Volume 10, Issue 24 - Party Parents

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2009 Honda Pilot Touring

2010 Honda Accord Crosstour EX-L

2009 Honda Pilot Touring

2010 Honda Accord Crosstour EX-L

$29,387

$28,359

$26,589

$25,897

33,618mi

18,951mi

41,519mi

59,062mi

Gray

Silver

White

Red

STOCK#

STOCK#

STOCK#

STOCK#

U8620I

U8561O

U8551T

U8567O

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397 2009 Honda Odyssey EX-L

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

2010 Honda Odyssey EX

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

2009 Honda CR-V EX

2009 Honda CR-V EX

$24,598

$24,598

$20,785

$20,398

50,585mi

19,056mi

18,548mi

34,540mi

Gray

Silver

Green

Beige

STOCK#

STOCK#

STOCK#

STOCK#

U8447O

U8533O

U8504O

U8417O

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

2009 Honda Accord EX-L

2008 Honda CR-V EX

2008 Honda Accord EX-L

2008 Honda Accord EX

$18,793

$18,489

$18,395

$16,987

52,670mi

25,179mi

39,147mi

38,649mi

White

White

Red

White

STOCK#

STOCK#

STOCK#

STOCK#

U8670I

U8649T

U8624T

U8722I

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

2009 Honda Civic EX

2008 Chrysler Pacifica Touring

2009 Honda Accord EX-L

2010 Honda Civic LX

$16,897

$16,895

$16,577

$16,459

18,419mi

49,000mi

61,927mi

18,812mi

Silver

Black

Silver

White

STOCK#

STOCK#

STOCK#

STOCK#

U8688I

U8580T

U8720T

U8543O

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

2008 Chrysler Sebring Touring

2010 Honda Civic LX

2010 Honda Civic VP

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397 2004 Honda Odyssey EX-L

$16,389

$16,298

$15,389

$12,598

38,286mi

28,877mi

31,016mi

99,318mi

Beige

White

Blue

Sage

STOCK#

STOCK#

STOCK#

STOCK#

U8565T

U8475O

U8646T

U8477T

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

Atlantic Honda 1-888-359-8397

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Everybody’s doing it... B E N E F I T S: *

Let us pick up your old, working refrigerator or freezer for FREE, and get a $50 rebate! To date, over 15,000 LIPA customers have had their old, working refrigerator or freezer picked up, free of charge and properly recycled. The best part is that just like we did for your neighbors, we’ll pay you $50 for your old refrigerator or freezer as well. Plus, right now LIPA will also recycle up to three room air conditioners or dehumidifiers in conjunction with a scheduled pick-up of a qualifying refrigerator or freezer free of charge and you’ll receive a voucher for use at LIPA’s online efficient products catalog. Visit www.lipower.org/recycling or call 866-761-2722.

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Proud winner of the Best of Long Island Sandwich Deal for 2012 Valid at participating SUBWAY® restaurants. For a limited time only. ©2012 Doctor’s Associates Inc. SUBWAY® is a registered trademark of Doctor’s Associates Inc.

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Sound Smart at a Party People in Shanghai are coming up with creative ways to reuse bomb shelters built throughout the Chinese city during the 1960s and 1970s. These

underground safe havens from possible Soviet air raids are now serving as nightclubs, lingerie stores and wine cellars but with an added advantage. A men’sonly underwear store that’s located next to a gay night club says that the store’s hidden location helps customers who may not want to be seen shopping there, and the cold, damp atmosphere of the former shelters is perfect for wine. One nightclub, appropriately named The Shelter, even throws “pitch-dark” parties where they leave only the music on… A new environmental book claims that renewable energy technologies aren’t as great as they seem, and could even spell more trouble for the environment. According to Green Illusions:

The Dirty Secrets of Clean Energy and the Future of Environmentalism, written by University of California–Berkeley visiting scholar Ozzie Zehner, “green”

practices don’t offset fossil fuel use in the U.S., and building more solar cells and wind turbines could actually accelerate fossil fuel use. How? Zehner says that subsidizing renewable energy just expands energy supplies, which ultimately increases energy demand. The demand is usually met by building more coal-fired power plants. He concludes that in order to avoid this “boomerang” effect, nations will have to look to socioeconomic innovations, like an energy tax that increases over time, a long-term plan to make building and equipment more efficient, legislation that prioritizes walking and biking over car culture, as well as universal health care and strong human rights…

911 instead, even though the officers were still on scene. He is charged with misuse of the 911 system, disorderly intoxication, trespassing after warning and resisting arrest without violence, along with subjecting an innocent kitten to an inappropriate environment… If you were the kid in class with the “old dad,” don’t worry. A new study suggests that people whose fathers or grandfathers started having children at a later age may live longer. Northwest-

ern University researchers studied the

“They couldn’t put it down and they started looking through and then they started actually reading it. Eventually, I got, actually, a thumbs-up.”

A Florida man was arrested for repeatedly calling 911 after a strip club owner wouldn’t let him enter with a kitten. When Everett Lages was initially

refused, the 47-year-old called the police. After they arrived, the seemingly intoxicated man wouldn’t get into a taxi the cops had called for him, and kept calling

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DNA of people in the Phillipines and found longer telomeres in people with older fathers and grandfathers. Telomeres are bits of DNA that protect the ends of chromosomes from deterioration, and longer ones have been associated with slower aging. The researchers stressed that this should not encourage men to intentionally wait to have children, since the investigators need to find out if the offspring actually do live longer. Previous research has shown that older fathers are more likely to pass harmful genetic mutations to their children…

First Lady Michelle Obama on her daughters’ approval of her first gardening book, “American Grown: The Story of the White House Kitchen Garden and Gardens Across America.” She signed copies of her book in Washington on Tuesday, June 12, 2012. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

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FROM THE EDITOR

The Long Island Press won the coveted Public Service Award for its investigative series into the Nassau County Police Department— one of 22 awards the newspaper was awarded by The Press Club of Long Island. Staff reporter Rashed Mian was also named the 2012 James Murphy Cub Reporter of the Year during the annual awards ceremony Thursday at the Woodbury Country Club. In addition to those two All Media Award prizes, the Press took home a half-dozen firstplace honors for news, features, arts and environmental reporting—sweeping the political and non-local news/feature categories for weekly newspapers. “The Robert W. Greene Public Service Award was presented to Shelly Feuer Domash and Christopher Twarowski of the Long Island Press for their five-part investigative series on corruption within the Nassau County Police Department,” the local chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists—said in a statement. The series included an expose detailing how police brass allegedly squashed the burglary investigation into the son of a wealthy donor to a nonprofit Nassau police organization that is fund raising to build a new police academy. Three former police officials were later indicted on conspiracy and misconduct charges. They have pleaded not guilty. The burglar was also arrested and pleaded guilty. LI’s only alternative newsweekly also earned 10 second-place awards and four third-place awards, including one for best website, longislandpress.com.

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First-Place Non-deadline News, “Nassau Police Investigative Series,” by Shelly Feuer Domash and Christopher Twarowski Non-local News/Feature, “Gas Rush,” by Jaclyn Gallucci, Rashed Mian, Spencer Rumsey and Christopher Twarowski Feature/Lifestyle, “20 Years of Torture,” by Christopher Twarowski Arts, “Rock On! Huntington’s Paramount Opens Its Doors,” by Dave Gil de Rubio Environment/Science/Health/ Technology, “Heating Up,” by Spencer Rumsey, Timothy Bolger and Christopher Twarowski Government/Politics, “King’s Speech,” by Christopher Twarowski, Spencer Rumsey and Rashed Mian Second-place: Non-deadline News, “How Team Mangano’s Proposal To Privatize The Nassau Sewage System Could Flush The County’s Future Down The Drain,” by Christopher Twarowski Government/Politics, “Nassau Police Investigative Series,” by Shelly Feuer Domash and Christopher Twarowski Business/Economics/Financial, “How’s Business?” by Spencer Rumsey Non-local News/Feature, “Bullfighting,” by Christopher Twarowski, Spencer Rumsey and Timothy Bolger Feature/Lifestlye, “New York State Approves Same-sex Marriage, But Does Long Island?” by Spencer Rumsey, Lindsay Christ, Timothy Bolger and Christopher Twarowski Arts, “Shooting for the Stars: The Long Island International Film Expo Gives Local Filmmakers The Spotlight,” by Michael Patrick Nelson Environment/Science/Health/Technology, “The Vaccine Machine,” by Jaclyn Gallucci Special Multimedia Project Online, “Tunnel Vision: Inside The East Side Access Project,” by Spencer Rumsey, Rashed Mian and Jon Sasala Online Photograph, “Tunnel Vision: Inside The East Side Access Project,” by Spencer Rumsey, Rashed Mian and Jon Sasala Sports, “Diamonds Aren’t Forever,” by Jim Mancari Third Place: Non-local News/Feature, “Mission Accomplished,” by Long Island Press Government/Politics, “The Trials Giving Steve Levy Nightmares,” “Steve Leaving,” and “County Clean-up” by Spencer Rumsey and Christopher Twarowski Business/Economics/Financial, “Missing the Bus,” by Spencer Rumsey

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C Ex h pr ec e ko ss ut

The Target

er Summs Job urch

The Ch

SUMMER JOBS—OFF TARGET As the U.S. Department of Education announces average tuition at a four-year public university is up 15 percent, statistics show fewer than three in 10 teenagers are able to find low-skill summer jobs—the highest teen unemployment rate since World War II. Don’t worry, kids, enjoy your summers while you can, because after graduation s e v l Seawo you’ll be working the next 40 years just to pay off your student loans! on

Group Phones Scam

rgan JPMoa Ch se

KKK

THE CHURCH—OFF TARGET After conducting a four-year probe, the Vatican accuses nuns of promoting “radical feminism” and not supporting church doctrine on same-sex marriage and a men-only priesthood. Nothing screams radical like wearing a white coif, scapular and underskirts. Or wanting equal rights.

