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Vol. 77, 4750 146,No. No.
December 13 - 1, 19,2023 2023 July 26 – August
3rd Congressional District
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INSIDE
GOOD HEALTH ‘23 FOOD SAFEza ColTlegYe
Food Safety This Holiday Season
Pla Accreditation for iday stressors Overcoming hol
In Plainview: Last call for Toys for Tots (See page 3)
In Hicksville: Great year for the Sarah Grace Foundation (See page 3)
In Bethpage: Students gain hands-on experience (See page 9)
Special election brewing in wake of ex-U.S. Rep. George Santos’ expulsion (See page 4)
The Nassau Observer (USPS 586-660) Postmaster: Send address changes to Long Island Community Newspapers, P.O. Box 1578, Mineola, N.Y. 11501. Entered as periodicals postage paid at the Post Office at Mineola, N.Y. and additional mailing offices under the Act of Congress. Published 51 weeks with a double issue the last week of the year by Long Island Community Newspapers, 132 East Second St., Mineola, N.Y. 11501 (P.O. Box 1578). Phone: 516-747-8282. Price per copy is $1.25. Annual subscription rate is $26 in Nassau County.
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The official congressional portrait of ex-Rep. George Santos, whose former seat is now up for grabs.
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Long Island Weekly: Darlene Love brings Christmas joy to New York
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Final Days Of Plainview Toys For Tots Drive
n an effort to spread holiday spirit throughout the Plainview-Old Bethpage community, the Plainview Water District (PWD) is once again proud to partner with the Toys for Tots Foundation, sponsored by the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve. The PWD headquarters, located at 10 Manetto Hill Road, will serve as an official drop-off location for the foundation now through December 15th. The District encourages residents to donate new and unwrapped gifts to help less fortunate children this holiday season. PWD will also be holding a drive-thru drop off day on December 14th. New and unwrapped gift donations can be dropped off at the PWD headquarters anytime until Friday, December 15th. The District will also be holding a drive-thru day on Thursday, December 14th, where community members can drop off toy donations with extra convenience. Since the District started this partnership several
(Graphic courtesy of Toys for Tots promotional material)
years ago, hundreds of toys have been donated from the community to support local children. “During the holiday season, it is easy to forget about the world around us and those that may not have the resources we do,” said PWD Commissioner Andrew Bader.
“By doing the simple task of taking part in a Toys for Tots drive, we each have the ability to make someone’s holiday special. It is always terrific to see our Plainview-Old Bethpage community join in the efforts and do their part to pay it forward. We appreciate every single person who comes out to
participate in this initiative.” The U.S. Marine Corps Reserve ‘Toys for Tots’ Foundation is a nonprofit organization that aims to provide all children across the United States with happiness and joy throughout the holiday season. Through the gift of a new toy, disadvantaged children will not be overlooked during the holidays, and will know that a community of people cares for them. “The holidays can be an incredibly stressful time for many of us, but by donating an item or two to these children it will not only make their holiday better but shows the strength and kindness of our community,” said PWD Commissioner Michael Chad. “We strongly encourage anyone who has the means or ability this year to stop by and support this wonderful cause by dropping off a toy for someone in need.” —Submitted by the Plainview Water District
Sarah Grace Foundation Ends 20th Anniversary Year Strong The 20th anniversary of the Sarah Grace Foundation for Children With Cancer, Inc. has been filled with charitable endeavors rooted in the mission of the organization. Since its founding in 2003 in honor of Sarah Grace Weippert, the foundation remained committed to helping children affected by cancer and their families. Over the summer months the Foundation distributed NY Mets ballgame tickets to pediatric cancer centers; provided summer crafts; distributed more than 1000 new books; replenished The Escape Hatch; Chemo Duck and provided 60 backpacks filled with school supplies as part of the organization’s “Back To School” program, including an additional 125 20th Anniversary backpacks. The Foundation distributed information and participated in Childhood Cancer Awareness
events throughout September. As fall arrived the Foundation shipped 528 Halloween trick-ortreat goodie bags and provided fall craft projects for children at local pediatric cancer centers. “All of this was accomplished while also fulfilling requests for grocery and gas gift cards as well as financial assistance for household expenses, patient co-pays and funeral expenses,” said Matt Weippert, executive director of the Foundation. “The Foundation depends on the generosity of donors and fundraising events to fulfill its mission. The Holiday Extravaganza raffle raised $5,600 for the foundation’s holiday programs, and a Zumba fundraiser in Florida raised an additional $550,” said Weippert. The foundation is once again hosting a toy drive to brighten
the holidays for children with cancer. Donations of new and unused toys can be dropped off at Ray Leventhal Clothing, 335 S. Oyster Bay Road in Plainview, N.Y. The collection deadline is Dec. 10. Stuffed animals will not be accepted. Donations can also be made online at https://yougivegoods.com/sarahgrace-toys2023. For more information on The Sarah Grace Foundation, please call (516) 433-9745 or visit the Foundation’s website at www. TheSarahGraceFoundation. org. Donations or requests for information may be sent to the Foundation at 17 E. Old Country Road, Unit B, PMB 202, Hicksville, NY 11801 —Submitted by the Sarah Grace Foundation (Contributed image)
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DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2023
TOP STORY
Special Election Gears Up After Santos Voted Out
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TOP STORY
Former congressman makes history as sixth-ever expelled from the House
ANTON MEDIA GROUP STAFF editors@antonmediagroup.com
L
ess than a year into his two-year term, now-former NY-03 Congressman George Santos was expelled from the U.S. House of Representatives on December 1, 2023, making him one of only a handful in history to leave Congress through that particular door. Facing an expulsion vote just a few weeks after the House Ethics Committee released a mostly negative 56-page report on his actions during and after his 2022 campaign, Santos was removed from Congress with a vote of 311 in favor, 114 against, and two voting “present.” As Santos heads off into the sunset (and onto the platform Cameo, and TV screens, and wherever else his fame carries him), legislators and political party leaders are ramping up for what will surely be a closely watched special election for his seat in Feburary.
Next steps for the seat
As per proper procedure, New York Governor Kathy Hochul formally announced by proclamation on December 5 that a special election would be held on February 13, 2024 to fill the seat vacated by Santos, that date being within 70 to 80 days of his departure, as per U.S. law. Hochul commented in a statement to press, “As governor, I have the solemn responsibility to call a special election to ensure the voters of Long Island and Queens once again have representation in Congress. Members of Congress provide critical constituent services, serve as a link to federal agencies, and advocate on behalf of the constituents who sent them to Washington.” The local Democratic and Republican parties spent the first few days of December interviewing and meeting with potential candidates for the NY-03 seat, who are chosen by party leaders rather than primaries in the case of a special election. On the Democrats’ side, a handful of names were mentioned in the slew of articles that followed Santos’ expulsion, but ultimately former NY-03 Rep. and gubernatorial primary candidate Tom Suozzi would take the spot, as his party announced on December 7. The New York State Republican Committee had not yet announced its chosen candidate by press time.
Local leaders, constituents react Reactions to Santos’ departure have been
The Douglaston, Queens office of former Rep. George Santos, which sits and has often sat vacant. (Credit: D. Benjamin Miller via Wikimedia Commons) plentiful and frequently bipartisan, including in our neck of the woods. Town of North Hempstead Supervisor Jennifer DeSena, a Republican, commented, “I applaud the House of Representatives for finally expelling the fabulist George Santos from their ranks. This is something I have called for and supported since the story broke earlier this year, as it is clear that George Santos is a liar and con man who has no place in Congress. As a resident of CD-3 myself, I am excited to be able to elect a new representative who will be an effective advocate for the residents of this District, something which George Santos had failed to do since day one.” New York State Assemblywoman Gina Sillitti (AD-16), a Democrat, commented, “It’s finally done and the people of the 3rd Congressional District are ready to move on. We need to learn from this experience, make sure it doesn’t happen again and get back to work for the residents who have been without representation for far too long.” Town of North Hempstead Councilmember Mariann Dalimonte, also a Democrat, noted, “As we move forward, let this serve as a reminder that our elected leaders must uphold integrity to ensure a future where the democratic process truly prevails.” Town of Oyster Bay Supervisor Joseph Saladino, a Republican, also commented, “While George Santos chose to ignore our public demands for his resignation, I commend the United States House of Representatives for taking action to remove
him. Since day one, my administration has worked with representatives from neighboring Congressional Districts to serve our community and we will continue to do so until a new representative is elected by the public.” For his part, Anton Media Group reader-subscriber Richard Siegelman of Plainview wrote in: “Having just read that George Santos ‘can return to the House floor as a former member, and he can use some House facilities,’ my knowledge of the meaning of the polite phrase ‘Excuse me, I have to use the facilities’ tells me that Santos may now be able to literally do what he has already figuratively done to the whole House of Representatives over the past 11 months!”
A rare moment in history
As previously noted, Santos is one of only six representatives in US history to be expelled from the House. He is also the first Republican. But Santos’ removal is unique in that he is the only congressman to be removed without a criminal conviction or an association with the Civil War Confederacy. The 1860s, a particularly tumultuous time of civil unrest in this country, resulted in the removal of three Southerners out of the lower chamber following their support to leave the Union. The three men were Missouri Reps. John Reid and John Clark, and Kentucky Rep. Henry Burnett. When the men were ousted, they were accused of abetting secession from the Union, helping to establish an alternative government in the
South, and joining the war on the Southern side. Expulsion would not occur again until the 1980s, when Rep. Michael Myers, a Pennsylvania Democrat, was removed following the Abscam bribery scandal, in which political officials were accused of accepting bribes in exchange for political favors. The last prior congressman to be expelled was Rep. James Traficant of Ohio in 2002, on – among other things – charges of tax evasion, racketeering, bribery, and obstruction of justice. Santos has tried to use the circumstances of his removal to undermine the decision. During a debate on the House floor, he stated, “Every member expelled in the history of this institution has been convicted of crimes or confederate turncoats guilty of treason. Neither of those apply to me. But here we are.” Santos was removed following a House Ethics Committee report which suggested “substantial evidence” that the congressman violated federal law. Santos has been indicted on 23 charges, including wire fraud and identity theft. He has pleaded not guilty to these accusations.
A star in the making
It seems like expulsion won’t be the last we hear of Santos, as the former congressman is set to get the movie treatment sometime soon. HBO has confirmed they are in the works to produce a film based on journalist Mark Chiusano’s nonfiction book The Fabulist: The Lying, Hustling, Stealing, and Very American Legend of George Santos. Frank Rich, executive producer of Emmywinning TV show Succession, will be dipping into that role again for the film adaptation, alongside Bad Education screenwriter Mike Makowsky. The HBO film aims to chronicle “the Gatsby-esque journey of a man from nowhere who exploited the system, waged war on truth and swindled one of the wealthiest districts in the country to achieve his American dream,” as stated by the project’s logline. Hollywood has been eagerly lapping up Santos’ drama for their own gains. A recent Saturday Night Live episode opened with a farewell skit to the former congressman. Cast member Bowen Yang offered a humorous speech. “This entire country has been bullying me just because I’m a proud, gay thief,” Yang’s Santos decried. “But what else is new? America hates to see a Latina queen winning.”
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2023
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NEIGHBORS IN THE NEWS Congregation Beth Tikvah Sisterhood Toy Drive For Children Spending Holidays In The Hospital The Sisterhood of Congregation Beth Tikvah, located in Wantagh, collected an overflowing table full of toys at their Annual Paid-Up Membership Dinner. These toys will be brought to the Goryeb Children’s Hospital in Morristown, New Jersey. This hospital was chosen because one of the sisterhood member’s grandsons received excellent care there, after being diagnosed with diabetes at the age of 3. The very proud grandmother was overwhelmed by these generous donations. The social action committee of Congregation Beth Tikvah proudly continues to make a difference in the community. For information about Sisterhood of Congregation Beth Tikvah and how to become a member, please call Sisterhood President Doris Joltin at (516) 546 6613, or visit the website at: http://www. congbt.org. —Submitted by Jo-Ann Hertzman
Linda Extract, Congregation Beth Tikvah Sisterhood Social Action co-chairperson, Doris Joltin, CBT Sisterhood President, Susan Wald, CBT Sisterhood Social Action co-chairperson and CBT Sisterhood member, Anna Cohen. (Photo courtesy of Gita Freed, CBT Sisterhood Calendar coordinator.)
Community Eyesore In Massapequa Cleaned Up Oyster Bay Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino, Councilman Steve Labriola, Councilwoman Laura Maier and Receiver of Taxes Jeffrey Pravato joined forces with County Executive Bruce Blakeman and County Legislator James Kennedy to improve the quality of life in Massapequa by removing graffiti from a former New York City Water Pumping Station on Sunrise Highway in Massapequa. The building is now freshly
painted and fenced off. Councilman Steve Labriola stated, “We’re cleaning up eyesores and improving your quality of life by working together to address community concerns. The graffiti on this pumping station was long neglected by the former County administration, and we’re proud to have cleaned it up.” —Submitted by the Town of Oyster Bay
(L-R) Receiver of Taxes Jeffrey Pravato, Supervisor Joseph Saladino, Councilwoman Laura Maier, Councilman Steve Labriola, and Legislator James Kennedy. (Contributed photo)
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WWII Vet And Farmingdale Resident Honored On 99th Birthday Oyster Bay Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino and Councilman Tom Hand recently joined with the Nassau County Police Department, the Farmingdale Fire Department, East Farmingdale Fire Department, South Farmingdale Fire Department and Village of Farmingdale Department of Public Works to celebrate the 99th Birthday of Farmingdale resident Edward Lomot. Edward is a retired United States Army Ser-
geant who served in the Bomb Squad from 1943-1945 during World War II. Supervisor Saladino and Councilman Hand joined with Edward and his assembled family, friends and neighbors to celebrate his 99th birthday, honor him as an American hero, and thank him for his dedicated service to the United States of America and freedom around the world. —Submitted by the Town of Oyster Bay
Fire Dept. Poster Contest Winners Earlier last month, Chief Michael Herold and Commissioner Joel Bearman presented awards to the student winners of the Levittown Fire Department’s Fire Prevention Week Poster and Essay contest. The awards are handed out to students attending Levittown elementary schools ranging
from grades K-6 that submitted the best fire prevention poster or essay. The students received a Target gift card and certificate and a new smoke detector. The overall winner was driven to school in a fire engine. —Submitted by the Levittown Fire Department
Commissioner Joel Bearmand and Chief of the Department Michael Herold with the winning students: Zachary Ramdhani, Arishka Abhilash, Abby Usma-Silva, Rebecca Bennett, Thashwin Piratheepan and Hana Qurbani. (Contributed photo)
(Contributed photo)
November 18 - March 10 This exhibition examines the appearances and the realities of an era that mirrors our own in many ways. The art of John Singer Sargent, Louis Comfort Tiffany. Drawing heavily upon the local literary history of Long Island, including William Cullen Bryant, Mark Twain (who named the Gilded Age), Walt Whitman, Edith Wharton and others.
