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Sound Smart at a Party A Texas mom found herself in the Guinness Book of World Records for donating more breast milk than any other woman to help feed babies in intensive care whose mothers can’t breastfeed. Since
giving birth to her son in March 2011, Alicia Richman has donated almost 87 gallons of her breast milk, more than 23 gallons more than the previous record holder. She began to donate after she discovered she was producing more milk than she needed and was running out of freezer space. According to Mothers’ Milk Bank, the nonprofit she gavher milk to, just three ounces of milk is enough to feed a premature infant nine times, and Richman’s donations have most likely fed thousands of little ones… One woman in New Mexico has a strange obsession with a family’s patio furniture. The Dentandts say that the tres-
passer keeps going onto their front porch and rearranging their furniture. Angela Dentandt first thought her daughter was the culprit until she saw the determined woman on surveillance tape. She says that she puts the furniture back in its place etvery time it’s moved, but is running out of patience. The family says that if there is one more feng-shui attack they may end up pressing charges…
A new health study suggests that aspirin may help certain colorectal cancer patients. The Dana-Farber
Cancer Institute looked at more than 900 colorectal cancer patients and found that patients with tumors that had the gene PIK3CA responded to aspirin therapy. Five years later 97 percent of the patients on aspirin survived, compared to the 74 percent survival rate of those who did not take aspirin. Patients whose tumors did not have the PIK3CA mutation were not affected by aspirin therapy. The full report was published in the New England Journal of Medicine… When in Rome, get high? It turns out that Rome is one of the eight Italian cities where researchers found trace amounts of cocaine and marijuana in the air. Italy’s Institute of Atmospheric Pollution Research found drugs in the air in Bologna, Florence, Milan, Naples, Palermo, Rome, Turin and Verona. While the amounts were large enough to be detected, they are still too small to have any type of mind-altering effect on people who breathe in the air (sorry, no free drugs). In addition to the drugs, caffeine and nicotine also showed up in the tests. Interestingly enough, the study found that the drug concentrations fluctuate throughout the year, and that the marijuana and caffeine levels go up during the winter months. The findings shouldn’t be too much of a shock to the Romans. A different study showed trace amounts of cocaine in Rome’s air back in 2006…
“God bless New York. God bless the Jersey shore.” New Jersey native Bruce Springsteen during “Hurricane Sandy: Coming Together.” Friday, Nov. 2, 2012, in New York. Hosted by Matt Lauer, the benefit concert for victims of Hurricane Sandy featured artists identified with the areas hardest hit by the storm. (AP Photo/NBC, Heidi Gutman)
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Letter from the Publisher
Style is in the stars.
Multicolor Gemstone and Diamond Starfish Pendant by Effy in 14K Rose Gold $2,399 Chain included
For better or for worse I grew up on country music. Long story. For the past week and a half the refrain, “I am a lineman for the county,” from Glenn Campbell’s Wichita Lineman has been running through my head. The lyrics were penned by the great Jimmy Webb, who has made Long Island his home, and they resonate with me every time I see crews from around the nation struggling to repair our grid in what can only be described as horrific conditions. The grid. Such a messy and incongruous mess of belching plants, substations, poles and lines that crisscross the Island and provide “juice” to our homes and businesses. Juice that we take for granted under normal circumstances. Juice that we realize we cannot possibly live without at times like these. I’m writing this letter to our readers from the Long Island Press’ third location in 10 days. Mother Nature’s howling surrogate, Sandy, knocked out the power in our Syosset headquarters last week, which prevented us from publishing an edition altogether as our reporters spread out across LI to provide updates as often as possible to Long Islanders desperate to connect with one another and comprehend what had occurred. Mother Nature then saw fit to deliver a further insult during this week’s storm by knocking out the power at our backup location in Garden City while we were on deadline. Undaunted, our staff wrapped up our computers and servers and brought them to Webair, the secure data center that hosts the Press’ website, also based in Garden City. So allow me to thank Adam Schwam from our IT company, Sandwire, for his heroic efforts and the Sandwire staff for graciously accommodating our entire team. Kudos as well to the good people at Webair for welcoming our bedouin family without hesitation and bringing us in from the snow and the cold. If you are reading these words in the printed edition of the Press, they are the reason. To say this has been a punishing week for the Island and the region is a laughable understatement. But the determination and grit exhibited by
those who were affected by the storms has been humbling. There will be plenty of time to Monday morning quarterback the response by our public officials and municipalities but suffice to say we are all united in our desire to heal and rebuild. This was a paradigm shift for Long Island that will need to be studied and reacted to swiftly. The time to be proactive has passed. How we move forward from this point will say everything about our chances to construct a sustainable economic, environmental and secure future for the next generation of Long Islanders. As a nation, we chose to hold tight to hope that was born in 2008 and not risk recalibrating our course. I have been vocal enough already with respect to the election, but I will make the following observation: Women are politically alive and empowered in the United States. This was the most positive development that could have occurred to stem the misogynistic tide of barbarism that has crept into the consciousness of the GOP. As a man, these words carry no irony as I write them on behalf of my daughters who will hopefully inherit a world where history marks this election as a new beginning for America’s herstory. And as for the “linemen for the county,” thank you for doing your best to re-electrify the grid and keep us warm. No doubt you have felt the wrath of those who waited the longest for power, but our rational selves know this is a larger problem and one we must face up to collectively. All of our hearts are broken by what we have witnessed in our seaside communities. All of our might belongs to them in the days, months and years ahead. Finally, I must be self-indulgent for a moment and take the opportunity to thank the members of the Long Island Press staff who worked tirelessly to update the Island with quality, necessary information in our time of need. I marvel not only at the ability of our staffers but their commitment to our vocation. You are giants. Jed Morey Publisher
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LIP 5
C Ex h pre ec ko ss ut Trump
Pricers Gouge
LiLo
The Target
TRUMP—OFF TARGET After the polls close and Obama is re-elected president, Donald Trump takes to Twitter to launch an endless series of rants, calling the election a “sham and a travesty” in way more than 140 characters. Another disgruntled billionaire!
hdata SPlas d Ronalald McDon
ors Neighb
PRICE GOUGERS—OFF TARGET After receiving hundreds of complaints in New York State, Attorney General Eric Schneiderman announces he is opening an investigation into post-Hurricane Sandy price gouging. For the love of God, gouge us all you want, just somebody please: Turn on the lights!
SPLASHDATA—BULL’S EYE The security software developer releases its annual list of the most common passwords and “password,” “123456” and 12345678” are once again the three most popular used passwords. Really, after being warned over and over for years, if your password is “password” you deserve to get hacked.
LILO—OFF TARGET Long Island’s favorite trainwreck Lindsay Lohan is facing charges that she lied to police, telling them she wasn’t behind the wheel of her Porsche when it crashed into the back of an 18-wheeler on California’s Pacific Coast Highway in June. If convicted, she would be in violation of her jewelry theft probation and could end up back in jail. In other news, the Earth is round. NEIGHBORS—PARTIAL SCORE After Long Island takes a devastating hit from Sandy, kind-heartd and wonderful neighbors with power run extension cords from their homes to those without, some even set up charging stations on the side of the road, and thousands donate goods and services to those hardest hit along the coast. Unfortunately, none of these people live on our block. RONALD MCDONALD—BULL’S EYE A British man named Ronald McDonald is arrested and sentenced to 86 days in prison after violating a restraining order by following his wife into a McDonald’s restaurant. You just can’t make this stuff up…
The Photo
The Pink Slip
NECC OWNERS
The death toll continues to rise from the fungusinfected pain medication produced by the New England Compounding Center, a Massachusetts company with an innocuous name that is at the heart of the largest outbreak of meningitis this country has ever seen. So far 14,000 people have been affected, 313 have become sick and at least 25 people have died. The scope of the tragedy is still expanding as federal and state investigators dig deeper into what went wrong—for years—right under their eyes. Now they’re trying to play catch up before other people die. FDA inspectors reported that sterilization equipment at NECC had greenish-yellow residue, surfaces in the “clean rooms” were coated with bacteria or mold, and an air-conditioner was shut off nightly despite the importance of keeping the climate controlled. NECC has been shut down, and Ameridose, its sister firm, has suspended work until Nov. 5. According to news reports both firms are owned by Gregory Conigliaro and members of his family. Interestingly he also owns a recycling plant right next door, which has also drawn complaints. The contaminated vials of methylprednisolone acetate had “greenish black foreign matter” and “white filamentous material.” That can’t be good. What the scrutiny shows is that the public was betrayed, whether by a pharmaceutical system that put profits over people or a regulatory system that had no muscle and no will. Here’s our prescription: Owners of NECC...You’re fired!
The Quote
“I just spoke with Governor Romney and I congratulated him and Paul Ryan on a hard-fought campaign. We may have battled fiercely, but it’s only because we love this country deeply and we care so strongly about its future.” President Barack Obama with first last Michelle Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and Jill Biden celebrate on stage at the election night party at McCormick Place, early Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2012, in Chicago. Obama defeated Republican challenger former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
President Barack Obama in his acceptance speech at the election night party at McCormick Place, early Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2012, in Chicago.
The Equation
4 more years + More congressional + NYS Senate control + Nassau GOP keeps + GOP’s Romaine new + Bishop beats Randy = Meet the new boss, gridlock court-bound legislative majority Brookhaven supervisor again same as the old boss
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2. VISIT GASBUDDY.COM/SANDY: Long Island residents continue to wait on huge lines for gas sometimes only to find out, after three hours in line, there is none by the time they get up to the pump. Now GasBuddy.com, which compiles gas price data by utilizing a network of volunteer spotters, has created a fuel shortage tracker at GasBuddy.com/Sandy to ease that frustration. The site is similar to GasBuddy.com, which posts gas prices at all the gas stations in one zip code. But instead of prices, the new site compiles real time information on what gas stations in a particular area actually have gas, which ones don’t, and as of what time. There’s also a spot for you to report the status of gas stations in your area. The more people who participate, the more accurate it is. 3. YOUTUBE “DARPA ROBOTS”: We don’t know whether or not to be impressed, awed or absolutely terrified. As a way to respond to natural and man-made disasters like Fukushima and the Chilean Copiapo mine collapse, where human presence can be highly risky, the DARPA Robotics Challenge is tasked with developing robots for use by the military to perform human tasks. Check out some of the videos to come out of this project which includes a police robot and a robotic mule. 4. READ DU MAURIER’S REBECCA: Even in death, Daphne du Maurier can’t escape the drama surrounding her classic gothic thriller, Rebecca. In 1944, the British author stayed on Long Island at the Oyster Bay estate of publisher Nelson Doubleday to fight allegations she plagiarized Brazilian writer Carolina Nabuco’s Blind Windows. Just a few weeks ago, Rebecca made headlines again when Long Island stockbroker Mark Hatton was arrested and charged with fraud for bringing in fake investors for the musical adaptation on Broadway. Forget the horror movies and toss out all your Stephen King books, nothing compares to this timeless macabre tale.