GROUPON—PARTIAL SCORE The daily deal site generates controversy with their latest offer—pay $1,000 and Groupon will name your baby. Six people have already taken the site up on it. Hey, if it keeps celebrities from naming their kids Blue Ivy and Pilot Inspektor, we’re on board. PHONE SCAMS—OFF TARGET Suffolk County police are warning residents about a phishing scam in which a text message is sent to cell phones telling the recipients they’ve won a $1,000 gift card from Best Buy, then directing them to a phony website where they have to hand over their personal financial information in order to claim their prize. Who would fall for this? We only give our credit card numbers to stranded Nigerian tourists who can’t access their bank accounts. JPMORGAN CHASE—PARTIAL SCORE JPMorgan Chase chief executive Jamie Dimon apologizes before Congress for the bank’s $2 billion trading losses and defends the bank against accusations it has acted irresponsibly. A bank…irresponsible with other people’s money? No way! KKK—OFF TARGET A Ku Klux Klan group in Georgia is denied after applying for the state’s AdoptA-Highway cleanup program to help beautify a part of Route 515 in the Appalachian Mountains, and now they are suing the state for discrimination. Really, sometimes these jokes just write themselves…

The Pink Slip David Diehl Blame it on soccer. Giants football star David Diehl got so hammered in a Queens bar while watching the Croatian national team triumph over Ireland that he forgot the rules of the game he’s excelled in—avoiding the blitz—and allegedly got behind the wheel of his BMW and slammed into three parked cars last Sunday. When he put his key in the ignition, his blood level was .182 percent—more than twice the legal limit, police said. Time out, dude! But there was no flag on the play before the damage was done. Diehl was headed back home to New Jersey, but fortunately the NYPD got to the 6-foot-5, 304-pound offensive lineman first. He was offensive all right. He couldn’t even stand up. They booked him while he was still wearing his red-checkered Croatia soccer shirt. He should’ve been thinking about Big Blue. Unlike President Obama’s Commerce Secretary John Bryson, who could claim medical reasons for crashing his car in California, Diehl’s got no excuse for his lamebrained behavior—even if he is a huge fan of the Croat team. He should’ve benched himself, but he didn’t, and the penalty should be severe. Hang it up, No. 66...You’re fired.

SEAWOLVES—Bull’s eye The Stony Brook University baseball team makes the College World Series for the first time in school history, also making them the first New York school to make it to the CWS since 1980. In lesser news, Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez tied Lou Gehrig for most career grand slams this week. Hey, it’s all relative.

The Quote “Just being able to walk around with 10 joints in each ear—and it would only be a violation? I think that’s wrong.” —Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos (R-ROCKVILLE CENTRE) to reporters on why he won’t support Gov. Mario Cuomo’s proposal to lessen penalties for marijuana possession in New York. The Assembly plans to take up the bill next week.

The Photo A helicopter tows a guide wire across the gorge at niagara falls, Tuesday, June 12, 2012, in preparation for daredevil Nik Wallenda’s high-wire act on Friday evening. Wallenda estimates his history-making, U.S.-to-Canada walk by way of a cable strung over the brink will cost about $1.2 million to $1.3 million. That includes fabrication and installation of the custom-made steel wire, permits and security on both sides of the border, travel, and marketing. (AP Photo/The Niagara Gazette, Dan Cappellazzo)

The Equation

Taco Bell’s New Beefy Nacho Burrito

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Popeye’s New Rip’n Chick’n

Long Island Press for June 14 - June 20, 2012

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The Rundown

1. READ DAVID MCCULLOUGH, JR.’S “YOU’RE NOT SPECIAL” COMMENCEMENT SPEECH: Yeah, we know. You didn’t even want to hear your own commencement speech and god forbid you get invited to yet another high school graduation ceremony where you get stuck baking on the bleachers at high noon. But, trust us, this one is worth a read. Over the weekend, a Massachusetts high school English teacher—who also happens to be the son of the Pulitzer Prize winning historian of the same name— seriously took the class of 2012 to school. His realworld reality check went viral. And it’s awesome. 2. SEE IF YOU RECOGNIZE UNIDENTIFIED CIVIL WAR PHOTOS: The identities of two little girls in a picture found among the bodies of Civil War soldiers still remain a mystery today. Now, The Museum of the Confederacy has released the unidentified images of the two girls on the remote chance someone might recognize them. View the pictures at www.moc.org. 3. WATCH THE “CDC ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE STATEMENT” VIDEO ON COLBERTNATION.COM: With all this talk about a zombie apocalypse headed our way, it’s important that we, as journalists, leave no stone unturned, and Stephen Colbert is carrying the torch. Listen as our fearless leader of the fourth estate questions the CDC’s flip-flopping stance on zombies: First they release the Zombie Preparedness Guide and now they deny that zombies even exist? There can be only one reasonable explanation—the CDC has been taken over by zombies, too! 4. GIVE BLOOD, GET METS TIX: Long Island hospitals require almost 800 pints of blood per day to meet routine needs, and our region also suffers from a shortage of local blood donors. A single donation has the potential to help three people. And if you donate at the Bellport Community Center on June 28, you’ll be rewarded with two free Mets tickets. To schedule an appointment, call Tim at 631-852-1300. Your neighbors need you and, quite frankly, the Mets could use all the support they can get. 5. GET YOUR STAR WARS ON AT THE CRADLE: Storm Troopers, Clone Troopers, Bounty Hunters, Sith Lords. Rebel Pilots, Troopers, Jedi Warriors, Princesses and Wookiees, oh my! Two of the most popular Star Wars costuming organizations, the 501st Legion’s Empire City Garrison and the Rebel Legion’s Echo Base will invade the Cradle of Aviation Museum in Garden City June 16. Members of both groups will roam the museum to pose for photos and see if the force is still with them.

—The amount in fines ING Bank agreed to pay the U.S. government to settle allegations it violated U.S. sanctions put in place to fight against money laundering and terror financing. Authorities say ING moved $1.6 billion illegally through banks in New York on behalf of Cuba, Iran and other countries subject to U.S. Sanctions. This is the biggest fine ever paid by a bank for sanctions violations.

B-List B-Day

7. RECYCLE YOUR PLASTIC POTS AT HICKS: After you finish your summer planting, you’re most likely going to be stuck with a mountain of plastic cell packs, trays and pots. But they don’t need to end up in the trash. Through July 15 Hicks Nurseries in Westbury is encouraging all Long Island home gardeners to bring in their gardening plastics to be recycled. Just drop ’em off!

VENUS “I’LL F*CKING TAKE THIS BALL AND SHOVE IT DOWN YOUR F*CKING THROAT” WILLIAMS June 17, 1980 Tennis champ Venus Ebony Starr Williams is a Gemini, a sign known for possessing intense mental energy and a fierce desire to win. Venus is a former World No. 1 tennis player and is a three-time Olympic gold medalist. A mischievous sign, this Gemini is known for throwing dress codes to the wind and wearing risqué outfits on the court—from nudecolored undershorts to lingerie-inspired dresses. Venus’ drive to be the best has landed her in some sticky situations: standing opposite her sister on the court on multiple occasions—and being fined thousands for crushing her racket and threatening the life of a lineswoman.

8. SEARCH “AIR YEEZYS” ON EBAY, THEN SELL YOURS: Yes, those are sneakers designed by Kanye West and, yes, they are selling for more than you paid for your first car. While many people waited on line to get their $200+ sneakers, then resell them for a quick profit, others just got lucky. “Got them as soon as they came out, they’re ugly so i’ll sell them and see what happens,” posted one seller. What happened is this dude’s already $600 richer, with half a day still left on his auction. 9. GET MARVEL VS. CAPCOM 2 ON YOUR IPHONE: For a while, Marvel vs. Capcom 2 was a highly coveted game. A brand-crossing, top-tier fighting game that was generally hard to find, it was re released digitally in 2009 via the PlayStation and Xbox Live networks. The game is now available on iPhones and iPod Touches, maintaining its full character roster and tag-team gameplay as it is formatted for iOS.

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Behind the Beautiful Forevers By Katherine Boo For almost four years Katherine Boo, a Pulitzer Prize-winning staff writer at The New Yorker, immersed herself in a slum near the Mumbai airport to create a gripping non-fiction narrative of 21st century India that echoes Dickens, Dostoevsky and even Tom Wolfe. The title comes from posters advertising “beautiful forever” ceramic tiles that were plastered on a concrete wall hiding the illegal neighborhood from view. The airport could evict these squatters any time. Every night they can see the good life in the twinkling lights of the luxury hotels overlooking their huts as they trudge through the mud to their homes: 3,000 people crammed on half an acre by a sewage pond. It’s a place where garbage pickers are envied for their upward mobility, where finding a wad of aluminum foil can mean the difference between eating and going hungry, where the powerless fight the powerless, and a guy can feel good about being beaten by the cops when he knows he really did what he’s accused of. Amazingly, this book—Boo’s first—celebrates the human spirit. Once you commit to reading it, you’re hooked because you’re hoping against hope that somebody gets lucky. And when that happens, it’s a great relief—for you, because you’ve got it so easy compared to them. —Spencer Rumsey

$619,000,000

6. CELEBRATE THE SUMMER SOLSTICE: “In two weeks it’ll be the longest day in the year. Do you always watch for the longest day of the year and then miss it? I always watch for the longest day in the year and then miss it.” Don’t be like The Great Gatsby’s Daisy Buchanan and miss the longest day of the year. This year it’s on June 20 and marks the official start of summer. To celebrate, Jake’s Wayback Burgers in East Meadow, Long Beach and East Northport will give away free Black & White Hand-Dipped Milkshakes!

10. HUG YOUR FATHER!

The Book

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By Beverly Fortune

Presented by

//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

Powerful Teen Advocate Sarah Haiken

MADD Volunteer

Despite being only 13 years old, Sarah Haiken has already made her mark on Long Island as an advocate to educate other young people about the consequences of underage drinking and driving. In 2009 at 3:30 a.m., Karen Naclerio-Negrin of Smithtown, a close friend of the Haiken family, was on her way to her job at LaGuardia Airport

when she was killed by a drunk driver. She was pronounced dead at the scene. The driver, a middle-aged man, wasn’t injured. As the police escorted him away, he was heard on television uttering the words, “I’m sorry.” Later it was learned that he had two previous convictions for driving while impaired. Karen was working the 4:30 a.m. shift at American Airlines so that she could be home to meet her daughters when they got off the school bus. They were only 5 and 8 years old when they lost their mother. Sarah, a student at West Hollow Middle School in Melville, thought the death of her family friend was

senseless. “I didn’t understand it,” she says. But she vowed to do something about it. “I didn’t want her to be forgotten.” So, ever since, Sarah has worked tirelessly to ensure that Karen is remembered. To honor her memory Sarah began volunteering at the Mothers Against Drunk Driving offices in Huntington Station. MADD is the nation’s largest nonprofit organization whose mission is to protect families from drunk driving and underage drinking. Sarah can be found at their offices at least once a week doing administrative work or stuffing envelopes. “Whatever they need me to do,” Sarah says. “I’ll do anything to help support the victims.” Lissa Harris, Program Specialist at MADD, who’s worked closely with Sarah, says the teenager is one of their most prolific volunteer recruiters, enlisting at least 10 of her friends into the organization, three who’ve become regular volunteers like Sarah. Sarah has also become a successful fundraiser, Lissa says, and thanks to her determination, Team Karen, comprised of members of the Haiken family, have raised more than $25,000 for the past two MADD walks on Long Island. Because of her commitment to stop underage drinking and driving, Sarah was first nominated and then selected to represent Long Island at the first-ever MADD Power of You(th) National Teen Influencer group and will participate at their summit in Dallas later this month. She is the youngest panelist and one of only five teenage representatives nationwide. At the summit, they will brainstorm about how to implement a youth complement to MADD’s underage drinking initiative that will be used this year in schools in downstate New York and Long Island. Cheryl, Sarah’s mother, says her daughter is “a witness to what happens to a family when someone is taken away.” For Sarah, there is no shortage of energy when it comes to helping

