Friday, August 25, 2017
Vol. 77, No. 34
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New camp in Levittown focuses on STEAM
CRIME STOPPERS SIGNS
Legislators Rose Walker and Laura Schaefer recently joined with the Bethpage Central Park Kiwanis to provide and distribute Crime Stoppers Drug Awareness Signs at various locations in the Bethpage community. Pictured are Legislators Walker and Schaefer, along with Bethpage Superintendent of Schools Terence Clark and members of the Bethpage Central Park Kiwanis.
Eclipse party at local library BY GARY SIMEONE
It was quite a scene at the East Meadow Library on Monday afternoon with over 300 people decked out in their solar viewing glasses to view the most widely anticipated natural phenomenon in ninety nine years. People of all ages gathered to witness the partial solar eclipse of the sun which took place between the hours of 2 and 4 p.m. People in other areas of the country who were in the direct path of the eclipse were able to bear witness to complete
totality where the moon completely covered the sun. “It has been so crowded that we were only able to give out one pair of glasses per family,” said Jude Schanzer, Director of Public Relations and Programming at the Library. “People are coming here from all across the Island to witness the eclipse.” The Library had multiple programs for people beginning at 10 p.m. and ending at 2 p.m. where people than set up folding chairs and blankets on the front lawn to see one of nature’s most awe-in-
spiring sights. “It’s great, unbelievable. I’ve never seen anything like it,” said eight year old, Eric Morales of Levittown, who came to the Library with his grandmother and brother and sister. Michelle Angel, grandmother of the three children, said that the kids had been looking forward to the big event and had been researching information online about it. “They’d been talking about this for awhile and now that the See page 20
It was an exciting couple of weeks for hundreds of kids at the newly opened Camp Invention at the Wisdom Lane Middle School in Levittown. The camp which ran from July 31st to August 11th, is a nationally recognized, non-profit summer enrichment program that catered to Levittown Students entering 3rd, 4th and 5th grades in the 2017-18 school years. Camp Invention also has locations in Wantagh and Merrick. The camp had seven stations set up for kids to participate in activities in classrooms throughout the school. One station included an outdoor area where they engaged in scientific team building type games. Siobhan Schneider, a 4th Grade Teacher in the School district and Camp Director at the Levittown site, said that the camp is a two week half day program where the kids participate in three different activities the first week and three unique activities in the second week. “There are four different academic programs and two outdoor games that the campers participate in,” said Schneider. “These programs align with the Science curriculum that students will be learning as they enter the third through fifth grade level.” The four programs inside the school include ‘Duct Tape Billionaire,’ where kids can start up their own accessory business, ‘Mission Space Makers,’ which lets kids locate and prepare a new planet for human habitation, ‘Have A Blast,’ where they fling, fly and float through high-energy air battles and ‘Operation Keep Out’ where they can create all sorts of neat inventions. The outdoor arena helps kids with their team building skills as they work together creating innovative water games and participating in small space puzzles where their creative thinking and problem solving skills come into play. “These activities help them to engage in creative thinking, apply principles of engineering, take apart non-working machines and devices to investigate their inner operations and work together to spark their interest in Science and Space,” said Schneider. See page 20
TOB Chabad welcomes new rabbi PAGE 10 Town hosts mom’s group “Team YOLO”PAGE 4
Friday, August 25, 2017
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What’s Happening August 25
“Wilson”, starring Woody Harrelson, will be shown at the Bethpage Public Library at 2 p.m. and again at 7:30 p.m. Rated R, the film is 108 minutes long.
August 28
A “Book-To-Film Discussion” will be held at the Hicksville Public Library at 12 noon with Fran Cohen, following by a showing of “The Sense of An Ending”, starring Jim Broadbent. The movie is 108 minutes long and is rated PG-13.
August 30
The fall series of “Zumba with Cathy Cromer” will begin this evening at 6 p.m. and will continue each Wednesday through November 8. Please pre-register. At 7:30 p.m. at the Bethpage Public Library, Elaine Langsam, craft specialist, will present a session of “Scrapbooking”. Compiled by Meg Meyer
Do you have Grandchildren?
Send in your grandchildren’s photos and enter our “World’s Most Beautiful Grandchildren” contest. Just send a photo and a brief description of the child (or children) along with your name and address to: editor@gcnews.com
InspIrIng Women™
a free community health education program
grandparents, are you up-to-date? Please join Ronald V. Marino, DO, Associate Chairman of Pediatrics and Richard A. Bagdonas, MD, Acute Care Surgeon, Department of Surgery for an informative session on the following: • Learn how to keep children safe inside and outside the home • Understand updates on vaccines, SIDS prevention and safe sleep • Become familiar with feeding options and choking hazards
Thursday, September 7, 2017 Sign in: 6:45 PM
Sen. Hannon hosts school supply drive
Program: 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 For parking information call: 516-663-9761
Senator Kemp Hannon (R-Garden City) has announced he is partnering with the United Way, Long Island Nets, Senator Elaine Phillips and local libraries to host a “Back to School Backpacks and Supplies Drive” to assist needy students in the area. “As a New York State Senator, one of my top priorities is to ensure that our children have the tools necessary to support their pursuit of knowledge and education and to feel prepared for success,” said Senator Hannon. “With the new school year quickly approaching, I am happy to be coordinating this backpack and supplies drive with the United Way, Long Island Nets, Senator Phillip’s and our local libraries. Supplies needed include backpacks, pens, pencils, rulers, protractors, lined
paper, notebooks, composition paper, folders, binders, basic calculator, glue sticks and highlighters. The drive will run through September 7. Donations may be dropped off at any of the following locations: Senator Kemp Hannon’s Community Office – 595 Stewart Avenue, Ste. 540, (516) 739-1700 Bethpage Library – 47 Powell Avenue, Bethpage (516-931-3907) Island Trees Library - 38 Farmedge Road, Levittown (516-731-2211) Levittown Library – 1 Bluegrass Lane, Levittown (516-731-5728) Plainview Old Bethpage – 999 Old Country Road, Plainview (516-938-0077) For more information, please call Senator Hannon’s Community office at 516-739-1700.
“Grandparenting Matters: Inside and Out”
Grandparents – are you up-to-date? NYU Winthrop Hospital’s Inspiring Women™ educational series will offer a free program, “Grandparenting Matters – Inside and Out,” on Thursday, September 7, 2017, at 7:00 PM. The program will be held at the NYU Winthrop Research and Academic Center, located at 101 Mineola Boulevard, Mineola, in the Treiber Family Conference Center, Room G-018. Ronald V. Marino, DO, Associate Chairman of Pediatrics and Richard A. Bagdonas, MD, Acute Care Surgeon, Department of Surgery, will offer an informative session on how to keep children safe inside and outside the home. Grandparents will also understand updates on vaccines, SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome) prevention and safe sleep, and become familiar with
feeding options and choking hazards. A question and answer period will be included with the session. Attendees are asked to arrive at 6:45 PM for the 7 PM program. Admission is free, but pre-registration is required. To register for this program, please call (516) 663-3916 or e-mail inspiringwomen@nyuwinthrop.org. For parking or inclement weather information, please call (516) 663-9761. The program is being offered as part of Inspiring Women: The Women’s Wellness Initiative at NYU Winthrop, a free community education series dedicated to the health and well-being of women. For information about Inspiring Women events or other programs at the Hospital, please call 1-866-WINTHROP or visit www.winthrop.org/community-programs
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Kiwanis Club sponsors Aktion Club
Friday, August 25, 2017
Town Supervisor to speak at Hicksville Historical Society
The Kiwanis Club of Bethpage Central Park is the proud sponsor of the new Aktion Club of ACLD Bridges. Aktion Club is the only service club for adults with disabilities, with more than 12,000 members worldwide. Pictured: Kris Biedermann, Aktion Club of ACLD Bridges Advisor; NY District Kiwanis Governor Steve Sirgiovanni; Beth Schwartz, Aktion Club of ACLD Bridges President; Jeffrey Corwin, Aktion Club of ACLD Bridges Secretary; Judith Terpilowski, Aktion Club of ACLD Bridges Treasurer; Patti Morrone, Kiwanis of Bethpage Central Park President; Monique Taylor, Aktion Club of ACLD Bridges Co-Advisor; Carmen Pumo, Aktion Club of ACLD Bridges Vice-President; Andrea Goodman, Kiwanis of Bethpage Central Park Advisor to Aktion Club of ACLD Bridges
Town of Oyster Bay Supervisor Joseph Saladino At the next meeting of the Hicksville Historical Society, Town of Oyster Bay Supervisor Joseph Saladino will discuss the actions taken by his administration to reduce costs for taxpayers, institute ethics reforms to protect resident’s wal-
lets, and review the challenges the town faces in the years ahead. The meeting will be held on Tuesday, September 26, at Hicksville Public Library at 7:30 p.m. All are welcome. Refreshments served.
End Of Summer Sale THIS FRIDAY TO SUNDAY Very Special Discounts! The Island Celebrates Our 18th Anniversary Specializing In Resort Wear For Men, Women & Children LILLY PULITZER SOUTHERN TIDE VINEYARD VINES THE ISLANDS 175-177 Seventh Street, Garden City (516) 248-2481
Friday, August 25, 2017
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Discover what all the BUZZ is about! Town officials with members of Team YOLO
Town honors moms group “Team YOLO”
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New Town of Oyster Bay Supervisor Joseph Saladino and Councilwoman Michele M. Johnson honored a group of local caring mothers known as Team YOLO prior to the August 12th Music Under the Stars performance of Jimmy Buffett tribute band “Barometer Soup” at John J. Burns Park in Massapequa. Team YOLO, an acronym for “You Only Live Once,” has competed annually in an obstacle course running event to raise money and awareness for the Morgan Center, a preschool for children with cancer located in the Town of Oyster Bay. Since it was formed four years ago by Dannie Taylor, a mom from Oyster Bay, Team YOLO has raised in excess of $85,000 for the Morgan Center. “Whenever a local group gets together and champions an important and worthwhile cause, it is deserving of our recognition and admiration,” Supervisor Saladino said. “The members of Team YOLO are particularly inspirational for all of the work they have done on behalf of children with cancer.” Members of Team YOLO were recently asked to be guests on the Ellen DeGeneres show held in Los Angeles. “This group of moms took that once in a lifetime opportunity and decided to further build awareness to the Morgan Center and provide details with how people can support the organization’s incredible work,” Supervisor Saladino said. “These selfless and remarkable women are a tremendous source of pride for all of us in the Town of Oyster Bay.” Since being on the show with Ellen DeGeneres, Team YOLO has used its platform to network with many major sponsors and currently has 65 moms registered to compete in the organization’s next running event slated for October in Hoboken, New Jersey.
Oyster Bay Town Councilwoman Michele M. Johnson, herself a mother of three school-aged children, helped coordinate Team YOLO’s special recognition program. “I was so inspired to see this regular group of local moms who banded together to achieve something extraordinary,” Councilwoman Johnson said. “This sort of spirit and energy is the very fabric of a vibrant community and I want to let this group know they are considered by many to be this Town’s quintessential role models.” Councilwoman Johnson said the Town of Oyster Bay has an extremely close bond with the Morgan Center because they are based locally out of the Town’s Hicksville Athletic Center. “The Morgan Center operates in our facility and provides preschool age children battling cancer the opportunity to learn and socialize in a safe environment,” Councilwoman Johnson said. “Children undergoing chemotherapy treatment have a suppressed immune system and the Morgan Center allows these children to interact in a setting where all of the parents understand the inherent risks and the importance of a germ free environment and limiting exposures. It is hard not be touched by the uplifting work being done there.” The Morgan Center is provided free of charge to the children and their families. Tuition and expenses are completely supported by private donations and fundraising. “That is why the generosity and kindness of people like Team YOLO should be celebrated,” Supervisor Saladino said. For more information on Team Yolo, or to support one of their upcoming causes, visit the group at https://www. facebook.com/TeamYOLOMoms/.
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Commissioners discuss water sustainability
At a recent meeting held by Nassau Suffolk Water Commissioners’ Association (NSWCA), of which Plainview Water District Commissioner Andrew N. Bader is President and was present, water commissioners representing 21 Long Island water districts welcomed Guest Speaker Michael Dwyer of Levittown, Irrigation Contractor and Trustee of the Irrigation Association of New York (IANY), who discussed the importance of water sustainability in Nassau and Suffolk Counties and the IANY’s role in educating both the general public as well as public water suppliers in conservation methods. Plainview Water District Commissioner Andrew N. Bader, who is NSWCA President, joined fellow Plainview Water District Commissioners Marc B. Laykind and Amanda Field in hosting the meeting while Commissioner Laykind provided a detailed overview of the Plainview Water District. “Even though our Long Island sole source aquifer has enormous capacity, education, good manage-
ment practices, and the judicious use of technology will benefit all residents,” Mr. Dwyer stated. “Some potential solutions are quite simple. Professionally installed automatic irrigation systems utilize rain sensors that prevent them from activating in the middle of a rainstorm. This seemingly small thing can conserve untold gallons of water as well as dramatically reduce the stress and strain on water production and irrigation systems.” Mr. Dwyer further advised NSWCA water commissioners on advanced technologies, including WiFi controllers, proper nozzling and the IANY’s emphasis on the importance of certification of irrigation professionals. He also discussed New York State Bill S00840, the ‘Landscape Irrigation Contractor Certification Act’. Commissioner Bader remarked, “Mr. Dwyer’s presentation was extensive, informative and apropos for the recognition of the need for sustainability in our daily lives here on Long Island. We thank him for sharing his expertise with our membership.”
Pictured at a recent Nassau Suffolk Water Commissioners’ Association (NSWCA) meeting where Michael Dwyer, Irrigation Contractor and Trustee of the Irrigation Association of New York (IANY), was guest speaker are: (from left to right) Kenneth P. Wenthen, Jr., NSWCA Treasurer and West Hempstead Water District Commissioner; William Schuckmann, NSWCA Secretary and Hicksville Water District Commissioner; NSWCA Guest Speaker Michael Dwyer, Irrigation Association of New York (IANY); Andrew N. Bader, NSWCA President and Plainview Water District Commissioner; Vincent Abbatiello, NSWCA 1st Vice President and Westbury Water District Commissioner; and Michael F. Rich III, NSWCA 2nd Vice President and Oyster Bay Water District Commissioner.
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Every day we make lots of choices and decisions that can impact our health. Some decisions involve what we eat, where we eat, what we drink, how we get to school or work and how we spend our free time. With overweight and obesity affecting so many of our youth today, parents and caregivers need tools to help establish good habits that can have a lasting impact on their family’s health.
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Friday, August 25, 2017
Friday, August 25, 2017
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Hicksville studentTHEhonored by Univ. of Scranton HOME OF THE WORLD’S FINEST FOOTWEAR!
Marisa A. Ciriello of Hicksville was among 60 members of The University of Scranton’s undergraduate class of 2017 honored for academic excellence, service or both at Class Night on May 26 on campus. Students with the highest GPA in each of the University’s three undergraduate colleges were presented Frank J. O’Hara Awards for General Academic Excellence, a memorial to the late administrator who served the University for 53 years. Students were also recognized for excellence within their various disciplines. Ciriello was the recipient of the Excellence in Community Health Education Award. She graduated cum laude with a community health education major with a minor in psychology. She is a member of the Eta Sigma Gamma honor society. She was a member of the Community Health Education Club, and the Varsity Softball team. She also completed an internship with Marley’s Mission. Ciriello will attend graduate school for occupational therapy. She is a graduate of Hicksville High School.
THE HOME OF THE WORLD’S FINES The University of Scranton honored graduates at Class Night for academic excellence, service or both. From the bottom left row are: Victoria Spagnolo, recipient of the Excellence in Criminal Justice Award; David Andres Velez, recipient of the Lawrence A. Mann Award; and Joseph Dreisbach, Ph.D., interim provost and senior vice president for academic affairs. >From the top left row are: Marisa Angela Ciriello, recipient of the Excellence in Community Health Education Award; Brittany Nicole Cafiero, recipient of the Excellence in Health Advocacy Award; Laura K. Bopp, recipient of the Mary E. Quinn Award for Excellence in Secondary Education; and Christopher J. Olsen, recipient of the Student Life Award.
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Friday, August 25, 2017
TEMPLE BETH TORAH
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Grand Opening
New Oyster Bay Town Supervisor Joseph Saladino (second from left) and Town Councilman Louis B. Imbroto (left) recently attended the grand opening ceremony of Del’s Bar & Grill, a new restaurant located at 129 Pine Hollow Road, Oyster Bay. Del’s Bar & Grill is a place where friends can gather together to enjoy outstanding food and drinks in a warm, comfortable atmosphere. Supervisor Saladino commended owner Michael Del Colle and wished him tremendous success in his new business endeavor. Also on hand was Michael’s long-time friend, John Minicozzi (third from right) and Chef George Posporelis (second from right). A Free Community eduCAtion SeminAr
HOW DO I KNOW IF I HAVE RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS? How is it treated in 2017? Please join Steven Carsons, MD; Elise Belilos, MD and Kristina Belostocki, MD, from NYU Winthrop’s Division of Rheumatology, Allergy & Immunology as they discuss the following. • What are the key signs of RA? • How physicians diagnose RA?