The Rundown
1. Help your neighbors: The Long Island Press is teaming up with Ace Hardware stores across Long Island, the Kids Kloset, Rock Can Roll and Long Island Food Not Bombs to help our neighbors who have been devastated by Hurricane Sandy. All Long Island Ace Hardware locations are serving as drop-off locations for non-perishable food items and clothing donations to those in need on the south shore.
The number of Long Island homes and businesses-- out of the 1.1 million homes and businesses served by LIPA—that were blacked out at the peak of Hurricane Sandy. As of Wednesday, there were still more than 100,000 customers still without electricity.
6. BUY AN ARCADE LIGHT SWITCH: Power up your lights like it’s the ’80s and you’re the coolest kid in the arcade. This original light switch by Leet Dreams will take your home décor to a whole other level and you can even have it customized in any combination of eight button colors on either a black or white plate to either match the walls or your favorite game. Order one from AlephDesign on Etsy.com.
B-List B-Day
7. FOLLOW @GOOGLEFACTS: This Twitter account isn’t actually affiliated with Google, but everything it Tweets is true— and awesome. Follow @GoogleFacts and you, too, will know that the longest English word without any vowel is “twyndyllyngs,” J.K. Rowling claims that Lord Voldemort is pronounced without the “t,” and grapes explode if you put them in the microwave. 8. BUY A COLEMAN LED LANTERN: For those of us going on 10+ days without electric, heat, hot water, etc., or maybe for the ones who lost power for a few days and got it back only to lose it again when Long Island was hit with high winds and snow Wednesday, do yourself a favor and buy an LED lantern, if not for this time, for the next. It won’t keep you safe in the event of a zombie apocalypse, but it will keep you from falling down the stairs. 9. CATCH UP ON PRETTY LITTLE LIARS: Yeah, we know this is—in news lingo—“allegedly” a show for teens. But first of all, not one of the actors is under 22 and most are nearing 30. And this show, centered around multiple murders and cyber stalking, isn’t replete with the bad acting and pandering plotlines of other shows in the same vein like Secret Life of the American Teenager. If you didn’t watch the Halloween episode, see it On Demand. But first catch up from the beginning on Netflix. We dare you to watch one episode and not tune in for round two.
10. THANK A VETERAN Sunday, Nov. 11 is Veterans Day! column
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Diana the Organic Banana By Francesco J. Caputo Putting a light-hearted spin on curbing the nation’s obesity problem, this children’s story book makes eating healthy a fun learning experience for kids. In Diana the Organic Banana, local author Francesco J. Caputo draws from his background as a personal fitness trainer, a fitness and nutritional counselor and a motivational speaker to bring awareness about healthy eating to children and parents alike. The book is written to inspire both children and adults to live a healthier lifestyle and avoid getting caught in the cycle of eating fast food or other unhealthy foods. Using fun and interesting characters, Caputo shows readers simple things such as how junk food is bad and healthy foods are good. These essential messages are meant to be interpreted easily by readers of all age groups, hopefully inspiring them to make wise dietary choices. Caputo, who named the main character in the book after his own daughter, is a doctor of chiropractic medicine and lives on Long Island. —Daphne Livingston
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The Book
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Tara “Remember Me?!?” Reid Nov. 8, 1975 Actress Tara Reid is a Scorpio, a sign known for embodying three levels of existence during the lifetime—the lowly Scorpion, the successful eagle and the powerful Phoenix resurrected, in no particular order. Reid began her career as a child, appearing in more than 100 commercials for brands like Jell-O, Milton Bradley and McDonalds (Eagle). She then hit it big and hit her peak with the super-succesful movie franchise American Pie (Phoenix). All that soon changed when Reid starred in a series of bombs that won her multiple Razzie Award nominations for Worst Actress (Scorpion). But Reid took it even further and began making her way through the three levels of post-Hollywood existence in a failed attempt to hang on to her dwindling career—posing semi-nude (Playboy), appearing on a reality show (Celebrity Big Brother UK) and disappearing into virtual anonymity.
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Election RECAP
Election Takes Island By Storm OBAMA’S COATTAILS HELP KEY LOCAL RACE By Spencer Rumsey
When Chris DeLuca, Assemb. Phil Boyle’s 35-year-old campaign manager, checked their headquarters in Babylon Village after Hurricane Sandy had subsided on the Tuesday before Halloween, he stepped into the office and found water almost up to his knees. Guppies were swimming by his legs. “Yes, there were guppies!” recalls DeLuca, still in amazement. Surprisingly, despite the flooding, the office never lost power, just Internet service, phones and cable. What the storm would mean for the closely watched New York State Senate race hung in the air. Long Island was still reeling, and the answers seemed far away. But a week later, on Election Day, the Boyle office was bone dry, volunteers were working the phones, a flat-screen TV on the wall was tuned to Fox News for the latest updates and the only evidence of the storm’s wake was a stack of rusted lawn signs propped up against the wall. This was DeLuca’s first campaign for Boyle, a long-time Assemblyman who was making a bid for the seat held for 40 years by State Sen. Owen Johnson (R-West Babylon), a veteran who had decided to retire. Facing them was Suffolk Legis. Rick Montano (D-Central Islip), a fiery former federal prosecutor, whose own home lay just outside the redrawn 4th Senate District. In fact, Montano’s legislative base was almost entirely excluded by the new lines. Not so for Boyle, who got the benefit of having the Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos (R-Rockville Centre) wielding the pen that made the borders final. Skelos was counting on keeping this seat in the Republican column in 8
(AP Photo/Haraz N. Ghanbari)
srumsey@longislandpress.com
order to retain his slim majority in Albany. Little did Skelos know that his hold would soon be in doubt— but not from the South Shore. Here in Babylon, with the polls still hours from closing at 9 o’clock and plenty of daylight still left in the campaign, DeLuca exuded confidence. His candidate was out, knocking on doors, helping with the neighborhood relief effort, keeping the heat on. He was waiting for volunteers to get off work and come in for their last assignments. Like so much of Long Island, this district had been hit hard. In SD4 alone, an estimated 25,000 people
were exercising their right, despite power outages, long lines at the gas pumps and, in too many cases, ruined homes and devastated lives. Of course, the big draw was the race at the top of the ticket for the White House. Democrats in Nassau and Suffolk were counting on President Barack Obama’s supporters to pull their “down ballot” candidates to victory. Republicans hoped to lessen that effect although they knew that the prospect of Gov. Mitt Romney carrying New York was unlikely, given the Democrats’ superior numbers in the city. Romney needed to dominate the suburbs decisively but fell short.
non-profit advocacy group touting high-tech projects. In the Assembly, status quo was the norm essentially, with newcomer Michaelle Solages, a Democrat, picking up the 22nd A.D in Nassau, and Andrew Garbarino, a Republican, winning the 7th AD in Suffolk. At the ballroom of the Islandia Marriott after the polls closed, the crowd of anxious Democrats roared their approval when the TV networks projected Obama the winner of his contest. The pandemonium was deafening, and for many seconds, drowned out any chance of conversing about the less stellar fates of the local candidates who had not fared as well as the president. One of those candidates was Montano. —CHRIS DELUCA, CAMPAIGN MANAGER FOR ASSEM. PHIL BOYLE’S STATE SENATE RACE He wound up losing 44 percent to Boyle’s 56 percent of the living south of Montauk Highway The unofficial final tally as of vote, although the count isn’t final. (known as Main Street in Babylon Wednesday afternoon had Obama Earlier in the evening after the village) had been ordered to evacuate. winning Nassau County with 243,649 polls had just closed, the spirit was The tidal surge had wreaked havoc, votes, compared to Romney’s 212,882 ebullient in Montano’s suite upstairs and pockets of neighborhoods were votes; and carrying Suffolk County at the Marriott. People were laughing, still without power. with 274,830 votes, compared to joking, drinking wine and enjoying But people everywhere were Romney’s 259,348 votes—a little empanadas. An hour later, the coming out to vote. more than 46,000 vote difference. empanadas were cold, and the results “The polls in Lindenhurst, But the president’s pull on the were colder. which got hit the hardest, are just local races was not so clear cut. In In the end, all that was left over being rocked,” DeLuca says, with his Brookhaven, Legis. Ed Romaine from the Montano-Boyle race was bitunspoken hope that the turnout was (R-Center Moriches) took over terness on Montano’s side, and relief going Boyle’s way. “Long Islanders town hall from the Democrats as on Boyle’s. As for Skelos, his 33-29 don’t let too many things get in their the new supervisor following Mark hold on the State Senate was shaken by way,” he says. Lesko’s early retirement to become races in the redrawn districts upstate All across the Island voters head of Accelerate Long Island, a and the courts may have the last word
“The polls in Lindenhurst, which got hit the hardest, are just being rocked.”