The Next Fortune 52 Networking Event

will be Monday, July 16, 2012, at Tanger Outlets at the Arches from 6 - 8pm. to be a part of this evenT, email Beverly at bfortune@longislandpress com. ///////////////////////

others. When she’s not volunteering at MADD or at the Gerald Ryan Outreach Center in Wyandanch, she’s on the middle school track team, a member of Grandfriends and the Junior Honor Society. Sarah’s unassuming personality has earned her the respect of her peers and her teachers who have recognized Sarah for her leadership skills. For her recent Bat Mitzvah, Sarah’s theme was based on acts of kindness, “Life is Tove (Good).” Sarah and her mother made each table centerpiece themselves, a dozen in all, each representing a different charity that Sarah wanted to help in some way, which included MADD, Relay for Life, Autism Speaks, 911 Memorial Fund, JDRF and others. She pledged to give each one her time and attention, or a donation. Cheryl is a very proud mother, and even she is sometimes in awe of her daughter’s generous spirit. “Her hobby is helping others,” Cheryl says. These days teenagers are constantly bombarded with messages about drinking alcohol that can make drinking seem fun, but as Sarah knows all too well, there are consequences that must not be forgotten. Sarah’s commitment to MADD is rooted in the reality that underage drinking and drunk-driving fatalities can be significantly reduced through education and awareness. “It’s totally preventable,” Sarah says firmly. Sarah’s family uses a slogan coined by her mother to remind themselves that no one is immune. “It could be you,” Sarah says. We all need to remember that.

She is the youngest panelist and one of only five teenage representatives nationwide…

For more information on MADD visit www.MADD.org; to contact Sarah, email mahaiken@aol.com.

If you know a super woman who deserves good Fortune—and a profile— e-mail your nominations to Beverly at bfortune@longislandpress.com.

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Jerry’s Ink BY JERRY DELLA FEMINA, Publisher, the Independent

A Prisoner In The War On Women This column is a plea to Charles Schumer. Chucky baby, lay off, I beg you, lay off. It started when Barack “The New York Times’ leaks say I’m doing a great job” Obama accidentally took on the Catholic Church. It seems that Obama Care mandates faith-based hospitals, charities and schools to provide birth control and reproductive services for all the employees in their health insurance plans. That includes priests and nuns. The Catholic Church, of course, objected. If Obama had made that suggestion at Saint Simon and Jude in my old neighborhood in Brooklyn when I lived there, Sister Mary Alice, a very, very tough old nun, would have slammed him across his knuckles with a ruler before his Secret Service guards could stop her. Wisely, Nobel Peace Prize winner Barack “I try to kill at least one al-Qaeda member a day” Obama retreated from his position and announced that insurance companies—not the government— would pay for free birth control and reproductive services. Naturally the church objected to that and the war began. No one on the Republican side had the presence of mind to call it “The Democrats’ War on Religion.” Then some smart Democratic ad guy decided if most Republicans think that all these years of women buying and paying for their own birth control was fine, and these same Republicans are against Obama Care, this means they object to the government paying for free birth control for every woman in the country. Thus “The Republicans’ War on Women” was born. What gobble-de-gook. Chuck, no one with a brain believes that Republicans are waging a war against women. Especially when you read the latest surveys that show 52 percent of women oppose Obama Care. Are you saying more than half the women in this country are waging a war against themselves? “The War on Women” is campaign bull crap and you know it. But Chuck, if Obama Care wants to hand out birth control pills like jelly beans, they will also be obligated to hand out free condoms for men. I would suggest that every male from the age of 16 receives 10 free condoms a week in the mail. Of course, for men over 60, the

government need send only one free condom a month. Failure to do this will be seen as “The Democrats’ War on Men.” Why am I so ticked off? Because, Chuck, every week I get an e-mail under your name, from your office, that starts out “Dear Democrat.” Then you have the chutzpah to ask me to send $50, or as much as I can, to help Obama in his valiant fight to destroy those Republicans who are waging a War on Women. Chuck, I am many things, but the one thing that I am not is a Democrat. Do you want to know my politics? Here’s what I believe: I am against telling people how to live. It’s none of my business. If people are pro-life, I’m fine with that. If they are pro-choice, I’m fine with that, too. If gays want to get married, I think that’s wonderful. If Latinos come to this country to find work, why not? They’re good people. In the end, it’s none of my business. Here’s what should scare you, Chuck. I’m a Republican and there are millions of Republicans and Independents who feel the same way I do. And for every Rick Santorum we have, you have a Dennis Kucinich. We have Newt Gingrich. You have Nancy Pelosi. You have Harry Reid. We have Mitch McConnell. No need to hoard these dopes— both parties have enough dopes to go around. The truth is Republicans and Democrats are much better people than you politicians who represent and try to divide us. Now, should I be wrong about all this and should one day in the mail I receive a notice from the Republican Party that reads, “Greetings, you have been drafted in the Republican Party’s War on Women,” you have my word, Chuck, that I will do as so many Della Feminas have done in wars before: I will surrender. I expect to be put into a prisonerof-war camp, and if my women guards have been reading the erotic best seller Fifty Shades of Grey, I will allow them to tie me up with a clothesline and tickle me with feathers. And I promise never to invoke the Geneva Convention.

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The Social Host Law Debate: Should Cover Parents Let Their Underage Kids Drink? Story By Timothy Bolger

he smells of suntan lotion, beer and sweat filled the air on the charter bus packed with 50 high school students fresh from their prom and graduation last June as it snaked through the winding backstreets of Sag Harbor to its destination: the rented mansion where they’d unleash a weekend of pent-up debauchery. After shelling out $350 each to the lawyer/landlord and signing contracts—parents included—that they’d obey the myriad rules to avoid police busting up the party, they could blast as much Kid Cudi and funnel as many cans of beer as they like. Aside from the pool, tennis courts and scenic views, the rules sound a tad prisonlike. No one outside before 10 a.m. or after 9 p.m. Leaving the premises is forbidden. Two chaperones and a pair of security guards must keep the peace at all times. If the police do show up uninvited, everyone must hide in the basement. It’s a small price to pay for what is the teens’ first weekend of freedom from high school and parents. The meticulous plans are drafted to not only protect the house, but keep the kids out of trouble. “We want the kids to come out here, but we’re not going to tolerate underage drinking,” says Edward Ecker, chief of the East Hampton Town Police Department. This Hamptons landlord has more than a dozen groups of high school students booked in three South Fork houses through the short window of prom season and can’t afford to be cited for breaking the social host law, which fines adults 18 and over who

serve alcohol to minors or fail to stop them from drinking. Every June like clockwork prom parties like this one play out across Long Island, as the debate rages among parents of high-school-aged children: Risk breaking the law— or worse—by hosting post-prom, graduation and other booze-soaked summer bashes? Or is it dereliction of parental responsibility to concede that sneaky teens will always find some other place to get drunk unsupervised? Underage Teens (clockwise Not everyone gets away from top left) Alexandra Romano, Haven Alba, Samantha with it. More than 100 Long Rose, Brian Perrone, Daniel Islanders have been arrested Mercia and Zachary Prout. or ticketed for violating social Mom (center): Crista Johnson, CristaJohnson.com host laws since Nassau and No alcohol was consumed Suffolk counties passed those during this photo shoot. statutes in 2007. Since then,

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at least three parties have left young people dead. Of the 20 cases a year —those that the police bothered to alert the media about—many of the hosts charged were parents, indicating that attitudes on underage drinking still buck the law, despite the serious consequences. “When you don’t want them to drown, you teach them to swim,” says an LI doctor and father of four college students who hosted two post-prom parties in recent years. “You shouldn’t learn about drinking when you’re away [at college] for the first time, you’re 19 and you’re a freshman getting rushed,” he says, asking not to be named. But not every parent-sanctioned, boozy teen party comes complete with lessons in moderation the doctor espouses. Some become

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exercises in mortality. “It’s just a recipe for disaster,” says Victor Ciappa, father of 18-tear-old Natalie from Massapequa, an honors student who became a poster-child for LI’s drug-abuse epidemic after she fatally overdosed on heroin at a June 21, 2008, Seaford house party. Parents who let their kids drink in the house are “setting themselves up for heartbreak,” he says. “You can’t let that shit go down in your home.” Also lost to underage drinking parties on LI in recent years were 16-year-old Taylor Cavaliere, who was hit by a vehicle on the Northern State Parkway after leaving a party hosted by her friend’s parents in her hometown of Dix Hills in April 2011. A 22-yearold Plainview man was also arrested for serving minors at a party where 21-year-old Nelson Cole of Brooklyn was found at the bottom of a pool in July 2010. Police filed social-host law charges in all three cases. The punishment differs depending on the counties. In Nassau the first offense is a $250 fine; in Suffolk, it’s $500, which is the second offense fine in Nassau. Suffolk’s second-offense punishment is $1,000, plus up to a year in jail—same as a third offense in Nassau. “Where do we draw the line?” asks Jeff Reynolds, executive director of the nonprofit Long Island Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence. “Even though it’s dangerous, even though we know it has health consequences, it’s fine if they drink. Well, how about pot? How about Oxycontin? How about Vicodin?”

