Roslyn Times 3.27.15

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Serving Roslyn, Roslyn Heights and Old Westbury

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Friday, March 27, 2015

vol. 3, no. 13

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pAGE 6

2015

Village seats unchallenged, everyone wins

spECIAL FUNdRAIsER

Three Roslyn mayors reelected, new officials to take office BY B I LL SAN ANTONIO Each of the three Roslyn village mayors up for election on Wednesday retained their positions, while several new trustees won seats on their respective boards. East Hills Mayor Michael Koblenz, Roslyn Estates Mayor Jeff Schwartzberg and Village of Roslyn Mayor John Durkin were reelected, while newcomer trustees Rodney Khazzam (Roslyn Estates) and Stacey Siegel (East Hills) have joined the fray. In Flower Hill, appointed trustee candidates Brian Herrington and Jay Beber were elected to their first two-year terms with 41 votes apiece, while Deputy Mayor Robert McNamara (42) earned a second term on the village’s board. Herrington was appointed to the board in November to serve the remainder of the term vacated by former Deputy Mayor Tab Hauser, who resigned from the vil-

lage board in June after moving to Glen Cove. Beber joined the board in December to fill the trustee position vacated by former Trustee Eileen Mills, who resigned in November due to family issues. “I am very excited and grateful the voters in Flower Hill gave me this opportunity,” Herrington said in an email. “I am looking forward to working with the mayor and fellow trustees on the upcoming budget, environmental issues, and our other strategic priorities.” Additionally, East Hills trustee Brian Meyerson was also elected to his first four-year term with 441 votes. He was appointed to the village board in February 2014 after former Trustee Peter Zuckerman joined the North Hempstead town council. The village tapped Siegel to run for the other trustee position, which had been held by former Trustee Gary Leventhal since 1994. She received 432 votes.

Diagnosed with muscular dystrophy, fifth grader Ty Flood can no longer play Little League baseball. Read a story about a fundraiser to assist his family. See story on page 2.

Rep. Israel to promote novel at Barnes & Noble BY B I LL SAN ANTONIO

field for his beloved New York Mets. Continued on Page 60 Having recently been Growing up on Long Is- elected to his eighth term in land’s South Shore in the 1960s the House of Representatives, and ’70s, U.S. Rep. Steve Israel and fresh off the release of his had three dreams in life: to one critically-acclaimed first novel, day be elected to Congress, “The Global War on Morris,” publish a novel and play center Israel [D-Huntington] said

Monday that two out of three ain’t bad. “I’ve always enjoyed writing, I’ve always loved writing, and being able to express my opinions, particularly through humor, was really a form of therapy for me,” said Israel, 56, Continued on Page 60

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The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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Fundraiser for ailing fifth grader Herricks student with chronic illness By Ja m es G allo w ay

Ken Fabricant (right), principal at Fabricant & Fabricant insurance, and the company’s legal representative address the Village of Roslyn’s board of trustees last Wednesday.

Insurance company seeks office expansion Fabricant & Fabricant introduces plans for 2nd floor BY B I LL SAN ANTONIO

A Village of Roslyn-based insurance provider introduced plans to the Board of Trustees on Wednesday for a 2,626 square-foot second floor addition to its Old Northern Boulevard office. Ken Fabricant, a principal at Fabricant & Fabricant, said the company has outgrown the current space at 1251 Old Northern Blvd., and would also need the addition if its plans to purchase another agency are completed. “As for the second floor, we don’t have people we’ve hired

yet, so we don’t have a set number of people who are going to be coming in there, but we definitely need the space,” he said. “...We can’t wait until an opportunity arises, whether it’s buying this other agency, to say, OK, let’s work out where we’re going to put them.” The construction would require a special-use permit that would be attained by approval from the board of trustees, after the project receives approvals from the village’s architectural review board and zoning board of appeals. “We start you here so we have an idea of what’s going on

and then those boards would make their decisions and you’d come back before us,” Village of Roslyn Mayor John Durkin said. During its application process, Fabricant & Fabricant would likely require a parking variance to make up for an 11-space deficit based on its building requirements, officials said. The company has a verbal agreement with nearby Hendricks Tavern to allow employees of the two businesses to share parking, Fabricant said, but village officials said the application would benefit from a written form of that agreement.

Ty Flood, a Herricks School District fifth grader who a few years ago enjoyed playing baseball and running with friends, will soon be unable to walk. Ty, who remains a devout Yankees fan, suffers from Duchenne muscular dystrophy, and to prepare for his wheelchair, his family will need to make major renovations to their home. So on April 1, Memories Bar and Grill will host a fundraiser to benefit the family of 10-year-old Ty and help pay for the renovations they need to remain in their home. Due to the chronic degenerative disease, Ty, who already uses a wheelchair at school, will soon be entirely wheelchair dependent. Most children with the disorder are in wheelchairs by age 10 to 12. To accommodate the change, the Floods would need to build two bedrooms and a handicapaccessible bathroom on the ground floor, make their Williston Park home’s layout more wheelchair-friendly and purchase a vehicle capable of loading a mechanical wheelchair.

Without making those changes, and without some financial support to pursue them, the family would need to relocate, said Jen Stanza, an organizer of the fundraiser whose daughters go to the Center Street School with the Floods. “They would have to remove their kids from school. They have their friends here,” Stanza said. “They’re such good-hearted people…they really don’t want to uproot them. Life is hard enough for them.” The fundraiser, which starts at 7 p.m. at Memories Bar and Grill at 121 Hillside Ave., will include raffle baskets, a 50/50 raffle and live music by the band Harpers Ferry. All of the proceeds from the $20 cover at the door go directly to the Flood family. People who are unable to attend the fundraiser may make tax-deductible or direct contributions at www.tyfloodfund.org. More information about Ty and the Floods is also available on the website. “The support we’ve received, everybody jumping on board to do what they can do to help us out, it’s wonderful,” said Ty’s mother, Beth Flood. “Words can’t Continued on Page 60

Ty Flood, a fifth grader at Center Street School in the Herricks School District, takes in a baseball game.

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editorial: Editorial Submissions: news@theislandnow.com / Sports Submission : sports@theislandnow.com Assistant Editor: Anthony Bosco 516-307-1045 x214 • abosco@theislandnow.com Great Neck News: Adam Lidgett 516-307-1045 x203 • alidgett@theislandnow.com New Hyde Park Herald Courier: James Galloway 516-307-1045 x204 • jgalloway@theislandnow.com Manhasset Times: Bill San Antonio 516-307-1045 x215 • bsanantonio@theislandnow.com Roslyn Times: Bill San Antonio 516-307-1045 x215 • bsanantonio@theislandnow.com Williston Times: James Galloway 516-307-1045 x204 • jgalloway@theislandnow.com

ROSLYN TIMES (USPS#12080) is published weekly by Blank Slate Media LLC, 105 Hillside Avenue, Williston Park, NY, 11596, (516) 307-1045. The entire contents of this publication are copyright 2015. All rights reserved. The newspaper will not be liable for errors appearing in any advertising beyond the cost of the space occupied by the error. Periodicals Postage is paid at Williston Park, NY, POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the Roslyn Times, C/O Blank Slate Media LLC, 105 Hillside Avenue, Williston, New York, 11596.


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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Brother offers thanks for support James McCormack responds to article on sister - missing wife of real-estate heir Robert Durst BY JA m eS G A L L O w AY The brother of Kathleen McCormack, the long-missing first wife of real-estate scion Robert Durst, commented online on an article that appeared in the five Blank Slate Media newspapers last week to thank everyone who “continue[s] to offer their support, sympathies and prayers to our family on behalf of Kathy.” Jim McCormack, whose family moved to New Hyde Park in 1962, continued in the comment on Blank Slate Media’s theislandnow.com website to say his family “truly appreciates those expressions of love.” Kathleen married Durst, an heir to one of New York City’s wealthiest families, in 1973 at age 19. But the relationship soured and became physically abusive, and nine years later, she went missing without a trace. Durst, who now faces murder charges for the 2000 killing of his close friend Susan Berman and who was acquitted of murder in Texas after admitting to killing and dismembering a

neighbor in 2001, has long been suspected in Kathleen’s disappearance. At the conclusion of the HBO true-crime series “The Jinx,” Durst, upon being confronted with new evidence in the murder of Berman, mutters to himself in the bathroom, “What the hell did I do? Killed them all, of course.” In his online comment, Jim McCormack said that after his father died in 1967, he assumed a “fathering role” to Kathleen. Fathering was “something I had no experience doing,” he said. “Fortunately, my three sisters stood in where I was lacking and, together, we helped Kathie mature to young womanhood.” Kathleen grew up in the New Hyde Park home her parents, James and Ann McCormack, purchased in 1962, according to Long Island Weekly. Jim McCormack said that his mother is still alive at age 101, but her “abilities to fully process these latest developments in Kathie’s disappearance are compromised.” McCormack did not respond

to an email requesting an interview. Durst was arrested on March 15 in New Orleans for the murder of Berman, just hours before the finale of “The Jinx,” something the series’ director called coincidental. McCormack told The Journal News that he hopes Durst will also face charges in Westchester for his sister’s murder. “If he’s convicted in L.A. and that’s it, I’ll be glad he’s off the streets, but I’ll be disappointed,” he said. He said he believes Berman was killed because she said she would speak with investigators, who had reopened Kathleen’s case at the time. “I suspect she had intimate knowledge of what happened (to Kathie),” McCormack said. “Can I say that with 100-percent certainty? No. But in my heart, I’m 99-percent sure.” He added in the article that he and Berman went on two dates, but he found her to be “self absorbed.” In addition to the murder charges, Durst faces two felony

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Kathleen and Robert Durst charges in New Orleans for the possession of a .38-caliber revolver and five ounces of marijuana found in his hotel room. A judge on Monday determined Durst to be a flight risk and ordered him held in prison without bail. In Los Angeles, where he faces the murder charges, Durst would be eligible for the death penalty.

McCormack told the Today show that he believes Durst is finally ready to confess. “I believe that Bob will somehow have an epiphany of conscience, contrary to the advice of lawyers,” he said. “I think he’s about ready to say, ‘You know, enough is enough. This is what Kathy would want and this is what I’m going to do.’”


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Local pols rally for education reform B y J a m e s G allo w ay

Assemblymembers from both parties rallied in front of the Nassau County Legislative Office Building on Sunday to call on Gov. Andrew Cuomo to increase education spending, temper plans to focus teacher evaluations on test results and end state control of struggling schools. Eleven assemblymembers, including Ed Ra (R-Franklin Square), Michelle Schimel (D-Great Neck) and Charles Lavine (D-Glen Cove, joined with community organizations to denounce the governor’s proposals. Last week, the governor and legislative leaders announced a $1.4 billion increase in state education aid for the 2015-16 fiscal year, about $400 million less than the Assembly proposed in its one-house budget and $600 million less than the New York Stat Board of Regents recommended, according to a release from the Long Island Progressive Coalition. “When it comes to funding we are looking for at least a $1.8 billion school aid increase,” Ra said in a release. Cuomo has also proposed basing half of a teacher’s evaluation on standardized test results and having Members of the New York State Assembly joined with community members for a rally at the Nassau County Legislative Office Continued on Page 60 Building in Mineola.

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Town touts efforts to fill pot Moody’s gives holes, asks public to help town top rating

While it was unclear how many reported potholes have still not been filled, officials said Approximately 350 pot- the town filled 19 more than it holes reported to the Town of did during the same span - beNorth Hempstead’s highway tween December 1, 2014 and department between Decem- March 18, 2015 - in 2013-14. Potholes may be reported ber and mid March have been filled, town officials announced through the town’s 311 call center, website or “My North Monday.

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Hempstead” mobile application, which uses GPS tracking to pinpoint their exact location, officials said. “You simply take a photo of the pothole and press ‘send,’” North Hempstead Town Supervisor Judi Bosworth said in a statement. North Hempstead Highway Superintendent Tom Tiernan said the town uses up to 48 tons of hot asphalt a day to fill potholes each spring. Asphalt is stored in 300-degree ovens pulled behind highway trucks to form what officials call “hot boxes.” The town currently has six “hot boxes” in operation. “Right now we are fortunate to have enough hot asphalt to fill our needs and our potholes,” Tiernan said. Potholes are filled by removing loose debris from the hole, shoveling in asphalt and then leveling it off with a steam roller, officials said. “Some of the bigger potholes can take up to a ton of material,” he said.

BY B I LL SAN ANTONIO The bond rating agency Moody’s Investor Service has assigned an Aa1 rating to the Town of North Hempstead’s long-term fiscal outlook, the fourth consecutive year the town’s finances have received the agency’s highest rating. Moody’s rating was based on the town’s $24 million in 2015 Series A Refunding Serial bonds and $4.5 million in 2015 Series B bonds, stating in its report that “the town maintains a solid financial position, the result of conservative budgeting of revenues, strong internal controls and revenue augmentation in line with expenditure growth.” An Aa1 rating was also placed on the town’s $220 million in previously issued, longterm general obligation debt, town officials said. “This continued endorsement from Moody’s reflects the hard work by this administration to budget conservatively

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LIU Post Launches Equine Studies Program New program utilizes equestrian center located on campus

LIU Post announces the launch of a new Equine Studies program, offered to students beginning in spring 2015. The four areas of focus include Equine Management, Equine Education, and Equine Health, as well as an interdisciplinary track. The program will utilize North Shore Equestrian Center located on campus, home to the LIU Post equestrian team and where students have been taking riding courses for decades. The Equestrian Studies minor is designed to meet the needs of students who want to expand their knowledge of horses and the equestrian business and gain skills in this area that will prepare them to enter into a career in the equine industry. The program, catering to students with a passion for horses, includes the following areas of focus: Equine Management focuses on the business side of the industry and includes courses on business management, facilities management, activities management, and business law and ethics. Equine Education includes courses on the fundamental theories of riding, teaching riding methods, therapeutic riding, and judging. Equine Health includes courses on equine anatomy, basic equine health, disease, and first aid; equine symptoms, lameness, metabolic disorders, and reproduction; and equine nutrition. Interdisciplinary Track allows students to tailor their focus with a combination of courses from the Management, Education, and Health tracks. Gerald. L. Chasin of North Shore Equestrian Center, a champion equestrian competitor, is an avid supporter of the Equine Studies minor program. “There are numerous career options that can be merged with a minor in Equine Studies,” Chasin said. “For science majors, the pharmaceutical business is heavily invested in research and development in the large animal category. In the technology hardware industry there are on-going developments in scanning equipment, and for marketing and public relations majors, combining the equine minor can lead to opportunities in the sports, broadcast, journalism, and entertainment sectors.” “The Equine Studies program reflects LIU’s rich history and engages today’s young equestrians and aspiring veterinarians,” said Dr. Kimberly R. Cline, president of LIU. “The equine focus will give students the skills and expertise needed to prepare them for a career in the equine industry.” “Now students can pair their business or marketing degree, for instance, with an equine minor and open their career options to a whole new area that they may have never known about before,” said Nana Koch, Ed.D., associate professor and chairperson of the Department of Health, Physical Education and Movement Science. “LIU has long offered students riding courses at the stable, and has maintained an equestrian team for decades. We wanted to meet our students’ needs by expanding on this by offering programs focused on equine.”

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Israel co-sponsors bill in terrorism fight BY B I LL SAN ANTONIO U.S. Rep. Steve Israel (D-Huntington) has co-sponsored legislation that would revoke citizenship for Americans who fight for a foreign terrorist organization. The law, called the Terrorist Denaturalization and Passport Revocation Act, has been introduced as an amendment to the Immigration and Nationality Act, adding allegiance to terrorist organizations to a list of actions for which naturalized Americans may lose citizenship. “Any American who decides to actively join a terrorist organization should no longer get to enjoy the freedoms and privileges afforded to them as a U.S. citizen,” said Israel, who co-sponsored the legislation with Rep. Steve Womack (RArkansas), in a statement. “This bipartisan legislation

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strengthens our homeland security and keeps our country safe by preventing home-grown terrorists from re-entering our borders to carry out attacks on American soil.” Womack introduced the legislation on Jan. 6. It was then referred to the House Foreign Affairs Committee. The addition would give the secretary of state the ability to revoke passports issued to citizens fighting

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alongside terrorist outlets, officials said, and prevent such people from coming back to the United States. Israel’s support for the legislation comes days after a former Air Force veteran was arrested while attempting to enter Syria to join the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria - also known as ISIS. On March 13, three Brooklyn men were arrested for allegedly conspiring with ISIS. A man was caught trying to help two others travel to Syria to join the militant group. Israel’s office said there have 74 terrorist plots or attacks in the United States since 2001.

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Pressing for an end to solitary confinement BY B I LL S A N A N TON I O

The Unitarian Universalist Congregation at Shelter Rock’s social justice committee is continuing its initiatives on ending the practice of solitary confinement on Monday with a reading of a play that takes place through the eyes of a prisoner in isolation. The congregation is hosting author Julia Steele Allen for a reading of “Mariposa & the Saint,” which she co-authored with Sara (Mariposa) Fonseca. A discussion and workshop about solitary confinement is set to take place following the reading. “Mariposa & the Saint” was conceived through letters between Allen and Fonseca, who has remained in solitary confinement for more than three years after receiving an initial 15-month sentence in insolation in 2012. Shelter Rock officials said the play is “urgent, emotional and profound.” The event will begin at 7:30 p.m. and is open to the public. Congregation officials have requested attendees make a $5 donation. Shelter Rock congregants have sup-

ported various initiatives in the last year aimed at raising awareness about solitary confinement and curtailing the practice in New York State. According to the New York Civil Liberties Union, approximately 4,500 prisoners across the state live in solitary confinement. In March 2013, the congregation hosted a roundtable event with three speakers who shared their experiences with solitary confinement, either by being placed in isolation or coping with their loved ones being imprisoned. That May, congregants joined advocates in Albany to lobby state lawmakers to pass legislation preventing inmates from spending more than 15 consecutive days in isolation and 20 total days within a 60-day period. Congregants in June held a demonstration outside the county Correctional Facility in East Meadow, protesting its incarceration practices. In December, in wake of incidents in Staten Island and Ferguson, Mo., the congregation analyzed allegations of police brutality and the targeted mass incarceration of minorities.


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Hillary touts opportunity for women

“Women are not victims.” That was the dramatic takeaway after three hours of presentations headed up by Hillary Clinton, Chelsea Clinton and Melinda Gates at the “No Ceilings” event March 9, convened by the Clinton Foundation and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which began a study last year to quantify progress women have made since the 1995 UN Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing. One could make the statement by virtue of the parade of women who have seized control of their own fate: presidents of three countries, CEOs and founders of companies, Nobel prize winners (including the youngest of all); women who, denied access to school and studied in secret places under threat of losing their lives, opened their own schools to educate women, women who broke barriers, inviting others through the opened gates, innovators and peacemakers at highstakes negotiating tables. But after hearing the voices behind the “Not There Yet: A Data Driven Analysis of Gender Equality,” you also have to wonder whether these are the exceptions to rules which are still in place that deny or even reverse the gains women have made to have access and opportunity in order to fulfill their potential and contribute their talent to society. Progress has been made in women’s rights since Hillary Clinton, as First Lady, made her landmark speech at the Beijing conference in 1995. But the first significant databased study of how women are faring - in the economy, in access to education, in environmental justice, and in politics and security - shows that women are “Not There Yet.” Women still have a far way to go. The New York Times recently told the story of a modern-day “Romeo & Juliet” in Afghanistan

- a couple who has been on the run, unable to get sanctuary, the girl still threatened with death by her father and brothers for refusing to marry the man her father promised her to as a child. The couple now has a baby girl, and what they want most for her is an education. “It doesn’t matter that she is a baby girl,” Zakia said. “I just want her not to grow up illiterate as we are.” If they do live to see Ruqia’s adulthood, Mohammad Ali added, one thing is for sure. “We won’t choose her husband,” he said. “She will,” the Times wrote. On the other hand, the No Ceilings event took place on a day when Japan, after more than a decade of stagflation, has determined that the problem is the lack of participation in the economy by women. Japanese women earn 40 percent less than men on average and occupy only one in 10 management-level positions. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has set a target of women accounting for 30 percent of supervisory positions by 2020, and plans to open 400,000 child care centers (New York Times, “To Rescue Economy, Japan Turns to Supermom”) “At a macro level,” Melinda Gates told the appreciative crowd, “if we can close the labor force gap and put women forward, economies will grow. Across high-income countries, closing the gap could lead to GDP growth of 12%. In Japan and Italy, if women are put into the labor force, they can grow GDP by 20 percent.” Lest we consider that women’s issues are “out there” and concern only the impoverished (developing) Third World or the religious extremists of the Middle East, they are very much on view here in the U.S., with right wingers in Congress continuing to pursue bans on women’s reproductive freedom as well as access to medical care. (Funny

how “I am not a scientist” to sidestep involvement on Climate Change, doesn’t correlate to “I am not a doctor” when it comes to government in charge of women’s health, or for that matter, getting Big Government out of your personal affairs.) And with peace and security, violence against women among the leading threats in the world, these Republicans have put an anti-abortion roadblock in The Justice for Victims in Trafficking Act, which would increase fines

KAREN RUBIN

Pulse of the Peninsula collected from people convicted of human trafficking and establish a fund to help survivors because they refuse. Anti-abortion extremists in the Senate want to prevent survivors from using those funds for health care that may include abortions, and have even held up the confirmation of Loretta Lynch, who would become the first African-American woman to be Attorney General, to force the issue. And as Hillary Clinton and Melinda Gates look around the world at the progress of women’s empowerment in political decisions, we should also look here in the U.S., where access to the polls has been made disproportionately harder for women

by the design of Voter ID laws. That’s no accident. As the data show, holding women back is more than the presence or absence of anti-discrimination laws. The glass ceiling is held in place by entangling policies or the lack of them - the lack of affordable, quality child care helps cement the glass ceiling in place; the U.S. is one of only nine countries that does not provide paid maternity leave, and women are usually the ones who are forced to give up jobs in order to care for ailing parents. Despite being the most educated in the world, women make up a scant 5 percent of Fortune 500 CEOs. Women still make 78c to the $1 that a man makes for equal work, which over the course of a career could mean hundreds of thousands of lost income, which also goes to whatever retirement funds a woman might have. Here in the US, a “No Ceilings” agenda should include universal pre-K, access to affordable, quality child care (something that Japan has now set to do), raising the minimum wage, pay-equity, renewing CHIP (the child health care program), and preserving and expanding protections under the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare), rather than trying to repeal it. And if private employers don’t like Big Government intrusion, they should on their own promote flexible work, job sharing, home-based work, paid parental leave on their own, without new government mandates. A year ago, when Hillary and Chelsea Clinton and Melinda Gates held their first No Ceilings conference introducing the data-collection project, there was considerable attention paid to an agenda for women’s rights. This year, as they released the results of this intensive study, to actually measure progress or the lack of it, there was no attention paid at all - everyone was focused on only one thing: Hillary’s emails.

It is the most glaring example of not just the double standards raised (Republican Gov. Scott Walker’s emails are actually the subject of legal prosecution for campaign finance abuses in Wisconsin, yet he is the front runner and no one is asking him a question; Jeb Bush held back disclosing his emails for seven years, yet criticizes Hillary), but also a horrifying display of how vacuous the “media” is. Photographers, reporters crammed the hall for No Ceilings - but it was only to get that “money” shot of Hillary and hope she would say something embarrassing or refer to the email “scandal.” The next day, Hillary Clinton made an important presentation to the United Nations on the status of women’s rights in the world, but there was not a single question and or article written about the issues she raised or the solutions she proposed. Not even about the negotiations with Iran (something relevant to her background as Secretary of State) or how she might have handled the 47 Republican senators who sought to torpedo the agreement aimed at stopping Iran from getting a nuclear weapon, several of them Presidential wannabes. No, they only wanted to know about the emails. In the only article that mentioned her speech, “Unfinished business: Hillary Clinton’s email upstaged her big speech on women’s rights,” Annalisa Merelli wrote, “Her speech wasn’t much different from the one she delivered in Beijing. Comprehensive and balanced, it pointed to the untapped potential women hold for the US economy - an economy that she said would be 10 percent larger if the gap between men’s and women’s participation in the workforce were closed. While noting that ‘there has never been a better time in history to be born female,’ Clinton described women’s equality Continued on Page 59

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14 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

Opinion

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Stop kvetching, attend meetings

OUR VIEWS

A Teaching Moment Parents in Great Neck have every right to be outraged by an image of a child made to look like Adolf Hitler with the caption “I’d rather be gassing Jews right now” that was posted on a private Facebook page. Now what? Is it possible that a high school student in the 21st century does not have at least the most basic understanding of the horrors of the Holocaust? The sad answer is yes. Students who graduate from our public schools get what is in many ways a tremendous education. Our science, technology and the arts is second to none. But too many students do not have a strong grasp of world and American history. Alan Mindel, a Village of Lake Success trustee and father of a Great Neck South freshman, told our reporter, “What I find incredible is that except for one elective in 12th grade that teaches something about the Holocaust, there is no mention of it. Even in the World War II discussions, it’s glossed over.” No education is complete without a thorough understanding of history. The kids who created the offensive Facebook page knew how to create a fake moustache and Nazi armband using Photoshop or a similar program but they apparently did not learn about the real horrors of the Nazi Holocaust. We need to do a better job teaching history to our young people and this offensive page should be turned into a teaching moment at all of the high schools and middle schools in the area.

READERS WRITE

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recent letter from Myrna Kabren was rather disturbing. She identifies herself as a Great Neck resident, but neglects to mention exactly where she lives. Great Neck is composed of many different villages and each one has its own government, so declaring that “The politicians here in Great Neck are the worst officials that are in office” and that the recent snow cleanup is “horrendous” is quite puzzling. I live in the Village of Great Neck and have for a long time. I believe that snow removal has been improving significantly each year and strongly praise

Lou Massaro, Superintendent of the Public Works Department, and his dedicated and hard working staff who not only do an outstanding job of cleaning our streets, but also do many other jobs involved in keeping our village safe and functioning properly. I also give credit to many Great Neck politicians over many years for their dedication and all they have accomplished. I may not always agree with everything they are doing or strive for, but believe it’s important to recognize and respect the time and effort they put into their jobs. I have always found them

accessible and receptive to residents’ ideas and concerns. If Ms. Kabren isn’t satisfied, I suggest she attend some local meetings, sit and listen, and present her issues in a cogent and positive manner, which often has very good results, especially in Great Neck, where I believe so many of us are very fortunate to live. She might also consider running for office so she can implement her ideas first hand. Being proactive often yields the best results. Diane Coffield Great Neck

OUR VIEWS

The devil is in the details on who’s a terrorist We confess that there is a part of us that would like to see any American citizen who decides to fight alongside ISIS drawn and quartered. This terrorist organization and others like it continue to commit unspeakable atrocities on a daily basis. In that sense we want to support legislation co-sponsored by U.S. Rep. Steve Israel of Dix Hills that would revoke citizenship for Americans who fight for a foreign terrorist organization. Named the Terrorist Denaturalization and Passport Revocation Act, the proposed law would add adding allegiance to terrorist organizations to a list of actions for which naturalized Americans

may lose citizenship. In announcing the legislation that he cosponsored with Rep. Steve Womack (RArkansas), Israel said, “Any American who decides to actively join a terrorist organization should no longer get to enjoy the freedoms and privileges afforded to them as a U.S. citizen. This bipartisan legislation strengthens our homeland security and keeps our country safe by preventing homegrown terrorists from re-entering our borders to carry out attacks on American soil.” However we are hesitant to endorse any legislation that makes it easy to revoke the citizenship of an American. While most Americans will agree that

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ISIS is a terrorist organization, it is not always that simple. Was the Zionist paramilitary organization that claimed responsibility for the bombing of the King David Hotel in 1946 a terrorist organization? At the time many people said it was. Today a great many Jewish-Americans do not agree. What about the Irish Republican Army that has been fighting to end the partition of Ireland. Should Americans who support the IRA lose their citizenship? What about Americans who supported the Contras in Central America? The list goes on.