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HOLIDAY
TREE LIGHTING FESTIVAL
Saturday, November 17 3 PM – 6 PM
FREE HoLIdAy coNcERT AUSTIN MAHONE 5pm The pop phenomenon will perform his hits “Say Somethin” and “11:11”
TREE LIGHTING cELEBRATIoN
OUr 50' TrEE cOMES TO lIfE 6pm with Austin Mahone and a pair of Radio City Rockettes
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rINK OPENS AT 1:30pm with special guest appearances throughout the afternoon
SANTA ARRIVES! 3pm–5pm Share your Christmas wishes and take a picture with Santa
shop & save more this holiday in over 95 brands & designer outlets lAST cAll BY NEIMAN MArcUS SAKS fIfTH AVENUE Off 5TH JUIcY cOUTUrE KATE SPADE NEW YOrK NIKE fAcTOrY STOrE BrOOKS BrOTHErS AND MOrE DEEr PArK, NY (631) 667-0600 L.I.E., Exit 52 South on Commack Rd. & Grand Blvd. or take the LIRR TANGEROUTLET.COM FACEBOOK YOUTUBE TANGER APP
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Election RECAP on which party won the chamber. On infuriated but it was too late in the LI, Skelos’ home turf, all nine Repub- election cycle to counter it. Gregory’s lican candidates for the State Senate aide’s mother in Wyandanch had got defeated their Democratic challeng- one, too, but not in time for him to go ers, although it cost plenty. public with his support of Montano’s According to campaign disclo- senate bid. sure reports, the state Republican “I’ve never seen anything like committee gave Boyle some $225,000, that happen in Suffolk County giving him almost before,” Gregory $610,000 compared told the Press on to Montano, who election night. “I had about $282,000 had nothing to do on hand. with it.” “I think they Some say spent probably Gregory and other about half a million Democrats in the dollars more on the Suffolk Legislature —RICH SCHAFFER, SUFFOLK other side,” says would have loved DEMOCRATIC CHAIRMAN Suffolk Democratic the independentChairman Rich minded Montano Schaffer. That difference would be to change his political venue from hard to offset, but Democrats are Hauppauge to Albany, but that move used to being outspent by their richer will have to wait. Republican adversaries. Here, two In the end, Montano, who’d run other factors hurt Montano’s chances a spirited campaign blasting Boyle of picking up the senate seat, he for supposedly making his official believes. The hurricane was No. 1. residence in Albany with his wife and “I think the electorate froze,” her children, had a margin of almost Schaffer says. “The race stopped a 8 percentage points that he couldn’t week ago.” bridge. But he wouldn’t formally Another factor was the lasting concede, he tells the Press, until every popularity of Johnson. “He had the “ballot and affidavit is counted.” seat for 40 years,” Schaffer observes, Two years ago, that counting and there were countless people in the process was very much in evidence district who remembered how he’d in the tight contest between Rep. helped them. Johnson’s endorsement Tim Bishop (D-Southampton) and of Boyle was a stamp of approval, his millionaire Republican challenger and Montano, who was counting on Randy Altschuler, who lost his bid to changing demographics, was a relative unseat the incumbent from the First newcomer in this part of town. Congressional District, which encomOf course, it also didn’t help his passes the East End and most of cause that slickly crafted mailings Brookhaven Town. Altschuler lost by went out to targeted voters in only 593 votes when the final ballot Wyandanch that said ominously was counted, weeks after the election. “Ricardo Montano claims to be a In his campaign headquarters Democrat, but…Rick Montano in Middle Island, wedged between turned his back on the Democratic a tae-kwon-do school and a nail Party. Montano endorsed and gave salon, Altschuler looked cool, calm money to the Republican candidate and collected this Election Day, as against our Democratic Legislator about two dozen supporters made DuWayne Gregory.” calls to voters. Asked if he wished he Montano got wind of the flier, could have had one more debate with which distorted his support for a Bishop, his campaign manager, Diana Democrat who was Weir—who’d watched once an opponent of the candidates go at Gregory’s, and was each other 18 times— roared with laughter. “Yes,” joked the September 27, 2012 cover of the press Altschuler. “Nineteen provided a behind-thewould make it a scenes glimpse into li’s two most hotly perfect number.” contested races: rep. The debates, he tim bishop vs. randy altschuler for congress admitted, were “very and assemb. phil boyle substantive.” And, he vs. suffolk legis. rick montano for state senate. believes, the voters
“Who did they trust? Clearly they trusted Tim Bishop.”
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were well served. On the airwaves, however, it’s questionable who was served when some $3 million was spent just on Altschuler’s behalf by Karl Rove’s SuperPAC, Crossroads GPS. An observer inundated by the negative advertising would not believe that these two men could stand side by side on a stage like gentlemen when such horrible things were being said about each other on television and the radio. “In the beginning, when I ran the first time,” Altschuler says, “I really couldn’t reconcile it, and I thought it was bizarre. But after a while…it’s the reality of politics.” And, he added, “it’s disgusting.” The trouble, of course, is that campaigns, especially at the Congressional level, don’t come cheap. “I think you spend a ridiculous amount of time raising money, and it’s totally inefficient,” says Altschuler, an innovative entrepreneur who co-founded Cloud Blue, a company based in Georgia that recycles computer equipment. “You’ve only got a two-year term, and you’re spending 50 percent of your time raising money—you’re not doing your job!” But Altschuler didn’t run on a promise to reform campaign spending, and Bishop, who railed about the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision, which basically opened the floodgate to SuperPAC funds, worried about the corrosive effect of big money on our democracy, but had no answer for it. Bishop won the rematch by more than 11,000 votes. As he told the enthusiastic throng at the Islandia Marriott, he felt great facing them news
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VICTORIOUS: U.S. CONGRESSMAN TIM BISHOP THANKS HIS SUPPORTERS GATHERED AT THE ISLANDIA MARRIOTT ON ELECTION NIGHT AS SUFFOLK COUNTY DEMOCRATIC CHAIRMAN RICH SCHAFFER LOOKS ON. (Spencer Rumsey/Long Island Press)
knowing that “I’ve got a four-figure margin instead of a three-figure margin!” Schaffer surmised that Altschuler lost the race because he was “a damaged candidate,” in particular because of Democratic opponents claims that he’d made his fortune as an “outsourcer” at PaperTiger, his previous company, always stuck in the minds of the Suffolk voters. And despite Bishop being outspent by the SuperPACs, the issue boiled down to trust. “Who did they trust? Clearly they trusted Tim Bishop,” Schaffer says. Altschuler finally conceded the election around midnight—an hour before Romney conceded. When Bishop spoke to the crowd at the ballroom, he said, “My opponent may have had the guys with the big checks, but I had the guys with the big hearts—and big hearts win every time.” The audience roared their approval. Then he took another swipe at the opposition, “a lot of people and a lot of institutions who bet against me—they know who they are—but they didn’t really bet against me,” Bishop said. “They bet against all of you.” What’s more, he said, his opponents bet against the “essential sense of goodness and fairness of this district…and the ability to separate truth from the lies.” And basically, when all is said and done, that is the voters’ job.
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Jerry’s Ink BY JERRY DELLA FEMINA, Publisher, the Independent
Sour Grapes “Politicians are like diapers; they need to be changed often and for the same reason.”— Mark Twain I’m writing this column one day before the election. By the time you read it, the results will be in. I’m sure that Barack Obama will win the electoral vote and I’m pretty sure that Mitt Romney will win the popular vote. More Americans will vote for Mitt Romney than for Barack Obama but in the end Barack Obama, with the electoral vote, will be President again. Did I hear someone say “God help us?” That said, Obama ran a brilliant campaign. His record was dismal. We had and will continue to have high unemployment… more Americans living on food stamps… more families earning less than they were four years ago… He forced ObamaCare down our throats against the wishes of the majority of Americans. His “Al Qaeda is dead” was
his version of Bush’s “Mission accomplished.” Benghazi proved how wrong he was. Yet his administration, with the help of the press, covered up his cover-up with a fable that four people were killed as a result of a movie. So how did he win? He successfully demonized Mitt Romney, a good man who would have been a great President. The press went along with it. They spent weeks talking about Romney’s treatment of the family dog… his career at Bain… Big Bird… the bull crap about the “War against women.” The press concentrated on everything but Obama’s dismal record and the fact that after four years he has no plan for the future other than taxing the wealthy for their “fair” share. Obama relied on many smart Democrats to drink the Kool-Aid. If you’re a Democrat you saw the real Romney and the real Obama in the first debate. If ever there was a time to cross party lines it was during this election. Am I disappointed? Half the nation is disappointed. But let’s look
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at it in the proper perspective. It’s an election. We lost. It’s not the end of the world. Compare it with those poor people who lost their homes and their lives to Hurricane Sandy. The woman whose two small children slipped out of her hands and were lost forever in the middle of a deadly wind. The old woman on Staten Island sifting through mud where her house once stood, looking for and retrieving her wedding picture from years ago. The only possession she has left in the world. There are so many sad stories. This is what is truly important in our world. By comparison, this election is just another blip in history. The other day, while driving out to the Hamptons, I listened to my first book on tape. It was “Truman,” about the life of Harry Truman, by David McCullough. It was great. Truman never went to college. He was just another Senator who was chosen by Roosevelt to be his Vice President. Then Roosevelt died suddenly. Truman was in office a few days when he made the decision to drop the atomic bomb on Japan to save the lives of many American soldiers.
He led the nation to prosperity when everyone thought we were headed for a post-war recession. He saved a starving Europe with The Marshall Plan. He stopped the spread of Communism with The Truman Doctrine. He recognized Israel and became that nation’s greatest friend. As I drove, I contrasted Harry Truman with Barack Obama. When Truman came into office, hardly anyone thought he was up for the job. This was a small, nondescript man with thick glasses, a terrible flat voice and probably, of all the Presidents before and since, the worst public speaker in the nation’s history. Barack Obama, on the other hand, came into office with the whole world cheering him on. He promised us hope and change. He’s handsome… dynamic… has a great speaking voice and is a wonderful speaker. When the smoke cleared, it was obvious to me and should be to you that Truman was a great President and Barack Obama is a dud. He’s our President for the next four years and did I hear someone say “God help us?” Oh yes, I did. It was me.
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If you wish to comment on “Jerry’s Ink” email Jerry at jerry@dfjp.com news
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PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT A QUICK MESSAGE FROM YOUR FRIENDS IN THE BUSINESS www.alure.com Dear Fellow Long Islanders, Hopefully, you and your loved ones have safely weathered Hurricane Sandy. Unfortunately, Long Island did get hit pretty hard and many homes suffered significant damages, with most homeowners still without power. Over the next several weeks, as we experienced after Hurricane Irene last year, Long Island will undoubtedly see a number of “storm chasing” companies from around the country, make their way to Long Island, where they will set up shop, and look to generate some quick business. Some, while not all, will take advantage of homeowner’s desperation and will prey on those most vulnerable. I just wanted to take this opportunity to advise everyone to be careful when selecting a company for any such repairs to damage you may have experienced to your home. Many of these companies will be in and out, and in some cases, may not be around or accessible 3 months down the road in the event service is needed. Whoever you choose to work on your home, whether it be Alure or one of the many other reputable contractors on Long Island, please make sure to do your due diligence. We encourage you to think KIOLI (Keep It On Long Island), but more importantly, we encourage you to be careful, and select a company that you can count on to be there for you when you need it, whether 2 months or 2 years down the road, and preferably, one that has an established presence on Long Island, and whose references you can check out. We have posted some tips and resources on our Alure blog and invite you view them or contact us for any help or advice in this challenging time. Additionally, we’ll have emergency phone coverage in the event you need us. Please don’t hesitate to reach out to us for any of your needs, or for advice, whether for you, your neighbors, family and more.
