’s what you need to know:
1. The Burn Pit Registry tells VA about your exposures. By completing an online questionnaire, veterans and servicemembers can use the Burn Pit Registry to report their exposures and related health concerns. Documenting exposures early ensures that participants will be monitored over time and that VA can improve programs to provide the necessary health care and resources should any health problems emerge. 2. The registry provides a summary of your health for you and health care providers. The Burn Pit Registry helps participants become more aware of their own health and allows them to receive updates about VA studies and treatments. It also helps researchers study the health effects of burn pits and other airborne hazards, resulting in better long-term health care from VA. Those who are eligible can get an optional, no-cost, in-person medical evaluation. 3. Many veterans who deployed after 1990
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are eligible to join the registry. VA uses deployment information from the Department of Defense (DoD) to determine eligibility for the Burn Pit Registry. To be eligible, you must be a veteran or service member who served in the Southwest Asia theater of operations at any time on or after Aug. 2, 1990, or Afghanistan or Djibouti on or after Sept. 11, 2001. This includes the following countries, bodies of water, and the airspace above these locations: Iraq, Afghanistan, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Djibouti, Gulf of Aden, Gulf of Oman, Oman, Qatar, United Arab Emirates and Waters of the Persian Gulf, Arabian Sea, and Red Sea. 4. Sign up for the Burn Pit Registry. To sign up for the Burn Pit Registry, visit https://veteran.mobilehealth.va.gov/ AHBurnPitRegistry. Step 1: Make sure you have a DoD SelfService Level 2 Logon (Premium DS Logon Level 2) account. If you don’t already have one, you can apply for a DS Logon account. Find the link at https://veteran.mobilehealth.va.gov/AHBurnPitRegistry. Step 2: Complete and submit the online questionnaire. Step 3: Print and save your completed questionnaire for your records. Learn More To learn more about burn pits and burn pit research, visit www.publichealth.va.gov/ exposures/burnpits/index.asp. For more information on the Burn Pit Registry, and to sign up, visit https://veteran.mobilehealth.va.gov/AHBurnPitRegistry/ Call the Registry Help Desk at 1-877-470-5947 from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday with questions. —U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs (VA)
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Happy Birthday, Sarge Veterans from across Long Island assembled in East Meadow for a birthday parade in honor of World War II Staff Sergeant Michael A. Dalmeto at his home in Bellmore. The parade stepped off from American Legion Post 1082 and paraded to Dalmeto’s home for a fitting birthday ceremony. Dalmeto served with the 8th Air Force in Buckingham, Emgland, part of the 453rd Bomber Group, 732nd Squadron. 238042 M
Photo by Lisa Cohen
SALUTE TO VETERANS • NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 5B
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6B NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 • SALUTE TO VETERANS
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Rolling Thunder Rallies For Veterans On Sunday, Oct. 8, dozens of members of Rolling Thunder New York Chapter 6, led by Chapter President William Byrne, assembled at the Marine Corps League in Massapequa for the Annual Motorcycle Run for PTSD Awareness, along with many veterans and affiliate organization members from across the tristate region. The rain remained at bay. The ride and post-festivities were a success. Rolling Thunder, Inc. is a nonprofit organization with more than 90 chartered chapters throughout the United States and
members abroad. While many members of Rolling Thunder, Inc. are veterans and many ride motorcycles, neither qualification is a prerequisite. Rolling Thunder, Inc. members are old and young, men and women, veterans and non-veterans. All are united in the cause to bring full accountability for the Prisoners Of War-Missing In Action (POW/MIA) of all wars, reminding the government, the media and the public by our watchwords: “We Will Not Forget.” Photos by Lisa Cohen
SALUTE TO VETERANS • NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 7B
BY CHRISTY HINKO
chinko@antonmediagroup.com
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.S. Army Sergeant Bernard J. Sweeney, Jr., killed in action in World War II at age 22, was laid to rest on Oct. 10 at Calverton National Cemetery in section 67. It was a privlege for the cemetery to welcome Sweeney home to his final resting place. More than 500 people were in attendance for the funeral, which included a horse-drawn caisson accompanied by a riderless horse (provided by Warrior Ranch Foundation) in tribute to the fallen soldier. Full military honors were provided by Alexander-Rothwell Funeral Home in Wading River. Military honors included a Blackhawk flyover and the firing of a ceremonial cannon. Originally from Waterbury, CT, Sweeney went missing in action in 1944 near Strass, Germany, in association with the Battle of Hurtgen Forest where he was fighting German forces as part of Company 1, 330th Infantry Regiment, 83rd Division. His unidentified remains were recovered from a minefield in Kleinhau, Germany, and were interred in Belgium, designated as “X-2752 Neauville” in 1950. The Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency (DPAA) worked with the American Battle Monuments Commission to disinter Sergent Sweeney’s remains for identification. DPAA used historical data and DNA analysis to positively identify Sweeney in 2021.
Bring Them Home MIA Sergeant Bernard J. Sweeney, Jr. is laid to rest
She Vets
Sweeney’s funeral included a horse-drawn caisson accompanied by a riderless horse. Calverton National Cemetery
On Friday, Oct. 6, an Island-wide message went out to members of the Patriot Guard Riders, American Legion Riders, Rolling Thunder Chapter 6 of Long Island and several other veteran-based organizations to assemble in Queens for the dignified escort of Sergeant Sweeney’s remains from the airport to the awaiting funeral director in Wading River. Sweeney entered the military on Nov. 27, 1942, in New York City.
Several local officials allege that Sweeney’s last remaining next-of-kin was a great nephew who died in a tragic accident shortly after providing DNA to help close the case in 2021. Visit www.dpaa.mil for more information about Sweeney and thousands of other troops who have been recovered or who remain missing in action. —With additional details provided by Calverton National Cemetery
Navy veteran and Anton Media Group editor Christy Hinko and Army veteran Phoebe Ervin, both of New Hyde Park, were among the 30 honorees at the Air Force Association’s (AFA) most recent Women’s Military Service Commemorative Medal Ceremony held on Saturday, Sept. 30, at St. Joseph’s University in Patchogue. This is the second medal ceremony hosted by the Long Island chapter of AFA to honor and acknowledge women veterans and women who are currently serving in the military for their selfless commitment, honorable service and duty to their nation. Photo by Paul Marcy
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8B NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 • SALUTE TO VETERANS
Dignified Transfers
Patriot Guard Riders host custodial ceremonies for dozens of unclaimed burial flags Dozens of patriots stepped up and volunteered to take custody of burial flags belonging to unclaimed veterans. Photos by Lisa Cohen BY CHRISTY HINKO
A
chinko@antonmediagroup.com
s most things happen in the veteran community, despite appearing to be well-planned and organized, things happen quite through a vast network and onthe-fly. Back in 2018, Wayne Cohen, Patriot Guard captain and vice president of Rolling Thunder Chapter 6 on Long Island, was at an affiliate event in Port Washington setting up the traveling Vietnam Wall. While assembling
the wall, Cohen was approached by Jay, a veteran of the Whitestone VFW. Jay told Cohen that their building had been sold and they were borrowing meeting space from the nearby Polish Hall in Maspeth. He said that the VFW was the custodian of more than 160 ceremonial burial flags of veterans who have died over the past couple of decades. The flags had been shuffled from the once-Whitestone post where they were prominently displayed
and were now languishing in the basement of the hall in Maspeth. He asked for Cohen’s assistance in finding proper custodians for these flag cases. Cohen, known for seizing opportunities to honor and assist veterans, took action. He put out the call to several veteran organizations that he is affiliated with, and some are within multiple organizations in the network, including other Patriot Guard Riders, Rolling Thunder, American Legion
posts, Veteran of Foreign Wars (VFW) posts, AMVETS posts, Legion Riders, and many others. American Legion Post 144 in Williston Park hosted two separate ceremonies, organized by Cohen. Some who stepped up to assist took one ceremonial flag, others like the Elmont and East Meadow American Legion posts took five or more. Some people took them home, others took them to their places of business or to the affiliated veteran posts for public display.
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8am - 9:30am Registration & Welcome at Mary Jane Davies Field 10am Race Start 10:45/11am Post Race Celebration 11am - 1pm Entertainment by the Meade Brothers Band, kid-friendly activities, food & more!
Anton Media Salutes Veterans Past And Present For Their Service.
Please sign up today to help raise money to support Jimmy’s brother’s and their families. The run/walk takes place in his hometown of Manhasset.