We fear that Israel’s legislation may create more problems than it solves. There is already legislation that makes it illegal to provide material support to organizations engaged in terrorism. It is reprehensible that any American would support ISIS, al-Qaeda or any of the terrorist organizations that have slaughtered thousands of innocent people in the Middle East and Africa. The U.S. government has the right and duty to keep a close watch on these Americans and to hold them accountable if they break United States or international law. This is already being done. New laws are not needed.

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The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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15

READERS WRITE

Seniors exploited to gain trustee victory

I

am writing both to thank all of my supporters who showed up on election day, March 18, and to let them in on a little secret... we won. Specifically, of the people who showed up and pulled the levers last Wednesday, 198 of you voted for me while only 172 of them voted for Mr. Schneiderman. I have attached the canvassed results to this letter so that the editor can see that this is in fact the case.

Therefore, Mr. Schneiderman’s statement, claiming that people showed up to vote against me, is plainly false. The people showed up to vote for me... and change. And, to you I say “thank you!” Don’t be discouraged... there will be more elections. Change will come to the Plaza. Mr. Katz’s victory is unquestionable, and to him I offer my congratulations.

My family met and spoke with his for a little while last Wednesday, and they are very nice people. It should be noted that I did go to congratulate Gerry, but he publicly refused my handshake. As to how Gerry won; out of over a hundred absentee ballots, most of which I’m told were from the Atria, Mr. Schneiderman received 114, Katz 100, and me... 31 - numbers quite inconsistent with the election day results.

I’m told by several independent sources that these ballots were solicited around Valentines Day, far in advance of the election, at a time several village officials paid visits to the Atria to hob nob with the residents there. A coincidence? I don’t know. Many have called, emailed, and outright asked me to challenge the result, based on what they believe is potential fraud at the Atria. I don’t want to cause a fracas.

Mr. Schneiderman only won by 57 votes - hardly a mandate. There are over 4,000 registered voters in the Plaza. Whether or not you support me in particular, if you support change in general, these results, these low numbers, prove that if you want it - if you want change - all you really need to do is... show up next time. Jonathan Stein Great Neck Plaza

Still waiting for GOP alternative to Obamacare

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o this point, Congress has tried about 70 times to abolish the Affordable Care Act/ Obamacare. The latest attempt is to have the Supreme Court strike down a short phrase regarding subsidies to states using the federal health insurance exchanges to make coverage affordable for millions of citizens. The result of such a decision would, quite simply, be disastrous. Those who have, from the beginning of advocacy for a much better

alternative, a bill proposed by John Conyers, have accepted the ACA as a step toward achieving comprehensive health care coverage for everyone. The Conyers bill would create a system modeled on Medicare that would include all Americans. As I have said before, the powerful lobbies of the private insurers and the huge pharmaceutical companies were instrumental in passing what we now have. With all its faults, so many are enjoying the security of health cover-

age they could never have had under earlier plans. Conservatives have been fighting hard to abolish the law all along. As more are enrolled and realize what they have gained, those who want to go back to the old days are panicking. Can you imagine what the public’s reaction would be if they lose what they have gained? But the willful, greedy, niggardly, self-centered persist. Their lack of empathy is unbelievable. Just a few days ago, Paul Ryan,

our 2012 GOP candidate for the vicepresidency, spoke about his plans for coverage, after the court has issued the decision he wants. Well, if he gets that decision. In a conference call organized by the Foundation for Government Accountability, a conservative thinktank, Ryan was asked if states should set up their own exchanges to prevent people from losing their insurance. “Oh, God, no...”, said Ryan, the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.

He promised that congressional Republicans would have alternative health-care legislation to revive lower-cost, limited coverage plans by June 20. Who is gullible enough to believe that? We have ample experience of the inability of Congress to write and pass any alternative after five years of accomplishing nothing. Esther Confino New Hyde Park

With malice toward all, charity toward none

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inston Churchill once wrote “Democracy is the worst form of government except for all the others.” Truer words were never spoken. One problem is that democracy requires ordinary citizens to pay attention to and understand complex issues. Case in point - the conventional wisdom that the U.S. Postal Service is “broke.” The explanation given is that post offices face competition from email and other internet services in addition to being grossly inefficient. Said inefficiency is proven by the

fact that the Postal Service lost nearly $20 billion in the last four years. Case closed! Well, maybe not. To learn the truth in this matter, we must look to the “Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act” of 2006. This act forces the Postal Service to “prefund its future health care benefit payments for the next 75 years” and it must do so within the next 10 years. Translated into English, the Postal Service had to put aside billions of dollars to pay for health benefits of employees it hasn’t even hired yet. Well, you must be thinking - if that’s the way the federal government

does things, so be it. Actually, nothing could be further from the truth. No other government agency or private corporation, for that matter, has a comparable requirement. Far from being “broke,” as the anti-government crowd would have you believe, “the Postal Service’s annual revenue greatly exceeds its operating costs…generating a profit of 1.4 billion.” (Sources are Jim Hightower and Ralph Nader) There must be something wrong, you’re thinking. Why would our government create a situation where failure is inevitable?

A few facts. The Congress which passed the nefarious Act was Republican controlled. The president who signed it was George W. Bush. And the corporations which would operate the newly privatized service would make billions annually. Does the phrase “follow the money” seem applicable? So, are we Americans up in arms over this flagrant deception? Are we concerned about proposals to shut down half of the mail processing centers, cutting nearly one-third of the postal jobs, and terminating Saturday mail deliveries? Not really. We are excited by more “juicy” issues. We prefer talking about an ex-

president’s extra-marital affairs and his wife’s email problems. But thank you Winston for starting the conversation about our democracy and its shortcomings. We all know the solution to our nation’s ills…a sophisticated and knowledgeable electorate, but don’t hold your breath America! As long as we live in a land whose credo is with malice toward all and charity toward none, we should not put much faith in the prospects for democracy. Dr. Hal Sobel Great Neck

Golf club housing has no place in East Williston

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tiny, residential community like East Williston is not the place to allow the establishment of a 12-bedroom boarding house-like facility for upwards of 13 male workers. Yet, still, the Wheatley Hills Golf Club’s current conditional use application, to be considered by East Williston’s Board of Trustees on Tuesday, March 31 at 8 p.m., in the Village Hall, apparently proposes to do just that. If the Golf Club feels a need to have its 13 male workers live in close proximity to its premises, it should rent apartments for its

workers and provide transportation for them to the Golf Club….. not establish a boarding house-like facility within just a few feet, literally within a stone’s throw, of East Williston’s property tax-paying residents. Property tax-paying residents have vested, long-term interests in the East Williston community. Most likely, the Golf Club’s workers have not invested hundreds of thousands of dollars into residences, have not developed deep roots in the community, and, very possibly, may leave their jobs at any time.

The East Williston Building Code, itself (Conditional Uses: 160-40), declares that a “conditional use review and approval procedure is established in recognition that many uses customarily found in communities may cause severe adverse impacts on a small, nearly developed, residential Village such as East Williston.” Allowing upwards of 13 male workers to occupy a boarding house-like facility located within a few feet within a stone’s throw of family residences would cause a severe adverse impact on East Williston’s homeowners and the com-

munity as a whole. A boarding house-like facility, with 13 male workers, located on higher graded land than Ridge Road homeowners allowing those workers to look easily into backyard homes and properties creates blatant privacy and security issues for residents. In addition, many other serious issues may arise, as well, involving supervision, sanitation, fire safety, and increased traffic congestion/gaseous emissions. East Williston’s Board of Trustees are vested with preserving the quality of life that has existed in East Williston since its inception.

On Tuesday, March 31, 2015, at 8 p.m., in the East Williston Village Hall, the Golf Club’s current “conditional use application” for establishing a 12-bedroom boarding house-like facility, housing upwards of 13 male workers, will be considered by the Board of Trustees. I suggest that everyone interested in preserving East Williston’s quality of life attend the aforementioned meeting. This is your major opportunity to speak out. Kathy Rittel East Williston


16 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

RT

A loo k o n the li g hter si d e

Try living with fickle chords of memory I’ll probably never make a good spy. It’s not so much that my memory is bad, as that it’s fickle. It fails me with names, with faces, even something as basic as the drive home; then springs back to life - with the most inconvenient possible results. A fickle memory does have some advantages. I can, for example, get more value for my entertainment dollar, recycling the books in my murder mystery collection. Usually, I find I’ve forgotten just enough to make re-reading them enjoyable. I am left with a pleasant tingle of recognition, making me just a little smarter than everyone in the book. I follow along as the sleuth peeks behind doors and sneaks around corners. “Look Out! Don’t open that door!” I try to warn him. “It’s just a hunch, but I think you’ll be sorry!” And when he walks past the unwashed whiskey bottle in the kitchen, or the dumb-bells lying out on the studio floor, I’ll say to myself “I don’t know why, but I

have a feeling that’s significant.” And yet none of my enjoyment is diminished, because the ending still comes, every time, as a delightful surprise. But a fickle memory has its disadvantages, too. For instance, there’s a fiveway intersection near my home where I can never remember which is the wrong fork to take -- until I have taken it once again. This might be a problem if I were a spy. And a spy would probably remember her recipe for 4-Bean Salad. Every time I make mine, all I recall is the feeling of impending doom. This is most likely because I know that one of the directions is wrong, but which one? And every time I remember, “Oh yes, half the amount of vinegar” ... just after I’ve mixed it all in. So I have to scramble through the pantry, hoping frantically that I can double everything else instead. I keep meaning to put a note about that in the margin ...

Judy epstein

A Look on the Lighter Side but somehow, I always forget. And of course, a fickle memory is a big disadvantage in keeping secrets, every spy’s stock in trade. If you tell me a secret, I will take it with me to the grave… unless the one person who must never know it walks into the room. Then suddenly it’s out of my mouth before I even realize I’m talking. Take the time my husband and I visited friends for dinner. Our friend Hank had taken elaborate precautions to get his

wife out of the house before taking the dessert cake from the freezer. “If she figures out I forgot to do this this morning,” he whispered to Jack and me, “the roast won’t be the only dead meat at the table tonight.” We promised him that his secret was safe with us. But no sooner had Anna returned and spotted the cake sitting on the counter than I blabbed all. “Looks defrosted, doesn’t it?” I volunteered. “You’d never guess Hank forgot all about it, this morning!” I have a theory about why this happens. I’m sure someday researchers will announce how, when secrets are stored in the human brain, they are marked with a tag saying “Under No Circumstances Reveal This Secret to So-and-So.” But what happens is, the tag erodes until all that’s left is the secret, and “So-and-So.” So no one should really be surprised if “So-and-So” is the first person I think of to tell. Surely this explains how I behaved at my brother’s wedding.

My other brother’s girlfriend had asked for my help with our rooming arrangements. She and I were supposed to create the impression that we were rooming together, rather than with our boyfriends. But I forgot to act like her room-mate; and when my mom spotted me leaving the rehearsal dinner with my boyfriend, instead, she became concerned. “What about Joan?” she asked me. “Isn’t she staying with you?” “Oh, she’s all right, Mom, she’s down the hall with Lewis.” The next time I saw Joan I reported back to her. “Thanks for nothing,” she exclaimed. “I told you, your mother was the only reason I went to all that trouble in the first place!” I’ve heard that no one retires from spying ... at least, not in one piece ... so perhaps it’s just as well I’d never be any good at it. Trouble is, at this rate, I may not stay in one piece much longer anyway. Maybe I should try for the Fickle Witness Protection Program, instead.

Raising minimum wage hurts workers

R

ecently, a woman called me an ungrateful Tea Party bastard. Someone else said that I was a typical, spoiled, overpaid Great Neck resident. Should I really be ashamed of myself, as another liberal berated me? These are some of the responses I get when I dare criticize any of the “sacred cows” of New York’s Liberal majority. How could I be against raising the minimum wage? How dare I deny any worker, his or hers employer-paid healthcare? I find that many progressives are never interested in finding out why I’ve come to these conclusions. So, let me try and explain it to them now, knowing full well, that it will probably land on deaf ears anyway. Recently I took my grandchildren out for lunch. We were seated by a hostess, who explained the restaurant’s new menus. Instead of waitresses, each table was now equipped with its own iPad. That’s right !! An iPad!! Oh well, this was California ! What do you expect? It makes things so easy. Order your food using a tabletop iPad, slide your credit card through, and then wait to be served. When your meal is completed, press finish, and your credit card receipt will appear. Wow! Isn’t that wonderful? Isn’t that fabulous? Not if you were one of the waitresses who were let go and replaced by that iPad! Why the new system? “Simple”, she said. “Management told us that they

couldn’t stay in business anymore without cutting costs.” Really? I thought California was the bluest of blue states. Progressive heaven! Its a workers paradise!! Get ready for this one! With the new higher minimum wage and Obamacare’s obligatory healthcare benefits, something had to give. Management felt that their choices were: 1 - raise their food prices or 2 - replace their waitress staff with these table-side iPads!! The final score? 25 waitresses were fired. 25 iPads were hired. The last time I looked, iPads don’t need healthcare or an increase in their hourly pay. Our only problem: Does an iPad deserve a 15% tip ? Every morning, my wife makes me the most fantastic caffe-latte. Her job? Make the coffee ! My job? Go to King Cullen in Manhasset, get a pound of their fabulous Columbian Supreme coffeebeans, have it ground, pay for it, and bring it home. Well worth the effort. Her coffee is fantastic. But not so fast; Now, instead of a worker grinding the beans for me, I had to do it myself. And then, when I went to pay, instead of 10 checkout cashiers, there are now only 6 and a self service machine. It sort of reminded me of an E-ZPass for groceries! Why? I asked. Management told their workers the same as the California restau-

rant. It’s become too expensive to pay the mandated higher salaries and benefits. King Cullen’s solution: keep the same prices, fire some workers, grind your own coffee and use the self service checkout machines instead. Obviously they know that the most I’ll pay for coffee is ten dollars a pound. Into the bank I went to pay my monthly credit card bill. Instead of the usual four tellers, there were now only two. You guessed it. The banks solution to the added costs of their workers? Fire more bank tellers, hire some more cheaper self-service units. Picking up bagels and lox at my favorite bagel store has become a Sunday morning ritual. But last week, I noticed new workers behind the counter. Why? Quite simple! Obamacare now mandates that every employee working more than 30 hours a week must have health insurance, payed by the employer. How does the bagel store avoid paying? Simple! Just limit the worker’s hours to 29 or less. Again, the same result. Fewer full time workers! Replaced by part-timers. Now pay attention all you Democrats out there who are gloating about our 5.5 percent unemployment rate. Did you know that Obama counts parttime workers as fully employed ? Is it no wonder that the unemployment numbers are “getting better”. Obama never told you that, did he? Want more proof that raising the minimum wage, and increasing employer costs

is detrimental to low paying workers? The undisputed leader in progressive governing is Seattle,Washington. Starting April 1, their minimum wage will be raised to $15 per hour, up from the federal rate of $7.25. Washington Policy Center is reporting an immediate rise in restaurant closings and layoffs in low paying jobs! Don’t tell me the reason so many workers are losing their jobs is because we live in the computer age. Keep raising the minimum wage, keep increasing employer’s costs, and watch how more and more low paying employees will be replaced by computers and self service stations. Watch how full time workers will be replaced by part timers. The choice is simple! Do the math. Nancy Pelosi was so right when she said during the healthcare debate: “We must pass the bill first and then we’ll find out what’s in it.” Want to provide healthcare for deserving and needy uninsured? Obamacare is not the way to do it, Scott Walker has a better plan. Check it out. Want to help our lowest paid workers? Raising the minimum wage is not the way to do it either. “Feel-good” solutions are just that!! Unfortunately, many of them just don’t work. Dr. Stephen Morris North Hills


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

RT

17

READERS WRITE

Embracing ‘asylum for all of mankind’

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iversity is flourishing in Nassau and Suffolk counties. We are extending our noble heritage, and that is a good thing. As Long Islander Walt Whitman wrote: “These states are the amplest poem. Here is not merely a nation, But a teeming nation of nations.” When anyone considers the challenges of pluralism, it is easy to see how remarkable the United States has been. In the words of Tom Paine, we have continued to “be an asylum for all of mankind,” notwithstanding that the U.S. is physically larger than China. Recognizing that England would fit inside of Pennsylvania, France inside of Oregon, and Italy inside of California verifies Whitman’s poetic view. The U.S. has not only had huge numbers of immigrants (now as the world’s 3rd largest population with more than 300 million), but we have people from more nations than any other country has ever received. Indeed, Queens County (physically part of “Long Island”) is the most diverse place in the world; more than 120 languages are spoken by students at LaGuardia Community College.

I

Now, the most rapidly increasing groups in “suburbia” are “Latinos” and “Asian-Americans.” I always have hesitation about using those terms because the equivalent would be to refer to my ancestors and most of the earlier immigrants as “European-Americans.” All choosing Americans come here with distinctive languages and cultures; it is insensitive to lump all of them together without an empathetic concern for their values and experiences. Caring Americans have long recognized that the process of “acculturation” is something to be eased, not forced. Further, it is not simply a matter of making new immigrants become like us – and as soon as possible. Immigrants from all nations have made distinctive contributions to our culture, even while they have been affected by it. Oscar Handlin, son of Jewish immigrants, was a Harvard historian who received a Pulitzer Prize for his book “The Uprooted.” Handlin explained in his introduction to the volume: “Once I thought to write a history of the immigrants in America;

‘With liberty and justice for all’

stand by everything I have written during the past six weeks or so. I am done with it. It is time to move on. In so doing, If one gives some thought to certain things, one wonders how they came to be as they are. One of these is the pledge to our flag. “I pledge allegiance to the flag of The United States of America and to the republic for which it stands...” What is this? Do we have a dual allegiance? Flag is the subject grammatically. The wording does not specifically say that we pledge allegiance to The United States of America which is a democracy. It actually only says that we pledge allegiance to the flag and to some republic. There are a number of those in South America. Does “One nation indivisible” refer to the US or some republic? Then comes the added words “under God.” Our Constitution already states that it is Our Creator who has endowed us with our inalienable rights. That is all that is necessary. We are supposed to have separation of church and state (for good reason) but adding “under God” makes this null and void. At present, we are still an infant humanity. At this stage only developing our mental capabilities and at the first stage with self consciousness and with the ability to say “I Am” which the animals cannot do. Our Founding Fathers were correct in say-

ing creator. At our stage it is very abstract to us and beyond our comprehension. People, especially the ‘know it alls’ create God in their own presently conceived image and drag God down to their level. Our Creator is said to have three attributes: will, imagination and motion. It is with imagination that the image of what is to be set into motion is created. So, it is derived by many that He created us ‘in His image’; That God looks like we do or vice-versa. This can’t be farther from the facts. Between incarnations we don’t look the same as we do here. During long periods of eons unknown numbers of beings have been created. They are far more advanced than we are and don’t look as we do as they don’t have a need to be incarnated among other reasons. They are highly developed compared to we as infants. Back to the pledge: It is the Republicans who are bent on turning our democracy into a republic by restricting voting rights with the result of creating a ruling elite. There would go the final words of the pledge: “liberty and (especially) justice for all.” A democracy has no place for Republicans. If I recite the pledge, it is: “I pledge allegiance to the flag of The United States of America; one nation indivisible with liberty and justice for all.” No one can force me to say more. Charles Samek Mineola

then I discovered that the immigrants were American history.” Every nation has the power to decide how many immigrants it will admit, from what nations and under what guidelines. All of us know that our immigration system has been broken (especially since the last comprehensive reform effort in 1986). It is worth considering why that has happened in our great nation. Is one political party more to blame than the other? Looking only at the years since 1986 (Republicans and Democrats have each held the Presidency for 14 years, while Republicans have controlled the Oval office and both houses of Congress for six years, while Democrats have prevailed in all branches for four years). If our representatives in Washington are not able to help us plan for the future and address the humanitarian crises that have ensued, perhaps it is time for a citizens’ movement to lead the way. Such endeavors can combine American pragmatism (seeking workable, practical, solutions) while keeping faith with our historical principles. At the core of such progress is supportive recognition of “unauthorized” immigrants, and of the many ways they con-

tribute to our economy and our future. It also behooves all of us who celebrate family values to work to prevent the disrupting of them. Such an approach seeks to appreciate new folks as striving humans, like our immigrant ancestors, and the rest of us (but recognizing that they face even more challenges). The encouraging sign is that key leaders of both political parties have long recognized the basic positions indicated above. Scores of Long Islanders are already at work fostering “win-win” developments for newcomers and the rest of us. The Hofstra Center for Civic Engagement and Long Island Wins (check its website) are reaching deep into our communities developing collaborative ways forward. There will be more discussion of those proposals next week.​ Michael D’Innocenzo Professor of History and The Harry H. Wachtel Distinguished Teaching Professor for the Study of Nonviolent Social Change Founding Member of the Hofstra Center for Civic Engagement Hofstra University

New treatment could save people’s eyesight

M

acular degeneration is the leading cause of blindness in the elderly. We are living longer than ever so more and more of the elderly will be faced with this problem. There are two types of MD, wet and dry. Currently there is treatment for the wet form but no treatment is available for the dry form. However there is reliable news that a groundbreaking treatment is within sight. On the internet look up Advanced Cell Technology. The data below has been extracted from one of the articles listed. The announcement was made on October 16, 2014, and pub-

lished in the British medical journal, Lancet. -18 patients had stem cells injected into one eye. - 9 had wet MD and 9 had dry MD. - No side effects 37 months after injection. - 10 had improved vision, 7 stabilized vision (no further loss). - Untreated eye not affected in any way. - A 75 year old blind rancher now rides horses once again. - Others could now use computers and read watches. Theodore Theodorsen Manhasset

Plaza voters spoke and should also act

W

e want to thank our residents for their continued support in the election for village trustee. The village experienced higher than typical turnout and that’s a win for grassroots democracy. We value the continued trust you have placed in us. We take the responsibility associated with that trust with the utmost seriousness. We urge all residents and other con-

cerned individuals to stay involved in Plaza government by attending the bimonthly meetings of the Board of Trustees at Village Hall; volunteering for a resident committee; and communicating your concerns and thoughts to us. We pledge to keep the lines of communication open to everyone. Lawrence Katz Gerry Schneiderman Village of Great Neck Plaza trustees


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READERS WRITE

Leasing treatment plants doesn’t pass sniff test

N

assau County, desperate for new funding to plug holes in its leaky $2.98 billion budget, is once again proposing the greatest “one shot” source of revenue in its history. Last summer Nassau County gave approval to pay New Jerseybased United Water a contract for $1.14 billion dollars over 20 years to operate its sewage treatment plant. The plan touted savings of $233 million over that same time frame. These savings, which are projected at a little over $11 million a year, or just .38 of one percent of the annual budget, are supposedly from transferring sewage treatment workers to United Water’s payroll. I have yet to see a report from the comptroller quantifying any realized savings even though United Water touts $12 million in savings on its website and the plan was just implemented under three months ago. You can’t promote $12 million in actual savings until the end of the fiscal year. This reminds me how Nassau residents were promised $20 million a year in savings through police precinct consolidation. Those savings never materialized because police overtime skyrocketed and the precinct consolidation was never fully implemented. Now Nassau wants to create a

long-term lease of its massive sewer system to a private firm in return for up to a $1 billion payment. The lease would include Nassau’s three sewage treatment plants, 53 pumping stations and approximately 3,000 miles of sewers. Newsday recently reported, according to Nassau officials, that by committing to a long–term lease of the sewage treatment plant, operating efficiencies and population growth would hold down fee increases and rate hikes would be capped at inflation. This just isn’t true. Nassau County’s population in 2000 was 1,336,000 and today it is about 1,353,000. This is a total increase of just 1.2 percent over 15 years. Where is the population growth going to come from? Every recent demographic study has 18-35 year olds leaving Nassau at an increasing rate. These are the same residents who are counted on to have children and raise families here. Population growth is just not going to happen. With an aging sewer system in desperate need of a complete overhaul how will rate hikes be capped at inflation? Any private company is going to invest money with the anticipation of a reasonable rate of return.

United Water, which already operates the sewage plants, is trying to find every nickel of savings it can. How will a new vendor do an even better job managing the whole system to make it financially worthwhile? Nassau has already privatized its bus system with the promise that it wouldn’t raise fares and improve service; yet, fares have gone up and routes have been cut. Why? Because a private bus company expects to make a profit, and you can’t make money on routes that aren’t full while you need to constantly upgrade equipment. The same thing will happen when the sewer system gets leased. Either short cuts will be taken, like what United Water did by in Gary, Ind., with felony charges of violating the Clean Water Act, or the new private company will petition for higher rates once it gets the contract, like Veolia did with bus fares. In 2012 the county attempted to retain Morgan Stanley to provide council on a similar sewer privatization. This would have given Morgan Stanley an inside track on the fat fees that would have come with privatization. That’s akin to asking a barber if you need a haircut! What should happen is an independent council of public sector ex-

perts should opine on any proposed deal. With proposals due March 27 and an expected decision the following month, I fear a monumentally bad deal will get shoved through. NIFA needs to closely scrutinize any deal before they approve it. If the privatization of Nassau County’s sewer system passes our children will be paying for a bad deal just like what happened with the Shoreham Nuclear Plant, which closed 25 years ago, with approxi-

mately $5.5 billion in debt. We are paying more for Shoreham today, with over $6 billion in debt still outstanding. Do you really believe there won’t be a similar boondoggle with the privatization of the Nassau County sewer system? Nassau leasing the sewer treatment plants doesn’t pass the sniff test. Adam Haber Roslyn

Dog park plan needs support

A

s you may know, funds are available in this year’s budget for the establishment of dog park facilities in the Town of North Hempstead. In cooperation with TNH Parks and Recreation, local dog owners are establishing a community based organization (CBO) to further the prospects of a dog run in the area. If you or someone you know is interested in a dog run for socializing and exercising your dog, perhaps

in Tully Park, please forward your name, the name of your dog, a telephone number or e-mail where we may reach you to keep you informed as to hearings, meetings etc. to: dogrunatnhp@verizon.net If you are available and willing to participate in this organizing effort please use the above contact information as soon as possible. Mark Klein New Hyde Park Letters Continued on Page 58

Urinary Incontinence: It Doesn’t Have to Rule Your Life

Urinary incontinence (UI) is a very common condition, but many people have trouble discussing it with their doctor because of embarrassment, a lack of knowledge about treatment options and the misconception that it is a “normal” part of aging. Farzeen Firoozi, MD, a urologist specializing in Female Pelvic Medicine and Reconstructive Surgery at the Arthur Smith Institute for Urology, part of North Shore-LIJ Health System, discusses what you need to know about this condition. Bladder or urinary incontinence (UI), also known as a loss of bladder control, can have symptoms ranging from mild leaking to uncontrollable wetting. There are several types of UI, including: • Urge incontinence — The inability to hold urine long enough to reach a restroom. It is often found in people who have conditions such as diabetes, stroke, dementia, Parkinson’s disease and multiple sclerosis, but may be an indication of other diseases or conditions that would also warrant medical attention. • Stress incontinence — Leakage of urine during exercise, coughing, sneezing, laughing, lifting heavy objects or other body movements that put pressure on the bladder. This is the most common type of incontinence in younger women. • Functional incontinence — Leakage due to a difficulty reaching a restroom in time because of physical conditions such as arthritis. • Overflow incontinence — Leakage that occurs when the quantity of urine produced exceeds the bladder’s capacity to hold it.

