Bethpage Newsgram (4/26/24)

Page 1

Hempstead Town Supervisor Don Clavin, Town Clerk Kate Murray and Receiver of Taxes Jeanine Driscoll attended the Lev-It Little League Opening Day on April 13th.

Couple arrested on weapons charges in Old Bethpage

Nassau County Police arrested an Old Bethpage couple on April 20 on weapons charges.

According to police, they responded to a call for a disturbance at an Old Bethpage residence at 7:31 p.m. due to

an argument that occurred between Patrick J. Jackson, 54, Dorothy Scotto, 42, and her immediate family members.

According to police, the argument escalated and Jackson picked up a loaded shotgun, which placed the victims

in fear for their lives, causing them to exit the home and call 911. Police say Jackson was placed under arrest and the shotgun was recovered. Subsequently, they say that six  ille-

See page 9

Town moves forward with beach sand replenishment

The Town of Oyster Bay is  moving forward with a major sand replenishment project at TOBAY Beach in Massapequa. In recent weeks, nearly two million cubic yards of sand along with critical dunes were washed away — thereby exposing the pavilion foundation and the retaining wall which is the last line of protection from a total washout of New York State-owned Ocean Parkway.

“We know just how much TOBAY Beach means to our residents, which is why Town crews will begin rebuilding TOBAY Beach by trucking in yards of clean sand just in time for summer,” said Supervisor Saladino. “Warm, sunny days are just around the corner and we’ll have the beach open in time for you to soak up the sun, swim in the ocean and enjoy summer.”

Supervisor Saladino has requested emergency assistance from United States Senators Charles Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, along with Congressman Andrew Garbarino and Governor Kathy Hochul, to begin planning for a long-term solution. The Town would like officials in all levels of government to pressure the Army Corps of Engineers to develop a long-term

solution that hardens the shoreline with additional sand, shields the primary nesting areas of protected species known as piping plover, defends the mainland and continues to provide the public access . While winter storms are partially to blame for the problems, Town engineers believe a change in longshore currents contributed to the crisis and that such transformation is the result of dredged materials placed at West Gilgo Beach in the Town of Babylon.

Supervisor Saladino stated, “I know the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has the expertise to resolve this matter and I implore their immediate assistance.  A long-term action plan must be implemented, along with the proper funding to achieve the goals of hardening the shoreline with additional sand, protecting the mainland and continuing to provide the public access our residents expect and deserve.  The Town of Oyster Bay suffered enough during Superstorm Sandy and we must resolve this matter now.”

Despite no financial assistance from the State and Federal governments, the Town has spent millions of dollars rebuilding the beach and stabilizing

See page 9

The Bethpage Newsgram is published every Friday by Litmor Publishing Corp. Periodical Postage paid at Hicksville, N.Y. 11801 Telephone 931-0012 - USPS 3467-68. Postmaster: Send Address Change to: The Bethpage Newsgram, 821 Franklin Ave., Suite 208, Garden City, N.Y. 11530 • Meg Norris Publisher
HS takes part in art exhibition PAGE 4 Blue Star moms collect for veterans PAGE 6
SERVING BETHPAGE, OLD BETHPAGE, AND PLAINVIEW JFK
LITTLE LEAGUE OPENING DAY

PSEG honors Hicksville lineman

When severe weather strikes, they put on their personal protective equipment, don their weather gear and answer the call, day or night. On National Lineworker Appreciation Day, PSEG Long Island saluted the in-house and contracted lineworkers dedicated to getting the lights back on and strengthening the energy grid for Long Island and the Rockaways — including Ron Bauer, of Hicksville.

Bauer and his colleagues are extensively trained to handle the potentially hazardous work of installing, repairing and replacing high-voltage electrical equipment. They prioritize the safety of themselves and members of the public and are empowered

to stop a job if they see something unsafe.

“When storms, blizzards or other natural disasters damage equipment and cause customer outages, it requires the 24/7 dedication and hard work of our skilled lineworkers to replace poles, lines and transformers safely and as quickly as possible, bringing normalcy back to communities across Long Island and the Rockaways,” said Michael Sullivan, PSEG Long Island’s vice president of electric operations. “Today we honor their contribution to our mission to provide safe, resilient and reliable service to all of our customers.”

Happy 80th Birthday!

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Bauer of Hicksville is one of PSEG Long Island’s dedicated team of lineworkers. Photo courtesy of PSEG Long Island
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Ron
Hempstead Town Clerk Kate Murray (left) congratulated Rosemary Dotzler of Levittown on the occasion of her 80th birthday on April 5, at Levittown Hall. Also attending was John Dotzler.

POB Chamber plans 4th Annual SpringFest

The Plainview Old Bethpage Chamber’s 4th Annual SpringFest event, planned for Sunday, May 5, promises to be its most exciting yet. In addition to an attractive array of vendors, a mechanical bull, toxic meltdown survivor game and axe throwing will amp up the excitement for older kids and adults. In addition, there will be a mobile bar featuring frozen Cinco de Mayo favorites.

Between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. enjoy some of SpringFest’s most popular attractions including the Pickle Ball Tournament and Children’s Face Painting, which will return to the grounds of the JCC. In keeping with the bigger and better theme, a “Foodie Fest” will feature a diverse array of vendors to satisfy all appetites.

Chamber President David Weinstein is grateful to CEO Rick Lewis and the JCC staff for contributing to the success of this major event and to all the event

sponsors. “An event of this magnitude could not be possible without the support of our many sponsors, including Platinum Sponsor SRG Residential and Gold Sponsor, Law Office of Andrew M. Lamkin, PC and the many other sponsors who return each year to be part of the fun,” he said.

One of Plainview-Old Bethpage’s largest community events, SpringFest attracts hundreds and hundreds of visitors to a safe and easily navigated location. Admission is free and parking is available at the POB Community Park up the road on Washington Avenue with free shuttle bus service to and from the JCC.

Be sure to visit the chamber booth for tempting raffle prizes. All proceeds benefit the chamber’s current charity partner, Ariella’s NY Friendship Circle.  Raindate for SpringFest will be May 19.

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Agency to benefit orphans opens Hicksville office

An international organization that provides health care and other social services to orphaned children overseas has opened its New York office in Hicksville.

The organization, Al-Ayn Social Care Foundation, serves orphans in Iraq, Afghanistan and Ghana. Since its founding in 2006 it has served more than 170,000 children in the three countries.

The children range from infants to teenagers.

Al-Ayn’s U.S. office is headquartered in Dearborn, Michigan. Its world headquarters are in Iraq. It also maintains offices throughout Europe that act as fund-raisers for the group ’ s work.

The organization has established centers throughout Iraq that serve as focal points for provision of educational, vocational and health care services.

In its latest annual report, CEO Ali Hassanali said “serving orphaned children is not something you choose to do. It chooses you.  To be a light in

the life of a child...is a gift reserved for those who have been chosen to receive it.”

People interested to learn more about the organization and its work should  contact Al-Ayn at info@ alayninternational.org.

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Local teams enter robotics competition POB JFK High School takes part in art exhibition

On March 22, New York State Senator Steve Rhoads attended the Optimum Robotics 2024 FIRST Long Island Regional Competition and met with robotics teams in his district competing in the competition. Senator Rhoads offered special thanks to Optimum for sponsoring the Hicksville High School Robotics J-Birds, Plainview-Old Bethpage High School POBots, Bethpage High School Bethpage Regal Eagles, and Seaford High School Mechanized Mafia.

On Thursday, April 11th, student artists from Plainview-Old Bethpage JFK High School, and ten other area school districts, showcased their art at the 10th annual National Honor Society’s 6x6 Collaborative Exhibit at the Heckscher Museum of Art. The special themed installation was titled, ‘Home’ and featured 6x6 colorful boxes placed on top of one another in unique arrangements.

Rosemary Elder, Art teacher and NAHS advisor at POBJFK, was one of the founders of the annual event. Her main purpose was have students in the National Art Honor Society work together and to collaborate on their artwork.

“We had founded this project with our school board members and the cooperation of the Heckscher Museum of Art in Huntington,” said Elder. “Each year we have different theme which correlates with ongoing exhibits at the Museum. It is truly a very rewarding experience for all of our students in the NAHS.”

Elder said she provided her art students with 6x6 pieces of wood, which were eventually turned into boxes that they could create their artwork on. The students were very creative in

their process, drawing colored portraits of peoples faces, city scenes and beach views in their artwork.

Elder said the exhibition originally contained two school districts but has grown to over ten districts in the past ten years.

“Each year the collaborative art exhibition has grown with many other high schools across Long Island becoming involved, such as Half Hollow Hills, Cold Spring Harbor, Syosset, and Massapequa school districts,” said elder. “With dedicated art teachers and National Art Honor Society advisors from participating schools, the student experience has expanded into the remarkable exhibit it is today.”

This year, thanks to the generosity of sponsors across Long Island, the show was able to honor all students with certificates of participation, present awards of excellence, and highlight a “best in show” piece.

Cali Yu, a NAHS student from Plainview-JFK, was one of those honored, with her portrait of a girl in red dress walking in a black and white city street.

The special anniversary exhibit was held at the Heckscher Museum of Art from April 10th to 14th.

4 Friday, April 26, 2024
The Plainview-Old Bethpage High School POBots. The Island Trees Robo Dawgs. The Bethpage High School Regal Eagles. Artwork created collaboratively by National Art Honor Society students.

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Blue Star moms collect clothing for veterans

Senator Steve Rhoads and Andrea Nordquist, president of Military Blue Star Mothers NY 14, stand in the middle of Senator Rhoads’ office overflowing with boxes and bags of professional clothing for veterans.

From March 1 through April 1, New York State Senator Steve Rhoads and Military Blue Star Mothers NY 14, a local organization dedicated to supporting and honoring our military service members and their families, held a professional clothing drive to support young veterans in New York looking to start their professional careers. Thanks to Andrea and her teams’ collective efforts along with the unwavering support of our generous community, a whopping 1,661 items were collected to help these veterans succeed in their job interviews and professional settings. State Senator Steve Rhoads and Military Blue Star Mothers NY 14 are committed to making a positive  impact on the lives of these young veterans and helping them transition into civilian life with confidence and success.

Special thanks to Verity Van Lines for donating the collection boxes, the Seaford Public Library, Bellmore Memorial Library, Wantagh Public Library, and the Levittown Public Library for serving as collection sites, and all the Kiwanis Clubs part of the Long Island South Central Division that made this drive a resounding success.

Senator Rhoads said, “When we began this drive, I said we were going to make it a “March to remember our military heroes” and I am

Volunteers needed to plant park garden

The Town of Oyster Bay invites volunteers to join the upcoming Rain Garden Work Party at Theodore Roosevelt Park, to help maintain the Town’s raingardens which help prevent stormwater pollution. The event will take place at the Western Waterfront at Theodore Roosevelt Park in Oyster Bay on Saturday, May 4, and volunteers are encouraged to bring their own work gloves for the occasion.

