ACID ATTACK REWARD RAISED


A press release U.S. Rep. George Santos sent out regarding the Great Neck School District’s 2021 budget vote and election date was riddled with falsehoods, according to individuals the congressman named in the release.
The district’s election and budget vote were scheduled to take place on May 18, 2021, the same date as the Jewish holiday Shavuot.
State law requires school districts to hold their elections on the third Tuesday in May, but due to the conflict, the district requested that
the date be changed to May 11.
The district, in early March, filed an emergency appeal with the state to change the date, which ultimately was granted.
Santos, fresh off a loss in the 3rd District election against former Rep. Tom Suozzi at the time, tweeted out the release on “George Santos for Congress” stationery on March 14, 2021. The release was titled “Jewish voter suppression in New York.”
In the release, Santos cited “sources” that former board President and current Trustee Barbara Berkowitz said she “was not aware of the importance of May 18th to the Jewish community and accused
a fellow board member who was allegedly responsible for clearing the calendar date.”
Santos said the unidentified board member “claimed that she did bring up the scheduling conflict to the board, who stated nothing could be done below the state level.”
Berkowitz told Blank Slate Media on Tuesday she was “outraged” by the claims made by Santos.
“I just read thru the entire press release he issued and can tell you that like all the other statements Mr. Santos has made, this one, too, is filled with too many outright blatant lies to even begin to know how
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Two tax bills for more than $1.1 million that were wrongly sent to the Notre Dame Parish in New Hyde Park are one step closer to getting corrected through the Nassau County Legislature.
The Legislat ure’s Finance and Rules Committee recently advanced Correction of Error petitions to pay back the $1,165,324.68 sent to the parish, which is tax-exempt, according to a press release from the county’s minority caucus.
Last winter, the parish was sent two different tax bills for its 2023 general taxes. The initial Nassau Assessment Department error led to a $16.7 million assessment on the property.
The Diocese of Rockville Centre,
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The reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of a person who threw acid on a Hofstra student’s face has been increased to $50,000, while Nassau police said they are making progress on the investigation Wednesday.
Nafah Ikram, a Sewanhaka graduate, had acid thrown in her face outside her Elmont home in March 2021 by an unknown assailant.
The reward for information leading to the arrest of the suspect described as roughly 6’2” with a skinny build was increased from $40,000 to $50,000, ofcials announced Wednesday.
The county will pay $30,000 in reward money while the FBI, which is aiding the county in its search, will pay the other $20,000.
Nassau County Legislator Carrié
The North Hempstead Town Board unanimously approved two resolutions that temporarily suspend tent permit limits and authorizes the expedited review for solar installations and electric vehicle charging stations at their Feb. 7 meeting.
“We at the Town want to enhance our partnership with our local business communities in whatever ways we can,” Councilmember Peter Zuckerman said in a statement. “Giving businesses more space through the use of tents means they have the ability to serve more patrons. We want our residents shopping local as frequently as they can and we hope that this initiative proves benefcial for business owners.”
Businesses can now apply for a tent permit and install it for up to six months, which is the maximum allowed by state law. Without the resolution, permits would only be granted for a maximum of 15 days and a possible extension for another 15 days.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, many local and national
municipalities allowed restaurants and small businesses to extend their property to deal with social distancing.
The second resolution passed now allows applications for solar energy panels and related equipment and electric vehicle charging stations to be expedited by the North Hempstead Building Department. Expedited permit applications will also be reviewed by the department within 14 business days.
“This new law is a crucial step forward in our journey toward a more sustainable and resilient future,” said Councilmember Veronica Lurvey. “It is imperative that North Hempstead empowers its residents to go green and embrace clean energy solutions. We are proud to be at the forefront of this important change.”
The commitment to electric vehicle charging stations falls in line with the town’s previous investment in going green. In the 2023 capital plan approved in January, about $330,000 is committed to buying more electric vehicles and installing charging stations, among other things.
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Solages (D-Valley Stream), who previously urged for the increased reward last year, expressed his gratitude to the county and the FBI for helping to incentivize others to fnd the assailant and commended Ikram for her strength throughout the search.
“Nafah Ikram has inspired all of us with the determination, dignity and courage she has demonstrated throughout this unthinkable ordeal,” Solages said. “I am very thankful for the cooperation and strong support from the Nassau County Police Department and the FBI, and I believe that together, we’re going to make justice happen for Nafah.”
Nassau County Police Commissioner Patrick Ryder said the department is “a lot further on” in the search for the assailant than when they frst started, expressing confdence that someone has information on the acid thrower.
Ikram’s mother, Sherina Mohamed, was walking into the house with her daughter that March night and urged anyone with information to “be a human being” and come forward to help bring the acid thrower to justice.
Ikram, who lost more than 10 pounds in 10 days after her eighth surgery, said she will not feel fully safe until the attacker is caught.
“Knowing who did this will 100% help me feel a little better and a little bit safer when I’m outside,” Ikram said Wednesday.
The attacker, police said, wore a black hooded sweatshirt and gloves before feeing the area in a red 20132015 Nissan Altima.
The acid caused Ikram to scream, which resulted in the liquid spreading to her mouth, according to a GoFundMe page to help fund the various Continued on Page 38
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The town of North Hempstead will be hosting a three-part series of home sustainability workshops throughout the month of March to garner resident support and involvement for the town’s eforts to combat climate change.
The three workshops will approach three diferent topics of home sustainability: sustainable yard care March 1, native plant gardening March 15 and rain gardens March 29. All three will be held via Zoom and begin at 6:30 p,m. Registration is required beforehand through the town’s website.
The workshops will be hosted by the town’s Climate Smart Community Task Force Coordinator Meagan Fastuca and include informative presentations and opportunities for attendees to ask questions and have discussions about the workshop’s topic. The second workshop will include a presentation from the president of the Long Island Native Plant Initiative, Rusty Schmidt.
Councilwoman Veronica Lurvey said the frst workshop covering sustainable yard care will inform residents about methods such as composting, rain barrels, saving water, pesticide alternatives and much more.
North Hempstead is working towards becoming a Climate Smart Community, Lurvey said, and these workshops will contribute to those eforts. Climate Smart Communities are a New York State program to help local governments address climate change.
“It’s really important for us to be environ-
mentally progressive and environmentally active to do the right thing for future generations,” Lurvey said.
She said that she hopes these workshops
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will bring individual residents to take sustainable actions that result in a chain efect until the majority of the town is involved in those eforts.
“We want these actions to exponentially
grow throughout the entire town,” Lurvey said. “The only way to really combat certain types of climate change consequences is by taking action in your own yard and hoping that that action becomes community action.”
Lurvey said these workshops are incredibly important for the town’s environment and its water.
“We need to keep our water safe,” Lurvey said. “And by taking sustainable steps in how we garden and how we live our lives, we keep our water clean and we keep ourselves healthy.”
Something that the town as a suburban space is working to combat through these workshops is theprevalence of the green, grassy front lawn. Lurvey said they are trying to change the cultural concept of what the suburbs should look like and to embrace the beauty of natural and native lawns that are better for the environment.
While there are no workshops scheduled beyond the three planned, Lurvey said the town will surely be working on additional workshops in the future.
Residents can also purchase rain barrels and composters through the city at a discounted price to be picked up from the Clark Botanic Garden on a frst-come, frst-serve basis. The next sale will be held on March 24. Residents can get more information through the town’s website.
For additional information about sustainability in North Hempstead, residents can visit the town’s sustainability page or call 311.
Some House Democrats introduced a resolution to expel U.S. Rep. George Santos from Congress on Thursday, a measure welcomed by a group of 3rd District residents who share the same goal.
Democratic U.S. Reps. Ritchie Torres, Dan Goldman, Robert Garcia, Becca Balint and Eric Sorensen submitted the resolution on Thursday. Santos’ expulsion would require a two-thirds majority vote of members of the Republicancontrolled House.
“Enough is enough: My colleagues and I are introducing legislation to expel George Santos from the United States Congress,” Torres tweeted Thursday. “If Kevin McCarthy refuses to hold George Santos accountable, then we will.”
“George Santos is a total fraud who deceived his voters to get elected to Congress,” Goldman tweeted. “His presence in Congress is a stain on the institution and if he will not resign then he must be removed.”
Santos told reporters that the sponsors of the resolution were “silencing the electorate of the United States.” The congressman has continuously referred to the 142,000 votes he received during the election since being faced with questions about whether or not he would step down from office.
Torres and Goldman, both New York Democrats, filed a complaint with the House Ethics Committee several weeks ago for allegedly violating the Ethics in Government Act, saying the Republican must be held accountable for deceiving voters and Congress.
The Ethics in Government Act, officials said, was created to “preserve and promote the integrity of public officials and institutions,” which Torres and Goldman said they believe Santos has failed to adhere to. The two described financial reports submitted in 2020 and 2022 as “sparse and perplexing” in the complaint.
McCarthy, the House speaker, said on Tuesday he anticipates Congress’ Ethics Committee to conduct a probe into the allegations made against Santos.
“There are questions, I expect them to get answered,” McCarthy told CNN.
McCarthy previously told reporters that the Ethics Committee had launched an investigation into Santos before an aide for the speaker confirmed no investigation has begun.
A nonpartisan ad hoc group, Concerned Citizens of NY-03 sent out a press release expressing their support for the expulsion resolution on Thursday, saying that Santos is “unfit to serve in Congress.”
“George Santos is a scourge to us, his constituents; he’s an embarrassment to the GOP, he’s a humiliation to long-time donors, and he’s turning the Republican Party into an international laughing stock,” the release said. “But worst of all, he’s distracting our leaders from conducting the country’s important business.”
Dozens of members of all ages from the group traveled to Washington D.C. from Roslyn Tuesday morning to call for McCarthy to oust Santos from the House. Once there, the residents flooded the hallways of the Capitol outside Santos’ office before joining Torres and Goldman, calling for him to be removed from office.
“The travesty of Santos’s presence in Congress is not politics as usual and cannot be treated as such,” the release continued. “And it leaves us, the citizens of NY-03, without meaningful representation in Congress.”
A resolution submitted by Town of North Hempstead Democratic Councilwoman Veronica Lurvey that also called for Santos’ expulsion from Congress was passed on Tuesday night by a 6-1 vote. North Hempstead Supervisor Jenni-
fer DeSena also presented a resolution for Santos to resign, which passed unanimously during the Tuesday meeting.
Republican Councilmember David Adhami said he agreed with the general intent of the Democrat’s resolution but disagreed with its verbiage before voting no, saying there’s information included just to trigger people and it was poorly written.
DeSena motioned to amend the resolution to remove any mention of her name, saying doing so makes it a political and personal attack, which was voted down 4-3 along party lines. The supervisor endorsed Santos during his congressional campaign and has since changed her tune following the unearthing of Santos’ personal, professional and financial track record.
Recent reports revealed Santos faced theft charges after writing several bad checks in his name to dog breeders in the Pennsylvania Amish country in 2017, according to multiple reports. The York County District Attorney’s office classified the case as “theft by deception” to Politico.
The nine checks Santos wrote exceeded $15,000, according to the reports. Santos’ childhood friend and personal injury lawyer, Tiffany Bogosian, said Santos claimed four checkbooks went missing before writing the bounced checks, in a letter she sent to a Pennsylvania state trooper.
Bogosian told CNN she was not licensed to practice in Pennsylvania and could not represent Santos in the matter. She said she was later informed by the now-congressman that the
Continued on Page 38
WILLIAM
“William, you were always my hero. I wanted to be just like you, but I didn't play football or basketball like 'The Will', just didn't have your touch. I enjoyed watching you and was always proud to be your brother. Never does a day go by that I do not think of you. What would it be like to be able to call you. I have told my daughters about you letting me drive Mom and Dad’s new car around Tarboro although I was only 14 years old. October 2, 1970, Daddy’s birthday and the day that changed my life. You were my hero before Nam and you are still and one day I hope to walk with you again. I Love you. Mike”
Help us find a photo for ever y name on The Wall
Each name on The Wall represents a family who was forever changed by their loss
Help us find photos for the Wall of Faces to ensure that those who sacr ificed all in Vietnam are never forgotten.
Vist www V VMF.org/Faces to lear n more
Former North Hempstead Supervisor Jon Kaiman said in an email to supporters that he is exploring other options in public service, in-
cluding the office of town supervisor.
Kaiman, a Democrat who held the town supervisor post from 2004 through 2013, said “there appears to be a good deal of support and encouragement for me to make a run for North Hempstead town supervisor and I am considering it.”
The Great Neck resident currently serves as the Suffolk deputy county executive, a position he has held since 2017. The Suffolk executive, Steve Bellone, has served in his current role since 2012 and is term-limited from running for the position again in this year’s elections.
Kaiman was also a candidate for New York’s 3rd Congressional District, where he finished second in the August Democratic primary behind Robert Zimmerman.
North Hempstead is currently run by Jennifer DeSena, a registered Democrat who caucuses with Republicans and is up for re-election this year.
Kaiman said it would be a “great honor” to serve in Congress, but acknowledged there are numerous challenges.
Before working as deputy executive, Kaiman served as the head of NIFA, a state oversight board that controls Nassau County’s finances.
He also served as an adviser to former Gov. Andrew Cuomo on the Superstorm Sandy recovery effort.
Prior to being elected supervisor, he served as a Nassau County District Court judge for three years.
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The proceeds of a GoFundMe created after the loss of a Herricks High School senior and his mother will go toward college scholarships, according to an update from members of the family.
Steven DiBiasi, 17, died on Jan. 25. His mother, Louise died three days later. A GoFundMe has been created that as of Tuesday has raised over $9,400.
“Please accept our sincere thanks and appreciation to all of the community members who contributed to the GoFundMe account in honor of Steven DiBiasi and his mother, Louise DiBiasi,” said husband and father Ralph DiBiasi and sister and aunt Carol Bertolotti.
“All of the funds collected will be used to fund scholarships for students graduating from high school and going on to college,” the statement continues.
Herricks Superintendent Tony Sinanis said the recent loss had a big effect on the community.
“The tragic, unexpected passing of Steven DiBiasi and subsequently his mother was something that really shook our community to the core,” Sinanis said during the Feb. 2 board of education meeting. “On behalf of the
A GoFundMe created after the recent loss of a Herricks High School senior has raised over $9,400.
entire district and Board of Education, I want to express our condolences to the DiBiasi family. who are still grappling with that loss.”
The GoFundMe page, organized by Lawrence and Emily Wong, describes DiBiasi as passionate.
“He was an amazing friend, stu-
dent, hockey player and unique individual,” the page said. “Steven gave his time and energy to special needs kids – his love for hockey was his pas-
sion and his way of spending time with others – such as coaching Bethpage special needs hockey team,” the page said.
Herricks High School’s Chamber Choir, Men’s Choir and Women’s Choir recently performed at the Harborside Senior Living Facility in Port Washington. For an hour, the Herricks
students sang various musical selections they will perform at an upcoming Carnegie Hall concert. This was the choral group’s frst visit back to the facility since December 2019.
