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NEVER FORGET Life a decade after 9/11 PAGES 8 AND 22-40
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THE FIRST DECADE Art in Light of 9/11
SEE qboro, PAGE 43
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PAGE 12
Congressional, Assembly candidates face off at Queens ChronicleForum debate PAGES 2 AND 5 Congressional candidates David Weprin, top left, and Bob Turner, top right, and Assembly candidates Jane Deacy and Phil Goldfeder spar at Saint Barnabas Church in Howard Beach.
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Weprin, Turner in bottom of the 9th Candidates spar with a week to go by Michael Gannon Associate Editor
emocrat David Weprin and Republican Bob Turner neither split differences nor minced words Tuesday night with one week to go before their special election in the 9th Congressional District. Both men squared off before a raucous crowd of about 300 at St. Barnabas Church in Howard Beach in a debate sponsored by the Queens Chronicle and The Forum. Weprin repeatedly said he is the candidate who will preserve the safety net of Social Security and Medicare, while Turner said federal spending at its current rate is unsustainable even in the short term. Weprin decried Turner’s call for a 35 percent reduction in spending over 10 years, calling for elimination of whole departments such as Education and Agriculture. “We definitely need to look at budget cuts, but the cuts need to be made with a scalpel, not a hatchet,” Weprin said. “And we must preserve Social Security and Medicare.” Turner said small measures will not work. “You’re being told everything is fine, and that you will get all your benefits, and don’t worry who will pay for it,” Turner said. “We have the potential to destroy the country if this continues.” On tax rates, Weprin reiterated his stand on a millionaires’ tax and the closing of corporate tax loopholes. Turner said taking 100 percent of all income from the country’s millionaires and
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billionaires would offset only 12 percent of the country’s current deficit for one year. But he also could not name a single tax loophole he would close. “I’m a Republican,” he said. “I never met a tax loophole I didn’t like.” Asked to name one corporation specifically, Weprin tabbed General Electric. “They made billions and billions last year and has an effective tax rate of minus 61 percent ... I don’t believe in having multinational corporations in the United States exporting jobs out of the country, jobs we need here, and getting tax breaks for it,” he said. While Weprin accused Turner of wanting to destroy Social Security and Medicare, Turner said only that financial straits require reassessing retirement age and other factors. Even in expressing vehement, unswerving support for Israel, the two men were at odds. Turner said the issue is not Weprin’s support but the Democrat’s potential effectiveness. He said electing a Democrat will not force the Obama administration to adopt a more pro-Israeli stance. “He can’t be influenced if he can take the 9th District for granted,” Turner said. Weprin said he has relatives living in Israel for more than 50 years, that his children have studied there and he has visited many times. “A strong Israel is a strong United States,” Weprin said. “Our special relationship is very important.” Weprin said he opposes so-called hydrofracking for natural gas as a danger to
Democrat David Weprin, left, and Republican Bob Turner shake hands prior to Tuesday night’s PHOTO BY PJ SMITH debate at St. Barnabas Church in Howard Beach. the environment and New York City’s water supply, while Turner said it is being done safely in Pennsylvania with 70,000 related jobs. On the recent vote to increase the federal debt ceiling, Turner said he would have voted in favor of it as the best deal possible with the country on the brink of default. Weprin was temporarily drowned out by booing Turner supporters when he blamed the Tea Party for engaging in brinksmanship, holding the party and country captive. He accused the party of causing Standard and Poors to issue its first ever downgrade of the country’s credit rating. “The debt ceiling debate was, frankly, shameful,” Weprin said.
Both said voters should not jump to conclusions that the 9th District will be eliminated when New York State loses two house seats through redistricting. “The population losses have been upstate,” Weprin said. “I think there is a very strong argument that the seats should be lost upstate and that New York City not lose one of its seats.” Turner said keeping the seat would be in Democrats’ self-interest if he wins. “If a Democrat wins it will be split among three or four different people,” he said. “They would have to face an election against a Republican. And [Rep. Joe] Crowley or [Rep. Gary] Ackerman don’t want to take me on. Or Q you.”.
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Join former Assemblywoman Audrey Pheffer in supporting Phil Goldfeder for State Assembly Dear Neighbor, District and being your Serving the 23rd Assembly r the past 24 years has fo ny ba Al in ive tat en es pr re time has come for been an honor. But now the generation of w me to hand the torch to a ne lp one last time he leadership – and I need your do what's best for so that we can continue to our community. Phil Goldfeder. I ask that you help me elect and he knows Phil’s values are our values ove our what needs to be done to m y forward. Phil community and our econom es and take ili will stand up for working fam and better jobs on the MTA. He’ll fight for ren. And he opportunities for our child otecting health knows the importance of pr ors. care and protecting our seni
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QUEENS NEWS
Assembly hopefuls mix it up Goldfeder and Deacy face off in debate for 23rd Assembly seat by Peter C. Mastrosimone Editor-in-Chief
About 200 residents and political activists heard the candidates for the 23rd Assembly District speak on a wide range of topics during a sometimes raucous debate held Tuesday night in Howard Beach. Everything from local concerns like security around the soon-toopen Aqueduct racino to the state budget and drilling for natural gas upstate was addressed by Democratic candidate Phil Goldfeder, an aide to U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer who is on leave during the campaign, and Republican Jane Deacy, a former police officer and teacher. The pair are facing off in the race to replace former Assemblywoman Audrey Pheffer, who was appointed the Queens county clerk. The vote is Sept. 13. At the debate, sponsored by the Queens Chronicle and The Forum Newsgroup and held at St. Barnabas Church in Howard Beach, Deacy and Goldfeder agreed on a number of issues, like the need to increase the police force and express bus service, but differed on others, such as whether state income tax rates should be raised on those making $250,000 or more (Deacy: no; Goldfeder: yes). The talk constituted the first half of a two-part event, the second being a debate between congressional candidates Bob Turner and
Assemblyman David Weprin during which the crowd swelled to around 300 and grew increasingly raucous [see separate story]. Deacy and Goldfeder were able to lay out their basic campaign messages in closing statements that wrapped up their portion of the night. “I am not a career politician, and I am one person who wants to make a difference,” said Deacy, who went first as per a coin toss. Adding that she has served as a police officer and a special education teacher, the Republican said, “I’m at the point in my life where I have the time and the energy — because 60 is the new 40 — to go to Albany and do something, rather than complain about it.” “I’ve never been elected to anything, never run for anything,” Goldfeder said. “I’m proud to run for this seat with the support of Audrey Pheffer, who knows this community.” Reiterating his stated focus on job creation, infrastructure repair and affordable healthcare, the Democrat finished by saying, “I’m a career public servant. I’m proud of that.” The candidates voiced agreement not only on the need for more law enforcement and transportation options, but also on adding casino table games to the Aqueduct racino; the need for Peninsula Hospital to remain open; blocking the com-
CHECK OUT VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS OF TUESDAY’S ASSEMBLY AND CONGRESSIONAL DEBATES AT THE NEW QCHRON.COM!
Republican Jane Deacy and Democrat Phil Goldfeder were often animated during Tuesday’s debate in Howard Beach, PHOTO BY PJ SMITH especially during a short portion when they shared the podium. muter tax now called congestion pricing (though Deacy briefly wavered on that one for those living outside the city); and establishing English as the official state language. They differed on several other concerns, including: • hydrofracking for natural gas upstate, which Goldfeder opposes and Deacy supports; • a sixth tier promising fewer benefits for new public employees, which Deacy said “may be neces-
sary to look at,” and Goldfeder declined to address directly, while saying he would “protect working men and women”; • and same-sex marriage, which Deacy said she would have opposed if she were a lawmaker when it came up this year and Goldfeder declined to address, saying he would not take a position on a bill he had not read. Asked during a “lightning round” of questions to describe themselves and each other in one word each,
Goldfeder said he is “bold” while Deacy is “sweet,” and she said he is “smart” while she is “honest.” Also during the one-wordanswers-only lightning round, Deacy said she hopes to get a seat on the Transportation Committee and Goldfeder chose the Budget Committee. Throughout the event, Pheffer, like other area VIPS, had a frontrow seat about a dozen feet from her successor in the Assembly, Q whoever it will be.
ENDORSEMENT
Vote David Weprin for Congress ob Turner is a good man. A retired television executive and investor, a family man who with his wife adopted the son of an AIDS victim years ago, the Rockaway Republican is not someone whose attempts at public office should be dismissed out of hand. We admire Turner for his successful career — despite his helping make both Jerry Springer and Pamela Anderson household names as a producer — as well as for the dignity he has shown in his runs for Congress and for making voters in the 9th Congressional District aware of the deep financial problems this country faces without sugarcoating them. But we disagree with his policy positions and believe they are at odds with the values of most voters in the district and the nation’s best interests. The right choice in Tuesday’s special election for the House of Representatives is not Turner but his opponent, Democratic Assemblyman David Weprin of Holliswood. Weprin is an experienced lawmaker who has served at both the state and city levels, the latter as chairman of the Council’s Finance Committee. That experience, along with his private-sector work in the financial markets, are a big part of what makes Weprin the best candidate to replace
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former Rep. Anthony Weiner, whose June resignation left the seat open for more than half a term. Weprin shows a balanced approach to solving America’s problems. He wants to protect Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, the much-maligned entitlement programs that would be endangered by the plans of current House Republicans. Turner, in contrast, says Social Security has “failed” — though it’s kept its promises for more than 70 years — and would balance the budget in part by reducing benefits for those under 55. The program does need adjustments as the country gets grayer, but Turner’s goal of cutting federal spending by 35 percent within 10 years makes no sense as it doesn’t address the benefits paid to retirees for another decade. And it’s reckless. Weprin, who has written laws and served on legislative committees for years, can be counted on for a more realistic approach. He supports what the country really needs: a mix of lesser spending cuts throughout the government — made with a scalpel rather than axe, as he puts it — and increased revenue, unlike Turner. A return to the Clinton-era capital gains tax rate of 20 percent and the closing of unfair tax loopholes also would help the
government be properly funded. The assemblyman would also be a stronger advocate for small businesses in Queens and Brooklyn, a key to reviving the economy. He vows to reduce taxes on these jobcreating companies and increase their access to credit. Turner, on the other hand, has little more to offer on taxes beyond saying at the Chronicle’s Tuesday night debate that as a Republican, he has “never met a tax loophole I didn’t like.” It was hard to tell if he was kidding or not. Turner is also pro-life and anti-gun control, while Weprin is pro-choice and pro-gun control, the positions of most voters in the district and this newspaper. On Israel, which the Turner camp has made an issue in the race thanks to former Mayor Ed Koch’s endorsement, Weprin has long shown his full support. He has family there and, ironically, would be the only Orthodox Jew in Congress if elected. Also ironic is the way Koch cited a list of other policies he disagrees with Turner on when he endorsed him, supposedly for his support of Israel. Bob Turner deserves credit for mounting a strong underdog campaign. But it’s David Weprin who deserves your vote Tuesday, and we’re proud to endorse him.
Page 5 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011
SOUTH
Candidates for Weiner seat make final push Weprin, Turner make last attempts to persuade voters to support them by Anna Gustafson Editor
Candidates running for the 9th Congressional District have been crisscrossing the district, touting endorsements and making last-minute attempts to woo voters poised to cast their ballots in the Sept. 13 special election. Democratic Assemblyman David Weprin (D-Little Neck) and Republican Bob Turner, a retired television executive from the Rockaways, are vying to represent the seat once held by former U.S. Rep. Anthony Weiner. The United Federation of Teachers and the New York Times endorsed Weprin last week, while Assemblyman Dov Hikind (DBrooklyn) crossed party lines to throw his support behind Turner this week. The Daily News also recently gave Turner its stamp of approval, an unusual move for a paper that routinely endorses Democrats. The Queens Chronicle endorsed Weprin in this week’s editorial, and former Republican Gov. George Pataki gave his thumbs up to Turner this week. “In these times of fiscal uncertainty and growing income inequality, New Yorkers need a strong Democratic voice in Wash-
ington to help put this country back on the right track,” UFT President Michael Mulgrew said at a press conference in front of PS 64 in Ozone Park last Thursday. “David Weprin will fight for the national policies New Yorkers need to solve the problems of our economy, and to keep the promises of Social Security and Medicare.” At the same conference, the UFT announced it was endorsing Democrat Phil Goldfeder for the 23rd Assembly District and Democrat Michael Simanowitz for the 27th Assembly District. Goldfeder is running against Republican Jane Deacy for the seat previously held by now Queens County Clerk Audrey Pheffer. Simanowitz is being challenged by Republican Marco DeSena for the district that had been represented by Nettie Mayersohn, who retired at the age of 86 in April. Hikind’s endorsement echoed sentiments voiced by former Mayor Ed Koch, a Democrat who backed Turner because he said he wanted to “send a message” to President Obama that he was upset with the administration’s policies in Israel. “I am supporting Mr. Turner because this is a rare opportunity for all those living in the 9th Congressional District, myself
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UFT President Michael Mulgrew, far left, endorses Democratic Assemblyman David Weprin, right of Mulgrew, for Congress. Former Gov. George Pataki, center photo, threw his support behind RepubLEFT PHOTO BY ANNA GUSTAFSON; FILE PHOTOS lican Bob Turner, right, this week. included, to send a message to President Obama about his failed, disastrous economic policies and his reckless policies toward Israel,” Hikind said in a statement on Wednesday. The New York Times said in its editorial endorsing Weprin that the Democrat would “represent the district with far more expertise, sensitivity and fiscal rationality.” “As a City Council member and state legislator, Mr. Weprin has promoted education and civil rights and fought to protect senior citizens,” the Times editorial continued. “In Washington, he promises to work to protect Social Security and Medicare. He says he would push for higher taxes for
the wealthy rather than cut programs that serve the working and middle classes.” The Daily News said in its Sept. 1 editorial that “after a private-sector career as a television industry executive, Turner has a real-world sense of the country’s fiscal distress and of the pressing need to jump-start employment opportunities.” The Queens Chronicle endorsed Weprin because it said Weprin was an experienced lawmaker and veteran of the financial markets, though the paper stressed Turner was an admirable person, albeit one whose policies were out of sync with the district. Pataki, meanwhile, said Turner has “the real-world business experience we need.” Q
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EDITORIAL
PAGE
10 years gone
decade after the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the pain is not gone. The memories of the slaughter downtown are seared into the mind and will be forever. The lessons for the nation and the policy changes that followed the destruction of the World Trade Center, damage to the Pentagon and downing of a fourth plane over Pennsylvania continue to be learned and debated. What hasn’t changed is the human condition — the resilient spirit that allows us to overcome even such horrors, the sharing of sorrows among those touched most deeply and the significance seen in anniversaries like this, the 10th. Queens, which suffered as much as anyplace outside Manhattan — think of the 19 firemen from just one house in Maspeth who went downtown to never return — is loaded with events commemorating the attacks this week. You who still suffer nightmares about New York’s darkest day, you are not alone. You who still hear footsteps on the stairs of someone who has not walked the Earth for 10 years, you are not alone. You who obsess about every detail of the WTC memorial and rebuilding project, you are not alone. The entire borough stands
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with you in your grief and welcomes you to share what you feel with your neighbors. All this week there will be prayer services, policy discussions, candlelight vigils, interfaith dialogues, musical tributes, art exhibits and more across Queens, not to mention the rest of the city. Those in this borough are listed elsewhere in this week’s Queens Chronicle — mostly in the news section, aside from the art shows, which are discussed in qboro, the Arts, Culture & Living section of the paper. Beyond the personal, the ramifications of the terror attacks still continue to play out in ways that affect nearly every person in the world. You didn’t see machine gun-toting National Guardsmen in Grand Central Station before, or police Emergency Service units springing out of vans in the Diamond District as a show of force. But for 10 years we’ve seen that and more. Our armed forces are still fighting in Afghanistan, where the plot was hatched, and, to a lesser degree, in Iraq. Together those conflicts have cost thousands of lives, and the results are debatable at best. There is a nominal
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Frazzled Hills Dear Editor: The Long Island Rail Road is at it again. After more than a year of needless, quality-of-life-disrupting horn blasting at the Forest Hills railroad station, caused by the LIRR misinterpreting a federal rule on horn sounding, the railroad has now come up with a new way to hassle Forest Hills residents. Specif ically, the ear-piercing door chimes and train announcements that are made when LIRR trains stop at the Forest Hills station. This industrial noise pollution can be heard more than three blocks from its source. At an MTA conference that I attended last year, a representative from the railroad said the door chimes and train announcements were needed to assist deaf people. Deaf? Do you mean those who would hear nothing, no matter how loud the bells? Really! When I responded to him that deaf people cannot perceive sound he answered back that the chimes and announcements were made to help blind people. You have to yell at blind people to get them to hear you? He also said that the railroad was concerned about “the drunks” riding the trains — that the new blaster bells would “help keep the drunks safer.” In the 20-plus years that I have been traveling on the LIRR, I have never witnessed even commuters with hearing aids having difficulty in figuring out that the train doors open and close when a train comes into a station. In addition, the conductor is still required to stick his or her head out the window to make sure all is well before closing the doors and moving the train onward. And, hard as I try, I can’t imagine that the strident door chimes are keeping inebriated travelers safer. The Forest Hills LIRR train station is surrounded by apartment buildings that house thousands of families who are being pointlessly stressed and harassed by the raucous door chimes and announcements put into place by the LIRR. These people don’t want to hear the dinging and binging from chimes and announcements that go on at all hours of the night and day. Would anyone want to hear that? Why can’t the LIRR just be a good neighbor, like it was
democracy in Iraq, still plagued by consistent violence, which may turn out to be an Iranian ally more than an American one. The ruling Taliban in Afghanistan were quickly toppled, but after nearly 10 years we’ve only had to increase our forces there to bring some semblance of civilization and order to a country that has historically been lawless in the Western sense. And our nominal allies in neighboring Pakistan often seem no more advanced, stable or reliable. Elsewhere throughout the world, American forces and spies operate clandestinely — lawlessly, in the minds of many here at home. The events of Sept. 11 did not just destroy buildings, planes and lives, but tore deeply at the very fabric of our society, maybe more than we knew then, maybe even more than we know now. We must continue not only to fight abroad to prevent a repeat, so far a success, but to fight in another sense at home — to overcome what happened, individually and collectively, to learn from it and to determine where the nation goes next. That’s more than enough burden for this 10th anniversary. But no matter where you are in this borough, city or nation, it is not one you bear alone.
EDITOR
before starting the wrongheaded policy of horn blasting in 2007, turn off the door chimes and train announcements, and allow the residents of Forest Hills quiet enjoyment of their domiciles? Martin H. Levinson Forest Hills
Treed off I Dear Editor: Hurricane Irene has proven that New York City has underestimated the destruction caused by unmaintained trees in our city. A large part of the damage to our homes, streets and power lines was due to city trees that have not been pr uned, removed or maintained for many, many years due to lack of funds allocated for this purpose. Yet the mayor’s goal has been to plant 1 million new trees in the city, without considering the state of old, diseased existing trees which should be removed. The priority should be maintenance, not planting new trees. In front of my home in Elmhurst are two 100-year-old diseased trees 150 feet high. Because of roots, my basement has been
flooded 16 times in four years. My water main from home to street had to be replaced, costing $4,000, and my heating unit also had to be replaced due to water damage. Two branches fell on my car last year, doing $1,500 damage, and one branch banged on my roof, making a hole and causing the attic ceiling to fall. I have reported these trees to the parks commissioner more than 40 times over a period of 15 years with zero satisfaction. I also reported this condition to Comptroller John Liu, Public Advocate Bill de B l a s i o a n d t h e m ayo r, w i t h o u t a ny response or solution. After the hurricane, on Monday Aug. 26, I called 311 regarding tree damage. The operator advised me that Department of Parks was not taking any 311 reports. The primary agency for this storm with all the damage and power outages was not taking 311 calls. I instead called Mayor Bloomberg’s off ice to describe the tree damage. The Department of Parks again played ostrich to the damage caused by old and defective trees, and opted not to take 311 calls. The mayor has to recognize that the tree problem is at a dangerous level in Queens. There are hundreds of trees that need
SQ page 9
‘About being brave’ Dear Editor: They just ran in, oh so brave So many lives they tried to save Didn’t stop to think twice Weren’t concerned with the price Hoping for all to survive Wishing for all to come out alive Had no idea rushing in That they’d be victims of Osama bin September 11th, a vicious day Now we look to see who’ll pay We say our prayers, yet we fight To fix the wrong, make it right So many innocents lost their lives Leaving behind children, husbands and wives We pray for peace the whole world wide And know we’re on the winning side James Paolino Astoria
Maspeth, divided Dear Editor: I was shocked today to f ind out that Grover Cleveland Park is represented by state Sen. Mike Gianaris from Astoria. How did this happen? Most of the people who use this park are from Sen. Addabbo’s district. If you live in Astoria you are going to make sure its parks are taken care of first before a park in Ridgewood which none of your constituents use. Now I know why this park does not have the same events that other parks in the city do. The representative in the state Senate couldn’t care less about it. We really need to redistrict this whole area. Get rid of representatives who don’t even live in this area or have constituents in this area. The districts do not make sense.