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SALUTE TO VETERANS • NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 9B
that was included inside the flag cases were shared with a local historian who has resources to attempt to learn more about these veterans as individuals and potentially build out their service story details. With the advances in genealogical research there are more opportunities now than ever before to locate a possible next-of-kin, even generations removed. Some of the flag cases contained vague service record details and general biographical information. Many flag cases contained nothing except the man’s name on a brass nameplate affixed to the flag case. The commander of the East Meadow American Legion took custody of five flags for his post. These veterans were labeled as “NOA” meaning they had no one in attendance at the time of their death. The state and the VA (Bronx and St. Albans), after doing their due diligence to identify a familial connection, simply assigned the local veterans service posts as the custodians of the burial flags of these men. “It has been such an honorable thing to do,” Cohen said. “I had no problem finding custodians for the flags; people are still asking me if there are flags, even when I go to meetings and events outside of Long Island.” This is an ongoing effort, through various Navy veteran Marc Wolf Gold Star sister Donna Conti Air Force veteran Ed Finley organizations. The American Legion hosts a similar program call The Missing In America Project. The Patriot Guard Riders Many of the flags remained on Long who took custody of each veteran’s burial are often called to task to offer dignified Island, but a dozen flags were rehomed to flag for historical records or in a case of transfers of cremains and unclaimed veterestranged family reconnecting. posts in Maryland and Virginia. ans for a proper burial through their Veteran Names and any identifying information Wayne’s wife, Lisa, meticulously recorded
Recovery Program. Cohen and many others participated recently in a dignified transfer of more than 65 burial urns of veterans to Calverton National Cemetery. “Sadly, I know these flag cases are occasionally discarded in local collection boxes for proper flag disposal,” Cohen said. The once-custodians might be moving and cannot take it with them, or they do not know what else to do with it, or it’s from someone in their family long, long ago and they have no sense of responsibility to continue caring for the symbolic memento. “If anyone finds these in flag disposal boxes, we would like to pass the custody to someone else rather than dispose of that flag,” Cohen said. “Just because it is folded properly though doesn’t mean it was necessarily a burial flag, but if there is some identifying information of who this flag was used to lay to rest, we would like to assume custody.” Visit www.longislandweekly.com to view the whole list of the veterans whose burial flags have been dispersed to dozens of custodians across Long Island. Editor’s note: I took custody of a flag because veterans are all connected by an invisible bond. These are my brothers and sisters, no matter which war era we are from. It’s incredibly heartbreaking to me that somebody died with no family; nobody was there to lay them to rest. It is even more of my duty to take custody of a burial flag.
SUPPORT FOR OUR VETERANS AND THEIR FAMILIES You served us, now let us serve you. We have a multifaceted program that helps meet the needs of you and your family. Long Island Cares’ Veterans Project provides food, outreach, and job placement services. LEARN MORE!
Visit our website or use your phone to scan the QR code. • • • • •
MILITARY APPRECIATION TUESDAYS INFORMATION & REFERRAL SERVICES MOBILE PANTRY VETERANS OUTREACH VETSWORK www.licares.org | 631.582.FOOD (3663)
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10B NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 • SALUTE TO VETERANS
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BY ROSANNE SPINNER
specialsections@antonmediagroup.com
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n Thursday, Sept. 14, the three newly elected New York State department heads, American Legion Commander Timothy Collmer, American Legion Auxiliary President Karen St. Hilaire and Sons of the American Legion Detachment Commander Peter DeAngelis, visited Nassau County. They were greeted by current Nassau County American Legion Commander Sean Hood, and Nassau County American Legion Auxiliary President Kathleen Murphy. Several members of the American Legion family from various posts throughout Nassau County joined them for breakfast at the Holiday Inn in Carle Place. The Legion visitors followed in an escort, led by the Elmont American Legion Riders, to the Cradle of Aviation Museum in Uniondale where they received a tour from a very passionate guide who has worked there since the 1980s. The group got to witness the dedication ceremony of the F-14 Tomcat which had been flown from the U.S.S. Theodore Roosevelt, and which arrived a few days prior for installation at the entrance to the Cradle of Aviation parking area. The tour continued with a visit next door to the Nassau County Firefighters Museum and Education Center, where many learned that St. Hilaire, in her earlier years, served not only as a firefighter but also as fire commissioner. The guests, who hail from upstate New York (Nunda, Mattydale and Narrowsburg, respectively) were then escorted to the next leg of the tour which brought them to the Nassau County Veterans Memorial, Field 6A, at Eisenhower Park, which serves as a tribute to the heroes of Nassau County, and dedicated to the bravery of two groups of Nassau County residents—deceased veterans of all wars and county firefighters who lost their lives in the line of duty on 9/11. In 1947, the park dedicated a memorial to those who died in World War II, and the Veterans Memorial plaza has been growing ever since. The Legion visitors got to see the individual monuments honoring Purple Heart and Medal of Honor recipients, Merchant Marines, veterans of World War II, the Korean War, POW/MIA, the September 11 Memorial, Agent Orange Awareness tribute as well as the recently added Iraq/ Afghanistan Wars Monument. In 1971, the county constructed the Veterans Tower dedicated to Nassau County veterans of the Civil War, Spanish-American War, World Wars I and II, Korean and Vietnam Wars. In 2015, a monument was added in honor of the Nassau County American Legion Auxiliary. The ‘Avenue of Flags’ represents active veteran organizations in Nassau County, and thousands of names appear on the
Timothy Collmer, American Legion commander, New York. American Legion
Karen St. Hilaire, American Legion Auxiliary president, New York. American Legion
Peter DeAngelis, commander, Detachment of New York, Sons of the American Legion American Legion
SALUTE TO VETERANS • NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 11B
American Legion Family Visits Nassau County ever-growing Walls of Honor, which honor all veterans who served, living or deceased. In addition, the Legion visitors availed themselves of the Veteran’s Museum located inside the Veterans Tower, which houses timely donated military artifacts. Legion guests were then welcomed at a “Nassau County American Legion Family Testimonial Dinner and Dance” at The Coral House in Baldwin where they were joined by a large turnout of membership from American Legion, American Legion Auxiliary, Sons of the American Legion, and American Legion Riders for a ceremonial dinner in their honor. The American Legion (as of April 2023), as well as the American Legion Auxiliary (as of November 2023), are celebrating their 104th anniversary. In April of 2019, membership in the American Legion was extended to include all honorably discharged veterans who have served during any period since Dec. 7, 1941. This closes the eligibility gaps and makes membership more available. Prior to this change, membership was contingent upon service during specific periods. This amendment to the American Legion’s Congressional charter allows for increased membership. This change in membership qualifications stands to increase benefits to
6,000,000 more veterans. In addition, as of August 2019, membership in the American Legion Auxiliary, which up to that time had been an all-female organization, has been extended to include all spouses (female or male) of U.S. veterans and service members who meet the American Legion eligibility
requirements, i.e. married to an American Legion member. This amendment makes the American Legion Auxiliary the largest and most inclusive volunteer organization supporting veterans, their families, children and youth. With these improvements in eligibility, those interested in joining either the
American Legion, American Legion Auxiliary, Sons of the American Legion or American Legion Riders should contact their nearest American Legion post. —Rosanne T. Spinner is the sergeant-at-arms and public relations chairperson for the Nassau County Committee of the American Legion Auxiliary.
