GUIDE TO MINEOLA STREET FAIR
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The North Hempstead Board of Ethics unanimously determined Wednesday afternoon there is no conflict of interest over Council Member Mariann Dalimonte being a member of the town board and Port Washington Business Improvement District.
After convening on the matter in executive session Wednesday afternoon, board Chairman Joseph Sciame read into the record a letter that was sent to Dave Franklin, Dalimonte’s Republican opponent for the town’s Councilmanic District 6, who filed an ethics complaint over Dalimonte’s role in the town’s previous negotiations for the acquisition of Sunset Park in Port Washington.
“The board is of the opinion that the situation presented in your letter does not present a conflict of interest,” Sciame read.
Franklin accused Dalimonte of making it clear “that she has been taking an active role in the town’s ongoing negotiations for the property” referring to Sunset Park, a 5.2-acre park owned by the Port Washington Water Pollution Control District, during the Sept. 5 North Hempstead Town Board meeting.
North Hempstead was previously
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in talks with the water pollution control district over transferring the park, which is currently off as of now, Dalimonte told Blank Slate Media.
Sciame said Dalimonte’s role with the Business Improvement District, which she was appointed to by the town, is inextricably linked with her role as a council member and her predecessors–Fred Pollack and Dina DiGiorgio–also sat on the Business Improvement District, among other things.
Dalimonte is one of 11 officers of the Business Improvement District, which holds a lease for their office with the Port Washington Chamber of Commerce, which is a tenant of the water pollution control district. The Business Improvement District spoke with the town regarding a potential new lease, something Dalimonte said multiple times she recused herself from.
The board said Wednesday it is not mandatory for Dalimonte to recuse herself.
Dalimonte said in a statement the complaint was a political stunt from Franklin, whom she did not mention by name, and that she is committed to providing transparency.
“I’ve always been committed to serving our community with integrity,
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Port Washington’s 120-year-old restaurant, Louie’s Prime Steak and Seafood, is seeking to expand to bolster its business, but many neighboring residents oppose the plan due to what they contend will be negative effects on the surrounding area.
Louie’s, which sits on the waterfront, was opened in 1905 by Louis Zwerlein. The Zwerlein family sold the restaurant in 2002
In 2022 Louie’s was bought by
partners Jerry Sbarro, the owner of Rothmann’s Steakhouse in East Norwich and six Matteo’s Italian restaurants, and Jorge Madruga, who are the new owners of the restaurant that will remain as Louie’s.
With the restaurant now managed by the Rothman’s Restaurant Group, the owners are looking to expand and have applied for a site plan that requires variances to be granted by the town.
The application was reviewed during the Town of North Hemp-
stead’s Board of Zoning Appeals meeting Wednesday afternoon, the second appearance before the board. The board postponed a decision on the application in order to further review comments submitted by the public.
The classic steak and seafood restaurant applied for four variances, which would also legalize the restaurant’s filled-in deck. The variances are for the building to exceed the permitted height, construct the
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could escape heartache for an afternoon.
Some of the kids in Tuesday’s Children were invited to stand on the feld after former President George W. Bush threw out the frst pitch at the World Series on Oct. 30, 2001, at Yankee Stadium.
“If she could look at her child and see her child smiling, then she would know things are going to be OK,” recalled Kathy Murphy, senior program director at Tuesday’s Children, about a mother at a game.
In the frst few years of operation, the main service provided was mentorship. Although a parent could never be replaced, having a certifed mentor step in and come to the child’s school events or going out and doing other activities made the loss more manageable.
Many of those lost on the North Shore during 9/11 were communitydriven individuals, Murphy noted.
“It always struck me that all of these mostly men who perished that day were like the Little League coaches, the soccer coaches. I mean they were involved, guys. They were young families,” she said.
After the attack, a number of babies were born in total to women without a spouse, and while these children have now grown up, the ripple efect of the event has not stopped.
Only once has the annual Pride in Port celebration been canceled due to weather, but it will be forced to do so a second time due to forecasted rain Saturday – the day of the planned festivities.
The Pride in Port Committee said in a statement that they decided Friday morning to cancel all events except the Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony.
All canceled events will not be rescheduled.
The Nassau County Ofce of Emergency Management will be monitoring Potential Tropical Cyclone Sixteen, which is expected to hit the North Shore in the early hours of Saturday morning. The storm is forecasted to bring heavy rainfall, strong wind gusts, minor coastal fooding and rough surf/rip currents.
The athletic events and the Schreiber High School football game against Hempstead High School will still be held Friday.
Girls varsity soccer will begin playing at 4 p.m., followed by a boys varsity soccer game at 7 p.m.
Girls tennis will also compete at 5 p.m. along with boys volleyball
at 6:45 p.m.