I’LL HAVE ANOTHER

LI politicians did not take lightly the task of turning their police into the summertime party patrol on an Island that becomes Margaritaville once school’s out. Nassau lawmakers may have unanimously approved its social host law in June 2007 after the City of Long Beach became the first municipality in the state to enact it, but when Suffolk took up the bill six

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months later, a legislative pub brawl broke out. For those old enough to remember when 18-year-olds could drink and be shipped off to war but voters had to be 21, the social host law was tough to reconcile. Legis. William Lindsay (D-Holbrook), presiding officer of the Suffolk legislature, confessed before the law passed at the Dec. 3, 2007 meeting that he would have been in violation for giving his then-20-year-old nephew a beer at a party upon the young man’s return from serving in Iraq. “We’re asking these young men to go out and risk their life, but I would have been violating the law to give them a beer,” he said, before joining Legis. Thomas Barraga (R-West Islip) in being the only two LI county lawmakers to vote against the law. Both lawmakers later voted in 2010 to increase fines attached to Suffolk’s social host law. Meanwhile, state lawmakers in Albany have been considering a bill to join the eight other states nationwide with social host laws, although New York is not expected to pass it before the legislature breaks for the summer on June 21. Former Legis. Jon Cooper (D-Lloyd Harbor), who was the Democratic majority leader when the social host law passed, struggled to see

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both sides, noting that teenagers drink regardless of what parents and authorities say. “If it’s unsupervised, [minors] are more likely to drive drunk afterwards,” he said during the 2007 meeting, relaying the unpopular opposition he heard. “[Parents] would rather the kids be able to drink at someone’s home

drivers, but are involved in more than 12 percent of fatal crashes. Still, the debate continues over whether to let teens drink at home or not. Back in 2007, when the social host law was first being considered, Denna Cohen, an advocate with the LI chapter of Mothers Against Drunk Driving, cited her own tragedy as a

“You have to act like the parent. You can’t be their best friend. A parent’s responsibility sometimes is to say ‘no’ to their child.” —Lt. Michael S. Murphy of the Suffolk County police Sixth Precinct Crime Section

and those parents make sure that the kids afterwards are not driving drunk.” Given the risks of underage drinking, perhaps this is why the period between Memorial Day and Labor Day is called the “100 Deadliest Days for Teen Drivers.” New York State officials say drivers under 21 represent about 5 percent of licensed

Long Island Press for June 14 - June 20, 2012

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reason for its necessity. Her 21-yearold daughter, Jodi, was killed by a drunken driver in 1989. “If they go to their friend’s house and they are served alcohol, that parent made the decision for my child,” she said. “They don’t have the right to make that decision for my child. Only I have that right…If my child drinks

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in my home, that’s my decision, but if your child drinks in my home that shouldn’t be my decision.” And that is a key wrinkle in the law. If a parent of a minor is present and has consented to their child drinking an alcoholic beverage, the host is not responsible. Of course, most high-school students don’t bring Mom and Dad to their parties. David Mejias, a former Democratic legislator who authored Nassau’s social host law, says he still gets calls from parents double-checking its details and ramifications. “There’s always going to be some sort of underground drinking with kids,” he says in his Glen Cove office, where he is now an attorney in private practice. “But there was an epidemic of parents’ buying alcohol for their kids or letting them drink their alcohol that resulted in binge drinking.”

SUMMERTIME AND THE LIVING’S BOOZY

So how bad is the teen drinking problem on LI? Look no further than the police blotter. Fatalities and alcohol poisoning cases aside, between the 36 Suffolk social host law cases and 60 in Nassau over the past five years, some read

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like an episode of World’s Dumbest Criminals. This is true especially for those incidents on the East End, where the five town police departments are not included in Suffolk police statistics. Last July, an 18-year-old man was charged with driving while intoxicated with a child as a passenger, a felony under Leandra’s Law, after police said he drove a go-kart with two friends from a Shelter Island party allegedly hosted by another 18-year-old accused of violating the social host law. In June, two men were charged under the social host law after police responded to a party at a house rented by Connetquot High School students in Remsenburg in the Hamptons, where an 18-year-old man was found unconscious and vomiting blood. “You have to act like the parent,” says Lt. Michael S. Murphy of the Suffolk police Sixth Precinct Crime Section. “You can’t be their best friend. A parent’s responsibility sometimes is to say ‘no’ to their child.” A Bayville man, for one, apparently didn’t get that memo. He was ticketed after police said he provided beer for his son’s 17th birthday party, where one of nearly 100 attendees was taken to a hospital for alcohol poisoning in October 2010. The sick 16-year-old admitted drinking vodka,

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police said at the time. Suffolk police found a 20-yearold Selden man regularly charging $5 at the door for college parties that included numerous teens in January 2009. Later that month, a 53-year-old woman was charged after a minor was treated for alcohol poisoning at her West Islip home. A 19-year-old Baldwin man was nabbed after a teen was smashed over the head with a beer bottle and beaten at an underage drinking party in May 2009, fracturing the victim’s neck. Four months later, a 30-yearold Roslyn Heights woman was summonsed when police said they found a 14-year-old boy unconscious in her driveway. And in June 2008, a 48-year-old Valley Stream woman and her two 17-year-old children were arrested for throwing a graduation party with nearly 150 in attendance, where one teen was treated for alcohol poisoning. That case showed that not every social host law charge filed by police sticks. “I have no objection to the law itself, just how it gets enforced,” says Daniel Friedman, a Mineola-based attorney who is president of the Nassau County Criminal Courts Bar Association. He successfully had the charge dismissed for one of the teens,

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whom he represented in the Valley father was out of town at the time. Stream case. No social host law charges were filed, The first two alleged violations but Freeley believes he can prove the of the social host law this year came young woman was negligent under the within an hour of one another social host law. May 13, after Nassau County If a jury agrees, they could police officers responded to award damages, although loud parties in Lake Success Freeley is not seeking a specific and Merrick. Pamela Leff, 51, dollar amount. His client’s jaw was summonsed in the first was wired shut for months case; 19-year-old James Valle during his recovery. in the second, after allegedly “It’s a good warning to resisting arrest. Both have by County the kids,” he says. “You send pleaded not guilty. one text out, that goes to a Nassau Social host cases aren’t friend and that friend sends 2007: 2 2008: 18 exclusive to criminal court. that text to 10 people and all 2009: 30 Mark Freeley, a Woodburyof a sudden you’ve got 150 2010: 8 based personal injury attorney, people you don’t know in your 2011: 1 is representing a man who’s living room. And you know 2012: 3 suing an 18-year-old Farmwhat? Something bad is going 60 overall ingville woman who threw a to happen if there’s alcohol.” Suffolk house party where his client Not that the threat of 2008: 7 suffered a broken jaw after arrest should be underesti2009: 9 being punched in the face in mated next to the possibility 2010: 10 March 2010. of a lawsuit. 2011: 7 Freeley reads back the “Students should have 2012: 0 woman’s text message invite, graduation and pre-prom 36 overall which was then forwarded to parties. What they shouldn’t *does not include five East End others: “‘Huge party tonight... have is alcohol at these parties,” towns DJ, kegs, beer pong, flip cup, says Det. Michael Bitsko, a liquor. $6 for dudes, $3 for Nassau police spokesman. ladies.’” The department has a zero tolerance Between 150 and 200 people policy for anyone serving alcohol to showed up before a brawl broke out, minors. “We’ll intensify patrols in the the attorney says. The 18-year-old’s back streets of our neighborhoods

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Annual Social Host Law Arrests

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Long Island Press for June 14 - June 20, 2012

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looking for such parties and checking to make sure that alcohol is not being served.”

WHAT HAPPENED?

Blackouts. Jail terms. Drunkendriving crashes. Long-term hospital stays. Parents who bury their children. A drop in grades. Loss of friends. Memory loss. Rape. At one time or another, all of the above have been attributed to alcohol abuse and alcoholism, which is likeliest in those with not only a genetic predisposition, but more importantly, those who start drinking in their teens. That’s because the prefrontal cortex, the decision-making part of the brain, doesn’t finish developing until the early 20s. So, early initiation can often set the stage for chemical dependence later in life. “What happens when kids start to drink, when they start to use illicit drugs early on, you kind of disconnect your frontal cortex,” says Dr. Stephen Dewey, director of the Laboratory for Behavioral and Molecular Neuroimaging at The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research in Manhasset. “They lose the ability to stop, so they lose their impulse control.” Dewey has been spreading the word around the Island. At about a

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dozen districts, Dewey’s lectures are required attendance for high school parents and their kids in order to attend prom. That’s in addition to the nearly dozen schools that use breathalyzers to test students suspected of showing up to prom intoxicated. Of course, trying to keep promgoers sober is not easy when the

their own, we don’t let them back on the bus, we call their parents,” he says. The policy has the added benefit of saving his drivers from scrubbing teen puke out of the upholstery. Of course, kids don’t need a special occasion to drink. The weekend is a celebration enough. For one 16-year-old boy in

“You shouldn’t learn about drinking when you’re away [at college] for the first time, you’re 19 and you’re a freshman getting rushed.” —a Long Island doctor and father of four college students who hosted two post-prom parties in recent years.

limousine is stocked with booze. Matthew Silver, president of Ultimate Class Limousine in Hicksville, says he lost some business, then gained it back, after he enacted a zero-tolerance policy on underage drinking. “If the kids go to another location and drink and come back to get in the bus and they’re not able to walk on

Long Island Press for June 14 - June 20, 2012

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Suffolk, getting beer for a recent backyard party—the kind that prompt countless noise complaints this time of year—didn’t require asking the older kids or siblings for help as usual, they just drank a 36-pack of beer left over from the prior weekend. His beverage of choice? Bud light, says the fresh-faced high school junior,

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“or the girls won’t drink it.” He usually has several parties to choose from where they play drinking games such as flip cup and beer pong, or “BP” for short. His friend, a 19-year-old LI college freshman, says his fake ID makes things a lot easier, and parents have never shut down their parties. The teenagers will just move the party outside or into the basement, away from the parents—not that there is typically much supervision to hide from. “Normally parents are home,” says a third in the group, another 16-year-old high school student. “They will never drink with us. They’ll keep to themselves.” All three asked not to be named in order to speak freely about how they skirt the law to drink alcohol without being 21 years old. With party season now in full bloom, the question remains: How many more booze-fueled LI teenage parties considered rites of passage will spill from backyard keggers into hospitals, courtrooms and morgues this summer? Their stories, too, could someday make the news. —With Jackie Salo, Michael Ventimiglia, Allysa Melillo and Matthew Marcus

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6/7/12 1:54:12 PM


t h e 1 0 t h a n n ua l l o n g i s l a n d p r e s s p o w e r l i s t pa rt y w r a p u p 10th Annual

at the carltun in eisenhower park

monday june 11, 2012

Long Island’s most powerful and influential turned out in force Monday night at Eisenhower Park’s elegant The Carltun to celebrate Long Island Press’ 10th annual Power List awards gala. Attendees spanned nearly every industry, from business and politics to the nonprofit sector and environmental activism, and included past and present attendees and their families along with a few special guests. Press Publisher Jed Morey kicked off the evening with a soulful-yet-humorous song about this year’s honorees while First Baptist Glen Cove Pastor Rev. Roger Williams delivered the invocation and former U.S. Sen. Alfonse D’Amato gave a lively keynote address. All in all, it was again that rarest of events where even those on opposing sides of Long Island’s myriad issues break bread and share a laugh in mutual respect and harmony for a few hours.