Town To Collect DVDs For Troops Oyster Bay Town has announced a partnership with Massapequa-based “Big Hy for Heroes” in an effort to collect DVDs for those deployed and serving overseas in the United States Armed Forces as well as movies for children’s hospitals. Donations will be accepted through Nov. 30 and then delivered to chaplains, commanding officers, sergeant majors and sergeants around the globe to distribute to troops and arrange movie nights this holiday season. The Big Hy for Heroes organization was founded in 2002 by Massapequa resident and WWII veteran Hyman Strachman who, along with his son Arthur Strachman, personally began sending DVDs to U.S. troops overseas. Over the years, Big Hy for
Over the years, Big Hy for Heroes has shipped hundreds of thousands of DVDs all around the world. Photo from the Town of Oyster Bay
Heroes has shipped hundreds of thousands of DVDs all around the world, and continues to do so today. Exciting, suspenseful, comedy and classic DVDs are among the most requested by the troops for movie nights. Children’s movies are needed for local hospitals. Residents can donate DVDs at any of the following locations: • Town Hall North at 54 Audrey Ave., Oyster Bay • Town Hall South at 977 Hicksville Rd., Massapequa Call 516-624-6380 for more information on the DVD Collection Drive for Troops and local children’s hospitals. —Town of Oyster Bay
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NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 • SALUTE TO VETERANS
I T ’ S A N H O N O R T O S E RV E
THOSE WHO SERVED Each year on Veterans Day, our communities pay special tribute to those who served in the armed forces. Their fierce camaraderie is contagious and their experiences inspiring. The Bristal salutes the many men and women among our ranks who dedicated themselves to the cause of freedom. Our thanks should be felt and heard, especially at this time of year. For a list of all locations in the tri-state area, visit: thebristal.com
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Protect Your Trees From Winter Damage A
s the temperature drops and leaves begin to fall, homeowners routinely prepare their property by cutting back perennials and winterizing lawns, but most neglect to properly prepare their trees for the cold, harsh winter season. Long Island’s Pinelawn Memorial Park and Arboretum, which is known for its world-class arboreta, is regularly approached by homeowners, requesting tips on how the Level II Arboretum cares for and maintains its 500-acre property with its diverse assortment of prized trees. “Many trees that are not prepared for winter might be subject to stress, disease, fungus and physical damage,” Ertugrul Kasap, the master gardener at Pinelawn explained. “In New York especially, our trees undergo a large amount of stress from the cold, wind and ongoing wet conditions, but if you take the time to care for them now, you will help your beloved and beautiful trees withstand the harsh winter weather to ensure their vitality and growth come spring.” Kasap is well-versed in maintaining thriving environments, overseeing the landscape of the 500-acre property, including its collection of highly valued trees. Kasap suggested taking tree soil samples which should be done twice a year—in the fall and in the spring. Tree soil sample kits can be purchased at local home stores and will indicate if the soil needs fertilizer. Inspect trees to check for vulnerability which can be identified by yellowing leaves or needles, early loss of foliage, thin canopy, decay, insect, or physical damage and broken branches. If the tree is showing signs of vulnerability, a local arborist should be contacted. He also
Pinelawn’s Arboretum is home to three distinct collections of trees. (Photo by Alex Nuñez)
suggests homeowners research the type of trees they have and keep up with the geographical data in their area to understand which trees may be most vulnerable during winter. Recently planted trees should be watered before temperatures freeze. Some recent fall plantings may require protection from harsh wind, remedied by wrapping them
in burlap. To prevent damage from heavy snow, some trees may need to be tied up to reduce the chances of the weight breaking their branches. Pinelawn’s Arboretum, which was awarded Level II status from the International Arboretum Accreditation Program, ArbNet in 2021, is home to three distinct collections of trees, including their Noteworthy
collection, which boasts 10 of its highest priority trees, including a 120-year old Weeping Beech. Pinelawn Memorial Park and Arboretum is located at 2030 Wellwood Ave. in Farmingdale. For more information on Pinelawn Memorial Park and Arboretum, or to schedule a tour of the property, visit www.pinelawn.com or call 631-249-6100. —Pinelawn Memorial Park and Arboretum
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10A NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
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Art League Of LI Shuttered After Rain Damage
eptember’s unprecedented rainstorm wreaked havoc on Long Island and the Art League of Long Island was not spared from the wrath of Mother Nature. The heavy rains on the night of September 29 led to extensive rain damage within the Art League of Long Island’s two-story art center, located at 107 East Deer Park Road in Dix Hills. As a result, the organization has been compelled to temporarily close its doors, including all exhibits, programs, and classes, for an estimated duration of four weeks or more, according to Marianne Della Croce, the non-profit’s executive director. The rainstorm caused substantial damage to the gallery, studios, hallways, and office space, resulting in significant harm to floors and walls, while only minimal damage was incurred by two wall murals created by our Resident Artists Program. In response, the Art League promptly engaged the services of ServePro to commence the abatement process, which was successfully completed in under two weeks. Following this phase, the Art League will embark on the reconstruction of its facility, “presenting a unique opportunity to deliver
a fresh and enhanced Art League experience to the vibrant community of Long Island upon reopening,” said Della Croce. The Art League is also working with other local nonprofits and community partners to temporarily host some of our upcoming events and classes. Croce and education & program manager, Ersule Metelus, have spent the last week visiting these alternate sites to determine the best fit for each one of our unique programs. The Long Island Craft Guild, originally scheduled to host a month-long exhibition at the Art League titled “Seeing the Other,” featuring local artists’ work, had to cancel its opening reception planned for the day after the storm. In response to the unforeseen circumstances, the Craft Guild artists have retrieved their artworks, including glass mosaics, sculptures, wood designs, and pottery, all of which fortunately remained unscathed. The Jeanie Tengelsen Gallery at the Art League of Long Island is a highly sought-after exhibition space, often reserved a year in advance. The Art League has offered the group gallery space for the year 2025, allowing them ample time to determine their way forward.
Awards Reception & Auction
Furthermore, the Latin Heritage Month Celebration, co-hosted by the Art League and Colored Colors and sponsored by Legislator Manuel Esteban, has been rescheduled for Saturday, November 4, 2023. This event promises to be a vibrant and culturally enriching experience for all attendees, featuring music, dancing, delectable Latin cuisine, and a variety of vendors offering unique cultural products and crafts. The event’s headlining band, Bachatu, will serenade the audience with captivating rhythms. Additionally, children will have the opportunity to participate in a Huichol Mexican Yarn Painting project, providing a hands-on cultural experience. Their Ceramics Department Fundraiser, “Made with Mud, Kissed by Fire” which was scheduled for October 21st has been postponed to January 27, 2024. The Art League of Long Island looks to bring you ceramic entertainment, raffles, an auction, and hors-d’oeuvres for you to enjoy while helping support one of their dynamic departments. Your ticket to the event entitles you to take home one bowl made by our instructors, staff, and long-term students.
The damage from the flood was extensive. (Photos by Art League of Long Island)
Please continue to purchase tickets to this lively event on our website. The financial implications of the flooding damage are substantial for the Art League of Long Island, an educational center dedicated to the visual arts since its establishment in 1955. While insurance coverage will alleviate a portion of the repair expenses, the Art League seeks the
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The Art League expects to be closed for about four weeks. support of the local community during this challenging time. The Art League of Long Island has faced significant operational challenges before. The non-profit was forced to put its headquarters on the market due to the closure necessitated by the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. Revenues, primarily derived from tuition, along with donations,
memberships, exhibition, and gallery rentals, quickly dwindled. Nonetheless, a local fundraising campaign generated over $100,000 in donations, which aided in steering the Art League away from financial turmoil. Marianne Della Croce remains hopeful that the community will rally around the Art League once again, ensuring its resilience as it progresses
toward its 70th Anniversary in less than two years. For more information or to offer support, please visit the Art League of Long Island’s website at www.artleagueli.org/ donate/ or email info@artleagueli.org About Art League of Long Island: The Art League of Long Island, founded in 1955, is a 501c non-profit visual arts organization
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WORD FIND
12A NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
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This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direc always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you hav By Holiday Holiday Mathis pleted the puzzle, there will be 20 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle. By Holiday Mathis By Mathis
HOROSCOPES HOROSCOPES
INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND Party time
ARIES (March 21-April 19). You will accept the way people show up, meet them where they are and make it feel safe for them to be fully themselves. You don’t want anyone to hide or perform for your acceptance. This is love. Whatever comes out of it will ultimately feel better than the disconnection caused when people try to control one another.
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 20 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
Party time Solution: 20 Letters
© 2023 Australian Word Games Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You’re not one to take your position for granted. Wherever you are in the world, it’s a different vantage from anyone else. There will be times this week where it feels as though you’re still learning to see. You’re re-teaching yourself the meaning of these shapes and patterns in the world. CANCER (June 22-July 22). It is said that the artist’s work is always, to some degree, a self-portrait. The same will be true of other choices people make. When people speak of others, it’s a way of telling about themselves. You’re savvy to the many layers of human self-expression. While others are dazzled by smoke and mirrors, you’ll see only the truth.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You’re comfortable in different worlds and communicating with those who have various strengths. You can speak logically or whimsically; you fit in with conventional styles even as you make sense of absurdity. You’ll be a translator for the less versatile, bridging communication gaps between people. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). The focus will be on big ideas and the future -- the sort of things that don’t need to be decided in a day. Some conversations are meant to simply put a topic on the table for further investigation. Your immediate responses may convey more intensity than is useful. With extra thought and effort, you’ll frame things in the best way. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Trust your allegiances. Life brings mixed results no matter who is involved, so you’ll do well to stick with your original crew. Don’t hire someone to come in and “save the day” who wasn’t there when “the day” didn’t need saving. That person doesn’t understand “the day” the same way you do. Loyalty will have multiple benefits. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You can tell how other people are feeling, and if you let yourself, the emotion will come over you, too. For this reason, it can be taxing for you to inhabit highly emotional environments. It can also be healing, invigorating, exciting and joyful. Just remember, you don’t have to stay anywhere. You are free to choose your own experience. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). It would seem that talking is just repeating what you know, but it’s also possible to discover through talk. There are so many layers to communication including the subconscious ones that dominate every exchange. You’ll pick up all kinds of knowledge this week and apply it to get exactly what you most desire. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Go easy on the projections this week. Trust and enjoy life, and let go of your worries about the future. Think about who you are now. You would not have guessed this is who you’d become. Though you’ll keep steering and hitting many of your aims, the next version of you is equally out of your realm of imagining.