• How is RA distinguished from other forms of arthritis and joint pain? • What are the new developments in RA treatment? A question and answer period will follow. Tuesday, September 12, 2017
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.
Rabbi Shalom Lipszyc and his wife Rochel Leah and their son Shneur Zalman
TOB Chabad welcomes new rabbi The staff at the Town of Oyster Bay Chabad have announced in an email to the Jewish community that they will be welcoming Rabbi Shalom Lipszyc and his wife Rochel Leah to their Synagogue. The new Rabbi will serve as a deputy Rabbi to his father Rabbi Shmuel Lipszyc, and serve as director of adult and youth engagement. The Chabad, located off of Woodbury road in Woodbury, will be celebrating this milestone by hosting a complimentary breakfast buffet for the Jewish Community on Sunday, September 10th, 2017. “We are thrilled that this young and dynamic couple will be joining our community and make it their home.” Said Chabad’s event coordinator Dovid Glassner while welcoming the new Rabbi and his family. “As our Rabbi’s son, we have watched Rabbi Shalom reach the many milestones in his life right here in our synagogue and we couldn’t be happier with this new development” He added. Known by community members for his wisdom and warmth, Rabbi Shalom completed his studies at the Rabbinical College of America in New Jersey, and received his Rabbinical Ordination from the former chief Rabbi of Israel, Rabbi Yisroel Meir Lau, amongst other great Rabbinic signatories. As a native to Town of Oyster Bay, the new Rabbi says that he feels extremely privileged and honored to give back to the community he grew up in, and is delighted to follow in the path of his father, Rabbi Shmuel Lipszyc, who established the first of the four Chabad Centers serving town of Oyster Bay just over 25 years
ago. The new Rabbi’s wife, Rochel Leah has been well praised for her smile and passion, and has just completed her six year teaching young Jewish girls from across the globe on the Nigri Online School. She has received her teaching degree from the Chaya Mushka Seminary in Quebec, and is the proud mother of two little children, Zalmen and Meir. “We take this opportunity to welcome them to the team, and see fresh energy and new ideas brought to our Chabad.” said Chabad’s staff in the welcoming wwwwemail sent out to the community inviting them to the welcoming ceremony. Known for their non-judgmental and joyful attitude, Chabad has become a popular hub for an array of Jewish experiences which include family holiday events, a top notch Hebrew School, and an excellent variety of adult learning and lecture series. The Flagship center of Town of Oyster Bay Chabad is located at 678 Woodbury Rd. Woodbury, NY 11797. For more information, please visit www.jewishtob.org or call the office at 516 682 0404 The whole community is invited to celebrate and welcome Town of Oyster Bay Chabad’s new Rabbi and his family on Sunday, September 10th, 2017. 9am - Shachrit Morning Service | 10am - Delicious Breakfast Buffet @Chabad - 678 Woodbury Rd. Woodbury, NY 11797 Please email rochelleah@jewishtob. org to RSVP for the event or find out more information.
August 25, 2017
Saratoga Springs, Age-Old Mecca for Horse Racing Gets Better with Age BY KAREN RUBIN
Tucked just above Albany, New York, small-town Saratoga Springs’ fortunes have been tied to tourism since forever. Its mineral springs has been drawing visitors since the 14th century, when Native Americans first discovered the healing properties of the springs, and were the first lure to
America’s earliest tourists. But along the way, the village also developed organized horseracing, which brought the elites, and later on, a rich cultural menu. And all of these come together during the six weeks of summer when racing is underway at the historic track, though Saratoga Springs is very much a four-season destination.
Saratoga Springs seems to have grown up around the Inn at Saratoga, which dates from 1843 and staying here gives you a sense of place. (The Inn at Saratoga, 231 Broadway, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866, 518-5831890, 800-274-3573, theinnatsaratoga. com.) It’s just a very short walk from
Saratoga Springs, with its healthful mineral springs, has been attracting visitors since forever, but organized horse-racing is what put the village on the tourist map © 2017 Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com
G O I N G P L A C E S N E A R A N D F A R
the inn down Broadway to the heart of the culturally vibrant community decorated with painted horses (evoking its historic racing tradition) and ballet shoes (a tip of the hat to its cultural heritage) and banners – a stunning streetscape lined with Victorian buildings, where I go the night I arrive. It is late but there are still some live music venues, pubs, pizza places (open til 3 am), and plenty of people out and about. A marker in front of the historic Adelphi Hotel, which dates from 1877, makes you appreciate all the more the work underway ($30 million worth) to reopen the hotel , which has been closed for five years. It is where the colorful Irish-born prize-fighter, gambling entrepreneur credited with establishing the Saratoga Race Course , New York State Senator and Tammany Hall enforcer John Morrissey, a regular of the hotel, died in 1878. Indeed, the immediate impression is that Saratoga Springs is a combination of Louisville, Kentucky with its strong racing tradition, and Lenox, Massachusetts, with its superlative cultural offerings, with mineral springs and health spa thrown in for good measure. The next morning, after a delectable breakfast at the inn, I walk through Congress Park, passed the Morrissey Fountain and the Casino, the gaming house for men which See page D2
D2 Friday, August 25, 2017
G O I N G P L A C E S, N E A R & F A R ....
Saratoga Springs, Age-Old Mecca for Horse Racing Gets Better with Age Continued from page D1 Morrissey built (now home to the Saratoga Springs History Museum) to Union Street, where Skidmore College was once located (today there is the Empire College and absolutely stunning Victorian houses, several of which are bed-and-breakfast inns), to Saratoga’s historic racetrack. Passing by for the moment the National Museum of Racing, I stroll over to the track where riders are finishing up their morning workouts. The six-week racing season will begin in just a couple of weeks
(July 21 this year), but there is already harness racing and polo underway. Thoroughbred racing did not actually begin in Saratoga Springs – the legacy heralds back to colonial days, 1665, with the establishment of the Newmarket course in Salisbury, New York, a section of what is now known as the Hempstead Plains of Long Island (attractive because it was flat), in the Westbury/East Garden City section of Nassau County. (Today, Belmont Park, the third leg of the prestigious Triple Crown races, is close to where the original track would have been. As
At Saratoga Springs, there are many ways to experience thoroughbred horseracing © 2017 Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com
I subsequently learn at the National Museum of Racing, August Belmont originally owned, Man o’War, one of the most famous horses in all of racing, who is heralded at the museum. The Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, one of the most famous horseracing tracks in the world, boasts being America’s oldest sporting venue of any kind. In 1863, the former undefeated bare-knuckle boxing champion John Morrissey staged the first organized thoroughbred meeting here at an old trotting course. In 1864, the racetrack hosted the Travers Stakes, named for William Travers, making it the oldest major thoroughbred horse race in America. The racetrack grew to prominence for hosting The Travers, nicknamed the Midsummer Derby, which brings together the greatest three-year-old horses to the race course to compete for the $1.25 million purse, and the track enjoyed prosperity, expanding in 189192. Millionaires moved in, including the DuPonts and the Whitneys. By 1890, there were 314 tracks operating in the United States. And in 1893, there was the Great Panic that led to an economic depression on the scale of the 1930s. The Saratoga race course was forced to close in 1896 because of financial hardship. But the track regained renown with the dramatic match-up between Man o’ War and appropriately named Upset in the 1919 Sanford Stakes, in which Man o’ War suffered his only career defeat
(Man o’ War won the 1920 Travers). .When Triple Crown victor Gallant Fox was defeated by a horse (Jim Dandy) with 100-1 odds in 1930, Saratoga became known by an ominous nickname “The Graveyard of Champions.” Saratoga has drawn the top names in thoroughbred racing - Secretariat, Seattle Slew, Affirmed, Rachel Alexandra, Curlin, Gallant Fox, the mighty Man o’ War, and American Pharoah. One of the delightful aspects of the Saratoga race course is that horses walk right through the crowd, on a white-fenced path, to get to the paddock for their races so you get to see them up close. (I also find that you can come out around 5:30 am, and watch the horses being exercised from outside the fence.) The course is stunning – with architectural majesty on par with Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky – and it is interesting that it is here, rather than at one of the Triple Crown venues, that the Hall of Fame for thoroughbred horsing racing is located, honoring the most notable horses, jockeys, owners and trainers. (Saratoga Race Course, 267 Union Avenue, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866; info about upcoming races at nyra.com.) National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame Even if you are not particularly engaged in horse racing (and especially so), you will be fascinated to tour the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame, which opened in 1950 See page D5
Prize-fighter John Morrissey, who brought organized horse-racing and gambling to At the National Museum of Racing, you can ride a racing simulator to experience Saratoga Springs, was a regular at the Adelphi Hotel and died there in 1878 just a the thrill of the race from the jockey’s perspective © 2017 Karen Rubin/ year after the hotel opened; the historic hotel has been closed for five years, undergoing goingplacesfarandnear.com a $30 million restoration © 2017 Karen Rubin/ goingplacesfarandnear.com
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When New York City was New York City BY LOU THEODORE I was born in New York City in 1934 and called it home until 1970. My first 7 years was spent in the north end of Hell’s Kitchen. The next 12 years were spent in an area that is known as Lincoln Center. The final 17 years was spent in Astoria, Queens. In effect, NYC was my home for the first 36 years of my life. This tale is the first of a 2-part series concerned with New York City during that 36 year time period. This first article is concerned with the 1934-1953 time period. The 1953-1970 period will be addressed in a follow-up article early next year. On to this first article. I have often written that following World War II, “anything was possible” in New York City. Nothing would compare to NYC around the middle of the 20th Century. The economy was booming. Its population was primarily comprised of first, not second generation Americans of European extraction, but mostly Irish and Italians and to a lesser degree, Germans, Poles and Greeks. The City was primarily white and Catholic. The Hamptons were some rich family living on Park Avenue. The migration from the Caribbean had just begun. The legal drinking age was 18. We had 3 baseball teams. The Garment District was just that. A $0.25 toll had been instituted on the Triboro Bridge . . . for maintenance purposes! McDonalds had arrived on the scene. TV? There was Uncle Miltie, Ed Sullivan, Danny Thomas, and my all-time favorite, Jackie Gleason. My all-time great entertainer, Louie Prima, would soon arrive on the scene. Movies? Pick one. There was also Otto Graham, Joe Louis, Rocky Marciano, Joe D., Willie Mays, George Mikan, etc. The GI Bill - $110 a month to attend college or $50 a week for 52 weeks. 42nd Street was, well…you know. Rockaway Beach had already been officially renamed the Irish Rivera. The Catskills had been reassigned the title “The Jewish Alps” while Astoria, Queens, was now a colony of Greece. Finally, there was The Beatles, Alan Freed, “Sha Boom,” “Earth Angel,” “Eddie My Love,” “Mr. Sandman,” and, of course, Billy Joel’s frantic attempt to determine who indeed had started the fire. But, what was life really like in NYC at that time? It would be impossible to squeeze it all into this type of article. But, I do have an earlier unedited 1995 Litmor Publication article titled “On the Stoop” which follows. Hopefully, this is a satisfactory alternative.
“On the Stoop” (Down Memory Lane)
My friend, the writer Costas Anifantakis of Searingtown, had this to say about “the stoop” in his Volume II Issue 26, titled – “The View from The
Stoop”: “Using the word ‘stoop’ as a noun is probably unique to Old Gotham. The etymological derivative of the word is lost somewhere in the hustle and bustle of the city’s pubertal period. The brownstone exterior of eight to ten steps, known as the Stoop, might have been adopted from the fact that a pedestrian had to do just that (stoop) to negotiate an upward and forward motion simultaneously, the essence of stair ascension. The stoop served and still serves a few functions. Primarily, it is a simple architectural expedient providing access to an upper entrance to a building. It not only constitutes a convenient place to ‘hang-out,’ but also is an excellent collecting point for the latest gossip. The stoop is a cosmos where one can observe the coiling and uncoiling of the street activity, and lastly, it constitutes an athletic playing field and stickball where kids, with the aid of a pink rubber ball (a Spaldeen) can play stoopball. Stoops come in a few shades of sandstone, varying in steepness-and depth and although each has its own distinct character, they all have one thing in common: an unmatched view of the world flowing by endlessly:” The stoop at 168 West 65th Street (between Amsterdam Avenue and Broadway) served as both an observatory tower and conference boardroom for me and the guys - on the south side of 65th Street during the late 1940’s. This area and the area due southwest was once described by Mayor LaGuardia as New York’s worst slum area. That area, just due north of Hell’s Kitchen, was leveled by the nefarious Robert Moses around 1950, to be replaced by what we now call Lincoln Center. Here is what I remember most of the view from our stoop at 168 West 65th Street. • We lived at 170 West 65th, Street, on the third floor, next door to the stoop. I had only a 10-12 foot walk from our tenement building to the stoop. • Directly across the street on the north side of 65th Street was Commerce High School, essentially a non-technical School. It’s still there today. • Further east diagonally and adjacent to Commerce High School was the Loew’s theater, later.to be converted to a CBS TV studio. It was here that a number of Jackie Gleason’s 8 pm Saturday night shows were staged. Afternoon programs featured a beautiful and slim singer named Rosemary Clooney. • Due east near Broadway on our side of the block was Joe McGrath ‘s father’s bar. It was here that I would stand by the door and watch Buddy Young, Vic Raschi and Mickey Mantle. At age 17, I moved inside and was introduced to a “7 and 7”, AKA Seagram’s Seven Crown and 7-up. • Diagonally west across the street
(on the northwest corner intersection of 65th and Amsterdam) was one of Con Edison’s generating plants. • Around the corner - between 64th and 65th on the east side of Amsterdam was the Open Kitchen restaurant, one of New York’s premier eateries. It featured eleven stools along the counter and three small tables squeezed into a tight space at the end of the counter. My father somehow managed to get us through the depression with this small establishment. • Directly across the Street from the Open Kitchen restaurant on the west side of Amsterdam was the Ederle Bros. meat and pork store. Sister Gertrude achieved fame when she became the first woman to swim the English Channel. • Further south and west was the “black” neighborhood. This area housed a chicken market (I think it was Kosher) and Ripley’s clothing factory. The bulk of my father’s customers were Ripley employees. • There was a gym teacher at Commerce High School that lunched daily at the Open Kitchen. A retired colonel, we all addressed him as Colonel Reutershan. One day, he announced in his deep resonating voice: “George, the future is in chemical engineering. Send Louis to school to get a chemical engineering education.” That’s how and why I became a chemical engineer: I really had no say in the matter. My have times changed. • There was a sign on the front door entrance of the Con Edison generating plant that read: Show Your Pass: Every now and then, I would mischievously meander over there at night and cover the letter “P”. Would this be classified as graffiti? • The terrors of the neighborhood were the gang from 63rd -Street. They beat me up twice. The first time was real bad. They had asked for my money. I only had 5 cents, but had mistakenly told them I had 15 cents. • The stoop’s tenement had been converted to single furnished room apartments. It housed Korean War veterans of Japanese-Hawaiian descent who were attending a dental technician school on the G.I. Bill. I remember it as a scam for both the veterans and the school. Despite this, I have nothing but positive memories of those guys. Almost to a person, they were kind, helpful and sincere people. • It was through the same veterans that I was introduced to prostitution, dope and gambling. I believe nearly all of them smoked the weed. Prostitutes came and went at all hours. Blackjack and dice games occurred on occasions; horse betting was a daily ritual. Fortunately, I only got involved with gambling. • We often pitched nickels or pennies to a wall or a crack in the sidewalk. One
day I won $80, an unheard of sum in those days, pitching quarters to line on the tarred street. This started what I then called the “gambling fund,” and it has somehow managed to survive today. • Stickball was played without gloves (some used gloves) with one sewer as home plate and the next sewer as second base. Broomsticks served as bats and a pink spaldeen was the ball. Our team matured in my eighteenth year and I believe we won all but one of our games that summer. There was at least $100 bet on each game and our team rarely could raise more than $25. I usually was the big contributor with $5. The rest of the money was put up by the owner of the stoop’s tenement; he turned a nifty profit that summer. • Late one Saturday afternoon, the back door of the CBS TV studio opened and out came a group led by the great one, none other than Jackie Gleason, and Phil Foster, Jackie’s guest that night. They were all stewed to the gills and wanted to play stickball for a couple of bucks. We couldn’t believe our good fortune. It was 6-0 after 2 innings when they retired to the studio. • I fell in love with a girl named Patricia Pike; but as the old joke goes, she didn’t know I existed. I still have that effect on people. • The block was predominately Puerto Rican, but my best friend was a Cuban named Gustavo Carrion. Gus was the janitor/superintendent of our building. One of his responsibilities was feeding coal to the furnace in the basement. He picked up the nickname “Aqua Caliente” because everyone used to yell for more hot water during the winter months. • During the Depression and World War II years, I would go to the restaurant and ask my father for a nickel to go to the movies. I could never quite figure out why some of the other kids couldn’t go because they didn’t have, or couldn’t get, a nickel. Saturday morning was a must for me because of the weekly serial. The one I remember most was “The Adventures of Naomi.” I fell in love with her too. • When it came time to level our block, my father’s lawyer couldn’t appear in court to arrange for the settlement from the city for the Open Kitchen restaurant. At my father’s request, I went in his place. The judge awarded my father $750. I started yelling and the judge threatened to throw me in jail. I remember shutting my mouth immediately since I was overcome with fear. Needless to say, the lawyer received a $250 fee, leaving my father with a measly $500 and without his near lifelong business. It was an eerie feeling when I returned to my earlier home and found See page D5
Friday, August 25, 2017
W R I T E R’S C O R N E R
Friday, August 25, 2017
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Y O U R S O C I A L S E C U R I T Y
When to Actually File for Social Security Retirement Benefits BY TOM MARGENAU
For some reason, I have been getting an awful lot of questions lately from seniors who are fretting about exactly when to sign up for Social Security benefits. I’m not talking about people who are undecided about when to start their benefit checks -- I have written countless columns discussing that. I’m talking about people who have decided when they want their retirement benefits to start but are concerned about when to initiate the process. Other times, they are needlessly worried that they will make a big mistake and lose untold amounts in government benefits. Here are some examples of those questions. Q: I will be 66 on Dec. 15, 2017. I want my Social Security checks to start at age 66. Some people have told me I need to file six months ahead of time. They said it takes that long for the government to do anything right. Others have told me I should wait until I am 66 before I file. What should I do? A: Don’t believe those government-bashers who would have you believe it takes half a year to process your Social Security claim. In fact, the last statistics I saw show that the Social Security Administration processes the average retirement claim in about 20 days. When I filed my own Social Security claim about five years ago, I did so on a Monday. By Friday of the same week, I had received a message from SSA that my claim was done. My wife’s claim took about 10 days. (By the way, we did all of this online.) And my neighbor said he filed his claim in person at our local Social Security office. It was processed in less than two weeks. Even though SSA handles retirement claims rather expeditiously, they still advise filing two to three months ahead of time -- just in case there is some kind of glitch. So because you are turning 66 in December and want your benefits to start then, I suggest starting the process in October. You can file online at www. socialsecurity.gov. Or you can call SSA at 800-772-1213 and set up an appointment to file a claim by phone or in person at your local Social Security office. Q: I will be 66 on Aug. 25. That’s when I want my Social Security checks to start. Recently, I began the process of signing up for benefits online. But I was confused by a statement that was filled with a lot of legal language about the importance of using July 24 (the date I went online) as the “official date of my application.” I’m afraid that if I consent to using that date, they will send me a check for July. I don’t want benefits to start in July, which would involve taking a reduced retirement rate. I want my full 100 percent retirement benefits to start in August. Please help!