Former U.S. Sen. Alfonse D’Amato delivers a rousing keynote address Press Publisher Jed Morey leads attendees through a finger-snapping tune that named each of this year’s Power List honorees

Counterclockwise from Left: First Baptist Glen Cove Rev. Roger Williams giving the invocation; King Quality general Manager Joe Dortona, wife Nora and Press Publisher Jed Morey; LIGLBT COO Robert Vitelli, LIGLBT CEO David Kilmnick, Bethpage Federal Credit Union President Kirk Kordeleski and Epoch 5 President Katherine Heaviside

From Top to Bottom, L to R: Long Island Compost President Charles Vigliotti; Posillico Group Executive VP Michael Posillico; LIPA COO and Acting CEO Michael Hervey; LI Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence Executive Director Jeffrey Reynolds; Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone; Farmingdale State College President Hubert Keen; Nassau Legislature Presiding Officer Peter Schmitt; Patchogue Mayor Paul Pontieri; Former Nassau County Executive Tom Suozzi

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Clockwise from Top Left: Former Suffolk Leg. Jon Cooper, husband Rob and LIGLBT’s David Kilmnick display their Citizen of the Year awards; Hall of Fame inductee William Savino, of Rivkin Radler, Nassau County Executive Ed Mangano and fellow Hall of Fame inductee Nancy Rauch Douzinas smile for the camera; Canon U.S.A. Corporate Administrative Planning Director Amy Newman accepts the “Take Flight” Award for Canon U.S.A. President Seymour Liebman from BFCU’s Kirk Kordeleski; Former LIPA Chair Richard Kessel hangs with Morey Organization President RJ Morey and Press Publisher Jed Morey; Hall of Famer Alure Home Improvements President Sal Ferro and Brenda Morey; Farrell Fritz Managing Partner Charles Strain and Cameron Engineering Founder John Cameron

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This Week: Best Q&A

Gregory Maguire Journeys Over the Rainbow

By Courtney Kaplar, Maroon Echo, Bay Shore High School, Bay Shore Gregory Maguire, best known for an artist. Some say it is essential to end the novel Wicked, which was made into a the story for a lot of reasons, the main Broadway musical in 2003, has returned one being so that I am not crowded into to Oz 16 years after the publication of his my grave by the success of something that first novel in his Wicked Years fantasy series. became a lot larger than I intended. I want Maguire recently visited Book Revue, a to be able to write whatever my imaginanew and used book shop in Huntington, tion, dreams, and sense of morals call up for me to write. to discuss and sign his new work. What are your hopes for Out of Why did you choose to end your Wicked series with Out of Oz? I wrote Oz? My real hope is that this book, which Wicked 16 years ago and I did not expect is in some ways sad and other ways encourit to have the type of big success that it has aging, particularly finds young readers now. That’s a big shadow to spend my life that take my books out, who can use some under...There is a billion dollar industry strength and consolation. I don’t mind for a story that I made up. That is a huge being read by a wide fan base, as long as my satisfaction for me, but I don’t want to be books can give some consolation to people a captain of industry; I am a writer and when they are struggling. For example,

a couple of nights ago I was signing in a bookstore in the Boston area and a person came up to me and said, “I’ve had terrible trouble in life: I was in a car accident and I had brain damage. My father sat on my bedside to read to me in order to keep my brain working. I couldn’t tolerate most of what he was reading, except when he began to read Wicked; it’s the first book I was able to read all the way through.” Why have you chosen to base your novels off of fairytales? Fairytales belong to everybody. They are like air and light; you can’t charge for light, all you have to do is go outside and the light is there. Even on cloudy days, even on snowy days, there is still some natural light…I like to write fairytales because I like my books to be able to reach as many possible readers as possible, not just people with my

educational background or my political philosophy or my particular interests in art and culture, but any readers from any background or part of the country What inspired you to further the story of L. Frank Baum’s Wizard of Oz from the Wicked Witch’s perspective? I wanted to write a story in which I could examine an evil character and how she got to be that way…A lot of her life is a failure but she never gives up on what she believes in, so that part of her life is a success and that is something that should be inspirational. A lot of reviewers did not read that book closely enough to realize that she is human. That’s why we read: to discover the more complex layers of characters. You have to spend time with both humans and literary characters in order to appreciate them.

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The Time Has Come for Alternate Development An alternate development plan for the former Cerro Wire property on Robbins Lane in Syosset would produce nearly $87 million more in annual economic activity compared to the proposed mega-mall, according to noted economist Dr. Martin Cantor who heads the Long Island Center for Socio-Economic Policy.

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Long Island Press Arts, Entertainment & Nightlife

Events

Thursday p.29

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Sunday p.32

Week of June 14 - June 21, 2012

Monday p.32

Tuesday p.32

Wednesday p.33

Thursday p.36

Venue Info p.36

Do This Event Listings

DRAKE/WAKA FLOCKA FLAME @ NIKON AT JONES BEACH THEATER The biggest rapper to come out of Canada since Snow, Drake (a.k.a. Aubrey Drake Graham), got his start on teen soap Degrassi: The Next Generation as aspiring teen rapper Jimmy Brooks. And while it would be easy to dismiss him as yet another wannabe musician, he’s already racked up numerous credits writing songs and working with the likes of Alicia Keys, Dr. Dre and Rick Ross. With J. Cole, Meek Mill, 2 Chainz and French Montana. —Dave Gil de Rubio

thursday 6.14 Flogging Molly @ The Paramount Even though Flogging Molly has the requisite punk-meets-Celtic music roots lumping them in the same class as The Pogues and The Dropkick Murphys, the band has a direct link to ’80s metal outfit Fastway by way of frontman/ founding member Dave King, who previously called Pete Way and Motorhead’s “Fast” Eddie Clark bandmates. Two decades later, King and his crew are five albums into a wellrespected career with the latest album being last year’s Speed of Darkness, a collection of songs influenced by the visible sights of the current economic collapse in Detroit.— Dave Gil de Rubio

FUN. (“We Are Young”) plays Terminal 5 with Minnesota indie rockers Now, Now on Saturday, 6.16.

JUSTIN BIEBER @ ROCKEFELLER PLAZA The Biebs will play a free show at Rockefeller Plaza Friday morning as part of NBC’s Toyota Concert Series on the Today Show where he will sing his latest, more grown-up, radio hit “Boyfriend.” If you want to get anywhere close to up front, you probably should leave now—or pull your couch up really close to the TV. Either way, we have a feeling there are going to be a lot of junior high school absences this Friday and, based on Bieber’s previous NY appearances we’re sure the NYPD is already rounding up the troops— because the mafia, murderers and street thugs are scary, but nowhere near as scary as a crowd of 13-year-old Beliebers. Friday, 6.15. —Jaclyn Gallucci /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

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Summer Art Celebration for Conservation @ Old Bethpage Village Live music, wine, food and and affordable art for conservation. Dean Karahlis & the FTC Concert Pops @ Dix Hills Performing Arts Center Buddy Guy/Jonny Lang @ NYCB Theatre @ Westbury Little Richard @ B.B. King Blues Club

Caught up with Flogging Molly Guitarist and Northport resident Dennis Casey. Check out the interview at longislandpress.com

Deconstructing The White Album @ Cinema Arts Centre Join acclaimed Beatles scholar Scott Freiman for a live multimedia journey through the creation of the Beatles’ classic album. Scenic Routes @ Molloy College This exhibit is part of a project where five established artists mentor five less established artists and

Venue addresses and information can be found on Page 36

news

Hoedown Throwdown @ McFadden’s Ladies drink free till midnight. $25 unlimited beer all night long.

Comedy Fundraiser Hayes Children Trust @ Brokerage The Long Island Press recently

THE WANTED/KARMIN/DEV @ BEST BUY THEATER British boy band The Wanted achieved commercial success across the pond with their self-titled debut album in 2010. Now, two years later, you can’t turn on the radio anywhere on Long Island without hearing “Glad You Came,” the latest single from their second studio album, Battleground. The band takes the stage in NYC along with Karmin (“Brokenhearted”) and Dev (“Dancing in the Dark”). Friday, 6.15. —JG

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their work. Ongoing through July.

|

Lisa Marie Presley @ Gramercy Theatre Mogwai @ Webster Hall, Also 6.15.

Annual Shark Tournament @ Star Island Yacht Club Through 6.16. Retro Tupperware Party @ Martha Clara Vineyards Cash Cash @ Revolution Continued on page 30

Long Island Press for June 14 - June 20, 2012

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Do This

NEXT YEAR BEGINS NOW!

Continued from page 29 /////////////////////

FRIDAY, JuNE 22ND • 5:30pM • NASSAu COLISEuM

THURSDAY

Cont.

The Pines @ Joe’s Pub Theresa Andersson/Lucius @ Bell House Friday 6.15 Keane @ Beacon Theatre, With the recently-released Strangeland, Keane return to their comfort zone of deftly rendered middle-of-the road indie-pop that contains elements of U2 and Coldplay. —DGdR Mattituck Lions Club Strawberry Fest @ Strawberry

Join us for a night of fun and festivities as we celebrate the 2012 NHL Draft! • APPEARANCES by CuRRENT PLAyERS & ALuMNI • WATCH A LIVE FEED OF THE 2012 NHL DRAFT • LOCKER ROOM TOuRS

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Disco Unlimited @ Eisenhower Park Lisa & the Leftovers @ Napper Tandy’s Miller Place Playing music from the ’60sthrough the ’90s. Offline Party w/QTip @ Irving Plaza Jerry Douglas @ B.B. King Blues Club

Melville’s Four Food Studio Renovates

FOR MORE INFO AND TO GET yOuR FREE TICKETS:

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Sherri Shepherd @ McGuire’s Comedy Club, Meet the NYPD partner of Everybody Loves Raymond’s Robert Barone. Also 6.16.

DECKED OUT

MENTION: LONG ISLAND PRESS

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Fields, Mattituck Through 6.17.

Morning Service (7 Days a Week) Afternoon Service (7 Days a Week)

Guests are now able to enjoy the summer breeze while sipping cocktails at their favorite hot spot. Four Food Studio has just expanded and introduced The Deck @ Four, a new addition to better accommodate the summer crowd. “It is only fitting that we remained true to our goal of evolving with the times,” says Anthony Gentile, Director of Marketing at Four. “The Deck @ Four was designed and created to give the total tropical experience providing the perfect summer reprieve for 5:37 PM an afternoon cocktail party or dinner and dancing under the stars.” While Four Food Studio always offered folks a space outdoors, The Deck offers up some stylish changes including fancy wooden decking, granite fire pits, lighting strung overhead, white cushioned seating throughout and sand—yes, sand. The new area not only offers patrons a bigger outdoor space to mingle with others, dance and drink, it also offers a outdoors spot to dine and a 20-foot rectangular bar fit with an elevated seating platform that doubles as a stage for live performances. “So whether your enjoying cocktails with friends, dinner with someone special or you’re looking for the perfect place to cater any event or occasion,” says Gentile. “The new Deck @ Four offers a variety of options in a tropical setting that is truly unique.”—Licia Avelar

Diego Garcia (Elefant) @ City Winery Gary Clark, Jr. @ Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center, With one listen to 2010’s Bright Lights EP, not only can Clark go on Hendrixian flights of fancy, but has enough room on his creative palette to include snatches of contemporary R&B and hip-hop beats that ensure the idea of the blues won’t end up as a curio in a museum or being relegated to the dry halls of academia. —DGdR The Great Long Island Laugh-Off of 2012 @ Brokerage Comedy, Also 6.21. Hat Trick/Big Shot @ Mulcahy’s, Performing rock and pop classics in the outdoor brick yard. Billy Garan @ Brokerage Comedy, Also 6.16. Chris Roach @ Governor’s Freaks of Nature, Kaskade @ MCU Park Scala & Kolacny Brothers @ Gramercy Theatre Deafheaven/Indian Jewelry/Vattnet Vishkar/Pinkish Black/DJ Pieter Weird @ St. Vitus In Other Words @ Broadway Bar Rice Cultivation Society/Eidetc Seeing/Bangladeafy/ Tha Elephant Walk @ Mr. Beery’s Saturday 6.16 The Empire Strikes the Cradle @ Cradle of Aviation, Two of the most popular Star Wars costuming organizations invade the Cradle. Ziggy Marley @ Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center, While on the one hand, winning the gene pool crapshoot