THIS WEEK’S BIRTHDAYS
You have your own personal ethos you adhere to. When it comes to your work, you set the bar higher than anyone else would set it, and you rise to it as well. You’re not afraid of conflict or risk and will dive into situations that others shy from. More highlights: Your gallant effort will be rewarded. You’ll perform a duty and be given more responsibility and money. You’ve a talent for gathering family, creating memorable events and providing a place where your favorite people want to come together. COPYRIGHT 2023 CREATORS.COM
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VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Friendship requires effort, time and energy. People prioritize friendship differently for their own complex reasons. When it clicks, cherish it, and when it doesn’t, this is nothing to overthink or take personally. You can’t know what complex factors are in play, but you can give your kind attention generously, knowing good things will happen when you do.
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LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You’ll get the chance to reconnect with the sights, smells and sounds of childhood. You’ll think about your story and the many ways in which it could be told. The way you tell it to yourself is important, too. The new version is coming together -- a more comprehensive and compassionate understanding of what it means to be you.
© 2023 Australian Word Games Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). There are no universally comfortable environments. Perfect temperature in the fresh air with sun streaming through the trees would be a nightmare for a fish. The best you can do this week is make yourself comfortable and shine from that place. You’ll attract many more there -- people who need and want to be there.
Solution: 20 Letters
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Collaboration is the key South dealer. East-West vulnerable. NORTH ♠K985 ♥6 ♦ 10 9 2 ♣ A Q 10 7 4 WEST EAST ♠72 ♠64 ♥ J 10 9 5 2 ♥A K 8 4 ♦AJ7 ♦8543 ♣9 8 6 ♣K 5 2 SOUTH ♠ A Q J 10 3 ♥Q 7 3 ♦KQ6 ♣J 3 The bidding: South West North East 1♠ Pass 2♣ Pass 2 NT Pass 3♠ Pass 4♠ Opening lead — jack of hearts. A declarer sees all of his side’s resources as soon as dummy appears, but the defenders do not have the same advantage. As a result, they must work harder to ascertain their respective assets and liabilities. If they collaborate well, they will nearly always collect all the tricks they are entitled to get. Consider this deal where routine defense would allow declarer to make four spades, while wellcoordinated defense would defeat the contract. West leads a heart,
won by East with the king. East must obviously shift to a diamond, but the question is, which one? First, let’s suppose East returns the three, in keeping with the standard practice of leading fourthbest. South would play the king, and West would presumably win with the ace. Unfortunately, if this position is reached — and it is only trick two — the defense is all washed up. Whatever West returns, South makes the contract, losing only a heart, a diamond and a club. Now let’s go back to trick two and have East return the eight of diamonds — a “top of nothing” lead. West can easily read the eight as East’s highest diamond, so — after South plays the king — West follows with the seven! West ducks the king because he knows declarer has the queen, and also because he sees that the only chance to beat the contract lies in scoring two diamond tricks. This can happen only if his partner regains the lead with either a club or a trump trick. If East can’t regain the lead, four spades cannot be defeated. West must reason along these lines to have a chance to beat the contract, and the path to the winning defense begins with East’s eight-of-diamonds return at trick two.
Tomorrow: A little bit of knowledge. ©2023 King Features Syndicate Inc.
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Autumn’s Here, Let’s Start Your Next Journey. Biagia (Gina) D’Amico, Licensed Real Estate Salesperson
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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
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ANTON MEDIA GROUP • NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023
11
Addressing Rumors
JULIE PRISCO jprisco@antonmediagroup.com
R
esidents of the Town of North Hempstead have recently heard talk of migrants from New York City being bused and dropped off at train stations in Manhasset, Port Washington and Roslyn. This information was spread from a local news outlet, claiming a bus transported migrants from the city and dropped them off at train stations early in the morning on Sept. 27. The news publication states to have received their information from eyewhitnesses in the area. Residents reached out to Town of North Hempstead officials and the Port Washington News regarding this information. Town of North Hempstead Councilmember Mariann Dalimonte looked into this story and contacted New York State Governor Kathy Hochul’s office for more information. In Councilmember Dalimonte’s
community newsletter, she shared “the Governor’s office informed me that no government entity had done such a thing.” On Oct. 17, Chief of Police Robert Del Muro of the Port Washington Police District released a statement regarding the rumors reading, “The Port Washington Police District is not in receipt of any complaint or official record, whether generated by civilians or by the district’s police officers, that supports the rumor that a bus recently dropped off a group of non-residents within its jurisdiction. Nor is the district in possession of any evidence that would tend to corroborate such a rumor. The district is generally aware of the size of the homeless population within its jurisdiction and there has been no observed increase in that population in recent times.” Councilmember Dalimonte said, “We are all living through a period of increased political polarization, heightened tensions, and anxieties, and during a time when false information spreads rapidly through social media. Please do your best to avoid enabling and perpetuating these problems.”
LIRR Service Changes On Oct. 22, the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) and Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) released a statement informing riders of LIRR service changes starting on Monday, Nov. 13. The Port Washington Branch, along with the Babylon Branch and the Ronkonkoma Branch, are receiving major weekday changes to its schedules. The LIRR is making these changes to adjust service levels to match where its data shows customers are riding. According to the LIRR, below are the changes coming to the Port Washington Branch: We’re making several changes to morning rush hour service to provide more express trains from Nassau County to Penn Station. After these changes, all five westbound trains departing Port Washington between 6 a.m. and 8 a.m. will run to Penn Station, and four of them will be express west of Great Neck. The 6:47 a.m. train from Port Washington will leave at 6:42 a.m., no longer stop at Little Neck, Douglaston, or Bayside, and run to Penn Station instead of Grand Central, arriving at 7:22 a.m. The 7:19 a.m. train from Port Washington will run non-stop from Great Neck to Penn Station, arriving at 7:54 a.m. The 6:28 a.m. and 7:03 a.m. trains from Great Neck will add stops at Little Neck and
The Port Washington Train Station (Photo by Julie Prisco)
Douglaston. The 7:38 a.m. train from Little Neck will start in Great Neck and run to Grand Central instead of Penn Station. The 7:54 a.m. train from Port Washington to Penn Station will leave 1 minute earlier and add a stop at Bayside at 8:09 a.m. The 7:11 p.m. train from Port Washington will run to Penn Station instead of Grand Central. The 8:44 p.m. train from Grand Central to Port Washington will run from Penn Station instead. The LIRR and MTA encorages riders to check the TrainTime app or schedules to plan their trips and view additional minor changes that may affect their departure and/ or transfer times, including on weekends. —Information compiled by Julie Prisco
OBITUARY Helen Melrose Duffy
Helen Melrose Duffy, 84, of Port Washington, passed away peacefully on Oct. 10, 2023 at home. She was born on June 12, 1939 in Glasgow, Scotland, to the late Daniel and Sarah Jane Wilcox. She grew up in World War II. She’s predeceased by brothers Daniel (Grace) Wilcox and Robert (Janette) Wilcox and two of six sisters Margaret (Victor) Schultz and Agnes (Johnny) McHoul. Beloved wife to husband John Duffy of 66 years,
she is survived by her sons John (Sophia Fu) Duffy III, Brian (Elizabeth) Duffy, Kenneth (Wendy) Duffy, and 5 grandchildren Dylan, Kay, Christopher, Logan, and Scarlett. She is also survived by sisters May Curatolo, Sadie Ruddy, Patricia (Gordon) Niven and Isabel (Andrew) McConville and many loving nieces, nephews and many friends. She is predeceased by brother- and sisters-in-law Grace Sheridan, Joan Orr, Isabel Kent, William Duffy, and Janette Mathieson. —Submitted by the Roslyn Heights Funeral Home
