F.P. student in coma after hit-and-run
Alexa Kropf, a freshman at University at Albany, struck early Saturday
BY TAYLOR HERZLICHAn 18-year-old Floral Park native is in a medically induced coma after being struck by a dirt bike in a hit-and-run incident in Albany just after midnight Saturday, according to Albany police and her father.
Alexa Kropf, a freshman at University at Albany, was walking along a road with her friends very early Saturday, according to multiple reports.
Multiple witnesses said they saw a man driving a dirt bike down the road at a very fast speed wh ile he weaved in and out of groups of people, police said.
It is illegal to operate dirt bikes on any Albany street or sidewalk, Albany Mayor Kathy Sheehan and Albany Police Chief Eric Hawkins said in a joint Facebook post.
The driver fled the scene after hitting the victim, throwing Kropf in the air before she landed in the road several feet away from where she was struck, police said.
Officers found the victim in the road with a serious head injury and a fractured leg, police said. Kropf was treated on scene by EMTs and transferred to Albany Medical Center Hospital, where she was in critical condition, police said.
The investigation remains ongoing as the driver has not yet stepped forward, police said. Sheehan and Hawkins said they are “deeply troubled by the unconscionable depravity shown by the driver” and urged anyone with information to contact law enforcement officials.
A GoFundMe designated to raise funds for Kropf’s surgeries and recovery has reached $62,170 of its $70,000 goal, according to the GoFundMe website.
“Hi my name is Christine Loper. My best friend Roni Fornabia’s daughter Alexa Kropf was away at college and the victim of a hit and run,” the GoFundMe site description said. “Alexa is going to need multiple surgeries and will have a VERY long recovery…Roni will need to be by her side and will need assistance with medical bills and will be out of work as well.”
The accident came just days before Kropf was set to finish her first year at college.
“Our thoughts are most immediately with the injured student and her family and friends as she begins what we hope will be a complete recovery,” Jordan Carleo-Evangelist, a University at Albany spokesperson, said in a statement. “It is heartbreaking any time
Continued on Page 56
Rep. Anthony D’Esposito (R-Island Park) condemns student protests with Speaker Mike Johnson at Columbia University. See story on page 3.
Quraishi, Lo race for 1 seat on Herricks ed board
BY TAYLOR HERZLICHShaheda Quraishi, a Northwell physician and Herricks district graduate, and Eric Lo, a financial adviser, are running in the race for the Herricks
Board of Education, in which seven candidates are vying for two seats.
Incumbent Trustee Brian Hassan is running for re-election and facing challenger Maria Bono
Newcomers Quraishi, Lo, Surendra
Gupta, Ravinder S. Ratra and Russell M. Stuart are all running for the seat left vacant by Trustee Nancy Feinstein, who is stepping down from the board after serving as a trustee for 12 years.
Continued on Page 57
Herricks High ranked No. 8 on Long Island
Placed at 317 nationally by U.S. News & World Report
Dems
call ‘militia’ ‘flagrantly illegal’ Says beyond county executive’s powerBY CAMERYN OAKES
All seven Nassau County Democrat legislators called the county’s new emergency special deputy sheriff program “misguided” and “flagrantly illegal” and that County Executive Bruce Blakeman does not have the power to enact it.
“No portion of County Law §655 authorizes you as the County Executive to establish a list of citizens and train said citizens for the purpose of maintaining a cohort of individuals to serve as emergency special deputies,” the letter to Blakeman states.
The special deputy sheriff program is a collection of Nassau County residents who are already licensed firearm owners. The program specifically sought out applicants who already had law enforcement or military background.
The program has garnered staunch opposition, including an online petition calling for the disbandment of the special deputy sheriff program which has garnered more than 2,500 signatures.
In a letter signed by all seven Democrats in the county Legislature, the minority caucus said the program is “grossly inappropriate, risks public safety, and wastes taxpayer money.”
“Not only does empowering undertrained civilians to perform critical governmental functions during the time of a crisis – bearing firearms, no less – pose obvious risks to public safety, it is illegal,” the letter states. “Moreover, it is illogical to comprehend how civilians with barely a month of training can be granted the authority to carry deadly weapons under law enforcement powers, while Nassau County Auxiliary police officers, despite undergoing a comprehensive 40-week, 150-hour training program, are not deemed qualified for similar responsibilities.” Efforts to solicit comment from Blakeman were unavailing.
BY JASMINE SELLARSThe U.S. News & World Report on the 2024 best U.S. high schools has been released with several high schools in Nassau County proudly boasting impressive rankings.
Schools are ranked based on student performance on standardized tests, graduation rates and college readiness. Among the top 50 performing schools, Manhasset Secondary High School scored as the second-best school on Long Island, placing No. 32 in the New York metro area and No. 23 in New York State.
The school also ranked No. 111 in STEM high schools nationwide and No. 177 in the national rankings, earning an overall score of 99/100. It also received an award badge, which recognizes schools for their “educational excellence,” U.S. News said on its website.
Jericho High School came in as the
No. 1 school on Long Island. The school was ranked No. 11 in New York State, No. 20 in the New York Metro area and No. 114 nationally. The school was awarded a badge and an overall score of 99.35.
Garden City High School also chalked up an impressive feat, coming in at No. 2 on Long Island, placing No. 31 in the NY Metro Area, No. 22 in New York State and No. 176 nationwide. It was also awarded a badge, scoring 99/100 overall.
The following schools placed within the top 50 in the NY Metro Area and NY State, receiving an award badge: Great Neck South High School, Great Neck North High School, The Wheatley School and Herricks High School. North Shore High School, Roslyn High School and Paul D. Schreiber Senior High School ranked within the top 100 for the metro area and statewide rankings, while Floral Park Memorial High School and Mineola High School
ranked within the top 300, all of them earning an award badge as well.
Great Neck South ranked No. 4 on Long Island, No. 36 in the NY Metro Area, No. 26 in New York State. Its other rankings include placing No. 187 in STEM high schools nationwide and No. 206 in the national rankings, as well as an overall score of 98.83/100.
Great Neck North ranked No. 9 on Long, No. 66 in the NY Metro Area, No. 51 in the state, No. 141 in STEM high schools nationwide and No. 399 nationally, with an overall score of 97.74/100.
“We’re very pleased with both of our high schools doing so well,” Great Neck Board of Education President Rebecca Sassouni said. “Both have increased in rankings since last year.”
The Wheatley School ranked high as well, coming in at No. 48 in the NY Metro Area, No. 35 in New York State and No. 280 in the national rankings. Its overall score is 98.41/100.
Many of those in opposition to the program have referred to it as Blakeman’s “militia.” The petition also refers to the program as “Blakeman’s personal Nassau County militia.”
The minority caucus includes Minority Leader Delia DeRiggi-Whitton (D–Glen Cove), Deputy Minority Leader Arnold Drucker (D–Plainview), and Legislators Siela A. Bynoe (D – Westbury), Carrié Solages (D – Valley Stream), Debra Mulé (D –Freeport). Scott M. Davis (D – Rockville Centre) and Seth I. Koslow (D – Merrick).
Continued on Page 56
x203 • rpelaez@theisland360.com
Hyde Park Herald Courier: Brandon Duffy 516-307-1045 x215 • bduffy@theisland360.com
Manhasset Times: Robert Pelaez 516-307-1045 x203 • rpelaez@theisland360.com
Roslyn Times: Brandon Duffy 516-307-1045 x215 • bduffy@theisland360.com
Williston Times: Brandon Duffy 516-307-1045 x215 • bduffy@theisland360.com
Port Washington Times: Robert Pelaez 516-307-1045 x203 • rpelaez@theisland360.com
D’Esposito blasts Columbia protests
Joins House Speaker Johnson in calls for president’s resignation, withholding donations
BY TAYLOR HERZLICHRep. Anthony D’Esposito (R-Island Park) joined 13 other congressmen in a letter Friday imploring Columbia University alumni and donors to pull their donations until the university president resigns amid pro-Palestine protests on campus.
“Until Pres. Shafik resigns & honor is restored to this once great institution, it’s no longer worthy of financial or personal support,” D’Esposito wrote in a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, and Facebook.
The letter called on the university to provide a review of school funding and claimed that the protests at Columbia and other schools have called for violence against Jewish students, faculty and staff.
The day before, D’Esposito joined Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana and two other representatives on the front steps of the Columbia library.
Johnson condemned the campus protests, called on Columbia University President Nemat Shafik to resign and said he would urge President Joe Biden to take executive action against the protesters, including use of the National Guard, if necessary.
His comments were largely drowned out by shouts and boos from the crowd. As crowd members chanted over his remarks, Johnson said: “Enjoy your free speech.”
“[Shafik] has failed her duty,” D’Esposito said. “She is not keeping students safe and we see on this campus the hate-filled speech that
Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman visited Columbia University April 22.
is carrying through this country.”
D’Esposito, Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman and Rep. Mike Lawler visited the university April 22. Lawler represents New York’s 17th Congressional Distric, including Rockland County, Putnam County and northern Westchester County.
“As Nassau’s first Jewish county executive, I’m disgusted by what’s going on at Columbia, Yale University and at Hofstra University,
license bid. Hofstra denied any form of collusion with Las Vegas Sands competitors.
Hofstra students participated in a proPalestinian protest Thursday afternoon at the Hempstead campus. A smaller group of proIsraeli students stood nearby.
“A group of passionate students and a few faculty gathered today outside Hofstra Hall to protest the war in Gaza,” a Hofstra spokesperson told News12. “The demonstration has been peaceful.”
At the time Blakeman made his Facebook post, Hofstra students had not yet held a protest.
“President Poser and Hofstra have suppressed our voices a lot, and I know that’s similar to other universities, but that’s why all of these protests are taking place on campuses,” said Zainab Mozawalla, president of Hofstra Student Voices for Palestine.
The junior pre-law student said these protests are a last resort after being silenced by the university.
where President Susan Poser is equivocating in her support for Israel,” Blakeman said in a Facebook post. “We denounced all forms of hate and anti-semitism.”
Efforts to reach Poser were unavailing.
This is not the first time Blakeman called out Poser by name. Blakeman accused Poser of colluding with competitors to prevent a Las Vegas Sands proposal — which would build a casino near Hofstra — from winning a gaming
“We pay so much money in tuition and we don’t want any of that money going to Israeli funding. Hofstra even offers free trips to Israel, which we believe is an apartheid state,” Mozawalla said. “That’s why we do these protests, because this is how we get our voices heard, and if this is the only way, then this is the only way.”
Adelphi students participated in a proPalestinian protest Monday at the Garden City campus.
Continued on Page 57
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HAPPY MOTHER’SDAY
Port pizzeria closes oven over permits
BY CAMERYN OAKESPopular Manorhaven take-out shop Serra Provisions, whose pizza was named some of the best in Long Island, shut down its pizza oven this April after prolonged permit issues with the village.
The announcement was met with customers upset and critical of the Village of Manorhaven, which Mayor John Popeleski took issue with at a Board of Trustees meeting Wednesday. He said the decision to close the pizza oven was not one made by the village as it had provided opportunities for the business to remedy its situation.
“We just want to raise our family, run our business, and put out the best product that we can,” the owners wrote in a Facebook post.
Serra Provisions opened on 7 Sintsink Drive East in Manorhaven in November 2021. About six months later, the business installed a pizza oven to expand its menu.
Owner Jesse Olson said the decision to start selling pizza was made to cater to its growing customer base and offer food options that were better for dinner meals. He said pizza was the best option to limit the amount of construction that would be needed.
Popeleski said the business went in front of the Board of Trustees as a hardship case to get its approval to begin operations and bypass approvals of the village’s Architectural Review Board and Planning Board.
Olson had presented his business application earlier to the village’s Board of Zoning and Appeals and followed all the required procedures. He said he was approved by the board.
He was ultimately granted final approvals by the village since it was found that their plans did not have elements needing to be approved by the other two boards, but Popeleski said it was a procedure the village had never done before.
“The village has been very lenient with Serra Provisions,” Popeleski said. “We’re trying to work with them.”
In the transcript provided by the village of Olsen’s appearance before the Board of Trustees, he said that no kitchen would be installed and that it would operate as a grab-and-go.
“So basically, right off the bat, they lied to this board,” Popeleski said.
Olson said he had emailed the mayor in September 2022 when he realized they had not received village approval for the pizza oven install. He said no response was received.
Popeleski said he is responsive to inquiries from the community, but Olson said multiple emails to the mayor were never responded to.
Popeleski also read a transcript from when Olsen appeared in village court in March 2023 at a proceeding where the judge said the business’ wood-fired pizza oven and its chimney were installed without a building permit.
While the owners admitted they had installed the pizza oven without village approval, they did seek approval from the Nassau County Fire Marshal, which determined there were no fire hazards. They said the failure to go through the village for approval was an oversight.
Popeleski said at the root of this issue is safety, saying that bypassing the required permits poses a risk to the public without proper oversight.
Olson said issues have persisted throughout the process of opening his business, which included never receiving a certificate of occupancy. He said this was exacerbated by turnover in the village’s Building Department.
He said his business also received numerous citations for variances his business had been approved for but none concerned the oven.
In a Facebook post on Serra Provisions’ account, the owners denied Manorhaven’s claim that they were refusing to comply with the village.
With a desire to resolve the issue as quickly as possible, Olson said the best solution they found was to decommission the pizza oven entirely.
“Unfortunately, the baseless citations and lack of clear direction have us questioning the integrity of the current administration, which was not something we anticipated when starting our small business,” the owners wrote on Facebook. “Until there is a shift in local leadership, we do not envision that any further proceedings will be fair and objective, nor do we have the financial capacity to jump through any more hoops.”
Blank Slate wins 8 contest awards
6 newspapers sweep best column category, honored for news coverage, advertising, photography
BY CAMERYN OAKESBlank Slate Media won eight state-wide awards at the New York Press Association Better Newspaper Contest this past weekend, including a sweep of the top three places for the best column award.
“It’s always gratifying to get recognition for all the hard work and effort that gets put into producing these papers and us doing our best job to serve the community,” Blank Slate Media publisher and editor Steven Blank said. “It’s nice when we get that recognition of that.”
The company, which publishes six weekly newspapers covering the North Shore, won awards in column writing, advertisements, photography, and news coverage at the New York Press Association conference in Saratoga Springs.
The New York Press Association represents all weekly and small dai
ly newspapers in New York State.
Blank said the awards demonstrate the talent and dedication of Blank Slate Media’s staff and its contributors.
Blank Slate Media swept the best column category, with colum -
nists Robert Scott in first place, Tom Ferraro in second place, and George Marlin in third.
Blank said the winning columnists reflect the diverse opinions that Blank Slate Media publishes, including a range of opinions on
politics, sports, education and beyond.
“It shows you what a vibrant opinion section that we have,” Blank said.
Editorial designer Yvonne Farley was awarded second place for
best small space ad. Both Farley and marketing director Susan Tabakin for best house ad/ad campaign. Roy Schneider, a Port Washington-based photographer who contributes to Blank Slate Media, was named third place in best photo
Blank Slate Media won eight awards at the New York Press Association’s Better Newspaper Contest, including a sweep in the columnist category.
story. He was honored for his collection “Port Washington in Photos,” which captured a diverse array of sceneries around his community.
Former reporter Robert Pelaez, reporter Cameryn Oakes and contributing sports reporter Michael Lewis were awarded a third-place finish for best spot news coverage in their joint reporting on the deaths of Roslyn tennis stars Drew Hassenbein and Ethan Falkowitz, both 14, who died in a car accident after their vehicle was struck by an alleged drunk driver.
Blank applauded the spot news coverage immediately after the deaths of the two teens but said reporters continue to follow the story, whereas other publications’ coverage may have tapered off.
Blank Slate Media also received an honorable mention for best editorial page.
Blank Slate Media began operation in 2010 with the purchase of three newspapers – the Great Neck News, New Hyde Park Herald Courier and the Williston Times.
The company ultimately grew to six newspapers with the opening of the Manhasset Times, Roslyn Times and Port Washington Times.
Open houses to be held on LI transmission lines project
BY CAMERYN OAKESCommunity members will be able to provide feedback $3.2 billion electrical transmission line project proposed in
Long Island during a series of in-person and virtual open houses hosted through May and June. For Nassau County residents, a virtual session will be held from 6-8 p.m. on
May 23. An in-person forum will be held for North Hempstead residents at the Bryant Library in Roslyn from 7-9 p.m. on May 28.
Continued on Page 46
The Propel New York Energy project is proposing nearly 20 miles of underground electrical transmission lines through the Town of North Hempstead.
D’Esposito violated FEC law: complaint
BY TAYLOR HERZLICHA constituent in the 4th Congressional District said she filed multiple campaign finance complaints against Rep. Anthony D’Esposito (RIsland Park), including an allegation that he has subsidized more than $20,000 for his federal campaign committee.
Merrick resident Helene M., who wished to keep her last name anonymous, said she filed the complaints April 4 in an effort to inform fellow residents of the alleged violations.
“Team D’Esposito always takes all necessary steps to operate in accordance with election law, and we will vigorously challenge this desperate smear campaign led by partisans who know they can’t win at the ballot box,” Matthew Capp, campaign spokesperson, told Blank Slate Media in a statement. Helene said she filed three complaints in total to the Federal Elections Commission and the Office of Congressional Ethics.
Continued on Page 52
“[It is] reprehensible for my representative to be breaking ethics rules and I wanted…people to be made aware of it because I think it would upset a lot of people and they would pay attention more to the election coming up,” Helene said. The alleged complaint filings come ahead of the representative’s race for reelection. The Nassau County Republican Committee officially nominated D’Esposito in February as the party’s nominee in the race for the 4th Congressional District seat.
Suozzi says border bill should be next Curran, Bosworth endorse Keiserman for state Senate
BY CAMERYN OAKESAfter Congress passed a $95 billion foreign aid package that delivers aid to Ukraine, Israel and the Indo-Pacific, Rep. Tom Suozzi (NY-03) said the next step is allocating funds to secure the country’s southern border.
The foreign aid package was voted on in the House of Representatives April 20 and in the Senate April 23. It passed in both chambers, with bipartisan support integral to its passage after Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson of Louisiana put his job on the line and brought the measure to the floor for a controversial vote.
Suozzi said this aid package “will provide long-awaited aid, including humanitarian aid, to Ukraine, Israel, and the Indo-Pacific.”
The $95 billion aid package is split between the three regions, with $60.84 billion allocated to Ukraine to aid in its war with Russia, $26.38 billion for Israel and $8.12 billion for the Indo-Pacific to counter China.
Bringing the vote to the House of Representatives followed months of delays due to pushback from many of its far-right Republican members, who opposed giving aid to Ukraine.
Since the war broke out in February 2022, the United States has sent about $74 billion in aid to Ukraine. But this had stalled in 2024.
For months Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky had been lobbying the United States government to deliver aid to his country amid war, but partisan opposition in Congress led months of inaction.
Continued on Page 42
BY CAMERYN OAKESFormer Nassau County Executive Laura Curran and former North Hempstead Town Supervisor Judi Bosworth, both Democrats, endorsed state Senate District 7 candidate Kim Keiserman, now joining a long list of local Democrats supporting the Port Washington resident.
“I’m proud to endorse Kim Keiserman in her campaign for State Senate,” former Nassau County Executive Curran said. “Kim’s commitment to our community, her steadfast values, and her willingness to take on the tough battles to protect reproductive rights, keep guns off our streets, and create a more affordable Long Island make her exactly the type of leader we need in Albany.”
“Kim Keiserman will be a dedicated State Senator and serve our communities well,” former North Hempstead Supervisor Bosworth said. “I believe she will build on the programs we started in the town for environmental protection and to combat hate and division in these very challenging times.”
Keiserman said she was gratedul for garnering both Curran’s and Bosworth’s support.
Keiserman faces Brad Schwartz in the race to replace state Sen. Jack Mar-
Former Nassau County Executive Laura Curran endorsed state Senate candidate Kim Keiserman in her bid for District 7 Democratic nomination.
tins , a Republican. Keiserman and Schwartz are the only Democrats running in the race, and the winner of the primary will face off against Martins – the only Republican running.
Schwartz, who ran in the 2018 race but dropped out before the primary against former state Sen. Anna Kaplan, is a former television editor and producer with a PhD in public policy.
Continued on Page 42
N O I N T E R E S T
I F P A I D I N F U L L W I T H I N 1 8 M O N T H S
Women’s Health Care of Garden City committed to personalized care
By John L. Gomes, MDJohn L. Gomes, MD, founded Women’s Health Care of Garden City in 1995. It has remained an independent private practice, providing personalized obstetrical and gynecological services.
He employs the technical advances of conventional medicine with an integrative approach to navigate women through difficult pregnancies into the menopausal years. He treats a wide variety of OB/GYN conditions and is dedicated to providing the highest quality of care.
All tests are conveniently done on the premises, and a dedicated, compassionate staff is on call 24/7.
He is committed to excellence in patient communication, education and support, as many patients come with anxiety associated with past experiences and future concerns.
Dr. Gomes received his undergraduate degree from Brown University, and his Doctor of Medicine from Columbia University.
He is both Board Certified and a Fellow of the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology.
Women’s Health Care of Garden City is located at 1000 Franklin Avenue, Suite 200, Garden City.
Swimwear store gets lifeline in Roslyn
BY TAYLOR HERZLICHGreat Shapes Swimwear, a locally owned swimsuit business with prior locations in Mineola, Roslyn Heights, Merrick and New Jersey, has opened a pop-up store in Roslyn Village.
The shop is located at 17 Lumber Road around the corner from Hendrick’s Tavern.
Business owner Joel Weinberg has worked in the swimwear industry for 50 years. Now, his friend Dan Burns, a financial adviser, has partnered with him on the new Roslyn Village location.
“Joel was in Roslyn Heights and he served people in that location for over 30 years,” Burns said. “With that said, Roslyn Village is very quaint. Special. When you walk around and you see some of the houses and some of the architecture from the late 1800s, you realize you’re in a special town.”
While the business partners are excited to be in their new location, the move to Roslyn Village was a way to make the best out of a sticky situation.