Cross-county commute Dear Editor: I’ve been reading a lot about the new Nassau County bus plan, and I f ind it quite troublesome. It’s going to affect not only those in Nassau but also those of us who commute into Nassau for employment. Many traveling into the county from Queens and beyond are medical personnel going to area hospitals. On Jan. 1 Nassau is set to turn over Long Island Bus to a company called Veolia Transdev in Lombard, Ill. LI Bus, which serves 100,000 daily riders, is owned by the county but has been operated by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority for the last 40 years. Nassau County Executive Ed Mangano pulled out of the deal with the MTA and has decided to turn it over to a private concern. An agreement was reached not to cut service or raise fares for one year. Well, isn’t that nice. I travel on the Q46 from Glen Oaks Village and transfer to the Nassau N25 to Great Neck. I pay $29 a week on a weekly unlimited MetroCard. But in January I will not be able to transfer because the Nassau bus will be a private concern and will not accept MetroCards. I will be forced to purchase a weekly card at about another $29 from this bus company. This brings the cost to $58 a week — a 100 percent increase in fares to all us commuters from Queens. Now the real kicker is that will change and the LI bus fare will be raised in one year most likely and who knows how much. Queens commuters will be hit very hard. Now also look at it another way: those of us that commute from Queens contribute to the local economy in Nassau as we buy food, clothing and other things. I think this privatization is just a bad deal. I hope Mangano and Lombard come up with a card that accepts transfers from the city system. If they don’t, I’m calling for a boycott from Queens commuters — to not buy any goods or sevices in Nassau until a fare deal is agreed upon. We the bus-riding commuters from Queens are very tired of been ripped off and we won’t stand it anymore. Frederick R. Bedell Jr. Glen Oaks
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Treed off II Dear Editor: Re “Irene fells trees across borough” by Paula Neudorf (Sept. 1, multiple editions): M a y o r Bloomberg had ONLINE the MillionMiss an editorial or TreesNYC iniletter cited by a writer? tiative to plant Want news from our trees throughother editions covering out the city. the rest of Queens? Find Unless there past reports, news from are underacross the borough and ground power more at qchron.com. lines, this is just sowing the seeds of destruction for future generations. Wendy Penner Great Neck, LI
I live in Maspeth, which is represented by three different congressional districts. Why is that? No wonder nothing gets done here — because you have so many hands in the pot. We need to have each neighborhood represented by the same elected officials as their neighbors. The way we have it now my elementary school, just one block away, is in a different congressional district. My neighborhood park five blocks away has a different state senator than the people who mostly use it. Until something is done about redistricting nothing is going to change around here. Charlene L. Stubbs Maspeth
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pruning or removal. During storms they fall, destroying homes and cars — and are deadly when they fall on people. Our priority should be to save lives, homes and prevent power failures. A concerted effort must be made to care for existing trees instead of concentrating on planting 1 million new ones. The Department of Parks budget must be realistic for it to do the job and prevent future damage similar to that caused by Irene. Nick Pennachio Member of Community Board 4 Elmhurst
EDITOR
Page 9 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011
LETTERS TO THE
QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011 Page 10
SQ page 10rev
CB 10 opposes Q41 reroute
Sheehan trial Most vote to reject plan to move bus to 109th Ave. is underway by Anna Gustafson Editor
Community Board 10 members voted overwhelmingly against the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s proposal to reroute the Q41 in South Ozone Park from 111th Avenue to 109th Avenue at their meeting last week. All but one of the members at the meeting, held last Thursday at the United Hindu Cultural Center in South Ozone Park, rejected the city’s plan to have
the Q41 travel on 109th Avenue from 111th Street to around 127th Street, instead of along 111th Avenue as it does now. The Q41 provides service between Jamaica and Howard Beach via Richmond Hill and South Ozone Park. Margaret Finnerty, president of the Richmond Hill South Civic Association, headquartered on 115th Street in South Ozone Park, said her organization is opposed to the rerouting because it would be disadvanta-
Richmond Hill South Civic Association President Margaret Finnerty reads a letter opposing the MTA’s plan to reroute the Q41 bus as CB 10 memPHOTO BY ANNA GUSTAFSON ber JoAnn Ariola looks on.
geous to the numerous students and seniors who are used to the current path. “Seniors use this bus to get to Howard Beach to shop and attend the Howard Beach Senior Center,” Finnerty said, reading a letter she sent to a number of elected officials to enlist their support. Finnerty added that a number of students use the stop at 111th Avenue and Lefferts Boulevard, where PS 100 is located. Robert Lai, director of service design at the MTA, told CB 10 members that the transportation authority wants to change the route because “the Q41 has experienced poor reliability, and you may experience long waits or crowded buses.” Part of the problem, Lai said, is the bus takes too many turns on 111th Avenue, making it more diff icult for it to reach stops on time. “If we stay on 109th Avenue, we eliminate four turns,” Lai said. CB 10 member David Quintana, the only one on the board to support the MTA’s proposal, said it would “make sense.” “As a regular bus rider, I’ve
Special election Tuesday for 27th AD Simanowitz versus DeSena by Liz Rhoades The 27th Assembly District seat, which has been occupied by Nettie Mayersohn for 28 years, will get a new look following Tuesday’s special election. Democrat Mayersohn retired in April and her chief of staff Michael Simanowitz, 39, hopes to succeed her in office. Republican Marco DeSena, 30, says he’s giving the voters a real choice. Simanowitz lives with his wife and four children in Electchester. He is active in the youth department of his synagogue, Young Israel of Hillcrest and the 107th Precinct auxiliary police, where he serves as deputy inspector. DeSena, a bachelor, lives in College Point. He works as a communications
consultant and is also an adjunct professor at Baruch College. The Democrat wants more technology in the classroom and less graffiti on the streets. Simanowitz also wants to continue the excellent constituent services started by Mayersohn, who he worked for the last 14 years. The Republican believes parents and students should have choices in schools and says he’s fighting for families and small businesses, who need to be taxed less. He also believes in term limits for state government: three full terms or six years. The district includes College Point and parts of Flushing, Forest Hills, Kew Gardens Hills, Briarwood, Kew Gardens and Q Richmond Hill.
Michael Simanowitz
Marco DeSena
Managing Editor
FILE PHOTO
FILE PHOTO
ridden the Q41 many times, and all those turns are ridiculous,” Quintana said. Pat McCabe, chief of staff to state Sen. Joe Addabbo (DHoward Beach), expressed skepticism about the plan. “In the senator’s opinion, you’ll take a bus off an avenue that’s familiar with it and move it to an avenue that’s never had a bus on it,” McCabe said. Representatives from the offices of Assemblyman Mike Miller (D-Woodhaven) and Councilman Eric Ulrich (ROzone Park) rejected the MTA plan as well. McCabe and CB 10 Chairwoman Betty Braton, as well as many other board members, praised police and city officials for their help during the tropical storm that hit the city last week. Braton reported that since last Sunday, there has been 476 complaints about tree damage — around the same number the board typically gets in an entire year. McCabe said the basements of at least 150 homes were flooded and 12 people “lost everything” because of the Q storm.
The trial for Howard Beach resident Barbara Sheehan, who is charged with killing her ex-cop husband, began Monday at the courthouse in Kew Gardens Queens Supreme Court Justice Barry Kron is presiding over the trial. Sheehan’s attorney, the Manhattanbased Michael Dowd, was upset with Kron for scheduling the trial for this week, saying he needed more time to find and bring in witnesses. “It’s the summer months and many of them are on vacation,” Dowd told the judge in August. “The decision rendered … creates an enormous problem for the defense.” Dowd said he wanted the trial to begin in November. “After three and a half years, it’s time to move the matter forward,” Kron said. Sheehan is charged in the shooting death of her husband, former NYPD Sgt. Raymond Sheehan, in 2008. Dowd and Sheehan have said the Howard Beach woman, a mother of two who works as a secretary for the city Department of Education, was physically and emotionally abused for the last 18 years of the 24-year marriage before she shot her husband 11 times as he was shaving in their home. Kron is the third judge in Sheehan’s case. Justice Richard Buchter recused himself in July, citing a possible conQ flict of interest. — Anna Gustafson
Special elections, primary are Sept. 13 City, state and federal seats are up by Peter C. Mastrosimone
Democrat Phil Goldfeder, an aide to U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) against Sept. 13 is the day residents in much of Republican Jane Deacy, a former city Queens will get to choose new representa- police officer and teacher. tives at the state and federal levels and, in The 27th Assembly District, located in one council district, the northern and central re-election of an incumQueens, will also be getbent or his replacement. ting new representation, to Topping the ballot box replace retired Assemblyis the special election for woman Nettie Mayersohn. the 9th Congressional In that contest, MayerDistrict, which covers sohn’s chief of staff, Michael Simanowitz, is large blocks of southern, the Democratic candisouthwestern and central date, running against Queens, as well as part of Republican Marco DeSeBrooklyn. Vying for the na, a communications seat vacated by former consultant. Rep. Anthony Weiner are In the Jamaica area, Democratic State AssemCity Councilman Ruben blyman David Weprin (DWills (D-Jamaica), who Little Neck) and Republiwon the seat of the late can Bob Turner, a retired television executive. It’s the second year for the Tom White in a special election, has to run again Residents of that dis- city’s new ballot machines. trict who live in south FILE PHOTO to retain it. Wills is facing several other DemocQueens will also get to vote for a new state Assembly member to ratic hopefuls in a primary: former replace Audrey Pheffer, who resigned the Councilman Allan Jennings and fellow 23rd District seat when she was appointed challengers Clifton Stanley Diaz and Q the Queens county clerk. The race pits Michael Duvalle. Editor-in-Chief
SQ page 11
“Bob Turner will protect Social Security and Medicare for seniors and I trust Bob Turner.” ED KOCH
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Democratic Mayor Ed Koch and Republican Mayor Rudy Giuliani Agree!
QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011 Page 12
SQ page 12
Peninsula Hospital keeps it’s doors open Institution will be ‘better than ever’ by Anna Gustafson Editor
Healthcare workers and borough officials breathed sighs of relief to learn that Peninsula Hospital in Far Rockaway will remain open. Originally pegged to be closed as early as last month, Peninsula reached a deal with Revival Home Health Care at the end of last week for the Jewish for-profit organization to purchase the 104-year-old health institution that has been struggling financially.
Peninsula Hospital reached a deal with Revival Home Heath Care that allows the FILE PHOTO institution to remain open.
While Revival did not return requests for comment, Peninsula officials and borough legislators confirmed the acquisition. The state Health Department has given its stamp of approval for Revival’s acquisition. “I’m very happy to report our hospice unit was opened this morning, and our traumatic brain injury unit is due to open today,” Mary Liz Grosseto, a registered nurse at Peninsula, said Wednesday. “We’re back in full swing.” Grosseto said Peninsula workers recently met with Todd Miller, the chief restructuring officer from Revival. “It could not be better,” she said of Revival’s purchase of Peninsula. “We are open for full operation. We’re going to be bigger and better than ever.” Borough President Helen Marshall said she was “delighted” an agreement has been reached. “I applaud the board of directors at Peninsula and all concerned parties for their willingness to work day and night in a tireless effort to keep this hospital open and support the effort to secure State Health Depar tment approval,” Marshall said in a prepared Q statement.
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More heat victims identified The office of the Chief Medical Examiner has certif ied eight more deaths, including that of a 73-year-old Queens man, as attributable to the heat waves that struck the city in July and August. They bring the number of heat-related deaths in the city to 19 this year. The Queens man died on July 24. He like the other eight identified last week, had an underlying medical condition. The others included a 52-year-old Bronx man and two bronx women ages 64 and 97; two Manhattan women ages 48 and 73 and two Manhattan men ages 60 and 78. They were the first four victims in Manhattan this summer.
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George Russo of Villa Russo, to provide food for the evacuees. They very generously donated enough food to five 900 people. Hundreds of people slept on cots the city provided for them at John Adams, which was reportedly one of the most crowded shelters in the city. When many residents returned home, they encountered massive flooding. About 91 shelters were opened in the city during the storm. In addition, the club’s president, Stephen Sirgiovanni of Giovanni Distributors, donated 10 cases of Stella D’Oro cookies. Although Irene did a lot of damage, she could not dampen our community spirit. Q
Previous victims included a 30-year-old Queens woman who died on July 22. Seven of the 19 in the city this year have been from Brooklyn and six from the Bronx. Thirteen have been female, including a 10-year-old girl from Brooklyn who died on July 23. Fourteen of the 19 died in the four-day period of July 22 through 25, when the temperature reached 100 degrees or higher for three straight days. Six died on Saturday, July 23, and five more the next day. Three also died on Aug. 1. All of the victims had underlying medical conditions, Q the medical examiner’s office said.
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Rich. Hill native stars in Sundance program Show follows creation of dog leash by Anna Gustafson Editor
When Richmond Hill native Sara Carpenter first thought of making a more comfortable dog leash — inspired by long walks with her “mutt,” Pom — she had no idea it would land her a starring role on national television. Carpenter, a 41-year-old retired police
Sara Carpenter with her dog, Pom, on the Sundance Channel’s series “Quirky.” PHOTO BY CHRISTIAN CLOTHIER
officer, was a “featured inventor” on the Sundance Channel’s new television series, “Quirky,” during their program that aired this Tuesday at 10 p.m. During the show, viewers got to see Ben Kaufman, the 24-year-old founder of Quirky.com, which helps inventors manufacture and market products, and his team work with Carpenter to create the “Kosuko,” or a dog leash with an ergonomic handle and a built-in bag storage. “I had this idea to make a leash a little over a year ago, but it’s very expensive to do it yourself and it’s hard to get a patent,” Carpenter said. “That’s the beauty of Quirky, you get to see your idea become a reality.” A lifelong resident of Richmond Hill who lives near Forest Park with her 7year-old son, Luke, Carpenter said the opportunity came along at the perfect time. “I was having trouble finding work in the city’s economy, so this was perfect,” Carpenter said. “It was so great getting to test out the leash for the first time with my son and get to see the idea I had become real. Visit sundancechannel.com/quirky Q for more information.
PHOTO COURTESY RESORTS WORLD
QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011 Page 14
C M SQ page 14 Y K
Slot machines arrive at racino Michael Speller, president of Resorts World New York City, pictured above, welcomes the first of the 4,525 Video Lottery Terminals that were delivered to the Aqueduct racino last week. The VLTs will be installed and individually tested on the gaming floor — the core of
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C M SQ page 15 Y K Page 15 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011
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C M SQ page 16 Y K
Broad Channel celebrates Labor Day by Dan Guarino Chronicle Contributor
road Channel residents celebrated their annual Labor Day Mardi Gras parade this week with music and homemade floats — including one that bid good riddance to Hurricane Irene. About a dozen floats were joined by Boys Scouts, the American Legion, area politicians, the Broad Channel Volunteer Fire Department and the Broad Channel Athletic Club. Nearly as old as Broad Channel itself, the Mardi Gras event has been an end of summer celebration for more than 100 years. It caps off a full season of fund-raising events designed to support neighborhood organizations. The Broad Channel firehouse, built in 1908 with money raised from dances, band concerts and field days, is still in use today. Proceeds from this year’s activities will go towards the Broad Channel Athletic Club. Founded in 1961, the BCAC offers all types of sports for area youth and is celebrating its gala 50th anniversary this year. As is the custom the parade stepped off shortly after 1 p.m. on Monday and proceeded along Cross Bay Boulevard. As they do each year, onlookers brought chairs, coolers and children in tow across the Boulevard to catch the Q parade a second time on its way coming back.
B
The annual Labor Day parade culminated a season of events that raised PHOTOS BY DAN GUARINO money for the Broad Channel Athletic Club.
Children celebrate their last day of summer vacation at the Broad Channel parade.
Members of the American Legion in Broad Channel march in the parade that travels along Cross Bay Boulevard.
On one of the floats, the ladies of “Channel Shore” gave their own twist to their Jersey counterpart.
Parade participants were happy the event took place last weekend, instead of the week prior, when Hurricane Irene hit the city, flooding numerous Broad Channel residents’ homes.
Many children attending the parade had fun dressing up in costumes, from superheroes and super villains to super presidents.
C M SQ page 17 Y K Page 17 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011
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Celebrating the baby parade Hundreds of people came out for the annual Hamilton Beach baby parade last Sunday. Many costumed children — and, of course, babies — participated in the event that included eight floats. The parade, which marks the end of sum-
mer, ran through the five blocks of the tightknit community. A number of community groups also marched in the event, including the New Hamilton Beach Civic Association, pictured at top, and the West Hamilton Beach Volunteer Fire Department.
RFK-Triborough construction A 50-year-old ramp from the Harlem River Drive to the RFK-Triborough Bridge will be closed on Sept. 12 and is scheduled to be replaced by year’s end. A temporary ramp and detours will allow access to the bridge at 125th Street. In a statement issued last week the Metropolitan Transportation Authority said work originally was scheduled for the 2013-15 capital budget cycle. It was moved up after a recent inspection showed severe deterioration brought on by the bridge’s age and recent harsh winters. “We reached the point where it was no longer possible to just keep patching,” said RFK Facility Engineer Rocco D’Angelo.
“The ramp has reached the end of its useful life and needs to be replaced before another winter approaches.” Motorists using the temporary ramp will take 1st Avenue and follow detour signs to 125th Street to an existing ramp that will take them to the RFK Harlem River Lift Span. Signs will be in place to direct drivers. The project is part of a nearly $1 billion, 15-year capital improvement plan for the tripartite bridge and plaza that connects Queens, Manhattan and the Bronx and serves 170,000 drivers a day. The new ramp is expected to be comQ pleted in December.
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In addition, Steps Ahead invites world renowned choreographers to teach master workshops throughout the year. We’ve had the privilege of working with choreographers such as Emily Shock; Joshua Allen — Season 4 winner of “So You Think You Can Dance;” Lajon Dantzler from Step Up 2 the Streets and Step Up 3D; and celebrity dancer and choreographer Brittany Perry-Russell. Given the opportunity to learn from such great artists has provided our students with a wide range of knowledge and experience in various styles of dance. Our classes create not only well-rounded dancers, but well-rounded people with poise, conf idence, discipline and of course physical strength and endurance. Come celebrate our 20th year anniversary and enrich your child’s life with dance lessons at Steps Ahead Dance Studio while developing lifelong friendships between dancers, parents and families. Steps Ahead Dance Studio is located at 90-55 Desarc Road. Telephone numQ ber is (718) 641-2005. Danielle Perero is the owner of Steps Ahead Dance Studio.
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Muslims celebrate fast’s end The Muslim American Society of Queens and Dar Al-Dawah Mosque held a celebration in Astoria Park on Aug. 30 to mark the end of Ramadan, the holy month of fasting. During Ramadan, observant Muslims around the world must abstain from eating, drinking, smoking or having sex from dawn
until dusk. Eid Al-Fitr, the first day of the month following Ramadan, was welcomed by over 8,000 Muslims. They joined in morning prayers, and then visited friends and family and ate sweets to mark the end of the holy Q month.
SQ page 21 Page 21 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011
CB 10 opposes Q41 reroute Most vote to reject plan to move bus to 109th Ave. by Anna Gustafson Editor
Richmond Hill South Civic Association President Margaret Finnerty reads a letter opposing the MTA’s plan to reroute the Q41 bus as CB 10 member JoAnn Ariola looks on. PHOTO BY ANNA GUSTAFSON
“As a regular bus rider, I’ve ridden the Q41 many times, and all those turns are ridiculous,” Quintana said. Pat McCabe, chief of staff to state Sen. Joe Addabbo (D-Howard Beach), expressed skepticism about the plan. “In the senator’s opinion, you’ll take a bus off an avenue that’s familiar with it and move it to an avenue that’s never had a bus on it,” McCabe said. Representatives from the off ices of Assemblyman Mike Miller (D-Woodhaven) and Councilman Eric Ulrich (R-Ozone Park) rejected the MTA plan as well. McCabe and CB 10 Chairwoman Betty Braton, as well as many other board members, praised police and city officials for their help during the tropical storm that hit the city last week. Braton reported that since last Sunday, there has been 476 complaints about tree damage — around the same number the board typically gets in an entire year. McCabe said the basements of at least 150 homes were flooded and 12 people “lost everything” because of the storm. Q
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Community Board 10 members voted overwhelmingly against the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s proposal to reroute the Q41 in South Ozone Park from 111th Avenue to 109th Avenue at their meeting last week. All but one of the members at the meeting, held last Thursday at the United Hindu Cultural Center in South Ozone Park, rejected the city’s plan to have the Q41 travel on 109th Avenue from 111th Street to around 127th Street, instead of along 111th Avenue as it does now. The Q41 provides service between Jamaica and Howard Beach via Richmond Hill and South Ozone Park. Margaret Finnerty, president of the Richmond Hill South Civic Association, headquartered on 115th Street in South Ozone Park, said her organization is opposed to the rerouting because it would be disadvantageous to the numerous students and seniors who are used to the current path. “Seniors use this bus to get to Howard Beach to shop and attend the Howard Beach Senior Center,” Finnerty said, reading a letter she sent to a number of elected officials to enlist their support. Finnerty added that a number of students use the stop at 111th Avenue and Lefferts Boulevard, where PS 100 is located. Robert Lai, director of service design at the MTA, told CB 10 members that the transportation authority wants to change the route because “the Q41 has experienced poor reliability, and you may experience long waits or crowded buses.” Part of the problem, Lai said, is the bus takes too many turns on 111th Avenue, making it more diff icult for it to reach stops on time. “If we stay on 109th Avenue, we eliminate four turns,” Lai said. CB 10 member David Quintana, the only one on the board to support the MTA’s proposal, said it would “make sense.”
SQ page 22
Artist remembers horror Roof-top work honors memory of the fallen by Liz Rhoades Managing Editor
Tribute in Light viewing Kimberly Miller paints the garage roof of her future father-in-law on 124th Street Street in College COURTESY PHOTO Point to commemorate the tragedy of 9/11. because of the location of the building, “We got a bird’s eye view of the attack,” she said. “I was terrified.” She recalls seeing the towers crumbling and thinking about so many people being killed. “We all started crying in the classroom,” Miller said. “I still f ind it devastating.”
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Today, she works as an oncology nurse at New York Hospital Queens in Flushing “and loves it.” The nurse still paints in her spare time and said she will never forget the terrorist attack that took place 10 years ago. “It’s unbelievable that it happened so long ago,” Q Miller said. “It’s still in my mind.”
The Municipal Art Society of New York is once again commemorating 9/11 with a Tribute in Light. The display, using 88 individual, 7,000-watt xenon bulbs, will begin at dusk on Sept. 11 and end at dawn on Sept. 12. The lights reach four miles into the sky and are visible from as far as 60 miles away. In Queens, among the best vantage points for viewing are Gantry Plaza State Park, Rockaway Station and Roxbury, just west of the Marine Parkway Bridge.
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As a 17-year-old Bayside resident in 2001, Kimberly Miller watched in horror as the twin towers of the World Trade Center collapsed. Ten years later, sheÕs a registered nurse who never forgets the tragedy of 9/11. Always interested in painting, Miller was inspired two years ago by her future fatherin-law, Jack Leone, to paint a mural to commemorate the attacks on his flat garage roof at 7-12 124 St. in College Point. “He’s very patriotic and this is our way of never forgetting that terrible day,” she said. “Jack loves it and says it’s just what he wanted.” The mural took two days to complete and Miller put a sealer on it. She admits the weather has faded it slightly since then and it may need a touch up. The design — suggested by Leone — features a ribbon with the stars and stripes and the message “Never Forget” with the date, “9.11. 2001.” The artist’s fiance, Joseph Leone, is so proud of the roof art that he has posted it on the Internet. “We hope that people in planes and helicopters flying over the area see it,” Miller said. The couple lives in Whitestone and plans to wed next March. As a teenager, Miller attended St. Agnes High School in College Point and
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QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011 Page 22
TEN YEARS AFTER 9/11: AN ARTIST REMEMBERS
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SQ page 24 TEN YEARS AFTER 9/11: THE MUSLIM EXPERIENCE
After attacks, Muslims are weary of wariness Boro Muslims, Sikhs say life has not been easy in the city since 9/11 by Anna Gustafson Editor
efore the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, Kew Gardens resident Moviz Siddiqi was never targeted for being a Muslim-American. He and his family easily walked the streets of Queens, enjoying the country he has called home since leaving Pakistan 15 years ago. Then came Sept. 11, 2001, and, as has been said countless times, everything changed. Like many Muslims throughout the city and the countr y, Siddiqi, the public affairs off icer at the Islamic Circle of North America, a group based in Jamaica that focuses on charity work and disaster aid, found himself facing an increasingly hostile environment for members of his religion. “I remember one incident when my sisterin-law was wearing hijab and someone yelled, ‘You are Osama bin Laden, go back,’” Siddiqi said. “I myself feel like a secondclass citizen. After Sept. 11, there is no doubt about it, I can feel totally different.” Since the 2001 attacks, numerous reports have been issued by a variety of organizations, including the New York Civil Liberties Union and the Gallup Organization, that cite a host of problems Muslim-Americans have faced, including being improperly detained by law off icials, bullied in schools and encountering a rise in antiIslamic sentiment in the country. According to a recent poll by the Pew Research Center, 30 percent of Americans said they had favorable views of Islam, down from 41 percent in 2005. Over the past decade, Muslim Americans have routinely found themselves in the news. Over the past year there has been a national debate over whether an Islamic cultural center should be allowed to be built a couple blocks away from Ground Zero, and U.S. Rep. Peter King (R-LI), chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, has held three hearings on “Muslim radicalization” that have largely upset members
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of the Queens Muslim community, as well as other religious organizations like the Catholic nonprof it charity group Pax Christi and the Interfaith Alliance of Long Island. “When Peter King says the things he does, that doesn’t just hurt Muslims, that hurts everybody,” said Harpreet Toor, a Richmond Hill resident who is a Sikh. Sikhs, some of whom wear turbans and grow beards, have, like Muslims, been victims of harassment or violence since the 2001 attacks. The Sikh Coalition reported there have been at least 700 attacks or bias-related incidents against Sikhs since Sept. 11. Federal officials have not kept separate statistics on violence against Sikhs, tracking hate crimes against them in the same category as crimes against Muslims, ArabAmericans and South Asians. In 2000, there were 28 anti-Islamic hate crimes reported to the FBI — a year later, there were 481, according to federal Department of Justice numbers. According to the most recent statistics available from the federal government, reported anti-Islamic hate crimes have dropped to 107 in 2009. “Life definitely has not been easy,” Toor said. “Have we made any strides since 9/11? Yes. Are we where we need to be yet? No. You still get these comments. Somebody pulled up in a car next to me while I was walking and told me to ‘go back.’ Why do I have to prove my patriotism to someone because I look different?” Siddiqi said his organization increased its efforts to do charity work and disaster relief domestically after Sept. 11 and has been working with groups like Catholic Charities and the Federal Emergency Management Agency to provide aid for victims in places like New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina and now for people affected by Hurricane Irene. Such work, he hopes, will shine a good light on Muslim-Americans trying to prove they are good citizens. “People have to understand, we are not going anywhere, we are as American as
The Islamic Circle of North America, based in Jamaica, increased their domestic charity work after Sept. 11. The group has given away thousands of free school bags to children in need throughout PHOTO COURTESY ICNA Queens.
