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Friday, January 16, 2015
vol. 3, no. 3
2015 january 16, section •
WINTER dININg gUIdE
FIgHTINg HEROIN NORTH SHORE OVERdOSES gOES HOLLYWOOd
PAGes s1-s32
PAGe 3
Crime down, terror concerns up in county
PAGe 25
siNGiNG iN tHe NeW yeAR
Nassau police taking precautions at Jewish-owned businesses BY B I LL SAN ANTONIO Nassau County police have taken “precautionary measures” at Jewish-owned businesses and houses of worship in the wake of terrorist attacks in Paris last week despite no apparent threat being made against the county, officials said Tuesday. The announcement came shortly after police and Nassau County Executive Edward Mangano announced that crime in the county had decreased 25 percent overall since 2009 and that major crimes dropped 9.5 percent from 2013 to 2014. Acting Nassau County Police Commissioner Thomas Krumpter said patrols have increased near Jewish institutions since a gunman stormed a kosher delicatessen in east Paris on Friday morning two days after an apparent jihadist attack on the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, which has a history of publishing political cartoons of
the Islamic prophet Muhammad. On Monday, a swastika was discovered engraved onto a glass panel at the Long Island Railroad station in Cedarhurst, which has a large orthodox Jewish population. Long Island Railroad stations are out of the jurisdiction of Nassau County police. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which oversees the maintenance of the train stations, has its own law enforcement agency that monitors them. “This kind of behavior will not be tolerated in Nassau County,” Krumpter said, adding that he would be in favor of the increased use of security cameras throughout Nassau if county officials and analysis deemed them necessary. Mangano, a Republican who was first elected in 2009, said the county crime rate is at its lowest point since Nassau began recording crime statistics in the 1960s. “This really is a great testament to the work our officers do Continued on Page 56
A performer sings during the Village of East Hills’ New Year’s Day celebration.
Roslyn schools net four Intel science semifinalists BY B I LL SAN ANTONIO
tor, district research coordinator Allyson Wesley. They eight huddled around They gathered last Wednes- a computer and logged onto day at noon, the seven Roslyn the contest website in search of High School students that en- the list of 300 participants that tered this year’s Intel Science were named semifinalists. They scanned the list, Talent Search and their men-
and the names David Michael Jaslow, Rachel Lauren Mintz, Jordan Rosen and Tiffany Sun appeared - four Roslyn School District semifinalists, tied with Great Neck for the most on Long Island. Continued on Page 56
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