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COMMUNITY CALENDAR To place an item in this space, send information two weeks before the event to editors@antonmediagroup.com.
THURSDAY, DEC. 14 Narwhal Mania 4:15 p.m. Learn about narwhals with a story and craft. Grades K-2. Programs run by the Children’s Department are for children residing in UFSD #22 only. You MUST use your child’s library card to register. Registration with an adult card will be invalid. This event is taking place in Room E of the Farmingdale Public Library, 116 Merritts Rd.
FRIDAY, DEC. 15 Last Day of Chanukah Ugly Sweater Holiday Workshop 2 p.m. Come join Jeannine and Emily to make your very own ugly (Contributed photo) sweater for the holiday season! Just bring a sweater, sweatshirt, or t-shirt, and we’ll have all the craft supplies you need to make a
unique ugly sweater this year. Let’s play some holiday music and get crafting! This is a free craft offered by the Library, but you need to bring your own sweater (or sweatshirt/t-shirt) to participate. Decorations will be provided. This event is taking place at the Hicksville Public Library, 169 Jerusalem Ave.
part of your seasonal display this winter. Children ages 3 years old and up to 5th grade. Young children will need adult assistance. This is not a live event. Kits will be available for pick up after registration. Stop by the Children’s Room to pick up your kit within 2 weeks of the registration date or your kit will be given away to the waitlist. Contact the Childrens’ Department at (516) 731-5728 ext. 500, or email childrens@levittownpl.org for more information.
else to be but here as Chef Rob teaches you how to decorate your very own cupcakes. Please be aware that the food may contain or come into contact with common allergens. This event is taking place at the Plainview-Old Bethpage Public Library, 999 Old Country Rd.
SATURDAY, DEC. 16 Toys, Toys, Toys! 2:30 p.m. With the Cold Spring Harbor Whaling Museum! Thinking about toys this season? Find out what kids were playing with in the 1800s. (They had fidget spinners, too!) Create and decorate some historic toys to play with at home. Grades K-5. Open to residents in SD #21 ONLY. Register online or in-person with your Bethpage Public Library Card. This event is taking place at the Bethpage Public Library, 47 Powell Ave.
SUNDAY, DEC. 17 Snow Globe Cupcakes 2 p.m. With Chef Rob. Grades K-4. Winter is here and there is “snowhere”
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 20 Movie: Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992) 2 p.m. One year after Kevin McCallister was left home alone and had to defeat a pair of bumbling burglars, he accidentally finds himself stranded in New York City—and the same criminals (Contributed photo) are not far behind. Rated PG. Length: 2 hours. Starring: Macaulay Culkin and Joe Pesci. This screening is taking place at the Bethpage Public Library, 47 Powell Ave.
(Contributed photo)
Christmas With Beethoven The organist from Parkway Community Church in Hicksville — a professional musician from NYC — will be having a Christmas concert with a professional violinist. They will be playing Beethoven’s Christmas music, Tickets are $5. Taking place at 95 Stewart Ave. For more information, and to book your tickets, visit www. parkwaycommunitychurch.org/
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JFK And The End Of The Innocence JOSEPH SCOTCHIE jscotchie@antonmediagroup.com
F
or decades, the “Where were you” question concerning Nov. 22, 1963, became a lasting pastime. It came up every November and whenever the presidency of John F. Kennedy was the subject. The question became so prevalent that wits on all sides of the spectrum began to answer with an “I don’t know,” translated into “I don’t care” into “knock it off already.” It matters. The cliche has long been End of the Innocence America. Being a cliche doesn’t make it wrong. At the 1956 Democratic Party convention, Kennedy, then a Massachusetts senator, had his name placed in nomination as Adlai Stevenson’s running mate. He lost out to Estes Kefauver (D---TN). Kennedy left the convention as the hottest thing going in the party. In 1960, he won the nomination. As the fall election progressed, he held a healthy lead over his rival, Vice President Richard M. Nixon. As Election Day approached, that lead evaporated. Kennedy, ever the fatalist, commented to reporters that the country didn’t want a Catholic president after all. Kennedy did win a razor-thin triumph. The legend of his brief administration as Camelot only came about after his assassination. Other than the excitement in Cuba, Kennedy’s presidency represented a normal time for a normal nation. In the early 1960s, the U.S. economy boomed as before. Jobs and pay raises were abundant. Adults married young and started families. Kennedy was liberal as the term was then defined. He supported tax cuts, negotiated an arms control treaty with the Soviet Union, and nominated a conservative Democrat, Bryon “Whizzer” White, to the Supreme Court. Cuba mattered. It was shocking to see America, at the zenith of its great power, allow a Soviet beachhead, one led by an anti-American demagogue just 90 miles from Key West. In early 1961, CIA-trained Cuban refugees attacked Cuba, hoping to overthrow Fidel Castro. Kennedy ignored advice from the super-hawk General Curtis LeMay, who counseled air support for the rebels. They didn’t get it, and Castro emerged triumphant. In 1962, Kennedy prevailed in having Soviet missiles removed from Cuba. The price was monumental. He agreed not to overthrow the Castro regime, a concession that was never reported in the media. Did those two failures lead to the New Frontiersmen’s commitment to Vietnam?
Picture of President Kennedy in the limousine in Dallas, Texas, on Main Street, minutes before the assassination. Also in the presidential limousine are Jackie Kennedy, Texas Governor John Connally, and his wife, Nellie. (Public domain photo)
Signing Cuba Quarantine Proclamation, President Kennedy in the Oval Office. (Public domain)
Lyndon Johnson escalated the war, but Kennedy first sent in actual troops. In 1983, on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of November 1963, Arthur Schlesinger maintained that if re-elected in 1964, Kennedy would have removed U.S. troops from that country. Was it true? Undeniable is that Kennedy’s death was the most symbolic moment in modern American history. On the afternoon of Nov. 22, 1963, CBS was the nation’s leading
television station, the “Tiffany” of broadcasters. On the air was a soap opera, a contended housewife dusting off a shelf in a contended America. Then, the interruption and the shocking news. That week, Life magazine, which had a jaw-dropping circulation of 12 million, had planned to place Navy quarterback Roger Staubach on its cover. Instead, America had to endure John-John’s gut-wrenching salute to his slain father. The cynics have won. American life was never the same. The columnist Joe Sobran claimed that since Kennedy’s death, the country had taken a frightening turn leftward. Was that true? Kennedy was a reckless man but a prudent politician. There was arms control but also ambivalence towards civil rights. Both Kennedy and his younger brother, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, held a negative view of Martin Luther King, Jr. Both wanted King to call off his June 1963 march on Washington. As a native of Massachusetts, Kennedy was sensitive over the American South, then wall-to-wall Democratic, from bolting to the Republican Party over civil rights. Kennedy supported civil rights, but he never pushed the issue.
Johnson was reckless in both his personal and professional life. In 1965, he increased the troop presence in Vietnam from 14,000 to 350,000 men, eventually reaching 500,000 troops. Johnson was a native Texan. He had no hesitation in steamrolling his old Southern Democratic friends on both civil rights and voting rights. The 1965 immigration bill transformed America in a way Ellis Island never did, from multiethnic to multicultural, from Robert Frost and Ernest Hemingway to “Hey hey, ho ho, Western civ has got to go.” Did the Great Society promise more than its legislation could deliver? Guns and butter translated into a tax surcharge and inflation. By the summers of 1967 and 1968, crime and rioting had overwhelmed dozens and dozens of once-vibrant American cities. Such rioting even extended to such college campuses as the once-august Columbia University. And so, the critical question. Would Kennedy, if re-elected, have withdrawn from Vietnam? If so, a much different 1960s. Thank God for presidents who prefer golf and Cape Cod- and other merrimentto remake an entire nation, much less the planet.
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BOOK TALK
Making Work Optional Local author shares tips for how to achieve financial peace of mind
CHRISTY HINKO chinko@antonmediagroup.com
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chieving financial freedom involves strategic planning, disciplined saving, and investing wisely. Making work optional allows individuals to design their lives on their terms, pursuing passions and meaningful activities without the constraint of traditional employment. It’s about creating a financial foundation that empowers personal choices and a fulfilling lifestyle. Philip Palumbo, CEO and chief investment officer of Palumbo Wealth Management in Great Neck, has recently published a book titled, Make Work Optional: Live Well and Never Worry About Money Again, to assist families on properly planning and investing their money. We had a chance to speak with Palumbo about the inspiration and goals of this book. Here is what he had to share.
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Why the need for this book? What I do for a living is to get people away from using that word and thinking like about that word, retirement. It’s so archaic, it’s overused in the financial community, people being sold and marketed that term of retirement. People are saying to themselves, “Oh, I want to retire from (some) arbitrary age of 60 to 65.” I’m more of the believer of saying to yourself, get to the point where work is optional, as quickly as possible. That could be for someone who is 45, 50, 55 and so on. Everyone is different. Financial peace of mind, that’s the goal and objective for all of us in life. You do not have to be worth billions to make work optional.
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Who will benefit from reading this book? It’s literally for everyone, no matter if you are 16 or 60. This book is not about teaching you how to stop working. It is about having the option to make work optional. The concept is easy to grasp, even at a young age. The focus of my practice is helping people who are preparing to make work optional, or were already at the point where working is optional.
Q
Do you think that this concept is more common now than when our parents and grandparents were working and trying to figure out how to manage their finances through retirement, or in some cases, work until they died? This book teaches how to build up enough assets so that you can generate enough cash flow to stop working, if you wanted to. Most people who are at a work optional point in their lives continuing to work, because they enjoy their work. The point of financial freedom isn’t necessarily stop working. In fact, I would argue that that’s not a smart idea. I would argue that it’s very good to continue to work.
A
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What inspired you to write this book? There’s a great business book called Who Moved My Cheese. It’s a very short read, but it really gets to the point. It is simple, easy to read and understand. The goal of my book was exactly to keep it simple and concise so anybody can understand the content. My hope is that when people read it, it’s an eye-opening experience for them. That gets them excited to push hard to get to this point where work is optional, to have the financial freedom to do whatever it is they want to do in life.
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Talk about your own passion in finance. I’ve been doing this for 23 years. I have been at my own first now for four years. The thought of getting people to make work optional has been something I’ve thought about from day one. A lot of my financial memories and ideas comes from my father who was a Local 3 electrician. My mom stayed home and took care of me, my older brother and my younger sister, and oftentimes my dad struggled financially. To see him struggle was an eye-opening experience for for me. I started working at the age of 13, hustling to make my own money and to build up my net worth was completely self-taught. My goal now is to make sure my clients don’t feel the way my dad did. Peace of mind, I’m so big into that. The three-legged stool in life is number one, your health. If you have your health, you can enjoy number two, your family. And number three is having enough money to enjoy your health and your family. If you’re missing and mismanage one leg of the stool, the stool falls over.
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COLUMN
How To End The Santos Drama Is George Santos gone? Finally, after three votes he is out of Congress. This is a relief to all of the members of Congress and is a signal to the voting public that Santos wasn’t going to get a free pass until the end of his term. The real question is whether the party bosses, in both parties, have learned anything from the Santos fiasco. To begin with, if the Republican Party would have done a simple background check on George Santos, he would have never been gifted with a two-year term in Washington. As an example, all they had to do was make a call to the coach of the Hunter College volleyball team to find out if Santos was a star player. But no one really cared that much to check and the party was stuck with him. As a former elected official, I remember being screened for the vacancy in the State Assembly. I met with 10 people who asked me a lot of questions about my background. Somehow a candidate for the Congress got the nomination two times and no one thought to challenge one line of his inflated history. To add to this sad chapter, there are rumors that the House campaign committee knew Santos had issues, but took no action to stop him thinking he would lose to Congressman Suozzi. But that was then and this is now. No candidate for any public office on Long Island or anywhere else, should get a nomination without being fully screened by a legitimate outside company that specializes in background checks. Candidates should have to fill out a comprehensive questionnaire that asks for real references that can be
INSIDE POLITICS Jerry Kremer
checked. In addition, the public should be entitled to see the questionnaire prior to Election Day. There is no iron-clad way for the public to know what they are getting when they step into the voting booth. One of the least informed categories of public positions is in the courts. Unless some candidate for a judicial post is your next door neighbor, no one knows anything about judicial candidates. While I assume that most of the nominees have been well screened, it wouldn’t hurt if the public got much more information prior to the election, describing all of the candidates. This is done in New York City and it is effective. There are many lessons to be learned as a result of the Santos drama. Hopefully the parties in charge will show that they have learned them.
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- T H I S H O L I D AY S E A S O N -
Bruce Blakeman
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COLUMNS
Crushing Criticism And Contempt Researcher John Gottman discussed the four horsemen, which are forms of communication that may appear during discussions of difficult topics. The horsemen are criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and stonewalling. The presence of these horsemen during an argument is detrimental as any one of them can create an escalation of negativity during interactions and lead to problems within the partnership. Let’s focus on two of these problematic communication tactics: criticism and contempt. Criticism involves attacking your partner’s character, for example, by saying, “You left the dishes in the sink, because you’re such a slob.” Contempt is like criticism, but involves verbally attacking a person from a place of superiority. Essentially, it’s criticism with a bit of sarcasm on top. An example is, “Of course you didn’t get the promotion, you can’t even handle taking care of
comments last well beyond the issue at hand. A simple issue such as leaving behind papers in the office can turn into name calling and frustration, creating a much larger interpersonal issue.