Thousands of Muslims gather at Jamaica High School to celebrate Eid, which marks the end of FILE PHOTO Ramadan. Many of the city’s Muslims call Queens home. anyone else,” Siddiqi said. “We are doctors, engineers, computer programmers. The Muslim community, we are not receivers, we are givers. Yes, there are some bad apples, but they are few. Our religion teaches people to respect others, to respect the law.” Asad Bajwa, a Queens Village resident who is the public affairs officer for the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, said his organization has recently launched a nationwide blood drive with the hope of collecting 10,000 bags of blood. “We wanted to spread the message that the definition of Islam is sanctity of life,” Bajwa said. “On 9/11 life was taken away, and we want to people to know that Islam stands for life, which is why we’re doing the blood drive.” To f ind out when and where a blood drive is happening, visit muslimsforlife.org. Siddiqi said the jump in anti-Muslim sentiment after Sept. 11 was devastating for him, and other Muslim-Americans, who felt increasingly isolated in the country where many of them grew up, or moved to long ago. “The Tea Party has held big demonstrations against us, and that is really heartbreaking,” Siddiqi said. Siddiqi and Toor said it is crucial to focus on dialogue promoting cross-cultural understanding in the city and throughout the country. “American people are the best in the world,” Siddiqi said. “They’re more open. They can come to us with questions about Islam, and we can explain what we are and they listen.” Toor said he also believes it would be helpful if Sikhs in the NYPD were given more visible positions. “Something that would help is if we have people with beards and turbans in the NYPD protecting elected officials,” Toor said. “If people see that the elected officials are safe, they will feel safe too.” Mark Rosenblum, the director for the Center for Ethnic, Racial and Religious Understanding at Queens College and an expert on the Middle East, said he wanted students to engage in dialogue about contentious topics immediately after the
Sept. 11 attacks, which he and his Modern Middle East class witnessed from the Flushing campus. “We were sitting right in front of Rosenthal Library with an unobstructed view of downtown Manhattan,” Rosenblum said. “We saw both of the buildings come down. One kid in the class had a father in the building.” In Rosenblum’s class, there were about 12 Muslim and 13 Jewish students, and, on the night Sept. 11 — which he spent at Queens College with students stuck there because there was no transportation — the professor, following a heated discussion between a Muslim and Jewish student, began to think about creating a curriculum that would “force students to confront the event and walk in others’ shoes.” Rosenblum has since created that curriculum, as part of which students who are members of groups that have historically been at odds with each other — Israelis and Palestinians, Turks and Greeks or Indians and Pakistanis, for example, will “enter into difficult dialogues with one another.” The Center for Ethnic, Racial and Religious Understanding has also brought numerous speakers and other performers to Queens College and recently hosted an event that featured a discussion between Daisy Khan, wife of Park51 Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, who favors building the Islamic cultural center near its proposed site a couple blocks from Ground Zero, and Jim Riches, a retired city Fire Department deputy chief whose son died as a f irst responder on Sept. 11 and who has opposed the Islamic center. “This year we’re hoping to engage more mosques and synagogues and get people to visit each other’s holy places to have dialogues,” Rosenblum said. “We have students who’ve undergone transformations because of our dialogues. We have a soldier who’s the head of the young Republicans here who did several tours of duty in the Middle East and is going back to Afghanistan, and he’s developed a close friendship with a Muslim woman who had once been deeply suspicious and didn’t appreciate the fact Q that he was a soldier in Afghanistan.”
SQ page 25
Activities set for 10th anniversary Queens events include prayer services, memorials and lots more by Liz Rhoades
CEREMONIES
Managing Editor
n the 10th anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, Queens communities are remembering those who died there, be it off ice workers, police, f ire or emergency responders. Events begin today, Thursday, and continue through October. They range from prayer services to a mural dedication. See a separate listing in Qboro for the many art exhibits geared to 9/11.
O
PRAYER SERVICES A 9/11 remembrance service will be held at the Reformation Presbyterian Church, meeting at PS 173 at 174-10 67 Ave. in Fresh Meadows. It will begin at 10 a.m. on Sunday. Saint Matthias Church, 58-15 Catalpa Ave. in Ridgewood will hold a mass of remembrance at 11:30 a.m. on Sunday. The church choir will perform music from Gregorian chants to contemporary composers. Saint Matthias lost three parishioners in the attack. Our Saviour Lutheran Church, 90-04 175 St. in Jamaica will host a nondenominational memorial service at 4 p.m. on Sunday. “We gather not only to remember, but to continue to heal,” said its senior pastor, the Rev. Bob Fritch.
Keizs, York president, will lead the program. The Richmond Hill Block Association will hold a memorial ceremony at 12:30 p.m. Saturday at Forest Park by Park Lane South and Myrtle Avenue. The Broadway Flushing Civic and the Bowne Park Civic associations will hold a candlelight vigil at Bowne Park at 156th Street and 32nd Avenue at 6 p.m. Saturday. New York Hospital Queens in Flushing will hold a memorial ceremony with an honor guard at the NYHQ Emergency Services memorial site on Booth Memorial Avenue at 8:30 a.m. on Sunday. The Briarwood Community Association is sponsoring a memorial program on Sunday at 11 a.m. on the Queens Boulevard promenade at 84th Drive. The Briarwood Action Network will sponsor a 9/11 Day of Service at Hoover Park, Manton Street between 83rd Avenue, 134th Street and Main Street at noon Sate gather not only urday. Participants will beauto remember but tify the park by repainting benches and lampposts. to continue to heal.” A memorial program honoring the 42 victims from — The Rev. Bob Fritch of Our Saviour Glendale, Ridgewood, MidLutheran Church in Jamaica dle Village and Woodhaven will be held Sunday at 12:30 p.m. at the Dry Harbor Playground, Myrtle Avenue and 80th Street in Glendale. Another candlelight vigil will Glen Oaks Village co-op has be held at the Village Mall, 150- just completed building its Trib38 Union Turnpike in Flushing at ute Triangle Park and will hold a 8 p.m. Thursday. It’s sponsored 9/11 memorial dedication cereby the homeowners association. mony at 1 p.m. on Sunday. The A memorial program will be location is Little Neck Parkway held Friday at 11 a.m. at Maspeth and 75th Avenue. Memorial Park at 69th Street and The Station Road Civic AssoGrand Avenue. A piece of steel ciation of Aubur ndale and from the WTC will be unveiled Assemblyman Rory Lancman are that will become part of the 9/11 sponsoring a memorial at 1 p.m. Maspeth memorial. There will be Sunday at Plaut Triangle, 169th a laying of a wreath by the Fire Street and Northern Boulevard. Department and patriotic songs. They will read the names of the The Korean American Senior f irst responders who lost their Citizens Society of Greater New lives on 9/11. York will hold a ceremony on FriA program titled “To Bigotry day at 11 a.m. at the Kissena Cor- No Sanction” will be held Sunday ridor Park, between Juniper at 1 p.m. at the Forest Hills JewAvenue and Colden Street in ish Center, 106-06 Queens Blvd. Flushing. This year, members It will feature members of various planted flowers to depict an religious communitites, including American flag. Area elected offi- Muslim, Buddhist, Christian, Sikh cials are expected to participate. and Jewish in a family-friendly Woodside on the Move will event. For reservations, call (718) unveil a mural to commemorate 263-7000 Ext. 203. the 10th anniversary on Saturday A candlelight ceremony will be at 11 a.m. at 61st Street and Roo- held at Doughboy Park at the corsevelt Avenue. ner of 56th Street and Woodside York College will sponsor a Avenue in Woodside at 5 p.m. on wreath-laying ceremony at the Sunday. It is sponsored by the college plaza, 94-20 Guy R. Woodside Civic Association. Brewer Blvd. in Jamaica on SatThe Forest Hills Volunteer urday at 12:30 p.m. Marcia Ambulance Corps will honor its The Flushing Suburban Civic Organization will hold a candlelight vigil at the flagpole at PS 154, 75-02 162 St. at 5:30 p.m. Thursday. A candlelight vigil sponsored by the Hillcrest Estates Civic Association will be held at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the Union Turnpike Veterans Memorial at the turnpike and 164th Street. Parkway Village will also hold a candelight vigil at its flagpole, 81-26 150 St., in Jamaica at 7 p.m. on Thursday. The United Community Civic Association will hold its annual candlelight ceremony at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in McManus Memorial Park at 81st Street and the Grand Central Parkway in Astoria Heights.
“W
TALKS The Greater Astoria Historical Society, 35-20 Broadway, 4th floor in Long Island City will hold a conversation about 9/11 at 1 p.m. on Saturday. The mental effects of the event will be discussed by William James and guests are invited to participate in the discussion. The Queens College Center for Ethnic, Racial & Religious Understanding will hold a dialogue on what the day means from 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday in the main dining hall’s patio room on the Kissena Boulevard campus in Flushing. Musical selections will be presented by Salman Ahmad of Junoon, Haim Avitsur and Sean Jeremy Palmer. A kosher lunch will be served. Call Steven Appel at (718) 997-5293. St. John’s University will sponsor a panel discussion on “Ten Years Later: Are We More Prepared?” on Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the D’Angelo Center, 8000 Utopia Parkway, Jamaica. On Oct. 4, St. John’s will offer an interfaith dialogue with Amir Hussain at 4 p.m. at Marillac Auditorium.
The Queens Museum of Art’s tribute to the World Trade Center that was placed FILE PHOTO in the Panorama 10 years ago. fallen member, Richard Pearlman, at a service Sunday at 5 p.m. at its headquarters at 92-29 Metropolitan Ave. St. John’s University, 8000 Utopia Parkway, in Jamaica will hold a vigil in remembrance and hope on the Great Lawn at 6:30 p.m. on Sunday. The Bayside Hills Civic Association will sponsor its annual ceremony at 7 p.m. Sunday at Bell Boulevard and the Long Island Expressway service road. Representatives from the city, fire and police and elected officials are expected to participate. Participants are asked to bring candles. American flags will be supplied and placed on a memorial at the site. A candlelight vigil will take place at 7 p.m. Sunday at Juniper Valley Park, between 77th and 78th streets in Middle Village. The program will include video tributes, a live chorus, recitations and dedication of a new memorial garden. Participants are asked to bring a chair, candle, flag and flashlight. A neighborhood walk and special assembly will be held at PS 222, the Firefighter Christopher Santora School, located at 86-15 37 Ave. in Jackson Heights. The assembly will begin at 9:30 a.m.
on Monday; the walk will be right before it. RSVP to Janette by Friday at (718) 429-2563. Santora, 23, was a lifelong resident of the area, who died at Ground Zero. St. Michael’s Cemetery at 7202 Astoria Blvd. in East Elmhurst will dedicate a monument honoring the 343 FDNY f iref ighters who died at the WTC on Saturday, Sept. 24 at 2 p.m. The memorial service will also honor the NYPD and Port Authority police.
MUSIC The Mendelssohn Glee Club, the country’s oldest men’s chorus, will present an American tribute concert with the 608th Battalion Army Band at the Seuffert Bandshell in Forest Park in Woodhaven on Saturday at 3:30 p.m. The concert will feature patriotic and American favorites. A concert in tribute of 9/11 will be offered on Sunday at 5 p.m.at 78th Street and Northern Boulevard in Jackson Heights. The Little Theatre of NY will present a concert of songs and scenes dedicated to the works of Jerome Kern, in remembrance of 9/11 on Sunday at 6 p.m. at Socrates Sculpture Park at 32-01 Ver non Blvd. in Long Island Q City.
Page 25 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011
TEN YEARS AFTER 9/11: COMMEMORATIONS IN QUEENS
QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011 Page 26
SQ page 26rev TEN YEARS AFTER 9/11: THE FAMILIES AND THE SITE
9/11 memorial rankles family Astorians Al and Maureen Santora are angry with the city’s design by Paula Neudorf Chronicle Contributor
Maureen Santora with her son, Christopher, a firefighter who PHOTO COURTESY THE SANTORA FAMILY died in the 9/11 attacks.
“We’ll be upset until the day we die,” Astoria resident and former New York firefighter chief Al Santora said last weekend. He wasn’t talking about the death of his son Christopher, a firefighter who perished on Sept. 11, 2001, though it’s clear that pain is also always with Santora and his wife, Maureen. Instead, he was referring to the National September 11 Memorial and Museum, set to open Sunday on the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. Santora spoke with the Chronicle over the phone on his way to Norfolk, Va., with his wife, where the pair and a number of other 9/11 victims’ family members would board the USS New York before journeying back to New York and disembarking at Ground Zero on Thursday. “We’re sitting with two other family members,” Santora said. “The four of us can’t understand the things that they have done.” Among these things is the design incorporating the names of the nearly 3,000 victims who died in the attacks, which will appear on bronze panels that border two “memorial pools” placed in the footprints of the twin towers. Santora objects to the way the names have been “randomly placed,” with “no information.” “You don’t know if it’s a male or female,” he went on. “Why bother if you’re not going to educate people?” More information about the people inscribed in the panels will be on view inside the museum itself, but for Santora, this doesn’t change the memorial’s effect. People, he said, would just see all the names and think “‘Wow, look at all the people who died here,’” and then be on their way. “You should get a feeling for who they were, not just a
name on a wall,” he said. The Santoras also take issue with how unidentified human remains will be interred, away from public view, behind a wall in the museum, where the city’s Office of Chief Medical Examiner will conduct ongoing identification work. Santora doesn’t understand why the remains need to be moved from the medical examiner’s office at all. “Is this a freak show?” he asked. But perhaps the most galling aspects of the memorial, Santora said, are the $25 admission price regular visitors will have to pay to get into the museum and the fact that first responders have not been invited to the site’s opening ceremony, which many officials are set to attend. Calling the fee “ludicrous,” Santora expressed his anger with the city. “The mayor is just about money,” he said. Despite repeated letters and attempts to bring their concerns to the Mayor’s Office, the Santoras felt they had never been properly addressed. Emails and calls made by the Chronicle for comment from the National September 11 Me-morial and Museum, whose board of directors is chaired by Mayor Bloomberg, went unanswered. Maureen Santora said that working as an activist was one of the ways she and her husband honor her son Christopher, who died at the age of 23. “We have fought tirelessly to bring these concerns to the general public,” she said. She hoped people would attend a ceremony honoring all the firefighters who died in the attacks at St. Michael’s Cemetery in Astoria, where Christopher is buried, on Sept. 24. “We will have a very tough day on Sept. 11,” she added, “not because it’s the 10th anniversary, but because it’s one Q more year without Christopher.”
Tribute to the past, hope for the future World Trade Center rises from the ashes, opens to public on Monday by Michael Gannon Associate Editor
The families of the dead and dignitaries will come on Sunday. And on Monday the site of the World Trade Center will open to the public as a tribute not only to the deceased, but to the city and the people they typified. “In the wake of the attacks, New Yorkers united first in grief — and then in resolve,”
1 World Trade Center
said Mayor Bloomberg on Tuesday. “ ... And we understood that we could not expect our men and women in uniform abroad to defend [our] values alone. We had to do our part right here at home. “And did we ever,” Bloomberg said. “Over the past decade, New York City has come roaring back, faster and stronger than anyone thought possible.” Ten years later, gardens, sculptures and a museum are ready to welcome visitors. PATH and subway stations move toward completion bringing back tourists and commerce; and 1 World Trade Center is reclaiming the site’s rightful place in the city’s skyline. Steve Coleman, spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, said its commitment to the $11 billion project is proceeding at full speed. “Right now 1 World Trade Center is up to the 80th floor,” Coleman said. “That leaves 24 to go, and we’re putting up about one floor per week.” He said the steel work is expected to be completed in February. The glass window facade, now up to the 53rd floor, is progressing at about the same pace. He said 225 trees adorning the plaza withstood Hurricane Irene quite nicely. A visitor’s center, though not open to the public, is completed on the outside. The waterfalls in the memorial pools are working and plaques naming the victims of Sept. 11, 2001 are in place.
Cranes were still working full tilt in July, but the World Trade Center Memorial Plaza had taken its unmistakable shape. The plaza opens to the public on Monday on a reservation basis following PHOTOS COURTESY PORT AUTHORITY OF NY AND NJ Sunday’s 10th anniversary ceremonies. And the Port Authority has installed fencing around unf inished parts of the eight-acre plaza so visitors and workers will not interfere with each other between now and 2014, when all work is expected to be completed. Coleman said the Port Authority managed construction of the 9/11 museum, but
is not in charge of its operation. He also said the components of the WTC transportation hub are in varying stages of completion, including passage for the No. 1 subway and a New Jersey PATH station. “When it’s done, you’ll be able to get off the PATH train and connect with 11 subQ way lines,” he said.
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Remembering the fallen More than 500 people gathered in Breezy Point on Monday to pay tribute to the victims of Sept. 11, 2001 and witnessed the last patch being sewn on a flag that was found tattered after being hung from a building in lower Manhattan by firefighters days after the World Trade Center attacks. Jimmy Sands, a firefighter from Howard
Beach, pictured at bottom, helped to sew the final patch on the flag. The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s son sewed stitches on it, and it was raised at the funeral for Christina Taylor Green, the 9-yearold victim of the shooting rampage at an event held Jan. 8 by Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords in Tucson, Ariz.
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Rising Stars Dance Studio located in Richmond Hill, is celebrating its 20th anniversary this year. Suzanne PafundiRodriquez is the owner/director of the studio. She is a graduate of the prestigious La Guardia High School of Performing Arts and Marymount Manhattan College. She is the winner of national studio awards including choreographer, director and best studio awards. “Our main goal here at Rising Stars Dance Studio is to provide your children with the highest quality of dance instruction,” Pafundi-Rodriguez said. Rising Stars remains a force in the dance community, Suzanne Pafundi-Rodriguez showcasing their students at competitions and shows. Rising Stars is family-owned and their areas of specialization include ballet, lyrical, modern, pointe, hip-hop, jazz, tap, salsa and acrobatics. For more information visit Rising Stars Dance Studio at 110-05 Liberty Ave. Telephone (718) 641-0653.
C M SQ page 29 Y K Page 29 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011
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C M SQ page 30rev Y K TEN YEARS AFTER 9/11: FALLEN HEROES
Glendale girl remembers 9/11 In a new radio series for WNYC, young people come forward at last by Paula Neudorf Chronicle contributor
When people would ask Jillian Suarez how her dad died, she would lie. He had a heart attack, she’d say. The truth — that her father, Ramon Suarez, a career police officer with the NYPD, died while saving others during the 9/11 attacks — was just too much to bear. But Jillian, who lives in Glendale and is just a few days shy of her 19th birthday, has been working hard to come out of her shell and talk about her feelings. It started when her mother Carmen saw that WNYC, the public radio station, was calling on young people affected by 9/11 to submit their stories for a special series of 10th anniversary broadcasts as part of its “Radio Rookies” program. Carmen put her daughter’s name forward. “I didn’t know I was doing it,” Jillian said of her being chosen as one of six young people by the radio station. “My mom planned it without telling me.” The two women sat side by side at WNYC’s office in downtown Manhattan with Sanda Htyte, a Radio Rookies associate producer who worked closely with Jillian to help tell her story through audio.
B o t h H t y t e a n d C a r m e n t a l ke d about how difficult it has always been f o r J i l l i a n t o d i s c u s s h e r f a t h e r ’s death. Once a medal-winning relay racer, Jillian stopped running after her f a t h e r d i e d, C a r m e n s a i d . H e h a d loved the sport. “They were very close,” Carmen said of her daughter and husband. After producing the five-minute segment, in which Jillian interviews her mother and talks about her father — “my best friend,” she calls him in the piece — Jillian said she felt better. In fact, this girl who once hid the details of her father’s death recently got a tattoo, just a few days before her audio story aired, commemorating his life. She’d been thinking about getting it for a year. The twin towers rising above a cityscape sit perched on her left shoulder, the word “Daddy” etched underneath. “You’re one of the few people I know that have a tattoo that really means something,” Jillian said her friends have told her. Now when people on the street ask her about the tattoo, she tells them about her dad. Despite the strides forward, recovering from the loss is a long process. Both women seemed to think they might never
fully “heal.” “You can’t move on from something that comes up in your life 24/7,” Jillian said. Whether it’s been one year or 10, she added, makes no real difference. Jillian’s 19th birthday is on Sept. 9, which has made her last nine birthdays extremely hard. The hardest part about interviewing her mother, Jillian said, was knowing she was going to cry. Her mom and dad were married in 1999 after being together for 10 years. “I could have never asked for a better husband,” Carmen said of Ramon, who is buried at St. Raymond’s Cemetery in the Bronx. “He was a great father.” This coming week, both women said, would be difficult, but they would get through it. Jillian has just begun her sophomore year as a transfer student at Queensborough Community College, where she hopes to graduate with a degree in social services. “I want to be able to help people,” she said. “I know people go through a lot.” Q To hear Jillian’s story and those of the five other “rookies,” visit wnyc.org/ shows/rookies/2011. All six stories will be broadcast on Saturday, Sept. 10.
Carmen Suarez, left, with her husband Ramon and daughter Jillian, at Niagara Falls in 2001. Ramon, an NYPD officer, was killed just months later in the 9/11 PHOTO COURTESY THE SUAREZ FAMILY attacks.
