Jericho-Syosset News Journal (4/20/18)

Page 1

$1

Friday, April 20, 2018

Vol. 78, No. 16

Town holds “Supplies for Soldiers” drive

ROTARY SUPPORTS GOOD CAUSE

Interact advisor Stacey Balducci, club officers and members, and Rotary vice president Bob Mittleman. Bob Mittleman, Rotary vice president, presented the Syosset

High School Interact Club with a check for $1,000 to support their

fund drive for Sunrise Day Camp See page 18

Sangria & Song at Temple Chaverim

Rabbi Jonathan L. Hecht

Temple Chaverim is hosting a night of Sangria and Song on Saturday, April 28th, 2018, beginning at 8PM. An evening of catered refreshments, live music, merriment, and more await you. The evening will feature live music (including opportunities for karaoke) with the song list created by the attendees sponsoring and bidding on songs to be played. Also included are raffles, a balloon pop, catered small plates, sangria, soda, dessert, coffee, and more. Sangria and Song is open to the public. The fee for entry is $60 per person. Sponsorships are available and raffle prizes are appreciated. This special evening honors

Rabbi Jonathan Hecht, Temple Chaverim’s senior rabbi for the past 25 years. Karen Bressner, immediate past president, says, “What a fantastic way to honor an amazing and dedicated professional in our community. Sangria and Song promises an evening filled with excellent music, good food, chances to win fantastic prizes as we honor Rabbi Hecht for his commitment and service to the community.” To purchase tickets, donate prizes or for additional information about Sangria and Song, please contact Rosemary Nucci at 516-367-6100, x101 or e-mail info@ templechaverim.org.

The Town of Oyster Bay is participating in a 2018 Soldier Collection Drive in an effort to gather needed supplies to be sent to the brave men and women of the United States Armed Forces serving around the globe. The drive will take place Tuesday, May 1st through Friday, July 6th. “The Town of Oyster Bay is proud to support our hometown heroes by collecting supplies for those stationed around the globe,” said Councilman Anthony D. Macagnone. “Each year, residents and Town employees open their hearts and wallets to purchase much-needed supplies for those protecting the freedoms we hold dear. This program serves as an important reminder to our uniformed service personnel that their daily sacrifices are not forgotten.” Individuals interested in donating to the Solider Collection Drive may drop-off items at Town Hall North in Oyster Bay; the Department of Public Works (CSEA entrance) in Syosset; Town Hall South in Massapequa; and at the Town of Oyster Bay Ice Skating Center in Bethpage. Items needed include: Antibiotic & cortisone ointments, white socks, Visine, athletic t-shirts (black or brown only), Pepto Bismol tablets, beef jerky, Tylenol/Advil, lollipops/hard candy/mints, Band-Aids, peanut butter, deodorant (no spray cans), toothpaste/ toothbrushes, powder, microwave pastas & soups, razors, protein bars, body lotion, tuna fish (pre-mixed packets - no cans), ChapStick, nuts, body wash, feminine products,baby wipes, travel size items, sunblock/ insect repellent (no spray cans), dog biscuits, soap, and pre-sweetened drink mixes. Letters & notes to soldiers are also welcome. Shoe boxes are no longer being collected. In 2017, the Town of Oyster Bay collected more than 1,800 pounds of supplies for troops. For more information on the Solider Collection Drive, please contact the Office of Councilman Macagnone at (516) 624-6618.

We’re Online! See our new website: www.jericho-news-journal.com

Syosset teams compete at Olypiad PAGE 8 Robbins Lane holds annual STEM Fair PAGE 4


Friday, April 20, 2018

2

Syosset student wins local sonnet competition

Jericho Schools breakfast exemption

The federal and state governments have mandated that all school districts implement a breakfast program for students. Based on a survey of Jericho School District sent to parents of children currently enrolled in K-5 in the Cantiague, Seaman, and Jackson Elementary Schools, the district is requesting an exemption from the breakfast program for these schools for the 2018-2019 school

year. The results of the survey indicate that more than 80 percent of those responding would not use the program. If any parents have questions or concerns regarding the request for the one year exemption, please contact Mr. Victor P. Manuel, Assistant Superintendent for Business, 203-3600 extension 3214, or Tracy Gilet, Director of Food Service, extension 3258.

Subscribe Today! Get the scoop on what’s happening in your community every week!

Are you interested in Ad placement, Classifieds, subscriptions?

Call our Garden City Office 516-294-8900 or visit us online www.gcnews.com Founded in 1923 • Locally owned and edited.

Please Join Us For Our

AT OUR NEW LOCATION 200 Robbins Lane, Suite D2, Jericho, NY 11753 WHY US?

At SoundSide Physical Therapy, we believe that providing outstanding one-on-one care while offering the best environment for rehabilitation is essential for your independence. We strive to progress our patients with rehabilitation in the most timely and efficient manner possible. We are your partner throughout your journey to restoring and maintaining motion so that you can function at your personal best.

Director: Dr. Adam Johnnidis DPT, CAFS

Allison Lin, winner of the Long Island Theatre Collective’s Romeo and Juliet sonnet competition, is congratulated by two Syosset High School teachers who have influenced her writing: Jacqueline DeRosa (left) and Lydia Esslinger. Photo courtesy of the Syosset School District Congratulations to Syosset High School’s Allison Lin, who is the winner of the Long Island Theatre Collective’s Romeo and Juliet sonnet competition. Allison wrote a sonnet that was recited by cast members of the organization’s recent production of William Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet” performed at the Cultural Playhouse in Syosset.

ATTENTION STUDENTS! We invite you to send details of your academic achievements, along with your name and contact info, to editor@gcnews.com for a chance to be featured in our paper! Submissions from students of all ages are welcome!

OUR NEW LOCATION 200 Robbins Lane, Suite D2, Jericho, NY 11753 Phone: 1-516-723-4020

Yes! I want to subscribe to the Jericho News Journal

Email: cs@soundsidept.com • www.soundsidept.com

☐ 1 yr............ $20

The Jericho News Journal

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 Jericho News Journal, 821 Franklin Ave., Suite 208 Garden City, N.Y. 11530 Meg Norris Publisher

In addition to having her work recited on the big stage, Allison was presented with a prize by the Long Island Theatre Collective for her award-winning sonnet. The Collective is a theater company dedicated to providing professional, vibrant, evocative, challenging performances with the goal of advancing theater and enriching the local community.

00

☐ 2 yr ...........$40

00

Name

* Please add $10 per year for delivery out of Nassau County

Address

City

E-mail

☐ 3 yr ...........$50

Zip

☐ Visa ☐ Mastercard ☐ Check

Phone Send To:

The Jericho News Journal 821 Franklin Ave., Suite 208 Garden City, N.Y. 11530

Card # Name on card Exp. Date

/

00

CVC #

enclosed


Chinese speech contest winners

Oyster Bay Town Councilman Joseph D. Muscarella (back row, third from left) met with the Town of Oyster Bay Blood Drive captains and chairpersons to discuss logistics and outreach for the upcoming blood drive to be held at Town Hall South, 977 Hicksville Road in Massapequa on Thursday, April 26th. Councilman Muscarella commended the Blood Drive Captains and Chairpersons for their valuable assistance in organizing the blood drive. For questions regarding medical eligibility, call 1-800-688-0900 or visit www.nybc.org. Those wishing to sign up and donate, or anyone in need of additional information, call Nancy Haarstick of Councilman Muscarella’s office at 516-624-6304 or visit the Town’s website at www.oysterbaytown.com.

Jericho High School students Emily Kweit and Matthew Lecher recently competed in the 13th Chinese Bridge Speech Contest for U.S. High School Students. Emily finished in second place in the intermediate group, and Matthew finished second place in the beginners group.“This is the most prestigious and well-recognized Chinese speech contest for high school students in the United States, and I am very proud of Emily and Matthew,” said teacher April Song.

CONTINUE THE EXCELLENCE IN SYOSSET

VOTE YES ON MAY 15th

Support a budget that includes everything that makes Syosset outstanding!

Polls are Open from 6am to 9pm Paid for by the Syosset Teachers’ Association

Friday, April 20, 2018

TOB Blood Drive on April 26th

3


Friday, April 20, 2018

4

Robbins Lane Elementary holds its annual STEM Fair

The Robbins Lane Elementary School STEM Fair was a breeding ground for the youngest inventors to showcase their ideas and inventions. Children in grades 3 to 5 worked for months at home and in school to devise,

plan, construct, and implement their ideas. They were able to display their inventions and explain them to fellow students, teachers and families at the STEM fair. The future is in good hands with these students leading the way!

All the hard work was worth it! Don't we all need one of these?

Place an ad in our Classifieds for reasonable rates and prompt results. Call the Garden City office today at 294-8900 for more info.

Proud inventors

T H I N K I N G

O F

S E L L I N G ?

NOW IS THE TIME SYOSSET OFFICE 317 Jackson Avenue O: 516.921.2262 Web# 2995809

elliman.com/longisland

110 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON STATION, NY, 11746. 631.549.7401 © 2018 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY.


5 Friday, April 20, 2018

We’ve mastered memory care so that you can cherish each moment

Caring for someone with Alzheimer’s disease or dementia takes both heart and science – knowing what expert approaches to take, and providing such care with compassion. This is what we do every day at The Bristal at Lake Success. Our community is dedicated 100% to state-of-the-art memory care, built upon a solid foundation of success caring for seniors at our family of assisted living communities across the tri-state area. We’ve also developed an alliance with Northwell Health’s Feinstein Institute, initiating opportunities for advancements in dementia care. Altogether, this means peace of mind for you, proven memory care for your loved one, and the freedom to share and embrace every moment. Come visit a truly extraordinary community where memory care is everything: The Bristal at Lake Success.

Schedule Your Visit Today 69 NORTH SERVICE ROAD | LAKE SUCCESS, NY 11020 Only 30 minutes from Manhattan

516.231.1688 | thebristal.com Licensed by the New York State Dept of Health • Eligible for Most Long Term Care Policies • Equal Housing Opportunity • Quality Communities by The Engel Burman Group


Friday, April 20, 2018

6

Syosset students win 16 top honors in science, engineering fairs Convention Center in Pittsburgh on May 17. Radhika won first place in the Biomedical and Health Science category at LISEF, qualifying her for entry into ISEF. Her research validated the use of the drug riluzole to treat hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia, a disease that ruptures blood vessels in several major organs including the eyes, lungs, liver and brain, which results in internal bleeding, and often death. "Radhika is a talented researcher who has a promising future career in STEM,” said Veronica Ade, the district’s research facilitator. “She demonstrates the characteristics of an excellent researcher; she is determined, passionate and curious. She worked hard to accomplish so much in her research, and I am so happy that she is being recognized for this.”

Syosset LISEF Grand Award Winners:

Syosset High School’s Radhika Patel is congratulated here by Syosset Superintendent of Schools Dr. Tom Rogers and Syosset research facilitator Veronica Ade. Radhika has qualified for the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair to be held in Pittsburgh this May. Photo courtesy of the Syosset School District Syosset High School students won 16 different awards between the recent Long Island Science and Engineering Fair and the New York State Science and

Engineering Fair. Additionally, senior Radhika Patel has advanced to the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair to be held at the David L. Lawrence

MAKE SAVING YOUR

G AL

• Radhika Patel – First Place, Biomedical and Health Sciences • Monet Yuan – Second Place, Biomedical and Health Sciences • Justin Cohen – Third Place, Behavioral and Social Sciences • Jarrad Li – Third Place, Energy: Chemical • Lance Lampert – Honorable Mention, Cellular and Molecular Biology

• Elizabeth Ruggiero – Honorable Mention, Earth and Environmental Sciences

Syosset NYSSEF Award Winners

• Gayatri Sriram –First Place, Materials Science • Rahul Parthasarathy – Second Place, Physics and Astronomy • Jeremy Weiss – Second Place, Robotics and Intelligent Machines • Monet Yuan – Second Place, Cellular and Molecular Biology • Lance Lampert – Third Place, Plant Sciences • Julianna Bianco – Third Place, Biomedical and Health Sciences • Justin Cohen – Third Place, Behavioral and Social Sciences • Jarrad Li – Third Place, Energy: Chemical

Syosset Special Award Winners

• Arushi Gahualt and Jennifer Lin – Association of Women Geoscientists • Jarrad Li – U.S. Metric Association

Syosset LISEF JV Award Winners

• Aaron Lafazan – Second Place, Behavioral and Social Sciences • Michael Bentivegna, Cooper Scher, and Ariel Blumenberg – Third Place, Cell Biology • Anthony LaBarca – Honorable Mention, Environmental Sciences

NYCB ELITE RATES

12 – MONTH

24– MONTH

CD

2.15

%

APY

1

CD

2.36

%

APY

1

$500 minimum to open and to earn interest. Get these great rates when you enroll in NYCB Elite, link your CD to a new or existing NYCB Elite Gold Checking account and maintain $100,000 or more in combined balances2.

We have CDs to help reach your goals—open one today! myNYCB.com • (877) 786-6560

Annual Percentage Yields (APYs) above are accurate as of date of publication and are subject to change without notice. The minimum balance to open the promotional CDs and to earn the stated APY is $500. The interest rate remains fixed until maturity. A penalty may be imposed for withdrawals before maturity. Fees could reduce earnings. The Promotional CDs must be opened with new money not currently on deposit with the Bank. 2 To earn 2.15% APY on the 12-Month CD or 2.36% APY on the 24-Month CD, enrollment in NYCB Elite Gold or Platinum is required. NYCB Elite Gold Checking account minimum to open is $5,000. NYCB Elite Relationship Terms and Conditions apply. Not available for non-profit or business accounts. Maintain $100,000 or more in combined balances in the NYCB Elite Gold relationship to waive monthly fee. Those not enrolled in NYCB Elite will earn 2.05% APY on the 12-Month CD or 2.25% APY on the 24-Month CD. Offer may be withdrawn at the discretion of the bank at any time. ©2018 New York Community Bank 1


7

At NYU Winthrop’s Vein Center, board-certified vascular physicians with the very latest minimally invasive technologies make quick work of those troublesome varicose veins. Treatment is safe, effective and virtually painfree. Our state-of-the-art facility has its own dedicated laboratory and maintains the highest level of office-based surgery accreditation (AAAASF). You don’t have to live with those painful, upsetting varicose veins any longer. Now is the time and NYU Winthrop is the place to eliminate them – and show off your gorgeous legs all summer long. To learn more or to schedule an appointment at the NYU Winthrop Vein Center, call 1-866-WINTHROP or go to nyuwinthrop.org/veincenter.

NYU Winthrop Vein Center • 200 Old Country Road, Suite 120, Mineola, New York 11501

Friday, April 20, 2018

Quick and easy varicose vein treatment from a world-class medical center – beautiful!


Friday, April 20, 2018

8 InspIrIng Women™

a free community health education program

VarIcose VeIns:

management and mInImally InVasIVe treatments Please join Dr. Christine Chung, Vascular Surgeon in the Division of Vascular Surgery at NYU Winthrop Hospital for a discussion about varicose veins and how they differ from spider veins; what causes varicose veins; risk factors, diagnosis and treatment. A question and answer period will follow.

Syosset teams compete at NYS Science Olympiad Congratulations to the Syosset High School Science Olympiad team Scioly, and the South Woods Middle School Science Olympiad team for advancing to the state Science Olympiad to be held at East Syracuse Minoa High School, April 13th-14th. Scioly claimed the top spot at the Nassau Eastern Regional and placed seventh out of the 55 teams that qualified for the state-level competition in

regional play (including only 16 high school teams from Long Island). South Woods won 87 medals overall in regional competition en route to its qualifying victory. Mildred CastaĂąeda coaches Syosset High School Scioly; Linda Stollow coaches the South Woods Middle School team.

Photos courtesy of the Syosset School District

Thursday, May 10, 2018 7:00 PM NYU Winthrop Research & Academic Center 101 Mineola Blvd. (Corner of Second Street in Mineola) Treiber Family Conference Center Admission is free, but seating is limited For reservations: Please call (516) 663-3916 or email: inspiringwomen@nyuwinthrop.org

South Woods Middle School is sending a team to the New York State Science Olympiad again!

Captains of the Syosset High School Science Olympiad team Scioly, which again advanced to the New York State Science Olympiad.

Calling all college students!

Have an outstanding GPA, honor-roll, or internship? Let us know about your transcending achievements then show your family, friends & neighbors! E-mail your most prized achievements, along with your name and contact info to: Editor Meg Norris - Editor@GCnews.com


9

Over 30 Programs in Sports, Arts, Computers, Science and Travel!!