In October, Weinberg’s landlord informed the business owner that he wanted to renovate the building. Weinberg did not oppose the renovations, but he did emphasize to his landlord the importance of finishing construction prior to this summer.
“Joel didn’t want to miss the summer season,” Burns said. “He has been serving Long Island and the women in Long Island for 43 years and he wasn’t gonna miss the summer.”
Renovations were estimated to be finished by April or May, but the building is currently still under construction.
When Burns, who said he has been a longtime friend of Weinberg, heard of the problem, he decided to bring to Weinberg’s attention an empty storefront he had noticed in the village.
Now, Weinberg and Burns have moved the business into the Roslyn storefront. While they are unsure of how long they will be at the new location, they said they are excited about the future.
The partners will continue Weinberg’s unique, old-school business model in the Roslyn storefront. While the store does have a website, customers are unable to purchase swimsuits online, a purposeful choice rather
than an oversight in the digital age.
“Fit is the most important thing that we sell,” Burns said. “Our staff is trained in this. They’ve seen all different types of people, all body shapes, and they know the brands so well that they can sort of point someone in the direction of what might fit them best.”
The dedication to fit goes beyond welltrained staff to beautiful dressing rooms and recommended swimsuit alterations, Burns said.
Great Shapes also has a large focus on making the customer comfortable, a practice that goes back as far as Weinberg’s career.
Weinberg started his career as a salesman for two large swimwear companies, but he lacked job security in sales. Weinberg said since the North Shore didn’t have any retail swim stores at the time, he opened his own.
Soon enough, Weinberg said he owned three or four of the largest grossing swim stores in the country. A career he fell into due to “sheer luck” became a passion, he said.
The store owner said he especially liked finding swimwear companies early on, before they became popular, and securing exclusivity on certain swimwear lines for his stores.
Weinberg is responsible for bringing in around 25 swimwear lines to the United States, the store owner said.
Today, his stores carry a wide range of swimwear and lingerie lines, including Maryan Melhoen, Karla Colletto, Heidi Klein, Carmen Marc Valvo, Michael Kors and many more.
Even with the expansive swim collection, Weinberg said he knows swimsuit shopping is no easy task.
“A woman is probably most uncomfortable outside of her house in a swimsuit,” Weinberg said. “Our goal is always to make that woman or that young girl or their grandmother or whomever feel as comfortable as they’re going to ever feel in a swimsuit, knowing that the world is going to see them.”
It seems as though Weinberg has achieved this goal. One woman drove hours to shop at one of his New Jersey stores after she moved, Weinberg said. And many young women who shopped at his stores when they were just 13 have returned years later to shop with their college friends, the store owner boasted.
Knitting together two decades in Roslyn
BY CAMERYN OAKESCheryl Lavenhar, the owner of Roslyn’s Knit, never expected to be in the knitting business but described it as something she rather fell into.
“It was never my plan in life, but it brings me immense pleasure,” Lavenhar said.
She also did not have a vision for how Knit might evolve, let alone foresee the celebration of being open for 20 years. Lavenhar described it as a milestone fraught with emotions.
“Coming here is what keeps me young, keeps me going,” Lavenhar said.
Roslyn’s Knit, located at 1353 Old Northern Blvd No. 3, is a local yarn supply store for various knitting and crocheting projects.
Lavenhar started working at Knit as an employee, later becoming a store partner and culminating in her current role as the sole owner.
In April, the store celebrated its 20th anniversary of being a source of yarn for local knitters and crocheters.
But that’s not all that Knit is. Lavenhar wrapped up Knit’s mission in a single sentence: a knitting store that encourages a sense of community. At various times throughout the week, especially on Saturday
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Continued on Page 57
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Pet Adoptathon on May 4 and May 5 LIJ Medical Center unveils $4M cardiac catheterization lab
Hundreds of dogs, cats. puppies, and kittens – of all ages, sizes and breeds – will be available for adoption this weekend as North Shore Animal League America launches their 30th Annual Global Pet Adoptathon®, with support from Rachael Ray® Nutrish®.
This yearly, month-long initiative focuses on finding loving, responsible homes for animals (rescued locally, nationally, and internationally) and celebrating the devoted worldwide community that facilitates and supports animal rescue and adoption.
KICK-OFF WEEKEND at our PORT WASHINGTON ADOPTION CENTER
SATURDAY, MAY 4
Extended Hours: 10 AM – 8 PM
10 AM: RIBBON CUTTING with 2024 Global Pet Adoptathon Ambassador LISA LAMPANELLI (Adopter, Advocate, Comedy Icon)
SUNDAY, MAY 5
Extended Hours: 10 AM – 7 PM
ADOPTION SPECIALS in CELEBRATION of our 80th ANNIVERSARY:
SATURDAY, MAY 4th: 1st 80 approved adopters receive $80 off adoption fees!
SUNDAY, MAY 5th: 1st 50 approved adopters receive $50 off adoption fees!
The kick-off weekend at our Port Washington Adoption Center and the weeklong celebration May 6 through May 11 is sponsored by Swiffer™.
The weeklong celebration will continue Monday, May 6 through Saturday, May 11 with regular adoption hours (10:00 am – 6:00 pm Daily.)
Global Pet Adoptathon continues throughout the month of May with more than 2,000 animal shelters and rescue groups across the country and around the world joining Animal League America for this premiere global adoption initiative — sponsored by Swiffer, with support from Rachael Ray® Nutrish®, to help save the lives of thousands of homeless animals.
Long Island Jewish Medical Center recently opened a $4 million cardiac catheterization lab, equipped with new state-ofthe-art technology to improve cardiovascular care and access for patients in Queens, Long Island and nearby communities.
The most common procedures performed in the cardiac cath lab include interventional cardiac procedures such as angioplasty, stenting, otherwise known as percutaneous coronary intervention, which opens up blocked arteries during a heart attack or in patients with symptomatic stable coronary artery disease.
The experienced, multidisciplinary cardiac team at LIJ provides procedures on an elective basis for diagnosis and treatment of conditions and also delivers highly coordinated
Dr. Alexander Lee and the clinical cardiac team showcase LIJ’s new cardiac catheterization lab.
care for patients with life-threatening emergencies such as heart attack 24/7.
“We are excited to see this project come to fruition. Sophisticated advancements in imaging and technology combined with an innovative team approach will allow us to provide at-risk cardiac patients with the best possible diagnosis, treatment and care, so they can live life to the fullest,” said Dr. Michael Gitman, executive director of Long Island Jewish Medical Center.
“With the addition of the new cath lab, LIJ Medical Center is not only investing in leading-edge technology but is making a commitment to our community to ensure they have the highquality care they deserve close to home,” said Dr. Alexander Lee,director of LIJ’s cardiac catheterization labs and director of quality for cardiology. “The state-of-the-art imaging capabilities in the new lab also significantly reduces radiation exposure for patients and providers, an important safety factor.”
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in men and women in the United States, accounting for more than 931,500 lives lost to the disease each year, according to the American Heart Association.
Despite stark statistics, doctors and health care experts note that most cardiac and stroke events can be prevented through education and lifestyle changes, such as increasing exercise, eating a heart-healthy diet and managing blood pressure.
For more information about cardiac care at LIJ Medical Center or across Northwell Health’s Cardiovascular Institute, please call: 855-HEART-11. The central contact number serves as a concierge service for patients seeking appointments, general information and resources.
North Hempstead to host native plant rebate program
This Earth Day, Town of North Hempstead Supervisor Jennifer DeSena and the Town Board announced that the Town has received $10,000 from the Nassau County Soil and Water Conservation District to offer rebates to residents who grow native plants in their landscapes.
The program offers eligible residents up to $350 per household when they purchase native plants to replace lawn grass or plants in an existing garden.
“Native plants play a critical role for our local pollinators and wildlife because they provide the resources pollinators require to survive,” DeSena said. “Many pollinator habitats have been lost to development, but this program helps residents use their own backyards to create a haven for wildlife. It’s rare to get the chance to help your environment and your wallet at the same time, and I strongly encourage residents to take advantage of this wonderful opportunity.”
For the past three years, this rebate program has helped create 70 new native plant gardens throughout North Hempstead. The gardens are designed for more than just beauty, as they help provide food, shelter, and nesting resources for the declining species of pollinators.
The town has again taken the Mayors’ Monarch Pledge this year, and these gardens are vital in efforts to conserve this iconic species.
Native plants also provide other benefits like extensive root systems that absorb polluted stormwater and carbon dioxide, low maintenance requirements, do not need fertilizer, and are drought tolerant once established.
To qualify for the program, residents must complete an application that includes the proposed garden size, a native plant species list, photos of the planting location(s), and a basic garden layout.
Funding is limited, and applications that meet the requirements will be accepted on a first-come, first-served basis until October 1 or until funding is exhausted. For more information and details on how to apply, please visit www.northhempsteadny.gov/ sustainability.
F. Square music education recognized
The Franklin Square Union Free School District has been recognized for its commitment to music education with a Best Communities for Music Education designation from The NAMM Foundation. Now in its 25th year, the Best Communities for Music Education designation is awarded to districts that demonstrate outstanding achievement to provide music access and education to all students. This is the second consecutive year that the district
has earned this honor.
Franklin Square UFSD was selected among 975 school districts nationwide. To qualify, the district answered detailed questions about funding, graduation requirements, music class participation, instruction time, facilities, and support for the music program and community music-making programs. Responses were verified by school officials and reviewed by The Music Research Institute at the University of Kansas.
John Street School students sell ice pops to raise money
John Street School ISP students sold ice pops during lunch hours, from March 2527, to raise funds for local non-profit organization Nassau-Suffolk Autism Society of America. The non-profit’s mission is to support individuals with autism in the local community.
The school raised $820, with all proceeds going to NASA to help provide free educational, social and recreational opportunities.
Additionally, John Street School invited families to complete a puzzle piece for a hallway display in honor of World Autism Awareness Day on April 2.
John Street School ISP students sold ice pops to raise funds for local non-profit organization Nassau-Suffolk Autism Society of America on March 26.
Upcoming early Mayh events at the Hillside Public Library Tree planting in Floral Park on Earth Day
Project Plant a Treat is focused on raising awareness about the importance of protecting and conserving our trees in our community.
With the assistance of Floral Parks Beautification Committee Chair Donna Sanchez and Floral Parks Mayor Kevin Fitzgeralds’ generosity donating a beautiful cherry blossom tree.
Girl Scout Alice Oustatcher was able to plant a tree at Centennial Gardens. The tree was planted on Earth Day which added even greater significance to the project. In addition posters will be hung in parks and schools to teach children how to properly treat trees with kindness and respect. Alice will also receive a silver award for this project.
Upcoming Events in Early May
Board Book Drive: Hillside Library is collecting new Board Books for local Childrens’ Hospitals. The donations will be collected throughout the month of May. We thank you for your generosity.
Movie! Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back – Rating:PG. All Purpose Room
Sunday, May 5 at 1 p.m. Join us for Revenge of the Fifth with the fifth installment of the Star Wars franchise! “Luke Skywalker and the Rebel Alliance continue their star wars with the evil Empire of Darth Vader in the second film to be released in George Lucas’s sci-fi series.”
All About Birds! – All Purpose Room
Monday, May 6 at 6:30 p.m. Join Peggy Maslow of the North Shore Audubon Society for a slide show and fun facts that are For the Birds!Also, learn how to borrow the Library’s Birding Backpack from our Library of Things!
Detox Your Mind through Meditation – Virtual Tuesday, May 7 at 12 noon. Join Ajili Hodari Esq, long time meditator and learn how to implement a simple yet very powerful meditation technique that can be life changing.
Fiction Loves History Book Club – 1st Fl. Modular Room
Tuesday, May 7 at 6:30 p.m. The book being discussed is: The Nature of Fragile Things by Susan Meissner.
“The fates of three women intertwine on the eve of a devastating earthquake, thrusting them onto a perilous journey that will test their resiliency and resolve and, ultimately, their belief that love can overcome fear.”
Staying Safe Behind the Wheel – All Purpose Room
Wednesday, May 8 at 1 p.m. Information for everyone! Town of North Hempstead’s Chari Biton, Senior Mobility Manager for Dept of Services for the Aging, discusses staying safe behind the wheel, and more. Bring your questions. Giveaways and refreshments!
Fresh Fiction Book Club — 1st Fl. Modular Room
Wednesday, May 8 at 6:30 p.m. The book being discussed is: The Island of Missing Trees by Elif Shafak.
“Kostas and Defne, a Greek Cypriot and a Turkish Cypriot, meet at a taverna and grow in their forbidden love for each other. A fig tree stretches through a cavity in the roof, and this tree bears witness to their hushed, happy meetings and eventually, to their silent, surreptitious departures.
Oh My Aching Head! Headaches and Migraines – Virtual Thursday, May 9 at 1 p.m. Community Health Nurse Educator Maura Calio discusses important details to know about headaches and migraines, including causes, symptoms, screening recommendations, and treatment options.
Brain Fitness Fun for Everybody! – Virtual Thursday, May 9 at 6:30 p.m. This class is uniquely designed for those who are interested in being proactive in maintaining and enhancing their cognitive functioning! Brain games, word games, trivia and other brain stimulating activities.
Movie! The Joy Luck Club – Rating: R. All Purpose Room
Friday, May 10 at 1 p.m. “Through a series of flashbacks, four young Chinese women born in America and their respective mothers born in feudal China, explore their past. This search will help them understand their difficult mother/daughter relationship.”
Paint Night: Save the Rhino Day! – Virtual Friday, May 10 at 7 p.m. Sketching and Acrylics with Alma for everyone! May 1st is not only May Day, it is Save the Rhino day! For a list of supplies needed, please go to the library’s website.
Cancer Prevention and Screening Overview – Virtual Tuesday, May 14 at 12 noon. Stony Brook Health Education;Don’t delay your cancer screenings. Learn what cancer screenings are available for you, when to get screened, and best practices for cancer prevention.
Got a Clue? Mystery Book Club – 1st Fl. Modular Room
Wednesday, May 15 at 6:30 p.m. The book being discussed is: Northern Spy by Flynn Berry. “A heart-pounding story of the contemporary IRA and a moving portrait of sister- and motherhood, and of life in a deeply divided society.
In-Person: Library Plant and Garden Group – 1st Fl. Modular Room
Thursday, May 16 at 6:30 p.m. Calling all gardeners, of all levels and interests! Join the Plant and Garden Club and exchange seeds, rooted cuttings, and plants with fellow gardeners of all skills and interests. No registration necessary. The Library Plant and Garden Club meets every 3rd Thursday, April through September.
Movie! Killers of the Flower Moon – Rating:R. All Purpose Room
Friday, May 17 at 1 p.m. “In the 1920s, innocent members of the Osage Indigenous American tribe suffer from a series of unusual, inexplicable murders. Though relegated to the margins of society, the case captures the attention of the FBI, which launches a large-scale investigation under the guidance of J. Edgar Hoover.”
CHILDREN and YOUNG ADULT EVENTS
Stemtastic: CSI! – All Purpose Room
Monday, May 6 at 4:30 p.m. Ages: 7-12 years. A crime has been committed at the library and it’s up to you to find the culprit. A fingerprint, a partially eaten strawberry, a mysterious note and an unusual footprint have been left behind. Follow the rules to find the thief and bring him or her to justice.
Time for Kids: Hooray for Mother’s Day! – All Purpose Room
Friday, May 10 at 10:30 a.m. Ages: 12 months- 5 years (with parent/caregiver). Come join a Time for Kids, Inc. as we celebrate in this family fun preschool program. Activities include music, movement, fine & gross motor development and storytelling! There will also be a Mother’s Day Craft! Mother’s Day Ceramics! – All Purpose Room Friday, May 10 at 4 p.m. Grades: 1-4. Paint a beautiful ceramic figure for a special lady in your life! Material Fee: $3
NYU Langone heart, kidney treatment a 1st Valley Stream boy 1st in NY to get blood disease therapy
BY TAYLOR HERZLICHNYU Langone Health surgeons successfully completed the first-ever combined mechanical heart pump and genetically modified pig kidney transplant surgery in April on a 54-year-old woman with heart and kidney failure.
New Jersey-native Lisa Pisano underwent the firstever combined surgery using the transplant of a genetically-altered, non-human organ.
Prior to surgery, Pisano faced heart failure and latestage kidney disease. She required routine dialysis. And Pisano suffered from several other chronic medical conditions that caused high levels of antibodies in her body to attack human tissue. Thus, she was not eligible for heart and kidney transplants.
“All I want is the oppor-
tunity to have a better life,” Pisano said in a statement.
“After I was ruled out for a human transplant, I learned I didn’t have a lot of time left.
My doctors thought there may be a chance I could be approved to receive a geneedited pig kidney, so I discussed it with my family and my husband. He has been by my side throughout this ordeal and wants me to be better.”
So Pisano received a series of landmark, life-saving procedures from two surgical teams at NYU Langone over a course of nine days.
Surgeons first implanted a heart pump, also known as a left ventricular assist device, or LVAD, on April 12. Without the pump, doctors estimated Pisano would have had only days or weeks to live.
Continued on Page 52
BY TAYLOR HERZLICHCohen Children’s Medical Center doctors administered Zynteglo, a treatment for a rare genetic blood disease, to an 8-yearold boy from Valley Stream, making him the first patient in New York State to receive the therapy.
Yusef Ahmed made history just one month after his eighth birthday when he received Zynteglo Jan. 9, just one of a handful of patients in the United States to have the treatment.
Dr. Charles L. Schleien is chair of the Department of Pediat-
Eight-year-old Yusef Ahmed received Zynteglo at Cohen Children’s Medical Center, making him the first patient in New York State to receive the treatment.
rics at Cohen.
“It’s not often that we have the opportunity to participate in a moment of medical history,” Dr. Schleien said in a statement. “This is a wonderful achievement and a milestone in our ongoing mission to provide the best care possible. I am very proud of our team of clinicians and researchers who spent years bringing this effort to fruition.”
Ahmed was born with thalassemia, a rare condition often seen in people of Asian descent, according to Cohen. The young boy followed in the footsteps of his aunt, who also suffered from thalassemia and received crucial treatment at Cohen.
His aunt was just a child when she received bone marrow transplant surgery in 2008 at Cohen. She is now a 20-year-old college student.
But Zynteglo affords patients the opportunity to forego bone marrow transplant surgery and the draining search for a donor, according to Cohen.
Zynteglo therapy was a three-step process for Ahmed. First, doctors collected stem cells from his blood and sent them to a manufacturing site to be made into Zynteglo in 2023.
Then Ahmed underwent four days of chemotherapy starting Jan. 3. The purpose of the chemotherapy is to eliminate existing cells in the patient’s bone marrow to make room for the new Zynteglo cells.
After a two-day rest, Ahmed received Zynteglo through IV transfusion Jan. 9.
Since the transfusion, Ahmed started to produce normal red blood cells. He is now cured of the disease that was genetically transmitted to him upon birth, a sign that Zynteglo might be a viable option for more patients suffering from thalassemia in the future, according to Cohen.
Continued on Page 52
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Are taxes in Nassau too high? It depends
Nassau residents and elected officials often complain that taxes are too high.
A comparison of income, property, and sales taxes by WalletHub, a personal finance company, shows that New Yorkers pay the most in the country.
And according to SmartAsset, an online financial information company, New York City suburbs pay the highest property taxes in the nation.
But are they too high?
Not, apparently, if you are talking about education. When it comes to spending—at least on education—residents and officials always want more.
Gov. Kathy Hochul recently agreed with state legislative leaders on a $327 billion budget that included an increase of $1.3 billion in school aid from her original budget.
The original budget had called for a far more modest $800 million increase in education spending, which included an overall increase for Nassau County school districts of 4.89% in state aid.
This was on top of a $7 billion increase in state spending over the past three years and an additional $13 billion in extraordinary federal aid.
But many Long Island school districts and local elected officials were not happy. They said the spending, mostly covered by the state income tax, was not enough.
They pointed out that 40 of the 117 Long Island School Districts would see a decrease in state aid, some as much as 10%.
This was due, in part, to the proposed elimination of the state’s “hold harmless policy,” which guaranteed that every district received the same amount of state aid or more from year to year – even if school enrollment dropped.
Eighty-one percent of districts outside New York City have fewer students today than they did in 201819,” according to the Empire Center for Public Policy, a conservative think tank. “Since peaking in 1999-2000 at
2.9 million, New York’s enrollment (including charter schools) has fallen below 2.4 million to a level not seen since the early 1950s.”
In North Hempstead, school enrollment has essentially stayed the same between the 2012-313 and 2022-23 school years, but the numbers among districts have been uneven, with some districts reporting large drops and others large gains.
Among the districts seeing decreased school attendance were Carle Place at 8.9%, East Williston at 8.2%, Manhasset at 8.1%, and Sewanhaka at 6.1%.
Among the districts seeing increases were Herricks at 12.8%, Floral Park-Bellerose at 8.6%, and Mineola, at 6.1%.
In Nassau County — with its 56 school districts, 56 school superintendents and 56 school boards — enrollment was down 3.38% in the past 10 years.
But during this time, New York’s per-pupil spending was rising.
The Empire Center pointed out that New York had the highest per-pupil spending of any state as of 2021 at $26,571, almost double the national average of $14,347. Places like Texas and Florida were below $10,000 per pupil.
New York’s per-pupil spending was expected to exceed $30,000 in 2022-23. On the North Shore, many school districts spent between $35,000 and $47,000 per pupil in the 2023-2024 school year.
Still, local officials were angry when Hochul’s budget mixed increases with cuts.
“It is shameful for Gov. Hochul to propose a state budget with Draconian cuts to over 40 Long Island school districts while providing billions to pay for the ongoing migrant crisis,” Republican Long Island Congressmen Anthony D’Esposito (NY-04), Andrew Garbarino (NY-02) and Nick LaLota (NY-01) said in a joint press release.
State Sen. Jack Martin’s (NY-07) op-ed, which appeared in Blank Slate
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Considering that opera is taught and the New York Stock Exchange floor has been replicated in North Shore school districts, this seemed a tad harsh.
But state Assembly and Senate Democrats agreed with the opponents of any cuts of state aid anywhere. They called for a minimum 3% increase in state aid for all districts.