A: The official date of your application is only important for possible legal reasons later on. For example, it could be an issue in the very unlikely event that you later change your mind and decide you want benefits to start in July. So don’t worry about that “official date of application” business. What you are much more concerned about is the month you want your benefits to begin. Somewhere on that online application it must ask something similar to this: “Please indicate the first month you want your Social Security benefits to start.” And as long as you answer that question with “August,” you will be fine. Q: I will be 66 on Aug. 10. I know my first Social Security check won’t be due until September. The online application I tried filling out asked me what month I want my benefits to start. I didn’t want to answer “August” because I want my full benefits to start in September. I don’t want to get a check in August, which would be a reduced payment for July. I want my first check to come in September. Yet it didn’t seem to give me that option. What can I do? A: Don’t worry about the month that your first check will be sent out. Worry only about the month you want to be the effective starting date of your benefits. You are correct that Social Security benefits are sent one month in arrears. In other words, the Social Security check that comes in September is the benefit payment for the month of August. But the application isn’t asking you which month you want your first check physically sent to you (or rather, sent to your bank account). It’s asking you which month you want your benefits to start. And for you, that would be August. Q: I will be 66 on Aug. 29. I want my Social Security to begin at age 66. When I started the application process online, they asked when I want my checks to begin. I didn’t want to say August, because I want nothing reduced. As I am not 66 until near the end of the month, I figure I should say I want my checks to start in September. A: Social Security checks are never prorated. So that’s good news for you. Even though you are 66 for only three days in August, you get a Social Security check for the whole month. So you should indicate August as the first month you want to start your Social Security benefits. Q: I will be 70 in September. I am going to sign up for Social Security then. I want my full benefit, plus the 32 percent bonus I get for delaying my benefits. I’m really afraid that if I apply now, they might send me greatly reduced benefits. Should I wait until after my 70th birthday to file? A: You should apply right now. Just make sure you indicate September as
the month you want your check to start. And even if there was a glitch and you got benefits paid back to August, it’s really no big deal. There is nothing that special about waiting until age 70 to start your benefits. Instead of getting 132 percent, you’d get about a 131.4 percent
benefit rate if your checks started one month early. As I said: no big deal. If you have a Social Security question, Tom Margenau has the answer. Contact him at thomas.margenau@comcast.net. COPYRIGHT 2017 CREATORS.COM
C R O S S W O R D P U Z Z L E
Answers on page D5
Saratoga Springs C ontinued from page D3 (located directly across the boulevard from the Saratoga Race Course) and has been expanded and improved since. You see in paintings, documents, artifacts, that show how engrained horse racing is in American culture, America’s first major organized sport going back to colonial times. Early presidents including George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison up through Ulysses S. Grant were avid race-goers. Andrew Jackson’s passion for horse racing and gambling was well known and he reputedly once fought a duel over a wager; Jackson also bred racehorses at the Hermitage and operated a racing stable from the White House during his presidency. You get to see the lineage of the hall of fame horses (they all trace back to just a couple of horses). You can even try your hand on a racing simulator – a mechanical horse synchronized to move with jockey cam videos, so you experience a race from the jockey’s point of view, racing for the finish (this is actually much harder than you would think, and some riding experience is necessary). Horse racing is visually stunning, as much as it is dramatic, and this comes through in the exhibits. The National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame’s honorees include horses such as Man o’ War (1957), Seabiscuit (1958) and jockeys like Willie Shoemaker (1958), and you can also watch videos of the Hall of Famers. On view this year is a special exhibit for Man o’ War at 100 (through 2018). The museum also hosts Oklahoma training track tours from June-October; reservations required. (191 Union Avenue, 518-584-0400, www. racingmuseum.org) While thoroughbred racing had not yet started this season, harness racing and polo matches were already underway. Saratoga Polo Matches are held every Wednesday, Friday, and Sunday night starting at 5:30 pm during the Saratoga Polo season, which runs from July 10 to Labor Day. Tickets may be purchased at
the gate beginning at 4 pm the day of the match. Casual chic is the recommended attire at the highly social polo match gatherings. (Saratoga Polo Association, 2 Bloomfield Road, Greenfield Center, NY 12833, saratogapolo.com) For more information or to help plan your visit, Saratoga Convention & Tourism Bureau, 60 Railroad Place, 855-424-6073, 518-584-1531, https:// discoversaratoga.org/. Also, Saratoga Springs Heritage Area Visitor Center, 297 Broadway Saratoga Springs, NY 12866, 518-587-3241, Email: visitorinfo@saratoga-springs. org, www.saratogaspringsvisitorcenter. com Next: Saratoga Springs is Firmly En Pointe as Center for Dance, Culture ____________________ © 2017 Travel Features Syndicate, a division of Workstyles, Inc. All rights reserved. Visit goingplacesfarandnear. com, www.huffingtonpost.com/author /karen-rubin & travelwriters magazine.com/TravelFeatures Syndicate/. Blogging at goingplaces n e a r a n d f a r . w o r d p r e s s . com and moralcompasstravel.info. Send comments or questions to FamTravLtr@ aol.com. Tweet @TravelFeatures. ‘Like’ us at facebook.com/NewsPhotoFeatures
Crossword Answers
Sock Hop & Doo Wop Leo’s Lobster Specials Are Back...All Summer Long! One 1 1/2 lb Lobster or Two 1 1/2 lb Lobsters
Includes French Fries & Coleslaw
Now Serving Breakfast Daily 7:30-11:00AM
Thursday is Mexican Night at Leo’s
Margaritas Mohitos Fish Tacos Fajitas Tacos Saturday Only 25% Off Entire Lunch or Dinner Check
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 8/31/17 • 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
God Bless America!
Note: Lincoln Center inhabits the area that housed my stoop. Our address--170 W. 65th Street--is the present address of the Lincoln Center Theatre.
Visit the author at: www.theodorenewsletter.com or on his Facebook page at Basketball Coaching 101
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 8/31/17 • 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 8/31/17 • 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
When New York City was New York City nothing but empty space and a newly paved sidewalk. The stoop had departed, never to return – yet not to be forgotten. But times have changed and I now live in East Williston, seven miles due east of New York City, in a house without a stoop.
Join us Friday, August 25th 6-10PM for the 7th St. Promenade
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 8/31/17 • 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
W R I T E R ’ S C O R N E R
C ontinued from page D3
LEO’S
Cash Only • Alcohol not included
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 8/31/17 • 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 8/31/17 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
Cash Only • Alcohol not included
190 Seventh St., Garden City 742-0574 • www.leosgardencity.com
D5 Friday, August 25, 2017
G O I N G P L A C E S , N E A R & F A R....
Friday, August 25, 2017
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G O I N G P L A C E S, N E A R & F A R ....
Nassau County Museum of Art Becomes Destination for Arts Education with Opening of Manes Center BY KAREN RUBIN
Housed in what was Childs Frick’s natural history laboratory where he studied paleontology, the newly opened Manes Family Art & Education Center on the grounds of the Nassau County Museum of Art – Frick’s former estate - gives the museum a new dimension in arts education and appreciation. The Manes Center, named in recognition of Museum Trustee Dr. Harvey Manes and the Manes Foundation’s $1 million gift, gives the museum the space to offer a dynamic and creative environment in which audiences of all ages and abilities can find creative engagement through a variety of activities, classes and projects. This includes new hands-on programs for children as young as 3, adults from beginners to skilled, and an ambitious curriculum for autistic individuals. The environment is special: Childs Frick, the son of Henry Clay Frick, was a vertebrate paleontologist and a trustee of the American Museum of Natural History. The center has repurposed Frick’s labs into art “labs,” each dedicated to a specific type of art learning, to address the multiple learning styles, interests and abilities of adults and children: Hands-On Studio Lab, Indoor/Outdoor Lab, Reading Resource Lab and Design Tech Lab, as well as additional exhibit space. This means that for the first time, the Museum will be able to offer handson multi-day workshops across the visual arts disciplines. “Family programs at the Manes Center provide children and the adults in their lives the opportunity to take time from their busy schedules to reconnect while talking about and making art together. Each week we offer projects that encourage curiosity and experimentation, and creative thinking through a variety of experiences and materials inspired by current exhibitions.” “Before, we always scrambled for space in order to run programs at the museum,” commented NCMA Director Karl E. Willers at the ribbon-cutting ceremony, August 3. “This facility allows us to enhance and expand all kinds of classes... Programs can be geared to exhibits as well as to open to the surrounding landscape. Many art programs integrate science and the natural world. It adds a new dimension to our educational offerings – extended hands-on workshops, more events going on simultaneously spanning age and ability groups, when before we were limited by the space availability in the mansion.” The building, which was designed for Charles Frick’s paleontology
Ribbon-cutting ceremony of the Manes Family Art & Education Center with Dr. Harvey Manes and grandchildren. The new center gives the Nassau County Museum of Art, housed on the former Childs Frick estate in Roslyn Harbor, Long Island, a new dimension in arts education, spanning ages and abilities © 2017 Karen Rubin/goingplacesfarandnear.com research (the specimens he collected Indeed, 10 of the gardens that are are now at the Museum of Natural immortalized in the photographs are History), is a series of laboratories that gone, and many others are in jeopardy. are being repurposed for making art in During this introductory period, all its forms. The floors are finished to through September 7, admission to the accommodate workshops and there are Manes Center is free (free admission sinks! offer does not include the main building, “We can offer proper professional the Saltzman Fine Art Building). art spaces for people to look at and The building now looks as a low-level make art in contemporary studio white box, but that will soon change. facility,” said Reem Hussein, who was The pop/surrealist modern artist brought in to manage the center. We Kenny Scharf is being invited to paint are bringing in technology – i-Pads to the exterior. After that, it is anticipated create art with technology. But we are that the landscape architects Oehme, mindful of people who want traditional van Sweden will create a new garden. art making. Preview of Educational Programs “These are programs we don’t offer at Manes Center now. We will able to offer more series Among the arts education programs programs, rather than one-shots and that will be available at the Manes lectures.” Center beginning this fall: She said that the rooms are called Early Childhood Programs: “labs” to pay homage to Frick. Programs for young children and their The New American Garden adult companions at the Manes Center Inaugural Exhibit are all about discovery. Both in the The public is invited to preview the galleries and in the art studio, children Manes Center and take in its inaugural find opportunity for self-expression, exhibit, “The New American Garden: socialization, and experimentation, The Landscape Architecture of through creative play and exploration Oehme, van Sweden.” through open ended developmentally Organized by The Cultural appropriate experiences. Looking at Landscape Foundation, The New and talking about art fosters visual American Garden is a traveling literacy in young children. photographic exhibition which Programs include Story Time for chronicles the careers and influence 3 to 5 year olds, featuring gallery of Wolfgang Oehme and James van exploration and hands-on art activities. Sweden who revolutionized landscape Young Artists (ages 3-5) programs architecture with the creation of a type for children and their adult companions of garden characterized by large swaths consist of hands-on activities designed of grasses and fields of perennials. The to experiment and become familiar with gardens are the penultimate merger of art materials and processes. man and nature, and the ultimate in An Outdoor Classroom program is “installation” art’s ephemeral quality. envisioned that would consist of guided
and self-guided activities for children to encourage the exploration of the natural environment through experiences that make the connection between art and science. Activities are designed to encourage open air exploration and imaginative play. A drawing class geared to children 8-11 years old, to learn the rules of traditional drawing by practicing line, shading, and perspective through drawing in the studio and gallery and using experimental materials. A program tentatively titled “Imagine, Design & Build,” for children 11-15 to experience the design process through sketching and building as they dive deep into creative thinking and problem-solving to explore the connections between design, art, science, and technology. A program for teens 13-17 is aimed at supporting high school students who are preparing portfolios as part of their college applications. Group and individual instruction focus on elements and principles of art and design through application to students’ own work and conversations about art work in the museum’s galleries. Student will have the opportunity for work with live models, critique sessions, and portfolio reviews. Adult Studio Programs Hands-on studio programs are being designed for adults of all levels of art making experience, taught by experienced artists. The programs focus on group and individual projects to help adults explore and learn art skills and processes, and have opportunities for personal expression. Adults will learn techniques of drawing & painting, sculpture, and printmaking and have opportunities to draw from live models. “The Creative Process” dovetails with every changing exhibition in the Manes Center’s contemporary art gallery: visitors are invited to create in response to the art on view through hands on activities that focus on artists’ themes, processes, and materials. Projects are designed to pique curiosity and inspire creativity, and gain new insights into the creative process. Life drawing at the Manes Center will present the opportunity to draw from a live model through gesture sketches and longer duration poses under the guidance of a teaching artist. Adults can learn the basics of drawing and painting and explore materials such as graphite, charcoal, and conté crayon, watercolor and acrylic paint. Projects will be inspired by art history and current gallery exhibitions. The center will also offer programs in using digital art tools to create traditional and experimental works of
1B Friday, April 10, 2015 The Garden City News
Friday, August 25, 2017 A SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT TO
Litmor Publications Avoid back injuries by choosing the right backpack Finding the right backpack is an essential component of back-to-school shopping
Students seeking private music lessons have options Time and again research has proven the benefits of music education.
Reduce kids’ risk of getting colds at school
How to help kids stay health and stay in school
The Litmor News Group Friday, August 25, 2017
2B
Reduce kids’ risk of getting colds at school
School-aged kids who catch colds or the flu from their classmates can quickly spread those colds to their family members, who then might spread the colds further when they go to work. Preventing the spread of colds and flu at school is a team effort that requires the assistance of not just parents, but also teachers and students. Still, parents might be the first line of defense when it comes to preventing the spread of cold and flu at school. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 38 million school days are lost to the flu each year. Those lost days can affect students who miss lesson plans, but also affect parents, who often must take days off from work to tend to their sick children. While there’s no way for parents to guarantee their children won’t catch a cold or the flu this school year, they can take various preventive measures to increase kids’ chances of staying healthy and achieving perfect attendance. • Make sure kids are immunized and that their immunizations are current. Vaccinations bolster kids immune systems. That’s important, as kids’ immune systems are naturally less mature than adults’, making them more vulnerable to germs and viruses. The CDC recommends that adults and children receive their flu vaccinations in October while noting that such vaccinations can be administered as late as January and still prove effective. The CDC also recommends that
adults and children receive flu vaccinations each year. Additional vaccinations may not need to be administered as often, but parents should still ensure kids’ are up-to-date with their shots.