LOVE LESSONS
Marisa T. Cohen, PhD
the children.” The Scenario Consider a couple, Jo and Sam, who have been married for three years. Sam tends to lash out during arguments, specifically to hurt Jo when he feels upset or attacked. He has found that when he lashes out, he temporarily feels less angry, because he “wins” the argument. However, this communication habit is eroding their relationship over time, as the hurtful
The Solution When criticism and contempt rear their ugly heads during an argument, it is important for both partners to use “I statements” or “I language.” First, the partner on the receiving end of the criticism and/or contempt may need to use these statements to point out the damage being done. For example, Jo may say to Sam, “When you say critical things about me during an argument, I get upset, because it makes me feel as if you don’t care about me or my feelings.” This will alert Sam to the problem, specifically the harsh language he is using. The person who is lashing out should also practice using “I statements” to better indicate
what the problematic behavior is and how it makes them feel. For example, if Sam is mad at Jo for leaving a mess of papers behind, he may say, “When you leave papers all over my desk, I get upset, because it takes me more time to clean up before beginning my own work. This creates extra work for me and makes me feel anxious.” Stating what the problematic behavior is (leaving behind a mess of papers) and how it impacts him, helps Jo understand what is bothering him and why. If both partners can share what they are thinking and how they are feeling, without hurting one another, they can enhance their communication and strengthen their relationship. Take some time to reflect on how you communicate with your partner when you get upset. Set a goal to remove these tactics from your disagreements in order to improve the way you speak to and feel about one another.
Karl V. Anton, Jr., Publisher, Anton Community Newspapers, 1984-2000 Publishers of Glen Cove/Oyster Bay Record Pilot Great Neck Record M anhasset Press Nassau Illustrated News Port Washington News Syosset-Jericho Tribune The Nassau Observer The Roslyn News Editor and Publisher Angela Susan Anton President Frank A. Virga Vice President of Operations/CFO Iris Picone Director of Sales Administration Shari Egnasko Editors Janet Burns, Jennifer Corr, Lauren Feldman, Christy Hinko, Amanda Olsen, Julie Prisco, Joe Scotchie Advertising Sales Ally Deane, Mary Mallon, Sal Massa, Maria Pruyn, Jeryl Sletteland Director of Circulation Joy DiDonato Director of Production Robin Carter Creative Director Alex Nuñe z
Twelve Days Of Thanksmas! The holidays are upon us and that means schedules are crazy. It’s hard to follow a regular exercise routine and eat healthy but below are some tips to stay healthy during this chaotic time of the year. Since our bodies are machines that are controlled by our brain and nervous system it is vital to fuel our bodies and minds with the best ingredients for the body. Choose organic, unprocessed foods that are naturally loaded with a variety of nutrients; even with the cleanest diet, our environment can be loaded with toxic chemicals. Regular cleansing is necessary to keep our body functioning well. Just like a vehicle runs better when it has clean fuel and regular oil changes to remove the gunk, Our mind likes to be fed nutrient rich foods as well. Regular exposure to positive motivational books, movies and conversations that feel uplifting and inspiring also helps. Our minds also love to learn new things and to be challenged, so find an activity you have always wanted to try but never made the time for and scheduled in this holiday season. We can also practice
ALL ARROWS POINT BACK TO NUTRITION Nutritionist Maria Dello
gratitude. When we practice gratitude on a regular basis, we demonstrate awareness of the amount of abundance and blessings in our life. It feels amazing to take the time to feel abundant rather than focusing on the limitations. When we are energetically vibrating in a higher level due to our intention and focus on gratitude, we automatically draw towards us more valuable things, ideas and people to be grateful for. Literally what we think we create, so if we want to stay in a more optimistic mindset during the challenging period of our
life, it would be helpful to give thanks. Keep a gratitude journal and write down five things each day to be grateful for. It helps us gain perspective in life. Another thing we can do is practice exercise. It can be hard to stick to a regular exercise routine, especially in those areas where the weather is getting cold. The good news is that any movement throughout the day is beneficial. If you don’t have time in your day to commit to a full workout, what I like to call micro-movements can help to stay on track. This is just moving, stretching and bending during the day. Another thing you can do is grab buddy to walk. Studies have shown that friends and family who walked together are participated in activities involving nature often feel closer to each other. Regular exercise can also improve mood and feeling of well-being translating into improved relationships with others so it’s a win-win all around. If you’re multitasking during meals (eating in the car or front of the TV) it can be challenging to be mindful about food. Try to sit down and focus on your
meals and be mindful. Chew your food slowly and make your meals last 20 minutes. You’ll connect with your food and maybe even have some time to practice a moment of gratitude while you eat. Always start your day off with protein. Starting the day off with a good serving of protein at breakfast can help keep energy stable throughout the day. Egg bakes are particularly helpful during the holiday season as they can be prepared ahead of time, in addition to being customizable. Those who celebrate Christmas can incorporate some red bell peppers and green chilies to bring the holiday color scheme to the table. Be present in the moment, it’s all too common to rush, appreciating the moment and journaling in the early morning and towards the end of the day will help not only keep us in gratitude but will help maintain a sense of reflection of gratitude. Keeping our body, mind and spirit as one is key to optimal health! Have a safe and healthy holiday!
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Transit Museum Special Program For December For the price of one swipe using your Metro or OMNY Card, on Saturdays during the month of December, you can take a trip down memory lane. Board the New York Transit Museum’s 1930s R1/9 cars that will operate between 2nd Avenue on the F line in Lower Manhattan and 145th Street on the D line, from 10am to 5:30pm. It will consist of eight train cars from the 1930s. They were originally purchased for the municipal Independent Subway System (IND) under contracts R1, R4, R6, R7, and R9, known as the R1/9s. This equipment was considered state-of-the-art for this generation of subway riders. Features included rattan seats, paddle ceiling fans (installed before the age of air conditioning), incandescent light bulbs, roll signs, and advertisements from that time period. During those good old days, it was common to find both penny gum and soda machines dispensing products at many subway stations. Clean and safe bathrooms were readily available. It was a time when people respected authority and law. Previous generations of riders did not litter subway stations and buses leaving behind gum, candy wrappers, paper cups, bottles and newspapers. No one would openly eat pizza, chicken or other messy foods while riding a bus or subway. Everyone paid their way and there was no fare evasion. You did not have to deal with aggressive panhandlers, eating as if one is at home or restaurant, those hogging two seats, yawning,
PENNER STATION Larry Penner
coughing or sneezing without covering up and the release of flatulence, or women accosted by gropers while perverts engage in other unhealthy sexual activities. Today, these train cars are preserved as part of the New York Transit Museum’s collection located in downtown Brooklyn. Larry Penner is a transportation advocate, historian and writer who previously served as a former Director for the Federal Transit Administration Region 2 New York Office of Operations and Program Management. This included the development, review, approval and oversight for billions in capital projects and programs for NJ Transit, New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority, NYC Transit bus, subway and Staten Island Railway, Long Island and Metro North Rail Roads, MTA Bus, NYCDOT Staten Island Ferry along with 30 other transit agencies in NY & NJ.
Adventures In Learning In this new column of L.I.G.H.T. FOR CHARITY™ (my acronym for ‘Long Island Giving Help Together For Charity’), I shine a light on a Long Island-based charity called Adventures in Learning. While many of the charities that I have researched and written about have been formed within the past few years, Adventures in Learning has been operating for 54 years. The charity has helped hundreds of local children in need over that time. It continues to do so, making a difference in the lives of children who would otherwise be without assistance during a critical time in their emotional and educational development. Adventures in Learning is an after-school educational and enrichment program dedicated to improving the lives of Long Island children in need of after-school care and instruction. Adventures in Learning operates at the Manhattasset-Great Neck EOC (the Economic Opportunity Council), where it offers children in kindergarten through sixth grade a place to come after school for help with homework and engage in other programs and activities. The charity provides a warm and caring environment where children develop homework skills while benefiting from computer instruction, literary and math programs, and cultural activities. Adventures in Learning offers children a wide variety of programs, including programs for homework assistance, early childhood reading, English as a new language, film
LIGHT for Charity
Kayla Donnenfeld
workshops, nutrition, science, STEM education, arts & crafts, basketball, dance, robotics and coding. Additional activities are also offered focusing on values of caring, honesty, respect and responsibility. There are different ways you can help support Adventures in Learning in fulfilling its mission. Adventures in Learning is looking for volunteers with an interest helping to transform children’s lives for the better, and the charity also accepts money donations to help fund its activities. You can visit Adventures in Learning’s website at adventures-in-learning.org to learn more about how you can help provide children with a safe haven after school and the opportunity to achieve stability, self-sufficiency, self esteem and hope for the future.
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HOME & DESIGN
HOMES
Recently Sold
Wrap The Fig Tree BY ANTON MEDIA STAFF specialsections@antonmediagroup.com
P This home, Longhouse at 1005 Wolver Hollow Road in Upper Brookville, sold on Nov. 20 for $1,575,000. It is a country estate designed by Royal Barry Wills—a well-known Massachusetts architect—who was considered to be the master of the Cape Cod Revival style. Surrounded by soaring pines, oaks, and junipers the property is accented with specimen plantings and English-style garden designed by Innocenti and Webel. The masterfully designed four-bedroom country farm ranch on 3.8 acres has wonderful entertainment rooms filled with light, beamed ceilings, and pre-war details. The home has a wood paneled library and elegant living room with 12-over-12 double hung windows. There are three wood-burning fireplaces. The formal dining room leads to a bright breakfast room and kitchen. The large first floor primary suite has ensuite baths and fireplace with 18th-century Delft tiles. The second floor features three bedrooms with two full bathrooms. Outdoor living with open and covered terraces offers incredible privacy. A fabulous barn is detached with two-car parking and above bonus space. Longhouse is not a classic Cape. It is rambling cottage that is utterly charming, intimate and noteworthy. Convenient to town, LIRR, schools and shopping. This home at 1347 Chicken Valley Road in Upper Brookville sold on Nov. 2 for $2,950,000. Set on a deep two-acre parcel, the reimagined property blooms with new landscaping and mature trees. New life has been breathed into this 1920s residence creating an intimate and inviting milieu reminiscent of a European country villa. Enveloped in quiet elegance, the natural beauty of the fine materials and architectural details take center stage. Renovated down to the studs, the home now has all new plumbing, electric, air conditioning, septic system and radiant heat throughout (except two of the bedrooms). Carlisle solid white oak tongue and groove random width wide-plank flooring is found throughout as well as custom woodwork. Duravit bathroom fixtures, honed travertine marble, new windows and doors. Stunning living room and dining room w/ high ceilings and French doors. An open floor plan for kitchen and family room features Christopher Peacock cabinetry, Carrera marble countertops
and Wolfe appliances. Bedrooms offer walk-in closets and en suite bathrooms. The primary suite has a new veranda and a Chesney wood-burning fireplace flanked by built-ins. The home has a finished lower level with a bedroom, bathroom and laundry. The backyard has a Gunite heated pool with a bluestone surround and two additional patios.
reparing fig trees for winter is essential to ensure their health and vigor when the growing season returns. Fig trees, especially those in regions with colder climates, require thoughtful care to withstand winter’s challenges. Before the first frost arrives, it’s crucial to properly water the fig tree. Well-hydrated trees are more resilient to cold stress. Ensure that the soil is adequately moist, but be cautious not to overwater, as waterlogged soil can lead to root rot. Watering should be reduced gradually as the tree enters dormancy. Mulching around the base of the fig tree is a key winterizing measure. Applying a thick layer of organic mulch, such as straw or wood chips, helps insulate the soil, protecting the tree’s roots from extreme temperature fluctuations. Mulch also aids in moisture retention, preventing the soil from drying out during winter. Pruning is another important task to prepare fig trees for winter. Remove any dead or damaged branches, as well as those that are crossing or overly crowded. This not only promotes a healthier tree but also reduces the risk of disease and provides better air circulation. However, avoid heavy pruning in the fall, as it may stimulate new growth that is vulnerable to frost damage. Wrapping the fig tree with burlap or horticultural fabric can
This new growth on a fig cutting is not enough to sustain direct winter. It will need to go into the garage for a dormancy period in order to thrive in the spring. Photo by Christy Hinko
provide additional protection. This acts as a shield against harsh winds and freezing temperatures, helping to prevent winter burn on the branches. Container-grown fig trees should be moved to a sheltered location, such as an unheated garage or a protected porch. Before moving them indoors, water the trees thoroughly, and allow excess water to drain. Once inside, place them in a cool, dark area to mimic winter dormancy conditions. By taking these steps to prepare fig trees for winter, gardeners can enhance the chances of a successful and productive growing season the following year. Winter care is an investment in the longterm health of the tree, ensuring it emerges from dormancy ready to flourish and produce a bountiful harvest when spring arrives.
Homes shown here represent closed sales, sold by a variety of agencies and are selected for their interest to readers by the Anton Media Group editor. Except where noted, data and photos are provided courtesy of Multiple Listing Service of Long Island, Inc. and Zillow.