“We welcome all those interested in native plant gardening to come join our spring Rain Garden Work Party. Participants will learn about rain gardens’ ecological impact while helping to maintain them,” said Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino. “We will work alongside volunteers and our environmental partners to weed, rake, prune, plant and mulch while learning about the environmental benefits these structures provide. This family-friendly program welcomes participants of all ages, particularly those seeking to fulfill community service hours.”

Rain gardens were installed at Theodore Roosevelt Park in Oyster Bay in partnership with Friends of the Bay and the Nassau County Soil and Water Conservation District. These gardens effectively filter stormwater runoff before it reaches local waterways. Rain

gardens also help alleviate problems associated with flooding and drainage, recharge the ground water supply, provide habitat and food for wildlife and enhance the beauty of local communities.

“A rain garden is a collection of native plants placed in a small depression designed to slowly absorb rain water runoff. They have numerous environmental benefits, such as filtering pollutants, reducing flooding, and providing food and habitats to wildlife,” added Councilwoman Vicki Walsh. “However, they must be maintained regularly to ensure healthy soil, healthy plants, and a healthy community, which is why we’re seeking volunteers to assist with our existing rain gardens at the Western Waterfront in Oyster Bay.”

Volunteers are invited to gather at the Western Waterfront, 1 West End Avenue in Oyster Bay, on Saturday, May 4. The Rain Garden Work Party will run from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Participants should bring work gloves, and community service hours are offered to participants. For more information, contact the Town of Oyster Bay’s Department of Environmental Resources at (516) 677-5943 or visit oysterbaytown. com/environmental.

proud to say we did just that. It was heartwarming to see the support and appreciation from residents in my district — rich with a history of military service men and women — truly value and appreciate the sacrifices made by our heroes. Thank you to everyone in the community who donated clothing for our professional clothing drive; your generosity underscores the fact that our veterans deserve all the recognition and support we can give, not only on Veterans Day or Memorial Day, but each and every day.”

As a group of mothers who have sons and daughters who are currently serving or have served in the United States Armed Forces, the Military Blue Star Mothers understand the importance of providing resources and support to those who have bravely served our country.

Andrea Nordquist, president of Military Blue Star Mothers NY 14, said, “I am truly blown away by the generosity of Senator Rhoads and his constituents for veterans in need. We collected so many wonderful items that we are going to be able to bring to them and help change their lives. I cannot thank Senator Rhoads, his staff, and all the people in his district and everyone who helped to support this most worthy cause.”

Local artists invited to showcase at “Art in the Park”

The Town of Oyster Bay invites local artists and artisans to display and sell their hand-crafted goods at a special day of “Art in the Park.” Applications are now available for the event which will be held on Saturday, May 18, at Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Park & Beach in Oyster Bay.

“Art in the Park offers local artists and artisans an amazing opportunity to showcase their best work for the public and gain local notoriety,” said Town Councilman Steve Labriola. “Art in the Park is certain to attract hundreds of families and seniors as the event also features live music, food trucks and activities for kids.”

Participants must be 18 or older, and

display and sell only their original pieces. No commercial or mass-produced items are permitted. Artists must supply their own 10x10 canopy and additional items required for their space. Additional details and associated costs are provided on the application, available on the Town’s website.

Art in the Park is run by the Town’s Department of Community & Youth Services, Cultural and Performing Arts Division. The event focuses on hand-crafted goods, including ceramics, watercolors, glass, jewelry, wood, leather, sculpture and more. Artist applications available on the Town’s website at www.oysterbaytown.com/capa or by calling (516) 797-7932.

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Made the honor roll or Dean’s List? Scored an internship or study abroad opportunity? We invite you to send details of any of these things and more, along with your name and contact info, to editor@gcnews.com for a chance to be seen in our paper!

6 Friday, April 26, 2024

Celebrating a decade of creativity

The National Art Honor Society ’ s 6x6 Collaborative Exhibit returned to the Hecksher Museum for its milestone 10th year from April 11–14, showcasing the artistic talents of Long Island ’ s student artists. This annual event, conceived by Rosemarie Elder of Plainview-Old Bethpage JFK High School and Jeanie Ritter of Harborfields High School, has become a cornerstone of artistic collaboration and celebration.

The NAHS 6x6 Collaborative Project began in 2014 with a vision to Connect, Collaborate, and Create. Co-founders Elder and Ritter, along with Allyson Uttendorfer of Half Hollow Hills High School East, initiated the project to foster artistic enrichment and community among students and teachers within the fine

arts. Partnering with the Heckscher Museum of Art, the project has grown exponentially, with the museum providing inspiration, exhibition space, and support for participating schools.

This year ’ s exhibition, themed "home," brings together 11 school districts from Nassau and Suffolk counties. Students ’ artwork from this year and the past decade will be on display, highlighting the evolution of creativity and collaboration over the years.

We are thrilled to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the NAHS 6x6 Collaborative Exhibit, ” said Rosemarie Elder. “ It ’ s incredible to see how this project has grown and evolved, thanks to the dedication of our students, teachers, and community partners. ”

7 Friday, April 26, 2024
POBJFK students participated in the 10th annual National Art Honor Society’s 6x6 Collaborative Exhibit at the Hecksher Museum along with exhibit co-founder Rosemarie Elder, art teacher at POBJFK High School. Photo courtesy of Plainview-Old Bethpage Central School District
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New member welcomed at Levittown Chamber

The Levittown Chamber of Commerce welcomed new members from the Northeast College of Health Services.

The Levittown Chamber of Commerce welcomed new members John LaFalce and Daryon Ray from the Northeast College of Health Sciences –Long Island Branch Campus. The degree programs at Northeast College of Health Sciences are diverse in curriculum and subject area with key qualities — all are centered on their mission of uncompromising academic excellence, leadership and professional best practices. Fully accredited by The Council on Chiropractic Education (CCE),

Middle States Commission on Higher Education, and the New York State Education Department of the University of the State of New York, Northeast College of Health Services – Long Island Camus is located at 70 Division Avenue in Levittown. For information on the college please call 516-796-3696.

The Levittown Chamber of Commerce meets every third Wednesday of the month, alternating between lunch and dinner meetings for busy professional. Call 516-520-8000 or visit levittownchamber.com for information on meetings and events.

Thoughtful Thursday at Central Boulevard School

Students in Susan Corcoran’s class created cards thanking first responders on April 18.

Central Boulevard Elementary School in Bethpage hosted its Thoughtful Thursday event on April 18, where students in Susan Corcoran’s class crafted cards to express gratitude to local first responders. This initiative aims to honor the dedication of firefighters, police officers, and EMTs who serve the community.

Students will distribute the cards during the school’s Law Enforcement and First Responders Appreciation Parade and Breakfast on May 17. The

Photos courtesy of the Bethpage Union Free School District

event will include approximately 40 attendees, comprised of immediate family members of students or staff who are first responders.

The highlight of the Law Enforcement and First Responders Appreciation event will be a parade around the school, where first responders will be accompanied by their student or staff member. A breakfast hosted by the PTA and Student Council will follow, fostering a sense of unity within the school community.

Town seeks nominations to honor veterans

The Town of Oyster Bay is accepting nominations in order to honor veterans at the Town’s ‘Salute to America’ Celebration scheduled for Tuesday, July 9, 2024 at 7:30 p.m. at TOBAY Beach. Residents are invited to nominate extraordinary individuals who have made a positive difference in our veteran communities.

“The Town of Oyster Bay’s ‘Salute to America’ Celebration provides the ideal backdrop to recognize veterans and individuals who continue to actively serve in the community and advocate for issues and concerns relative to vet-

erans. The Town is proud to recognize and honor amazing individuals who have helped to shape our communities for the better through their continuing advocacy and exemplary community service each year,” Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino said. “I hope residents will consider submitting a nomination of an individual who deserves special recognition for their continued efforts on behalf of the veteran’s community. I look forward to recognizing the efforts of outstanding individuals who have impacted the lives of our veterans in an extraordinary way yet again this year.”

Nominations are being accepted in three different categories of recognition: Veterans Volunteer of the Year (awarded to a veteran), Friend of Veterans Volunteer of the Year (awarded to a non-veteran), and Lifetime Achievement Award (awarded to a veteran or a non-veteran).  All entries must include a supporting narrative describing the nominee’s on-going veterans related activities, and all nominees must be Town residents. All nominations must be postmarked no later than Monday, June 3, 2024. Winners will be recognized as part of

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a special program during the ‘Salute to America’ Celebration, a patriotic evening of top-flight musical talent and fireworks, which serves as a thank you to all of our veterans and active military for protecting the freedoms we enjoy each and every day as Americans.  To submit a nomination for the Veterans Awards, please visit www. oysterbaytown.com, email kfileccia@ oysterbay-ny.gov or call (516) 797-7925 for an application.

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Weapons charges

From page 1

gal firearms, two switchblade knives and multiple high-capacity magazines were recovered from inside the home Dorothy J. Scotto was also placed under arrest.

Jackson was charged with Criminal Possession of a Weapon 2nd Degree, Criminal Possession of a Weapon 3rd Degree, Criminal Possession of a Weapon 4th Degree, Menacing 2nd Degree, Endangering the Welfare of a Child and Failure to Safely Store Firearms 1st Degree.

Scotto was charged with Criminal Possession of a Weapon 2nd Degree, Criminal Possession of a Weapon 3rd Degree, Criminal Possession of a Weapon 4th Degree and Failure to Safely Store Firearms 1st Degree.

Beach sand

From page 1

dunes against erosion. A critical public access point to the shoreline, TOBAY Beach is located in the middle of Jones Beach Island, a barrier island off the south shore of Long Island. The beach suffered a direct hit from Superstorm Sandy in 2012, and serves as a critical asset toward protecting the mainland, its property and population. Recent erosion of the beach and dunes threaten not only the recreation at the beach, but also poses a risk of flooding to Ocean Parkway as well as homes and infrastructure on the mainland.

To accommodate summer beachgoers, the Town will extend lifeguard coverage and swimming boundaries. In recent years, the Saladino administration has improved restrooms, upgraded the spray park, and installed a new playground and new bulkhead at the marina.

Do you have a service to advertise? Our Service Directory is sure to bring results. Call 294-8900 for rates and information.

NOTICE OF SALE

NASSAU COUNTY

NOTICE OF SALE

SUPREME COURT - COUNTY OF NASSAU

LEGAL NOTICES

U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE UNDER THE POOLING AND SERVICING AGREEMENT DATED AS OF MAY 1, 2006, GSAMP TRUST 2006-HE3, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-HE3, Plaintiff, Against

MARY MURRAY A/K/A MARY C. MURRAY, ET AL.

Defendant(s)

Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale, duly entered 09/16/2019, I, the undersigned Referee, will sell at public auction, on the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court located at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, N.Y. 11501 on 5/20/2024 at 2:00PM, premises known as 273 North 4th Street, Bethpage, New York 11714, And Described As Follows:

ALL that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in Bethpage, Town Of Oyster Bay, County Of Nassau And State Of New York.