Herricks High School junior Gabriella Cardone was recently recognized by the Region At Large Program of the 100th year of Scholastic Art and Writing Awards 2023. The Herricks artist is receiving the Silver Key Award for her mixed media piece “Self-Refection.”
Cardone has also been recognized as a Nassau Region Finalist in the PTA Refections contest for her piece “My Generational Duty.”
Herricks Art teacher Jennifer Cavalluzzo said, “We are very proud of Gabby for her recent recognitions and her contributions to the Art program.”
Herricks Middle School recently hosted an assembly with Stephen Hill, motivational speaker, author and attorney who shared his journey of addiction and recovery with eighth grade students. By sharing his personal story, he hopes to inspire others to think twice before doing drugs.
Herricks High School seniors Namit Kapoor, Carolyn Lau and Patrick Leu have all been named a Regional Finalist for the 2023 class of the Coca-Cola Scholars Program and are moving to the next round of the selection process for a chance to become a CocaCola Scholar.
The three Herricks seniors were among 1,557 Semifnalists who were selected from over 91,000 initial applicants and are now part of 250 students who have moved to the fnal selection phase, regional interviews.
After these interviews are conducted in mid-February, 150 of the Regional Finalists will be designated as Coca-Cola Scholars and attend Coca-Cola Scholars Weekend in Atlanta, GA on April 13-16 where they will be the guests of honor at the 35th annual Coca-Cola Scholars Banquet and participate in the CocaCola Scholars Leadership Development Institute facilitated by program alumni. Collectively, the Coca-Cola Scholars Foundation will award $3.1 million in college scholarships to these outstanding young leaders.
The Coca-Cola Scholars Foundation celebrates and empowers visionary leaders who are refreshing the world. With its 34th class of Coca-Cola Scholars, the Foundation has provided more than $78 million in scholarships to over 6,600 program alumni who together have become a powerful force for positive change. To learn more, visit www.coca-colascholarsfoundation.org.
We wish Namit, Carolyn and Patrick the best of luck in the next steps of the 2023 Coca-Cola Scholars Program.
Twenty-seven Herricks High School musicians recently attended the Long Island String Festival Association’s (LISFA) Secondary Festival at Uniondale High School. Students were selected for this prestigious festival based on their NYSSMA Solo Evaluation scores from the previous year and teacher recommendations.
The talented young string players rehearsed with prominent guest conductors for four hours each day, culminating in a fnal performance on the fnal day of the festival.
Herricks Director of Fine and Performing Arts Anissa Arnold said, “I am very proud to see so many students represent Herricks at this event.” She continued, “It is a great honor for the students and a true testament of the efort and dedication of both students and teachers.”
At the Feb. 2 Herricks Board of Education meeting, the board congratulated and recognized Herricks High School seniors Ashley Lam, Jeylin Lee and Dheyala Simrin for being named in the top 300 scholars in the Regeneron Science Talent Search 2023. This program is one of the nation’s oldest and most prestigious science and math competitions for high school seniors.
Each of the three Herricks students committed themselves to their individual research projects for eight weeks and dedicated another eight weeks to complete the submission of their original, independent research projects, essays and recommendations. In preparation, the aspiring scientists were fortunate to align with mentors virtually and in person.
Ashley Lam’s subject was environmental engineering/materials science, specifcally focused on water purifcation. Ashley worked under the direction of Dr. Benjamin S. Hsiao and Jiajun Tian through the Simons Summer Research Program at Stony Brook University.
Ashley’s project was titled “Novel Zinc Oxide/Nanocellulose Composite as a Low-Cost Photocatalyst for Water
Purifcation.”
Jeylin Lee’s subject was medical/data science and her mentor was Dr. Tim Duong through The Albert Einstein College of Medicine at Montefore Medical Center. Jeylin’s project was titled “Diabetic Ketoacidosis Amongst COVID-19 Infected Individuals: A Retrospective Study of Incidence, Characteristics, Outcomes, and Risk Factors.”
Dheyala Simrin’s subject focused on behavioral and social science. Dheyala’s mentor was Alexander Harris and she did her work through New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University. Dheyala’s project was titled “Characterizing Social Behaviors in Female Mice: A Novel Sex-Specifc Model Using DeepLabCut and BSOiD Unsupervised Machine Learning.”
Throughout their four years at Herricks High School, the scholars have been part of the school’s Science Research Program allowing students to explore their individual passion of science at a higher level. Each have expressed a desire to pursue a career in science.
The district is proud of Ashley, Jeylin and Dheyala and wish them continued future success.
Town of North Hempstead offcials have not only done the right thing in supporting a Port Washington family in the face of resident opposition to improvements to their home.
But the town ofcials did so with the kind of compassion and common sense too often-absent from these kinds of disputes.
And what could have ended up as another story of a small group of residents opposing a worthy project has turned into a feel-good story that we hope gets retold often.
Yes, Stevie and Angelo Bovis built a four-foot high fence on their front lawn on Derby Road last September without receiving a needed variance from the town’s Board of Zoning and Appeals.
Homeowners on Derby Road expressed their concerns with the fourfoot distance of the fence to the curb, the height of the fence and the aesthetics of the overall neighborhood, among other issues, during a zoning board hearing
Sometimes they spoke with an unexpected level of anger.
North Hempstead Town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena said some neighbors opposed the fence and a “general animosity simmered as the process with the zoning board played out.”
Those opposing the fence who attended the zoning hearing were supported by a letter signed by 14 other homeowners surrounding the home, which sits a block from Port Washington Boulevard, a heavily traveled four-lane road.
But Stevie and Angelo had a good
reason for the fence.
Their 4-year-old daughter, Stella, has been diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder and is considered a fight risk.
Her father said during the zoning hearing that he built the fence ahead of applying for a permit and variance on the advice of Stella’s doctor and two therapists to allow Stella to play outside freely and safely.
We would like to have thought protecting a challenged 4-year-old would have been enough for the residents. But then again this is North Hempstead and, for some, it wasn’t a good enough reason.
Fortunately, the town Board of Zoning and Appeals ruled in favor of the fence under the American Disabilities Act. A reasonable accommodation for Stella’s needs.
To its credit, the town’s support of the Bovid family did not end there.
Town ofcials led by DeSena gathered on Derby Road two weeks ago to mark the end of the Bovis’ struggle and extend the town’s assistance with two “Autistic Child Area” signs on their block.
DeSena then went one step further and ofered the family a welldeserved apology.
“Despite this happy ending, I still would like to extend my deepest sympathies on behalf of the town as their family was put through an ordeal, and I hope this will raise awareness going forward of what is considered a reasonable accommodation,” DeSena said at a press conference outside the Bovis home.
District 6 Councilmember Mari-
22 Planting Field Road, Roslyn Heights, NY 11577 Phone: 516-307-1045
E-mail:
ann Dalimonte of Port Washington, who was unable to attend the press conference, said she had visited the Bovis family with members of the Port Washington Police Department and Stella Spanakos, the executive director of the Nicholas Center, which supports people of all ages with autism.
“Going forward, I would like members of the Port Washington community to come together and form a support group for parents and grandparents of children with autism – I would like to work Stella Spanakos from the Nicholas Center to help facilitate this,” Dalimonte said.
The outpouring of support from town ofcials was returned by the Bo-
vis family, who ignored the opponents and singled out the neighbors and offcials who supported them.
“I just want to say thank you to the community coming forward and really making us feel welcomed after such an ordeal that was so disheartening to myself, my husband and my daughter, Stella,” Stevie said. “I also want to say thank you to the neighbors that have stepped forward and given us their blessing and have also shown support and sympathy for what we’re dealing with on a daily basis.”
Spanakos, co-founder of the Nicholas Center in Port Washington, which provides daily support to over 140 in-
dividuals with autism each day, said it takes a community efort to make everyone feel welcomed.
“Kudos to our great community. It takes more than a village to raise a child with disabilities,” Spanakos said. “We are very grateful this had a happy ending.”
In a perfect world, we wouldn’t feel the need to compliment ofcials and neighbors who did the right thing and accommodated the need of a 4-year-old with a disorder like autism.
But we don’t live in a perfect world, so we thank those who supported the Bovis family. We hope to see that kind of compassion for those in need more often.
In their study on anti-Jewish attitudes, the Anti-Defamation League surveyed a representative sample of more than 4,000 Americans from September through October of 2022.
They found that 85% of Americans believe at least one anti-Jewish trope (stereotypical representation), as compared to 61% in 2019. In fact, 1 in 5 respondents believes 6 or more antisemitic tropes, the most measured in decades.
Most notable among commonly believed anti-Jewish tropes are: Jews stick together more than other Americans, Jews have too much power in the business world, and Jews are more loyal to Israel than America.
Thirty-nine% of Americans believe the “dual loyalty” trope, which extends back thousands of years, generations before the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948. This falsehood is underpinned by the belief that Jews cannot be trusted and their allegiance to Judaism takes precedence over the country in which they live.
In 1930s Germany, anti-Jewish conspiracy theories like this were used as propaganda to paint Jews as traitors and to justify Nazis initiating mass violence and, ultimately, genocide against Jews and other marginalized people.
Powerful Americans like industrialist Henry Ford had already joined Hitler’s chorus of hatred a decade earlier. Ford reprinted the antisemitic screed the “Protocols
of Elders of Zion” in his newspaper the “Dearborn Independent” and in a collection, he entitled, “The International Jew: The World’s Foremost Problem,” which was translated into 16 languages.
These publications were circulated widely and advanced the conspiracy theory that a cabal of Jews is secretly plotting to rule the world.
The modern-day white supremacist movement, backed by certain U.S. elected ofcials, echoes the age-old disloyalty claim which contends that Jews are covertly planning to replace white people through migration and integration.
If you will recall, at the August 2017 Charlottesville, Va. “Unite the Right” rally, tiki torch-bearing neoNazi marchers chanted, “Jews will not replace us!”
Prominent among classical antisemitic conspiracy theories that were not listed among the ADL survey tropes is Holocaust denial.
There are others that readers may not be familiar with such as: “blood libel” — the belief that Jews use the blood of Christian children for religious rituals; “deicide” — the charge that Jews crucifed Christ, and “demonization” — the belief that Jews are “children of Satan.”
While a survey can provide us with a timely snapshot of critical issues, statistics alone do not ofer an in-depth understanding of what it feels like to be on the receiving end of sustained bigotry and hate.
Sometimes it takes art to jumpstart empathy. Now that we are in
the midst of the motion picture awards season, I recommend three flms (“Gentleman’s Agreement,” “Crossfre” and “School Ties”) that illustrate universal truths about antisemitism in America and can serve as a complement to a deeper understanding of the ADL survey fndings.
What I admire about these flms is that they portray the subtle and insidious exercise of antisemitism, in contrast to more sweeping depictions presented in Holocaustoriented flms like Schindler’s List, Sophie’s Choice or Judgement at Nuremberg, to name a few.
My frst two recommendations are post-WWII flms, produced soon after the defeat of fascism, uncovering of Nazi atrocities, and liberation of the concentration camps.
In the Academy Award-winning “Gentleman’s Agreement” (1947), journalist Phil Green accepts a ma-
jor magazine assignment to expose antisemitism. He assumes a Jewish identity in order to experience antiJewish bigotry frsthand.
The flm-noir classic “Crossfre” (1947) introduces us to a WWII soldier who has evil intentions against a Jewish war veteran, whom he believes did not serve in the war. The soldier violently lashes out. A detective is determined to solve the ensuing crime and expose the motive.
In “School Ties” (1992) a Jewish teenager receives a football scholarship to a highly regarded prep school in the 1950s and feels immense pressure to conceal his Jewish identity from his classmates and teachers whom he fears are anti-Jewish.
These three flms ofer a birdseye view of what it is like for someone whose Jewish identity may or may not be known to those outside of their immediate orbit, to be exposed to others who hold either open or tacit antipathy against Jews.
In “Gentleman’s Agreement,” the protagonist Phil Green, a nonJew and widower with a young son Tommy, has started to date Kathy, who is not Jewish. Kathy is aware of Phil’s magazine assignment and that it entails him assuming a Jewish identity. This leads to an uncomfortable exchange, when Tommy comes home from school one day.
Tommy: “They called me dirty Jew and a kike.”
Kathy: “It’s not true, it’s not true, you’re no more Jewish than I am!”
This leads Phil to confront Kathy, dismayed that she is trying to comfort Tommy by suggesting that the “dirty Jew” taunts are wrong because he isn’t Jewish, as opposed to addressing the intrinsic bias against Jews that blind expressions of hatred represent.
Among the more troubling fndings reported in the 2022 ADL survey, is an increase in young adults ages 18-30 believing anti-Jewish tropes, as compared to earlier research. This is further afrmation that “antisemitic attitudes in the U.S. are widespread” and on the rise.
“The climate for Jews in America is changing. The temperature is rising. If you believe that this is a country for all, then you have a moral responsibility to combat antiJewish hate wherever it may arise,” urges Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO and national director of the ADL.
The Oct. 27, 2018 mass shooting at the Pittsburgh Tree of Life Congregation that took 11 lives and injured several more, represents an extreme expression of the deadly limits of antisemitism. However, it is every day exchanges like the one between Kathy, Tommy and Phil, that are most revealing of the deeply ingrained and enduring nature of anti-Jewish hate.
Lurking just beneath the surface, simmering hatred such as this too often goes unchallenged, fnally leading to unthinkable violence and chronic heartache.
One of the fnancial television channels has a frequent program on diferent individuals who were caught stealing under the title of “Greed.” There are two entities who may not be breaking the law but they personify the word greed. They are the National Football League and the petroleum industry. The NFL preys on its players and the petroleum industry rips of each and every one of us.
Despite the fact that it hides its fnancial information, the NFL was estimated to have grossed $11 billion in 2021. They get their money from television, sports products and many other media opportunities. Without the football players who put their lives on the line each game, the NFL would be nothing. For a long period of time, the NFL totally ignored the physical injuries that the players sufered, which shortened their life span. In an outof-court settlement in 2013, the NFL agreed to set up a $765 million fund for 18,000 damaged players.
Traditional football fans love the
game because of the brutality between the players. Like the old-ime gladiators, the players bang and slam into each other and the fans holler with glee. Occasionally a player has been hit so hard that they have to be carried of the feld. If that player never returns to the feld again because their injury has disabled them, the fans rarely hear anything about how that injured player will live the rest of their life.
Recently, it was reported by the league that player concussions are up 17% this year. The concussion statistic is rarely discussed as the NFL is not happy about anything that makes them look bad. But thanks to the more recent publicity about players continuing on the feld with mild concussions, some protocols have been developed that force the coaches to remove the players from the game. In time, some will return and others never return.