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FOOD SAFETY
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Keep Food Safety In Mind This Holiday Season BY JENNIFER CORR
jcorr@antonmediagroup.com
T
he holidays are known as a time to chow down. Between all the holiday parties, abundance of cookies and sugary gifts, December is a great time to experience all different kinds of flavors. But it’s important to keep in mind food safety tips when preparing food for yourself, your family or friends. A simple Google search can reveal numerous cases of food poisoning caused by potlucks. For example, WCNC Charlotte reported that 300 people got food poisoning after eating at a church barbecue in Concord, N.C. And 40 people got sick, and 19 people were hospitalized, after eating feces contaminated food at a birthday party in Forest Hills, Charlotte, the Daily Mail reported. “The holidays are a wonderful time of year to spend time with friends and family,” Jack Connolly of the United States Department of Agriculture Office of Public Affairs and Consumer Education wrote in an article. “During this season of festive cheer, food is often a central part of holiday celebrations with loved ones. With so many delicious options, it is important to stay safe from certain unwanted guests—bacteria that cause foodborne illnesses, which is more commonly known as food poisoning.” To keep yourself and the people you are preparing the food for safe, it’s important to keep a number of food safety tips in mind. Bacteria is not something you can see, smell or taste. However, bacteria can multiply, especially in a moist or warm environment. Some bacterias can frequent on people’s hands, which can cause illness if hands are not washed or gloves are not used when preparing ready-to-eat food like lettuce. It’s also important to be cautious with foods like eggs and chicken. “During the holiday season, people consume many different festive treats like holiday cookies and cupcakes,” Connolly wrote. “These can include uncooked or lightly cooked egg products, which can be contaminated with salmonella. To kill any bacteria that may be present, it is very important to thoroughly cook egg products. As tempting as it may be, avoid tasting any extra cookie or cake batter.” Poultry should be cooked to 165 degrees to destroy pathogens. And the University of Connecticut in an article discourages washing raw chicken or turkey before preparing it, as the resulting splash could spread pathogens to nearby areas of the kitchen, such as counters, faucets and other kitchen surfaces. “Cross-contamination happens when raw poultry or its juices, contaminated with harmful bacteria or other pathogens, touches a cooked food, a ready-to-eat food or fresh produce,” the article from the University of Connecticut states. “It can also happen when
Practice food safety this holiday season. (Photo courtesy Unsplash) a utensil, cutting board, work surface or hand—used to prepare raw, contaminated poultry—is then used to handle ready-to-eat foods. For example, cross-contamination could occur if serving tongs are used to put raw chicken on a barbecue grill and are again used to remove the cooked food without washing between uses. Because the juices from raw poultry can easily be spread to other foods, the counter or utensils, you need to handle poultry in a way that minimizes the possibility of cross-contamination.” Ground meats, according to the Minnesota Department of Health, should be cooked to 160 degrees; fresh beef should be cooked to 145 degrees (160 degrees for medium and 170 degrees for well done); fish and shellfish should be cooked to 145 degrees; ham should be cooked to 160 degrees and eggs should be cooked until yolk and whites are firm or 160 degrees for egg dishes, egg-based sauces and custards. When having a party, keep in mind the twohour rule. According to the USDA, leaving food out at room temperature can cause bacteria to grow to dangerous levels that can cause illness, as bacteria grows most rapidly in the range of temperatures between 40 degrees and 140 degrees, doubling in number in as little as 20 minutes. This range of temperature is known as the “danger zone.” “Never leave food out of refrigeration over two hours,” the USDA states. “If the
temperature is above 90 degrees, food should not be left out more than one hour.” Clean hands and dishes can also keep your food safe and sanitary. To properly wash your hands, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, wet your hands with clean, running water; lather your hands by rubbing them together with soap and lather the backs of your hands, between your fingers and under your nails; scrub your hands for 20 seconds (hum the “Happy Birthday” song from beginning to end twice); rinse your hands and dry your hands with a clean towel or air dryer. Hands should be washed before, during and after preparing food and after handling raw meats or eggs, after using the toilet, after changing diapers, after touching an animal or handling pet food, after touching garbage, before and after handling someone who is sick, before and after treating a wound and after blowing your nose or sneezing. Foodsafety.gov recommends washing cutting boards, dishes, utensils and counter tops with hot, soapy water, especially after they’ve held raw meat, poultry, seafood or eggs and to wash dish cloths often in the hot cycle of your washing machine. One of the best parts about the holidays is the leftovers. But even leftovers need to be stored properly. It is recommended by the USDA to divide a large pot of soup, for example, into smaller
portions to prevent bacteria from multiplying. Large items for food, such as roasts or hams, should be cut into smaller parts. Chicken breasts, legs and wings can be left whole, instead of sliced. Leftovers can be left in the refrigerator for three to four days, or in the freezer for three to four months (while safe indefinitely, frozen leftovers can lose moisture and flavor when stored for longer times in the freezer). Cover leftovers, wrap them in airtight packaging or seal them in storage containers. These methods will help keep bacteria out, retain moisture and prevent leftovers from picking up odors in the refrigerator. Immediately refrigerate or freeze the leftovers for rapid cooling. Safe ways to thaw leftovers include the refrigerator, cold water and the microwave. Refrigerator thawing takes the longest. To cold water thaw, place the food in a leak-proof package or plastic bag and place it into cold water. Make sure no water gets in, as it could introduce bacteria. Microwave thawing is the fastest option. When thawing leftovers, make sure the temperature reaches 165 degrees. After thawing, food should be used within three to four days or it can be refrozen. Foods thawed by cold water or microwave should be cooked before refreezing. With all these food safety tips in mind, have a happy, safe and delicious holiday season.
4B DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2023 • GOOD HEALTH ‘23
Chronic liver disease affects more than 120 million Americans, most of whom are unaware of the disease they carry. There are methods to screen for liver disease which are non-invasive, inexpensive, and high yield to save lives in the future. Fatty liver, now called steatotic liver disease, is the most common chronic liver disease in the United States. Pure steatotic liver disease, renamed metabolic associated fatty liver disease or MAFLD, is strongly associated with diabetes, high cholesterol, hypertension, and heart disease. The majority of people in the United States with fatty liver have either diabetes or are overweight. Sadly, greater than 50 percent of our population is considered obese so the number of patients with fatty liver disease is increasing dramatically. While not everyone can be screened for fatty liver, all people with diabetes, all people with polycystic ovarian syndrome and all people who are medically obese, should be screened for this condition. The main screening tests are not standard liver tests, as they can be normal in fatty liver, but calculated
2024
THE SPECIALIST
David Bernstein, MD
formulas comprising blood test results and age to quickly determine if scarring is present or not. There are also special ultrasounds which can determine quantitatively how much fat or scarring is in the liver so not only does this test diagnosis fatty liver but it also stages it. All patients with diabetes or who are obese should have this ultrasound, called transient elastography. Viral hepatitis remains common in the United States. The current recommendations are that all
adults be screened once in their lives for hepatitis C. This is a new recommendation and an important one. Anyone with potential recurring risk factors for hepatitis C should be screened annually. Screening for hepatitis B should be in those with specific risks. Screening tools remain an important part of preventive medical care. Screening of all people for all liver diseases is not cost effective and is not recommended. However, targeted screening as described above is cost effective and both life and quality of life saving. Mass education regarding liver diseases and its risk factors in an effort to prevent the acquisition of liver diseases such as hepatitis B, hepatitis C and both alcoholic and non-alcoholic liver diseases is probably the best way to prevent the late complications of liver disease. David Bernstein, MD, MACG, FAASLD, AGAF, FACP, is a professor of medicine at NYU Grossman School of Medicine and the director of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Ambulatory Network-Long Island for NYU Langone Health.
Plaza College Gains Accreditation On the heels of a concerning study finding 100 percent of New York State hospitals reporting unmitigable nursing shortages, Queens-based Plaza College has been awarded a prestigious national accreditation for its Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree program. The Plaza College School of Nursing was awarded formal accreditation by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE), recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education as one of the most rigorous programmatic accreditation programs in the U.S. Dr. Abdur “Raheem” NizarMoses, PhD/MSN/RN, the program’s Chief Nurse Administrator and Dean of Nursing at Plaza College said, “To achieve CCNE accreditation illustrates the remarkable quality of the programs at Plaza College. Our esteemed faculty and I are extremely proud of the level of attention and access to advanced resources that our program provides. Coupled with the clinical rotations at our affiliate hospitals and healthcare centers, the nursing education
Plaza College School of Nursing experience at Plaza is top-notch.” Each Plaza nursing program cohort is made up of 40 students enrolled every other semester. Its ethnically diverse student body was recognized by Queens Borough President Donovan Richards as “a true representation of the borough, which is one of the most ethnically diverse urban areas in the world.” The college’s unique Center for Healthcare Simulation includes an advanced suite of training laboratories featuring innovative simulation technology for students to practice skills on medical manikins that mimic emergency room, labor and delivery, elder care, and other high-risk patientand hospital-care scenarios. —Plaza College
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GOOD HEALTH ‘23 • DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2023 5B
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6B DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2023 • GOOD HEALTH ‘23
Blues Clues
Helping kids with emotional regulation during the holiday season BY ANGELA C. SANTOMERO
wonder and excitement will help us be less stressed around our kids, and allow us to enjoy the ride that much more. Here are some tips to help us look through the eyes of a child and help our kids from being over-stimulated during the holiday season.
specialsections@antonmediagroup.com
H
olidays are upon us and experiencing them through the eyes of a child will help you and your family find joy during this time! Remember when you couldn’t wait for the lights and the frenzied excitement and buzz that surrounded the holiday time? Remember how you could barely sleep because this time was so much fun? Holding onto our own child-like
Plan ahead and slow down
As hard as that sounds, this will go a long way in making us calmer, overall. If we slow down, our kids will too, which will help us all take in the positive and enjoy the holidays. Maybe make
paper rings and take one away for each day in December to count down to the holidays. Perhaps create a small ritual of a family dinner every Sunday to talk, eat together, and cherish the moments before the holidays.
Give kids a part to play in the festivities
Can they help set the table? Help prepare their favorite dish? Choose a small gift for their siblings and wrap it? Maybe their job is to take the coats when people come over? Or maybe they are the photographer and take pictures? Giving kids a special task will help them focus their energy which helps them not to be over stimulated.
“When something is new, talk about what you’ll do”
day? Will I play music? Will we show gratitude for presents? Will we play some games? Have your kids get a mental picture of what is going to happen—or even draw their favorite part. It’s exciting to talk about, and at the same time, it helps to prepare our kids for what’s to come.
Be early
Having control over an environment and feeling comfortable before there are a lot of people at an event will help ground our little ones. Whether it’s a school concert or a holiday gathering, arriving early will give kids their bearings before all of the people, music and chatter rise to a high level.
Know that emotions are inevitable As the TV show character We all get overstimulated, so Daniel Tiger would say, talking knowing that sugar, loud noises, about the holidays and what to lots of people, lots of lights and the expect will do wonders to calm the pure joy and excitement can take over-stimulation for our little ones. anyone over the edge. Knowing Talk about the simple things—who that this may happen will help you will come over? Will we sit in the take it in stride and show our kids dining room and all eat together? we respect their emotions and that What’s your favorite part of the all emotions are okay.
About Angela C. Santomero Described by Joanne Rogers as “a modern day Fred Rogers,” Angela Santomero is the co-creator of Blue’s Clues and the creator of the Super Why!, Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood, Creative Galaxy and Wishenproof. Her work has been cited in numerous publications including Malcolm Gladwell’s bestseller, The Tipping Point. Santomero earned her master’s degree in child developmental psychology and instructional technology and media from Columbia University–Teacher’s College. She has spent more than two decades creating, developing, and writing shows for kids that are based on the essential clues for child development. Santomero’s goal is to create media that will empower, challenge and build the self-worth of preschoolers while making them laugh. After working with children for more than 30 years, she has learned that kids’ media can and should be a bonding experience to bring families together to laugh, love and play.
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GOOD HEALTH ‘23 • DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2023 7B
NEIGHBORS IN THE NEWS
Local Nursing Students Receive White Coats On Oct. 18, local students in New York Institute of Technology’s nursing program received their white coats. The Nursing White Coat Ceremony signifies the transition from classroom learning to clinical learning, and represents a formal welcome into the nursing profession. It is held each fall semester of the students’ junior year, before beginning their first clinical experience in health facilities. Miriam Ibrahim of Williston Park and Joel Philipose of New Hyde Park were among some of the local nursing students. —New York Institute of Technology
Dr. Kevin J. Tracey Receives Science Prize The Hans Wigzell Research Foundation announced that Kevin J. Tracey, MD, president and CEO of Northwell Health’s Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research, is the recipient of the 2023 Hans Wigzell Research Foundation’s Science Prize in recognition of his significant contributions to the fields of neuroscience and neuroimmunology. “The prize is given to Dr. Tracey
Kevin J. Tracey, MD, earns the award as recognition for his groundbreaking discoveries in vagus nerve stimulation, the inflammatory reflex and bioelectronic medicine. Northwell Health
for his innovative discoveries of the mechanisms of how nerves transmit signals to stop inflammatory diseases,” said Hans Wigzell, MD, PhD. “His research is a surprising new inroad to treat inflammation using computer chips targeting nerves instead of drugs.” One of Tracey’s most notable achievements is his discovery of the body’s “inflammatory T:10" reflex,” which is a neural circuit that regulates S:9.5"
the body’s inflammatory response. This seminal finding led to the field of bioelectronic medicine. This relatively new and innovative approach combines principles of neuroscience, immunology and electrical engineering to develop novel therapies and medical devices to modulate this reflex to treat conditions. “I am honored and sincerely grateful to Professor Wigzell and
the Foundation,” said Dr. Tracey. “This prize celebrates the work of outstanding teams of brilliant colleagues who dedicated years of research in the shared hope of making discoveries that improve the lives of patients needing better therapies for inflammation. Having met some of the first patients who benefited from this work, we now in turn, dedicate this prize to them.” —Northwell Health
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KIDS ! R E N R CO
Animal Fact!
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Tenrecs
Tenrecs are believed to have evolved from a single species that colonized Madagascar between 42 and 25 million years ago. Once established on Madagascar, tenrecs diversified to occupy various niches on the island. the hedgehog tenrec possesses a coat of hardened spines and the ability to roll into a ball when threatened, characteristics similar to true hedgehogs. Most species are nocturnal and have poor eyesight. Their other senses are well developed, however and they have especially sensitive
EATRE
THE ARGYLE TH
Let‛s Get Crafty: Shadow Puppets
Here’s a fun thing you can do anytime with just a flashlight and your hands: shadow puppets! Materials: Flashlight Hands A blank wall Rest the flashlight on something off the floor, like a stool or a coffee table, point it at a blank
9A
wall and switch it on. Now put your hands together and try making the shadow look like the outline of an animal or object. Different arrangements of your fingers will make shadows on the wall. What happens when your hands are closer to the flashlight? What about farther away? Here are Question: some shapes If two‛s company to get you started.
whiskers. All species are somewhat omnivorous, with invertebrates forming the largest part of their diets. The main threats facing tenrecs include habitat loss due to deforestation, fragmentation and degradation, hunting, incidental capture, and climate change. Slashand-burn agriculture, as well as commercial logging and mining of metals is negatively affecting tenrec species that inhabit forests. Five of the six threatened Tenrec species are dependent on forest habitats.
Lowland Streaked Tenrec
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and three‛s a crowd, what‛s four and five?
Answer: Nine.
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Send us COLOR ME Want to see your name in the paper? ! f f your stu Email your jokes, riddles, and drawings to editors@antonmediagroup.com, then check the kids page to see if we pick your work. Coming soon to the children’s theatre stage
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10A DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
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New York State Library Announces Online Programs
Thank You, Long Island Because of the generosity of our local and national foundations, corporate donors, and people like you, Long Island Cares, Inc. The Harry Chapin Regional Food Bank provided 19,004 families in need with Thanksgiving meals in collaboration and partnership with our 360 community-based member agencies. These agencies received everything they requested from Long Island Cares, whether it was turkeys, chickens, pork loins, turkey breasts, trimming boxes, and/or gift cards.