Section 46 Block 78 Lot 53

The approximate amount of the current Judgment lien is $424,971.27 plus interest and costs.  The Premises will be sold subject to provisions of the aforesaid Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale; Index # 3901/2015

Harold F. Damm, Esq., Referee.

If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the then Court Appointed Referee will cancel the Foreclosure Auction. This Auction will be held rain or shine.

MCCABE, WEISBERG & CONWAY, LLC, 10 Midland Avenue, Suite 205, Port Chester, NY 10573

Dated: 3/7/24   File Number: 17-301460   SH

NASSAU U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for Lehman XS Trust Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-4N, Plaintiff AGAINST Parminder Chandi; et al., Defendant(s)  Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered February 24, 2020 I, the undersigned Referee, will sell at public auction at the North Side Steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on April 29, 2024 at 2:00PM, premises known as 253 Haypath Road, Old Bethpage, NY 11804.  All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at Old Bethpage, in the Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau, State of NY, Section 47 Block 31 Lot 12.  Approximate amount of judgment $578,244.15 plus interest and costs.  Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 010267/2015. The auction will be conducted pursuant to the COVID-19 Policies Concerning Public Auctions of Foreclosed Property established by the Tenth Judicial District. Foreclosure Auctions will be held "Rain or Shine." Original Sale Date: April 3, 2024 @ 2:00PM Charles Casolaro, Esq., Referee LOGS Legal Group LLP f/k/a Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 430-4792 Dated: April 11, 2024

NASSAU COUNTY NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT - COUNTY OF NASSAU

WILMINGTON SAVINGS FUND

SOCIETY FSB D/B/A

CHRISTIANA TRUST AS TRUSTEE FOR PNPMS TRUST II, Plaintiff, Against

THEOCHARIS PHILIPPOU A/K/A THEOCHARRIS

PHILIPPOU A/K/A HARRIS

PHILIPPOU A/K/A HARRY

PHILIPPOU A/K/A

THEOCHAIRUS PHILIPPOU, ET AL, Defendant(s)

Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale, duly entered 09/12/2019, I, the undersigned Referee, will sell at public auction, on the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court located at 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, N.Y. 11501 on 5/30/2024 at 2:00PM, premises known as 2 Prose Street, Hicksville, New York 11801, And Described As Follows:

ALL that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Hicksville, Town Of Oyster Bay, County Of Nassau And State Of New York. Section 11 Block 309 Lot 33

The approximate amount of the current Judgment lien is $578,855.97 plus interest and costs.  The Premises will be sold subject to provisions of the aforesaid Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale; Index # 1488/2015

If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the then Court Appointed Referee will cancel the Foreclosure Auction. This Auction will be held rain or shine.

9 Friday, April 26, 2024
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FORECLOSURE NOTICE NOTICE OF LEGAL POSTPONEMENT OF SALE SUPREME
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Judgment of Sale, duly I, the Referee, will sell at the North Nassau Court located Court Drive, on 2:00PM, premises Street, 11801, Follows: piece or the improvements situate, lying Hicksville, Town County Of New York. 309 Lot 33 amount of the lien is interest and will be provisions of the of Sale; Index # distancing maintained or there safety Court will cancel Auction. This rain or Referee. FIRM P.C., ROAD, SUITE BROOKVILLE, NY newspaper 8900, and search Publishing to find each issue.

LEGAL NOTICES

10
SALE COUNTY
AS
Friday, April 26, 2024 COUNTY
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Levittown school participates in Autism Awareness project

Students at Northside Elementary School helped to decorate a special tree that was placed in their school’s hallway. The students in grades K-5 created the special project as part of Autism Awareness Month in April.

Cynthia Dano, PE teacher at Northside, said that students wrote on puzzle pieces in their classroom, describing what attributes make them special. The puzzle pieces were then turned into leaves on the ‘Grow Your Awareness’ tree, which was placed on the wall inside the school’s main hallway.

“The older students in grades three through five, wrote sentences describing what makes them special and kind people,” Dano. “The first and second graders wrote a singular word describing what makes them special.”

She said that for the kindergartners, she wrote each of their names on top of multicolored butterflies, which were placed around the tree.

“All of the students were very excited to take part in this activity because they take some of the general education and phys ed classes with their special friends.”

As part of the Autism project, stu-

dents were also encouraged to share their feelings and thoughts with the phys Ed staff, on Autism and other neurodivergent disorders.

Fallon Kearns, a fifth grader at Northside, said that he liked how everyone was included in the discussions.

“I liked how everyone was included and it was also interesting finding out about the different communication devices that people with autism may need to use,” said Kearns. “Sometimes it’s hard to tell if somebody has Autism just by looking at them, so it’s important to be sensitive to everyone.”

Fifth grader, Cayden Chan, echoed his classmates sentiments, saying, “it made me happy to talk about making sure to include all students and what we do everyday,” said Chan.

Along with the ‘Grow Your Awareness’ tree, classroom doors throughout the school were also decorated with a similar theme.

Another way students have celebrated Autism Awareness Month, is to dress up in blue colors every Tuesday during the month.

“This project helped our students to become more sensitive and also more accepting of other people and their differences,” said Dano.

Tree decorated by students at Northside Elementary School as part of the Autism Awareness project.

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12 F riday, April 26, 2024

April 26, 2024

Discovering Strasbourg, France’s Cultural Riches

I’ve come to Strasbourg, France, for a European Waterways canal cruise through the Alsace Lorraine on its luxury hotel barge, Panache. It is my practice now when connecting with a cruise or bike tour, to arrive at least a day early, especially when I have the opportunity to overnight in such a charming historic city as Strasbourg and experience it in the morning and evening light in the peace and calm without the daytrippers, and have the time to really explore, discover and immerse in its cultural riches.

The TGV train ride, less than two hours from Paris, was absolutely gorgeous. (Less than two hours from Paris, you go Charles de Gaulle Airport into the Gare de Nord in Paris, then take an easy 15 minute walk to Gare L’Est - glad I pre-purchased my train ticket and reserved seat on raileurope.com). It is surprising to see how soon out of the bustling metropolis you are in pastoral countryside. We whisk passed solar arrays, wind turbines, cows in pasture, and see traditional villages at the far end of fields. It’s cinematic.

And I still get into Strasbourg in the afternoon with plenty of time to explore.

There is much to experience in Strasbourg and I will actually have part of four days here. We will be picked up in Strasbourg on the first afternoon and taken to Krafft to board the barge hotel, Panache, and actually cruise back into Strasbourg on its first full day when we will have a walking tour and overnight on the canal. I will have much of a full day again at the end of the cruise, when we are delivered back

Strasbourg’s picturesque Le Petit France is a UNESCO Heritage Site © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

to Strasbourg from Niderviller before I take the train to Paris. I do a calculation and decide on my only full day in Strasbourg, after exploring the old city in the early morning, to hop on the train for a 45-minute ride to see Colmar, and still get to enjoy Strasbourg’s beauty at night.

I must say I am clever about seeing Strasbourg, beginning with choosing a charming boutique hotel, the Hannong, which I find on hotels.com, right in the historic district and walking distance from the train station, so walking distance to everything I want to see, even walking back late at night. I am able to book a room ideal for a single person (it’s as big as a walk-in closet but has everything I need) for a very attractive rate. The pleasant stay, hospitable staff, and location add immeasurably to the way I experience Strasbourg and make the best of my time. (Hotel Hannong, 15, Rue du 22 Novembre,67000 Strasbourg, +33 03 88 32 16 22, hotel-hannong.com).

It’s just a couple of blocks to where Le Petit France begins, and I wander the narrow cobblestone streets, over bridges over the River Ill, where every turn reveals a picturesque scene of quaint quays and colorfully timbered structures from the Middle Ages, reflected in the blue water. The River Ill, which divides into five arms, is what spurred the construction of mills and the installation of tanneries centuries ago.

So charming and tranquil today, even with the crowds of tourists in midday, Le Petit France, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, in its day would have been the stinkiest, filthiest, poorest part of town, inhabited by tanners, fishermen, and animals, but as you get closer and closer to fabulous Cathedral, the residences become nicer and fancier and is where the wealthiest merchants and officials would have lived.

I come upon Place Gutenberg with a striking monument creat-

GOING PLACES NEAR AND FAR

ed by David d’Angers (1788-1856), erected in 1840. It commemorates that the German inventor Johannes Gutenberg developed moveable type that revolutionized access to the Bible, news, information, books, and even the law to the masses, while living in Strasbourg from 1430-1440, spawning an entire printing and publishing industry based in Strasbourg. The bronze statue stands on a granite base with four fascinating bronze relief panels that commemorate that Gutenberg came upon his idea for moveable type inspired by how a wine press worked, and how his invention influenced every corner of the globe.

In this plaza, there is also an oldtimey carousel that is a delight in the day, enchanting at night.

When I get to St. Thomas Church, I come upon an outdoor Punch & Judy puppet show, which traces back to Commedia dell’arte tradition in Italy in the 1660s.

Notre-Dame Cathedral of Strasbourg

The Notre-Dame Cathedral of Strasbourg dominates the city,, in fact the entire region since it can be seen from great distances. The Cathedral Square is a vibrant hub of musicians, vendors, and is ringed with some of the most important sites in the city – reminiscent of St. Marks Square in Venice. I will visit multiple times, and in the course of my visit, experience most of the important sites around the Cathedral. The streets that radiate from it are also full of colorful activity.

Construction of the Cathedral started in 1015, but came into its own as a monumental Gothic structure in the 1260s because of Erwin von Steinbach who designed the Cathedral to be the most modern

Continued on next page

1 Friday, April 26, 2024 Discovery

Discovering Strasbourg, France’s Cultural Riches

Continued from previous page

building of its time in the whole of the Holy Roman Empire. It is still one of the most beautiful examples of Gothic architecture in the world. The hundreds of statues that decorate the Cathedral are magnificent.

Finally finished in 1439, the Cathedral, built of pink sandstone from the Vosges, features a 142-meter-tall bell tower, making it the tallest medieval building in Europe.

It is an imposing structure inside, as well, with 12th and 14th century Romanesque stained glass windows in mesmerizing geometric patterns. You can climb the 332 steps to the top of the bell tower for a spectacular view and explore an 11th century crypt below the main cathedral.

On Saturday night, I stroll out of the hotel to Cathedral Square for the 10-minute Illuminations de la Cathedrale de Strasbourg, a free laser light show which begins nightly at 10 pm and runs continuously until midnight (in July and August). I find the neon colors jarring, but I love when the white fluttering strobe light gives the Cathedral a ghostly quality.

Musee de l’Oeuvre Notre Dame

Just across the square from The Cathedral is the Musee de l’Oeuvre Notre Dame, an absolute must-see, where you walk through seven centuries of art in Strasbourg and the Upper Rhine. Its medieval and Renaissance collections show why Strasbourg is considered one of the most important artistic centers of the Germanic Empire from the 13th to 16th centuries.

