Serving New Hyde Park, North New Hyde Park, Herricks, Garden City Park, Manhasset Hills, North Hills, Floral Park
$1
Friday, September 16, 2016
vol. 65, no. 38
N E W H Y D E PA R K
Williston Day Sunday, September 18 11 am - 5 pm
PAGES 36-44
Guide to St reet Fa irs e m b e r 16 , 2016 e ci a l S e c t i o n • S e pt Blank Slate Media Sp
New Hyde Park Saturday, September 17 10 am - 4:30 pm
PAGES 44-54
FireFiGhTerS UNVeiL MarTiNS WiNS GUide To aPPeaL, PidoT oUT STreeT FairS 9/11 MoNUMeNT PAGeS 35-54
PAGe 3
Silence marks 9/11 tragedy in Floral Park
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Gone, noT FoRGoT Ten
Village remembers 11 residents killed in WTC terrorist attacks By N o a h M a N S k a r Except for the church bells ringing nearby, the crowd in front of Floral Park’s Village Hall was completely silent Sunday at 8:46 and 9:03 a.m., the moments when planes struck the World Trade Center’s twin towers 15 years ago. The terrorist attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people then caused noise and terror to ripple from downtown Manhattan across Long Island, the U.S. and the world. The bells ringing to mark the first plane crash broke almost 10 minutes of silence among the crowd of about 150 residents, clergy, firefighters and village officials at Floral Park’s annual 9/11 remembrance. More followed after village Mayor Thomas Tweedy read the 11 names of village residents killed in the attack and before the bells rang again. That silence brought back Jim MacDonald’s vivid memories of a
day that still carries much emotional weight. “I closed my eyes and you can visualize the two explosions,” said MacDonald, a Vietnam War veteran and past commander of the Floral Park American Legion. “It’s still right there in the front of your mind.” It also creates the space to remember not just the horror of the attack and those who died, but also “to really be proud of our country and really how much further we’ve come, hopefully,” said Susan Walsh, Floral Park’s village clerk. MacDonald, a 69-year-old carpenter, was working on a house the morning of 9/11 when reports of the attack came over the TV, he said. He left and went to the John Lewis Childs Elementary School, where one of his children was a student. His wife was the president of the Parent-Teacher Association Continued on Page 25
Photo By Michael scro
new hyde Park firefighters bow their heads at the fire department’s unveiling of a new monument honoring local victims of the terrorist attacks at the world trade center on sept. 11, 2001. See story on page 3.
Foes of 3rd track raise federal review questions By N o a h MaNSkar
of the project rather than the railroad itself. An environmental study Opponents of the Long Is- under the New York State Enviland Rail Road’s third track say ronmental Quality Review Act a federal agency should over- is underway, but other work see the environmental study the railroad has done should
trigger a study under the National Environmental Policy Act, or NEPA, a federal law, Hicksville civic activist Tanya Lukasik said in Floral Park last Thursday. Continued on Page 73
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