T
he New York State Library announces its upcoming programming for December. The following free upcoming Webinars require registration and are available online. Genealogy Online with Ancestry Library Edition (Webinar) Date: Thursday, December 14, 2023 Time: 10:30 AM – 12:00 PM
Senior Librarian Stephanie Barrett will demonstrate the Ancestry Library online database which is accessible at the New York State Library. Learn how to access Census records, genealogy and history books, maps and other resources included in this database, as well as the resources on Ancestry New York State page which are freely available to all New Yorkers. Stephanie will also demonstrate search tips and strategies, how to save records, printing and how to create a family tree via Ancestry. Seating is limited and registration is required.
We are grateful for the support of our individual and corporate volunteers that joined us to sort, repack, and deliver holiday meals for our food insecure. We are thankful to the many community groups, civic organizations, schools, elected leaders, and businesses that hosted food drives to ensure that Long Island Cares had all the resources we needed to feed so many families on Long Island. A very special thank you to Governor Kathy Hochul and members of our Long Island delegation in the New York State legislature for awarding additional funding for food banks in New York. It was a show of bipartisanship at a time when we’re experiencing a dramatic increase in the number of people requiring emergency food assistance.
Quilts, Plows, And Munitions: The Northern Homefront Supports Civil War Troops (Webinar) Tuesday, December 19, 2023 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM With the first salvo of cannon fire at Fort Sumter in April 1861, northern civilians sought to help the nation and the war effort. This support included creating national soldiers’ aid societies. Additional support came from the need for women to do “men’s work” when fathers, sons, and brothers went off to war. This talk will cover
Together we got the job done this Thanksgiving because Long Island cares.
how northern women helped to keep the country running and support the war effort during the Civil War. Susan Carver has been a member of the 125th New York Regimental Association, a civil war reenacting group, since 2006. Susan’s interests in the US Civil War era include the roles of women during the war and making 1860s apparel and food. The New York State Library is part of the Office of Cultural Education within the New York State Education Department and celebrated its bicentennial in 2018. The Library serves the following three major constituencies. The Regent Joseph E. Bowman Jr. Research Library, established by law in 1818, collects, preserves, and makes available materials that support State government work. The Library’s collections, now numbering over 20 million items, may also be used by other researchers onsite, online, and via interlibrary loan. The Talking Book and Braille Library (TBBL) lends braille, audiobooks, magazines, and special playback equipment to residents of the 55 upstate counties of New York State who cannot read printed materials because of a visual or physical disability. The Division of Library Development works in partnership with 72 library systems to bring library services to millions of people who use New York’s academic, public, school, and special libraries. Library Development also administers State and Federal grant programs that provide aid for library services.
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ANTON MEDIA GROUP • DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2023 11A
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Island Federal Credit Union Launches Holiday Support Drive
sland Federal Credit Union (Island Federal), one of Long Island’s leading credit unions, is supporting Ronald McDonald House Charities New York Metro (RMHC NYM) this holiday season with two programs that invite Long Islanders to get involved: • Toy Drive: All eight Island Federal Branches (Bellmore, East Setauket, Hauppauge, Hicksville, Massapequa, Riverhead and Selden) will serve as dropoff points for new, unwrapped toys to be distributed to families served by RMHC. Interested donors who cannot visit an Island branch can donate through a special Amazon wish list available through the Island Federal website. • New Account Donations: Island Federal will donate a matching monetary donation to Ronald McDonald House Charities, up to a total of $20,000, for all new funds deposited into an Island Federal High-Five Youth Savings account during the month of December. All donations will go toward the construction of a new Ronald McDonald House at Stony Brook Children’s Hospital. “This holiday season, Island Federal has two ways that everyone can join in
supporting Ronald McDonald House Charities New York Metro as they provide comfort and services to families with a child in medical crisis,” said Chris Murray, VP/ Marketing, Island Federal. “We certainly hope that Long Islanders will join us in support of this organization that helps to ease the burden for these families.” Ronald McDonald House Charities (RMHC) New York Metro keeps families seeking medical treatment for their sick children near the care they need and the families they love. RMHC NYM operates a multi-bedroom house in New Hyde Park near Cohen Children’s Hospital and two Family Rooms at Stony Brook Children’s Hospital and the Stony Brook Hospital NICU, respectively. All services – including lodging, meals, and transportation – are provided free of charge by Ronald McDonald House and delivered mostly by volunteers. Most of the funding for Ronald McDonald House Charities NY Metro is privately donated.
“Our focus is to take care of the families, so they can focus on the health of their children,” said Matt Campo, CEO of RMHC NYM. “We greatly appreciate the support of Island Federal to help people in their greatest time of need, especially at the holidays.” Island Federal Credit Union, headquartered in Hauppauge, is a not-for-profit, full-service financial institution, providing affordable banking products and services to Long Islanders. Founded in 1955, Island has grown to be among the top performing credit unions in New York State with $1.5 billion in assets, serving over 50,000 members. Island’s successful track record can be attributed to consistently delivering the best rates, no hidden fees, and exceptional service to its members. When banking at Island, members have access to a complete menu of loan and deposit products, including cash back checking accounts, certificate accounts, IRAs, Auto loans, mortgage, home equity loans and lines, a Credit Mastercard® and student choice college loans. For anytime access,
Island offers free 24/7/365 customer service, online banking, bill payer, and mobile banking services. In 2014, Island announced a 10-year, multi-faceted partnership with Stony Brook University that included naming rights of the Island Federal Credit Union Arena, sponsorship of the Stony Brook Film Festival, support of the Long Island State Veterans Home and Stony Brook Children’s Hospital as well as providing two branches and more than a dozen ATMs on the Stony Brook University campus. In 2018, Island Federal merged with Bay Ridge Federal Credit Union, adding a branch in Brooklyn. In addition to the Stony Brook University and Brooklyn locations, Island operates seven full-service branches located on Long Island, in Bellmore, East Setauket, Hauppauge, Hicksville, Massapequa, Riverhead, Sayville, and Selden. Island members can also access their Island accounts at more than 5,600 shared credit union branches throughout the country, and over 125,000 no-fee ATM networks worldwide. For more information about Island, stop by any branch, visit their website, islandfcu.com, or call (631) 851-1100 —Submitted by Island Federal Credit Union
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WORD FIND
12A DECEMBER 13 - 19, 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 direct 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 By Holiday Mathis pleted the puzzle, there will be 16 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle. By Mathis
HOROSCOPES HOROSCOPES
INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND INTERNATIONAL WORD FIND Sea voyage
ARIES (March 21-April 19). The good thing about the bad experiences you’ve had is that they taught you what you should avoid next time. This week brings several “next times,” and you’ll proudly make new choices. To live boldly is to try the untried, open different doors and taste another side of life.
Solution: 16 Letters
WORD FIND
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You’ll get the win, though not right away. Just because you fail at an endeavor, it never means that you yourself are a failure, only that something didn’t work. There will be a mismatch to blame -- the wrong tool for the job or an ineffective intensity level. Without fuss, you’ll try it another way until the right things click.
Sea voyage
© 2023 Australian Word Games Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.
Solution: 16 Letters
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You are at your best with people who see you the way you like to be noticed and bring out the side of you that you most like to inhabit. When you can’t be with these people, you will surround yourself with admired ones from the realm of media. These influences sharpen your humor and polish your style. CANCER (June 22-July 22). There’s help for whatever you need; you only have to ask. Talking out an issue will lessen its impact on you. If it doesn’t, you may not be talking to the right person. Keep seeking good company. With people who get you, you’ll always end up in a better place than you started, and you’ll have the chance to give back, which feels so good.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Your intent to hone a skill will work out better than you anticipated. Trust your teacher and follow through with all lessons. You’ll not only learn what you need to know to work more efficiently, you’ll also produce a better result, and all who participate will be satisfied, if not over the moon about how you helped. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Your body has an intelligence that serves you on a primal level. Its mysterious wisdom often shows up when there’s an important decision to be made. This week, there will be a dozen options before you, but you keep noticing a certain one. Your senses are informing you of your body’s preference. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). A person who makes the same wrong turn twice is likely to make it more times because of the groove that’s established with repetition. This week puts you at a critical juncture for getting onto an exciting trajectory. It will really benefit you to stop and plan your next move, then execute it slowly, making sure to get it right. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You’ll notice awkward and shy feelings and you’ll diminish them with warmth and humor. You’ll witness a slow-leaking pain stop the flow by putting a piece of yourself into it. Your method of fixing things will be unorthodox and effective. Just don’t forget to use them on yourself. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You’re getting better at turning your kindness inward. It doesn’t make you soft; it makes you more powerful. It takes strength to be kind. You allow for your feelings, knowing they don’t define your entire self. You’ll treat yourself with the patient compassion you would offer to a friend in a similar situation. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). The term “problem” carries a negative connotation, but in a math textbook, a “problem” is merely an equation awaiting a solution. Approach your life’s challenges with a similar mindset, as a puzzle to figure out. You’ll seize the opportunity to strengthen yourself and gain friends and fans in the process. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Understandings will happen on many levels, some quite shallow, as not everyone is on the same wavelength. Then there are those who think listening entails waiting for their turn to speak. You won’t take it personally, as excellent communicators can be rare. You’ll find them, though, and you’ll be one of them, too, and enjoy the many perks of true connection.
THIS WEEK’S BIRTHDAYS
A year of gentle surprises and breathtaking twists. You’ve a sensor for fun and a heart for duty. With this combination, you’ll find fulfillment in the projects and relationships you take on. An investment will keep building through the months and ultimately pay off years from now. This is a critical time for keeping the faith. More highlights: invigorating companionship, a peaceful knowing that you’re doing right by your people, a team win and an acceptance speech for the ages. COPYRIGHT 2023 CREATORS.COM
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Solution: Another Solution: adventure Another adventure
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). There are times we need to distract or fool ourselves to do the work of being human. There are risks we wouldn’t take if not for some amount of delusion to keep fear at bay. So don’t be too quick to judge yourself or anyone with a distorted view of the scene. Reality is different for each, and we all have plenty to learn.
© 2023 Australian Word Games Dist. by Creators Syndicate Inc.
This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direction but always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you have completed the puzzle, there will be 16 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
Creators Syndicate
Crea tors te 737 3rd Syndica Street • Hermosa 90254 CUSTOMER SERVICE: (800) 708-7311 EXT.Beach, 236CA
Date: 12/13/23
Date: 12/13/23 310-337-7003 • info@ creators.com 737 3rd Street • Hermosa Beach, CA 90254 310-337-7003 • info@ creators.com By Steve Becker
CONTRACT BRIDGE — BY STEVE BECKER
CONTRACT BRIDGE
FOR RELEASE SATURDAY, DECEMBER 16, 2023
Kerchoo! South dealer. North-South vulnerable. NORTH ♠62 ♥K 5 3 ♦KQ97 ♣8 4 3 2 WEST EAST ♠— ♠J853 ♥ Q J 10 9 7 6 ♥A 8 4 2 ♦6542 ♦— ♣ A Q 10 ♣K J 9 7 6 SOUTH ♠ A K Q 10 9 7 4 ♥— ♦ A J 10 8 3 ♣5 The bidding: South West North East 1♠ 2♥ Pass 4♥ 4♠ 5♥ 5♠ 6♥ 6♠ Pass Pass Dble Opening lead — queen of hearts. There are 30-point tricks and there are 300-point tricks. To lose 30 points is of little consequence, but to lose 300 is a matter of more serious consequence. This deal occurred in a team-offour match. At the first table, South wound up in six spades doubled following the sequence shown, and West led a heart. Declarer ruffed and cashed the ace of spades, on which West showed out. The 4-0 trump break appeared
to be no more than a minor inconvenience, so South led a diamond to dummy, planning next to take a trump finesse. But East ruffed, returned a club to West and then ruffed another diamond to beat the contract two tricks — 500 points. Six spades doubled was also the contract at the other table. Again, West led a heart, ruffed by South, and again declarer played the ace of spades, West showing out. But here South displayed unusual foresight. He recognized that an immediate attempt to reach dummy with a diamond was not urgent, and he led a club instead. As a result, he saved 300 points. West won and returned another heart, which declarer ruffed. A diamond lead to dummy was then ruffed by East, but that was the end of the line for the defense. Thanks to South’s earlier club play, East could not negotiate a second diamond ruff, so South lost only 200 points at this table. Not many declarers would have led a club at trick three to guard against the possibility of East’s being void in diamonds. But the fact is that South had nothing to lose by the play, and something to gain if East actually had no diamonds. After all, 300 points is not to be sneezed at.
©2023 King Features Syndicate Inc.