During the 13th century, the construction of Strasbourg Cathedral produced some of the most exceptional sculptures of the medieval world. Many of them –such as The Church and the Synagogue statues on the south portal, and the

Strasbourg, France’s Notre-Dame Cathedral,

west façade’s Tempter and the Wise and Foolish Virgins, the Virtues Crushing the Vices, and the Prophets - were removed from the edifice in the early 20th century to protect them from bad weather and pollution, and replaced by sandstone replicas. But here you see the original sculptures that decorated the Cathedral. To see them so close, life-sized, so you can really appreciate the artistry in a way you simply can’t by gazing up at the Cathedral, is astounding.

In one grand room, I focus on the two sculptures known as “The Church and The Synagogue,” which I would not have known to look for just walking about the Cathedral.

So much is embodied in these two statues: Positioned on either side of the south transept portal, the statutes of The Church and The Synagogue “each personify a covenant binding God to his people: the New Covenant of the Christian Gospel and the Old Covenant of the Jewish Torah, respectively,” the notes say.

Now that I know where to look,

later I go out to see the figures at the Cathedral.

Besides the statuary, there are incredible paintings, triptychs and religious art – some of the most magnificent in the world - as you walk from room to room, floor to floor.

I follow an interior staircase all the way down, and come to an interior courtyard in which tombstones rescued from a Jewish cemetery are displayed respectfully. The notes say that in 1349, Jews were expelled from Strasbourg because of Black Plague.

I climb the staircase to an attic room, where the innovations in architecture and engineering are explained. You also see some of the original architectural drawings of the Cathedral – the oldest architectural drawings of their type – as well as a video.

The museum is housed within La Maison de L’Oeuvre Notre-Dame, which has been the home of the Foundation of the Oeuvre Notre-Dame (the body responsible for administering work on the Cathedral) since the Middle Ages.

On Celebrate Trails Day, April 27, Rails to Trails Conservancy Showcases the Joy and Impact of Trails

Rails to Trails Conservancy, the nation’s largest trail, walking and biking advocacy organization, is calling on people across the country to get outside on trails this spring to celebrate the many ways that trails and connected trail networks bring joy and impact to people’s lives. Central to the organization’s call to action is Celebrate Trails Day, hosted on April 27, 2024, with hundreds of events nationwide to inspire more people to make trails, walking and biking part of their everyday lives.

“Celebrate Trails Day is an opportunity to experience and share the joy and impact of trails. The nation’s 41,000+ miles of multiuse trails on the ground nationwide lay the foundation for 150+ trail networks in development— giving us all plenty of places to get

outside. These spaces bring incredible value to our everyday lives, contributing to the well-being of people, places and the planet,” said Brandi Horton, RTC’s vice president of communications. It is RTC’s ultimate goal to link the 150+ trail networks that currently exist into a Great American Trail, spanning 3,800 miles across the continent. (Explore the nation’s 41,000+ miles of multiuse trails using  TrailLink™, RTC’s free trailguide website and app.)

Around the country, Rails to Trails partners are planning group rides, nature walks, family-friendly festivals, volunteer cleanups and other community events for Celebrate Trails Day.  Explore these events and find more inspiration for your day on the trail, including ideas to help you

The building is actually two: a Gothic house with its crow-stepped gable (1347) and a Renaissance wing with a scroll gable (1582). Just walking through is an experience.

Fondation de l’Oeuvre Notre-Dame (Our Holy Lady Work Foundation) was established in 1224 (!!) to improve the administration of donations and legacies for the construction of Strasbourg Cathedral. Every since construction ended, the Foundation has been in charge of restoration and conservation of the monument, a UNESCO World Heritage site since 1988.

Plan on spending several hours wandering around this museum (I actually did it twice).

Musee de L’Oeuvre Notre-Dame/ Aarts Du Moyen Age, 3 place duChateau, Strasbourg.

From here, I walk across the square to see the Church and Synagogue portal, before walking back across Cathedral Square to the fabulous Palais Rohan.

What is so interesting (and fun) about Strasbourg is how the historic city seamlessly integrates – and respects - what is ancient and what is modern: the virtual reality in the Musee de L’Oeuvre Notre Dame, the neon laser lights that bathe The Cathedral for the nightly show, the modern art in Cathedral Square, the really modern art exhibit incorporated into the 18th century Royal Chambers of the Palais Rohan’s Decorative Arts Museum, the light rail that rings the Old City along cobblestone streets.

So much to see, experience and appreciate. My exploration continues.

More information at https://www. strasbourg.info and https://www.visitstrasbourg.fr,

Next: Time Traveling Through Strasbourg

See more photos: https://goingplacesfarandnear.com/discovering-strasbourg-frances-cultural-riches/

© 2024 Travel Features Syndicate, a division of Workstyles, Inc. All rights reserved. Visit goingplacesfarandnear. com

design your own trail adventure and our  virtual event series where we host conversations with partners about the ways trails contribute to big issues in our lives.

Let Rails to Trails Conservancy know you’re planning to participate in Celebrate Trails Day on April 27, 2024, and you’ll be automatically entered to win a prize pack, https://secure. railstotrails.org/site/SSurvey.

Find  creative ideas for getting outside , visit RTC’s  Celebrate Trails Day website ( https://www. railstotrails.org/celebrate-trails/ ), follow #CelebrateTrails on social media for updates and connect with RTC at  railstotrails.org and @railstotrails on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram

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2 Discovery Friday, April 26, 2024
as seen through the windows of Musee de l’Oeuvre Notre Dame © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

How “The Golden Girls” redefined the golden years

Who can ever forget “The Golden Girls” TV show which came out on NBC TV in September 1985. The show became an instant hit and most people I knew tuned in every Saturday night to see the latest episode. “The Golden Girls” starred Estelle Getty as Sophia, Rue McClanahan as Blanche, Betty White as Rose, and Beatrice Arthur as Dorothy as the ensemble cast. Each woman had her own personality and each woman had her own strengths and quirks as an actress.

The basic plot was the four women shared a house in Florida and went about their daily lives. Every so often a problem would arise that needed discussing so they would gather around the kitchen table to discuss it.

This often happened late at night and many times while eating cheesecake or some other dessert. One of the other girls then told a story from her own life which somehow related to the problem. Rose, however, would tell a nonsensical story that had nothing to do with the situation so the others would be confused. Rose had her St. Olaf stories. Not to be outdone, Sophia told outrageous, made-up stories. Sophia always had her Sicily stories. The women would talk about family problems, dating problems or whatever was on their minds.

The show went on for seven seasons and each of these half-hour episodes was videotaped in front of a live studio audience. The network was considering ideas for a comedy series about older women living together in a house in Florida and that was a different concept. Each of the four major characters had had success in prior roles so it was a strong ensemble.

The part of Sophia Petrillo was the first of the four roles to be cast. Estelle Getty auditioned and won the role as the feisty mother of character Dorothy Zbornak due to the great reviews she got in her off-Broadway role reprisal for the 1984 Los Angeles run of “Torch

Song Trilogy.” Casting director Judith Weiner had seen “Torch Song Trilogy” where Getty played the role of Ma Beckoff and thought she was terrific in it.

When asked about read-throughs of the script for “The Golden Girls,” writer and producer Marc Cherry later said that usually, “if the joke was a good one, the women found a way to make it work the very first time they read it. You have a lot of table reads where the actors will mess it up because they don’t understand what the characters are doing, or they misinterpret. But the women were so uniformly brilliant at nailing it the first time ... we basically knew that if the women didn’t get it right the first time, the joke needed to be replaced.”

Last year “Variety” ranked “The Golden Girls” #18 on its list of the 100 greatest TV shows of all time. I doubt some of the young millennials or Gen Zers remember the show but that’s an example of the generation gap which is another story altogether.

Some seniors who are 55+ say they are living their best years now that they’re older because the kids are raised and if they have jobs, they are inching closer and closer to retirement. I remember when my grandparents worked and took care of the family then enjoyed a quiet retirement when they were over 65. My grandmothers would rock in their wooden rocking chairs as they told me family stories and about things that happened years ago. Nowadays, however, many seniors are so active. It’s nothing for people I know to announce that they’re taking a long cruise or traveling on land through Europe.

The bottom line is you know you’re hitting the golden years when you start seeing descriptions of senior discounts at restaurants, fast food places and even for Broadway show tickets. I looked online about these particular discounts and found this rather amusing writeup:

“These Broadway ticket discounts are aimed at the ‘blue-haired’ retired crowd from Long Island and New Jersey because these retired folks and senior citizens are available to fill up the Wednesday matinee shows that would normally be light on people since locals are usually at work and tourists aren’t around as much midweek.”

My friends know I like to pepper people with questions so over the years I’ve asked many retirees and soon-tobe retirees what they plan on doing in their retirement years.

Here are some of the answers I get: My friend, Dan, was presented with a brand-new digital camera at his retirement party and he plans on taking photos of flowers, trees and the landscape and submitting them to magazines. He knows that breaking into a magazine as a freelance photographer is hard but he is determined to try.

My friend, Pam, volunteers once a week at an animal shelter and she brings gently used blankets and towels that she’s collected from her neighbors

to drop off. While at the animal shelter Pam spends time visiting dogs and cats and she has told me that they love the companionship. She can walk the dogs and hold the cats in the kennels. They like being petted and spoken to softly. Pam knows that she is just visiting and while she’d like to take home a dog or cat that she has fallen in love with, she and her husband already have a dog named Buster at home.

When speaking with my friend, Gary, he expects to retire from a job this year and his dream has been to open a restaurant. Gary has always had a knack for making delicious meals so he and another person will cook. He’s going to start small, get his bearings and assuming all goes well he will expand. Gary wants to hire local people to be full-time employees. As a small business owner Gary wants to use his business smarts to order inventory efficiently, advertise, etc. With some hard work and his culinary talent, I bet Gary will succeed.

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Foreign-Born Parents Not Mooching Off the Social Security System

Q: I am sick and tired of all these people who bring their parents over here from foreign countries and then immediately put them on their Social Security account. No wonder Social Security is going broke! I personally know two couples in my neighborhood who get Social Security. They brought their parents up from Mexico and now they are mooching monthly checks off of the Social Security system and bankrupting it. You can’t tell me this isn’t an outrage!

A: It might be an outrage if it were true. But it’s not. Either you are lying about these two couples you “personally know,” or you’ve picked up on some xenophobic neighborhood gossip and fallen for another in the long line of urban myths about Social Security.

I’ll use you as an example. Let’s say you are getting Social Security checks, you have parents living overseas and you bring them here to live with you. And let’s say you want them to get dependent parents’ benefits on your Social Security account. Do you know what you would have to do first?

Die! Yes, that right, you would have to die. Social Security benefits to dependent parents can only be paid on the account of a Social Security taxpayer who has died.

So unless one or both members of the couples in your neighborhood are dead, it simply can’t be true.

But let’s get back to you. Let’s say you conveniently died just so that your parents could get Social Security benefits on your record. It’s not quite that simple. They would have to jump through several other eligibility hoops before the government checks would start rolling in. For one, they would have to prove that you were supporting them before you died. So unless you were sending half your paycheck to your parents before you died to pay their rent and buy their groceries, they simply couldn’t qualify for benefits on your record.