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NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
SCHOOL NEWS
SPORTS & RECREATION
The World Of Narnia Comes To The Schreiber Stage This fall, Schreiber Theatre Company proudly presents The Lion, The Witch & The Wardrobe. This dramatization of C.S. Lewis’ classic work recreates the magic and mystery of Narnia with its great lion Aslan, and his struggle with the White Witch. Audiences will be enchanted with the adventures of Susan, Peter, Edmund and Lucy as they wander from an old wardrobe into the exciting, never-to-be-forgotten, snowy world. The play features heart pounding chases, duels and escapes as the White Witch strives to keep Narnia in her possession and end the reign of Aslan. All the memorable episodes and characters from this classic story are represented: the temptation of Edmund by the witch, the slaying of the evil wolf by Peter, the witnessing of Aslan’s resurrection by Susan and Lucy, the crowing of the four new rulers of Narnia, and more. This story of love, courage and giving, with its triumph of good over evil, is a true celebration of life. Director, Ms. Christine Nelson leads our talented cast, featuring the talents of: Tai Abrams, Sean Banks, Charlotte Brill, Ava Burton, Addison Craig, Dylan Diamond, Kathryn Djohan, Bella Ertel, Sadie Feingold, Andy Garcia, Sabrina Grossman, Gabriel Jaffe, Ray Landaeta Salazar, Ally Lazear, Averia Masia, Aurora Mata, Sofia Piza, Liesha Sewani, Max Siskin, Viktor Straesser, Jadyn Underberg, Tori Von Roeschlaub, Alexa Welch, and Abigail Zlotoff. Our Production Staff includes Producer, Ms. Lauren Foster-Holzer, Technical
Director, Ms. Allison Friedman, Choreographer, Ms. Floryn Glass Stock, Stage Combat Coordinator, Mr. Ray Rodriguez, Dialect Coach, Ms. Elise May, Set Construction and Decorating by Mr. & Mrs. Richie and Helen Albertson, Prop Design & Construction by Ms. Leah Siskin, Costume Construction by Ms. Nan Trisjono & Ms. Leah Siskin, and our Makeup Team, headed by Ms. Diana Von Roeschlaub. Our Run and Tech crews, led by our Stage Manager/Production Assistant, Chiara Amodeo and Assistant Stage Manager, Alex Habert, include: Production Assistant, Benjamin Gordon, Terence Au, Kara Chan, Leah Dong, Evan Eng, Simone Gordon, Emaan Hanif, Michael Isserles, Tina Katsigiorgis, Benjamin Kollappallil, Olivia Kollappallil, Aubrey Kollar, Ava Lau, Gianni Livigni, Nyra Mehra, Elizabeth Milgrim, Aryaman Sharma, Charlotte Walz and Joia Zahner. Our Creative Crew is composed of Emily Bonavitacola, Emma Johns, Erin Kobayashi, Penelope Kurta, Abby Latner, Elizabeth Milgrim, Ava Rapaccuiolo and Jade Zirpolo. Show dates and times: Friday, Nov. 17 at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov.18 at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 19 at 2 p.m. Please visit sch.portnet.org for the ticket link. —Submitted by the Port Washington School District
Twelve graduating seniors from the boys soccer team.
Vikings Football Wins On Saturday, Oct. 21, Vikings Football won 28-20 against Baldwin High School. This win put the football team at 3-4 for the season. (Photo from Port Washington Athletic Department’s Instagram | @portwashad)
Four seniors from the boys volleyball team. Four seniors from the girls volleyball team. (Photo from Port Washington Athletic Department’s Instagram | @portwashad)
Conference Champions The Schreiber Girls Soccer team finished their regular season with a conference record of 8-0-4, earning the Conference 3 Championship of 2023. (Photo from Port Schreiber Theatre Company (Contributed photo)
Washington Athletic Department’s Instagram | @portwashad)
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023
13
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12 NOVEMBER NOVEMBER 11 -- 7, 7, 2023 2023 •• ANTON ANTONMEDIA MEDIAGROUP GROUP 14
TOWN NEWS
O
Community Building Event For Veterans
n Friday, Oct. 13, Councilmember Veronica Lurvey hosted a veterans community event featuring Maj. Lance Jensen, (ret). The timely discussion topic was Military and Diplomacy. Following, veterans had an opportunity to ask questions and receive information about town resources. The Westbury Junior ROTC Color Guard was on hand to present colors. Prior, Lurvey hosted Jensen in a veterans event at American Legion Post 304 in Manhasset. In a continued effort to engage our service members, veterans and their families, Lurvey offered advice and assistance regarding tax exemptions and vital town resources. Jensen served in the US Army for over 30 years and continues as a Department of Defense Civilian. His military career spanned a wide range of assignments, from combatting the war on drugs in Central and South America to fighting Al Qaeda in Afghanistan immediately after 9/11 and Al Shabaab in Somalia. As a civilian, he served as the director of the International Training Branch, 7th Army Training Command in Germany, where he
Councilmember Lurvey speaks to local veterans. (Contributed photos) oversaw the train and equip program for the Ukrainian Armed Forces. Currently, he is the Program Manager of Security Assistance for the Office of Defense Cooperation at the US Embassy in Spain. —Submitted by the Town of North Hempstead Councilmember Veronica Lurvey and Maj. Lance Jensen host a Veterans’ community event about featuring a discussion about the military and diplomacy.
Town To Host Thank You To Minority And Women-Owned Our Veterans Celebration Business Enterprises Seminar North Hempstead Supervisor Jennifer DeSena and the Town Board are proud to host the Thank You To Our Veterans Celebration, sponsored by Bethpage Federal Credit Union, on Friday, Nov. 3 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Clinton G. Martin Park. The event will offer veterans the opportunity to connect with fellow veterans in the local community while enjoying lunch. “The Town of North Hempstead has always prioritized honoring and supporting our veterans for their selfless service in protection of the freedoms we enjoy each and every day as Americans,” Supervisor DeSena said. “This annual event is a meaningful way to recognize and thank the extraordinary individuals who have bravely served
Town of North Hempstead Councilmember Veronica Lurvey in partnership with the New York State Division of Minority and Women’s Business Development, a division of Empire State Development Corporation, recently hosted a Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises Seminar on (Contributed graphic) October 11 at Town Hall. our nation and helped shape our communiNearly 50 attendees joined the event ties for the better.” which focused on advancing economic opThe event is free, will be held outdoors, portunities for minority and women-owned and is open to veterans from all branches of business enterprises (MWBEs) through the military. All attendees must register in state and government contracting. Carey Ye advance for the luncheon by calling 311 or and Fei Long assisted with translating the 516-869-6311. event in Chinese for attendees. —Submitted by the —Submitted by the Town of North Hempstead Town of North Hempstead
The seminar for minority and women owned businesses. (Contributed photo)
Town And Union Reach Agreement On New 4-Year Contract North Hempstead Town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena proudly announced today that the Town has agreed on a new collective bargaining agreement with the Town’s Civil Service Employees Association (CSEA) Unit 7555. “This new contract represents a win for both taxpayers and our incredibly dedicated union workforce. This new four-year contract is not only a fair agreement that will protect our taxpayers’ wallets, but it will
also fairly compensate our CSEA members who provide invaluable Town services,” Supervisor DeSena said. “I believe this new contract is in the best interest of our Town, and I thank the union, my senior staff, and the Town Attorney’s Office for their hard work in making it a reality.” CSEA Unit 7555 President Tom McDonough stated, “I would like to thank Supervisor DeSena and her team for working with us on this contract. I believe this is a
fair and equitable contract that will benefit both the CSEA employees of the Town of North Hempstead and constituents that we serve each and every day. I look forward to presenting this agreement to my membership for ratification.” The four-year contract will run from January 1, 2023 to December 31, 2026. “The terms of this new contact provide both a fair and equitable agreement with our workforce, and a recruitment tool as
we look to hire new employees, as this agreement will result in more attractive job postings,” Supervisor DeSena said. “Finally, I want to particularly thank CSEA Unit 7555 President Tom McDonough for his hard work and advocacy on behalf of his members throughout this process.” —Submitted by the Town of North Hempstead