AND SCHOOLS

65 acre campus Includes busing, lunch & towels We have something for EVERYONE!!

Friendships that last a lifetime! • 30 Programs • 4 - 2 Week Sessions • Free Transportation Something For Everyone! Join Us For An Open House Sunday, April 29th Noon - 2pm

LuHiSummerCamps.org 516-626-1100 Find us on Facebook & Twitter

Friday, April 20, 2018

SCHOOL AND CAMP DIRECTORY 2018


Friday, April 20, 2018

10

This Week at the Syosset Public Library Friday, April 20th at 10:30AM

Home Improvement Assistance Program for Seniors and the Physically Challenged Free. Presenter: This program is administered by the Town's Department of Intergovernmental Affairs and is made possible by a federal Community Development Block Grant. The lecture will provide information to residents of TOBAY who are senior citizens and the physically challenged about how to make essential home improvements by providing interest free loans for necessary home repairs.

Friday, April 20th at 2:00PM

Planning to Sell Your Home? Free. Presenter: Denise Langweber, Esq., Associate of Denise R.

Langweber, LLP & Member of the Nassau County Bar Association Speaker's Bureau Denise Langweber, Esq. will be providing you with pertinent information on how to best prepare to sell your home. This program is presented in cooperation with the Nassau County Bar Association as a public service.

Thursday, April 26th at 2:00PM

The Lost Elegance of the Great Gatsby Estates Free. Presenter: Orin Finkle, house historian Orin Finkle who has written over 150 published articles devoted to mansions, gardens, owners and architects during the “Gatsby Era” will speak and show rare photos of several prominent Gatsby estates and their wealthy society owners. Enjoy this guided tour back to a bygone era.

Conversational, opinionated, wordsmith?

We are looking for writers in our community to compose news articles on local topics, opinions, reviews, worthy places to visit on Long Island, and even fiction. We aim to feature at least one new article and writer each week in our Discovery magazine section. E-mail 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

PersPectives in HealtH

A Free Community eduCAtion SeminAr

SENIOR SCAMS: WHAT SENIORS AND THEIR FAMILIES NEED TO KNOW Please join us for an informative program, Senior Scams: What Seniors and Their Families Need to Know. Speakers include: Jonathan C. Zweig, NYS Assistant Attorney General and Carole Filangieri, PhD, Department of Behavioral Health at NYU Winthrop Hospital. This seminar will expose some common scams, tips to prevent being a victim of scams,what to do to report a scam, and also some reasons why seniors are more susceptible to scams.

This Week at the Jericho Public Library Friday, April 20th from 10:00AM to 2:00PM

FREE Health Screenings: St. Francis Hospital Community Outreach Program St. Francis Hospital’s Outreach Bus will be in our front parking lot offering free health screenings. The screenings include a brief cardiac history, blood pressure, a simple blood test for cholesterol and diabetes, height, weight and body mass index. They will offer appropriate education and referrals as needed for those participating. No appointment necessary. You MUST be 18 or older.

Friday, April 20th at 2:00PM

Great Performers with Marc Courtade Sophia Loren & Marcello Mastroianni: Icons of Italian Cinema Sophia Loren and Marcello Mastroianni were one of the most dynamic pairings of a leading man and woman on film. They were stars of the Italian cinema who rose to international stardom, making seventeen films together. Mastroianni is the only actor to receive three Academy Award nominations for foreign language films. Loren received two, and also won the Oscar for Best Actress for her performance in Two Women. This talk will take a look at their films, their lives, and will recall the magic of Loren and Mastroianni.

Monday, April 23rd at 2:00PM

America's First Ladies: Eleanor Roosevelt, Bess Truman, Mamie Eisenhower, and Jacqueline Kennedy The Constitution does not outline responsibilities for the First Lady of the United States. This challenging role

is sometimes described as the most demanding volunteer job in America. These remarkable women are wives, mothers, and confidants to the most powerful person in the world, in addition to occupying their own place on the international stage. Although not elected, they are often subject to intense public scrutiny. This multimedia lecture will highlight the personal side of life in the White House and the unique contributions each of these women have made to the nation.

Tuesday, April 24th at 2:00PM

News Currents with Elinor Haber This is an opportunity to participate in an informal exchange about topics of the day - the international, national, and local scene. We’ll focus on trends that affect us now and in the future. Bring your thoughts, issues, and a friend to join in the discussion.

Wednesday, April 25th at 1:00PM

Smart Driver TEK Workshop: The More You Know About Your Vehicle’s Technology, The Safer You Will Be An AARP Driver Safety Program. Understanding how the newest car technology works can make driving safer and more enjoyable. Register for this new, fun Smart DriverTEK Workshop to learn the benefits of the smartest safety features in your car and how to use them! Cost: $5.00 per person (Non-refundable check payable to AARP) Space is limited. Register at the Circulation Desk.

Saturday, April 28th from 1:00 to 4:00PM

Closing Art Reception Meet artist Marc Cavello at the closing reception of his art show World of Lines. The public is invited to attend.

Do you have a service to advertise?

GC-CHERRY 1-8 Page - 01-29-18.qxp_Layout 1 1/29/18 3:41 PMforPage Our Service Directory is sure to bring results. Call 294-8900 rates1 and information.

A question and answer period will follow. Thursday, May 3, 2018 6:45 PM Registration; 7:00 PM Program NYU Winthrop Research & Academic Center 101 Mineola Blvd., Mineola (corner of Second Street) Admission is free, but seating is limited. Reservations are required. Please call (516) 663-3916 to reserve your space.

2017

Best North Shore OF THE

Cherry Lane Gymnastics / New Hyde Park

516-775-2828

SPRING REGISTR ATION

Our professional staff will safely teach your kids gymnastics while building strength, flexibility, coordination and confidence. All while having fun and making new friends.

BEGINNERS WELCOME! Classes for Kids – 12 months to 17 years

VOTED “Best of the North Shore” 2015, 2016, 2017

WINNER PRESENTED BY BLANK SLATE MEDIA


April 20, 2018

72 Hours in Philadelphia: A Visit to the National Constitution Center Exposes Contradictions in ‘We the People’ BY KAREN RUBIN TRAVEL FEATURES SYNDICATE, GOINGPLACESFARANDNEAR.COM

There is a cold, institutional feel to the National Constitution Center – as if you fell into a law book. And oddly, even though this place more than any other, recognizes the impact of words on paper – the decisions, pronouncements, laws – on each and every person’s everyday life, there is that struggle between the “rule of law” without fear or favor, that objective, dispassionate application, and any sense of what is right and good for ordinary people. What emerges from my visit to the National Constitution Center is unexpected: a sense that law and government, like evolution, is not good or bad, but reflects politics and power. Look at the restrictions on voting to “white men over 21;” the Dred Scott Decision based on 5th amendment property rights; the evolution of rulings that elevate corporations to the status of people (despite the fact “corporation” is not mentioned in the Constitution) such as the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision which established that cash is equivalent to speech and corporations have a right to spend as much as they want on political speech (while an individual is limited to $2700), essentially saying that speech is not really “free”, but whoever has more cash has more speech; and Hobby Lobby which determined that corporations could possess religious “conscience” in order to deny their female employees access to contraceptives. I realize that the progressive change on behalf of ordinary people occurred during brief spurts in our history. I used the opening of the brand new Museum

‘Freedom Rising’ is presented in an arena-like setting at the National Constitution Center © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com of the American Revolution as the theme for my three-day visit to Philadelphia – a really deep dive probe of the Revolutionary War, a return to understanding the founding of the nation through, as it were, original documents, materials and artifacts, at a time when we need to be reminded – everything from the off-hand comment by Trump Chief of Staff John Kelly

that the Civil War could have been averted if only there were compromise (he should go to the National Constitution Center), to the quixotic amazement of a US Treasury official pining on his research into what’s this thing, “The American Dream,” all about before adopting the

G O I N G P L A C E S N E A R A N D F A R

See page D2


Friday, April 20, 2018

D2

G O I N G P L A C E S, N E A R & F A R ....

72 Hours in Philadelphia: A Visit to the National Constitution Center Exposes Contradictions in ‘We the People’

Continued from page D1 biggest redistribution of wealth since the Gilded Age, to the pronouncements by some politicians that America is a Christian Nation, to Trump’s remarks about immigrants coming from s-hole countries, his contempt for the Rule of Law and the fundamental principle that no one, not even the president, is above law; and his mind-blowing statement that an investigation into possible collusion of his campaign with Russian agents is “an attack on the nation” – reminiscent of Louis XIV (“the Sun King”) saying, “L’etat, c’est moi.” I felt a driving need to go back to the beginning, the foundations, remind myself of those values and debates and compromises and circumstances. Today, the raging debate is whether firing special counsel Robert Mueller who is heading the investigation into Russian meddling into the 2016 presidential election would trigger a “constitutional crisis.” So far, during my three-day visit to Philadelphia, I have visited the new Museum of the American Revolution, the National Museum of Jewish American History, the Ben Franklin Museum, the Betsy Ross House, the Old Burial Ground – each one adding to my understanding and appreciation of the founding values of this nation and the men and women who bravely challenged the superpower of its time, Great Britain, to found this nation - and now I have arrived at my last stop, the National Constitution Center. The National Constitution Center, which opened in 2003, is on federal land but is a private, independent,

nonprofit, nonpartisan institution. It is the first and only institution in America established by Congress to “disseminate information about the United States Constitution on a non-partisan basis in order to increase the awareness and understanding of the Constitution among the American people.” Its mission is to spark constitutional debates that impact citizens and inspire active citizenship. “As the Museum of We the People, the Center aims to bring the Constitution to life for visitors of all ages through interactive programs and exhibits that include coming face to face with original documents, rare artifacts and hearing personal stories. As America’s Town Hall, the Center brings the leading conservative and liberal thought leaders together to debate the Constitution on all media platforms. As a center for Civic Education, the Center delivers educational programs and online resources that inspire, excite, and engage citizens about the U.S. Constitution.” I arrive just in time for a multi-media orientation experience, “Freedom Rising” in a theater that has the metallic feel and design of a 21st century dystopian gladiator arena (perhaps more prescient than I realize). For some inexplicable reason there is a live person who is not so much a narrator as a ringmaster as video images flash around the ceiling so you can’t fully see them or process the message. ‘Freedom Rising’ “Freedom Rising” is intended to

Benjamin Franklin, “The Sage” is the only Founding Father to have signed all four of the major documents of the founding of the United States: the Declaration of Independence, the Treaty of Alliance (1778) with France, the Treaty of Paris that ended the Revolution (1783) and the United States Constitution (1787), though he was sick and suffering in pain during the Constitutional Convention and died shortly after, in 1790 © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com

highlight the primary themes of the main exhibit gallery, making an effort to tell the story of “We the People” in two senses of that phrase: First, the Constitution’s vision of “popular sovereignty,” or rule by the people; Second, how the definition of citizenship has expanded over more than 200 years of American history to gradually include those who were left out by 18th century definition – white men without property, women, African Americans, other people of color. It rang hollow to me. You walk out of the arena to the Richard and Helen DeVos Exhibit Hall, which is designed as two concentric rings. The outermost ring is presented chronologically with 13 sections which relate American history through the lens of the Constitution from 1765 until today and a central ring focused on civics and how government operates. Exhibits along the outermost ring use multiple techniques to bring the story to life: a short general video introduction to each section; text-andgraphic based story panels and reading rails; maps and images; game-like computer interactives; video and audio segments focusing on specific historical moments; selected artifacts; and walkin immersive environments that render key ideas, moments, and stories in three dimensions. For instance, you enter a re-creation of the floor of the Senate during the impeachment trial of Andrew Johnson and listen to the debate; you can step into a 1940s living room and hear one of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s famous fireside

chats playing on the radio. A device that is used to fairly good effect is presenting a major Supreme Court decision or milestone event as if told as a news story that day, making it more immediate and relevant. After all, newspapers are theoretically written to an 8th grade reading level. The “Founders’ Library,” presents a sampling of the books that the Library Company of Philadelphia made available to the delegates during the Constitutional Convention – giving visitors a sense of the intellectual origins of the Constitution and make it more accessible. What’s on that bookshelf that helped shape the Constitution? Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels, King James Bible, Magna Carta, Machiavelli, John Locke, Cato’s Letters, Baron Montesquieu, David Hume, Sir William Blackstone, Adam Smith, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine, John Adams, John Dickerson, among others. What troubles me, though, is what’s missing: anything about the Iroquois Confederacy which provided a framework for “we the people” democratic leadership (and women’s rights) and a confederation of states. Other features include the Civil War alcove, an exploration of the turning point year of 1863, which features a rare copy of the Emancipation Proclamation signed by Abraham Lincoln as well as pages from an autograph book with the only-known Lincoln signature from the day that he gave the Gettysburg Address. Here I encounter a docent who lets us handle some Civil War-era artifacts.

The National Constitution Center, which opened in 2003, is the first and only institution in America established by Congress to “disseminate information about the United States Constitution on a non-partisan basis in order to increase the awareness and understanding of the Constitution among the American people.” © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com


D3 Friday, April 20, 2018

G O I N G P L A C E S, N E A R & F A R ....

The National Constitution Center puts life into this founding document. In Signers Hall, walk among life-size statues of the 42 Founders who hashed out the framework for ‘We the People’ government © Karen Rubin/ goingplacesfarandnear. com

I pose to him my theory that the Civil War could have been avoided had the slave-holding states accepted the entreaty from Zachariah Kingsley, a plantation owner in Florida, a Spanish territory until 1845 when it became part of the United States and subject to its laws regarding slavery; Kingsley entreated Congress that the United States use the Spanish model of slavery that was much less cruel (if any form of slavery could be “less cruel”),

that provided a pathway to freedom, allowed for slaves to be educated and earn their own money so they could eventually buy their own freedom and did not automatically enslave future generations. It was ignored. (I saw a copy of Zachariah Kingsley’s letter to Congress a Kingsley Plantation on Fort George Island near Jacksonville, Florida which stuck in my mind, “What if...”.) Instead, Congress passed the Fugitive Slave Act (so much for Kelly’s

notion that “compromise” could have avoided the Civil War.) You also can see a fascinating display of archeological artifacts from the late 1700s that were uncovered at the site of the National Constitution Center between 2000 and 2003, only two blocks from Independence Hall where the Constitution was drafted. These historic treasures illuminate daily life in Philadelphia as a new nation was being born.

The Central Ring through the main gallery explores how the constitutional system works through a series of immersive, interactive exhibits designed with families and school groups (and I imagine international visitors) in mind. You learn about the great rites (responsibilities) of democracy, such as serving on a jury See page D5

W R I T E R’S C O R N E R

BY CLAIRE LYNCH

Spring Most Certainly Is in the Air!

Spring is a time for connecting with nature once again. After a long, cold, snowy winter it is so nice to step outside on a sunshiny day and enjoy some blue skies overhead and feel some warm temperatures. We deserve it after the winter we have been through. When it’s unseasonably warm I like being able to put on my flip-flops, shorts and a T-shirt to do some outdoor exercising, such as yoga and jogging at a local park. It’s so much fun!

When the World Changes Around Us

Animals that have been hibernating all winter suddenly wake up in the spring. The bears and woodchucks are known for their hibernating. Frogs swim up from the murky and muddy bottoms of the ponds. Snakes emerge, too, from where they’ve been all winter. Migration occurs. At this time many different birds fly north to build nests and lay eggs. In the fall, we watched the skies above as they headed south for the warmer climates during the winter months. Whales swim north to find food to eat in colder waters during the spring months. We see animals giving birth to their young at this time. Deer have fawns. Sheep have lambs. Horses have foals. They try to stand up but …

sometimes it’s rough going. Ducklings and tadpoles hatch from eggs. High up in trees birds nest among the branches. Looking around, I see ladybugs living among the leaves. Butterflies emerge from their protective shells and either fly around, showing us their beautiful colors, or land on a branch and stay there for a while. We hear, “Spring ahead, fall back” and it’s time to turn our clocks back one hour for Daylight Saving Time. We did it on Sunday, March 11, and we will have more daylight until Sunday, November 4, when we will turn our clocks back one hour. In the southern hemisphere, however, in countries like Argentina and Australia, in Brazil and Chile, it’s fall when we have this beautiful springtime weather to enjoy!