• Make sure kids regularly wash their hands. Kids often catch colds by rubbing their hands that have been exposed to cold virus germs on their noses or eyes. To prevent that, parents can teach kids to wash to their hands thoroughly, including scrubbing the backs of their hands, between their fingers and around their fingernails. Kids should know to wash their hands regularly, but especially after they use the bathroom and before they eat, drink or touch their mouths, noses or eyes. • Keep kids home when they are sick. Parents don’t want their children to miss school, but kids who are suffering from colds or flu should be kept home. This prevents the spread of colds and flu to classmates and teachers, and time to rest at home may help youngsters recover more quickly. • Teach kids to avoid common germ spots. Germs can be lurking anywhere, but some spots seem to make more welcome homes for germs than others. Studies have shown that kids were most likely to encounter germs in schools on water fountain spigots and on plastic cafeteria trays. Teach kids to never put their mouths on fountains and to avoid eating any food that might fall onto their trays in the cafeteria. School-aged children are susceptible to colds and flu when spending time in the classroom. But parents can reduce their youngsters’ cold and flu risk in various ways.
How to find the right school fundraiser for you
The school year is in full swing, and parents of school-aged kids have no doubt been involved in at least one fundraiser already. Fundraisers help schools raise money for supplies or special activities that may not have been included in the budgets established by the local school district. Parent participation is essential for school fundraisers to be successful. Though requests to join in a school’s fundraising efforts can be overwhelming at times, rather than avoiding fundraisers completely, parents should research the fundraisers to determine which fundraising efforts best suit their schedules and interests. Parent-teacher organizations or the
fundraising committees are great sources of information for inquisitive parents. Such groups may already have a schedule of fundraisers that you can peruse to find a match. If a fundraiser seems particularly attractive, you can mark your calendar to participate. Attend PTA meetings to learn how fundraising dollars are being spent. This can make it easier to find a fundraising activity to support, as you are more likely to participate in activities when you know just where the fruits of your labors will be going once the event has come and gone. It’s also important for parents to understand the rate of return on fundraisers. Schools and other organizations receive
a percentage of return on a fundraiser. It may be 50 percent, less or more. Aim to participate in fundraisers that provide schools with the best return on their investments. Purchasing a T-shirt for $15, $10 of which will go directly to the school, is more effective than participating in several fundraisers that only offer marginal returns. Another way to ensure your participation will yield results is to choose fundraisers that are being operated in conjunction with companies that have a long-standing record of success. When choosing a school fundraiser to pitch in with, ask the school if its efforts are being made in conjunction with a local business. If so, ask about the school’s
track record with this particular business. If the results are good, you might feel better about offering your help. Don’t be afraid to offer your opinions if you feel a fundraiser is not being run as efficiently or smoothly as you think it could be. Speak up at a PTA meeting or volunteer your services to a committee. Other volunteers may just need a push in a new direction or some fresh ideas to make fundraising efforts more effective. Schools often offset miscellaneous costs by soliciting communities and parents of their students for assistance through fundraisers. People can select the fundraisers that interest them and offer the best return on investment to the school.
Reasons To Come To Us…
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1 block North from Lord & Taylor
516-445-8035
Successful Skin Tag Removal and Make Up Available
3B BEST
PERFO RM 2015, ING ARTS STUD 2016 & BEST IO CHOR 2017 2014, EOGRAPH Y 2015, 2016 & AWARDS 2017
B roadway B ound
2017 NAT OF T IONAL W H I STUD E BEST D NNERS ANC IO IN E O FLOR RLANDO IDA
Dance Center of Garden City Ages 2 1/2 through Adult Beginners through Advance
Dance Classes Offered For Both Recreational and Competitive Dancers
BALLET • LYRICAL • TAP • JAZZ • HIP HOP • ACRO New Competitive Students Welcome. Please call 516-616-1601 for an audition. BROADWAY BOUND’S REGISTRATION FOR FALL CLASSES
Three Large Dance Rooms All Air-conditioned With Bathrooms, Cubbys And Floating Floors
REGISTRATION DATES August 25, 26 11am – 3pm August 31 And September 1, 2 10am – 5pm September 7,8,9 10am – 5pm
WE OPEN FOR CLASSES MONDAY SEPTEMBER 11, 2017
Broadway Bound’s director Miss Debbie, has won Best Choreography awards the last five years in a row along with her very talented staff. MUSICAL THEATRE
For The Past Three Years Our Musical Theatre Department Has Won “The Best Performing Arts Studio” Award For Broadway Bound. During Our Regular Season September Through June We Offer Two Classes On Fridays Consisting Of Singing, Acting And Dancing.
66 New Hyde Park Road, Garden City (516) 616-1601
Friday, August 25, 2017 The Litmor News Group
NS MPIO A H C NAL NERS NATIO E CUP WIN L DIO -TRIP E STU C N A D UDIO BEST UT ST DIO B E D E STU R T BEST A THE SICAL U M BEST
The Litmor News Group Friday, August 25, 2017
4B
Avoid back injuries by choosing the right backpack
Finding the right backpack is an essential component of back-to-school shopping. Children may have their own ideas of what’s in style, but parents should look for backpacks that are functional before factoring in style. Marrying form and function together can be challenging, but it’s necessary to prevent students from developing back problems. But parents must give consideration to more than just the size of their children’s backpacks. Depending on school schedules, students may be carrying backpacks for up to 10 hours per day, five days per week. Backpacks may be filled with several pounds of stuff, such as textbooks, binders, laptops, and other supplies, potentially leading to injury. According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, at least 14,000 children are treated for backpack-related injuries every year. The American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons says that the weight of a backpack should not exceed 10 to 15 percent of a child’s body weight. But many students pack their bags with much more weight than that. Improperly sized, worn and overstuffed backpacks can injure joints and lead to neck, back and shoulder injuries. They also may affect children’s posture. • Choose a streamlined model. Select a backpack that will get the job done without much added bulk. Many backpacks have been designed to hold technological devices as more and more schools integrate technology into the classroom. A less bulky bag might be lighter and easy to carry.
• Consider shopping at a sporting goods store. Employees at camping and sporting goods retailers understand how to fit backpacks for hikers and outdoor ad-
venturers. They can help measure a student and find a pack that will fit his or her body frame. Also, these retailers may have a wider selection of backpacks than some other stores, increasing the chances of finding the right fit.
• Select a pack with a waist strap. According to the American Chiropractic Association, the body is not designed to carry items hanging from shoulders. By using the waist strap in conjunction with taut shoulder straps, students can distribute the weight in their backpacks over their hip bones instead of the shoulders. The padded and adjustable shoulder straps should be at least two inches wide. All straps should be used each time the pack is worn. • Backpacks should be loaded properly. Heavy items should be near the center bottom to distribute the load, rather than placed on top. Students should only carry what is necessary, visiting lockers or desks as needed to lighten their packs. Backpack fit and functionality is something parents should take seriously when shopping for school supplies.
Finding the right backpack is an essential component of back-to-school shopping. Children may have their own ideas of what’s in style, but parents should look for backpacks that are functional before factoring in style. Marrying form and function together can be challenging, but it’s necessary to prevent students from developing back problems.
Carolyn Zettel-Augustyn
“Teaching an equal balance of technical skills embraced with artistry is of utmost importance to me, as one without the other is detrimental to the dance student, the future dancer, and the art form as a whole.” This is a motto Carolyn Zettel-Augustyn, Director and Founder of Classical School of Ballet LI (CSB) carries with her as she steps into the studio as she greets her students.
For more that thirty years Carolyn Zettel-Augustyn has educated herself in the art of teaching to ultimately provide her students with the best possible training, no matter the age and no matter if they choose dance for personal fulfillment, gained physicality, or to pursue dance as a professional career. “Regardless of their choice, the students that pass through the doors of Classical School of Ballet LI are given the opportunity to enrich their lives in the true art of ballet that embraces the whole person, mind, body and spirit.”
“I invite my students to perceive their training in ballet as a constantly evolving and enriching experience building upon a solid foundation that is tried and true, following in the tradition of classical ballet that dates back to the 1600’s. At CSB we have adopted the American Ballet Theater (ABT®) National Training Curriculum. This curriculum provides safe and sound training principals that are age-appropriate with the students well-being in mind. “I’m very proud that CSB holds annual ballet examinations where an ABT® examiner adjudicates the students work.” Carolyn began her training at age 10 in Waterloo, ON Canada in 1974. She was awarded a scholarship to attend the Washington School of Ballet. Upon her return, Carolyn’s first ballet teacher, Anne Suetta was ready to retire and offered Carolyn her school. Carolyn apprenticed with Suetta and during that time she became a fully certified teacher with the Society of Russian Ballet Schools and the Canadian Dance Teacher Association where she later became Vice President of the Ontario Branch which consisted of 400 schools. Carolyn’s first small school outgrew the building and she expanded into a 5000 square foot space, and soon after opened a second location in a neighboring village. Carolyn’s school soon became known as the go to ballet school in the area and attracted guest artists including the late Betty Oliphant, founder of the National Ballet School, Arnold Spohr, former artistic director of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet, and the celebrated, internationally acclaimed dancer Frank Augustyn, who later became Carolyn’s husband. Frank’s illustrious dancing career ended and soon after he was invited to become the Chair of the Department of Dance at Adelphi University, Garden City, where he currently serves. In the first few years that Carolyn lived here she worked for a few local dance schools. In 2011 she founded Children’s School of Ballet, and later changed the name to Classical School of Ballet LI which more fully embodied what the school represents. In 2009, Carolyn began her teacher training program with ABT® National Training Curriculum. Carolyn is an ABT® Affiliate Teacher who has successfully completed the ABT® Teacher Training Intensive Primary through Level 7 of the ABT® National Training Curriculum and in 2016 Carolyn became an ABT Examiner.
How art benefits young brains
Art enriches lives and can be used to connect people from all walks of life. Among the many additional benefits of art is its effects on young people and the development of their brains. The American Association of School Administrators notes that neuroscience research has shown that the effects of the arts on a young brain’s cognitive, social and emotional development can be profound. • Art helps to wire the brain. The AASA notes that especially young children spend much of their time playing, and that play often includes forms of art such as singing, drawing and dancing. These artistic activities engage various senses and help to wire the brain so it can learn. As children age, these seemingly basic activities remain essential for young brains. • Art helps children develop their motor skills. Dancing and other movements that might be prompted by exposure to art help children develop motor skills. Motor skills are necessary for kids to perform important and necessary daily tasks while also promoting independence. • Art helps kids learn to think. The AASA notes that art can be a valuable tool in instilling essential thinking tools in children, including the ability to recognize and develop patterns,
the ability to form mental representations of what is observed or imagined, and the ability to observe the world around them. • Art can improve memory and focus. The AASA cites studies that listening to music can stimulate parts of the brain responsible for memory recall and visual imagery. In addition, background music played in a classroom has been shown to help students remain focused while completing certain learning tasks. • Art can positively affect how students approach other courses. Studies have shown that incorporating arts into core curriculums can have a number of positive effects on students’ overall academic performance and benefit students socially. Studies indicate that students involved in such integrative programs are more emotionally invested in their classes and work more diligently than those not studying in such conditions. In addition, students may learn more from one another when the arts are integrated into core curriculums than when they are not. Art is often mistakenly seen as a strictly fun component of children’s education. But the effects of art on young brains is considerable, helping young people develop in ways that may surprise many men and women.
Dream
Big...
Long Island’s premier ballet school... Classical School of Ballet LI REGISTRATION DATES
Aug. 21 – 24 10a- 5p, Studio, Garden City Jewish Center Aug. 28 – 31 Call for appointment Sept. 6 5p – 7p, Studio, Garden City Jewish Center Sep. 7, 5p – 7p Studio, UKE Learning Center, Syosset Sep. 9, 10a-3p Studio, Adelphi University Performing Art Center Sep. 11 – 14 Call for appointment
Classical Ballet School LI is a destination school. It doesn’t attract the masses but rather attracts those interested in learning the art of ballet and all that embodies it. Students commute and car-pool from Huntington Bay, Islip, Great Neck, Jericho, Syosset, Jamaica, Queens and local communities including and around Garden City such as Floral Park, Mineola, Franklin Square, West Hempstead and more. Carolyn is looking to open a location to the Syosset area to ease the burden of commuting students during the weekday classes, yet, they will continue to commute to Garden City for their weekend classes.
Bring this ad and receive $25.00 tuition credit
Carolyn is excited to welcome former student and professional dancer Beth Lamont to teach in late June. Beth has accepted the title at CSB as Guest Visiting Artist.
“My joy and rewards come from knowing and seeing the success of my students, many of whom have gone on to professional careers, and others that carry with them the love for ballet and still many more that greet me with an abundant amount of energy and desire to learn. When the studio lights go out at the end of the day, I know I can sleep well knowing that I have done my job well.” GARDEN CITY LOCATION
516-476-3339
www.classicalschoolofballetli.com carolyn@classicalschoolofballetli.com
Former student, Beth Lamont Photo Rejean Brandt
SYOSSET LOCATION NOW OPEN GARDEN CITY LOCATION
516-476-3339
www.classicalschoolofballetli.com carolyn@classicalschoolofballetli.com
Carolyn Zettel-Augustyn, Director
Friday, August 25, 2017 The Litmor News Group
ADVERTORIAL
5B
The Litmor News Group Friday, August 25, 2017
6B
Help kids get ready for fall sports season
Though summer is synonymous with R&R, parents of young athletes who hope to compete in scholastic athletics when the school year begins in autumn may need to take steps to ensure their kids aren’t at risk of injury once the curtain comes up on fall sports season. • Examine and replace equipment if necessary. The right equipment can protect kids from injury and help them realize their full athletic potential. But damaged or outdated equipment can increase kids’ risk of injury. Examine kids’ equipment long before fall sports season begins so you have time to bargain hunt should anything need to be replaced. • Schedule a physical for your child. Many school districts mandate that athletes receive and pass physicals before they can compete. Speak with the athletic director at your child’s school to learn the guidelines that govern athletic physicals. The physical will need to be conducted by a predetermined date, but you may also need the physical to be conducted after a certain date for it to be considered valid. Speak with your child’s physician if any problems are found during the physical. • Let kids heal. Kids’ schedules are busier than ever before, and many youngsters play several sports during the school year. Summer vacation may be the only extended period all year that youngsters’ bodies
get to heal. While it’s important that kids stay physically active throughout the summer, make sure they don’t overdo it, as you should emphasize the importance of rest. • Gradually get back in the swing of things. While
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rest gives kids’ bodies a chance to heal and develop, it’s important that young athletes stay in shape over the summer. As the fall sports season draws near, help kids gradually get back in the swing of things. Tryouts tend to be physically demanding, so kids who have not lifted a finger all summer may be at risk of injury or missing the cut. Let kids ease back into regular exercise to make sure they are not starting from scratch come their first tryout. • Speak with coaches. Coaches can be great assets to parents who want to make sure their youngsters enjoy the summer without sacrificing their chances of making the team in the fall. Speak with kids’ coaches to determine if there is any area your son or daughter can work on over the summer to improve his or her chances of making the team. Make sure kids are the ones leading the charge to improve their games; otherwise, they may feel pressured into doing so and that can take away the fun of playing sports. Scholastic athletes should take advantage of the opportunity to relax and recover that summer presents. But athletes who hope to compete in the fall can still work with their parents to ensure they’re ready once the school year and sports season begins.
As the school year begins anew, lice often becomes a subject of conversation among concerned parents. In certain areas, such as in classrooms and locker rooms, lice easily can be transferred from person to person. Understanding this common foe can help students avoid it and parents recognize it when it’s present. A louse is an ectoparasite, meaning it feeds on its host while living on the surface of the host’s body. Although lice can affect various parts of the body, they are most notably present on the scalp. Research indicates that head lice have been spreading among humans for millenia. Ancient Egyptian and Greek books of medicine make reference to lice, and they have even been found on prehistoric mummies. No one is quite sure just how lice originated, though it is suspected they once targeted another host species, but then adapted to living among humans. Schools, daycare centers and babysitting centers are common places Unlike lice that congregate on other parts of the body, head lice are not a vector for disease for lice to strike. transmission. They are relatively innocuous, 12 million infestations occur each year in the United but can be quite a nuisance. The insects are adept at States among children between the ages of three and clinging to human hair and feeding on blood from the 11. Head-to-head contact with an already-infested perscalp. son is the most common way to get head lice, offers the Anyone can get lice, regardless of their personal hy- U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Head giene or lack thereof. School-aged children between lice can be spread when people sit closely to one anthe ages of four and 14 catch lice more frequently than other, such as in a classroom or theater. It is very rare adults. Although firm data on lice infestations is dif- that lice are spread through shared belongings such as ficult to come by, estimates suggest that as many as hats, combs or on furniture. Pets do not play a role in
the spread of head lice. Lice tend to congregate behind the ears and at the neckline at the back of the head. Sometimes, they can be found on the eyelashes or eyebrows. Lice can be difficult to detect, and they may not produce symptoms. In some instances, itching and irritation may be so mild that it goes unnoticed. Plus, because eggs (nits) and even adult lice are so small, they can be difficult to identify. Treating lice typically involves using specialized combs to remove nits and lice. Pesticide shampoos and lotions or nonpesticide treatments may be used to eradicate the lice. Limiting head-to-head exposure is the best way to avoid a lice outbreak.