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SCHOOL NEWS
Bethpage Students Gain Hands-On Experience Bethpage High School students are gaining real world experience in a new course for the 2023-2024 school year – Home Improvement and Repair. Led by teacher Jim Miller, this unique, full year course is open to students in grades 10-12 and introduces them to the basics of home repair. Bethpage High School’s former stage crew room was transformed into a new classroom workshop for the course. Here, hands-on learning is embraced as students learn how to safely use tools and fasteners and participate in projects in areas such as basic carpentry, insulation, electrical wiring, basic heating and cooling, roof and gutter repair and maintenance and basic plumbing. Mr. Miller provides demonstrations, support and guidance as the students work through different repair and installation projects, building their self-sufficiency. Although only in its early stages, the course has become a big hit among Bethpage students. “I enjoy the fact that there is a set curriculum but there is just so much more opportunity to learn above that,” said Bethpage senior Matthew Schneider, who noted that Mr. Miller encourages students to explore different tools. “It’s a very free class and opens more opportunity to learning.” Other students have enjoyed getting the chance to work with their hands during the school day and learn real world appli-
Bethpage seniors Matthew Schneider (left) and Ryan O’Connell (right) worked on a basic circuitry project together. (Contributed photo)
cations which will help them as a future homeowner. Instead of hiring a handyman, the students are obtaining the skills to do the work themselves. In addition, the course introduces students to the world of a skilled trade professional such as a plumber, electrician and contractor. This exposes students to more career options and better prepares them for life beyond the classroom. The Bethpage Union Free School District looks forward to seeing its Home Improvement students grow and learn as the school year progresses. —Submitted by the Bethpage Union Free School District
Officer Dispenses Wisdom At East Lake In Massapequa Nassau County Police Officer Yolanda Assistant Principal Mary Velte said that the Turner served as a role model for both acadvice shared from Officer Turner helped ademics and good character as she visited students understand that the decisions they students at East Lake Elementary School in make now can affect them in the future. the Massapequa School District. Next year as fifth-graders, they will attend During an social media safeassembly with ty presentations fourth-graders, led by students Officer Turnfrom Massapequa er discussed High School. topics including As part of her bullying, cybervisit, Officer Turnbullying and er also visited kinonline safety. dergarten classes, As students where she read become more The Very Hunadept at using gry Caterpillar the Internet and and Brown Bear, East Lake Elementary School kindergartners begin to have Brown Bear, What presented Nassau County Police Officer Yolanda social media Do You See? KinTurner with thank-you cards after she read to them. accounts, she dergartners learn (Contributed photo) reminded them about community to beware of their digital footprint and be helpers throughout the year and they were mindful of information they post. excited to see a real-life community helper. Officer Turner, of the NCPD Community She emphasized the importance of reading, Affairs department, also talked to students and noted that the two books were her about actions that constitute bullying, and favorites to read to her own children. invited students up to simulate situations —Submitted by the in school. Principal Thomas McKillop and Massapequa School District
Gardiners Avenue Students Learn Life-Saving Skills Life-saving fire safety skills were practiced by students at Gardiners Avenue Elementary School in the Levittown School District thanks to visiting firefighters and an interactive demonstration. Wantagh Fire Department members spoke with students to share important tips that can prevent fires in their homes and save lives in the event of an emergency. Firefighters also showed off their gear that helps them fight fires. Inside the fire department’s smoke house, which is built to resemble a room in an actual home, students ducked and crawled under smoke toward a window, where they made their emergency exit with help from department volunteers. —Submitted by Levittown Public Schools
Gardiners Avenue Elementary School students made an emergency escape out of a room filled with smoke in the Wantagh Fire Department’s smoke house. (Contributed photo)
Two Plainview Students Named LI Scholar-Artists The Long Island Arts Alliance has named Plainview-Old Bethpage John F. Kennedy High School seniors Nadia Giovagnoni and Goeun Choi LI Scholar-Artists for 2023. This prestigious award is given to only 20 high school seniors across Long Island each year. Scholar-Artist nominees are selected by their respective school districts, and the award recipients are chosen from five disciplines: visual arts, music, theater, dance and media arts. As part of the award, the Scholar-Artists will be featured in the online and print editions of Newsday. Nadia and her work will appear in a February 2024 edition, while Goeun and her work will appear in an April 2024 edition. Winners are also eligible for early scholarship consideration by Long Island Arts Alliance university partners. “Nadia and Goeun have shown incredible talent, imagination and dedication in their artwork throughout their time in the Plainview-Old Bethpage Central School District,” said K-12 Director of Art & Digital Instruction Dr. Ben Wiley. “Congratulations to these two excellent artists and their art teachers who have nurtured their talents over the years.” For more information about the Plainview-Old Bethpage Central School District, please visit the District’s website at www.pobschools.org. Exciting activities happening throughout the District and programs celebrating student achievement can also be found on the District’s Facebook page at https:// www.facebook.com/pobschools/.
One of Goeun Choi’s winning pieces of artwork. (Contributed photos)
One of Nadia Giovagnoni’s winning pieces of artwork. —Submitted by the PlainviewOld Bethpage Central School District
10
DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
Referee indels arx ane ittendorf, ttorne s for laintiff LEGAL NOTICE lban treet la a, e Notice of Formation of RACE runs ic , J WITH PURPOSE, LLC, Arts 12-27-20-13-6-2023-4Tof Org filed ith ec of tate # O of NY (SSNY) on 10/31/23. Office location LEGAL NOTICE CO designated REFEREE’S NOTICE OF as agent upon hom process SALE IN FORECLOSURE ma be served and shall mail CO cop of process against C COUNTY OF NASSAU to orris oad, eth- CI I , laintiff page, urpose against I O an la ful ct LEY A/K/A EDITH H. POST I O , et al # O efendant s ursuant to a Judgment of oreclosure and ale entered LEGAL NOTICE on October , I, the Notice of formation of REAL undersigned eferee ill HEAVEN LLC. Arts of Org sell at public auction on the filed ith ec of tate of orth ide steps of the asNY (SSNY) on 11/07/23. Of- sau Count upreme Court fice location assau Count located at upreme Court designated as agent rive, ineola, upon hom process ma be ain or hine on the th served and shall mail cop of da of Januar , at process against C to ll that certain plot, , , piece or parcel of land situate, NY 11714. l ing and being in armingdale, o n of O ster a , # O Count of assau and tate of e or remises no n as Juniper treet, armingdale, o n of FARMINGDALE O ster a # LEGAL NOTICE pproximate amount of lien CO , plus interest and COUNTY OF NASSAU costs. I, indiremises ill be sold sub ect viduall , laintiff against to provisions of filed udgI C , indi- ment and terms of sale viduall , et al efendant s Index o ursuant to a Judgment of eather Crosle , s , oreclosure and ale dated Referee. October , and enavidson in tered on October , , I, ttorne s for laintiff the undersigned eferee ill eridian Centre lvd, sell at public auction on the Ste 200 orth ide steps of the asochester, sau Count upreme Court el ain or hine located at ated ovember , upreme Court rive, During the COVID-19 ineola, on Januar , health emergency, bidders at p m premises are required to comply with situate, l ing and being in all governmental health rethe illage of armingdale, quirements in effect at the Count of assau, tate of time of sale including but e or , bounded and de- not limited to, wearing face scribed as follo s I - coverings and maintaining I on the easterl side of social distancing (at least Jefferson oad, distant 6-feet apart) during the feet northerl from the north- auction, while tendering deerl end of the arc of a curve posit and at any subsequent hich connects said easterl closing. Bidders are also reside of Jefferson oad and quired to comply with the the northerl side of herman Foreclosure Auction Rules oad C outh ast, and COVID-19 Health feet C orth Emergency Rules issued by East, 60.72 feet; THENCE the Supreme Court of this orth est feet County in addition to the C orth ast, conditions set forth in the feet C outh ast, Terms of Sale. feet C outh 1-3-2024; 12-27-20-13-2023West, 99.99 feet; THENCE # O orth est, feet ection loc ot LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE aid premises no n as CO CANT LAND, JEFFERSON COUNTY OF NASSAU O , I , , NY TIONAL ASSOCIATION, pproximate amount of lien O I, plus interest C O O costs. ERVATION TRUST SERIES remises ill be sold sub ect ICI , laintiff, to provisions of filed JudgI ment and erms of ale I J O, JOIndex umber SEPH R. YULO, DefenO , , dant s ursuant to a
BETHPAGE
LEGAL NOTICES udgment of foreclosure and sale dul entered on October , and resettled on October , I, the undersigned eferee, ill sell at public auction at the orth ide teps of the Nassau Supreme Court, 100 upreme Court rive, ineola, on Januar , at premises no n as Carol l, armingdale, lease ta e notice that this foreclosure auction shall be conducted in compliance ith the oreclosure uction ules for assau Count and the CO I ealth mergenc ules, including proper use of mas s and social distancing. ll that certain plot piece or parcel of land, ith the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, l ing and being at ethpage, in eth o n of O ster a , Count of assau and tate of e or ection , loc and ot 00036. Approximate amount of udgment , plus interest and costs remises ill be sold sub ect to provisions of filed Judgment Index #012927/2011. Christine rillo, s , Referee, ldridge ite, ttorne s for laintiff arcus rive, uite , elville, NY 11747 1-3-2024; 12-27-20-13-2023# O
LEGAL NOTICE CO COUNTY OF NASSAU. O O O , O NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE, IN TRUST FOR THE I O OF CWALT, INC. ALTERNATIVE LOAN TRUST , O O C I ICATES, SERIES 2007-19, IO O O , laintiff against NICOLA A. DIAZ AKA ICO I , et al efendant s ursuant to a Judgment of oreclosure and ale dated arch , and entered on pril , , I, the undersigned eferee ill sell at public auction on the orth ide steps of the assau Count upreme Court ain or hine located at upreme Court rive, ineola, on Januar , at p m premises situate, l ing and being at armingdale, o n of O ster a , Count of assau and tate of e or , bounded and described as follo s I I at the corner formed b the intersection of the easterl side of ood ard ar a ith the southerl side of th venue being a plot feet b feet b feet b feet ection loc ot aid premises no n as WOODWARD PARKWAY, I , pproximate amount of lien , plus interest
costs. remises ill be sold sub ect to provisions of filed Judgment and erms of ale Index umber KATHRYN N. O I, , eferee incus a roup, C ttorne s for laintiff la a, niondale, 1-3-2024; 12-27-20-13-2023# O
LYING AND BEING AT SOUTH FARM INGDALE, TOWN OF OYSTER BAY, COUNTY OF NASSAU AND STATE OF NEW YORK remises ill be sold sub ect to provisions of filed Judgment Index # elv n oth, s eferee obertson, nschut , chneid, Crane artners, C erchants Concourse, uite , estbur , e or , ttorne s for laintiff All foreclosure sales will be conducted in accordance with Covid-19 guidelines including, but not limited to, social distancing and mask wearing. *LOCATION OF SALE SUBJECT TO CHANGE DAY OF IN ACCORDANCE WITH COURT/CLERK DIRECTIVES. 1-3-24; 12-27-20-13-24 4T# O
LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Organi ational eeting for the outh armingdale ire istrict of the o n of O ster a , Count of assau, e or , ill be held on the nd da of Januar , at pm egularl scheduled meetings for ill ta e place on the nd and th uesda of each month at pm ll meetings ill be held at the outh armingdale ire istrict HICKSVILLE Commissioners office located at ain treet, armingLEGAL NOTICE dale, e or , order of the oard of ire NOTICE OF SALE CO Commissioners of the outh NASSAU COUNTY armingdale ire istrict , istrict ecretar outh AS TRUSTEE FOR LSF10 armingdale ire istrict ICI IO ecember , , laintiff against 12-13-23 1T# 243900 I O IO, et al eO fendant s ttorne for laintiff s LEGAL NOTICE tern isenberg, C , CO O , STATE OF NEW YORK - Commerce rive, uite Cranford, J and COUNTY OF NASSAU oute , uite , agranC CO IC , geville, ursuant to a Judgment of AS TRUSTEE FOR RESoreclosure and ale entered IDENTIAL ACCREDIT , I ill sell at O , I C, O - October , public auction to the highest C O C I I- bidder at orth ide teps of C , I , the assau Count upreme Court at 100 Supreme Court V. rive, ineola, ANTHONY LORENZO, ET on Januar , at AL. remises no n as NOTICE OF SALE elfr ane, ic sville, O IC I I ec loc ot pursuant to a inal Judgll that certain plot, piece ment of oreclosure dated ugust , , and entered or parcel of land, situate, l in the Office of the Cler ing and being at ic sville, o n of O ster a , Count of the Count of assau, of assau and tate of e herein C or pproximate mount CO , ICAS, AS TRUSTEE FOR of Judgment is RESIDENTIAL ACCRED- plus interest, fees, and costs remises ill be sold sub ect I O , I C, O to provisions of filed JudgC O C I - ment Index o or sale information, please IC , I uction com or is the laintiff and O- visit NY LORENZO, ET AL. call uring the CO I health are the efendant s I, the undersigned eferee ill emergenc , idders are reuired to compl ith all sell at public auction I O I at the - governmental health re uirements in effect at the time of CO COURT, NORTH SIDE the sale including but not limited to earing face coverings , CO I , I O- and maintaining social dis, , on Januar tancing at least feet apart , at , premis- during the auction, hile tenes no n as OI , dering deposit and at an subO I , se uent closing hould a bidection , der fail to compl , the eferee ma refuse to accept an bid, loc , ot ALL THAT CERTAIN cancel the closing and hold PLOT, PIECE OR PARCEL the bidder in default idders OF LAND, WITH THE are also re uired to compl ith the oreclosure uction BUILDINGS AND IM ules and CO I ealth PROVEM ENTS THEREmergenc ules issued b ON ERECTED, SITUATE,
the upreme Court of this Count in addition to the conditions set forth in the erms of ale If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safet concerns, then the Court ppointed eferee shall cancel the foreclosure auction oreclosure uctions ill be held ain or hine ar icciardi, s , eferee ile # 12-27-20-13-6-2023 4T# O I LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE CO CO TY OF NASSAU, U.S. , , TRUSTEE FOR LSF10 ICI IO , laintiff, vs O , , efendant s ursuant to a Judgment of oreclosure and ale dul entered on October , I, the undersigned eferee ill sell at public auction on the orth ide teps of the assau Count upreme Courthouse ocated at upreme Court rive, ineola, e or on Januar , at , premises no n as LANE, HICKSVILLE, NY ll that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, ith the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, l ing and being in the o n of O ster a , Count of assau and tate of e or , ection , loc , ot pproximate amount of udgment is , plus interest and costs remises ill be sold sub ect to provisions of filed Judgment Index # If the sale is set aside for an reason, the urchaser at the sale shall be entitled onl to a return of the deposit paid he urchaser shall have no further recourse against the ortgagor, the ortgagee, the ortgagee s attorne , or the eferee or ale information, please visit uction com at Auction.com or call JO C , s , Referee oach in, C , Jericho urnpi e, uite , osset, e or , ttorne s for laintiff 1-3-2024; 12-27-20-2023# O I LEGAL NOTICE CO O STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF NASSAU CI , , V. C O O, AL. NOTICE OF SALE O IC I I pursuant to a inal Judgment of oreclosure dated ebruar , , and entered in the Office of the Cler of the Count of assau, herein CI , is the laintiff and C O O, are the efendant s I,
the undersigned eferee ill sell at public auction I O I at the CO COURT, NORTH SIDE , CO I , I O, , on Januar , at , premises no n as C I DRIVE, HICKSVILLE, NY ection , loc , ot ALL THAT CERTAIN PLOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING IN TOWN OF OYSTER BAY, AT HICKSVILLE, COUNTY OF NASSAU AND STATE OF NEW YORK remises ill be sold sub ect to provisions of filed Judgment Index # drienne lipse ausch, s eferee obertson, nschut , chneid, Crane artners, C erchants Concourse, uite , estbur , e or , ttorne s for laintiff All foreclosure sales will be conducted in accordance with Covid-19 guidelines including, but not limited to, social distancing and mask wearing. *LOCATION OF SALE SUBJECT TO CHANGE DAY OF IN ACCORDANCE WITH COURT/CLERK DIRECTIVES. 1-3-2024; 12-27-20-13-2023# O I LEGAL NOTICE otice of ormation J HICKSVILLE LLC rticles of Organi ation filed ith ecretar of tate of e or on 12/06/2023. Office loc assau Count designated for service of process. shall mail copies of an process served against the C to rose treet, ic sville, urpose n la ful purpose or activit 1-17-10-3; 12-27-20-13-23 # O I LEGAL NOTICE HICKSVILLE PUBLIC SCHOOLS PURCHASING DEPARTM ENT 20 DIVISION AVENUE HICKSVILLE, NY 11801 PUBLIC NOTICE he oard of ducation of the ic sville ublic chools hereinafter referred to as the istrict hereb invites the submission of ealed roposals for the follo ing service RFP #013124 - 204205 UNIVERSAL PRE-KINDERGARTEN PROGRAM Sealed proposals will be received by the Purchasing Department, 20 Division Avenue, Hicksville, NY 11801 until 11:00 a.m. prevailing time on January 31, 204 at hich time the ill be publicl opened and read aloud in the oard oom he contract ill be a arded as soon thereafter as is pracContinued on page 11
ANTON MEDIA GROUP • DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2023