The Fallen 19 never forgotten in Maspeth 68th Street firehouse suffered FDNY’s largest loss in twin towers by Michael Gannon
“I called it the day of the sirens,” she said. “That was all you could hear, that and the fighter jets flying overhead. Mary Anne Walter of Maspeth last week recalled Sept. You could see the towers burning from the overpass, and at 11, 2001 not far from where she stood that afternoon, on my school where I had been teaching that morning. And Grand Avenue near the overpass for the Long Island my church held a prayer vigil that night.” The FDNY lost 343 men when the twin towers fell. Expressway. And Walter and the neighborhood soon would be horrified to learn that 19 of the men from the f irehouse on 68th Street who charged into the twin towers would never come back, the largest loss of any fire station in the city that day. “It was awful,” she said. Hazmat 1 lost f iref ighters Dennis Carey, Martin Demeo, Thomas Gardner, John Giordano, Jonathan Hohmann, Dennis Scauso and Kevin Smith; Battalion Chief John Fanning, captains Thomas Moody and Patrick Waters; and Lt. John Crisci. Squad 288 lost Lt. Ronald Kerwin, and firefighters Peter Brennan, Ronnie Gies, Joseph Hunter, Jonathan Ielpi, Adam Rand, Brian Sweeney and Timothy Welty. The men are remembered on a Workers apply the finishing touches last week to an addition to Maspeth’s memorial to the 19 monument in Maspeth Memorial firefighters from Hazmat 1/Squad 288 from the firehouse on 68th Street. Six Maspeth resi- Park at 68th Street and Grand dents, including four members of the New York CIty Fire Department, also are commemorated Avenue, across a narrow street from PHOTO BY MICHAEL GANNON the firehouse. on the monument. Associate Editor
Also honored are six Maspeth residents slain in the attack, including Cono Gallo, Jennifer Mazzotta, firefighters Michael Cawley, Christopher Pickford and Michael Weinberg and Lt. Kenneth Phelan. On Friday the annual ceremony honoring all 25 will include the unveiling of an addition to the monument which will house a piece of steel from the World Trade Center. The ceremonies, sponsored by the United Veterans and Fraternal Organizations and Maspeth Federal Savings, commences at 11 a.m. at the memorial. Hazmat 1 and Squad 288 were restaffed and rebuilt. Though members declined through FDNY headquarters to be interviewed, one can walk by the station and see them rolling out on calls both large and small whenever summoned, and checking and maintaining their building, grounds and equipment when they are not. “You see them on the street and in the supermarkets and stores,” Walter said. “And they often host school and scout troops at the firehouse. When my daughters were in a playgroup at Maspeth Methodist Church in the ’80s a trip to the firehouse was one of the highlights of the year. The firefighters were always so friendly and accommodating.” And continue to be so. “They come in occasionally; they’re very nice,” said Darlene Bixler, who has worked down the street at Grand Avenue Pharmacy for 11 years. Anthony Terracciano, who has owned the drugstore for 25, says the loss lingers. “Some of them were customers or family members of customers,” he said. “It was terrible. I still don’t think they get the credit they deserve outside the neighborhood.” Walter said the tragedy if possible, moved Maspeth to further embrace New York’s Bravest. Q “We’re very protective of our firefighters,” she said.
C M SQ page 31 Y K Page 31 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011
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TEN YEARS AFTER 9/11: A MOTHER’S BATTLE
The fight for a son’s justice Resident wants feds to recognize man as responder by Anna Gustafson Editor
Richard Pearlman was 18 years old when he died trying to help people at the World Trade FILE PHOTO Center.
Richard Pearlman always knew he wanted to help people. As a boy growing up in Howard Beach, he would run to help elderly residents struggling to open a door or with shoveling snow from their yards. When he was 13 years old, he was ecstatic to begin working with the Forest Hills Volunteer Ambulance Corps, taking the job so seri-
ously that he would hop on three buses in major snowstorms to get there. And after graduating from Beach Channel High School in 2001, he planned to attend LaGuardia Community College to become a paramedic. Then came the news that the World Trade Center had been attacked on Sept. 11, 2001, and the 18 year old didn’t think twice about running to help. Pearlman’s body was later found in the rubble at
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Ground Zero. Ten years later, his mother, Dorie Pearlman, is still f ighting to get the federal government to recognize her son, whose life will be honored at a ceremony at the Howard Beach Judea Center on Thursday, Sept. 8, as a first responder. The U.S. Department of Justice in 2009 denied Pearlman’s application to receive funds from the Public Safety Off icers’ Benefits program, which the government set up to give one-time payments of $250,000 to the families of first responders who died in the line of duty. According to the government, Richard Pearlman was not acting in an off icial capacity when he was killed, making his family ineligible to participate in the program. With the help of former U.S. Rep. Anthony Weiner, Dorie Pearlman twice appealed the decision, but both appeals were rejected. She is now looking for help from other elected officials to help her appeal again. “It’s about more than the funds involved,” said Pearlman, who lives in the Lindenwood section of Howard Beach. “It’s the respect. Because he wasn’t a paid employee, because he was a volunteer, his life is worth less? He was a first responder. He was taken to the World Trade Center in a Police Department car, and the Fire Department gave me pictures of him carrying people out.” According to Pearlman, her son had heeded an announcement that anyone with medical training should report to 1 Police Plaza. After Pearlman said he proved his affiliation with the FHVAC, he was taken by a police cruiser to the towers. “He was a volunteer, a young man, and he literally gave his life to help somebody else,” Pearlman said. Her most recent appeal was rejected in June. Because Weiner resigned in midJune, she no longer was able to receive his help and has since written to a bevy of public officials throughout New York, as well as President Obama. “Dear President Obama,” Pearlman’s letter stated. “I realize you are very busy, but I have a problem and do not know where to turn, or who to turn to.” She has also reached out to state Sen. Joe Addabbo Jr. (D-Howard Beach) and U.S. Sens. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY). “I just need some help,” Pearlman said. “You’d think after all that has happened, that wouldn’t be so hard.” A ceremony for Pearlman will be held Thursday, Sept. 8 at 7:30 p.m. at the Howard Beach Judea Center at 162-05 Q 90 St.
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The Friends of Charles Park Committee and American Legion Post 1404 will hold a sunset memorial service for those who died in the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. The event will begin at 6 p.m. at Frank Charles Park in Howard Beach on Sept. 11. Attendees are asked to gather at the Q park’s flag pole.
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First responders get help in Queens Health center moving to Rego Park from Flushing early next year by Liz Rhoades
Queens College center will provide increased access to medical and mental health programs. “We merged because the program needs to be affiliated with a medical institution,” she added. The new Rego Park facility will be near parking and public transportation and will be larger than the Flushing site. Moline would not give the address because details are still being worked out. Although health conditions vary, most of the first responders suffer from throat and sinus problems, acid reflux, lung and upper airway problems and mental health issues, including post traumatic stress disorder, depression and anxiety. Asthma is particularly high among patients, too. The director says patients come once a year for monitoring and more often if treatment is necessary. “Some are medically managed, some have gotten better and some worse,” Moline said. Mental health services will now be handled through the Zucker Hillside Hospital in Glen Oaks, one of the specialty hospitals within the North Shore-LIJ system. “This is a real bonus for the program,” Moline said. She noted that post traumatic stress disorder can happen two years after a major incident, but that 18 months is the most common time frame. Moline added that through the use of drugs and counseling,
Managing Editor
The Queens facility treating more than 5,000 first responders at Ground Zero will be moving early next year from Flushing to Rego Park. Funding is through the Zadroga Act, which provides more than $4 billion in federal dollars to address the health crisis caused by the World Trade Center tragedy. In July, $3.85 million was awarded to LIJ Medical Center to partner with the Queens World Trade Center Clinical Center of Excellence, run for the last eight years by Queens College in a facility on the Horace Harding Expressway. Its chief Dr. Steven Markowitz, is co-directing the new effort with Dr. Jacqueline Moline, vice president and chairwoman of population health at the North Shore-LIJ Health System. She previously served as director of the largest WTC medical monitoring and treatment program at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in Manhattan. There are f ive clinical centers in the metropolitan area that examine, monitor, diagnose and treat f iref ighters and others who worked in Ground Zero and inhaled the “toxic mix” physicians now say was in the air from the destroyed towers. In an interview with the Queens Chronicle, Moline said par tnering with the
first responder patients can become fully functional. She believes clinicians will see more diseases in first responders in the future, including cancer and scarring of the lungs. Currently, federal guidelines prohibit the use of funds for cancer patients because officials say there has not been enough documentation to prove the connection with 9/11. But Moline strongly believes cancer should be part of the medical surveillance program. “I’m not surprised that cancer is turning up in responders because the disease takes many years to develop,” she said. “So many toxic substances were absorbed.” The doctor thinks documentation will show cancer rates higher and or sooner among first responders than the general population. “The information will speak for itself,” Moline said. Last week, the first major documented evidence was published in The Lancet, a medical magazine, in research done by the head FDNY doctor. It showed that firefighters who worked at Ground Zero are 19 percent more likely to have melanoma, thyroid and prostate cancer and nonHodgkin’s lymphoma cancer than those firefighters who did not work there. Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-Manhattan, Queens), who was one of the authors of
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the Zadroga Act has been pushing for funding for first responder cancer patients. She urged Dr. John Howard, the 9/11 federal health administrator, to consider “as soon as possible” adding coverage for the cancers discussed in The Lancet study. Moline said the center continues to get new patients and those at risk should conQ tact the facility at (718) 670-4174.
Please bring your donations to KIWANIS CLUB BOOK SALE COLLECTION BOXES at these participating locations:
• COUNCILMAN ERIC ULRICH 32nd DISTRICT
to be held on Saturday & Sunday October 1st and 2nd
PHOTO COURTESY NORTH SHORE-LIJ
• 96-05 101st Avenue Ozone Park 718-880-1644
• SINCEDE HAIR STUDIO
162-08 90th St. 718-845-9443
• S. MOSSA AGENCY-INS. 105-30 Cross Bay Blvd. 718-848-8122
• LENNY’S PIZZA 164-02 Cross Bay Blvd. 718-738-3500
• MICKY’S LAUNDROMAT Lindenwood Shopping Center 82-37 153rd Ave. 718-843-1084
• OLD MILL YACHT CLUB 163-15 Cross Bay Blvd. 718-848-8122
• JOE TROTTA REALTY 90-19 Rockaway Blvd. 718-843-3333
105-06 93rd St. 718-848-1639
• FASHION CLEANERS 164-24 Cross Bay Blvd. 718-843-5357
Proceeds of this sale will go to the Kiwanis Club of Howard Beach and used to support the many charitable needs of children in our community.
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Dr. Jacqueline Moline
Page 37 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011
TEN YEARS AFTER 9/11: TREATING FIRST RESPONDERS
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SPOTLIGHT ON ELDER LAW Who’s your trustee? The use of trusts for seniors as part of an estate plan by Nancy J. Brady, Esq. and Linda F. Marshak, Esq. The word “trust� has many different meanings. Within the estate planning context, we use the term “trust� to describe a formal document in which the Grantor, or person creating the Trust, appoints a Trustee or a person who agrees to manage the assets titled under the Trust, according to the terms the Trust agreement directs. A trust is a “living� trust if it’s created during the Grantor’s lifetime, and it’s “revocable� when the Grantor retains the power to change or alter the trust at any time, for any reason, as long as he/she is mentally competent. Usually revocable trusts become irrevocable on the incapacity, or death of the Grantor. Unlike a Last Will and Testament, which only has legal effect upon the death of the person creating it, a Living Trust becomes effective as of the date signed, and, in the case of Revocable Trusts, can be changed by the Grantor during the Grantor’s lifetime. Additionally, a Trust is a private agreement which allows the Trustee (the successor Trustee after the Grantor has passed away) to distribute the assets held in the name of the Trust to the named beneficiaries without the expense and delays associated with the probate process. (Probate is the legal process of proving one’s Will valid, with formal notification of all persons who stood to inherit if the individual had passed away without a Will). Our articles often focus on asset protection planning using Irrevocable Trusts, to protect assets from the costs of long term nursing home or home care. If you own real property, and significant financial assets, you should strongly consider establishing this type of trust to plan for the possibility of protecting assets in the event you should require long term care either in a nursing home or at home. We frequently use Revocable Trusts in estate planning, for reasons other than Medicaid planning. Trusts can be especially useful for the following reasons:
1. Trusts can avoid multiple probates when an individual owns real estate in more than one state, since real estate is subject to the probate process in the state in which the property is located; 2. Trusts are private agreements, and allow the transfer of assets to your intended beneficiaries to remain private (and avoid Will contests). Probate of a Last Will and Testament can expose your estate to public scrutiny. 3. A Trust can protect the inheritance of your minor children by including directions as to how and when the assets can be spent. 4. Used in combination with a credit shelter trust in one’s Will, a Trust is an important part of an overall estate plan to help reduce estate taxes for married couples. 5. Trusts can protect assets for a disabled individual, without jeopardizing government benefits the disabled person may be receiving or be entitled to receive in the future. Not everyone needs a Trust to accomplish the most effective estate plan. Probate can be avoided for liquid (financial) assets by other means, especially if one’s estate is relatively small. For some individuals, however, especially those with real property in more than one state, or married couples with taxable estates, the Revocable Trust is a valuable estate planning tool that should not be overlooked. For people with disabled or minor children, trusts should also be considered as part of a complete plan. For seniors, planning with Irrevocable Trusts can serve two valuable purposes — avoidance of probate and protection of assets for long term care planning. Each person’s estate plan should be tailored to meet his or her specific needs taking into account the type of assets comprising the estate, whether the estate will be a “taxable� estate, and the family structure and goals. Taking the time to meet with an estate planning attorney reviewing your specific needs is the best way to determine which plan is best for you and your family and loved ones! The attorneys can be reached at (718) 945Q 7777 or (718) 738-8500.
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SQ page 38
SQ page 39 Page 39 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011
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SQ page 40
First responder was hurt serving in Iraq Army sergeant says service members deserve more credit for helping out by AnnMarie Costella
ered with white dust, walk in disbelief from the area. The only ones who were clearly In his 31 years in the military, retired recognizable were the firefighters and that Army Sgt. Winston Weston of Jamaica was only because of their uniforms, Weston never thought he would see an attack on said. American soil, but he did on Sept. 11, 2001. “There was a sense of panic,” Weston Weston, a senior diesel mechanic, was said. “Most were afraid and scared, but they repairing vehicles at the Jamaica Armory pulled themselves together. They were helpwhen the World ing each other and Trade Center towers making sure people were struck by got to safety and out planes commanof harm’s way.” deered by terorists. Weston spent two ost were afraid and He and others ran months at Ground into an off ice to He later develscared, but they pulled Zero. watch the destruction oped asthma, but on television. Shortly said his doctor told themselves together.” thereafter, his comhim it was due to his — Ret. Army Sgt. Winston Weston mander instructed time in Iraq, burning on New Yorkers after 9/11 him and others to trash, breathing in head to the site. chemicals and “We were under exhaust fumes. “We attack,” Weston said did have masks, but in an interview with the Queens Chronicle not for the first few days,” Weston said of last Thursday. “When we heard that a plane his time near the fallen towers. had hit the Pentagon, we knew we were Now, 10 years since the tragedy occurred, being targeted by terrorists.” Weston said his memories from that time are When they arrived at Ground Zero, the as vivid as ever. “It’s scary. It brings the shock Army personnel blocked off an area with back,” he said of the anniversary. “We were military vehicles near Battery Park. Weston down there and we could smell the dead bodsaid it was a surreal experience as he ies and see the blood and bones. But I had a watched men and women, their faces cov- job to do and that was to protect people.” Assistant Editor
“M
As horrific as it was, Winston noted that the scene was a lot different from being engaged in combat. “When you’re at war, you are constantly on guard,” Weston said. “You don’t trust anyone, and you don’t even know where the enemy is.” Weston, a mar ried father of three, was injured several times while in Iraq from 2004 to 2006. In one instance, an engine block fell on him, and at another time his elbow was damaged while riding in the gunner position on a tank. Weston is no longer able to continue his military service or work. He still shows signs of the injuries, including the intense back pain that continues to plague him. The serviceman said he believes another terrorist attack on the United States is possible. “I never thought it would happen here, but I don’t think it’s over,” Weston said. “I think there will be another attack. I just don’t know when, where or how, but it will happen when we’re off guard.” Winston, who said he had no special plans to commemorate the 10th anniversary of 9/11, also believes that military servicemen
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Disabled Army Sgt. Winston Weston in his military uniform and at home back in June. FILE PHOTOS
and women did not get the credit they deserve as first responders after the attacks. “The president doesn’t see the big picture,” Q he said. “We did our part.”
DEVELOPMENTS
9/11 remembered
BAYSIDE
©2011 M1P • LEMO-055264
QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011 Page 40
TEN YEARS AFTER 9/11: SERVICE AT HOME AND ABROAD
Two important announcements: 1) The highly honored Franklin K. Lane High School ROTC program — the leading Air Force ROTC program in the United States was nearly lost to Queens, Brooklyn and New York City last week. It appears that since Chief Master Sgt. Jose Silveira was retiring, they tried to discontinue the program. Then because of our Brooklyn and Queens elected officials namely Councilmembers Elizabeth Crowley and Eric Ulrich and Sen. Joe Addabbo Jr. and Assemblyman Michael Miller and schools Chancellor Dennis Walcott intervened and our ROTC program was saved. The program is now under the leadership of Master Sgt. Edward Carr and the administration of the Multicultural Campus School will now continue. So, again thankfully they will be the color guard at our Woodhaven ceremonies. In the last year and a half there have been many viable programs (that would have assisted students in gaining employment in many specialized fields) that have been lost to this school. Some of our best educators have been excessed and told that they no longer had positions. Since Lane High School is located in Woodhaven it is of great concern to us as to the programs and the curriculum they set forth for our students and community. More on this in my next article. 2) Jamaica Avenue has again been victimized with No Parking Anytime Signs that remained posted and have not been removed. This has caused parking tickets for $115 each to be issued. If you have received a
parking ticket on Jamaica Avenue since Friday, Sept. 2, call the Woodhaven Business Improvement District office at (718) 8050760 or (718) 805-0202 and we will handle them for you. Every year since 2001 the month of September has brought with it a very sad special feeling. In September 2002, I spoke at an ecumenical prayer mass. The words that I wrote and stated are still poignant now nine years later. I would like to share them again with you. “Since last year, the sadness of September 11th, 2001 has been constant, as we in Woodhaven cope with the life stories of all those heroes lost and their families that are suffering from their loss. The dirge of bagpipes and the flow of tears have been with us every day, and we grieve. We grieve for all of the innocent men, women, and children that were so brutally taken from us that fateful day. We grieve for our majestic Twin Towers, forever taken from our skyline. These innocents were taken because they were Americans, and our towers for they were symbols of America. Our eyes may be filled with tears, but our vision is clear. Our America is at war and we view the enemy, terrorism, through eyes of strength and with resolve. The men and women of our armed forces are fighting this war against terrorism with bravery, not as our enemy, who act in cowardice. Our Woodhaven supports these our good defenders, in this war against these hateful evil doers. And because of our good, we will be victorious against this evil. In this time of war, may our leaders, our country and our little Woodhaven be protected. May we be resolute in stating never forget, never again.” Q
SQ page 41
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Ice Jewelry Buying Service is located on Queens Boulevard in Rego Park.
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PHOTO BY DENIS DECK
like it’s a one-shot deal and we don’t do that,” Elias said. In addition to buying gold, silver, diamonds, Recently, a woman and her boyfriend went into an unassuming gold buying and cash loan watches and coins, Ice Jewelry Buying also shop on Queens Boulevard. She had a $35 offers instant cash loans for jewelry and eBay offer on her ring from another area shop, but selling services. Their cash loans program is straightforward and was looking to get a better deal. In what may be viewed as poor business acumen, she told simple. “It’s a perfect solution for someone who her new prospective buyer what her previous has a bill due and a check on the way,” Goldberg offer was. Still, after examining her piece, he said. “But we make sure they have a game plan to offered her $1,600. He did so, as he says, buy their jewelry back before the end of the term. Sometimes these are people’s heirlooms we’re “...because that’s what it was worth.” The plight of the worker who’s hard-up for talking about and we respect that.” For those who are less Internet-savvy or cash in today’s economy is something that Arthur Elias and Edward Goldberg can relate to just don’t have the time, Ice Jewelry Buying first-hand, having been laid off from their jobs offers a convenient eBay sales service. If what in jewelry manufacturing. They understand a customer has isn’t an item that Ice Jewelry that people get into situations where they just Buying would purchase, like a handbag or need a little cash fast to make the bills and Ice antique furniture, they can help find a buyer Jewelry Buying Service hopes to help out in on their eBay store. Elias consults with the customer to find a target the most honest way they can. price and let the internet STORE HOURS “For this, I like to think we’re handle the rest. doing the community a service,” MON.-FRI. 11am - 7pm auctioneers For anyone who has Elias said. “We’re in the business SAT. 10am - 5pm ever dealt with the hassle of helping people who are in a SUN. by Appointment of selling and shipping tough spot. They can come to an item on eBay — all the our store and know that we can educate them on what they have and we’ll give forms involved in setting up a user and paypal them what their items are worth. When that account, the 10-15 percent fee that Ice woman told me her previous offer, it made me Jewelry Buying charges to do all the work is wonder how many times this happens — how really a bargain deal. “At the end of the day, I just want people many people who really need that money get to feel comfortable doing business with us. taken advantage of?” Elias opened his Rego Park shop with People have this conception of gold buying Goldberg less than a year ago, and already stores as these slimy places with slimy they’re seeing a lot of repeat customers and people, and they’re typically right. But we referrals. This is a sign to them that they’re want to be different. I don’t think it’s cool to doing something right — the pawn business see someone buy a ring for $200 and put it in typically deals in one-time transactions but their counter for $800. We don’t do that.” Ice Jewelry Buying Services is located at Elias is determined to break that mold, 98-30 Queens Blvd. in Rego Park. Hours of building a reputation on trust. “Everyone around here is buying gold these operation are Monday-Friday from 11am to days; you can go into the barber shop down 7:00pm and Saturday 10am to 5pm; Sunday the road and sell your jewelry. The problem private appoinments are available. Call for Q with all these places is they treat everything more information (718) 830-0030.
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Page 41 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011
Ice Jewelry: where the owners can relate to their clients
Boy Scouts of America
QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011 Page 42
SQ page 42rev
Woodside man runs for House Socialist Workers Party candidate stresses jobs by Anna Gustafson Editor
Christopher Hoeppner, the Socialist Workers Party candidate running for former U.S. Rep. Anthony Weiner’s seat, says he wants to go to Washington to fight for the working class — which, he added, he understands well. Born and bred in Woodside, where he
Socialist Workers Party candidate Christopher Hoeppner, a Woodside resident, is running in COURTESY PHOTO the 9th Congressional District.
still resides, Hoeppner, 58, works in an electronics plant in Sheepshead Bay as a machine operator and inspector — a job he said gives him insight into the plight of the country’s working man. “When I approach people and say I’m running for the 9th Congressional District, they don’t want to talk to me until I say I actually work for a living,” said Hoeppner, who is running against Democratic Assemblyman David Weprin (D-Little Neck) and Republican candidate Bob Turner. Saying he is the “revolutionary” and “radical” alternative in the race, the 40-year member of the SWP conceded it’s not easy for a third party to win an election. While socialists have held office in the United States — there were two socialist members of Congress in the early 20th century and Milwaukee elected a Socialist mayor four times between 1910 and 1960 — the party lost traction after President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal. “The only way I’d get elected is if there’s mass struggles in the street,” Hoeppner said. “In the streets is where people defend their rights, and we’re headed that way.” Hoeppner highlighted universal health care, increased resources for education, job creation and immigration reform as tenets of his campaign platform. “The idea that someone goes to a hospital and the first thing they ask you is how you’ll pay for it and not take your pulse is ridiculous,” he said. “Everyone should have healthcare.”
