LIONEL OPERATORS' OPEN HOUSE Town moratorium on battery storage systems
On March 10, New York State Senator Steve Rhoads visited the Nassau Lionel Operating Engineers spring open house in Levittown to thank the talented members of the Nassau Lionel Operating Engineers for their dedication and hard work in maintaining and operating their model trains. He emphasized the importance of preserving and promoting the rich history of railroads in New York State, and applauded the organization for their efforts in doing so.
Free Family Fun Spring Festival
The Town of Oyster Bay will be holding its Spring Festival on Saturday, April 20, from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. at Syosset-Woodbury Community Park, located on Jericho Turnpike in Woodbury.
The Town of Oyster Bay hasapproved a six-month moratorium on the establishment of Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) in the Town of Oyster Bay.
“While these battery storage systems have been identified as playing a critical role in achieving climate goals by New York State, they are not without their potential safety risks as various concerns have been recently exposed,” said Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino. “Four fires at BESS facilities in New York State have highlighted these dangers and have raised concerns over public safety and the safety of first responders.”
Battery Energy Storage Systems have been populating New
York State in recent years. BESS facilities utilize rechargeable batteries that can store energy from different sources and discharge it when needed. They consist of one or more batteries that can be used to balance the entire grid, provide backup power, and/or improve grid stability.
The recent public concern regarding the volatile nature of lithium ion batteries and the potential threat to the health and safety of communities surrounding these facilities have led the Town Board to consider a pause on approving them. With reports of fires at BESS locations over the past two years, there are also concerns related to the impact
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The Spring Festival will once again feature free activities such as inflatables, games, refreshments, a petting zoo, multiple photo opportunities and so much more! Additionally, food truck vendors will be on-site with specialties available for purchase.
“This free family-fun Spring Festival brings together local
families for games, bounce houses and a petting zoo. There’s no better way to enjoy a beautiful day at our park while celebrating the arrival of spring with a full afternoon of family-friendly activities and attractions,” said Town Super-
See page 10
Arrest for burglaries
Nassau County Police arrested a Bronx man for allegedly committing multiple burglaries that occurred at various Home Depot locations between January 1 and April 11, 2024, in Nassau County.
According to detectives, a loss prevention officer observed a man in Home Depot located at
86 Jericho Turnpike, who was responsible for multiple burglaries and larcenies at various Home Depot locations. The subject allegedly stole merchandise exceeding $12,000 dollars. The employee located Francis Rivera, 36, and placed him into custody.
To the Editor:
During the March Board of Education meeting, Mr. Perlman brought up what he deemed a very serious issue regarding an alleged surreptitious video recording of a private conversation involving himself and a student by a person he identified as a central office administrator.
I would like to provide clarification and comment on this matter before reviewing the results of our investigation:
Firstly, it’s important to note that this matter is clearly a personnel issue and should have been more appropriately discussed in executive session not in an open public session of the board of education. While I ordinarily would not report my findings on an executive session matter, I am compelled to do so because this was inappropriately raised in public.
Additionally, the individual identified by Mr. Perlman as a central office administrator is actually an employee working under a civil service title, which I believe Mr. Perlman was fully aware of due to previous allegations of inappropriate behavior made against Mr. Perlman by this employee.
Considering Mr. Perlman emphasized the seriousness of this alleged violation, it is puzzling why he waited five weeks to report this publicly at a board of education meeting and did not immediately report the event through the appropriate administrative channels, all of which he is well aware.
Moreover, Mr. Perlman’s public accusation directed at this employee could potentially be interpreted as retaliation, especially in light of the outcome of the Perlman investigation earlier in the school year.
Now, regarding the details of the incident after reviewing videos and con-
ducting interviews I have determined:
Mr. Perlman was in a public hallway outside of the Ratner Seaman cafeteria after the Board of Education meeting had concluded. Two Jericho staff members overheard Mr. Perlman making disparaging remarks about the employee and informed her of this. Additionally, there was a high school student and an election campaigner present in conversation with Mr. Perlman. The campaigner who identified himself as recently working on the Santos campaign with the high school student.
The employee promptly went to the public area where Mr. Perlman was speaking negatively about her. With her phone clearly visible, she approached the group consisting of Mr. Perlman, the student, and the campaigner, with Mr. Perlman verbally acknowledging that he was being recorded. It is important to note that the student was not verbally recorded during this interaction nor was he involved in the conversation.
The employee stated during the interview that the reason for her recording was not because she was instructed to do so by a higher up administrator, as alleged, but because of previous incidents, she was trying to protect herself.
Based on our investigation findings, we have determined that there was no inappropriate or illegal use of a recording device as alleged by Mr. Perlman.
Any further discussion of this matter should take place in executive session.
Hank Grishman, Superintendent of Schools, Jericho Public SchoolsDon’t
attack messenger
To the Editor:
Three weeks ago, my letter to the editor ran on this page under a headline ending with a question mark, appearing to challenge the accuracy of my account.
However, at the April 11 Jericho School Board meeting, Superintendent Henry Grishman confirmed my facts regarding the surreptitious recording by a
District administrator of a private, school-related conversation between a high school student and me. While this employee’s unscrupulous behavior was surprising, the Superintendent’s aberrated statement confirming that administrator’s actions was not. After over a decade of attending school board meetings and serving as a Trustee for almost three years, I am overly familiar with the Superintendent’s preference to
deflect, to provide excuses rather than apologies, and to attack the messenger rather than address the message.
The continued success of the Jericho School District remains my primary focus. I will not be distracted or discouraged by these novel impediments or the incessant, but baseless, attacks on my character.
Sam Perlman, Jericho School Board TrusteeBHS musician receives recognition for excellence
BY GARY SIMEONEIt was a proud moment for Bethpage High School senior Michael Schneider last month, as he received a certificate of recognition from New York State Senator Steve Rhoads. Schneider received the recognition for a musical performance at the 51st annual Joseph R Sugar NYSSMA Day in upstate Albany New York.
Schneider said that he was selected for the New York AllState Instrumental Jazz Ensemble along with other talented high school musicians from throughout the state.
“We were selected as some of the best jazz musicians in New York State,” said Schneider. “It was an honor to meet Senator Steve Rhoads and other government officials, and to receive this recognition for our musical talents.”
Schneider has been playing the guitar for over eight years and was introduced to music at a very young age by his father.
“My dad got me interested in music when I was a little kid. I started out initially playing the violin but turned to the guitar after he bought me a Fender acoustic
for my tenth birthday. I have been hooked ever since.”
In his past two years of high school, he’s been writing compositions in his spare time and playing songs on the guitar.
“Music pretty much consumes my life. I’ve been writing compositions in multiple genres, from jazz music to string quartets and involved with many bands in the last few years.”
One of his main bands is his heavy metal band ‘Exosphere,’ where he plays guitar and lead singer. The band has played in over thirty gigs on Long Island and has one of their tracks on Spotify digital music services.
Schneider has earned awards in the past for his musical talents, including at Nassau/Suffolk Performing Arts and as best jazz soloist at ‘Music In the Parks’ in Hershey, Pennsylvania.
He also has stage-credit to his name, recently appearing in Bethpage High School’s musical production of “Catch Me if You Can.”
He plans to attend Berklee College of Music in the fall, where he will major in film & media scoring.
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9:00 a.m. - noon
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POB HS hosts students from Taiwan
Plainview-Old Bethpage JFK High School had the privilege of welcoming four distinguished students from Kaohsiung Senior High School, Taiwan, on April 8–9, as part of a cultural exchange program. Organized by the dedicated Chinese Honor Society adviser, Ellen Huang, this initiative exemplified the power of international friendship and learning.
During their two-day visit, the Taiwanese students immersed themselves in the American educational system, attending classes and engaging in various activities guided by enthusiastic members of the Chinese Honor Society. From participating in a music lesson with orchestra teacher Dustin Bartley, to experiencing daily life in an American school, the students gained invaluable insights into the warmth and
inclusivity of Plainview-Old Bethpage.
Beyond the classroom, the cultural exchange continued with vibrant activities. Teresa Clausi, Italian Honor Society adviser, introduced the art of Tarantella dance, while the Spanish Honor Society led a lively salsa dancing lesson. The Taiwanese guests broadened their cultural horizons experiencing Mexican cuisine for the first time, attending a tennis match, and forging meaningful friendships with American peers.
POBJFK High School takes pride in facilitating such impactful exchanges, fostering mutual understanding, and creating lasting memories for students and guests alike. These experiences are instrumental in bridging cultures and nurturing global citizenship.