If you or a loved one has symptoms of urinary incontinence, call (516) 734-8500 today to make an appointment with one of our urologists. For more information, visit NorthShoreLIJ.com/Smith.

What you need to know about UI: • 200 million people are affected by UI worldwide. • 1 in 3 Americans age 30 to 70 have experienced bladder control loss, and may be living with symptoms. • 2 in 3 people with UI do not use any treatments to manage their condition. • According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), 51 percent of people aged 65 and older living at home reported bladder and/or bowel incontinence. While one-third of American adults think that UI is a normal part of aging that they have to accept, incontinence can be improved or completely cured with proper evaluation and treatment. The Smith Institute for Urology has resources for men and women who want to discuss these symptoms and treatment options with a physician. Our urologists and urogynecologists are at the national forefront for many non-invasive, state-of-the-art procedures to correct incontinence. *paid advertising


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We know that a prostate cancer event

ISN’T EXACTLY DATE-NIGHT MATERIAL. But what you learn could help you keep many dates in the future. Get the Facts about Prostate Cancer and Take Control of Your Health:

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Attend a Free Seminar to Learn about Prostate Cancer Prostate cancer is one of the most common cancers among men in the United States. Men aged 50 to 70 — along with their spouses or significant others — are invited to attend a FREE seminar about prostate cancer, where you’ll learn about: • The latest guidelines for the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test, so you’ll be able to make an informed decision with your doctor about whether or not to take the test • The full spectrum of prostate cancer, from indolent to metastatic disease • Understand the results of your PSA test and what they mean — especially if they were high • Prostate cancer treatment options

You will have the opportunity to interact with leaders in the field of prostate cancer diagnosis, treatment and research. Presenters include: Lee Richstone, MD Chief of Urology, North Shore University Hospital; System Vice Chairman, Urology

Manish Vira, MD Director, Fellowship Program, Urologic Oncology Louis Potters, MD Co-Executive Director, North Shore-LIJ Cancer Institute Chairman, Radiation Medicine, North Shore-LIJ Health System

Date: Thursday, April 2 Time: 6pm – 8pm Location: Rust Auditorium at North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset

Preregistration is preferred for this free event and seating is limited. To register and learn more, go to NorthShoreLIJ.com/ProstateEvent The Smith Institute for U r o l o g y

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The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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Turn your passion into a career. LIU Post is the only university on Long Island with an on-campus equestrian center, home to LIU Post’s Equine Studies program. Students in the program combine academics with hands-on experiential learning and competition, gaining skills and knowledge to prepare for careers in the $100 billion equine industry. Go ahead—take the reins.

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DiNapoli to keynote business conference BY B I LL SAN ANTONIO

fourth annual College Regional Minority and Women Businesses Conference State Comptroller - an event aimed at womThomas DiNapoli will en, minorities and small give the keynote address businesses - at SUNY Colnext Thursday at the lege Old Westbury.

State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli

Ballet At It’s Finest!

The speech will come as part of a day of workshops and networking opportunities for business owners with state officials and SUNY staff, to take place at Old Westbury’s Duane L. Jones Recital Hall, college officials said. Old Westbury officials said the event will also spotlight businesses owned by veterans disabled during their service as well as various business certification processes. Purchasing contract opportunities with state agencies and SUNY campuses across Long Island will also be discussed, officials said. The conference will take place from 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Registration for the event is $40.

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Where Taste Matters!

BY B I LL SAN ANTONIO A former manager of Ruths Chris Steakhouse in Garden City who pleaded guilty in January to embezzling more than $230,000 from the restaurant has been sentenced, county prosecutors said. Barry Pearlstein, 70, of Orlando, Fla. was sentenced to two consecutive nine-month prison sentences. He must also repay $230,933.39 in restitution by civil judgment. Pearlstein was arrested on Dec. 1, 2014 following a joint investigation between the district attorney’s office and the Nassau County Police Department’s Crimes Against Property Squad. Upon firing Pearlstein from the restaurant in June 2014, Ruth’s Chris management conducted an internal investigation that found he embezzled funds meant for deposit on 511 occasions and filed false records to conceal the transactions.

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Barry Pearlstein Management then contacted the district attorney’s office, then led by U.S. Rep. Kathleen Rice (D-Garden City). Pearlstein was initially charged with a felony count of grand larceny

and 10 counts of falsifying business records and faced up to 15 years in prison. The case was prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Matthew Sotirhos, of the office’s Economic Crimes Bureau.

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bLAnk SLATE MEdIA March 27, 2015

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Outsiders by Joyce Kubat

At any Price, a painting by Patricia Chambers

Huntingon’s b. j. spoke gallery recently invited Adrienne Rooney, curatorial assistant at the Whitney Museum of American Art, to judge entries received for EXPO 34, the gallery’s annual national competition. The guideline for Rooney was simple: create a winners’ show highlighting quality art, providing space to hang more art. “I did not enter the process looking for something specific, only strong artworks in any medium and of any sensory quality,” Rooney said. “b. j. spoke gallery’s call for entries circulated throughout the United States and thereby brought forth artists not only working with a wide range of mediums but also considering diverse forms and content. I wanted the final group to represent this quality, and, to me, the voices forming this show are indeed rich

PHOTOGRAPH BY MARY DONDERO

Garden Snail, ceramic sculpture by Sara Desjardins

and specific, coming from several vantages.” The 19 winning artists Adrienne Rooney selected are: Brandon Alumbaugh, Cynthia BickleyGreen, Patricia Chambers, Asma Chaudhary, Sara Desjardins, Mary Dondero, Kindra Hayes, Nayoung Jeong, Nina Jordan, Barbara Kingsley, Joyce Kubat, Adam Kuhn, Veronique Leriche-Fischetti, Hildy Maze, Lowell Miller, Barbara Rubensohn, Stephanie Ryan, Henry Thomas and Erin Zerbe. Kubat and Chambers are represented by paintings in the show. “Art that goes beyond the obvious, that goes beyond copying, that goes to the gut, that says something, excites me,” Kubat said. “The figure has always been my focus, and over the years it’s become a psychological focus, a sometimes uncomfortable focus.

It’s the serious and profound underpinning, relating in some way to the universal humanity common to all of us, that is necessary for me.” “My work is inspired by things that I pass on a daily basis in the small towns and countryside around my home,” added Chambers. “I see lots of interesting landscapes, animals, buildings and homes with many different designs and architecture, and a whole lot of trailer homes I think contemporary art is a reflection of our society, certainly on the precipice of change in culture climates, yet I purposely live in the country not to be influenced by popular styles and movements. My aim is to hold on to my vision thru my art, and to be honest to myself.” Desjardins’ entry is a ceramic sculpture titled “Garden Snail.” “I have a degree in graphic

design. I began sculpture work Oct. 2013- after graduation when my husband got sick,” she said. “It was a way for me to be home with my husband and children and work at the same time. I began with clay which ended up being much too fragile for a house filled with little boys. This led to needle felting. A few YouTube videos later and it feels like exactly what I was meant to do.” Dondero is a photographer who feels “that our experiences, fleeting and often oscillating, leave us with a fragile or a precarious understanding of who we are. This notion inspires me to create and capture images that are intended to imply concepts concerning the ephemeral. What subject better than a flower to express ever-changing realities and impermanence? In this body of work entitled, Cut Flowers, I slice

open, chop or cut each flower, revealing what is concealed from our view. My intent is to stir the viewer’s attention by allowing the hidden interior of the flower to be observed. In spite of that, my fundamental goal is to suggest or challenge the concept of what is considered precious.” Asma’s artworks explore the duality of a domesticated homemaker by physically recreating the home environment. Asma makes every effort to use discarded materials and repurpose them into basic necessities for survival such as shelter, warmth, luminance, sustenance, mobility and intellectual growth. EXPO 34 Winners will be on display at b. j. spoke gallery, 299 Main Street, Huntington, April 2 through April 30. There will be an artists’ reception Saturday, April 11 from 6 to 9 p.m.


26 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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“Voted Best Pizza by The top seven events Wall Street Journal” for the coming week Saturday, March 28, 8 p.m. Mary Gauthier & david Wilcox Landmark On Main Street 232 Main Street, Suite 1 Port Washington (516) 767-1384, ext. 101 www.landmarkonmainstreet.org Singer songwriters mary Gauthier are David wilcox roll into the Landmark Saturday night for an evening of modern American folk music. These are two artists whose wit will make you laugh, lyrics will make you cry and whose performances will ensure you leave the show smiling. The show will be hosted by wFUV’s John Platt and is part of the Fabulous Folk Series.

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Friday, March 27, 7 p.m. Barry Manilow: One Last time Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum 1255 Hempstead Turnpike, Uniondale (516) 794-9300 http://www.nassaucoliseum.com Legendary singer/songwriter Barry manilow, famous for such international hit songs as “mandy,” “I write The Songs” and “Copacabana,” is embarking on what he has called his last concert tour. Friday’s performance at the Coliseum is just the second stop on the tour, which ends at the Barclays Center on June 17.

Saturday, March 28, 8 p.m. John pizzarelli Big Band: the Frank sinatra Centennial Tilles Center For The Performing Arts | LIU Post 720 Northern Boulevard, Brookville (516) 299-3100 • http://tillescenter.org New York City radio veteran John Pizzarelli has performed on some of the country’s most popular national television shows, including “The Tonight Show with Jay Leno,” “The Late Show with David Letterman,” “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon,” “The Conan Show,” as well as the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon and the macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. Saturday he salutes Frank Sinatra in a celebration of “Ol’ Blue eyes” 100th birthday”

Saturday, March 28, 7:30 p.m. the Get Up Kids with special Guests pUp & Restorations The Paramount 370 New York Ave., Huntington (631) 673-7300, ext. 303 www.paramountny.com After performing to sold out crowds across four continents and becoming a crucial part of what has been called the “second wave of emo” in the 90s, The Get Up Kids, featuring matthew Pryor on vocals and guitar, Rob Pope on bass, Jim Suptic on guitars and vocals, James Dewees on keyboards and Ryan Pope on drums released their first full-length album in 2011 after a seven year hiatus and have been performing steadily since.

Friday, March 27, 8 p.m. Saturday, March 28, 8 p.m. the Moody Blues NYCB Theatre At Westbury 960 Brush Hollow Road, Westbury. (516) 247-5200 www.thetheatreatwestbury.com english classic rock stalwarts The moody Blues make a scheduled stop on their Timeless Flight-The Polydor Years tour in westbury for two nights this weekend, touring in support of the band’s eight discs set The Polydor Years 1986-1992. The band’s hits include “Nights In white Satin,” “Tuesday Afternoon,” “I’m Just A Singer (In A Rock And Roll Band)” and “Your Dave Coulier wildest Dreams.” Friday, March 27, 8 p.m. Sunday, March 29, 3 p.m. Saturday, March 28, 7 & 9:30 p.m. swingtime! Featuring the Jive Aces dave Coulier Adelphi University Performing Arts Center Governors’ Comedy Club 1 South Avenue, Garden City 90 Division Ave. Levittown (516) 877-4000 (516) 731-3358 http://aupac.adelphi.edu/ http://tickets.govs.com/index.cfm Direct from London, The Jive Aces are interPerhaps best known as “Joey” from the hit nationally renowned for their musicianship, ABC’s Full House, Dave Coulier also hosted spectacular stage show and their energetic America’s Funniest People, world’s Funniest renditions of swing/jive/R & B classics by Videos and his own series, Out of Control such greats as Louis Prima, Cab Calloway, for Nickelodeon. He has performed his clean Bobby Darin, Louis Armstrong, Dean martin stand-up on The Tonight Show, HBO’s Detroit and Sammy Davis, Jr. The Tinseltown JitComedy Jam and HBO’s Comic Relief at Radio terbugs, representing six swing dancers, and City music Hall and continues to sell out shows makinna Ridgway of The Satin Dollz, join at colleges, corporate events, casinos, nightThe Jive Aces on stage for this high-energy clubs and theaters. afternoon of music.


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THE CULINARY ARCHITECT

Dining options for Easter, during spring What are traditional American Easter dishes? Some families’ traditions include a baked ham or rack of lamb, other families choose to celebrate with roasted turkey. Of all the Holidays, Easter foods seem to be a “free for all”in established traditions. The following menu is a lovely lunch which may certainly be served throughout the spring, as many of the foods are the harbingers of the rebirth of the earth’s beauty. Menu Serves 12 My Favorite Way to Poach a Salmon Steamed Asparagus Herbed New Bliss Potatoes Salad Culinary Architect My Favorite Way to Poach a Salmon 12 pieces fillet of salmon (approx. 3-4 oz. each) 1 bottle white wine 1 cup clam juice 4 ribs celery 2 carrots, peeled 1 small bunch of parsley 1 onion, coarsely chopped

Sauce: 1 cup salmon stock 4 tbsp butter 2 shallots, finely chopped 1 cup cream 1 bunch dill 1. Place the white wine, clam juice, celery, carrots, parlsey and onion in a roasting pan and bring to a boil. After 5 minutes turn down to a simmer, add the salmon, skin side down, into the stock and cover with buttered piece of parchment paper. Poach salmon ALEXANDRA TROY for approximately 8 minutes or The Culinary Architect until done. Remove to a plate and cover with foil. Let rest in a warm oven. Steamed Asparagus 2. In a saucepan, reduce 1 48 asparagus spears, cup of the salmon stock to 1/2 tough bottoms removed cup. (about 4 inches) 3. In another saucepan, 1/2 stick butter, melted sweat the shallots in 2 tblsp butter. 1/4 cup parmesan cheese, When the shallots are soft, add the grated salmon stock and heat on medium Freshly ground pepper, high heat for 3 minutes. Add the to taste cream and reduce the mixture by half. Take the sauce off the stove 1. Preheat the broiler. and whisk in the remaining 4 tblsp 2. Peel off the bottom, outer butter, 1 tblsp at a time. When part of the asparagus (if necessary). combined, snip in the dill. 3. Place the asparagus in 4. To serve, place 1 salmon fillet on each plate and drape with a skillet large enough to hold them and add cold water to cover. sauce.

1 bunch watercress, separated, washed and dried Dressing: 3 tblsp excellent quality balsamic vinegar 2 tblsp Dijon mustard Salt and pepper to taste 1 cup extra virgin olive oil

Bring to a boil and simmer for 3 minutes or until slightly cooked. Drain and rinse in cold water. 4. Place asparagus, in a single line, in a heatproof dish. Sprinkle with butter and cheese. Add pepper to taste. Lightly brown under broiler. Herbed New Bliss Potatoes 30 new Bliss potatoes, washed, dried and cut into quarters 3 tblsp sweet butter 3 tblsp fresh herbs: thyme, tarragon or dill 1. Boil the potatoes over medium high heat until done. 2. In a large saucepan, melt the butter, add the herbs. 3. When the potatoes are done, drain them and add them to the butter mixture. Coat with butter mixture and serve.

1. In a jar, with a tight lid, put all of the dressing ingredients. Shake vigorously. 2. To serve: Place a radicchio cup on each plate. Fill with Boston lettuce and red leaf lettuce. Slighly drizzle dressing on top. Garnish with watercress.

Salad Culinary Architect 1 head radicchio, separated, washed and dried 1 head Boston lettuce, separated, washed and dried and torn into pieces 1 head red leaf lettuce, washed and dried and torn into pieces

E ric’s

Italian Bistro

MODERN & CLASSIC ITALIAN CUISINE

DINING • WINE BAR • CATERING

CHEF GEORGE ECHEVERRIA formerly from Soigné & Andiamo has brought his creations to Mineola!

Easter Sunday Serving 1:00pm thru 9:00 pm

Offering our regular Dinner Menu plus a 3-Course Holiday Prix Fixe Menu:

Including: Lamb, Glazed Ham, Cod, Bronzini, Lasagna, Antipasto, Crabmeat Deviled Eggs and much more Private Events in our beautiful Dining Room Special Packages Starting at: Luncheons $15 p.p. / Dinners $28 p.p.

70 East Old Country Rd., Mineola, NY 11501 www.ericsbistro.com

516-280-5675


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crosswor d p u z z le

LEO’S Friday Only 25% Off Entire

Lunch or Dinner Check

Cash Only • Alcohol not included Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included • Not available at the bar Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering Expires 4/2/15 • Dine In Only • Good for parties of 8 or less May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Saturday Only 25% Off Entire

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Cash Only • Alcohol not included Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included • Not available at the bar Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering Expires 4/2/15 • Dine In Only • Good for parties of 8 or less May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Sunday Only 25% Off Entire Dinner Check

Cash Only • Alcohol not included Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included • Not available at the bar Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering Expires 4/2/15 • Dine In Only • Good for parties of 8 or less May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Monday Only 30% Off Entire

Lunch or Dinner Check Cash Only • Alcohol not included Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included • Not available at the bar Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering Expires 4/2/15 • Dine In Only • Good for parties of 8 or less May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Tuesday Only 30% Off Entire

Lunch or Dinner Check Cash Only • Alcohol not included Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included • Not available at the bar Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering Expires 4/2/15 • Dine In Only • Good for parties of 8 or less May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

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Lunch or Dinner Check Cash Only • Alcohol not included Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included • Not available at the bar Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering Expires 4/2/15 • Dine In Only • Good for parties of 8 or less May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

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Lunch or Dinner Check Cash Only • Alcohol not included Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included • Not available at the bar Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering Expires 4/2/15 • Dine In Only • Good for parties of 8 or less May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

190 Seventh St., Garden City 742-0574 • www.leosgardencity.com

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Arts & Entertainment Calendar LANDMARK ON MAIN STREET 232 Main Street, Suite 1 Port Washington (516) 767-1384 ext. 101 www.landmarkonmainstreet.org Saturday, March 28, 8 p.m. Mary Gauthier & David Wilcox Wednesday, April 8, at 2 p.m. Film: American in Paris Friday, April 10, 7 p.m. Imagination Movers Friday, Apr. 17, 8 p.m. Rhiannon Giddens GOLD COAST ARTS CENTER 113 Middle Neck Road Great Neck (516) 829-2570 • http://goldcoastarts.org Thursday, April 23, 7 p.m. Furman Film Series: Iris Thursday, May 7, 7 p.m. Furman Film Series: The Prime Ministers: Soldiers and Peacemakers The Space at Westbury 250 Post Ave., Westbury (516) 283.5566 www.thespaceatwestbury.com Saturday, April 11, 8 p.m. RAEL - The Music of Genesis Thursday, April 23 8 p.m. Steve Winwood Sunday, April 26, 2 & 8 p.m. Miranda Sings NASSAU VETERANS MEMORIAL COLISEUM 1255 Hempstead Turnpike, Uniondale (516) 794-9300 • http://www.nassaucoliseum. com Friday, March 27, 7 p.m. Barry Manilow Thursday, April 16, 7 p.m. Friday, April 17, 3 & 7 p.m. Disney Live! Presents Three Classic Fairy Tales NYCB THeatre at Westbury 960 Brush Hollow Road, Westbury. (516) 247-5200 www.thetheatreatwestbury.com Friday, March 27, 8 p.m. Saturday, March 28, 8 p.m. The Moody Blues Thursday, April 9, 8 p.m. Zebra / The Mystic Saturday, April 11, 8 p.m. Tom Wopat & John Schneider: Return Of The Dukes Sunday, April 12, 4 p.m. The Price Is Right Live Stage Show Friday, April 17, 8 p.m. Bob Saget Friday, April 24, 8 p.m. Saturday, April 25, 8 p.m. Bob Saget ADELPHI UNIVERSITY PERFORMING ARTS CENTER Westermann Stage, 1 South Avenue Garden City (516) 877-4000 • http://aupac.adelphi.edu/ Sunday, March 29, 3 p.m. Swingtime! Featuring the Jive Aces Tuesday, April 7 through Sunday, April 12 (various times) Hopper: A New Musical

The madison theatre at molloy college 1000 Hempstead Ave., Rockville Centre. (516) 323-4444 • http://madisontheatreny.org. Sunday, April 12, 3 p.m. The Gershwin Project Featuring Grammy Award Winner Peter Nero TILLES CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS | LIU POST 720 Northern Boulevard, Brookville (516) 299-3100 • http://tillescenter.org Saturday, March 28, 8 p.m. John Pizzarelli Big Band: The Frank Sinatra Centennial Sunday, March 29, 1 & 3 p.m. Monday, March 30, 10 a.m. & 12 p.m. New York Philharmonic in Very Young People’s Concerts Friday, April 10, 8 p.m. Tango Night Saturday, April 11, 2 p.m. Jim Henson’s Dinosaur Train Live! Saturday, April 11, 2 p.m. Andrea Marcovicci in A Gershwin Valentine Friday, April 17, 8 p.m. Gioacchino Rossini’s The Barber of Seville Saturday, April 18, 8:30 p.m. Chris Botti Holocaust Memorial and Tolerance Center of Nassau County 100 Crescent Beach Road, Glen Cove (516) 571-8040 • http://www.hmtcli.org Nov. 2 through April, 2015 Objects Of Witness: Testimony of Holocaust Artifacts These artifacts have been lent or donated to the Center by the families of Holocaust victims and survivors, or by the survivors themselves. Many of these artifacts were kept hidden during the Holocaust, at great risk to those who hid them. They will be on view beginning on in the exhibit gallery. The Paramount 370 New York Ave., Huntington (631) 673-7300 ext. 303 • www.paramountny. com Saturday, March 28, 7:30 p.m. The Get Up Kids with Special Guests - PUP & Restorations Sunday, March 29, 7 p.m. New Found Glory Friday, April 3, 8 p.m. Black Label Society Unblackened with Special Guest - Wino Saturday, April 4, 8 p.m. Michael Bolton Tuesday, April 7, 8 p.m. Robby Krieger of The Doors “An Evening of The Doors Greatest Hits” Friday, April 10, 8 p.m. Back to the Eighties Show with...”Jessie’s Girl” Saturday, April 11, 8 p.m. Citizen Cope Wednesday, April 15, 8 p.m. Thursday, April 16, 8 p.m. Friday, April 17, 8 p.m. Jeff Beck Saturday, April 18, 7:30 p.m. Joe DeGuardia’s STAR Boxing Presents “Rockin’ Fights 18” Featuring Joe Smith


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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g�ide to

Wellness &Beauty

a blank slate media / lit�or publications special section • march 27, 2015

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32 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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A free community educAtion progrAm

ASTHMA, ALLERGIES, EXERCISE & YOU Learn about the changes in guidelines and treatment of asthma and allergies; how lifestyle and emotional health play a part; and the benefits of exercise. Topics & speakers include:

The benefits of weightliſting for women

“Allergies A to Z” - Marcella Aquino, MD, Division of Rheumatology, Allergy & Immunology at Winthrop “Asthma at Any Age” - Shalinee Chawla, MD, Division of Pulmonary & Critical Care Medicine at Winthrop “Relaxation Breathing” - Edith Jason, RYT Tuesday, April 14, 2015 7:00 PM Winthrop’s Research & Academic Center 101 Mineola Blvd. (Corner of Second Street in Mineola) Admission is free, but seating is limited. Please call (516) 663-3916 for reservations & parking information.

Take a Journey To Recovery at

Grace Plaza HOSPITAL

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3 Tracks to Recovery: Orthopedic • Neurologic • Pulmonary continuing a Tradition of Excellence in Rehabilitation and Long Term Care

Call the Admissions Office for more information: 516-466-3001 extension 215 15 St. Paul’s Place, Great Neck, NY 11021

We welcome you to come have a personal tour of our facility You can also visit us on our website at w w w . g race p l az a.co m

at

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any women steer clear of the free-weight areas inside their gyms, opting instead for treadmills and other cardio machines. Some women may not know how to use weights correctly, while others simply don’t want to add any bulk to their frames. But research shows that women who adhere to moderate strength-training programs two to three times per week can benefit in a variety of ways. Burn more calories: Many people exercise to burn calories and shed fat, and weight training is an efficient way for women to do just that. Resistance training is a great way to burn calories, as after a heavy weight-training session, the body continues to use oxygen, which increases a person’s basal metabolic rate. In addition, as you increase lean muscle mass, your body burns even more calories as its muscles contract and it works to repair and build new muscle. reverse metabolic decline: Lifting weights can help reverse the natural slowing down of metabolism that begins in middle age. Keeping your body working out and your metabolism elevated for as long as possible can help keep you in top shape. Build stronger bones: Lifting weights does more than just build muscle. Weightlifting also builds bone density. After menopause, women may lose up to 20 percent of their bone mass, and the United States Surgeon General estimates that, by 2020, half of all Americans could have weak bones due to bone loss. Women can look to weightlifting to help increase bone density and reduce their risk of fracture and osteoporosis. reduce risk for heart disease: Cardiovascular disease claims the lives of 5.6 million women worldwide each year. Women are more likely

to get heart disease than cancer. A study in The Journal of Strength and Conditioning found that women who lift weights are less likely to develop heart disease risk factors, such as large waist circumference, high triglycerides, hypertension, and elevated glucose levels. The American Heart Association lists weight training as a healthy form of exercise for those at risk for heart disease. combat back pain: Weight training can help strengthen the core muscles of the abdomen and back, which may help alleviate lower back pain. It’s important to use proper form when lifting weights to avoid exacerbating existing back pain or developing new injuries. Boost mood and combat depression: Lifting weights is not just good for the body, it’s also good for the mind. Women who strength train regularly can improve their feelings of well-being and may be able to reduce episodes of depression. A study from researchers at Harvard University found that 10 weeks of strength training was effective at reducing symptoms of clinical depression. relieve stress: Any form of exercise can help to relieve stress, but according to the 2009 study “Psychological Aspects of Resistance Training,” those who regularly strength train tend to manage stress better and experience fewer adverse reactions to stressful situations than those who do not exercise. Increase energy levels: Lifting weights can boost mind power and provide a long-term energy boost. Working out in the morning can be an especially effective way to maintain high energy levels throughout the day. Women should not shy away from lifting weights. In addition to creating a trimmer, healthier body, resistance training offers many other health benefits.