As the school year begins anew, lice often becomes a subject of conversation among concerned parents. In certain areas, such as in classrooms and locker rooms, lice easily can be transferred from person to person. Understanding this common foe can help students avoid it and parents recognize it when it’s present.
Celebrating Our 11th Year! Come in for a Free Trial Dance Class
CLASSES FOR AGES 3 THROUGH 18 Registration Going On Now For All Classes
Owners & Directors Jay Barrett, Natalie Mossa
Award Winning Competition Team
(Featuring some of the best teachers in the country, in all styles)
BALLET • TAP • JAZZ • LYRICAL • HIP HOP • CONTEMPORARY • GYMNASTICS • COMBO • PILATES RECREATIONAL & NON-COMPETITIVE CLASSES AVAILABLE THROUGHOUT THE YEAR. CALL US FOR DETAILS • AGES 3-18
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Friday, August 25, 2017 The Litmor News Group
‘Tis the season for school and lice
7B
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8B The Litmor News Group Friday, August 25, 2017
Students seeking private music lessons have options Time and again research has proven the benefits of music education. Children who study music typically score better on standardized testing and exhibit improved language and reasoning skills, and music education helps students with advanced mathematics lessons by improving their spatial and temporal reasoning. Involvement in music and the arts can improve a student’s SAT scores and make the student well-rounded. Despite these benefits, music and art education is slowly disappearing from the classroom. At many schools across the nation, stages are dark and band and chorus rooms are empty. Budget cuts have been unkind to music education programs. To keep up with the demand for technology in the classroom, certain school programs have to be scaled back, and art and music are generally the first to go. This leaves it up to parents to involve their kids in music education. Private lessons have long been a great way for kids to learn music, and many such music coaches are former music teachers. With private lessons, kids get to benefit from working with certified instructors, and parents are happy to make music a part of their youngsters’ lives. The following are a handful of ways parents can find private lessons for their kids. * Word of mouth: Begin by asking neighbors or friends in the community if they know of any reliable music teachers. Someone is bound to know a person
or have a connection to a music teacher. Speak with members of a community music ensemble, such as a church choir, or even amateur or professional musicians you see playing at a restaurant or bar. There’s a good chance you can get a referral. You may also have a friend or neighbor who is a talented musician and will agree to offer lessons on the side. * Community music programs: While schools may not have music classes, community centers offer programs for both adults and children. A community arts center may offer instrument training and/or vocal lessons, so look into such organizations in your community. A community YMCA or a similar organization also may have after-school music programs. * Nearby colleges: Music students at local colleges may want to make extra money by offering music lessons. They may be able either to meet at your home or use the music room on campus to conduct lessons. * Newspaper classifieds: Tutors frequently advertise their services in the newspaper. Look in the classified section to see if anyone is offering music lessons. Many newspapers now offer their classifieds both online and in print, so utilize both options to ensure your search is as thorough as possible. Music education is important, but those seeking instruction may have to look outside of school. Private instructors are available to help foster a love of the arts and mold creative, well-rounded children. ADVERTORIAL
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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.
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art. Art Talks for adults invited scholars, academics and exhibiting artists to introduce and discuss topics in the field of art with visitors in an intimate salon style setting. Art Programs for Special Needs Art education programs are also being designed for children, teens and adults with special needs. One program invites families affected by autism into the galleries and art studio to talk about and make art. Throughout the course of this program parents and caregivers will gain skills in behavioral methods that they can employ when bringing their child into a community setting. Families will join the Art Educator trained in Art Therapy in fun interactive gallery experiences that provide opportunities for everyone to look at and talk about art in a group setting. Then off to the studio for hands on art making activities that encourage experimentation with new materials, processes and creative play. Another workshop is aimed at building social and vocational skills for teens and young adults with autism through arts-based workshops. During this workshop series, teens will receive hands on training in basic artistic processes that can be translated into practical job skills. Based on current exhibitions in the galleries at Nassau County Museum of Art, these workshops will encourage participants to explore different methods of art making and design and how a museum can be a resource for creative inspiration. Students with autism will have the opportunity to apply their artistic skills and functional academic learning in a real world setting. Explore picture & art books and related resources about art history and museum exhibitions. This space is equipped with manipulatives and simple drawing materials for young children. The Manes Center will also be available for birthday parties, with appropriate art project activities. Party bookings are available on Saturdays 12:30 – 2 pm. Sculpture Park, Gardens & Hiking Trails The focus on gardens for the inaugural exhibit at the Manes Center is also appropriate for this grand estate. Most of the 145 acres originally belonged to poet, lawyer, conservationist, political activist, patron of the arts and preservationist William Cullen Bryant, who settled in Roslyn in 1843. The long-time editor of the New York Post built is home, Cedarmore, and founded Roslyn’s public library. In 1862, he built a cottage for his friend and fellow poet, Miss Jerusha Dewey (you can see the cottage when you explore the hiking trails on the grounds). In 1900, Lloyd Stephens Bryce purchased Bryant’s ‘Upland Farm’ and commissioned architect Ogden Codman, Jr. to design Bryce House, the present mansion.
Henry Clay Frick, co-founder of US Steel Corporation purchased Bryce House in 1919 as a gift for his son, Childs Frick, a Princeton graduate who became a vertebrate paleontologist and naturalist. For museum-goers, the estate grounds also offer: Sculpture Park: Approximately 30 works, many of them monumental in size, by renowned artists including Fernando Botero, Tom Otterness, George Rickey and Mark DiSuvero among others, are situated to interact with nature on the museum’s magnificent 145-acre property. Walking Trails: The museum’s 145 acres include many marked nature trails through the woods, perfect for family hikes or independent exploration. Gardens: From restored formal gardens of historic importance to quiet little nooks for dreaming away an afternoon, the museum’s 145 acre property features many lush examples of horticultural arts. View the expanded gardens and beautiful new path to the museum. Today, Frick’s mansion is the Saltzman Fine Arts Building, home to the Nassau County Museum of Art, which has put on world-class exhibitions and has a notable collection, including 150 Tiffany paintings and drawings which were bequeathed to the museum. Currently on exhibit in the Saltzman Fine Art Building (through November 5, 2017) “New York, New York”: From its earliest years, New York City was the stage on which the transformation of America played out, reflecting economic and historic upheavals that led to the city’s place as the financial and art capital of the world. This exhibition, guest curated by Director Emerita Constance Schwartz, portrays the city’s grit and glamour, its excitement and bustle, the heartbeat of a great metropolis, through more than 140 works by artists such as John Sloan, Reginald Marsh, Childe Hassam, Red Grooms, Robert Henri, Fairfield Porter, Berenice Abbott, Milton Avery and Georgia O’Keeffe among many others. “Glamour Icons: Marc Rosen”: Through the work of the awardwinning designer Marc Rosen, Glamour Icons celebrates fragrance and cosmetic packaging as an art form. This retrospective spanning the designer’s 40-year career includes many of his most iconic designs as well as some vintage 20th-century perfume bottles from Rosen’s personal collection. The designer’s work has been recognized with many industry awards and is also in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York and Musée de La Mode in Paris. Family Sundays – 1– 4 pm (free with admission): Be inspired by an exhibition based gallery conversation, then explore new art materials and learn new art-based vocabulary and ideas in the studio with our museum educator.
Super Family Sundays – 1-4 pm (admission plus $10 materials fee): Families immerse themselves in artmaking and exploring the Museum, the grounds, and sculpture collection during Super Family Sundays. Multiple activities are offered in collaboration with teaching artists in a variety of media, from performance to monumental cardboard constructions. Themes connecting the artmaking activities are inspired by the art on view in our galleries, the Museum’s history or the changing seasons on display in our forests and gardens. New Director Meanwhile, Charles A. Riley II, Ph.D. has been named director of the Museum, succeeding Karl E. Willers, Ph.D. who served as director for seven years. Dr. Riley’s long association with Nassau County Museum of Art includes having served as curator-atlarge and popular presenter of many lectures offered for many exhibitions. He helped curate the Museum’s Picasso, Surrealism and Abstract Expressionist exhibitions and recently curated the permanent installation of Western art at a major new private museum in Taiwan as well as several exhibitions in Berlin, Amsterdam, Lausanne, Manhattan and Long Island’s East End. Nassau County Museum of Art, consisting of the Saltzman Fine Art Building and The Manes Family Art & Education Center, is located at One Museum Drive in Roslyn Harbor, just off Northern Boulevard, Route 25A, two traffic lights west of Glen Cove Road. The Museum is open Tuesday-Sunday, 11 a.m.-4:45 p.m. Admission is $12 for adults, $8 for seniors (62 and above) and $4 for students and children (4 to12). During the August 3-September 10 preview of the Manes Center, there is no admission fee (this does not include admission to the Saltzman Fine Art Building). Members are admitted free. Docent-led tours of the exhibition are offered at 2 p.m. each day; tours of the mansion are offered
Friday, August 25, 2017
G O I N G P L A C E S, N E A R & F A R....
each Saturday at 1 p.m.; meet in the lobby, no reservations needed. Tours are free with museum admission. Family art activities and family tours are offered Sundays from 1 pm; free with museum admission. Call (516) 484-9338, ext. 12 to inquire about group tours. The MUSEUM STORE is open Tuesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Call 516-484-9338 for current exhibitions, events, days/times and directions or log onto nassaumuseum.org.
__________________________________ © 2017 Travel Features Syndicate, a division of Workstyles, Inc. All rights reserved. Visit goingplacesfarandnear. com, www.huffingtonpost.com/author/ karen-rubin , and travelwritersmagazine. com/TravelFeaturesSyndicate/. Blogging at goingplacesnearandfar.wordpress. com and moralcompasstravel.info. Send comments or questions to FamTravLtr@ aol.com. Tweet @TravelFeatures. ‘Like’ us at facebook.com/NewsPhotoFeatures
Pop Artist Kenny Scharf, at the opening of his exhibit at the Nassau County Museum of Art in 2016, will transform the exterior of the new Manes Family Art & Education Center © 2017 Karen Rubin/ goingplacesfarandnear.com
The Nassau County Museum of Art is on the 145-acre grounds of the former Childs Frick estate in Roslyn Harbor, Long Island © 2017 Karen Rubin/ goingplacesfarandnear.com
Classifieds Friday, August 25, 2017
D8
CLASSIFIEDS
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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
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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
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSIST. Large reform synagogue, Port Washington. Greeting visitors, processing donations, bulk mailings. Four years’ experience. MS Office. Cover letter and resume ybbergman@aol. com No phone calls please.
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT to vice President of insurance related construction company. 4 days. Must have experience with preparing claims. Knowledge of Xatimate program a must. Email resume to submitresumes3@gmail.com
F/T DENTAL RECEPTIONIST Busy, private FFS, multi-specialty dental office. Minimum 1 year experience, Dentrix knowledge a plus. North Shore / Port Washington, near LIRR. Call 516-883-1234
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSIST. 4 days per week. Garden City General Business Law Firm seeks college educated professional, reliable, proactive to work directly with partner. Must be able to perform wide range of responsibilities and MUST be PROFICIENT in all aspects of current technology (Windows Office 365, Quckbooks, Sage Timeslips +) Candidate will draft business letters, type at a speed of 55wpm+, answer phone calls, communicate with clients, update partner schedule and maintain (i) several book keeping and escrow systems, (ii) filing system and (iii) a neat and orderly work environment. Immediate start, Compensation Competitive. Email resume etc. to: P.T.Assistant@gmail.com
CUSTOMER SERVICE REP / Clerk: Part time for Insurance and Real Estate office. Requires computer knowledge and office multitasking. Email resume with cover letter to valentineinserv@aol.com
FRONT DESK HEALTH CARE ASSISTANT P/T Floral Park Ophthalmology Practice seeking individual to work P/T in a team environment providing optimal patient experience in busy medical office. Experience preferred includes good communication / phone skills, multitasking, processing of patients, utilization of office software & other office computer programs, electronic billing, insurance. Will provide training. Please email cover letter & resume to: Reception@drjindra.com
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
Are you tired of thAt sAme old job?
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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
MEDICAL ASSISTANT RECEPTIONIST: Part time for busy pediatric practice. Experience preferred but will train. Great personality, work ethic. Fax resume 516-767-8961 or email healthykidspediatrics @gmail.com
hiring ¬ now team members. Target is an iconic brand, a Fortune 50 company and one of America’s leading retailers. We’re hiring team members at our new store in Port Washington North and can’t wait to meet you. to apply: Visit ¬.com/careers, select store hourly positions, the state of New York and the Port Washington location.
work somewhere you apply online at �.com/careers or in store. © 2017 Target Brands, Inc. The Bullseye Design and Target are registered trademarks of Target Brands, Inc.
EMPLOYMENT
EMPLOYMENT
SITUATION WANTED CAREGIVER—Seniors. Long experience, reliable, own transport, reference. Maria 516-9431796 CERTIFIED NURSES AIDE experienced 20 years. Honest and reliable seeking home care position. Available Part Time, Evening, Weekends, Nights & Overnight. Licensed driver w/ car. Please contact Barbara 516734-1165 CERTIFIED SITTER AVAILABLE! Garden City HS student w pool membership for babysitting or mother’s helper. Red Cross certified (infant and child CPR and first aid). Responsible and fun big sister! 516-650-4295 or 516-592-2916
CLEANING AVAILABLE EXPERIENCE POLISH HOUSE CLEANER Good references, ability. Very honest, reliable, responsible and hard working. Own transportation. English speaking. Flexible days and hours. Reasonable rates. I will do a good job. Call or text 516-589-5640 HOME HEALTH AIDE, 3 yrs exp., certified.Honest. Patient and kind. Live out or in, prefer live out. No heavy lifting. References avail. 516-325-4270
Our Service Directory is sure to bring results. Call 294-8900 for rates and information.
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
SITUATION WANTED
NOVENAS/PRAYERS
NOVENAS/PRAYERS
HOUSE CLEANING: Experienced cleaning service available. Pleasant, responsible. Provides own quality clean products. Own transportation. Local references. Spanish/English speaking. Free estimates. Approximate cost: Small home $79, Mid size $99, Large $118. Please call Diana 516-859-7084
PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Never known to fail). Oh Most Beautiful Flower of Mount Carmel, Fruitful Vine of Splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate Virgin assist me in this necessity. Oh Star of the Sea help me and show herein you are my Mother. Oh Holy Mary Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth I humbly beseech thee from the bottom of my heart to succor me this necessity (mention your request here). There are none that can withstand your power. Oh, Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to Thee (three times). Oh Holy Mary I place this prayer in your hands (three times). Thank you for your mercy to me and mine. Amen. This prayer is never known to fail and is to be said for 3 consecutive days. Publication on granting of the favor must be promised and done. (MAK)
PRAYER TO THE HOLY SPIRIT Holy Spirit thou who made me see everything and showed me the way to reach my ideals. Thou who gave me the divine gift to forgive and forget the wrong that is done to me, and thou who art in all instances of my life with me. I thank thee for everything and confirm once more that I never want to be separated from you no matter how great material desire may be, I want to be with thee and my loved ones in Your perpetual glory. Thank You for your love towards me and my loved ones. Pray this prayer for 3 consecutive days. After 3rd day your wish will be granted no matter how difficult it may be. Promise to publish this dialogue as soon as your favor has been granted. ( M.J.M.)
MATURE CARING WOMAN seeks position in child care, elder care, housekeeping. Available full time, part time, live in, live out. Excellent references. Please call 516-565-4802
MATURE CERTIFIED Home Care Aides seek position to take care of your loved one. Ten years experience. At home or will do live in. References upon request Vivene 347-742-3575 or Lorraine 347-595-0454 LOVING CAREI am a certified nurses assistant seeking to take care of your loved one. Hospital & nursing home experience. Available mornings, evenings, nights, overnights, weekends, anytime. Driver. Please call 516297-8648
ANNOUNCEMENTS GOT LAND? Our Hunters will pay top $$$ to hunt your land. Call for a free info packet & quote. 1-866-309-1507 www.basecampleasing.com
EMPLOYMENT HELP WANTED
JOB OPPORTUNITY For a Full Time Registered Nurse Monday–Friday At Our Mineola Location
Competitive salary/benefits Email cover letter and resume to:
careers@harborchildcare.org
PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Never known to fail). Oh Most Beautiful Flower of Mount Carmel, fruitful vine of Splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate Virgin assist me in this necessity. Oh Star of the Sea help me and show herein you are my Mother. Oh Mary Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth I beseech thee from the bottom of my heart to succor me this necessity (make request). There are none that can withstand your power. Oh show me herein you are my Mother. Oh Mary conceived without sin pray for us who have recourse to Thee (three times). Oh Holy Mary I place this cause in your hands (three times). Thank you for your mercy to me and mine. Amen. This prayer must be said for three days and after three days your request will be granted. The prayer must be published after the favor is granted. Grateful thanks. (L.S.)