Town hiring assistants for summer youth program
The Town of Oyster Bay has openings available for tennis assistants in the Youth Tennis Program, held this summer at local Town parks. Those interested must be 16 years of age or older to apply.
www.oldwestbury.edu
“This fun summer job is ideal for a tennis-loving community teen 16 or older looking to build their resume,” said Town Councilman Lou Imbroto. “Town tennis assistants have a lot of fun while receiving hands-on experience and making a difference in the lives of others.”
Tennis assistants must be 16 or older and have at least 1–2 years of experience participating on a tennis team. Tennis assistants must be available for the duration of the program, which runs Mondays through Thursdays, July 1 through August 15, between the hours of 3:45 p.m. and 8 p.m.
For more information, prospective applicants should contact Town of Oyster Bay Recreation Division, at (516) 797-7945.
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Music education program receives national recognition
Hicksville Public Schools has been honored for the 9th consecutive year with the Best Communities for Music Education Award from the National Association of Music Merchants Foundation. Hicksville music educators, administrators, students and parents have demonstrated outstanding achievement and commitment to providing access to music education and to instilling an appreciation of music as part of the district’s philosophy of offering a well-rounded education for national recognition.
“We are incredibly proud to be named as one of the Best Communities for Music Education once again,” said District Supervisor of Fine Arts Chad Wyman. “This recognition from NAMM is a testament of our community’s commitment to music education and our dedicated music educators who have continued to inspire our talented students to continue learning and sharing music within our district.”
To qualify for the designation, Hicksville Public Schools answered questions about funding, graduation requirements, music class partici -
pation, instruction time, facilities, support for the music program and community music-making programs.
The NAMM Foundation is a nonprofit organization supported in part by the National Association of Music Merchants. It advances active participation in music making across the lifespan by supporting scientific research, philanthropic giving, and public service programs.
Abbey Lane students deliver morning treats
ABA students created a wall of art showing students’ true colors for Autism Awareness Month.
Students in the ABA program at Abbey Lane Elementary School in the Levittown Public School District make regular visits to their peers in classrooms throughout the building to make special deliveries to elated customers.
ABA students take orders from each classroom and make their way through the halls with carts filled with morning goodies, including bagels, coffee, muffins, fruits and yogurt. With their eclectic array of food and drinks, all breakfast needs of students and staff are met.
Operation of the cart creates many opportunities for ABA students to interact with their peers and gain valuable experience in a practical role. All proceeds from the cart are used to benefit the ABA program. In April, Abbey Lane celebrates Autism Awareness Month, promoting the acceptance and inclusivity the community fosters every day. ABA students helped create a wall of art showing students’ true colors with words of positivity, such as support, respect and empower.
Levittown Chamber of Commerce Spotlight
BY DON PATANEThe Levittown Chamber of Commerce would like to introduce, Mum Beirne, owner of MVB Bookkeeping located in Levittown. Mum is a Levittown resident.
MVB Bookkeeping has been in business since 2019. Beirne says she has always loved working with numbers so it was a no brainer to study accounting in college. One day, her former employer whom she had worked with for 15 year. asked if she would like to do freelancing for them. That’s how it all got started; one client at a time.
Beirne has always worked in the real estate sector in her career with her last position with a real estate developer in Muttontown as a finance manager. Although she has various clients from different industries, her expertise is in real estate when it comes to bookkeeping. Whether it’s development/construction, short/long term rentals, fix and flip or multi-family, Beirne enjoys the real estate sector and has a passion for numbers. Beirne saw too many contractors, subcontractors and real estate investors having problems keeping up with their business financials. This is where she began to help them out organizing their books, maintaining records such as job cost, work in progress, soft/ hard costs, etc.
Beirne says she provides better bookkeeping by simplifying business financials so clients can focus on revenue. MVB Bookkeeping provides the following services to meet a client’s budget: full charge bookkeeping services, monthly
Lee Road students were ready for eclipse
service, bank reconciliation, credit card reconciliation, accounts receivables, accounts payables, process payroll, invoicing/billing, clean ups, catch ups, budgeting, collections, cost allocation, financial reports, and accounting software such as QuickBooks Integration.
When Beirne isn’t working with numbers, she teaches yoga, enjoys gardening, investing in real estate, reading business books and cooking/eating vegan foods.
Beirne’s motto is “Driving Your Business Forward, One Financial Record at a Time”.
Beirne at MVB Bookkeeping can be contacted for a free consultation at: EmaiL: vabegroup@gmail.com
Cell: (516) 776-6447
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Students at Lee Road Elementary School received eclipse glasses ahead of the awe-inspiring event. Photo courtesy Levittown Public Schools
Students throughout Lee Road Elementary School in the Levittown Public School District were excitedly preparing for a historic event that won’t be seen for another 20 years.
Prior to the eclipse on April 8, all students were given the tools needed to safely view the awe-inspiring event. In their classrooms, students learned about why and how eclipsis occur
and what makes them so rare. They reviewed important safety tips, such as avoiding direct sight of the sun when not wearing special glasses designed for safe viewing. With their glasses equipped, students observed the eclipse at its peak as they were dismissed from school. The sight was an unforgettable experience for all.
Irish History Forum to meet at library
The Irish Family History Forum will hold a special presentation on The Wrecks of the Bristol and the Mexico on Saturday, April 20, at the Bethpage Public Library.
In early January 1837, one of the worst shipwrecks in New York history occurred. Off Nassau Beach on Long Island’s south shore, the ship Mexico became stranded in freezing weather. A total of 116 people, mostly Irish immigrants and crew members, succumbed to the icy cold. Six weeks earlier, the ship Bristol had been wrecked off Far Rockaway. Nearly 100 Irish and English immigrants drowned.
On Saturday, April 20, Arthur
Mattson, Lynbrook village historian and author of Water and Ice will give a presentation on the wreck during a meeting of the Irish Family History Forum at the Bethpage Public Library.
The schedule for the day will be:
10:00 a.m.: Meet and Greet (light refreshments)
10:15 a.m.: Ask the Experts (Oneon-One)
10:45 a.m.: Speaker (Zoom Available for Members)
Check www.ifhf.org for meeting updates and changes.
The Bethpage Public Library is located at 47 Powell Ave, Bethpage.
Our Professional Guide is sure to bring results. Call 294-8900 for rates and information.
said school School, qualified or holiday authorize the as completing School; districtupgrades; stating the from the specific offices, District 6:00 A.M. and the levy of residence of P.M. The on matters or more vote in school 2018-c. may also received by the personally to the hours. the District DistrictClerk@jerichoschools.org, or fax original military ballot foregoing will be voter’s Jericho,
LEGAL NOTICES
NASSAU COUNTY
NOTICE OF FORMATION OF A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY
Notice of Formation of ORGANIC POWER. Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of NY (SSNY) on 03/12/2024. Office location: Nassau County. SSNYdesignated as agent of Limited Liability Company (LLC) upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY should mail process to ABDUL REHMAN: 280 MILL ROAD, VALLEY STREAM, NY, 11581. Purpose: Any lawful purpose.
NASSAU COUNTY
NOTICE OF FORMATION OF A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY
Notice of Formation of JASMINE MANAGEMENT LLC.
Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of NY (SSNY) on 10/23/2023. Office location: Nassau County. SSNY designated as agent of Limited Liability Company (LLC) upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY should mail process to the LLC: 2 CONVENT COURT, SYOSSET, NY 11791. Purpose: Any lawful purpose.
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Battery storage systems moratorium
From page 1
to the environment, as well as the stress put on roadways and local infrastructure. Following the recent fires, New York State is also currently considering pending updates to New York State Fire Code following a preliminary investigation performed on BESS facilities.
These concerns, coupled with the Town’s desire for additional information and assurance about the safety of these type of facilities, as well as allowed New York State time to finalize its report, have all led to the determination that a moratorium be put in place while these issues are further considered.
“While a recent report from
New York State indicates initial findings that show BESS facilities have limited longterm impacts to health, safety and the environment, it’s prudent for additional investigations and reviews be conducted before considering any applications for such a facility in the Town of Oyster Bay,” added Supervisor Saladino.
Free Family Fun Spring Festival
From page 1
visor Joseph Saladino. The Town of Oyster Bay extends a special thanks to the following event sponsors: Extreme Auto Body, Action Auto Wreckers, The Gucciardo Law Firm, Complete Basement Systems of Long Island, Steel Equities, Gold Coast Studios, School of Rock of Syosset and
Oyster Bay, Starkie Brothers Garden Showplace, Busto’s Martial Arts of Plainview, Northwell Health-GoHealth Urgent Care of Plainview, Soccer Stars, Orchard Estate of Woodbury, Champions Martial Arts of Syosset, The Camp Connection, No Limit Ninja of Farmingdale, Webster Bank, Hicks Nurseries, New York
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Life Insurance Company, Moe's Southwest Grill, Royal Events Princess Parties, and News 12 Long Island.