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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34 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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Why you should skip crunches (and what to do in their place) to sculpt impressive abs, but they may not be so effective at targeting the inner abdominal muscles that really lead to a strong core. It’s important to do exercises that also will target the transversus abdominus muscles, the innermost flat muscles of the abdomen.

A

bdominal crunches have long been a staple of many people’s workouts. Crunches have been credited with helping to reduce belly fat and sculpting the perfect midsection.

But sit-ups and crunches have never been the optimal exercises for developing strong abdominals. Each exercise requires more strength from the front of the abdomen than the side oblique muscles. This can cause a strength imbalance that may lead to back problems down the road. According to

research from San Diego State University, the traditional crunch is the least effective way to strengthen the rectus abdominus as well as the obliques.

Many people do not adhere to proper form when doing crunches. Performing crunches in an unsafe manner may lead to more than a few sore muscles, as it’s easy to slip a disc in the spine or pull muscles that result in problems that may not show up immediately. Crunches also can reinforce bad habits that can result in poor posture. Crunches may be one way

Several other exercises are more effective at working the core muscles without causing the back strain associated with crunches.

Planks: Planks help stabilize the core and require more muscle activation in the obliques than traditional crunches. Practicing this position also can help lower the risk of lower back pain because it targets the abdominals while putting no pressure on the spine. Planks require no specialized equipment. To perform a plank, hold your body in a pushup position while resting on bent forearms. Hold your body in a straight line and pull in your

stomach to create tension in the midsection. Keep the plank position for as long as possible. Vary the regular plank with side planks to target obliques. Leg raises: Leg raises isolate various ab muscles. You can raise legs only a few inches off the ground and hold or alternately lift the legs to a 90-degree angle and slowly lower. Experiment with different variations of leg raises, such as scissoring or rotating the feet, for even more resistance. Vertical crunches: Instead of lying on the floor to perform crunches, hang from your arms or hands on a pull-up bar to take pressure off of the spine. Get into the hanging position and then draw your knees up into the chest. Lower knees and repeat. An alternative is to lift the legs with legs extended instead of knees bent. Woodchoppers: This exercise puts your body in the same position it would be in if you

were chopping wood with an ax. It can be performed using a cable machine or a medicine ball. Begin by holding the ball or cable handle up high and with both hands, then pull down to the opposite side of the body while rotating your torso and pivoting hips in the direction of the turn. Repeat a few times and then switch to the other side of the body. Dragon flags: A dragon flag is essentially a leg lift in reverse. Made popular by martial arts master Bruce Lee, dragon flags start with men and women lying on a bench or the floor where they can grab onto something near their heads. Keep your shoulders and back planted to the bench. Slowly lift your legs in the air and then lower back down. Dragon flags require time and conditioning to master but can effectively sculpt abdominal muscles.

Locally Owned & Operated

ROSLYN: 1085 NORTHERN BLVD. (NEXT TO THE WILD FIG) 516-365-4066


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IS TREATMENT SAFE?

HOW DO PHAROS EX-308 EXCIMER LASERS WORK?

The PHAROS EX-308 excimer laser creates a concentrated, but painless, beam of ultraviolet light that is delivered to psoriatic plaques through a handpiece that rests directly on the skin. By precisely targeting only specific plaques without exposing healthy skin, the laser safely delivers high-dose treatment for fast clearing and long remission.

WHO IS A CANDIDATE FOR TREATMENT?

The laser 18 is ideal for treating mild to moderate psoriasis. Traditionally hard-to-treat areas such as knees, elbows, and scalp are easily treated, thanks to the laser’s aiming beam and adjustable spot size handpiece. The targeted high-dose therapy can effectively treat stubborn plaques, even those that have not responded to other treatments. Ask your doctor if laser treatment is right for you.

HOW DOES TREATMENT COMPARE WITH OTHER PSORIASIS TREATMENTS ?

Unlike topical creams, treatment with the laser does not require any daily maintenance. Each patient is unique, but many patients enjoy several months of treatment free remission after completing their laser sessions.

The laser may have fewer shortcomings than many common psoriasis treamtments. Due to the targeted nature of laser therapy, ultraviolet light exposure to the healthy skin in limited. This may reduce the risk of premature skin aging that is often associated with booth phototherapy. There is no thinning of the skin, easy bruising or stretchmarks often caused by steroids, nor any of the systemic side effects caused by some oral medications.

WHAT CAN I EXPECT DURING TREATMENT?

Treatment will take place in your doctor’s office. First, your doctor will determine the best dosage. level for you. then, the doctor will place the handpiece directly on the plaques and apply the laser therapy. You will hear a gentle hum and see a blue colored light from the handpiece tip. Most treatments take only a few minutes.

DOES THE TREATMENT HURT ?

No. Most patients experience no pain or discomfort. a few patients may feel slight warmth shortly after treatment. this warmth is mild and short-lived. No anesthesia is needed.

35

HOW MANY TREATMENT SESSIONS WILL I NEED?

Your doctor will create a customized course of therapy for you based upon the extent, thickness, and location of the lesions. Many patients enjoy clearing after 10 or fewer sessions.

HOW DO I PREPARE FOR TREATMENT?

No extensive preparation is required for laser therapy. Just ensure that the skin to be treated is clean dry, and free of any make-up, lotion, or creams containing SPF protection.

ARE THERE SIDE EFFECTS ?

the side effects of laser therapy are minimal. Most patients report no side effects. A few patients have reported a mild and short-lived redness at the lesion site. More serious side effects such as blistering and hyper-pigmentation are rare and short-lived.

ARE LASER TREATMENTS COVERED BY INSURANCE ?

Many national, state, and local insurance companies cover the laser treatment, but coverage levels will vary by plan. Talk to you doctor’s billing staff for details about your insurance coverage.

PHAROS EX-408 excimer laser treatments are painless and take only a few minutes. Equally important, many patents need only about 4 to 6 weeks of treatments, as opposed to 30 or more phototherapy booth sessions.

Helen S. Flamenbaum,

Helen S. Flamenbaum, MD

MD, FAAD Board Certified Dermatologist

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36 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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How to rediscover yourself ….

3 women made it their mission, and created the New Prism Med Spa in Roslyn. While Long Island is filled with spas and medical spas offering the usual medical aesthetical treatments, lasers, injectables, etc., not many have addressed the issue of aging well from the inside out. Three women, experts in the medical and medical aesthetics field, decided to change that. Dr. Maria Levada, Elizabeth Manessis and Katherine Sempecos knew the ‘Prism’ concept would shake things up, while offering a way for ‘Aging Well’. They were determined to help women and men regain their quality of life, vitality, and a youthful appearance. Dr. Maria Levada is an award winning physician, practicing for over 35 years in NY, as a Gynecologist and F.A.C.O.G. Dr. Levada is also a leading authority in Natural Bio Identical Hormone Replacement Therapy, treating both women and men’s hormone imbalances. Natural Bio-Identical Hormone Therapy is the key to maintaining and/or regaining hormone balance that ensures your overall health and wellbeing by maintaining good organ function, consistent muscle mass, healthy libido, tight and firm skin, and free of menopausal symptoms. This is key to securing a long, fulfilling life for years to come. Elizabeth’s Aesthetics and Laser expertise for over 15 years in the Long Island area has made her an expert in treating darker skin types for all skin conditions and problems. She has also been a leading consultant to many plastic surgeons and doctors in the NY area. Katherine Sempecos, also an Aesthetician and Medical Laser expert for over 20 years and brings her European antiaging expertise and exclusivities to Prism. Having owned her own med spa in Europe for over 15 years, Katherine introduces her unique and effective know how to the Long Island market, by introducing leading antiaging facials, body treatments, and laser skin rejuvenation therapies. Prism Med Spa specializes in everything that makes us “Age Well”, inside and out! Prism’s dream team offers their expertise, long term experience and latest European and U.S. technologies to customize each and every program, so that each client

PRISM is located in the heart of Roslyn at

41 Main Street, near the clock tower. Prism is open Mon to Friday 10am – 7pm and Saturdays from 10am to 5pm. VIP hours also available. Valet parking is also available. For Free Consultations, clients can call and book at 516-277-2293.


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38 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

Can beer

Protect Your Precious Eyesight

boost brain power?

HAVE YOU BEEN PUTTING OFF AN

EYE EXAM?

Many eye diseases have no early symptoms, but timely diagnosis and treatment are important to prevent vision loss. Our Board-certified ophthalmologists specialize in treating diseases of the retina, such as diabetic eye disease and macular degeneration.

• Evening and Saturday hours • Convenient location with ample parking • Most insurance plans accepted

516-739-5905 Mark Fleckner, M.D. • Gila Zilkha, M.D. • Andrew Brookner, M.D.

Professional eye care, with a personal touch 520 Franklin Avenue, Suite 123, Garden City, NY www.drmarkfleckner.com

Your Solution for True Health and Wellness Circuit Training, Personal Training

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Body Sculpting, Pilates, Yoga and Stretch and more! Studio size classroom with plenty of individualized attention.

With 8 Stations

Yoga 6:30pm Core Strength 5:30pm Stretch 8:00am Body Sculpt 4:45pm Zumba 9:40am Zumba Step 6:00pm Yoga 8:15am

Pilates 7:30pm TRX 6:30pm (co-ed class) Body Sculpt 8:30am TRX 6:00pm TRX 7:00pm (co-ed class) Cardio Sculpt 5:00pm Core Strength 7:00pm Pilates 9:30am

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A chemical component in beer hops has been shown to improve brain function in lab mice. It may one day help with age-relative cognitive decline.

• Immediate appointments for urgent problems

DON’T DELAY. CALL TODAY.

Mon. Tues. Wed. Wed. Thurs. Thurs. Sat.

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CHIROPRACTIC HEALTH Gail E. Stevens, D.C. Chiropractic / Nutrition Acupuncture & Massage Therapy

516-294-1100

166 East Jericho Tpke., Mineola. NY 11501

T

here is newfound reason to indulge in a pint or two of your favorite beer, and it’s not just to catch up and share a few laughs with friends. New research has shown that a chemical compound in beer may be able to improve cognitive function. The beverage once thought to obliterate brain cells when consumed in abundance may actually have the opposite effect and boost brain power. No one should run out an start imbibing just yet, however. The study that ran in Behavioral Brain Research in October 2014 was preliminary and only conducted on lab mice. During the study, scientists discovered that xanthohumol, a type of flavonoid found in beer, seemed to improve brain function in the young mice given xanthohumol doses. The cognitive flexibility of the mice was tested with a specially designed maze, and younger mice showed signs of intellectual improvement. Older mice showed no improvements. Researchers believe xanthohumol and other flavonoids, such as those found in red wine, blueberries and dark chocolate, may play a role in helping a person form memories. The mice were given very high doses of the flavonoid. A person would have to drink roughly 2,000 liters of beer a

day to equal what the mice consumed to show improvement. However, should a supplement hit the market down the road, it may just be possible for men and women to consume a potentially beneficial amount of xanthohumol without bellying up at the bar. One of the goals of the xanthohumol study was to examine its potential efficacy at treating age-related deficits in memory. Xanthohumol also may benefit those with metabolic syndrome, a condition associated with obesity and high blood pressure, as it can speed metabolism and reduce fatty acids in the liver. Flavonoids are plant compounds that often provide plants with their color. Scientists have attributed many health benefits to flavonoids in foods and plants and have even suggested flavonoids can help in the fight against cancer and heart disease. Xanthohumol is rare and is most often found in the hops commonly used to make beer. While doctors and researchers do not suggest running out and consuming a few six packs right now in the goal of improving brain function and cramming for that next test, xanthohumol may one day be harvested from beer hops to slow down age-related memory deficits.

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Massage Therapy Key to a Well-Balanced Lifestyle

Tension and stress are almost inevitable in our lives. While many people believe they occur from a change, conflict or illness, they fail to realize that life events can lead to these negative health issues. As these problems become more apparent, many individuals seek relief in the form of massage therapy. Massage therapy naturally relieves stress by lowering one’s heart rate and blood pressure while relaxing the muscles and improving circulation. Massage therapy also decreases the stress hormone cortisol, and allows the body to enter a relaxing state of rest and recovery. “This effect has been shown to linger long after the massage session is over. Beyond enhancing rest and relaxation, massage therapy can also help to provide muscle relief from aches and pains, and stimulate recovery from injury and overuse,” said John Lundgren, owner of Massage Envy Spa Lake Success. Whether muscle pain is caused from physical exercise or everyday activity, massage therapy uses a variety of techniques to relieve tension while increasing flexibility. These

techniques enable blood to flow through the overworked muscles, allowing them to receive oxygen and nutrients and to recover more quickly. Massage therapy also has several outcomes that go beyond the scope of just physical benefits, such as an improvement in overall mood, quality of sleep, and a strengthened immune system. “As members and guests of all ages experience the physical and emotional benefits of even a single massage therapy session, they realize massage therapy is about more than just relaxation,” added Lundgren. “’ME Time’ at Massage Envy Spa is a part of a more balanced lifestyle.” Massage Envy Spa is located in the Lake Success Shopping Center at 1476 Union Turnpike in New Hyde Park. It offers customized massage therapy and Murad® Healthy Skin facials performed by professional, licensed massage therapists and estheticians to guarantee the highest level of quality and care. Late night and weekend hours ensure that everyone can make time for rest and relaxation. To schedule an appointment today, call (516) 673-4278.

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How to cope A

with an athletic injury

Working together with a trainer or physical therapist to set realistic recovery goals is one way for athletes to successfully cope with injury.

s any professional athlete can attest, even the most athletic and physically fit individuals can suffer an injury. Professional athletes typically have highly trained medical personnel at their disposal as they recover from injury, but men and women who don’t draw a paycheck for their athletic exploits have no such luxury, making it far more difficult to recover from and cope with injury. Each individual body responds to injury in different ways. For example, one person may heal from a hamstring injury in as little as a few weeks, while others must endure a healing process that lasts several months. But no matter how different athletes’ bodies may be, there are coping mechanisms every athlete can employ to help deal with the mental toll that injuries can take. Stay involved. Athletes who train heavily and devote much of their free time to pursuing their sport of choice may feel as though their world has come crashing down when they suffer an injury. But even if you cannot compete, you can still stay involved in your sport. If you are physically capable, offer to volunteer at sanctioned events, which can help you maintain a connection with your sport and keep abreast of the happenings within that community. If your injury is so limiting that active volunteering is nearly impossible, you can still attend events and then blog about them afterward. The important thing is to recognize that, while an injury may prevent you from competing, you can still find other ways to stay involved. Set realistic recovery goals. Many athletes begin physical therapy or their rehabilitation

processes with a gung-ho attitude, insisting they will return from injury stronger than they were before. While that’s a great attitude, it’s important that athletes temper their enthusiasm for recovery with a dose of reality. Recovery is not overnight, and even the most elite athletes, many of whom are accustomed to their bodies responding in the way they want them to respond, can be discouraged if they enter the rehabilitation process with unrealistic expectations. Work with your physical therapist, physician or trainer to establish realistic recovery goals, using your enthusiasm to meet your short- and long-term recovery goals. Be flexible when setting your recovery goals, as you never know how your body will respond to treatment. Expect setbacks. Setbacks are an unfortunate reality of recovery for many athletes. Don’t allow yourself to become discouraged if a goal can’t be met because your body is simply not ready or needs to pause in its recovery process. A setback can be frustrating, but you can cope with setbacks by writing about them, be it on a blog or in a personal journal. Many athletes have found that writing down their feelings is an effective way to deal with the frustration of the recovery process. Keeping a journal or recovery blog can also help you cope with any future setbacks down the road, as you can look back and see what did or did not help you deal with past obstacles. Athletic injuries can be thorns in the sides of committed athletes, who may or may not know what to do with themselves when sidelined with significant injuries. But there are various ways for athletes to cope with injuries and make the recovery process less frustrating.

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Though laughter is often referred to as “the best medicine,” no definitive study has been conducted to determine the effects of laughter on overall human health, leaving open the possibility that maintaining a good sense of humor and a positive attitude are just as important, if not more important, than finding time to laugh each day. But even if

laughter is not medicinal, its benefits can mimic those of exercise. When a person laughs, his or her pulse and blood pressure increase, and people tend to breathe faster when they laugh. Faster breathing sends more oxygen to the tissues, which can help the heart and lungs work more efficiently. In addition, a Vanderbilt University study found that between 10 and 15 minutes of laughter can burn as many as 50 calories. Finding time to laugh may also indirectly improve the body’s immune system response, as studies have suggested that infection-fighting antibodies might be more abundant in people who can use humor to combat stress.

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The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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See, Zofolk advance to ‘Big Break’ finals B y K ar e n R ubin The winners of the second semifinal of the Third Annual “Your Big Break” showcase series presented by Love Revolution Org and the Gold Coast Acoustic Cafe at the Gold Coast Arts Center are singer-songwriter See (first place) and the band Zofolk. They will join Annika and Emily Lutz in the finals on Saturday, April 18. See is a 19 year old singer/songwriter from Long Island. This past May she released her debut EP “The Time Thief.” which features seven original songs all written, recorded, mixed, and mastered on her own. She is currently writing and recording for her next EP which will be released in the spring of 2015. Zofolk was formed at Rock-n-Roll University during the spring of 2014 and has performed at venues including the Nassau Coliseum, The Hub in Island Park, Tattoo Lou’s Annual Poker Run and Easter Seals Drive and at The Cradle of Aviation. Zofolk has also performed for Breathe for Britt Foundation which benefits Long Island children and teens affected by cystic fibrosis. The evening’s event also included the band Sir Cadian Rhythm, and singers Jaclyn Manfredi and Samantha Daniels. Winners of “Your Big Break” win prizes intended to give them a leg up in their music career. In addition to performing in front of the judges who are influential in the music industry, the winner gets a chance to open for national acts at major venues like The Space at Westbury/Bruce Michael (judge), recording time at The Loft Sound Studio w/Donnie Klang (who is one of the judges) and Matthew LaPorte (judge) who are offering a one song demo recording to the winner, a feature at Reverbnation.com/Lou Plaia (judge), Online TV streaming opportunities on IndiMusic TV with Chris Pati (judge), musical equipment from All Music Inc and Guy Brogna (judge), mentoring at Five Towns College with Linda

Ingrisano (judge), plus a photo shoot by Image Photographers and Neil Tandy, a video shoot with Kevin Wood Media, a publicity and promotion campaign with Rick Eberle Public Relations, radio appearances on WCWP and WUSB. “All the things you need to get started on your musical journey,” said Rick Eberle, a veteran of Arista Records, member of the band “Iridesense,” an entertainment manager and publicist, and the organizer of the Big Break event. The featured performers for the night, the Brady Brothers - who were accompanied by a large contingent of fans - won notoriety when they were in the first Big Break competition, performing with the band Doink. There is a new twist this year as there will also be mentors assigned to the finalists once they have been chosen after the second semifinal. The mentors will work with the artists to help them hone their craft before performing at the finals. Mentors are Long Island based hit makers Ryan Star (Top 10 Single “Stay a While”, TV on Rockstar Supernova), John Hampson (Nine Days top 5 hit “Story of A Girl”), Ido Zmishlany (current hit for Shawn Mendes “Life of the Party”) and Steve Thompson (producer for John Lennon, Guns N Roses, Madonna, 2014 LIMHOF inductee). An open call for submissions for all musicians age 15 to 25 back in December resulted in more than 1,000 submissions, from which the semifinalists were selected. To be eligible, the performer could not currently have a recording or publishing contract to submit for the showcase events; interested artists must perform with a band or solo with an acoustic guitar or sing to a backing music track. The Gold Coast Arts Center is located at 113 Middle Neck Road in Great Neck. For more information about the event, call 516829-2570, visit www.goldcoastarts.org, or email gnacbigbreak@gmail.com

Adelphi to present ‘Swingtime!’ concert Adelphi University’s Performing Arts Center will present Swingtime! featuring the internationally renowned Jive Aces, with special guests The Tinseltown Jitterbugs and Hollywood vocalist Makinna Ridgway on Sunday, March 29, at 3 p.m. on the Westerman Stage of the Concert Hall, One South Avenue, Garden City. Direct from London, The Jive Aces are known for their superb musicianship, high energy, original songs, and fresh arrangements of swing/jive/R&B classics by such greats as Louis Prima, Cab Calloway, Bobby Darin, Louis Armstrong, Dean Martin and Sammy Davis, Jr. Having become the first-ever band to reach the semi-finals of Britain’s Got Talent in 2012, following up with a performance for Queen Elizabeth as part of the Diamond Jubilee celebrations and performances for the

Olympic and Paralympic celebrations, The Jive Aces have established themselves as one of the UK’s top jive and swing bands. Together for more than a decade, The Jive Aces have worked with many of the top names in show business, including John Travolta, Isaac Hayes, Van Morrison, Count Basie Orchestra, Keely Smith, Priscilla Presley, Chuck Berry and more. This popular group has performed at thousands of festivals, theatres and events throughout the UK, Europe and the U.S., as well as Japan, Israel, South Africa, Morocco and the Caribbean. The group has been featured on hundreds of TV and radio shows, including appearances on CNN, ABC’s Good Morning Los Angeles, BBC Radio 2, NBC’s Holy Smoke, BBC 1 TV and more. They have released seven studio albums, one dance compilation and also a skiffle E.P.

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Holy Week Calendar PALM SUNDAY, MARCH 29TH WORSHIP AT 10:00 AM DISTRIBUTION OF THE PALMS HOLY THURSDAY, APRIL 2ND HOLY COMMUNION 11:30AM AND 7:30PM GOOD FRIDAY, APRIL 3RD 12 NOON AND 7:30PM

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Performance to promote autism awareness The Long Island Children’s Museum will kick off Autism Awareness Month with sensory-friendly performances of the Experiential Theater Company’s “The Adventures of Perseus.” Evening performances on Wednesday, April 1 and Thursday, April 2, 2015 (World Autism Day) will be reserved exclusively for families with children on the autism spectrum and with other sensory sensitivities. Performances are made possible with the support of the National Endowment for the Arts. Long Island Children’s Museum Theatre is part of a select group of theaters and organizations across the nation that provides barrier-free theater for families with children on the autism spectrum. The Theater Development Fund (TDF) has been at the vanguard of these efforts since 2011 with dedicated performances of popular productions including “The Lion King,” “Mary Poppins,” “Spiderman” and “Matilda The Musical” on Broadway. This production of “The Adventures of Perseus” follows the guidelines established by TDF’s Autism Theatre Initiative and was developed with input from Linda Eisen, Education Administrator of ACLD (Adults and Children with Learning and Developmental Disabilities) Kramer Learning Center. In explaining the importance of this initiative, LICM President Suzanne LeBlanc notes, “The LICM Theater plays a vital role in the Museum’s educational mission by developing children’s imagination, improving language skills and bringing history, science

and literature to life.” It is important, she adds, that these experiences … and benefits be accessible to all families on Long Island. “Many families with children on the spectrum have told us they are hesitant to bring their children to any type of theater experience because they risk being judged. We want these families to experience the joy of the performing arts in a setting that is supportive, comfortable and convenient.” What makes a performance sensory-friendly? Lower sound levels, especially for startling or loud sounds Guests are free to talk, leave their seats and move freely during the performance House lights in the theater are left on low throughout the performance Designated Quiet Room adjacent to the Theater Trained staff and volunteers Judgment-free environment, welcoming to all In conjunction with the production, LICM will provide various resources to ensure that families are comfortable to enjoy the production and their trip to the Museum, including: Downloadable Social Script Seat selection Take-home, themed “fidgets” presented in Theater These accommodations and resources were used successfully in 2014 when LICM launched sensory-friendly programming with the presentation of “Aesop’s Fables.”

Production Background: The Adventures of Perseus Originally created at the McCarter Theatre Center, The Adventures of Perseus is a dynamic production that explores the use of puppetry in storytelling while introducing children to characters from Greek legends. The pre- and post-show workshops focus on the forms of puppetry used, including hand and rod, shadow and Bunraku-style puppets and marionettes. Advanced ticketing is suggested and may be purchased online at licm.org/sensory. Tickets are priced at $9 per person ($7 LICM members). The production is recommended for children ages nine and up. About Experiential Theater Company Under the direction of Christopher Parks, the Experiential Theater Company is dedicated to creating high quality theater opportunities for young audiences. While at the McCarter Theatre Center, Parks and some associates pioneered the interactive style which has become its namesake. About the Long Island Children’s Museum The Long Island Children’s Museum invites visitors of all ages, backgrounds, and abilities to explore freely, discover their passions, and appreciate the communities and world we share. The 40,000-square-foot museum is a learning laboratory where handson exhibits invite visitors to experiment, examine, and play. The Museum welcomes 250,000 children and adults annually. The private, not-for-profit institution chartered by the New York State Board of Regents, of-

fers museum-based educational programs and cultural experiences, as well as an extensive community outreach program offered in schools, libraries and youth centers across Long Island. The Museum is the recipient of the 2012 National Medal for Museum & Library Service, the highest honor conferred on museums for extraordinary civic, educational, economic, environmental, and social contributions. The Children’s Museum takes seriously its role as an introductory setting to launch a child’s lifelong interest in the performing arts. Presentation of the performing arts has played a central role within the diverse range of educational experiences provided by the Museum since it opened in 1993. The LICM Theater presents an active, year- round schedule of interactive multimedia performances featuring locally, regionally, nationally and internationally acclaimed groups.

EXPERIENtial Theater Company takes audience members on a journey through Greek myths when LICM Theater hosts two Sensory-Friendly performances of “The Adventures of Perseus.”

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Community Calendar Project Independence Care Giver Support Group Learn new ways of coping with demands of care giving and gain a better understanding of your relationship with your loved one (over age 60). Meetings take place on the first and third Thursday of each month from 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Located at 80 Manorhaven Blvd., Port Washington. Registration required. Please call 311 or (516) 869-6311 to register for the presentation or for more information.

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FREE LEGAL CONSULTATION CLINIC FOR SENIOR CITIZENS The Nassau County Bar Association provides free monthly legal consultation clinics for Nassau County residents 65 or older. Seniors have the opportunity to meet oneon-one with an attorney who volunteers to provide a half-hour private consultation on any topic of concern. The next Senior Citizen Free Legal Consultation Clinic will be held Tuesday, April 21, 9:30 to 11 a.m. at NCBA, 15th and West Streets, Mineola. This popular free program regularly fills up quickly. Registration is required by calling (516) 747-4070. SMALL BUSINESS SEMINAR A free public seminar presented by the Nassau County Bar Association, “What You Need to Know Before You Start Your Small Business,” will be held on Monday, March 30, from 6:30 to 8 p.m., at NCBA, 15th Street on the corner of West Street, Mineola. Seasoned attorneys, bankers and accountants will be on hand to clarify the benefits of various com-

pany formations, what documents are needed and where to file them, and how to raise capital. Leasing space, insurance, payroll and basic employee policies and laws will also be discussed. Speakers include attorneys Reena Gulati of Reena Gulati PLLC, Heather Harrison from Farrell Fritz, Robert Thee from Gettry Marcus, and Bank Business Manager Ken Altman. Co-chairing the program are Deborah Kaminetzky, a West Hempstead attorney, and Michael Schoenberg of Farrell Fritz, Uniondale. Reservations are requested for this free program. Just call the Nassau County Bar Association at (516) 747-4070 or email ckatz@ nassaubar.org

FOR TRIVIA LOVERS At 7 p.m. Two Wednesday nights each month at Page One Restaurant, 90 School St. Glen Cove. Call (516) 625-8804 for information. Singles Association of Long Island For information on events, please call (516) 825-0633 or (516) 333-2851 or e-mail singlesassociationofli@yahoo.com. YOUR WIDOWED SOCIAL GROUP The group meets on the third Wednesday of the each month (except July and August) from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. at St. Joseph’s R.C. Church on Franklin Ave. and Fifth Street, Garden City. There is a $5 fee for members and a $8 fee for non-members. For additional information, please call (516) 481-9280.