Festivities kicked of Thursday night with a girls volleyball game at 6:45 p.m. against Plainview-Old Bethpage JFK High School. The Vikings fell to the Hawks 3-0.
Friday celebrations will continue with a traditional Pride in Port pep rally at 2 p.m. on the Schreiber High School turf feld.
The Hall of Fame Induction ceremony will begin at 9 a.m. Saturday, with breakfast served in the lobby 30 minutes before it begins.
This year’s inductees are Patrick Badolato (Class of 1980), Patrick Doyle (Class of 1982), Jef Froccaro (Class of 2009), John “Jack” Gibbons (Class of 1960), Stephanie Joannon (for service, 1979-2022) and Angela Matinale (Class of 2007).
Of the canceled events Saturday are the Pride in Port parade, which was to feature the Nicholas Center Navigators as its grand marshals.
Following the parade was a Family Fun Day on the feld inside the track, which has also been canceled.
Pride in Port will return next year for its 35th annual celebration.
BY KARINA KOVACIn the wake of the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, America was left grappling with the profound loss of life that continues today. Among those affected were countless children, many of whom were an average of 8 years old when they lost a parent in the attack. In the days following, unclaimed cars in train station parking lots and fowers piled up by their front doors served as a reminder of those left behind.
Friends and families attending
numerous funerals knew they needed to act after seeing the direct impact of 9/11 on children. Terry Sears, one of the founding members of Tuesday’s Children, a Manhasset-based organization to assist those whose lives have been changed by terrorism, military confict or mass violence, started to act in small ways.
During the early days of the organization 22 years ago, members received tickets to major sporting events to give out to families. These games were the frst attempt to restore a sense of normalcy to the families, who
Listening to the concerns of these children led to the development of Tuesday’s Children programs like youth mentoring. These mentors, who undergo extensive training, can never replace a lost parent, but can bond with the children through activities so they’re not lonely. They also check in on schoolwork and, during the COVID-19 pandemic, they played online games together.
“We made a commitment, when the organization frst opened its doors, to see every child through to adulthood,” Murphy said.
With 3,051 children left behind on 9/11, Tuesday’s Children has built a database that has assisted 50,000 people worldwide across 40 countries. Today, it is among the handful of organizations that remain dedicated to Continued on Page 45
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Started in the wake of 9/11, continues to help thousandsPHOTO COURTESY OF THE PORT WASHINGTON SCHOOL DISTRICT Cheerleaders at Friday’s Pride in Port 2022 Pep Rally. PHOTO BY KARINA KOVAC Kathy Murphy, senior program director at Tuesday’s Children, shows off the many children who’ve been helped by the organization.
The Herricks School District and Nassau County District Attorney’s Office are investigating an incident regarding a former teacher who was removed from the district after a “disturbing and upsetting” video surfaced online.
Residents expressed concern during the Thursday night board of education meeting over the well-being of students and the next steps for the jazz band, which parents said the removed teacher was involved with.
Superintendent Tony Sinanis said the district was informed after 9 p.m. Tuesday night of a video circulating online that allegedly featured a Herricks teacher.
“The following morning, we informed legal authorities and continued investigating in an effort to ensure the safety of our students,” Sinanis said in a statement Thursday night and in an email to the district. “We also took steps to ensure that our students and staff were supported and had access to counselors if necessary.”
Sinanis said the teacher is no longer employed by the district. The Nassau County District Attorney’s office is also investigating the matter with their law enforcement partners, officials confirmed to Blank Slate Media.
“I moved to this district specifically for the music program,” said Linda, the mother of an eighth-grade trombone player. “For this to happen now was just heartbreaking and shocking.”
Sinanis told the mother and other parents who inquired that the district offers counseling
in both group and individual settings.
Board of Education President James Gounaris said one person does not make the entire district win or lose, commending the students and parents who reported the incident to the district.
“We thank you for that, because without them we may not have known until the day af-
ter or the day after that,” Gounaris said. “It’s a testimony to the entire family unit in this district and also the staff members who reported it.”
“No one stands for this, no one thinks it’s tolerable,” Gounaris said.
Catalin Wong, a senior at Herricks High School, said she and her friends were shocked
by the news and asked to board about the process of replacing the teacher, who parents said was involved in the jazz band.
“To every degree possible there will be a minimal disruption to the instructional program associated with the individual who is no longer employed by the district,” Sinanis said.
Gounaris said in a statement the district is very limited in terms of what information can be shared due to the incident being a personnel matter. The removed teacher’s identity was not disclosed by the district Thursday night.
According to Thursday night’s agenda, the only resignation the district approved in its personnel report that was effective Tuesday night on Sept. 19 was Geoffrey Taylor, a music teacher assigned to Herricks High School.