Saying “working people need to join in any struggles, even if they’re small struggles,” Hoeppner said he recently supported Verizon workers who were striking in the city and protested the potential closure of Peninsula Hospital, which is now expected not to happen because Revival Home Health Care has purchased the struggling institution. The Verizon employees returned to work without winning any concessions. “They’re closing hospitals in working class neighborhoods,” Hoeppner said. The candidate also criticized school closures in Queens and the city. “They don’t have enough room for needed classrooms, but they’re closing schools?” he asked. The candidate said he would work to create jobs in Queens, and throughout the country. Specifically, Hoeppner is calling for a government-funded national jobs program, which would include positions repairing roads and bridges, expanding railroads and public transportation and building affordable housing. “Democrats and Republicans haven’t done anything on the question of employment,” Hoeppner said. Criticizing President Obama’s administration for what he called “mass deportations,” Hoeppner said he would want to overhaul the country’s immigration system. He also stated he is pro-choice and against the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Q
R ESTAUR A NT & BA R
Queens Zoo offers program for toddlers The Wildlife Conservation Society’s Queens Zoo has launched a new Toddler Time series, a program for young children that will offer an introductory glimpse into wildlife, nature and the environment. Youngsters and their caregivers will learn about animals through educational age-appropriate games, crafts, singalongs, storytelling and many other activities. No program would be complete without a meet-and-greet with some of the zoos’ amazing animals, including hedgehogs, rabbits and other adorable creatures. Through these live animal encounters, children will observe how animals feel, move and in some cases, eat their delicious snacks. Toddler Time is a fee-based program for children ages 2-3 accompanied by an adult. Programs occur on select days at the zoo throughout autumn. Registration for this program begins on Thursday, Sept. 1. Participants can attend one class or register for the entire six-session series and receive a $20 discount. Members are $20, nonmembers are $25. All six sessions are $100 for members, $130 for nonmembers. Wednesday series: Moving Marvels, Sept. 21; Mother Nature, Sept. 28; Scaly Critters, Oct. 5; Furry Friends, Oct. 19; Animal Size-Up, Oct. 26; and Count Like the Animals, Nov. 2, all are from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. For information, visit queenszoo.com Q or call (718) 271-7361.
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PHOTOS COURTESY LAGUARDIA COMMUNITY COLLEGE
THE FIRST DECADE
ARTS, CULTURE & LIVING
Video stills by Monika Bravo taken from the WTC on Sept. 10, 2001, of the views Michael Richards, who created the aviator sculpture, right, might have seen before he died.
It’s been called the most wita markedly different approach than nessed tragedy in history. By some others when it comes to commemoestimates, two billion people across rating 9/11. the world watched the 9/11 attacks. On display will be works that might by Paula Neudorf But despite this, many art curators in seem barely related to the attacks Queens seem to be saying that even — in fact, of the 70 artworks by 41 10 years on and thousands of images later, people might not artists, many were made before the World Trade Center towers have really seen the event at all. were felled. Peter Eleey, the curator of MoMA PS1’s show “September 11,” Eleey believes the experience of 9/11 has changed our very which will open on that date, talked about the glut of images perception of history, so that old images have acquired new that came from the attacks. meanings. “I guess in part because they were so widely distributed and “There’s a range of ways that particularly large-scale, traumatviewed, there remains something overly familiar ... that doesn’t ic events change the way we experience the past,” Eleey said. allow us to make our own meaning,” he said. When thinking about the show, he said he asked himself, “What In many ways, curators of other shows being mounted in could be gained from looking at this obliquely?” Continued page continued ononpage 50 Queens would seem to agree with Eleey, though PS1 has taken
ART IN LIGHT OF 9/11
Page 43 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011
September 8, 2011
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QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011 Page 44
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qb boro
W H AT ’ S H A P P E N I N G
EXHIBITS
North Flushing AARP Chapter 4158 meets on Tuesdays, Sept. 13, Oct. 11, Nov. 8, Dec. 13 at noon at Church on the Hill, 167-07 35 Ave. Flushing. New members welcome.
Crossing Art Gallery, 136-17 39th Ave., ground floor, Flushing, presents Going Green Exhibition now through Sept. 11. For information contact Jennifer Junkermier at jennifer@crossingart.com, (212) 359-4333 or visit crossingart.com. Free.
AARP Chapter 3698 will meet on Wednesday, Sept. 14 at the Zion Episcopal Church, 243-01 Northern Blvd. Douglaston. Social hour at noon, meeting at 1:00 p.m. Program at 2 p.m.
Flushing Town Hall, 137-35 Northern Blvd., presents Within the Emperor’s Garden — The Ten Thousand Springs Pavilion exhibit, now through Sept. 30. Suggested donation is $5, free for members. Gallery hours are Saturday and Sunday noon-5 p.m.
Join Alley Pond Environmental Center, 228-06 Northern Blvd., Douglaston’s very own knitting circle. Knitters, crocheters, or crafters of any kind welcomed. This is a meeting for adults who know how to knit, not a class. Call Liz at (718) 229-4000, ext. 200 or e-mail emcglinchey@alleypond.com to inquire about meeting times. They will meet a few times a month, and there will be a fee of $3 for members, $5 for nonmember per meeting.
The Maria Rose International Doll Museum, 187-11 Linden Blvd., St. Albans, exhibits are open Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 12:30-4:30 p.m. Cost is $5 for adults, $2.50 for children.
AUDITIONS
You Gotta Believe, a community based older child adoption agency is looking for families who would be willing to provide love and nurturing to a child in the foster care system. To learn more, join the agency every Sunday at 4 p.m. at Little Flower Children’s Services, 89-12 162 St., Jamaica.
Oratorio Society of Queens rehearsals begin Monday Sept. 12 at 7:45 p.m. located at Temple Beth Sholom, 172nd Street and Northern Boulevard, Flushing. Interested in becoming a member? Visit QueensOratorio.org, for audition-listening and membership information. Maggie’s Little Theater at St. Margaret Parish is holding auditions for “The Claus Family Christmas Spectacular,” an original, family-oriented musical revue and variety show, reminiscent of Christmas TV Specials of the ‘50’s and ‘60’s. Auditions are Wednesday, Sept. 14 at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 15 at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, Sept. 18, from 1-4 p.m., at St. Margaret Parish Hall, 66-05 79 Place, Middle Village. Singers, dancers, comedy acts — all types of performers — are welcome to audition. Prepare a song and bring sheet music. Rehearsals run September through early December, evenings and weekends. Performances are Dec. 3, 4, 9, 10 and 11. Senior Theatre Acting Repertory holds acting rehearsals on Wednesdays at 10:30 a.m. at Hollis Public Library, 202-05 Hillside Ave. and on Fridays at 10:30 a.m. at Queens Village Library, 94-11 217th St. For information, call the director’s assistant at (718) 776-0529.
FILM The fifth annual Sunnyside Shorts Film Festival will be presented in conjunction with Flicks in the Garden on Saturday Sept. 10 at 7 p.m. (rain date Sept. 17). The entire two-hour program will showcase films running from 44 seconds to 16 minutes in length and include comedy, animation, documentary and narration. Sunnyside Shorts will present new films from the UK and France along with audience favorites from previous years. Admission is $10/$5 for SGP members.
DANCE Topaz Arts Center 55-03 39 Ave. Woodside presents Dance Into Light, in an open rehearsal to watch, reflect, discuss and be inspired on Saturday, Sept. 10 at 2 p.m. Suggested donation: $10. Limited seating. Call for reservations: (347) 770-3454 or (917) 941-7313.
FOR KIDS Digital violinist Todd Reynolds and woodwind maestro Ken Thompson will be performing at the Noguchi Museum’s 2011 Music in the Garden series on Sunday, Sept. 11 at 3 p.m. COURTESY PHOTO
MUSIC
HEALTH
The Noguchi Museum 9-01 33 Rd., Long Island City and Bang on a Can continue the 2011 Music in the Garden series in the museum’s sculpture garden with a performance by digital violinist Todd Reynolds and woodwind maestro Ken Thomspon on Sunday, Sept. 11 at 3 p.m. Free with museum admission $10 adults; $5 senior citizens and students with valid ID; free for children under 12.
Humanity Service Incorp., a nonprofit that helps the needy, has a free clinic of mental and medical health services from 6-8 p.m. every Friday. There is also a food pantry that is open during this time. These services are located at 92-17 101 Ave., Ozone Park. For more information, call (718) 845-1901.
New York Opera Forum offers a complete perfomance of the operatic classic Lucia di Lammermoor in concert at St. Luke’s Church 85 Greenway South Forest Hills, on Sunday Sept. 18 at 3 p.m. Soprano Karole Lewis, a Forest Hills favorite, takes the title role of the doomed heroine in this masterpiece of the bel canto repertory. Tenor Benjamin Sloman plays her hotheaded lover, and Edgardo Scott Wheatley is her implacable brother Enrico. Tickets are $12, $10 for seniors and students. For reservations call (718) 268-7772 or visit the church’s website at stlukesforesthills.org.
FLEA MARKETS Faith Mission’s summer flea market will be held every Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. now through Oct. 1 at 114-40 Van Wyck Expressway, South Ozone Park.
LECTURES Guest lecturer Charles Fine will present a video tour of the Lower East Side at the annual breakfast of the Bayside Jewish Center Sisterhood, 203-05 32 Ave. on Sunday, Sept. 18 at 10 a.m. Cost is $10. Payment is due Monday, Sept. 12.
Join the Walkers for Wellness Club at New Hope Lutheran Church of Jamaica. Under the guidance of a walking leader, you will walk two to three times each week at a comfortable pace. The club is open to walkers of all ages and abilities. The walking schedule is Tuesdays and Thursdays at 7 p.m. and Saturdays at 8 a.m. Weather permitting, meet at the church, located at 167-24 118 Ave.
MEETINGS Family Focus Adoption Services gives the full story about adopting babies, children and teens; domestic and international. Join them Saturday, Sept. 10 at 10 a.m. or Tuesday, Sept. 20 at 7 p.m. at 54-40 Little Neck Parkway, Suite 4, Little Neck. No reservation necessary. The Flushing AARP Chapter 1405 holds its meetings at the Bowne Street Community Church 143-11 Roosevelt Ave. Flushing, Mondays starting at 1 p.m. The next meetings will be on Sept. 12 and Sept. 26. The Sisterhood of Bay Terrace Jewish Center 13-00 209 St. Bayside presents at it‘s first meeting of the season, The Kelzmateers, featuring the voice of Julie Ellis and the musical talent of Doug Leblang on Tuesday Sept. 13 at 7:30 p.m.
The Flushing YMCA Flyers will be holding tryouts for its swim teams on Saturday, Sept. 10 at 8 a.m.; Monday, Sept. 12 at 5 p.m.; or Tuesday, Sept. 13 at 5 p.m. The tryouts are open to girls and boys ages 5-18. No competitive experience is necessary. The Flyers are one of the top rated teams in the metropolitan area. The YMCA is located at 138-46 Northern Blvd., Flushing. Call (718) 961-6880, ext. 131 for more information.
CLASSES Learn two languages at the Bayside Jewish Center, 203-05 32 Ave. Rabbi Moses Kirsh will teach conversation Hebrew, 2:30-3:30 p.m. and Torah stories in Yiddish from 3:30-4:30 p.m. on Wednesdays. It’s free. The Center for the Women of New York in Kew Gardens offers various classes in family day care — health and safety course, medical office assistant’s course, horticulture and home health aide class. For costs and information, call (718) 793-0672. A one-hour auto clinic for women is held the third Saturday of every month at 3:30 p.m. at Great Bear Auto Repair Shop, 164-16 Sanford Ave., Flushing. Call to reserve at (718) 762-6212. Dance with instructions at Italian Charities of America, 83-20 Queens Blvd., Elmhurst, every Monday and Friday, 7:15-8 p.m. From 8-11 p.m. will be a dance social. Music by Sal Escott. Admission is $10. Yoga classes are now being held at the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, 76-11 37 Ave., Room 204, Jackson Heights. All levels are welcomed. Classes are held Saturdays, from 10-11 a.m. and Sundays, 9:30-10:30 a.m. Classes held during the week include, meditation, ayurvedic, yoga philosophy and Sanskrit language instruction. Minimum donation is $5. For information, call Rashid at (646) 912-1885 or Shree at (646) 417-2252.
To submit a theater, music, art or entertainment item to What’s Happening, email artslistingqchron@gmail.com
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9/11 exhibits around Queens by Jason Pafundi Citywide, a plethora of exhibits commemorate the 10th anniversary of the attacks on Sept. 11. Below are the art shows being held throughout Queens, many of which will be on display through the fall.
ST. JOHN’S UNIVERSITY Queens Campus, Dr. M. T. Geoffrey Yeh Art Gallery; 8000 Utopia Parkway; (888) 978-5646, stjohns.edu Running until Oct. 26, a collection of iconic photographs taken of the disaster before the area was barricaded by the NYPD and FDNY by famed street photographer Jeff Mermelstein. “Jeff Mermelstein: 9.11.01.” Free.
QUEENS COLLEGE ART CENTER Benjamin S. Rosenthal Library, Level Six; 65-30 Kissena Blvd., Flushing; (718) 997-3770, qcpages.qc. cuny.edu/art_library/artcenter.html Mon-Thurs 9 a.m.-8 p.m., Fri 9 a.m.-5 p.m. (closed Oct. 10 and holidays) Running until Oct. 14, “This is Personal: Michael Ragdale’s 9/11,” an archive of more than 3,000 post-9/11 items available for view and examination. Free.
LAGUARDIA COMMUNITY COLLEGE E-Building, 5th Floor, Presidential Gallery; 31-10 Thompson Ave., Long Island City; (718) 482-7200, lagcc.cuny. edu/home/; Sept. 10 to Nov. 23 “Witness – A Look Back to the Future” includes works by 15 established artists who lived or worked in the area of the World Trade Center on 9/11. Free.
Chronicle Contributor
BAYSIDE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 208 Totten Ave., Fort Totten Park, Bayside; (718) 352-1548, bayside historical.org; Thurs and Fri 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Sun 12 p.m.-4 p.m. On display through the fall, an exhibit featuring photographs, local and national newspapers of the time, sculpture, artwork and letters composed for firefighters by local schoolchildren. Free.
Janet Cardiff’s audio installation “The Forty-Part Motet” was first presented at MoMA PS1 in the wake of 9/11 and has been reinstalled in the same gallery for the museum’s 10-year PHOTO COURTESY MOMA PS1 anniversary show. GREATER ASTORIA HISTORICAL SOCIETY Quinn Building; 35-20 Broadway, 4th Floor, Long Island City; (718) 278-0700, astorialic.org On Monday, Sept. 12, a photo exhibit by freelance photographer Steve Spak shows photos taken during the recovery process after the 9/11 attacks. $5, free for GAHS members.
QUEENSBOROUGH COMMUNITY COLLEGE 222-05 56th Ave., Bayside; (718) 631-6262, qcc.cuny.edu/; Sept. 9 to Oct. 21 An exhibit of 9/11 works by artist Ultra Violet, who starred in many Andy Warhol films, commemorates the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 tragedy. Free.
MOMA PS 1 46-01 21 St., Long Island City; (718) 784-2084, ps1.org; Sept. 11-Jan. 9, 2012, Thurs-Mon 12 p.m.-6 p.m. (closed Tuesdays and Wednesdays) On display, more than 70 works by 41 artists, many made prior to 9/11, that explore the attacks’ enduring and farreaching resonance. The exhibit, entiled “September 11,” will occupy the entire second floor of the museum. $10 suggested general admission. Q
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Among the art forms on display are photographs, prints, videos and collages. A new cultural hub serving as an alter“Subway Fab,” a piece created in ink native space for queer art has opened in and colored pencil in 2008, features a a converted storage room below the pair of androgynous figures at the Union Hombres Lounge, a gay bar in Jackson Square subway station. Heights. “It’s not what you’d expect to see of a According to Hector Canonge, direc- male body. You ask, ‘What are they? tor of Cinemarosa, the only queer film Men, women?’” Canonge said. series in the borough, Galeria, a new “Joseph Josephine,” a photograph initiative by Cinemarosa, was estab- taken in 2011 by Queens resident Angel lished in partnership Brown, deals with with the Hombres both gender and Lounge to “expand race. Inspired by the queer visibility.” late entertainer The first exhibition, When: Aug. 31-Sept. 21: Josephine Baker, the “Queer Bodies,” photograph imMon-Thurs 6-10 p.m., which opened on pressed Canonge for Fri 6-9 p.m., Sat. 7-10 p.m. Aug. 31 and will run Where: 85-28 37 Ave., the way its subject through Sept. 21, stares directly into Jackson Heights includes representathe camera, as if Tickets: Free tions of the feminine challenging viewers. cinemarosa.org/galeria and masculine forms Canonge, himself and, explained Jackan artist and filmson Heights resident maker, was approached Canonge, asks the question, “What is a by Mauricio Fino, Hombres Lounge’s manqueer body?” ager, who suggested the storage room Featuring the works of 10 artists cho- could be put to better use. sen from 30 submissions, the exhibit “With almost no budget, we manfocuses primarily on local artists. The aged to put up the gallery and exhibiparticipants were chosen, Canonge said, tion,” Canonge said. Before the because of “their technique and the way changeover, “everything was different. they’re using their medium.” The walls were green. The lighting was not appropriate to show art. Slowly the place got transformed.” Fino said he was “thrilled” to collaborate with Canonge. “The partnership will serve to introduce the public to art outside the traditional exhibition environment,” he added. In addition to rotating monthly exhibits featuring the work of queer visual artists, Galeria will serve as “a cultural hub for the presentation of performing artists, video screenings and social events for networking and dialogue,” Canonge said. When “Queer Bodies” closes, it will be followed by further exhibits, including “Q-Topias” (Oct. 26Nov. 16) and “Positive Art” (Nov. 24-Dec. 14). The exhibits are free and open to the public, though Canonge acknowledges that Galeria is not your typical mom and pop A photograph by Andrew Mueller appearing in the exhibit gallery, aiming, instead, to “Queer Bodies” at Galeria, a new art space in Jackson attract mature and openQ PHOTO COURTESY GALERIA Heights. minded audiences. by Mark Lord
Chronicle Contributor
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Artists and curators react to 9/11 continued from from page page 00 43 continued
At LaGuardia Community College, on the other hand, curator and art professor Kris Jefferson emphasized a more direct kind of connection to the event. Her show at LaGuardia features the work of 15 artists who all lived near or worked in the WTC. Michael Richards, one of the artists in the show, had a studio in the WTC and died in the attacks. Yet Jefferson still expressed a sentiment similar to Eleey’s when talking about how she came up with the exhibit. Many of her students were very young on Sept. 11, 2001, she explained, and in fact, many experienced it in other countries. She worried that “for them, it was almost like a video game.” “It’s such a horrific event that people try to get a little bit of distance on it,” Jefferson said. She saw her “curatorial imperative” as being the need to give “an up-close and personal reaction to 9/11.” One of the most poignant works in the exhibit is a video taken by Monika Bravo, who was working as an artist in the WTC at the same time as Richards. Bravo shot video from one of the towers just 12 hours before they were hit, filming, according to Jefferson, “what
aftermath, or what went missing. Sometimes, this is evident in a very literal way. One artist featured in the LaGuardia show, for example, spent months taking photographs of all the missing persons fliers that appeared around the city, before they got “damaged and destroyed by nature,” Jefferson said. He wanted to make sure those people, already lost, weren’t “taken A still from Mary Lucier’s video installation “Dawn Burn,” away again.” produced in 1975, is one of many pieces at PS1’s exhibit made Perhaps the most PHOTO COURTESY MOMA PS1 extreme version of that prior to 9/11. preservation instinct is Michael would have been looking at the work by Michael Ragsdale, featured while he was working on his sculpture” in the show “This is Personal” at the Queens College Art Center. Ragsdale, in the hours before he died. It might be the very universality of the who was working as a videographer for images the world saw of 9/11 that has C-SPAN, Columbia University and the curators and artists concerned with craft- Manhattan Institute when the 9/11 ing a personal meaning from the tragedy. attacks occurred, responded to the Another recurring preoccupation of many tragedy by collecting every piece of paper 9/11 works is the idea of preserving what he could find relating to 9/11 events might have been lost in the event and its around the city for some seven years.
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A fallen aviator from Michael Richards’ sculpture, “Are You Down?” Images of the sculpture will be on view at LaGuardia PHOTO COURTESY LCGG Community College. Ragsdale not only gathered over 4,000 pieces of paper relating to post9/11 events — fliers, postcards, “anything I could find on paper,” he said — he actually attended many of the events continued on page 53 00 in question.
Three Awards of $10,000 Each Available for Your Start-Up! • Join the 6th Annual Queens StartUP! Business Plan Competition at Queens Library.
• To participate, you must attend a mandatory orientation and training sessions at Queens Library and/or via webinar.
To register, visit www.younoodle.com/groups/queensstartup.
On September 29th, the Queens Chronicle will be publishing a “Pet Services” section. QUEL-055185
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Tell us a little bit about yourself and your pet with your contact information. Send entries to Pet Contest, Queens Chronicle, PO Box 74-7769, Rego Park, NY 11374, or e-mail them to mailbox@qchron.com. Deadline for submission is Monday, September 26th. Winners will be announced in our Sept. 29th edition
The 2011-2012 6th Annual Queens StartUP! Business Plan Competition is brought to you by the Queens Economic Development Corporation (QEDC) and sponsored by Citi Foundation. The QEDC acknowledges the support of the New York City Department of Small Business Services, the U.S. Small Business Administration, New York City Council, New York State Empire State Development Corporation, Speaker Christine Quinn & Borough President Helen M. Marshall. Additional support is provided by the Queens Chamber of Commerce and Webline Designs. Queens’ Largest Weekly Community Newspaper Group ©2011 M1P • QCHR-055294
www.queenslibrary.org Queens Library is an independent, not-for-profit corporation and is not affiliated with any other library system.
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IN REMEMBRANCE S E P T E M B E R
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boro SOCIAL ACTIVITIES New York Metropolitan Country Music Association, Inc. will hold a dance featuring Patience and the Cowboy Angels on Saturday, Sept. 10 at 8 p.m. at the Glendale Memorial Building 72-02 Myrtle Ave. Cost is $12.
This Week’s Deal!
Italian Charities of America, 83-20 Queens Blvd., Elmhurst sponsors a Saturday dance on Sept. 10 and Sept. 24, 8 p.m to midnight. The Singles Center of the Samuel Field Y, 58-20 Little Neck Parkway, Little Neck, sponsors Wednesday Nite Rap for singles 45+ on Wednesday, Sept. 14 at 7:30 p.m. Cost is $9.
SPECIAL EVENTS A Back to School Festival will be held on Saturday, Sept. 10, noon-3 p.m. at Little Bay Park in Bayside. The 31st annual Antique Motorcycle Show will be held at the Queens County Farm Museum, 73-50 Little Neck Parkway in Floral Park on Sunday, Sept. 11 from 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. Admission is $5 per person. The 13th annual Long Island Pride Brazilian Jiu Jitsu Tournament will be held on Sunday Sept. 11 at York College 94-20 Guy R. Brewer Blvd. in Jamaica. General admission for adults is $10, kids are $5. Portions of the door revenue will be donated to 9/11 Health Now. Check the website lipridebjj.com for times.