Night Service (Friday & saturday) suffolk County Nassau County Queens

10-Cent F**k Flicks @ Hellgate Social, 12-21 Astoria Blvd., Astoria. We first profiled this band nearly 10 years ago and the description went something like this: Imagine two strippers knifefighting while dancing to Chuck Berry and the Stooges high out of their gourds. Still true. 8 p.m. —Tristram Fox Saturday Night Dance Party @ The Paramount Strawberry Festival @ Old Grace Church Nervo @ Neptune Beach Club That 70’s Band @ Napper Tandy’s Smithtown Cortland Reunion & Mixer @ The Boardy Barn, Free admission w/college ID, $1 cups. The Casualties/Two Man Advantage @ Revolution The Olivia Tremor Control @ Music Hall of Williamsburg Beach Bark Dog Walk & Festival @ Westhampton Beach Great Lawn Best of Long Island Comedy Showcase @ Governor’s Comedy Club JK Hodge/Youth be Told/ Hollywood Driveby @ Middle Country Beer Garden Uppercut Rock’n Funk’n Horns @ Napper Tandy’s Miller Place

Day of Pigs Autism Benefit Show @ Katie’s of Smithtown Caroline Country Fair @ 1 Dyke Rd., Setauket, Inflatables, games and races, pony rides, fire truck visit, Continued on page 34

mohegansun.com/foreveryoung Long Island Press for June 14 - June 20, 2012

Riverhead Blues Festival @ VailLeavitt Music Hall, Also 6.17.

Kings Park Day @ Main Street, Kings Park

check Out Forever Young Mondays!

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means Ziggy probably got a slightly easier pass through life, as a musician he’ll always be unfairly matched up to the old man. His solo career away from the Melody Makers has resulted in a string of albums (including last year’s, Wild and Free), that find him sounding more like Ben Harper than Buju Banton. Also 6.17 @ Irving Plaza.—DGdR

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Do This Continued from page 34 /////////////////////

Sunday 6.17 Ultramagnetic MC’s @ Music Hall of Williamsburg, Part of Northside Festival. Hawks and Doves/ Your Skull My Closet/Descender/ Future Now @ St. Vitus Gato Barbieri @ B.B. King Blues Club & Grill Alice Smith @ City Winery The Toasters @ Vibe Besides being the first American band to help kick off the third wave of ska after forming back in 1981, founding member Robert “Bucket” Hingley also started up the hugely influential NYC-based label Moon Ska Records. As for Hingley’s musical crew, the Toasters are

three decades-plus into a career that shows no signs of slowing down although 2007’s One More Bullet was the band’s last studio outing. —DGdR Jonny Lang @ Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center Tech N9ne @ Highline Ballroom Hostile Takeover Tour with Machine Gun Kelly, Mayday, Prozak & Stevie Stone. Ziggy Marley @ Irving Plaza Road to St. Paddy’s Day @ Mr. Beery’s Murphy’s Irish Stout discount, live music, Irish style. Greek-American Night @ Eisenhower Park Antiques & Collectibles Show @

Sagtikos Manor

Center

Monday 6.18 Refused/Off! @ Williamsburg Park This will be the Swedish punk band’s first outdoor New York City show. Before splitting in 1998, Refused made their mark on the hardcore music scene with their LP The Shape of Punk to Come, which is considered to be one of the best punk albums of all-time. Joining Refused will be Off!, an American hardcore super group made up of Circle Jerks/Black Flag singer Keith Morris, Burning Brides frontman Dimitri Coats, Redd Kross bassist Steven Shane McDonald, and Rocket From the Crypt/Hot Snakes drummer Mario Rubalcaba.—Daphne Livingston

Ivy League of Comedy @ Bay Street Theatre Brazilian Girls @ Brooklyn Bowl With DJ Greg Caz. Also 6.19. The Jeff Lorber Fusion @ B.B. King Blues Club & Grill Jazz Jam Nite w/Off White Set & Andrew Ahr @ Mr. Beery’s Punjabi-American Night @ Eisenhower Park No Use for a Name @ Gramercy Theatre Monday Night Brew Night @ Faraday’s Tuesday 6.19 Prodigy (Mobb Deep) @ Irving Plaza

WWE Raw @ Nassau Coliseum

Balkan-American Night @ Eisenhower Park

Take This Waltz @ Great Neck Arts

21st Amendment Beer Dinner @ The

Venue addresses and information can be found on Page 36

FATHER’S DAY

If you go by the greeting cards, Dad is obsessed with the TV remote, the grill, fishing, golf, beer and bodily functions—and the only gift he truly could use for Father’s Day is a belt to hold his pants up. So, if you’d rather not insult Dad on his special day by signing a greeting card that basically tells him he’s a lazy bastard, we have some alternatives—13 of them, to be exact. 1. Plant a Boot for Father’s Day @ Hicks Nurseries, 100 Jericho Tpke., Westbury. Bring in one of Dad’s old shoes, sneakers or boots to create a fun summer planter filled with flowering annuals at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, 6.14. 2. Native American Father’s Day/Arrowhead Necklace @ Garvies Point Museum & Preserve, 50 Barry Dr., Glen Cove. You and Dad can learn how to make fire without matches, grind corn, and

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use the stone drill in the way Native Americans did from 11 a.m.-noon. Then make Dad an awesome arrowhead necklace from noon-3 p.m. Thursday, 6.14. 3. East Islip Historical Society’s Father’s Day Breakfast @ Brookwood Hall, 50 Irish Lane, East Islip. Breakfast served from 8:30-11 a.m. Sunday, 6.17. 4. Father’s Day Comedy Event @ North Amityville Fire

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Lark, Five beers paired with five courses, $55 per person. Ani DiFranco @ Webster Hall The Manhattan Transfer @ B.B. King Blues Club &

Grill Sparks the Rescue @ Revolution, With Rocky Loves Emily, Aristo, All the More & Nothing to Lose. Delphic Sibyl/York Factory Complaint/

Monday

6.18

2012 Long Island Hospitality Ball @ Crest Hollow Country Club This gala organized by Keith

Hart, a hospitality industry mainstay and cancer survivor, will be a night of sensory delights from light and sound to food and drink, showcasing more than 60 top restaurants, wine and spirit brands, nightclubs and entertainers plus hotels and catering halls. Entertainment includes several well-known acts from popular DJs and live music performers to talented magicians, all to raise money for the American Cancer Society. Tickets are $100 per person and include event entry, parking, entertainment and unlimited food and drink from 7-11 p.m. For more information visit www.longislandhospitalityball.org. —Daphne Livingston

Company, 601 N. Broadway, Amityville. Performer and writer Chloe Hilliard (Gotham Comedy Club, Black Entertainment Television) hosts. Sunday, 6.17. 5. Father’s Day Nature Hike @ Connetquot River State Park Preserve, Sunrise Highway, Oakdale. From 1:30-3 p.m. walk with dad on a family adventure. Sunday, 6.17. 6. Father’s Day Car Show @ Oceanside School House Green, Foxhurst Road, Oceanside. Fundraiser for Oceanside Educational Foundation. 10 a.m.-3 pm. Sunday, 6.17. 7. Designing for Dad @ Long Island Children’s Museum, 11 Davis Ave., Garden City. Create your own one-of-a-kind picture frame, a masterpiece for your dad or

Kama Rupa @ St. Vitus The Tallest Man On Earth @ Town Hall With Strand of Oaks. Also 6.20. Pretty Good Friends w/Eugene Mirman, OK Go @ Williamsburg Park Head Crusher from TX. @ Mr. Beery’s Mile-a-Minute Weed Pull @ North Shore Land Alliance To volunteer, contact Jane Jackson at 516-626-0908 or jjackson@northshorelandalliance.org. Vertical Horizon @ The Paramount Wednesday 6.20 Joss Stone @ Highline Ballroom Comedy Central: Indecision in the Park w/The Daily Show @ Central Park SummerStage Hard Times: Lost on Long Island @ Cinema Arts Centre

someone special in your life. 1-3 p.m. Sunday, 6.17. 8. Father’s Day Karaoke @ Martha Clara Vineyards, 6025 Sound Ave., Rivherad. With DJ Phil from 1-4 p.m. Sunday, 6.17. 9. Celebrate Father’s Day @ LI Museum of American Art, 1200 Route 25A, Stony Brook. Treat Dad to an historic adventure. Free admission for fathers and grandfathers all day. Noon-5 p.m. Friday, 6.17. 10. Father’s Day @ Cold Spring Harbor Fish Hatchery, 1660 Route 25A, Cold Spring Harbor. Free admission for Dads when accompanied by their children. Sunday, 6.17. 11. Father’s Day Wine & Chocolate Pairing @ Castello di Borghese,

Average White Band @ B.B. King Blues Club & Grill Bill Thieben @ YMCA Boulton Center for the Performing Arts Liars @ Webster Hall Crosby, Stills & Nash @ NYCB Theatre @ Westbury, There really isn’t enough space here to chronicle the legacy Crosby, Stills & Nash (with occasionally Neil Young) have created since this supergroup formed after leaving The Byrds, Buffalo Springfield and The Hollies respectively. Whether it’s those seminal harmonies or unapologetic liberal views that are more than lip service, given the numerous social causes CSN (and sometimes Y) has gotten behind, these dates represent a rare chance to see this Rock & Roll Hall Continued on page 36

17150 County Route 48, Cutchogue. A guided tasting by Roxanne, Long Island’s only Chocolate Sommelier, and Mary, Borghese Wine Consultant, as they take you on an exotic journey. 2-3 p.m. Sunday, 6.17. 12. Happy Fishy Father’s Day @ Cold Spring Harbor Whaling Museum, 301 Main St., Cold Spring Harbor. 2:30 p.m. Discover unusual dads in the ocean from seahorses to sea spiders to Emperor penguins. Bring four jar lids with you. Sunday, 6.17. 13. Daddy & Me Rocket Building @ Center for Science, Teaching & Learning, Tanglewood Preserve, 1436 Tanglewood Rd., Rockville Centre. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Build a rocket with Dad and launch it toward the clouds. Sunday, 6.17.