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Bryant Library Library Budget Hearing The Bryant Library 2015/2016 Budget Hearing will take place on Monday, April 20, 8 p.m. in the Helen Glannon Room of the Library. The regularly scheduled Board meeting will start at 7:30 p.m. All are invited to attend. Make A Difference At Your Library: Be A Candidate For Trustee In November 2015, two Trustees will be elected to the seven-member Bryant Library Board. The Nominating Committee is seeking well-rounded, energetic applicants who can assist the Board of Trustees with the many challenges the Library will be facing in the next several years. Board members are responsible for: *Developing long-term library policy *Assuring sound fiscal management *Serving as liaison between the community and the Library To be eligible to be a trustee applicant, you must be a member of The Bryant Library Association. All residents of the Roslyn School District, 18 and older, are automatically members of the Association. An information packet, including Bryant Library

history, its services, its governing bylaws, and the duties of trustees will be available at the Reference Desk or online. To be a candidate for trustee, please fill out the application which will be available at the Library for the month of April. Please send a cover letter and resume between April 1 and April 30, to: The Bryant Library Association Nominating Committee 2 Paper Mill Road, Roslyn, New York 11576-2193 The Nominating Committee will meet after the April deadline to review resumes, interview the applicants, and select the two candidates whose qualifications most closely meet the needs of the governing board. Nominations may also be made by petition. Bryant Library Main Floor Showcase There is still time to see the showcase exhibit by Bert Kraus Artist, Collector, Curator. “I have been an artist and collector my whole life. Illustrator, painter, photographer. Collector, collector of very cool things, folk art, western art, Americana, primitive toys, etc. In my collecting and creating, I

enjoy finding objects to enhance my artwork. My watercolor of a cowboy and his horse, shown with a 1940’s western cowboy hat, next to a 1950’s wood carving of a cowboy on his horse, becomes a total grouping and complete art statement. A 1920’s tin roadster, accompanied by my photographs of rusty gold tin roadsters, becomes alive by embellishing the car itself. A 1900 Eagle weathervane, standing next to a detailed drawing of that same eagle, gives the weathervane yet another dimension.” The exhibit will be up through April at The Bryant Library. Concerts Masks: A Piano Recital by Mirna Lekic Sunday, April 26, 2:30 p.m. The program features works by Debussy, Martinu, Muczynski and Villa-Lobos, and focuses on pieces that embrace a fantasy world populated by various ‘masked’ characters, including puppets, dolls, and Commedia dell’arte figures. Praised for her “intelligent and sincere pianism,” and for “eliciting [music’s] haunting poetry,” Mirna has performed in the

United States, Canada and Europe, at venues including Carnegie Hall, Symphony Space, World Trade Center, Chicago Cultural Center and St. Martin-In-The-Fields in London. A recipient of the NYFA Artist Grant, Artists International Special Presentation Award (New York debut), and City University of New York Music Fellowship, she serves on the faculty of Queensborough Community College, CUNY. Lectures and Workshops Are There More SEALs in Romance Novels Than in the US Navy? Lecture by Mary K. Chelton, Ph. D. Tuesday, April 21 Mary K. Chelton, Ph.D., Rutgers University. Dr. Chelton characterizes herself as an advocate for various neglected and stigmatized categories of library users such as teenagers, adoption searchers, genre fiction readers in general and romance readers in particular, of which she is pleased to be one (favorite authors are Nora Roberts, Suzanne Brockmann and M. L Buchman). She is co-founder of Voice of Youth Advocates journal and has published over 60

articles in library literature. She has 20+ years experience as a public librarian. She is also a winner of ALA’s prestigious Grolier Award for outstanding work with young people, and the Romance Writers of America’s first ever Librarian of the Year. A Maryland native, Chelton now lives in Suffolk County with three dogs, all Vizslas. She is vice-president of the Vizsla Club of Long Island. She is also an official member of the So You Think You Can Dance fan club, an avid romance and thriller reader, and a passionate collector of Northwest Indian art prints and carvings, and Hmong textiles. Leonardo da Vinci: New Discoveries Presented by Thomas Germano Thursday, April 23, 1 p.m. This lecture explores new attributions associated with the great Renaissance master, Leonardo da Vinci. Several major exhibitions, significant restorations, new discoveries and the hunt for a lost masterpiece in the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence are part of the discussion in this lecture presenting new insights on one of the greatest artists and polymaths in the his-

tory of art. Significant evidence pointing to the involvement by the hand of Leonardo has been presented in recent curatorial exhibitions, scholarly journals and international symposiums over the past four years. With scientific analyses and Leonardo specialists backing up these claims, it is necessary to take many of the recent attributions quite seriously. Professor Thomas Germano will discuss the most recent insights, new discoveries, news and exhibitions related to the great master, Leonardo da Vinci. Included in the talk are several recent exhibitions, related scholarship, publications and the search for the lost mural “The Battle of Anghiari”, “The Portrait of La Bella Principessa (Bianca Sforza)”, ‘Salvator Mundi”, Verrochio’s Florentine Baptistry font, the Louvre’s restored “Virgin, Child and St. Anne”, the National Gallery’s restored “Virgin of the Rocks”, The Prado’s recently cleaned “Mona Lisa”, the Swiss Bank Vault “Mona Lisa” and the issues identifying Leonardo versus ‘Leonardesque.’ Lastly, the very recent “Isabella D’Este” painting will be discussed.

Shelter Rock Library MUSEUM PASSES @ SRPL Shelter Rock Public Library cardholders can reserve a Museum Pass online for free admission to a variety of museums and gardens on Long Island and in New York City. Go to www.srpl.org and pull down the Library Services Menu then go to Museum Passes. Click the Reserve Now link and look for the red Request Pass button to see if the Museum Pass is available. Your library card must be in good standing. Advance reservations will be accepted for the next 60 days (one Reservation per family every 30 days). SHELTER ROCK PATRONS MAY RESERVE PASSES FOR: American Airpower Museum • Children’s Museum of Manhattan •

Cold Spring Harbor Fish Hatchery • Cradle of Aviation • Garvies Point • Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum • Long Island Children’s Museum • Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) • Nassau County Firefighter’s Museum • Nassau County Museum of Art • New York Botanical Garden • New York Historical Society and Library & Dimenna Children’s History Museum Nassau County Executive Edward P. Mangano announced today that in cooperation with the Shelter Rock Public Library, the Nassau County Offices for the Aging and Mental Health are coordinating a support group that is specifically targeted to respond to the needs

of caregivers of older persons. The group is led by Dora Lupo, LMHC, MAC, CASAC, Support Group Facilitator. Meetings will be held on the third Tuesday of each month from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. at the Shelter Rock Public Library, located at 165 Searingtown Road, Albertson. The meetings are open to residents of Nassau County. This support group will provide an opportunity for participants to share experiences and to help one another. Persons interested in attending for the first time, or in need of additional information, please call (516) 227-8725.

programs

HOPEFUL SINGLES for ages 55 plus with Marla Matthews, TV Host. Wednesdays at 3 p.m. March 25. Life is unpredictable, there are no guarantees and change is always happening. With new friends and inspirational guidance, compassion and support, your journey can be easier!! Be part of this group of single adults 55 plus to find hope for your future. A

YOUNG ADULT

TEEN AND TWEEN VIDEO and Board Game Program Friday, March 27 from 4:30 to 5:45 p.m. Teens in Grades 7 to 12 will assist Grades 5 to 6

in playing popular Wii video games and board games and enjoy refreshments. Registration begins on March 12.

CHILDREN TODDLER STORYTIMES Designed for toddlers 2 – 3 1⁄2 with a parent or caregiver as a program of stories, simple songs, fingerplays and rhymes with other toddlers and their parents. Children must be two by April 1, 2015. Registration begins Monday, March 16. Choose one of the following sessions: Tuesdays, April 14 – May 19, 10:15 a.m. Wednesdays, April 15 – May 20, 11:15 a.m.

Thursdays, April 16 – May 22, 10:15 a.m. PRESCHOOL STORYTIMES Designed for children ages 3 – 5, this is a program of stories, simple songs, fingerplays and rhymes with other preschoolers. Children must be three by April 1, 2015. Registration begins Monday, March 16. Choose one of the following sessions: Tuesdays, April 14 – May 19, 1:30 p.m. Fridays, April 17 – May 22, 10:15 a.m. SPRING BOOK CHATS GRADE K & 1 Thursday, April 16 at 4:15 p.m. Scaredy Squirrel Has a Birthday Party by Melanie Continued on Page 49


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Community Calendar Tuesday night bingo Veterans of Foreign Wars Post #5253 will host bingo on Tuesday nights from 7 to 11 p.m. The top prize is $1,500 with additional cash prizes totaling $1,700. Admission is $4 at the post, which is located at 155 Searingtown Road. TEMPLE JUDEA SINGLES After Passover Cabaret Night, Monday, April 13 at 7 p.m. Enjoy an exciting Après Passover evening with Temple Judea Singles featuring a wonderful cabaret journey of music from the Doo Wop era through today’s hits, by a well known professional guitarist - vocalist / entertainer. Sample delicious latkes and crudités before and after the show along with wine, sodas, desserts, coffee and plenty of time to meet other singles. A $25 raffle prize Join other singles and bring your friends for this

wonderful event at beautiful Temple Judea,333 Searingtown Road, Manhasset. Donation is $12 LOW-IMPACT EXERCISE Glen Cove Hospital will offer a free, weekly class for people with arthritis starting Wednesday, April 16, from 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. in the hospital’s 1 South Dining Room, 101 St. Andrew’s Lane, Glen Cove. The class will be taught by Merav deGuzman, the hospital’s recreational therapy supervisor. The low-impact exercises are designed to reduce joint pain and decrease stiffness. The program is open to the community. For more information and to reserve a place, call (516) 674-7696. ZUMBA FITNESS Classes will be held at Shelter Rock Jewish Center 272 Shelter Rock Rd., Sunday at 10 am: March 29. All classes are $10 per session

and held in the lower level auditorium. Classes taught by Debby Snider, licensed Zumba Fitness and Toning instructor. ZUMBA TONING (Using light handheld weights) will be held at Shelter Rock Jewish Center on Tuesday and Thursday evenings at 7 p.m. March 31. All classes are $10 per session and held in the lower level auditorium. Classes taught by Debby Snider, licensed Zumba Fitness and Toning instructor. ACBL BRIDGE ACBL sanctioned Bridge games take place in the Nursery School Atrium every Wednesday evening at 7 p.m. and Thursday afternoon at 12:30 p.m. in the main building at Shelter Rock Jewish Center, 272 Shelter Rock Rd., Roslyn. Call (917) 658-5991 to make a reservation.

Shelter Rock Library Continued from Page 48 Watt Scaredy Squirrel is planning his own birthday party for one, but despite his detailed plans, things get out of control when the party animals arrive. Registration begins Thursday, March 26. GRADES 4 & 5 Thursday, May 14 at 4:15 p.m. Mistakes Were Made: Timmy Failure Book One by Stephen Pastis. Meet Timmy Failure, the founder, president and CEO of the best detective agency in town, probably the na-

tion and his lazy sidekick, Total, a 1,500-pound polar bear. Registration begins Wednesday, April 23. PLAYHOORAY KIDS Families with children ages 2 – 4 years are invited to participate in a fun-filled program of music and movement. Monday, April 13 at 10:30 a.m. Registration begins Monday, March 30. FUN on the FARM (A TIME FOR KIDS) Families with children ages 2 1⁄2 – 5 years are invited to participate in a program

of songs and stories with a craft. Friday, March 27 at 10:30 a.m. 30 in 30 Children in grades 3 -5 read 30 minutes for 30 days in April and join us for a special Pizza Party! Pick up your log sheet in the Children’s Room starting March 20. You may read whatever you like as long as you read 30 minutes each day in April. Be ready to discuss your favorite books at the pizza party! Friday, May 1 at 4 p.m.

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G RCEOAt M MNUENCI K t ys C NH EO WOsL s

County Medical Marvels program tackles mental health seeking volunteers The Nassau County Department of Health is seeking volunteers to take part in a public health emergency preparedness Point of Dispensing (POD) exercise on Wednesday, April 22 from 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. at LIU Post, Pratt Recreation Center, 720 Northern Blvd. Brookville. The mission of this exercise is to test the Department’s operational plans for mass distribution of medications during a public health emergency. This exercise also seeks to familiarize the public with a POD and the important role of public health emergency preparedness in protecting the public from events such as a large-scale disease outbreak or bioterrorism attack. Interested volunteers may pre-register at www.health.state. ny.us/go2clinic or obtain additional information by contacting the Nassau County Department of Health, Office of Public Health Emergency Preparedness at (516) 227-9652.

In its third year, the North Shore-LIJ Health System Medical Marvels program had more than 200 Long Island students from 24 schools who presented mental health solutions for various issues teenagers face. Awards were given for research papers on March 13 at the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research. The first place winners, one of Jericho High School’s teams, won $1,800; Commack High School’s second place team received $1,000 and Comsewogue High School’s third place team got $500. Additional prizes were given for presentations. “This whole process – from researching a topic to presenting a poster to professionals, and working as a team – is educational for the students and provides them with an invaluable experience,” said Cheryl Davidson, director of the North Shore-LIJ Center for Workforce Readiness. “We appreciate all the hard work and schools’ participation in this year’s competition and look forward to next year.” The Medical Marvels program was created by the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research and North Shore-LIJ Health System’s Center for Workforce Readiness in 2013. Students from Nassau and Suffolk County New York State-accredited schools participate in teams of between three and six students. Schools can have a maximum of two teams. This year’s program doubled compared to last year and workshops and presentations enhanced the educational

The 2015 North Shore-LIJ Medical Marvels first place team from Jericho High School with Joseph Moscola, chief human resources officer for the North Shore-LIJ Health System. experience. Participating high school this year included: Baldwin High School, East Islip High School, The Wheatley School, John Glenn High School, Farmingdale High School, Hauppauge High School, Hicksville Public Schools, John F. Kennedy High School, Lindenhurst High School, Gen. Douglas MacArthur High School, Mass-

apequa High School, Mineola High School, New Hyde Park Memorial High School, Sacred Heart Academy, Schreiber High School, Syosset Hospital and Walt Whitman High School. For more information about the Medical Marvels program, contact Cheryl Davidson at (516) 472-6071.

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Winter at the Herricks Leisure Club B y D orothy D aly An unrelenting winter engulfed us and became the focus of the lives of the members of the Herricks Leisure Club. We stepped gingerly on icy paths and bundled up against fierce winds and nearzero temperatures. But we were also enchanted by the soft beauty of each round of new fallen snow and the silence of a whitened wonderland. However, we are even more delighted by the approach of spring. As our days defrost, we reflect on the events our club provided despite the inclement weather. Our monthly jaunt to Yonkers Casino was enjoyed on January 14. An informative presentation was afforded us the next day when we were visited by Officers Galvin, Espinosa and Sean McCarthy from the Third Precinct who briefed us on the workings of the Burglary Prevention Service and its response to a rash of recent break-ins. A most exhilarating assembly took place on January 22 when we surprised our Director Frances Kivatisky with a party celebrating her 90th birthday. Accolades and love were showered upon our beloved Coordinator by ninety-eight members and our guests Supervisor Judi Bosworth, Councilman Peter Zuckerman, Commissioner Kimberly Galante and the Herricks office staff. Kudos to Helene Picchiello and Terry Lanese for arranging a savory turkey box lunch, elaborate pink décor and fabulous birthday cake. A fitting tribute to a special lady! On January 29, Mrs. Kivatisky dubbed the 50 of us who attended despite the snow a “hardy bunch”. President Lillian Ciesluk read a heartfelt thank you note from Frances and Legislative Chairlady Tess Fiorentino remarked that at least we did not lose power during the storm. The

‘blithe spirits” of our group revisited the Empire Casino on February 4 for a stimulating gaming experience. Another pleasurable session occurred on the fifth when we were treated to a captivating performance by the Center Street students in their musical ode to summer camp. We incurred a “snow day” on February 12 as well as the President’s Day closure on the nineteenth. However, a most convivial outing on Friday the thirteenth took the seniors of our group who were married fifty years to a delectable Valentine luncheon and renewal of vows at Harbor Links sponsored by the Town of North Hempstead. Our return to meetings on February 26 proved to be a joyous occasion. We indulged in a timely and delicious offering of Irish soda bread with all the trimmings prepared by Peg and David Monfort which was followed by jumbo apple turnovers courtesy of Martha Harris. How fortunate we are that our club boasts such generous and thoughtful members. We also heard from our guest, Irene Eng of St. John’s University, who dispersed data on diets. Once again, snow precluded a meeting on March 5 but we rebounded on March 11 with an exciting trip to the Yonkers Casino and on March 12 which featured a catered corned beef and cabbage feast in celebration of St. Patrick’s Day. The “wearin o’ the green” and the luck of the Irish prevailed for we were finally blest with a snowless meeting day! We extend our thanks to Tess Firoentino and Marie Rallo for chairing this “top o’ the morning” event. Obviously, the members of the Herricks Leisure Club were able to overcome the challenges of an unrelenting winter and now delight in the prospect of a new season “springing up” in our golden years.

From left: Jeanette Kovalsky, Lillian Ciesluk, Tess Fiorentino, Frances Kivatisky, and Terry Lanese celebrating Mrs. Kivatisky’s birthday.

From left: Coucilman Peter Zuckerman, Supervisor Judi Bosworth, Jeanette Kovalsky, Commissioner Kimberly Galante, Tess Fiorentino, Gia Montalbano and Terry Lanese congratulating Mrs. Kivatisky.

Mineola introduces $89.4 million school budget B Y J a m e s G allo w ay Mineola School District officials last week presented the first draft of the district’s 2015-16 budget, which looks to maintain all current programming, expand certain curriculum and hire more math teachers, while remaining below the tax cap. The $89.4 million recommended budget marks an increase of 1.84 percent, or $1.6 million, over the current year’s budget. Superintendent Michael Nagler said at the Mineola’s board meeting that the district would add 4.5 math teaching positions, mostly in middle school and high school, in part by using money saved by eight teachers retiring at high-tier salaries. “When you have eight retirees at higher salaries, we’re able to hire those four additional teachers really with not

much increase in the budget this year,” Nagler said. “What will be important is for us to balance that going forward because those new teachers will get more money in the future.” The district would also increase math offerings at the high school and increase the amount of time seventh graders spend in math class, Nagler said at the presentation. The shift in seventh grade instruction stems in part from the district’s past decision to teach regents algebra, typically a non-advanced ninth-grade class, in eighth grade in order to prepare students to pass trigonometry later in high school, Nagler said. “We’re trying to get every student through trigonometry. Trigonometry and chemistry are kind of the gatekeepers to college,” he said. “In order to do that we’ve started algebra in the eighth grade.”

He said that in the past, the district had tried splitting trigonometry into two years, but that “what we found success with is doubling the time” students spend in class. Beginning next year, the district would provide seventh grade students with one to two full periods of math per day, based on the student’s needs. “Those are hard subjects, so sometimes children need a little more time,” Nagler said. The budget would also fund several capital projects and increase hands-on science lab for grades kindergarten to second grade. “I think it’s important every child gets the same experience in terms of science labs,” Nagler said. Mineola Board of Education President Artie Barnett said that in 2015-16 the district looks to enhance programs while maintaining sound fiscal practices,

including the district’s pay-as-you-go policy. “Our overall goals are to maintain all programs and to enhance them… and also save for future needs - which I assure you keep on coming,” Barnett said. Like all districts in New York, Mineola is benefitting from a significant drop in employer pension contribution rates, which had ballooned in recent years. Barnett said that the district for this year has a particular focus on STEAM subjects: science, technology, engineering, art and math. “We want to ramp up robotics; we want to ramp up coding classwork,” Barnett said. “We’re not leaving anyone behind, but we’re certainly taking [STEAM programs] to the next level at the high school.” The final budget proposal be voted on by the board on April 23 and will go before voters in May.


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EWSD budget workshops continue Upcoming Budget Meetings and Vote Additional budget meetings are scheduled for: • Monday, March 30 – 7:30 PM - Final Budget Deliberations and Special Meeting for the purpose of Adoption of Budget & Property Tax Card - in Wheatley Room 450 • Monday, May 11 – 7:30 PM - Public Budget Hearing - in the Wheatley Auditorium • Tuesday, May 19 – 7:00 AM – 9:00 PM – in the Wheatley Gymnasium Budget Update At the March 19 Budget Workshop the Board of Education held a line-by-line review of the budget. The Board and public had the opportunity to ask questions regarding individual budget lines to obtain further information. At next Wednesday’s Budget Workshop, the Board will begin their deliberations on the budget and will also review what is called the “trace” document which keeps tracks of any additions, deletions or changes that may have been made to the recommended budget throughout this budget workshop process. The recommended budget maintains our class sizes and current programs and adds staff in reading, math and English as a New Language support, as well as funding the second year of our new Project Lead the Way Engineering program, among other initiatives. A Click Away You should have received an email invitation to the PTO Coordinating Council Districtwide Grant Dinner this week. I just secured my tickets with basically just a click of the keyboard. If you go to the following link, you can order and pay for your tickets right now, online. The Districtwide Grant Dinner is Thursday, April 30th at 7:00 PM at the Chateau Briand. It is a fun night of shopping, dinner and dancing. Hope to see you there! Click here to pay online or to pay by check and/or make a donation, print the Response Card from the email invite sent on Wednesday. Books Alive! What a fun event! This North Side tradition is a highlight of the year for our students. It is a great opportunity to bring our staff and parents together, collaborating once again, to help our children appreciate the joy of reading. At this yearly event, part of the North Side Parents as

Reading Partners program, the Bug Station, Sound Exploration, students are the audience; staff and Water Striders. These New and parents are the performers. York Hall of Science events were available through generous doThis year’s Books Alive nations from the North Side and theme celebrated multicultur- Willets Road PTOs. Our district teachers offered alism in alignment with the Educational Advisory Commit- STEM classes for grades 2 – 7. tee’s goals of raising awareness Classes for grades 2 - 4 included of how the cultural diversity of the following: Is It Solid? Is It our community enriches our Liquid? No … It’s Oobleck with students’ and families’ learning North Side third grade teachers Kelly Donohue and Holly Conkexperiences. lin; Become a Weatherperson Performances of We Are the with North Side instructional World, the Michael Jackson and technologist Rochelle Sroka and Lionel Ritchie song, along with Instructional technologist asthe following storybooks and po- sistant Joanna Schrager; Owl ems - The Day the Crayons Quit Pellet Dissection with Wheatby Drew Daywalt, You Be You by ley science teachers Jim Abdale Linda Kranz, Marisol McDonald and Steven Finkelstein; Shape Doesn’t Match by Monica Brown, Up with Origami with Wheatley We All Sing with the Same Voice! math teachers Andrea Abidore By J. Phillip Miller and Sheppard and Maryrose Ambrose; and M. Green, The Only One Club by Pasta Race Cars with Wheatley Jane Nakiboff and The Name Jar science research teacher Mary by Yangsook Choi - came alive Alexis Blondrage and members today, performed with costumes of the winning Wheatley Sciand props in a reader’s theatre style. (They are great stories that you may enjoy reading aloud to your children). Each story centered on themes that celebrated diversity of ideas, working together in harmony and an appreciation of differences. I had so much fun playing Marisol, in Marissa McDonald Doesn’t Match, a little girl who comes to treasure her creativity and uniqueness. Director and North Side speech teacher BonElaine Kanas nie Klein and teaching assistant and Art Director Kiki Kyrou deSuperintendent serve a standing ovation for the tremendous job they did putting together this production. Their ence Olympiad Team. Classes work was just outstanding! Spe- for grades 5 - 7 included: Gamecial thanks to all the parents, star Mechanic with Willets Road teachers and administrators who and Wheatley instructional participated and helped out. A technologist Audra Beberman; special thank you, as well, to Is It Magic or Science - Why Stage Manager parent Dina Tha- Do Muffins Rise? with Wheatley science teachers Allison ler and her wonderful crew. Chanin-Bermudez and Christine The District Technology Perinelli; Bridge Building with Willets Road seventh grade sciFair – STEM Experience On March 11, a great time ence teachers Matthew Gottlieb was had at the revamped Dis- and Bridget Lennon and techtrict Technology Fair for students nology club students; Get Some in grade K - 7. This year, as a Cosmic Perspective with North result of recommendations from Side enrichment teacher Henry the District Technology Commit- Kupstas and fourth grade teachtee, the yearly fair was expand- er Robert Owen; and Bowling Is ed to include STEM events and Science! with Wheatley science teacher Mindie Schwartz. classes. The Technology Fair also Staff from the New York Hall of Science brought 10 STEM featured a variety of demon(science, technology, engineer- strations of how technology is ing and math) activities to our being used in our classrooms as district for our students in grades well as presentations of different 2 – 7. Students participated in technologies from the New York the following: Rocking Rockets, Institute of Technology and the Dowel Structures, DNA Extrac- Microsoft Store. District teachtion, Ski Jump Shake, Whirly- ers demonstrated the following: gigs, Glo Rocks, Brain Dissection, PowToons in Foreign Language

with Secondary Chair of Foreign Language Joan Anderson and Wheatley foreign language teacher Angel Rivero; PowToons in Social Studies with Wheatley social studies teacher Gena Topping; Just Google It with Wheatley library media specialist JoBeth Roberts; Quizlet with Willets Road special education teachers Jessica McGee and Kirsten Donaghy; You Can Find it Free with Willets Road special education teachers MaryBeth Devine and Alison Butler and Willets Road fifth grade teacher Jennifer Taggart; Prezi with Willets Road seventh grade teachers Patrick Shanahan and Antonia Laruccia; Adventure Iditarod with North Side library media specialist Karen Homer; Google Docs Collaboration with Willets Road and Wheatley English teachers Dr. MaryBeth CollinsCook, Rick Leidenfrost-Wilson and Wheatley special education teacher Jenna Stein; Hit the Deck with Match with Willets Road teaching assistant Katerina Skiadas; QR Codes and Book Reviews with Director of Secondary Curriculum Services and Social Studies Dr. Danielle Gately and Willets Road library media specialist Diane Ilkiw; Chromebooks and Students with Disabilities with Wheatley special education teacher Joseph Crotty; Quia with Wheatley foreign language teacher Susan Vasselman; and Podcasts in the English Classroom with Secondary Chair of English Stephen Collier and Wheatley English teacher Colin McKenna. Throughout the evening, students from Wheatley’s Technology Club, Key Club and National Honor Society helped out by taking students to the different events, babysitting and working the registration desk. Organizing this event is a huge task and was spearheaded by our District Director of Science and Technology David Casamento with the assistance of the entire technology team from all three buildings. A tremendous thank you to Mr. Casamento, Mrs. Beberman, Mrs. Sroka, Wheatley instructional technologist assistants Kim Kelleher and Erik Larsen, Willets Road instructional technologist assistant Jerry Pokrywka, North Side instructional technologist assistant Joanna Schrager and BOCES network technologist Nick Furci, for all their efforts putting together this evening in celebration of our districts many STEM initiatives. As Mr. Casamento stated at the end of the evening, “This could not have

been accomplished without the team effort each and every one of these people contributed.” A special thank you to the faculty and staff for helping to make this evening a success. Many people attended what surely looked to be a great night of learning and fun for students, parents, and staff. Many thanks again to the North Side and Willets Road PTOs that enabled the expansion of the event to include the New York Hall of Science activities during this pilot year. The recommended 201516 budget includes full funding of this event for next year which provides such a rich learning experience for our students. Reminder – April 1 Deadline for Transportation Requests If you plan on having your child(ren) attend a private or parochial school for the 2015-16 school year, the Special Transportation Request Form must be completed and received by the East Williston School District Business Office/Transportation Office at 11 Bacon Road, Old Westbury, New York 11568 by April 1. You can download a request form by going to the district website at www.ewsdonline.org > go to the left side navigation bar > hover over Transportation and click Transportation Form Private/Parochial or call Virginia Davis at 333-2826. Still Time To Register There’s still time to register to vote. To vote in the School District Budget Vote and Board Candidate Vote on May 19, 2015, you must be a citizen of the United States, 18 years of age, a resident of the East Williston School District for a period of 30 days preceding the election and registered to vote with the school district or appear on a Nassau County Voter’s Registration List. Only residents, who have not registered or voted in a school district election or a general election in the last four years, must register. To register, you may do so through May 8, 2015 at the Nassau County Board of Elections at 240 Old Country Road, 5th Floor in Mineola, from 9:00 AM – 4:30 PM daily (see website Nassau County Board of Elections). You may also register to vote for the school district vote, in person on May 7, 2015 between 8:00 AM – 12:00 Noon or on May 12, 2015 between 4:00 PM – 8:00 PM in Continued on Page 55


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Town of North Hempstead Supervisor Judi Bosworth receives a certificate of recognition Thursday from the Great Neck Chamber of Commerce.