I personally know one life story that refects how the game impacts on the lives of players. I had the honor
of knowing Nick Buoniconti, who had been a middle linebacker in both the American Football League and the NFL. He had the distinction of being on two Super Bowl winning teams. His record as a player is one of the most impressive bunch of statistics that you could ever see. Over a period
of years, I watched this great athlete deteriorate as a result of being “hit over 1,000 times,” according to Nick. The loss of function was gradual, but eventually he wound up in a wheelchair totally paralyzed prior to his death.
The attitude of the NFL is that they have taken care of “those players” and they have no further obligation. But believe it or not, the 2021 settlement was not enough. The funds have been exhausted. In addition, the new and younger players who are damaged have little or no help going forward and if paralyzed, they will get little attention. Super Bowl is now a fnished product, but it is time for the average fan to give some extra thought about how the NFL fails its players.
Greed is not just the way the NFL operates. Big Oil, the people who help fll up your gas tanks, earned a proft of almost $200 billion in 2022. Exxon alone grossed $56 billion, which was the highest proft in its history. They have funneled those profts back to their shareholders, which was to be
expected. As a reminder, much of those profts came from the gas tank sales and you contributed your hardearned $5 a gallon to make the shareholders happy. Some of those profts could have been spent to create more production facilities, but if you can create your own shortages, why build more capacity.
Since the oil barons are making record profts, it is fair to ask how much have they spent on reducing air pollution? The worldwide fgures are over a trillion dollars, but the domestic spending is small compared to the other countries. The Infation Production Act passed last year will force more dollars to be spent, but it will be hard to get the industry to pay its fair share to help us breath cleaner air.
I am sure there are other candidates for the most greedy company category. The NFL will lie about how they treat damaged athletes and the oil industry will moan about lost profits during the Covid pandemic, but an informed public will know what the real truth is.
Say what you want about Thanksgiving or Christmas, I am convinced that the true American holiday is the Super Bowl. And it has earned its spot at the top. Christmas has borrowed its cache from St. Nick, Xmas trees and wintertime. Thanksgiving gets its lift from harvest time, the beauty of fall and Norman Rockwell fantasies of the American family. But the Super Bowl has worked its way to the top spot of holidays through grit, grind and hard work. The Super Bowl is an American phenomenon.
This year’s Super Bowl featured The Kansas City Chiefs against The Philadelphia Eagles led by two young charismatic quarterbacks with talent to spare. Everyone understands that a big buildup of anything can lead to disappointment but not so for the Super Bowl. Over the last 57 years it has been played, the NFL has understood that it usually takes three things to make something special. And the three things that the NFL has focused on is football, advertising and the halftime show. Let us re-
view the three in order.
FOOTBALL: Long gone are the days of Y.A. Tittle, Frank Giford and Dick Lynch being rough- and-umble and powering their way to victory. The game now is in hands of guys who must have the grace of ballet dancers, the speed of track stars, the power of locomotives and the knowhow of mathematicians. Football is now flled with guys who are superfast, fearless, creative and smart. And that’s only the beginning. A famous NY Jets quarterback once told me that the most important thing in football today is the ability to run fast, hit hard and learn the 220-page playbook you are given every week.
TELEVISON ADVERTISING: Super Bowl ads now cost a company $7 million for a 30-second TV ad but do not fear: They are not wasting money. These ad campaigns are run by art directors, TV production crews and directors who are as talented as Martin Scorsese or Francis Ford Coppola. To give you an idea of the quality of the actors they now hire to participate in these Super Bowl ads, here is a list of who I saw
just in the frst half. There was Ben Stiller doing a very funny Pepsi ad, Bradley Cooper and his mother doing an hysterical ad for T-Mobile, Kevin Costner narrating a pre-game ad for the Tillman Foundation, Ben Afeck and Jennifer Lopez doing a McDonald’s ad , or was it for Dunkin’ Donuts?
Tony Hawks the skateboarder did an ad and so did Serena Williams, who parodied the Al Pacino halftime pep talk in the flm “Any
Given Sunday.” And let’s not forget John Travolta singing one of those old songs from “Grease” for yet another T-Mobile ad. There were many more, I assure you. And all these ads were done with humor and style. In other words, what you have are ad agencies who hire the world’s best directors and camera crews, script writers and production crews to create 30-second pieces of art.
THE HALFTIME SHOW: The last piece of this glorious puzzle is the halftime show. This year it was Rihanna, who was center stage. Now if you did not see the show, let me describe this to you. Long ago we had people like Michael Jackson or Bruno Mars, who did some cool moves on the ground surrounded by a few hip dancers. But the show that Rihanna put on was on an entirely diferent level. It had such high production value that it made the opening ceremonies at the Olympics look like amateur hour.
You had her entrance from some kind of glass stage that was way high up over the stadium and her crew of maybe 200 dancers descend
from the heavens on their own glass stages. She was dressed in some kind of red outft and the rest were in white outfts. She looked like maybe she was a little pregnant, which was confrmed later. The entire impact that the show made was actually jaw-dropping. Some said that Rihanna successfully demonstrated the most impressive power move of the year.
The NFL deserves lots of credit. Whoever has been running the show is doing things correctly. Football is clearly America’s sport in that it captures our need for aggression, for action and our need for spectacle and to make or spend money as we do it. But sorry, I have to stop now. The halftime show is over and I want to see if Patrick Mahomes and the KC Chiefs can overcome that 10-point defcit from the frst half and see how bad his ankle injury was.
Epilogue: Patrick Mahomes did come back to win. And quite a game it was. So congratulations to Rihanna, Patrick Mahomes, the KC Chiefs, the NFL and all those creative TV ad script writers.
Ispend a lot of time thinking about our connection to nature or even more so our disconnection from nature. This is an important issue for predicting and demonstrating behaviors consistent with environmental protection. Research shows that a connection to nature indicates greater likelihood for environmental behavior.
How can we promote people’s connection to nature? This is an especially difcult question living in a culture and community where our homes are designed and intended to a very great extent to keep nature out, and we live in a way that separates us from nature. We have to take afrmative steps to be in nature.
For example, most spaces we exist in, whether for living, work, socializing or anything else, are climate controlled. It doesn’t matter what is happening outside – we can control the temperature and humidity. Our yards and parks are typically carefully curated lawns and gardens where we control for insects and other wildlife unless we choose to attract birds with bird feeders or pollinators and other living things with
certain types of plants and practices, like leaving our leaves in the fall. Our parks aren’t very diferent; they are typically comprised of open grass areas with some trees and other plants.
Of course, there are more natural places we can visit, and many of us do. But in general, we live intentionally separated from nature, behind walls and windows that keep nature in a space apart from us. And this makes sense to a large degree. We’re not built to withstand the hardships of living outdoors.
Over time, as wealth and technology have allowed, we have increasingly cut ourselves of from nature. In parallel, we have also increased our isolation by living more privately and less communally. As wealth grew, more and more people transitioned to living in private homes. This allowed for greater privacy and independence as people could make their own decisions about how to decorate and how to maintain their living space, no longer subject to communal rules and leaders. With the advent of cars, people could increase their distance and isolation from one another, further diminish-
ing community engagement.
Current thinking is that all this isolation, much like the disconnection from nature, is not good for human health and well-being. Many countries are promoting policies for a return to some degree of communal living that often involves the use of nature and natural spaces to do that.
It’s interesting, but we’re not all going to shift to the latest trend in
communal living (nor could we), but the value of connecting to nature remains, as does the question of how.
I recently visited the photography exhibit at the Nassau County Museum of Art and saw a black-and-white photograph of a cabbage leaf that struck me in terms of how it could connect people to nature. The photograph, I believe, is a well-known image taken by Edward Weston (though I could be wrong as I didn’t write down the photographer’s name and am relying on my Google search and memory). It is a close-up of a single cabbage leaf. From the far side of the room I had no idea what it was and thought it might be sand dunes.
As I approached I still couldn’t quite determine what it was. I didn’t realize the true nature of the subject of the photograph until I read the label.
It got me thinking about how an image like that could draw people in and get them to think about the miracle of a cabbage plant – its growth from a seed to a plant to something edible and in this context, a work of art that at frst appears to be something very diferent from what it is. Could this photograph help connect
people to nature in a way that manifests in caring for nature? I’m probably asking too much of a cabbage leaf.
That photograph has stuck with me and has infuenced my awareness of natural things around me. I am making a point to notice nature more intimately. The limbs and branches of the bare trees sometimes conjure the veins running through our bodies, similarly transferring so much of what we need to stay alive. Sometimes they look like bodies clustering together like a family or group of friends might as they enjoy time together.
There is so much happening in nature that is like what is happening in our bodies and our lives. Whether it is trees and fungus communicating danger to each other or it is water fowing through a plant, transmitting nutrients, there is a lot to relate to in nature. Like a human-to-human relationship, it makes sense that a human-to-nature relationship will produce a desire to protect. Seek that connection, whether in a photograph or a book or a walk outside. It’s good for you and it’s good for nature.
Heights, NY 11577.
The contrast could not be more clear or more dramatically drawn – President Joe Biden and the Republicans at the State of the Union.
Biden, ever dignifed, civil, respectful and honorable, began by congratulating Republican Kevin McCarthy on becoming speaker of the House and GOP Leader Mitch McConnell, and in his speech repeatedly praised bipartisanship in his frst two years.
“Time and again, Democrats and Republicans came together. Came together to defend a stronger and safer Europe. Came together to pass a once-in-a-generation infrastructure law, building bridges to connect our nation and people. Came together to pass one of the most signifcant laws ever, helping veterans exposed to toxic burn pits. In fact, I signed over 300 bipartisan laws since becoming president. From reauthorizing the Violence Against Women Act, to the Electoral Count Reform Act, to the Respect for Marriage Act that protects the right to marry the person you love.”
But he basically laid out a challenge to Republicans, now that they have a slim majority in the House – albeit, one in which the most radical extremists are in control.
“To my Republican friends, if we could work together in the last Congress, there is no reason we can’t work together in this new Congress. The people sent us a clear message. Fighting for the sake
of fghting, power for the sake of power, confict for the sake of confict, gets us nowhere. And that’s always been my vision for our country. To restore the soul of the nation. To rebuild the backbone of America, the middle class. To unite the country. We’ve been sent here to fnish the job.”
Who could argue with that? The White Christo Fascist MAGA Republicans who have taken over and are literally holding Congress —and America – hostage.
Biden actually had to trick the Republicans to stand up for seniors – after a humorous back-and-forth (when does that ever happen in a SOTU?) in which he exposed Republicans’ plan to extort cuts to Medicare and Social Security – even sunset these vital programs – in exchange for raising the debt ceiling and destroying the economy. GOP Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene shrieked like a banshee “Liar!” while Congressman Mike Lee (R-UT) and McCarthy shook their heads. But Biden said he would provide the proof: Sen. Rick Scott’s (R-FL) published pamphlet in which he calls for every federal law to sunset every fve years; Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) requiring all laws sunset every year; and Lee on tape pledging to pull out Social Security and Medicare “by the roots.”
When he mourned the 70,000 a year who die of drug overdose – afecting every community in the country – and spoke of stepped-up eforts that interdict-
ed drug trafcking and saved thousands of lives, one shouted “You’re fault” – even as Biden was laying out a forceful plan to go after fentanyl trafckers and expand medical services to reduce deaths.
But that requires Congress to act, he said.
Will the Republicans? Not likely. Because Republicans don’t care and have no plan to improve lives — they want people to sufer, be angry, frustrated and desperate, because they think that’s how they win elections.
Biden can pretty much coast on the extraordinary successes won during his frst two years – the most consequential presidency since FDR — most of which will only frst bear fruit in 2023, when Republicans who voted no will nonethe-
less steal credit. As Biden said, “I promised I’d be a President for all Americans. We’ll fund these projects. And I’ll see you at the groundbreaking.”
But there are still big, important initiatives he needs congressional action to accomplish:
Most urgently: Raise the debt ceiling to avoid catastrophic collapse of the economy and full faith and credit of the US Renew funding for the Cancer Moonshot, improve public health and mental health; lower the cost of prescription drug and health care
Protect reproductive rights and abortion access
Address the gun violence epidemic; ban assault weapons
Police reform and public safety
Comprehensive immigration reform
Raise the minimum wage; protect workers’ right to unionize; secure parental leave and access to afordable child care and housing; restore the Child Tax Credit (that cut child poverty in half); give students debt relief; expand access to higher education; raise teacher salaries; ban non-compete clauses in work agreements.
End junk fees on everything from concert tickets to credit cards to telecom contracts, airline tickets and hotel stays (that would save consumers billions of dollars)Implement a fair tax code so that no billionaire pays a lower tax rate than teachers and frefghters
“And, by the way, when we do all of
these things, we increase productivity, we increase economic growth,” he said.
In all of these, Republicans sat disdainfully or booed.
Republicans could not even applaud the 800,000 manufacturing jobs created by Biden’s economic policy or Biden’s policy that all federal infrastructure projects utilize materials and products “Made in America.”
They booed when he said, “The climate crisis doesn’t care if you’re in a red or a blue state. It’s an existential threat I’m proud of how America, at last, is stepping up to the challenge. We’re still going to need oil and gas for a while — no, we do — but there’s so much more to do. We’ve got to fnish the job.”
Republicans were quiet when he reafrmed support for Ukraine’s fght for its democracy and sovereignty and spoke of how the United States has reclaimed its role as a global superpower.
And Republicans were silent when Biden gave a vigorous call to “protect democracy” and condemned the rise in political violence. “With democracy, everything is possible. Without it, nothing is There is no place for political violence in America. We have to protect the right to vote, not suppress that fundamental right. Honor the results of our elections, not subvert the will of the people. We have to uphold the rule of the law and restore trust in our institutions of democracy.”
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As students prepare for spring studies and contemplate summer activities, it is a good time to consider fnding a mentor who can ofer seasoned advice. At the same time, those who are newly retired or young professionals who are being encouraged to be in active society might consider becoming a mentor.
What is a mentor? A mentor is usually a more experienced person who becomes a source of guidance and wisdom. A mentor is someone who demonstrates care and concern so the mentee can feel more confdent about the paths ahead. The mentor can be a teacher or coach, a neighbor or relative. It is not necessarily someone who meets on a regular schedule with a younger person for a long period of time. Mentors and role models can do that or be more intermittent in their relationship.
The mentor is a source of encouragement to raise aspirations and the conduit to new networks. Generally, the mentoring relationship focuses on character more than on competency and the mentor is more cheerleader than critic. The mentor and mentee can meet wherever and whenever it is convenient. It is important for the mentor to meet the parents of the mentee.
Over the years, I have benefted from
mentors. There are three people who qualify unquestionably and others who vie for contention. Some were accidental mentors, and perhaps not aware of the role they were playing. Others were intentional.
The frst was an antique dealer in Mount Vernon, N.Y., whose name I have forgotten, but whose kindness toward me at a time of stress was critically important. My mother had died; my sister and I lived in separate cities with diferent relatives while our father recovered from bankruptcy. After reuniting with them, I began “acting out” with some other junior high school boys who were prone to trouble.