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023
LEGAL NOTICES
PORT WASHINGTON LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE ST AT E O F N E W Y O R K SU P R E M E CO U R T : CO U N T Y O F N ASSAU U .S. BAN K T R U ST N AT I O N AL ASSO CI AT I O N , N O T I N I T S I N D I V I D U AL CAP ACI T Y BU T SO L E Y AS O W N E R T R U ST E E F O R R CF 2 ACQ U I SI T I O N T R U ST , P l aintiff, v . P E T R A G O L L O N G , E T AL . D efendants. P L E ASE T AK E N O T I CE T HAT I n pur sua nce of a J udgm ent of F orecl osur e and Sal e entered in the Office of the County Clerk of Nassau County on June 1, 2023, I, Malachy P. Lyons, Jr., Esq., the Referee named in said J udgm ent, w il l sel l in one pa rcel at publ ic auc tion on N ove mbe r 13, 2023 at Nassau County Supr eme Cour t, 100 Supr eme Cou rt D r. N orth Side Steps , County of Nassau, State of N ew Y ork, at 2: 00 P M the pr emises describe d as fol l ow s: 26 L inw ood R oad Sout h P ort W ashingt on, N Y 11050 SBL N o.: 00404065 00330 AL L T HAT certain p l ot, pi ece or p arcel of l and, w ith the bui l dings and impr ove ments thereon erected, situate, lying and b eing in the I ncorpor ated V il l age of M anor Have n, County of Nassau and State of N ew Y ork. T he pr emises are sol d subj ect to the pr ovi sions of the filed judgment, Index No. 008 879/ 2014 in the amount of $631,054.77 pl us interest and costs. T he aforementioned auc tion w il l be conduc ted in accordance with the Court System’ s CO V I D -19 mitiga tion pr otocol s and as suc h al l pe rsons must comply with social distancing, w earing masks and screening pr actices in effect at the time of this forecl osur e sal e. W oods O v iatt G il man L L P Attorneys for Plaintiff 500 Baus ch & L omb P l ace R ochester, N Y 14604 T el .: 855- 227-5072 11-1; 10-25-18- 11-2023-4T #242871- P O R T LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SU P R E M E CO U R T CO U N T Y O F N ASSAU T he Bank of N ew Y ork M el lon Trust Company, National Association F K A T he Bank of N ew Y ork T rus t Compa ny, N.A. as Successor to JPM orga n Chase Bank, N .A. as T rus tee for R esidential Asset M ortga ge P roduc ts, I nc., M ortga ge Asset-Backe d Pass-Through Certificates Series 2006- R P 1, P l aintiff AG AI N ST Charles Byron Entwistle; et al ., D efendant( s) P ur sua nt to a J udgm ent of
15
LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the fiscal affairs of the Port Washington Union Free School District for the period beginning on July 1, 2022 and ending on June 30, 2023, have been examined by an independent public accountant, and that the report, prepared in conjunction with the external audit by the independent public accountant, has been placed on our website w w w .por tnet.org and also filed in my office where it is available as a public record for inspection by all interested persons. Pursuant to §35 of the General Municipal Law, the Board of Education of the Port Washington Union Free School District may, in its discretion, prepare a written response to the report of external audit by the independent public accountant and file any such response in my office as a public record for inspection by all interested persons no later than December 8, 2023. K athl een A. M anue l Assistant Supe rintendent for Bus iness P ort W ashingt on U F SD
11-1-2023-1T -#243301- P O R T Foreclosure and Sale duly entered J une 16, 2017 I , the unde rsigne d R eferee w il l sel l at publ ic auc tion at the N orth Side Steps of the N assau County Supreme Court at 100 Supr eme Cour t D rive , M ineol a, N Y 11501 on N ove mbe r 15, 2023 at 2: 30P M , pr emises know n as 155 Sands P oint R oad, Sands P oint, N Y 11050. Al l that certain pl ot pi ece or pa rcel of l and, w ith the bui l dings and impr ove ments erected, situate, lying and be ing in the I ncorpor ated V il l age of Sands P oint, T ow n of N orth Hemps tead, County of Nassau, State of New Y ork, Section 4 Bl ock C L ot 250. Approximate amount of j udgm ent $1,235,123.07 pl us interest and costs. P remises w il l be sol d subj ect to pr ovisions of filed Judgment Index# 009696/2008. The auc tion w il l be conduc ted pur sua nt to the CO V I D -19 P ol icies Concerning P ubl ic Auc tions of F orecl osed P roperty established by the Tenth J udi cial D istrict. F orecl osur e Auc tions w il l be hel d “ R ain or Shine.” Michael H. Sahn, Esq., Referee L O G S L ega l G roup L L P f/ k/ a
Shapi ro, D iCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the P l aintiff 175 M il e Crossing B oul eva rd R ochester, N ew Y ork 14624 ( 877) 430-4792 D ated: Sept embe r 19, 2023 11-1; 10-25-18- 11-2023-4T #243017- P O R T LEGAL NOTICE N O T I CE O F SAL E SU P R E M E CO U R T N ASSAU CO U N T Y W E L L S F AR G O BAN K , N AT I O N AL ASSO CI AT I O N , SU CCE SSO R BY M E R G E R T O W E L L S F AR G O BAN K M I N N E SO T A, N AT I O N AL ASSO CI AT I O N , AS T R U ST E E F O R ST R U CT U R E D ASSE T SE CU R I T I E S CO R P O R AT I O N P ASS-T HR O U G H CE R T I F I CAT E S, SE R I E S 2003-26A , P l aintiff aga inst J O N AT HAN K U L I CK A/ K / A J O N AT HAN J AY K U L I CK , AS AD M I N I ST R AT O R O F AN D AS HE I R AT -L AW T O T HE E ST AT E O F M I N D Y K U L I CK A/ K / A M IN D Y F R AN K U L I CK A/ K / A M I N D Y F . K U L I CK A/ K / A M I N D Y G AR M I SE K U L I CK A/ K / A M I N D Y F . G AR M I SE A/ K / A M I N D Y
F R AN G AR M I SE , et al D efendant( s) Attorney for Plaintiff(s) McCalla Raymer Leibert Pierce, LLC, 420 Lexington Avenue, Sui te 840, N ew Y ork, N Y 10170. P ur sua nt to a J udg ment of F orecl osur e and Sal e entered Sept embe r 13, 2023, I w il l sel l at publ ic auc tion to the highe st bi dder at N orth Side Steps of the Nassau County Supr eme Cour t at 100 Supr eme Cour t D rive , M ineol a, N Y 11501 on N ove mbe r 22, 2023 at 2: 30 P M . P remises know n as 105 R adcl iff Avenue , P ort W ashingt on, N Y 11050. Sec 4 Bl ock 137 L ot 14. Al l that certain pl ot, pi ece or pa rcel of l and, w ith the bui l dings and impr ove ments thereon erected, situate, lying and be ing in the I ncorpor ated V il l age of P ort W ashingt on N orth, T ow n of N orth Hempstead, County of Nassau, and State of New York. Approximate Amount of J udgm ent is $396,224.91 pl us interest, fees, and costs. P remises w il l be sol d subj ect to pr ovi sions of filed Judgment Index No 613433/ 2019. T he forecl osur e sal e w il l be conduc ted in accordance
w ith 10th J udi cial D istrict’ s Covi d-19 P ol icies and forecl osur e auc tion rul es. T he Referee shall enforce any rul es in pl ace rega rding facial cove rings and social distancing. I f pr ope r social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other heal th or safety concerns, then the Court Appoi nted R eferee shal l cancel the forecl osur e auc tion. F orecl osur e Au ctions w il l be hel d “ R ain or Shine.” Jane Shrenkel, Esq., Referee F il e # 21- 05184N Y 11-8- 1; 10-25-18- 2023-4T #243145- P O R T LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE FOR FORMATION of a limited liability company (LLC). T he name of the limited liability company is BEACON HILL REALT Y P AR T N E R S L L C. T he date of filing of the articles of orga niz ation w ith the D epa rtment of State w as Sept embe r 20, 2023. The County in New York in which the office of the company is located is Nassau. The Secretary of State has be en designa ted as age nt of the company upon whom process may be served, and the Secretary of State shall mail
a copy of any process against the company served upon him or her to T he L L C, 52 Crescent R oad, P ort W ashingt on, N ew Y ork 11050. T he bus iness purpose of the company is to engage in any and all bus iness activi ties pe rmitted unde r the l aw s of the State of N ew Y ork. 12-6; 11-29-22-15-8- 12023-6T -#243319- P O R T LEGAL NOTICE 2023 Annual Election Notice Port Washington Police District Notice is hereby given that the 2023 Annua l E l ection of the P ort W ashingt on P ol ice D istrict w il l be hel d on the 12th day of December, 2023, at the P ol ish American Citiz ens Association, 5 P ul aski P l ace, P ort W ashingt on, N ew Y ork, 11050, be tw een the hour s of 12: 00 P .M . ( noon) and 9: 00 P .M ., for the pur pos e of el ecting one ( 1) P ol ice D istrict Commissioner to the Board of Commissioners of the P ort W ashingt on P ol ice D istrict. T he el ection is for a term of three (3) years commencing January 1, 2024. P l ease take fur ther notice
that only those duly registered vot ers w ith the N assau County Board of Elections w ho have resided in the P ort W ashingt on P ol ice D istrict for a period of at least thirty (30) days next preceding the el ection to be hel d on D ecembe r 12, 2023 shal l be entitl ed to vot e at said el ection. Appl ications for Abs entee Ballots may be obtained from the desk officer of the Port W ashingt on P ol ice D istrict ( D epa rtment) at P ort W ashington Police Headquarters, 500 P ort W ashingt on Boul eva rd, P ort W ashingt on, N ew Y ork 1 1050. D ated: N ove mbe r 1, 2023 BOARD OF POLICE DISTRICT COMMISSIONERS PORT WASHINGTON POLICE DISTRICT J BM E Y E R , CO M M I SSI O N E R AN G E L A L AW L O R M U L L I N S, CO M M I SSI O N E R BR I AN G . ST AL E Y SR ., CO M M I SSI O N E R 11-1-2023-1T -#243348P O R T Continued on page 16