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
PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Never known to fail). Oh Most Beautiful Flower of Mount Carmel, fruitful vine of Splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate Virgin assist me in this necessity. Oh Star of the Sea help me and show herein you are my Mother. Oh Mary Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth I beseech thee from the bottom of my heart to succor me this necessity (make request). There are none that can withstand your power. Oh show me herein you are my Mother. Oh Mary conceived without sin pray for us who have recourse to Thee (three times). Oh Holy Mary I place this cause in your hands (three times). Holy Spirit, you who solve all problems, light all roads so that I can attain my goal. You who give me the divine gift to forgive and forget all evil against me and that in all instances in my life you are with me. I want in this short prayer to thank you for all the things as you confirm once again that I never want to be separated from you in eternal glory. Thank you for your mercy towards me and mine. The person must say this prayer 3 consecutive days. After 3 days, the request will be granted. This prayer must be published after the favor is granted. M.J.M.
Grandparents:
Send in your grandchildren’s photos and enter our “World’s Most Beautiful Grandchildren” contest. Just send a photo and a brief description of the child (or children) along with your name and address to: editor@gcnews.com
MARKETPLACE INVITED SALES BY TRACY JORDAN Consignment Shoppe and Auction House Open 7 Days a Week Consignments by Appointment Monthly Live & Online Auctions Tag Sale, Appraisals and Estate Sale Services Complete House Cleanouts Moving Services Home Staging Services 839 Stewart Avenue Garden City, NY 11530 516-279-6378 www.invitedsales.com
Friday, August 25, 2017 Classifieds
CLASSIFIEDS
PRIVACY HEDGES FALL BLOW OUT SALE. 6’ Arborvitae (cedar) reg. $149 NOW $75. Beautiful, nursery grown. FREE installation / FREE delivery. Limited supply! ORDER NOW! 518-536-1367 www.lowcosttrees. com
WANTED TO BUY
ABE BUYS OLD STUFF
Antiques, Bronzes, Paintings, Sterling Silver & All Contents
917-817-3928
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 TOP CASH PAID: JEWELRY, Furniture, Art, etc. Please call 718-598-3045 or 516-270-2128. www.iBuyAntiquesNYC.com
TAG SALE *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
Classifieds Friday, August 25, 2017
D10
CLASSIFIEDS MARKETPLACE
GARAGE SALE 89 Suffolk La., Garden City Friday & Saturday 8/25, 8/26 9am-5pm. No previews Designer clothes, handbags, shoes, many household items, Christmas items, golf clubs and more.
PETS 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
DO YOU HATE KENNELS? OR STRANGERS IN YOUR HOUSE? HOME AWAY FROM HOME will care for your dog in my Garden City home while you are away. Dog walking also available. Pet CPR & first Aid Certified. Numerous referrals and references. Limited availability. Book early! Annmarie 516-775-4256 MYA’S K9 CAMP Full Service Pet Care Professional Dog Grooming Training Boarding Walking EFT Pet Therapy Therapeutic Healing GC Resident 516-382-5553
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: Huge bright 2 bedroom, 1 bath with dining area, gated parking, laundry, A/C, hardwood floors, NO BROKER FEE, near LIRR. $1,685 + electric. rentals@gardencityborder.com or 516-524-6965 (text or voice)
Call 294.8900
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
APARTMENT FOR RENT
CONDO/CO-OP FOR SALE
GARDEN CITY RENTALS One & Two Bedroom Apts $2200—$3200 Pet friendly, elevator, updated Kitchens & Baths Immediate Garden City Properties 516-746-1563/516-313-8504
GARDEN CITY, STEWART Ave. Co-op. Bright, spacious 1 BR, 1 Bath. Walk to town, LIRR. Low maintenance in immaculate building, hardwood floors, newly painted. $349,000. Call 516-313-1122
GARAGE SPACE FOR RENT COMMUTER PARKING AVAILABLE: 2 blocks form Port Washington Railroad. 516-883-3200
OFFICE SPACE GARDEN CITY 1565 FRANKLIN AVE Large Windowed Offices in newly built professional suite. Conference room, reception, copier, pantry included. Call 516-248-3048 NEW HYDE PARK: 6 Tuxedo Ave., first floor, 1500 sqft, private entrance. Please call for details. Owner 516-650-4880
WILLISTON PARK 1300sf. office space avail on Hillside Ave. Prof building, parking lot, close to RR & parkways. Full commission paid. Call Tony 516248-4080.
VACATION RENTAL OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND Best selection of affordable rentals. Full/partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Resort Services. 1-800-638-2102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com 5% base rent discount — use code NYPS17-2. Ends Oct-01-2017
Grandparents: Send in your grandchildren’s photos
and enter our “World’s Most Beautiful Grandchildren” contest. Just send a photo and a brief description of the child (or children) along with your name and address to: editor@ gcnews.com
HAMPTON BAYS EAST END SUMMER HOME
Beautiful Summer Home 5 BR, 4 Bth, Pool, Jacuzzi. Waterviews. Weekly, Monthly Kathy 516-984-8430
LOTS FOR SALE HUDSON VALLEY SACRIFICE! 10 acres was $49,900 NOW $39,900. Pine woods, stonewalls, stream! 20 mins from Albany, 2 hrs NYC G’teed buildable Call 888-905-8847
SERVICES HOME IMPROVEMENTS AMBIANCE PROFESSIONAL SERVICES *Handyman & Remodeling *Kitchen Installations *Furniture Assembly *Finish Carpentry *Minor Electrical & Plumbing 23year 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, wainscoting molding, closets, doors, windows, sheetrock, painting, siding, decks power washed, stained and built. 516-623-9822
LAMPS FIXED $65 In home service. Handy Howard. 646-996-7628
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Place an ad in our Classifieds for reasonable rates and prompt results. Call the G.C. office at 294-8900 for more information.
TRUMBULL
SERVICES HOME IMPROVEMENTS 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 SKY CLEAR WINDOW and Restorations Inc. Window Restorations, Outdated Hardware, skylights, Andersen Sashes, new storm windows, wood windows, chain /rope repairs, falling windows, fogged panes, mechanical repairs, wood repairs, restorations, all brands. Call Mr. Fagan, 32 years experience. 631-385-7975 www.skyclearwindow.com
PAINTING & PAPERHANGING JV PAINT HANDYMAN SERVICES Interior-Exterior Specialist Painting, Wallpapering, Plastering, Spackling, Staining, Power Washing. Nassau Lic#H3814310000 fully Insured Call John 516-741-5378 PAINTING PAINTING PAINTING: Interior / E xterior. Summer Specials! Call Steve cell 972-998-8573
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
HISTORIC NICHOLS, Area/Trumbull. 4 BR, 3 Bth, 3,500 sq ft. Home. Features 2 Fireplaces, Dedicated Office, Hwd Flrs, 3 Car Gar, Manicured Landscaping & Gardens, Large Yd (1.1 acres) w/Inground Pool & Waterfall. Loc Near Excellent Schools & Route 95/Merritt Pkwy For Convenient Commuting • MLS No. 99176570
PRICE REDUCED! $689K OWNER RELOCATING
Contact Homeowner at:
203-258-3274
AP BIOLOGY tutor using the Campbell or Sadava books. I use the test banks to show you what you are weak in. Will test you on each chapter or topic and review results with you. If you read the chapters and review with me, this is a pathway to a 5! Ephraim Himelstein. 516384-9865. ephraimhimelstein@ gmail.com
SERVICES COLLEGE ESSAYS: Make your application stand above the rest. Call Jonathan, 516-6690587or ifixessays@gmail.com, an Ivy League PhD with proven Ivy League results.
ENGLISH TUTOR: Diane Gottlieb M.Ed., M.S.W. SAT / ACT, College Essays, AP, Regents, ELA Test Prep, Reading comprehension and writing proficiency. 917-599-8007 or email: dianegot@gmail.com LongIslandEnglishTutor.com Providing one-on-one professional support to build confidence, knowledge and skills in every student. MATH, PHYSICS, SAT/ACT TUTOR, adjunct professor Calculus I,II, Algebra, trig, AP & Pre-Calc, IB, NYS Certified, highly experienced. Raj 516-7871026
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 SPANISH TUTOR: There is a difference. Over 30 years of teaching and tutoring all levels, flexible scheduling, periodic contact with child’s teacher if required. Experienced, dedicated, flexible, collaborative, William Cullen, M.A. Spanish. Call /text 516-509-8174 wdctutor@aol. com
INSTRUCTION PIANO LESSONS By Ira Baslow. Experience the joy of playing the piano. Private lessons in your home, free no-obligation piano lesson, all levels, all styles, all ages. Beginners a specialty. 516-312-1054 www.iwantmypianolessons. com POPPA’S MUSIC: Back to School instrument rentals. 20% off with ad on already low priced school rental rates! Offer expires 9/30/17. Affordable, high quality rentals for all band and orchestra instruments. 168 Jericho Tpke., Mineola. Email allan@ poppasmusic.com 516-747-5107
Our Service Directory is sure to bring results. Call 294-8900 for rates and information.
SERVICES
SERVICES
CLEANING
CLEANING
MARIA’S CLEANING SERVICE Our excellent cleaning team will get your home or office spotless! Available Monday thru Friday 7am to 6pm Supplies provided if needed Own transportation Excellent references provided CALL 516-849-2026
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
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
Are you a professional?
Our Professional Guide is sure to bring results. Call 294-8900 for rates and information.
SERVICES 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
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
DONATE YOUR CAR
Wheels For Wishes
SERVICES
SERVICES
SERVICES
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
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
PROFESSIONAL LETTER WRITER: Will write your letters of: Complaint, Regret, Applications, Correspondence, Thank You’s, Speeches, Reports, Cover Letters, Newsletters, Editing and more. Your letters will get results! Ron Goldberg 516567-8434 ron.e.goldberg@gmail. com
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/Commercial. Bonded/Insured. Free estimates. 516-538-1125 GENERATORS Sales and service. Maintenance contracts. Generac, Kohler. Mohrmann Electric Co., Inc. 516-826-3311
PRIVATE SCHOOL BUS TRANSPORTATION for upcoming school year. We cover Elementary through High School. Herricks School District. DOT inspected school buses driven by NYS DMV certified 19a professionals. Monthly payment plan available after initial down payment. Call Sandra Transportation at: 516-469-7684 and leave a message. We will return your call within 1 business day.
PSYCHOTHERAPY: Efrat Fridman, LCSW. Individual, couple and family therapy. effiefrid@gmail.com 2 Pinetree Lane, Old Westbury, NY 11568. 516-224-7670 or 225 West 35th Street, NY 10001 718-887-4400
Our Service Directory is sure to bring results. Call 294-8900 for rates and information.
Wine Tasting helps animal shelter
*Free Vehicle/Boat Pickup ANYWHERE *We Accept All Vehicles Running or Not *Fully Tax Deductible
Benefiting
Make-A-Wish® Suffolk County or Metro New York
D11
Call 294.8900
Suffolk County
Call: (631) 317-2014
WheelsForWishes.org
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.
THERE WILL BE NEARLY 5,000
COURT REPORTING JOB OPENINGS OVER THE NEXT FIVE YEARS*, & THERE’S ONLY
ONE PROGRAM IN NYC TO PREPARE YOU. NOW ENROLLING FOR FALL 2017 CERTIFICATE & DEGREE PROGRAMS
718-502-6248 • PLAZACOLLEGE.EDU 118-33 QUEENS BLVD., FOREST HILLS *AS RECENTLY STATED IN THE WALL STREET JOURNAL & DAILY NEWS
Friday, August 25, 2017 Classifieds
CLASSIFIEDS
Please join Last Hope Animal Shelter on Friday night, September 15th, from 7-10 PM for its night of wine tasting at the Walt Whitman Birthplace, 246 Walt Whitman Road in Huntington Station. Admission of $55 includes wine, a light supper and dessert. All proceeds benefit the rescue efforts of Last Hope.
This is always fun night and will include a live auction, Chinese auction and 50/50. Please purchase your tickets in advance using the PayPal link on the website by September 12th. For more information, visit http://lasthopeanimalrescue. org/wine-tasting-friday-september-15th/ If paying by check, please mail it by September 2nd to be sure it’s received in time.
Classifieds Friday, August 25, 2017
D12
CLASSIFIEDS Call 294.8900
Last Hope Flea Market Saturday, September 9th
THE WAIT IS OVER!
After our summer break, the next Last Hope Flea Market and Jewelry Sale will be on Saturday, September 9th from 10am-2pm at The Church of the Advent (Winthrop Hall) in Westbury, 555 Advent Street, just off Jericho Turnpike. Items for donation will be accepted on Friday, September 8th from 2:30pm to 7pm at the church. Things we don’t accept since they don’t sell: books, VCR/cassette tapes, toys, gym equipment, furniture, picture frames and clothing. Our customers are interested in knick-knacks and household items. Jewelry is a big seller for us–all kinds. All proceeds benefit the special needs animal fund at Last Hope. To see our adoptable cats and dogs and more information about Last Hope, please visit our website: http:// lasthopeanimalrescue.org For more information contact Maureen at toestetra@hotmail.com.
Do you own a local business?
Place an ad in our classifieds for reasonable rates and prompt results. Call The Garden City office at 294-8900 for more information Litmor Publishing Corp.
SERVICE DIRECTORY
11 Friday, August 25, 2017
CLEANING SERVICE
Call 294.8900
TREE SERVICE
CLEANING RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL
MASTER CLEANING
A Complete Home Service by Reliable Professionals Homes • Apts. • Offices • Carpet Cleaning • Window Wash • Floors Stripped & Waxed • Move In Move Out • Attics • Garages • Basements • Rubbish Removal • All Cleaning Supplies Included FREE ESTIMATES
Cell: 516-770-0514 MOVING SERVICE
CARPENTRY
Serving the community for over 40 yrs
SWEENEY CUSTOM CARPENTRY
BRIAN CLINTON
MOVERS
One Piece to a Household/ Household Rearranging FREE ESTIMATES
333-5894
Owner Supervised
Licensed & Insured Licensed #T-11154 175 Maple Ave. Westbury, NY 11590
and PAINTING
Renovations Custom Closets Sheetrock Repairs Interior/Exterior
New Doors New Windows New Moldings Free Estimates
26
516-884-4016 Lic# H0454870000
HOME HEATING OIL
MASONRY
MOVERS ALL TYPES OF STONEWORK
FREE ESTIMATES LICENSED & INSURED #H2219010000
Sage Oil Save 5¢ per gallon
by visiting mysageoil.com and entering promo code SAGE5 at checkout.
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
ANTIQUES
516-485-3900
234099-1
FAMILY OWNED & OPERATED
CUSTOM DECORATORS
Residential | Commercial | Installation | Sales & Services
Window Treatments, Custom Upholstery, Custom Fit Slipcovers, Cushions and Pillows, Furniture Restoration.
10% OFF
on any project (Restrictions apply)
FREE ESTIMATES
85 Franklin Ave. Franklin Square NY 11010
516.216.1630
LAWN SPRINKLERS
Open Mon. to Sat. 9am to 6pm
www.TheSquareDecorators.com
AUTO DETAILING
DETTAGLIO DETAILING “We clean and pamper your car”
• • • • •
Spring Turn-Ons Backflow Device Tests Free Estimates Installation Service/Repairs
Joe Barbato (516) 775-1199
• We specialize in Imports: Mercedes-Benz, BMW, Audi, Jaguar & Maserati
• SUV’s, Vans & Pick-Ups also detailed at a higher price • We provide Mobile service
$10 OFF
Complete Detail Coupons not to be combined
Anthony Masia
Wash & Wax Spring Special $95 Cars only Coupons not to be combined
- 631-612-7152
Owner/Operator Check us out on Facebook
Friday, August 25, 2017
12
SERVICE DIRECTORY PAINTING/POWER WASHING
ROOFING
PAINTING/POWER WASHING
SWEENEY PAINTING and CARPENTRY
Interior B. Moore Paints Dustless Vac System Renovations
Call 294.8900
PAINTING & WALLPAPER est. 1978
Exterior Power Washing Rotted Wood Fixed Staining
Interior and Exterior • Plaster/Spackle Light Carpentry • Decorative Moldings Power Washing
516-884-4016
www.MpaintingCo.com 516-385-3132 New Hyde Park
Lic# H0454870000
DEMO/JUNK REMOVAL
516-328-7499 Licensed & Insured
“PAULIE THE ROOFER” - Stopping Leaks My Specialty -
• Slate & Tile Specialists • All Types of Roofing LIC & INSD “MANY LOCAL REFERENCES”
(516) 621-3869
AWNINGS
ADVERTISE YOUR SERVICE HERE Enjoy Instant Shade & Comfort All Summer 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
GENERATORS
JUNK REMOVAL
ALL PHASES OF RUBBISH REMOVAL & DEMOLITION Residential • Commercial Construction Sites
“POWER WHEN YOU NEED IT”
Kitchens • Bathrooms Clean-Ups • Attics Basements Flood/Fire
ALL SIZE DUMPSTERS
516-541-1557
Some Day Service, Fully Insured
Bob Cat Service
www.1866WEJUNKIT.com
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
10% off New Customers First Maintenance Call or First Service Call. (including any parts used) Mention this ad.