After several incidents of harassing the shopkeeper, knocking on his door, and calling him disparaging names, he must have seen something in me I had not felt. He called me in, asked my name and about my family, and, after setting me straight about my behavior, ofered to hire me to dust, move boxes and answer the phone. I learned that he was a widely traveled, knowledgeable person who knew the history and provenance of each object. I don’t recall working for him more than a few months, but his respect for me was an inspiration.
In 11th grade, while other students were contemplating college, I was uncer-
tain of my future. Neither of my parents had gone beyond high school. One day, my tenth-grade biology teacher, Joe Leone, in whose class I had earned a rare “A,” stopped me in the hallway and asked, “Bobby, why haven’t you signed up for the SATs?” Why, indeed? No one had encouraged me. The guidance offce, knowing my family circumstances, had urged me to apply to an inexpensive Midwestern public university that didn’t require the exams and was eager to enroll out-of-state students. I took the SATs, earned a scholarship to Bucknell, and the rest as they say, is history — — a his-
tory whose critical “hinge” was a teacher whose class I had taken a year earlier and who cared enough to encourage me.
As a sophomore at Bucknell, I had doubts about why I was in school and whether I could aford to stay, even with campus jobs. I decided that I should enlist in the U.S. Navy as my father had. Fortunately, my English professor and faculty adviser, Mildred Martin, talked me into rethinking my decision and urged me to see the dean about additional scholarship assistance. Together, they helped me fgure out how I could stay fnancially and why I should stay intellectually. I still have the letter detailing the increased aid and the standards I would have to meet to maintain it. They taught me that it is OK to ask for help.
Later, when I was president of Ramapo College of New Jersey, I would meet twice a year or so with James Perkins, the former president of Cornell University whom I got to know when I was an associate dean there. Dr. Perkins’ frequent refrain, “Secure your footing before you extend your reach,” has stayed with me as good advice for life as well as mountain climbing.
These mentors are among the many teachers, advisers, professors, deans, supervisors, and secretaries who have ofered me guidance and shared their
wisdom.
I also have served as a mentor to students and colleagues at various stages in my career and theirs. I think of a distinguished professor at Cornell whom I met when he was a freshman applicant and became my advisee, and a young admissions ofcer at Ramapo College who became a mentee and friend at many points in his life.
In reviewing my role as one who has been mentored, and as a mentor myself, I am reminded that the relationship does not have to be formal and structured. The important elements are for each to take the other seriously, and to realize that each can learn from the other.
Think about the mentors you have known and those you have mentored. You may have become a mentor almost accidentally for a classmate, a teammate, or someone at work or on the residence hall. Just think broadly about the purpose and value of mentoring. It does not have to be long and costly; it is about sincere and authentic relationships, valued contact, and fostering opportunities for others.
Robert A. Scott, President Emeritus, Adelphi University and Author, How University Boards Work, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2018, Eric Hofer Book Honoree, 2019
ROBERT A. SCOTT, Ph.D. My Turn
Gov. Kathy Hochul has proposed a housing plan, which, if adopted, will have drastic consequences for our county and communities.
The Hochul plan seeks to create 800,000 new housing units across the state in the next 10 years, with a special focus on Long Island. For Long Island, the target is for 38,218 new units from 2023-2025.
Gov. Hochul’s proposal would require local municipalities to rezone properties within one half mile of a transit station. The new zoning must allow a minimum of 50 units per acre. The half-mile radius would be measured from the station itself or station parking lots.
The proposal would prohibit restrictions on height as well as rea-
sonable requirements relating to property line setbacks, lot coverage and minimum parking spaces.
The state would also establish percentage increases for housing for each town that local leaders unanimously say are unrealistic in the three-year time period.
If a town fails to meet its target, the state will impose a process whereby developers could appeal the denial of a local municipality to a “state housing approval board,” which could overrule the local determination.
RICHARD NICOLELLO Presiding OfficerIn other words, decisions with respect to housing proposals would no longer be made by local elected ofcials but would be made by bureaucrats appointed by the state. If enacted, these proposals would eliminate zoning protections, damage our suburban quality of life
and erode the bedrock principle of local control that is at the heart of our democracy.
For generations, residents have left the city and come to the suburbs for the quality of life, open space, decreased housing density, good schools and safe streets. The quality of life in our communities has remained consistent for decades, primarily because residents demanded policies that protected against overdevelopment.
Long Island relies upon a fragile sole source aquifer for our drinking water. Increasing housing density will endanger that water supply, overcrowd our schools and increase strains on our critical infrastructure from sewage treatment to the supply of gas and electric to fre and police
The people of Congressional District 3 have been lied to and betrayed. A majority of them voted for a candidate who peddled falsehoods about his background, who is devoid of conscience or the ability to tell the diference between fact and fction, who is unft to serve as their representative in Washing-
ton. In fact when the voters of District 3 cast their vote for George Santos, they had no idea who they were voting for. With each passing day more of his mendacity is revealed. The people of the 3rdCongressional District deserve a person who will represent them and not use them as pawns to advance his career in the GOP.
All individuals, not only those who reside in District 3, must keep applying pressure to local and national politicians to expel George Santos from the House or force him to resign.
Rita Hall Great NeckHere is a fnancial challenge facing New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority Chairman Janno Lieber and NYC Transit President Richard Davey. Are they aware that their predecessors have been unsuccessful for six years in applying for three old Federal Transit Administration national, competitive, discretionary-funded project allocations that would improve the NYC Transit Canarsie L subway line worth over $100 million?
With the MTA facing a current multibillion-dollar, multi-year budget shortfall, why would you want to forfeit any federal funds? On Jan. 27, 2023 the FTA published Federal Notice of Available Funding for Federal Fiscal Year 2023. This included the availability of carryover earmark allocations from 2016 and 2017. They are NY Canarsie Power Improvements at $3,200,271, NY Canarsie Power Improvement Program Expedited Project Delivery Pilot Program for $13,121,114, and NYC Canarsie Line Power and Station Improvements at $83,680,000.
They should have previously devel-
oped and submitted grant applications to apply for these funds worth over $100 million. Seven years later, work should have already been completed. Why have they been unsuccessful to date in having these funds obligated under approved grants? These funds will eventually lapse and be lost. They end up returned to the federal treasury and may be reprogrammed for another purpose.
It is now on their watch that Lieber and Davey have been unsuccessful in applying for and having these funds obligated under approved grants. When will they develop a recovery schedule for completion of these big overdue projects? How many more years must taxpayers, commuters and NYC Transit employees have to wait before seeing the benefts from completion of these federally funded improvements to the NYC Transit Subway Canarsie L Line?
Here is another fnancial challenge facing MTA Chairman Janno Lieber and MTA President Catherine Renaldi. Are they aware that they have been unsuccessful for four years in applying for a 2019
Federal Transit Administration national, competitive, discretionary-funded project allocation that would pay for a ferry dock replacement? This ferry afords West Shore Hudson Rockland County commuters a connection to Metro North Hudson Line service to Grand Central Terminal.. With a multibillion-dollar, multi-year budget shortfall, why would you want to forfeit these federal funds? On Jan. 27, 2023 the FTA published Federal Notice of Available Funding for Federal Fiscal Year 2023. Why didn’t MTA previously apply for these funds?. Four years later, work could have already been completed. Why have they been unsuccessful in having these funds obligated under approved grants? These funds will lapse on Sept. 30, 2023 and be lost.
services. There will be more cars on the road and more congestion.
In fact, Long Island has been gradually transforming with more transit-oriented development in communities like Mineola, Patchogue, Farmingdale and others.
Rather than accept this gradual progress, the state will force a radical transformation. The “one size fts all” approach ignores the fact that each community is diferent and what makes sense in one community makes no sense in another.
I have joined with other elected ofcials throughout our region to oppose this ill-conceived plan and will fght against it every step of the way.
Richard J. Nicolello is the presiding ofcer of the Nassau County Legislature
When I visited my father’s parents, I was glad to be allowed to call on friends a few doors away. When not home I headed of to the salt marsh. There I found what a child would love. Especially having moved back east from a segregated part of St. Louis, where Civil Rights and Dr. Martin Luther King were discussed as “Handing the country over to the Communists,” and part of some sort of evil machinations in religious undertones I really didn’t understand.
The few things I liked then were my frst grade teacher Mrs. Wandling, who was glad I could read. Playing stick-ball in the street. Two friendships that remain to this day. And Mike Shannon, the St. Louis Cardinal shortstop, who when he visited his mother just up the street sometimes handed out tickets to we eager kids. Though I was never well positioned to snatch one. When fnished he’d look up at those in back as if to say and may have: “The lesson to learn is be quick.” A lesson in the making that took decades, certainly. I clearly recall how cramped houses were, even for celebrities, making them like me and my parents.
Besides visiting grandparents who doted on me, the salt marsh held special appreciation. Openness at the confuence of three worlds where thoughts foat upwards— signatures without pretense.
Gulls white as angels though scavengers really. The decay and rebirth.
The glinting sea and the sun’s pure light. Summer warmth. White snow. Forest of tall reeds and blue sky.
Neck
Larry Penner GreatLarry Penner is a transportation advocate, historian and writer who previously served as a former Director for the Federal Transit Administration Region 2 New York Ofce of Operations and Program Management.
The sun blazes for everyone. Another way to enter the world. Another way to enter life.
The salt marsh a wilderness— A world of discovery and I liked to linger. Perfect happiness.
Stephen Cipot Garden City ParkWhat’s our greatest asset at The Bristal Assisted Living communities? It’s the lifetime of interests and experiences you bring to it. After all, that’s what makes you special. A caring team that spends the time getting to know you so you can continue nurturing, sharing and exploring those interests? Well, that’s what makes us special, too.
See for yourself. Explore all of our locations in the tri-state area. thebristal.com
Photography has become so easy and commonplace, especially with the invention of phones with cameras, that sometimes we forget to appreciate how wonderful it can be.
The Nassau County Museum of Art seeks to remind us with its current exhibit, “The Big Picture: Photography’s Moment.”
Wandering through the museum, whose building is itself a work of art, on a guided tour with the director of the museum and curator of the show, Charles Riley, I was reminded of how powerful images can be.
The show ranges from a black-and-white image that is the same size as one panel on a roll of film to a practically life-size, full-color family portrait. Easily the most recognizable image in the show is Dorothea Lange’s “Migrant Mother,” depicting the effects of the Dust Bowl on American citizens. Museumgoers can also see a tribute to children lost to the Holocaust and an eye-opening photo of soldiers charging the beach during the Normandy invasion, along with many other stunning images.
Riley explained that he liked the idea of a photography-based show because it is accessible.
“Everybody takes pictures. People sort of feel like they know the medium because they do it all the time on their telephone,” Riley said. “They even take pictures of their dessert,” he commented, to which I had to admit I was guilty. This variety of images in the exhibit serves to demonstrate how photography as a medium has developed throughout history.
“What happened about 10 years ago was those big color ones became what you saw when you went to the Chelsea galleries and Soho galleries,” he explained. “I really needed those black-and-white ones to have the historic side of it.”
As we walk around the museum, Riley’s excitement about the art is palpable. He practically runs from one side of the gallery to the other to show me another photo. He interacts enthusiastically with all the guests and tells stories about the artists and their work.
The museum is located in Roslyn on 145 acres of beautiful fields, forest and gardens which have been filled with over 40 sculptures
and countless trails. It was a gorgeous February day when I went to visit, so we took a walk outside to see one of Riley’s favorite sculptures –Richard Serra’s “Equal Elevations-Plumb Run.”
“The Big Picture: Photography’s Moment” will be on view until March 5, when it will be
replaced with “The Collector’s Eye,” which will include famous artworks from one collector’s extensive assemblage.
The Nassau County Museum of Art also hosts programs to get the community involved and immersed in art. These events include art
lessons, nature walks, educational seminars and more. Museum members receive free admission and discounts on programs and events.
“We’ve got something for everybody,” Riley said. “And the other thing is, it shouldn’t be intimidating.”
On Sunday, Feb. 19 at 3:00 p.m., Stephen C. Widom Cultural Arts at Emanuel will present a virtual concert featuring New York’s Jazziest R&B Duo, Elasea Douglas and Sadiki Pierre.
The duo, entitled, Acute Inflections, will perform their favorite love songs from Billie Holiday, Sam Cooke, and Anita Baker, along with selections of their original music!
“A velvety mix of Erykah Badu & Billie Holiday paired with the cool grooves of her 007 on bass” is how one reviewer described Acute Inflections New York’s Jazzy R&B duo has been featured on Discovery and NPR. They can often be found entertaining their clients, among them, the United Nations and Mercedes-Benz, at high-end
events across the country and abroad. They have shared the stage with Jennifer Hudson, Sting, DJ Jazzy Jeff, and other notable artists. Their albums are always favorites on the jazz charts, and their shows are both fun and enchanting.
Elasea Douglas is a gifted singer, songwriter, dancer and actress. After graduating from Hunter College, Elasea performed in several Off-Broadway shows including Dreamgirls and most impressively, a onewoman show called A Role Once Played She made her Broadway debut as part of the original cast of the Tony Award-winning show, FELA!
Sadiki Pierre is a talented upright bass player who is uniquely capable of playing
and fusing almost any style of music including classical, jazz, Latin, reggae and R&B. He’s performed at numerous jazz clubs throughout New York City, the Hudson Valley, Boston and New England.
The Donna Levien Presentation in Music, in celebration of Black History Month, is funded by the Kisner-Levien families in loving memory of Donna Levien.
Registration for this virtual event is $15. Check here for further information, to register and purchase a ticket online
After February 19th at 2:00 PM, call 516.482.5701 to purchase a ticket. Video is available for viewing thru March 5. Call 516.482.5701 if you have any questions.
Gold Coast International Film Festival will be presenting the best new Jewish and Israeli films as part of its 2023 Spotlight on Jewish Films. The GCIFF lineup showcases five critically acclaimed features comprised of a diverse collection of outstanding international narrative and documentary works, with special guest speaker Q&As following select screenings. All events will take place at the Manhasset Cinemas, 430 Plandome Road in Manhasset.
“Schachten – A Retribution,” which premiered at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival, is a thrilling historical drama that explores the lives of Austrian Jews in the years after World War II and the legacies of anti-Semitism and racism that follow them. When the legal system fails to secure punishment for the Nazi concentration camp commandant who tortured and murdered much of Victor’s family, the young businessman resolves to take the law into his own hands. This film will be shown on March 14 at 7 p.m., and it is in German with English subtitles.
“Israel Swings for Gold” follows the 2021 Israeli baseball team as they compete in the Olympics for the first time. With no media allowed in Tokyo’s Olympic Village, the players record their own experiences for the world to see. With a team of mostly newly minted Israelis, including one star pitcher from New Hyde Park, Long Island, they chronicle unexpected battles against anti-Semitism and antiZionism as they strive to show the world what they can accomplish. This film can be viewed on March 16 at 7 p.m.