LEGAL NOTICES Continued from page 10 ticable. pecifications and forms ma be obtained from the urchasing epartment beginning, ecember , lease email mcmahon hic svillepublicschools org for a cop of the specifications ll addenda ma be transmitted via email he istrict is offering a or shop to assist ou in understanding ho to complete our response his or shop ill be held at am on Januar , at ivision ve , ic sville, ttendance is not mandator but it is strongl recommended that a representative from our organi ation attend he istrict is not responsible for proposals opened prior to the time and date of the opening if the identif ing ealed roposal information does not appear on the outside of the submission esponses opened prior to the time and date of the opening are invalid It is the proposer’ s responsibility to ensure that their proposal is received by the Purchasing Department in a timely manner. All responses received after the date and time stated will not be considered and will be returned unopened. Whether sent by mail, delivery service or personal delivery, the responder assumes responsibility for having their proposal deposited on time. he istrict reserves the right to accept each proposal b individual item, b categor , b groups of items or as a hole or, in its discretion, to re ect all proposals he istrict also reserves the right to aive an informalit in the response process if determined to be in the best interest of the istrict roposals opened and read shall remain irrevocable for the contract period he a ard of contracts, if at all, shall be made as soon as practicable after the opening n uantities, if sho n, are estimates and not guaranteed he oard of ducation reserves the right to consider ualification, experience, and reputation, as ell as the specific ualifications of a proposer set out herein, in considering proposals and a arding the contract he oard of ducation reserves the right to re ect an or all proposals at its discretion order of the oard of ducation athleen c ahon urchasing gent # O I
LEVITTOWN LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE CO CO O , O , , laintiff, vs O J CO, , efendant s ursuant to a Judgment of oreclosure and ale fter
LEGAL NOTICES
In uest and ppointment of eferee dul entered on Januar , and an Order ppointing uccessor eferee dul entered on Jul , , I, the undersigned eferee ill sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the assau Count upreme Court, upreme Court rive, ineola, on Januar , at p m , premises no n as utternut ane, evitto n, ll that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, ith the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, l ing and being in the o n of empstead, Count of assau and tate of e or , ection , loc and ot pproximate amount of udgment is , plus interest and costs remises ill be sold sub ect to provisions of filed Judgment Index # Cash ill not be accepted his foreclosure sale ill be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine CO I safet protocols ill be follo ed at the foreclosure sale If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safet concerns, the Court ppointed eferee ill cancel the sale alach ons, Jr , s , eferee nuc les, omosins i anfro, , axter oad, uite , lmsford, , ttorne s for laintiff #
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LEGAL NOTICES
uired to compl ith all governmental health re uirements in effect at the time of the sale including but not limited to earing face coverings and maintaining social distancing at least feet apart during the auction, hile tendering deposit and at an subse uent closing hould a bidder fail to compl , the eferee ma refuse to accept an bid, cancel the closing and hold the bidder in default idders are also re uired to compl ith the oreclosure uction ules and CO I ealth mergenc ules issued b the upreme Court of this Count in addition to the conditions set forth in the erms of ale If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safet concerns, then the Court ppointed eferee shall cancel the foreclosure auction oreclosure uctions ill be held ain or hine ruce obert e rits , s , eferee ile # #
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LEGAL NOTICE O IC O CO CO O O , , laintiff I J O , I , , efendant s ursuant to a Judgment of oreclosure and ale dul entered arch , , I, the undersigned eferee ill sell at public auction at the orth ide steps of the assau Count upreme Court, upreme Court rive, ineola, on Januar , at , premises no n as C O , I O , ll that certain plot piece or parcel of land, ith the buildings and improvements erected, situate, l ing and being at evitto n, o n of empstead, Count of assau and tate of e or , ection , loc , ot pproximate amount of udgment , plus interest and costs remises ill be sold sub ect to provisions of filed Judgment Index # he aforementioned auction ill be conducted in accordance ith the Count CO I mitigation protocols and as such all persons must compl ith social distancing, earing mas s and screening practices in effect at the time of this foreclosure sale If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safet concerns, then the court appointed referee ill cancel the foreclosure auction oreclosure uctions ill be held ain or hine alach ons Jr , s , eferee ross olo , C ehrle rive illiamsville,
LEGAL NOTICE O IC O CO CO , O ICI IO , laintiff against O I O O I O , et al efendant s ttorne for laintiff s tern isenberg, C , Commerce rive, uite , Cranford, J and oute , uite , agrangeville, ursuant to a Judgment of oreclosure and ale entered arch , , I ill sell at public auction to the highest bidder at orth ide teps of the assau Count upreme Court at upreme Court rive, ineola, on Januar , at remises no n as unrise ane, evitto n, ec loc ot ll that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, ith the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, l ing and being at evitto n, o n of empstead, Count of assau and tate of e or pproximate mount of Judgment is , plus interest, fees, and costs remises ill be sold sub ect to provisions of filed Judgment Index o or sale information, please # O visit uction com or call LEGAL NOTICE uring the CO I health otice of formation of Inemergenc , idders are re- novatedge olutions C
rticles of Organi ation filed ith e or epartment of tate on Office location assau Count epublic egistered gent ervices I C is designated as agent of C upon hom process against it ma be served gent shall mail process to Oa t , ellmore, urpose an la ful acts # O LEGAL NOTICE CO CO O I CI C I IO , laintiff against O , O O , et al efendant s ursuant to a Judgment of oreclosure and ale entered on a , , I, the undersigned eferee ill sell at public auction on the orth ide steps of the assau Count upreme Court ain or hine located at upreme Court rive, ineola, on Januar , at pm that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, situate, l ing and being at evitto n, o n of empstead, Count of assau and tate of e or , no n and designated as ection loc and ot aid premises no n as O C I O , I O , remises ill be sold sub ect to provisions of filed Judgment and erms of ale Index umber O I , , eferee eren i Confusione C ttorne s for laintiff ran lin venue, uite , arden Cit , #
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LEGAL NOTICE J O C otice of formation of imited iabilit Compan C , rticles of Organi ation filed ith the ec of tate of on Office location assau Count has been designated as agent of the C upon hom process against it ma be served ma mail a cop of an process to the C, oodpec er ane, evitto n, urpose or Character o engage in an la ful act or activit # # O LEGAL NOTICE CO O O O CO O O O
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at pm, I I- Januar , premises no n as James ane, evitto n, ll that certain plot, piece O I I , or parcel of land, ith the NOTICE OF SALE O IC I I - buildings and improvements pursuant to a inal Judg- thereon erected, situate, l ment of oreclosure dated ing and being in the o n of empstead, Count of asarch , , and entered in or , the Office of the Cler of the sau and tate of e ection , loc and Count of assau, herein ot pproximate amount O O of udgment is , O plus interest and costs remO O ises ill be sold sub ect to CC O I I provisions of filed Judgment O J O C Index # his , , O O O - foreclosure sale ill be held I , on the north side steps of the I , O - Courthouse, rain or shine CO I safet protoO I O C C I - cols ill be follo ed at the foreclosure sale If proper IC , I social distancing cannot be is the laintiff and O I I , are the e- maintained or there are other fendant s I, the undersigned health or safet concerns, the eferee ill sell at public Court ppointed eferee ill cancel the sale auction I O I eorge eter sernio, s , at the CO eferee CO , riedman artolo , O I , road treet, uite , e CO I , or , e or , tI O , , on Januar , at , torne s for laintiff irm ile o premises no n as O I , I # O O , ection , loc , ot LEGAL NOTICE ALL THAT CERTAIN CO O PLOT, PIECE OR PARO O CEL OF LAND SITUATE O LYING AND BEING IN CO I I THE TOWN OF HEM PO , C, STEAD, COUNTY OF NASSAU, STATE OF NEW JO C I, I YORK I , I remises ill be sold sub ect I I I O to provisions of filed JudgO J ment Index # O, eorge sernio, s efNOTICE OF SALE eree obertson, nschut , O IC I chneid, Crane artners, I pursuant to a inal C erchants Conoreclosure course, uite , estbur , Judgment of , and e or , ttorne s dated ugust , for laintiff All foreclosure entered in the Office of the sales will be conducted in Cler of the Count of asherein Iaccordance with Covid-19 sau, I O , guidelines including, but not C is the laintiff and limited to, social distancing C I, I and mask wearing. *LOCA- JO I , I TION OF SALE SUBJECT I I I O TO CHANGE DAY OF IN O J ACCORDANCE WITH O, are the eCOURT/CLERK DIRECfendant s I, the undersigned TIVES. eferee ill sell at public # auction I O I O at the CO CO , O I , MASSAPEQUA CO I , I O , , on Januar , at , LEGAL NOTICE premises no n as NOTICE OF SALE O , CO CO , ecO , I , ot , I O , - tion , loc , and IO OCI IO , ALL THAT CERTAIN O I I I I I PLOT, PIECE OR PARC CI , O CEL OF LAND, WITH O , laintiff, vs THE BUILDINGS THEREC I , , ON ERECTED, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING AT efendant s TOWN ursuant to an Order Con- M ASSAPEQ UA, firming eferee eport and OF OYSTER BAY, COUNJudgment of oreclosure and TY OF NASSAU AND ale dul entered on ebruar STATE OF NEW YORK remises ill be sold , and an Order dul entered on ugust , , I, sub ect to provisions of the undersigned eferee ill filed Judgment Index # arold sell at public auction on the amm, s eferee obfront steps on the north side of nschut , chneid, the assau Count upreme ertson, artners, C Court, upreme Court Crane erchants Concourse, uite rive, ineola, on C
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estbur , e or , ttorne s for laintiff All foreclosure sales will be conducted in accordance with Covid-19 guidelines including, but not limited to, social distancing and mask wearing. *LOCATION OF SALE SUBJECT TO CHANGE DAY OF IN ACCORDANCE WITH COURT/CLERK DIRECTIVES. #
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LEGAL NOTICE O IC O I O C O CO CO O IO O OCI IO , laintiff against C O I O C I O O O I O O I O, C , et al efendant s ursuant to a Judgment of oreclosure and ale entered on Januar , I, the undersigned eferee ill sell at public auction on the orth ide steps of the assau Count upreme Court located at upreme Court rive, ineola, ain or hine on the th da of Januar , at ll that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, situate, l ing and being in the o n of O ster a , Count of assau and tate of e or , and partl in the o n of ab lon, Count of uffol and tate of e or remises no n as Count ine oad, assape ua, o n of O ster a a a Count ine oad, mit ville, o n of O ster a , assau Count and Count ine oad, orth mit ville, o n of ab lon uffol Count # C CO # O CO pproximate amount of lien , plus interest and costs remises ill be sold sub ect to provisions of filed udgment and terms of sale Index o O arshad aed, s , eferee cCalla a mer eibert ierce, C ttorne s for laintiff exington venue, uite e or , el or sale information, please visit uction com at uction com or call Dated: September 14, 203 During the COVID-19 health emergency, bidders are required to comply with all governmental health requirements in effect at the time of sale including but not limited to, wearing face coverings and maintaining Continued on page 12
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DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2023 • ANTON MEDIA GROUP
COLUMN
Thank You For Your Utter Lack Of Service I am referring to the abysmal decline of even a modicum of customer service this country has experienced since, oh hell, the 1980s? And fear not, I am not going to reference the battles of attrition we have all fought at the hands of overseas phone banks whose customer service reps, though polite, are fairly unintelligible. This is about American companies and American employees. This is a homegrown problem and not only is it not going away, but it seems to be getting worse. I’ll start with tipping because that is the very essence of recognizing any kind of customer service. I have been in every state in this great collection of states we have thrown together and if I have learned one thing, it is that nobody outside the states of New York and New Jersey and some major cities has the faintest idea on how to tip, when to tip, why to tip, etc. Where did you learn the rules of tipping? Well, of course, from your Dad. He had the wallet, he laid it out. You watched and you learned. I know the numbers have changed but the paradigm remains. Whether it be Domenico’s or the China Moon—it was five bucks for good service, two bucks for bad. The difference was calculated in Dad’s
LEGAL NOTICES Continued from page 11 social distancing (at least 6-feet apart) during the auction, while tendering deposit and at any subsequent closing. Bidders are also required to comply with the Foreclosure Auction Rules and COVID-19 Health Emergency Rules issued by the Supreme Court of this County in addition to the conditions set forth in the Terms of Sale. 12-27-20-13-6-2023-4T#243739-NOB/MASS LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE The bond resolution, asummary ofwhich is published herewith, has been adopted on November 16, 2023, and the validity of the obligations authorized by such bond resolution may be hereafter contested only ifsuch obligations were authorized for an object or purpose for which Massapequa Union Free School District, in the County of Nassau, New York, isnot authorized to expend money or if the provisions of law which should have been complied with as of the date of publication ofthis Notice were not substantially complied with, and an action, suit or proceeding contesting such validity is commenced withintwenty days after the publication of this Notice, or such obligations were authorized inviolation ofthe provisions ofthe constitution. ANNE MARIE BELLIZZI
DELANEY AT LARGE Douglas Delaney
head, but he was not a cheap man and he seemed to know what he was doing. “Why only two bucks, Dad?” “Because the service was terrible.” “Then why give him anything?” “Because he just might be having a bad day and I don’t want to add to it.” That’s a good lesson, considering at the time that 5 bucks was more than half his hourly wage. The point is: Good Service? Tip. Bad Service? Tip. But Tip! We tip because our mercurial economic
LEGAL NOTICES
the validity of the obligations authorized by such bond resolution may be hereafter contested only if such obligations were authorized for an object or purpose for which Massapequa Union Free School District, in the County of Nassau, New York, is not authorized to expend money or ifthe provisions of law which should have been complied with as of the date of publication ofthis Notice were not substantially complied with, and an action, suit or proceeding contesting such validity is commenced within twenty days after the publication of this Notice, or such obligations were authorized in violation of the provisions of the constitution. ANNE MARIE BELLIZZI District Clerk BOND RESOLUTION OF MASSAPEOUA UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICI, NEW YORK, ADOPTED NOVEMBER 16, 2023, AUTHORIZING THE CONSTRUCTION OF ALTERATIONS AND IMPROVEMENTS TO VARIOUS DISTRICT BUILDINGS AND SITES; STATING THE ESTIMATED TOTAL COST THEREOF IS $46,490,545; APPROPRIATING SAID AMOUNT THEREFOR; AND AUTHORIZING THE ISSUANCE OF $46,490,545 SERIAL BONDS LEGAL NOTICE OF SAID DISTRICT TO FINOTICE The bond resolution, a sum- NANCE SAID APPROPRIAmary of which is published TION. Objects or purposes: the herewith, has been adopted on November 16, 2023, and construction ofalterations and District Clerk BOND RESOLUTION OF MASSAPEQUA UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT, NEW YORK, ADOPTED NOVEMBER 16, 2023, AUTHORIZING THE CONSTRUCTION OF IMPROVEMENTS AND ALTERATIONS TO THE HAWTHORN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL; STATING THE ESTIMATED TOTAL COST THEREOF IS $11,789,885; APPROPRIATING SAID AMOUNT THEREFOR; AND AUTHORIZING THE ISSUANCE OF $11,789,885 SERIAL BONDS OF SAID DISTRICT TO FINANCE SAID APPROPRIATION. Objects or purposes: the construction of improvements and alterations to the Hawthorn Elementary School. Amounts ofObligations to be Issued $11,789,885 Period of Probable Usefulness: thirty (30) years A complete copy of the bond resolution summarized above shall be available for public inspection during normal business hours at the office of the District Clerk, Massapequa Union Free School District, 4925 Merrick Road, Massapequa, New York. Dated: November 16, 2023 Massapequa, New York 12-13-2023-1T-#243871NOB/MASS
system has established that some workers who are toiling below the minimum wage can have their income augmented by gratuities. All in all, we tip because we are obliged to in certain situations and occupations, and they are as follows: Cab Drivers: You damn well better. Nobody in the whole of NY has a tougher job. And I don’t care how many tamblas or balalaikas are blasting on the radio or how many consonants are in their nameplate. These guys are busting their butts daily and sometimes risking their lives to get you 11 blocks up the road. Barbers & Hair Stylists: This is a must. Unless you want to come out looking like the Unabomber, give these men and women some love. On top of that, they have to listen your endless litany while you sit in that chair, and that in itself is worth a few extra bucks. Mailmen, Milkmen & Garbage Men: Crack the wallet or purse. All of the above. But these tips are seasonal and subject to how your mom or dad paradigm operated. For Bob The Mailman, every Christmas Mom and Dad had an envelope ready and Bob was also invited into the house for a “Bracer.” This was a tonic against the cold.