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The Ridgewood Youth Farm Market will be held at Ridgewood Memorial Triangle between Cypress and Myrtle avenues every Saturday now through Oct. 29 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. for local produce, flowers and plants from local farms sold by local teens.
30-05 Whitestone Expwy., Flushing, NY 11354 (718) 353-6300
SUPPORT GROUPS Parents Bereavement Support Group meets on Thursday, Sept. 8 at 7:30 p.m. at St. Adalberts Parish, 52-40 84 St., Elmhurst.
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Full course home-made chicken parmigiana w/ spaghetti dinner and dessert with entertainment at Emanuel Church, located on Woodhaven Boulevard and 91st Avenue in Woodhaven on Saturday Sept. 24 at 5:30 p.m. Tickets are $15 for adults and $7.50 for children. Call the church at (718) 849-1153 on a Tuesday or Wednesday to reserve your tickets. Deadline is Sept. 14.
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The Center for the Women of New York announces that it is now accepting registration for a new session of their Women’s Support Group. It meets at Queensborough Hall, 120-55 Queens Blvd., Room 325, Kew Gardens every Thursday from 6-7:30 p.m. For information and an interview appointment, call (718) 793-0672. Drug problem? Call Narcotics Anonymous Helpline at (718) 962-6244 or visit westernqueensna.com. Meetings are held seven days a week. SMART Recovery, a free self-help group dedicated to assisting individuals in overcoming all types of addictive behavior problems, meets on Sunday, 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. at the Long Island Consultation Center, 97-29 64th Road, Rego Park.
SENIOR ACTIVITIES ©2011 M1P • QCHR-055293
A leisure group meets every Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at the Hillcrest Jewish Center, 183-02 Union Turnpike, Flushing for area seniors.
An Alzheimer’s Adult Day program is held on Monday, Wednesday and Thursday, 157-16 65 Ave., Flushing. Door to door transportation included. Call (718) 358-3541. The Rockaway Boulevard Senior Center, 123-10 143 St., South Ozone Park, offers service programs Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Breakfast is at 9 a.m. with a suggested donation of 75 cents; lunch is at noon with a suggested donation of $1.50. Exercise programs include: yoga, tai chi stretch, three dance groups (African, interpretive and line), chair exercise, choral group, crochet/knit (Mondays and Tuesdays), ceramic, art and camera class, quilting/sewing, Wii games, arts and crafts, conversational Spanish, book talk club, movie afternoons, computer classes, trips, birthday parties and more. For more information, call (718) 657-6752. The Middle Village Adult Center, 69-10 75th St., offers beginner and intermediate level computer classes and workshops in Word 2007 and Excel 2007. Call Dina at (718) 894-3441 or visit the center. The Howard Beach Senior Center invites seniors aged 60 and older to become members. The center offers exercise, yoga and tai chi classes, billiards, creative writing, crafts, weekly dances with a DJ, painting and sketching classes, bingo, ballroom and line dancing, Wii bowling and computer classes. The center also takes many trips, including a monthly excursion to Atlantic City. It is located at 156-45 84th St., use the 85th St. entrance, open from 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Lunch is served at noon. For more information, call (718) 738-8100, or visit their new website at howardbeachseniorcenter.org.
VOLUNTEERS Maggie’s Little Theater at St. Margaret Parish, 6605 79 Pl., Middle Village, is seeking a creative team of volunteers for its musical revue and variety show, “The Claus Family Christmas Spectacular,” reminiscent of Christmas TV specials of the ’50s and ’60s. Auditions begin mid-September. Rehearsals run mid-September-early December during the evenings and weekends. Performance dates are Dec. 3, 4, 9, 10 and 11. If you would like to be involved in the off-stage aspects of production, such as director, musical director, choreographer, stage crew, painters, costumers, seamstress/tailors, send an e-mail to maggieslittletheater@gmail.com or call (917) 579-5389 for information and to set up an appointment. Bridge instructor needed for refresher course and guided supervised play. Contact Wendy or Rochelle at SNAP Bell Park Senior Center in Queens Village at (718) 740-3905.
LISTING INFORMATION Items for the Community Calendar must be sent two weeks before the date of the event. Listings should be typed, from a nonprofit organization, either free or moderately priced, and be open to the public. Keep the information to one paragraph. Because of the large number of requests for the free calendar listings, we cannot include every event submitted. Send to: Queens Chronicle, Community Calendar, P.O. Box 74-7769, Rego Park, NY 11374, fax to (718) 205-0150.
SQ page 53
9/11 exhibits
King Crossword Puzzle
continued from page 00 50
His “paper history,” as he calls it, fits into 40 three-ring binders, all of which will be on view at the exhibit. The Maspeth resident now works as a cab driver, and said he hopes people would go to the exhibit to “remember who got involved and decided to do something” after the attacks. Curator Suzanna Simor called the items in the collection “the kind of stuff that historically are most difficult to find.” “An archive of ephemera is the rarest archive,” Simor said. “It’s strong stuff, I Q can tell you.”
ACROSS 1 Symbol of intrigue 4 iPhone download 7 Nut job 12 Actress Longoria 13 Meadow 14 Foreigner 15 Part of UCLA 16 Beatles ditty 18 Schuss 19 Heavens above 20 “Phooey!” 22 Green prefix 23 Castro’s home 27 Young fellow 29 Trafalgar admiral 31 Daniel who’s played 007 34 Prepared 35 Gilligan’s boat 37 Scratch 38 Carry 39 Simile center 41 Entanglement 45 Its participants must form a line 47 Spring mo. 48 “The Swedish Nightingale” 52 Conk out 53 Alaskan islander 54 Nourished 55 Cozy lodging 56 Boston newspaper 57 Wayne and Worth (Abbr.) 58 Roulette bet
Crossword Answers DOWN 1 People of Pontypridd 2 Bring forth 3 Fundamental 4 Swiss range 5 Cheated at hide-and-seek 6 “War of the Worlds” effect 7 Methods 8 Every iota 9 Spy-novel org. 10 Jennings of “Jeopardy!”
11 Inseparable 17 Night light? 21 “A Fish Called Wanda” Oscar winner 23 Office worker 24 N.A. portion 25 Physique 26 Whatever number 28 Past 30 Historic time 31 Nashville-based MTV offshoot 32 Carnival city 33 Pismire
36 Cry like a banshee 37 Fridge decoration 40 Check for smells 42 Bottom 43 Put one’s two cents in 44 Pollster’s find 45 Info measure 46 Toteboard tally 48 Show that spawned “NCIS” 49 Right angle 50 Ultramodernist 51 Gist Answers at right
One of the pieces of “paper ephemera” Michael Ragsdale collected in the wake of 9/11. PHOTO COURTESY QUEENS COLLEGE ART CENTER
29th Annual
QUEENS COUNTY FAIR Saturday & Sunday, September 17th & 18th 11:00 am to 6:00 pm
Entertainment: • Pig Racing • Rides and Midway • Big Apple Circus-to-go • Irish Band on Saturday - German Band on Sunday
Activities:
Resorts World New York (“RWNY”) strives to provide our guests with world-class gaming, exquisite dining and unique entertainment experiences. RWNY is looking to hire professional management, supervisory and frontline level employees. We plan to interview candidates in the following areas: FACILITIES, FINANCE, FOOD & BEVERAGE, MARKETING, SLOT OPERATIONS, SECURITY & SURVEILLANCE ON-SITE JOB FAIR Resorts World Casino New York City Employment Center Aqueduct Racetrack, 110-00 Rockaway Blvd., Jamaica, NY Wednesday, September 14, 2011 (3:00pm – 7:00pm)
• Con Edison Ecology Exhibit • The Amazing Maize Maze® sponsored by Con Edison Maze Admission: $9.00 Adults, $5.00 Children Ages 4-11 (3 Yrs. & Under - Free) • Craft, Product and Food Vendors • Blue Ribbon Competition Exhibits And Much More!
Admission:
$8.00 Adults - $5.00 Children Ages 12 & Under
$1.00 OFF SINGLE ADMISSION WITH ORIGINAL AD (1 ad per person)
FREE PARKING
Interested individuals can view the job descriptions on the RWNY website: www.rwnewyork.com Driving Directions: Linden Blvd. or Rockaway Blvd. to Lefferts Blvd. Continue south on Lefferts Blvd. approximately one mile. Turn right on North Conduit Rd., continue on North Conduit Rd. approximately 1/4 mile. Entrance to Aqueduct Racetrack will be on your right. Please follow the directional signage to RWNY Employment Center. RWNY is an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer. All candidates must be at least eighteen (18) years old and have the ability to obtain the appropriate license pursuant to the NY State Lottery Regulations.
RESW-055289
Queens County Farm Museum
©2011 M1P • QCFM-055272
NEW PROPERTY, ENDLESS OPPORTUNITIES!
73-50 Little Neck Parkway, Floral Park, NY
718-347-FARM www.queensfarm.org
(3276)
e-mail: info@queensfarm.org
Page 53 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011
boro
QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011 Page 54
SQ page 54
Commercial & Residential
✻ RND ✻ APPLIANCE REPAIR
Friendly Reliable Service Expert Repairs on all Brand Name: 37 • OVENS • STOVES • REFRIGERATORS Clip to • DISHWASHERS • WASHERS • DRYERS No service charge with repairs Save
$10.00
with this ad
Lowest Rates Guaranteed
845-4378
•718Licensed by City of New York - Sr. Citizen Discount
Flat & Shingle Roofs Gutters & Leaders Cleaned and Installed Slate & Tile Repairs All types of Windows & Siding Installed
FREE ESTIMATES
FULLY INSURED
Are you thinking about renovating or remodeling your home or business place? Your home is your single largest investment! We have the experience and knowledge regarding ALL types of home and business improvements. New Construction, Remodeling, Extensions, Alterations, Additions, Kitchens, Bathrooms, Roofing, Tiling
1-877-846-2399 Cell: 917-714-8825
All Work Guaranteed Lic. & Insured
Kary & Karbiner Corp. ALL PHASES OF HOME REMODELING & REPAIR
• Tile Repair • New Installation • Plumbing & Electric We Re-Grout and Re-Caulk To Look Like New! Affordable Prices I’ll Beat Any Price! Free Estimates 40
• Complete Kitchen & Bathroom Remodeling
35 YEARS EXPERIENCE LIC # NYC HIC 1281504 24
Insured
917-865-8693 www.tile-repair.net
WOOD FLOORS • • • • • • • •
• Custom Carpentry • Designed Decks • Cabinets • Flooring • Painting • Faux Techniques
718-835-5980
Nick “The Tile Man”
Quality Work
39
Lic. #113420104
40
INSURED
Lic. #1398018 & 1310043
New Floors Sanding/Installs Stain & Refinish Old Floors FREE ESTIMATES
J&M CLEANOUTS
NO JOB TOO SMALL Fast, Clean, Reliable & Affordable Service
43
Sanding Refinishing Staining Bleaching Moisture Cure Water Based Oil Based Polyurethane
89
199 per room Min
$
WE ALSO DO: • Sheetrock • Skim Coating • Wallpaper Removal • Plastering • Staining • Carpentry INSURED • FREE ESTIMATES
718-357-4719
PAINTING & TILES ARE US HANDYMAN Over 20 Years
21
Low Prices! - Free Estimates! - Insured! Call Anthony 38
347-226-0202
COMMERCIAL & INDUSTRIAL SPECIALISTS WIRING FOR LIGHT, HEAT & POWER
No Job Too
100 Amp • 220 Volt Service Air Conditioning • Fire Damage Repairs Electrical Violations Corrected Consulting Services • Electrical Layout Designs
Big or Smal
l!
Bonded with BBB & Fully Insured
★ FREE ESTIMATES ★ 37
Lic. #1197433
All Work Guaranteed
CHRIS MULLINS
FREE ESTIMATES • REASONABLE
Lic. #0982130 LIAB. DISAB + W/C INS.
Call
718-276-8558
20
5% OFF with mention of ad
738-8732
Houses & Apartments • Plastering • Taping • Skim Coating
• Paper Hanging & Removal FREE ESTIMATES FULLY INSURED 36
718-899-7797
www.rubensfinebrush.com
J&F FLOOR SPECIALIST ★ ★ Expert Workmanship ★ ★ Professional Service ★
• Sanding • Refinishing $ • Polyurethane • Staining • Bleaching • Pickling • Moisture Cure INSURED FREE ESTIMATES
100sq. ft.
718-318-1442 516-342-0954
INTERIOR-EXTERIOR
J.S.V. ELECTRIC Inc. LICENSED ELECTRICIANS 24 HR. EMERGENCY SERVICE • • • • •
220V Service Upgrades Complete Rewiring Ceiling Fans Air Conditioner Lines Indoor/Outdoor Lighting 31
FREE ESTIMATES Cell: Office:
51
MASTER CARPET CLEANERS RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL • Carpet & Rug Cleaning • Upholstery Cleaning • Tile Cleaning Free • Water Damage Deod orizing • Flat Low Rates
718-335-7572 347-624-3061
37
www.mastercarpetco.com
917-731-1723 718-296-1238
METRO CEMENT Specializing In: • Driveways • Sidewalks • Brick & Blockwork • Foundation & Excavation • Tilework All Types of Concrete Lic. #1335180
FREE ESTIMATES Call Any Time
38
718-763-8796
Water Heaters • Boilers • Gas & Water Meters Installed • Gas Leak Repairs Legalizations & Violations Removals
HARDWOOD FLOORS
DORMERS & EXTENSIONS
Member of the Better Business Bureau
COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL
Europol Floors, Inc.
• Bathrooms • Kitchens • Basements • Carpentry • Roofing • Flat Shingle • Expert in Fixing Leaks • Attics • All Renovations • Masonry • Stoops • Brickwork • Waterproofing • Pointing
RUBEN’S PAINTING FINE BRUSH
• Roofing • Seamless 5 & 6 Inch Gutters & Leaders • Windows • Skylights • Brick • Stucco & Vinyl Siding • Concrete • Kitchens & Baths • Basements 37 • Extensions • Dormers • Sheetrock
C.J.M. Contracting Inc.
Specializing in General Contracting
Family Owned For Over 35 Years
PROVENZANO PLUMBING Inc.
Emergency Service 24/7
718-361-1873
★
Squirrel & Raccoon Removal ••Snow Shoveling Chimney Caps Installed (Stainless Steel) ••Flat Roof’s Soffit &(Cold Metal Capping Work ••S.B.S. Process) Tree Removal - Trees Pruned ••Rubbish Removal StumpCut Removal • Snow Shoveling 2 ••Trees & Pruned
718-849-2206
Est. 1938
RESIDENTIAL - COMMERCIAL - INDUSTRIAL
42
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
RE-NEW CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC.
DEPENDABLE LICENSED CONTRACTOR
EMERGENCY SERVICE MON. THRU FRI. DAY OR NIGHT AROUND THE CLOCK
31
Experience • Skim Coating • Bathroom Tile/Repair/Re-Grouting • Kitchens • Sheetrock & Plastering 15% • Wood Floors • Carpentry • Water Damage Repair OFF • Wallpaper Removal
sq. ft.
718-807-5902 516-424-9997
Call For FREE ESTIMATE (718)
SPECIALIZING IN:
AS LOW AS ¢
RAINBOW ELECTRIC Co. Inc.
• • • •
Small Jobs Welcome
43 • Courteous Reliable Service • Weekends Available At No Additional Cost • • All Furniture Padded For Protection • No Job Too Small • Packing & Unpacking • • Cartons & Packing Materials Available • Licensed & Insured DOT#10851 USDOT#1406075NY www.movecomovers.com 102-15 LIBERTY AVE., OZONE PARK, NY 11417
INTERIOR SPECIALISTS Starting at 4 Rm
718-843-5971 917-670-1015
Member of the Better Business Bureau
•• Shingles Shingles • Slate Work •• Expert SlateTile & Spanish Tilework Spanish •• Rubberized Flat Roofs Squirrel Services •• Gutters Leaders - Gutters& & Leaders Cleaned, Repaired & Installed Cleaned, Repaired & Installed • Chimney Caps Installed
MOVECO
Clearview Painting
Lowest Rates • Fully Certified All Work Fully Guaranteed Chemicals Rotated - All Areas Commercial & Residential
36
Residential Residential SALTY’S ROOFING & TREE SERVICES
✁718-496-2572 EST. 1985
TERMITE INSPECTION AND TERMITE JOBS
Commercial Commercial
CHECK OUR LOW RATES
WE SERVICE YOUR COMMUNITY
Tommy’s WOOD FLOORS
✁
MOVING SERVICE INC.
718-641-4164 • 516-244-3799 LICENSED
We’ll See What’s BUGGING You!
718-827-8175
$25.00 with this ad
GARY RYAN HOME SPECIALIST, INC.
FREE ESTIMATES
Free Estimates Since 1980
INSTANT SAVINGS OF
718-847-1445
Families Exterminator
ELECTRICIAN Call Russo Electric Honest & Reliable Your Neighborhood Electrician Since 1946
Removal of Garbage - Debris Unwanted Furniture/Appliances
37
Licensed 3rd Generation 220V Services, Outlets, Security Lights, Fixtures, Etc.
37
Lic. #1069538
FERRARO ROOFING www.ferraroroofing.com
• Aluminum • Plastic • Fabric
www.Classical-Iron.com
H.I.C. #0937014
• • • •
AWNINGS
718-528-2401
279-4246
Ask For 718ROB
Classical Custom
Professional Services INSTALLATION • SANDING • Repairs • Staining • Refinishing • Bleaching FREE ESTIMATES ALL WORK GUARANTEED 39 Lic./Ins.
718-850-8798
All Plumbing & Heating Repairs
NYC MP Lic. #001677 24/7 Service
Carpentry Specialists
917-731-8365 Office: 718-849-6400 Cell:
17
917-709-1181 718-323-5114 15% OFF*
LICENSED ELECTRICIAN
ALEXIS
• Wiring for Light, Heat, Power, 220 Upgrades, A/C Lines, Bells & Intercom • Violations Removed
• Gutters Cleaned & Installed • Leaders • Skylights • Specialists in Flat Roofs & Shingles • Roofing Repairs • Rubberoid Roofs LOW PRICES • FREE ESTIMATES 24 Hours A Day • 7 Days A Week
FREE ESTIMATES Lic #11242
Call 646-739-1404
40
On All Roofs With This Ad
ROOFING & SIDING
Call Leon 718-296-6525 All Work Guaranteed • Se Habla Español *Reg. price quoted
Lic. # 0859173 38
SQ page 55
Cell 917-349-9061 Ask for Pablo EVENING HOURS AVAILABLE!
“Day or Night We Get Your Appliances Working Right” Hablamos Español
STOP
ONE STOP STOP PAINTING
WOOD FLOORS SPECIALIST • Hardwood Floors Installation • Refinishing • Repairs • Staining MODERN DUSTLESS MACHINES
718-803-1348
• Kitchens • Electrical • Bathrooms • Carpentry • Plumbing • Painting • Ceramic Tile • Sheetrock • Sidewalks • Finished • Driveways Basements 37 • Hardwood Floors Reasonable Rates Free Estimates
All Repairs For Your Home and Business Kitchen & Bath Renovations/Floors Power Washing Licensed, Bonded, Experienced
718-348-7821 Lic. #1066489
Licensed & Insured
718-426-2977
36
718-938-2127
36
43
Lic. # 1258952
Siding • Windows • Roofing • Fences Kitchens • Baths • Basements • Decks Doors • Awnings • Patio Enclosures Brick Pointing • Concrete Stucco
• Driveways • Foundations • Excavations • Blacktop
8
FREE ESTIMATES
1-800-525-5102 • 718-767-0044 WWW.NEWHEIGHTSCONSTRUCTIONNY.COM NYC LIC. #1191201
• WINDOWS • DOORS • STORM DOORS
• • • • • • • • • •
Kitchens Bathrooms Garage Doors Skylights Decks Sheetrock Flooring Basements Drop Ceilings And Much More
FREE ESTIMATES NYC Lic. #1001786
All Work Proudly Guaranteed www.webercarpentry.com
1-800-289-7046
Lic. #1270074
J&B HOME IMPROVEMENTS Celebrating Our 30 th Anniversary
• Painting
• Masonry
917-560-8146
43
LICENSED & INSURED FREE ESTIMATES
Owner Operated Climber/Pruner With Over 20 Years Experience
• Firewood • Free Estimates • Removals • Prunings
Serving Queens - Fully Insured Contact Brian (owner)
845-224-9637
Only
41
Specializing in Designing, Tree Pruning and Clean-Ups.
FREE ESTIMATES Call Anthony
718-845-9023 Licensed & Insured
ROOFING LEAKS • LEAKS • Shingles • Flats • Slates • Specializing in Finding Leaks • Clean Out Leaders & Gutters FREE Estimates 37 • Best Price • Work Guaranteed
199
Capping Available
VINYL SIDING SALE! Call For Special FREE Estimates or Visit Our Showroom
22500
$
per 100 Sq. Ft.
ROOFING • SEAMLESS LEADERS & GUTTERS ALL MASONRY WORK • CEMENT • PAVERS • BRICK NYC Lic. # 0927491
37
A&M Imbriano LANDSCAPING, Inc.
718-791-8259
EXPERT WINDOW REPAIRS WINDOWS COMPLETELY INSTALLED $ 00
All Types of Tree Service All Hardwood Firewood
SPRING SPECIAL
Nassau Lic. #H0421840000
718-894-0659
SIDEWALK VIOLATIONS REMOVED
ROADSTONE CONTRACTING
Give Us A Call To Spruce Up Your Property For Spring. Weekly Maintenance Available 37
39
45
Brickwork • Pavers • Concrete • Waterproofing Tile & Granite Work Anthony Interior • Exterior
• Doors
Cell: 917-922-5355
– SINCE 1995 –
LICENSED & INSURED
• Siding
718-523-2317
Weber Home Improvement
7
• Roofing
We Do All The Loading & Cleanups Commercial • Residential Interior • Exterior • Demolition Cleanouts - All Kinds Boiler & Oil Tanks Removed Lawn Maintenance Fully Insured and Certified 45
(Double Box Ad)
FREE ESTIMATES
• Window
Rubbish Removal
Your Ad In 9 Newspapers For The Price Of One. $ 65 A Week.
718-658-0979
• Retaining Walls • Basement Floors • Handicap Ramps • Garbage Removal
BG TREE EXPERTS
SUMMER SPECIALS ON WINDOWS SUMMER SPECIAL Gutters - Leaders Siding
646-244-1658
PROFESSIONAL CARDI CONCRETE WORK CONSTRUCTION CORP. • Sidewalks • Stoops/Patios • Bathrooms • Kitchens • Basements • Windows/Anderson/Pella/Skylights • Decks • Concrete • Pavers • Flooring • Painting • Sheetrock • Carpentry • Plumbing • Electrical • Extensions & New Construction ★ 20 Years Excellent Record with Consumer Affairs FREE ESTIMATES LICENSED AND INSURED
Same Day Service
FREE ESTIMATES
HOME REPAIRS
NEW HEIGHTS CONSTRUCTION LLC • • • •
40
Handyman
15% Senior Citizen Discount FREE ESTIMATES 38 20 Years Experience We Will Beat Anybody’s Price! Phil 917-747-4060
VICKAR FLOOR SERVICE
718-968-5987
Husband For Hire
Interior & Exterior Painting Sheetrock & Taping Faux Wallpapering
FREE ESTIMATES
39
lateappliancerepair.com
Old Furniture, Household Items, Appliances, Yard Waste, Construction Debris And More.