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If you have not heard, Governor Cuomo New York State consumers will not be required to meet hurricane deductibles when seeking reimbursement for damages from superstorm Sandy.
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BIGGEST DANGERS
1. Downed wires. - STAY AWAY! - Notify authorities as necessary. Even touching a tree that is exposed to downed wires is dangerous. The same goes for standing in water that is near a downed wire. Use extreme caution 2. Use common sense when handling broken glass, sharp metal, splintered wood and even for removal of wet materials from basements. Use gloves and other protective clothing whenever possible. 3. Use caution when inspecting broken limbs hanging from trees and or areas of a home or building damaged by a storm. Unless inspected for structural integrity, “WHEN IN DOUBT, STAY OUT”.
See of full list of post hurricane tips & reminders at www.alure.com
KITCHENS ▪ BATHS ▪ BASEMENTS ▪ SUNROOMS ▪ SIDING ▪ ROOFING ▪ WINDOWS ▪ HANDYMAN SERVICES ▪ INSULATION ▪ MODULAR CONSTRUCTION news
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Cover Story
Long Island Endures Residents Struggle to Recover By The Long Island Press News Staff
Editor’s Note: The numbers are staggering. The reality is heartbreaking. Nearly 200 people throughout the Caribbean and Northeast are dead due to the destructive superstorm that was Hurricane Sandy, and the death toll for related tragedies continues to climb. More than 8.5 million homes and businesses lost power across the East Coast due to Sandy’s wrath— including more than 1 million Long Island Power Authority customers. As of the publication of this week’s issue—in which the Press’ staff twice had to evacuate and relocate to complete; for Sandy and the Nor’easter Nov. 7—there remains nearly 200,000 LIPA customers across Nassau and Suffolk still in the dark, excluding the hardest hit areas of Long Beach, Fire Island and the Rockaways. There are countless stories of misery and destruction, sadness and hope that have yet to be told about the lives forever altered due to Sandy’s catastrophic wrath. We at the Press have been dong our best to bring you the most pertinent and useful information, along with up-to-theminute resources to help you get through it all, via our website www.LongIslandPress.com and Facebook profile www.Facebook.com/LongIslandPress. We will continue to do so. Here are but a few more tales of endurance:
Lance Walker
stands on his front lawn alongside the contents of his Lindenhurst home and weeps. The ocean, he says, rose several feet high, inundating his house, engulfing his car and swallowing his entire neighborhood. Lashing winds whipped ferociously atop the sea, conjuring a wall of water that slammed his shoreline community with the speed of a freight train, uprooting trees, shredding power lines, pummeling homes and businesses and turning boats into missiles that hit structures with the terrific force of floating wrecking balls. Tears roll down the 48-year-old’s face like empty thunder as he recalls the horrors of being trapped with his wife and four children in their modest ranch as the heavens decimated everything they and their neighbors have ever known. His oldest daughter Ashley wraps her arms around him between gasps. “After the wind blew the back doors open, the water came in and it was sort of like whitecaps,” he tells the Press. “It was sort of like a little tidal wave. “It came in and it went out,” he says with a laugh, as if in disbelief. “It did its damage and it left and that was it.” “We grabbed all we could, but all of our pictures
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Photos by Christopher TwarowskiI
Nearly every street in the village of Lindenhurst resembles his, cluttered with water-logged couches The full cost of the devastation that Superstorm Sandy and furniture, demolished appliances, cabinets, sparked across Long Island and the Northeast has yet upholstery, wooden panels and countless other to be tabulated, but here are some of the figures and estimates available as of press time. debris, remnants of lives once intact, now razed to shambles. and everything were under the beds and they It’s as if someone detonated an atomic bomb evacuated everybody,” continues Walker. “We were on the banks of the Great South Bay yet somehow rushing to get out of here, the humvees, the military devised a way to spare most of the target’s inhabitwas here, ‘You gotta leave, you gotta leave!’ So we ants for further torture. As if the weather was a cruel forgot the pictures—15 years of pictures. But we sadist. As if the sky harbored an inhuman vengeance. brought them over to my mother-in-law’s house and Photographs of family members lie amid we washed them and spread them out all over the floor wreckage. Boats hang upside-down from bulkheads and tried to dry them up. But all our or strewn atop one another against home videos—it’s saltwater—and all houses. A few blocks away from of our birth certificates, everything: what’s left of Walker’s gutted home, the car, my shed, all my tools in the the roof to someone else’s house back are done. sits on the side of the road beside The early estimate of how much “There’s really nothing left,” damage and business losses, a mangled Christmas wreath— he adds, wiping away tears. “We second to Katrina. stripped from another several did what would could,” he said, his hundred yards away like the popped voice cracking. “I guess we didn’t do enough.” cap of a soda bottle and tossed through the air like a Walker is not alone, but just one of countless gigantic Frisbee. survivors across the South Shore of Long Island Walker’s is a shared misery, a communal whose homes, businesses, livelihoods and automo- suffering. Some residents’ homes were completely biles were absolutely annihilated when Hurricane gobbled up by the sea, erased. Nearly 200 lives Sandy’s outer bands pounded the tri-state area Oct. throughout the Caribbean, mid-Atlantic and 29 with a storm surge yards high and wind gusts of Northeast were claimed by the storm, including at up to 96 mph. least five on Long Island.
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Those souls aren’t lost on Walker. Amid his Alexandra Pagano and Ken The latter was undoubtedly shattered world, he remains grateful. Byrnes only made it a few blocks one of the hardest hit, if there is “I ended up with maybe five feet of water,” he such a thing as varying degrees south on Fire Island Avenue on says. “But we’re all alive.” Tuesday, Oct. 30, before they of complete devastation. The number of homes and businesses Besides the rebuild-able property destroyed and needed a boat. Hurricane Sandy took out that lost power across the East Coast, irreplaceable life taken, now, more than a week since its water service and sewage Hurricane Sandy had including more than 1 million of LIPA’s 1.1 million customers. Superstorm Sandy’s fury, a new reality has emerged— treatment plant—meaning by moved the ocean just shy of one that’s not likely to be pass any time soon. It’s a mid-storm, people could no Montauk Highway, about a world of never-ending gasoline lines longer flush their toilets or drink dozen blocks north of Pagano’s parents’ house on hundreds of vehicles deep wrapped the water. The storm folded and dis- Bayview Avenue. around empty fuel stations. A world She and her 2-year-old daughter heeded town mantled its famous boardwalk like of no heat or electricity during frigid a shredded accordion, the beach officials’ mandatory evacuation orders the Sunday temperatures. A world of anxiety, now smothering much of Broadway, before the megastorm struck; her elderly father The estimated number of paranoia, depression and frustration. burying vehicles like a snowdrift. didn’t. Pagano said he was stuck on the second floor, homes and businesses destroyed on LI and in the Looters and National Guard troops. Residents complain of looters and the and she and Byrnes were trying to get to him. Rockaways. Police and thieves. “I can’t get back,” she said, asking a Press sound of gunshots at nighttime. The But there’s also a flipside to the National Guard checks visitors’ IDs to reporter if the rowboat tied to a nearby tree was his. chaos and disorder. ensure they actually live there before they’re granted (It wasn’t.) “My house is going to be a disaster.” Because while Sandy has turned many commu- access. It resembles a war zone. Byrnes’ home was no better, maybe worse, he nities into wasteland, it cannot snuff out the light of Ditto for other sections of Western Nassau, such said—he lived in Long Beach. the human spirit. “I lost everything,” he said, motioning with his as Oceanside, Island Park, Atlantic Beach and the Families are helping families. Neighbors are helping neighbors. Strangers are helping strangers. As Walker relives the horror that nearly wiped out his entire family, several hundred people gathered just around the corner at Shore Road Park to barbeque donated food, distribute boxes of nonperishables, hand out clothes. Couples walk doorto-door passing out McDonald’s hamburgers and water. A local radio station sets up speakers and —lindenhurst resident lance walker, whose home and car were destroyed by hurricane sandy blasts music. more than 550,000 residents and business owners hands just below his neck to show the height the How many New serviced by Nassau’s historically troubled Bay Park water reached at his place. “Four feet.” Yorkers that may need His father didn’t leave, either. Sewage Treatment Plant. long-term housing After several moments weighing their options, Whether the storm delivered the deathblow to assistance. the plant or it died due to myriad complications Pagano, 23, and Byrnes, 25, splashed their hiking caused by its decades-long mismanagement, lack of boots into the shin-high water and trudged south, maintenance and officials’ willful machinations—or joining a steady stream of residents also returning Lindenhurst, too, was not an anomaly in the a combination of all—the public may never truly home or seeking loved ones who stayed behind. degree of ruin Hurricane Sandy rained down upon know, though it doesn’t take an electrical engineer In his chest-high camouflage fly fishing waders, her and her residents. to understand that if you neglect even one critical Kurt Verdillo instead headed north. The Frankenstorm, as it was called by meteo- process in such an multi-faceted facility for even “It’s catastrophic down there,” he said. rologists, since it took the freakish conThe 51-year-old, who works at Great Bay a few days you compromise its entire vergence of three separate weather systems stability, since each are interconnected and Marine off the end of Fire Island Avenue and has to create such a mutant, pummeled a means to the same end: treated sewage lived in the neighborhood for 30 years, tells the Press villages and towns and cities all across the he’d “never” seen flooding this bad before. He shared and wastewater. Northeast as it lurched from Florida up At the least what Hurricane Sandy some photos he took to prove it. The last year toward Pennsylvania, Vermont and even“The boats are stacked up like Jenga,” he said. showed Nassau is that you can’t play the New York tually Canada, where it met its own slow politics with the public’s health and safety “One yard has 40, 50 boats that just floated and fell Stock Exchange demise. when your relying on aging, neglected and over.” had a two-day New Jersey. Connecticut. The New “The water level inside my shop was up to fourabused infrastructures. weather York City subway system was force-fed Right now, more than 75 million and-a-half feet,” he continued, as a man paddled a closure. hundreds of millions of gallons of the East gallons of barely treated sewage a day is canoe near the corner of Sumpwams Avenue behind River and Lower Manhattan was beneath several feet being diverted into Rockaway Channel. People catch him. Another man towed a cooler atop an inflatable of seawater. The Long Island Rail Road was shuttered and eat fish out of these waters. The Press wonders if raft and turned down the block. for days. “Just trudge on,” said Verdillo, they’ve even been warned. If history’s a teacher, the U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer compared parts of answer is no. slopping through the water. NYC in the days after the superstorm’s raid to what The Island is full of stories Parts of Babylon were other casualties of Sandy’s. was left of London and Dresden after their firebombsimilar to Walker Pagano and How many ing during World War II. Byrnes’—and as nearly everyone people were Breezy Point, Queens looked like a hellscape on Long Island and Eastern killed in the US during the after about 100 homes were lost in a mid-storm Non-Emergencies Requiring Police Response in Suffolk: Queens knows all too well by storm, including inferno. The ocean breached Fire Island twice and 631-852-COPS now, residents didn’t have to live at least 47 in a third time at Westhampton’s Cupsogue County Non-Emergencies Requireing Police Response in Nassau: adjacent to the sea to be dramatiNew York and 5 cally effected. Park, which was nearly washed 1-888-684-4274 on Long Island. into Moriches Bay. Much of the New York State Hurricane Sandy Helpline: 1-888-769-724 FEMA: Disaster Assistance: 800-621-3362 dunes have been decimated on Sheltering/Meals Salvation Army: 1-800-SAL-ARMY, the barrier islands, giving a clear The Red Cross: 1-800-RED-CROSS The shortage of gasoline to fuel generators and run view of the Atlantic from Ocean To Report The peak wind vehicles remains a hellish nightmare as of press time. Parkway. The Jones Beach theater Electricity Outages to LIPA: 800-490-0075; LIAccount. Text OUT to 695472 gust in the Lines of automobiles, some more than 200 deep, was submerged and the boardwalk com/Outage; Gas Leaks to National Grid: 800-490-0045 tri-state area continue to wrap around blocks and neighborhoods, destroyed, same as in the City of Price Gouging/Scams: Attorney General’s Consumer recorded in snake along side streets and jam main thoroughfares. Long Beach. Helpline at 800-771-7755 or www.ag.ny.gov. Eaton’s Neck.