“Hummus Full Trailer” is a satirical crimefilled comedy of errors that involves three trailers
that have been smuggled into Israel. A mistake in the harbor brings together Arabs, Orthodox Jews and a gay couple that must join forces to solve the mishap. “Hummus Full Trailer” will be shown on March 21 at 7 p.m., and it is in Hebrew with English subtitles.
“Exodus 91” follows Israeli diplomat, Asher Naim, on a seemingly insurmountable mission to bring 15,000 Ethiopian Jews to Israel through Operation Solomon. In this vital and gripping film, a historical moment is brought vividly to life through a hybrid of documentary and dramatic narrative. Gold Coast’s screening of “Exodus 91” includes a post-screening Q&A with Nassau County Legislator Mazi Pilip, herself an Ethiopian Jew who was rescued as a child through Operation Solomon. This film will be shown on March 23 at 7 p.m.; it is in Hebrew, Amharic and English with English subtitles.
“America,” a colorful, affecting Israeli melodrama, follows an Israeli swimming tutor living in Chicago who returns to Israel after 10 years away to bury his father. An encounter with a beloved childhood friend and his newly engaged girlfriend will set a series of events in motion that will affect everyone’s lives forever. “America” can be viewed on March 28 at 7 p.m., and it is in Hebrew with English subtitles.
For more information on each film and to purchase tickets visit www.goldcoastarts.org.The 2023 Spotlight on Jewish Film is made possible by the generous support of The Bristal Assisted Living, Sumi & Michael Glickman and Micki & Dohn S. Schildkraut.
Enrolling in Medicare can be confusing. Family and Children’s Association’s Free Nassau County Health Insurance Information Counseling and Assistance Program can help with enrollment guidance by phone.
The open enrollment season for people who are currently enrolled in Medicare ended Dec. 7, but there is another potential opportunity to switch Medicare health plans for those currently enrolled in a Medicare Advantage Plan.
The additional open enrollment season runs from Jan. 1 through March 31, with any changes effective the first day of the month following enrollment. There is also the opportunity to drop your Medicare Advantage Plan and return to traditional Medicare during this time, although you would also need to sign up for a Medicare drug plan.
If you find that the plan in which you are currently enrolled does not work for
you, this added flexibility can help you find a new plan that better suits your needs.
Please note, that if you were not currently enrolled in a Medicare Advantage Plan, you cannot sign up for one at this time. The current enrollment period only allows people to switch or drop a plan.
Income Limit Increase Helps More People. The Medicare Savings Program has dramatically increased the income limits for eligibility. This program can help pay your Medicare Part B premium and can dramatically lower your drug costs.
If you were previously found to be ineligible for this program, you should call Family and Children’s Association’s Nassau County Health Insurance Information Counseling and Assistance Program office to see if you are now eligible. Medicare coverage can be confusing for the uninitiated, as there are various options. Choosing the right plan for you requires careful consideration.
If you need help understanding or choosing a plan, FCA can help guide you through
the process with free help by calling 516-485-3754. There are four basic parts of Medicare:
Hospital Insurance (Part A) covers you as an inpatient in a hospital or skilled nursing or rehabilitation facility, or for skilled home care after
a hospitalization. Medicare Part A also can cover hospice care if you have a terminal illness. For most people Medicare Part A is premium free.
Medicare Medical Insurance (Part B) covers physician and other outpatient
services. These services include doctor visits, hospital outpatient services, lab tests; physical, speech or occupational therapy; and durable medical equipment for use in the home. The standard Part B premium amount in 2022 is $164.90. Most people pay the standard Part B premium amount. If your modified adjusted gross income as reported on your IRS tax return from 2 years ago is above a certain amount, you’ll pay the standard premium amount and an Income Related Monthly Adjustment Amount (IRMAA). IRMAA is an extra charge added to your premium.
Medicare Part C You may opt for Medicare Advantage plans instead of Part B. Medicare are managed care plans including Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) and Preferred Provider Organizations (PPOs). These plans generally have a network of providers. In an HMO you must use providers in that network. If you join a PPO, you can go out of the network, but you will have a higher copayment for out
of network services. Medicare Advantage plans generally cover prescription drugs, otherwise covered by Medicare Part D, and frequently cover non-Medicare services such as vision, dental and hearing services. Medicare Part D is prescription coverage. There are 19 drug plans in New York State. These plans vary in premium cost and formularies.
Medigap: There are Medicare supplement plans known as Medigap. These are standardized plans that can fill most of the Medicare gaps such as deductibles and co-insurance.For more information about these changes to Medicare and for any other information pertaining to your health benefits, you can call our office at 516-4853754 and a trained counselor will assist you.
Barry Klitsberg is an Assistant Health Insurance Information Counseling and Assistance Coordinator at FCA in Garden City and an Aging Services Program Specialist at U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Various changes are associated with aging, and these can be physical, mental and emotional. Though each person manages these changes in their own way, there’s no denying that social interaction can benefit people from all walks of life as they navigate their golden years.
The Foundation for Senior Care says socializing can give seniors a sense of purpose, stimulate the mind, relieve boredom, potentially prevent feelings of depression, and give individuals something to look forward to. The senior living center Aston Gardens says socialization provides a significant boost to the cognitive health of older adults, helping to prevent or delay conditions that can affect memory. Individuals looking to cultivate healthy social interactions may turn to clubs and other groups. If there’s a dearth of opportunities, individuals can start and promote their own social club using this useful guideline.
Decide on the purpose of the group
Social clubs can meet and be organized around any number of themes or interests. Social clubs may meet to discuss gardening, crocheting, reading, or other shared hobbies. Friends also may be interested in doing food and beverage sampling. In such instances, a luncheon social club makes perfect sense.
Turn to social media
Meeting details can be posted in a community bulletin or on a message board at a local house of worship. However, the internet can be a speedy messenger and help like-minded people figure out how to connect. Facebook groups are one way to organize social clubs, as is the website Meetup.com. The latter is a large online network of offline groups that meet all over the country and the world. The website makes it a snap to organize a local group or find an existing club.
Check for competition
Conduct a search of groups already meeting within a 50-mile radius to see if an existing group already meets your criteria. If not, proceed full speed ahead as you establish your own club.
Establish consistent meeting times
Most people prefer a schedule so they can plan their days accordingly. Choose a regular meeting time and place to hold the social club; otherwise, it can be confusing to accommodate everyone. Inconsistency also can make it hard to get the club off the ground.
Start small and then build
For those new to hosting social clubs, it may be better to begin with only a few members as everyone gets into a groove. As the group becomes more established, it can be opened up to more members. Although it may be wise to cap membership so that things are more easily managed.
Social clubs are a great way for seniors to stay connected and active. When there isn’t one that meets a person’s interests, it’s relatively easy start one from scratch.
www.theisland360.com
Peg Espinola writes and sings songs of the age she lives in and the quirks of her generation. Playing the same guitar her husband gave her on their honeymoon to Madrid in 1965, she’s recorded four of her own CDs. She’s now a proud resident of Jefferson’s Ferry.
The vein of creativity runs deep through Jefferson’s Ferry. Resident artists and writers produce and exhibit their work routinely. Do you have an inner artist trying to break free? Get in tune with your creative side at Jefferson’s Ferry.
Join us at the Bryant Library in Roslyn as we celebrate Black History Month with a special performance of “The Healing Quilt,” a play by Long Island playwright Carolyn Brown.
Take a journey into the lives of a group
of longtime friends as they reminisce about their lives, the good and the bad, stitching together clothes of healing and forgiveness with threads of communication and understanding.
Carolyn Brown has spent more than 30 years in local theater and has written, direct-
ed and performed in a plethora of theatrical pieces.
Since 2012, she has been the owner of Townsend Brown Productions. The granddaughter of former Roslyn resident Birdsall Leroy Townsend, Carolyn has ties to a number
of families of mixed African, Native and European ancestry that lived in the area during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This free event is open to everyone. The library is located at 2 Paper Mills Road in Roslyn.
The largest and most realistic dinosaur event in North America is back, bigger, and better than ever. Long Island-area families can walk among the nation’s biggest herd of photorealistic dinosaurs when Jurassic Quest opens at Nassau Coliseum for a limited run Feb. 17-20.
Loved by millions, only Jurassic Quest can bring families memories this BIG! Walk through 165 million years of the Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous periods to learn about the creatures that ruled on land!
In addition to life-like dinosaurs, Jurassic Quest’s classic experiences for the whole family include some of the largest rideable dinosaurs in North America, live dinosaur shows, interactive science and art activities including a fossil dig and real fossils like T-Rex teeth, a triceratops horn and life-size dino skull, a “Triceratots” soft
play area for our littlest explorers, bounce houses and infatable attractions, photo opportunities, and more.
The Jurassic Quest herd of animatronic dinos – from the largest predators to playful baby dinos – are displayed in realistic scenes with some that move and roar, allowing guests to experience them as they were when they roamed the earth billions of years ago.
Jurassic Quest works in collaboration with leading paleontologists to ensure each dinosaur is painstakingly replicated in every detail, from coloration to teeth size, to textured skin, fur or feathers, drawing on the latest research about how we understand dinosaurs and ancient giants of the sea looked and moved. Meet the babies, hatched only at Jurassic Quest: Cammie the Camarasaurus, Tyson the T-Rex and Trixie the
Triceratops.
Advance purchase online is recommended to ensure desired date and availability at www. jurassicquest.com, or tickets are available on-site and include a 100% ticket guarantee that in the event of a show cancellation or postponement for any reason, ticket purchases will be automatically refunded for the full purchase amount.
General admission tickets include access to the dinosaur and marine exhibits, arts and crafts activities, and dinosaur shows. There are rides and activities that require activity tickets available on-site, or guests can upgrade to the Kids Unlimited Ticket (the best value for children ages 2-10). Entry is free for children under age 2.
Guests can walk through the dinosaur experience at their own pace, and strollers are permitted. Socks required for infatable attractions.
Some venues may have wheelchairs for use, but please contact the venue in advance to make arrangements.
Admission: Tickets available online (Standard, Senior and Kids pricing available)General admission includes live shows, arts and crafts activities, dinosaur and marine exhibits. Tickets for individual activities available on-site. Free entry for children under 2.Kids unlimited ticket: Includes admission, plus unlimited access to stationery and walking dinosaur rides, fossil dig, and dinosaur-themed infatable attractions (Note: maximum weight for rides is 140lbs.).
Where: Nassau Coliseum (1255 Hempstead Turnpike Uniondale, NY 11553)
When (Public Hours):Friday, Feb. 17: 1 pm-8 pm, Saturday, Feb. 18: 9 am-8 pm, Sunday, Feb. 19: 9 am-8 pm, Monday, Feb. 20: 9 am-5 pm
John Ford is back at the Port Washington Public Library!
The set will feature songs from the Strawbs’ hit albums “Grave New World,” “Bursting At The Seams,” and “Settlement.” John Ford and his
band will also perform songs from his latest solo release, Life In A Foreign Town Priority seating will be given to Port Washington residents. Sponsored by the Friends of the Library.
Visit the Sands Point Preserve for a series of themed walks as we explore diferent aspects of the Preserve’s environment, encompassing its unique physical features and wildlife, as well as critical conservation issues and helpful practices to create a healthy, sustainable environment.
Our expert guide, environmental educator Hildur Palsdottir brings a range of perspectives for each outdoor adventure. Join us on for these enriching experiences on the preserve.
Join us for all-ages walks to celebrate the changing seasons! Our expert guides will lead you on nature walks to diferent locations, and engage you in hands-on nature discovery activities.
Sunday, Feb. 26, 10 – 11:30 am – Winter Wildlife Discovery. Learn about the winter habits of the Preserve’s wildlife; including who migrates, hibernates, who stays dormant and who is active in the colder weather. We’ll create an animal tracks guide and explore the woods in search of animals who brave the winter cold.
Saturday, May 13, 10 – 11:30 am – Search For Spring. Use binoculars to search the skies,
and magnifying glasses to search the ground for signs of spring. We’ll explore the woods and the pond habitat, seeking fowers, buds, insects and animals that indicate spring is here! After the walk, participants will plant seeds in peat pots to take home to their own gardens.
Saturday, July 1, 10 – 11:30 am – Summer at the Sea. Discover the living and nonliving things that call our beach home. We’ll explore the animal and insect life on the beach, identify shells, and rock formations.
Saturday, Oct. 14, 10 – 11:30 am – Fall Foliage. Using a leaf guide, learn to identify the trees of the Preserve, and those in your own backyard. Discover why leaves change color, and the benefts of “leaf litter.” We’ll use leaves and other materials we collect along the way to make a beautiful wreath to take home.
TICKETS: Members: $10 per adult; children are free; Non-Members: $15 per adult, $5 per child; includes parking.
Pay at the Gatehouse and meet at Castle Gould’s Clock Tower.
Fri 2/17
ART DRIVES SOCIAL ACTION: "THE PLANT A ROW STORY"
@ 9am AT THE HEART OF PLANT A ROW'S SUCCESS IS ART! Port Washington Public Library, 1 Li‐brary Drive, Port Washington. marv@plant-a-row.org, 516510-8408
Sat 2/18
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
Nature Week!
@ 10am
Feb 18th - Feb 26th
Jurassic Quest @ 1pm / $25 Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum, 1255 Hempstead Turn‐pike, Uniondale
The dinosaur exhibit will host many natureinspired crafts to make way for the spring sea‐son. 1450 Tanglewood Rd, 1450 Tanglewood Road, Rockville Centre. brandon@cstl.org, 516764-0045
Sun 2/19
SCW Cultural Arts presents "Acute In�ections" - NY's Jazziest R&B Duo
@ 3pm / $15 SCW Cultural Arts pre‐sents a virtual concert: �Acute In�ections�� New York's Jazziest R&B DUO Great Neck. missy150@opti mum.net, 516-482-5701
Mon 2/20
Friday Feb 24th
Norm Lewis
@ 8pm / $41-$57
Jeanne Rimsky Theater, 232 Main Street, Port Washin gton. info@landmarkonmainstreet.org, 516-767-6444
Norm Lewis, recently starred in Spike Lee’s critically acclaimed, “Da 5 Bloods,” and in the groundbreaking FX series, Pose. He was also seen as ‘Caiaphas’ in the award-winning NBC television special, “Jesus Christ Su‐perstar Live in Concert!” In May of 2014, Norm Lewis made history as The Phantom of the Opera’s �rst African American Phantom on Broadway.
Thu 2/23
February Vacation FAST
Camp - Thursday, February 23 - Half Day @ 9:30am / $65 FAST Port Washington @ Power 10, 102 Harbor Road, Port Washington. 516-8013533
SMLI Ancient Adventures Holiday Workshop
@ 10am / $80-$90
Fri 2/24
Zoe Keating @ 8pm / $27-$41
Zoë Keating is a onewoman orchestra.
