Manhasset times 12717

Page 1

Serving Manhasset

guide to

$1

Friday, January 27, 2017

Vol. 5, No. 4

&DPS &6FKRROV

CAMP AND CHAMBER HONORS MAJOR CRIME SCHOOLS GUIDE BUSINESS VETS FALLS IN PCT. PAGES 31-50 «ÕL V>Ì Ã Ã«i > L > à >Ìi i` >É Ì À

V > ÃiVÌ U > Õ >ÀÞ ÓÇ] Ó

PAGE 2

PAGE 6

ä£Ç

Landlord plans for B&N loss Lease runs out at end of the year BY M A X Z A H N C & B Realty, which owns the Northern Boulevard property occupied by Barnes & Noble, is bracing for the bookstore’s possible departure when its lease runs out at the end of the year. Last August, the real estate company said it was abandoning plans to develop the property for alternate tenants. But those efforts appeared back on track at the North Hills Board of Trustees meeting last Wednesday, when C & B sought permission to expand its parking lot for prospective medical or retail tenants. Edward Glackin, chief operating officer at Colin Development LLC, a subsidiary of C & B Realty, said the company is “still in talks with Barnes and Noble” to extend its lease but pointed to Barnes & Noble’s recent financial woes as a likely impediment. “Look at Amazon and Kindle and people reading on their phones,” he said. “It’s a changed business.” Continued on Page 65

PHOTO BY STEPHANIE HALL

Approximately 500,000 protesters, including hundreds of North Shore residents, assembled in Washington, D.C., for the Women’s March on Saturday.

Hundreds of N.S. women join marches Protesters cite gender and racial equality as reasons they attended “I realized the only way I’ll be comfortable is if I stand up,” Hundreds of North Shore said Stephanie Hall, a Port Washresidents were among the esti- ington resident who drove to the mated three million protesters march in Washington, D.C., with who participated in women’s her mother and niece. “A lot of us voted but unformarches across the globe on Sattunately those votes aren’t visurday. ible,” she added. “By going to Washington you could see all those bodies. It’s a visual reminder that this is what we believe in. Listen to us; we’re here.”

BY M A X Z A H N

Protesters from the North Shore cited women’s rights, racial and economic justice and opposition to the agenda of President Trump as issues that prompted them to join the marches. Hall said a group of Port Washington women organized buses to the march through a private Facebook group. The women wore “blue and white knit caps that said ‘you are the change’ on the front,” she

said. Among the Manhasset attendees at the march in Washington was Regina Rule, president of the Board of Education. A bus of 53 women traveled from the Unitarian Universalist Congregation at Shelter Rock, in Manhasset, early Saturday morning. Lisa Simon, the chair of the congregation’s social justice committee, said the bus includContinued on Page 66

For the latest news visit us at www.theislandnow.com D on’t forget to follow us on Twitter @Theislandnow and Facebook at facebook.com/theislandnow


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.