So much for controlling state spending and high taxes. At least when it comes to education.
The three Republican congressmen did call for the state to eliminate the $2.5 billion allocated for New York City housing more than 170,000 migrants.
But this was a non-starter, with city Democrats who dominate both the Assembly and the Senate unwilling to abandon otherwise homeless men, women, and children.
The result? A state budget that includes a record $34.5 billion in school aid — a $3 billion increase over the current year.
This happened in a year when all state legislative and congressional seats are up for election. So, it is safe
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to assume that legislators of both parties believed this was supported by voters.
The same is true of local school budgets — usually the largest part of revenue for school districts.
County, town and village officials routinely tout their efforts to control spending, which can make a difference at the margins.
But the county, towns and villages only account for about one-third of the property taxes paid by residents.
The remaining two-thirds? The money that goes to schools.
School budgets are also the only budgets subject to voter approval every year.
Spending on schools and villages is constrained by a cap imposed on increases in tax levies that require a 60% vote to exceed.
Almost all budgets don’t exceed the tax cap. Almost all budgets are also approved by voters, many of whom have children who attend local schools.
As Willie Sutton, the famed robber, said when asked why he stole from banks, that’s where the money is.
Schools are much the same way when it comes to taxpayers. They are where the money is and the 56
school districts in Nassau would be a good place to look if you wanted to cut taxes.
This is not to say that voters should reject school budgets or state spending on education.
North Hempstead residents have demonstrated their support for school spending over many years by voting in favor of school budgets and calling for more state aid.
Many residents who live here decided to come to and stay in Nassau because of the high-quality education their children receive accompanied by a promise for a better future.
Residents, whether or not they have children in school, also benefit from the high property values associated with quality schools.
Voters may want to know if they are getting the most from their spending. Students in some other states have higher average test scores. Why that is would seem a fair question to ask.
But most residents appear to believe that spending on education, particularly in their community, is a good use of tax money.
So are taxes too high in Nassau County? We guess it depends on who the money is spent on.
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The five things you should do to be happy
Post-Covid-America has its challenges and its worries.
We can get inundated with stress due to income inequality, political polarization, the threat of AI, multiculturalism, the rising cost of college tuition, inflation, shame and envy. In our consumer-driven society, the new normal is anxiety, depression, hatred and paranoia. However, I bring you good news. It is possible to find happiness in PostCovid America.
All you have to do is to listen to what the father of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud, had to say on the subject. He was the first to admit that life can be difficult if not depressing, but he outlined the best way to live a life by defining the mature defenses one ought to live by. They include the following five:
Humor: Humor makes life easier. Humor is of great value. Comedians are some of the highest paid actors on Earth. Jerry Seinfeld, Jim Carey, Woody Allen and Adam Sandler are rich because they have the ability to make us laugh. Humor is of value because it allows us to transcend pain. Freud considered humor to be mankind’s highest level defense by allowing one to discharge emotions with
individual discomfort and without hurting others. The exception to this rule was seen in the Oscars when Will Smith did not laugh at Chris Rock’s joke but instead smacked him in the face. But that is the exception to the rule. Usually, mature humor allows one to look directly at one’s pain and get beyond it.
Altruism: Altruism is charitable works and allows one to achieve pleasure by giving to others. I recall the most enjoyable Christmas I ever spent was by taking my uncle, who was brain damaged, and my aunt, who had schizophrenia, into the city to see a Broadway play and then have dinner at Tavern on the Green. I learned altruism from my father, who would always bring two dozen donuts to the club every Saturday morning so that the other golfers would munch out and enjoy them. I got into the habit of doing the same when I got older and went to conferences. I gave a talk at a psychoanalytic conference this past weekend via Zoom and I was introduced by Dr. Paul Elovitz, who ran the conference. He said: “Here is Dr. Tom Ferraro about to speak. It’s a shame we are not doing this conference faceto-face this time since Tom would
DR. TOM FERRARO Our Townalways bring those delicious donuts for us to enjoy.”
Sublimation: Sublimation is what you are doing every time you play a sport, involve yourself in a hobby, paint a picture or plant something in the garden. It is defined as taking your basic sex or aggressive drives and converting them into a pro-social activity. In other words, instead of sleeping with your neighbor, you take up poetry. Instead of punching your brother in the face, you take up golf. Sublimation is what keeps civilization intact and what keeps us out of depression.
Suppression: Suppression is a form of stoicism or the defense that allows one to delay, postpone and put off. If one can suppress one’s fantasies about winning, you have more of a chance to stay focused and relaxed as you play. If you are able to suppress worry for a period of time, you can stay relaxed. The Asians are very good at using suppression to postpone worry or excitement. This may be due to what occurred during the Cultural Revolution or perhaps it derives from the practice of Buddhist meditation. Tiger Woods, whose mother was Thai, was a good example of an athlete who used suppression to the highest degree. He was able to suppress all thoughts during play and never choked. To give you a sense of what it feel like to be around someone who uses suppression well, I recall standing next to him on a putting green at Shinnecock Golf Club during the US Open. He was so focused that it was actually like I was not even there or was invisible.
Anticipation: This means having the ability to plan carefully and prepare for any contingencies in the future. This is what they mean by “Murphy’s Law.” Murphy was a mountaineer who realized that if you
did not plan for possible problems as you climb Mt. Everest, you will surely die if things should go wrong. Planning ahead is one of the secrets to success and a good way to find peace.
So there you have it. Freud told us many years ago if you want to find your measure of happiness in life, use humor, give to others, enjoy a hobby, suppress needless worry and plan ahead. You do those five things and you are showing mental health and maturity and you will find more happiness as well.
The secret to happiness is found through five behaviors.
Gov. Hochul’s budget giveaways this year
After announcing a $237 billion budget deal had been reached with the state Legislature’s radical leftists, Gov. Kathy Hochul made this statement: “Each of us came to the table with really strongly held beliefs, but in the interest of our state, we pulled it together to deliver in a really collaborative way. And I will say we don’t always see that here.”
What a lot of baloney.
The only interests accommodated were those of the Public Employee Unions.
As for spending, the budget has grown by an astonishing 35% since the 2019 pre-COVID $175 billion spending plan. The state’s structural budget is now projected to be north of $16 billion.
Hochul has permitted spending to grow at an unsustainable rate despite an anemic economy that grew by only 0.7% last year—vs. 2.5% nationally — and declining revenue from the biggest source of taxes: Wall Street.
Financial services tax revenues have declined due to 5,000 industry jobs moving to low-tax states and bo-
nus payouts dropping from $42.7 billion in 2020 to $33.8 billion in 2023.
But the scary economic trends didn’t matter to Albany power brokers. As Nicole Gelinas, of the Manhattan Institute, quipped, Albany has been “obviously preparing their next round of milking, while the cow is already part way out of the barn door.”
The budget also sticks it to New York City’s taxpayers.
Mayor Eric Adams’ request that Albany pick up half the tab of the projected $12 billion in migrant costs was rejected. The budget throws him a measly bone—$2.4 billion to house, feed, and clothe over 180,000 migrants.
With commercial property and Wall Street taxes falling out of bed, the city will probably have to cut essential services to cover the costs of onerous “Sanctuary City” laws.
Albany also surrendered to NYC’s United Federation of Teachers.
While Mayor Adams’ control of NYC’s public schools has been extended for two years, his authority has been severely curtailed.
directed the city to spend an additional $1.9 billion annually to procure more classroom space and to hire more teachers to accommodate the mandated smaller class size.
Former Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who convinced the Legislature in 2002 to establish mayoral control of schools, had this reaction to Albany’s actions: “It’s a shameless betrayal of the city’s nearly 1 million students that will undermine the progress the city’s schools have made and harm the next generation, leaving them without the skills they need to succeed in future careers—and leaving too many trapped in poverty and tempted by crime.”
state money reflects lawmakers’ commitment to pouring cash instead of scrutiny into the system that’s spending more than any other state….”
Another costly item buried in the budget is the pension giveaway to the public employee unions.
The “Tier 6” reform—championed by Gov. Andrew Cuomo in 2012—that shored up the pension system and included benefit changes that would save state and municipal governments $113 billion over 30 years, was emasculated.
The Board of Regents—which is controlled by the state Legislature— will now run the city’s Panel for Education, not the mayor. (The panel is empowered to approve or reject union contracts.)
There’s more.
Even though the city’s school enrollment has declined by 200,000, to protect UFT jobs the Legislature has
Hochul’s budget plan to cut education aid statewide due to declining school enrollment got nowhere.
After the UFT balked, the governor not only stripped the proposal out of the budget but agreed to additional school spending. (Long Island school aid will increase by over $200 million.)
Reacting to the education budget, Ken Girardin, of the Empire Center for Public Policy noted, “The decision to keep filling empty classrooms with
“There is no justifying this giveaway, which will cost over $4 billion,” the Empire Center has noted. “It is a heist from current and future taxpayers that will push property taxes higher and diminish public services. New York employees already get more generous benefits (on top of collecting Social Security) than any private sector group.”
The budget abuses and giveaways I have described are only the tip of the fiscal iceberg.
More on Gov. Hochul’s egregious tax and spend budget in my next column.
Artificial turf must be a community decision
Last week the Board of Health in Oak Bluffs, Mass., banned the installation of artificial turf anywhere in the town. The reason was simple: The safety and integrity of the community’s water supply was deemed more important than an all-weather sports field.
Also last week, the scientific community dropped a figurative bomb on the United Nations conference in Ottawa, where delegates from around the world were negotiating a worldwide plastic treaty. The news that microscopic pieces of plastic have been found in the placentas, eyeballs and other organs of the human body turned the meeting on its head, while the oil and gas lobby worked desperately to save the plastic industry—their only remaining off-ramp as the world shuns burning fossil fuels for energy.
At first, these two events might seem unrelated, but I assure you they are not. And they portend a sea change in the way we think about artificial turf fields.
For years we have known about the terrible environmental cost of an artificial turf sports field. It’s a multi-ton plastic carpet that can never be recycled. It will be here on Earth long after everyone reading
this column is long gone. It’s made from a combination of fossil fuels and toxic chemicals, including PFAS — the “forever” chemicals that have been in the news recently because of their cancer-causing and endocrine-disrupting potential. The crumb rubber used to cushion the fields brings with it another full array of chemicals that are just as hazardous.
Young athletes are exposed to this panoply of synthetic chemicals as they inhale noxious fumes and particles from the field, absorb them through their skin when sliding or falling, or accidentally ingest them. If those same chemicals were accidentally dumped on a school field, the area would be quickly cordoned off and workers in hazmat suits would be brought in to clean up the mess.
Those chemicals don’t stay on the field, of course. As the field is groomed, during athletic play, on a windy day, or during a storm, the toxic chemicals escape into the environment where they wreak havoc on our natural world, our water and our own bodies.
But now the environmental issues associated with artificial turf are running headlong into another, even more significant problem: plastic pollution as a public health issue. The Ottawa conference,
DOUG WOOD Earth Mattersoriginally designed to limit the amount of plastic pollution in the world’s oceans, will instead take up the issue of plastic as a human health threat and will focus on taking steps to reduce its production.
And that brings us to the question of artificial turf fields and whose decision it should be as to whether a community wants to burden its citizens with acres of more plastic at a time when science is clearly shouting “Stop!”
Here’s what we know: tiny pieces of
plastic and their constituent chemicals are imperiling our air, our water and our bodies. They are found in the soil, the trees, and in our fruit and vegetables. They are found in fish, beef, pork, chicken and even tofu. Plastic is everywhere, including places where it can do real damage.
Here’s what we don’t know: how many chemical-laden nano-plastic particles are released off a giant plastic carpet during a football game? How many are released on a windy day, or when the field is “groomed”? How many are released from the crumb rubber used to cushion the field? (Tires are more plastic than rubber.)
How many of those nano-plastics are being ingested by young athletes, and how many are being ingested by the homeowners who live nearby? What amount of plastic particles from an artificial turf field end up in local streams or bays and the fish who swim there, and how many eventually seep into the underground aquifers that provide our drinking water?
Very soon we will all have to learn to live without plastic bottles of water. We’ll learn to use paper instead of plastic for our trash. Our take-out containers will be made not from plastic but from recycled
cardboard, and we’ll wrap our boats in canvas for the winter instead of giant sheets of white plastic.
But these good steps toward reducing our use of plastic pale against the impact of stopping even a single artificial turf field, not to mention several, as are currently being planned in our community. Tons and tons and tons of new plastic is not what any community needs right now.
While scientists race to figure out how our bodies will respond to an onslaught of foreign synthetic chemicals, some of which are known to cause serious or fatal diseases, buying acres of more plastic doesn’t seem like the responsible thing to do. And now that we know that the installation of artificial turf has community-wide, irreversible negative public health impacts as well as significant environmental costs, the most important question is, who should be empowered to make that risk-benefit decision?
This is no longer a decision that should be taken by any small group of stakeholders. This is a community-wide decision, and should take into account those who will be most affected, both by the tragic and costly environmental legacy as well as their own health; our kids.
Supreme Court looks to save Trump not women
Anyone listening to the back-toback Supreme Court sessions – first on Idaho’s rejection of the federal requirement to provide emergency health care for pregnant women and next inoculating Trump against accountability for committing fraud to overturn the election and violating the peaceful transfer of power — had to be sickened, incensed and scared.
The Christo Fascist Supreme Court majority seems to be poised to rule that women do not have the right to emergency medical care to save their health and their future fertility standing at death’s door while also facing the likely loss of their baby, too.
At the same time, they seem likely to rule that Trump, in a second term, can have his political rival assassinated, sell nuclear secrets to Putin, extort paying vital military aid to Ukraine until President Zelensky announces an investigation into his political rival, Biden (wait, that happened); take $1 million to appoint someone an ambassador; take kickbacks on foreign aid he authorizes; mount a deadly insurrection; and commit election fraud without criminal liability as long as he claims retroactively these are “official acts.”
Listening to the oral arguments in these two cases was shocking – a study in strategic, willful obliviousness to the real consequences of overturning a woman’s right to reproductive health care, the real consequences of ignoring the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection and the conspiracy that led up to it, ignoring the growing use, even normalization, of intimidation and vio-
lence as a political weapon.
Justice Brett Kavanaugh postulated that a sitting president cannot be prosecuted for breaking any law that doesn’t specifically mention “the president.”
Justices Amy Coney Barrett and John Roberts tried to exempt Trump’s actions as “official.” Justice Clarence Thomas refused to recuse himself despite the fact that his wife joined the insurrection.
Justice Neil Gorsuch said presidents would wind up routinely pardoning themselves every four years (vs. not committing a crime for which they could be prosecuted).
But Justice Samuel Alito takes the prize for absurdity, saying that presidents must be immune from prosecution or else it would “destabilize our democracy” because they would be so fearful of being prosecuted after leaving office, they would take desperate measures to stay (what only Trump among our 45 presidents did).
Just the opposite, Justice Jackson asserted. “[The realization that a president might be criminally prosecuted is] what has kept the Oval Office turning into Crime Central. But once we say ‘no criminal liability, Mr. President, you can do whatever you want,’ I’m worried that we would have a worse problem than the problem of a president feeling constrained to follow the law while he’s in office.”
“I respectfully disagree,” Trump lawyer D. John Sauer smugly retorted. Even ordering the assassination of a rival, Sauer said, “could well be an official act.”
Michael R. Dreeben, counselor to the
in fact, ineligible under the 14th Amendment.
“I’m not focused on the here and now of this case,” Kavanaugh said. “I’m very concerned about the future.”
In the case pitting the federal emergency health care law, in place since 1986, against Idaho’s extreme abortion ban, the radical justices concocted hypotheticals, theoreticals and gobblygook that would give them an excuse to nullify the preemption of federal law that has applied for decades over the recently enacted state’s abortion ban.
or she has to leave the state,” said Solicitor General Elizabeth B. Prelogar, arguing on behalf of the federal government
Even Justice Amy Coney Barrett, a religiously anti-abortion activist, showed sensitivity if not sympathy to the plight of a woman frantically coming to an Emergency Room with some pregnancy horror.
Special Counsel, countered: “Executive immunity would license a president to commit ‘bribery, treason sedition, murder’ and as in Trump’s case ‘conspiring to use fraud to overturn the results of an election and perpetuate himself in power’.”
In response to Thomas, who loves to justify egregious decisions based on twisted cherry-picking of “history and tradition,” asked for historical examples of criminally prosecuting an ex-president. Dreeban replied, “The reason there were no prior prosecutions is because there were no crimes” warranting criminal prosecution.
So desperate to give Trump a lifeline back into the presidency, the Justices ignored the facts of the case in front of them and the right of the American people to see justice done, establish safeguards for free and fair elections, and know if a candidate for president is an insurrectionist,
Justice Sonia Sotomayor cited visceral examples of women suffering sepsis and hemorrhaging due to pregnancy complications but not quite at the point of threatening their lives and a patient who was denied an abortion earlier in her pregnancy and by the time she was able to deliver, the baby died and she was forced to have a hysterectomy.
Asked whether Idaho’s ban applied in those situations, Josh Turner, Idaho’s Constitutional Litigation & Policy chief, cavalierly replied it was a case-by-case assessment and up to prosecutorial discretion whether to prosecute the doctor.
But that is the problem – doctors are too afraid of being prosecuted, of losing their license and being locked in expensive litigation, to give their patient the care they should have.
“The situation on the ground in Idaho is showing devastating consequences –women and doctors in Idaho are in an impossible situation: doctors facing a grave threat to their health but not yet death have to delay care and let her deteriorate,
But her Christo Fascist male cohorts completely ignored the woman’s health emergency. What most concerned them was spending: Could the federal government withhold its funding unless the recipient complies with its “conditions?” (Answer: yes.) And states rights: Can the federal standard preempt the state abortion ban? (Answer: yes.)
And what of the unborn child? asked Alito, who wrote the Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade, ending women’s constitutional right to seek an abortion up until fetal viability. Doesn’t the doctor have an obligation to protect “the interests of the unborn child?” he asked, laying the groundwork for his ultimate goal, fetal personhood.
Prelogar countered that Alito’s reading of the statute was “erroneous” and the hospital only has a duty to stabilize the pregnant woman since the likelihood is that the fetus has no possibility of surviving.
“What Idaho is doing is waiting for women to deteriorate and suffer the lifelong health consequences with no possible upside for the fetus,” Prelogar said. “It just stacks tragedy upon tragedy.”
The conservative Supreme Court Justices in the majority can act with impunity because no one can or will stop them.
Considering play to keep life in perspective
The review of the Philharmonic’s performance said the cellist performed with “playful” dexterity. The review of a new book about Nixon, Kissinger, and wars in Southeast Asia said that in it “We see North, South, and West in “play” together. To take advantage of another can be “playing on fears,” a far cry from being “playful” and fiddling around.
When I performed as Joe Stoddard, the Undertaker, in the student production of “Our Town” at Adelphi, I was asked what it was like to act in a “play.”I frequently attended Adelphi athletic events and watched our teams play. When I visit my grandchildren, we play. What is “play?”
The word “play” has many definitions, but the one I emphasize here is child’s play and its importance. Play is joyful, a burst of fun. It is the voluntary engagement of the imagination. It is the spontaneous activity of children, usually absent any serious intent or adult supervision. Unlike organized sports, play is self-directed and involves kids choosing sides according to local norms. Play provides for building friendships, allows for fantasy, and requires communication. It can expose the child to di-
versity in its many forms; it can enhance empathy, i.e., putting oneself in another’s shoes. Play is essential for developing resilience, courage, cooperation, independence, and inquisitiveness. It helps build healthy bodies, active minds, and generous spirits as well as mental, physical, and emotional capabilities.
I recall pick-up games; the yo-yo; hitting tennis balls against the garage; and shooting marbles. I remember having more fun with the box a toy came in than with the toy itself; building a log cabin — partially, that is — with Uncle Harold’s prized young pine trees I had cut down. At play, I imagined I could fly; debated big issues, taking both sides, while walking across town; caught fish with a safety pin tied to a string, with a pinecone as a floater, a stone as a weight and freshly dug worms as bait.
The start of each baseball season revives memories of childhood pick-up games when as young kids we would choose sides, set the rules and arbitrate disputes. We learned teamwork and leadership, honed our skills and abilities, and developed a set of values. We learned that the sides should be equal, that everyone should play, that we could resolve our disputes without outside in-
ROBERT A. SCOTT, Ph.D. My Turnterference or advice and that having fun was the goal.
For those of us who are or were adult volunteers or spectators for youth sports, the start of the season also reminds us of how parental involvement and the corporate organization of children’s games have stolen some of that joy. Travel teams, all-star status, and league standings are a far cry from neighborhood fun. As a parent with children in T-Ball, I tried to restrain these efforts. As a col-
THE REAL DEAL
lege president, I enjoyed our teams and urged them to emphasize the joy of play.
I recall these and other memories of play, as a child, as a parent, and as a grandparent, and tell stories about them. I can do this because of the impressions these memories made on me, enhanced by family photographs and my mother’s poems. She wrote one she called, “Your Boy”. (Ann Waterman Scott, New England Homestead, November 8, 1947.)
Your Boy
“Have you a boy about seven years old,
Who frequently does just as he has been told,
But in spite of all effort will shape to the mold
Of a bandit?
Do you also wonder if your boy will ever
Put any speediness in his endeavor,
Although he be most self-reliant and clever,
But stubborn?
Are you on the verge of losing your mind,
Over his questions of every kind,
From “Where is heaven?” to “What is
a mind?”
And “Why is it?”
Is he now an Indian off on the run,
Then maybe a cowboy with a holster and gun,
At practically any time ready for fun, Or a movie?
Does he make pets of plain earth worms and ants;
Continually does he prattle and prance;
Outgrow all his shirts and his socks and his pants,
Or need patches?
After you’ve punished him, could you just weep,
When he says “Sorry, Mom,” before going to sleep, And signals a message you always will keep,
That he loves you?”
Word pictures and family photographs help rekindle the mental images of a child’s play. I rejoice in them all; they helped shape who I am. Encourage children to play. Support neighborhood playgrounds.
Robert A. Scott is president emeritus of Adelphi University
Should chemical known as BPA be canned?