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NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
48th Annual Port Washington Thanksgiving Day 5-Mile Run
“The Port Washington “Turkey Trot” is an extraordinary event, bringing our community together and it’s the unofficial beginning of the holiday season,” said Community Chest Race Chairman Noal Goldfarb. “It is one of the largest races on Long Island and is truly a family event, with grandparents, parents, and their children participating in the race.” Registrants can pick up their Thanksgiving he Community Chest of Port Day Race packets on Nov. 21 or Nov. 22 from 5 Washington and the Town of North p.m. to 8 p.m. and on race day—Nov. 23—from Hempstead are co-presenting the 7 a.m. to 8:25 a.m. at the Port Washington Adult 48th Annual 5-mile Thanksgiving Day Run Activities Center, 80 Manorhaven Blvd. People on Thursday, November 23, 2023 at 8:30 am. are encouraged to bring their own reusable Runners, joggers, and walkers are invited to shopping bag. In addition, the Community participate in this annual community event. Chest will be accepting food donations and gift The race is capped at 3,500 participants, so cards for the Our Lady of Fatima food pantry at participants are encouraged to register early race packet pick up. at portchest.org. Along with major support from the Peter & “For the first time, the annual Thanksgiving Jeri Dejana Foundation, Thanksgiving Day Run Day Run will celebrate the special bond Thanksgiving Day Run starting line sponsors to date include; M&T Bank, Leviton, between the Community Chest, our running Baker Air, Harding Real Estate, Alper’s True community, and the 28 non-profits who Value Hardware, Lorber Hoffman RE Group, change the lives of over 7,000 residents of the Men’s and Women’s Runners will also receive accompanied by an adult). All participants receive a commemorative, long-sleeve Port Spear Physical Therapy, Chief Graphix, The Art Port Washington Community each year with the inaugural Red Feather Award trophy. The Red Feather Award trophy was created Washington Thanksgiving Day Run t-shirt. Guild of Port Washington, Creative Snow by -The Run for the Red Feather - an enduring through a collaboration with the Art Guild of Awards are given to the top three finishers Cow Bay, and PW College Consulting. symbol of the Community Chest,” said Drew Port Washington (a 2024 Chest grantee) and overall (male and female) and to the top three Officially sanctioned and certified by USA Hershkowitz, Community Chest president. renowned sculptor Alice Riordan. finishers (male and female) in 16 different age Track and Field, the Thanksgiving Day Run is “All the money raised from the Race will “The Red Feather Trophy symbolizes our categories. co-presented by the Town of North Hempstead support these charities.” shared responsibility to help our friends and Another registration option is the Family and assisted by the Port Washington Police The Community Chest will celebrate neighbors in need here in Port Washington,” sponsorship ($250)which includes two free and Fire Medics, the Sands Point Police and this commitment to the Port Washington said Community Chest Executive Director race entries (an $80 value), recognition in the Nassau County Police, along with the community by awarding the overall Men’s the Community Chest’s newsletter’s annual Villages of Manorhaven, Sands Point, Baxter and Women’s winners a $1,000 “Grant Prize,” Bobby Keller. Prior to Nov. 20, race fees are $40 for recognition page. Also, you get a customizEstates and Port Washington North. The run’s which he/she will donate to one of the 28 adults and $25 for kids ages 9-21 (minimum able lawn sign that celebrates your family’s technical director is David Katz, founder of charities selected by the Community Chest age 9 and all children under 11 must be commitment to Port Washington. Finish Line Road Race Technicians (FLRRT). to receive support in 2024. The First Place
The Run for the Red Feather
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LEGAL NOTICES Continued from page 15 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF HEARING Town of North Hempstead Historic Landmarks Preservation Commission N otice is hereby given that a public meeting of the Historic L andmarks P reservation C ommission will be held on Thursday, November 16, 2023 at 7:00 PM at Town Hall, 220 Plandome Road, Manhasset. F or more inf ormation, contact landmarks@ northhempsteadny.gov. The C ommission will consider the f ollowing application: Application f or the issuance of a Certificate of Appropriateness at 62 Murray Avenue (Section 5, B lock 58, L ot 41 and 172) in the P ort Washington Historic D istrict to install an addition, deck, rear portico, replace windows, and modif y f ront retaining wall. Application f or the issuance of a Certificate of Appropriateness at 52 Reid Avenue (Section 5, B lock 61, L ot 199) in the P ort Washington Historic District for new atwork in f ront yard, retaining walls, new atwork in side yard f or existing cellar entry, f ront stoop re- clad to match, new gutters/ leaders. Gas lamp near street. Expanded rear yard deck and patio. 11- 1- 2023- 1T- #243362P O R T
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING CHANGE OF DATE WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 8, 2023 VILLAGE OF FLOWER HILL – BOARD OF TRUSTEES P L EASE TAK E N O TI C E, that the I ncorporated V illage of F lower Hill will hold a R egular Meeting and the f ollowing new public hearings on Wednesday, N ovember 8, 2023 at 7: 30 p.m. at V illage Hall, 1 B onnie Heights R oad, Manhasset, N Y : 1. Continued Proposed Local Law K – 2022 “Amend Ch. 158-5 “Noise” 2. Continued Landmark Designation Hearing: Elderfields Preserve 3. Application of Elonis Development LLC, 1025 Northern Blvd., Roslyn, NY 11576 also known as Section 6, Block B5, Lot 462 on the Nassau County Land & Tax Map for Site Plan Hearing 1025 Northern Blvd., Roslyn, NY 11576. To demolish an existing three-story fire damaged building and replace it with a proposed 1-story commercial bank building. This meeting is open to the public. P ersons who may suf f er f rom a disability which would prevent them f rom participating in said hearing should notif y R onnie Shatzkamer, V illage C lerk, at (516) 62 -5000 in sufficient
time to permit such arrangements to be made to enable such persons to participate in said hearing. B y O rder of the B oard of Trustees R onnie Shatzkamer, V illage Administrator F lower Hill, N ew Y ork D ated: N ovember 1, 2023 11- 1- 2023- 1T- #243397P O R T
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Veteran’s Day Tribute The Annual Veteran’s Day Parade and Tribute will be held on Saturday, Nov. 11, 2023 on Main Street. Any and all Veterans are urged to participate, demonstrate their pride, and experience the thanks from community members. Veterans are requested to congregate on Campus Drive, at 9:15 a.m. and will be joined by local Fire, EMS and Police Departments and their vehicles. The vehicle parade will follow the route north on Port Washington Boulevard, and west on Main Street, finishing at the Sousa Band Shell, where the annual and very poignant Veterans Day Remembrance will be held. The remembrance ceremony begins at 11:00 a.m., signifying the time that the Allies and Germany signed an armistice meant to end fighting on the Western Front, a region that included Belgium, France, Italy, Germany, and other bordering countries. As a result, the cease-fire took effect at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month. Members of the American Legion and the Veteran of Foreign Wars (VFW) Post 1819 will lead the program with Welcoming addresses, song, the noteworthy gun salute, a poem always delivered by John Chaulker, and recognition of those Veterans in attendance. Community Members are invited and
Veterans’ Day Parade, 2022. (Contributed photo)
urged to show your support along the Parade route, and attend the Tribute at the Sousa Band Shell. If you should have questions regarding the event or participation, please call Fred Falconer at 516-767-2488. —Submitted by the Veterans Day Parade Committee
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023
Fall Musicale