And just to put things in perspective, in the whole country, there are only about 2,000 people getting monthly Social Security checks as a parent on a deceased adult child’s Social Security record. That’s 2,000 people out of about 66 million Social Security beneficiaries. So even those people legally getting parents’ benefits aren’t exactly bankrupting the system!

As long as I’m discussing Social Security benefits and noncitizens, let me clear up some other myths.

The most prevalent myth has to do with undocumented workers, or illegal aliens, as some people refer to them. That myth would have you believe that these folks somehow qualify for Social Security benefits and thus are ripping off the system and the U.S. taxpayer. That is absolutely untrue. In fact, just the opposite is the case: Social Security actuaries point

out that undocumented workers (the ones working “above the table” with illegally obtained Social Security numbers) pump many millions of dollars into the Social Security trust funds every year and never collect a dime in benefits.

Another myth has to do with Social Security benefits being sent overseas. This is a half-truth: It is true that many millions of dollars in Social Security benefits are sent to people in other countries every year. (Out of Social Security’s trillion-dollar budget, that is just a tiny trickle.)

Most of that trickle is going to U.S. citizens who have moved overseas after retirement. If you are a U.S. citizen, you can get your Social Security benefits sent to just about any country in the world. There are a few exceptions -- places such as Cuba and North Korea and most of those “stan” countries that make up the former Soviet Union (Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, etc.).

But what about Social Security benefits to noncitizens overseas? Before I get to that, let me back up a bit. Some may wonder why noncitizens get Social Security benefits in the first place. Well, if you have lived in this country legally, and if you have worked and paid taxes in this country, and assuming you meet all the eligibility requirements, you can qualify for Social Security benefits just like anyone else.

There are many thousands of U.S. citizens who collect Social Security benefits from other countries because they worked and paid into the Social Security programs in those countries. As I always like to point out to my readers, social insurance programs like our Social Security system are a universal phenomenon. Almost every country on the planet has a Social Security system in place for its citizens. And because we live in a global economy where it is not uncommon for people from one country to live and work in another country, many millions of people around the world collect Social Security benefits from other countries.

Anyway, back to non-U.S. citizens getting Social Security benefits. If you are a noncitizen living here legally and you are getting a Social Security benefit that you have worked and paid for, you will get that benefit as long as you continue living in the United States.

But if you move overseas, the rules get a little trickier and messier than they do for U.S. citizens who leave the country. So messy, in fact, that those rules fill a 30plus page pamphlet that explains them:

“Your Payments While You are Outside the United States.” In a nutshell, if you are a noncitizen getting your own retirement benefits, there is a halfway decent chance you will be able to get those benefits sent to many other countries. But if you are a noncitizen getting dependent or survivor benefits from a spouse, your chances of getting those benefits shipped overseas grows slimmer and slimmer.

If you have a Social Security question,

Tom Margenau has two books with all the answers. One is called “Social Security -Simple and Smart: 10 Easy-to-Understand Fact Sheets That Will Answer All Your Questions About Social Security.” The other is “Social Security: 100 Myths and 100

Facts.” You can find the books at Amazon. com or other book outlets. Or you can send him an email at thomas.margenau@comcast.net.

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SOCIAL SECURITY AND YOU
Answers on page 2
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
4 Discovery Friday, April 26, 2024

Solving the housing dilemma is a waiting game

The housing dilemma is still with us here on Long Island. When checking around the U.S. inventory has increased in certain areas, but for the majority of locations and states, we are still way below the normal inventory level of 6-7 months. We are currently still historically deficient in approximately 6 million homes as we need 2 million new homes per year. The greatest demand is occurring from the millennials who are at their peak homebuying age, Gen Z and Gen X are also entering their next stage and are coming on board by either starting and/or growing a family or leaving the rental market to enter into the purchasing zone to become owners.

Homeownership is still on their radar as the most safest and beneficial way to be able to create and build their future wealth. I believe they are no different than their parents were when they began their homeownership journey back in the 1940s-1970s. However, the obvious change is that we baby boomers are not moving as they did years ago. Some of us prefer to age in place. Others can attribute the stagnation to the increase in interest rates. Moreover, the other factor is that so many of us either had refinanced 2 plus years ago and prefer not to take on a higher rate that might be 2-3 times greater in cost. Lastly, some may not have enough equity to pay cash, so it’s a bit of a dichotomy.

Downsizing may be another issue as inventory is still at historic lows; some may want to rent and then there are those that while considering downsizing, will prefer to still own. Depending on your age you may need and want to discuss this with your children and have them be on the deed of anything you purchase.

If you have investments in real estate, stocks, bonds, and even businesses and other financial assets for estate purposes; you should always seek the assistance of a professional CPA, CFP, or Eldercare Attorney;

when it comes to taxes or financial planning, especially when it comes to your Will, Healthcare Proxy and Power of Attorney. Lastly, keep in mind there is a 5-year lookback from when you filed your Medicaid application, so be prudent and be aware and smart in your planning.

Five states, Kansas, Washington, Nebraska, Utah, and Missouri have averaged less than 1 month of inventory since the beginning of 2022. Housing stock in the U.S. fell from 2,194,184 units in May 2012 to 629,904 in January 2022; a net decrease of over 1,500,000.

However, as rates increased 11 times, and an increase in home construction during the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. housing inventory was finally showing signs of growing after many years of decreasing. From January 2022-October 2022, housing inventory increased from 629, 904 to 1,173,927. This was a promising situation for buyers, hoping that prices would come down.

Increases occurred in the following states: at the top was Mesa, Az. at 87.9% to San Diego, Ca up 29.1%, Florida up 45.8%, Louisiana, up 28%, Alabama, up 27%, Arkansas up 27.2%, Mississippi up 28%, Texas up22.8%, North Carolina up 17.8%. The high-interest rates and highest prices in over 50 years are the culprits for the major increases As these increases continue those holding out and waiting just might continue to see prices moderating further, allowing more to enter the market to purchase. AS long as demand stays stronger than normal, inventory will presumably take many years in getting back to a normal state.

Inventory decreased during the same time in the following states: NY -7.3%, NJ -9.1%, CT -7.6%, Mass -7%, Denver down 32%, Illinois, -9.8%, NJ

-9.1%, Idaho -9.1%, and Rhode Island -7.8%

However, in contrast, 8 states have averaged more than 2 months supply, including expensive states like New York, New Jersey, and Hawaii. Within the Metro areas, the locations with the lowest levels of housing included the hot markets of Denver, Colorado, Seattle, Washington and San Jose, California. These statistics were derived from in-depth research from: https://WWW. InspectionSupportNetwork.com

However, housing inventory has been increasing since 2023, due to the higher interest rates and lower-than-normal sales as many sit on the sidelines waiting for lower rates, decreased prices, as well as greater choices.

Decisions to move out west and some states down south may be your solution to lowering your costs, especially if you are considering cashing out in Long Island and NYC. Whatever you decide do your homework and due diligence before making your move.

I want to wish everyone a Healthy and Happy Passover Holiday.

Philip A. Raices is the owner/Broker of Turn Key Real Estate at 3 Grace Ave Suite 180 in Great Neck. He has 42+ of years experience in the Real Estate industry and has earned designations as a Graduate of the Realtor Institute (G.R.I.) and also as a Certified International Property Specialist (C.I.P.S.) and has earned his National Association of Realtors “Green Industry designation for eco-friendly low carbon footprint construction with 3-D printed foundations, Solar panels, Geo-thermal HVAC/Heat Pumps).

He will gladly provide you with a copy of “Unlocking the Secrets of Real Estate’s New Market Reality, and his Seller’s and Buyer’s Guides for “Things

to Consider when Selling, investing or Purchasing your Home, HOA, Condo or Coop.

He will also deliver to you “free” regular updates of what is currently available, under contract (pending), sold (closed) and those homes that have been withdrawn/released or expired (W/R) and all new listings of homes, HOA, Townhomes, Condos, and Coops in your town or go to https://WWW. Li-RealEstate.Com and you can “do it yourself (DYI) and search on your own. For a “FREE with no obligations” or “strings attached” a 15-minute consultation, as well as a “FREE printout digital value analysis of what your home might sell for in today’s market again, without any “obligations” or “strings” attached whatsoever! call Philip A. Raices @ our Global ”find me/follow me” Mobile: 1-(888) 355-1385 or email him: Phil@TurnKeyRealEstate. Com

Browse and search for your “Next Place to Call Home” our updated and newly revised site: https://WWW. Li-RealEstate.Com

Want his monthly Real Estate/ Business newsletter and bi-monthly “American LifeStyle” magazine delivered to you absolutely “FREE” W/O any Obligations or “Strings attached?” Email or text your full name, email and mobile to be included on his list of 129,000+ satisfied subscribers locally, domestically and internationally.

Check out My New Digital Business Card. My question to you is, are you still using your old 1900’s passé paper business card? Do you still have a rotary dial phone? Of course not! So, get on board in 2024 with cutting-edge revolutionary and transformational technology that will assist you in propelling your business and profits to the next level. Save my information by clicking on the link below, click “Add to Contacts, then click create, then “DONE, then “DONE” again. https://WWW.onetapconnect. com/turnkeyrealestate-philraices

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It Starts With Knowing How to Manage a Paycheck

Millennials, born between 1981 and ‘96, represent the largest, most educated and culturally diverse generation in American history. This demographic cohort holds significant sway over the future trajectory of the U.S. economy through their financial choices, which are being made within a progressively intricate financial environment. That’s the academic definition. Here’s mine: Millennials are financially jinxed, suffering from recession fatigue, attitudes of entitlement and a lack of financial education, but time is on their side.

Dear Cheapskate: My son graduated from college three years ago. He has a job, but he is struggling financially with student loans and credit card debt -- and still living at home. I know with smarter choices he could pull himself out of this. He has asked his father and me for help. We want to be good parents and provide for him. At the same time, we also think that since he’s an adult, he must start caring for himself. Is there any compromise? -- Debbie, Illinois

Dear Debbie: I have two grown sons, so I can relate. Since your son has asked for help, this might also be the perfect time to teach. Don’t just give him a handout. Help him set up a budget. Like so many people, it’s possible he has never learned how to manage a paycheck! That is the most basic first lesson in practical per-

sonal finances. Because he has come to you asking for help, he may also be open to receiving your guidance. He needs to be accountable but not in a child/parent way.

Think of this as more of a client/counselor relationship. In the same way he would have to create and submit a business plan to get a business loan, have him create a personal finance plan for how he intends to use the money you lend to him, how he intends to manage his income each month, and how he plans to pay you back.

It’s time for your son to get real about his money, and this could be the perfect opportunity you need to teach him valuable lessons.

Not sure how or where to start? Pick up a copy of my book “7 Money Rules for Life: How to Take Control of Your Financial Future.” It’ll teach him everything he needs to know to manage his income now and for the rest of his life.