We literally have become a plastic society. We eat, drink, breathe, touch and wear plastics.
There is a growing movement towards ridding our everyday products of the chemical bisphenol-A, better known as BPA, and the equally unsafe alternatives. Let’s hone in on some of the dangers so that we can try to avoid them.
In 1891 Russian chemist Aleksandr Dianin synthesized BPA in a laboratory. BPA made its debut in the 1950s when it was used to produce resilient and transparent plastics. In the 1960s the FDA approved the use of BPA in consumer products, including water bottles, baby bottles, food containers and epoxy linings for metal-based food and beverage cans.
Throughout the decades there were various studies surrounding the safety of BPA, but it wasn’t until medical doctor David Feldman, a professor at Stanford University, made a discovery about BPA in 1992 that the course of discussion regarding it changed from then on.
Feldman and his team identified a molecule leaching out of the plastic that, due to its estrogenic hormonelike properties, showed to be potentially dangerous to people who ate food out of containers made of this type of plastic.
There are BPA-Free products on store shelves that contain replacement chemicals to keep plastics soft and resilient. When a product states “BPA-
Free” on the label, it would seem to be a good thing, but what is BPA being replaced with? This is not stated on the labels.
The dilemma here is that these alternative chemicals are not only just as harmful as BPA, but can be even more toxic. BPA and substitutes BPS (Bisphenol S) and BPF (Bisphenol F) are all near identical compounds.
In evaluating the risks of BPS and BPF, researchers conclude that they both are as hormonally active as BPA. These endocrine disruptors work by mimicking hormones that occur naturally in the human body. This can produce a negative overload of hormonal activity.
Our endocrine system is instrumental in regulating mood, growth and development, tissue function, metabolism, sexual function and reproductive processes. So, it is not surprising that BPA and related chemicals are associated with a great number of health conditions, including high blood pressure, heart disease and diabetes.
Research from Canada demonstrates that the human body does not safely metabolize or excrete BPA, BPS or BPF. In 2016, Ella Atlas, Ph.D, of Health Canada (Canada’s federal health agency), and her team published an article in Endocrinology that addressed how exposure to bisphenol S (BPS), a replacement for bisphenol A (BPA), can encourage the formation of fat cells.
The National Institute of Environ-
GARY FELDMAN The Real Dealmental Health Sciences conducted research that reveals that these endocrine disruptors carry the greatest risk when humans are exposed during prenatal and early childhood development, and that these chemicals can cross the placental barrier, increasing the toxic load on a growing fetus. Despite extremely strong scientific evidence that BPA has a very negative effect on health, by 2013 BPA was valued at over $13 billion and higher as the years went by. So, today this family of chemicals is found in a countless number of products. From the lining in food cans to bottle caps and lids, plastic food wraps, to bottled water and soda, to personal care products. BPA is abundant along with its related chemicals in register and ATM receipts.
As Little Anthony (and The Imperials) sang, “I Think I’m Going Out of My Head.”
Until manufacturers place a higher value on our health than on profits — as consumers we can take steps to reduce our exposure to plastics and toxic chemicals of all kinds. Seek out Earth-friendly, animal-friendly products.
Eat whole foods. Processed foods are a common source of these chemicals. Go with sustainable, certified organic and GMO-free products. Always try to buy and store foods in glass.
The FDA banned BPA in baby bottles and sippy cups, but again what is it being replaced with? So use baby bottles made of glass rather than plastic. When purchasing toys for kids, avoid plastics by choosing natural materials. With summer upon us, teach your kids not to drink from garden hoses. Teflon-coated and other non-stick cookware, if heated to high temperatures, are acutely toxic to birds and can kill them, according to the Environmental Working Group and other organizations, so take heed of this warning.
Microwaved food tends to increase the amount of chemicals that are leached out from the plastics. Don’t drink hot beverages from plastic cups. Try not to use, or at least limit your use of plastic utensils and plastic coated plates.
Ask store managers to replace the new register receipts with plain paper as we had years ago, not plastic coated. When at the dentist, verify what
dental sealants are used. Bite down on sealants free of BPA, BPS and BPF.
Look for “green,” toxic-free personal care products, household cleansers (white vinegar and baking soda works well) and other products including mattresses and carpets. Replace vinyl shower curtains with fabric. Feminine hygiene products can have undisclosed ingredients. Tests suggest they may contain dioxins and petrochemical additives.
There are more natural products in the marketplace. Also, opt for fragrance-free products. Those great smelling fragrances contain dozens of toxic chemicals. This also includes scented candles.
A mindful, and toxic-free people give birth to a healthier generation that also cherishes their first mother –Mother Earth. Stay safe.
Gary Feldman garyteach1@gmail.com
Gary Feldman was an innovator in the nutritional supplement retail field with a first-of- -its-kind catalog of all vegetarian name-brand supplements and cruelty-free personal care products, and did extensive research for customers. Queens Library System Green Initiative. Continuing Ed Instructor: Great Neck Adult Program, Queensborough Community College, Port Washington Public Schools. Contributing columnist: Litmor Publications, Anton Community Newspapers, The Island Now. Local Hero: Great Neck Patch. NYS Assembly Citation.
Melkonian seeks re-election to Port school board
Board of Education Trustee Nanette Melkonian and her husband, Matt, moved their family to Port Washington in 2000.
Nanette and Matt’s three children all attended the Port Washington schools and were involved in a wide range of programming, including the arts, athletics, PEP, Research, and the Integrated Co-Teaching Program.
In her 30-year career as a parent, teacher, and advocate, Nanette has established connections across the Port Washington school district’s many constituencies and built a reputation as a listener who is willing to challenge the status quo.
She consistently demonstrates the ability to build community and consensus by researching and understanding the issues facing our public schools.
Prior to raising her family, Nanette was an elementary educator in the public schools and a special educator at the elementary, secondary and post-secondary level.
Nanette’s teaching and classroom experience involved a range of populations, needing a variety of services, including regular classroom, integrated co-teaching, secondary level resource room, and support services for students
at the college level.
As a parent, Nanette’s experience and involvement in public education broadened to include volunteering as an educator in the Parent Resource Center’s Outreach Program, and then as a member of the Parent Education Committee with the Guggenheim HSA.
In 2015, Nanette grew concerned with state and national policies that placed an undue emphasis on highstakes testing rather than educational best practices and joined forces with other parent leaders to co-found Port Washington Advocates for Public Education, a grassroots community group dedicated to researching and providing information on education issues relevant to the Port Washington school district.
Nanette continued her public education advocacy, serving for three years as co-president of AAdvocacy for Gifted and Talented Education, and as a member of the Parents’ Council. Nanette has also served on a variety of district hiring committees and as a member of the district’s Vision and Mission Committee.
During Nanette’s current term as a school board member, she has represented our community in a variety of ways, asking the foundational question,
“What are we doing well as a district, and how can we grow?”
She has chaired the Board of Education Curriculum Committee, focusing on important topics that have included literacy, AI, PEP, and college admissions.
As a member of the Policy Committee, Nanette utilized her experience and critical thought lens to help draft new district policies including grading, homework, and equity and inclusivity.
Nanette has also served as an integral member of the District’s Guidance Advi-
sory committee, the District’s DEI committee and the Nassau BOCES Budget Review committee.
She has prioritized professional development for faculty and staff, language access for all BOE meetings, translation of district policies, the return of the ICT program, and introduced student voice through monthly updates/ insights at BOE meetings.
In addition, she supported an analysis of services for our students with disabilities, sensory-friendly theater performances, recycling initiatives, exit interviews of students and retirees, board and community access to Professional Growth and Curriculum Development reports, programming for at-risk high school students, and a study of our District’s culture and climate.
Furthermore, Nanette has proudly served as a BOE liaison with community organizations representing underserved students and families.
While this is notan exhaustive list, it encapsulates Nanette’s approach to strengthening our schools, with a focus on educational excellence, for all learners and families.
Nanette maintains that with knowledgeable and diligent leadership on the Board of Education, a commitment to
child-centered educational practices, and our talented and inspiring staff, Port’s future is bright.
She welcomes a second term to build upon her work advancing professional development in a variety of areas, including literacy, enhancing services for students with disabilities, and prioritizing student and staff mental health.
Additionally, Nanette will continue to focus on communication, consistency, and school culture and climate while recognizing the challenges of budget constraints in this economic environment.
Nanette seeks a second term as BOE Trustee as she believes that robust public schools are a pillar of our democracy that have the capacity to inspire life-long learners and citizens of the world.
She would like to continue to use her experience and knowledge to nurture the next generation of students and families in the Port Washington Schools.
For more information about Nanette’s campaign, please email her at nan4BOE@gmail.com.
To join Nanette’s campaign, follow her Facebook page @Re-elect Nanette Melkonian for Port Washington BOE.
Hochul’s plan to shut down illegal cannabis sales
In the fight against illicit cannabis sales, Governor Hochul’s recent budget plan marks a significant step forward for communities across New York, including here on Long Island. As President & Co-Founder of the Long Island Cannabis Coalition (LICC), I commend this crucial move towards ensuring a safer and more responsible cannabis industry.
At LICC, our mission is clear: to advocate for the growth of a responsible cannabis industry throughout Long Island by connecting local communities and mu-
nicipal leadership, while creating awareness through continuous educational endeavors. Our membership, consisting of licensed operators and cannabis business professionals, is committed to creating a unified industry that benefits both consumers and the communities we serve.
Long Island is no stranger to the cannabis community, boasting one of the most concentrated cannabis communities in the U.S. for medical and recreational use. LICC provides a platform for consumers, decision-makers, and community
stakeholders to understand the role of cannabis as plant medicine and a powerful enterprise.
Governor Hochul’s decision to empower the Office of Cannabis Management to padlock illicit businesses for a full year, alongside allowing local governments to enforce padlock orders, sends a clear message: illegal cannabis operations will not be tolerated. Additionally, establishing fines for landlords who knowingly rent to unlicensed cannabis retailers further strengthens our efforts to combat il-
licit sales.
Throughout New York and especially on Long Island, we appreciate the governor’s commitment to take action against unlicensed operators. The steps taken today will help reign in the illicit market that has thrived until now. Illegal cannabis stores are unregulated, unsafe, and directly interfere with the success of legal cannabis dispensaries. Having the OCM work with local governments to shut down these shops is common sense legislation that is long overdue.
As we move forward,we know there is more work to be done and the LICC remains committed to working with Governor Hochul and other officials to ensure that Long Island’s cannabis industry continues to grow responsibly and sustainably. Together, we can create a safer, more vibrant community.
Gahrey Ovalle Long Island Cannabis Coalition President & Co-Founder Brentwood
Mix and match on Manhasset Isle’s (C-1) District
On March 8 I saw an online article in the Port Washington Times, “Manorhaven blows up over Property”, dealing with a new construction project in Manhasset Isle’s Commercial (C-1) District at 12-20 Matinecock Ave. It appears that the same circus-type atmosphere at the Feb. 28 B.O.T. meeting, similar to the May 23, 2023 Board of Trustees meeting, still continues with people yelling and screaming from the floor without being acknowledged by the mayor. It is no wonder why the court recorder was beside herself not being able to keep up with the uncontrolled, indiscriminate comments flying around the room. It is also easy to see why hardly any of our residents attend these raucous meetings or better yet have no interest in serving on our various Village Boards.
At the May 23 meeting the four trustees challenged the mayor with various resolutions pretty much similar to the way
the mayor and other three trustees challenged their newest trustee, Jeff Stone, as he apparently asked for clarification on the development at 12-20 Matinecock Ave. where it appears local builders are mixing and matching two of our existing zoning laws with the approval of the Board of Trustees back in March 2023.
If our Manhasset Isle residents and our Board of Trustees have read Chapter 155-18, they might have noticed that nowhere in this law does it mention building homes and apartments but rather marinas, yacht clubs, public parklands, etc.
During the building moratorium and my tenure on the Waterfront Committee for almost 18 months during my second term as trustee, there was much concern appropriately displayed by the residents of Manhasset Isle at our numerous committee and village meetings.
It is quite ironic that during the moratorium on building along the waterfront in the C-1 District that then Trustee
Popeleski, myself, and the entire Board of Trustees assured the residents that there would not be any construction along Matinecock Avenue in the C-1 District.
Now let’s move forward a few years later where we find that a local builder, who purchased a working marina at 1220 Matinecock Ave. some years back, is now in the process of building apartments there under the B.O.L.D. for Mixed Use/ Live Work Apartments section under Chapter 155.20.1 of our Manorhaven Village Code.
The owner has already had the existing buildings on this marina torn down and removed which appears to contradict the purpose of the B.O.L.D. law which originally allowed for the construction of 2d story apartments over existing commercial buildings, especially along Manorhaven Blvd. and Sintsink Drive East.
More importantly, our March 2023 Board of Trustees, where they granted
permission for this project, needed to pay closer attention to Chapter 155.20.1C(3) of B.O.L.D. which specifically states, “any existing industrial uses…….and any uses where toxic chemicals are stored shall not be permitted under B.O.L.D.”
This property at 12-20 Matinecock Avenue had been used as a marina/boat yard for at least 50 or more years and may possibly have contaminants in the soil or groundwater from toxic fluids and chemicals used over all those years in this type of business.
In that same March 2023 article, “The project architect said during the public hearing that site plans are within the village’s code and do not require any variances!”
Our Village should rely on the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation being involved with any possible building along the Manhasset Bay waterfront while having proper soil and groundwater testing conducted.
Thypin Steel, just down the street, made every effort during a 14-year period to clean up its property with the help and guidance of the N.Y.S.D.E.C and the Nassau County Board of Health and the health of future residents should be paramount.
One final note, of utmost importance, is how our 60+-year-old, 14-inch diameter, one-mile-long sewer line on Pequot Avenue will be capable of handling another 60 plus toilets, showers, sinks, etc. from added apartments at the two ongoing projects on Manhasset Isle.
We definitely, now more than ever, need village officials who worry more about the future of our village and also its sewer capabilities instead of where the next project may be built.
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The Fall 2024 Season at the Staller Center includes an extensive assortment of astounding artists and performances, including countless musicians, comedy, jazz, dance performances, and family experiences.
Season highlights include Wanda Sykes, Renée Elise Goldsberry, John Pizzarelli, Malevo, Cirque Kalabanté: Afrique en Cirque, Anthony Nunziata, and more! Tickets for the Fall 2024 Season will be available on May 3 at stallercenter.com.
Kicking off the Fall 2024 season on September 15 is the Emerson Legacy Concert. After 47 years of enthralling audiences and nearly 100 sold-out shows at the Staller Center, the Emerson String Quartet bid the world farewell in October 2023. Now, former Emerson String Quartet members Phil Setzer, violin, and David Finckel, cello, join the acclaimed pianist Wu Han in their exceptional Han-Setzer-Finckel Trio in an evening of Haydn, Beethoven, and Dvorak.
On Sept. 21, Get ready to experience the sensational talent of Renée Elise Goldsberry live on stage. Known for her Tony Awardwinning role as Angelica Schuyler in the Broadway smash hit “Hamilton,” Goldsberry’s star power shines brightly from Broadway to the big screen.
But that’s not all. Fans of her earlier Broadway triumphs in Rent and “The Color Purple” know that Goldsberry brings unmatched energy and passion to every performance.
Whether she’s belting out showstopping numbers or captivating audiences with her star power, Goldsberry always leaves a lasting impression. And let’s not forget her starring television roles in “Altered Carbon: and “The Good Wife”, and now Netflix’s latest hit, “Girls5Eva.”
Don’t miss your chance to witness this powerhouse performer in action. Grab your tickets now for unforgettable entertainment with Renée Elise Goldsberry!
Closing out the month of September, enjoy John Pizzarelli: Stage & Screen on Sept. 28! This fall, John Pizzarelli returns to the Recital Hall to commemorate four decades of his
Staller Center’s fall season offers wide variety of performers YOUR GUIDE TO THE ARTS, ENTERTAINMENT AND DINING
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renowned musical legacy.
Hailed by the Boston Globe for “reinvigorating the Great American Songbook and re-popularizing Jazz,”
The Grammy Award-winning singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist brings his new album, “Stage & Screen,” to the Staller Center. Exploring some of the most immortal songs of the past century from Broadway and the silver screen, “Stage & Screen” repackages these standards with Pizarelli’s signature blend of vibrant jazz and Sinatra-esque vocals.
Mark your calendars for a family adventure on Oct. 14 for a live sing-along screening of the beloved Disney Film Encanto, featuring a live orchestra performing the musical score.
An exceptional on-stage Latin Band will be performing the multiGrammy-winning musical score while you sing along. Enjoy film favorites, including “Surface Pressure,” “We Don’t Talk About Bruno,” and more, during this energetic and family-fun show that is not to be missed!
Following up that weekend is a hysterical comedy performance by Emmy-winning actress, writer, and stand-up comedian Wanda Sykes on Oct. 18. WANDA SYKES is an Emmywinning stand-up comic, writer, actress, and producer who has entertained audiences for over 20 years. She has ranked among Entertainment Weekly’s “25 Funniest People in America,” her peers have called her “one of the funniest stand-up comics” in the field.
With her first major tour in six years, Fourteen-time Emmy nominee Wanda Sykes brings her sharp wit, observational humor, and fearless commentary on what matters most to Staller’s Main Stage. Upheaving the every day with her irreverent takes, Sykes’ performances are equally thought-provoking and tearinducing, uproariously funny.
Up next on Oct. 26, a thrilling dance performance by the modernized dance group Malevo, featuring passionate drumming, explosive dance, and fiery theatrics – Argen-
tina’s answer to Stomp and Riverdance.
Highly skilled dancers execute zapateo, similar to tap dance, in fastpaced, adrenaline-fueled routines with boleadoras or throwing weapons. Meanwhile, musicians pound out a blend of traditional and avantgarde percussion with impressive precision that will delight both the eyes and ears. Malevo was named “Cultural Ambassador to the National Identity of Argentina” and boasts a rich history of performances all over the globe.
Their credits include special performances with Latin pop sensation Ricky Martin and Cirque du Soleil, a year-long residency at Universal Studios Japan, and a notable achievement as a semi-finalist on the hit TV show America’s Got Talent. Backed by a live band, MALEVO is a fiery, pulsating South American sensation slaying audiences across the globe.
November brings an exciting variety of talent to the Staller Main Stage, beginning with Cirque Kala-
banté: Afrique en Cirque on Nov. 9! Afrique en Cirque is inspired by daily life in Guinea and shares African culture’s beauty, youth, and artistry. Beyond its gorgeous scenery, dazzling costumes, and precise staging, this colorful show will make any theater vibrate with energy. Witness acrobats execute gravity-defying stunts and human pyramids, accompanied by live Afro-Jazz, percussion, and kora sounds. Artistic Director Yamoussa Bangoura creates a show that radiates the diversity of traditional African arts and the virtuosity of the modern North American circus performance. Lovers of Jazz, Broadway, and Tap will come together on Nov. 13 for Some Enchanted Evening with Stella Cole. The viral sensation Stella Katherine Cole pairs up with Postmodern Jukebox’s Benny Benack III and tap-dancing star Jabu Graybeal to perform Jazz-inspired selections of Broadway Hits from the Golden Age to today.
Continued on Page 37
Iranian traditional music by Chakavak Ensemble
Great Neck Library is hosting a Sunday musical performance Iranian Traditional Music by The Chakavak Ensemble on Sunday, May 5 from 2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Main Library, 159 Bayview Avenue in Great Neck. Enjoy an afternoon of traditional Iranian
music featuring The Chakavak Ensemble’s founding members, Bahrain Sadeghian (vocals) and Shahla Nikfal (qanun).
The ensemble was formed in 1987 to advocate and offer an understanding of traditional Persian music to the tri-state area and has become more successful than ever.
Boasting performances in New York City’s Town Hall and Carnegie Hall, the ensemble has contributed significantly to the Persian music culture on the East Coast. It has also worked extensively with the World Music Institute, the Metropolitan Museum, and the American Museum of Natural History to create programming that showcases and teaches audiences about traditional Persian culture and music, among many other venues.
Registration is required. Great Neck Library cardholders and residents have priority for seating. Sign up online, in-person, or via phone beginning April 25 at 10 a.m.
Non-residents are welcome as walk-ins, as space allows. For more information, please contact the Great Neck Library at (516) 466-8055 or email adultprogramming@greatnecklibrary. org.
Music and Lyrics by Irving Berlin
Orchestrations by Larry Moore
Book by Herbert & Dorothy Fields As Revised by Peter Stone
‘Spring
Fling’ on Port’s historic Mill Pond
Visiting the Dodge Homestead in Port Washington is a lot like leaping back in time – starting with the year 1721. That’s when Thomas Dodge first built the Dutch Colonial farmhouse, overlooking both historic Mill Pond and Manhasset Bay.
The farmhouse – which served as home to seven generations of Dodge family members up until 1993 – has been lovingly maintained by the Cow Neck Peninsula Historical Society (CNPHS).
The Historical Society is opening the Dodge House doors to the community on Saturday, May 11, from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. for its annual Dodge Homestead Spring Fling. The
family-friendly afternoon features tours of the grounds and stories about the people who lived there.
Of course, a lot has changed since Thomas Dodge first built the farmhouse on the 54 acres of land he purchased for his family home.
The land, for example, was farmed until 1898, with produce shipped to the New York market.
Over time, the Dodge children attended the Sands Point School up the hill, which offered a view of the Dodge House. The Mill Pond became an important community center, with a blacksmith, two tidal mills, a bicycle shop with a courtroom upstairs, a general
store and post office, a blacksmith, a butcher, and even a hotel.
The Historical Society will share insights about the Dodge Family and how life has transformed since Thomas Dodge’s day.
During the Spring Fling, the Society will lead a guided walk around Mill Pond at 2 p.m. when visitors can learn about the tidal mills, early settlers, our first schoolhouse and the first church in Port Washington.
The afternoon will feature the music of the Society’s Front Porch Players, as well as an opportunity to meet Ross, the ground’s beekeeper, who will be discussing the Homestead’s honey bees.
And yes, Dodge Homestead honey will be available for sale, as well as Port Washington “circa 1644” tee shirts, home-baked goods, jewelry, brand new CNPHS Journals and books about old Port Washington, and even some unique attic treasures. And new this year, there will be Story Time for the little ones.