For more information on the Town of Oyster Bay Free Family Fun Spring Festival, please call the Department of Community and Youth Services at (516) 797-7925 or visit www.oysterbaytown.com/capa
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LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
NASSAU COUNTY
NOTICE OF MEETING
FOR BUDGET VOTE, CAPITAL RESERVE PROPOSITIONS AND ELECTION FOR THE JERICHO UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT AND THE JERICHO PUBLIC LIBRARY MAY 21, 2024 OF JERICHO UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT NASSAU COUNTY, NEW YORK
NOTICE is hereby given to the qualified voters of Jericho Union Free School District, Nassau County, New York, that the annual budget and election vote meeting of said school district will be held in the Gymnasium of Jericho High School, Cedar Swamp Road, Jericho, New York, on Tuesday, May 21, 2024 between 6:00 A.M. and 9:00 P.M.
NOTICE is hereby given that the public hearing on the proposed budget of the school district will be held on Tuesday, May 14, 2024 in the Little Theatre of Jericho High School, Cedar Swamp Road, Jericho, New York, at 7:00 P.M.
NOTICE is given that a copy of the statements of the amount of money required for the ensuing year for school purposes and library purposes may be obtained by any qualified voter in the District at each schoolhouse and at the Office of the District Clerk, between the hours of 10:00 A.M. and 2:00 P.M. on each day other than Saturday, Sunday or holiday during the fourteen days immediately preceding such Budget Election Voting.
Voting will be held for the following purposes:
1. To elect two (2) members of the Board of Education for a three (3) year term commencing July 1, 2024 and expiring June 30, 2027.
2. To vote upon the appropriation of funds to meet the estimated expenditures of the District for school purposes for the school year beginning July 1, 2024 and authorize the levy of necessary taxes therefore; said matter to be presented on the voting machines as Proposition No. 1.
3. To vote upon the expenditure from the Capital Reserve Fund known as ”Facilities Improvement Program V – Jericho Public Schools”. Said matter to be presented as Proposition No. 2 as follows:
SHALL the Board of Education be authorized to expend a sum not to exceed $4,448,603 from the capital reserve fund established on May 17, 2022 for the purpose of completing capital improvements as follows: district-wide bathroom upgrades; district-wide plumbing and pump upgrades; auditorium reconstruction at Jackson Elementary School; districtwide ceiling and lighting upgrades; district-wide building energy management systems upgrades; district-wide asphalt and paving upgrades; district-wide security upgrades; district-wide exterior door upgrades; all of the above to include all labor, materials, equipment, apparatus, and incidental costs associated therewith.
Candidates for the office of Member of the Board of Education may be nominated only by petition directed to the District Clerk signed by thirty-five (35) qualified voters, stating the name and residence of each candidate, who must have been a resident of the District for at least one year prior to election. Sample form of petition may be obtained from the District Clerk. Pursuant to a proposition heretofore adopted by the voters of this District, vacancies upon the Board of Education shall not be considered separate, specific offices, and nominating petitions shall not describe any specific vacancy upon the Board of Education for which the candidate is nominated. Each petition shall be filed with the District Clerk on or before April 22, 2024 between 9:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M.
NOTICE is given that the Annual Election of the Jericho Public Library will be held in the Gymnasium of the Jericho High School on Tuesday, May 21, 2024 between 6:00 A.M. and 9:00 P.M. for the following purposes:
1. To elect one (1) member of the Board of Trustees for a full term of five (5) years commencing July 1, 2024 and expiring June 30, 2029.
2. To vote upon the appropriation of funds to meet the estimated expenditures of the Public Library purposes for the school year beginning July 1, 2024 and authorize the levy of necessary taxes therefore, said matter to be presented on the voting machines as Proposition No. 3.
Candidates for the office of Library Trustee may be nominated only by petitions directed to the District Clerk, signed by at least thirty-five (35) qualified voters, stating residence of each signed and the name and residence of each candidate. Each petition shall be filed with the District Clerk on or before April 22, 2024 between 9:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M. The name of the last incumbent shall not be set forth on the petition for the Library Trustee.
PLEASE TAKE FURTHER NOTICE that only persons who are qualified voters as of May 21, 2024 shall be permitted to vote at the election to be held on May 21, 2024 on matters affecting the School District and the Jericho Public Library, as herein above set forth.
A qualified voter is defined as follows: A citizen of the United States, who is eighteen (18) years of age or over, and has been a resident of the District for thirty (30) days or more next preceding the meeting on which he/she offers to vote. Persons disqualified from voting under provisions of Section 5-106 of the Election Law are not eligible to vote in school district elections.
The School District may require all persons offering to vote at the budget vote and election to provide one form of proof of residency pursuant to Education Law Section 2018-c. Such form may include a driver’s license, a non-driver identification card, a utility bill or a voter registration card. Upon offer of proof of residency, the School District may also require all persons offering to vote to provide their signature, printed name and address.
EARLY MAIL AND ABSENTEE BALLOTS-Application for an early mail or absentee ballot may be made at the Office of the District Clerk. Such application must be received by the District Clerk at least seven days before the day of the vote, if the ballot is mailed to the voter, or by the day before the day of the vote, if the ballot is delivered personally to the voter. A list of all persons to whom early mail and absentee ballots shall have been issued will be available in the Office of the District Clerk during regular business hours.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that early mail and absentee ballots must be received by the District Clerk by no later than 5:00 PM on May 21, 2024.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN, that military voters who are qualified voters of the Jericho Union Free School District, may request an application for a military ballot from the District Clerk in person, by mail to District Clerk, Jericho Union Free School District, 99 Cedar Swamp Road, Jericho, New York, 11753, by email to DistrictClerk@jerichoschools.org, or fax sent to (516) 203-3602. In such request, the military voter may indicate their preference for receiving the application by mail, fax or email. A military voter must return the original military ballot application by mail or in person to the office of the District Clerk at the address above. In order for a military voter to be issued a military ballot, a valid military ballot application must be received in the office of the District Clerk no later than 5:00 p.m., on April 25, 2024. Military ballot applications received in accordance with the foregoing will be processed in the same manner as a non-military ballot application under Section 2018-a of the Education Law. The application for military ballot may include the military voter’s preference for receipt of the military ballot by mail, fax, or email.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN, a military voter’s original military ballot must be returned by mail or in person to the Office of the District Clerk at 99 Cedar Swamp Road, Jericho, New York, 11753. Military ballots shall be canvassed if they are received by the District Clerk before 5:00 PM on May 21, 2024
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION
Jill Citron, President
Divya Balachandar, Vice President
Jennifer Vartanov
Samuel Perlman
Christopher Foresto
Friday, April 19,
Upcoming Events at the Jericho Public Library This Week at the Syosset Public Library
Tuesday, April 16, April 23, April 30
11:00 a.m.: VIRTUAL: Guided Meditation for Self-Healing with Patricia - Join Pat for one or all of the meditation sessions to bring harmony and balance into your life. Learn the beautiful practice of Jin Shin Jyutsu to help your body heal and keep you relaxed.
Thursday, April 18
2 p.m.: HYBRID/VIRTUAL: Yoga with Joe (10 Sessions) - You will learn yoga poses that include standing, sitting, twists, leg stretches, chair poses, and breathing exercises. Mindfulness and living in the moment are woven into the practice. Have a sticky mat, chair, yoga blanket, block and belt. You will learn yoga poses that include standing, sitting, twists, leg stretches, chair poses, and breathing exercises. Mindfulness and living in the moment are woven into the practice. Have a sticky mat, chair, yoga blanket, block and belt. April 18, April 25, May 2, May 9, May 16, May 23, May 30, June 6, June 13, June 30.
VIRTUAL ONLY SESSIONS: April 25, May 2, 9, June 13 , 20. Cost: $60 Friday, April 19
10:30 a.m.: Jump for Joy (18 months to 5 years) - Join us for a lively program of music and group activities for you and your child.
2 p.m.: VIRTUAL : Great Performers with Marc Courtade: Michael Caine: British Film IconSir Michael Caine appeared in over 160 films during an eight decade career. He rose to stardom in 1966 as an immor-
al chauffeur in “Alfie.” He received two Oscars for Best Supporting Actor for “Hannah and Her Sisters” and “The Cider House Rules.” He retired from acting in 2023 thinking he would never receive another offer of a leading role. This talk will pay tribute to one of the most versatile screen actors, renowned for both his leading and character parts.