Looking Around for Tulips

After seeing forsythia and daffodils and the dandelions that come up in the grass that provide bees with the nectar they need - I start looking around for the first signs of tulips. I know that they will soon follow. It can’t be long now. Long Island looks so pretty when all of the various colors of tulips spring. There are the vibrant reds, pinks, maroons, pale yellows, white and more. They bloom in practically every color

of the rainbow. When I looked up the history of tulips, I found it to be fascinating. Originally cultivated in the Ottoman Empire (present-day Turkey), tulips were imported into Holland in the sixteenth century. When Flemish doctor and pioneering botanist Carolus Clusius wrote the first major book on tulips in 1592, they became so popular that his garden was raided and bulbs stolen on a regular basis. As the Dutch Golden Age grew, so did this colorful flower. They became popular in paintings and festivals. In the mid-seventeenth century, tulips were so popular that they created the first economic bubble, known as “Tulip Mania.” As people bought up bulbs they became so expensive that they were used as money until the market in them crashed. Today, Holland is still famous for its bountiful tulips. Tulip festivals abound throughout the country in the spring. The Dutch people took their love of tulips abroad when they settled, and tulips and tulip festivals are now found in New York, which was originally called New Amsterdam, and in Holland, Michigan, where the connection to their Dutch roots is very strong. (Holland.com) In Nassau County, I like checking out the tulips each spring in various botanical gardens, especially

Old Westbury Gardens and at Clark Garden in Albertson.

Baking Pies and Other Goodies

I bake some blueberry pie in the oven on some cool spring days after I’ve gotten some fresh blueberries from the market. This recipe is from allrecipes. com. Ingredients: 3/4 cup white sugar 3 tablespoons cornstarch ¼ teaspoon salt ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon 4 cups fresh blueberries 1 9 inch pie crust - Preheat oven to 425 degrees F. - Mix sugar, cornstarch, salt, and cinnamon, and sprinkle over blueberries. - Line pie dish with one pie crust. Pour berry mixture into the crust, and dot with butter. Cut remaining pastry into 1/2 - 3/4 inch wide strips and make lattice top. Crimp and flute edges. - Bake pie on lower shelf of oven for about 50 minutes or until crust is golden brown. My cousin, Elaina, told me about this recipe for blueberry pie and it really is my favorite. See page D6


Friday, April 20, 2018

D4

Y O U R S O C I A L S E C U R I T Y

SSA Service: Am I a Shill or a Critic? BY TOM MARGENAU

I figure I must be doing something right when I get back-to-back emails from readers criticizing me for allegedly voicing diametrically opposite viewpoints. First, there was this little gem. Q: You just think the Social Security Administration is perfect in every way, don’t you? I just want you to know that there is a lot of bad information out there. Recently, I applied for widow’s benefits, and I won’t even get into what they put me through. The first young gal I talked to was clueless. Then she called an old bat for backup and this bat was criticizing me for waiting too long to file. She finally backed down. I just want you to know I read your column for laughs, not for information. And then the next email I opened -and I’m not exaggerating, it really was the very next email -- went like this. Q: What I want to know is this: Why are you always so critical of an agency you spent most of your life working for? I think you should know that when I signed up for my retirement benefits recently, the local Social Security office people were very efficient and courteous. The young woman who took care of me was professional in every way. The entire process was smooth and simple. Please publish the good news about SSA and stop highlighting the few bad apples. Interesting isn’t it? So who is right? Well, in a way, they both are. I’ve been writing this column for about 18 years. And in more than a few columns, I took SSA reps to task for not doing their jobs. On the other hand, I’ve also written quite a few columns commending the agency and its employees for the work they do. In other words, when the SSA deserves praise, I give it. When it doesn’t, I let the SSA know. I will say this: I do think that overall service at local Social Security offices has gone downhill since I left the agency 13 years ago. When I worked for SSA, we were focused on one-to-one customer service. But that has gone the way of gas stations offering green stamps or doctors making house calls. In the 21st century, the focus is on the internet and other forms of electronic communication. From an efficiency standpoint, that has its plusses. But from the standpoint of someone trying to deal with the oftentimes complex Social Security rules and regulations, it has its drawbacks. Some readers may remember a customer service survey column I wrote about a year ago. I was getting lots of emails from readers critical of SSA’s services or of the allegedly bad advice they were getting from the agency’s representatives. As a still-proud retired SSA-er, I didn’t get too alarmed. I figured that people were more likely to write and complain about bad service than they were to

praise good service. That’s just human nature, I guess. But I tested my theory by conducting a survey of my readers. I got hundreds of responses. And long story short: the vast majority -- almost 90 percent -- of respondents said they were happy and satisfied with the service they got from the SSA. That was the good news for the Social Security Administration and its employees. But there was another side to that coin. I was able to glean this bit of information from the responses. SSA’s frontline employees did routine work very well. And fortunately, most of us have rather routine experiences with Social Security. We turn 62 or 66 and want to file for retirement benefits and that’s that. It’s all rather simple and cut and dried. But if your Social Security situation is not quite routine, then, sadly, SSA reps all too often fall down on the job. For example, if someone wants to employ one of the Social Security maximizing strategies, or if a woman has a choice between taking widow’s benefits or her own retirement benefits, she sometimes get bad or conflicting advice from the Social Security representatives. And I think a lot of this has to do with training. When I started working for the SSA in 1973, I went to a highly intensive and vigorous 3-month class that was taught by expert trainers -- front-line supervisory people who had been with the agency for decades. And they passed all this knowledge on to us neophytes -- comprehensive facts and information that carried us through our careers. Regrettably, that’s not the way things work anymore. Today, new SSA hires get about six weeks of mostly online training. That’s just not the way to teach raw recruits about complicated Social Security rules and regulations. So if you are John Q. or Jane Q. Public, what are you supposed to do if you are pushing Social Security age and are about to deal with the Social Security Administration for the first time? Well, as I alluded to earlier, most of you have fairly routine situations. You are about to retire and want to apply for your Social Security benefits. In that case, I recommend you get on your computer, go to the Social Security website and file online. The whole process is quite simple. But if you’ve got a Social Security case with a few wrinkles -- having a spouse eligible for Social Security benefits at the same time; possibly being eligible for benefits on two different accounts (usually your own and a living or deceased or divorced husband or wife); wanting to use one of the maximizing strategies discussed countless times in past columns -- well, then I recommend you talk to someone. And I suggest you do so at your local Social Security office, as opposed to dealing with a faceless clerk over the phone. You still would have to call SSA at 800-772-1213 to set up an in-house appoint-

ment. And insist on the appointment. They may try to talk you into a phone interview. But seeing someone face-toface is the best way to go. And when that happens, you are usually going to get someone who is competent and knows what he or she is doing. And if you do get an inexperienced or undertrained clerk who seems hesitant or unsure of what to do about your case, ask to speak to a supervisor.

Or send an email to a highly trained but now retired former SSA representative who writes a nationally syndicated column about Social Security issues. I can’t take your claim, but I certainly will be able to answer your questions. If you have a Social Security question, Tom Margenau has the answer. Contact him at thomas.margenau@comcast.net. COPYRIGHT 2018 CREATORS.COM

C R O S S W O R D P U Z Z L E

Answers on page D5


A Visit to the National Constitution Center

C ontinued from page D3

and voting. Role-playing is a key component of this part. In one of the most popular displays, you can stand behind a presidential podium and take the oath of office. You can try on a judge’s robe, sit at a replica of the Supreme Court bench, and decide landmark cases selected to illustrate the broad range of constitutional issues that come before the court: Katz v. United States is a wiretap case involving the Fourth Amendment and issues of privacy; Texas v. Johnson, the flag-burning case, tested the protection of the First Amendment; United States v. Nixon, the Watergate tapes case, involved separation of powers and executive privilege. The American National Tree, another prominent exhibit, tells the stories of 100 Americans – a few who are well known but most of them unheralded. By selecting their faces streaming by on touch screens, you can read and hear how they shaped constitutional history. People really enjoyed Signers’ Hall, where you walk into a stylized evocation of the Assembly Room in the Pennsylvania State House, known today as Independence Hall, where the delegates to the Constitutional Convention met in Philadelphia during the summer of 1787. The room is “peopled” with life-sized bronze statues of 42 men: the 39 delegates who signed as well as the three present on September 17, 1787, who refused to sign. We are encouraged to walk among them and to consider them as real people, imagining the dilemma they faced in creating the framework for a new nation founded on “We the People” - choices that still impact the nation, the oldest continuously surviving democratic republic. You also can add your name to a digital version of the Constitution alongside the Founding Fathers’ signatures. Notably, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams, signers of the Declaration of Independence, are not represented in Signers Hall because they were both serving as ambassadors overseas (Jefferson in France and Adams in England) during the Constitutional Convention. Several other famous Founding Fathers who were not signers of the Constitution include John Hancock, Samuel Adams and Patrick Henry. The statues in Signers’ Hall were created by some 50 artists – sculptors, designers, costumers, mold makers at Studio EIS in Brooklyn, who used numerous historical sources, including portraits and written descriptions, to

create the most accurate likenesses possible. The project began in early 2001 and was completed in May 2003. Unanswered Questions: Democratic are We?

How

I come away with a few new insights, but few answers to long-lingering questions I have harbored: Everything George Washington does as president sets a precedent, including doing the unimaginable of stepping down after two terms when many wanted him to be president for life. (But having visited the Museum of the American Revolution, I wonder what would have happened if Washington had been younger and not so anxious to retire to Mount Vernon after so many years at war, if he would have been so interested in giving up presidency.) We learn that slander and scandals have always been a part of the political process: A Federalist called Jefferson “a Godless man whose election would lead to reign of terror, like France.” Republicans claimed John Adams was “a British-led tyrant bent on enslaving us.” The Supreme Court’s infamous Dred Scott Decision was based on a ruling which found that Congress in its 1820 Compromise deprived slaveholders of their 5th Amendment property rights. I learn that 1824 was the first presidential election that counted the popular vote (though I don’t really understand what that means, to “count” the popular vote.) On the other hand, it renews a question that I had ever since visiting the Women’s Rights National Monument in Seneca Falls, NY: Without any change in the Constitution that gave voting rights only to “white men with property,” suddenly, in that election, white men without property were allowed to vote. See page D6

Crossword Answers

LEO’S Join Us For An Awesome night oF Live mUsic FeAtUring “ReviveR Band”

sAtUrdAy, ApriL 21st 9:00pm Serving Leo’s Famous Breakfast Saturday & Sunday 8-11:30AM

Thursday is Mexican Night

Margaritas Fish Tacos Fajitas Tacos Friday Only 25% Off Entire Lunch or Dinner Check

Cash Only • Alcohol not included • Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included. Not available at the bar • Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering • Expires 4/26/18 • Dine In Only Good for parties of 8 or less • May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Saturday Only 25% Off Entire Lunch or Dinner Check Cash Only • Alcohol not included • Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included. Not available at the bar • Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering • Expires 4/26/18 • Dine In Only Good for parties of 8 or less • May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Sunday Only 30% Off Entire Dinner Check

Cash Only • Alcohol not included • Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included. Not available at the bar • Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering • Expires 4/26/18 • Dine In Only Good for parties of 8 or less • May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Monday Only 30% Off Entire

Tuesday Only 30% Off Entire

Lunch or Dinner Check

Lunch or Dinner Check

Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included. Not available at the bar • Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering • Expires 4/26/18 • Dine In Only Good for parties of 8 or less • May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included. Not available at the bar • Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering • Expires 4/26/18 • Dine In Only Good for parties of 8 or less • May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Wednesday Only 25% Off Entire

Thursday Only 25% Off Entire

Cash Only • Alcohol not included

Lunch or Dinner Check Cash Only • Alcohol not included

Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included. Not available at the bar • Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering • Expires 4/26/18 • Dine In Only Good for parties of 8 or less • May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Cash Only • Alcohol not included

Lunch or Dinner Check Cash Only • Alcohol not included

Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included. Not available at the bar • Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering • Expires 4/26/18 • Dine In Only Good for parties of 8 or less • May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

190 Seventh St., Garden City 742-0574 • www.leosgardencity.com

D5 Friday, April 20, 2018

G O I N G P L A C E S , N E A R & F A R....


Friday, April 20, 2018

D6

W R I T E R’S C O R N E R

Spring Most Certainly Is in the Air! C ontinued from page D3

Relaxing on Sunday Mornings

My older sister, Michelle, heard the Commodores’ song, written by Lionel Richie called, “Easy Like Sunday Morning” in 1977 and pretty much adopted it as her personal anthem especially when it came to the Sunday of Memorial Day weekend. Not one to miss any obligations, she would go to Mass on Saturday evening then sleep in a bit on Sunday morning. I would usually find Michelle sitting comfortably on a lounge on the patio in the back yard and she would be reading a good book or magazine. She would never want to be interrupted. After relaxing for a little while she would go into the kitchen and start making a nice breakfast, a bowlful of fresh fruits and berries. She always had plans for Memorial Day whether it was going sailing, taking in the latest movie or heading to Manhattan with friends. Now we live in our own homes but whenever the Sunday of the Memorial Day weekend rolls around I take a cue from Michelle. Starting to hum that “Easy” song, I find a comfortable lounge or hammock, put my feet up for a while and enjoy this beautiful season.

Planting During the Spring Months

This spring I finally had the chance to plant a fir tree outside. I waited long enough, that’s for sure. A friend gave it to me for Christmas one and a half

years ago. That potted plant (tree) was indoors all that time, complete with its small red velvet bow for decoration. I had placed it in my kitchen and whenever I looked at it I thought of the friend who gave it to me. Still, with the beautiful weather here now, I figured there’s no time like springtime for planting things. I chose a spot in the back corner of my yard – way back in the corner near the fence - and dug a hole for my fantastic fir tree. I removed it from the pot and placed it carefully in the hole. Brushing some soil onto it, I gave it plenty of water and made sure that it was firmly in the ground. Standing back, I looked at it and imagined how majestic it will look in 10 or 20 years’ time. I bet that in the years ahead that fir tree grows big and strong. Its greenery is sure to brighten our yard. In subsequent weeks, when visitors came along, I showed my relatives how it is starting out as a tiny thing, measuring about a foot tall, but eventually it will be great. It will flourish.

Playing indoor and outdoor games

Playing shuffleboard, badminton and bocce as kids with my parents and watching my dad sweep the court pretty much every time was always a highlight of spring. Inside on rainy spring days we’d play board games. The kids would play checkers and the adults would play chess. After I got bored with playing checkers I would try to convince my parents and whoever else was around to play a solid

game of Monopoly. That usually meant playing for at least 90 minutes and more likely for a couple of hours (which some people never seemed to want to do) but when someone actually won, when it came time to count the money and the real estate to see who the winner was, I was happy no matter who it was. I always liked trying to go for Connecticut Avenue, Vermont Avenue and Oriental Avenue as well as Baltic Avenue and Mediterranean Avenue. And my favorite piece to move was the little dog.

Oh Rain, That Natural Moisturizer

Raindrops splash on my face during sudden spring rainstorms and I like the feeling. It’s a natural moisturizer. I like it especially after being confined during the winter months – confined inside my home and bundled up in a ski coat whenever I went outdoors on cold days and nights. Now it’s springtime – the season of baby ducks, baby geese and baby bears – and I like seeing, smelling and tasting the rain. I realize that some people prefer to have blue skies and sunny days during the spring but I think that it would be monotonous to have the same weather every day – even if it is beautiful weather. I like the variety of the four seasons that we have here on Long Island so I must confess that now and again I actually enjoy a rainy spring day. Whether it’s a light drizzle or a heavy rainstorm, that moisture feels good on my face. I welcome it!

General George Washington

It’s a historic fact that on April 23, 1789, George Washington went to New York City, the new nation’s temporary capital, to serve as its first President. He arrived on a barge manned by 13 men in white uniforms, followed by a grand naval procession. Inaugurated on April 30, Washington took his oath of office on the balcony of Federal Hall at the corner of Wall and Broad Streets. Sworn in at age 57, Washington gave a speech and asked that the American people be allowed to find “liberties and happiness” under a government determined by themselves. After his speech, Washington walked up Broadway and attended a chapel service at St. Paul’s Church. In the evening he watched as the whole city celebrated with fireworks and bonfires. While in New York, George and Martha Washington lived at a house located at 3 Cherry Street in lower Manhattan. On August 30, 1790, Washington left New York City for the last time en route to the nation’s new capital in Philadelphia. (mountvernon. org-Michael Hattem) That was a historic spring in New York City. Baltimore, Md., native Millard Kaufman, who was a novelist and a screenwriter, wrote in “Bowl of Cherries” in 2007: “I glanced out the window at the signs of spring. The sky was almost blue, the trees were almost budding, the sun was almost bright.”

G O I N G P L A C E S, N E A R & F A R ....