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Do This Continued from page 30 /////////////////////

WEDNESDAY Cont. BBQ lunch, bake and barn sale, live music, artists, craftspeople and vendors. NASCAR’S Green Program & Whelen Event Night @ Riverhead Raceway Modifieds will qualify via time trials for their 35-lap feature event, plus 8-cylinder demolition derby. Spring Festival @ Seaford, Also 6.17. Summertime Gift Fair Expo @ Eisenhower Park, Also 6.17. Strawberry Festival & Yard Sale @ St. Thomas of Canterbury Aziz Ansari (Parks and Recreation) @ Beacon Theatre Kinky Friedman @ Stephen Talkhouse Pull a Print, Make a Kite @ Nassau County Museum of Art LI Moose Classic Car Show @ Tanger Outlets Riverhead

Career Education

Take

PRIDE...in knowing that you studied at

Nassau Pops Symphony Orchestra @ Old Westbury Gardens 100th Anniversary Celebration @ Huntington Lighthouse Johnny Cash 80th Birthday Celebration @ Dix Hills Performing Arts Center

• Healthcare Management • Health Information Management • Medical Practice Management

Producing Academic Graduates & Athletic Champions since 1966!

Raiders of the Lost Ark @ Cinema Arts Centre Trace Adkins @ NYCB Theatre @ Westbury Blessing of the Fleet @ Northport Dock, Northport.With the USCG Auxiliary Flotilla 22-7 Band, boat procession and area clergy offering blessings. Green Fest @ Village Center of Port Jefferson

Be MORE! Do MORE!

Text MYBC to 94576 or call

877.876.8333

www.bcl.edu

Bethpage, NY • Patchogue, NY • Queens, NY

Career Education 266223-03/12. Program availability differs by location. Find disclosures on graduation rates, student financial obligations and more at www.briarcliffe.edu/disclosures Briarcliffe College cannot guarantee employment or salary. Students can begin taking courses at Briarcliffe’s Queens center but must take their last 3 credits and complete their degree at the Bethpage location.

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Baby Barnyard Animal Festival @ Harbes Farm & Vineyard, Also 6.17. Scott H. Biram & Lydia Loveless @ Mercury Lounge The Duke Spirit @ Highline Ballroom With Hacienda. Ann Hampton Callaway & Liz Callaway in Boom @ Landmark on Main

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Street, Throughout the set, the sibling tap into songs from the 1960s and ’70s that embrace a gamut of songwriters including Joni Mitchell, Carole King, Bob Dylan, The Beatles, Barbra Streisand, Jimmy Webb, Stevie Wonder and others.—DGdR The Led Zeppelin Experience @ YMCA Boulton Center Paul McCartney’s 70th Birthday @ Great Neck Arts Center Pirate Festival @ LI Maritime Museum Charetta @ Gramercy Theatre A Little Garden Music @ Bayport Flower Houses, Country Junque Shop, Daisy Garden, Sayville General Store, Rambling Rose Florist & Sweet Gourmet. For more information visit www.baffa.org. Benefit for Firefighter Kevin O’Toole @ The Paramount Sunset & Starlight Lighthouse Cruise Special Fundraiser @ Bay Shore Marina Hop aboard the 65-foot turn-of-thecentury style riverboat, the Lauren Kristy for a buffet dinner and lighthouse tour. Clean Streets CI Clean Up Day @ Central Islip Visit www.facebook. com/groups/ cleanstreetscommittee for more information. 4th Annual Soldiers on the Sound Fluke Fishing Tournament @ Smithtown Bay Yacht Club, About 40 boats will depart from the Long Beach Marina at 9 a.m. for a friendly fishing competition. At this time, 70+ military men and women have signed up to fish alongside 33+ members of the Yacht Club. After the winning fish has been weighed-in, the soldiers and members of the club will enjoy live music by The Chris Jennings Band, a clam bake, barbeque and an incredible afternoon of raffles of amazing prizes.—DL War on Health, FDA’s Power of Tyranny w/Gary Null @ Cinema Arts Centre

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BE A PART OF A HEALTHCARE TEAM. Train as a

Medical Assistant!

Call Now for a full program list! or Text tryusNY to 94576

866.948.8333 sbmelville.edu sanfordbrown.edu

711 Stewart Ave., 2nd Floor Garden City, NY 11530

320 South Service Road Melville, NY 11747

Career education 176495–07/11. Programs vary by location. Find disclosures on graduation rates, student financial obligations and more at www. sbmelville.edu/disclosures or www.sanfordbrown.edu/disclosures Sanford-Brown Institute is licensed by the New York State Education Department. Credits earned are unlikely to transfer. Sanford-Brown cannot guarantee employment or salary. SBI Campus – an affiliate of Sanford-Brown, is authorized by the Board of Regents of New York State. Programs offered at SBI Campus are registered by the Office of Colleges and Universities of NYSED. Cars

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YOU AND A GUEST ARE INVITED TO THE LONG ISLAND 3D ADVANCE SCREENING OF

Wednesday Cont. of Famer trio in such intimate confines. Also 6.21. —DGdR Face to Face Acoustic @ Gramercy Theatre Bonnie Raitt @ Beacon Theatre, Also 6.21. First Day of Summer, Bitch! @ Mr. Beery’s, $5 Georgi flavor pints. Rapid Fire @ Aura

To enter, email

wdsmpnyc@ gmail.com

©2012 Disney•Pixar

with your full name, date of birth, and mailing address

No purchase necessary. Contest winners will be notified by email. Limit one entry per person. Limit one admit-two pass per person. Duplicate entries will not be accepted. Theatre is overbooked to ensure capacity. Please arrive early as seating is first-come, first-served. Must be 13 years of age or older to enter.

In theatres in Disney Digital 3D™ June 22

Disney.com/Brave • Like Us On Facebook: Facebook.com/Pixarbrave • Follow Us On Twitter: Twitter.com/DisneyPixar

Great Long Island Laugh-Off 2012 @ Governor’s Comedy Club thursday 6.21 Jon McLaughlin @ Gramercy Theatre US Air Guitar Championships 2012 Regional Competition @ Bowery Ballroom Deer Tick @ Red Hook Park, Brooklyn After Prom Comedy Show @ Governor’s Comedy Club Ki-Mani Marley/ Skadanks @ B.B. King Blues Club & Grill Designer Drugs @ Revolution Iconochasm/Stern/ Feast of the Epiphany @ St. Vitus Anders Osborne @ Brooklyn Bowl Marshall Crenshaw @ City Winery Eli “Paperboy” Reed/Lily & the Parlour Tricks/Zongo Junction @ The Bell House Toshi Reagon & Allison Miller Present: Celebrate! The Great Women of Blues & Jazz @ Highline Ballroom Ronnie Mund Block Party @ McGuire’s Comedy Club, With Ronnie “The Limo Driver” Mund, and Scott “The Engineer” Salem from The Howard Stern Show. Long Island Comedy Festival @ Martha Clara Vineyards Blue Point Grecian Festival @ St. John’s Greek Orthodox Church, Through 6.24. Long Island Dahlia Society Exhibition Grade Plant Sale @ Bayard Cutting Arboretum

Where it’s At Do This Venue Information Nassau County

baystreet.org

Riverhead

Aura—East Meadow Shopping Center, East Meadow

Bayard Cutting Arboretum—Montauk Highway, Great River

Village Center of Port Jefferson— 101 E. Broadway, Port Jefferson

Brokerage—2797 Boardy Barn—270 W. Merrick Rd, Bellmore. Montauk Hwy., Hampton 516-785-8655. www.bro- Bays keragecomedy.com Broadway Bar—198 Cradle of Aviation— Broadway, Amityville. Charles Lindbergh Boule- 631-753-1975. vard, East Garden City Cinema Arts CenCrest Hollow Country tre—423 Park Ave., HunClub— 8325 Jericho Turn- tington 631-423-FILM. pike, Woodbury www.cinemaartscentre. org Eisenhower Park—Hempstead Turnpike, East Dix Hills Performing Arts Meadow Center—305 N. Service Rd., Dix Hills. 631-656Governor’s—90 Division 2148. www.dhpac.org Ave., Levittown. 516-7313358. www.govs.com Faraday’s—Main Street, Smithtown Huntington Lighthouse— Huntington Bay Great Neck Arts Center—113 Middle Neck Landmark on Main Rd., Great Neck Street— 232 Main St., Port Washington. 516Harbes—715 Sound Ave., 767-6444. www.landmar- Mattituck konmainstreet.org Katie’s of SmithMcFadden’s—210 Mertown—145 W. Main St., rick Rd., Rockville Centre. Smithtown. 631-360516-442-2600. www. 8556. www.katiesofmcfaddensrvc.com smithtown.com Molloy College—1000 Hempstead Ave., Rockville Centre

LI Maritime Museum—86 West Ave., West Sayville

Mr. Beery’s—4019 Hempstead Tpke., Bethpage. 516-731-9579. www.mrbeerys.com

Lark Pub & Grub—93 Larkfield Rd., East Northport. 631-262-9700. www.thelarkpubandgrub. com

Mulcahy’s—3232 Railroad Ave., Wantagh. 516-783-7500. www. muls.com

Martha Clara Vineyards—6025 Sound Ave., Riverhead

Nassau Coliseum—1255 Hempstead Tpke., Uniondale. 631-920-1203. www.nassaucoliseum. com

McGuire’s—1627 Smithtown Ave., Bohemia. 631-467-5413. www. mcguirescomedyshows. com

Nassau County Museum of Art—1 Museum Dr., Roslyn Harbor. 516-4849337. www.nassaumuseum.com

Middle Country Beer Garden—1702 Middle Country Rd., Centereach. 631-696-1111. www. muls.com

Nikon @ Jones Beach Theater—1000 Ocean Pkwy., Wantagh. www. jonesbeach.com

Napper Tandy’s Smithtown—15 E. Main St., Smithtown. 631-3600606. www.nappertandys.com

NYCB Theatre at Westbury—960 Brush Hollow Rd., Westbury. 877-5988694. www.thetheatreatwestbury.com Old Bethpage Village Restoration—1303 Round Swamp Rd, Old Bethpage. 516-5728401. www.nassaucountyny.gov

Napper Tandy’s Miller Place—275 Route 25A, Miller Place. 631-3315454. www.nappertandys.com

Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center—76 Main St., Westhampton Beach. 631-288-1500. www. whbpac.org YMCA Boulton Center—37 W. Main St., Bay Shore. 631-969-1101. www.boultoncenter.org

Manhattan B.B. Kings Blues Club & Grill—237 West 42nd St. 212-997-4144. www. bbkingblues.com Beacon Theatre—2124 Broadway. 212-4656500. www.beacontheatre.com Best Buy Theater—1515 Broadway. www.bestbuytheater.com Bowery Ballroom—6 Delancey St. 212-5332111. www.boweryballroom.com Central Park SummerStage—East Drive, Central Park City Winery—155 Varick St. 212-608-0555. www. citywinery.com Gramercy Theatre—127 E. 23rd St. 212-777-6800. www.thegramercytheatre.com Highline Ballroom—431 W. 16th St. 212-4145994. www.highlineballroom Irving Plaza—17 Irving Pl. 212-777-6800. www. irvingplaza.com Joe’s Pub—425 Lafayette St. 212-539-8778. www. joespub.com Mercury Lounge—217 E. Houston St. 212-2604700. www.mercuryloungenyc.com Rockefeller Plaza—1230 Sixth Ave. www.nbc.com Terminal 5—610 W. 56th St. www.terminal 5nyc. com