Saturday, April 20
2 p.m.: “Wonka” (Teen) - Come have a seat in our renovated theater to see the movie Wonka starring Timothée Chalamet. Bring a friend or two! Rated PG, 2 hrs
Monday, April 22
2 p.m.: VIRTUAL : Hidden, Forgotten and Off-the-Radar in New York City with Sylvia Laudien-Meo - New York is not only a metropolis with major sights and collections, it is also a city with a complex layer of history and an incredible wealth of arts and culture. Exploring the city for decades with the eyes and passion of an art historian and tour guide, I learned about so many curious, magnificent, hidden, remixed, dispersed, forgotten, or no longer mentioned fantastic art. Some of the older buildings have the most curious sculptural detail and hidden messages. There are incredible treasures accessible but not very well known. Some past temporary Public Art Projects still survive and some artworks might not register to you as art, even as you’re walking by them. Take this personal, virtual tour with me throughout NYC.
Breast cancer screenings at POB Library
Nassau County Legislature Deputy
Minority Leader Arnold W. Drucker (D - Plainview) is partnering 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 from 8 a.m. –10:30 a.m. on Thursday, April 18. Mammograms will be made available to asymptomatic women over the age of 40 who do not have implants and are not breastfeeding or pregnant. Appointments include a breast exam from a nurse, a mammography, and self-examination instructions.
Appointments are required, and
women who do not have insurance may be eligible for free mammograms through the Cancer Services Program. Women with health insurance may be required to make a copayment. Patients who have gone more than a year since their last mammogram will be required to get a prescription from their doctor (if they have insurance) and provide any past films (if available). Photo ID and an insurance card (if available) are required.
For more information and to make an appointment, contact Deputy Minority Leader Drucker’s office at 516-571-6216 or adrucker@nassaucountyny.gov.
Friday, April 19, at 2:00 p.m.
Learning to Look 101Part 1 (IN-PERSON)
Presenter: Professor John Cino, art appreciation and art history professor and sculptor
In the lecture, Professor Cino explains how to interpret representational art using symbolism and formal analysis works from classical, modern and non-western sources. No registration needed.
Thursday, April 25, at 2:00 p.m.
From Stage to Screen: The Broadway Musical Goes to Hollywood (VIRTUAL)
Presenter: Brian Rose, professor emeritus, Fordham University
For nearly a century, Hollywood has been captivated by the allure of the Broadway musical. From the beginning of talkies up through today, most of the Great White Way’s biggest hits have made the transfer to the movie theater. This talk will look at the colorful history
of the Broadway-to-movie musical, and trace its development from truncated adaptations in which most of the songs were abandoned, to glorious interpretations like Milos Forman’s “Hair” or Steven Spielberg’s remake of “West Side Story” in 2021. No registration needed. For Zoom link, go to syossetlibrary.org.
Thursday, April 25, at 7:30 p.m.
Virtual True Crime Club with Robert P. Ottone: Ashley Freeman and Lauria Bible
Join horror author Robert P. Ottone to learn about a brow-raising true crime case and share your truecrime theories with fellow aficionados! Registration required. Register at syossetlibrary.org.
Friday, April 26, at 2:00 p.m.
Friday Movie at the Library (IN-PERSON)
Join us for an afternoon movie at the library. Check our website for the movie that will be shown. Go to syossetlibrary.org.
“Shed the Meds” Drug Takeback Day
The Town of Oyster Bay has announced a partnership with Drug Free Long Island and the Nassau County Police Department (NCPD) to host a “Shed the Meds” Drug Take Back Day at Massapequa Park Village Hall on Saturday, April 20, from 10:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
“This Drug Take Back Day is a great opportunity to rid your medicine cabinet of old and unwanted prescription drugs,” said Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino. “Through proper disposal of old medications, we can prevent them from contaminating the environment through improper disposal and also keep them out of the wrong hands and away from young people.”
In cooperation with Drug Free Long Island and the Nassau County Police Department, the Town and Village will host this event at Massapequa Park Village Hall, in the back parking lot.
This program is anonymous. For those who cannot attend this Drug Take Back Day, disposal containers are located at all Police Precincts throughout the county for safe deposit.
For those looking to turn in unused or expired medication, be sure to make sure of the following:
• If left in original container, please remove all personal information from label.
• Liquid medication will not be accepted
• Illicit substances are also not part of this initiative.
• Intra-venous solutions, injectables, and syringes will be accepted.
For more information about the “Shed the Meds” Drug Take Back Day, please call Drug Free Long Island at (516) 639-2386 or email info@drugfreeli. org
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
April 19, 2024
European Waterways’ Alsace-Lorraine Canal Cruise: A Boat Guillotine, Two Tunnels and a Chagall
BY KAREN RUBIN TRAVEL FEATURES SYNDICATE GOINGPLACESFARANDNEAR.COMDay 6 Lutzelbourg to Niderviller
On Day 6 our European Waterways luxury hotel barge, Panache, cruises from Lutzelbourg to Niderviller where the cruise ends, during which we experience some of the most dramatic cruising – thrilling even considering how calm and restful the slow cruising on the canal is - of the trip.
I set out on the bike along the towpath but come to a fork and am confused which way to go, so return to the Panache. It’s a good thing I did return to the boat because the bike path would have taken me away from the boat.
Indeed, the canal takes a turn and we get our first view of an astonishing sight: the Arzviller boat elevator that will carry Panache 45 meters up a mountainside in mere minutes.
Captain Brian excites us with the image of a “boat guillotine”. But before we have the experience (we have to wait our turn), we tie up and walk a short distance to Cristal Lehrer (Cristallerie Lehrer) glass-blowing factory where we get to see demonstrations of the craftsmanship involved.
In 1920, there would have been 1500 glass workers in this area. One of the workers was Charles Lehrer. Decades later, his son, Bruno Lehrer, founded this glassworks.
We get to observe from an amphitheater as glassblowers heat the molten glass to 1700 degrees Celsius; use different oxides to create the
drama isn’t over.
Coming out of the boat elevator, we cruise a bit further until we come to an enormous tunnel, just exactly the width of the boat, cut through the Vosges mountains.
It is unbelievably exciting to go through – I don’t even go down for lunch, which is served by candlelight – until we get through the tunnel, some 30 minutes later.
But that is not all, because we will soon come to a second tunnel that takes 20 minutes to get through.
different colors and shape them into a range of items.
In the cutting and etching room, a craftsman named Bruno shows us how he cuts shapes into a glass, etches images like a swan or a bird, changing the wheel for a different cut and then engraves my name in the glass, which he gives me as a gift. He tells me he has worked in this factory with his father from when he was 14 years old; now 86, the master craftsman is here every day demonstrating his skill. (It occurs to me later whether this is Bruno Lehrer, himself?)
Arzviller Boat elevator
An engineering feat when it was installed in 1969, and still the only one of its kind in Europe, before the Arzviller boat elevator was constructed in 1969, it took boats an
entire day to navigate the 17 locks over four kilometers to ascend the 146 feet in altitude. Before the Arzviller boat elevator, only one barge a day could pass through, but today, as many as 39 can make the trip each day.
Now back on the Panache, it is our turn to go through the “boat guillotine” – really the black door that comes down to seal the carriage, like a bathtub, into which our boat floats, to be carried, like an elevator, up the hill. Two counterweights, weighing 450 tons each, powered by two winches, lift or lower barges safely up and down the hill at a 22-degree angle. It takes four minutes for us to be lifted to the top, where the door rises and we continue our journey on the Canal de la Marne au Rhin.
What an experience, but the
In between the tunnels, I go down for lunch which is also an event –fennel and anchovies salad; orange duck with couscous, and selection of cheese. White wine from Alsace, Gewurztramine 2020, a vegan, “vin biologique” wine “Evidence” (named to reflect “the respect we have for biodiversity in our vineyards as “evidenced” by the return of game birds to our land, which has inspired this label”).
And yet, there are still more astonishments to unfold on this day, our last full day of the cruise.
We are driven to Sarrebourg, a classic, historic French town.
A Monumental Chagall
The astonishing highlight in Sarrebourg comes at the Chapelle des Cordeliers. Built in 1265 by Franciscans, the church was used for barracks during the French Revolution; in 1870, during the German Annexation, the church was used for worship for German soldiers. From 1927, the History and Archeology Society converted the chapel to a museum. But by 1970, the building, near ruin, was demolished,
Continued on next page
European Waterways’ Alsace-Lorraine Canal Cruise: A Boat Guillotine, Two Tunnels and a Chagall
Continued from previous page
leaving only the choir of the chapel and an open space where a wall should have stood.