72 Hours in Philadelphia: A Visit to the National Constitution Center Exposes Contradictions in ‘We the People’

C ontinued from page D5

And yet, it took the 15th Amendment in 1870 to give Black men the vote, and the 19th amendment in 1920 to finally give women the vote. I’ve never seen anyone question how without any change in the Constitution, all of a sudden, any white man could vote, enabling Andrew Jackson, who lost in 1824 to John Quincy Adams, to win his election in 1828. When freed black men also turned up to vote, states passed laws restricting voting to “white men over 21”. I learn that the Bill of Rights, adopted in 1791 (itself a compromise because there were states that would not ratify the Constitution without a Bill of Rights, which are the first 10 amendments) only applied to federal law (and originally, there were 12 but two were knocked out).

In recent decisions, the Court ruled that their protections in fact apply to states because certain rights are so fundamental, they are incorporated in the amendment guarantee of due process. “Like the preamble of Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights at the time of ratification was largely a promissory note. It was not until the 20th century when the Supreme Court vigorously applied the Bill of Rights against the states that the document becomes centerpiece of the contemporary struggle over liberty and equality. It defends the majority against an overreaching federal government but also against overreach by the state.” What you appreciate, though, is that through all of American history, there have been “firsts” – challenges or unsettled issues of the Constitution. It was never fixed or complete. The

Founders designed the Constitution to be a “living” document. So-called “originalists” (like Justice Antonin Scalia) who pretend to divine what was in the mind of the Founders are just that: pretenders, who more often than not are caught committing hypocrisy (Bush v. Gore). Clearly, the Founders, never could have imagined cyber hijacking of elections or social media trolls, though they did design the Electoral College as a check on populism. A new display is an “Interactive Constitution”, where you can click on the freedoms of the Bill of Rights to see the documents that were used. During my visit, I am lucky enough to see an original copy of the Bill of Rights on view in the George H.W. Bush Gallery before it is sent back to New York. It is one of 12 original copies that survive. (North Carolina’s

was stolen during the Civil War but was returned in 2003 with the help of the National Constitution Center, which informed the FBI after being told they could have it back for $4 million ransom). This copy is shared by New York and Pennsylvania which alternates every three years (it now has gone back to New York, where you can see it livestreaming on camera). There is also a first-edition Stone Engraving of the Declaration of Independence and an original copy of the US Constitution. I’m not sure that what I came away with was the message that the Center intended: Instead of assurances that the Framers created mechanisms – fool-proof checks-and-balances - to insure a democratic republic would withstand every challenge, I am shaken by the realization of how wrong those in power, with the ability to set laws,


1B

COLLEGE AND EDUCATION

Friday, April 20, 2018 The Litmor News Group

FREE ADVERTORIAL

From the Gold Coast of Long Island to the Gold Coast of Hong Kong, College Nation Provides Premier College Admissions Essay Coaching and Editing Services. At College Nation, we strive to obtain success through close collaboration with our college-bound students by creating a customized experience that fits their intellectual, emotional, and developmental needs. Our holistic approach sets us apart from other college coaching companies, as we take sincere interest in getting to know our students and guiding them to uncover their strengths, select the most suitable essay topics, and convey the best version of themselves in their essays while letting their voice shine through. Not only is it our goal for each and every student to walk away from this experience feeling proud of their Common App and supplemental essays, but we equally work to build their confidence while facing this challenging yet rewarding process.

We coach applicants throughout the college personal statement writing experience: brainstorming, drafting, editing, and proofreading. As Harvard and Columbia alumni familiar with the application process, we provide insider tips on how to craft perfect essays targeted towards the student’s specific school as well as their academic and career interests, while taking into account the strengths and weaknesses of their overall application content. Please visit us at www.collegenation. org or contact us at andrea@collegenation.org or marisa@collegenation.org for any inquiries.

Professional College Admissions Coaches, Andrea Schiralli (Harvard University; Cornell University) and Marisa De Marco (Columbia University; FIT) are North Shore Long Island natives who have dedicated their careers to guiding their students reach their highest potentials. Visit them at www.collegenation.org to learn how they can support your college-bound student throughout the application process.

ADVERTORIAL

Janine Stiene, Speech-Language Pathologist, is owner and operator of the Suffolk Center for Speech And Myofunctional Therapy and Long Island Speech. Along with her exceptional group of therapists, she supports families and children across Long Island and Queens, specializing in: PROMPT, Myofunctional Therapy, Voice Disorders, Fluency, Augmentative Communications, Articulation, Auditory Processing Disorders and Expressive/Receptive Language Disorders (adults and children). Also offered is Feeding Therapy for individuals who suffer from texture and consistency aversions. There are seven affiliated offices across Long Island, with the Lake Success office being conveniently located next to LIJ on Lakeville Road. All offices offer flexible hours and scheduling including evenings as well as Saturdays. It is also one of the only private practices that participates with most major health insurance companies. Janine Stiene, former Speech Pathologist of the Hauppauge School District, has had her rapidly growing business for ten years. Her well equipped staff of LIcensed speech Pathologists and Myofunctional Therapists come from diverse educational backgrounds and top schools such as Long Island University, St. John’s University, Hofstra University, Adelphi University, and more. Open: Monday through Saturday, Daytime and Evenings. Please call for appointment availability. PARTICIPATING WITH MOST MAJOR HEALTH INSURANCES.

LONG ISLAND SPEECH 444 Lakeville Road, Suite 202 Lake Success, NY 11042 (516) 216-1791 500 North Broadway, Suite 141, Jericho, NY 11753 (516) 597-4344

w w w.lispeechandmyo.com

Long Island Speech

& Myofunctional Therapy (631) (631) 689-6858 689-6858 • • (516) (516) 597-4344 597-4344 www.LiSpeechandMyo.com www.LiSpeechandMyo.com

Licensed Speech Pathologists & Myofunctional Therapists Specializing in the Treatment and Correction of:

culties • Fluency • • Voice Disorders • Motor Planning Disorders • Deviate Swallowing • Tongue Thrust • • Feeding & Swallowing Problems / Aversions • Thumb Sucking • • Articulation Disorders • Oral Facial Muscle Weakness •

Specialized Therapy Approaches Including PROMPT Therapy • Individual FEEDING Therapy Augmentative Communication Evaluations & Therapy

olk LAKE SUCCESS, WANTAGH, JERICHO, COMMACK, STONY BROOK, FARMINGVILLE, EAST YAPHANK Participating with most major health insurances


The Litmor News Group Friday, April 20, 2018

2B

COLLEGE AND EDUCATION

Creative Students Invited to Tour Long Island’s Top Arts High School and Summer Program ADVERTORIAL

Long Island High School for the Arts to Host Open House for 2018-19 Academic Year and Summer Arts Academy Long Island High School for the Arts (LIHSA) & Summer Arts Academy invites all Nassau & Suffolk County students with artistic talent, passion and ambitions to an Open House on Saturday, April 28 from 10 am - 2 pm. Prospective students from across Long Island are welcome to tour the campus at 239 Cold Spring Road in Syosset with LIHSA Principal Dr. Chris Rogutsky Bleecker and staff to experience classes focused on each area of the visual and performing arts. Attendees can join a theater improvisation skit, sketch in an art class, take a dance class, listen to a jazz performance and participate in much more to get better acquainted with LIHSA. During the Open House, parents of prospective students will also have the opportunity to speak with faculty, guidance, current parents and students. Established in 1973, LIHSA is part of the public education system and is paid for by local school districts. It offers specialized training and instruction to students interested in pursuing careers in dance, drama, musical theatre, filmmaking, special effects, instrumental and vocal music, digital music, fine arts and digital media. The half-day program enables students to complete their core academic classes in their home high school and receive two and a half hours of intensive training in their field

of study. As part of their professional-level training, students regularly receive one-on-one access to experienced professionals working in their chosen fields. Students have recently benefited from Master Classes and Workshops lead by pop-rock icon Billy Joel, actor and director Ralph Macchio and principal Paul Taylor Dance Company dancer and LIHSA graduate Michael Trusnovec to name a few.

“We are incredibly proud of the instruction and experiences offered at the Long Island High School for the Arts,” said Dr. Robert Dillon, District Superintendent of Nassau BOCES. “Each year, we look forward to our Open Houses to showcase the programs and talent our students possess. We encourage all students interested in pursuing the arts to come down and take advantage of this oppor-

Experience a day in the life of Long Island’s top arts high school and summer program during the Nassau BOCES Long Island High School for the Arts Open House on Saturday, April 28. LIHSA students regularly learn from the top professionals in their chosen fields and spend the day honing their craft.

tunity to learn how LIHSA can help you reach your dreams.” Alumni of the school have gone on to develop successful careers in all fields of art. In addition to landing starring roles on Broadway, alumni have danced with national touring companies, illustrated for New Yorker magazine, designed successful swimsuits lines and embarked on technical careers working for companies such as Cirque de Soleil. Graduates have also earned prestigious scholarships and grants to continue their education at some of the nation’s most highly esteemed colleges and conservatories, including the Juilliard School, Boston Conservatory, Cooper Union and the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. For more information, call 516-622-5678 or visit www.longislandartshighschool.org. New for this summer! LIHSA’s Summer Arts Academy for students entering grades 6-12 has new options for early drop-off, later pick-up, weekly field trips and pick-your-weeks for Middle School students. LIHSA is now accepting applications for the 2018-19 school year audition based program and the Summer Arts Academy a non-audition based program. The Long Island High School for the Arts is a Nassau BOCES Program. Like us at www.facebook.com/LIHSArts.

Long Island High School for the Arts

CAMPAIGN FOR THE

long island high school for the

arts

High School Program & Summer Arts Academy

APRIL 28 10 am - 2 pm

Come learn about our New Programs and Summer Offerings

WE ARE LIHSA Call for more info art · filmmaking · dance · digital media · music special effects · theatre · theatre tech summer arts academy

516.622.5678

239 Cold Spring Road, Syosset Nassau BOCES LIHSA offers a unique opportunity for all Nassau & Suffolk County students Grades 9-12 as part of their free, public high school education to talented young artists. The Summer Arts Academy accepts students Grades 6-12.


3B

COLLEGE AND EDUCATION

Possible is Everything

The Brookings Institution ranks Lawrence Technological University fifth among U.S. colleges and universities for boosting graduates’ earning potential. Payscale.com reports that salaries of LTU bachelor’s graduates are in the top 10 percent nationally. Some 88 percent of students are employed or have selected grad school by the date of their graduation, greater than the national average.

Innovative Programs, Small Class Sizes

LTU is a private, 4,500-student university that offers more than 100 innovative programs in Colleges of Architecture and Design, Arts and Sciences, Engineering, and Management – all featuring exceptional exposure to theory and practice. As a student, you’ll benefit from small class sizes, with classes, studios, and labs taught by faculty with current industry experience. Lawrence Tech is ranked among the nation’s best universities by U.S. News & World Report and The Princeton Review.

Located in Dynamic Suburb

The University is situated in Southfield, a dynamic suburb in Oakland County, Michigan. Hundreds of Fortune 500 and international companies are located nearby, and the region has one of the largest concentrations of engineering, architecture, and technological jobs in the world. Southeastern Michigan also offers a rich variety of recreational and cultural activities, with public transportation making most areas accessible to students.

Clubs and Sports

More than 60 student clubs and organizations, including fraternities, sororities, honor societies, and student chapters of professional groups, sponsor a variety of activities. LTU features NAIA, ACHA, and USBC varsity and junior varsity athletics in men’s and women’s basketball, soccer, lacrosse, bowling, ice hockey, golf, tennis, volleyball, and cross country, as well as women’s softball, and men’s football and baseball. You can also show your Blue Devil spirit as a member of the marching band or dance team. Learn more at LTUAthletics.com.

Technology to Help You Succeed

Lawrence Tech provides the tools required to compete and succeed in a technology-driven world. You’ll be provided your own high-end laptop loaded with industry-standard software – retailing on average over $75,000 – a benefit you’ll only get at LTU.

Ready to apply now? Go to ltu.edu/applyfree

For more information about becoming a Blue Devil, contact Lawrence Tech’s Office of Admissions at 800.225.5588 or admissions@ltu.edu, watch the “Student Stories” video at ltu.edu/StudentStories, or visit ltu.edu.

Possible is everything. At Lawrence Technological University you’ll get an innovative, hands-on education to prepare you for the career of your dreams. Why do students choose LTU? Find out: ltu.edu/studentstories

5th 88% 11:1 in nation for boosting student/faculty ratio students employed or graduates’ earning potential

registered for graduate school at commencement

admissions@ltu.edu

Architecture and Design | Arts and Sciences | Engineering | Management

Southfield, Michigan

Friday, April 20, 2018 The Litmor News Group

A Degree from Lawrence Technological University Boosts Your Earning Potential


4B The Litmor News Group Friday, April 20, 2018

COLLEGE AND EDUCATION ADVERTORIAL

IN KNOWLEDGE THERE IS OPPORTUNITY

Court reporters create word-for-word transcriptions at trials, depositions, administrative hearings, and other legal proceedings. Some court reporters provide captioning for television and real-time translation for deaf or hard-of-hearing people at public events, at business meetings, and in classrooms. Communication Access Real-Time Translation providers or CART providers, are court reporters who work primarily with deaf or hard-of-hearing people in a variety of settings turning speech into text so that the deaf or hard of hearing can interact with the world around them. For example, CART providers who use a stenography machine may caption high school and college classes and provide an immediate transcript to students who are hard-of-hearing or learning English as a second language. Computer-aided transcription, or “CAT,” is technology that utilizes highly specialized software to interpret the strokes made by a court reporter on a stenography machine. As the court reporter presses applicable keyboard combinations, the software immediately translates the machine shorthand into English. Realtime writing refers to computer-aided transcription which is performed by court reporters and can be instantly read on a monitor. Growth of the elderly population also will increase the demand for court reporters who are Communication Access Real-Time Translation (CART) providers or who can accompany their clients to doctor’s appointments, town hall meetings, and religious services. In addition, theaters and sports stadiums will provide closed captioning for deaf or hard-of-hearing customers. If you would like to gain the knowledge and skills required of a Court Reporter contact Long Island Business Institute (www.libi.edu) (631-499-7100).

631-499-7100

libi.edu 6500 Jericho Turnpike, Commack, NY 11725 This school is authorized under Federal Law to enroll nonimmigrant students. For Consumer information visit www.libi.edu

ADVERTORIAL

Home of The College Whisperer™ Official Sponsor of College Admission Success™ COLLEGE CONNECTION offers

comprehensive

college

enhancement to essay development, there is a difference between

planning and counseling. Guidance

simply

and

and

support

in

choosing

a

applying

actually

pay

in.

That

CONNECTION!

lege, and finding the to

getting

college

difference is, COLLEGE

college, getting in to colmoney

to

for

Remember, there’s more

college, all while taking

to applying to college than

the stress, the worry, the

filling in the blanks on

frustration and the madness

Common App, and more to

out of college applications and

getting your hands on the money to

admissions.

pay for college than just submitting

At COLLEGE CONNECTION,

FAFSA.

we’ve not only got your back, we’ve

got

your

best

moves

forward!

So, before the applications, college admissions, and financial aid

From college matching to admission strategies, application

you

forms need

get to

get

to to

you, us

--

COLLEGE CONNECTION!

What You Don’t Know About College Admissions Can Hurt You!

FREE COLLEGE PLANNING WORKSHOP When:

Monday, May 21, 2018 @ 7:30 PM-9:30 PM Where: Ethical Humanist Society of Long Island 38 Old Country Road Garden City, NY 11530 Why: Because the more you know, the better you’ll be able to plan for what’s ahead!

Seth Bykofsky (aka The College Whisperer™) of College Connection, presents an engaging and informative program, exploring such topics as choosing colleges that are "best" for you, the intricacies and nuances of the application and admissions process, creating persuasive essays and meaningful writing supplements, winning scholarships, and maximizing financial aid. A must attend for anyone applying to college, planning for college, paying for college, or just thinking about college.

Space is limited. Registration is requested. Register online at www.tfaforms.com/319156, at our website, or call us for more information.