8.5 Million
100,000
“It was sort of like a little tidal wave.
It came in and it went out. It did its damage
and it left and that was it.”
40,000
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How many years its been since the Police continue to stand guard to keep Long Island Express of 1938, the the peace, protect the fuel, and as in one last “storm of the century” to cause situation a Press reporter discovered last as much devastation on LI. Saturday while waiting in a walk-up line hundreds of people thick—remind people not to smoke while MULTIPLE LOCATIONS: AT&T Stores (regardon line. less of carrier) There’ve been flare-ups MULTIPLE LOCATIONS: King Kullen Stores on the lives, as frustration MULTIPLE LOCATIONS: Best Buy Stores boils over and patience wears Babylon: Looney Tunes CDs, 31 Brookvale How many Ave. thin. A man was arrested at states Sandy Babylon: Monsoon, 48 Deer Park Ave. a gas station in Queens for affected Bay Shore: Home Depot, 1881 Sunrise Hwy. trying to cut a gas line and from Florida Bayport: Main Street and Snedecor Ave. pulling a gun on those who to Maine and 1:30 p.m.-2:30 p.m. Michigan. protested. A Suffolk teen Bellport: Porters on the Lane, 19 Bellport Lane. allegedly brandished a knife Bethpage: Town of Oyster Bay Ice Skating at a gas attendant at another Center stop. People are now coming Centereach: New Village Recreation Center, 20 Wireless Rd. to fill up armed. East Islip: Beachtree, 166 W. Main St. Farmingdale: Wal-Mart, Route 110. A Press reporter Farmingville: Brookhaven Town Hall, Independence Hill. witnessed one man filling Garden City: Garden City Library, 60 Seventh St. up with a billy club proGlen Cove: Stango’s Restaurant, 19 Grove St. truding from his pocket and Gordon Heights: St. Michael’s Recreation Center, Wilson Ave. another who admitted that Hauppauge: H. Lee Dennison Bldg., Media Center, 1st Floor, 100 Veterans Memorial Hwy. he’d brought two knives Huntington: Town Hall, Route 114. with him on a visit. Huntington: Prime, 117 New York Ave. Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s Huntington: The Paramount, Main Street. attempts to get more gas Islip: Tellers, 605 Main St. Islip: Verace, 599 Main St. flowing has been only partly Kings Park: DunkinDonuts, Pulaski Road. successful. Levittown: Levittown Library, 1 Bluegrass Lane. There are gas stations Lindenhurst: Babylon Town Hall, 200 East Sunrise Hwy. still without power that Lynbrook: Wendy’s, 580 Merrick Rd. have fuel and many with Manhasset: Buttercooky Bakery, 140 Plandome Rd. Massapequa: LI Progressive Coalition, 90 Pennsylpower that are empty. vania Rd. Part of the problem Massapequa: Oyster Bay Town Hall South, 977 stems from the closing Hicksville Rd. of New York Harbor, Massapequa Park: Chiefs Deli, 5089 Merrick Rd. Mastic: Recreation Center, 15 Herkimer St. a crucial port for fuel, The number Mineola: Nassau County Comptroller George during the storm. of people Maragos Office; Mon.-Fri., 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 240 Old Lately, even if they do arrested for Country Rd., Mineola, Second floor. get additional supplies post-Sandy New Hyde Park: Michael J. Tully Park. 1801 looting in they’re quickly tapped Evergreen Ave. NYC and New Hyde Park: K. Pach, 1270 Union Turnpike out again, as anticipaon LI. North Babylon: Babylon Town Hall Annex: 281 tion lines—rows of Phelps Lane. vehicles hundreds long Northport: Copenhagen Bakery, 75 Woodbine Ave. inhabited by gas-seekers Oakdale: Oakdale LIRR Station, Oakdale Bohemia Road & Main Street. 2:30-3:30 p.m. who either sleep in their Oyster Bay: Office Building, 34 Audrey Ave. cars or park them in front Riverhead: County Center-Lobby, 210 Center Dr. of pumps and stations and Rockville Centre: Hair Machine Salon, 40 S. Park Ave. leave them until there’s Sayville: Main Street & Railroad Avenue, 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. word that it’s open again. Sayville: Sayville Library, Shoreham: Robert E. Reid, Sr. Recreation Center, Defense Hill Many can be seen & Route 25A on line literally pushing Smithtown: H2O, 215 W. Main St. their vehicles to the pump Syosset: Shine Dental, Jericho Turnpike. because they have no fuel Syosset: Oyster Bay Town Hall North, Audrey Avenue Valley Stream: Valley Stream Library, 60 Verona Pl. left to leave the lines even if West Islip: Atlantic Nissan, 193 Sunrise Hwy. they wanted to. Yaphank: Bldg. C14, 360 Yaphank Ave. As Cuomo and Schumer continue their was being made to ease the crusade to break loose flow, the shortage would more gas, another issue continue to be an issue for “a has arisen—hoarding. number of days.” Many gas stations have The record-breaking storm “Now is not the time to posted signs warning of surge in lower Manhattan. be using the car if you don’t rationed limits each person need to,” he said. “Now is can take—yet there’s no enforcement, so once at the pump people not the time to be hoarding fuel.” The governor has also not held his take as much as they can. This wipes out the new fuel almost as fast as it’s delivered. tongue about the slow, confusing and The governor warned against fuel infuriating response of the state’s utilities, stockpiling at a post-Hurricane Sandy including the Long Island Power Authority, update Nov. 4, adding that while progress telling reporters at a recent post-storm
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The water-logged contents of Lance Walker’s home lie in heaps along Shore Road in Lindenhurst. The father of four says his insurance company AllState will not even return his phone calls.
The roof of a home decapitated by Hurricane Sandy sits among the wreckage that now defines Venetian Boulevard in Lindenhurst, a onceidyllic waterfront neighborhood on the South Shore.
16
Continued on page 51
Lindenhurst residents left a warning for looters who have been ransacking the decimated homes in the neighborhood.
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A boat hangs impaled on a bulkhead in Lindenhurst. Hurricane Sandy transformed boats along the South Shore into missiles, firing them into homes and causing added wreckage. news
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update: “To say that I am angry, to say that I am frustrated, disappointed, would be the understatement of the decade.” Desperation has set in. Regarding the lack of power, residents in Farmingdale, for instance, besieged their village hall when LIPA only restored half their apartment complex. Regarding the gas squeeze, people have now resorted to lugging whatever container, water jug, bucket or bottle they can find to fill up. Such is the case at nearly every gas station that offers a walk-up. Haim Benbenichti, of Westbury, sat in his car along Old Country Road in Hicksville just before midnight Nov. 2 outside a Hess gas station where hundreds of people converged the night before seeking gas, both by car and by foot. The 62-year-old had been waiting in line since 11 a.m., he said, and would be there, he said, “Until they’re going to come.” A partially eaten pan of French fries sat beside him, which he had delivered to his car from a nearby pizzeria. The plummeting temperatures, which have been hovering in the low 30s and upper 20s throughout the past week, were on his mind. “It’s getting cold and it’s going to be colder,” he said. Besides fuel, however, one source of warmth for the countless who have been rendered homeless by the storm has been delivered through the caring hearts of others. Complete strangers. Fellow Long Islanders. To witness some of the truly random acts of pure kindness in such ravaged tragedy has brought more than one Press reporter to tears themselves.
Ray “The Plumber” and Melissa Suter organized a BBQ in Lindenhurst’s Shore Road Park Nov. 4.