The Mayor of Sarrebourg at the time, Pierre Messmer, a former Prime Minister of France, entreated his friend, the world-famous artist Marc Chagall to create stained glass windows that would close the empty space. Chagall agreed to do it as a gift to the town. It took Chagall six months, from December 1973-Febuary 1974, to produce a series of six sketches for what became his largest stained glass window, 12 meters high by 7 ½ meters wide. Chagall died in 1985 at the age of 98 after creating one more stained glass work, but never saw “The Peace” installed. (https://www. sarrebourg.fr/parcours-chagall/chapelle-des-cordeliers/)
“For me a stained glass window is a transparent partition between my heart and the heart of the world. Stained glass has to be serious and passionate. It is something elevating and exhilarating. It has to live through the perception of light,” Chagall wrote.
La Paix (“The Peace”) puts Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden at the center, surrounded by a multitude of Biblical and religious symbols and sub-
jects, as well as secular images that give a nod to the Alsace-Lorraine, our guide, Philippe Zugmeyer, explains, showing us Chagall’s sketches which we can compare to the finished work. “The face of Eve is very bright, white, brightest image. They are smiling, showing love. Look closely and you will see the face of girl from Lorraine – identified by the regional headdress she wears.”
He points us to the Prophet Isaiah in green, an important symbol for Chagall, of reconciliation of all creatures. There are the lamb, cow, bear, snake, lion. There is King David with a harp. Jacob’s ladder. Jesus on a donkey heralded by people smiling and cheering. Jesus giving his Sermon on the Mount. Jesus on the cross. There is a baby to symbolize maternity (not nativity, he notes). Moses with two beams of light emitting from his head.
I never expected to see anything like this on this day.
From here we walk a short distance to the affiliated Musée du pays de Sarrebourg (Museum of Sarrebourg and its surroundings). Created in 1905, it was originally only an archaeological museum. Today, it is a modern building that includes a space dedicated to Marc Chagall, tapestries and an exhibition
of earthenware and porcelain from the Niderviller manufacture. The museum also exhibits local collections of porcelain and ancient Roman artifacts.
Gala Captain’s Dinner
This is our last evening onboard The Panache, and while each meal has been the ultimate in fine dining, tonight’s Captain’s Dinner when Captain Brian heads the table, has the feeling of a gala with formal table setting – white tablecloth, red cloth napkins, candlelight.
The meal features peas and wasabi tartlet; Jerusalem artichoke; lobster tail piquillos; chocolate with truffle, cheeses. The wine is Chablis Grand Cru Les Blanchots (2018) from Albert Bichot, founded in 1831and still family-owned, and a Pino Noir Grand Cru from Burgundy (2014)
In the course of our six-day cruise, I calculate we sampled 36 cheeses –about half of all the controlled French cheeses - and 40 wines.
We see gorgeous scenery, to be sure, but the barge experience is about doing, being present, the camaraderie. And so there are sentimental farewells when we depart – the seven days we have spent together feeling like a long time and as no time at all.
The next morning, we are driven
back to Strasbourg – 45 minutes to cover the distance we have traveled in six days cruising (and biking). I have enough time to continue to explore Strasbourg before I take the TGV train to Paris.
The 12-passenger luxury hotel barge Panache cruises the Alsace & Lorraine in summer and autumn; Holland in the Spring, when the flowers are in full bloom, and Champagne in May & June (Champagne itineraries typically include Brie cheese tastings, a tour of the Cathedral at Reims, Epernay and of course, tastings at renowned champagne houses).
One of the largest providers of all-inclusive luxury hotel barging in Europe, European Waterways, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary, is launching its newest, ultra deluxe vessel, the eight-passenger Kir Royale this May.
Contact European Waterways, 877879-8808, www.europeanwaterways.com.
See more photos at goingplacesfarandnear.com.
© 2024 Travel Features Syndicate, a division of Workstyles, Inc. All rights reserved. Visit goingplacesfarandnear. com
Total Solar Eclipse Above Long Lake, in New York’s Adirondacks is Stellar
BY KAREN RUBIN TRAVEL FEATURES SYNDICATE - GOINGPLACESFARANDNEAR.COMThat effortless, magical golf swing
At my retirement party a few years ago I got a few gifts from my co-workers that have come in handy on these retirement days. They were given to me after the food and festivities of the retirement party were over. I’d had a special guest speaker then I said a few words of thanks and in short order I was being handed a fishing rod, a golf club and a beautiful set of earrings commemorating my time on the job.
A few other gifts were presented and I have enjoyed each and every one. The hand-written cards of thanks for helping people at work were appreciated, too, but the fishing rod and golf club have a way of standing out in my mind.
My co-workers had heard that I wanted to go fishing - something I’d never gotten to do during my working years. And the golf club Joanie gave me, a putter not a driver, reminded me of so many times my relatives and I went miniature golfing at Nunley’s in Baldwin.
Was Joanie implying that I should stick to miniature golf rather than set up some tee times with three other people and embark with our bags of clubs on an 18-hole golf course? Asking her that later as we walked to our cars, we laughed about the implication and I told Joanie how I would fare on a great big beautifully manicured golf course.
She said I’d be good at it since I’m so interested in golfing and I added that I’d never really made time for it before. You’ve really got to allow at least four hours to play a solid round of golf and I was always running here and there taking care of chores.
My first leisurely, enjoyable round of golf wouldn’t happen for a few more months because I retired at the end of the year just as winter was beginning. Soon the cold temperatures and snow would arrive on Long Island so I was saving my fishing rod and golf club for spring when Long Island would thaw out and my friends and I could set some realistic tee times.
That summer I got a part-time job even though I had retired. I’ve never been one to sit still, I think retires
should have a schedule and I believe that working helps keep older people mentally sharp. I also scheduled some time for meeting friends for coffee once a month at our favorite specialty coffee house.
Since my work is part-time - not fulltime which I’d done for 41 years - I had time to exercise whether it was taking long walks or playing pickleball once a week. By building it into my schedule I found myself saying, “Yes, I can do this” as opposed to making excuses and getting comfortable on the couch watching my favorite Netflix movies.
Doing jigsaw puzzles in the cold weather is a good way to challenge myself but now that the warmer weather is here I’m excited about golfing once again. Amy, Linda, Jane and I formed a foursome and we’ve stuck with it. I joined their group three years ago when they needed a fourth golfer and I was looking to join a group. They were used to the duffer’s routine but I was new at it so I set out very determinedly to look and act like a golfer.
Early in spring I wore slacks, a blouse and a jacket to hit a golf ball all over an 18-hole course. As the days grew warmer I wore lighter clothes - a polo shirt and skorts to hit that little white golf ball around the course.
A golf cap or visor is a must when the sun is looking right at me - and the glare of the sun can throw me off my game. I prefer lace-up spikeless golf shoes on the course. They help keep my balance and hence, my concentration. I’m no women’s golf fashionista but dressing for the weather is important. Golf gloves help me grip the club comfortably and a comfortable golfer may end up being a good golfer.
Now that we play regularly, I have my golfing routine down pat. Amy, Linda, Jane and I like to play on Wednesdays. Meeting at the golf course we take out two golf carts, load our bags onto the carts and head out. Early birds, we like to start playing when the morning sun is out and the birds are singing. Sometimes we run into other golfers and converse with them. At other times we’re on our own and that’s okay.
Afterwards we have our “tea time”
or lunch. We’ve worked up appetites and by then we’ve had our fill of golf clubs and motorized golf carts.
I’ve known for years that golf is a game of numbers - each hole has a par, for example - and I aim for a low score in golf not a high one. In terms of hitting the ball, I prefer driving the golf ball to putting but to each their own. My golf score isn’t super low but I’m enjoying the game. And communing with nature. Some of my other friends like playing bridge on Wednesdays but I’d rather be out on the golf course admiring nature and hoping to hear the sweet sounds of birds singing.
I like the look of a beautifully manicured golf course. The sand that’s raked so well it looks pure. I enjoy seeing the ponds spaced out so well - and hope that my golf ball doesn’t land in the drink. That would be embarrassing but then Amy, Linda and Jane know that I’m still a “newbie.”
A hole in one on any golf course would be fun but it’s not mandatory. Sure I’d like to be able to brag to my sister, Michelle, that I got a hole in one because she hit a hole in one at a golf
course on Hilton Head Island, S.C. a few years ago. She said later that she was so relaxed swinging the club that it magically just seemed to go in. “That’s a wonder to behold,” I told Michelle when I saw her and we both agreed that indeed, it was, indeed.