The Dodge House is located at 58 Harbor Road(at the head of the Mill Pond), and there is free parking along the north side of Mill Pond. For more information, visitwww. cowneck.org.
Admission to the Spring Fling is free.
‘Servants of the Gilded Age’ at Trinity Church
Step into the world of the servants during New York’s Gilded Age as Esther Crain discusses her second book, “The Gilded Age in New York, 1870-1910” at a presentation of the Roslyn Landmark Society and Trinity Episcopal Church.
The book and lecture take a deep dive into the Gilded Age — exploring what day-to-day life was like in an age of posh Fifth Avenue mansions and crowded tenements; of deep political corruption and a widening gap between rich and poor.
Rarely seen photographs and illustrations help tell the story of how New York transformed from a small-scale post-Civil War city lit by gas and powered by horses into a mighty metropolis of skyscrapers, subways, blazing electric light, and rapid social change.
Come in person to the Trinity Episcopal Church on Sunday, May 19 at 3 p.m. at 1579 Northern Boulevard (25A) in Roslyn. Or join via Zoom.
Call the Roslyn Landmark Society at 516625-4363 or visit our website to RSVP!
Rainforest butterflies at The Bryant Library
View spectacular butterfly and moth displays from the world’s tropical rainforests: Central America, Amazon, Africa, Southeast Asia and New Guinea, many collected by the presenter, Steve Fratello on Tuesday, April 30 at 6:30 pm at The Bryant Library at 2 Paper Mill Road in Roslyn.
Fratello has explored the world’s tropical rainforests for approximately 1,000 days and led a half dozen major scientific expeditions for the Smithsonian and Field Museums.
This program is for adults, but families are welcome.
Learn about and discuss science concepts including camouflage, mimicry, insect anatomy, metamorphosis, tropical climate.
New food fest, car show on Mineola’s spring menu
BY TAYLOR HERZLICHThe Village of Mineola is hosting a slew of exciting new events in May and June, from artisan markets to foodie festivals.
All of the new events are open to everyone, not just village residents, and are free to attend.
The village will hold two wellness and artisan markets at the village community center from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on May 5 and June 2.
These markets will feature local holistic vendors. There will be some prepackaged food items and supplements for sale.
“It’s sort of a take on a farmer’s market if you will, but focused on self-care products,” said Grace Kelly, an event planner working on the new village events.
Mineola will welcome a food truck festival May 18 with a June 1 rain date. The festival will be held at the Wilson Park parking lot from 4 p.m. to 9 p.m.
“That’s a big one,” Kelly said. “We have over 50 vendors registered for the foodie festival, so it’s not just food trucks.”
While there will be a large variety of food trucks at the festival, the street fair will also feature booths from local brick and mortar establishments, chefs and private caterers.
The village will hold an arts and automobile show June 15 with a
June 22 rain date. The show will be held at Morgan Parc at 199 Second St. from 12 p.m. to 6 p.m.
“It’s not like a typical car show,” Kelly said. “It’s more like a vehicle exhibition.”
The arts and automobile show will feature around 75 exotic and custom cars that have been handpicked for the show. Coca-Cola is involved with the set-up of the arts and automobile show, which will
feature a unique car collection including Lamborghinis from the early 1980s.
The vacant retail space in Morgan Parc will be converted into an art gallery for the day. Artists will
be present at the show, with some painting on cars or painting large murals live.
Food will be provided by local restaurants.
The Village of Mineola will also be holding its traditional events.
The Memorial Day Parade is set for May 27 at 11 a.m. on Jericho Turnpike. The ceremony will be held in Mineola Memorial Park.
The Portugal Day Flag Raising will be June 7 at 5 p.m. in front of the Mineola Fire Department headquarters. The Portuguese Carnival will be held from June 7 to June 9 at the Wilson Park parking lot. The Portugal Day Parade will be held at 11 a.m. on June 9. These events are organized by the Portuguese society of Mineola.
Shakespeare in the Park will take place June 15 at 5 p.m. at the Mineola Memorial Park Amphitheater where guests can watch a performance of “Hamlet.”
Kelly said village residents should stay tuned for more exciting new events this fall and winter.
The village will hold a fall harvest festival in October. Then in the weeks between Thanksgiving and Christmas, there will be a Christmas village festival every weekend. This festival will be similar to the holiday village at Bryant Park in Manhattan, with food vendors, artisans and heated booths.
FOR A LIMITED TIME
Unique Mother’s Day gift ideas
Mothers, stepmothers, grandmothers, and many more remarkable women often work tirelessly and without fanfare to provide for their families. Even though they may deserve to be recognized throughout the year, moms enjoy a special day nestled within the month of May when children, spouses and others celebrate Mother’s Day.
Many people give heartfelt gifts on Mother’s Day to express their love for the mothers in their lives. The perfect gift may focus on Mom’s interests and the things that make her truly happy. With that in mind, the following shopping tips can help anyone find the perfect Mother’s Day gift.
· Explore spa packages. What mother won’t benefit from some rest and relaxation with a little pampering thrown in? Salons and massage therapists typically put together Mother’s Day packages that cater to mothers. Packages may include massages, facials, hair treatments, manicures, and pedicures. Gift-givers can customize the services depending on their budgets.
· Dining out can be a treat. A meal at a favorite restaurant can be a welcome change from kitchen duty. Mother’s Day is a busy day for restaurants, many of which have limited menus to better handle the crowds. As a result, if dining out on Mother’s Day, Mom may not get the full menu she desires. To ensure mothers have full menus at their disposal, gift givers
can cook a meal at home on Mother’s Day and then choose another day of the week to enjoy a meal in an upscale restaurant.
· Schedule a paint and sip. A paint and sip session is a unique gift. A session is typically two hours and includes step-by-step instructions. Patrons are encouraged to bring snacks and their favorite beverages. With the right planning, well-intentioned children can turn the evening into a “ladies night out” and encourage other moms to join in the fun. Or the entire family can paint masterpieces together.
· Give tickets to a show or sporting event. Whether Mom is a sports fan or she prefers the theater or live music, event tickets can make a wonderful gift. Unique gift ideas include tickets to Cirque du Soleil, Shen Yun or a Broadway play.
· Give the gift of wine tasting. Wineries can be found across the country and frequently open their doors to wine tastings and wine pairing events. A Mother’s Day wine tasting can be special for the entire family and support local businesses. Check the vineyard’s rules on guests. Many times those under 21 can attend but will not be permitted to consume wine, though other refreshments may be available.
Mother’s Day offers the perfect opportunity to lavish attention on special women. Gifts that cater to Mom’s interests will make the biggest splash.
Supporting Long Island’s small businesses
National Small Business Week is April 28–May 4.
Just because a business is small doesn’t mean it isn’t important. The small businesses on our island are 50% of our economy. These businesses are part of the fabric of our communities. They’re vital. We’ve been proudly supporting our small businesses since 2014 with cost-saving programs and services. Show your support, too, by shopping locally during Small Business Week (and all year long). It’s no small thing to let them know they matter.
Our Business First Program offers many ways to help Long Island’s small businesses, including:
• Free energy assessments
• Rebates for energy-saving improvements
• Incentives for renovating commercial spaces in struggling business districts
• Bill credits for occupying vacant downtown spaces
• Grants for outdoor beautification in downtown areas
• Business Solutions Center hotline (800-966-4818)
• Business planning and customized solutions
Mother’s Day
At The Douglaston Manor Sunday, May 12, 2024
Seatings: 12, 1 :30 AND 3PM
UPON ARRIVAL: TUSCAN ANTIPASTO TABLE
Herb Grilled Veggies / Mushrooms / Artichokes
Roasted Red Peppers / Salami / Fresh Housemade Focaccia
Cheese Board: Swiss / Cheddar / Fontina / Olive Medley
Surprise mom with a special dessert in her honor
Mothers selflessly devote themselves to their children from infancy into adulthood. A mother’s love never wanes, and she’s always ready and willing to step in and put her children first.
Mother’s Day is a great chance for men, women and children to honor the special women in their lives. Delicious homemade treats can show mothers just how much they’re appreciated and adored. Try this tasty recipe for “Cold Mango Soufflés Topped with Toasted Coconut” from “The Complete Mexican, South American & Caribbean Cookbook” (Metro Books) by Jane Milton, Jenni Fleetwood and Marina Filippelli.
Cold Mango Soufflés Topped With Toasted Coconut (Makes 4)
4 small mangoes, peeled, pitted and chopped
2 tablespoons water
Place a few pieces of mango in the base of each of four 2/3-cup ramekins. Wrap a creased collar of nonstick parchment paper around the outside of each dish, extending well above the rim. Secure with adhesive tape, then tie tightly with string.
Pour the water into a small heatproof bowl and sprinkle the gelatine over the surface. Leave for 5 minutes or until spongy. Place the bowl in a pan of hot water, stirring occasionally, until the gelatine has dissolved.
Meanwhile, whisk the egg yolks with the superfine sugar and milk in another heatproof bowl. Place the bowl over a pan of simmering water and continue to whisk until the mixture is thick and frothy. Remove from the heat and continue whisking until the mixture cools. Whisk in the liquid gelatine.
Puree the remaining mango pieces in a food processor or blender, then fold the puree into the egg yolk mixture with the orange rind. Set the mixture aside until starting to thicken.
Bruschetta / Crostini / Fusilli Salad / Fresh Mozzarella
1 tablespoon powdered gelatine
2 egg yolks
YOUR BUFFET STARTS WITH
Fresh Garden Salad Cucumbers / Tomato / Balsamic Baby Arugula
Salad roasted yellow peppers / Citrus Vinaigrette
Caesar Salad / Romaine / Shaved Parmigiano / Croutons
Housemade Focaccia Bread/ Butter / Hot Dinner Rolls
CARVING STATION***
gravies / sauces / condiments Italian Roast Beef & Slow Roasted Turkey Breast
1/2 cup superfine sugar
1/2 cup milk
1 1/4 cups heavy cream
Grated rind of one orange
Toasted flaked or coarsely shredded coconut, to decorate
Whip the heavy cream to soft peaks. Reserve 4 tablespoons and fold the rest into the mango mixture. Spoon into the ramekins until the mixture is 1 inch above the rim of each dish. Chill for 3 to 4 hours, or until set.
Carefully remove the paper collars from the soufflés. Spoon a little of the reserved cream on top of each soufflé and decorate with some toasted flaked or coarsely shredded coconut.
BUFFET
Crab Stuffed Sea Bass/ citrus lime sauce
Chicken Marsala / Mushrooms & Rosemary
Chicken Francese / Lightly Breaded, White Wine & Lemon Sauce
Mac~n~Cheese / crisp hickory smoked bacon, cheddar, herbed panko
Cavatelli Bolognese / classic meat sauce
Baked Eggplant Rotolo/Ricotta, Mozzarella & Pomodoro
~ Herb Roasted Potatoes / Spring Vegetables
DESSERT TABLE
Cannoli / Italian Pastries / Lemon Chiffon Cake House
Baked Cookies / Chocolate Cake
ADULTS : $68. PER PERSON +SALES TAX
CHILDREN (10 YRS AND UNDER) : $45.00 PER CHILD + TAX
5% DISCOUNT FOR PARTIES OF 50 OR MORE
CALL FOR RESERVATIONS: 718 224-8787
Commonwealth Blvd, Queens, NY 11362 www.thedouglastonmanor.com
Mother’s Day Brunch Menu
ASSORTED BREADS & BREAKFAST PASTRIES
Croissants
Muffins
Bagels
Assorted Breads
Sweet Butter
Assorted Preserves
BREAKFAST DISPLAY
Scrambled Farm Fresh Eggs
French Toast
Sausage
Bacon
Home Fries
SEAFOOD STATION
Smoked Salmon
Smoked Whitefish
Seafood Pasta
ASIAN STATION
Bang Bang Shrimp
Bourbon Orange Chicken
Pork Short Ribs
Vegetable Fried Rice
SALAD BAR
Asian Caesar Salad
Cherry Tomatoes & Mozzarella Cheese
Mixed Green Salad
HOT ENTRÉES
Penne Alla Sake
Chicken Teriyaki
Roasted Red Bliss Potatoes
String Beans with Sweet Onions
CARVING STATION
Roasted Prime Rib
Fri 5/03
Fleetwood Macked
The Ultimate Tribute to Fleetwood Mac:
My Fathers Place welcomes back
Fleetwood Macked @ 7pm
My Father's Place at The Roslyn Hotel, 3 Pratt Blvd., Glen Cove
Strange Parade NY:
Debut at Nostalgia @ 7pm Nostalgia, 380 N Wantagh Ave, Bethpage
Sat 5/04
Derby Bourbon Festival @ 3pm / $59-$99 Mulcahy's, Wantagh
Zac Brown Tribute Band @ 9pm / $15
Mulcahy's, Wantagh
Poetica Musica: Bach and Way Beyond @ 8pm / $30
Immerse yourself in a wonderful combination of sounds while explor‐ing various musical styles as Poetica Mu‐sica presents a concert entitled Bach and Way Beyond. Old Westbury Gardens, 71 Old West‐bury Road, Old West‐bury. mramirez@old westburygardens.org, 516-333-0048
Dalton & the Sheriffs @ 9:30pm / $15 Spotlight at The Paramount, Huntington
Rhiannon's Run 5K Run/Walk @ 10am / $25 Santapogue Elementary School, 1130 Herzel Blvd, West Babylon. events@elite feats.com
Graztopia Live@Mr. Beery’s @ 2pm
Mr. Beery's, 4019 Hempstead Tpke, Bethpage
Daniel Sloss: Can't @ 7pm / $29.50-$59.50 The Paramount, Huntington
A Special Gift for
Mom Awaits at our Ceramics Workshop @ 1pm
Mother’s Day is right around the corner. This year, give her some‐thing special! Gold Coast Arts Center, 113 Middle Neck Road, Great Neck. info@gold coastarts.org, 516-8292570
NCMA Exhibition Tour with Guest Curator, Christopher Pusey @ 3pm / $15
Urban Art Evolution: NCMA Exhibition Tour with Guest Curator, Christopher Pusey Nas‐sau County Museum of Art, One Museum Drive, Roslyn. events@nas saumuseum.org, 516484-9338
Mon 5/06
LA Gran Banda @ 9pm El Guadalajara Grill, 46 Fulton ave., West Hempstead
AMC 05 Adult Tuesday Golf Clinic 10am @ 10am / $169 May 7th - Jun 4th Eisenhower Park driving range, Eisenhower park, East Meadow. 516-222-2620
Wed 5/08
LIFE CENTER OF LONG ISLAND 5K RUN/WALK
4 LIFE @ 8:45am / Free-$30 May 8th - Jun 8th 3340 Merrick Rd, Seaford
Friday May 10th
Annie Get Your Gun presented by the Herricks Players @ 8pm / $22-$30
Herricks Community Center, 999 Herricks Road, New Hyde Park. herricksplayers@gmail.com, 516-742-1926
The Herricks Players proudly announce their upcoming production of the beloved musical "Annie Get Your Gun." Transporting theatergoers to the vibrant world of the Wild West, experience classics musical hits like "There's No Business Like Show Business” and "Anything You Can Do (I Can Do Better)".
Restaurant & Bar, 124 W Park Ave, Long Beach
Gold Coast Cinema Series: Endearing French �lm TONI @ 7pm / $16
Toni is a feel-good French comedy written and directed by 24year-old �rst-time direc‐tor Nathan Ambrosioni! Manhasset Cinemas, 430 Plandome Road, Manhasset. info@gold coastarts.org, 516-8292570
Joshua Van Ness: Back to Back to Black: An Amy Wine‐house Celebration @ 7pm
The Paramount, 370 New York Ave, Hunting‐ton
Thu 5/09
James Maddock @ 7pm
Swing the Teapot, 6 Verbena Ave, Floral Park
Cuthbert Live: Solo at JJ Coopers @ 7pm JJ Coopers - American
Art & Music in Motion @ 7pm / $20-$25
Featuring new dance works in collaboration with visual artists and vocalists. Premiering is "Subway Windows" a dance journey into the minds of subway riders. Great Neck Community Education Center, 30 Cumberland Avenue, Great Neck. dancevi sions.ny@gmail.com, 516-314-2359
Tim McGraw: Standing Room Only Tour 2024 @ 7pm / $38.50$203.50 UBS Arena, Belmont Park - Long Island
Fri 5/10
Willy Porter @ 6:30pm Unitarian Universalist Congre‐gation at Shelter Rock (UUCSR), 48 Shelter Rock Rd, Manhasset
Asi Wind - Incredibly Human @ 7pm / $29.50-$69.50 The Paramount, Huntington
New York Mets vs. Atlanta Braves @ 7:10pm Citi Field, Flushing
Dance Theatre of Harlem @ 8pm / $64
The multi-ethnic com‐pany performs trea‐sured classics, neo‐classical works, and in‐novative contemporary pieces to celebrate founder Arthur Mitchel‐l’s belief that ballet be‐longs to everyone. Tilles Center, LIU Post College, 720 Northern Boulevard, Greenvale
Diamond Groove NY: Diamond Groove Rocks Memories! @ 8pm
Memories Pub & Grill, 121 Hill‐side Avenue, Williston Park
Nate Charlie Music @ 8:30pm Bartini Bar & Lounge, 124 N Carll Ave, Babylon
Mike Delguidice @ 9pm / $20 Mulcahy's, Wantagh
Calendar information is pro‐vided by event organizers. All events are subject to change or cancellation. This publica‐tion is not responsible for the accuracy of the information contained in this calendar.
Adelphi’s Writers and Readers Festival
On April 5 and 6, approximately 300 fellow book lovers visited Adelphi University’s inaugural Writers & Readers Festival, a free celebration of storytelling, literature and the power of the written word.
with literary agents, book editors and writing coaches.
Adelphi alumna and best-selling author Alice Hoffman, founded and inspired the two-day event.
The festival included panels and keynotes with bestselling authors professional development workshops and interactive conversations
In addition to Hoffman, festival attendees had the chance to meet and hear from well-known authors including Mona Awad, Kevin Baker, Lisa Belkin, Ada Calhoun, Rebecca Chace, Liana Finck, Kim Coleman Foote, Robin Gow, Julie Klam, Jacqueline Jones LaMon, Ann Leary, Charles Leerhsen, Matt Pasca, Adam Powell and Laura Zigman. Learn more about Adelphi’s Writers & Readers Festival.
Best-selling author and podcaster Adriana Trigiani (holding microphone) and Alice Hoffman. The moderator and author Laura Zigman is at right. Zigman’s first novel “Animal Husbandry” was made into the movie “Someone Like You” starring Hugh Jackman and Ashley Judd
Star-studded offerings at Staller
Continued from Page 23
Led by Emmy-nominated crooner Benny Benack III and singing phenomenon Stella Katherine Cole, alongside one-of-a-kind tap dancing star Jabu Graybeal. Don’t miss the magic of Benny Benack III, Stella Cole, and Jabu Graybeal, favorites from Postmodern Jukebox, as they serenade you with Hammerstein, “Hamilton,” and everything in between.
The Peridance Contemporary Dance Company takes on the Staller Main Stage on November 16th with one of their inventive yet timeless and powerful dance performances. Experience the captivating artistry of Peridance Contemporary Dance Company.
Under the direction of Igal Perry, PCDC brings together diverse artistic voices from world-renowned choreographers for an evening of virtuosity and elegance. New York City’s premiere repertory company is not to be missed! Described by the New York Times as “blessedly inventive,” New York City’s Peridance Contemporary Dance Company has been a leader in expressive and innovative dance since 1983. With a magnificent troupe of dancers from all over the world, you’ll be transfixed by their seamless blend of athleticism, emotion, and artistic vision.
On the classical side, Staller presents Starry Nights on Nov. 21—an enchanting chamber music performance featuring masterful musicians from the Stony Brook University Department of Music, including Hagai Shaham, violin, and Colin Carr, cello.
On Nov. 23, listen to the dazzling vocal performance by record-breaking artist Jackie Evancho. The worldwide singing sensation, actress, and songwriter will astound the audience with her intricate and skilled vocal performance.
A global phenomenon at only ten years old, Jackie Evancho first dazzled television audiences in 2010, gaining worldwide recognition with her debut on NBC’s America’s Got Talent. She’s broken many records, including the youngest top-10 debut artist in US history, the youngest solo platinum artist, and the youngest person ever to give a solo concert at Lincoln Center.
Now at 23, Evancho has moved beyond the fleeting title of child prodigy towards maturity as an artist, embarking on a new creative direction to tell her truth musically.
While she’s best known for her mastery over classical vocals, Jackie Evancho has proven time and time again that she can tackle any genre with ease, creating Classical Crossover combos that are adored by fans and newcomers alike.
November finishes with an exciting and hilarious kids and family show: Don’t Let The Pigeon Drive the Bus on November 24!
Based on the children’s picture book, written and illustrated by the award-winning author Mo Willems, Don’t Let The Pigeon Drive the Bus. This interactive story follows the journey of an ecstatic yet mischievous pigeon who begs and pleads with the audience to allow him to drive the bus. Perfect for families and kids who love all of Mo Willems’ books.
December brings us a must-see timeless holiday vocal performance on Dec. 6 by Anthony Nunziata in “A Broadway Italian Christmas.” The Carnegie Hall headliner brings a feast of Italian Holiday Classics, fresh for the season!
Supporting his critically acclaimed BroadwayWorld Holiday Album of the Year Together for Christmas, world-renowned tenor, songwriter, entertainer, and Carnegie Hall headliner Anthony Nunziata is back with a special concert of his hit touring holiday show.
Nunziata’s glorious voice will serenade you with timeless songs from the Italian and American Songbooks, Broadway, jazz, and pop repertoires. You’ll love his soul-stirring renditions of “O Holy Night,” “O Sole Mio,” “The Prayer,” “The Christmas Song,” and many more from his Grammy-winning team of musicians. This is a must-see concert event for the Holiday season!