Mayfair Power Systems, Inc. Sales • Service • Parts • Maintenance
516-623-3007 www.mayfairpower.com
Servicing Long Island Since 1961
Call 294.8900 For Rates and Information AN OPPORTUNITY... 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
ANTIQUES
Call 294.8900 COMICS
NEED $$ ?? NEED SPACE?? 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 www.bestcomics.com
$
Since 1991
516-328-1900
ADVERTISE YOUR SERVICE HERE Call 294.8900 For Rates and Information
HOME IMPROVEMENT
One Stop For All Your Home Improvement Needs Basement, Bathroom & Kitchen Remodeling, Carpentry, Crown, Wainscoting Molding, Closets, Doors, Windows, Sheetrock, Painting, Siding, Decks - Stained & Built
GEM - BASEMENT DOCTOR
516-623-9822 Lic. Nas. H3803000000
TREE SERVICE
AN OPPORTUNITY...
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
Do you own a local business?
Place an ad in our classifieds for reasonable rates and prompt results. Call The Garden City office at 294-8900 for more information Litmor Publishing Corp.
13 Friday, August 25, 2017
SERVICE DIRECTORY
Friday, August 25, 2017
14
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 COMPUTER SPECIALIST
COLLEGE COUNSELING
FAMILY THERAPIST
SUSAN MURPHY, LCSW 111 Seventh Street, Suite #111 Garden City, New York 11530
SUSAN MURPHY, LCSW Individual and Family Therapist Child • Teen • Adult
(908) 868-5757 SMurphy824@gmail.com
LAW
PSYCHOTHERAPIST
D’Angelo Law Associates, PC Frank G. D’Angelo, Esq.
Divorce Mediation
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
Elder Law Wills & Trusts Medicaid Planning Estate Planning Probate & Estate Administration / Litigation 901 Stewart Avenue, Suite 230 Garden City, NY 11530
WWW.DRANNMARIEDANGELO.COM
WWW.DANGELOLAWASSOCIATES.COM
PSYCHOTHERAPY
CHEMISTRY TUTOR
(516) 248-9323
Efrat Fridman, Individual, couple and family therapy
EilEEn ToonE l.C.S.W
Psychotherapist
1975 Hempstead Turnpike East Meadow NY 11554 • Suite 404 P: 516 873 1288 C: 516 316 3350
(516) 222-1122
TUTORING
LCSW
PSYCHOTHERAPY
effiefrid@gmail.com 516-224-7670 2 Pinetree Lane Old Westbury NY 11568
Individual • Couples • Marital Therapy • Addiction Specialist
718-887-4400 225 W. 35th St. New York, NY 10001
TUTORING
call
Jonathan, Ivy League Ph.D.
669-0587
(516)
itutorchem@gmail.com I also tutor:
AP • SAT II Regents
biology, physics, earth & envi. sci.
NorthShoreAcademics.weebly.com
INSTRUMENTS AND MUSIC
SPANISH TUDOR
SPANISH TUTOR THERE IS A DIFFERENCE… • Over 30 Years of Teaching and Tutoring at all levels • Flexible scheduling • Periodic contact with child’s teacher if requested
Experienced...Dedicated...Flexible...Collaborative
William Cullen, Call/Text
M.A. SPANISH
516-509-8174
Email: wdctutor06@aol.com
We Carry 2000 Major Brand School Rentals. Guaranteed Lowest Prices. Woodwind, Brass & Strings. Come in Early and Save 20% Off Our Already Low Prices for the School Year!
AN OPPORTUNITY...
ADVERTISE
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.
YOUR SERVICE HERE Call 294.8900
For More Information and rates call
For Rates and Information
Let us begin listing you in our Next Issue.
516.294.8935
Hurry! Offer expires 9/30/17
New Customers only. Discount will be given at the time of Rental. Some Restrictions Apply.
Call Allan at 516-747-5107 for . . .
Expert Repairs Onsite by Mark Kasten + Staff Recording Studio & DJ Lessons For All Ages Sign up for Any Music Lesson and Receive a Free Lesson Book! College Degree Teaching Staff with Expert NYSSMA Preparation Lowest Price Guarantee on All New & Used Instruments
168 Jericho Tpke., Mineola N.Y. 11501 Located Between Mineola Blvd. & Willis Ave. Visit us at www.PoppasMusic.com Print Your Rental Agreement Today. Like Us on Facebook! Facebook.com/PoppasMusic
To Advertise Call 294-8900
15 Friday, August 25, 2017
LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU, MTGLQ INVESTORS, L.P., Plaintiff, vs. ANGELO RECCHIA; JEANNETTE RECCHIA, ET AL., Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly filed on June 16, 2017, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the CCP (Calendar Control Part Courtroom) in the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY on September 05, 2017 at 11:30 a.m., premises known as 346 Woodbury Road, Hicksville, NY. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 12, Block 105 and Lot 5. Approximate amount of judgment is $275,823.43 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 1227/14. Kenneth Robinson, Esq., Referee Knuckles, Komosinski & Manfro, LLP, 565 Taxter Road, Ste. 590, Elmsford, NY 10523, Attorneys for Plaintiff MIT 5555 4X 08/04,11,18,25 LEGAL NOTICE SUPREME COURT – COUNTY OF NASSAU WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., AS TRUSTEE FOR THE POOLING AND SERVICING AGREEMENT DATED AS OF AUGUST 1, 2005 PARK PLACE SECURITIES, INC. ASSETBACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES SERIES 2005WHQ4, Plaintiff against PHYLLIS BARRAVECHIA; DENISE BARRAVECHIA, et al Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered on November 9, 2016. I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction in the Calendar Control Part (CCP) Courtroom of the Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, N.Y. on the 5th day of September, 2017 at 11:30 a.m. premises described as follows: All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Hicksville, Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York. Said premises known as 215 Marie Street, Hicksville, N.Y. 11801.
(Section: 11, Block: 323, Lot: 484 & 485). Approximate amount of lien $ 399,990.68 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed judgment and terms of sale. Index No. 11651-14. Luigi Devito, Esq., Referee. McCabe, Weisberg & Conway, P.C. Attorney(s) for Plaintiff 145 Huguenot Street – Suite 210 New Rochelle, New York 10801 (914) 636-8900 MIT 5556 08/04,11,18,25 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT: NASSAU COUNTY. MARGARET RANIERI, PLACIDO AMENDOLIA, NATALE TURSI, ROBERT N. SWETNICK, EACH AS TO AN UNDIVIDED 25% INTEREST, Pltf. v. NEAL SULTZER, et al, Defts. Index No. 010700/15. Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure and sale June 14, 2017, I will sell at public auction on Tuesday, Sept. 12, 2017 at 11:30 a.m. in the Calendar Control Part (CCP) Courtroom of the Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Dr., Mineola, NY prem. k/a 101 Autumn Drive, Plainview, NY a/k/a Section 13, Block 117, Lot 42. The Condominium Unit known as Unit NO. 101 in the condominium k/a The Seasons at Plainview Condominium I located at Plainview, Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau, State of New York, such Unit being designated and described as such in that certain declaration, dated December 8, 2006, made by Engel Burman Beidler Senior Housing at Plainview LLC, pursuant to Article 9-B of the Real Property Law of the State of New York establishing a plan for condominium ownership of the buildings and the land described below upon which buildings are situate, which declaration was recorded in the office of the clerk of the County of Nassau on March 30, 2007, in liber 12249 of conveyances at page 843, and shown on the plans of a condominium prepared by Sidney B. Bowne & son, LLP, certified by Zabdiel A. Blackman, L.S. and filed in the Clerk’s Office on March 30, 2007 as Map No. CA-231. Together with an undivided 1/134m fractional inter-
est in the Common Elements of the Condominium. Approx. amt. of judgment is $199,651.10 plus costs and interest. Sold subject to terms and conditions of filed judgment and terms of sale. KEITH LAVALLEE, Referee. THE MARGOLIN & WEINREB LAW GROUP, LLP, Attys. For Pltf., 165 Eileen Way, Ste. 101, Syosset, NY. #92330 MIT 5557 4X 08/11,18,25,09/01 NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT: NASSAU COUNTY THE BANK OF NEW YORK AS TRUSTEE FOR THE CERTIFICATE HOLDERS CWALT INC., ALTERNATIVE LOAN TRUST 2006-23CB, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 200623CB; Plaintiff(s) vs. NACHHATTAR SINGH; et al; Defendant(s) Attorney (s) for Plaintiff (s): ROSICKI, ROSICKI & ASSOCIATES, P.C., 2 Summit Court, Suite 301, Fishkill, New York, 12524, 845.897.1600 Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure and sale granted herein on or about October 11, 2016, I will sell at Public Auction to the highest bidder at Calendar Control Part (CCP) Courtroom of the Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501. On September 5, 2017 at 11:30 am. Premises known as 7 Sebree Place, Plainview, NY 11803 Section: 0047 Block: 00016-00 Lot: 00018 ALL that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Plainview, in the Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, known and designated as and by lot number 18 in Block No. 16 on a certain map entitled “Map of Morton Village, Section No. 4 situated at Plainview, Town of Oyster Bay, Nassau County, New York, surveyed by Teas & Steinbrenner, Civil Engineers and Surveyors, Malverne, New York, on February 17, 1953 and filed in the Nassau County Clerk`s Office on April 1, 1953 under Map No. 5763. As more particularly described in the judgment of foreclosure and sale. Sold subject to all of the terms and conditions contained in said judgment and terms of sale. Approximate amount of judg-
ment $678,647.87 plus interest and costs. INDEX NO. 7366/08 Mark S. Ricciardi, Esq., Referee MIT 5559 4X 08/04,11,18,25 NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT NASSAU COUNTY FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff against HAL P. MELTZER, et al Defendants Attorney for Plaintiff(s) Fein Such & Crane, LLP 1400 Old Country Road, Suite C103, Westbury, NY 11590 Attorney (s) for Plaintiff (s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale Entered March 22, 2017 I will sell at Public Auction to the highest bidder at the Calendar Control Part (CCP) 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, New York, 11501. on September 5, 2017 at 11:30 AM. Premises known as 24 Bunker Lane, Hicksville, NY 11801. Sec 46 Block 471 Lot 11. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Levittown, Hicksville, in the Town of Oyster Bay, Nassau County, State of New York. Approximate Amount of Judgment is $491,952.85 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index No 011262/11. Mark Ricciardi, Esq., Referee YSETN263 MIT 5561 4X 08/04,11,18,25 NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU SRP 2015-1, LLC, Plaintiff, Against Index No.: 2983/2016 JAMES R. BUONAGURA, a/k/a JAMES BUONAGURA a/k/a JAMES BUONAGARA a/k/a JIM BUONAGURA, et al., Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale, duly entered in the Nassau County Clerk’s Office on 6/20/2017, I, the undersigned Referee, will sell at public auction, in the Calendar Control Part (CCP) Courtroom of the Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Dr., Mineola, NY 11501 on 9/12/2017 at 11:30 am, premises known as 34 Bloomingdale Road, Hicksville, NY 11801, and described as follows: ALL that certain plot, piece or
parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Bethpage, Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York, and designated on the tax maps of the Nassau County Treasurer as Section 46, Block 519 and Lot 2. The approximate amount of the current Judgment lien is $541,308.44 plus interest and costs. The Premises will be sold subject to provisions of the aforesaid Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale; Index # 2983/2016. Lisa Segal Poczik, Esq., Referee. Richland & Falkowski, PLLC, 35-37 36th Street, 2nd Floor, ASTORIA, NY 11106 Dated: 7/18/2017 PB MIT 5562 8/11, 18, 25; 9/1 LEGAL NOTICE SUPREME COURT – COUNTY OF NASSAU NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC D/B/A CHAMPION MORTGAGE COMPANY, Plaintiff against WARREN SCAGLIONE, et al Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered on February 01, 2017. I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction in the Calendar Control Part (CCP) Courtroom of the Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, N.Y. on the 12th day of September, 2017 at 11:30 a.m. premises described as follows: All certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Plainview, in the Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau and State of New York. Said premises known as 25 Stauber Drive, Plainview, N.Y. 11803. (Section: 12, Block: 406, Lot: 3). Approximate amount of lien $ 466,080.93 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed judgment and terms of sale. Index No. 008373-15. Michael B. Mirotznik, Esq., Referee. McCabe, Weisberg & Conway, P.C. Attorney(s) for Plaintiff 145 Huguenot Street – Suite 210 New Rochelle, New York 10801 (914) 636-8900 MIT 5563 4X 8/11, 18, 25; 9/1 LEGAL NOTICE SUPREME COURT See page 16
Friday, August 25, 2017
16
LEGAL NOTICES From page 15
COUNTY OF NASSAU DEUTSCHE BANK NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY AS TRUSTEE FOR INDYMAC INDX MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST 2005-AR2, MORTGAGE PASSTHROUGH CERTIFICATES SERIES 2005-AR2 UNDER THE POOLING AND SERVICING AGREEMENT, V. GERALDINE R. GEREMIA, et al. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated March 27, 2017, and entered in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Nassau, wherein DEUTSCHE BANK NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY AS TRUSTEE FOR INDYMAC INDX MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST 2005-AR2, MORTGAGE PASSTHROUGH CERTIFICATES SERIES 2005-AR2 UNDER THE POOLING AND SERVICING AGREEMENT is the Plaintiff and GERALDINE R. GEREMIA, ET AL. are the Defendant(s). I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive Calendar Control Part, Mineola, NY 11501, on September 12, 2017 at 11:30AM, premises known as 15 HOFSTRA DR, PLAINVIEW, NY 11803: Section 13 Block 92 Lot 13: ALL THAT CERTAIN PLOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND, WITH THE BUILDINGS AND IMPROVEMENTS THEREON ERECTED, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING AT PLAINVIEW, TOWN OF OYSTER BAY, COUNTY OF NASSAU AND STATE OF NEW YORK Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 14537/2009. Anthony Capetola - Referee. RAS Boriskin, LLC 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 106, Westbury, New York 11590, Attorneys for Plaintiff MIT 5564 4X 8/11, 18, 25; 9/1 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE Supreme Court County Of Nassau Nationstar Mortgage LLC, Plaintiff AGAINST Benjamin Cortes, et al, Defendant Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated 6/5/2017and entered on
6/16/2017, I, the undersigned Referee, will sell at public auction at the Courtroom of the Supreme Court Mineola, 100 Supreme Court Drive, The Calendar Control Part (CCP), Mineola, NY on September 12, 2017 at 11:30 AM premises known as 5 Kenneth Court, Hicksville, NY 11801. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Borough and County of Nassau, State of New York, SECTION: 12, BLOCK: A, LOT: 1107. Approximate amount of judgment is $581,286.16 plus interests and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 12047/2012. Dominic A. Villoni, Referee FRENKEL LAMBERT WEISS WEISMAN & GORDON LLP 53 Gibson Street Bay Shore, NY 11706 MIT 5567 4X 8/11, 18, 25; 9/1 NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT NASSAU COUNTY NAVY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION, Plaintiff against MICHAEL J. SCHMATZ III, et al Defendants Attorney for Plaintiff(s) Fein Such & Crane, LLP 1400 Old Country Road, Suite C103, Westbury, NY 11590 Attorney (s) for Plaintiff (s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale Entered May 30, 2017 I will sell at Public Auction to the highest bidder at the Calendar Control Part (CCP) 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, New York, 11501 on September 19, 2017 at 11:30 AM. Premises known as 13 Violet Avenue, Hicksville, NY 11801. Sec 12 Block 288 Lot 21. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Hicksville, in the Town of Oyster Bay, Nassau County, State of New York. Approximate Amount of Judgment is $467,457.04 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index No 010155/14. Luigi Devito, Esq., Referee YNFNY010 MIT 5568 4X 8/18, 25; 9/1, 8 NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU US Bank National Association as Trustee for the MLMI SURF
Trust Series 2006-BC5, Plaintiff AGAINST Melanie Artoglou; Christoduola Artoglou; Harry Artoglou; et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated October 26, 2016 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction in the Calendar Control Part (CCP) at the Nassau Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, New York, 11501. on September 19, 2017 at 11:30AM, premises known as 8 Clarissa Drive, Hicksville, NY 11801. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in Hicksville, Town of Oyster Bay, County of Nassau and State of NY, Section 45 Block 363 Lot 34. Approximate amount of judgment $542,671.67 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 8875/07. Scott F Guardino, Esq., Referee Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 759-1835 Dated: July 27, 2017 MIT 5569 4X 8/18, 25; 9/1, 8 The Viscardi Center, Henry Viscardi School & Abilities, Inc. (Owner) will receive sealed bids at 201 I.U. Willets Road, Albertson, NY 11507 until 11:00am on Friday, September 22, 2017 for maintenance service on various manufacturer’s automatic doors. At that time all bids will be publicly opened. Vendors will receive specifications and a walk through on Monday, September 11, 2017 at 11:00am at our facility located at 201 I.U. Willets Road, Albertson, NY 11507, please go to rear of building to see the receptionist. All interested Vendors must pre-register with Maureen Begina, Purchasing Manager at 516-465-1558 or email mbegina@viscardicenter.org prior to meeting. The Owner reserves the right to reject any or all bids received and to accept any bid which it deems to be most favorable to the interest of the Owner. No bid shall be withdrawn pending the decision of the Owner. Bids may be sent via mail, email or hand delivered to: Maureen Begina Purchasing Manager The Viscardi Center
201 I.U. Willets Road Albertson, NY 11507 516-465-1558 – mbegina@viscardicenter.org MIT 5570 1X 8/25 NOTICE OF SALE IN FORECLOSURE STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT: COUNTY OF NASSAU WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A, SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO WACHOVIA MORTGAGE, FSB, FORMERLY KNOWN AS WORLD SAVINGS BANK, FSB, Plaintiff, LILLIAN VIVIANA CASTILLA A/K/A LILLIAN VIVIANA CASTILLA-COLLADO A/K/A LILLIAN V. CASTILLA A/K/A LILLIAN V. COLLADO A/K/A LILLIAN CASTILLACOLLADO A/K/A VIVIANA CASTILLA, et al., Defendants PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT In pursuance of a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale entered in the office of the County Clerk of Nassau County on June 13, 2017, I, Arnold Michael Bottalico, Esq., the Referee named in said Judgment, will sell in one parcel at public auction on September 12, 2017 at the Nassau County Supreme Court Calendar Control Part (CCP) Courtroom, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, County of Nassau, State of New York, at 11:30 A.M., the premises described as follows: 104 Plainview Road Woodbury, NY 11797 SBL No.: 13-D-132 ALL THAT TRACT OF PARCEL OF LAND situate in Manetto Hills, partly in the Town of Huntington, County of Suffolk and State of New York. The premises are sold subject to the provisions of the filed judgment, Index No. 004217/14 in the amount of $1,535,463.16 plus interest and costs. Richard S. Mullen, Esq. Woods Oviatt Gilman LLP Plaintiff’s Attorney 700 Crossroads Building, 2 State St. Rochester, New York 14614 Tel.: 855-227-5072 BN 7243 4X 8/11, 18, 25; 9/1 NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT NASSAU COUNTY U.S.BANK TRUST, N.A., AS TRUSTEE FOR LSF9 MASTER PARTICIPATION TRUST, Plaintiff against TERESA HELFRICH, et al Defendants
Attorney for Plaintiff(s) Fein Such & Crane, LLP 1400 Old Country Road, Suite C103, Westbury, NY 11590 Attorney (s) for Plaintiff (s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale Entered March 17, 2017 I will sell at Public Auction to the highest bidder at the Calendar Control Part (CCP) 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, New York, 11501 on September 19, 2017 at 11:30 AM. Premises known as 29 Hayden Drive, Bethpage, NY 11714. Sec 46. Block 602 Lot 1. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at Bethpage, in the Town of Oyster Bay, Nassau County, State of New York. Approximate Amount of Judgment is $563,557.65 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index No 001015/13. Scott L Braziller, Esq., Referee VERNY355 BN 7244 4X 8/18, 25; 9/1, 8 NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC D/B/A CHAMPION MORTGAGE COMPANY, Plaintiff AGAINST TINA MONTANARO, et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated March 08, 2017 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 August 15, 2017 at 11:30AM, premises known as 4033 JEAN AVENUE, BETHPAGE, NY 11714. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being at Bethpage, Town of Oyster Bay and County of Nassau and State of New York, SECTION 46, BLOCK 483, LOT 23. Approximate amount of judgment $358,559.88 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment for Index# 16-004476. Peter V. Christiansen, Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC Attorney for Plaintiff 1775 Wehrle Drive, Suite 100 See page 17
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Incidents that have occurred recently in the local area include:
On Union Avenue in New Cassel, a victim has reported that the front window of the building was damaged sometime between 9:30 p.m. on August 2 and 10 a.m. on August 3.