Crossword Answers
Divorced Man’s Guide to Social Security
Over the 27 years I’ve been writing this column, I have probably written a hundred columns directed at divorced women. But after answering emails from men who had questions about benefits for divorcees, it dawned on me that I’ve never written a column for divorced men. Today, I’ll make up for that.
I should point out that I will be concentrating on the benefits a husband’s ex-wife can get on his Social Security account -and what effects those benefits have on his own Social Security or on benefits due a subsequent wife. Why? Because those are the kinds of questions I get from men.
I will briefly cover what benefits a divorced man might be due on his ex-wife’s Social Security record. But frankly, that rarely happens. As I recently pointed out, because women traditionally have earned less than men, and because women take time off from their careers to raise children, there are millions of women getting benefits off a husband’s or ex-husband’s Social Security account. But there are only a handful of men getting spousal benefits from a wife’s record.
Let me first explain how a divorced woman qualifies for benefits from her ex. First of all, she’s got to be old enough, which means at least age 60 for divorced widows and at least age 62 for an ex-wife whose husband is still alive. Second, her marriage to the ex must have lasted at least 10 years. Third, she can’t be currently married. (If she remarried after the divorce, but that second marriage ended and she is unmarried now, she’s potentially eligible for benefits from the first ex.) And fourth, she can’t be due higher benefits on her own Social Security account. There are other qualifying conditions, but these are the main ones.
And if you are that rare divorced man whose ex-wife consistently made more money than you, meaning she is due a higher Social Security benefit than you are, then the eligibility rules for divorced women explained above would also apply to you. In other words, the same rules that apply to divorced and financially dependent wives and widows also apply to divorced and financially dependent husbands and widowers.
But as I said, men very rarely qualify for these kinds of benefits. And that’s why a divorced man’s interest in rules for divorcees almost always have to do with how his ex might qualify for divorced spousal benefits and how it affects his own benefits. Here are some sample questions.
Q: My first wife and I were married for 30 years before getting divorced five years ago. I have remarried. My ex hasn’t. She is 62 years old. My current wife is 45. I am 65 and not yet drawing Social Security. My ex says she is going to file against my Social Security. Can she do that without my permission?
A: Your ex-wife does not need your permission to file for divorced wife’s benefits
on your record. If the law says she’s due benefits, she’ll get them no matter what you say. So if she is not currently working, she’ll be due benefits on your record unless her own retirement benefit pays her a higher rate. And by the way, your ex can file for benefits on your account even if you haven’t filed yourself.
Q: My wife and I are about to turn 67. We are thinking of filing for Social Security. My wife’s own benefit is so small that I’m sure she will get higher benefits on my record. But I was married once before, and my ex-wife is already getting divorced wife’s benefits on my account. Is that going to reduce what my current wife will be due on my record?
A: No, it won’t. Any benefits paid to an ex-spouse are just “add-on” benefits. They don’t take anything away from what you are due or what your current wife will be due on your record.
Q: I am 76 years old. I waited until I was 70 to file for Social Security. The primary reason I did this is so my wife will get the highest widow’s benefits possible when I die. But I just learned that my first wife, to whom I was married for 20 years, is going to get half of my benefits upon my death. And my current wife will have to settle for the other half. This doesn’t seem fair.
A: Well, it might not be fair if it were true. But it’s not true. When you die, your current wife will get 100% of your benefit -- assuming she is over her full retirement age when you die. And assuming your ex hasn’t remarried and is over her full retirement age and isn’t due higher benefits on her own record, she also will get the 100% widow’s rate. As explained above, any benefits paid to your ex do not offset any benefits due your current wife.
Q: I can’t believe my ex-wife is getting my Social Security. When we divorced in 2018, I very specifically added a clause to the divorce decree stating that my soon-to-be ex-wife would not be able to get any of my Social Security. And yet now I learned she’s telling her friends she is getting benefits on my account. I’m going to call my lawyer to stop this!
A: You can call your lawyer if you want. But you aren’t going to stop this. That clause you added to your divorce decree isn’t worth the paper it’s printed on. Federal law overrides anything you or your lawyer might scribble onto your divorce papers. And if that law says your ex is due spousal benefits on your account, she’s going to get them.
Q: I’ve been married and divorced five times. Is each of my ex-wives going to get some of my Social Security? No wonder the system is going broke!
A: Actually, it’s pretty uncommon for more than one ex to get benefits on your account. Why? Because the only way all your ex-wives would collect on your record is if they all have remained unmarried and if all of them have never worked.
Or to put that another way: All your exes who have remarried and all your exes who have worked and will get their own Social Security won’t be collecting divorced spousal benefits from you.
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.
Answers on page 3
I have dealt with literally thousands of buyer and seller clients over the last 42+ years, listening to their specific, “needs and wants” in finding a purchaser for their homes and buyers in their search for their “next place to call home.” The one common denominator was the location, location, and most importantly the school district. Even for those downsizing or who were empty nesters, the majority weren’t concerned or gave any thought about schools being of any importance. I conveyed to them that the better the schools, the more stable the prices and potentially greater resale value. I have found and truly understand the importance of an excellent above-average education; the accompanying school curriculum is a defining characteristic that most parents desire for their children.
However, sometimes there are limitations to what people and families can afford in purchasing their desired towns; they need to settle for the most optimum location, based on their financial qualifications. The greatest obstacle is the lack of adequate funding from Albany. The towns that need it the most don’t always get sufficient funding to attract better-quality teachers. it comes down to paying sufficient remuneration to those educators to live a good life and existence.
Unfortunately, Albany may sometimes not understand or see how important those monies are in the quality of education for those towns that have the greatest need compared to most other school districts. Teachers need to make a living as the 2nd most crucial entity in a child’s life. One might argue or not think about what a true lifestyle for a teacher might be; and that sometimes is too much to focus on as other less important things are on the agenda. Nothing is as crucial and critical as an education with quality teachers. However, unfortunately, family income and budgets become the problems in attaining a proper education.
Location, location, school district
BY PHILIP A. RAICESToday, we no longer have a conjugal nuclear family structure compared to years ago. We have more single-family units in history; the mothers have to not only earn a living, to survive but also take the role of the missing dad model in keeping a stable and healthy environment. In my eyes, even though, the mothers are doing an amazing job; this deficiency of a father figure is what is many times, lacking, as the basis of a stronger family unit; creating and leading to a quality, caring, and solid lifestyle in bringing one’s children up in. But then again, there are those independent, divorced, widowed women who do quite a commendable, admirable, and praiseworthy job providing the immense effort, discipline, and sacrifice of time in doing what is needed to provide a quality and grounded environment with the necessary and proper guidance for their kids.
and begins in December. Jump in feet first, and take advantage of these grant programs. If you need any assistance, feel free to reach out to me.
Some can have a home and a lifestyle together if one will apply and sacrifice the necessary and required time and effort; to earn while learning how to start a side hustle in conjunction with your job; or an additional stream of income as an adjunct to your current business. This can and will enable you to accomplish greater earnings; if you have a burning desire and passion to improve your position in life, so you can and will attain your home and lifestyle. Real estate might be your vehicle in getting there. Interested? Then call me for a confidential interview and learn how to rid yourself of those invisible job handcuffs and potentially consult your way to the top of the food chain and never look back.
you must send your answers to Phil@ TurnKeyRealEstate.Com with your legal 1st and last name, cell, and email by midnight on 4/15/24.
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).
Did you know that grants are available for first-time homebuyers and lower-income individuals and families yearly through the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). A Realtor’s job should be to assist and guide those who require funding by pointing out those programs, from HUD.COM or USA.GOV.
One must go online and fill out an application to be considered. The last time I checked, the grant provided was $50,000 in Nassau and Suffolk Counties. One must get on that list in December of each year (March 6th was the last day to submit your application) as a first-time homebuyer and potentially striking gold in consideration of that “free” money. You must reside in that home for 10 years otherwise the grant must be repaid.
Since a majority of people that I have spoken to are not at all aware of these grant programs; one must apply as soon as the grant program is funded
Hoping you, your Family, Friends, and Business associates have a Healthier, Safer, Happier, and more Lucrative 2024!
P.S. Have you entered our contest yet? Time is ticking! Whoever provides the correct answer in how many interest rate reductions or possible increases plus the total percentage reduced or increased in 2024, will be the winner. Your reward will be a dinner with my wife and I and a special surprise bonus! The contest was going to end on 4/15/24, but due to my column coming out on Thursday April 18th, we will extend our contest until Sunday, April 21st as the final entry date at Midnight. The final drawing will be on 12/28/24. We thank the multitude of participants who have already entered and this will be a very exciting contest to determine what Jerome Powell, the Fed Chair’s course of action will be during 2024. The first correct complete answer picked will be the winner! To be qualified,
Save my New digital business card with/Videos,Virtual and Drone Tours/ photos/Bio/Reviews to your cell, PC or Laptop contacts: https://onetapconnect. com/turnkeyrealestate-philraices Are you still using your passé paper card? Do still use a rotary dial phone, of course not. So get on board in 2024 and order your digital card by scrolling all the way down to the bottom and click on the link, “Get your Connect Card.”