COLLEGE CONNECTION

College Connection

Call for a FREE telephone consultation - 516-345-8766 Visit us on the web at www.CollegeConnect.info

516-345-8766

www.collegeconnect.info


D7

The National Constitution Center has some cavernous spaces; from the picture window, you can see out to Independence Hall where the Constitution was signed in 1787 © Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com decide laws and implement laws, have been (think Dred Scott, Citizens United). It seems that it has been a matter of luck that our democratic republic has survived this long, but one wonders how would we survive a “perfect storm” of various levers breaking down against threats that the Framers could never have foreseen, like an election that was stolen by a foreign adversary, or a president who used his office to personally profit, who sold favors to a foreign government and then defied a subpoena and could be manipulated or blackmailed. Andrew Jackson defied the Supreme Court’s ruling that his Indian Removal Act was unconstitutional, daring the court to bring its army to force him to do its bidding. I went in wondering if it would address some of the questions that I have long harbored: did the Salem Witch Trials play any part in the Founders’ interest in preserving Religious Freedom and separating Church and State? What role did the Iroquois Confederacy play in the writing of the Constitution? How does the notion of “originalism” – the pretense of knowing what the Founders intended – carry sway since the Constitution was clearly not perfect, the Founders were not omniscient and could not predict technology of today, were not Gods, knew their own human fallibilities in devising a system of government that had never been seen before, as well as the need to compromise on such issues as slavery in order to forge a union and the fact we have already adopted 27 amendments? The Constitution already has provision for impeachment (for “high crimes and misdemeanors”), already has an Emoluments clause, more recently adopted a 25th Amendment to provide for a President who is “unable”

or unfit, but what provision is there to “re-do” (or nullify) an election that is stolen – votes literally being switched in an e-ballot box - using the advanced technology of today? I wonder about the changes that need to be made in light of expanded population and new technologies, but that are resisted. For example, the Founders never imagined the powerful role that political parties would play – indeed, had to immediately change the procedure for “electing” the President and Vice President (originally it was the top-two vote getters) - but the present system almost guarantees a President elected by a minority of voters. The Electoral College, which functions mostly by tradition and not by law, but was created as a check against populism at a time when communications were slow, voting confined to a small elite, has already been demonstrated to be obsolete in its function by twice selecting as President a candidate who lost the popular vote, not to mention that it nullifies the ideal of “one person-one vote” because it gives so much unequal representation to small-population states over highpopulation states (as does the Senate). The Founders never imagined the fire power of an assault weapon at a time when the most sophisticated weapon was a single-ball musket. I don’t find the answers to my questions. Constitution Heritage Act A permanent memorial to the Constitution was first proposed around the celebration of the centennial of the Constitution in 1887. It did not begin to take shape until the idea was proposed again 100 years later during the document’s bicentennial celebration in 1987. President Ronald Reagan signed

the Constitution Heritage Act of 1988 on September 16, 1988. The act directed the establishment of the National Constitution Center, an institution “within or in close proximity to the Independence National Historical Park” that “shall disseminate information about the United States Constitution on a nonpartisan basis in order to increase awareness and understanding of the Constitution among the American people.” The Center opened on July 4, 2003, at 525 Arch Street (the date itself was significant, translating to May 25, 5/25, the date that the Constitutional Convention began in Philadelphia in 1787) in Philadelphia’s Independence National Historical Park, “America’s most historic square mile.” Designed by the architectural firm Pei Cobb Freed & Partners, the building is made of American products, including 85,000 square feet of Indiana limestone, 2.6 million pounds of steel, and a halfmillion cubic feet of concrete. The limestone used in the building is from the same quarry as the Empire State Building’s materials. The National Constitution Center owns a rare, original copy of the first public printing of the Constitution. This printing was published in a newspaper, The Pennsylvania Packet and Daily Advertiser, on September 19, 1787—two days after the Constitution was signed. Since the Constitutional Convention was conducted under an oath of secrecy, this printing represents the first time that Americans (“We the People”) saw the Constitution. (The original signed, handwritten Constitution is at the National Archives in Washington, D.C.) Now is an especially exciting time for visitors because the Center is displaying the rarest handwritten drafts of the U.S. Constitution through 2019.

In addition to exhibits, visitors can enrich their visit with daily museum programs or a Living News performance. In Living News, today’s headlines are brought to life in a dynamic performance incorporating video, contemporary music, and current news broadcasts. Featuring three engaging actors who play multiple roles, Living News introduces controversial constitutional issues and encourages audience members to explore their own points of view during a post-show discussion. Visitor amenities include The Delegates’ Cafe, a glass-enclosed restaurant providing the backdrop of historic Independence Mall, as well as a Museum Store, offering a wide range of gifts, books, apparel, jewelry, and toys. The National Constitution Center also houses the Annenberg Center for Education and Outreach, the national hub for constitutional education, which offers cuttingedge civic education resources both onsite and online. (Constitution Daily Blog: constitutioncenter. org/blog; We the People Podcast: constitutioncenter. org/podcasts; America’s Town Hall Programs Live: constitutioncenter. org/live) The National Constitution Center is located steps from Independence Hall, where the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence were signed. You need a minimum of 1 hour to visit, but more likely will spend at least two to three hours. General Admission to the museum and daily programming: Adults $14.50; Youth (6-18) $11; Students w/ID, Seniors $13. Members, active military personnel, and children ages 5 and under admitted free. The National Constitution Center, Independence Mall, 525 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106, 215409- 6700, constitutioncenter.org. Visit Philadelphia provides excellent trip planning tools, including hotel packages, itineraries, events listings: 30 S 17th Street, Philadelphia PA 19103, 215-599-0776, visitphilly.com. _____________________________ © 2018 Travel Features Syndicate, a division of Workstyles, Inc. All rights reserved. Visit goingplacesfarandnear.com, www.huffingtonpost.com/author/karenrubin & travelwritersmagazine.com/ TravelFeaturesSyndicate/. Blogging at goingplacesnearandfar. wordpress.com & moralcompasstravel. info. Send comments or questions to FamTravLtr@aol.com. Tweet @ TravelFeatures. ‘Like’ us at facebook. com/NewsPhotoFeatures

Friday, April 20, 2018

G O I N G P L A C E S, N E A R & F A R ....


Classifieds Friday, April 20, 2018

D8

CLASSIFIEDS

ONE CALL TO 516-294-8900 AND YOUR AD WILL APPEAR IN 11 LOCAL NEWSPAPERS. CALL TODAY FOR OUR VERY LOW RATES. FAX: 516-294-8924 www.gcnews.com Garden City News • Great Neck News • Mid Island Times Bethpage Newsgram • Syosset Advance Jericho News Journal • Williston Times - Mineola Edition New Hyde Park Herald Courier • Manhasset Times Roslyn Times • Port Washington Times DEADLINE FOR CLASSIFIED ADS IS TUESDAY AT 1:00PM. 3 EASY WAYS TO PLACE ADS: 1) Directly on website: gcnews.com & click on “Classified Order” 2) Email Nancy@gcnews.com 3) Fax 516-294-8924 Please include your name, daytime phone number, address and ad copy. Visa and MasterCard Accepted

EMPLOYMENT

EMPLOYMENT

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

ASSISTANT​ / ​ B OOKKEEPER: 6-8 hours per week. $12 per hour. Good with numbers. Familiar with internet. Will train. 516-365-2689

OFFICE ASSISTANT: Williston Park, duties include phone, billing, invoices, estimates and contracts. Customer service oriented. Must be motivated and fast learner. Hours Monday thru Friday 12-5pm. Please email resume to: elisa@elitesyntheticsurfaces. com

LEGAL: Process serving company seeking part time detail oriented individual for office assistant in Williston Park. Computer knowledge a must. Will train. Email resume: LRadler@ courtsupportinc.com LION WANTED! Are you a fierce competitor? Resourceful? Aggressive? Do you command respect? Instill client confidence? Blank Slate Media is looking for a hungry lion to fill a unique and rewarding Advertising Sales position with a newly formed Great Neck-Manhasset territory. You will represent a successful and fast-growing chain of 6 Blank Slate Media publications and website, in addition to five other publications and website owned by our partner, Litmor Publications. Minimum 2 years outside sales experience. Newspaper sales experience will be a plus. Must have own car. Up to $60,000 first year. Salary + commission. Health Insurance & Holidays. Email resume and cover letter: sblank@ theislandnow.com or call Steve at: 516-307-1045 ext 201. All inquiries are in strict confidence. Blank Slate Media, 105 Hillside Ave, Suite 1, Williston Park, ny 11596. Fax: 516-307-1046

TEACHERS

Judaic Studies, Special Education and Early Childhood. 2018-2019 School Year

MAGEN DAVID YESHIVAH Email

HRresumes@mdyschool.org

Call 294.8900

...a sure way to get results.

PART TIME EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT wanted for a contractor’s office located in Albertson. Responsible for day-to-day activities such as mail, phones, errands, vendor bills, filing and general office work. Downloading files from websites, making wide format prints, ordering and receiving office supplies. Some property management activities also required. Notary preferred. 9am-3pm, Monday thru Friday, with some flexibility. Email resume to ralph@strocchia.com

EMPLOYMENT

EMPLOYMENT

EMPLOYMENT

SITUATION WANTED

SITUATION WANTED

SITUATION WANTED

A NURSES AIDE​/​COMPANION SEEKING position to take care of your elderly loved one. Experience and very good references. Live in or out. Driver. Light housekeeping, shopping, doctor appointments, etc. Please call 516-353-9686

HOUSEKEEPER P/T Looking for part time housekeeper in the Garden City area who can cook, drive and run errands to stores, some light housekeeping. Experience preferred. Please provide references. Call Marianne 516-594-4944

CERTIFIED HOME HEALTH AIDE​/​COMPANION: over 12 years experience seeks position with the elderly. Prepare nutritious and appetizing meals, light housekeeping, live in or out. Excellent references. Please call Joy 347-898-5804

NANNY 21 year old Garden City resident and college student seeks a summer position as a nanny Monday through Friday. Reliable, experienced, references, reliable transportation. Call 516-532-9844 or email: AntoniaPalmeri@optonline.net

NANNY​/ BABYSITTER Experienced Babysitter available FT​ /​ PT. Trustworthy, responsible, active, creative and fun! Child development background. Excellent references. Licensed driver. Call Doris 516-330-0230 or email: dorischris910@gmail.com

ELDER CARE: Woman seeking position caring for the elderly. Available to live out and work nights or overnights as well. Over 20 years experience including in nursing home. References furnished upon request. Call V 516-943-3172 OR 516-5764736

NANNY AVAILABLE My reliable, kind, trustworthy Nanny who cared for my little ones like family is looking for a loving family to work with. She’s available to start as soon as possible. Please call: Natasha 347-957-7584

HOME HEALTH AIDE Ukrainian woman (previously Physical Therapist in Ukraine) seeking live in position of home health aide. Overnights no charge. Excellent cook also! Excellent references. Please call 516-294-9519

CAREER TRAINING AIRLINE CAREERS Start here. Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information 866296-7094

ANNOUNCEMENTS COMMERCIAL MORTGAGES: apartments, bridge loans, construction, hard money, hotels, industrial, private financing, mixed use, multi-family, no tax return option, office buildings, rehabs, REO purchases, retail shopping centers. FAST CLOSING 718-285-0806

Get results!

Place an ad in our Classifieds for reasonable rates and prompt results. Call the G.C. office at 294-8900 for more information.

JOB OPPORTUNITY $14.50 Long Island per hour $17.00 NYC per hour

If you currently care for your relatives or friends who have Medicaid or Medicare, you may be eligible to start working for them as a personal assistant. No Certificates needed.

347-462-2610 347-565-6200

ImmedIate OppOrtunIty fOr freelance repOrter Award-winning local newspaper group looking for a Freelance Reporter interested in a fast paced, quick turn-around environment. • • • • • •

We are looking for someone Who is:

Highly motivated Strong in AP style Able to ask questions without inhibition Able to produce clearly written and accurate stories Available to work evenings Experienced in covering meetings

Perfect opportunity for those looking to return to reporting, college students interested in honing their skills or individuals who enjoy writing about local news and events.

Send 2 samples of writing to sblank@theislandnow.com

N E W H Y D E PA R K

Herald Courier Great Neck News

Roslyn Times Manhasset Times

Williston Times Port WashingtonTimes METRO TEAM OUTFITTERS

www.theislandnow.com

WWW.METROTEAMOUTFITTERS.COM

105 Avenue, Suite I,Suite Williston 105Hillside Hillside Avenue, I Park, NY 11596 • Office: 516.307.1045 • Fax: 516.307.1046

Williston Park, NY 11596

516-307-1045

www.theislandnow.com

75 NASSAU TERMINAL ROAD NEW HYDE PARK, NY 11040


Call 294.8900

ANNOUNCEMENTS

MARKETPLACE

Have an idea for an invention​ /​new product? We help everyday inventors try to patent and submit their ideas to companies! Call InventHelp, FREE INFORMATION! 88-487-7074

INVITED ESTATE SALES BY TRACY JORDAN Estate & Tag Sales Online & Live Auctions Cleanout & Moving Services Home Staging Services Appraisals 516-279-6378 www.invitedsales.com Email: tracyjordan@invitedsales.com

HughesNet Satellite Internet: 25mbps starting at $49.99​ /​ mo! FAST download speeds. WiFi built in! FREE standard installation for lease customers! Limited Time, Call 1-800-214-1903 LUNG CANCER? And Age 60+? You and your family may be entitled to significant cash award. Call 866-951-9073 for information. No risk. No money out of pocket. MEDICARE doesn’t cover all of your medical expenses. A Medicare Supplemental Plan can help cover costs that Medicare does not. Get a free quote today by calling now. Hours: 24/7 1-800-730-9940

Our Service Directory is sure to bring results. Call 294-8900 for rates and information.

MARKETPLACE

MARKETPLACE

PETS

TAG SALE

GARAGE SALE

PET SERVICES

*BROWSE *SHOP *CONSIGN A.T. STEWART EXCHANGE CONSIGNMENT SHOP China, Silver, Crystal, Jewelry, Artwork, Furniture, Antiques, Collectibles Tues-Fri 10-4 Sat 12-4 Every Tuesday: 10% Senior Citizen Discount. All proceeds benefit The Garden City Historical Society 109 Eleventh Street Garden City 11530 516-746-8900 email: store@atstewartexchange.org www.gardencityhistoricalsociety. org

PRIVACY HEDGES SPRING BLOW OUT SALE. 6’ Arborvitae (cedar) reg. $179 NOW $75. Beautiful, nursery grown. FREE installation​ / FREE delivery. Limited supply! ORDER NOW! 518-536-1367 www.lowcosttreefarm.com

WANTED TO BUY LOOKING TO BUY! Oriental items, clothing, art, old & modern furniture, estates, jewelry, silver, glassware, dishes, old photos, coins & stamps, flatware. Call George 718-3861104 or 917-775-3048

Do you have a service to advertise?

TOP CASH PAID: JEWELRY, Furniture, Art, etc. Please call 718-598-3045 or 516-270-2128. www.iBuyAntiquesNYC.com

Our Service Directory is sure to bring results. Call 294-8900 for rates and information.

EMPLOYMENT HELP WANTED

Join A Growing Team That Values Your Experience….. We Have Openings for School Bus Drivers

Don’t miss an opportunity for a great job where you can serve your community and make good money too. • Training provided to obtain your commercial drivers license

WE OFFER: • Flexible hours • 401K plans with matching funds • Health & Life insurance • Emergency family leave • Safety and attendance bonus twice a year RETIREES WELCOME! Easy to drive vans - CDL training

Will train qualified applicants

WE NEW STARTING SALARIES • BIG BUS: $20.28 hr. Benefit rate • BIG BUS: $22.28 hr. *Non-Benefit rate • VAN: $17.51 hr. Benefit rate Positions • VAN: $19.51 hr. *Non-Benefit rate available for *available after 90 days

EDUCATIONAL BUS TRANSPORTATION 516.454.2300

CALL TODAY!

GARAGE SALE LOVING DOG WALKER GARDEN CITY AVAILABLE 7 DAYS A WEEK, FRIDAY 4/27 ALL TIMES! 12:00 pm to 6:00 pm Former Garden City resident, Saturday 4/28 I am reliable & attentive. 10:00 am to 4:00 pm References & 138 Cambridge Ave referrals available. (cross street Kensington Rd) Categories & Items: Infant & todCall David dler items and toys; more toys 516-996-6329 and games for post toddler-adolescence; sporting equipment, folding field chairs; skiis, hockey stuff, golf clubs​/​bags; children’s DO YOU HATE KENNELS? videos and books & fiction & OR non fiction books; guitars, audio STRANGERS IN YOUR mixer, stereo equipment & cabiHOUSE? net, cds; household furnishings​ /​furniture, outdoor storage bin; HOME AWAY FROM HOME painting, art, ceramics & knick will care for your dog in my knacks; luggage, backpacks Garden City home while you are away. GARDEN CITY Dog walking also available. HUGE Multi Family Sale Pet CPR & first Aid Certified. Saturday 4/21 Numerous referrals and ref10:00 am to 3:00 pm erences. Limited availability. 175 Roxbury Rd Toys, Sporting Goods, Cloth- Book early! ing, Housewares, Kitchenware. Annmarie 516-775-4256 Antiques, Vintage & New. Something for Everyone! NO EARLY BIRDS! GARDEN CITY Saturday, 4/21 10am to 4pm 212 Wellington Rd All above average condition items: full dumbell set, luggage, frames, home furnishings, art, lamps and lots more! THE ANDY FOUNDATION YARD SALE SHOP An eclectic selection of furniture, home decor, jewelry, china, artwork, antiques, housewares. New donations daily 195 Herricks Rd Garden City Park, NY 11040 Tues​—​Sat 10am-4pm 516-739-1717 info@theandyfoundation.org Proceeds benefit The Andy Foundation

PETS

(We will train for the rad test) CALL TODAY!