Dear Cheapskate: I’m looking for a new job. My current employer offers great benefits and even pays for my health insurance. Since I know this probably won’t be the case at a new company, I’m worried any new out-of-pocket payments I’ll have may offset a salary increase. How do I include these sorts of things when coming up with salary requirements? -Dan, California

Dear Dan: Most employees would be shocked to see what their benefit pack-

ages are worth in dollars and cents. If you have a good employee compensation package that includes health, vision and dental insurance, paid vacation and sick leave, consider that to be worth at least 30% of your gross income.

Before you leave your current position, do your homework. You know what your paid vacation and sick leave are worth. Get three quotes for health insurance that are similar to the coverage you have now. Come up with an annual dollar figure that reflects your current benefit package.

Seeing in black and white what your current benefits are worth will be a valuable exercise whether you make the change or not.

Dear Cheapskate: Recently I received an inheritance from a distant relative. I’d like to use it to pay off my car loan. I have about eight payments to go, and the thought of not having that monthly bill is really appealing. But then my dad said I wouldn’t save anything and that there are better ways to spend the money. Is he right? -- Sandy, Arizona

Dear Sandy: It all depends on how your car loan is structured. If it is a simple interest loan (typical), each month you pay interest on the outstanding balance. You will avoid eight months of interest if you pay it off early. Even if you have a loan where you agreed to pay a set amount of interest (not likely), you won’t save any money, but there’s still a big emotional

NUTRITION NEWS

Healthy Eating Tips

payoff for early payment. There’s just nothing like a $0 balance!

Here’s an idea: Use the windfall to pay off the balance. Then commit to keep making those eight car payments, but make them to yourself. In eight months, you will have restored the windfall, saved some interest and have a paid-for car, too.

Mary invites you to visit her at EverydayCheapskate.com, where this column is archived complete with links and resources for all recommended products and services. Mary invites questions and comments at https://www.everydaycheapskate.com/contact/, “Ask Mary.” This column will answer questions of general interest, but letters cannot be answered individually. Mary Hunt is the founder of EverydayCheapskate.com, a frugal living blog, and the author of the book “DebtProof Living.”

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I’ve given several presentations lately on “food as medicine” -- meaning, eating for health. We all know the statistics. More than 74% of adults in the U.S. are obese or overweight. Another 1.6% are underweight. Both can negatively affect your health.

People who are underweight have a higher risk of malnutrition, decreased immune function and anemia. Those who are overweight have an increased risk for high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes and sleep disorders.

This spring -- as you tackle spring cleaning -- do a spring assessment on what you’re eating. Are you cooking at

home? Do you include a vegetable and fruit at each meal? Are you eating from all the food groups -- whole grains, fruits, vegetables, lean meat and low-fat dairy -- to get all the nutrients you need? It’s a great season to make a commitment to healthier eating to feel better, look better and be healthier.

Here are some tips to help you get started.

No. 1: Eat whole foods. Rather than fixing something from a box, plan your meals with lean protein, fruits, vegetables and whole grains. That’s where the nutrients are. And those nutrients, vitamins and minerals will provide energy throughout the day and help you maintain a healthy weight. Choose less of the processed foods like deli or sausage meat, cookies, crackers and box mixes (which can be high in sodium).

No. 2: Start slow. Take your favorite lasagna recipe and swap half the pasta for zucchini ribbons, or add finely chopped carrots to your spaghetti sauce. Mix half mashed cauliflower with mashed potatoes. Try a whole-grain version of your favorite pasta. Try replacing potato chips

at lunch with crunchy baby carrot sticks.

No. 3: One of the best changes you can make for healthier eating is to cut back on your salt and sugar. The Dietary Guidelines recommend no more than 2,300 milligrams of sodium per day, about the amount in 1 teaspoon of salt. But it’s the salt shaker that adds up the sodium for most people. It’s also in hidden sources like chips, pickles, bacon, sausage, deli meats and condiments such as soy sauce. As for added sugars, the recommendation is less than 10% of total calories.

No. 4: Add healthy fats. Saturated fats such as butter can increase cholesterol. Instead, choose monounsaturated fats such as olive, peanut or canola oil. Saute your chicken or fish in olive oil instead of butter. Omega-3 fats, found in avocados, nuts, salmon, tuna, sardines, flax seed and chia, are heart-healthy.

No. 5: Switch to whole grains. Choose brown rice over white, or try quinoa. Add barley to a soup. Start your day with oatmeal.

These are all great starts to a healthier you, and the end result will be a healthy weight for you.

Q and A

Q: Can changing your diet really slow brain aging?

A: Research shows it can -- by as much as 7 1/2 years. The foods that make a difference include broccoli, fatty fish, avocados, beans, eggs, dark chocolate, walnuts, berries and coffee. In fact, more fruits and vegetables of all types are helpful. The Cleveland Clinic recommends adding apples, tomatoes and onions to your diet, along with barley, brown rice, chia, flaxseed, tea and turmeric. Think whole foods, foods rich in fiber, antioxidants and omega-3s. Choose less added sugars, saturated fat and foods with refined flour. If you’re still not sure, stick with a healthy eating pattern based on the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s MyPlate.

Charlyn Fargo is a registered dietitian with SIU School of Medicine in Springfield, Illinois, and the current president of the Illinois Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. For comments or questions, contact her at charfarg@aol.com or follow her on Twitter @NutritionRD. .

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6 Discovery Friday,April 26, 2024
EVERYDAY CHEAPSKATE

Week of April 28 - May 4, 2024

Stand outdoors on a clear, dark night, and before long, you’re almost sure to see a star zip across the sky.

You may know it as a “shooting” star or “falling” star; some may even say they saw a comet. But these phenomena are none of the above. Astronomers know they are meteors.

So what’s the difference? I’m glad you asked, because I was going to tell you anyway!

While they may look like falling stars, they are about as different from stars as one can get. Stars, you may recall, are massive globes of hot gases not unlike sun trillions of miles away.

Meteors, however, are specks of dust -- most are smaller than a grain of sand -- pulled in from our solar system by the Earth’s gravitation. When one of these hits our upper atmosphere at tens of miles per second, it ignites and causes the nearby atmospheric gases to glow. It’s this fiery demise that we see as a meteor.

Comets, on the other hand, are huge chunks of dirty ice that whirl around the sun over periods of years, decades or centuries. They don’t go whipping across our sky, but they do lose dusty material as they round the sun, and some of this material can fall to Earth

The Falling Stars of May

in the form of meteors many years after the comet’s visit.

Some of us “ol’-timers” may remember seeing the most famous of all comets -- Halley’s Comet -- back in 1986. It wasn’t particularly bright during that visit, but it will be when it returns in 2061.

Now if you don’t want to wait 37 years to see Halley on its next pass, you can see fragments it left behind on previous orbits during the Eta Aquarid meteor shower in early May.

Stargazers have watched the Eta Aquarids since about 74 B.C., but the shower wasn’t officially “discovered” until Lt. Col. George Lyon Tupman recorded it in 1870.

To view the shower, head away from city lights to where the sky is dark and clear. Under ideal conditions, stargazers may see a meteor every minute or two. It’s best to view it during the hours just before dawn. At that time the waning crescent moon will lie very low in the eastern sky, so its light won’t diminish this year’s show.

While you’ll see meteors all around the sky, those from this shower will appear to radiate from the constellation Aquarius. To determine if a meteor is part of the meteoric swarm left behind by Halley’s Comet, trace its path backward. If its path intersects the middle of Aquarius low in the east-southeastern

sky before dawn, the meteor almost certainly originated from Halley’s Comet. If its path appears not to intersect Aquarius, the meteor is called a “sporadic” meteor; in other words, it’s just a random speck of dust that we coincidentally scooped up around the same time.

As with all meteor showers, you will need nothing except your eyes, a lawn

chair or sleeping bag, and some warm clothing. You may wish to have binoculars handy, however, to check out any persistent smoke trails left behind by some of the brightest meteors.

Visit Dennis Mammana at dennismammana.com.

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Stargazers’ expected view during the upcoming Eta Aquarid meteor shower in May

Speak Softly and Carry a Big Laugh

My husband listened quietly to his work associates on a Zoom call, and then suddenly, he burst out laughing.

“HAHAHAHA!!”” he bellowed across our living room. I looked over at the windows to make sure they hadn’t been shattered by the sonic boom of his laughter.

“What’s so funny?” I asked him when he got off the call.

“Oh, nothing,” he said. I gave him the side eye. My husband and I had been working from home together intermittently since the pandemic, and yes, we were still married ... barely. There was definitely a strain on our relationship, and it wasn’t all the togetherness that was to blame. It was the laughter. Well, his laughter ... when he’s on a Zoom call.

When he’s alone with me, he has a normal laugh. But when he’s on a Zoom

call, his laugh suddenly gets thunderously loud, like he’s trying to make sure the people on the call who live a thousand miles away can hear him guffaw, even if they have their sound turned off. Imagine if a jackhammer and a foghorn had a child. That would be his Zoom laugh.

The problem isn’t merely that it’s loud. It’s also really sudden. It can be emitted so abruptly that it not only scares me, it scares the dog. When I hear it, I jump out of my chair. When the dog hears it, he tucks his tail between his legs and runs into another room, convinced an elephant stampede is about to come through our living room. It’s somewhat disconcerting to know that if in fact an elephant stampede was to come through our living room, the dog would not stay to protect me. Apparently when it comes to loud laughter or elephant stampedes, it’s every man, woman and dog for

themselves.

My husband used to be a loud phone laugher, but that would happen infrequently since he wasn’t much of a phone guy. But now that he was spending nearly eight hours a day on video calls, the issue had escalated. There was an average of a dozen loud laughs a day, and I thought it was just a matter of time before the neighbors reported us for violating the local noise ordinance and we would have a noise control officer show up at our door and cite us for breaking the sound barrier. When he arrived, he might also wonder if the cause of the noise was an elephant stampede going through our living room, and then he would cite us for not having a variance to house large, wild, African animals as well.

Wanting to save myself and the dog, and also not wanting to worry about going to jail, although it would probably be quieter there, I thought it was time to

take some action.

“Honey,” I said, sitting him down. “I need to talk to you about your laugh.”

“What about my laugh?” he said.

“When you are on a Zoom call, you laugh really, really loudly, and it scares the dog.”

“It scares the dog?”

“Yes. Do you think you can tone it down a bit?”

“You want me to laugh softer?” he said, scowling.

“Yes. Just on the Zoom calls,” I said. He thought for a minute.

“OK,” he said finally. “I can do that. But now let’s talk about your snoring.”

Tracy Beckerman is the author of the Amazon Bestseller, “Barking at the Moon: A Story of Life, Love, and Kibble,” available on Amazon and Barnes and Noble online! You can visit her at www. tracybeckerman.com.

7 Friday, April 26, 2024 Discovery
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OFFICE SPACE

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PLEASE CALL 516-248-4080 SERVICES

INJURED IN AN ACCIDENT?