Later on December 14, don’t miss Caroline Campbell, violin, with guest star Chloe Flowers. Caroline returns, this time with a pop and rock edge, alongside special guest pianist Chloe Flower! Classical crossover violin virtuoso Caroline Campbell pairs up with classical/pop pianist Chloe Flowers to thrill our audience with an edgy and exciting pop and rock program.
Playing classical crossover versions of Led Zeppelin favorites or Campbell’s YouTube sensation version of Skyfall, you will see why this “violinist to the stars” was handpicked to do famous duets, not just with classical greats like Andrea Bocelli and Barbra Streisand but with rock legends like Steven Tyler and Sting.
As for Chloe, you may have seen her perform alongside Cardi B at the Grammys or on SNL, or you may have heard her work on tracks she co-produced for Céline Dion, Johnny Mathis, 2 Chainz, Swae Lee, and more, but never like this — in an adventurous musical night featuring a truly dynamic and powerful duo that you will not want to miss!
For tickets, information, and to see all of the programs at Staller Center, including our Stony Brook Symphony Orchestra dates, our HD Screenings and Live Broadcasts from the Metropolitan Opera, and our entire season of art exhibitions in our Paul W. Zuccaire Gallery, and more, visit stallercenter.com.
Consider becoming a member and receive complimentary tickets, discounts, presale access, and more perks. To learn more, visit stallercenter.com/membership
Don’t miss your opportunity to submit your nominations for the Top Business Leaders 2024.
Blank Slate Media is recognizing the most influential and accomplished individuals in business, finance, education, law, not-for-profit, and media who continue to find ways to lead and inspire.
To nominate, or to find out details on how to be a corporate sponsor visit www.theisland360.com/nassau-countys-top-business-leaders
SAVE THE DATE: JUNE 20, 2024 • 6PM
LEONARD’S PALAZZO OF GREAT NECK
KEYNOTE SPEAKER: ERIC ALEXANDER Director, Vision Long Island
READERS WRITE
Re-elect Melkonian, a jewel on Port Board of Education
Ifirst got to know Nanette through her advocacy around education.
Our initial discussions were about our own personal experiences as educators as well as mothers with young children in our district.
Right away, it was clear that Nan knew her stuff around education and that her passion for it was palpable. We served on a board together aimed at lifting the quality of education for all
students in our community.
Having served alongside Nan provided me with a firsthand glimpse into her character and convictions. What initially struck me most about Nanette was her unwavering dedication to understanding diverse perspectives, coupled with her remarkable ability to foster meaningful dialogue – even in the face of disagreement.
I remember sitting around a table
with Nan and admiring her poise and grace as she respectfully listened to another colleague who had a very different perspective from her own.
I was immediately impressed by Nan’s candor, compassion, and dedication to truly understand what the other person was saying, as well as her ability to find common ground. The two ended up elevating each other’s thinking as the rest of us watched in awe.
This would become a common occurrence.
Aside from Nan’s natural propensity to connect with people and her clear passion for education, what has also impressed me about Nan is her commitment to making things better for all children. Nan’s work in our community started when her own children were small, but as they have all graduated, her dedication to making our schools
the best they can be has remained steadfast.
Nan’s heart is tremendous. Her passion and understanding of educational pedagogy and practices, coupled with her love of people and our community, make Nan Melkonian a true jewel in the crown of our Board of Education.
Dina Maiella-Marro Port WashingtonA happy 190th anniversary to Long Island Rail Road
Let us all wish a Happy 190th Anniversary to the Long Island Rail Road. On April 24, 1834, the Long Island Rail Road was officially chartered by the State of New York. In 1900, the Pennsylvania Railroad bought a controlling interest as part of its plan for direct access to Manhattan, which began on Sept. 8, 1910. The Pennsylvania Railroad subsidized the LIRR into the late 1940s. This provided the financial basis for support of expansion and upgrades to service and infrastructure.
At the end of World War II there began a decline of our LIRR with a corresponding loss of farebox revenues.
The Pennsylvania Railroad began to reduce financial support as well. This played a part in the LIRR going into receivership in 1949. In recognition of the role the LIRR played in the economy of both Long Island and NYC, New York State began providing financial assistance to the LIRR in the 1950s and 1960.
The “Line of the Dashing Dan” was officially chartered on April 24, 1965, by the State of New York. Prior to 1965, the LIRR derived almost 100% of its funding for both capital and operating expenses from fares. Chartered by the State Legislature in 1965 as the Metropolitan Commuter
We the people can do better than Biden
Joe Biden is the least popular commander in chief at this point of his presidency in the last 70 years, below even Richard Nixon and Jimmy Carter, according to a blistering new poll — imperiling his chances of re-election. However, if the GOP doesn’t do anything to protect the election from mail in voting fraud, rampant ballot harvesting, midnight polling center showdowns, miscounting, state courts that decide to change election law instead of the state legisla-
tures, Zuckerbucks, Biden’s 11,000,000 newly imported Illegal aliens voting because no voter ID’s are required then these polls are moot anyway. Chances are the GOP won’t do anything about it because it’s all about the Uniparty. They are all corrupt. When you hear about bipartisanship it only means that they are all getting their share of the money. We the people can do better!
Bill Spitalnick RoslynTransportation Authority (MCTA), it was created to purchase and operate the bankrupt LIRR.
In 1966, NYS bought the railroad’s controlling stock from the Pennsylvania Rail Road and put it under the newly formed Metropolitan Commuter Transportation Authority. The MCTA changed its name to the Metropolitan Transportation Authority n 1968 when it took over operations of the NYC Transit Authority.
With MTA subsidies, the LIRR modernized further and grew into the busiest commuter railroad in the United States. Over the past 50 years, several billion dollars in combined
county, city, state and federal taxpayers generated dollars have subsidized both the capital and operating costs for the LIRR.
Riders must remember that fare hikes are periodically required if the MTA is to provide the services millions of New Yorkers use daily. They are inevitable due to inflation, along with increasing costs of labor, power, fuel, supplies, materials, routine safety, state of good repair, replacement of worn-out rolling stock, upgrades to stations, yards and shops along with system expansion projects necessary to run any transit system.
In the end, quality and frequency
of service are dependent upon secure revenue streams. We all have to contribute—be it at the fare box or tax revenues generated by different levels of government redistributed back to the MTA. TANSTAFFL or “There Ain’t No Such Thing As A Free Lunch” or in this case a free ride.
Larry Penner Great Neck (Larry Penner is a transportation advocate, historian and writer who previously served as a former Director for the Federal Transit Administration Region 2 New York Office of Operations and Program Management).
Blakeman’s ‘militia’ no threat
The last two issues of the Herald (April 12, April 19) were very interesting.
I suppose the Herald used many barrels of ink blasting County Executive Blakeman and the terrible Republicans.
Mr. Blakeman’s suggestion regarding citizen volunteers in the Sheriff’s Department apparently has caused many citizens to go mad!
Around the State of New York and across the country, it is common for citizens to aid the authorities.
Volunteers are selected, trained and supervised by full-time law enforcement professionals.
Many New Yorkers may not know of the New York Guard. It is a militia force of citizens that has existed here since World War I.
There is also a New York Naval
Militia.
I suggest that the folks who think this move is something unusual or evil do their homework. They may also worry about being struck by lightning or having a mouse run up their trouser leg! Let me assure them that there is no cause for alarm.
The
The Port Washington Water District salutes Supervisor Jennifer DeSena and the Town Board for its pursuit of a $3 million grant to go toward collecting and reusing greywater to irrigate the Harbor Links golf course. The golf course used 14,137,200 gallons of water in 2023 and this project will dramatically reduce that number, helping the PWWD achieve critical conservation goals.
(Editor’s Note: Greywater is domestic wastewater generated in households and buildings from streams that have no contact with wastewater from toilets,) Irrigation is the biggest user of water not only in Port Washington, but throughout Long Island. Approximately
two-thirds of all water pumped during the spring and summer is used for lawn irrigation alone, and golf courses use more water for irrigation than nearly any other type of property. Through this grant, the Town has taken the initiative to offset millions of gallons of water used at Harbor Links per year by recycling greywater, taking an enormous amount of strain off our water source and the infrastructure that supplies it. Water conservation efforts like this are especially important in coastal communities like Port Washington. When we over-pump from our aquifer, we run the risk of saltwater making its way into our drinking water, an obvious detriment to public health. The collection and recycling of greywater for the irri-
gation of Harbor Links will significantly reduce the risk of saltwater intrusion, protecting the water quality of our entire community.
We at the Port Washington Water District take pride in our ability to serve our community and preserve our most precious natural resource, and it is always a pleasure to see our fellow representatives join us in this mission. This project serves as a phenomenal example of how we can all work together to protect our environment and we look forward to helping the Town in any way we can.
PWWD Chairman David Brackett
PWWD Secretary Peter Meyer
PWWD Treasurer Mindy Germain
Business&RealEstate
Follow up the way to future profitability
Long Island is still on “fire” with a multitude of cash purchasers as well as those that have commitment letters from their lenders. However “Cash Is Still King” and still rules in the world of real estate transactions.
I received $35,000 over the asking price on a property in Levittown last week, which actually “shocked” the Trustee of the Estate. I had sold the owner’s previous home 10 years ago, but she had recently passed away. But I had stayed in touch over the years.
One of the most crucial and critical thing that I have learned, absorbed and practiced over 42+ years, was to “stay in Touch” with current and past clients. I learned this while performing this most important facet in growing my previous business of landscape design, licensed and certified and professional lawn-tree and shrub applicator, and our irrigation and carpet cleaning divisions. It is just as significant and far reaching today as it was 30+ years ago.
Your current and past clients referrals are truly the life-blood of every
successful business and without this simple task of keeping and staying in touch; one will never scale one’s business to attain its “optimum lucrative and profitable level.”
Yes, it does take a “1 minute manager” a book written by Kenneth H. Blanchard written in 1982, and still very current today; in order to accomplish this feat.
But it can be learned and adapted with specific conditioning through one’s concerted efforts, disciplined actions and the sacrifice of a commodity that is irretrievable, unrecoverable and you can not create it, your valuable time! By understanding these 6 concepts from my pending copyrighted S.A.C.E.D.S.© formula can assist in scaling your business to potentially earn a $100,000 the very first year.
What many in the real estate industry still don’t do sufficiently is to “stay in touch” and follow up on a regular basis, with their current and especially their past clients.
When is the last time to you called
your past clients? It is as simple as making short and concise videos to say hello, email or video text, snail mail or a short notes.
Maybe deliver a bag of bagels for your Jewish clients after the holidays. Providing an inspirational book for Kwanza to your black clients. Celebrating “Diwali” (also known as Deep-
avali), celebrating the “Festival of Lights” with a sweet treat or food or small gift for your Indian past clients.
Lastly, Ramadan began this year on March 10th and finished on April 10th and was 1 month of fasting, celebrated by the Muslim community. A small gift or some sweets on Eid, the day after Ramadan finishes would be appropriate, again staying in touch with your clients. In 2025, it begins on February 28 and ends on Saturday, March 29 at sundown, so you should add it to your calendar.
Back in February, the Long Island Board of Realtors held an event for the Lunar New Year, celebrating the Year of the Dragon at New Fun Restaurant in Great Neck. The Village of Great Neck Plaza also celebrated the holiday, with another event that our Mayor Ted Rosen hosted with all the participants.
Being involved in these types of events goes a long way, in showing your clients that “nobody cares how much you know, until they know how much you care and know.” By
participating in these celebrations it provides the evidence and proof that all your clients and their cultures are important to you.
This will form a strong bond between you and your current, past and future clients.
It is extremely important to notate the holiday dates in one’s calendar for the varied cultures that you have previously completed transactions with. If you haven’t stayed present with your past clientele, maybe it’s time to re-establish some rapport and build back those most crucial and critical relationships.
Your business doesn’t stop after you were paid at the closing of the transaction. It actually continues into the future by creating advocates and communicating and staying in touch for your most valuable and cherished referrals. This will enable you to grow, enhance and scale your business to greater profitability.
Philip A. Raices is the owner/Broker of Turn Key Real Estate at 3 Grace Ave Suite 180 in Great Neck.
and Founder
WHAT IS THE DARK WEB?
The Dark Web is an intentionally hidden world where cyber criminals access illegal information, goods and services. Hackers trade in stolen passwords, identities and other exposed vulnerabilities to wreak havoc on the legitimate internet, spreading viruses, ransomware and the like.
Sandwire monitors clients’ domains 24/7/365 with human and machine-powered protection of domains, IP addresses and email addresses. We uncover compromised credentials in Dark Web markets, data dumps and other sources, and sound the alert quickly!
Our clients gain the advantage over the cybercriminals by updating access to passwords and using MFA, multi-factor authentication, to preserve the privacy of sensitive data.
Suozzi eyes border bill, says he backs Johnson
Continued from Page 9
The bill’s aid to Ukraine faced the strongest opposition from MAGA Republicans, many of whom align with former President Donald Trump, including Johnson, who did an aboutface after receiving an intelligence briefing as a member of the nation’s most senior leadership on the stakes involved in not supporting Ukraine militarily.
Just a week prior to the vote being brought to the House floor, Suozzi penned an op-ed that called for partisanship to be cast aside so aid could be delivered to these regions.
Far-right Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene criticized the House speaker for failing to deliver on promises and said she would not tolerate his anticipated plan to push for more aid to Ukraine. Her disapproval includes threats to call for his removal as speaker via a single vote, yet she did not indicate if or when this could occur.
In the wake of Greene’s warnings to oust House Speaker Johnson, Suozzi, a Democrat, announced his support of the Republican speaker.
Suozzi attributed the divisiveness in delivering Ukraine aid to Russian propaganda, which
he said Republicans like Greene were “parroting.”
“Our foreign adversaries tried to divide us and stop us from supporting Ukraine, Israel, and Taiwan,” Suozzi wrote in a release. “Putin, the Iranians, and the Chinese Communist Party were counting on the rhetoric of Moscow Marjorie, and the other isolationists and extremists in the chaos caucus to stop us from doing our jobs. Instead, we, on a bipartisan basis, fulfilled the call of history and fulfilled our role as the indispensable nation.”
But in his praise for the foreign aid package’s passage in Congress, Suozzi also called for security to be brought to the U.S.-Mexico border – funds for which were included in the original foreign aid package presented in February.
“Now let’s bring ‘Order to The Border!’” Suozzi wrote in a release.
In tandem with delivering aid to Ukraine, the package also strengthens sanctions on Russian assets. It funds Israel’ss military efforts against Iran and other proxies, reimburses U.S. military operations and provides humanitarian aid. And a provision requires TikTok’s China-based parent company to sell the app or face a U.S. ban.
ington, D.C.
Curran, Bosworth back Keiserman in primary
Continued from Page 9
The district, which includes much of the North Shore and the Town of Oyster Bay as far east as Woodbury, is currently represented by Martins, who flipped the district red in 2022.
Keiserman has garnered a slew of endorsements, including from Nassau County and New York State Democratic Party Chairman Jay Jacobs, former Nassau County Legislator Josh Lafazan, state Assemblymember Gina Sillitti, former state Sen. Anna Kaplan, Democratic National Committeeman Robert Zimmerman and Nassau County Legislature Minority Leader Delia DeRiggi-Whitton.
Lafazan was previously in the state Senate District 7 race, running against Keiserman, but pulled out in March. In his announcement suspending his campaign, he extended his support for Keiserman in the race.
Lafazan was ousted from his seat in the Nassau County Legislature in November when he was defeated by his Republican opponent Samantha Goetz. Keiserman is an education consultant and serves as a commissioner for the North Hempstead Housing Authority Board of Commissioners and is the chairwoman of the Baxter Estates Planning Board. She also is co-president of the Baxter’s Pond Foundation and president of the Port Washington Democratic Club.
She said she plans to advocate for increased public school funding, sensible gun policies and combatting climate change to “create a future that reflects shared aspirations and ensures a fair, inclusive, and prosperous Long Island for all,” her campaign said.
The primary election for party nominees is June 25. The general election will then be held on Nov. 5.
Open houses scheduled for LI electric transmission project
Continued from Page 8
Other Nassau County sessions will be held on May 15 at Long Island University for Oyster Bay residents, May 16 at Kennedy Memorial Park Community Center for the Village of Hempstead, May 21 at Adelphi for the Town of Hempstead and May 22 at Oceanside School #8 for Oceanside residents.
Individuals can also provide comments or ask questions by calling the toll-free line 1-800-347-9071 or emailing the developers at info@propelNYEnergy.com. Additional information can be found on its website PropelNYEnergy.com.
The Propel New York Energy project is proposing about 66 miles of electrical transmission lines throughout Long Island, with a majority proposed in Nassau County.
The project is a collaboration between the New York Power Authority, the state’s public power utility, and New York Transco, a New York developer, owner and operator of bulk electrical transmission facilities.
Its intent is to bolster reliability, resiliency and redundancy in the electrical grid and aid in environmental sustainability goals.
It includes the implementation of
new and upgraded electrical stations along with nearly 90 miles of underground and submarine – or below the sea floor – transmission lines.
The electrical transmission lines will connect the electrical sources to the substations, which then distribute electricity to surrounding homes and businesses through separate distribution lines.
“It’s the backbone of the electric grid,” New York Power Authority senior program director Ana Stachowiak previously told Blank Slate Media.
A majority of the lines will be placed in Long Island, with just 12 miles in New York City and 12.6 miles in Westchester County.
Nearly 10 miles of submarine lines will also be installed, cutting through Hempstead Harbor and the Long Island Sound. Of this, 6.25 miles will be considered part of Long Island.
The transmission lines are planned to be placed under existing public rights of way and utility properties throughout Nassau County and in Suffolk County, Queens, the Bronx and Westchester County.
Three segments of the transmission lines route will run through North Hempstead on Northern Boulevard,
Mineola Avenue to Willis Avenue, and Glen Cove Road.
Of Nassau County, a majority of the lines will run through the Town of North Hempstead and cut through 11 villages. Approximately 19.5 miles of lines will be installed in North Hempstead.
The villages these lines would cut through are Westbury, Old Westbury, East Hills, Roslyn Harbor, Mineola, Williston Park, Roslyn, Flower Hill, Lake Succes, Russell Gardens and Thomaston.
The project proposal is preliminary and details are still subject to change pending community feedback.
The project is amid its pre-permitting outreach and survey phase which is when they will solicit community and municipality feedback on the project. This is a required component before permits can be applied for.
The application of a state permit to begin the project is anticipated to be filed this summer, but the process is estimated to take place through 2026. It is estimated that the permitting process will take about two years.
Community engagement is a requirement for the project to be granted its required state permits.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that GoodFriend Self-Storage facility located at: 119 South 3rd Street, New Hyde Park, NY 11040, will sell, to satisfy lien of the owner, at public sale by competitive bidding on May 1, 2024 at 11:00am. Bid online at storageauctions.com. This is a cash sale and all sales are final.
Unit E137 – Melissa Sills
NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU ONEWEST BANK, FSB, Plaintiff AGAINST RAYMOND ARROYO, JR. A/K/A RAYMOND J. ARROYO, JR., SYLVIA P. CRUZ, ET AL., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered October 17, 2016, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the North Side steps of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on May 21, 2024 at 2:00PM, premises known as 301 TULIP AVENUE, FLORAL PARK, NY 11001. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Incorporated Village of Floral Park, Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 32, Block 256, Lot 251253. Approximate amount of judgment $847,127.50 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #017077/2009. The aforementioned auction will be conducted in accordance with the NASSAU County COVID-19 mitigation protocols and as such all persons must comply with social distancing, wearing masks and screening practices in effect at the time of this foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, then the court appointed referee will cancel the foreclosure auction.
Foreclosure Auctions will be held "Rain or Shine". Leo McGinity, Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC 1775 Wehrle Drive Williamsville, NY 14221 16-000133 80132
Notice is hereby given that a license No. NA-0240-24103285 for beer, cider, and wine has been applied for by the undersigned to sell beer, cider, and wine at retail in a restaurant under the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law at 1215 Jericho Turnpike, New Hyde Park, NY 11040
Applicant: Nova Two Inc.
LEGAL NOTICE
INC. VILLAGE OF SOUTH FLORAL PARK
NOTICE OF COMPLETION OF THE ASSESSMENT ROLL
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to the provisions of Section 1410 of the Real Property Tax Law of the State of New York that the 2024/2025 Final Assessment Roll of the Incorporated Village of South Floral Park, NY has been completed and was duly filed in the Office of the Village Clerk on the 15th day of April 2024 and that said assessment roll will remain on file with said Village Clerk.
Dated: April 26, 2024
Mary Long
Administrator
Inc. Village of South Floral Park
TO THE TAXPAYERS AND RESIDENTS OF SOUTH FLORAL PARK
NOTICE IS HERBY GIVEN THAT the Tax Roll and Warrant of the Inc. Village of South Floral Park for the collection of taxes for the fiscal year beginning June 1, 2024, has been left with the undersigned, as Tax Collector of said Village, for the collection of taxes therein levied, and that the undersigned will receive taxes at the Office of the Clerk-Treasurer, 383 Roquette Avenue, in said Village, from June 1, 2024, to and including July 1, 2024, from 9:00 am until 4:00 pm, except Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays and that for said period of time that taxes may be paid to the undersigned without additional charge and that on all such taxes remaining unpaid after July 1, 2024, five percent (5%) will be added for the first month, and an additional one percent (1%) for each month and fraction thereof thereafter until paid.
Inc. Village of South Floral Park
Mary Long
Tax Collector
Dated: April 29, 2024
Legal Notice Request for Proposals for Storm Drain Cleaning and Maintenance
The Inc. Village of Bellerose hereby requests proposals from qualified contractors for the cleaning and maintenance of approximately 65 storm drains located within the Village boundaries.
The work shall include, but not be limited to, the following:
• Removal of debris, sediment, and vegetation from the storm drain inlets, outlets, and pipes.
• Inspection and repair of any damaged or defective storm drain components.
• Disposal of all waste materials in accordance with applicable laws and regulations.
• Preparation and submission of a detailed report of the work performed, including before and after photos, GPS coordinates, and any recommendations for future maintenance.
The Village reserves the right to reject any or all proposals, to waive any informalities or irregularities in the proposals, and to award the contract to the lowest responsible bidder who meets the specifications and requirements of the Village.