SIGN ON BONUS $1,000 FOR CDL DRIVERS Bus & Van $500 For Non CDL Drivers

D9

mechanics and bus attendants

Positions available for Nassau & Suffolk

Friday, April 20, 2018 Classifieds

CLASSIFIEDS

PET SERVICES A GARDEN CITY ANIMAL LOVER doesn’t want to leave your precious pooch or fantastic feline alone all day. I’m reliable, dependable and will walk and feed your pet while you work or travel. Please call Cheryl at 516-971-3242

K9 Monk, LLC Located in Garden City, NY, K9 Monk, LLC is a full service pet care company who is committed to providing the very best care to your dog’s well-being by using cutting edge professional dog grooming, day care, overnight boarding, private training and energy healing techniques. 516-382-5553 thek9monk@gmail.com www.facebook.com​/​k9monk www.k9monk.com

AUTOMOTIVE AUTO FOR SALE BMW 328xi 2013 44k miles, 8 speed automatic, meticulously maintained, Silver, black leather seats, navigation, bluetooth, sunroof, wood grain trim, weather tech mats, ABS (4-wheel), heated seats, No accidents. Asking $15,500 Tracey 516-984-4470

AUTO SERVICES CAR DETAILING done at your home, includes cleaning of interior, vacuuming. Very reasonable. Please call 516-373-5928

-DO YOU HAVE A SERVICE to advertise? Our Service Directory is sure to bring results. Call 294-8935 for rates and information.


Classifieds Friday, Aprol 20, 2018

D10

CLASSIFIEDS AUTOMOTIVE AUTOS WANTED

DONATE YOUR CAR to Wheels For Wishes, benefitting Make-a-Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call 631-317-2014 Today!

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT APARTMENT FOR RENT GARDEN CITY BORDER APARTMENT: Spacious, bright 2 bedroom with dining area, gated parking, laundry, A/C, dishwasher, hardwood floors. NO BROKER FEE, near LIRR, $1 725+ electric. Available May 1 www.gcbapts.com or 516-724-1101 RENTALS Three Rooms. 1 Bed. EIK. Wood Floors, Parking. May 1, $2,300 Large Five Rooms. 2 Bed, FDR, EIK, 5 Closets, Wood Floors, Immediate $2,750 Garden City Properties (516)746-1563 / (516)313-8504

VACATION RENTAL HAMPTON BAYS AVAILABLE JUNE 11-17 2018 US OPEN SHINNECOCK approximately 5 miles from Shinnecock. 4 Bedroom, 2.5 Bath, 1/2 Acre, Private Community, Private Beach, Large Patio, Music System, CAC, Laundry. South of Montauk Hwy. Close to train, town, beach and golf course. $6,000​/​week or $1,100​/​night. References and security. No smoking. No pets. Call 516-426-2247 HAMPTON BAYS SHINNECOCK 2018 US GOLF OPEN RENTAL 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, finished basement, central A/C, outdoor living space, solar heated swimming pool. South of the highway, close to all. Approx 5 miles to the golf course. Jun 11th thru 17th. $8,500 plus security deposit. Call 516-306-5992

Call 294.8900

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

REAL ESTATE WANTED

CONDO/CO-OP FOR SALE

OPEN HOUSE

LAND WANTED

GARDEN CITY Large One Bedroom Condo in the heart of downtown Garden City. This 800 sq ft Condo boasts newly finished Hardwood Floors, Dining Room, brand new Bathroom & Kitchen with d/w. Low maintenance & taxes. By owner​ — ​ n o broker. $579,000 Call: 646-499-1684

GARDEN CITY Saturday & Sunday April 21st & 22nd 1:00pm to 3:30pm 156 Chestnut St. Charming Mid Block Side Hall Colonial with 4 Oversized Bedrooms. Large Formal Living Room w/Wood Burning Fireplace. Formal Dining Room, Comfortable Den or 5th Bedroom. 5 Bath & Eat in Kitchen. Finished Basement, Great Backyard. 10 min to LIRR. $989,000 For more info: http:​/​​/​chestnut.eproptour.com Marco LaPadura: Keller Williams Liberty 917-846-0433 (c) or 718-848-4700 (o)

SEEKING LARGE ACREAGE Serious cash buyer seeks large acreage 200 acres and up in the Central​/​Finger Lakes​/​So. Tier & Catskills Regions of NY State. Brokers welcome. For prompt, courteous, confidential response, call 607-353-8068 or email: Info@NewYorkLandandLakes. com

MILL POND ACRES PORT WASHINGTON Condominium For Sale By Owner. First floor, end unit. Two bedrooms, two full baths, living​ /​ dining room 17’x20’, granite countered kitchen. Enormous closet space. Washer ​ / ​ d ryer. Amenities: swimming pool, gymnasium, locker rooms, sauna and steam rooms. Gated community, 24/7 guard, snow removal and garden maintenance. Condominium rented through March 2020, $3,300 monthly. $695,000. Residents 55+ Excellent investment opportunity and eventual move in possibility. Call Philip Sherman, owner, 516-482-3754 or 516698-4808

LOTS FOR SALE LENDER ORDERED WATERFRONT LAND SALE! April 28th. 1 DAY ONLY! 7 Waterfront Parcels​/​Finger Lakes​ —​Ithaca area! Ex: 6 acres​—​150’ waterfront​—​$49,900. 8 acres​—​ 600’ shoreline​—​$69,900. Owner terms avail! CAll 888-905-8847 to register. NewYorkLandandLakes.com

OPEN HOUSE BAITING HOLLOW Sunday 4/22 1:00pm to 3:00pm 54 Baiting Drive Sophisticated & Modern! Elegantly Appointed Contemporary Home on Acre+ Park Like Property. 4 BRs, 3 Baths. Indulge in the Luxury & Privately set In Ground Swimming Pool. Formal LR​/f​ ireplace, FDR, New Gourmet EIK & Family Room. Master Suite​/​Balcony. Circular Drive, Garage, Full Basement. This one has it all. $649,000 Colony Realty, 631-722-5800

Are you a professional?

Our Professional Guide is sure to bring results. Call 294-8900 for rates and information.

OUT OF TOWN REAL ESTATE JAMESPORT: 375’ of Waterfront. Location! Location! Spectacular Views. 140’ of Sandy Bay Beach. Boat Dock on Property. Cape with 3 BRs. Living Room with Stone Fireplace. $1,995,000. Colony Realty, Carll Austin 516-658-2623 SARATOGA COUNTY, NY The Great Sacandaga Lake 62 feet of prime beach Row boat, Old Town Canoe, two Kayaks, paddles included. House was built in 1990 with an addition added on 10 years ago. 2000 sf home. 4 Bedrooms, 2 full Baths, Laundry Area, Open Concept Living Room, Dining Area and Kitchen. The large Family Room has a Bar and includes a Shuffleboard table. Front and Back Porch. Price: $589,000 The owner is a former Garden City resident. Please call between 3 & 9 PM Phone: 518-696-7203

Our Service

Directory is sure to bring results. Call 294-8900 for rates and information.

SERVICES ** EVON’S SERVICES ** HOME HEALTH AIDES ELDER CARE CHILD CARE AND MORE! We offer the following services: Companions, Home Health Aides​/​Elder Care Child Care and Housekeeping Laborers Days / Nights Live In or Live Out

SERVICES Help your local economy and save money with Solar Power! Solar Power has a strong Return on Investment, Free Maintenance, Free Quote. Simple Reliable Energy with No out of pocket costs. Call 800-6780569

LAMPS FIXED $65 In home service. Handy Howard. 646-996-7628 MASONRY All types of stonework Pavers, Retaining Walls, Belgium Block Patios, Foundations, Seal coating, Concrete and Asphalt driveways, Sidewalks, Steps. Free Estimates Fully Licensed & Insured #H2219010000 Boceski Masonry Louie 516-850-4886 ROOF LEAKS REPAIRED All types Roofing & flashing repairs, aluminum trim work and Gutter Clean Outs. Nassau Lic# H1859520000. B.C. Roofing & Siding, Inc. Text or call: 516-983-0860

SKY CLEAR WINDOW INC. Window Restorations, Outdated Hardware, skylights, AnNO FEE TO EMPLOYERS dersen Sashes, new storm winCall: 516-505-5510 dows, wood windows, chain​ /​ DISH NETWORK Satellite rope repairs, falling windows, Television Services. Now over fogged panes, mechanical re190 channels for ONLY $59.99​/​ pairs, wood repairs, restomo! 2yr price guarantee. FREE rations, all brands. Call Mr. installation. FREE streaming. Fagan, 45 years experience. More of what you want! Save 631-385-7975 www.skyclearwinHUNDREDS over Cable and DIdow.com RECTV. Add Internet as low as rob@skyclearwindow.com $14.95​/​mo! 1-800-943-0838

HOME IMPROVEMENTS AMBIANCE PROFESSIONAL SERVICES *Handyman & Remodeling *Kitchen Installations *Furniture Assembly *Finish Carpentry *Minor Electrical & Plumbing 25year GC Resident Lic & Ins H18E2170000 Call BOB 516-741-2154 GEM BASEMENT DOCTOR: One stop for all your home improvement needs! Basement, bathroom & kitchen remodeling, carpentry, crown & decorative molding, closets, doors, decking, painting, roofing, siding, sheetrock, windows. 516-623-9822

PAINTING & PAPERHANGING INTERIOR & EXTERIOR PAINTING Plastering, Taping, Sheetrock Skim Cutting, Old Wood Refinish, Staining, Wallpaper Removal & Hanging, Paint Removal, Power Washing, Wood Replacement JOHN MIGLIACCIO Licensed & Insured #80422100000 Call John anytime: 516-901-9398 (Cell) 516-483-3669 (Office)

Get results!

Place an ad in our Classifieds for reasonable rates and prompt results. Call the G.C. office at 294-8900 for more information.


SERVICES

SERVICES

PAINTING & PAPERHANGING

CLEANING

MBR HOUSE CLEANING Offices & Buildings

MICHELANGELO PAINTING & WALLPAPER Interior, Exterior, Plaster​ /​ Honest, Reliable, Hardworking, Experienced, Excellent Ref. Spackle, Light Carpentry, Reasonable Rates Decorative Moldings & Power Washing. FREE ESTIMATES Call: 516-328-7499 CALL/TEXT 516-852-1675

PARTY HELP LADIES & GENTLEMEN RELAX & ENJOY Your Next Party! Catering and Experienced Professional Services for Assisting with Preparation, Serving and Clean Up Before, During and After Your Party Bartenders Available. Call Kate at 516-248-1545

TUTORING MATH, PHYSICS, SAT​/​ACT TUTOR Adjunct professor Calculus I, II. Algebra, Trig, AP & Pre-Calc, IB, NYS Certified, highly experienced. Call Mr G 516-787-1026 MATH, SAT, ACT TUTOR: Algebra, Geometry, Algebra 2 plus Trig, Pre-Calc, AP Calculus. Norm 625-3314 ENGLISH, ACT, SAT TUTOR: 25+ year experience Critical Reading, Writing, Grammar, Essays. Lynne 625-3314 PRIVATE TUTORING FOR GRADES K-6 Give your child a helping hand! Licensed NYC​ /​ NYS Dept of Education teacher available to tutor students grades K-6. Contact Audrey Sullivan, M.S.Ed 347-628-8872 (voice​/​text) seguenow@aol.com

CLEANING CLEAN AND SHINE! Service and Products Specializing in Commercial and Office Cleaning Providing a Professional Personalized Service. All cleaning services discussed and designed to your needs. No job too small Weekly or Daily Cleaning Competitive Pricing Move In​/​Move Out Residential​/​Apts Call for Free Estimate Elizabeth 917-863-5060

mbrhousecleaning@gmail.com

CLEANING LADY AVAILABLE Also organizes homes, offices, garages. English speaking, honest, reliable. Excellent references. Own transportation. Animal friendly. Free estimates. Call 516-225-8544 HOUSE CLEANING: Excellent service, with great references, reliable, own transportation, English speaking. Call Selma 516-690-3550 RELIABLE, high quality service with great references. Please call Mirian at 516-6426624

SPRING INTO ACTION LET US CLEAN YOUR HOUSE WINDOWS GARDEN CITY WINDOW CLEANING Home Window Cleaning Service by Owner Free Estimates Inside & Out Fully Insured 25 Years Experience 631-220-1851 516-764-5686

SERVICES

SERVICES

SERVICES

STRONG ARM CLEANING: Residential and commercial cleaning specialist, post construction clean ups, shipping and waxing floors, move ins and move outs. Free estimates. Bonded and insured. 516-5381125 www.strongarmcleaningny.com 1-866-We Junk It: All phases of rubbish removal & demolition. Residential, commercial, construction sites, kitchens, bathrooms, clean-ups, attics, basements, floods, fires. All size dumpsters. Same day service. Fully insured. Bob Cat Service. www.1866wejunkit.com 516-5411557

COMPLETE JUNK REMOVAL​/​DEMOLITION SERVICE: Strong Arm Contracting Inc. We haul anything and everything. Entire contents of home or office. We clean it up and take it away. Residential​/C ​ ommercial. Bonded​/​Insured. Free estimates. 516-538-1125

OLD VILLAGE TREE SERVICE: Owner operated since 1989. 24 hour emergency service. Licensed​/​insured. Free estimates, member LI Arborist Assoc. Please call 516-466-9220

A & J MOVING & STORAGE: Established 1971. Long Island and New York State specialists. Residential, Commercial, Piano & Organ experts. Boxes available. Free estimates. www. ajmoving.com 516-741-2657 114 Jericho Tpk, Mineola NYDOT# 10405 COLLEGE ARTS ADMISSIONS: College Counseling in the Visual and Performing Arts. Dance, Musical Theatre & Drama. Film, Instrumental & Vocal Music. Audio Recording & Production. Theatre Technology & Production. Visual & Graphic Arts. Resume, Essays, Repertoire Lists. Michele Zimmerman. 516-353-6255 CollegeArtsAdmissions@gmail.com www.CollegeArtsAdmissions. com

I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!®

Help On-the-Go ®

I’ve fallen and I can’t get up!

$50

Gift Card!

(Courtesy of Satellite Deals)

FREE

Premium Channels! for 3 mos.

FREE

Installation! (up to 6 rooms)

CALL TODAY! 844-621-4863 All offers require 2-year commitment with early termination fee and eAutoPay. Free Premium Channels: After 3 mos. you will be billed $55/mo unless you call to cancel.

“Long Island‛s Largest Seller of Palm Trees”

Order Online or Call

HELP!

with

SWITCH TO DISH & GET:

2956 Rt. 112 Medford, NY

Help at Home

GPS !

EXPIRES SOON:

We Sell the “Windmill Palm Tree” Guaranteed to Survive the Winter!!!

Saving a Life EVERY 11 MINUTES

Help in Shower

D11

Call 294.8900

Friday, April 20, 2018 Classifieds

CLASSIFIEDS

Get HELP fast, 24/7, anywhere with

For a FREE brochure call:

.

1-800-404-9776

IslandWidePalmTrees.com (631) 714-7256

For Residents and Visitors of Long Island

Extra 10% OFF with Promo Code NYS415


Classifieds Friday, April 20, 2018

D12

DONATE YOUR CAR

Wheels For Wishes Benefiting

Make-A-Wish® Suffolk County or Metro New York WheelsForWishes.org

*Free Vehicle/Boat Pickup ANYWHERE *We Accept All Vehicles Running or Not *Fully Tax Deductible

Suffolk County

Call: (631) 317-2014

Last Hope Part of the Chewy.com Rescue Program

If you haven’t tried Chewy.com yet for your pet food and supply purchases, this is a great time to check them out. Last Hope is now part of their rescue program. For each new customer that makes a purchase, Last Hope will receive a $20 donation. Click on the ad below or go directly to the Last Hope page at https://www.chewy.com/rp/5941

Metro New York

Call: (631) 317-2014

* Car Donation Foundation d/b/a Wheels For Wishes. To learn more about our programs or financial information, visit www.wheelsforwishes.org.