1-800-599-1150 www.jbhomeimprovementsinc.com
L.I. Lic. #H18D2240000
######################################
AMERICAN APPLIANCE & AIR CONDITIONING FOR ALL YOUR MAJOR APPLIANCE NEEDS Including high end appliances • Gas/Electric • Commercial/Residential
$15 OFF
REPAIRS 14
CFC Certified • Insured
718-352-4600 • 516-352-4600 • 516-322-8063 Thank You
##############
Clip To Save $30
We Remove
##############
WE SERVICE: • Washers • Dryers • Refrigerators • Stoves/Ovens • Combo Units NO SERVICE CHARGE WITH A REPAIR!
We Remove Your Junk, So You Don’t Have To!
All Leaks on Pipes, Faucets, Toilets, Shower Bodies, Radiator Valves, Clear Stoppages in Sinks, Tubs, Also Install Hot Water Heaters Free Estimates Licensed Cheap Rates & Insured Ask for Bob
######################################
$45.95
$45.95 ANY ONE PROBLEM
SEWER & DRAINS Electrically Cleaned: • Main Sewers • Toilets • Showers • Bathtubs • Sinks • Floor/Yard Drains • Grease Separators • Leader Lines
• Sewer Ejector Systems Serviced and Installed • High Tech Water Jetting • Camera Inspection • Root Treatment • Basements Pumped
Money Saving Preventive Maintenance Contracts Residential/Commercial Accounts Welcome! All Work Guaranteed! 1 Year Guarantee Available On Sewers
1 Hour Response Time Available
We Gladly Accept Our Competitors Contracts!
Final Cleaning Sewer and Drain Service Inc.
718-977-4500 • 516-285-2845 24 HR./7 DAY EMERGENCY SERVICE
* It Doesn’t Cost A Lot To Achieve The Best *
37
Page 55 QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011
REPAIRS
LATE APPLIANCE REPAIR
QUEENS CHRONICLE, Thursday, September 8, 2011 Page 56
SQ page 56
A
NCE & TV REPAIR PPLIA WE REPAIR:
SERVICE Estate Cleanouts FREE Broom Sweep ESTIMATE Residential/Commercial Licensed & Insured www.cleancocleanoutservice.com A Division of Moveco, Inc.
From Home or Office Attic • Garage • Basement, Etc. No Job Too Big or Small Fast, Honest, Reliable Service
718-275-0074 – SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT –
718-738-8732
38
CUSTOM MADE BLINDS OF ALL TYPES
SAVE MSRP 37
718-444-0116
Wizard Furniture, Inc. • Professional Furniture Repair • Touch-Ups • Refreshing Kitchen Cabinets & Much More FREE ESTIMATES Call 516-837-0886 36 or 917-515-7416
30 Years Experience Family Business Licensed and Insured
718-569-0772 40
E-mail: wizardfurniture@yahoo.com
Earl Construction Inc.
L &B
• Bathroom Tiling • Mason Work • Roofing • Siding • Carpentry • Dry Wall • Painting • Gutter Cleaning No Job Too Large or Too Small
Home Improvements • Painting • Cleanouts • Sheetrock • Tiles ( Ceramic & Vinyl) • Framing • Roofing • Taping • Siding • Walls 36 Licensed & Insured
718-658-4832 917-593-3926
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE
1-718-605-5414
40
MOVING SERVICES Licensed & Insured
Local Long Distance Lic. #T37169
US Dot #1613339
FREE ESTIMATES - CALL 24/7 NO JOB TOO BIG OR TOO SMALL REASONABLE RATES 39 718-809-6238
EverythingHomeGallery.com EverythingHome@aol.com
• Brick • Stone • Concrete • Patios • Walks • Pool Areas • Basement Entrances • Fireplaces • Stoops • Cultured Stone Veneer Lic. & Insured www.tandtmasonry.com Lic. #1250357
“ONE CALL” HANDYMAN Home Improvements
41
Commercial & Residential
• TREE REMOVAL • FULL SERVICE LANDSCAPING • SPRING CLEAN-UP – Masonry Work Also Available –
FREE ESTIMATES FULLY INSURED Cell
347-418-7309 718-979-2694
Roofing & Painting • Siding • Gutters • Leaders • Pointings • Skylights • Sheetrock • Sidewalks • Home Improvements FREE ESTIMATES Call Mark
36
718-529-3810 347-517-5235
Cell:
38
CONSTRUCTION LLC FULLY INSURED
Family Owned & Operated for 30 Years
Lic. #1314744
718-896-9200 or 718-845-9200 FREE ESTIMATES VIOLATIONS REMOVED • Kitchens & Bathrooms • Dormers & Extensions • Brickwork • Paving Stones • All Types of Concrete • Custom-Built Homes • Residential & Commercial • New Construction • We Do It All!
Visit us online: SclafmoreConstruction.com
40
Insulated Garage Doors
HUGE CLEARANCE SALE • Steel • Entrance Doors • Storm Doors • Wood • Gate Operators • Security Doors • Raised Panels • Parking Systems • Maintenance Free Doors
Sales & Service For All Major Brands Wholesale & Retail
Always Free Estimates
BROKEN SPRINGS, DOORS, CABLES 42
• Siding 25 Years Experience • Roofing For Your Needs! • Waterproofing ALL WORK GUARANTEED • All Types of Repairs • Cleanouts • And Much More Job Not Listed? Just Ask! “We Do It All”
Embick Construction, Corp.
Thunder Tree Experts
Center Post Removed • Openings Widened
Traditional Old World Masonry and Modern Concepts
1-877-488-5588
• Plastering • Ceramic Tiles • Painting: Interior & Exterior • Laminate & Commercial Flooring • Windows - Doors
36
GARAGE DOORS Complete Framing Available • Garages Extended
Masonry Corp.
36
• Complete Renovation of Kitchens, Bathrooms and Basements • Plumbing • Electric • Sheetrock & Taping
Cell 917-497-9800
SCL AFMORE
T&T
“ONE CALL” Does It All!!!
Call 718-634-5543
Lic. #1248998
L. HOOVER TRUCKING
718-520-8370
Lic. # 1248998
Call BJ First
At Affordable Rates
FREE • New & Existing Construction ESTIMATES • Circuit Breaker Panels 24 Hours • A/C Lines • New Meters Residential • Commercial EMERGENCY SERVICE All Work Guaranteed
36
Specializing in: Brick & Block (patio) Sidewalk, Driveways, Stoops, Interlock Brick Paving, Brick Pointing, Carpentry, Roofing and Waterproofing 10% Discount with ad 43 Call Billy 718-726-1934
60% to 80% Off
• BASEMENT WATERPROOFING • CONCRETE • BRICK • PAVERS
All Phases of Electrical Work
OLD CORONA CONSTRUCTION CORP.
Custom Re-Upholstery At Factory Direct Prices
Free Shop at Home service Free Installation & Valance
37
Mention this Ad for a Discount
Sale On Concrete Work
VERTICAL VIEW DECORATORS ON ALL TYPES of FURNITURE Don't Throw Your Furniture Away, Make It Like New! Custom-Made Plastic or Vinyl Slip Covers at Discount Prices
ELECTRICAL SERVICES
We Will Remove All Your Unwanted Furniture Junk Removal • From One Piece To A Truck Load
NO SERVICE CHARGE WITH A REPAIR
UP TO $50 DISCOUNT
CALL BJ FIRST
CLEANOUT
• Washers • Dryers • Refrigerators • TVs • A/Cs • Stoves/Ovens • Dishwashers
1 Year Warranty
ELECTRICAL WORK
CLEANCO
Authorized Distributors & Installers For:
$25.00 COUPON With Installation of Any New Garage Door
718-593-9263
Expires 09/29/11.
Reliable - Dependable - Clean & Neat - Reasonable Rates - References Upon Request
FIRST CLASS EXTERIORS BIANCONE CONTRACTING CORP.
Siding • Windows Any Type of Doors Awnings Patio Enclosures Interior/Exterior Painting • Gutters, Leaders • Clean Gutters Senior Citizen Discounts 24 Hr. Service - 7 Days A Wk.
Call
718-359-6594 28 Years Experience
(Flat & Shingle)
• • • • •
39
718-848-3800
Se Habla Español Lic. #1242941 39 Insurance Estimates Welcome
PARTS • REPAIRS • REMOTE CONTROLS FREE SHOP AT HOME SERVICE
CASSEL & & FREYMUTH, FREYMUTH, INC. INC. CASSEL Serving Queens For Over 50 Years
718-739-8006
Fully Licensed & Insured
RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL ELECTRIC GARAGE DOOR OPENERS
22
SQ page 57
RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL • KITCHENS • FULL BASEMENTS • BATHROOMS • TILEWORK • WOOD FLOORING • PAINTING • PIPING & HEATING
917-951-8946
Lic. #1374222
Licensed & Insured
Insured & Bonded FREE ESTIMATES
SENIOR DISCOUNT
Serving Queens For Over 10 Years ALL PHASES OF TREE WORK ✓Tree Removal ✓Stump Grinding ✓Pruning
Commercial & Residential
Cell:
✓Free Load of Wood Chips
Residential & Commercial
28
917-763-7538
SE HABLA ESPAÑOL
Brick & Cement Work Licensed & Bonded 38
*in most cases
H.I.S. Lic. #1393697 H.I.C. Lic. #1393699
38
Chronicle Services Your Connection To Quality Home Improvement
A STEP ABOVE
LICENSED & INSURED
Licensed & Insured
Joe Hoyler
BRICK STOOPS BRICK POINTING
Same Day Service* 24 Hr. Emergency Service
917-721-5356
All Phases of Construction
917-412-7004
36
JC TREE SERVICE FREE ESTIMATES
J. Hoyler Construction, Inc.
• Janitorial • Stone Floor Care & Restoration • Wood Floor Refinishing • Wall Washing • Stripping & Waxing • Grounds Cleaning
No Job Too Big or Too Small! FREE ESTIMATES
JH C
• Tile Work • Driveways • Kitchens & Baths • Patios • Sidewalk Violations Removed 15 FREE ESTIMATES
Call 718-847-6930 Ask for Jim
Lic. #0855277
Chronicle CLASSIFIEDS To Advertise Call 718-205-8000
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Tutoring
HALLOWEEN P/T & F/T POSITIONS
PT/CLERICAL
Looking for some excitement this Halloween while earning extra cash? Look no further! You’ve found the place. Queens-based Halloween company offering full and part-time sales/stock positions.
9AM-2PM, MON-FRI Input invoices, orders filing, telephone. Must have clear and pleasant speaking voice. Woodside location. Call for interview
Ph.D. provides Outstanding Tutoring in Math, English, Special Exams. All levels. Study skills taught. 718-767-0233
Please call for appointment 718-846-1008
718-335-3000
Situation Wanted Nanny avail for childcare from infant to 6 yrs old, also avail for companion, great refs, avail now, 917-432-8795
Child Care/Day Care
P/T GROUNDS REAL ESTATE KEEPER/HELPER AGENTS & AGENT TRAINEES 8am-12 Noon, Mon-Fri. Needed for all of Queens. Great Opportunities Available!
Ideal for a college student. $10/hour. Call for interview
Call Jerry Fink
718-738-6364
917-774-6121
Ask for Steve
AIRLINES ARE HIRING- Train for high paying Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified- Job Placement Assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance (866)296-7093
Classified Ad Special Pay for 3 weeks and the 4th week is FREE! Call 718-205-8000
Junk Cars Wanted
JUNK CARS WANTED
(347) 386-0356 Having a garage sale? Let everyone know about it by advertising in the Queens Classifieds. Call 718-205-8000 and place the ad!
Cars Wanted
BOBBI AND THE STRAYS CAR DONATIONS Receive CA$H, Hotel Voucher & Tax Deduction
NO KEYS? JUNK NO TITLE? CARS NO PROBLEM! WANTED! 1-888-712-JUNK SAME DAY PICKUP 24 HR PICKUP, MON-SUN
CALL 347-777-4932
JUNK CARS
SERENA’S SERENITY DAYCARE $350 & UP & AFTERSCHOOL SAME DAY PICKUP SERVICES We specialize in the following: Local school pickups AM Drop-offs All Ages Open 7 days a week 100% Child Proof Clean & Smoke-free environment Security cameras on premises at all times Access from the convenience of your laptop! Call for more info:
Cars Wanted
NO TITLE NEEDED!
DAY OR NIGHT!
718-913-5273 Cars Wanted DONATE VEHICLE: RECEIVE $1000 GROCERY COUPONS. NATIONAL ANIMAL WELFARE FOUNDATION SUPPORT NO KILL SHELTERS HELP HOMELESS PETS FREE TOWING, TAX DEDUCTIBLE, NON-RUNNERS ACCEPTED 1-866- 912-GIVE
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ATTENTION ALL RECIPIENTS OF DE PUY
DEFECTIVE HIP IMPLANTS Don’t rely on the company who gave you a potentially defective hip implant to advise you on your legal rights!
DePuy Orthopaedics, a division of Johnson & Johnson, has issued a worldwide recall of it’s ASRTM Acetabular System for Total Hip Replacement, after determining that these hip implants may fail at an alarming rate. The “metal-on-metal” composition of these implants can release particles into the patient, potentially causing serious and painful reactions — sometimes requiring complete revision surgery. Reportedly, Johnson & Johnson has been seeking medical releases from recipients so that their claims adjustors can speak with you directly and possibly take down statements without your having counsel present – an unwise action for any recipient to do. Having a defective hip implant in your body clearly demands having your own lawyer. You
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Old Howard Beach, Sat 9/10 & Sun 9/11, 10-4, 99 St betw 163 & 164 Ave. Multi family sale!
LOOKING TO BUY Estates, gold, costume jewelry, old & mod furn, records, silver, coins, art, toys, oriental items. Call ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from George, 718-386-1104 home. *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Accounting, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if Forest Hills, Sat 9/10, 10-6 & Sun qualified. Call 888-201-8657 9/11, 10-3, 101-12 72 Ave. A bit www.CenturaOnline.com of everything!
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must be very cautious with dealing with the manufacturer or its representative without proper legal representation. If you have a DePuy ASR TM product, please call us immediately, as there are time limits for filing a claim. You might already have problems with the implant about which you are unaware, so please contact us — and certainly do not forfeit your legal rights without talking to us.
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING The NYC Board of Standards and Appeals has scheduled a public hearing on the following application: Variance (72-21) to allow a threestory yeshiva with dormitories; contrary to bulk regulations. Address: 1213 Bay 25th Street, west side of Bay 25th Street, between Bayswater Avenue and Healy Avenue, Block 15720, Lot 67, Borough of Queens. Applicant: Law Office of Fredrick A. Becker, for USA Outreach Corp., by Shaya Cohen, owner. Community Board No.: 14Q This application, Cal. No.: 47-11BZ, has been calendared for Public Hearing on Tuesday, September 20, 2011, 1:30 P.M., session, 40 Rector Street, 6th floor Hearing Room “E”, Borough of Manhattan. Interested persons or associations may appear at the hearing to present testimony regarding this application. This application can be reviewed at the Board offices, Monday through Friday, 9:00 am to 5:00 pm. This notice is published by the applicant in accordance with the Rules of Procedure of the Board of Standards and Appeals.
Notice of Formation of Segadey Notice of Formation of Vernon Real Estate Holding Company, Howard Beach/Rockwood Park, L.L.C., a domestic or foreign PLEASE CALL LORI, 718-324- Sat 9/10, 9-4, 158-47 79 St. Too Limited Liability Company (LLC). LLC. Articles of Organization Articles of Organization filed with 4330. I PAY THE BEST, MOST much to mention! filed with Secretary of State Secretary of State on June 2, HONEST PRICES FOR ESTATES, of NY (SSNY) on 05/19/2011. FURNITURE, CHANDELIERS, Old Howard Beach, Sat 9/10, 9-4, 2011. NY Office location: Queens Office location: Queens County. Secretary of State is 161-44 99 St, PKD fundraiser & LAMPS, COSTUME JEWELRY, County. SSNY designated designated as agent upon whom WATCHES (WORKING OR NOT bake sale as agent of LLC upon WORKING), FURS, COINS, POCK- Ozone Park, Sat 9/10 & Sun 9/11, process against the LLC may whom process against it ETBOOKS, CHINA, VASES, 9-3, 95-11 81 St. Too much to be served. Secretary of State may be served. SSNY shall shall mail a copy of any process GLASSWARE, STERLING SIL- mention! mail process to: Kenneth against the LLC service upon VERWARE, FIGURINES, CANDLEAbrahami, 33-18 57th STICKS, PAINTINGS, PRINTS, Ozone Park, Sat 9/10 & Sun 9/11, him/her to C/O 119-16 204th Street, Woodside, NY 11377. RUGS, PIANOS, GUITARS, VIO- 9am, 135-16 97 St. Too much to Street, St. Albans, NY 11412. Purpose: Any lawful activity. Purpose: any lawful activity. LINS, FLUTES, TAG SALES, mention! CLEAN OUTS. South Ozone Park, Sat 9/10, 10-4 Our Classifieds Reach Over Classified Ad Special. Pay for 3 Classified Ad Deadline is 12 Noon & Sun 9/11, 11-4, 133-29 120 St, 400,000 Readers. Call 718-205- weeks and the 4th week is FREE! on Tuesday for Thursday’s paper. betw 133 & 135 Aves. 8000 to advertise. Call 718-205-8000
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NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. NAME: H.B. LANG REALTY LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 07/21/11. Office location: Queens County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to the LLC, c/o Denise R. Langweber L.L.P., 3332 Sunrise Highway, Wantagh, New York 11793. Purpose: For any lawful purpose.
NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. NAME: CRITERION HOLDINGS LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 05/19/11. Office location: Queens County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to the LLC, 35-11 36th Street, Astoria, New York 11106. Purpose: For any lawful purpose.
Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company. Name: BENAIR HVAC-R LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 04/19/2011. Office location is Queens County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: Ben Avishai Yarkoni, 150-14 Grand Central Parkway, Jamaica, NY 11432. The general purpose: For any lawful purpose.
Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company. Name: A W Family LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 07/05/2011. Office location is Queens County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC, 84-11 Jamaica Ave., Jamaica, NY 11421. The general purpose: For any lawful purpose.
RLLCCYCR LLC, a domestic LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 03/31/2011. Office location: Queens County. SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Jun Xu, 17-19 Putnam Ave., Suite 3L, Ridgewood, NY 11385. Purpose: Any Lawful Purpose.
Notice of Formation of WAVECREST MANAGEMENT GROUP LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 07/25/11. Office location: Queens County. Princ. office of LLC: c/o Susan Camerata, 87-14 116th St., Richmond Hill, NY 11418. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC at the addr. of its princ. office. Purpose: Any lawful activity.
JAMESON PLAZA LLC, a domestic LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 7/18/2011. Office location: Queens County. SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 4128 College Point Blvd., Flushing, NY 11355. Purpose: Any Lawful Purpose.
Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company. Name: Alina & Sofia’s Jewelry LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 04/20/2011. Office location is Queens County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to Eduard Lalaiants, 84-10 34 Ave., Apt. 4L, Jackson Heights, NY 11372. The general purpose: For any lawful purpose.
Notice of Formation of 5505 ASSOCIATES LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 07/25/11. Office location: Queens County. Princ. office of LLC: 139-10 28th Rd., Apt. 5B, Flushing, NY 11354. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC at the addr. of its princ. office. Purpose: Any lawful activity.
Notice of Formation: FEDERAL ENVIRONMENT, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the Sec. of State of NY (SSNY) on 2/14/2011. Office loc: Queens County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: FEDERAL ENVIRONMENT, LLC., 63 Flushing Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11205. Purpose: Any lawful activity. p
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SUMMONS AND NOTICE STATE OF NEW YORK, Index No. 7295-09 SUPREME COURT QUEENS COUNTY NYCTL 2008-A TRUST AND THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON, AS COLLATERAL AGENT AND CUSTODIAN, Plaintiffs, VS. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, INC.; NEW YORK CITY TRANSIT AUTHORITY TRANSIT ADJUDICATION BUREAU; NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE; NEW YORK CITY DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE; HAROLD H. ALLEN and PATRICIA H. ALLEN, Defendants. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the Complaint in the above-entitled foreclosure action, and to serve a copy of your answer on the plaintiff’s attorney within thirty (30) days after the service of this Summons, exclusive of the day of service or within thirty (30) days after completion of service where service is made in any other manner than by personal service within the State. The United States of America, if designated as a defendant in this action, may answer or appear within sixty (60) days of service hereof. In case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the Complaint. Queens County is designated as the place of trial. The basis of venue is the location of the subject premises. Dated: May 11, 2011 TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: The foregoing summons is served upon you by publication, pursuant to an Order of Honorable Jaime A. Rios, a Justice of the Supreme Court, dated August 1, 2011, and filed with supporting papers in the Queens County Clerk’s Office. This is an action to foreclose a tax lien covering the property known as 129-12 Guy R. Brewer Boulevard, Jamaica, New York and being a parcel of land designated as Block 12276 and Lot 63. The relief sought is the sale of the subject property at public auction in satisfaction of the tax lien. In case of your failure to appear, judgment may be taken against you in the sum of $13,909.71, together with interest, costs, disbursements and attorneys’ fees of this action, and directing the public sale of the property. Richard M. Beers, Jr., Phillips Lytle LLP, Attorneys for Plaintiffs Office and Post Office Address 1400 First Federal Plaza Rochester, New York 14614 Tel. No. (585) 238-2000
Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company. Name: Q & A CONSULTING LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 04/08/2011. Office location is Queens County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC, 11 Soundview Drive, Bayville, NY 11709. The general purpose: For any lawful purpose.
Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company. Name: FTW Consulting LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 04/14/2011. Office location is Queens County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC, 29-15 36th Ave., #4EA, Astoria, NY 11106. The general purpose: For any lawful purpose.
Notice of Formation of WANG HOLDINGS LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secretary of State of NY (“SSNY”) on 7/19/2011. Office location is Queens County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 143-13 Beech Ave., Flushing, NY 11355. Purpose: any lawful activity.
THE NEW YORK FAMILY OFFICE LLC, a domestic Limited Liability Company (LLC), filed with the Sec of State of NY on 7/8/11. NY Office location: Queens County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC served upon him/her to The LLC, c/o Heiko Meyenschein, 90 Park Ave., Ste. 1710, NY, NY 10016. General Purposes
CS CONDO LLC, a domestic LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 6/21/2011. Office location: Queens County. SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 39-60 65th St., Woodside, NY 11377. Purpose: Any Lawful Purpose.
GHALE CONCIERGE & SECURITY SERVICE LLC, a domestic Limited Liability Company (LLC), filed with the Sec of State of NY on 4/15/11. NY Office location: Queens County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC served upon him/her to The LLC, 411 Onderdonk Ave., Ridgewood, NY 11385. General Purposes.