Downtowns a village’s ‘lifeblood’: Bosworth

president and Village of Kings Point trustee. “We have brick and mortar stores While they take a toll on downtown businesses, malls and online shopping competing with Internet sales...it’s an uncan’t provide the experience offered by fair competition,” Nematzadeh said. Changing demographics and high downtown shopping districts such as those in the villages of Great Neck and taxes were some of the main causes of the Great Neck Plaza, North Hempstead Town vacancies, he said. In Great Neck, Supervisor Judi BosNematzadeh said, rent worth said Thursday is about $20 to $22 per “Downtowns have e have brick square foot with $9 of this unexplained energy that make people and mortar stores that being paid in property taxes. actually want to come competing with Nematzadeh, who there,” Bosworth said Internet sales...it’s an is president of Nemat to members of the Great Homes Inc. and is curNeck Chamber of Comunfair competition rently seeking to build merce at a luncheon at in mixed-used developthe Inn of Great Neck. Hooshang Nematzadeh ment in the Village of “Downtowns are the Great Neck Plaza, said best indicator of a village climate – they’re the lifeblood of the the high property taxes impact real estates values and make it more difficult to local economy.” But Great Neck Plaza’s 6.5 percent attract and keep new businesses. He acknowledged though that the storefront vacancy rate - which officials said is lower than most villages across Plaza’s vacancy rate would be significantLong Island - is still a glaring issue within ly better if the three vacant storefronts in the community, said Hooshang Nematza- the building he is seeking to build at 5-9 Continued on Page 59 deh, Great Neck Chamber of Commerce

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Fire to utility line cuts power, closes roadway BY B I LL S A N A N TON I O A transmission wire that caught fire along Northern Boulevard and Middle Neck Road in Flower Hill on Friday caused power outages for about 300 PSEG Long Island customers, officials said. A portion of Northern Boulevard in Flower Hill was closed at about 6:10 p.m. in both directions due to the fire and re-

opened about an hour later, Nassau County Police said. PSEG Long Island spokeswoman Elizabeth Flagler said some customers were without power for up to an hour and 40 minutes, while some had service restored about 10 minutes later. She said heavy snow pulling down on the wire could have contributed to the cause of the fire.

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Shah wins first place at L.I. science fair

Pictured are students in Terri Nappi’s third grade class at Harbor using manipulative fraction strips to compare fractions in a real-world scenario.

Go Math! program making math matter

The Roslyn elementary school math program, Go Math!, offers students an interactive approach to learning math. Go Math! emphasizes conceptual understanding, computational fluency and real world applications. Each lesson begins with an Essential Question that sets the stage for the lesson topic . Strategies and conceptual understanding are highlighted through visual representations, mathematical models,

greater risk of depression and even suicide. Four other Roslyn students also were recognized at this year’s LISEF. Rachel Mintz took second place in the category of Medicine and Health. Winning third place honors were David Jaslow (Behavioral and Social Sciences) and Mahip Grewal (Cell Biology). Will Berger was part of a team that earned an Honorable Mention in the category of Materials and Bioengineering. Shah will now travel to Pittsburgh, PA for a week where he will compete at the International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF). “Given how competitive research on Long Island is, it’s a tremendous honor to have a student selected for ISEF,” said Dr. Allyson Weseley, Roslyn’s Coordinator of Secondary Research and Shah’s mentor on the project. “Shah has done great work on this project, and his success is well deserved.”

and student explorations. Math Talk and math questions provided within the lessons support verbal and written communication around important mathematical topics. Students are encouraged to explain their thinking, as it helps children to truly understand a concept or procedure when they can explain it to others! It’s also important for students to understand the language of math, and key vocabulary is included in each chapter.

Honorable mentions for two from Roslyn Two Roslyn High School students received Honorable Mention Awards in the Scholastic National Art and Writing Awards competition. Angela Tran, grade 9, was recognized for her story entitled, “There is No Home.” Chloe Kaplan, an 11th grader, re-

Roslyn High School senior Aansh Shah won first place at the Long Island Science and Engineering Fair held on Thursday, March 12 at the Crest Hollow Country Club. Shah’s study, Sticks and Stones May Break My Bones: Middle School Students’ Perceptions of Bullying looked for gender differences in how bullies are perceived while also factoring in the type of bullying behavior (physical or verbal) the bullies displayed. Shah found that male bullies are perceived as more aggressive and are thought to deserve harsher punishments than female bullies. He also learned that students who bully girls are seen as more aggressive and thought to be deserving of harsher punishments than students who bully boys. Finally, Shah’s results show that people view physical acts of bullying as more severe than verbal attacks, even though the latter have been linked to a

ceived the award for her story, “Ralph.” English Department Chair Joshua Cabat praised the students for their work. The Scholastic Art & Writing Awards have recognized the talent of young people throughout the nation since 1923, and provided opportunities to celebrate these creative teens.

Roslyn High School’s Long Island Science and Engineering Fair round two participants from left: (back row) Will Berger, Mahip Grewal, Sahil Anand, David Jaslo, (Front row) Aansh Shah, Rachel Mintz and Tiffany Sun.

HOMEMADE MUSIC

Transportation request deadline looms April 1 In accordance with New York State Education Law and Board of Education policy, all requests for transportation of children in the Roslyn School District to private and parochial schools, as well as before and/or after school child care locations for the 2015-2016 school year must be submitted in writing by a parent, guardian or authorized representative no later than April 1, 2015. Parents whose children currently receive transportation to private and paro-

chial schools must submit a new request each year along with proof of residency. Failure to meet the April 1 deadline may result in the loss of transportation services. If you haven’t received a transportation request form, the forms can be obtained from the Transportation Office at the bus garage on Round Hill Road or by calling 801-5190 on weekdays. Forms can also be downloaded from the district’s website at www.roslynschools.org.

The fifth graders at Harbor Hill School studied sound production in General Music under the direction of music teacher Theresa Nardo. The students finished the unit by constructing their own instruments from items they found around the house, garage or basement. Pictured are the students of Ms. Hintermeister’s 5th grade class with their homemade musical instruments.


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Herricks’ Mak to perfom at festival

BIERWIRTH HONORED

Dr. John E. Bierwirth, retiring superintendant of the Herricks School District was honored at the 19th Annual Dinner Dance of the Herricks Community Fund “for his dedication and commitment to the residents and students of the Herricks district.” Bierwirth has been superintendant for 13 years and has been a staunch supportor of the Herricks Community Fund. Pictured: Bierwirth (center) with Paul Ehrbar and Iona Davis, co-presidents of the Herricks Community Fund.

The Herricks High School Music Department announced that Veronica Mak will perform at the Eastern Division Honors Festival held in Providence, RI. The event, held from April 9 – 12, is sponsored by the National Association for Music Education. Mak will be among 150 students selected from school music programs across the state. Students will rehearse and perform with renowned conductors of the All National Concert Band (Hofstra University’s Dr. Peter Boonshaft); All National Orchestra (New York Philharmonic Staff Conductor Miriam Burns); All National Mixed Choir (Temple University’s Dr. Rollo Dilworth) or All National Jazz Band (Michigan State University’s Rodney Whitaker). “This is a wonderful opportunity for our students,’’ said Louise O’Hanlon, Herricks High School choral director. “We are very proud of Veronica, who will learn collaboratively with other musicians from schools outside of New York. Veronica is an outstanding musician and the expe-

rience she will get by working with renown master conductors is a great opportunity.” “I am extremely honored to be a part of this year’s NAfME All Eastern Mixed Chorus,” Mak shared. “It’s so crazy to believe that this opportunity is now a reality to me. I cannot wait to share this once in a lifetime experience with such talented musicians in April.”

Veronica Mak

Kanas: E.W. school budget workshops continue Continued from Page 52 the lobby of The Wheatley School, 11 Bacon Road, Old Westbury. For additional information, go to the district website at www.ewsdonline.org and go to Voter Registration/Absentee Ballot Info on the left side navigation bar. Congratulations and Commendations Willets Road Librarian – A Judge Congratulations to Diane Ilkiw who participated in the Long Island Regional National History Day Competition at Hofstra University as one of the competition judges. Board Member Recognized At Monday’s Board of Education Monthly Business Meeting, Board Trustee Leonard Hirsch was recognized by the New York State School Board Association (NYSSBA) with a Certificate of Board Achievement Award for his participation in Board developmental activities and workshops. Congratulations Mr. Hirsch.

Association (NYSBDA) accepted three Wheatley students to perform as part of the NYSBDA Honor Band. Wheatley oboists, seniors Emily Black and Arjun Kapoor attended the NYSBDA Symposium in Liverpool, New York with Wheatley music teacher Dr. Peggy Ho. Unfortunately, senior Gabriella Schwartz, who was selected on piccolo, could not attend due to illness. Students rehearsed Friday night, all day Saturday and gave an amazing performance on Sunday with conductor Robert Spradling, retired conductor of bands from Western Michigan University. The repertoire included music of collegiate level and the world premiere performance of Joel Puckett’s Emory’s Barcarole which was commissioned by NYSBDA for the 2015 Honor Band. The performance was presented with Avelynn’s Lullaby, also by the composer. Both pieces were written for the composer’s two children. Mr. Puckett is a professor of composition and theory at Peabody Conservatory. Congratulations to Emily, Arjun and Gabriella. Congratulations also to Wheatley junior Andrew Zuckerman who was named an alternate for the alto saxophone.

Italian Poetry Contest Congratulations to eighth grader Cecilia Jozef who took 3rd place in Level Wheatley Artists Shine 1 today at the American Association of Wheatley senior Priya Prasad reTeachers of Italian 31st Annual Poetry ceived four awards at the Alliance for contest at SUNY Old Westbury. Young Artists and Writers – Scholastic Art and Writing Awards Contest. Priya NYSBDA Honor Band Performance The New York State Band Directors received a Silver Key in the Drawing and

Illustration category and three Honorable Mentions in the Painting and Mixed Media category. Wheatley senior Nancy Zhang also received a Silver Key award for one of her paintings. Congratulations Priya and Nancy! The Drexel Photography High School Competition, Drexel University, has recognized Wheatley Junior Alexa Georgeton. Congratulations Alexa! Wheatley junior Brianna Clarfield was recognized by the Photographer’s Forum Contest, Photographer’s Forum Magazine. Congratulations Brianna! Wheatley had 10 students participate in the Cleveland Institute of Art 2D3D: National Art & Design Competition. The following seven students received Honorable Mention: for Visual Arts –seniors Priya Prasad and Nancy Zhang and junior Nikki Koch; for Digital Arts (Photography) – senior Alana Leahy and juniors Kelsey Beresheim, Erin O’Kelly and Jordan Shaked. The following Wheatley students have artwork currently being exhibited at the Broadway Mall in Hicksville at the Long Island Art Teachers Association Celebrate Youth Art with the 6th Annual Art in HeART Exhibit: juniors Keziah Chung, Brianna Clarfield, Ali Giordano and Erin O’Kelly; sophomore Michael Constrastano; and 9th grader Giavanna Papavero. Congratulations! A special congratulations to Keziah and Michael who recently received Awards of Excellence. The ex-

hibit runs through April 19. Some of our students’ artwork will also be exhibited in the 25th Annual New York State Art Teachers Association (NYSATA) Legislative Exhibit in Albany. Congratulations to juniors Dean Mattioli, Erin O’Kelly and Zara Shaikh and ninth grader Naomi Schlesinger. Willets Road Scrabble Teams Successful Once Again The recent Scrabble tournament took place at Southside Middle School in Rockville Centre. Other schools that attended were the Hebrew Academy of Nassau County and Roslyn Middle School. The following student team members competed: Jace and Emily Yagoda, Alex and Tyler Horowitz, Costa and Teddy Koutsoftas, Nadeem Al-Okla and Ansh Jhaveri. The team of Emily Yagoda and Alex Horowitz won second place and the team of Jace Yagoda and Teddy Koutsoftas won third place. Congratulations! We will be hosting the next tournament at Willets Road on April 28th. Have a Good Weekend As always, please email me at kanase@ewsdonline.org or call me at 333-3758 with any questions, suggestions and/or any topics you would like to see in this newsletter. Best regards, Elaine Kanas, Ed.D. Superintendent of Schools


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Row for Autism slated for April 18 The Fourth Annual Row for Autism Regatta will be held on Saturday, April 18, at North Hempstead Beach Park in Port Washington. Spectators are invited to attend this free event to cheer on local rowing teams and adaptive rowers as they raise awareness and money for autism. The event is sponsored by U.S. Rowing and attracts teams from throughout New York and nearby states. Last year alone, over $15,000 was raised. The Regatta will be hosted by the Town of North Hempstead in partnership with Friends of Port Rowing. “The Town of North Hempstead is proud to be partnering with Port Rowing for this outstanding event,” said Town Supervisor Judi Bosworth. “The regatta provides a fun and exciting way for the teams to gather together in an effort to raise money and awareness for autism.” “The growing success of the Row for Autism regatta, now in

Town Supervisor Judi Bosworth, Town Clerk Wayne Wink, rowers and Port Rowing officials at last year’s Row for Autism. its 4th year, is a testament to the enthusiasm and willingness of the Port Washington community and the Town of North Hempstead to support a great cause,” Councilwoman Dina De Giorgio said. “The Friends of Port Rowing are to be commended for

their support of adaptive rowing, which also benefits from this event.” The event, which will begin at 8 a.m., started three years ago with the goal of combining two interests: the love of rowing, and the need to raise aware-

ness about the growing number of children with autism. New this year, students from “Bach to Rock”, a music school based in Port Washington, will perform during a halftime show. On the day of the event, the Town’s website will also have a

live streaming video of the finish line as the rowers cross over. It will be available at: www.northhempsteadny.gov. Twenty-five percent of all money raised will be donated to Autism Speaks of Long Island and The Nicholas Center for Autism & Spectrum Designs Foundation. The remaining proceeds will be going towards the purchase of adaptive rowing equipment, which allows a disabled teenager to be paired with a typical peer mentor. Residents can donate in person at the event, or online at www.PortRowing.com. In addition to competitive races, onlookers can enjoy all the amenities at North Hempstead Beach Park, as well as an on-land and on-the-water “Learn to Row” station, among other event features. Teams can find more information on registration by visiting www.PortRowing.com. The deadline to register is April 12. For more information, please call 311.

FCA conference to focus on safeguarding seniors Family & Children’s Association, Long Island’s leading human service agency, is conducting a conference for first responders, emergency personnel, healthcare professionals, senior citizens and their caregivers entitled “Safeguarding Seniors When Disaster Strikes.” The conference, sponsored by PSE&G and free to attendees, will be held on April 22 at the Holiday Inn Westbury, 369 Old Country Road, Carle Place from 8:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. and will focus on identifying and responding to the special needs of senior citizens during large-scale disaster or emergency events. The keynote address will be delivered by Dr. Tom Demaria, an expert in psychological trauma response and founder of the trauma response team at LI University. Three breakout sessions will be conducted including: Project Light: What have we learned from Hurricane Sandy? The Nassau County Department of Health and Human Services in partnership with the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research will present its cutting edge research on the psychological impact of Hurricane Sandy and how this information can inform current intervention and future emergency preparedness efforts.

A major goal of this study is to inform first responders of the findings to help them better understand the impact of disasters on mental health and well being. Speaking on this topic will be Rebecca M. Schwartz, associate professor, Department of Population Health, Hofstra North Shore/LIJ School of Medicine and Samantha Kerath, administrative manager for Research, North Shore/LIJ Health Service. Get a Kit, Make a Plan, Be Informed In this workshop David Zaitlin, recovery director of Nassau County Office of Emergency Management, will focus on how to be prepared in a disaster, what measures to take in advance and during a disaster to reduce the risks to one’s safety. Being prepared reduces anxiety, increases control and reduces the feeling of being overwhelmed when faced with the unexpected. Donna Reed, director of Long term Care from Nassau County Department of Health and Human Services will discuss her department’s role during a disaster. Treatments for Traumatized Seniors Increasingly, psychological traumatization of senior citizens has become an all too common phenomenon. Professionals, from a variety disciplines, are

faced with becoming “first responders” for traumatized senior citizens. As such, it is crucial for these professionals to be aware of research-supported (i.e. evidence-based) treatments for trauma. This workshop, conducted by Dr. Robert Cavera a doctoral student at Hofstra University’s Child and Family Trauma Institute, will focus on teaching the signs and symptoms of trauma in seniors, as well as exploring the current state of trauma treatment. Emphasis will be placed on practical strat-

egies and interventions that can be employed by professionals in various community settings. “We serve nearly 9000 seniors each year giving us insight into the special needs of this population during a crisis; we’re bringing Long Island’s seniors, their caregivers, healthcare and emergency professionals together to ensure those needs are met should Long Island experience an environmental disaster,” said Family & Children’s Association President/CEO Jeffrey L. Reynolds. “We’re very grateful to our

sponsor PSE&G and supporters United Lifeline, Guildnet, Agewell, Parker Jewish Institute, EAC and Long Island University for their contributions toward making this event possible.” Registration is required and space is limited; anyone interested in attending must register by April 15 by emailing: dlent@ familyandchildrens.org or phoning (516) 292-1300, ext. 2223. For more information on this event and Family & Children’s Association, please visit www. FamilyandChildrens.org

VSA to hold mobile office hours

The Nassau County Veterans Service Agency (VSA) will host monthly mobile office hours at the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW), Frank P. Curry Jr. Post 2718, located at 68 Lincoln Road in Franklin Square. Veteran counselors will be at the VFW on the second Thursday of each month from 12 to 3:30 p.m. starting April 9. “My administration is committed to providing a better life for our veterans,” Mangano said. “The level of assistance our Nassau County Veterans Service Agency provides has resulted in our hometown heroes receiving an unprecedented level of financial assistance. I urge all

veterans to contact the Veterans Service Agency to ensure they are receiving all of the benefits they are entitled to, as well as to receive information on upcoming workshops, job fairs, stand downs and housing opportunities. If you serve, you deserve!” The Nassau County VSA advocates for veterans and their dependents with the U.S. Veterans Administration, as well as New York State and County agencies by informing them of programs and ensuring they receive all their benefits; assisting with their financial and economic issues; and expanding public awareness of veteran issues. Any veteran who is coping

with a military service related injury or illness, including PTSD and Agent Orange, may be eligible to receive a monthly cash benefit. In addition, veteranvolunteers provide free transportation for fellow veterans to the Northport Veterans Administration (VA) Hospital, as well as to clinics in East Meadow, Hicksville and Valley Stream. For more information, veterans should visit the Nassau County VSA, located at 2201 Hempstead Turnpike, Building “Q” in East Meadow (along the entrance road of Nassau University Medical Center). To contact the VSA by phone, please call (516) 572-6565.


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Med school taps Sethna for pediatric position Dr. Christine Sethna has been named in Brooklyn. She completed her post-graduate division director of pediatric nephrology in the Department of Pediatrics at Cohen training in pediatrics and pediatric neChildren’s Medical Center, part of the Hof- phrology at the Children’s Hospital of stra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine. Philadelphia. As part of her fellowship training, she “Since joining Cohen in 2008, Dr. received a professional cerSethna has served our patificate in biostatistics and tients with compassion and epidemiology from the Uniexcellence,” said Dr. Charles versity of Pennsylvania. Schleien, senior vice presiShe serves as the local dent and executive director principal investigator for of pediatrics at Cohen. “We several multicenter trials are delighted that she conof kidney diseases, includtinues to share her expertise ing the National Institutes and knowledge with all of us of Health-sponsored NEPhere at the hospital.” TUNE and CureGN studies Dr. Sethna joined the on nephrotic syndrome. In hospital as director of its addition, she is the director End Stage Kidney Disease Program and as an assistant Dr. Christine Sethna of resident scholarly activity for the GME program at Coprofessor of pediatrics at the Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medi- hen and a member of the North Shore-LIJ Institutional Review Board. cine. Dr. Sethna is an active member of With clinical and research interests in hypertension and cardiovascular out- numerous professional and scientific socomes in kidney disease, Dr. Sethna re- cieties, including the American Society ceived her bachelor’s degree from Tufts of Pediatric Nephrology and the AmeriUniversity and a Master of Education can Society of Nephrology. She is also from the Harvard Graduate School of the section editor of nephrology for the Education before earning her medical de- American Academy of Pediatrics’ Grand gree SUNY Downstate School of Medicine Rounds.

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58 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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READERS WRITE

A thank you for special medical care

A

t this time I would like to thank the doctors, nurses, and the entire urology staff at North Shore Hospital in Manhasset, where I was operated on for an aggressive prostate cancer on March 12. Now I would also like to thank Dr. Gary Goldberg of Advanced Urology of Manhasset for his saving hands. He operated with the aid of a

robot know as, “Da Vinci.” I have jokingly called him Mr. Roboto and as Robby the Robot. As you might notice I’m a long time sci-fi fan. I have also believed that yesterdays science fiction is today’s reality. I had an aggressive prostate cancer and was very nervous about the outcome It was a good thing I had gotten tested last year.

Now there is a test known as the PSA and can save lives. This year there is an expected 30,000 men will die of this disease and this disease is curable when caught early. Meanwhile let me give a shout out to nurses Carolyn, Zerena and Rose who aided in my recovery process and took me a step in the right direction. Their help was a mixture of help, concern, good humor and

a polite disposition. As a patient I tried not to be a pain knowing they had patients who were far sicker than myself. These nurses work hard and try to help the many that are under their care. I even found a man who would cleaned the bathrooms and the room and we talked and he showed concern on how I was feeling. When I was discharged he

wished me the best and that my healing would go well. As time goes on I will think of my stay at North Shore Hospital in Manhasset as being God sent. Now for that I say to all that helped me,” Kudos ! “ for the caring and doing all you could do for me. Frederick R. Bedell Jr. Glen Oaks Village

Hempstead supervisor’s costly self-promotion

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ear Supervisor Murray: I am writing regarding the Town of Hempstead’s new “No Peddlers” signage. It is important for residents to understand that it prohibits the door-to-door salesmen from encroaching upon time with my family, but does nothing to prevent politicians or religious organizations from knocking on my door, or charitable organizations from selling candy or cookies.

In the 10 years I’ve lived in Merrick, never once has an Avon lady or Fuller Brush man come to my door. Gone are the days when vacuum cleaner or encyclopedia salesmen knocked on our doors, selling their wares. So from whom are these “feel good” signs meant to protect us? The larger issue is that these signs have your name on them. This is just another one of Hempstead’s unabashed campaigns to

keep you in office in perpetuity. We cannot drive a half mile in the town without seeing a sign with the Kate Murray name on it. Nearly every week we get a mailing with your face on it. We cannot watch TV for an hour without hearing “Thank you Kate Murray” for this or for that. I find these invasions into my private home much more intrusive than the door-to-door salesman that hasn’t occasioned my door in 30 years.

The millions of tax dollars that we hand to the Town of Hempstead year after year to keep your name and the town board’s names on our street signs, in the mailings that wind up on our kitchen table every week; and the television ads that appear way too often in our homes; could be used to fix our roads. If the true intention of this “No Peddler” signage is as altruistic as the town portrays it to be, then the Kate Murray name

should be taken off the signage so it does not give the appearance of being political. This is America. And in this country, we have the right to “support” or “not support” a candidate for public office. Our tax dollars should not be spent on political signage to bring a candidate’s name into our homes and on our windows. Audrey Ciuffo Merrick

City Dems looking to score Letter-writer, paper points plucking chicken eatery wrong on author

H

ow refreshing to hear that the owners of “Chick-Fil-A” plan on opening up their first store in New York City at 37th Street and 6th Avenue in midtown Manhattan later this year. Thousands of Long Island Rail Road commuters from Great Neck, New Hyde Park, Herricks, Williston Park, Albertson, Mineola, Manhasset, Roslyn along with other communities in Nassau and Suffolk County who travel to and from Penn Station and or shop in Herald Square will be able to sample some of the best chicken in America. Chick-Fil-A has long-term plans for opening up to 200 stores in the five boroughs of New York City. Hopefully they will also come to Long Island as well. Chick-Fil-A will provide gainful employment to construction contractors and their employees building each local store. Once open, Chick-Fil-A will provide gainful employment to

cooks, cashiers and those who deliver daily food supplies. Don’t forget that they provide a good quality product at reasonable prices for many New Yorkers. Now watch how New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer, New York City Public Advocate Letitia James and New York City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito will attempt to score political points with their liberal friends by opposing Chick-fil-A expanding into the New York City market. All should worry about more important issues such as future budget shortfalls, growing long-term debt, education, environmental, safety and unemployment along with delivery of essential municipal services. How disappointing to see this collection of “politically correct” progressive liberals throwing their lot in with political extremists on the right who use the threat of boycotts to impose their

moral values on others. If you don’t like the politics of Chick-Fil-A, don’t eat there. Don’t deny the civil liberties of others who might prefer Chick-Fil-A. In America, under the free enterprise system, this is called freedom of choice. Entrepreneurs like the owners of Chick-Fil-A have continued to create new employment opportunities without the assistance of federally-funded taxpayers’ stimulus dollars from Uncle Sam. Remember that New York City still faces a 6 percent unemployment rate with another 6 percent who have just given up looking. These people are our neighbors who work long hours, pay taxes and provide local employment. True tolerance means accepting those with different values than your own.