Entenmann’s Bakery donated piles of freshly baked goods for Lindenhurst residents at the Nov. 4 drive.
COME TOGETHER
At the park around the corner from Walker’s gutted home, smoke billows through the chilly afternoon air. There are high-pitched squeals. Shouting. The scene is not one of disaster, however, but rather recovery, life. There are congregants from a local church. There are members of volunteer fire departments, the Bethpage Water District. There are people from all ages and stages of life. And they have come here to pitch in. Ray “The Plumber,” who runs an East Islip business of the same name but who refused to be interviewed for this story because he wasn’t interested in the publicity, delivered 1,000 hotdogs and 1,000 hamburgers, among other foodstuffs via his fleet of trucks, and for the first time in awhile for many, these residents are eating hot food. An army of volunteers work the grill, tell stories and do what they can to conjure a smile. Island Harvest parks its truck in front of the park and delivers free meals. There’s a pile of boxes filled with non-perishables.
Volunteers grilled hotdogs and hamburgers donated by Ray “The Plumber,” serving hot food to hundreds of hungry residents still suffering from Hurricane Sandy’s wrath.
Ray “The Plumber” donated his fleet of trucks to the cause, transporting more volunteers, food and much-needed supplies. news
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Entenmann’s Bakery has stocked a table off the sidewalk with unopened, freshly baked goods. There’s a pile of clothing that other Long Islanders have donated. Down the block, away from the hubbub, Dyana and Tom Grix of North Babylon walk door-to-door handing out McDonald’s hamburgers and water. The day before, they drove around with their 8-year-old son Kevin and a 60-cup urn’s worth of steaming coffee, delivering hot java to lips starved for warmth. After several prods from a Press reporter for an answer as to why they’ve been out there, walking up to strangers, spending their own gas and money during a time when both are so scarce, the couple finally relented. “Seeing the news and seeing local families close to us have nothing,” said Tom, 40. “Pictures on the news don’t really tell you the story. You don’t get the feeling that you get when you’re down there.” “There aren’t any words to describe it,” says Dyana, 39. “We made friends down there, so out of all this misery, some good came out of it,” Tom adds. New friends, such as Lance Walker. “We got good people, like these people bringing us coffee in the morning, which is really great, cause it’s cold in there,” he smiles. “And now you’ve got all these people handing out food, dry clothes. “The first day, it seemed like it was never going to end,” he continues. “And now, everyday it does seem like there is an end to it. “[But] I don’t know where it is.” The Press News Staff consists of: Lindsay Christ, Timothy Bolger, Rashed Mian, Spencer Rumsey and Christopher Twarowski
3 2 1 How many people were arrested for pulling a knife or gun in NY’s ensuing gas lines.
How many people were arrested for pulling a knife or gun in NY’s ensuing gas lines.
The category of hurricane Sandy was with 96 mph sustained winds.
Hurricane Sandy The Long Island Press has been providing nonstop coverage of Hurricane Sandy and its devastating aftermath, turning the paper’s website and Facebook page into an up-to-the-minute, one-stop resource for a region still reeling. Visit www.LongIslandPress.com and www.Facebook.com/LongIslandPress for the latest updates, photos, video and important contact information to help with Long Island’s recovery.
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Program This Week: Best Public Service Story – First Place Race Relations
this does not mean that race is no longer
More than 50 percent of Bellport
That race is an issue in Bellport High School is not something that can be debated. Due to an extremely diverse community, the high school has always been a very mixed setting. For many years, especially during the racial riots of 1972-73, tensions between students of different races were incredibly high. Often, full-scale fights that involved the police occurred, and school was in no way a safe place to learn. It was only through the hard work of enterprising students and teachers that the school was brought closer together and the racial divides somewhat bridged. In recent times, racial tensions have been much more subdued. However.,
an editorial about race that prompted an incendiary response from all sides of the issue, and set the school afire. With the threat of rioting, violence, and total disorder in the school, three teachers (Ms. Hoffman, Mr. Budris, and Mr. White) led the charge to fix race relations by creating a forum for student discussion. An assembly led by a multiracial panel of students was held in the auditorium, which many students attended. After more than an hour of discussion, students left satisfied, enlightened and relieved. Underlying issues that had been simmering just below the surface had finally been addressed in an open forum and, when they where, the school healed.
pretend to ignore. Rather than treating race as the elephant in the room— always ignored and tuned out to avoid uncomfortable situations—we should discuss it, like the important topic of contention it is. By confronting the issue at hand, we change the most important problem we have regarding race: a lack of dialogue. Dialogue may seem a simple facet of the problem to focus on, but it is truly the crux of the matter. No one doubts that individual students can and do bridge the racial divide every day. However, this does not happen with all students simply because
an issue. High School’s population is made up of By Daniel Garisto In 2005, The Clipper published “minorities.” Race is not an issue we can The Clipper, Bellport High School
there is a gap, one that we cannot afford to brush over and disregard. There are serious issues under that bridge. The water under the bridge is not full of sharks, but socio-economic discrepancies, cultural differences, and other factors that must be addressed. Taking a plunge into those deep and serious issues is not something that will be easy, or an endeavor that should be taken blindly. Establishing a forum where there can be an honest and respectful conversation will not be painless. But it can be done, and is done in thousands of schools across the nation. We, too, can take this step forward and bring race to the table. It is 2012. That does not mean race is gone, but it does mean that we can and should discuss it frankly and openly to learn and grow.
Read This and other students’ Stories at highschool.longislandpress.com
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Long Island Press Arts, Entertainment & Nightlife
Events
Thursday p.55
Friday p.55
saturday p.56
sunday p.56
Week of November 8 - November 15, 2012
monday p.58
tuesday p.58
wednesday p.58
thursday p.58
Venue Info p.58
Do This Event Listings MADONNA plays Madison Square Garden on Monday, 11.12 & Tuesday, 11.13.
THURSDAY 11.8 The Fresh & Onlys @ Music Hall of Williamsburg The Rezillos @ Revolution The Outlaws @ B.B. King Blues Club Disney on Ice: Rockin’ Ever After @ Nassau Coliseum, Through 11.11. NY Comedy Fest @ Union Hall Live in the Lobby: The Corduroy Sky w/Robert Bruey @ Patchogue Theatre
STRONG ISLAND HURRICANE RELIEF CONCERT
For the past week, The Paramount has kept its doors open for residents affected by Hurricane Sandy to come in, charge up their devices, get warm—and even watch the football game. Now, the theater hosts The Script and other special guests who will perform to raise money for Long Island. Thursday, 11.8. –Jaclyn Gallucci
Hurricane Sandy Skate Fundraiser The New York Islanders are holding a special event to
help raise funds for area residents affected by Hurricane Sandy. On Monday, 11.12, from 2–8 p.m., the team will host a free, open skate at Nassau Coliseum for the public. Throughout the event, the team will collect monetary donations, warm clothing and other nonperishable items. Donations are not mandatory to attend, but highly encouraged. Public skating sessions will run every hour throughout the six-hour event on the Coliseum ice and will feature Islanders Ice Girls and team mascot Sparky, the Dragon. –Kate Kincaid
Venue addresses and information can be found on P. 58
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JUSTIN BIEBER
The teen heartthrob who went from YouTube sensation to teen idol practically overnight comes to Brooklyn’s newest venue, the Barclays Center, bringing Bieber Fever to the masses for one night only on Monday, 11.12. Ladies with seats on the floor, get your helmets ready. –Daphne Livingston
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Fountains of Wayne w/Robert Schwartzman @ The Bell House Fountains of Wayne, while formed in New York in 1996, took its name from a garden store in Wayne, NJ. Two Grammy nominations, including a nod for Best new Artist after their song “Stacy’s Mom” became iTunes’ most downloaded song in 2003, and five albums later, the band’s long-awaited album, Sky Full of Holes, was released in 2011 via Yep Roc Records, the band’s first release on the indie label. Recorded in New York City, Sky Full of Holes features 13 new songs by Chris Collingwood and Adam Schlesinger, ranging from highenergy power pop to
intimate, acousticdriven ballads. The band takes the stage with Robert Schwartzman from Rooney at The Bell House in Brooklyn Thursday, 11.8. —KK
Friday 11.9 $3 For All Friday @ Nutty Irishman Bay Shore Ali Wong @ Santos Party House National Circus of China @ Tilles Center Jay Mohr @ Governor’s Comedy Big Shot/Free Buffet Friday @ Mulcahy’s NY Comedy Fest: Aziz Ansarai @ Apollo Theater NY Comedy Fest: Brian Regan @ Beacon Theatre Corey Rodrigues @ Brokerage Comedy NY Comedy Fest: Patton Oswalt @ Town Hall Six Feet Under @ Revolution Chris Robinson Brotherhood @ Irving Plaza Bang the Buds @ Nutty Irishman Farmingdale Dredg @ Bowery Continued on page 56
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Do This Continued from page 55 /////////////////////
Sunday Cont. Ballroom
Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center
Tuck & Patti @ YMCA Boulton Center Tame Impala @ Webster Hall
NYCORTACA 2012 Jug Event @ Brooklyn Bowl Donka @ Staller Center
Jimmy Shubert @ Brokerage Comedy
Sunday 11.11 John Tartaglia’s Imaginocean @ NYCB Theatre at Westbury
Saturday 11.10 Hurricane Sandy Relief Benefit Concert @ BACCA Arts Center
Black Prairie @ Mercury Lounge
Megadeth @ The Paramount
Leslie Uggams @ Tilles Center
Jax/Rubytown @ Vibe Lounge
Tim Krompier @ McGuire’s Comedy
Sammy Adams @ Roseland Ballroom
NY Funk Exchange @ Stephen Talkhouse
The Cataracs w/ the Melka Project & Maluca @ Highline Ballroom
Led Zeppelin Experience: Hammer of the Gods @ Patchogue Theatre
NY Comedy Fest: Adam Carolla @ Town Hall NY Comedy Fest: Jim Gaffigan @ Apollo Theater
Jay Black & Bill Medley @ NYCB Theatre at Westbury
Comedy Series @ The Paramount
Saturday Night Dance Party @ Nutty Irishman Bay Shore
En Vogue @ NYCB Theatre at Westbury
Red Fang @ Bowery Ballroom
NY Comedy Fest: Party MacHine @ Union Hall
The Wallflowers @ The Paramount
Soundsource @ Stephen Talkhouse Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Experience @ NYCB Theatre at Westbury Mint Condition @ B.B. King Blues Club & Grill
Mim0sa & Curren$y @ Best Buy Theater Tinsley Ellis @ YMCA Boulton Center Girls & Boys @ Webster Hall Patty Griffin @
NY Comedy Fest: Kevin Hart @ Madison Square Garden Rick Emmett (Triumph) @ B.B. King Blues Club Leslie Uggams @ Tilles Center
That 70’s Band @ Revolution
Russell Peters @ Barclays Center The Tragically Hip @ Terminal 5 The Vansaders @ Mercury Lounge
Red Fang Performance & Signing @ Looney Tunes Tinderbox Music Festival @ Webster Hall Bryan Stars @ Vibe Lounge
Chris Isaak @ Beacon Theatre Robeson @ Staller Center Robert Randolph & The Family Band @ YMCA Boulton Center West Side Story @ Tilles Center Guitar Mash @ City Winery Tom Hand Benefit feat. Wiggle Boy @ Stephen Talkhouse Viasava @ Revolution Converge/ Kvelertak/Torche @ Highline Ballroom Ralph Stanley & His Clinch Mt. Boys @ City Winery
EDITORIAL CARTOONS
Hofstra University Museum presents Political Slant, an ongoing exhibit of editorial cartoons focusing on presidential elections, education, the economy, war and civil rights. The work of five well-known political cartoonists from around the country (three of whom are Pulitzer Prize winners) will be featured.The exhibit also includes late 19th century works by Thomas Nast, illustrating the history of editorial cartoons. Through 12.21. –Jaclyn Gallucci
Justin Townes Earl @ Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center The Asteroids Galaxy Tour @ Music Hall of Williamsburg Victor Wooten & Continued on page 58
TAKING BACK SUNDAY The Long Island alternative rock band is returning to the
Paramount in Huntington on Wednesday, 11.21 to kickoff the Thanksgiving holiday with their new TAYF (Tell All Your Friends) 2012 Tour. Once again, TBS and the Paramount are teaming up to support Long Island Cares, Inc.-The Harry Chapin Food Bank by hosting a food drive and asking everyone coming to the concert to bring a donation of a nonperishable food item to help feed the hungry on Long Island. Long Island Cares will also be hosting a special drawing at the concert for a lucky fan to win a custom-framed drum head signed by each of the members of Taking Back Sunday as part of their “Beat An End to Hunger” campaign. Stop by the information table in the lobby for more information. “We’re very happy to be partnering with Taking Back Sunday and the Paramount once again,” said Paule Pachter, Long Island Cares Executive Director. “Last year, many of Taking Back Sunday’s fans brought donations of food to the Paramount and the evening was very successfull all around. –Daphne Livingston Venue addresses and information can be found on P. 58
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Do This Continued from page 56 /////////////////////
Jimmy Herring @ B.B. King Blues Club & Grill Monday 11.12 Newt & Callista Gingrich @ Book Revue Revocation @ Webster Hall
Chamberlin @ Mercury Lounge Joe Purdy @ City Winery Honor Society @ Bowery Ballroom
Rome @ Gramercy Theatre Jimi Hendrix 70th Birthday Celebration w/Living Colour @ City Winery Ask Me Another @ The Bell House Death Grips @ Music Hall of Williamsburg Pinback @ Irving Plaza My Jerusalem @ Mercury Lounge Tuesday
Great South Bay Dinner @ Nutty Irishman Farmingdale
11.13
Beacon Theatre Murs @ Santos Party House Rumer @ Highline Ballroom Cave @ Mercury Lounge Wednesday 11.14 Ricki Lee Jones @ The Concert Hall Ultimate Disco Nights Dance Party @ Revolution
Soundgarden @ Irving Plaza
Trivia Night @ Nutty Irishman Farmingdale
Open Mic Night/$3 Pints @ Nutty Irishman Bay Shore
Kathy Arnold @ Brokerage Comedy
Dom Kennedy @ Gramercy Theatre
So You Think You Can Dance @ Beacon Theatre
Paul Banks @ Webster Hall
The Sword @ Webster Hall
Anberlin/Morning Parade @ Webster Hall
The Who @ Barclays Center
So You Think You Can Dance @
Dan Deacon @ Music Hall of Williamsburg
Where it’s At Do This Venue Information BACCA—149 N. Wellwood Ave., Lindenhurst. BabylonArts.com B.B. King Blues Club—237 W. 42nd St., Manhattan. BBKingBlues.com Barclays Center—620 Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn. BarclaysCenter.com Beacon Theatre—2124 Broadway, Manhattan. BeaconTheatre.com Bell House—149 7th St., Brooklyn. TheBellHouseNY.com Best Buy Theater—1515 Broadway, Manhattan. BestBuyTheater.com Big Z Beverage—1675 Jericho Tpke., Huntington Book Revue—313 New York Ave., Huntington. BookRevue.com BookHampton—41 Main St., East Hampton; 93 Main St., Southampton; 50 Love Lane, Mattituck. BookHampton.com Boss Croker’s—1871 Wantagh Ave., Wantagh Bowery Ballroom—6 Delancey St., Manhattan. BoweryBallroom.com Broadway Mall—358 Broadway Mall, Hicksville Brokerage—2797 Merrick Rd., Bellmore. BrokerageComedy.com Brooklyn Bowl—61 Wythe Ave., Brooklyn. BrooklynBowl.com Chateau La Mer—845 S. Wellwood Ave., Lindenhurst City Winery—155 Varick St., Manhattan. CityWinery. The Concert Hall—2 W. 64th St., Manhattan. NYSEC.org De Seversky Mansion—
S C Isl O Land UMN Press S F for E AT U november RES F O8O- Dnovember A & E 14, 2012 C L A S S| I F w I EwDw. lo n gW i sW l aWn.dL pOrNeGs IsS. cLoAm N D P R E SnSe. w C Os M 58 N E WLong
Northern Boulevard, Old Mr. Beery’s—4019 Westbury Hempstead Tpke., Bethpage. MrBeerys.com Dix Hills PAC—305 N. Service Rd., Dix Hills. Music Hall of WilliamsDHPAC.org burg—66 N. 6th St., Brooklyn Emporium—9 Railroad Ave., Patchogue. TheEm- Napper Tandy’s—275 poriumNY.com Route 25A, Miller Place FotoFoto—14 W. Carver Nassau Coliseum—1255 St., Huntington. FotoFoto- Hempstead Tpke., UnionGallery.com dale. NassauColiseum. com Governor’s—90 Division Ave, Levittown. Govs.com Nassau County Museum of Art—1 Museum Dr., Gramercy Theatre—127 Roslyn Harbor. NassauE. 23rd St., Manhattan. Museum.com TheGramercyTheatre. com NCC Little Theatre—Education Drive, Garden City Harbor Crab, Co.— 116 Division St., Patchogue Nutty Irishman—60 E. Main St., Bay Shore Highline Ballroom—431 W. 16th St., Manhattan NY Public Library for Performing Arts— 40 Irving Plaza—17 Irving Lincoln Center Plaza, Pl., Manhattan. IrvingManhattan Plaza.com NYCB Theatre at WestJoe’s Pub—425 Lafayette bury—960 Brush Hollow St., Manhattan. JoesPub. Rd., Westbury. TheThcom eatreAtWestbury.com John W. Engeman The- Old Westbury Garater at Northport—250 dens—71 Old Westbury Main St., Northport. Rd., Old Westbury. OldJohnWEngemanTheater. WestburyGardens.org com Paramount—370 New Knitting Factory—361 York Ave., Huntington. Metropolitan Ave., ParamountNY.com Brooklyn Patchogue Theatre—71 Landmark on Main East Main St., PaStreet—232 Main St. tchogue. 631-207-1300. Port Washington. Land- PatchogueTheatre.com markOnMainStreet.org Patchogue Y—255 W. Madison Square GarMain St., Patchogue den—4 Penn Plaza, Manhattan. TheGarden.com Revolution—140 Merrick Rd., Amityville. RevoluMcFadden’s—210 Mer- tionLI.com rick Rd., Rockville Centre. McFaddensRVC.com Ripe Art Gallery—67 Broadway, Greenlawn. McGuire’s—1627 Smith- RipeArtGal.com town Ave., Bohemia. McGuiresComedyShows. Roseland Ballcom room—239 W. 52nd St., Manhattan. RoselandMercury Lounge—217 E. Ballroom.com Houston St., Manhattan. MercuryLoungeNYC.com RXR Plaza—Hempstead Turnpike, Uniondale
Sum 41 @ Irving Plaza Uriah Heep @ B.B. King Blues Club & Grill Andy Grammer @ The Paramount Yellow Ostrich @ Bowery Ballroom THURSDAY 11.15 Kreayshawn @ Irving Plaza Matt & Kim @ Terminal 5 Big Bad Voodoo Daddy @ B.B. King Blues Club & Grill Freestyle Love Supreme @ Gramercy Theatre Olivia Newton-John @ The Paramount Sharon Van Etten @ Town Hall Bobby Bare, Jr. @ Mercury Lounge The Narrative @ Revolution St. George Theatre—35 Hyatt St., Staten Island. StGeorgeTheatre.com Saint Vitus—1120 Manhattan Ave., Brooklyn. SaintVitusBar.com Santos Party House—96 Lafayette St., Manhattan. SantosPartyHouse.com Soundview Restaurant— Route 48, Greenport South Shore Mall—Sunrise Highway, Bay Shore Staller Center—Nichols Road, Stony Brook. StallerCenter.com Stony Brook University—Nichols Road, Stony Brook. Tag Beverage—960 Main St., Holbrook Terminal 5— W. 56th St., Manhattan. Terminal5NYC.com Theatre Three—412 Main St., Port Jefferson. TheatreThree.com Tilles Center—720 Northern Blvd., Greenvale. TillesCenter.org Town Hall—123 W. 43rd St., Manhattan.TheTownHall-NYC.org Town of Oyster Bay Golf Course—South Woods Road, Woodbury UCP Suffolk—9 Smiths Lane, Commack Union Hall—702 Union St., Brooklyn. UnionHallNY.com UU of Central Nassau—223 Stewart Ave., Garden City Webster Hall—125 E. 11th St., Manhattan. WebsterHall.com Westbury Manor—100 Jericho Tpke., Westbury. WestburyManor.com Westhampton Beach PAC——76 Main St., Westhampton Beach. WHBPAC.org YMCA Boulton Center—37 W. Main St., Bay Shore. BoultonCenter.org
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Open HOuse registratiOn www.msmc.edu/visit or 1-888-YES-MSMC
Learn about our: • Career-oriented degree programs • Modern residence halls • Financial aid and scholarships • Individualized attention • Division III athletics
Mount Saint Mary College
Admissions open house
sundAy, nov. 11, 2012 • 9:30 Am-1:30 pm Come see all the Mount has to offer!