Don’t Accept the insurance company’s first offer. Many injured parties are entitled to major cash settlements. Get a free evaluation to see what your case is really worth. 100% Free Evaluation. Call Now: 1-888-454-4717. Be ready with your zip code to connect with the closest provider

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STEPHANIE A.

D’ANGELO, ESQ.

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901 Stewart Ave, Ste 230 Garden City, NY 11530 516-222-1122

www.dangelolawassociates. com

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

ALARM SYSTEMS

FIRST CALL SECURITY Serving Garden City & Surrounding areas for over 20 years. Free Switchovers

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Flat TVs mounted, Phone, TVs & Computer wiring installed & serviced, camera & stereos, HDTV Antennas FREE TV

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FAMILY CARE CONNECTIONS, LLC

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SERVICES

PAINTING & PAPERHANGING

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Plastering, Taping, Sheetrock Skim Cutting, Old Wood Refinish, Staining, Wallpaper Removal & Hanging, Paint Removal, Power Washing, Wood Replacement

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Do you have grandchildren?

Enter our “World’s Most Beautiful Grandchildren” contest! Just send in your grandchildren’s photos and a brief description of the child (or children)along with your name and address to editor@gcnews.com

Sweeten the day with peaches

Peach Cobbler

Although many desserts make for a sweet ending to delicious meals, there’s something so inviting about a moist and tender cobbler to add that yum factor. Cobbler consists of a fruit filling covered in a biscuit batter of sorts. When baked,

Servings: 9

5 peaches, peeled, cored and sliced (about 4 cups)

3⁄4 cup granulated sugar

1⁄4 teaspoon salt

For the batter:

6 tablespoons butter

1 cup all-purpose flour

1 cup granulated sugar

2 teaspoons baking powder

1⁄4 teaspoon salt

3⁄4 cup milk

Ground cinnamon

1) Add the sliced peaches, sugar and salt to a saucepan and stir to combine. If using canned peaches, skip steps 1 and 2 and follow the directions starting at step 3.

2) Cook on medium heat for just a few minutes, until the sugar is dissolved and helps

the ingredients blend together to form a spoonable treat that is tender but with the right amount of bite.

Enjoy this recipe for “Peach Cobbler” courtesy of Taste Better From Scratch and contributor Lauren Allen.

to bring out juices from the peaches. Remove from heat and set aside.

3) Preheat oven to 350° F. Slice butter into pieces and add to a 9-by-13-inch baking dish. Place the pan in the oven while it preheats, to allow the butter to melt. Once melted, remove the pan from the oven.

4) In a large bowl, mix together the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt. Stir in the milk, just until combined. Pour the mixture into the pan, over the melted butter and smooth it into an even layer.

5) Spoon the peaches and juice (or canned peaches, if using) over the batter. Sprinkle cinnamon generously over the top.

6) Bake at 350° F for about 38 to 40 minutes. Serve warm, with a scoop of ice cream, if desired.

11 Friday, April 26, 2024 Classifieds
CLASSIFIEDS Call 294.8900 12 Friday, April 26, 2024 Classifieds Put your engagement, wedding, or baby announcement in the paper. It's free of charge for subscribers! Email editor@gcnews.com
SERVICE DIRECTORY Call 294.8900 ADVERTISE YOUR SERVICE HERE Call 294.8900 For Rates and Information FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED MASONRY • PAVING • CONCRETE FREE ESTIMATES LOU: 516 850-4886 LIC: #H2219010000 FULLY INSURED Contracting LLC DRIVEWAYS & PARKING LOTS RETAINING WALLS FOUNDATIONS DRYWELL WATER DRAINAGE WATER PROOFING SIDEWALKS PATIOS / PAVERS BRICK / BLOCK BLUE STONE STEPS / STOOPS BELGIUM BLOCK CULTURED STONE MASONRY ANTIQUES $$ Top Cash Paid $$ HIGH END ANTIQUES HIGH CASH PAiD Damaged Quality Pieces also wanted Oil Paintings,Mid-Century Accessories 1950s/60s, Porcelain,Costume Jewelry,Sterling Silver,Gold, Furniture,Objects of Art,etc. • 1 Pc.or entire estates • CALL JOSEPHOR R UTH 718-598-3045 or 516-270-2128 AntiqueAssets.com Buying and Selling over 40 Years / Member New England Appraisers Association Family Business for over 40 years Premium prices paid for Tiffany, Meissen Porcelain,Bronzes, Marble,etc. CARPENTRY Sweeney Custom Carpentry and PAINTING 516-884-4016 Lic# H0454870000 Crown Molding Window Molding Base Molding Picture Frame Molding New Doors Old Plaster Removed New Drywall Installed Rotted Wood Replaced SECURITY SPECIALISTS (516) 747-9111 ALARM SYSTEMS • Free Switchovers • We Service All Brands • Installations, Expert Service • Control Your Alarm With Your Smartphone • No Phone Line, No Problem! firstcallsecurity.com Serving Garden City & The SurroundingAreas For Over 25 Years JUNK CAR BUYERS WE BUY JUNK CARS & TRUCKS FREE SAME DAYREMOVAL • 7-DAY/ 24 HOUR • FREE PICK-UP CALLOR TEXT NOW (516) 497-8898 TOP$$ PAID FOR YOUR CAR OR TRUCK WWW.JUNKCARBUCKS.COM NO KEYS! NO TITLE! NO PROBLEM! CUSTOM FRAMING JACK’S CUSTOM FRAMING We can frame anything! 516-775-9495 Over 30 Years in Business Quality Care & Workmanship Thousands of frames to choose from 92 Covert Ave., Stewart Manor HOURS: Tuesday - Saturday 10-5 @jacks_custom_framing jackmccullough@me.com PAINTING/POWER WASHING Interior and Exterior • Plaster/Spackle Light Carpentry • Decorative Moldings Power Washing www.MpaintingCo.com PAINTING & WALLPAPER est. 1978 516-385-3132 New Hyde Park 516-328-7499 Licensed & Insured WINDOW TREATMENTS *CUSTOM WINDOW TREATMENTS TOP BRANDS AT DISCOUNT PRICES* WE BRING THE SHOWROOM TO YOU FREE CONSULTATION 516-426-2890 WWW.MADEINTHESHADENSLI.COM FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED Advertising on this page is only open to N.Y.S. Licensed Professionals. Call 294-8900 and let us begin listing you in our Professional Guide and Professional Services pages. Deadline is Monday, 12 Noon 13 Friday April 26, 2024
SERVICE DIRECTORY Call 294.8900 PAINTING/POWER WASHING • INTERIOR / EXTERIOR • B. Moore Paints • Power Washing • Dustless Sanding Vacuum System • Taping • Spackling • Plaster Removed • New Drywall Sweeney Custom Painting and CARPENTRY 516-884-4016 Lic# H0454870000 JUNK REMOVAL www.1866WEJUNKIT.com 516-541-1557 ALL PHASES OF RUBBISH REMOVAL & DEMOLITION • Residential • Commercial Construction Sites Kitchens • Bathrooms Clean-Ups • Attics Basements • Flood/Fire Bob Cat Service DEMOLITION AND JUNK REMOVAL DEMOLITION AND JUNK REMOVAL SERVICES We Rip-Out or Remove Anything & Everything! We Clean It Up & Take It Away! Residential & Commercial 516-538-1125 FREE ESTIMATES STRONG ARM CONTRACTING INC. For More Information and rates Call 516.294.8900 Email: nancy@gcnews.com Include name, daytime phone number, address and email. HELP YOUR BUSINESS GROW... Each week Litmor Publications publishes the ads of service providers in our Classifieds, Professional Guide and Service Directory. A 6 week agreement brings your specialty or service to the attention of the community in a public service format. Let us begin listing you in our Next Issue. Deadline for Professional Guide or Service Directory is Monday, 12 Noon. • Deadline for Classified is Tuesday, 1pm Advertising in the Professional Guide is only open to N.Y.S. Licensed Professionals. LAWN SPRINKLERS • System Turn-Ons • Backflow Device Tests • Free Estimates • Installation • Service/Repairs Joe Barbato (516) 775-1199 14 Friday, April 26, 2024
HOME IMPROVEMENT ALL RENOVATIONS, EXPERT LEAK REPAIRS 516-428-5777 Liability, Disability & W/C Ins FREE ESTIMATES Licensed & Insured / Lic.# H18C6020000 SMALL JOBS WELCOME Having Hardships? We’ll Help and Bring Hope CJM CONTRACTING INC. CHRIS MULLIN Specializing in General Contracting Including Churches & Cathedrals • Fire flood and mold remediation • Dormers & Extensions • Bathrooms • Roofing • Attics • Brickwork • Stoops • Waterproofing • Painting • Windows • Power Washing • Plumbing • Electric 20% OFF HANDICAPPED HOUSE MODIFICATIONS, WALK IN TUBS, WALK-IN SHOWERS, RAMPS, ELEVATORS, HANDICAP BARS. WE INSTALL HANDICAP BATHROOMS ANYWHERE IN YOUR HOUSE 20%OFF SERVICE DIRECTORY Call 294.8900 HOME IMPROVEMENT EXPERT BATHROOM REPAIRS OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS... Each week, Litmor Publications publishes the ads of providers in our Classifieds, Professional Guide and Service Directory. A 6-week agreement brings your specialty or service to the attention of the community in a public service format. LET US BEGIN LISTING YOU IN OUR NEXT ISSUE. For More Information and Rates, Call Nancy 516.294.8900 Email: Nancy@gcnews.com Include name, daytime phone number, address and email. Deadline for Professional Guide or Service Directory is Monday, 12 Noon. Deadline for Classified is Tuesday, 1pm Advertising in the Professional Guide is only open to N.Y.S. Licensed Professionals. #1 PAINTER IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD FREE ESTIMATES CALL: 718-709-7000 FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED SINCE 1985  Highly Professional & Trained Painters  Locally Owned & Operated  Fully Licensed & Insured For Your Peace Of Mind  We Use Only The Highest Industry Standard Preparation & Materials ✔ Exterior Painting ✔ Interior Painting ✔ Wallpaper Removal & Installation ✔ Hardwood Floor Refinishing ✔ Powerwashing ✔ Carpentry 10% OFF ANY INTERIOR OR EXTERIOR PAINTING JOB WHY CHOOSE US? www.silvaspainting.com 15 Friday April 26, 2024

Columbiettes Spring Raf f le Auction

The Joseph Barry Columbiettes will be sponsoring a Spring Raffle on Sunday, May 19, at the Joseph Barry Knights of Columbus hall (45 Heitz Place, Hicksville).  Doors open at

12:30 p.m. and the raffles for gift baskets will begin at 1 o’clock.  Tickets are $12 per person and include coffee, tea and snacks.

Proceeds from this and other

Columbiettes fundraisers go toward assisting charities including our local parishes, veterans’ organizations, food pantries and other worthy causes in the community.

See what's happening at your library!

From classes to lectures and concerts to movie screenings, there's never a dull day at your local library!