I

magine my surprise as I read a letter to the editor in the March 20, 2015 edition of the Great Neck News in which the author blasted me for writing the editorial column entitled, Village of GNP Election. He certainly took me to task. However, one small detail: I did not write the column nor have I ever worked for the G.N. News. The actual writer was the incomparable, never wishy-washy Karen Rubin who does sometimes tootle around town on a bike. It is a puzzle that the letter was published. I understand the News honors freedom of speech and publishes all letters sent their way, but doesn’t anybody at the paper actually read those letters? Or read your own columnists? How could such a blatant, factual error have been carelessLarry Penner ly overlooked? As Daniel MoyniGreat Neck han said, “Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not to

his own facts.” It is a wonder that Rob Stevens took the time to write an outraged response to the column without noticing who wrote it. Mr. Stevens, be glad that I have a sense of humor. What you wrote could be construed as libelous. Having worked as a reporter for the Great Neck Record for 14 years, I staunchly support the freedom of speech right we enjoy; however, there is a responsibility that comes with the right, namely, to be as accurate as possible and to take great care, especially when castigating others. Perhaps a couple of apologies are in order. Carol Frank Great Neck Editor’s Note: Ms. Frank was incorrectly identified as the author of the column. We apologize for the mistake. Continued on Page 69


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Hillary offers opportunity for women

Continued from Page 13 as “the great unfinished business of the 21st century.” And while the No Ceilings/Not there Yet Assessment pointed to the need to educate men and boys in places like India why it is wrong to batter and abuse women and girls, here in the U.S., we are plagued with sexual assault on college campuses, and a reemerging culture that diminishes, even dehumanizes women as when a legislator can dismiss a woman’s right to make her own health and reproductive decisions. That’s what state Sen. Steve Martin (R) did when he referred to a pregnant woman as merely a “host” to nurture the fetus rather than a mother. “Once a child does exist in your womb, I’m not going to assume a right to kill it just because the child’s host (some refer to them as mothers) doesn’t want it,” he posted on Facebook. And Rep. Vicky Hartzler, R-Mo. said that a woman’s right to choose should be ended because it robs a man of his right to fatherhood; Austin Ruse, Catholic Family & Human Rights Institute said that those who teach Women’s Studies “should all be taken out and shot” and also that “The toxic stew of the modern university is gender studies, it’s ‘Sex Week,’ they all have ‘Sex Week’ and teaching people how to be sex-positive and overcome the patriarchy.” In fact, what is stunning is that while there has been significant progress made for women’s rights in Africa, India and Afghanistan and around the globe, that in many ways the United States has gone backwards. Like racism which has bubbled back to the surface in overt ways (rather than merely fester below), the mere fact that there could be such statements uttered without any sense of self-consciousness shows that whatever political correctness that kept such public pronouncements in check is gone. What does that say about the culture, and therefore, the political landscape? And so, even as three women who have served as presidents of their respective countries (Croatia, Ireland and Liberia) took to the stage with Hillary Clinton, joining a pantheon of countries that have had a woman at the helm (Germany, United Kingdom, Pakistan, India, Israel, Argentina, Brazil, Malawi, Jamaica, Costa Rica, Lithuania, Denmark, Thailand, Costa Rica, Iceland, Bangladesh, Switzerland, Sri Lanka) - the notion of a woman becoming American president is still regarded as a remarkable thing. “Compared to other nations, the United States is losing ground. America now ranks 98th in the world for percentage of women in its national legislature, down from 59th in 1998. That’s embarrassing: just behind Kenya and Indonesia, and barely ahead of the United Arab Emirates,” Steven Hill wrote in The Nation. “At the current rate of progress, it will take nearly 500 years for women to reach fair representation in government.” The culture that underlies that fact is demonstrated by a comment by South

Carolina state Senator Thomas Corbin (R) who ridiculed State Senator Katrina Shealy (R), the only female member of the 46-person state Senate, at a legislative dinner. “When Shealy asked angrily where Corbin got off making fun of her gender, he replied: ‘Well, you know God created man first. Then he took the rib out of man to make woman. And you know, a rib is a lesser cut of meat.’” It is why the right-wing majority of the Supreme Court values the “being” of a corporation, a corporation’s “beliefs,” more than a woman’s being or right to access health care or make her own reproductive decisions. Hillary’s possible/likely run for the presidency is demeaned and characterized as “legacy” (in the way W. was a legacy of Poppy Bush), or a “next in line” (as Mitt Romney), or even as a potential “First Woman President” rather than examine her accomplishments, her agenda and her proposals in her own right. In fact, Hillary Clinton is the most accomplished candidate - man or woman - ever to seek the presidency, bar none. The No Ceilings event was meant to give a progress report over the 20 years since the Beijing declaration, when Clinton, as First Lady, declared “human rights are women’s rights and women’s rights are human rights once and for all” Pathetically, so much of what she decried in that important speech in 1995 could be (and was) the basis for her speech at the UN this year: “At this very moment, as we sit here, women around the world are giving birth, raising children, cooking meals, washing clothes, cleaning houses, planting crops, working on assembly lines, running companies, and running countries. Women also are dying from diseases that should have been prevented or treated. They are watching their children succumb to malnutrition caused by poverty and economic deprivation. They are being denied the right to go to school by their own fathers and brothers. They are being forced into prostitution, and they are being barred from the bank lending offices and banned from the ballot box. “Those of us who have the opportunity to be here have the responsibility to speak for those who could not. As an American, I want to speak for those women in my own country, women who are raising children on the minimum wage, women who can’t afford health care or child care, women whose lives are threatened by violence, including violence in their own homes.... “The international community has long acknowledged and recently reaffirmed at Vienna that both women and men are entitled to a range of protections and personal freedoms, from the right of personal security to the right to determine freely the number and spacing of the children they bear. No one - No one should be forced to remain silent for fear of religious or political persecution, arrest, abuse, or torture. “Tragically, women are most often the ones whose human rights are violated. Even now, in the late 20th century, the rape of women continues to be used as

an instrument of armed conflict. Women and children make up a large majority of the world’s refugees. And when women are excluded from the political process, they become even more vulnerable to abuse.” And her message then, was echoed today at the “No Ceilings - Not there Yet” event: “If we take bold steps to better the lives of women, we will be taking bold steps to better the lives of children and families too. Families rely on mothers and wives for emotional support and care. Families rely on women for labor in the home. And increasingly, everywhere, families rely on women for income needed to raise healthy children and care for other relatives. “As long as discrimination and inequities remain so commonplace everywhere in the world, as long as girls and women are valued less, fed less, fed last, overworked, underpaid, not schooled, subjected to violence in and outside their homes -- the potential of the human family to create a peaceful, prosperous world will not be realized.” This year, Clinton said, “There are real gains to celebrate, including more laws protecting the rights of women, more girls going to primary school, and more mothers getting access to services that can keep them healthy. Yet despite this progress, significant gaps remain around the world, including in the United States, especially in the areas of security, economic opportunity, and leadership. The evidence is clear: When it comes to gender equality, we’re just not there yet.

“This data proves that progress is indeed possible, but it is not inevitable. More needs to be done to fulfill our promise and ensure that every woman and girl has the opportunity to live up to her God-given potential. “We all have a role to play in building a world of shared prosperity and opportunity.” So the final takeaway from the No Ceilings-Not There Event is that women can’t wait for the prevailing dominating powers to make the changes. Women have to rise up, work together, network together, support each other to effect the necessary changes - and increasingly, using social media and other technology, they have the independent means to accomplish it. “Stop looking at us as victims and look at us as the leaders we are,” a woman told Melanne Verveer, Executive Director of the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security, who served as the first United States Ambassador-atLarge for Global Women’s Issues under Obama. “That is so true – if we only look at women as victims, we don’t see women as participants, the wealth of experience they bring to make a difference.” As Wanjira Mathai, Director, wPOWER: Women’s Partnerships in Renewables, said: “Women are not just victims but engines of change, drivers of progress.” Her statement was echoed by Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović, president of the Republic of Croatia: “We are not just victims but should be agents of change.” Women aren’t waiting any longer. Visit NoCeilings.org to explore the gains and the gaps.

Downtowns a village’s lifeblood: Bosworth Continued from Page 53 Grace Ave. in the Plaza were not counted. The building was the first to be approved under the village’s Business “B” District zoning law, which allows for residential units to be built on top of storefronts or offices. The new zoning is intended to increase business in the Plaza by increasing the number of residents who live there. Bosworth said that even though town taxes represents a relatively small percentage of local property taxes the Town Council did its part by keeping down taxes in the budget it passed in November. The budget calls for households located within a village to see their taxes increase by about 1.03 percent, while residents living in unincorporated areas would see an increase by an average of 1.45 percent. Bosworth said downtown business areas are vital to the character of the villages in which they are located, providing jobs and helping keep money within local villages. But because all downtowns are differ-

ent across Long Island, she said, there is no single solution to filling empty storefronts. Bosworth hailed the opening of LaunchPad, a business that allows startup companies to rent space in an office building, at 3 Grace Ave next year as a step in the right direction toward revitalizing downtown Great Neck . LaunchPad also has sites in Hicksville, Huntington, Mineola and Stony Brook University. “It will improve the odds of start-up success in Great Neck and create 50 new jobs by 2016,” Bosworth said. “It’s exciting to see Great Neck is related to other start-up hotspots.” The company, led by co-founder Andrew Hazen, will occupy parts of the first floor of 3 Grace Ave., as well as the entire basement of the building. Bosworth also touted the collaboration between the Nassau County Industrial Development Agency, Great Neck Plaza and the town that led to LaunchPad coming to Great Neck.


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Fundraiser set for ailing Herricks student Continued from Page 2 describe how me and my husband feel about what they’re doing for us.” Duchenne muscular dystrophy leads to a slow weakening and eventual wasting of the muscles. Symptoms can begin as early as infancy but are generally visible by or before age six. Beth said Ty has a tight-knit group of friends at the Center Street School, many of whom he’s known since kindergarten, when he could run and play baseball. “He has a crew… he has a group of set friends and they all love Ty. He’ll have his friends over and they love hanging out with him. Really nice young boys,” Beth Flood said. “I think it would be devastating for him to leave, to lose friends that he knows.”

Though Ty can no longer play Little League - a photograph on the fundraiser website depicts him shagging a ball from the outfield Beth Flood said he is still an avid sports fan. He especially enjoys rooting for the Islanders and Yankees, for whom his favorite player is the now-retired Derek Jeter. “He probably knows the stats of every player that’s out there,” she said. “Even on his iPad he follows who’s going to be traded, who’s doing this…sometimes he’s too smart for his own good.” Like many young boys, Ty also enjoys playing video games, she said. The Floods’ two younger daughters also attend Center Street School, and Ty will attend Herricks Middle School next year. Beth, who left her career

to care for Ty, said the Herricks School District has been responsive and supportive in accommodating Ty, another reason the family would like to stay in Williston Park. “After our third daughter was born about the same time Ty was diagnosed, it was in the best interest to take care of Ty and his needs that I’ve had to stop working,” Beth said. Timothy Flood, Ty’s father, is a veteran special agent at Homeland Security Investigations, with 26 years of service, according to the fundraiser website. “I love the family - Ty has a special place in my heart,” Stanza said. “They’re always willing to help people who are in crisis and need. They’re good people and I want to see them stay.”

Ty Flood dressed as Batman for Halloween

Rep. Israel to promote novel in Manhasset Continued from Page 1 who on Sunday will sign books and meet with his 3rd District constituents at the Barnes & Noble store in Manhasset at 2 p.m. “And these days, Congress could use a lot of therapy.” “The Global War on Morris,” published Dec. 30, 2014 by Simon & Schuster, follows a pharmaceutical salesman from Long Island who, through a series of government highjinks, becomes Washington’s top terrorist target. “I wrote it because I would see and hear things inside Congress that were so inane that I

had to find a way to share it with the public,” Israel said. “The best way to share those reflections is through biting satire, and that’s what this book is.” Critics agree. In its review, Booklist said that, “As political satires go, it’s really good; as debut novels go, it’s even better.” The Washington Post’s Ron Charles said Israel “skewer[s] his way through one gaffe after another in the fight against domestic terrorism.” Israel, who last Sunday appeared at the Gold Coast Arts

Center to promote the novel, said promotion for “The Global War on Morris” has served as another opportunity to reach constituents across Nassau, Queens and Suffolk counties who “are generally pretty good at sharing what’s on their minds.” The novel is also currently being adapted into a television series by Hollywood heavyweight Rob Reiner and Roslyn native Andrew Lenchewski, cocreator and executive producer of the USA series, “Royal Pains.” Lenchewski, Reiner and Alan Greisman, Reiner’s pro-

ducing partner, will be executive producers on the project. It is being written by Academy Award-nominee Doug McGrath, whose credits include the 1994 Woody Allen feature “Bullets Over Broadway.” “When I received a call that Rob Reiner was interested in developing the book for TV, I really thought it was a practical joke. I thought literally that a friend was pulling my leg, but it turns out Reiner enjoyed it and is developing it,” Israel said. “...I just couldn’t be more happy and more surprised, quite honestly.”

Village elections go Local politicians rally unchallenged, all win for education reform stead, echoed the calls of the legislators. Eyal Isaac, who did not seek a second Continued from Page 4 Continued from Page 1 Acting East Hills Village Justice term. the state assume control of struggling “[Long Island] schools are renowned Mitchell Studley was elected to the vilfor their quality because we focus on Schwartzberg was elected mayor of schools. lage’s justice position with 444 votes, suc- Roslyn Estates in 2011 after defeating The release said that the state con- teaching - not testing - and because we ceeding the recently deceased Gino Papa. 12-year incumbent Susan Ben-Moshe. He trolled Roosevelt schools for 11 years, be- battle for the programs and resources our “All the members of my students need to succeed,” she said. “I was reelected in an uncon- fore returning local control in 2013. team are profoundly grate“In the Assembly we are fighting for am proud to stand with Long Island’s Astested election in 2013. ful to each and every voter Village of Roslyn trustees a $1.8 billion school aid increase and sembly delegation in support of a sound who went to the polls,” said ELECTION 2015 Sarah Oral and Marta Geno- against the overuse and misuse of test- education budget that rejects the goverKoblenz, who received 448 ing as well as against the governor’s pro- nor’s ‘test and punish’ agenda, and other vese were also re-elected. votes, in an email to resiTerms for positions in posal to replace local school boards with so-called ‘reforms’ that would harm Long dents Thursday. “I congratulate my fine the villages of Roslyn, Roslyn Estates and a state receiver in underperforming local Island’s schools, its teachers and, most and talented running mates who I am Flower Hill are for two years each. In schools,” Lavine said in a statement. “We importantly, students.” proud to serve with for our wonderful East Hills, terms are for four years and will all be better off when the day comes Representatives from the Alliance for community.” that those of us who have benefitted from Quality Education, the Working Families are salaried. Schwartzberg received 31 votes in Koblenz was set to make $60,000 in public education fight for and support Party, Long Island Progressive Coalition, earning his third two-year term in Roslyn 2014-16, while trustees were slated to public education in the same way as those Make the Road New York, New York ComEstates, while Deputy Mayor Jeff Linden- earn $21,524 each. who have benefitted from private educa- munities for Change and New York State baum was also re-elected with 33 votes. United Teachers also attended the rally. Trustee positions in the Village of Ro- tion.” Khazzam received 33 votes. Barbara Hafner, a sixth-grade math The state Legislature has until April 1 slyn Harbor were not up for election this Khazzam replaces former Trustee year. and social studies teacher at West Hemp- to pass an on-time budget.


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School & camp directory

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Employment

Help Wanted AIRLINE CAREERS BEGIN here​​Get FAA approved Aviation Maintenance Technician training. Financial aid for qualified students- Housing available. Job placement assistance, Call AIM 866-296-7093 Bricks4Kidz IS HIRING!! Garden City & surrounding areas. Experience with children preferred. Help children learn while using Legos. All materials provided. P/T approx $20​/​hr based on experience. Call Margo @ 631-327-1312 DRIVERS: O/OP’s. Best deal in New York! 40% Advance! Home weekends! Paid weekly! 85% gross! Regional​/​OTR​/​Flatbed. 888-825-0924 NEW YEAR-NEW CAREER GROUP SALES REPRESENTATIVE Fortune 500 company, voted top 30 places to start a career in USA by Business Week magazine, looking for individuals to grow with the largest provider of voluntary employee benefits in the country. Must be enthusiastic and have strong work ethic. Sales experience is welcome but not necessary. Extensive management opportunities available. Unlimited earnings potential. Office located in Garden City. Call Bill Whicher 516-574-1064

Situation Wanted

Situation Wanted

CERTIFIED HOME HEALTH AIDE​ / CHILD CARE English speaking female with 28 years experience with Alzheimers, trach, able to help with medications, doctor appointments. 14 years experience caring for infants, school age children. References available. Live in​/​out. WILLING TO RELOCATE. Reliable, sense of humor. Driver. Please call Diane 516-484-4327

CLEANING AVAILABLE Houses and Apartments. Flexible days and hours. Experience, reasonable prices. Very good references. Own transportation. Please call 516-272-5154 or 516-385-5547

CLEANING AVAILABLE for homes, apartments & offices. Monday-Saturday. Excellent references. Honest, reliable, trustworthy. Years of experience. Also available for Spring & Fall cleaning, cluttered closets, messy garages. Experienced in organizing. Satisfaction 100% guaranteed! Call Cathy 516-582-9682

CHILDCARE STARS & ANGELS For precious little ones. NYS licensed. Staff is CDA, infant, child & adult CPR First Aid Certified. Small groups in home setting. Provide exceptional individual attention & plenty of TLC. Infants are our specialty. Indoor & outdoor activities in park like fenced in yard. Walk to Merillon train station. We provide organic foods for breakfast, lunch & dinner. Educational age appropriate activities. 7:00 am​​6:00 pm with weekend & extended hours available. Visit www. snadaycare.com or for more information or to schedule a tour, call 516-873-1853

CLEANING SERVICES AVAILABLE to clean homes, apartments, offices & stores. Free estimates. Own transportation. References available. Bonded & insured. Please call Rosemary 516-782-5764

DONATE YOUR CAR Wheels For Wishes benefiting

*Free Vehicle/Boat Pickup ANYWHERE *We Accept All Vehicles Running or Not *100% Tax Deductible

$15-$25/hour base, plus commission

Mineola based Strategic Marketing & Sales Support Agency looking for team player to follow-up on high-impact packages sent to executives at major corporations and schedule meetings on behalf of our Fortune 500 clients. No sales or cold calling. Well-spoken professional required with working knowledge of contact management software. Flex-time or full time M-F 9:00am-5:30pm. Email resume to: hresources@impressionsaba.com

HELP WANTED: Receptionist (PT) Biener Audi seeks organized, courteous front desk person to receive calls, greet customers, and perform various office functions. Professional appearance, pleasant phone voice and good computer skills a must! Competitive salary/benefits package and friendly energetic work atmosphere.

HELP WANTED: Driver (PT)

x % Ta 100 tible uc Ded

WheelsForWishes.org

Situation Wanted

CLEANING LADY AVAILABLE Cleans, organizes. English speaking, honest, reliable. excellent references. Own transportation. Call 516-225-8544

MA RKETING REPR ESENTA TIVE

Suffolk County

Call: (631) 317-2014

Metro New York

Call: (631) 317-2014

Biener Audi seeks responsible person to assist with dealer swaps, etc. Rare opportunity to set your own hourly schedule as available. Must have clean NYS drivers license and agree to keep all delivery vehicles completely smoke-free! For immediate consideration call 516-829-2834 (Ext. #140) or email resume in confidence to: careers@biener.com

IF YOU USED THE BLOOD THINNER XARELTO

and suffered internal bleeding, hemorrhaging, required hospitalization or a loved one died while taking Xarelto between 2011 and the present time, you may be entitled to compensation. Call Attorney Charles H. Johnson 1-800-535-5727

2015 SUPER SUMMER EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES AT THE PARK AT EAST HILLS!

Park Attendants and Lifeguards 1. Are you looking for an exciting summer job with competitive pay and an upbeat environment? 2. Would you like to spend the summer at the finest park facilities with the largest municipal pool on Long Island? 3. Do you like the outdoors? Then our position is a perfect fit for you! REQUIREMENTS: • At least 16 years of age • Lifeguards must be Nassau County Certified • Available to work through Labor Day weekend To apply: Contact The Park at East Hills at 516-484-9800, e-mail us at: gcox@villageofeasthills.org. or simply visit Village Hall on a business day from 9am-4:30pm. We are located at 209 Harbor Hill Road, East Hills, NY 11576. Ask for Gerica Cox to get an application. The Village Of East Hills is an Equal Opportunity Employer

760900

To Place Your Ad Call

Investment group looks to take an equity position in your company. Whether you are a start up, an established business, looking to buy out a partner, or purchase a franchise, we are willing to make an initial investment up to $100,000. Our goal is to provide the resources to guarantee the success of your entrepreneurial venture. Only business located in the five boroughs, Nassau, and Suffolk County will be eligible to apply. For more details, please email DivinitusInvestments@gmail.com with your contact information, a short description of your business, and what you hope to achieve with the initial investment funds.


68 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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▼ real estate, service directory Situation Wanted

Situation Wanted

CLEANING SERVICES FOR OFFICES OR HOMES. Available 7 days a week. Excellent references. Own transportation. Gift Certificates available! Call 516-974-8959

HOUSECLEANING Young Ukranian woman seeking cleaning​/​ housekeeping jobs. Years of experience. References available. Call Svitlana 516-567-5003

ELDER CARE / HOME CARE Mature woman w/ experience and excellent references seeking position to take care of the elderly or ailing. Light cleaning, cooking also. Flexible days. Has own car. Local excellent references available. Please call Luisa 516-485-9215 or 516-451-1781. Leave message.

MY AMAZING, WONDERFUL, RELIABLE NANNY, who has cared for my little ones like family and who has been in GC for 15yrs is available starting in May. Please call Sharon 516-776-1808

ELDER CARE AVAILABLE full time, live out, Mon-Fri to care for female patients. Trustworthy, reliable. 10 yrs experience. Driver w/ own transportation. References available. Call Esme 516-850-0669 EXCELLENT HOME HEALTH AIDE Seeking FT​/​PT, live in or out position, flexible hours. Have worked with many prominent people. Excellent references. Driver w/car. Will do errands, doctor appts, housework, light cooking. Call Lorna 347-425-2804 F/T COMPANION AVAILABLE Looking for someone to take care of your elderly parents in the comfort of your own home for peace and tranquility? 18 yrs. experience, references, driver w/ reliable vehicle. Please call 516-410-1892 HOME HEALTH AIDE Certified, hardworking reliable mature woman with 15 years experience seeking full time live out position as companion. References available upon request. Please call 347-613-7623 HOME HEALTH AIDE Experienced woman with excellent references seeks FT live in position to take care of your sick or elderly. References available. Call Claudette 347-595-5491 HOME HEALTH AIDE​/​CNA Experienced woman seeking P/T position (Sat & Sun). Willing to do light housekeeping, running errands. Licensed drive w/ own car. References available. Call Joy 516-902-1867

NANNY​/​BABYSITTER FT​/​PT w/ 10 yrs experience. Excellent references. Elementary teaching experience. See review in mommybites. com. Please call Angela 516-3300230 or email: angelamargoth@ yahoo.com PRIVATE CASE WORKER seeking position to take care of elderly full time Monday through Friday. BABYSITTING also offered. Honest, trustworthy, caring, very attentive, dependable. Lots of experience. References available. Please call 516-508-8528 RETIRED MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN looking for part time work building your stores. Please call John 516-328-8924 SUMMER BABYSITTER​/​NANNY: Garden City college student available this summer. Experienced with children and has many references. Owns car to provide transportation if necessary. Contact Kelly at 516-382-3529 or kellodonn24@gmail.com TO ALL EMPLOYERS We offer the following services: Companions, Home Health Aides​/​Elder Care Nights, Days Child Care and Housekeeping Live In or Live Out Laborers, Housekeepers No Fee to Employers Evons Employment & Services 516-505-5510

Business Opportunities WELDING CAREERS : Hands on training for career opportunities in aviation, automotive, manufacturing and more. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. CALL AIM 888-205-1735

announcements

Adoption A DREAM IS A WISH your heart makes. Our wish is a baby to love. We’re a loving, educated, close family. Expenses paid. Danny​/​Lorraine 1-866-997-7171 CHILDLESS YOUNG MARRIED COUPLE (she-30-he-37) seeks to adopt. Will be hands on mom​/​ devoted dad. Financial security. Expenses paid. Call​/​text Mary & Adam 1-800-790-5260

marketplace PRIVACY HEDGE SPRING BLOW OUT SALE. 6’ Arborvitae (cedar) reg. $129 NOW $59. FREE installation​/ delivery. Call TODAY. Limited supply 518-536-1367. www.lowcosttrees.com

Wanted to Buy CASH BUYER! Buying ALL Gold & Silver coins, Stamps, Paper Money, Comic Books, entire collections, Estates. Travel to your home. Call Marc in NY 1-800-959-3419

Tag Sale

Condo/Co-op

YOU’RE INVITED! Wednesday, April 1 9:30am 7 Maplewood St Glen Head, NY 11545 Decorative, collectibles, clothing, glass Dining Room table, housewares, household items, furniture, basement and tools. ...Visit www.invitedsales.com for pictures and details

GARDEN CITY Modern 3 rooms, 1 bedroom, EIK, w/d in unit $3,150 plus 5 rooms, 2 bedroom, 2 baths, FDR, updated EIK, parking $3,500 Garden City Properties 746-1563

pets

Pet Services A GARDEN CITY ANIMAL LOVER doesn’t want to leave your precious pooch or fantastic feline alone all day. I’m reliable, dependable and will walk and feed your pet while you work or travel. Please call Cheryl at 516-505-9717 DO YOU HATE KENNELS? OR STRANGERS IN YOUR HOUSE? HOME AWAY FROM HOME will care for your dog in my Garden City home while you are away. Dog walking also available. Pet CPR & first Aid Certified. Numerous referrals and references. Limited availability. Book early! Annmarie 516-775-4256 PROFESSIONAL DOG TRAINING Doggie Day Care & Walks Backyard Clean-up GC Resident 516-382-5553

LOOKING TO BUY! Records, oriental items, clothing, art, old & modern furniture, estates, jewelry, silver, glassware, dishes, old photos, coins & stamps, flatware. Call George 718-386-1104 or 917-775-3048

Autos Wanted

TOP CASH PAID: JEWELRY, Furniture, Art, etc. Please call 718598-3045 or 516-270-2128. www. iBuyAntiquesNYC.com

ATTENTION !! WANTED !! 2010 or 2011 WHITE MERCURY MARQUIS LS with low mileage. Private owners only. Call George 516-352-9113

Tag Sale

DONATE YOUR CAR to Wheels For Wishes, benefitting Make-aWish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call 631-317-2014 Today!