Town Hall— 123 West 43rd St. 212-840-2824. Neptune Beach Club—70 www.the-townhall-nyc.org Dune Rd., East Quogue Webster Hall—125 E Paramount—370 New 11th St. 212-353-1600. York Ave., Huntington www.websterhall.com

Old Grace Church—Merrick Road & Cedar Shore Drive, Massapequa

Riverhead Raceway—1797 Old Country Rd., Riverhead

Old Westbury Gardens—71 Old Westbury Rd., Old Westbury. 516333-0048. www.oldwestburygardens.org

Sagtikos Manor—Bay Shore

Revolution—140 Merrick Rd., Amityville. 516-2086590. www.revolutionli. com

St. John’s Greek OrthoMCU Park— 1904 Surf dox Church—77 Montauk Ave., Coney Island Hwy., Blue Point Music Hall of WilliamsSt. Thomas of Canterburg—66 N. Sixth St. bury—90 Edgewater Ave., 212-486-5400. www. Smithtown musichallofwilliamsburg. Strawberry Fields—1175 com Route 48, Mattituck Red Hook Park— Halleck Stephen Talkhouse—61 Street, Red Hook Main St., Amagansett. St. Vitus—1120 Manhat631-267-3117. www.ste- tan Ave. www.saintvitusphentalkhouse.com bar.com Vail-Leavitt Music Williamsburg Park—Kent Hall—18 Peconic Ave., Avenue, Williamsburg

Tanger Outlets Riverhead—200 Tanger Mall Dr., Riverhead Vibe Lounge—60 N. Park Ave., Rockville Centre. www.vibeloungeli.com

Suffolk County Bay Street Theatre—The Long Wharf, Sag Harbor. 631-725-9500. www.

Smithtown Bay Yacht Club— 552 E. Long Beach Rd., St. James

Brooklyn Bell House—149 Seventh St. 718-643-6510. www. thebellhouseny.com Brooklyn Bowl—61 Wythe Ave. 718-9633369. www.brooklynbowl. com

Submit event listings at www.longislandpress.com/dothis

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Get your Pharmacy Technician training started Learn what it takes to assist in preparing prescriptions and helping patients.

Call Now for a Brochure

866.943.2444 TEXT trainNY to 94576 sanfordbrown.edu/garden-city

Sanford-Brown Institute | 711 Stewart Ave., 2nd Floor | Garden City, NY 11530 Career education 288974–05/12. Find disclosures on graduation rates, student financial obligations and more at www.sanfordbrown.edu/disclosures Licensed by the New York State Education Department. Credits earned are unlikely to transfer. Sanford-Brown Institute cannot guarantee employment or salary. Cars

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Health Sciences University, “patients widely report that sore, stiff or inflamed joints respond remarkably to MSM, as do bursitis and rheumatoid arthritis.” PENETRAN PLUS is available at only a very few stores in New York. It is, however, available here at Medisource Pharmacy in Plainview for just $9.99 through June 30th (reg.$15.98). It is such an excellent pain blocker that we guarantee your satisfaction 100% or your money back.

Until now, the only way to block the pain with drugs like Lidocaine, was to use a needle. Now, there’s a better way: PENETRAN PLUS rub. How is it different? Lidocaine -like “quaternary amines”, in PENETRAN easily penetrate through your skin to quickly neutralize pain at its origin— just like Lidocaine, which gives it outstanding analgesic and healing properties— and without the needle. PENETRAN PLUS now adds the power of MSM. According to Dr. Stanley Jacobs of the Oregon

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Adoption Pregnant, scared, need help?†† Licensed agency offers free confidential counseling, financial assistance, guidance, opened/ closed adoption, choice of loving, preapproved families. Call Joy: 866-922-3678. www.ForeverFamiliesThroughAdoption.org. Auctions SULLIVAN COUNTY REAL PROPERTY TAX FORECLOSURE AUCTION. 300+/- Properties June 20 + 21 @ 10AM. At SCCC, Liberty, NY. 800-243-0061 AAR & HAR, Inc. Brochure: www.NYSAuctions.com Autos Wanted DONATE VEHICLE: RECEIVE $1000 GROCERY COUPONS. National Animal Welfare Foundation. Support NO KILL Shelters. Help Homeless Pets. Free Towing, TAX DEDUCTIBLE, NONRUNNERS Accepted 1-888-333-3848 CASH FOR CARS! We Buy ANY Car or Truck, Running or NOT! Damaged, Wrecked, Salvaged OK! Get a top dollar INSTANT offer today! 1-800-267-1591 Business Opportunity ATTN: COMPUTER WORK. Work from anywhere 24/7. Up to $1,500 Part Time to $7,500/ mo. Full Time. Training provided. www. workservices3.com

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Buildings for Sale HAS YOUR BUILDING SHIFTED OR SETTLED? Contact Woodford Brothers Inc, for straightening, leveling, foundation and wood frame repairs at 1-800-OLD-BARN. www.woodfordbros. com.Suffolk Cty~ License #41959-H Nassau Cty~ License #H18G7160000 Drivers Drivers- New Freight lanes in your area. Annual Salary $45K to $60K. Flexible hometime. Modern Fleet of Trucks. CDL-A, 3 months current OTR experience. 800-4149569 www.driveknight. com

Forms Personalization; exp in Data Conversion into Oracle e-Business Suite from Legacy systems; & Creation of Technical Designs, Unit Test Plan, & Integration Test plans. Send resumes (Req. #10412) to: HR Shared Services, 24 Inverness Place East, Englewood, CO 80112 or apply online at: http://www.arrow. com/careers/ AIRLINES ARE HIRING- Train for hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified- Job Placement Assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (866)296-7093

NEW TO TRUCKING? Your new career starts now! *$0 Tuition Cost *No Credit Check *Great Pay & Benefits. Short employment commitment required. Call: (866)304-9526 www. joinCRST.com Land For Sale NY Land & Cabin Bargain Sale Classic Adirondack Camp 5 acres-$29,995. Cozy Cabin- Base Camp 5 acres - $19,995. Near 1000ís of acres of Stateland, lakes, & rivers. Access to snowmobile & ATV trails. Our best deal ever! Call 800229-7843. See pics at www.landandcamps. com

Help Wanted Oracle Applications Engineer Specialist for Arrow Electronics, Inc. (Melville, NY) Create technical dsgns based on business/functional reqmts. Reqs: Bachelors in Engg, Info Systems OR rltd & 5 yrs exp which must incl Oracle Developer exp in applics framework using SQL, PL/ SQL, Oracle Workflow, Business Events, XML Publisher reports & Forms 6i; Oracle 11i & customization utilizing Oracle best practice methodology; Supply Chain background in Order-To-Cash cycle; SQL performance tuning; Customization of Forms using CUSTOM.pll/

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Thrill Dad this Father’s Day!

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Crossword PRESENT DANGER ACROSS 1 Singer Horne 5 Gusto 9 Complain 13 Helium and hydrogen 18 Israeli airline 19 Cultural grp. 20 “Picnic” playwright 21 Actress Baddeley 22 Strauss’ “sprach Zarathustra” 23 “Chacun a son -” 24 Lassie’s father 25 Diva Jessye 26 Start of a remark by Milton Berle 30 Iron 31 Center of gravity? 32 - Pea (Popeye’s kid) 33 Health resort 36 Swore off 40 “Little Man -” (‘91 film) 42 Mock 46 Polished the Pontiac 48 R&B’s Johnny 49 Harsh 51 Latin I word 52 Help in a heist 53 Baseball’s Nolan 54 Hiawatha’s transport 55 Very cold 57 King’s quarters 59 Brilliant bird 60 Common antiseptic

61 Prone 63 Shepard or Snead 64 Poet in the past 66 Particle 67 Middle of remark 72 Writer Paretsky 74 Memo start 75 Brenda or Brandon 76 Gob 77 Speaker 79 Singer Neville 81 “Barry -” (‘75 film) 86 Defamation 87 Shoelace part 88 Charity 91 French airport 92 “Unaccustomed - am . . .” 93 Storage sites 95 Burn remedy 96 Steep rocks 97 Curl up with Cather 99 Ho Chi 100 Mobile home? 102 Dogpatch’s Daisy 103 Famous fellow? 105 Scrape by, with “out” 106 Stout relative 108 End of remark 118 “Peter Pan” extra 119 Comic Sahl 120 Seaport or Canal 121 Circus sound 122 Put on 123 Disoriented 124 Run in neutral

125 - Taft Benson 126 Stereo component 127 Trawler gear 128 Tumbled 129 TV’s “- the Press” DOWN 1 Page 2 Raines or Wilcox 3 “Boss” Tweed’s nemesis 4 Hilo hello 5 Croatian capital 6 Slaughter or Cabell 7 Lobe probe? 8 “Cheerio!” 9 Ached for 10 In reserve 11 Taj town 12 - -do-well 13 Lawn ornament 14 Comes to terms 15 Big rig 16 Jack of “Rio Lobo” 17 - Bernardino, CA 21 Response 27 “Heavens to Betsy!” 28 Montand or Tanguy 29 Cosmetician Lauder 33 Trade 34 Sunscreen ingredient 35 Lipinski leap 37 Happiness 38 Actress Hagen 39 - Tin Tin 40 Logical 41 Declaration

43 Rock salt 44 - acid 45 Transmit by bytes

47 LAX letters 49 Cul-de- 50 Freud topic 53 Mend

54 Lerner & Loewe musical 56 Dutch export 58 Roller-coaster

Sudoku

unit 59 --jongg 60 Perfect examples 62 - ear 63 Furtiveness 65 Mil. group 67 Sheik spot 68 Destiny 69 Siegfried slew one 70 Itch 71 Strive 72 - plexus 73 Greet Eos 78 Vintage 80 Musical syllables 82 Postman’s Creed word 83 Wee serving 84 “Eugene Onegin” character 85 AMEX rival 87 Simian 88 Menu phrase 89 Tennis stroke 90 “- culpa”

94 Hammed up “Hamlet” 95 Pianist Templeton 96 Baby bovine 98 Mar 100 Powerful pooches 101 Maestro Lorin 104 39.37 inches 105 Snowy bird 107 - Zimbalist, Jr. 108 In - (archaeology term) 109 Mediterranean port 110 “No Way Out” actress 111 Scenter of your face? 112 Like 113 Bare 114 Swiss sharpshooter 115 Seep 116 Seldom seen 117 “Confound it!” 118 Oregon hrs.

Last Week’s Answers

All Games © 2012 King Features Synd. All Rights Reserved

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