was charged with Criminal Possession of Marijuana.
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On August 2, between 8 a.m. and 9 p.m., a watch was stolen from a vehicle at Rallye Motors in Westbury.
At Sunrise Assisted Living in Plainview, a pocketbook was stolen from a vehicle between 11:30 p.m. on August 2 and 6:30 a.m. the following morning.
At 10:05 p.m. on August 4, unknown subjects threw a brick through the front window of a home on Hicksville Road in New Cassel, causing damage.
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On Franklin Avenue in Franklin Square, a victim has reported that unknown subjects removed his unattended iPhone from the counter while he was shopping at 12 noon on August 2.
A laptop was stolen from a vehicle on Crag Lane in Levittown between 7:30 and 7:35 a.m. on August 3.
Assorted personal property was stolen from a vehicle on Locust Street in Westbury between 11:30 p.m. on August 4 and 8 a.m. the following morning.
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On August 2, between 1 and 8 a.m., assorted personal property was stolen from a vehicle on Old Farm Road in Levittown. n
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At Macy’s in Hicksville, a 22-year-old woman from Flushing was arrested and charged with Shoplifting at 6:14 p.m. on August 2. n
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A vehicle on Bridge Lane in Hicksville was damaged between 1:30 p.m. on August 3 and 10 a.m. the next day. n
A 33-year-old woman from Hicksville was arrested on Taylor Avenue in Westbury at 11:45 p.m. on August 3, and
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At Bed Bath & Beyond in Westbury, twenty-five boxes of Nexium were stolen at 11 a.m. on August 4.
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At the Red Roof Inn, located on Dibblee Drive in Westbury, a 25-year-old woman from Brooklyn was arrested at 12:40 a.m. on August 5. She was charged with Criminal Possession of Marijuana.
Turnpike in Levittown. n
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Criminal Possession of Marijuana was the charge brought against a 23-yearold man from Mineola, when he was arrested at 5:30 p.m. on August 6 at the corner of Jackson Avenue and Roslyn Road in Mineola.
At 9 p.m. on August 7, assorted US currency was stolen from a vehicle on Meridian Road in Levittown.
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On Merchant’s Concourse in Westbury, a 25-year-old man from Elmont was arrested and was charged with Criminal Possession of Marijuana at 8:35 p.m. on August 6. n
Just after midnight on August 7, a victim’s vehicle was keyed while parked on East Blacksmith Road in Levittown. n
A pocket knife and assorted change were stolen from a vehicle on Kenneth Avenue in Baldwin between 1:30 and 8:14 a.m. on August 7.
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At 4:45 p.m. on August 5, a 35-year-old man from Uniondale was arrested and was charged with Driving While Intoxicated on Compass Street in that town.
Unknown subjects damaged the driver’s side window of a victim’s vehicle sometime between 2 and 7 p.m. on August 7 on Schoolhouse Road in Levittown.
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At 12:50 on August 6, a victim reports that his vehicle was keyed while parked at the BJ’s Wholesale Club on Hempstead
On August 7 at 8 p.m., it was noticed that the pull down cage to a Pods storage container had been damaged on Elves
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On Gardner Avenue in Hicksville, two vehicles that were parked between 11 p.m. on August 7 and 7:30 a.m. on August 8 were found to have been keyed. n
At Century 21 on Old Country Road in Westbury, a 46-year-old man from Little Neck was arrested and was charged with Shoplifting at 12:30 p.m. on August 8. n
On 1st Street in East Meadow, unknown subjects key a victim’s car between 1:20 and 1:45 p.m. on August 8. n
At 4 p.m. on August 8, a 34-year-old woman from Elmont was arrested at Walgreens on Hempstead Turnpike in Franklin Square. She was charged with Shoplifting. n
On York Street in East Meadow, a victim has reported that the rear passenger side window of his vehicle was damaged sometime between 11 p.m. on August 8 and 7 a.m. the next morning. n
LEGAL NOTICES From page 16 Williamsville, NY 14221 BN 4245 4X 8/18, 25; 9/1,8 LEGAL NOTICE Notice of formation: Photo Booth Paparazzi LLC. Filed
6/02/2017. Office: Nassau co. SSNY designated as agent for process & shall mail to: 339 Hicksville Rd. #943, Bethpage NY 11714. Purpose: General BN 7246 6X 8/18, 25; 9/1, 8, 15, 22
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The rear window of a vehicle that was parked on North Broadway in Hicksville between 10:30 a.m. and 12:12 p.m. on August 9 was found to have been broken when the owner returned. Compiled by Kate and Meg Meyer
Friday, August 25, 2017
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THE VIEW FROM HERE
Too much politics BY BOB MORGAN, JR.
I’m writing this on an Amtrak train, and, as usually happens on a Sunday evening, I’m searching around for a subject to write about in this column. I wrote a fairly heavy piece last week on the events in Charlottesville, so I don’t think that readers are looking for two columns in a row of this type. What I’m settling on this week is another riff about how we have overpoliticized too much in recent years. I recognize that in some ways this type of piece is a little incongruous since I write a column that touches upon politics fairly often. I am interested in ideology and public policy implications of political decisions. I also enjoy reading and writing about political strategies and the molding of public opinion. But not always and everywhere. Much of life has little or no political implications. And it also helps from time to time to focus on subjects well afield from politics. Indeed, this week such topics as the eclipse, remembering the colorful career of Jerry Lewis or the problems of the Yankees in Fenway Park all serve to give us a sense of perspective not available to those who think in purely political terms. There is obviously no shortage of good recent material on overpolitization (for example, late night television has become far more political in recent years), but some examples border on the comical. Here’s a representative tale. At University of Southern California Trojan home college football games, the team uses a white Arabian horse named Traveler, ridden by a student dressed as a Trojan warrior, to ride across the field in celebration of the team’s touchdowns. This tradition apparently dates back more than 50 years when a Hollywood figure persuaded the university to use the original horse named Traveler, who previously had appeared in some movies, to ramp up enthusiasm at games. (There have been a number of successor Travelers over the years.) According to the Los Angeles Times, however, use of the white horse named Traveler at games was criticized by
student activists as emblematic of white supremacy. The activists note that Robert E. Lee’s horse was named Traveller, although the general used an extra l in the spelling of the name. I need not spend much time explaining my opinion that the connection between Traveler the horse and racism seems nonexistent. Sometimes a horse is just a horse. The academic world provides another wonderful example of politics run amuck. According to the New York Times, students at Oberlin College protested that the college cafeteria service was engaging in cultural appropriation (the improper taking over of another culture’s creative or artistic forms) and cultural insensitivity. African American students demanded that more fried chicken be added to the menu. As to the cultural appropriation, it allegedly occurred when recipes or preparation of food served in the cafeteria deviated from a dish’s original ethnic origins. An example cited in accounts of the controversy was an Americanized version of the banh mi Vietnamese sandwich which was served with pulled pork and coleslaw on ciabatta bread, rather than using more traditional ingredients on a baguette. The complaints also touched upon poorly prepared sushi and General Cho chicken prepared with steamed rather than fried poultry. Again, this seems ridiculous. Complaints about college cafeteria food are not exactly new and perhaps students should be served more of what they want, including fried chicken. But it just can’t be offensive for a food provider to experiment with versions of a dish that appeal to local audiences, that may fit better within a budget, or that are mixed with other culinary influences. Indeed, many top restaurants would likely go out of business if fusion dishes were outlawed. This cafeteria food issue just isn’t in the political sphere. In short, there are many important political issues in our time, but it is most unhelpful to ignore that many parts of life are simply, and properly, nonideological and nonpolitical.
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Levittown 70th Anniversary Seniors’ Luncheon The Levittown 70th Anniversary Seniors’ Luncheon will be held on Wednesday, September 27, at 12:30 PM at the Levittown Memorial Education Center Panther Room, 150 Abbey Lane, Levittown.
The cost is $15 per person – Checks payable to Levittown Public Schools R.S.V.P.: By September 8th to Susan Garibaldi at sgaribaldi@levittownschools.com or call 516-434-7025.
Irish History Forum to host speaker On Saturday, September 16, the Irish Family History Forum will present: 10:00 AM Genealogy Tips and Tricks with Michael Carragher 10:45 AM Refreshment break & Ask the Experts 11:15 AM Shellee Morehead, CG who will speak on “Using DNA to Solve a Family Tree Mystery” Meetings are free and open to the public. Light refreshments are served. Join the Irish History Forum at
Bethpage Public Library, 47 Powell Avenue, Bethpage. Directions: www.ifhf.org There is ample parking directly opposite the library. The Bethpage Long Island Railroad Station is nearby Information: contact Mary Ann: Email: press@ifhf.org Phone: (631) 335-2462 Irish Family History Forum www.ifhf.org
Free legal consultation clinic
As a free community service to help those fearful of losing their homes, Nassau County Bar Association hosts Mortgage Foreclosure/Sandy Recovery Free Legal Consultation Clinics. Held twice a month to meet the demand, the next two clinics are scheduled for Monday, September 11 and Monday, September 25, 3 - 6 p.m., at the Nassau County Bar Association, located on 15th Street at the corner of West Street in Mineola, two blocks south of the bus and train stations. NCBA volunteer attorneys meet oneon-one with homeowners who are then referred for additional help for mortgage modifications, loan restructuring, bankruptcy, financial planning assistance, services for lower income households or emotional support. Many of these resources and agencies are available immediately in the same room, such as American Debt Resources, LI Housing Partnership, La Fuerza Unida, and LI Housing Services. There are no income restrictions to attend the clinics. Since 2009, NCBA
has held more than 160 clinics assisting more than 12,000 Nassau families in distress. Currently, each clinic averages 30 - 50 homeowners, signifying that foreclosure continues to be prevalent in Nassau. Volunteer attorneys also answer Sandy victims’ questions regarding homeowner, flood, property damage and automobile insurance claims; FEMA, debt deferral, and consumer protection issues. Bi-lingual attorneys fluent in Spanish are on site. Attorneys bi-lingual in other languages, including Russian, Haitian Creole, Korean, Chinese, Hindi and American Sign Language, may be requested when making reservations. To make an appointment for the next clinic, call the Bar Association at 516747-4070. Attendees are asked to bring their mortgage documents or other important papers and correspondence with them. This program is funded through the NYS Attorney General Homeownership Protection Program (known as HOPP).
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HEALTH , W ELLN ESS A N D B EAU T Y
_Asbestos_Lunchbox_BlankSlate.qxp_W&L 7/18/17 12:20 PM Page 1
New camp in Levittown focuses on STEAM
Friday, August 25, 2017
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From page 1 Schneider said that’s what unique about the Levittown location is certified teachers in the district are in charge of running the classes and that the volunteers who are High School and Middle School students in the district, are required to complete a rigorous training course. “In order to be a counselor here
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they must complete an online training course that teaches them how to be a positive mentor and coach.” The camp session runs from July 31st to August 11th from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The cost for each camper for the two week session is $245.00 To find out more information about Camp Invention you can go online to their website, campinvention.org.
Eclipse party at local library
From page 1 big day is here they can barely contain their excitement,” said Angel. Michael Dorado, of East Meadow, said he was an astronomy enthusiast and that the eclipse was one of the most anticipated events of his lifetime. “I was probably one of the first people here on line for the glasses,” said Dorado. “Looking up at the moon blocking out most of the sun is probably one of the coolest things I’ve ever seen.” At exactly 2:44 p.m. people got to witness 71% totality in the New York Metropolitan area. Before heading outside to witness the real thing, people were able to check out a live NASA station feed inside the Library depicting eclipse images from
all over the country. Many of the kids who attended the event, kept themselves busy in the hours leading up to the eclipse by participating in activities such as Constellations and Stars and Eclipse Crafts for Children, where they made eclipse clocks and decorated eclipse glasses. There was also a program called Eclipse in Literature, for adults and teens, which featured readings from novelists such as Mark Twain, Isaac Asimov, Stephen King and Fredric Brown. If people missed out on the eclipse or are eagerly awaiting the next one, they only have to wait seven years as another solar eclipse will be visible in the United States on April 8th, 2024.
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