*BROWSE *SHOP *CONSIGN A.T. STEWART EXCHANGE CONSIGNMENT SHOP 109 Eleventh Street Garden City 11530 516-7468900 China, Silver, Crystal, Jewelry, Artwork, Furniture, Antiques, Collectibles Tues-Fri 10-4 Sat 12-4 Every Tuesday: 10% Senior Citizen Discount. All proceeds benefit The Garden City Historical Society email: store@atstewartexchange.org www. gardencityhistoricalsociety.org INVITED SALES by TRACY JORDAN Live and Online Auction House, Estate Sales, Appraisals and Consignment Shoppe. 839 Stewart Avenue Garden City 11530 516-279-6378 www.invitedsales. com Mon-Fri 10-6pm Sat 10-5pm, Sun 12-5pm Located next to the La Quinta and behind the Garden Gourmet Deli. Live Auctions Monthly! Free walk-in evaluations for items to be considered for Live Auction every Thursday 10am-2pm. No appointment necessary. Auctions are live every Wednesday from 8am8pm and pre-bids are accepted at anytime. Visit www.invitedsales.com and click on the online auctions tab. Visit www.invitedsales.com to see pictures and information regarding our upcoming tag sales and estate sales. Our 50% off room is open everyday and includes items that have been in our shoppe for more than 60 days. To receive discount coupons and promotional information, join our email list. Text “invited” to 22828 and enter your email address when prompted. Consignments are taken by appointment to provide you with the best service. Please call the shoppe at 516-279-6378 to schedule an appointment or email pictures of your items to info@invitedsales. com. We can provide fair market values on any item that you may want to sell, consign or enter into auction. If you need advice on hosting a sale, selling an item or liquidating an estate, please call Tracy Jordan at the shoppe or directly at 516-567-2960

automotive

real estate for rent GARDEN CITY HOUSE SHARE Large Master Bedroom beautifully decorated & furnished. Use of all common areas of house. Cable tv, utilities, washer​/​dryer included. Walking distance to LIRR. No smoking, no pets. No overnight guests. Females only. $875​/​ month. Call 516-477-4240

Apartment For Rent FLORAL PARK VILLAGE First floor​​4 rooms: EIK, LR, 2 Bedrooms, Master Bedroom with walk in closets. One car garage. Located in small 5 family apartment complex. No smoking, no pets. $1,775​/​mth. Call Curtis (Ford Realty) 516-551-9764 FRANKLIN SQUARE Top floor, 1 bedroom, move-in condition. Great location, utilities included. Credit report required. No smoking or pets. $1,200​/ ​m th. Call 516-747-8139 WILLISTON PARK Completely renovated, 1 bedroom, 1 bath, second floor 2 family private home. Bonus finished attic space, updated kitchen, new appliances, new wood floors, new carpets, off street parking. Few blocks to LIRR, village area, nice neighborhood! $1650 includes water and heat. Reference check required. Penny 917-848-9366

For Rent

Office Space GARDEN CITY FRANKLIN AVE Newly furnished individual offices and cubicles for rent at prime location in the heart of Garden City on Franklin Ave. Reasonably priced. Contact Donald Neumann 516-747-4082 GREAT NECK: Beautiful large furnished room, separate furnished secretarial space, conference, kitchen privileges. 516-487-9030 MINEOLA: FULLY FURNISHED 4-OFFICE suite with reception. Approximately 750 sq. feet. 4 private offices with center conference space, 4 parking spaces, cleaning & utilities included. Contact Elen Dundon 516-2941338 ext 335

Vacation Rental OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND Best selection of affordable rentals. Full​ /​partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Real Estate. 1-800-638-2102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com

real estate for sale

Homes for Sale POINT LOOKOUT On beach block. For sale by owner. Totally renovated. Ready to move in. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, LR w/ cathedral ceiling, skylight, fireplace. Granite kitchen w/ ss appliances. DR w/ sliding doors to wrap around deck. Large den. Sunroom​/ ​O ffice. All Anderson windows. Hardwood & Tile flooring. Gas heat. CAC. Alarm system. Full storage attic, large storage closets. Principals only. Asking $795,000. Call 516-805-8193

Lots for Sale CONTRACT FELL THRU! 5 acres​​$19,900 or $254​/ ​m onth! 70% below market! Gorgeous woods, 5 miles to Cooperstown! G’teed buildable! Town rd, utils Call: 888-905-8847 or go to newyorklandandlakes.com UPSTATE NY WATERFRONT! 11 acres $69,900. Beautiful woods on bass lake 5 miles to Cooperstown! Private setting for camp, cabin or year round home! Terms available. 888-479-3394 newyorklandandlakes.com

Out Of Town Real Estate SEBASTIAN, FLORIDA Beautiful 55+ manufactured home community. 4.4 miles to the beach, 2 miles to the riverfront district. Homes starting at $39,000. 772581-0080, www.beach-cove.com. SOUTHOLD CREEK FRONT 2 bedroom, 1 bath cottage. Floating dock. Great year round getaway. $529,000. Exclusive Joan Tyrer Realty 631-765-9500

service directory

Services HOME CARE INSURANCE: Protect assets, assisted living, care in your own home, free guide. Master Choices LTC, Long Term Care Specialists. 516-877-2704. Please see ad in Professional Guide or more details. NEW YORK MARRIAGE AND FAMILY THERAPISTS: Joan Atwood, Ph.D. An experienced therapist makes all the difference. Individual, couple, family therapy and anger management. 516764-2526. jatwood@optonline.net www.NYMFT.com

Computers MICROSOFT TRAINING & MORE for individuals or groups. Local college teacher will help you build skills in WINDOWS, WORD, EXCEL, POWERPOINT. Please call Jim Kaplan 347-673-1785 or email: help@jim-kaplan.com

Home Improvements AMBIANCE PROFESSIONAL SERVICES *Repairs & Maintenance *Handyman & Remodeling *Vanity & Kitchen Cabinet Installations *Furniture Assembly & set up *Finish Carpentry *Minor Electrical & Plumbing 22 year GC Resident Lic & Ins H18E2170000 Owner Operated Call BOB 516-741-2154 BEAUTIFY YOUR HOME WITH SHUTTERS Now you can get them at an amazing discount! Call DESIGN SOLUTIONS for a free estimate. Can’t beat our prices. Call 516-491-8446 BEAUTIFY YOUR HOME WITH SHUTTERS Now you can get them at an amazing discount! Call DESIGN SOLUTIONS for a free estimate. Can’t beat our prices. Call 516-491-8446 DEVLIN BUILDERS Since 1979. We do all types of improvements including HANDYMAN REPAIRS. No job too small. Bob Devlin 516-365-6685. Insured License H18C730000 FINER INTERIORS: Kitchens, bathrooms start to finish; floors stripped, waxed, installed or repaired; painting, sheet rocking, carpets cleaned and repaired, upholstery cleaning. Richard Lopez 516-330-2226

HANDYMAN Meticulous & Reliable Serving GARDEN CITY & Surrounding Area since 2003 Repairs & Installations of all Types Built-in Bookcases, Woodworking, Carpentry, Crown Moldings, Lighting, Painting, Wallpaper and More. 30-year Nassau County Resident. Many References Lic #H01062800 Insured Call Friendly Frank 516-2382112 anytime E-mail Frankcav@ optonline.net HAS YOUR BUILDING SHIFTED OR SETTLED? Contact Woodford Brothers, Inc. for straightening, leveling, foundation and wood frame repairs at 1-800-OLD BARN. www. woodfordbros.com. Suffolk Cty- License #41959-H Nassau Cty- License #H18G7180000 LAMPS FIXED $65 In home service. Handy Howard 646-996-7628


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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classifieds ▼ Health & Fitness

Tutoring

Cleaning

Advance At Home Physical Therapy House Calls: Unable to travel to physical therapy? We’ll come to you! Services covered by Medicare. Scheduled with a geriatric specialist near you! Call today: 516-399-0051. www.AdvanceAtHomePT.com

ENGLISH TUTOR: Diane Gottlieb M.Ed., M.S.W. SAT​/​ACT, College Essays, AP, Regents, ELA Test Prep, Reading comprehension and writing proficiency. 917-599-8007 or email: dianegot@gmail.com LongIslandEnglishTutor.com Providing oneon-one professional support to build confidence, knowledge and skills in every student.

STRONG ARM CLEANING: Residential and commercial cleaning specialist, post construction clean ups, shipping and waxing floors, move ins and move outs. Free estimates. Bonded and insured. 516-538-1125 www.strongarmcleaningny.com

ENLISH / WRITING TUTOR Great writing is a learnable skill. One-onone coaching for admissions essays, school papers, writing tests, etc..... Grades 6-12, college, adult. Call Ruth at 917-340-6142

A & J MOVING & STORAGE: Established 1971. Long Island and New York State specialists. Residential, Commercial, Piano & Organ experts. Boxes available. Free estimates. www.ajmoving.com 516-741-2657 114 Jericho Tpk, Mineola NYDOT# 10405

IASO in Home Physical Therapy. Great physical therapists, excellent results. Outpatient physical therapy services in your home. Medicare covers the cost. We treat: balance problems, debility, joint replacements, CVA, back pain, vertigo, dizziness, etc. Free consultation. 800-803-3385 www. iasorehab.org

Painting & Paperhanging JV PAINT HANDYMAN SERVICES Interior-Exterior Specialist Painting, Wallpapering, Plastering, Spackling, Staining, Power Washing. Nassau Lic#H3814310000 fully Insured Call John 516-741-5378

Party Help LADIES & GENTLEMEN RELAX & ENJOY Your Next Party! Catering and Experienced Professional Services for Assisting with Preparation, Serving and Clean Up Before, During and After Your Party Bartenders Available. Call Kate at 516-248-1545

SPANISH TUTOR: High School, College, Spanish Grammar Specialist, Trimester​/​Comprehensive, FLACS (Regents) Exams. William Cullen, M.A., M.B.A., S.D.A. Chaminade, Fairfield University Alumnus. 516-509-8174 wdctutor06@aol.com

Instruction MATH, SAT, ACT TUTOR: Algebra, Geometry, Algebra 2 plus Trig, PreCalc, AP Calculus. Norm 625-3314 ENGLISH, ACT, SAT TUTOR: 25+ year experience Critical Reading, Writing, Grammar, Essays. Lynne 625-3314

Tutoring

PIANO LESSONS By Ira Baslow. Experience the joy of playing the piano. Private lessons in your home, free no-obligation piano lesson, all levels, all styles, all ages. Beginners a specialty. 516-312-1054 www. iwantmypianolessons.com

CHEMISTRY Tutor and Support Regents & AP NY State Certified Chemistry Teacher. Don’t let your child fall behind. Text​/C ​ all Diane Halka 516-469-6864

PIANO, TRUMPET & TUBA LESSONS given by very patient teacher, very reasonable rates. Flexible hours. All ages welcome. References available. Call 516-746-8349

Services

COMPLETE JUNK REMOVAL​/​DEMOLITION SERVICE: Strong Arm Contracting Inc. We haul anything and everything. Entire contents of home or office. We clean it up and take it away. Residential​/​Commercial. Bonded​/​Insured. Free estimates. 516-538-1125 JUNK REMOVAL AND DEMOLITION: 5% off any job, any type, any 2-3 pieces to entire house. Residential, commercial. Free estimates. References. Bonded and insured. Delivery service available. Henry 516-523-0974 OLD VILLAGE TREE SERVICE: Owner operated sine 1989. 24 hour emergency service. Licensed​ /​insured. Free estimates, member LI Arborist Assoc. Please call 516466-9220

To Place Your Ad Call: 516.307.1045

To place a legal notice in one of Blank Slate Media’s 5 weekly newspapers, please call 516-307-1045x201 or e-mail us at legals@theislandnow.com. Prompt service, low prices, convenient deadlines, easy-to-understand instructions and free online distribution and affadavits guaranteed.

Great Neck News New Hyde Park Herald Courier Williston Times Manhasset Times Roslyn Times 105 Hillside Avenue, Williston Park, NY 11596 516-307-1045 • email: legals@theislandnow.com

69

READERS WRITE

Common Core a threat to our kids

A

s April approaches, we look forward to spring, Easter eggs and baseball, but there is something clouding the horizon for our 3rd through 8th graders: Ridiculously difficult tests designed to make kids fail and to allow our politicians to hand public education to private corporations and make lots of money for those big donors at the expense of our children. No one should be allowing their children to take these tests. No one. But some people are. Some don’t know they can refuse, although that is becoming less and less of an excuse. And some actually condemn those taking a stand against this assault and complain that their children are demanding to opt out too. They groan that they have to tell their kids: “I don’t care if this child isn’t taking the tests, you are.” And they rage against those who are refusing to let their children be abused. I’ve noticed a pattern with these people. Some are afraid. A friend who has a child in special ed won’t refuse because she fears her daughter’s services will be taken away. She says: “I am not giving them any reason to retaliate. She can’t afford to lose her services.” Some people can’t see the big picture. No one wants to harm their kids or be responsible for bringing harm upon them. But, if your child learns differently, don’t let them to take tests specifically designed to frustrate them and label them a failure. If a child needs services, refusing the tests should never be a basis for taking them away. That’s illegal. It is safe to say that if these parents lived in Boston in 1773, they would not have been sneaking onto ships and dumping tea in the harbor. Can’t make those in power angry now. They wouldn’t have been rowing furiously across the Delaware River in 1776 with George Washington. Better to keep your head down and not risk losing what little you have, right? Then there are those who just meekly accept Common Core and the tests as inevitable and part of the status quo. It is what it is, they reason, and their kids are going to take the tests because they have to. That’s education today. Accepting their logic, Rosa Parks should have just given up her seat, right? Jackie Robinson should have been content playing the Negro leagues. Common Core is an assault against our children and their right to a decent education. It is a coup on the part of politicians who have been paid handsomely and are trying to secure even more donations.

Coumo has been paid millions of dollars to push his “education reform plan.” These people aren’t bankrolling him for nothing. They see it as an investment. Privatize public education, launch a bunch of charter schools and who wins? Who gets rich? Not our kids. The worst offenders, however, are not the apathetic and not the cowardly. The worst offenders are the people who actually embrace common core. Who blithely assert how smart their kids are and how much they are learning. Who brag they are good test takers. “Oooh, my kid is doing calculus and reading War and Peace.” The same parents who don’t let their children have playdates, they are too busy studying. Whose kids cry on the bus because their parents won’t let them do any clubs or after-school activities if they don’t get 4s on the tests. Who sue schools because they don’t like their kid’s teacher. Who stoke their egos bragging about how smart their kids are, not caring if they are miserable as well. Common core is designed so all but a select few kids will fail. And considering where we live and how much houses cost and how high are taxes are, the odds are good that those select few are living here. Of course many kids in East Williston, Jericho, Roslyn, Manhasset and Great Neck are going to rise to the challenge, the deck is stacked in their favor to begin with. Their parents may even be among those who stand to gain financially. But what are they losing in the process? I took calculus, even got an A one semester. Never used it again. I read War and Peace. It’s a long, boring book, even the Cliff Notes are daunting. Childhood is a unique time in one’s life, it should be enjoyed. And for the ridiculous Common Core goals to be met, a lot of what makes childhood joyous has to be sacrificed. Art, music, gym… playdates, time spent with friends just hanging out and being kids. Parties. Dress up. Playground time. Recess. Fun. Health. Happiness. A well-rounded life. That is what is being sacrificed. Students here were college and career ready long before Cuomo sacrificed them on the altar of his big donors. Parents, don’t let these people rob your children of their childhood. Common Core must be shown the door. Refuse the tests. That is our first weapon. Put aside your egos, muster your courage, and fight back. Your children need you. Don’t let them take these tests. Emily Kaye Roslyn Heights


70 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

▼ LEGALS

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LEGAL NOTICE PLEASE TAKE NOTICE THAT the completed and verified assessment roll for the Village of Roslyn Estates for the fiscal year June 1, 2015 through May 31, 2016, will be filed with the Village Clerk of the Village of Roslyn Estates, at 25 The Tulips, Roslyn Estates, New York, on April 1, 2015, where it shall remain open to public inspection Monday through Friday between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. Dated: Roslyn Estates, New York March 23, 2015 BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES VILLAGE OF ROSLYN ESTATES Bryan L. Rivera Village Clerk​/​Treasurer RT 141293 1x 3/27/​2 015 #141293

Notice of formation of We R Media LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York SSNY on 03/02/2015. Office located in Nassau County. SSNY has been designated for service of process. SSNY shall mail copy of any process served against the LLC 125 Mineola Ave Suite#301 Roslyn Heights, NY 11577. Purpose: any lawful purpose. RT 141257 6x 3/20, 27, 4/03, 10, 17, 24, 2015 #141257

LEGAL NOTICE PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that a public hearing will be held by the Zoning Board of Appeals of the Village of Roslyn Estates on Wednesday, April 15, 2015, at 7:30 p.m. at Village Hall, 25 The Tulips, Roslyn Estates, New York 11576, to hear the following case: Public Hearing for Case #581, the Application of Val and Sara Katayev, as owners with regard to the premises at 7 The Birches, Roslyn Estates, NY 11576, also known as Section 7, Block 23, Lot 1990, in an R-21 Residential District, for variance from Village Code Section 200-27(C), to permit alterations to an existing, single family home that will result in 5,844.8 square feet of floor area on a 33,977 square foot lot, 146.8 square feet in excess of the maximum allowed floor area. At time and place of public hearing, all persons will be given opportunity to be heard. Individuals wishing to review file may do so during Village business hours. Those persons planning to attend meeting and who require special accommodations because of disability are requested to notify Village Clerk no less than 48 hours prior to meeting. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF APPEALS STEVEN HALPER, CHAIRMAN March 24, 2015 RT 141295 1x 3/27/2015 #141295

Notice of Formation of Jolie Rothschild LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy of State of NY (SSNY) on 03/04/2014. Office location: Nassau County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 164 Crescent Lane, Roslyn Heights, NY 11577. Purpose: any lawful purpose. RT 141296 6x 3/27, 4/03, 10, 17, 24, 5/01, 2015 #141296

Sports

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Purchase outlasts Old Westbury The SUNY Old Westbury women’s lacrosse team fell behind early, and continued to push back throughout the game until falling 13-11 to the Purchase Panthers in Monday’s Skyline Conference opener from Mitchel Field in Uniondale, New York. With the loss, Old Westbury moves to 1-4 while Purchase remained perfect at 5-0. Samantha Rich netted three goals and Zoe Hines scored two more to put Purchase ahead with a 5-0 lead through the opening 10:48. Emily Powell and Courtney Gallagher tallied backto-back goals in a 12 second span to make it a 5-2 game. Following a Kelly Turtell goal, Old Westbury answered with goals by Gabriella DiPierno, Danielle Weir, Sara Bey and Powell to knot the game at 6-6 with 3:04 remaining. Purchase added three-straight goals before Powell netted her third goal of the game as time expired in the first half to make it a 9-7 contest at the break. Purchased used a 3-0 run to open the second half to grab a 12-7 lead with 14:15 remaining. Sara Bey found Halle Johnson at 12:51 to stop Purchase’s run. Hines then totaled her sixth goal of the game at the 7:07 mark to close out Purchase’s scoring with a 13-8 advantage. Bey would dish out her third assist of the season (career high) when DiPierno ripped nylon at 6:47 to close the deficit to four goals (13-9). Weir (1:49) and Gallagher (1:08) each scored late goals to make it a two-goal game, but were not enough to overcome Purchase’s first-half scoring output. Ashley Gugliuzzo (1-4) tied a career-high with nine saves in defeat for Old Westbury. Gallagher scooped up a game-high five ground balls (tied career-high) to go along with a career-best five caused turnovers. Bey and Wier each followed with three ground balls. Bey’s two helpers placed her in the company of Jessica Walker and Maria Dischley as Old Westbury’s singlegame assist record holders. Caitlin Sosa (5-0) made four saves to earn Purchase’s win. In the end, Purchase held the advantage in

Sara Bey tied Old Westbury’s single-game record with two assists. shots (30-18), shots on goals (22-15) and draw controls (16-8) while Old Westbury scooped up a 19-18 edge in ground balls. Drew’s Nikki Kleiman led all scorers with four goals and two assists as Krysta Cento

racked up five draw controls. In the end, Drew held the advantage in shots (30-16), shots on goal (25-14) and ground balls (20-18) while Old Westbury finished with a 14-11 edge in draw controls.

Old Westbury bests CCNY for 5th straight win SUNY Old Westbury baseball won its fifthstraight game with a convincing 15-1 victory Monday afternoon versus the CCNY Beavers from Baseball Heaven in Yaphank. With the win, Old Westbury improves to 5-2 on the season while sending CCNY’s record to 3-2. Old Westbury starter Tim Ingram (2-1) dazzled on the mound, striking out nine of 15 batters he faced to earn his second win of the season. After Ingram struck out the side in the top of the second, Old Westbury got on the board in the home half of the frame with 10 runs on 10 hits (six extra-base hits). Three straight singles set the plate for Tommy Ziegen, who delivered a two-run double to score Jake Schwartz for the eventual game-winning run. Two batters later,

Jacob Coners’ RBI triple scored Ziegen, which followed with four-straight RBI doubles by Eddie Hernandez, Jonathan Pagan, Dean Sheridan and Michael Cardino to put the Panthers up by nine runs. Ziegen knocked in his third run of the inning with an RBI single to score Schwartz for a 10-0 lead. CCNY scored its lone run in the fifth with a two-out Bobby McDowell RBI double off reliever Carlos Solorzano to make it a 12-1 game. Cardino’s RBI double in the fifth put the Panthers up by 12 runs before pinch hitter Joey Walsh walked, stole second, and advanced home off a wild pitch in the seventh inning. Old Westbury closed the scoring books in the eighth with Brandon Stein’s RBI double, which drove home Peter Falgiano for the 15-1 final.

Ingram scattered two hits and walked one in four innings of mound work. Nick Schoen and Nick Dorcean each tossed two innings of one-hit relief as Old Westbury’s pitching combined to rack up 15 strikeouts, while allowing six hits and three walks. CCNY starter Max Mueller (0-1) lasted just 1.1 innings, surrendering nine runs on nine hits to take the loss. Cardino’s 3-for-4 game with two RBI and two runs scored paced the Panthers. Pagan (2-5, 2 RBI, 2 R, SB), Sheridan (2-3, RBI, R), Carlos Balmaceda (2-3 RBI, R), Stein (2-2, RBI) and Ziegen (2-5, 3 RBI, R, SB) each contributed multi-hit performances for Old Westbury. Olivio’s 2-for-3 game at the plate led the Beavers.


Sports

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The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

71

Post bounces back with consecutive wins B y Ma x i m e D e villa z The LIU Post men’s lacrosse team saw itself slide down three steps to fifth seed on the USILA and Lacrosse Magazine Division II Top-15 rankings last Monday, March 16, after a hard-fought battle at Adelphi University. But the Pioneers recovered sturdily from the results of a seemingly unimportant poll thus far in the season. Junior attackman Ryan Slane’s goal scoring led the Pioneers to two victories to finish off their three-game home stand in the East Coast Conference. Slane went on a six-goal roll in the match-up against the University of the District of Columbia Firebirds that led the hosts to a comfortable 13-5 win. Fellow junior attackman Matty Beccaris also recorded six points, four of which were assists. Despite a 1-1 mark long into the first stanza, the Firebirds didn’t have much to say that afternoon. Once LIU Post notched three tallies with only minutes to go before the break, the guests were unable to respond. The Pioneers totaled 45 shots over the four quarters while the Firebirds fired off 23. Neat and orderly, the Pioneers brushed off most of the ashes from offensive Firebird attacks as the defense stood for 15-of-18 clears. LIU Post returned to the castle on Saturday, March 21, against Chestnut Hill,

eager to continue their perfect ECC record. The hosts started off wildly up front by scoring six unanswered goals to welcome their opponents to Bethpage Federal Credit Union Stadium in Brookville, which seemed to have recovered from the surprising late March snow the day before. Up 6-1 after the first quarter, the home side had no intentions of stopping the attack. The Pioneers stood for another sixgoal commotion with two man-up tallies from junior midfielder Anthony Berardis. The guests attempted to come back, but never really came close. Despite 33 shots for the Griffins, only six found the cage behind junior goalkeeper Adam Winne, who stood for 11 consecutive saves. Senior attackman Chris Caiazza scored a career-high seven points, with six tallies and one feed, while Berardis tied his career-best with four points as well. As the final whistle blew, the scoreboard shone 18 bright for the hosts and only six for the guests. Head LIU Post men’s lacrosse coach John Jez and his squad are going on the road next as they face Post University on Wednesday, March 25 in a non-Conference tilt. Faceoff is scheduled for 3 p.m. This article was originally published in the Pioneer, the award-winning student newspaper of LIU Post, www.liupostpioneer. com, and is republished here by Blank Slate Media with the permission of the Pioneer. LIU Post men’s Lacrosse in action.

Photo/Kimberly Toledo

Salcido shines for Post as softball squad splits B y Micha e l O t e ro LIU Post softball earned a split in a double dip against the Southern Connecticut State Owls on Thursday, March 19 at the Softball Complex in Brookville. In the first game, the Pioneers grabbed the early lead with sophomore outfielder Mackenzie Buckley’s single through the right side to score sophomore infielder Kayla McCoy. Later in the third inning, the Pioneers doubled their lead when sophomore infielder Melissa Peet launched a solo shot over the right field fence, making it a 2-0 game. The Owls answered back though in the fourth inning with a home run of their own to even up the game at two apiece. The score stood pat through regulation and eventually extra frames were needed to decide a winner. The Owls went on to secure a 4-2 victory thanks to another two-run home run in the top of the eighth inning. Sopho-

Photo/Kimberly Toledo

LIU Post softball split a doubleheader with Southern Connecticut State. more pitcher Ashley Martin commanded the circle through eight innings for the Pioneers and struck out eight while allowing just one walk. The second game was different for the Pioneers as their bats came alive and they pounded the Owls for 10 runs en

route to a 10-0 victory. LIU Post manufactured four runs right of the bat in the first inning. In the third, Peet continued her spectacular day when she sent another ball over the wall to increase the lead to 5-0. The back breaker for the Owls came in the sixth inning when the Pioneers tal-

lied five more runs and the exclamation point was a three-run blast off the bat of junior infielder Maria Palmeri. Perhaps even more impressive than the hitting in the second game was the pitching from Megan Salcido. The senior improved to 2-2 for the season, and tossed six frames of no-hit ball. She struck out five batters and only allowed one base on balls. Due to inclement weather conditions, the Pioneers’ doubleheader against the Bears from NYIT set for Saturday, Mar. 21, was postponed and rescheduled. Head LIU Post softball coach Jamie Apicella and the Pioneers return to the field on Wednesday, March 25 against Mercy College. First pitch from the LIU Post Softball Complex is set for 2 p.m. This article was originally published in the Pioneer, the award-winning student newspaper of LIU Post, www.liupostpioneer. com, and is republished here by Blank Slate Media with the permission of the Pioneer.


72 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 27, 2015

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