LEGAL NOTICES improvements to various District buildings and sites. Amounts of Obligations tobeIssued $46,490,545 Period of Probable Usefulness: thirty (30) years A complete copy of the bond resolution summarized above shall be available for public inspection during normal business hours at the office of the District Clerk, Massapequa Union Free School District, 4925 Merrick Road, Massapequa, New York. Dated: November 16, 2023 Massapequa, New York 12-13-2023-1T-#243872NOB/MASS
PLAINVIEW LEGAL NOTICE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF NASSAU DEUTSCHE BANK NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE FOR AMERICAN HOME MORTGAGE ASSETS TRUST 2006-1, MORTGAGE-BACKED PASSTHROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-1, V JILL S MARKOWITZ, ET AL. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated April 12, 2023, and entered in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Nassau, wherein DEUTSCHE BANK NATIONAL
And since my Dad was not the only one giving Mailman Bob an envelope and a bracer (so was Mr. Hays and Mr. Nelson and Mr. Bernabo and Mr. Creamer) that guy was pie-eyed by the time he reached the end of the block. Bob the Mailman; a Great American. Milkman and Garbage Men were unpredictable in their arrivals so you just left a note and a bottle. This ensured two things — the milk was cold and your trash cans were actually placed back on the sidewalk instead of unceremoniously tossed into the street. They DO remember. Dad actually would put a bottle, wrapped in a red ribbon, inside the trash can so that when these guys opened the lid the gift was there. Dad had class. When and where do you tip? You tip when you are sitting down. You do not tip when you are standing, unless it is at the bar. And you tip where you feel some young person (in NYC usually an actor or dancer) is giving you the best damn service they can muster up between auditions and denials. Look in their eyes. You can see their hunger and donate to that cause. Folks, it’s your money. You deserve to get your due value and service from any expenditure.
LEGAL NOTICES
TRUST COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE FOR AMERICAN HOME MORTGAGE ASSETS TRUST 2006-1, M O RT G A G E - B A C K E D PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-1 is the Plaintiff and JILL S MARKOWITZ, ET AL. are the Defendant(s). I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction RAIN OR SHINE at the NASSAU COUNTY SUPREME COURT, NORTH SIDE STEPS, 100 SUPREME COURT DRIVE, MINEOLA, NY 11501, on January 9, 2024 at 2:30PM, premises known as 133 CARRIAGE LN, PLAINVIEW, NY 11803: Section 13, Block 119, Lot 141, Unit 105: ALL THAT CERTAIN PLOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING AT PLAINVIEW, TOWN OF OYSTER BAY, COUNTY OF NASSAU AND STATE OF NEW YORK Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 001980/2017. George Peter Esernio, Esq. - Referee. Robertson, Anschutz, Schneid, Crane & Partners, PLLC 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310, Westbury, New York 11590, Attorneys for Plaintiff. All foreclosure sales will be conducted in accordance with Covid-19 guidelines including, but not limited to, social distancing and mask wearing. *LOCATION OF SALE SUBJECT TO CHANGE DAY OF IN ACCORDANCE WITH
COURT/CLERK DIRECTIVES. 12-27-20-13-6-2023-4T#243771-NOB/PLV
PLAINVIEW/ OLD BETHPAGE LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU, NJCCNYS COMMUNITY RESTORATION FUND LLC, Plaintiff, vs. MALCOM BROTTMAN, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF MAUREEN MANLEY A/K/A MAUREEN L. MANLEY A/K/A MAUREEN BROTTMAN A/K/A MAUREEN MANLEY BROTTMAN A/K/A MAUREEN Y. MANLEY, ET AL., Defendant(s). Pursuant to an Order Amending the Caption, Confirming Referee’s Report and Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on July 2, 2019 and an Order Appointing Successor Referee duly entered on October 20, 2023, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on January 9, 2024 at 2:00 p.m., premises known as 179 Floral Avenue, Plainview, NY 11803. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and
LEGAL improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Plainview-Bethpage, Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 46, Block 556 and Lot 15. Approximate amount of judgment is $388,036.56 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 010200/2014. This foreclosure sale will be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. COVID-19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale. Scott H. Siller, Esq., Referee Friedman Vartolo LLP, 85 Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Firm File No. 232772-1 12-27-20-13-6-2023-4T#243736-NOB/PLVOB
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ANTON MEDIA GROUP • DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2023
13
SPORTS & RECREATION
College Teams Await 31 Massapequa Athletes
“B
e proud of yourselves,” Massapequa High School Principal Barbara Lowell told 31 student-athletes at their letter of intent signing ceremony earlier this season. The room was packed with proud parents, siblings and coaches, there to see the current Chiefs commit to the next chapter in their lives. The fall ceremony featured senior athletes who play baseball, lacrosse, soccer, softball and volleyball finalize their plans to play at the collegiate level. In less than a year, they will don uniforms for college and university teams on Long Island, across New York State and throughout the country.
Shannon McEntee, director of physical education, health, athletics and recreation noted the significance of this accomplishment before announcing each athlete. Superintendent Dr. William Brennan said that Massapequa’s athletes are a source of pride and also thanked their parents and coaches for their time, energy and passion. The newly committed athletes are: Baseball: George Adams, Stony Brook University; Paul Dulanto, Stony Brook University; Joseph Swinarski, University of New Haven; and Cameron Zampolin, University of Saint Joseph. Softball: Samantha Amante, Central
Massapequa High School held a letter of intent signing ceremony for 31 collegebound athletes. (Contributed photos)
Connecticut University; Emily Balducci, Assumption University; Lauren O’Brien, Palm Beach Atlantic University; Arianna Vitale, Barry University; and Meghan Stork, SUNY Plattsburgh. Boys Lacrosse: Joseph Fazio, SUNY Maritime; Nicholas Hinck, Nazareth University; Adam Lamendola, SUNY Cortland; Nicholas Margiotta, Wingate University; Aidan Stanton, SUNY Geneseo; Michael Weigand, SUNY Maritime; and Ryan Wieczorek, University of Massachusetts Amherst. Girls Lacrosse: Neave Bowman, Stonehill College; Madelyn Breves, George Washington University; Anna Cuccio,
Pace University; Megan Felker, Quinnipiac University; Brigid Keaveney, Bloomsburg University; Addison Labriola, University of Massachusetts Amherst; Cameron Labriola, University of Massachusetts Amherst; and Allison Petrullo, Pace University. Girls Soccer: Riley Benito, Marist College; Shae Brennan, Greensboro College; Kara Jahrsdoerfer, SUNY New Paltz; Briana Neary, Siena College; Julianne Peterson, St. Michaels College; and Nicole Tonello, Millersville University. Boys Volleyball: Tristan Rezza, SUNY New Paltz. —Submitted by the Massapequa School District
University of Massachusetts Amherst was the most popular choice among the student-athletes with lacrosse players Cameron Labriola, Addison Labriola and Ryan Wieczorek choosing the school.
Victory For The Hicksville High School Marching Band Recently, New York State Senator Steve Rhoads and Legislator Rose Walker celebrated the victory of Hicksville’s Marching Comets.
Senator Rhoads joined the Hicksville Board of Education, Hicksville Superintendent Fulton, Legislator Rose Walker, and the Hicksville
community in welcoming the Hicksville Marching Comets home after winning the NYSFBC Large School 2 championship! This marks the band’s 3rd year of winning the championship. Senator Rhoads issued
a heartfelt congratulations to the marching band and applauded them for making the entire Hicksville community proud. —Submitted by the Office of Senator Steve Rhoads
Anton Media Group
Wishes Our Loyal Readers And Their Families A VERY HAPPY AND HEALTHY HOLIDAY SEASON LOOK OUT FOR OUR DOUBLE ISSUE 12/20/23 and our next issue on January 3, 2024 (Contributed photo)
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DECEMBER 13 - 19, 2023 •• ANTON ANTONMEDIA MEDIAGROUP GROUP
L LI IW IW LIW
ENTERTAINMENT & LIFESTYLE
Darlene Love’s Fave Vocalists BY DAVE GIL DE RUBIO
A
editor@antonmediagroup.com
true national treasure, Darlene Love’s career has taken her from being one of the late Phil Spector’s go-to studio weapons to becoming the Queen of Christmas, despite what all those Mariah Carey memes may say. Love’s 1963 classic “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home).” is not only a centerpiece of the storied holiday compilation A Christmas Gift To You from Phil Spector that came out the same year, but it has become a perennial favorite covered by the likes of U2, Michael Bublé and yes, even Carey herself. And to be sure, Love will be busting it out at her annual Darlene Love: Love for the Holidays show that has become as traditional as the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree lighting. This annual event has been going on for the past two decades-plus and evolved from similar shows she did at the Bottom Line in the ‘80s when she came East from her native Los Angeles. David Letterman was a fan who asked Love to first perform her signature Christmas song on his show back in 1986. It became an annual tradition that helped birth the current full-blown show the 82-year-old Rock and Roll Hall of Famer delights in performing every year. “It’s amazing because when I started doing Christmas shows, nobody but the Rockettes were doing Christmas shows,” she said with a laugh. “With this current show, I do my old songs. I tell my audience that I put them in a medley, but I do the whole song because back when we recorded all these songs—‘He’s a Rebel,’ ‘Da Doo Ron Ron,’ ‘He’s Sure the Boy I Love’— they were only a minute and a half long.” Proving what’s old is new, old friend Cher not only recorded a new version of “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home),” but asked Love to join her in recording. What makes this all the more meta is that then17-yearold
Darlene Love (Photo by Christopher Logan)
LONG ISLAND WEEKLY
C h e r ( t h e n known by her birth name Cherilyn Sarkisian) sang backup vocals on the original version of the song. It’s an anecdote Love delights in recounting. “Sonny Bono used to work for Phil Spector and he was dating Cher,,” Love recalled. “Sonny would bring her to the studio just to be there—not to do anything, but to be there among all of us because we didn’t really care if people came to the sessions. One day, Phil asked Sonny if it was true that his girlfriend could sing. He said yes and I hadn’t gotten to the session yet and Phil called her in to do some ‘oohs’ and ‘ahhs’ on ‘Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)’ and that’s actually how we started. That made for a very lasting relationship over the years. I even went out on the road with her during the Heart of Stone tour as one of her backup singers.” As someone who cut her teeth singing in her pastor father’s church choir, Love was more than happy to share who some of her favorite vocalists are. Marian Anderson (February 27, 1897 to April 8, 1993) “The one lady I thought I was going to sing like and whose memory I cherish is Marian Anderson. I loved the way she sang. She walked out on the stage like, ‘Here I am.’ “ Aretha Franklin (March 25, 1942 to August 16, 2018) “I met her when she was 16 years old traveling with her father. I was just amazed by her voice. It wasn’t just churchy—it was gospel, it was rhythm and blues. We all clung to Aretha Franklin because she was one of a kind.” Kelly Clarkson (April 24, 1982 to present) “I met her in passing. She was getting ready to start her television show and we didn’t really have time to say hello that much, but I instantly knew that I would like her and her whole personality. I just love her whole thing, everything about her. Not just her singing voice, but her whole persona.” Visit www.longislandweekly.com to read a longer version of this story. Darlene Love will perform her Love For the Holidays show on Dec. 17 at the Tarrytown Music Hall, 13 Main St., Floor 2, Tarrytown. Visit www.tarrytownmusichall.org or call 914-233-3856 for more information.
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The Guttermans Family Wishes you a Happy and Healthy Hanukkah
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