Check this paper each week for fun and informative all-ages activities, all for free or cheap!

For additional information, please call Susan at 516-680-8487 or email suesarandis@gmail.com

16 Friday, April 26, 2024 PROFESSIONAL GUIDE Call 294.8900 D’Angelo Law Associates, PC Stephanie A. D’Angelo, Esq. Your Trusts & Estates Attorney • Wills & Trusts • Estate Administration • Estate Planning • Asset Protection • Elder Law • Probate • Real Estate 901 Stewart Ave., Ste 230 • Garden City, NY 11530 www.DangeloLawAssociates.com Nassau (516) 222-1122 Queens (718) 776-7475 ATTORNEY John E. Lavelle Law Firm P.C. Accidents: • Car Accidents • Construction Site Accidents • Trip/Slip and Falls • Train/Subway Accidents • Medical Negligence Claims • Workplace Injuries Appellate Practice: • Civil Appeals - Motion and Post-Trial John Lavelle, Williston Park Resident, Parishioner, St. Aidan’s Graduate (‘93) and Proud SAS Parent 630 Willis Avenue Williston Park, NY 11596 516-325-1175 John.Lavelle@LavelleInjuryFirm.com www.JohnLavelleLaw.com Proudly serving clients in New York & Pennsylvania ATTORNEY Family Care Connections, LLC • Nurse Geriatric Care Manager • Assistance with Aging at Home • Assisted Living & Nursing Home Placement • Elder Care Consulting & Counseling • Medicaid Application & Consulting Services • Real Estate & Housing Options for Aging Nassau (516) 248- 9323 (718) 470- 6300 Queens Dr. Ann Marie D’AngeIo, DNP, CNS Dr. Frank G. D’Angelo, JD, PhD 901 Stewart Ave., Ste. 230 • Garden City, NY 11530 www.FamilyCareConnections.com HEALTH CARE MANAGEMENT Call 516-294-8900 and let us begin listing you in our Professional Guide. Deadline is Monday, 12 Noon. Professional Services Guide Advertising on this
is Only Open to N.Y.S. Licensed Professionals.
and let us begin listing you in our
Guide and Professional Services
is
Noon BOOST YOUR BUSINESS!
Page
Call 294-8935
Professional
pages. Deadline
Monday, 12

Northside students name what makes them special

Students at Northside Elementary School established a “Grow Your Awareness” wall to mark Autism Awareness Month.

It’s Autism Awareness Month throughout Levittown Public Schools, when the entire community celebrates its inclusivity and diversity. At Northside Elementary School, that message of acceptance is clear to see thanks to a special project created by students.

With their physical education teachers, students in kindergarten through fifth grade participated in discussions

Public Schools

surrounding autism and other neurodivergent conditions. Following the conversation, each student filled a puzzle piece or butterfly with the attributes that make them unique and special. Throughout the halls, classroom doors have also been decorated under the same theme. Additionally, every Tuesday, the Northside community dresses in blue to mark Autism Awareness Month.

Wisdom Lane Girls Basketball undefeated

The Wisdom Lane Middle School seventh grade girls basketball team enjoyed an undefeated season.

The seventh grade girls basketball team at Wisdom Lane Middle School in the Levittown Public School District made school history by playing an undefeated season.

The team put forth fierce competition and tough teamwork to win their 11 games against rival schools. Their strong team spirit was clear to see on the court as the team’s 12 players showed close coordination and camara-

derie. Players Payton Maletta, Sophia Lovece and Hailey Vecchio expressed their pride in their successful season, while adding that it was not always an easy task. In their final game, they were down in the fourth quarter before making a last-minute comeback.

“We made sure to keep each other in check,” Maletta said. “Consistency is key.”

Lifeguard jobs available at town pools, beaches

The Town of Oyster Bay has announced that it has lifeguard employment opportunities at Town Pools and Beaches throughout the Town. Opportunities for this summer once again include a competitive starting salary of up to $18 per hour for all lifeguards, as well as openings for 15-year olds at community pools.

“From having the opportunity to

work at one of the Town’s fantastic summer facilities and building confidence, self-esteem, and leadership skills, to making new friends and helping others, working as a lifeguard is one of the best summer jobs around,” Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino said. “Our lifeguards provide an invaluable service in protecting our residents and have helped

save countless lives in both pool and ocean waters. We encourage you to take the first step in making this summer your best one yet by applying to be a Town of Oyster Bay lifeguard today.”

The Town is accepting lifeguard applications from candidates who possess Nassau Lifeguard Certification and a current CPR/ AED for the Professional Rescuer. Additionally, the Town is offering Red Cross Lifeguard Training and Nassau County Certification courses for residents who are not certified, but would like to be. Upon successful completion of these two courses, residents will be eligible for employment as a lifeguard with the Town of Oyster Bay and the Town will then pay all fees for both courses. There are also many future opportunities for advancement, including as Water Safety Instructors,

Swim Team Coaches, Swim Lesson Teachers, Head Lifeguards, Lifeguard Instructors and Lifeguard Managerial positions.

“The Town of Oyster Bay is making it easier than ever to become a lifeguard. We’re offering all the certification and training courses you need to apply, covering the fees of these courses for successful candidates, welcoming 15-year olds to our lifeguard ranks at Town community pools, and offering competitive pay in recognition of the life-saving work they do,” added Supervisor Saladino. Town lifeguards are hired for the summer season, which runs from Memorial Day through Labor Day. Positions are available at all Town pools and beaches. For all inquiries about lifeguard employment and classes, please call 516-797-4131 or email aquatics@oysterbay-ny.gov.

17 Friday, April 26, 2024
Photo courtesy Levittown Photo courtesy Levittown Public Schools
294-8900 • www.gcnews.com • Litmor Publishing's Community Newspapers

Breast cancer screenings offered at POB Library

Nassau County Legislature Deputy Minority Leader Arnold W. Drucker (DPlainview) with staff from NuHealth.

Nassau County Legislature Deputy Minority Leader Arnold W. Drucker (D - Plainview) partnered with NuHealth and the Breast Imaging Center at Nassau University Medical Center to bring the breast cancer screening van to the Plainview-Old Bethpage Public Library on Thursday, April 18. During the event, women who pre-registered through Deputy Minority Leader Drucker’s office received free mammograms, breast exams, and self-examination instructions from a medical professional.

“Early detection is so critical in the fight against breast cancer, and I am committed to bringing these potentially life-saving screening resources directly to our community whenever we can,”

Deputy Minority Leader Drucker said.

“This event could not have happened without the help of Plainview-Old Bethpage Library Director Maryann Ferro and Cultural Program Specialist Andrea Vaglio, and all the outstanding staff from Nassau University Medical Center. I thank them all for their service to the residents of District 16!”

Community blood drive held at POB Library

Nassau County Legislature Deputy Minority Leader Arnold W. Drucker (D –Plainview) with a donoar at the blood drive held on April 13 at Plainview OldBethpage Public Library

Nassau County Legislature Deputy Minority Leader Arnold W. Drucker (D – Plainview) hosted a blood drive he hosted at the Plainview-Old Bethpage Public Library in partnership with the New York Blood Center on Saturday, April 13.

“Every donation goes a long way toward ensuring that we have ample

blood supplies on hand to address any medical emergency that may occur in our lives,” Deputy Minority Leader Drucker said. “I thank the New York Blood Center, the Plainview-Old Bethpage Library team and everyone who rolled up their sleeves for helping us make a difference in our community.”

Free musical performances planned for local libraries

The Town of Oyster Bay ’ s Distinguished Artists Concert Series will continue this spring with free performances at local libraries throughout the Town.

“The Distinguished Artists Concert Series provides free musical and dance programs for the enjoyment of our resi-

dents,” said Town Councilwoman Vicki Walsh. “I encourage residents to take advantage of these wonderful performances offered by the Town for free at local libraries.”

Scheduled performances for April and May include:

• Gene Casey & The Lone

Sharks on Sunday, May 5, 2024 at 2:30 p.m. at the Farmingdale Public Library – Performing rockabilly, twang & Johnny Cash-style country music.

• Bay Big Band on Sunday, May 19, 2024 at 2:00 p.m. at the Hicksville Public Library – an 18-piece big band playing greatest hits.

The Distinguished Artists Concert Series is sponsored by the Cultural and Performing Arts (CAPA) Division of the Town of Oyster Bay’s Department of Community & Youth Services. For the full concert schedule and further information, please call (516) 797-7925 or visit www.oysterbaytown.com/CAPA.

18 Friday, April 26, 2024
LET OUR NEWSPAPER MAKE YOU MONEY! Advertise your business or service in the main pages of our papers, in our classifieds section, our Professional Guide, or our Service Directory, and increase your exposure while watching your clientele grow! Call our offices at 516-294-8900, or visit us at gcnews.com, to learn more!

Levittown BOE honors scholars and athletes

The Levittown Board of Education honored Division Avenue High School salutatorian Ceyda Nazli (fifth from left) and valedictorian Syeda Nowroz at its April 16 meeting.

Success in academics and athletics was recognized at the Levittown Board of Education meeting on April 16.

Division Avenue High School Principal John Coscia recognized this year’s top graduates, valedictorian Syeda Nowroz and salutatorian Ceyda Nazli. He spoke about their academics accomplishments, as well as their extensive involvement in extracurricular activities and community service. Mr. Coscia, Superintendent Todd Winch

and Board of Education members presented each student with a plaque to honor this significant achievement.  Varsity athletes from Division Avenue and MacArthur High Schools were also recognized for their various accomplishments during the winter season. Students from basketball, cheerleading, swimming, wrestling and winter tracks teams were called up for their various accolades, including All-County selections, Player of the Year awards,

Standout athletes from the winter sports season from both Division Avenue and MacArthur high schools were honored.

county championships and state qualifying performances. Several coaches and assistant coaches were also recognized.

The Division Avenue varsity cheerleading squad was celebrated for their county and state championships. Described by their coaches as a “dream team,” they won the 2024 New York State Cheerleading Championship held in Binghamton. They team represented Section VIII in Class B and competed

against nine other teams from across New York.

Imran Pasha, president of the Levittown Muslim Community, thanked the Board of Education and central administration for their gesture of inclusivity and respect by making Eid-al-Fitr a school holiday.

Imran Pasha, president of the Levittown Muslim Community, presented gifts to the board and administration for recognized Eid-al-Fitr as a school holiday.

Love to write?

We’re looking for writers in our community to compose ar ticles on local topics, opinions, reviews, worthy places to visit on Long Island, and even pieces of fiction. We aim to feature at least one new article and writer each week in our Discovery magazine section.

Email submissions: editor@gcnews.com

• Attach article and any photos (1MB), along with your name and contact info.

• Articles must be between 1,500 - 3,000 words. • Each writer will be reimbursed a stipend of $25.⁰⁰

19 Friday, April 26, 2024
The district celebrated Division Avenue’s state championship cheerleading squad. Photos courtesy of the Levittown School District
20 Friday, April 26, 2024 S:8.83"
T:9.83"
S:10.3"
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