Donate A Boat or Car Today!

“2-Night Free Vacation!”

800 - 700 - BOAT (2628)

w w w.boatangel.com

sponsored by boat angel outreach centers

STOP CRIMES AGAINST CHILDREN

Our Service Directory is sure to bring results. Call 294-8900 for rates and information.

SHOPPING FOR SUPPORT

Clipping pet item coupons for Last Hope is a great and easy way to give your support. Every coupon we receive helps to defray our costs, particularly for dog and cat food. They can either be dropped off at our adoption center at 3300 Beltagh Avenue in Wantagh, or mailed to Last Hope, PO Box 7025, Wantagh 11793. Please share our need with your friends and family. Thank you! Visit http://lasthopeanimalrescue.org to read about Last Hope’s programs and to see the fabulous array of fantastic felines eagerly awaiting adoption into their forever homes!

Love to write?

We are looking for articles on local topics, opinions, ideas, nice places to visit on Long Island, and even fiction. In our Discover magazine section, we will try to feature one new article and writer each week. Each writer will be reimbursed a stipend of $25.00, and articles should be between 1,500 and 3,000 words. If you want to be published and be part of an issue of Discovery, you may submit your article to: editor@gcnews.com


MOVING SERVICE

Call 294.8900

CLEANING RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL

COMICS

NEED $$ ?? NEED SPACE??

Serving the community for over 40 yrs

BRIAN CLINTON

MOVERS

One Piece to a Household/ Household Rearranging FREE ESTIMATES

Visit us at Comic Con at booth #2537 on 10/5-10/8

333-5894

Owner Supervised

Have Old Comic Books To Sell?? Old Toys?? Old Pulps?? Collectibles?? Have to Move?? Have TV or Movie Memorabilia??

WE BUY!! $$ PAID IMMEDIATELY!!

BEST COMICS INTERNATIONAL

1300 JERICHO TURNPIKE, NEW HYDE PARK

Licensed & Insured Licensed #T-11154 175 Maple Ave. Westbury, NY 11590

www.bestcomics.com

MOVERS

$

Since 1991

516-328-1900

TREE SERVICE

CARPENTRY

SWEENEY CUSTOM CARPENTRY and PAINTING

Renovations Custom Closets Sheetrock Repairs Interior/Exterior

New Doors New Windows New Moldings Free Estimates

516-884-4016 Lic# H0454870000

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

MASONRY FREE ESTIMATES LOU: 516 850-4886

FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED

DRIVEWAYS & PARKING LOTS RETAINING WALLS FOUNDATIONS DRYWELL WATER DRAINAGE WATER PROOFING

SIDEWALKS PATIOS / PAVERS BRICK / BLOCK BLUE STONE STEPS / STOOPS BELGIUM BLOCK CULTURED STONE

Contracting LLC

26

MASONRY • PAVING • CONCRETE

FULLY INSURED

LAWN SPRINKLERS

• • • • •

LIC: #H2219010000

ANTIQUES

AWNINGS AND HOME IMPROVEMENT

Spring Turn-Ons Backflow Device Tests Free Estimates Installation Service/Repairs

Joe Barbato (516) 775-1199 ROOFING

B.C. Roofing Inc. Over 30 Years Experience No Sub Contractors

SLATE ROOF SPECIALIST COPPER FLASHING WORK FREE Estimates

516-983-0860 Licensed & Insured Nassau Lic #H1859520000

Enjoy Instant Shade & Comfort All Summer Mention Blank Slate Media and

SAVE $200

INTERIOR & EXTERIOR / RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL • Thermal Windows • Doors • Siding & Gutters • Dormers & Extensions • Basements • Kitchens • Bathrooms • Decks

GOLDEN HAMMER HOME IMPROVEMENTS

Perfection Is No Accident!

516-354-1127

FREE ESTIMATES Lic. & Insured

11 Friday, April 20, 2018

SERVICE DIRECTORY


Friday, April 20, 2018

12

SERVICE DIRECTORY

Call 294.8900

PAINTING/POWER WASHING

SWEENEY PAINTING

Lic# H0454870000

Interior and Exterior • Plaster/Spackle Light Carpentry • Decorative Moldings Power Washing 516-385-3132 New Hyde Park

CHIMNEY SPECIALISTS

www.MpaintingCo.com

516-328-7499 Licensed & Insured

Basement, Bathroom & Kitchen Remodeling, Carpentry, Crown & Decorative Molding, Closets, Doors, Decking, Painting, Roofing, Siding, Sheetrock, Windows

GEM - BASEMENT DOCTOR

516-623-9822 Lic. Nas. H3803000000

TREE SERVICE

JUNK REMOVAL

ALL PHASES OF RUBBISH REMOVAL & DEMOLITION

House Calls & Same Day Service Available

ANTIQUE & ESTATE BUYERS

Residential • Commercial Construction Sites

We Pay $$CASH$$ For Paint ings Clocks • Watches Est ate Jewelr y Coins • St amps A nt ique Fur nit ure Hummels/LLadr os Recor ds Sterling Silver

MILITARY COLLECTIONS: Swords • Knives • Helmets

TOP $ PAID FOR JUDAICA COLLECTIBLES

FREE ESTIMATES!

• Slate & Tile Specialists

Kitchens • Bathrooms Clean-Ups • Attics Basements Flood/Fire

ALL SIZE DUMPSTERS

516-541-1557

Some Day Service, Fully Insured

• All Types of Roofing LIC & INSD “MANY LOCAL REFERENCES”

(516) 621-3869

AN OPPORTUNITY...

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

One Stop For All Your Home Improvement Needs

• • • • • • • •

- Stopping Leaks My Specialty -

est. 1978

Exterior Power Washing Rotted Wood Fixed Staining

516-884-4016

“PAULIE THE ROOFER”

PAINTING & WALLPAPER

and CARPENTRY

Interior B. Moore Paints Dustless Vac System Renovations

ROOFING

PAINTING/POWER WASHING

Bob Cat Service

www.1866WEJUNKIT.com

Each week Litmor Publication’s Professional Guide and Professional Directory publishes the ads of providers of professional services. A 6 week agreement brings your specialty or service to the attention of the public in a public service format.

Let us begin listing you in our Next Issue.

For More Information and rates call

516.294.8900

WE BUY IT ALL

COIN SHOP

WE BUY IT ALL

Coins, Paper Money, Stamps, Jewelry, Diamonds, Sports Memorabilia, Comic Books, Antique Guns, and much more - please offer!

516 - 9 74 - 6 5 2 8 ASK FOR CHRISTOPHER

1029 West Jericho Turnpike, Smithtown, L.I.

SERVING QUEENS & ENTIRE TRI-STATE AREA We buy anything old. One Piece or house full

Get the news everyone’s reading about!

Premium Quaility Certified Coins

2127 Hillside Ave. New Hyde Park, NY 11040 (516) 741-3330 Ask for Paul Sr.

Stay informed about your community with a weekly subscription to our newspaper.

With current events, announcements, restaurant reviews, puzzles, and much more, there’s always something for everybody to enjoy!

Litmor Publishing

Your Community, Your Newspaper (516) 294-8900

The Garden City News • Bethpage Newsgram Jericho-Syosset News Journal • Syosset Advance The Mid-Island Times & Levittown Times


HOME IMPROVEMENTS

PROFESSIONAL GUIDE

Call 294.8900

Call 294-8900 and let us begin listing you in our Professional Guide and Professional Services pages. Deadline is Monday, 12 Noon ACCOUNTANTS AND TAX CONSULTANTS

COMPUTER SPECIALIST

ACCOUNTANTS & TAX CONSULTANTS

J.B. Luzim & Company JEFFREY LUZIM C.P.A.

300 Garden City Plaza, Suite 154 Garden City, NY 11530 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF TAX PRACTITIONERS

Phone: (516) 747-8939

Fax: (516) 747-3197 E-Mail: jeffLuzim@cpa.com

DEMO/JUNK REMOVAL

COLLEGE COUNSELING

HEALTH CARE MANAGEMENT

Family Care Connections,® LLC Dr. Ann Marie D’Angelo, PMHCNS-BC Doctor of Nursing Practice Advanced Practice Nurse Care Manager Assistance with Aging at Home / Care Coordination Nursing Home & Assisted Living Placement PRI / Screens / Mini Mental Status Exams 901 Stewart Ave., Suite 230, Garden City, NY 11530

(516) 248-9323

WWW.DRANNMARIEDANGELO.COM TUTORING

TAX AND ACCOUNTING

Audrey Sullivan M.S.Ed. Educator

Give your child a helping hand. Available for private tutoring. Specializing in Grades K - 6 347-628-8872 (voice / text) seguenow@aol.com Licensed Teacher / NYC Dept. of Education Licensed Teacher / NYS Dept. of Education

TUTORING

AN OPPORTUNITY...

TREE SERVICE

TUTORING

Each week Litmor Publication’s Professional Guide and Professional Directory publishes the ads of providers of professional services. A 6 week agreement brings your specialty or service to the attention of the public in a public service format. Let us begin listing you in our Next Issue. For More Information and rates call

516.294.8900

13 Friday, April 20, 2018

SERVICE DIRECTORY


14 Friday, April 20, 2018

Record 38 from Syosset compete at international DECA conference

Syosset High School’s DECA team at the New York State Career Conference, where the school qualified a record 38 students for this year’s international conference.

What’s Happening April 20th

“Free Health Screenings” by the St. Francis Hospital Community Outreach Program will be held at the Jericho Public Library from 10AM to 2PM. No appointments are necessary. “Planning to Sell Your Home” is the topic of a presentation at the Syosset Public Library at 2PM with Denise Langweber, Esq. The Great Performers series continues at the Jericho Public Library at 2PM with “Sophia Loren & Marcello Mastroianni – Icons of Italian Cinema”.

April 23rd

At 2PM in the Jericho Public Library, Marilyn Carminio will present a program on “America’s First Ladies”.

April 24th

“The Syosset Public Library’s Afternoon Book Discussion Group” will meet at 1:30PM to talk about The Stranger In the Woods by Michael Finkel. Elinor Haber will be at the Jericho Public Library at 2PM to lead a discussion on “News Currents”. “Color Chemistry”, for children in grades 2 through 6, will be held at the Jericho Public Library at 7PM.

April 25th

The “Spring

Painting

Workshop”

begins today at 6:45 to 8:45PM and will continue each week through May 9th. It will be taught by Barbara Lewin. Advanced registration is required.

April 26th

“The Lost Elegance of the Great Gatsby Estates” is the subject of a lecture with Orin Finkle, Historian, at the Syosset Public Library at 2PM.

April 27th

The film “Selma” will be shown at the Syosset Public Library at 2PM. Rated PG-13, the movie runs 127 minutes.

April 29th

At 1PM, Bob Spiotto’s musical revue, “The United States of Music” will be performed at the Syosset Public Library. “The Best of Neil, Engelbert & Tom” will be performed by the Evergreen Trio at the Jericho Public Library at 2PM.

Photo courtesy of the Syosset School District

Syosset DECA returned from a successful showing at the DECA State Career Conference held in Rochester, New York last month, where the team qualified 38 members – a school record – for the International Career Development Conference in Atlanta April 21st-24th. Nine first-place awards, six second-place awards, five fourthplace, and a fifth-place award highlighted the impressive performance in Rochester as 32 Syosset teams placed in the top 10 overall. Students competed in a variety of events in categories including marketing, entrepreneurship, finance, business management, and hospitality and tourism, completing a wide range of tasks, from presenting their written business proposals to solving real-world business problems in a role-play scenario. In addition to the competition, Syosset students participated in leadership seminars and activities that focused on strengthening their ability to solve problems, work as a team and network with others. This year’s DECA State CareerConference welcomed more than 2,100 attendees. Congratulations, Syosset DECA adviser Glenn Baumann and the students who either won awards or advanced to the International Career Development Conference.

Sign Up & Save A New Issue Every Friday, Delivered to Your Door!

Receive thought-provoking editorials and current events coverage to restaurant reviews, puzzles and more, we deliver the quality reporting that keeps you informed and the playful features that keep you entertained.

April 30th

“Phantom Thread”, starring Daniel Day-Lewis, will be shown at the Jericho Public Library at 2PM. Rated R, the film is 2 hours and 10 minutes long. From 7 to 8PM at the Syosset Public Library, “Escape the Room: Harry Potter Horcrux Hunt” will be held. Teens should register in advance to attend. Compiled by Meg Meyer

Litmor Publishing

Your Community, Your Newspaper The Garden City News - The Mid-Island Times & Levittown Times The Bethpage Newsgram - The Syosset Advance - The Jericho-Syosset News Journal


15

THE POLICE BLOTTER

Incidents that have occurred recently in the local area include: n

A 27-year-old woman from Hempstead was arrested at 11:50AM on March 29th and charged with Shoplifting from 9 Star Wine and Liquor in Westbury. n

On March 29th at 3:35PM, a 26-yearold man from Baldwin was arrested at the corner of Hempstead Turnpike and Garden City Boulevard in West Hempstead. He was charged with Unlawful Possession of Marijuana. n

On Southern State Parkway at Exit 17S in West Hempstead, a 54-year-old man from Hempstead was arrested and was charged with Driving While Intoxicated at 12:29AM on March 30th. n

A 39-year-old man from Wantagh was arrested on South Fulton Avenue at Old Country Road in Westbury at 12:30AM on March 30th and was charged with Unlawful Possession of Marijuana. n

At 2:45PM on March 30th, a 20-yearold woman from Huntington was arrested and charged with Shoplifting from Sephora in East Garden City. n

At Eisenhower Park’s Field 3 parking lot, located in East Meadow, a 41-year-old man from Hempstead was arrested and was charged with Criminal Possession of Marijuana at 5PM on March 30th. n

At 6:41PM on March 30th, two 21-year-old subjects, both from Westbury, were arrested on Eastfield Road in that town. Both were charged with Unlawful Possession of Marijuana. n

On Voice Road in Carle Place, a 33-year-old woman from East Patchogue was arrested and was charged with Unlawful Possession of Marijuana on March 30th at 9:50PM. n

While driving eastbound on Old Country Road in Westbury, a 38-yearold man from that town was arrested and was charged with Driving While Intoxicated on March 30th at 11:15PM. n

Sometime between 3:50 and 4:16PM on March 31st, a 48-year-old man from Hempstead was arrested on Jerusalem Avenue at Maple Avenue in Uniondale. He was charged with Driving While

Intoxicated.

n

A 44-year-old man from Long Island City and a 39-year-old woman from Glendale were arrested and charged with Shoplifting from Walmart in Westbury at 10:55PM on March 31st.

ales s a i med

Are you the one?

n

At 2:28AM on April 1st, a 43-year-old man from Oradell was arrested and was charged with Driving While Intoxicated on the Long Island Expressway at Exit 34 in Lake Success. n

At PF Changes in Westbury, two bags were stolen from a vehicle between 7 and 9PM on April 1st. n

A 46-year-old man from Freeport was arrested at 10:30AM on April 2nd and charged with Shoplifting from Lowes in East Garden City. n

US currency was stolen from a vehicle in the Roosevelt Field Mall parking lot in East Garden City at 3PM on April 3rd. n

A 30-year-old woman from East Meadow was arrested at 4:25PM on April 3rd and charged with Shoplifting from JC Penney in East Garden City. n

At The Gap in East Garden City, a 21-year-old man and a 25-year-old woman, both from the Bronx, were arrested and charged with Shoplifting at 5:45PM on April 3rd. n

At 6:15PM on April 3rd, a 25-year-old woman from Riverhead was arrested and charged with Shoplifting from Saks Off 5th Avenue in East Garden City.

Friday, April 20, 2018

Working at Blank Slate Media means you will be joining a highly talented group of sales professionals that have contributed to our becoming the award-winning group of eleven weekly newspapers and website on Long Island’s North Shore. As a key member of our media sales team, you will be assigned a protected territory, where you will have unlimited potential to manage existing clients and grow new business utilizing email, special events and contest sponsorships. The candidate selected will acquire the latest contact information system, plus improved computer software that will compliment your ability to sell and service your clients. We are prepared to offer uncapped commission and earnings potential, in addition to health insurance, paid holidays.

n

Driving While Intoxicated was the charge brought against a 38-year-old woman from Oceanside who was arrested on Main Street in Roslyn at 12:20AM on April 4th.