On Aug. 19, a YouTube video was posted by the channel “Omma” whose author said he posed as a 15-year-old girl under a fake profile on the social media app Discord and chatted with adults.
“Omma”, otherwise known as 19-year-old Kaizer Kinsley, said in the video he uses artificial intelligence to disclose the identities of adults who send their pictures to him in what he called “predator fishing.”
In the video, which has 1.2 million views on YouTube, a man under the name “Blue” with a trumpet as his profile picture tells Kinsley, who is posing as a 15-year-old female, that he is a 37-year-old male and lives in Queens.
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The New York attorney general has warned NY Citizens Audit to cease any “voter deception and intimidation” amid allegations the Newburghbased group has gone door-to-door, falsely claiming to be election workers and wrongly accusing voters of felony election fraud.
Attorney General Letitia James’s ofce issued an immediate cease-anddesist letter to the organization and instructed the group to provide information about any third parties working with them as well as details about the training of their representatives by Oct. 2.
The letter was sent by Lindsay McKenzie, chief of the Voting Rights Section at the state AG ofce.
McKenzie said that if these allegations were proven true, they would constitute unlawful voter deception. She also said her ofce would use every available tool at its disposal to protect New York voters against fraud.
Marly Hornik, NYCA executive director, said in a statement Monday that the non-proft frst learned of the order through a press inquiry. She claimed the press had been notifed before the group and that the allegations in the order were “unsubstanti-
ated,” “strange” and “puzzling.” A call to the AG’s ofce about the NYCA statement went unanswered.
“The whole thing has developed from a purposeful Board of Elections attempt to create public hysteria
about unidentifed canvassers,” Hornik said in the release, “Then the board started naming NYCA as “public law
breaker No. 1, then the press beat the drum with nothing but unsupported allegations, and next thing we know the NY attorney general is involved and naming NYCA.”
She added, “It all sounds like a Soviet-era propaganda move to discredit and then attack NYCA, calculated to stop the news of serious anomalies in the NY voter rolls discovered during our review of ofcial data.”
The attorney general’s order has underscored the ongoing concerns about voter deception and intimidation in New York State and beyond. On Sept. 1, the state Board of Elections issued a statewide warning about reports of individuals impersonating election ofcials in various counties, including Sufolk.
The canvass imposters are accused of approaching voters and saying they have carried out illegal activities because of discrepancies found in their voter registrations. Similar incidents were reported in at least six other states.
NYCA claims it has been unable to meet with the state Board of Elections over the last two years over the legality of election conduct in 2020 and 2022. The group said it has ofered to give the extracts from Continued on Page 45
The Lakeville Estates Civic Association held the first meet and greet for candidates running in the Town of North Hempstead and Nassau County Legislature Wednesday night in North New Hyde Park.
Republican Supervisor Jennifer DeSena and Democrat challenger Jon Kaiman, who was supervisor from 2004 to 2013, each answered questions posted by civic members related to their resumes, ideas for the town and issues pertaining to the association specifically.
The two candidates for the county’s 10th Legislative District, incumbent Mazi Melesa Pilip, a Republican, and Democrat challenger Weihua Yang also gave brief introductions on their backgrounds and platforms to civic members at the Manhasset-Lakeville Fire Department Company No. 5 firehouse.
The first question for DeSena and Kaiman referred to their times as supervisors. DeSena, who was elected in 2021, was asked about possibly taking credit for the 5% tax cut the sevenmember town board, which has a majority of four Democrats, approved for this year’s budget after she submitted a tentative budget that had a 2.1% tax raise.
DeSena said she discovered large town reserves after submitting her tentative budget and resubmitted a new budget proposal with an 11% tax cut, which was not passed. The supervisor said it’s part of the process in the town board that once her tentative budget is submitted, the board members discuss and make amendments.
“It was a proud moment for all of us to offer that vote and that we now have that for our residents,” DeSena said.
Kaiman said a lot of people are responsible for solving problems in government and that if there are limited things to talk about, officials may try to take credit.
“I understand there is a divide in this town board, but we need to respect everybody when you achieve things or get results,” Kaiman said. “I think we would all be better off and probably have a friendlier environment.”
Kaiman was asked about claims against him that he raised taxes every year as supervisor, taxes increased 44% during his term, he voted himself a 33% raise and approved a $31 million tax hike as the chairman of the Nassau Interim Finance Authority.
Kaiman said he did not raise taxes every year and in certain years the tax raises amounted to $3.50 and $7.50 increases for the average household. As for his role with NIFA, Kaiman said it was not the authority’s responsibility to set the budget but to make sure it was balanced and the numbers added up.
“The reality is taxes went up maybe $30 or $40 in the town fund over the 10 years I was there,” Kaiman said. “So it sounds really bad when you read it in their campaign mail. but the impact to the voters and taxpayers was minimal.”