Jeanne Rimsky Theater, 232 Main Street, Port Washington. info@land markonmainstreet.org, 516-767-6444
Great Neck Winter Market @ 10am
Great Neck Indoor Win‐ter Market Great Neck House, 14 Arrandale Avenue, Great Neck. deeprootsfarmersmar ket@gmail.com, 516318-5487
SMLI: STEM Factory Holiday Workshop
@ 10am / $80-$90
Design and create vehi‐cles, contraptions and more in this STEM-fo‐cused workshop. Test and tinker until it's per‐fect as you explore the engineering process! Science Museum of Long Island, 1526 North Plandome Road, Manhasset. corellana@ SMLI.org, 516-5642274
Presidents Week '23 KINGS Indoor Tournament @ 4pm / $225 Feb 20th - Feb 24th Coleman Country Day Camp, 55 Babylon Turnpike, Freeport. 516-365-6629
Unearth the secrets of the past as we dig into paleontology & the nat‐ural forces that have shaped our planet. Head to the paleo lab to excavate fossils and learn the power of vol‐canoes & earthquakes! Science Museum of Long Island, 1526 North Plandome Road, Man‐hasset. corellana@ SMLI.org, 516-564-2274
Wed 2/22
SMLI Mystery at the Museum: Forensics Holiday Workshop @ 10am / $80-$90
A crime has been com‐mitted & we need YOUR help to catch the culprit! Use forensic science to gather & an‐alyze data to get to the bottom of the mystery! Explore �ngerprinting, blood testing & more! Science Museum of Long Island, 1526 North Plandome Road, Manhasset. corellana@ SMLI.org, 516-5642274
SMLI Animal Adaptations Holiday Workshop
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
@ 10am / $80-$90
Karen Bella @ 6pm AVO TACO, 212-97 26th Ave, Flushing
SMLI Maple Sugaring Holiday Workshop @ 10am / $80-$90
Learn the ins-and-outs of tree tapping in this fan-favorite workshop! We’ll head to the pre‐serve to drill our own maple trees, explore the syrup-making process, and, of course, have some pancakes! Science Mu‐seum of Long Island, 1526 North Plandome Road, Manhasset. corel lana@SMLI.org, 516564-2274
Bored Teachers @ 7pm / $25-$55
The Paramount, 370 New York Ave, Huntington
Leslie Mendelson @ 7pm
My Father's Place @ The Metro‐politan, 3 Pratt Blvd, Glen Cove New York Islanders vs. Los Angeles Kings @ 7:30pm / $31-$1000 UBS Arena, 2400 Hempstead Turnpike, Belmont Park - Long Island
February Vacation FAST Camp - Tuesday, February 21 - Full Day @ 9:30am / $95
FAST Port Washington @ Power 10, 102 Harbor Road, Port Washington. 516-8013533
Meet the animals of SMLI! Get up-close with mammals, reptiles, and amphibians in this day highlighting our furry and scaly friends. Learn about their adaptations, create fun crafts, and pet each one! Science
Tue 2/21 ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
Museum of Long Is‐land, 1526 North Plan‐dome Road, Manhas‐set. corellana@ SMLI.org, 516-564-2274
Sam Morril: The Class Act Tour @ 7pm / $25-$65 The Paramount, 370 New York Ave, Huntington
Kelli Baker Acoustic at Carney's Irish Pub @ 7pm Carney's Irish Pub And Restaurant, 136 Broadway, Amityville
80s vs. 90s Decadia & The 90s Band @ 8pm / $15
Mulcahy's Pub and Concert Hall, 3232 Railroad Avenue, Wantagh
The Concert for Bangladesh Revisited Featuring Wonderous Stories and F @ 8pm / $41-$71
The Space at Westbury The‐ater, 250 Post Avenue, West‐bury
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Last week, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul unveiled her 2023-24 budget for the state, which includes a record-breaking 10% increase in state aid to public schools. Of the $3.1 billion increase statewide, Long Island schools will realize an unprecedented increase in aid of approximately $775 million – and this comes on top of healthy aid increases in the previous two budget cycles.
The governor’s proposed budget represents a truly historic investment in the intellectual infrastructure that is our public school system on Long Island.
This long overdue support package will help financially position our 121 local school districts throughout Long Island to meet the challenges of our times and our students’ educational and emotional needs.
Most significantly, the aid increase is a hopeful signal of a long-term shift in thinking in Albany – a recognition that the state was failing to adequately support school districts for far too long.
New York State has a long and unfortunate history of underfunding its public schools. For decades, Albany defied a court-ordered increase in Foundation Aid – and further cut school funding at that time through mechanisms such as GEA (Gap Elimination Aid). Districts found themselves tens of millions of dollars short of funding and were forced to burden their residents with dramatic property tax increases to pay for educational programs. With the implementation of the property tax cap beginning in 2012, school districts were financially hamstrung further in trying to meet the needs of students.
Through the advocacy and awareness-raising of educators across the state, from the New York State United Teachers down to local teacher unions, advances have been made recently to ensure Albany is meeting its constitutional responsibility for funding education. GEA was eliminated in 2016 and, as noted, the past few budget cycles have seen healthier increases in aid packages, highlighted by this year’s proposed 10-percent increase.
Gov. Hochul’s promise could not have come at a more critical time as districts across Long Island work to meet the rising costs due to inflation, supply chain issues and oil prices without sacrificing educational programs in the classroom.
A few of the many potential benefits from the substantially increased state aid for schools include: Creating a plan to upgrade technological infrastructure after the COVID-19 pandemic revealed shortcomings and inequalities in many communities;Increasing mental health and wellness programs to support the emotional and social needs of students;Addressing learning loss and closing the achievement gap through high-impact tutoring and support programs;Enhancing career and technical educational offerings; and Expansion of Universal Pre-K programs.
Our highest priority is preparing our students for success in the world, whether that means moving on to higher education or applying their knowledge, training, and skills in the workforce. That success begins with a high school diploma.
Despite the multi-year challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic, high school graduation rates on Long Island far exceed the national average (92.6-percent in 2022 vs. 88.6-percent) and fall high on statewide averages of 74-to-94 percent. We can only expect these rates to climb with the added support of state aid.
Over the past decade, our school districts on Long Island have been fortunate to enjoy the community’s overwhelming support as they have navigated annual school budgets through tax cap requirements. Budgets have been approved by the vast majority of voters every year, and the proposed increase in state aid from Albany will help districts across the Island maintain the support of their communities.
Local and statewide educator organizations have been waging a 30-year battle in Albany for adequate state funding for schools. The governor’s proposed state aid package marks significant and substantial progress in that battle, as it recognizes the longstanding inequity in state funding.
Increased state aid is an investment in our children, our communities, and the future health of Long Island’s public school system. It is worthy of enthusiastic support from both sides of the aisle as the State Budget process moves ahead this spring.
Richard Haase
President of the Half Hollow Hills Teachers Association on behalf of LongIslandTeachers.org representing over 100 local teachers unions across Long Island
Continued from Page 17
“We’re not bystanders of history,” Biden declared. “We’re not powerless before the forces that confront us. It’s within our power of We the People. We’re facing the test of our time. We have to be the nation we’ve always been at our best: optimistic, hopeful, forward-looking. A nation that embraces light over dark, hope over fear, unity over division,
stability over chaos.”
And then Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who was Trump’s press secretary, gave the Republican response — a rehash of Trump’s “American carnage” inaugural speech, attacking “liberal wokeness” and with Orwellian craftiness, casting banning books, words and women’s reproductive rights as “freedom.”
North Hempstead Town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena and the Town Board have announced that the town will once again be offering home sustainability workshops as well as the sales of rain barrels and compost bins to Town residents this March.
“The home sustainability workshops introduce residents to a variety of ways to make their home yard more environmentally friendly,” DeSena said. “I believe the town plays an important role as an environmental steward for the next generation, and I strongly believe that programs like this one will help ensure a healthy environment now and in the future.”
“These workshops are so important toward creating a greener future for all. They provide residents with the knowledge they need to make choices about their daily habits that can help reduce their carbon footprint,” said Council Member Veronica Lurvey. “By learning about sustainability or adding a rain barrel and composter to your home, the Town is empowering residents to take small yet impactful actions towards preserving our planet.”
The workshops will educate residents on ways they can maintain their landscapes for both human and environmental health. This year’s workshops will be held virtually through Zoom. They are free for all, including non-residents, but registration is required.
The first workshop is called “Sustainable Yard Care,”and it will be held on Wednesday, March 1 at 6:30 p.m.
During this session, residents can find out how to make their yard more sustainable by composting, using a rain barrel, saving water, creating wildlife
tilizer properly and more. Your yard can look great and be healthy for the environment.
The next event is called “Native Plant Gardening,” and it is on Wednesday, March 15 at 6:30 p.m. This workshop educates citizens about how native plant gardens help to conserve water, reduce fertilizers and pesticides and provide food and habitat for wildlife, like pollinators. The president of the Long Island Native Plant Initiative will explain how to create native plant gardens in the home landscape.
The final workshop is called “Creating Rain Gardens” and will be held on Wednesday, March 29 at 6:30 p.m. During this event, viewers can discover how to install rain gardens that reduce stormwater pollution and flooding, recharge and purify the drinking water and provide food and habitat for wildlife.
Composting and using a rain barrel are two great ways to help the environment from your own backyard. Compost provides valuable plant nutrients, reduces waste and lessens or eliminates the need for synthetic fertilizers. Rain barrels collect rainwater that can be used for outdoor irrigation and help to conserve water use, allow users to save money and reduce stormwater pollution.
The Town will have composters and rain barrels available for purchase at a discounted fee of $50 each (one each per household). These items are only available to Town of North Hempstead residents on a first come, first served basis (ID is required). Please note there is a limited number of each item. Sales will be held at Clark Botanic Garden in Albertson.
For more information, dates of rain barrel and composter sales and to register for a workshop visit
In the last few weeks I have had several inquiries concerning capital gains on the sale of one’s primary residence. There are a multitude of variables that come into play. It would be smart to strategize and determine in advance of selling if there will be any capital gains to be paid.
The frst step is to check out those homes that have sold recently (in the last three months) in your area that are similar to yours in terms of bedrooms, baths, EIK, interior square footage, lot size and condition. Then take that price and do a hypothetical calculation. You can use the following as an example:
∙Comparable sale: $975,000
∙Your original purchase price: -$
∙All capital improvements: -$
∙Married: -$500,000
∙Or single: -$250,000
∙Closing Costs: -$ Lawyer
∙Adjustments for oil/gas: -$
∙Adjustments for R. E. taxes: -$
∙Nassau: Transfer tax: $4 per $1,000 of sale price
∙Queens: City tax 1% of sale price $500,000 or 1.425% above $500,000
Remaining mortgage: -$
Real Estate Taxes paid -$
Mortgage Title: (if paying of) -$250.00
Real Estate Commissions:-
Any advertising costs: (FSBO) –
Staging fees:-
Escrow Fees: (if any)-
When you subtract all your deductions, you may or may not be required to pay any capital gains tax. Another item that will come into play and will be an important factor in calculating your capital gains tax is your marginal tax bracket at the time of your sale. The lower your tax bracket the less you will have to pay in capital gains. The tax can be 0-20%.
Keep in mind this must have been your primary residence for the last two out of fve years and not an investment property. You can also deduct repairs and upgrades that you have made, as long as they were done within 90 days of the closing. Make sure you keep all your receipts from any capital improvements that you have made over the years as well as the most recent ones. They will be crucial in the event of an audit by the IRS. Keeping organized and accurate records will save you quite a lot of money, especially if you are a new homeowner; as they will greatly beneft you as allowable deductions when you are ready to sell.
Mortgage interest on mortgage debt (up to $750,000); unless your mortgage was on or before Dec, 15, 2017 then the interest on up to a $1,000,000 mortgage can be taken. Also, your local real estate and state tax (S.A.L.T.) up to a maximum $10,000 can also be deducted.
However, if itemizing you will need to compare it with the standard Deduction(which has doubled in recent years to $25,900) to determine which method will provide a greater beneft.
If you paid any points to get your original or re-fnanced mortgage, these are also allowable de-
ductions. If you had put down less than 20% for your purchase price and paid points to receive private mortgage insurance, they would also be deductible from your sale price; but there are limitations, so discuss with your CPA. Also, any points on your mortgage to reduce the actual cost, or interest rate, would also qualify as a deduction, too. Home equity interest is an allowed deduction only if used for home improvements. However, your primary and home equity loans combined cannot exceed $750,000 for interest to be deductible.
Any green improvements, solar panels, heaters, and heat pumps have an allowable tax credit of 22%, but that will end at the end of 2024.
Also, if you have a spouse that has passed away, the IRS allows you to still take the $500,000 exemption for capital gains as long as the sale takes place within a 2-year period of the death. There is a stepped-up basis that is utilized when a spouse passes. You should seek the advice of your CPA to understand and gain the most clarity in the process.
I have detailed the majority of deductions and exemptions, but consult your CPA and/or fnancial planner for greater insight into your specifc allowable expenses.
There are also ways to defer capital gains by not selling your home, but by renting it out for at least two years, then it becomes an investment property. It is critical to keep records of the rent that you collect to prove it was rented in the event of an audit. You can then decide to sell it using an allowable IRS 1031 deferred Tax Exchange process.
Once you sell the property after two years and one day, the money received is held by your attorney or 3rd party exchange. You will have 45 days after the closing to locate a replacement investment property and a total of 6 months to fnalize the transaction by IRS rules and regulations. You can perform a 1031 Deferred Tax Exchange as many times as you want.
However, there is a holding period of at least one year on the property.
Also, if you have more than one investment property (always put each one in an LLC for minimizing your liability), you might also seek advice from your CPA and/or fnancial planner to create a trust. This will further decrease your heir’s tax exposure when the day comes and you pass away.
One last item is that only $10,000 of local real estate and state and sales taxes can be deducted yearly from your tax return. However, setting up a trust will allow greater deductions on real estate taxes that people and families wouldn’t normally be able to take advantage of to reduce their taxable income. It is important to seek the advice of a CPA and/or CFP to gain the greatest advantage and beneft based on the tax code and regulations to reduce your taxable income when selling.
Philip A. Raices is the owner/Broker of Turn Key Real Estate at 3 Grace Ave Suite 180 in Great Neck. He has 40 years of experience in the Real Estate industry and has earned designations as a Graduate of the Realtor Institute (G.R.I.) and also as a Certifed International Property Specialist (C.I.P.S) as well as the new “Green Industry” Certifcation for eco-friendly construction and upgrades. For a “FREE” 15-minute consultation, value analysis of your home, or to answer any of your questions or concerns he can be reached by cell: (516) 647-4289 or by email: Phil@TurnKeyRealEstate.Com or via https:// WWW.Li-RealEstate.Com Just email or snail mail (regular mail) him with your ideas or suggestions on future columns with your name, email, and cell number and he will call or email you back.