Klein International Music Competition in California, and Benjamin Russell, a member of American Contemporary Music Ensemble. On cello is Brook Speltz, a member of the Escher String Quartet and Kathryn Lockwood, who also serves as artis- an artist of the Chamber Music Society of tic director of Music at MOMA, the concert Lincoln Center. On accordion is Nathan is part of a curated series comprising music, Koci, a music director and performer in poetry and dance, inspired by the time of such genres as theater, folk music, jazz, year and themes of romance and resilience. contemporary classical music, dance, and Fall Musicale performers include karaoke singing. duoJalal, the ensemble-in-residence for The final installment of the season, Fall the Telluride MusicFest with Lockwood Musicale celebrates the end of autumn’s on viola and Yousif Sheronick, who brings “cooling off” season, with a focus on unique skills as a classical- and world-percelebrating the earth as a warm, breathing, cussionist. Joining them on violin are Nurit living map. Pacht, a top prize winner in the Irving Tickets are $40 for members of Sands Point Preserve Conservancy; $50 for non-members, and includes parking. Please note that processing fees will be added to credit card charges. For more information, visit sandspointpreserveconservancy.org, or call 516-571-7901. The Sands Point Preserve is located at 127 Middle Neck Rd. in Sands Point, New York. About The Sands Point Preserve Conservancy: The Conservancy provides year-round educational and cultural programs, seasonal celebrations, mansion tours, wellness activities as well as private/corporate event services and film/TV location facilities. For more details, visit http www. sandspointpreserveconservancy.org —Submitted by the Sands Point Preserve Conservancy
Chamber music at the Preserve
Red Feather Award sculptor Alice Riordan. (Contributed photos)
Experience the joys of live music when the Four Seasons in Music Series returns to the Great Hall in Castle Gould at The Sands Point Preserve on Sunday, Nov. 12 at 3 p.m.. The concert is followed by a wine reception—a time to mingle with the artists, friends and concert-goers. The Nov. 12 program, “Fall Musicale,” features an afternoon of music, from Beethoven, Bach, and Mozart to Guy Klucevsek, one of today’s culturally diverse composers. Created by the artistic director,
FLRRT, a pioneer and innovator of modern road race technology, produces a flawless race, calculates timing and results and posts results at www.FLRRT.com by noon on Race Day. Sponsorships for the run are available, as well as volunteer opportunities. Please contact the Community Chest office for more information at 516-767-2121. The Community Chest supports Port Washington charities that help our town continue to be a special place to live. Your donations to the Community Chest help fund critical mental health counseling for Port teens, bullying prevention, quality childcare, out of school time academic programs for under resourced students, as well as college scholarships and programs which feed the hungry and care for the environment. —Submitted by the Community Chest
(Contributed photo)
BOARD GAME NIGHT FUNDRAISER Join us as we raise funds and awareness for victims of abuse. Net proceeds to benefit The Safe Center.
The Safe Center LI’s mission is to serve and empower survivors and victims of domestic/interpersonal violence. If you or someone you love may need help, call The Safe Center’s 24/7 Free and Confidential Hotline: 24/7 Hotline 516.542.0404
For more information about Board Game Night, contact info@mainstboardgamecafe.com or call (631) 729-0060.
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Sunday, November 12, 2023 6:00 - 9:00pm Main Street Board Game Café 307 Main St., Huntington, New York 11743 $50 Admission Includes: Complimentary drink 10% off retail purchases Free pass to come back! Scan QR code to purchase tickets!
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NOVEMBER 1 - 14, 7, 2023 2023• •ANTON ANTON MEDIA MEDIA GROUP GROUP
L LI IW IW LIW
ENTERTAINMENT & LIFESTYLE JENNIFER CORR jcorr@antonmediagroup.com
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here’s no debating the impact Billy Joel has had on Long Island culture. After nearly a year of planning, the Long Island Music Hall of Fame (LIMHOF), located in Stony Brook, has announced the first ever exhibit dedicated to Billy Joel, an inductee at the hall of fame. The exhibit, titled Billy Joel- My Life, A Piano Man’s Journey, will open on Nov. 24 at noon. It will feature Billy Joel’s most cherished items including rare memorabilia, behind-the-scenes video, dozens of awards, rare audio and video recordings, vintage instruments and historic photos, many donated by Billy Joel and never seen before in public. The exhibit takes viewers through the beginning of Billy Joel’s life, all the way up to his residency at Madison Square Garden. “It was natural,” said Ernie Canadeo, LIMHOF Chairman, when asked how the idea to create an exhibit about Billy Joel came out. “We opened the museum a year ago in November of 2022 and early on, we just felt that it was appropriate to have an exhibit about him because of his Long Island roots and his fame. We started thinking about it, myself and my creative director Kevin O’Callaghan at the end of last year. We presented a rough concept to Billy at his [Madison Square Garden] show in late February and he loved it. We’ve actually been working on it ever since.” O’Callaghan said he and Canadeo met with him twice,
Long Island Music Hall Of Fame To Honor Billy Joel Through Exhibit An exhibition about Long Island legend Billy Joel will open at the Long Island Music Hall of Fame in Stony Brook on Nov. 24. (Photo courtesy the Long Island Music Hall of Fame) the first time to get his blessing and the second time to show him a model of the exhibit. They first met with him on Valentine’s Day before his show. They were brought to a small room in the back of the Garden, and, O’Callaghan said, Billy Joel walked in by himself. “I designed the whole exhibition and I think the challenge was Billy Joel is kind of a humble guy,” said O’Callaghan. “I approached him with a concept that this wasn’t all about him. It was about the people he was inspired by, and were inspired by him. This exhibition is not only the journey of Billy Joel, it also touches upon people like Sir Paul McCartney, Beethoven, Ray
Charles, Otis Redding... People that were part of his journey. When I showed him the concept, his reaction to me was ‘So this is going to be a big party.’ And I said ‘That’s right. It’s going to be a party with you and your friends...’” Billy Joel, born in 1949 in the Bronx, grew up in the Levittown section of Hicksville. He began studying piano early on in his life in 1953, going on to perform and release records with various bands. He signed a solo recording contract in 1971 and released his first album, Cold Spring Harbor, and as he was touring the album, he disappeared in the West Coast as a result of a contractual dispute and performed in piano
bars under the name Bill Martin. Eventually, a radio station in Philadelphia recorded a song of his called “Captain Jack” and began playing it on air, which made it hard for Billy Joel to keep his low profile. Columbia Records tracked him down and offered him a recording contract, which led to the recording of Piano Man. The song “Piano Man” became his first top 20 single. He went on to release Streetlife Serenade, The Stranger. 52nd St., Glass Houses, Songs in the Attic, The Nylon Curtain, An Innocent Man, among other albums. To see a complete timeline of Billy Joel’s life, visit www.billyjoel. com/timeline/.
LONG ISLAND WEEKLY
Canadeo said Billy Joel has had a positive impact on the image and notoriety of Long Island because he always speaks about his Long Island roots and displays pride. Because of his impact, Canadeo said this exhibit, taking place on Long Island, is appropriate. “He is really proud of where he’s from and he’s our ambassador to a certain degree of Long Island,” O’Callaghan said. “We’re lucky to have him, of someone of his stature... He still has a house in Sag Harbor. I don’t think he’ll ever totally leave Long Island.” O’Callaghan also remarked at the way that most Long Islanders have some connection to him, as many people have randomly met him in person at a restaurant or while he’s driving his motorcycle. “He is a very down to earth guy,” Canadeo said of Billy Joel. “Easily approachable, funny, casual. That’s how I would describe him.” The organization behind LIMHOF was formed about 20 years ago, but the museum opened up last year. “We’ve inducted over 120 musicians and other music professionals from Long Island,” Canadeo said. “We include, as Long Island, Suffolk, Nassau, Queens and Brooklyn. And in the hall of fame we have memorabilia from a lot of our inductees. Each inductee has a plaque that you can scan and see their bio and a playlist. We span every musical genre. You’ll see things we have from Run-DMC to Billy Joel, and Joan Jett, Pat Benatar and even Louis Armstrong...” For more information about LIMHOF, visit www.limusichalloffame.org.
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ANTON MEDIA GROUP • NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023
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NOVEMBER 1 - 7, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
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