Proposals must be submitted in sealed envelopes marked "Storm Drain Cleaning and Maintenance" and delivered to the Village Clerk's Office at 50 Superior Road, Bellerose, NY 11001 no later than 12:00 p.m. on May 15, 2024. Proposals received after this time and date will not be considered.
Proposals must include the following information:
• The name, address, phone number, and email address of the contractor.
• A description of the contractor's qualifications and experience in performing similar work.
• A list of references from previous clients who can attest to the quality and timeliness of the contractor's work.
• A detailed breakdown of the cost of the work, including labor, materials, equipment, and any other expenses.
• A proposed schedule for completing the work, including the start and end dates and the estimated hours of work per day.
• A copy of the contractor's license, insurance, and bonding certificates.
• Any other information that the contractor deems relevant to the proposal.
For any questions or clarifications regarding this request for proposals, please contact the Village Clerk at (516) 354-1000 or email villageclerk@bellerosevillage.org.
The Village of Bellerose is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, disability, or any other protected status.
By Order of the Board of Trustees Inc. Village of Bellerose
Charles P. Puglisi
Village Clerk / Treasurer
Dated: 3 May 2024
NOTICE OF ANNUAL SCHOOL DISTRICT ELECTION AND PUBLIC HEARING on the 2024 - 2025 School Budget in the HERRICKS UNION FREE SCHOOL DISTRICT Town of North Hempstead, Nassau County, New York
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the annual election of qualified voters of the Herricks Union Free School District, Town of North Hempstead, County of Nassau, New York will be held on Tuesday, May 21, 2024 in the Gymnasium of the Herricks Community Center, 999 Herricks Road, New Hyde Park, New York between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. for the purpose of voting, on voting machines, on the following matters:
A. to vote on the annual school budget as set forth in Proposition No.1 below: PROPOSITION NO 1
RESOLVED that the 2024-2025 annual school budget for the Herricks Union Free School District and the appropriation of the necessary funds therefore and the levy of taxes necessary to meet the expenditures in said budget be authorized.
B. to elect two board members for a three-year term commencing July 1, 2024 to fill the vacancy occasioned by the expiration of the term of Nancy Feinstein and Brian R. Hassan.
C. to vote on such other propositions as may properly come before the voters at this annual school election.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the Board of Education will hold a public hearing at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, May 9, 2024 at the Herricks Community Center, 999 Herricks Road, New Hyde Park, New York for the purpose of discussing the expenditure of funds for school district purposes and the budgeting thereof for the school year beginning July 1, 2024 and ending June 30, 2025 (the 2024-2025 annual school budget). At said hearing all persons in interest will be given an opportunity to be heard.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that a copy of said 2024-2025 Annual School Budget for the Herricks Union Free School District containing a statement of the amount of money needed to meet the estimated expenses for school purposes for the 2024-2025 school year, exclusive of public monies, together with the text of any propositions, questions and resolutions which will be presented to the voters, will be made available upon request and may be obtained by any district resident at the following offices of the school houses, at the Herricks Community Center, on the District’s internet website (www.Herricks.org), the Williston Park Library and at the Shelter Rock Library during the fourteen days immediately preceding the day of the budget vote and election, except Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays, between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m.
Center Street School, Center Street, Williston Park, NY Denton Avenue School, Denton Avenue, New Hyde Park, NY Searingtown School, west end of Beverly Drive, Albertson, NY Herricks Middle School, Hilldale Drive, Albertson, NY
Herricks High School, Shelter Rock Road, New Hyde Park, NY Herricks Community Center, Herricks Road, New Hyde Park, NY Shelter Rock Academy, Shelter Rock Road, New Hyde Park, NY Williston Park Library, Willis Avenue, Williston Park, NY Shelter Rock Library, Searingtown Road, Albertson, NY
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN pursuant to Real Property Tax Law Section 495, an exemption report detailing exemptions from real property taxation shall be available and appended to any tentative, preliminary or final budget.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that each candidate for the office of a member of the Board of Education shall be nominated by petition and a separate petition for each such candidate shall be directed to and filed in the Office of the Clerk of said School District located in the Herricks Community Center between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m., and no later than 5 p.m. on Monday, April 22, 2024. Each such nominating petition shall be signed by at least twenty-five (25) qualified voters of said school district, and shall state the residence of each signer, and shall state the name and residence of the candidate, and shall describe the specific vacancy on said Board of Education for which the candidate is nominated, which description shall include at least the length of the term of office and name of the last incumbent. No person shall be nominated by petition for more than one specific office.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that Herricks School District has personal registration of voters and that the Board of Registration for the School District shall meet in the Herricks Community Center, Herricks Road, New Hyde Park, New York, on Tuesday, May 7, 2024 between the hours of 4:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. for the purpose of preparing a register of the qualified voters of the School District who are entitled to vote. In addition, registration can be accomplished on any school day from 8 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. at the District Clerk’s Office through May 16, 2024. The register so prepared will be filed in the Office of the Clerk of said School District in said Herricks Community Center and will be open for inspection by any qualified voter of said School District between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. on each of the five days prior to and the day set for such vote, including Saturday from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. by appointment only, except Sunday.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that a person shall be entitled to vote at the annual election who is: 1) a citizen of the United States, 2) eighteen years of age or older, 3) a resident of the School District for a period of thirty days next preceding the election he or she offers to vote at and 4) registered to vote for said election. A person shall be registered to vote if he or she shall have permanently registered with the Nassau County Board of Elections or with the School District's Board of Registration. Only persons, who are so registered, may vote.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that said Board of Registration will meet during the hours of voting and at said annual election on May 21, 2024, at the Herricks Community Center for the purpose of preparing a register for school meetings and elections held subsequent to said annual election. Any person shall be entitled to have his or her name placed on register provided at such meeting of the Board of Registration he or she is known or proven to the satisfaction of such Board of Registration to be entitled to vote at school meetings and elections for which the register is being prepared.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that all propositions and questions, which qualified voters of the school district desire placed upon the voting machines at said election, shall be made by petitions subscribed by not less than one hundred (100) qualified voters of the district and filed in the Office of the Clerk of the School District between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. and no later than 5:00 p.m. on Monday, April 22, 2024 thirty (30) days prior to said election, except as to propositions and questions required by law to be stated in the published or posted notice of the annual election which shall be filed not later than sixty (60) days prior to said election. When the last day for filing a petition falls on a Saturday or Sunday, the petition may be filed on the Monday following the last day for filing. Upon the filing of such a petition the Board of Education shall determine by resolution whether or not to place such questions or propositions on the voting machines. In the event that the Board of Education shall determine that it is not proper, feasible or practicable to place such proposition or propositions, question or questions, upon a voting machine, then such proposition or propositions, question or questions, as the Board of Education may resolve to place before the voters at said election shall be voted upon by the use of paper ballots.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the applications for early mail and absentee ballots for election of members of the Board of Education, the adoption of the annual budget and vote on any other propositions and questions as may be legally placed before the voters at the annual district election may be applied for at the Office of the Clerk of the District. An application for early mail and absentee ballot must be received by the District Clerk no earlier than thirty (30) days before the Annual Election. An application for early mail and absentee ballot must be received by the District Clerk at least seven (7) days before the Annual Election if the ballot is to be mailed to the voter, or the day before the Annual Budget Vote/Election if the ballot is to be delivered personally to the voter or his/her designated agent. Upon receiving a timely application for an early mail and absentee ballot, the District Clerk will mail the ballot to the address designated on the application by no later than six (6) days before the Annual Election. No early mail and absentee voters’ ballots shall be canvassed, unless it shall have been received in the Office of the District Clerk no later than 5:00 p.m. on the day of the vote. A list of all persons to whom early mail and absentee ballots have been given shall be available for inspection in the Office of the Clerk of said School District and will be open for inspection by any qualified voter of said School District during regular office hours between 8:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that military voters who are not currently registered may apply to register as a qualified voter of the school district. Military voters who are qualified voters of the school district may submit an application for a military ballot. Military voters may designate a preference to receive a military voter registration, military ballot application or military ballot by mail, facsimile transmission or electronic mail in their request for such registration, ballot application or ballot. Military voter registration and military ballot application forms must be received in the Office of the District Clerk no later than 5:00 p.m. on April 25, 2024. No military ballot will be canvassed unless it is returned by mail or in person and (1) received in the Office of the District Clerk before the close of the polls on election day and showing a cancellation mark of the United States postal service or a foreign country’s postal service, or showing a dated endorsement of receipt by another agency of the United States government; or (2) received by the Office of the District Clerk by no later than 5:00 p.m. on election day and signed and dated by the military voter and one witness thereto, with a date which is associated to be not later than the day before the election.
DATED: March 7, 2024
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION
LEGAL NOTICE
INCORPORATED VILLAGE OF FLORAL PARK
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PROPOSED LOCAL LAW NO. 2 OF 2024
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that pursuant to Article 9 of the New York State Constitution, the provisions of the Code of the Incorporated Village of Floral Park and the Municipal Home Rule Law of the State of New York, as amended, a public hearing will be held in the Incorporated Village of Floral Park at the Village Hall, One Floral Boulevard, Floral Park on the 21st day of May, 2024 at 8:00 o’clock in the evening of that day, to consider enactment of a Local Law entitled: “A Local Law amending § 81-8 of the Code of the Incorporated Village of Floral Park which regulates the chaining of bicycles and other similar equipment.”
This Local Law shall take effect immediately upon its filing with the Secretary of State. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES
INCORPORATED VILLAGE OF FLORAL PARK, NY
JOSEPH O’GRADY VILLAGE CLERK
DATED: May 3, 2024
NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU, BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON, F/K/A THE BANK OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE, ON BEHALF OF THE HOLDERS OF THE ALTERNATIVE LOAN TRUST 2006-41CB, MORTGAGE PASSTHROUGH CERTIFICATES SERIES 2006-41CB, Plaintiff, vs. MARY LOIS SERRA, ET AL., Defendant(s). Pursuant to an Order Confirming Referee Report and Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on May 30, 2019, an Order Amending Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered on February 7, 2022 and a Short Form Order duly entered on September 8, 2022, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction on the front steps on the north side of the Nassau County Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, NY 11501 on May 14, 2024 at 2:30 p.m., premises known as 31 Maple Drive West, New Hyde Park, NY 11040. All that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being at New Hyde Park, Town of North Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of New York, Section 8., Block 340 and Lot 17. Approximate amount of judgment is $511,295.36 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 008443/2015. This foreclosure sale will be held on the north side steps of the Courthouse, rain or shine. COVID19 safety protocols will be followed at the foreclosure sale. If proper social distancing cannot be maintained or there are other health or safety concerns, the Court Appointed Referee will cancel the sale. Cindy Cheung, Esq., Referee Friedman Vartolo LLP, 85 Broad Street, Suite 501, New York, New York 10004, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Firm File No.: 182424-1
AVISO DE ELECCIÓN ANUAL DEL DISTRITO ESCOLAR Y AUDIENCIA PÚBLICA sobre el Presupuesto escolar 2024 – 2025 en el Distrito Escolar De Herricks Ciudad de North Hempstead, condado de Nassau, Nueva York
POR LA PRESENTE SE NOTIFICA que la elección anual de votantes calificados de el Distrito escolar de Herricks , Ciudad de North Hempstead, Condado de Nassau, Nueva York se llevará a cabo el martes, 21 de mayo de 2024 en el Gimnasio del Centro Comunitario Herricks, 999 Herricks Road, New Hyde Park, Nueva York entre las 7:00 a.m. y las 9:00 p.m. con el propósito de votar, al votar en máquinas, en las siguientes asuntos:
A. votar sobre el presupuesto escolar anual como se establece en la Proposición No. 1 a continuación:
PROPUESTA N° 1
SE RESUELVE que el presupuesto escolar anual 2024-2025 para Herricks Union Free School District y la asignación de los fondos necesarios para ello y la recaudación de los Impuestos necesarios para sufragar los gastos que en dicho presupuesto se autorice. B. elegir a dos miembros de la Junta por un período de tres años a partir del 1 de julio de 2024 para cubrir la vacante ocasionada por la expiración del término de Nancy Feinstein y Brian R. Hassan.
C. votar sobre otras propuestas que puedan presentarse ante los votantes en esta elección escolar annual.
SE NOTIFICA ADEMÁS que la Junta de Educación llevará a cabo una audiencia pública a las 7:30 p.m. el jueves, 9 de mayo de 2024 en Herricks Community Center, 999 Herricks Road, New Hyde Park, New York con el propósito de discutir el gasto de fondos para propósitos del distrito escolar y el presupuesto del mismo para el año escolar que comienza el 1 de julio de 2024 y termina el 30 de junio de 2025 (presupuesto anual del año escolar 2024-2025). En dicha audiencia, todas las personas interesadas tendrán la oportunidad de ser escuchadas.
SE NOTIFICA ADEMÁS que una copia de dicho Presupuesto Escolar Anual 2024-2025 para el Herricks Union Free School District que contenga una declaración de la cantidad de dinero necesaria para gastos estimados con fines escolares para el año escolar 2024-2025, sin incluir dinero público, junto con el texto de las proposiciones, cuestiones y resoluciones que se someterán a la votantes, estará disponible a pedido y puede ser obtenido por cualquier residente del distrito en las siguientes oficinas de las escuelas, en el Centro Comunitario de Herricks, en el sitio web del Distrito (www.Herricks.org), la Biblioteca de Williston Park y en la biblioteca de Shelter Rock durante los catorce días inmediatamente anteriores al día de la votación y elección del presupuesto, excepto los sábados domingos y festivos, en el horario 9:00 a.m. a 3:00 p.m.
Center Street School, Center Street, Williston Park, Nueva York Denton Avenue School, Denton Avenue, New Hyde Park, Nueva York
Searingtown School, extremo oeste de Beverly Drive, Albertson, NY Herricks Middle School, Hilldale Drive, Albertson, Nueva York
Herricks School, Shelter Rock Road, New Hyde Park, Nueva York
Centro Comunitario Herricks, Herricks Road, New Hyde Park, Nueva York Shelter Rock Academy, Shelter Rock Road, New Hyde Park, Nueva York
Biblioteca Williston Park, Willis Avenue, Williston Park, Nueva York
Biblioteca Shelter Rock, Searingtown Road, Albertson, NY
SE DA AVISO ADEMÁS de conformidad con la Sección 495 de la Ley del Impuesto sobre la Propiedad Inmueble, un informe de exención que detallan las exenciones de los impuestos sobre bienes inmuebles estarán disponibles y se adjuntarán a cualquier presupuesto preliminar o final.
SE NOTIFICA ADEMÁS que cada candidato para el cargo de miembro de la Junta de Educación deberá ser nominado por petición y una petición separada para cada uno de dichos candidatos deberá ser dirigida y presentada en la Oficina del Secretario de dicho Distrito Escolar ubicado en Herricks Centro Comunitario entre las 8:00 a.m. y las 3:00 p.m., y no más tarde de las 5:00 p.m. el lunes, 22 de abril de 2024. Cada petición de nominación deberá estar firmada por al menos veinticinco (25) votantes calificados de dicho distrito escolar, y deberá indicar la residencia de cada firmante, y deberá indicar el nombre y residencia del candidato, y describirá la vacante específica en dicha Junta de Educación para que el candidato es nominado, cuya descripción incluirá por lo menos la duración del término de cargo y nombre del último titular. Ninguna persona podrá ser nominada por petición para más de un puesto específico.
SE NOTIFICA ADEMÁS que el Distrito Escolar de Herricks tiene un registro personal de votantes y que la Junta de Inscripción del Distrito Escolar se reunirá en el Centro Comunitario de Herricks, Herricks Road, New Hyde Park, Nueva York, el martes 7 de mayo de 2024 entre las 4:00 p.m. y 8:00 p.m. con el propósito de preparar un registro de los votantes calificados del Distrito Escolar que tienen derecho a votar. Además, la inscripción se puede realizar cualquier día escolar de 8 a.m. a 3:00 p.m. en la Oficina del Secretario del Distrito hasta el 16 de mayo de 2024. El registro así preparado se archivará en la Oficina del Secretario de dicho Distrito Escolar en dicho Centro Comunitario de Herricks y estará abierto para inspección por cualquier votante calificado de dicho Distrito Escolar entre las 8:00 a.m. y las 3:00 p.m. en cada uno de los cinco días antes del día fijado para dicha votación, incluido el sábado de 9:00 a.m. a 11:00 a.m.; solamente con cita previa, excepto los domingos.
SE NOTIFICA ADEMÁS que una persona tendrá derecho a votar en la elección anual que sea:1)ciudadano de los Estados Unidos, 2) dieciocho años de edad o más, 3) un residente del DistritoEscolar por un período de treinta días inmediatamente anterior a la elección en la que él o ella ofrecevotar y 4) registrado para votar por dicha elección. Una persona estará registrada para votar si él o ellase ha registrado permanentemente con la Junta de Elecciones de Condado de Nassau o con la Junta deRegistro del Distrito Escolar. Solamente las personas, que están registradas, pueden votar.
SE NOTIFICA ADEMÁS que dicha Junta de Registro se reunirá durante el horario de votación y en dicha elección anual el 21 de mayo de 2024, en el Centro Comunitario Herricks con el propósito de preparar un registro para las reuniones escolares y las elecciones que se celebren con posterioridad a dicha elección anual. Ninguna persona tendrá derecho a que su nombre se incluya en el registro proporcionado en dicha reunión de la Junta de Registro a menos que él o ella es conocido o aprobado a satisfacción de dicha Junta de Registro para tener derecho a votar en las juntas escolares y en las elecciones para las que se prepara el registro.
SE NOTIFICA ADEMÁS que todas las proposiciones y preguntas, de los votantes calificados de el el distrito escolar que se deseen poner de en las máquinas de votación en dicha elección, se hará mediante peticiones suscritas por no menos de cien (100) votantes calificados del distrito y presentado en la Oficina del Secretario de el Distrito Escolar entre las 8:00 a.m. y las 3:00 p.m. y no más tarde de las 5:00 p.m. el lunes, 22 de abril de 2024 treinta (30) días antes de dicha elección, excepto en cuanto a proposiciones y preguntas requerido por la ley que se indique en el aviso publicado o fijado de la elección anual que se presentará a más tardar sesenta (60) días antes de dicha elección. Cuando el último día para radicar una petición cae en un sábado o domingo, la petición podrá presentarse el lunes siguiente al último día de presentación. Sobre la presentación de dicha petición, la Junta de Educación determinará mediante resolución si se coloca o no tales preguntas o proposiciones en las máquinas de votación. En el caso de que la Junta de Educación deba determinar que no es apropiado, factible o practico colocar tal proposición o proposiciones, pregunta o preguntas, en una máquina de votación, entonces tal proposición o proposiciones, pregunta o preguntas, como la La Junta de Educación puede resolver colocar ante los votantes en dicha elección será votada por el uso de boletas de papel.
SE NOTIFICA ADEMÁS que las solicitudes de papeletas de voto por correo anticipada y en ausencia para la elección de miembros del Junta de Educación, la adopción del presupuesto anual y la votación sobre cualquier otra proposición y pregunta como se puede colocar legalmente ante los votantes en la elección anual del distrito se puede solicitar en la Oficina del Secretario del Distrito. El Distrito debe recibir una solicitud para una boleta de voto por correo anticipada y en ausencia en la oficina del Secretario no antes de treinta (30) días antes de la Elección Anual. Una solicitud para una boleta de voto por correo anticipaday en ausencia debe ser recibido por el Secretario del Distrito por lo menos siete (7) días antes de la Elección Anual si la boleta es para ser enviada por correo al votante, o el día antes de la Votación/Elección del Presupuesto Anual si la boleta debe ser entregada personalmente al votante o a su agente designado. Al recibir una solicitud oportuna para un boleta de voto por correo anticipada y en ausencia enviada por correo, el secretario del distrito enviará la boleta por correo a la dirección designada en la solicitud a más tardar seis (6) días antes de la Elección Anual. Ninguna boleta de votantes por correo anticipada y ausentes debe ser escrutado, a menos que se haya recibido en la Oficina del Secretario del Distrito a más tardar a las 5:00 p.m. el día de la votación. Se facilitará una lista de todas las personas a las que se hayan entregado papeletas de voto por correo anticipada y en ausencia disponible para inspección en la Oficina del Secretario de dicho Distrito Escolar y estará abierto para inspección por cualquier votante calificado de dicho Distrito Escolar durante el horario regular de oficina entre las 8:00 a.m. y las 3:00 p.m. SE DA AVISO ADEMÁS de que los votantes militares que no están actualmente registrados pueden solicitar registrarse como votante calificado del distrito escolar. Votantes militares que son votantes calificados de la escuela distrito pueden presentar una solicitud para una boleta militar. Los votantes militares pueden designar una preferencia para recibir un registro de votante militar, una solicitud de boleta militar o una boleta militar por correo, facsímil transmisión o correo electrónico en su solicitud de tal registro, solicitud de boleta o boleta. Los formularios de registro de votantes militares y los formularios de solicitud de boleta militar deben recibirse en la Oficina del Secretario del Distrito a más tardar a las 5:00 p.m. el 25 de abril de 2024. Ninguna boleta sera escrutinada a menos que sea devuelto por correo o enpersona y (1) recibido en la Oficina del Secretario del Distrito antes del cierre de las urnas el día de las elecciones y que muestre una marca de cancelación del servicio postal de los Estados Unidos o de un servicio postal de un pais extranjero,o mostrando un endoso fechado de recibo por otra agencia de los Estados Unidos Gobierno; o (2) recibido por la Oficina del Secretario del Distrito a más tardar a las 5:00 p.m. el día de las elecciones y firmado y fechado por el votante militar y un testigo de ello, con una fechaque se asocia no ser más tarde que el día anterior a la elección.