SUMMONS AND ORDER FOR PUBLICATION STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT, CIVIL DIVISION, RUTLAND UNIT DOCKET NO. 497-6-10 Rdcv DATE ISSUED: 8/2/11 ATOMIC PROFESSIONAL AUDIO INC. V. EASTWEST BEST INC. TO THE ABOVE-NAMED DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon John R. Canney Ill, plaintiff’s attorney, whose address is P.O. Box 6626, Rutland, VT 05702, an answer to plaintiff’s complaint in the above-entitled action within 41 days after the date of the first publication of this summons, which is September 8, 2011. If you fail to do so, judgment by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in the complaint. Your answer must also be filed with the court. Unless otherwise provided in Rule 13(a), your answer must state as a counterclaim any related claim which you may have against the plaintiff, or you will thereafter be barred from making such claim in any other action. YOUR ANSWER MUST STATE SUCH A COUNTERCLAIM WHETHER OR NOT THE RELIEF DEMANDED IN THE COMPLAINT IS FOR DAMAGE COVERED BY A LIABILITY INSURANCE POLICY UNDER WHICH THE INSURER HAS THE RIGHT OR OBLIGATION TO CONDUCT THE DEFENSE. If you believe that the plaintiff is not entitled to all or part of the claim set forth in the complaint, or if you believe that you have a counterclaim against the plaintiff, you may wish to consult an attorney. If you feel that you cannot afford to pay an attorney’s fee, you may ask the clerk of the court for information about places where you may seek legal assistance. Plaintiff’s action is a Complaint for monies owed based upon materials and services provided to the Defendants. A copy of the complaint is on file and maybe obtained at the office of the clerk of this court. It appearing from the Affidavit duly filed in the above-entitled action that service cannot be made with due diligence by any of the methods prescribed in V.R.C.P. 4(d) through (f) inclusive, it is hereby ORDERED that service of the above process shall be made upon the defendant, EastWest Best inc., by publication pursuant to V.RC.P. [4(d)(1) and] 4(g). This order shall be published once a week for 3 weeks on September 8, 2011, September 15, 2011, and September 22, 2011, in the Queens Chronicle, a newspaper of general circulation in Queens County, NY, and a copy of this order shall be mailed to the defendant, EastWest Best Inc., if their address is known. Dated, at Rutland, Vermont this 1st day of August, 2011. Mary Miles Teachout, Vermont Superior Court Judge, Civil Division, Rutland Unit
Notice of Formation of KULEKORGOOD, ROFF AND ASSOCIATES, PLLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/17/11. Office location: Queens County. Princ. office of PLLC: 118-35 Queens Blvd., 17th Fl., Forest Hills, NY 11375. SSNY designated as agent of PLLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the PLLC at the addr. of its princ. office. Purpose: Practice of law.
S&S Exterminating LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/22/11. Office in Queens County. SSNY designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to 63-09 108th St., Ste. 3D, Forest Hills, NY 11375. Purpose: General.
Notice of Formation of MW ROUNDHOUSE LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/22/11. Office location: Queens County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to c/o Werber Management, 40-52 75th St., Elmhurst, NY 11373. Purpose: Any lawful activity.
NOTICE is hereby given that an Order entered by the Civil Court, Queens County on 8/31/2011, bearing Index Number NC-000679-11/QU, a copy of which may be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 89-17 Sutphin Blvd., Jamaica, New York, in Record Room 357, grants me the right to assume the name of Evan Yufang Ye. My present name is Evan Yufang Hong. My present address is 132-25 Maple Ave., Apt. 112, Flushing, NY 11355. My place of birth is Manhattan, NY. My date of birth is August 24, 2005.
NOTICE is hereby given that an Order entered by the Civil Court, Queens County on 7/5/11, bearing Index Number NC-000509-11/QU, a copy of which may be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 89-17 Sutphin Blvd., Jamaica, New York, in Record Room 357, grants me the right to assume the name of Dimitrios Markopoulos. My present name is Jimmy Markou. My present address is 199-34 28th Ave., Flushing, NY 11358. My place of birth is Greece. My date of birth is November 5, 1949.
MODAREVISE LLC, Arts. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 06/20/2011. Office location: Queens County. SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: C/O Jonathan M. Stein ESQ., PLLC, 11 Grace Ave., Ste. 410, Great Neck, NY 11021. Purpose: Any Lawful Purpose.
Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company. Name: SANDY SUN LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 11/01/2010. Office location is Queens County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC, 135-11 40th Road, Suite 4C, Flushing, NY 11354. The general purpose: For any lawful purpose.
YORK SECURITY SYSTEMS LLC, a domestic LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 06/08/2011. Office location: Queens County. SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Jarek Kajda, 6605 70th St., Middle Village, NY 11379. Purpose: Any Lawful Purpose.
Wall Street FPGA, a domestic Limited Liability Company (LLC), filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 3/4/11. NY Office location: Queens County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC served upon him/her to the LLC, 4020 195th Street, Flushing, NY 11358. General Purposes.
NOTICE is hereby given that an Order entered by the Civil Court, Queens County on 7/21/2011, bearing Index Number NC-661-11/QU, a copy of which may be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 8917 Sutphin Blvd., Jamaica, New York, in Record Room 357, grants me the right to assume the name of Moses Hoon Lee. My present name is Tae Hoon Lee. My present address is 200-05 16 Avenue, Bayside, NY 11360. My place of birth is Queens, New York. My date of birth is February 18, 1992.
Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company. Name: FULL HOUSE PARKING LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 9/3/2008. Office location is Queens County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC, 135-11 40th Road, Suite 4C, Flushing, NY 11354. The general purpose: For any lawful purpose.
Notice of Formation of 110-45 ZJD, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/12/11. Office location: Queens County. Princ. office of LLC: 112-15 72nd Rd., #410, Forest Hills (Queens), NY 11375. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to c/o Robert Rothstein, M.D. at the princ. office of the LLC. Purpose: Any lawful activity.
Raymond’s Plumbing & Heating, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 5/18/11. Office in Queens County. SSNY designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to 77-45 164th St., Flushing, NY 11366. Purpose: General.
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Real Estate EQUAL HOUSING. Federal, New York State and local laws prohibit discrimination because of race, color, sex, religion, age, national origin, marital status, familial status or disability in connection with the sale or rental of residential real estate. Queens Chronicle does not knowingly accept advertising in violation of these laws. When you suspect housing discrimination call the Open Housing Center (the Fair Housing Agency for the five boroughs of New York) at 212-941-6101, or the New York City Commission of Human Rights Hotline at 212306-7500. The Queens Chronicle reserves the right to alter wording in ads to conform with Federal Fair Housing regulations.
Apts. For Rent Centreville, 1 BR, renov, close to shopping & trans, $1,200/mo, neg. Agent 917-207-4003 FOREST HILLS GARDENS, beautiful xtra lg studio, w/ EIK, close to all! Overlooking the square! move in cond, $1,400/mo, incls all! Owner, 718-757-2394 Howard Beach, exclusive agent for studios & 1 BR apts, absentee L/L. Call Joe Trotta, Broker @ 718843-3333 Howard Beach/Cloverdale, 2 BR duplex apt, near shopping, express bus, schools, no pets, no broker fee, free W/D, $1,445/mo, heat incl, 917-723-0158 Howard Beach/Lindenwood, 3 BR, 1 1/2 baths w/terr, close to all shops & trans, no pets/smoking, credit ck req. Call owner, 347924-6807 Howard Beach/Lindenwood, modern 3 BR, 2 baths, balcony, EIK, LR/DR combo, credit ck & refs. Owner, 718-738-4013 Howard Beach/Lindenwood, 3 BRs, 2 baths, EIK, LR, DR, no pets/smoking, no washer/dryer, credit ck req w/refs, avail 9/1, $1,650/mo, util not incl, 718-5295262/347-393-9170
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HOWARD BEACH • 1 Family 80x100. 163 Ave. & 97 St. Agent Pasquale 718-641-8009
EXIT REALTY CENTRAL
Howard Beach, co-op for sale, 3 1/2 rms, 1 BR, hi-rise, new kit, updated bath, hardwood fls, all new appl, maint only $499/mo, Howard Beach/Lindenwood, Sat Howard Beach/Old side, studio, move-in cond, asking $119/K. Call 9/10, 12:30-3:30, Vineyard near buses/trans, credit ck, 718- owner, 516-298-7422 Gardens, 89-27 Shore Parkway. 1 736-4345 Howard Beach, mint AAA, lobby fl, BR, garden co-op, 2nd fl, pets ok. Howard Beach/Rockwood Park, 2 BR, 2 bath, 1,100 sq ft, 10” ceil- Connexion I RE, 718-845-1136 studio, freshly painted, $1,100/mo, ings, new kit & bath, $189/K. Mint incls G&E/CAC, no pets/smoking, AAA, 1 BR garden, dogs ok, parking avail, new kit/bath, $114,900. near all. Owner, 917-881-1176 Connexion I RE, 718-845-1136 Howard Beach/Rockwood Park, 1 BR, tiled bath, no pets/smoking. Credit ck & refs, $1,300/mo, gas/elec/AC incl, 718-848-4272 BANK?FORECLOSURE! FLORIDA Old Howard Beach, 2 BR, DR, EIK, WATERFRONT CONDOS! SW LR w/sun rm, $1,600/mo, incls all Coast! Brand new upscale 2 bed- 5 BRs, 3 Baths, Use of room, 2 bath, 1,675sf condo. Only util. Owner, 718-848-8039 Yard, Pvt Dvwy, Ref & $179,900! (Similar unit sold for Ozone Park, 2 BR, 1 fl, 2 family $399,900) Prime downtown loca- Credit Check required. pvt house, no smoking/pets, near tion on the water! Buy before all. 3 BR, 2 fl, no smoking/pets, 9/23/11 &?get $8,000 in flex Available from October. near all, 718-835-0582 money! Call now 1-877- 888Close to all! Ozone Park, 2 BRs, no 7571, X 51 Owner 917-693-7924 smoking/pets, 1 mos rent, 2 mos Classified Ad Deadline is 12 Noon Leave detailed message sec, 917-584-4433 on Tuesday for Thursday’s paper.
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BEAT
I HAVE OFTEN WALKED
SPORTS
Blasting through the borough, as per Moses
The art of the un-deal
by Ron Marzlock Chronicle Contributor
On Nov. 15, 1940 the Queens Midtown Tunnel was opened to the general public. When exiting the tunnel into Queens, motorists were slowed down on their way to Long Island by two-lane streets. The problem was to be solved by construction of the Queens Midtown Highway. Swedish engineer Ole Singstad, who helped design and build the tunnel, decided how the highway would run and which blocks would be eliminated in Woodside, Maspeth, Elmhurst and Rego Park. To get to Long Island, you have to bypass these older neighborhoods at great speed, master planner Robert Moses said. As people complained, he said, “You have to break a few eggs to make an omelette.” Condemnations began in 1950 and blocks of houses and businesses came down from 1953 to 1955. In 1958 the completed Queens Midtown Highway linked up with the Long Island Expressway at the Queens-Nassau border. In 1959 Moses changed to name of the QMH to LIE. Shown here is the once-famous Queens Food Shop located at 91-74 Queens Blvd. at Eliot Avenue, opposite the present Rego Park post office. It sat on the western corner, which is now directly under the LIE
overpass. The dedicated owner of the eatery was Christ G. Campos (1890-1972), who ran another diner of the same name at 169-06 Hillside Ave. in Jamaica. After more than 20 years in business the Queens Boulevard building was torn down and Eliot Avenue was overrun by hundreds of rats that fled as their home was destroyed. School children were told to play inside and not go out until things settled down. Campos, who was turning 65 at the time, decided to take his settlement, sell his other diner and retire from the business. He never moved away from Queens, however, living the rest of his life on 159th Street in Q the Hillcrest section of Jamaica.
The Queens Food Shop, 91-74 Queens Blvd., Elmhurst, summer 1933.
by Lloyd Carroll Chronicle Contributor
The term “May-December romance” is used to describe a relationship with a significant age difference between partners. Perhaps a new phrase, “May-September romance,” will come to describe business deals that fall apart. On May 26 the Mets announced that David Einhorn would be the team’s new minority owner. On Sept. 1 they announced the end of negotiations with Einhorn. Since the Mets are a subsidiary of the privately held Sterling Enterprises, we are not privy to their financial dealings the way that we are with publicly traded corporations. Nonetheless the conventional wisdom seems to be that Mets CEO Fred Wilpon believes his monetary exposure to Madoff victims’ trustee Irving Picard is a lot less now since he learned on July 7 that the dispute will not be decided in bankruptcy court but in U.S. District Court. In the former legal jurisdiction, Wilpon could have been on the hook for $1 billion. In the latter, the general feeling is that the most he will lose is the $300 million in Madoff profits that Picard claims Sterling Enterprises earned. So Wilpon no longer considers David Einhorn’s $200 million such a necessary lifeline. It has been alleged that Wilpon was quite nervous about the possibility of immediately losing control of the Mets this past spring because of cash flow problems. Accordingly, he was willing to agree to Einhorn’s demand that he be allowed to keep roughly a one-sixth equity interest in the team if he were to be repaid his $200 million investment in five
years. If he was not repaid, then he would be given a one-third stake in the team and the right to purchase a majority interest at an agreed upon price. Desperate times apparently called for desperate measures. I got a good chuckle reading Daily News columnists Mike Lupica and Bill Madden last Sunday. Just after Memorial Day they were singing Einhorn’s praises for being a franchise savior. Just before Labor Day, however, they were accusing him of “shorting the Mets,” meaning that it would be to his advantage if the team were to stink so that he could swoop in and buy it at a bargain basement price. Einhorn proclaims that he is first and foremost a Mets fan who roots for his team. I have no reason to doubt him. He made his fortune in the mysterious world of hedge funds, which is a fancy way of saying that he gambles big time in investments. In this case, though, all he was doing is what anybody in capitalism tries to do: buy low and one day sell high. Einhorn’s departure does not mean Wilpon is free of cash problems. The team’s guaranteed payroll will be at least $100 million next year and it will be higher if they re-sign free agent-to-be shortstop Jose Reyes. Even if he does come back, the Mets in all likelihood will not be very good and attendance revenue will drop. There are also the high interest payments that have to be made to Citi Field bondholders and to the lenders that helped finance SNY. There is also a $25 million loan to Major League Baseball that has to be repaid. And let’s not forget that Picard is still Q breathing down Wilpon’s neck.
E V E RY T H I N G YOUR SMALL BUSINESS NEEDS TO GROW IS HERE. THE GOLDMAN SACHS 10,000 SMALL BUSINESSES PROGRAM IS IN NEW YORK. APPLY TODAY. Goldman Sachs is pleased to announce open enrollment for the next 10,000 Small Businesses program in New York. The program, led by LaGuardia Community College, is designed to give local small businesses the resources to grow by providing them with greater access to business education, financial capital and business support services. Learn more and apply today at www.lagcc.cuny.edu/ACE/10000smallbusinesses.aspx or (718) 730-7400.
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Continuing Education PEOPLE, CHANGING
LASB-055195
C M SQ page 63 Y K ©2011 M1P • CONR-055286
LIC. ASSOCIATE BROKER
Specializing In Howard Beach
CO-OPS FOR SALE
Connexion I REAL ESTATE SERVICES INC. 161-14A Crossbay Blvd. Howard Beach (Brother’s Shopping Ctr.)
Get Your House
SOLD! Open 7 Days!
Howard Beach/Lindenwood
718-845-1136
ARLENE PACCHIANO
LAJJA P. MARFATIA
Broker/Owner
Broker/Owner
www.ConnexionRealEstate.com
• Spectacular 2 BRs 2 Baths Hi-Rise w/Terrace, Completely Remodeled Thru-out. New Gourmet Kitchen, Two new custom baths. Must See! ......Only $209K • XLG 5 Rm, 2 BR Garden Co-op, 2nd Fl, All New Thru-out, Open State of the Art Kit, Mint, Move-in Cond .Only $229K • 4½ Rm Hi-Rise, 2 BRs, Needs TLC, Won’t Last Only $134K
Never Forgotten 9/11 OPEN HOUSE SAT 9/10, 12:30 to 2:30pm 89-27 Shore Parkway
VINEYARD GARDENS
CONDOS FOR SALE
Just move in to this lovely 1 BR garden co-op. 2nd floor, Pets ok. Call Today!
Howard Beach/Lindenwood
• Huge 2 BR/2 Bath, Hi-Rise Condo, Terrace, New Kitchen, 2 New Baths, Mint! ....................Only $269K • Huge 3½ Room Hi-Rise, 1 BR, New Bath, Updated Kit, Huge Closets, Great Building! ...... Only $179K
HOUSE FOR SALE
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HOWARD BEACH/ROCKWOOD PARK HOWARD BEACH/ROCKWOOD PARK Detached Hi-Ranch, 4 BRs, 2.5 Baths, Updated Kitchen w/Wood Cabinets, Pickled Hardwood Floors. Asking $659K
Large Hi-Ranch, 27x53, 1/2 Brick on 40x100, 4 BRs, 3 Full Baths, 2 Car Pvt Dvwy, 1 Car Garage. Asking $669K
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CALL FRED 516-353-1941 Visit www.FredKolsin.com
©2011 M1P • FREK-055318
Upper Glendale
• Extra Large SD Legal 2 Family, 5/5, Full Finished Basement, Updated Thru-out, 2 Car Detached Garage, Immaculate Condition! ......................Just Reduced! $609K
HOWARD BEACH/ROCKWOOD PARK HOWARD BEACH/ROCKWOOD PARK HOWARD BEACH/ROCKWOOD PARK Mint, Move-in Cond, High Ranch on 45x100, 3 BRs, 2 Full Baths, Beautiful Landscaped Yard 24x45, Home is 50x25, Oversized Garage 17x25, Just Move in! $704K
Beautiful 55x100, Corner 5 Level Split One of a kind custom colonial, Colonial, 3 BRs, 2½ Baths, Den, 19.7x23.6 72x100 Totally redone in 2008, with Fireplace, Patio off Den/Basement, 4 BRs, 3 Baths, Radiant Heat, Central Vac, Oak Flr in LR, Parquet Flr Security Cameras, Alarm, IGS, Unique in Den, New Roof, HW Heater, Sprinkler Cabinetry, Huge Rooms, $1,299,000 System, 1½ Car Garage. Asking $689K
Email: FredKolsin@Realtor.com
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Keller Williams Landmark Realty
HB y t l a e R
FREE MARKET APPRAISALS Thomas J. LaVecchia, Licensed Real Estate Broker 137-05 Cross Bay Blvd. Ozone Park, NY 11417 www.howardbeachrealty.com
718-641-6800
Apartments Wanted - Free To List - Free Credit Check - Call Now! OPEN HOUSE SUN 9/11, 1-3pm 95-32 81 St.
H.B./ROCKWOOD PARK HOWARD BEACH LINDENWOOD Carlton, 5 Rms, 2 BRs, Excel Cond, Many Closets, Seller Motivated, Asking $129K
Hi-Ranch, Just Listed! 9 Rms, 4 BRs, 2.5 Baths, IG Heated Pool, Central Air, Pvt Dvwy & Garage. Many Extras! Call Now!
OZONE PARK 2 Family Det, 8 Rms, 3 BRs, 2 Baths, Full Fin Bsmnt, 3 Car Gar, Huge 49x100 Lot.
HOWARD BEACH/ROCKWOOD PARK Beautiful Unique Extended Hi-Ranch, 5 BRs, 4 Baths, Wood Cabinets, Granite, Mobile Garbage Disposals, Wine Fridge, Central Vac throughout and much, much more.
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HOWARD BEACH/ LINDENWOOD
©2011 M1P • HBRE-055287
OZONE PARK 2 Family, 6 Rms, 2 BRs, 2 Baths, Full Bsmnt, Pvt Dvwy and Garage. Call Now!
Asking $154,900
COMMERCIAL LAND
HOWARD BEACH
3.5 Rooms, 1 BR Hi-Rise Co-op, Window in Kitchen, Must Sell! Asking Only $98K
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APARTMENTS FOR RENT
HOWARD BEACH/OZONE PARK
Commercial land with water rights, 88x84 • Studio Apartment .........................$750 frontage on Cross Bay Blvd. Prime location • Howard Beach, 3.5 Rm 1 BR Apt, Terr, Laundry Room on Premises, and parking. Call Now! with plenty of foot traffic. Call Today!
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HOWARD BEACH/ROCKWOOD PARK
HOWARD BEACH CO-OPS
• L-Shaped Studio, MIC ..... $75K • Hi-Rise 1 BR Co-op ......... $99K • Hi-Rise, 1 BR, 1 Bath Move-in Condition..........$103K • Mint 1 BR Garden, Modern Kitchen, Hardwood Floors, HOWARD BEACH/OLD SIDE HOWARD BEACH/ROCKWOOD PARK Dogs OK, Walk to all! $114,900 One of A Kind Spacious Luxury Home, Mint Split-Level Colonial, 3 BRs, Waterfront property, 5 BRs, • JR4, Hi-Rise ...................$135K 2 full baths, All updated, Hardwood • 2 BR, Garden w/DR ........$145K 5 full-baths, full-fin bsmnt, custom kit w/granite, viking stove, master Floors, Den, EIK, CAC, Roof approx • 2 BR, 2 Bath Hi-Rise ......$148K bath w/slate tiles, custom California 7 yrs old, IGS, 2 Car Pvt Dvwy, • Courtyard Garden 1 BR, closets.Just too Much to say!!! 40x100, Asking $650K. Pet friendly, Mint............$155K ! • Mint 3 BRs, 1 Bath, Garden, ! ED ED Dogs OK ..........................$169K UC UC D D RE RE • Mint-AAA, Lobby Flr, 2 BRs, 2 Baths, 1100 sq ft, 10' Ceilings, New Kitchen/Bath ...........$189K • 2 BR, 2 Baths, Terrace, Move-in Condition! ........$195K HOWARD BEACH/ROCKWOOD PARK • Mint 3 BRs, 2 Baths w/Terrace, Parking available .......... $248K HOWARD BEACH/ROCKWOOD PARK Totally redone low ranch on 50x100, RE
HOWARD BEACH HOWARD BEACH
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Huge Brookfield Hi-Ranch (27x55), Mint 2 BR/2 Bath Double Unit Condo + 1 BR Walk-in, Open Floor 4 BRs, 3 Full Baths, Sunken LR, Huge Plan, Hardwood Floors, Pets OK. FDR, H/W Flrs, 2 Car Pvt Dvwy, 1 Car Asking$369K Gar, ½ Brick Home. $699K
4 BRs, 2.5 Baths, Finished Basement, HOWARD BEACH CONDOS New Windows, New Doors, Hardwood • Unique 1 BR Condo Floors, All New Appliances, Granite w/Terrace, Custom Kit & Countertops, New CAC. $655K
5 Rms, 2 BRs, Garden Co-op, 1st Fl. Mint Condition. Pets ok.
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HOWARD BEACH/ROCKWOOD PARK Raised ranch on 50x100, 3 BRs, 2½ baths, private drwy., corner lot, CAC, large living room, very large kitchen. A must see!! Asking $589
Large Empire Style Hi-Ranch 27x55 on 40x100 Lot with 5 BRs, 3 Full Baths, Pvt Dvwy and 1 Car Garage. Needs TLC. Asking $629K
Bath, Granite, Jacuzzi Tub, Oversized walk-in closet, Beautiful arched doorways, Low maint & taxes $169,999 • Huge 3 BR, 2 Baths, New Kitchen, Terrace ........$239K
OZONE PARK/CENTERVILLE BEACH/ROCKWOOD PARK PARK VILLAGE CONDOS HOWARD Designer 3 BR ranch w/open floor plan,
• Mint AAA, 2 BRs/2 Baths Duplex with Terrace, Separate Deeded Parking Spot ...........................$279K
kitchen island, 2 baths, fireplace and skylights on main floor. Great room, 1 large bedroom with attached bath on lower level. Unique features throughout.
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