The Long Island Association’s Energy & Environment Committee hosted a discussion focusing on the economic development role of the New York Power Authority and New York State Public Service Commission and heard directly from the leaders of the agencies, NYPA Acting President & CEO Justin E.Driscoll and PSC Chair & CEO Rory M. Christian.“Energy and environment policy at the state level is key to the growth and the resilience of our region’s economy, and we were delighted to welcome Driscoll and Christian who addressed Long Island’s business community for the frst time together to discuss how their agencies are spurring growth and creating new jobs on Long Island,” said Matt Cohen, LIA president & CEO.“The New York Power Authority is an economic development engine for the State, and we are helping to support businesses while advancing our clean energy economy by pilot -
ing new technologies and engaging in publicprivate partnerships to ensure grid stability,” said Driscoll.
NYPA produces 25% of all the state’s power on any given day, including a robust renewable energy portfolio, and is the nation’s largest state-owned electric utility. The agency manages 16 generation facilities and 1,400 circuitmiles of high-voltage transmission. NYPA’s projects result in thousands of jobs for New Yorkers and economic investment in our state’s communities.“After more than a century of dependence on fossil fuels, the PSC is focusing on a future system emphasizing renewable energy and reducing greenhouse gas emissions,” said Rory M. Christian, PSC Chair & CEO.
The PSC ensures afordable and reliable utility service to all residential and commercial customers throughout New York State. Its regulatory oversight includes all investor-owned
utilities in New York and electric utility operations on Long Island. The PSC has focused on deregulation, fostering access to clean energy, and renewable infrastructure build-out. The event included a focus on New York’s transition to electric vehicles.
New Yorkers own more than 123,000 electric cars, and the state incentives and programs discussed included:
• NYPA’s Evolve NY network brings fast and afordable charging stations around the state, with hubs in Riverhead, Commack, and Bridgehampton.
• The Charge NY initiative ofers rebates to New Yorkers, which they can combine with a federal tax credit.
• The Utility 2.0 Program, administered by PSEG Long Island, provides funding for customer upgrades to install approximately 500 direct connect ports, a signifcant increase
compared to what is available today.
Drive Electric LI hosted a showcase of electric vehicles in the parking lot before and after the event. The Drive Electric Long Island coalition is dedicated to encouraging and accelerating the adoption of electric vehicle usage and charging infrastructure through advocacy, education, and outreach eforts. The LIA’s Energy and Environment Committee examines a variety of issues, including green jobs, power generation, efciency, groundwater protection, agriculture, and clean air.
The Committee leadership includes:
• Chairs: Jennifer Garvey, Head of Market Strategy for New York, Ørsted U.S. Ofshore Wind; Richard Humann, PE President & CEO, H2M Architects and Engineers
• Vice Chairs: Dawn Harmon, Area Asset Manager for Long Island, Covanta; DavidSchieren, CEO, EmPower Sola
Suzanne LeBlanc, president of Long Island Children’s Museum will retire in May, ending her 17-year tenure at the helm of the nationally recognized institution.
LeBlanc has been working quietly with the board of trustees and Museum staf since last spring to prepare for the transition.
During this timeframe, she has spearheaded succession planning and leadership training measures, completed organizational restructuring and seen the museum rebound to pre-COVID numbers. These actions will enable the next LICM president to build upon a strong foundation of success as the Museum prepares to celebrate its 30th anniversary this fall.
“Long Island Children’s Museum is enormously grateful for the leadership Suzanne LeBlanc has exhibited over the past 17 years. The mindful approach she has taken in planning her departure is exemplary of Suzanne’s exceptional management and sensitive style,” noted LICM Board Chair Scott Burman.
“Suzanne has led the Museum through some turbulent times, including hurricanes, a global fnancial crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic; while also bringing the Museum to exceptional highs, championing the National Medal for Museum & Library Service, and earning ‘Accredited Museum’ status, an elite honor awarded to only three percent of museums in our nation.”
Burman added, “It’s been an honor to work with Suzanne, she will leave a long-lasting mark both on LICM and the children’s museum community at large.”
“It has always been a gift to have work that I love and that makes a difference in people’s lives,” said LeBlanc.
“Growing up I could never have imagined that I would be leading an institution and had this career. I have enormous gratitude for my extraordinary mentors who saw my potential and helped all along the way, she adds.” Concluding this portion of my career has been a diffcult decision because of how much I will miss the LICM staf and board. But I know that the Museum is in a good place and good hands, and I can’t wait to see what the next growth phase brings.”
LeBlanc’s professional life in museums began with a 3-month internship at the Boston Children’s Museum, while studying for a planned career in journalism.
That internship led to a 14-year stay that saw LeBlanc build a deep understanding of Museum operations. During this time, she was accepted into the Museum Management Institute, a competitive museum leadership training program of the J. Paul Getty Trust, administered by the American Federation of the Arts. This month-long intensive executive education program fueled her decision to become an executive director.
LeBlanc’s next career step saw her move to the role of Assistant Director of Brooklyn Children’s Museum, the frst children’s Museum. In this position, she oversaw three program divisions: Education, Exhibitions and Collections and led the development of the museum’s national traveling exhibit program.
LeBlanc was recruited to assume the role of executive director of Lied Discovery Children’s Museum in Las Vegas. While helming that museum she oversaw the development of the museum’s YouthWorks & ArtSmarts programs, which have been cited as national model programs for underserved youth by the President’s Committee on the Arts and Humanities.
LeBlanc joined Long Island Children’s Museum in 2005. During her tenure, she has spearheaded programs and exhibitions and multi-year community initiatives that have broadened the Museum’s audience, deepened its community connections, secured more than
$4.5 million dollars in federal funding while establishing a national reputation for Long Island Children’s Museum.
She has seen the Museum welcome 3.5 million people during her years of service; bringing LICM’s total visitorship to more than 5 million guests.
Throughout her career, LeBlanc has made it a priority to share her expertise at conferences and as a frequent contributor to professional journals.
She has delivered presentations on Museums & Social Responsibility (Smithsonian Conference), The Challenges of Operation a New Museum (Association of Children’s Museums, Increasing Your Organization’s Cultural Competency (Sagamore Museum Institute), among others. LeBlanc has addressed the U.S. House of Representatives’ Subcommittee on Healthy Families & Communities detailing “How Museums & Libraries Strengthen Communities.”
LeBlanc has literally written the history of Children’s Museums, when she authored “The Slender Golden Thread, 100 Years Strong: The Children’s Museum Movement Celebrates its Centenary” for Museum News. Her writing has tackled a number of issues regarding inequality and social justice including “Beyond Exhibitions and Programs: Against a History of Segregation, One Museum’s Systemic Approach to Social Justice”
(Hand to Hand, the journal of the Association of Children’s Museums),which researched issues of diversity, economic
inequality and the impact of segregation on Long Island.
She has held numerous leadership positions in the museum feld, including as an ofcer of the Association of Children’s Museums and the Nevada Museums Association. LeBlanc has served on the board of the Museum Association of New York, most recently as President.
LeBlanc has been honored as one of Nassau County’s Women of Distinction and named one of the “50 Most Infuential Businesswomen of Long Island” by Long Island Business News. This spring, her contributions to the feld will be recognized as she receives the Board of Directors Special Achievement Award from the Museum Association of New York.
As she refects on her career, LeBlanc is most proud to have led museums to positions of national recognition and for developing the steady hand needed to guide organizations through turbulent and transformative times. Additionally, LeBlanc points to her deep interest in social justice and community outreach and weaving these values and priorities into museums she has led.
LeBlanc intends to stay connected to the feld she loves as a consultant to museums across the country, while making time for hobbies she has let slip and international travel, including regular visits to her daughter’s family in Wales Long Island Children’s Museum is conducting a national search for her successor.
After a nearly 20-year run, Microsoft’s Internet Explorer (IE) is being retired as of June 15, 2022. Its replacement, Microsoft Edge, works faster, and is more secure and modern. Today’s internet environment is far more complex than when IE was launched in the 1990’s. It requires faster speeds to refresh web pages and process cloud-hosted programs.
Additionally, the online environment is increasingly dangerous, as cybercriminals exploit even the slightest of vulnerabilities. To combat this, security features have been built into Microsoft Edge, to minimize the risk of a breach.
• If you are a user accessing IE at home, we suggest you switch to Edge at your earliest opportunity. If you are using Windows 10, you can locate the program by searching for “Edge” in the box at the bottom left of the screen.
• Many business users still employ legacy programs and inter/intranet websites reliant on Internet Explorer. By enabling the “Internet Explorer mode” within the Microsoft Edge program, access to these applications will be remain supported through at least 2029. Check out the Internet Explorer mode website for more details..
For home users and for businesses that do not need access to features of Internet Explorer, Chrome, Firefox and Safari (for Mac users) are good options, as well.
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3 bd, 3 ba, Sold On: 1/9/23, Sold Price: $1,475,000
Type: Single Family, Schools: Manhasset,
3 bd, 3 ba, 1,900 sqft, Sold On: 12/20/22, Sold Price: $1,415,000
Type: Single Family, Schools: Manhasset
4 bd, 3 ba, 2,445 sqft, Sold On: 1/11/23, Sold Price: $1,410,000
Type: Single Family, Schools: Manhasset
3 bd, 2ba, Sold On: 1/12/23, Sold Price: $1,600,000
Type: Single Family, Schools: Manhasset
Editor’s note: Homes shown here were recently sold in Manhasset by a variety of real estate agencies. This information about the home and the photos were obtained through the Zillow.com. The homes are presented solely based on the fact that they were recently sold in Manhasset and are believed by Blank Slate Media to be of interest to our readers.
Continued from Page 1
to correct,” Berkowitz said in an email to Blank Slate Media Tuesday. “It was one more piece of garbage that Santos used for his rise at-all-cost to acquire his current position. I’m sorry, but this piece of garbage is scarcely worth resurrecting at this point in time except to further rile the Great Neck Jewish community because of Santos’ untrue claims!”
Berkowitz defeated challenger Michael Glickman in the board’s 2021 election.
District Superintendent Teresa Prendergast said, at the time, the district regretted not fling the appeal earlier as they did not know they were able to make the request to the state Department of Education. She also said the district reached out to state ofcials to aid in getting the date moved.
Santos, again citing “sources,” said the district reached out to former state Sen. Anna Kaplan who “stonewalled the issue, refusing to get involved or provide guidance to the board on which state entities they may be able to reach out to.”
Kaplan introduced legislation to help the district change its budget vote and election date the day after Santos’ release was published. The former state senator’s bill passed both houses after one week and was signed into law on April 6.
“This wasn’t the frst time that George Santos lied to the Jewish community, and it certainly wasn’t the last,” Kaplan said in a statement to Blank Slate Media Tuesday. “I was proud to have passed emergency legislation at break-neck speed amidst the busy State Budget season to correct this obvious problem facing our community in Spring 2021, and I was proud that as a result of my advocacy to the State Education Department, no voters in our community were disenfranchised.”
Santos has been the subject of multiple investigations on various levels for lying about his personal, professional and fnancial background since being elected to the 3rd Congressional District seat in November.
Eforts to reach Santos or a campaign representative were unavailing.
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medical procedures needed.
Her tongue and throat were burned as a result of the attack, along with burns and scars on her face, according to the page.
Ikram ran into the house, where her parents attempted to help her, but the acid burned her parents’ arms and hands as well, the page said.
The acid caused “severe burning” on Ikram’s eyes, chest and arms, according to the post. She
was also wearing contact lenses, which were melted to her eyes as a result of the acid.
The GoFundMe page has raised more than $570,000 for Ikram since being launched following the attack. Ikram occasionally posts updates on her surgeries and the road to recovery.
A Jan. 2 update detailed her recovery from her most recent surgery as “extremely gruesome, severely painful and probably the worst one” she has endured.
Still, Ikram said she remains grateful for friends, family, medical professionals and others who have aided her in the recovery journey.
“I am so grateful to have so much support because it’s so important to know that you’re wanted, appreciated and most importantly LOVED in life and especially in my predicament,” Ikram wrote.
Continued from Page 4
charges were dropped.
A spokesman for the York County District Attorney’s ofce told CNN said the case against Santos was listed as “withdrawn or dismissed.” Bogosian told CNN she plans to “expose him to the fullest degree” after the congressman’s falsehoods have been revealed.
The FBI is currently investigating Santos’ role in allegedly scamming a homeless, disabled veteran out of thousands of dollars that would have been used to care for the man’s service dog.
Richard Osthof said that he met Santos, who introduced himself as Anthony Devolder, in 2016 while living in a tent on the side of a New Jersey highway.
Osthof’s service dog, Sapphire, was suffering from a life-threatening stomach tumor, treatment for which would cost $3,000, the veteran told Patch.
A veterinary technician told Osthof to use Friends of Pets United, a pet charity headed up by Santos under the Anthony Devolder alias.
Osthof said he never saw any of the funds
after a GoFundMe was set up and subsequently deleted once it got close to hitting the $3,000 goal.
Sapphire died in January 2017, he said.
“I went through two bouts of seriously considering suicide, but thinking about leaving her without me saved my life,” Osthof told Patch. “I loved that dog so much, I inhaled her last breaths when I had her euthanized.”
Osthof said Santos informed him that the money would not be used for Sapphire, but rather “for other dogs.”
which owns the property, received the bill. State law exempts houses of worship, which are nonprofts, from property taxes.
Town of North Hempstead Receiver of Taxes Charles Berman, who was told of the error by the diocese, wrote at the time to acting County Assessor Matthew Croning that the county failed to apply a full property tax.
In November, Berman told Blank Slate Media the parish, located at 45 Mayfair Road, sold a single-family home on its property for $630,000, the amount the county should have removed the tax exemption for rather than using the value of the entire property.
County Legislator Debra Mulé (D–Freeport) said in a statement when the Legislature approves all corrections, the fnal bill will total more than $2.715 million.
“Once the corrections receive fnal approval from the full Legislature, the County will have paid out more than $2.715 million to fx specifc, avoidable tax bill mistakes,” she said.
In October 2022, the Minority Caucusidentifed 842 property ownerswho had been overcharged by a total of approximately $1.55 million because the fve-year phase-in of the 2020-2021 reassessment was not applied correctly to the impacted second-half school tax
bills. The church was incorrectly assessed $1.2M and the 842 property
owners owed $1.55, which left Nassau County shelling out $2.75 million in taxes that were not due.
“It is deeply disappointing that a series of avoidable and preventable tax bill errors have already deprived
Nassau County residents of nearly $3 million that could have been applied toward public services or tax relief,” Mulé said. “Despite the administration’s promises of no future mistakes, the Notre Dame Parish fasco illustrates why we have no confdence that additional major and costly errors are (not) looming.”