FECHA: 7 de marzo de 2024
POR ORDEN DE LA JUNTA DE EDUCACIÓN
Nuevo Hyde Park, Nueva York
Lisa Rutkoske, Secretaria
Distrito Escolar De Herricks
Ciudad de North Hempstead
LEGAL NOTICE
INCORPORATED VILLAGE OF FLORAL PARK NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PROPOSED LOCAL LAW NO. 3 OF 2024
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that pursuant to Article 9 of the New York State Constitution, the provisions of the Code of the Incorporated Village of Floral Park and the Municipal Home Rule Law of the State of New York, as amended, a public hearing will be held in the Incorporated Village of Floral Park at the Village Hall, One Floral Boulevard, Floral Park on the 21st day of May, 2024 at 8:00 o’clock in the evening of that day, to consider enactment of a Local Law entitled: “A Local Law amending § 99-21.2 of the Code of the Incorporated Village of Floral Park to prohibit transient rentals of residential pools and yards.”
This Local Law shall take effect immediately upon its filing with the Secretary of State.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES
INCORPORATED VILLAGE OF FLORAL PARK, NY
JOSEPH O’GRADY VILLAGE CLERK
DATED: May 3, 2024
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that the Board of Trustees of the Incorporated Village of Floral Park, NY will hold a Public Hearing at Village Hall, One Floral Boulevard, Floral Park, NY on Tuesday, May 21, 2024, at 8:00 pm in relation to the following application: The application made by Michelle Ingkavet Cavanagh, 301 Brooklyn Avenue, New Hyde Park, NY 11040, tenant of 22 Verbena Avenue, Floral Park, NY 11001, is made in accordance with Chapter 99, Article III, Section 99-10 B (5), of the Zoning Ordinance of the Incorporated Village of Floral Park, NY, which states that a building in a B-1 District may be erected, altered or used for any purpose only when authorized by the Board of Trustees as a special use after a public hearing conducted by the Board of Trustees. This application seeks to use the premises for public assembly. The structure for which said Special Permit is applied is situated on the west side of Verbena Avenue 98.87’ north of Floral Boulevard and known as 22 Verbena Avenue, Section 32, Block 123, Lot(s) 13-14 on the Nassau County Land and Tax Map. A copy of the application is on file in the Office of the Village Clerk, One Floral Boulevard, Floral Park, NY and may be examined by any persons interested therein during business hours Monday through Friday inclusive, except legal holidays, from 8:30 am to 4:30 pm. NOW TAKE NOTICE that all parties in interest and citizens will be given the opportunity to be heard at the aforesaid time and place.
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES
INCORPORATED VILLAGE OF FLORAL PARK, NY
Joseph O’Grady Village Clerk
Dated: May 3, 2024
FEC complaint filed against Rep. D’Esposito
A constituent in the
Continued from Page 8
She alleged that in addition to the subsidized funding, D’Esposito used his campaign social media accounts to post official government communications and sent fundraising emails from his campaign committee asking for support in official government business.
Representatives from the FEC and the Office of Congressional Ethics said they were unable to confirm that the complaints were filed because it was confidential information.
This is not the first time D’Esposito has faced pushback on his fundraising efforts.
The FEC questioned D’Esposito on his campaign fundraising in 2022, when he first ran for Con-
gress, asking about excessive contributions, funds from unregistered committees and possible illegal donations from corporations, Newsday reported in 2023.
The representative’s campaign finance committee responded with amendments to fund designation, refunded contributions questioned by the FEC and said that the contributions from unregistered committees did not come from corporations, according to Newsday.
Helene is a retired teacher who called herself an “active Democrat” and said she has donated to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee in the past.
She said she contacted the DCCC to bring D’Esposito’s social media posts, which she claimed
are violations of the House ethics rules, to the committee’s attention.
She said D’Esposito posted about a Republican spending bill on X, formerly known as Twitter, and then posted a nearly identical tweet on his campaign account.
She said that D’Esposito sent an email discussing homeland security from his government email address and then asked for campaign donations in the same email.
“I really want to get [D’Esposito] out,” Helene said.
The former teacher said she supports Laura Gillen.
When Helene contacted members of the DCCC, the DCCC informed her about the alleged
$20,000 in subsidized funding, Helene said.
“Anthony D’Esposito has proven time and again that he caves to corruption and extremism, which is why voters across New York’s Fourth Congressional District will hold him accountable this November,” DCCC Spokesperson Ellie Dougherty told Blank Slate Media in a statement.
The 4th Congressional District race is one of the top competitive congressional races in the country, according to Cook Political Report ratings.
The race is a rematch between D’Esposito and Laura Gillen, a former Hempstead town supervisor and Democrat who lost to D’Esposito in 2022.
Valley Stream boy 1st in NY to receive treatment
Zynteglo is a one-time treatment for patients with beta-thalassemia, which is a blood disease caused by genetic mutations. These genetic mutations cause hemoglobin production to be reduced or wholly absent.
Hemoglobin is a protein in red
blood cells that contains iron and transports oxygen, according to Mount Sinai Hospital. Low hemoglobin levels can indicate health conditions like anemia, leukemia and other cancers, kidney disease, chronic illness and so on, according to Mount Sinai Hospital.
Patients with the rare condition live with severe anemia and a lifelong dependence on weekly blood cell transfusions, according to Cohen. Only about 200,000 patients around the world with thalassemia are registered as receiving regular treatment, according to Thalassemia International Foundation.
But blood transfusions are not a permanent solution and can lead to other complications, including an increased risk of long-term illness and death due to an overload of iron in the blood, according to Dr. Jon Fish, head of stem cell transplants, cell therapy and pediatric hematology at Cohen.
“Patients living with beta-thalassemia who would traditionally require regular transfusion faced an increased risk of long-term illness and death,” Dr. Fish said in a statement. “That’s why the ability to treat our patients with Zynteglo represents a milestone in the care and treatment of our patients.”
• Great Neck News
• Williston Times
• New Hyde Park Herald Courier
NYU Langone performs 1st heart, kidney treatment
• Manhasset Times
• Roslyn Times
Continued from Page 14
Then it was time for a xenotransplant, which is a transplant of an organ between different species. Pisano received a genetically altered pig kidney, which was key to avoiding the pitfalls of her chronic health conditions. While her body develops high levels of antibodies against human tissue, the same is not the case for tissue from another species like pig.
Dr. Nader Moazami is chief of the heart and lung transplant division at NYU Langone and one of the surgeons who performed Pisano’s heart pump surgery.
“Without the possibility of a kidney transplant, she would not have been eligible as a candidate for an LVAD due to the high mortality in patients on dialysis with heart pumps,” Moazami said in a statement. “This unique approach is the first time in the world that LVAD surgery has been done on a dialysis patient with a subsequent plan to transplant a kidney. The measure for success is a chance at a better quality of life and to give Lisa more time to spend with her family.”
The landmark procedure required clearance from the NYU Langone institutional review board and approval by the FDA through its Expanded Access Program, which is meant for patients with a life-threatening
condition.
The surgeries’ success could have powerful future outcomes, since many patients today are stuck on the waitlist for organ transplants. Nearly 104,000 people are currently on the transplant waiting list, according to NYU Langone, and 89,360 of those patients are in need of a kidney.
• Port Washington Times
• Garden City News
While nearly 808,000 people in the United States have endstage kidney disease like Pisano, only about 27,000 patients were able to receive a kidney transplant last year, according to NYU Langone.
Dr. Robert Montgomery led the transplant surgery. He is chair of the Surgery Department, director of the NYU Langone Transplant Institute and the H. Leon Pachter professor of surgery.
“By using pigs with a single genetic modification, we can better understand the role one key stable change in the genome can have in making xenotransplantation a viable alternative,” Montgomery said in a statement. “Since these pigs can be bred and do not require cloning like more-complex gene edits, this is a sustainable, scalable solution to the organ shortage. If we want to start saving more lives quickly, using fewer modifications and medications will be the answer.”
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F.P. college student in coma after hit-and-run
Continued from Page 1
a member of our community is seriously injured – but especially so near the end of the semester.”
Residential life staff at the university have been in contact with Kropf’s roommates and counseling and psychological services are avail-
able for all students, Carleo-Evangelist said.
The university is grateful for the police department’s efforts and urges anyone with information on the incident to step forward, CarleoEvangelist said.
The Long Island student is a Flo-
ral Park Memorial High graduate.
“Due to the privacy of the family, the district has no comment, but Alexa and her family have all of our support and positive affirmations in her recovery,” Sewanhaka Interim Superintendent Thomas Dolan said in a statement.
An 18-year-old college student from Floral Park native was severely injured in a hit-and-run accident Saturday morning, according to Albany police.
Herricks ranked in top 10 of LI high schools
Continued from Page 2
Herricks High School followed closely behind, placing No. 54 in the NY Metro Area, No. 41 in the state and No. 317 nationwide, earning an overall score of 98.21/100.
“We take pride in the fact that we are in the top 50 schools in New York State,” Herricks School District Trustee
Brian Hassan said.
North Shore High School placed No. 78 in the NY Metro Area, No. 57 in New York State. It also ranked No. 269 in STEM high schools nationwide and No. 456 in the national rankings, with an overall score of 97.42/100.
Next up, Roslyn High School came in at No. 82 in the NY Metro Area,
No. 61 in New York State and No. 493 in the nationwide rankings, scoring 97.21/100 overall.
Paul D. Schreiber Senior High School in Port Washington ranked closely behind, placing No. 105 in the metro area, No. 78 in the state and No. 705 in the national rankings. It earned an overall score of 96.01/100.
Floral Park Memorial High School ranks No. 280 in the NY Metro Area, No. 241 in New York State and No. 2,560 nationwide, with an overall score of 85.5/100.
Similarly, Mineola High School ranks at No. 297 in the metro area, No. 256 in the state and No. 2,720 nationwide, scoring 84.59/100.
Sewanhaka High School did not receive an award badge, ranking No. 600 in the metro area, No. 679 in the state and No. 8,546 in the national rankings. Its overall score was 51.59/100, due to low participation rates for the AP Exam, low AP Exam scores and poor proficiency in Mathematics and Science.
Dems call sheriff program ‘flagrantly illegal’
Continued from Page 2
The caucus states in their letter that the power to appoint special deputy sheriffs is only bestowed upon the sheriff and only during designated special emergencies, as outlined under county and general municipal law.
Blakeman said the volunteer deputy sheriffs would only be deputized during a declared emergency, including political protests that become riots.
While the county executive can declare an emergency, the minority caucus cites general municipal law that states emergencies can only be declared after first notifying the governor. The governor is also able to
deny any emergency declaration.
They state the governor’s veto power on declared emergencies exists to “safeguard against potential abuses of power.”
“There is no special emergency presently in effect and you have sent no communication to the Governor to commence the declaration of one,” the letter states. “Nor do you have the power, as you appear to be claiming, to “provisionally” assemble a list of special deputies in the absence of a duly declared emergency, as no such authority is granted to local sheriffs under the law. It is also an obvious waste of the County’s resources to do so.”
The caucus also expressed disdain for the criteria to apply for the program, saying it relies mostly upon the applicant’s possession of a firearm license.
They say this is also a violation of the law, which requires that emergency special deputy sheriffs be pulled from active law enforcement personnel like neighboring county deputy sheriffs.
The general municipal law states that sheriffs may request from other sheriffs “such number of their deputy sheriffs as may be available…. and to deputize as emergency special deputy sheriffs of his county any or all personnel so supplied by the sheriff of
any other county.”
“The law does not authorize or contemplate the deputization of unqualified civilians,” the letter states.
The minority caucus also said the compensation for the special deputies is illegal.
The advertisement soliciting applicants states the emergency special deputy sheriffs would be paid $150 a day. The minority caucus referenced county legislation that requires such individuals to be paid no more than $3 an hour, unless a different compensation amount is approved by the Legislature.
The compensation of the special deputy sheriffs did not face the legis-
lature for a vote of approval.
In an April 12 letter from Bynoe, a member of the legislature’s Public Safety Committee, she said there were lapses of information that inhibited the public and the legislature’s ability to fully understand the program. The minority caucus said the concerns in her letter have not been addressed yet.
“You are arrogating to yourself power you do not have to advance an inflammatory and illegal political stunt that wastes time, money, and attention that should be devoted to our County’s real issues and concerns,” the letter states. “We call on you to abandon it immediately.”
Two vie for one seat on Herricks ed board
“As a physician from Northwell, I am uniquely poised to help facilitate [the partnership between Northwell and Herricks],” Quraishi said. “The mental health needs of our students is also a very, very big concern and I want to make sure we’re providing all the resources that we can to help our kids be the best that they can be.”
If elected, the lifelong Nassau County resident said her goals include improving the safety and security of students with additional security guards, improving cybersecurity efforts and improving the district’s partnership with Northwell.
Quraishi is no stranger to the district. She has lived in the Herricks district for nearly 40 years and has been in her current Roslyn home for five years. She has three children in the Herricks district: one in elementary school, one in middle school and one in high school.
“I had such an amazing experience in Herricks that I wanted my children to have the same opportunities, which is why I chose to live in the district,” Quraishi said.
The physician also works as an assistant professor at the Hofstra School of Medicine.
“I educate on a daily basis. I teach residents and medical students at my practice and I also teach at the medical school at the anatomy lab, so for me, educating our youngsters is the most important job that we have as a society and it’s definitely my most favorite part of my job,” Quraishi said.
She said her biggest concern for the district is growing enrollment, a financial stressor that she would hope to combat by maximizing state aid and federal grants.
Quraishi said she supports the board’s adopted 2024-2025 budget and believes the board is doing a good job of handling costs associated with child sex abuse lawsuits.
Lo is running against Quraishi for a seat on the board. He said he thinks the board is doing a good job of handling lawsuit costs and would like to work with board members on this issue.
Lo has been a Williston Park resident for six years. While Lo works as a financial adviser, his wife owns a coffee shop in Williston Park where he said local parents often come in and speak about their experience as district parents. The couple have two young children in the Herricks district.
“We do have a lot of vocal parents that come in to kind of talk about their experiences for their children—we do hear a lot of different stories,” Lo said.
If elected, his goals include improving school facilities, especially at the middle school, replacing outdated sports uniforms, lending his financial background to budget conversations, improving communication efforts between the board and district parents and better supporting district-wide sports and arts programs. He said he wants to act as a conduit for these district parents and their concerns.
“I do have two very young children in the district so we are going to have a number of years here,” Lo said. “Being in a position that we do have this establishment within the community, it allows us to really listen to a lot of the local parents all around, not just our elementary school, but elsewhere. The middle and high school.”
Lo said some of his biggest concerns for the district include CVA costs and student access to social media. He said he worries about cyberbullying and the spread of misinformation online among students.
“I think residents should vote for me because I am here for the long haul,” Lo said. “I want to improve the experience for our students and, of course, hopefully the teachers as well.”
Efforts to reach Surendra Gupta, Ravinder S. Ratra and Russell M. Stuart were unavailing.
An issue top of mind for candidates is the large budget-to-budget increase included in the proposed budget.
Herricks School District board members adopted a proposed 2024-2025 budget of $141,710,364, which represents a 5.2% increase from the 2023-2024 budget of $134,719,970.
The proposed tax levy increase is 2.38%, which is within the state tax cap. The average tax levy over the past seven years in the district was 1.78%, Superintendent Tony Sinanis said.
Herricks is set to receive a larger increase in
state aid than initially proposed, from 6.58% to 8.32%, according to the state budget adopted nearly three weeks late Saturday. It is unclear how the new state budget will affect the current adopted budget.
Board members said the larger-than-usual budget-to-budget increase was due in part to the cost of settling child sex abuse claims against the district filed under the Child Victims Act. The district has paid $1.1 million to settle four of the 21 claims thus far.
Residents are set to vote on the budget and elect two trustees on May 21 from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. at the Herricks Community Center at 999 Herricks Rd., New Hyde Park.
Knitting together two decades in heart of Roslyn
intimidating sight – a feeling that they are disturbing some event.
But this is what Knit is, a gathering place for knitters and crocheters of all skills and walks of life, and Lavenhar assures newcomers they are never interrupting and are more than welcome to grab a seat as well.
“It’s just people here hanging out,” Lavenhar said. “It’s just people who come in and meet each other and make friendships around the table who would never meet any other way.”
Community is an integral aspect of Knit’s business model, providing a welcoming space for individuals to not only purchase yarn but seek out guidance and assistance in the proj-
ects they then use the yarn for.
“You walk in the door and people say hello to you,” Lavenhar said. “That’s a big thing to me.”
For anyone who purchases their yarn from Knit, Lavenhar said they are welcome to come into the store at any time to seek help on their knitting and crochet projects – free of charge.
“Unless you need to learn a new technique, then we’re going to just hold your hand throughout the project,” Lavenhar said.
With a growing knitting and crocheting trend and individuals new to the craft, Lavenhar invites customers to join them around the large craft table in the center of the store. This is where they can seek help and inspira -
tion or find a friendly person to chat with as they knit away.
Knit’s table is not just a place to seek help as you frantically try to fix a mistake, but also a place where a community of knitters and crocheters is fostered.
“I got a lovely card from one of my customers where she said she learned to be a better knitter and a better person by sitting around my table,” Lavenhar said.
But while every customer is welcomed into the store the moment they step foot inside, Lavenhar said it is also important not to be too pushy and allow the crafters to browse, shop and ask for help at their leisure.
To reach the 20-year milestone, Lavenhar said some of her success is just good ol’ luck.
But it’s staying power also can be traced to Lavenhar’s decision to cater to the customer base and foster a community that draws in customers time and time again.
Reaching its 20th anniversary is a feat, Lavenhar said, and she anticipates keeping it going until she no longer can.
While Knit has reached success, Lavenhar said its growth is not stopping here.
As new people take up the craft of knitting and crocheting, Lavenhar said she is seeking to continue bringing in new customers and offering classes that introduce newcomers to the craft.
“There’s always a new crop,” Lavenhar said. “I just want to continue to grow my community, grow my knitters, teach new people.”
D’Esposito calls for Columbia president’s resignation
Continued from Page 3
“The university fully believes in the importance of fostering an environment where students and community members have the freedom to peacefully express themselves,” an Adelphi spokesperson told News12.
Efforts to reach Adelphi Students for Justice in Palestine were unavailing.
Columbia University faculty and students have staged protests in support of Palestinians amid the Israel-Hamas war for weeks on the college campus.
Dozens of students supporting Palestinians first staged a “Gaza Solidarity Encampment” on the campus April 17, pitching tents and occupying the center of campus.
Shafik appeared before a congressional committee that same day to condemn antisemitism and rebut claims that the university was a breeding ground for hate. Now, nearly two weeks later, student protesters have occupied a building at the university, breaking through windows to gain entry very early Tuesday.
“These terror sympathizers will destroy Columbia University until leadership steps up,” D’Esposito wrote in a Facebook post with a video of protestors smashing windows. “Shafik’s out of her depth – resign.”
Columbia protesters referenced the anti-Vietnam War protests of 1968, when students occupied the same building, according to NBC News.
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Joe O’Grady, Village Clerk / Inc. Village of Floral Park
Dated: (3X) 4/19/24, 4/26/24, 5/3/24
A FAMILY TRADITION
Mineola senior Jack McCormack leads Mustangs with scoring
BY MICHAEL J. LEWISThe garage door at the McCormack house in Mineola has taken its lumps over the years, of that there is no doubt.
It’s taken its welts, its crunches, it’s dents: you name it, this covering that for most people houses old lawn furniture and toys has been positively destroyed by the three boys of the family.
Between Peter, now age 25, and Michael, 21, and youngest boy Jack, 18, the garage has seen thousands upon thousands of lacrosse balls whacked at it, in pursuit of excellence in this most Long Island of sports.
“Our backyard was destroyed too, but mostly the garage door, just so many holes in it,” Jack McCormack said, with a knowing laugh. “We just all loved to play so much, that it was all we wanted to do.”
All that passing, shooting and garage-door crunching has worked out OK for the McCormacks; Peter played at SUNY-Oneonta, while Michael is currently on the Nassau Community College team.
And Jack, well, he might be the best goal-scorer of them all. Starring at Mineola High School like his siblings, McCormack is finishing off a fine career in style during his senior season.
After pouring in 48 goals in 2023, McCormack has roared to a fantastic start this spring. In his first nine games the attack has scored 34 goals and added 15 assists as Mineola got off to a 7-2 start.
All that has led to McCormack earning a scholarship to play close to home, at Division I St. John’s next year.
“He’s just a natural, plus he’s been playing lacrosse since he could walk,” Mustangs coach Jim Durso said. “His stick skills, his vision, it’s all elite, and he’s really helping us a lot.”
McCormack is quick to give his teammates like Rusty Carr and Joe O’Connell credit for peeling defenders off him with their dangerous shots, and said that following his brothers’ example has always paid off.
“Just watching all their games and seeing how hard they worked, and how dedicated they were, made a difference for me,” he said. “And all those hours practicing, and the time spent in the PAL (league) here as a kid, helped me a ton.”
McCormack has been a four-year varsity starter for Mineola, and Durso said he recognized early on that the
BY LEAH DESENAkid was more than just a lacrosse legacy.
“He’s just always been a kid who listened to his coaches and immediately fixed whatever was wrong,” Durso said. “And every day he’s come to practice with a smile on his face.”
McCormack is marked whether he’s playing midfield or attack, and of course the better teams always have No.1 for Mineola in their sights.
But this year he netted a pair of goals against both Floral Park and Lyn-
brook, two of the top opponents Mineola faces.
“You just try to score and make (the opponents) quiet, because they try to chirp me a lot,” McCormack said. “I don’t talk much, I just try to play my game.”
McCormack, also the quarterback for Mineola’s football team last fall, said he looked at several different schools to continue his lacrosse career but really bonded with Justin Terri, the head coach at St. John’s. The Red
Storm compete in the Big East Conference.
“Once I met him I knew I wanted to play for him,” McCormack said. “The chance to play Division I lacrosse and be close to home was something I really wanted.”
Durso said McCormack will likely need to bulk up to be effective in college, adding 10-15 pounds of muscle, but feels his star can handle the challenge.
For the rest of this season, McCor-
mack, who now has more than 200 points in his career, is hoping the Mustangs can go on a deep playoff run in Class B.
The words of Kid Cudi run through his head before each game, and McCormack is hoping he’ll be getting psyched up well into May this year.
“I think we’re going to go deep,” McCormack said. “We’ve got a lot of experienced players and I know I’m really motivated to finish my career here strong.”
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