He will give you 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.
He will also provide you with “free” regular updates of what has gone under contract (pending), been 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” no obligation 15-minute consultation, as well as a “FREE printout or digital value analysis of what your home might sell for in today’s market without any obligation or “strings” attached call Philip at (516) 647-4289.
EVERYDAY CHEAPSKATE
When You’re Stuck and Can’t Get Going
A question I receive nearly every day goes something like this: I’m ready to get started taking back control of my finances. But how do I get started? It’s like I’m stuck.
Don’t think you are alone if you find yourself wanting to do all the steps at once. But that could be a big mistake. In the same way when building a house you wouldn’t pour the foundation, raise the walls and put on the roof all at the same
time, with your money makeover, you need to take things one step at a time.
First you need to lay the foundation. I call this initial step “tracking.” You cannot manage what you cannot measure.
Tracking means to write down exactly where every penny goes. If you bring home $793.42 this week, next week you should be able to account for every single cent. Where did that money go?
I suggest that you track on a daily basis. Every morning start with a fresh sheet of paper. Throughout the day, as you spend any amount of money, write it down. How much did you spend and what did you spend it for? Do this for at least 30 days (longer may be necessary if you are really in a financial fog). Ideally both you and your partner should keep record.
At the end of a month pull out all of those daily records. Categorize your spending. You will begin to see patterns. Perhaps you spend $3.49 a day on lattes. Of course there are no right or wrong answers here. But you might want to point
out to yourself that if you keep this up for a year, you will shell out $1,273 on coffee drinks. Apply this multiplication to all of your spending categories. Where are things really out of line? Can you see why you are spending more than you earn?
How much of your spending was done with cash? Debit cards? Checkbook? Credit cards? What might you have done differently to come out with a more favorable end?
It is not going to take the assessment of a professional financial planner to point out problems in your spending. You will see that instinctively. Putting things in black and white has a way of clearing the fog.
You may find this to be the activity that keeps you going in the right direction month after month. Some people find they need to do this for the rest of their lives as a normal part of their personal finance management. It can’t hurt.
Cutting expenses in every way possible is the next logical step. The goal is to get your outgo to be less than your income by trimming expenses. The best way to
trim is to do a little bit in every area. Little things really add up when it comes to trimming just as they do when it comes to foolish and unaccounted spending.
Just think: If you had your lattes just three days a week rather than seven, you would trim more than $700 from your annual spending. It takes time, but little by little you will be amazed how well you can do.
OK, there’s your jumpstart. I would love to know how this is working for you.
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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6 Easy Ways to Upgrade Your Wardrobe Without Spending a Dime
BY MARY HUNTCould your wardrobe use a long overdue boost? Maybe you’re eyeing a career move, aiming to project a more polished image at work or simply looking to raise the bar when it comes to school drop-offs and PTA meetings.
Perhaps you’re diving back into the dating scene or could just use a little pickme-up. Sure, some might shrug off the ideas that follow, and that’s OK; not every piece here fits every puzzle. Yet, like it or not, the ways we present ourselves to the world influences how the world treats us.
We can debate fairness, preach about inner beauty or claim immunity to superficial judgments, but reality often has its own script, advises Daisy Luther, author of the website The Frugalite. The good news? You don’t need a shopping spree to refine your style. In fact, you can elevate your look using what’s already hanging in your closet.
What follows are timely tips Daisy offers to help us present a polished appearance to the world using the clothing we already have.
No. 1: Get rid of things that do not look good on you.
You don’t need to hang onto every piece of clothing you’ve accumulated over the years. In today’s world of social media and TV showcases, overflowing closets might seem like the pinnacle of prosperity. But let’s be real here -- less clutter means more clarity and peace of mind. Embrace the truth that most of us wear only 20% of the clothes we own. Everything else is clutter, taking up space. Sell, donate, do whatever it takes to move things out. Can’t bring yourself to com-
pletely part with them? Stash them away for “someday.” (If you do this, remove them from your day-to-day wardrobe so you aren’t tempted to wear them.)
No. 2: Mend your clothing.
Got some clothes in need of a little TLC? Let’s talk maintenance because, let’s face it, neglected garments just scream sloppy. From droopy hems to loose threads, unraveled seams and missing buttons, these are all fixable faux pas that can transform your look from disheveled to dapper in a snap.
A frugal habit of our friend Daisy is to toss things that require mending in a basket beside where she sits to watch television. The basket contains a thorough sewing kit. “Whenever I sit down to watch television,” says Daisy, “I pick up something that needs fixing and do my mending while watching some Netflix.”
No. 3: Iron or steam your clothing.
When it comes to making your existing clothes presentable, there’s nothing quite like a good, old-fashioned press to take them up a notch. Here are a couple of budget-friendly tricks that can breathe new life into your wardrobe:
-- Hang your desired outfit in the bathroom while you take a hot shower. The steam works wonders in relaxing wrinkles.
-- Toss the garment into the dryer along with a damp washcloth. Just make sure to use a cloth from the same color family to avoid any contrasting lint mishaps on your ensemble.
No. 4: Maintain your shoes.
Footwear are the unsung heroes of any outfit. Nothing kills a look faster than scuffed, dirty or worn-out footwear, shouting neglect. The good news? It’s of-
ten an easy fix. Sometimes, all your shoes need is a good scrub or polish to regain their charm.
If you’re dealing with high-quality shoes showing signs of wear and tear, it might be worth a trip to a local shoe repair. While I wouldn’t splurge on repairs for cheaper shoes that can easily be replaced, I’d gladly invest in restoring those pricey gems from days gone by. No. 5: Create outfits from what you have.
Now that your clothes are looking sharp, well-kept and crease-free, it’s time to curate some stylish and sophisticated outfits. As a frequent traveler, Daisy swears by the versatility of a capsule wardrobe, ensuring everything mixes and matches seamlessly.
Spread out your everyday bottoms on the bed, and keep your tops neatly hung in the closet. Next, pair each bottom with various tops to find winning combinations. Don’t hesitate to try them on for a firsthand look. You might consider organizing your outfits by hanging them together for quick and easy dressing. Keeping a wardrobe notebook handy can also help track your favorite combinations.
If you’re seeking some fashion inspiration, hop onto Pinterest and explore the type of outfit you have in mind. You’ll discover a plethora of ideas to spark your creativity and help you assemble stunning looks from your existing wardrobe.
No. 6: Use a lint roller.
For the love of all things lovely and stylish, use a lint roller before you leave the house! It’s a quick step that takes just a few seconds but helps you to look crisp and clean. This isn’t just important if you have pets. All of us encounter various
selves to clothing. It’s not a good look and something that is so easily rectified.
Clothing is not optional, but spending a lot of money on it is. Upgrading the clothing you have is an efficient way to carry out what mothers everywhere have advised for decades. When you look good, you feel good. When you feel good, you do good!
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.”
Week of April 21-27, 2024
We’ve got another full moon this week.
Seems like we just had one last month, doesn’t it? And the month before that. Well, this is not a coincidence. The moon orbits the Earth with a period of about one month and, therefore, sunlight shining on it from different angles throughout the month produces the shapes we know as phases.
In fact, this lunar cycle gives rise to the calendar division we know as a month (or “moonth” if you prefer) and was developed into a lunar calendar by ancient sky watchers. Even today, the lunar calendar is in use to mark holy days by Muslim and Jewish communities around the world, and the Chinese still use it for festive occasions.
When the moon lies opposite the sun in our sky, its visible face is illuminated fully by sunlight, and we call it a “full” moon. And since the moon rotates on its axis with nearly the same period as the moon’s orbit, we always see the same dark gray features on the lunar surface that form massive plains of solidified magma called “mare” (MAH-ray). This is helpful when trying to understand the seemingly confusing behavior of our cosmic neighbor.
Occasionally, I receive notes from observant sky watchers asking why the full moon appears upside down when it’s setting in the west at sunrise. It’s not that complicated, and you can see this for yourself this week.
On the evening of Tuesday, April 23, go outdoors around sunset, and if the sky is clear, keep watch toward the east-southeastern horizon. It won’t be long before you spot the full moon rising. Yes, it looks larger than normal (it’s a powerful optical illusion created in your brain) and yes, it appears redder than normal (this is caused by dust particles in the atmosphere
As the Moon Turns...
scattering out shorter wavelength light).