To apply, email a resume and cover letter to sblank@theislandnow.com. Or call Steven Blank from Mon. to Fri. 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at 516.263.6440.

n

A 58-year-old woman from Roslyn Heights was arrested at 4PM on April 4th and charged with Shoplifting from Target in Westbury. n

While driving on the Long Island Expressway at Exit 34E in North Hills, a 25-year-old man from Massapequa was arrested and was charged with Driving While Intoxicated at 3:10AM on April 5th.

Compiled by Kate and Meg Roslyn Times erMeyer Herald Couri ews Williston Times nTimes Great Neck Nimes Port Washingto Manhassewt Tww.theislandnow.com Are you a professional? N Y 11 596 NEW

PA R K HYDE

, Our Professional Guide is sure to bring results. Call 294-8900 for rates and information. s to n P a rk 4 6 e I, W il li n u e , S u it 16 .3 0 7.1 0 :5 id e Ave 4 5 • Fa x 10 5 H il ls 16 .3 0 7.1 0 O ff ic e : 5

n Times er Rosly Herald Couri ews Williston Times nTimes Great Neck Nimes Port Washingto Manhasset T theislandnow.com YDE NEW H

PA R K

www.

11 596 a rk , N Y il li s to n P W I, 6 4 e 0 it .1 u .3 0 7 ue, S id e Ave n 7.1 0 4 5 • Fa x : 5 16 10 5 H il ls .3 0 16 5 : e ic O ff ber 26, 1923

Founded Septem

FOUNDED 1923

LOCALLY OWNED

AND EDITED

ws.com www.gcne

30 y , N Y 11 5 a rd e n C it 24 G , 8 0 2 .294 .89 u e , S u it e • Fa x : 5 16 k li n Ave n 8 2 1 Fra n e : 5 16 .294 .890 0 O ff ic

ue k li n Ave n 8 2 1 Fra n e : 5 16 .2 O ff ic


Friday, April 20, 2018

16

LEGAL NOTICES

NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU LNV CORPORATION, Plaintiff AGAINST ALLISON ALBERT, et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated August 03, 2016 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Calendar Control Part (CCP) Courtroom of the Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501, on May 22, 2018 at 11:30AM, premises known as 106 IRA ROAD, SYOSSET, NY 11791. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at Syosset, Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, SECTION 15, BLOCK 105, LOT 0008. Approximate amount of judgment $523,429.26 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment for Index# 851/2012. Francis X. Mcquade Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC Attorney for Plaintiff 1775 Wehrle Drive, Suite 100 Williamsville, NY 14221 SYO 4173 4X 04/20,27,05/04,11 LEGAL NOTICE Notice of formation of RDA Kitchen LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the SSNY on February 12, 2018. Office location: Nassau County. SSNY designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC, 27 Evans Drive, Glen Head, NY 11545. Purpose: Any lawful activity. JNJ 7872 6X 03/16,23,30,04/06,13,20 NOTICE OF FORMATION BLISS SOLAR, LLC. Articles of Organization Filed with New York Secretary of State (SSNY) on February 1, 2018. Office located in Nassau County. SSNY has been designated for service of process and to mail process served against the LLC to 1120 Northern Blvd., Suite 404, Manhassett, NY 11030. Purpose: any lawful purpose. JNJ 7874 6X 03/23,30,04/06,13,20,27 NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING BY THE ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS Pursuant to the provisions

of Chapter 246, Article III, Section 246-18-E of the Code of the Town of Oyster Bay, notice is hereby given that the Zoning Board of Appeals has scheduled a public meeting, which will take place in the Town Hall Meeting Room, Audrey Avenue, Oyster Bay, New York, on APRIL 26, 2018, at 7:00 P. M., to consider the following appeals: BY ORDER OF THE ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS APPEAL NO. 18-179 JERICHO ALL COOL ADVANTAGE LLC: (A) Variance to construct second story addition and second floor deck having less side yard setback and aggregate side yards than permitted by Ordinance; also encroachment of eave and gutter. (B) Variance to construct covered front porch exceeding maximum building coverage than permitted by Ordinance. S/s/o Dewey St., E/o Leahy St., a/k/a 106 Dewey Street, Jericho, NY APPEAL NO. 18-180 JERICHO NORMAN PRISAND: Variance to allow existing 6 ft. high fence exceeding maximum height across side/front yard (Forest Drive) than permitted by Ordinance. SE/ cor. of Fair Ln. & Forest Dr., a/k/a 50 Fair Lane, Jericho, NY APRIL 16, 2018 BY ORDER OF THE ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS TOWN OF OYSTER BAY, OYSTER BAY, NEW YORK JNJ 7877 1X 04/20

Telling the community's story, week by week Call us today at 294-8900

Syosset-Woodbury hosts Syosset School Board Trustee

Rotary Vice-President Bob Mittleman, Andy Feldman, and Rotarian Dr. Robert Schultz Andy Feldman, a current Syosset School Board Trustee, was a guest speaker at a recent Syosset-Woodbury Rotary Club meeting. He is running for re-election to the school board this coming May. Andy discussed his personal background as a financial planner and a former coach with Syosset youth sports. As a board trustee, he is proud of the improvements in the

areas of curriculum, school security and safety, the advancement of technology, fiscal responsibility, and the adoption of an energy performance contract, which will introduce solar power to the district. The Rotary Club meets at the Lisbon Cafe, Jericho Turnpike, Jericho on Tuesday afternoons.

NYIT students volunteer at Town animal shelter

New York Institute of Technology’s (NYIT) President Henry C., “Hank” Foley thanks members of the NYIT community for crafting DIY dog toys for donation to the Town of Oyster Bay Animal Shelter. The community service activities took place during NYIT’s Day of Giving, one of several events held in honor of Foley’s inauguration as NYIT’s fourth president and in support of the university’s mission to make the world a better place. More than 300 NYIT students, faculty, and staff participated in the Day of Giving.


Friday, April 20, 2018

First Grade Rec Night at Robbins Lane

17

Robbins Lane Elementary first graders had a blast at their annual Rec Night! The children got to enjoy relay races, tug of war, freeze dance, scooters and so much more! The kids even beat their parents at tug of war! A great time was had by all!

Patiently waiting for the races to begin!

I got the ball! Having a blast!

Can't wait for my turn!

Team spirit

I got this!


Friday, April 20, 2018

18

THE VIEW FROM HERE

“Media Madness” by Howard Kurtz BY BOB MORGAN, JR. Relatively balanced books about the Trump Administration are pretty rare, but Howard Kurtz makes a good effort at providing one in his new book, Media Madness: Donald Trump, the Press and the War over the Truth (Regnery, 2018). Mr. Kurtz is currently the host of Fox News’s Media Buzz, was formerly a host of Reliable Sources at CNN and also a columnist for the Washington Post. He previously wrote a book, Spin Cycle, about press coverage of the White House under President Bill Clinton. Media Madness discusses the 2016 election campaign and then provides a highly readable running summary of Mr. Trump’s embattled first year in office through December 2017. We go through the controversy over the crowd size at the inauguration, the travel ban controversy, the firing of James Comey, the alleged collusion investigation, the rise and fall of Sean Spicer, Steve Bannon and Anthony Scaramucci, the turmoil at Charlottesville, the attempts to repeal Obamacare, and many other episodes. Mr. Kurtz is not sparing in describing the self-inflicted wounds of Mr. Trump and his administration. These include over the top, and sometimes cringe-inducing, tweets and other statements by Mr. Trump, needless controversies (as with Mika Brzezynski and others), a disorganized White House with pervasive leaks, and far too many dysfunctional personalities. Mr. Kurtz also describes Mr. Trump’s all too frequent rejection of facts, or even his own past statements, as he builds his own narrative. While many of Mr. Trump supporters are willing to accept that exaggeration, occasional misstatements and over the top language are just part of the President’s style (or to use Mr. Kurtz’s phrase, “street talk”), this penchant for exaggeration allows his opponents to call out his repeated inaccuracies and label him a liar. Mr. Kurtz nevertheless believes that, for all of the shortcoming of Mr. Trump and his administration, there has been no attempt by much of the media (including some “Never Trumpers” on the right) to cover Mr. Trump in an unbiased manner.

For example, he notes that Harvard researchers found that media coverage of Mr. Trump’s first 100 days was 80 percent negative, including 93 percent negative for CNN and NBC and 91 percent for CBS. Even on Fox, it was 52 percent negative and 48 percent positive. Media Madness provides example after example of name calling by media and entertainment figures (“racist”,” deranged”, “out of touch”, “ignoramus”) well as the lack of a good faith attempt to treat Mr. Trump fairly. For example, Mr. Trump’s efforts to make changes in the flawed Obamacare program were treated as merely aimed at killing people. A lame wrestling video posted by Mr. Trump showing him taking down CNN was magnified into a frontal assault on the press. The book points out that the pervasively negative, and often biased, coverage is grounded on an expressed rationale. In a front page article during the 2016 campaign, Jim Rutenberg of The New York Times said that “if you’re a working journalist and believe that Donald J. Trump is a demagogue playing to the nation’s worst racist and nationalist tendencies”, you “have to throw out the textbook American journalism has been using.” Similarly, a column by The Washington Post’s Margaret Sullivan was titled “How Much Normalizing Does an Abnormal President Deserve?” In Mr. Kurtz’s view, however, there is a real price associated with of overwhelmingly negative coverage where the media believes that it has a solemn duty to oppose the President. He contends that in an effort to resist normalizing Mr. Trump’s administration, his critics in the media have abnormalized journalism. But, as he points out at the end of the book, Mr. Trump will not be president forever, but the “media’s reputation, badly scarred during these polarizing years, might never recover”. In sum, Media Madness, while by no means excusing President Trump and his team for many shortcomings, provides a highly readable account that quite reasonably takes the Administration’s opponents to task as well.

Getting Married?

email editor@gcnews.com to put your engagement, wedding, or baby announcement in the paper

Town of Oyster Bay plans Harbor & Beach Cleanup Day The annual Oyster Bay Harbor & Beach Cleanup will be held on Saturday, April 21. The event is co-sponsored by the joined forces of the Town of Oyster Bay, the North Oyster Bay Baymen’s Association (NOBBA), and Friends of the Bay. This environmental event is scheduled to kick-off at 8AM “This great event features Town employees and volunteers rolling up their sleeves and working side by side to clean-up the beaches and shoreline areas along Oyster Bay Harbor,” Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino said. “With Earth Day right around the corner, this important environmental initiative is the perfect way to pitch in and help make a difference!” Volunteers are invited to participate in the cleanup, which will run from 8AM to 12PM. The central meeting place

will be Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Park launching ramps and waterfront gazebo off of Larrabee Avenue, Oyster Bay. Additional locations for the cleanup include Theodore Roosevelt Beach in Oyster Bay, Stehli Beach in Bayville, and Centre Island Beach in Bayville. Typically, in years past, harbor and beach clean-up events have resulted in about forty thousand pounds of debris collected by volunteers. Councilwoman Michele Johnson stated, “Each year, countless amounts of paper, food, plastics and other trash are discarded on beaches or dumped overboard from recreational and commercial vessels. ” Individuals and groups who are interested can get further information by calling the Town’s Department of Environmental Resources at 677-5943.

Rotary Supports a good cause From page 1 . These high school students are raising monies for children who are battling cancer. Interact is Rotary International’s service club for high school students

who help their school or community through involving themselves in various service projects. The Syosset-Woodbury Rotary Club provides these students with guidance and support.

Sign Up & Save A New Issue Every Friday, Delivered to Your Door!

Receive thought-provoking editorials and current events coverage to restaurant reviews, puzzles and more, we deliver the quality reporting that keeps you informed and the playful features that keep you entertained.

Litmor Publishing

Your Community, Your Newspaper The Garden City News - The Mid-Island Times & Levittown Times - The Bethpage Newsgram - The Syosset Advance - The Jericho-Syosset News Journal


Sold Price: $1,250,000 Date: 12/13/2017 4 beds, 4 Full baths Style: Split # of Families: 1

Lot Size: 77x100 Schools: Jericho Total Taxes: $25,788 MLS# 2966675

19 Niagara Drive, Jericho Sold Price: $805,000 Date: 11/22/2017 4 beds, 2 Full/1 Half baths Style: Hi Ranch # of Families: 1 Lot Size: 80x126 Schools: Jericho Total Taxes: $17,206 MLS# 2963971

3 Richmond Avenue, Jericho

622 Parkside Drive, Jericho

Sold Price: $950,000 Date: 12/14/2017 4 beds, 2 Full/1 Half baths Style: Split # of Families: 1

Sold Price: $783,888 Date: 03/07/2018 3 beds, 2 Full baths Style: Split # of Families: 1 Lot Size: 84x119 Schools: Jericho Total Taxes: $12,394 MLS# 2966222

Lot Size: 84x122 Schools: Jericho Total Taxes: $18,738 MLS# 2960738 Houses featured on this page were sold by various real estate agencies

P U T

T H E

P O W E R

O F

E L L I M A N

T O

W O R K

F O R

Y O U

7,000

TA L E N T, O F

T E C H N O L O G Y & A N E T W O R K R E A L E S TAT E A G E N T S

Syosset Office | 317 Jackson Avenue | O: 516.921.2262 © 2018 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY.

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

elliman.com/longisland

19 Friday, April 20, 2018

27 Middle Lane, Jericho


Friday, April 20, 2018

20 T H E PA S C U L LO / S A L E G N A T E A M P R E S E N T S

S I X

G R E A T

H O M E S

T O

C H O O S E

F R O M

Brookville | $2,699,000 | 6-BR, 4-BA and 2-HALF-BA | Set back on 2.26 acres surrounded by specimen trees, lush lawns and gunite in-ground pool. A long driveway leads to this approx. 6,000 sf all brick estate, paneled library and separate guest wing. Web# *1311529

Muttontown | $2,598,000 | The sensational, grand two-story entry with sweeping staircase leads to formal living room, dining room, butler’s pantry and gourmet state-of-the art kitchen. Set on 1.74 acres boasting a heated in-ground pool and paved patio. Web# 3003724

Oyster Bay Cove | $2,299,000 | 6-BR, 5.5-BA | One-of-a-kind approx. 6,500+ sf contemporary set on two acres with an abundance of outdoor activities including in-ground pool with full cabana. The interior offers home theater and sound system. Web# 2984685

Oyster Bay Cove | $1,418,000 | 5-BR, 4.5-BA | Lovely well maintained contemporary style home with hardwood floors, and walls of glass overlooking stunning park-like flat 2.3 acres, offering specimen trees, perennial gardens and gunite in-ground pool. Web# 2993788

Roslyn Estates | $999,000 | 4-BR, 2.5-BA | Sprawling ranch-style home boasting high quality finishes and craftsmanship, hardwood floors, high ceilings and living room with fireplace. The eat-in kitchen leads to bucolic 0.90 acres. Web# 3010890

Syosset | $709,000 | 4-BR, 2-BA | Located in The Syosset Groves section, this sun-filled mid-block home offers hardwood floors, formal dining room, updated kitchen, finished basement and outside entrance to large backyard. Web# 3014738

Connecting Exceptional Homes With Exceptional People

PATRICIA PASCULLO

MICHAEL PASCULLO

PATRICIA SALEGNA

Lic. Assoc. R. E. Broker

Lic. R. E. Salesperson

Lic. R. E. Salesperson

O : 516.921.2262 M: 516.287.4871 patricia.pascullo@elliman.com

O : 516.921.2262 M: 516.695.8047 michael.pascullo@elliman.com

O : 516.921.2262 M: 516.241.2280 patricia.salegna@elliman.com

elliman.com/longisland

110 WALT WHITMAN ROAD, HUNTINGTON STATION, NY, 11746. 631.549.7401 © 2018 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. ALL MATERIAL PRESENTED HEREIN IS INTENDED FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY. WHILE, THIS INFORMATION IS BELIEVED TO BE CORRECT, IT IS REPRESENTED SUBJECT TO ERRORS, OMISSIONS, CHANGES OR WITHDRAWAL WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL PROPERTY INFORMATION, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO SQUARE FOOTAGE, ROOM COUNT, NUMBER OF BEDROOMS AND THE SCHOOL DISTRICT IN PROPERTY LISTINGS SHOULD BE VERIFIED BY YOUR OWN ATTORNEY, ARCHITECT OR ZONING EXPERT. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY. *EXCLUSIVE LISTING.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

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