330 powell avenue, newburgh, ny, 12550 www.msmc.edu
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Movies by Prairie Miller
7
Seven Questions With
Daniel Craig
To hear Daniel Craig mull his latest turn as James Bond in Skyfall, it wasn’t just about facing off against all those enemies of the super-spy. Craig had lots to say as well during this conversation, about doing battle with all sorts of his own inner demons, and hopefully managing to come out on top anyway. 1. Daniel, there are hints that Bond may have had a sexual relationship with another man. Is Bond bluffing? What are you gonna do!I don’t see the world in sexual divisions. It’s not the way I look at the world. But is he gay? I think he would fuck anything! But it was a great flirt with Javier. It’s a game of cards. And a way to have your pleasure. And what’s great about Javier, is that he plays it for real. You know, he plays it to the limit. But I love that scene. It makes me laugh. I hope it makes you laugh! 2. I heard you initially turned down this role. So, what made you change your mind? Money! I think I was just a little bewildered that they would even come to me. It wasn’t even on my radar. And I suppose I was concerned about being typecast. But you know, when you weigh it up, it’s not a bad thing to be typecast as James Bond! So yeah, I changed my mind! 3. Talk about getting buff for Skyfall. Um, I’m not a fighter! I mean, I pretend to be one. It’s called bullshit boxing! But we try to make it look good. And you just try to stay on your feet most of the time. And then we’ll say, this fist looks good going into that fist! So it’s just constantly a lot of work, and a lot of skilled people. But I had to do a lot of running in this movie. Which I hate! So I did a lot of sprinting and running. Because...Bond doesn’t usually walk through a room! 4. Were you disappointed that you didn’t get to play with more
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gadgets this time around? No! But it’s an interesting point, because people talk about gadgets all the time. But if you look at the original gadgets, what was sexy about them, was that Bond took out a box, stuck it on a door, and pressed a button. And then a red light came on. And that’s kind of sexy. It did something. But to have Bond on a computer, looking at a screen, I think is fucking boring! And I think technology on the whole is boring. 5. How about the sequences with the water, did you ever panic? When I was underwater? No. Actually, the great thing about doing those underwater scenes, is that you can’t see it, but we’ve got safety divers off camera. And they have oxygen tanks. But actually, it’s my favorite bit. Because nobody can find you. I spend most of my time under the water, and there’s a huge tank at the bottom at Pinewood. And I just sink to the bottom, put the respirator in, and hide! And it’s so great, that sometimes I actually fall asleep. You can get some great sleep down there! So it’s wonderful being under the water, because I love scuba diving. But then you hear a voice saying, ‘Where’s Daniel!’ 6. This is the first time we see Bond cry on screen. What was it like getting to that emotional place? Crying? I don’t cry! That’s sweat! It’s on the page! And what do I think about while I’m doing that? I think about what I’m having for lunch! That’s what I think about. 7. Talk about the secrecy surrounding the movie. Just a point about that. Somebody gave a really good speech just before the screening in London, which was that you get a chance to see the movie before anybody else does, and without knowing what will happen. You get that privilege. And what was said was that... give your readers a chance as well. And that was what we felt so passionate about. P r e s s P l ay
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Crossword MEN OVER BOARD ACROSS 1 Tree with chocolate-yielding seeds 6 Shoulder blade 13 Attempted 20 Stop prematurely 21 Emmy winner Janney 22 Program that blocks pop-ups 23 Person used to increase a candidate’s popularity, e.g. 25 Found a radio station on the dial 26 Inventor who rivaled Tesla 27 Caviar source 28 “Wild Thing” rapper Tone 30 “Zip- - -Doo-Dah” 31 Bumper flaw 32 Radiance 34 “It” novelist 38 “Ah, OK” 40 “The Dukes of Hazzard” co-star John 42 Zeta follower 43 Singer with the Pips 47 “You’ve Got Mail” director Ephron 48 Tiny amount 49 Acting in place of a ruler 50 Punker/folkie DiFranco 51 Huge 52 Aruba, e.g. 53 English rocker Brian 54 Writer John Dickson - 56 Yemeni port
58 Inclined 60 “Look -!” (“Aren’t we a pair!”) 62 High fortress in Scotland 69 Attend as a visitor 72 Wood shoe 73 1959 Neil Sedaka hit 74 “Filling Station” poet 77 Agreeable 78 Prefix with center or dermal 79 Watering aid 80 Golda who succeeded Levi Eshkol 83 Kind of acct. that accrues interest 84 Give guff to 87 Stage design 88 “There’s no team” 90 Stinging plant 92 - to the test 93 U.S. gas brand 95 Hit for Abba 98 Ending of ordinals 99 “Kung Fu” star David 101 City laws: Abbr. 102 Theme of this puzzle 104 Western lily 106 Valet for the Green Hornet 110 Highway cost 111 Marne “Mrs.” 112 Precursor of reggae 113 Li’l tyke 115 Tourist guide 118 1959 romantic comedy appropriate for this
puzzle? 122 Campsite shelters, collectively 123 Attributed 124 French playwright Jean 125 “Roots” Emmy winner 126 People painting, e.g. 127 It merged with Kmart DOWN 1 Like Batman 2 Residence 3 Actor Farrell 4 Three-time president of Haiti 5 Artist Dix 6 Baglike part 7 Light cigar 8 Lets enter 9 Hookah, e.g. 10 D.C.’s land 11 Like valleys 12 Shakers founder in America 13 Furry guard 14 School Web site suffix 15 Indian flatbread 16 Adjust a bit 17 Trendy weightloss plans 18 Of the East 19 Outlaw type 24 Things eaten 29 Expressing views 33 Albanian currency unit 34 “Zip it up!” 35 Blast creator 36 Ending for auction 37 Gun lobby inits. 39 ‘N - (pop boy
band) 41 Hi-tech film effects 43 Oily stuff
LEAGUE FOR ANIMAL PROTECTION
44 Soup bean 45 Rabbit’s tropicallookalike 46 Quaint ointment
51 Sailor’s bed 52 “- uphill climb” 55 Surrealist Magritte
Sudoku
of Huntington, Inc.
Dear Ms. Matchmaker, a 4 year old, My name is Sophia. I am ing for love. Can sing le white female look h I may not win you please help me? Thoug cute and have a beauty pag ent, I’m darn I’m told make many lovely qualities that ndly, active, frie me a great catch. I am like to go ple, peo h get along well wit for swims go , ball play for walks, love to (Please don’t and I have a winning smile! I was burying mind the dirt on my nose, children and my toy.) I don’t mind older sins. Yet I cou ine I love to play with can ile all of wh d ke rloo continually get ove h wit on ve mo nds my dog gie frie d tire I’m s. love nd fou their new ly bab pro I it, adm I ly! lone of being ss Mi h need to check in wit to es com it Manners, but when a I’m ion, ect aff giving love and the find me p hel pro. If you can l the love of my life, please cal ! number below. Thank you XOXO,
56 Hoffman of the Yippies 57 Bands of two 58 Frau’s cry 59 With 116-Down, classic arcade game 61 T-shirt data 63 Strike while the iron 64 Catches 65 Wish (for) 66 Mournful 67 Place 68 Ten plus one 70 Brief sleep 71 Sendai sash 75 Axiom’s kin 76 Hotel chain 81 Like some painful hairs 82 Necessary: Abbr. 84 Watch from the stands 85 Penned 86 Brit. island in the Atlantic 87 Penny pincher
88 Hospice 89 Bladed boot 91 Alabama city 93 Elec. coolers 94 Séance reply 95 HST follower 96 “- for Alibi” (Grafton novel) 97 Drink with 114Down 100 Kind of acid in vinegar 103 Thin boards 105 Bistro patron 107 “32 Flavors” singer Davis 108 Less savage 109 “Golden Boy” playwright 112 Dirty stuff 114 Hen’s clutch 116 See 59-Down 117 Grow mature 119 Med. service 120 Air quality gp. 121 Bouncers check them
Last Week’s Answers Week of 10/22
Sophia
631-757-9373 or dogs@LAPHuntington.org www.LAPHuntington.org 62
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DO YOU HAVE IRRITABLE BOWEL SYNDROME? Winthrop-University Hospital Clinical Trials Center is seeking patients who have been diagnosed with Irritable Bowel Syndrome to participate in a research study of an investigational medication. To be eligible for the study, you must: Be between 18 and 80 years old � Have diarrhea predominant irritable bowel syndrome �
Qualified participants will receive study medication or placebo, study-related testing, physical exams, and lab work at no charge. Compensation for time and travel may be available to qualified participants for each completed visit. For more information, call 516-663-9582 or e-mail clinicaltrials@winthrop.org www.winthrop.org/departments/clinical/ctn
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To be eligible for the study, your child must: be 10 - 17 years old; be diagnosed & have a history of type 2 diabetes � be receiving treatment with diet and exercise alone, or be receiving treatment with metformin, a sulfonylurea or both for 3 months � have used insulin for less than 10 weeks during the 3 months prior to screening ; be able to understand and comply with a lifestyle modification program �
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For more information, call 516-663-9582 or e-mail clinicaltrials@winthrop.org Visit us online at: www.winthrop.org/departments/clinical/ctn
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EASTERN SHORE VA. HOME SITES
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mature hardwoods, fields, apple trees! Close before opening day and we pay your closing costs! (888)701-7509. Miscellaneous ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from home. *Medical, *Business, *Criminal Justice, *Hospitality, Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV Authorized. Call 888-201-8657 www. CenturaOnline.com P r e s s P l ay
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BIG LIT TLE
Corporate Holiday Party hosted by
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