But forget all that for the moment. Look at its features -- the gray markings from which one can imagine the face of the “man in the moon.” They seem to trace out a large “C” on the lunar disk, with the open part of the “C” appearing on the right side.
A few hours later, after the Earth has turned a quarter of the way around, go out and look at the moon again and notice the pattern traced by the lunar mare. It still forms the letter “C,” but the open end now appears more toward the lower right side!
By sunrise, the full moon will be setting in the western sky, and you may (or may not) be surprised to see the open area of the letter “C” now appearing at the
When Yaks Attack
bottom of the moon.
So what’s going on here? Nothing unusual, really. Hang a photo of the moon on your wall and stand in front of it. If you tilt your head to the left, then straight up and down and then to the right, you’ll see how the orientation of the moon appears to change in response.
This is quite similar to what happens as our Earth rotates. Check it out. It’s simply the moon changing its orientation as we view it differently throughout the night.
BY: TRACY BECKERMANI was sitting at my desk writing, with my trusty dog lying on the floor by my side, when suddenly I heard this sound like someone was letting the air out of a tire. It went on for about five seconds and then stopped. I looked around the room to see if there was a gas leak or something ... and that’s when I smelled it. It was like a cross between a toxic waste dump and a festering swamp. It was so bad my eyes began to cloud over and my eyebrows started to fall out of their follicles. That’s when I realized it WAS a gas leak. But it wasn’t a gas leak from the pipes. It was a gas leak from the dog. I looked down at him and saw that he hadn’t moved a muscle, hadn’t even twitched. I had to wonder, how could something that noxious escape from his nether regions and not sear the hair off his tail?
Fortunately, because of the pandemic, I still had some face masks handy, and I put one on before my nose hairs got singed and I lost all sense of smell, although right then, that would not have been a bad thing.
Meanwhile, I couldn’t figure out what had caused him to pass gas that was a veritable weapon of mass destruction. And then I remembered I had ordered a bone for him online that was made of yak milk. The yak, of course, is not an animal we would generally run into here, so yak milk is not widely available. This is probably because no one wants to get close enough to a yak to milk it. But the online pet store I ordered from said yak milk bones are easily digestible and great for big chewers like my dog. It said nothing about the fact that while yak milk bones might be easily digestible, they have a residual effect that results in flatulence
that could flatten a World Wrestling Entertainment champion.
Naturally, I would feel bad if my dog were physically distressed by the Yak Yucks, as I decided to call them. But he seemed completely unfazed by his nuclear butt emissions. It occurred to me that a dog that liked to roll in dead things in the yard probably wouldn’t care if he made my house smell like a bog. However, I would feel guilty if he wiped out the entire planet with his gas, which was a distinct possibility considering how it was affecting me.
I decided I needed to consult with my veterinarian before things got worse, and by worse, I mean caused the paint to peel off my walls and the tile to buckle on my floors. She said if he had no symptoms other than gas, it was OK to give the dog some Gas-X to remedy the gas leak.
Later, when my husband got home,
the dog’s gas had dissipated, but the house still smelled a little like a men’s locker room after the Super Bowl.
“What’s that smell?” he said, pinching his nose.
“We had a gas leak,” I said.
“Did you call the gas company?” he asked.
“Something like that,” I replied.
“What did they say?”
“Shut off the main valve,” I said. “And don’t give the dog any more yak.”
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.
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The Viscardi Center publishes a monthly print/digital newspaper and website that serves the New York City and Long Island disability community and is looking for an energetic, highly motivated sales representative.
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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.
Legislative breakfast brings state, county lawmakers to table
On March 16, the Plainview-Old Bethpage Board of Education hosted a panel of local lawmakers to discuss major issues affecting the District as part of the Board’s annual Legislative Breakfast.
The Board hosted State Senators Steve Rhoads and Jack Martins; Assemblymembers Charles Lavine, Jake Blumencranz and Steve Stern; and Nassau County Legislator Arnold Drucker for a discussion on a variety of issues, many of which the assembled lawmakers have an active role in legislating. Chief among them was Governor Kathy Hochul’s proposal to do away with the hold harmless school funding policy, which dictates that the State provide at least the same level of state aid funding as the
prior year. Other issues discussed included the State’s requirement
that school districts begin switching to electric school buses by 2027, tax roll maintenance, civil service requirements and setting school calendar start and end dates.
“Maintaining an open dialog with our local lawmakers is one of the many important roles our Board plays in ensuring our District’s interests are given top priority—both in our County seat of Mineola and in Albany,” said Board of Education President Debbie Bernstein. “Many of these issues affect not only our students, but also our District’s taxpayers. We are proud to advocate on their behalf.”
Superintendent of Schools Dr. Mary O’Meara explained some of the District’s priorities.
Levittown Community Council plans Earth Day Cleanup
Getting ready to clean up the town, Levittown Community Council invites individuals and groups to celebrate Earth Day by volunteering to participate in a community event, one which they’ve hosted for more than a dozen years. The event takes place on Saturday, April 20, from 1 to 4 p.m.. The rain date is Sunday, April 21.
Volunteers gather at Veterans Park on Hempstead Turnpike and Shelter Lane (in front of the Levittown Public Library) at 1 p.m. to sign in. All participants under
the age of 14 will require an adult chaperone and adult supervision is required for all groups.
The event involves bringing together local residents and school and community groups to groom local parks and public areas. Students in an Honor Society, religious education programs, Key Clubs, scouts, sports teams or anyone needing community service credits are welcome to participate. Certificates for hours worked will be provided at the end of the event or when participants leave. Certificates are given when volun -
teers report back to the Council at Veterans Memorial Park.
Participants are encouraged to bring their own rakes, picks, shovels, spades, clippers and brooms, but may borrow equipment provided by the Town of Hempstead. All borrowed equipment must be returned to Community Council volunteers at Veterans Memorial Park by 4 p.m.
The Council will provide individual volunteers groups with local parks and community areas to be cleaned. Groups may join with another group, if they choose to do that.
About to hit a milestone?
Participating community groups may choose an area for their group to clean, but must notify the Council no later than April 5 about which area they are interested in cleaning. Personal property is not eligible. The Council can provide locations of areas that are eligible for cleanup. To receive such information, please contact us at our e-mail address. The Council can be reached by email at levittowncouncil@yahoo. com.
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Second graders welcome parents to Wax Museum
Second graders at Bethpage’s Kramer Lane Elementary School celebrated their biography writing on April 9, welcoming visiting family members to the school’s annual Wax Museum.
Second graders at Bethpage’s Kramer Lane Elementary School celebrated their biography writing on April 9, welcoming visiting family members to the school’s annual Wax Museum. Each student had chosen an important and influential person, whether living or from history and the arts, and then researched on their own in class, gathering facts and writing about their selected person’s important accomplishments. In preparation, the second graders then practiced their summaries, both at home and at school. Dressed as their historical figures, the students stood like statues at the Wax Museum, inviting parents to push their “buttons” so they could recite a short blurb about their chosen famous people, who included Cleopatra, Walt Disney, Albert Einstein, Abraham Lincoln,
HMS students welcomed into National Jr. Honor Society
Hicksville Middle School recently inducted 111 members to the National Junior Honor Society. The newly inducted middle school students were selected based on their demonstration of scholarship, service, leadership, character and citizenship, and each met specific requirements for academics and community service.
Mary Poppins, Betsy Ross and more than a few astronauts and athletes.
“It was really a lot of hard work, and all of the students are really proud,” teacher Margaret Schmidt said. “A lot of them find out so much information about someone who might be brand new to them that they chose from our list, or someone that they knew about but didn’t really know all of the things that come with a biography. The writing and reading aspect of it was how to pull from a biography and read about what their historical figures were like when they were little, or certain experiences that might have led to their big accomplishments, and then how they influenced others and had an impact on society. I think it was pretty cool for them to see more than just the headline of what the person was most famous for.”
The Reptile Guy visits Lee Ave. School
Roaches, turtles and tortoises, oh my! Students at Lee Avenue Elementary School in Hicksville recently sat in anticipation as John, The Reptile Guy introduced his reptiles. Throughout the hour-long program, students learned about various reptiles and each of the animal’s environments and the differences between herbivores and carnivores.
The things you love doing are more than just passions. They’re what make you “you.” This is why at The Bristal, our expert team members dedicate their time, attention, and energy to creating customized social activities that ensure each resident continues being the unique person they are. And, in the process, create the one-of-a-kind community we are, too.
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