She added, “County Executive Blakeman must immediately order an independent investigation into how these errors occurred, how the Department of Assessment missed them, and the steps that should be taken to prevent the needless waste of even more taxpayer money.”
Cronin, an Amityville resident, was appointed acting assessor by Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman in May of last year. Prior to his current role, Cronin was an assistant assessor with previous experience in the Department of Assessment.
He served as the county’s commercial and industrial assessor in 2020 before being promoted.
Cronin was appointed after Blakeman, a Republican did not renew the contract for acting Assessor Robin Laveman, who was appointed to fll the shoes of her predecessor, David Moog, by former County Executive Laura Curran, a Democrat.
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Village of Williston Park • Potential Start Date — March 1, 2023
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NOVENA TO ST. JUDE May the Sacred Heart of Jesus be adored, glorified, loved, and preserved throughout the world, now and forever. Sacred Heart of Jesus, pray for us. St. Jude worker of miracles, pray for us. Say prayer 9 times a day. By the eighth day, your prayer will be answered as mine was. Publication must be promised. Thank You St. Jude. (M.P.) Prayer for the Intercession of St. Pio of Pietrelcina Dear God, You generously blessed Your servant, St. Pio of Pietrelcina, with the gifts of the Spirit. You marked his body with the five wounds of Christ Crucified, as a powerful witness to the saving Passion and Death of Your Son. Endowed with the gift of discernment, St. Pio labored endlessly in the confessional for the salvation of souls. With reverence and intense devotion in the celebration of Mass, he invited countless men and women to a greater union with Jesus Christ in the Sacrament of the Holy Eucharist. Through the intercession of St. Pio of Pietrelcina, I confidently beseech You to grant me the grace of (here state your petition). Amen. (M.P.)
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North Hempstead Town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena, Council Member Robert Troiano Jr. and the Town Board are reminding residents about the Safe Play program at the “Yes We Can” Community Center in Westbury.
The program is partially funded by a grant received from state Sen. Anna Kaplan.
Safe Play will create educational and enrichment programs for youth in the community, will be an outlet for youth recreation and interpersonal skill training to resolve conficts and will
include special guest speakers for workshops that engage youth and parents.
The program is held weekly on Thursdays. The session designed for youth 13-17 years old is from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., and the session for adults 18-25 years old will be held from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Individuals interested in signing up can do so at the membership desk at the “Yes We Can” Community Center. Active membership is required. For more information please call 516-876-4430.
The 12th annual All Kids Fair returns to Westbury for another amazing event. This is the second in-person All Kids Fair since before Covid-19.
This year’s All Kids Fair will be held on Sunday, April 23, from 10-4:30, at Samanea New York Mall, formerly The Source Mall, at 1504 Old Country Road in Westbury.
This is the same mall that houses Dave & Busters and where Fortunof’s previously resided. Since 2011, the All Kids Fair provides a fun day each April for kids and their families to spend time together and also learn about Long Island-based companies with services and products for them.
Attractions for families, all of which are free with admission, include:
Three large bounce houses
Petting zoo with a pig, goats, rabbits, and chickens and Mrs. Mouse
Guinea pig and bearded dragons for touching
Face painting
Balloon animals
Cotton candy
Photo booth
Child ID kits
Many activity areas
Over 80 kid-centered exhibitors
According to Barbara Kaplan, director of the expo, “Building on last year’s success, we decided to have the All Kids Fair at Samanea Mall again because of its spacious layout, high ceilings, and excellent parking. As a result, we will be able to have many draws for Long Island families to enjoy together.”
The All Kids Fair will have over 80 vendors, including camps, places to play, after-school activities, birthday party providers, travel, non-profts, and college planning.
North Hempstead Town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena and the Town Board would like to remind residents about several dogs up for adoption at the Town’s animal shelter. This month’s featured pups include Maisy, Mason, and Legend.
Maisy is a one-year-old Shepherd mix ready to start the new year as your new best friend. Maisy is famous for her “zoomies” but will settle down once she gets them out. Maisy would make an excellent walking or jogging buddy; she loves to explore the outdoors.
She is a smart girl and seeks out your afection. Maisy would thrive in an active household with dog experience and older children.
Mason must have gone to Harvard before ending up in the shelter, because we can’t believe how smart this boy is. Mason walks well on a leash, crushes our agility course and loves romping on our nature trail.
He is an active guy but has excellent manners; he would make a great walking, jogging or hiking buddy. Mason gets along with other dogs but can be dominant. A meeting with any other dog in the home is required at the shelter before adoption.
Legend is a one-year-old 100% mutt; we tested his DNA and believe it or not, the highest breed, at 34%, is standard poodle. Legend came to us through The Shelter Connections Rescue program from an overcrowded shelter in Georgia.
He is an afectionate, energetic boy that lives to chase a ball. You need to have a good throwing arm to make Legend your new best friend. He gets along well with all people he meets and other dogs alike. Legend is slowly learning his
commands but still needs a bit of work on his training. With a lot of love and little patience he will make an excellent companion.
North Hempstead TV channel 18/65 on Cablevision or channel 46 on Verizon FIOS, will be highlighting the dogs throughout the month. You can also watch videos of the featured pups on the Town’s social media pages.
The North Hempstead Animal Shelter is located at 75 Marino Ave. in Port Washington and is open Monday through Fridays (except holidays) 9 a.m. through 4 p.m. and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. To make an appointment to visit or for more information on a featured dog, please call 311 or 516-869-6311.
North Hempstead Town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena and the Town Board recently celebrated and honored Councilmember Mariann Dalimonte on February 7 prior to the Town Board meeting. Councilmember Mariann Dalimonte recently displayed exceptional bravery in a moment of crisis, heroically rushing to the aid of a motorist involved in a car crash near her
home. Her quick thinking and unwavering determination resulted in her removing the driver from the vehicle, extinguishing the ensuing fames, and skillfully managing the trafc fow until additional assistance arrived. Her fellow colleagues on the Town Board presented her with a proclamation of recognition to thank her for her dedication to the community and helping others.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Town of North HempsteadBoard of Zoning Appeals
Pursuant to the provisions of the Code of the Town of North Hempstead, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Zoning Appeals of said Town will meet at Town Hall, 220 Plandome Road, Manhasset, New York, on Wednesday, March 1, 2023 to consider any matters that may properly be heard by said Board, and will hold a public hearing on said date to consider applications and appeals. The following cases will be called at said public hearing starting at 10:00am. APPEAL #21355 –FLC Corp; 480 Plandome Rd., Manhasset, Section 3, Block 69, Lot 1; Zoned Business-A/ Residence-B Conditional Use § 70-126(A) and Variances from § 70-103(A)(1) and 70-103(F)(1) to construct interior alterations to convert a pizza store into a ramen noodle restaurant (a conditional use) with not enough parking and not enough loading zones. Plans are available for public viewing at https://northhempsteadny. gov/bza. Persons interested in viewing the full fle may do so by any time before the scheduled hearing by contacting the BZA department via e-mail at BZAdept@northhempsteadny. gov. Additionally, the public may view the live stream of this meeting at https:// northhempsteadny.gov/ townboardlive. Any member of the public is able to attend and participate in a BZA hearing by appearing on the scheduled date and time. Comments are limited to 3 minutes per speaker. Written comments are accepted by email up to 60 minutes prior to the hearing. Timely comment submissions will be made part of the record.
DAVIDMAMMINA, R.A., Chairman; Board of Zoning Appeals
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There’s a scene in the classic 1980s baseball movie “Bull Durham” when Calvin “Nuke” LaLoosh, the famethrowing, scatterbrained hotshot pitcher for the Class A Durham Bulls, gets a phone call that changes his life.
Suddenly, he’s getting sent all the way up to the major leagues. From Class A, it seems impossible, but it’s Hollywood.
Well, Chaminade graduate Keith Raad got a real-life call very similar to that of Tim Robbins’ character in that famous flm: He’s going from Class A all the way up to the bigs. And he’s doing it for a franchise that is just a few miles from Chaminade High School.
Audacy Inc. and the New York Mets announced on Feb. 6 that Raad will be joining the legendary Howie Rose in the Mets broadcast booth on WCBS-880 AM for the 2023 season on a full-time basis. (Audacy owns the station.)
The 29-year-old Raad, a 2011 graduate of Chaminade, had spent the last six years as the announcer for the Mets’ Class A afliate, the Brooklyn Cyclones, and now will be making the giant leap to the big time.
“I’m still pinching myself here a few days after the announcement because I feel so incredibly fortunate this is happening,” Raad said in a phone interview
on Feb. 8. “My phone has been ringing nonstop, my mother is even having trouble getting ahold of me. It’s just an incredible opportunity and I’m so excited to get started.”
Raad joins good friend and Port Washington native Jake Eisenberg as debut big-league radio broadcasters this season from Nassau County, with Eisenberg being hired to announce Kansas City Royals games.
And it was Eisenberg who preceded Raad in the Cyclones’ booth and pushed for his good friend to get the Mets job.
“He has a tremendous amount of knowledge of all the up-and-coming talent in the (Mets) organization,” Eisenberg said. “He’s developed a smooth sound that’s easy and enjoyable to listen to, while also being afable and enthusiastic.”
“Jake has been such a big help to me, because we share the same dreams and thoughts, and being a minor league broadcaster is very often a lonely job,” Raad said. “So having a guy who’s about your age group, who you can send tapes to and critique each other, has been so helpful.”
Raad said the process of applying for the Mets opening began last fall, when Eisenberg, a part-time Mets announcer in 2022, was hired by the Royals.
Then, a little before Christmas, it was announced that Wayne Randazzo, Rose’s
former WCBS-880 partner, would be leaving the job, meaning there were two openings on the Mets broadcast team, a part-time and a full-time opening (Pat McCarthy, a Triple-A announcer for the Phillies last season, was also hired this week by the Mets.)
“You’re just looking for an opportunity, and last fall I was reaching out to every big-league club and just seeing what was out there, that I could apply for,” Raad said. “And when I saw there were maybe two openings now with the Mets, I applied and started going through
the process.”
Raad said he frst had to have an interview with Rose, and when a scheduled 20-minute talk went 45 minutes, he thought that was a good sign.
Then he met with Audacy executives, and fnally Mets front-ofce brass, and after each set of talks he began to feel like he really had a shot at the gig, such was the positive feedback he was receiving.
“I got the feeling they really wanted a younger guy to pair with Howie, someone who knew the Mets, and also a New
Yorker as well, who could connect with listeners,” Raad said. “And just going through the process, at each step when they asked ‘do you think you could do this?’ I could tell I really had a chance.”
Finally in late January Raad was offered the job of working 120 games with Rose, and about 40 with McCarthy when Rose is of, dealing with a medical issue he recently revealed was bladder cancer.
It was a shock and disbelief, but it just became constantly joyous and emotional in a good way, when I got the ofcial call,” Raad said. “And let me tell you, it was very hard for my parents to keep this quiet the last few weeks, but I told them they couldn’t tell anyone yet,” Raad said with a laugh.
In a statement, Andy Goldberg, the executive vice president and chief marketing ofcer of the Mets, said this about Raad: “Having Keith called up from Brooklyn, and being a local New Yorker, is what the Mets are all about.”
For Raad, trying to win over notoriously fckle New York baseball fans/listeners is nothing he’s intimidated by.
“I’ve been trying to win over New Yorkers my whole life, at the bar, at the deli, everywhere,” he said with a chuckle. “But even going back to Chaminade, when I frst started thinking about (broadcasting), I’ve had so much support and help from so many people, so this is really, really rewarding.”
Mineola High School’s Jackie Lewis isn’t exactly sure who it was in her body bowling way above her normal level at the Nassau County championships on Feb. 4.
But she’s pretty certain it wasn’t her.
“I have no idea what happened there, it certainly didn’t feel like myself,” the senior said with a laugh. “I have no clue what made me bowl (so much better), but I’m so happy I did.”
In part because Lewis averaged 20 points above her normal 150 average, the Mustangs were able to repeat as county champions, fnishing 88 pins ahead of second-place MacArthur and advancing to the state championships on March 10 in Syracuse.
“That’s what is so great about our team, that when some of us don’t bowl as well other people pick us up,” said junior Michaela Palumbo, who had the secondhighest average in the county this season at 192.5. “Jackie and the others picked me up and it made me so happy to see.”
The Mustangs rolled (pun intended) into counties having gone undefeated this winter, piling up the pins behind top bowler Palumbo and No. 2 Kelsey Mor-
rison, a junior who averaged 168 for the year.
“I call them Frick and Frack,” coach Mark Miller said. “Kelsey is a little more demonstrative, gets pumped up a little more, while Michaela is really steady and makes great adjustments when she needs to.”
“Yeah I’m defnitely a little more emotional, where Michaela is so calm and a great leader,” Morrison said. “Our team really did a good job of staying strong knowing everyone was gunning for us.”
Besides Lewis, Morrison and Palumbo, Mineola was led by Emma Foley, Kate Flynn, Brianna DiVirgilio, and Leanna Quello, new to the team this year.
Now the Mustangs, who watched their school hang a banner honoring them after the county triumph, will try to conquer the state championships, where last year they fnished ninth.
“Last year we were a little intimidated and didn’t know what to expect, and we didn’t expect every other team to be so insanely good,” Palumbo said. “This year I think we’ll be a little calmer and ready to do better.”
While the Mineola girls are looking to complete a perfect season with a state championship win, another local bowler
achieved some perfection of his own a few weeks ago.
On Jan. 18 Vikings senior bowler Matt Nochowitz rolled twelve consecutive strikes to record his frst-ever perfect game.
In a match against Carle Place at Bowlero of Mineola, Nochowitz achieved the 300 in the second game of the day, and was mobbed by his teammates after the fnal strike.
No one was more surprised than he was that of all days, that was when it happened.
“I was having a pretty bad day; I forgot one of my bowling balls at my house, and I forgot my captain’s badge,” Nochowitz said. “So I was little of my game and then got to the lanes and tried to relax.”
Nochowitz, whose previous high game was a 268, said it was around the sixth frame when he felt he was really locked in, but he didn’t start thinking of the perfecto until the fnal frame.
By that time, North Shore coach Brian Rodahan said, the whole bowling alley was aware of what was happening on lane 19.
“Once he got to strike No. 8, everyone took notice,” Rodahan said. “By strike
nine, everyone stopped what they were doing as he got to his approach. And by the 10th strike, everyone was cheering.
“I’m so proud Matt was able to achieve a feat like this that was four years in the making.”
Nochowitz said he wasn’t nervous until the 11th shot, when he looked up “and saw more people than ever had watched me bowl” crowded around his lane.
When he threw the fnal strike, he said he knew it was good as soon as it left his hand.
As his teammates celebrated with him, even the Carle Place opponents congratulated Nochowitz, and workers at Bowlero came over to shower him with praise.
Nochowitz will be attending Cortland State next year to play baseball.
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