DeSena said the town could have done better and returned more money to the taxpayers during Kaiman’s time as supervisor.
Continued on Page 46
A new law was adopted Tuesday night by the Sands Point Board of Trustees that established time restrictions for subdivision applications in the village.
Mayor Peter Forman said that if an individual applies for a subdivision, and they don’t do anything on it for “years and years,” the application will now expire.
“This way someone can’t come back 18
years later,” Forman said.
Village attorney Michael Sahn said this law’s established time periods are consistent with New York State village law.
Sahn said the law will take effect upon filing with the Secretary of State, within a week.
The village’s public hearing for the law also included 13 other proposed laws, all amending different chapters within the village’s code, but none were adopted Tuesday night.
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The International Cricket Council Men’s T20 World Cup 2024 will be arriving in Nassau County’s Eisenhower Park, the first time the United States will host the tournament.
“Nassau County is excited to partner with the ICC to host the Men’s T20 World Cup, one of the most popular sporting events in the world. With more than one billion fans worldwide, this event will attract fans from all around the world to Eisenhower Park,” Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman said in a release.
A 34,000-seat modular stadium will be constructed in the park, conditional on the award of a required permit next month, the council said. Modular stadiums are cost-eff ective, semi-permanent structures that can be expanded or relocated.
In addition to Nassau County, venues in Grand Prairie in Dallas and Florida’s Broward County will also be hosting cups.
“We’re delighted to announce the three USA venues that will host part of the biggest ICC Men’s T20 World Cup ever staged, with 20 teams competing for the trophy,”
ICC Chief Executive Geoff Allardice said in a release. “The USA is a strategically important market and these venues give us an excellent opportunity to make a statement in the world’s biggest sport market.”
Nassau County won the bid over New York City, which proposed hosting the cricket tournament in Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx. The city’s bid was struck down after many local leaders and residents
rallied in opposition to sacrificing a public spot for a private tournament.
The United States and the West Indies were established in November 2021 as co-hosts of the global
tournament.
The International Cricket Council said the decision on the United States locations was made after an extensive evaluation of many possible venues.
“We explored a number of potential venue options in the country, and we were hugely encouraged by the enthusiasm the event generated amongst prospective hosts, reinforcing the growing awareness around cricket’s massive fanbase and its power to unite diverse communities,” Allardice said.
Allardice said the tournament will be the largest T20 World Cup in history.
He added that the tournament will be able to unite diverse communities growing in the United States and draw in cricket’s global fanbase. Blakeman echoed these same sentiments.
“Whether it be PGA events, record-breaking concerts in our parks or the annual Belmont Stakes, we are no stranger to hosting largescale events on the world stage,” Blakeman said. “I look forward to bringing our many diverse communities together to watch some of the best cricket in the world right here in Nassau County.”
Queens native and CEO Austin Cheng has announced his bid for New York’s 3rd Congressional District on the Democratic Party Line.
Cheng, of Old Westbury, joins an already crowded group running to replace George Santos–who is currently facing a federal indictment–which includes at least 14 candidates trying to oust the controversial and duplicitous congressman.
Cheng is the only Asian-American candidate in the race. Asians represent 17.2% of the district, according to Data USA.
“My parents immigrated to this country and worked to the bone to give my sister and me a better life– they found their American Dream in New York, and they passed that dream onto us,” Cheng said in a statement. “I am running for Congress in the district where I was born and raised to protect that Dream, and ensure that regardless of race, religion, ethnicity, gender, or sexual orientation, if you work hard you can achieve that Dream.
The candidate said he will return to the district open, honest and respectful governing that has been overlooked recently.
Since announcing his run, Cheng has put $500,000 of his own money into his campaign, which has raised over $100,000
Professionally, Cheng is the CEO of Gramercy Surgery Center, an independent outpatient surgery center started by his family he took over in 2019 after his mother became ill.
Prior to his work with Gramercy, Cheng served on active duty with the United States Army as a judge advocate criminal prosecutor and was a special assistant U.S. attorney and criminal defense attorney.
Peter Tu, founder of the Flushing-based Kissena Democratic Club, said Cheng has the experience needed to represent the district.
“Unlike our past and present representatives, Austin has always led by example. He has been giving back to our country and community since his years in the Army and his tenure as a Special Assistant U.S. Attorney, and he will use his legal and military experience to keep New York families safe,” Tu said in a statement. “Today as a small business leader, he understands the strain of infation faced by small business owners and their families in Long Island and Queens. In Congress, Austin will advocate for tax reforms and federal support for housing and healthcare initiatives that beneft our region, ensuring that Queens and Long Island residents aren’t left behind.”
Cheng received a bachelor’s from Union College in Schenectady before graduating from Brooklyn Law School and getting a master’s in health administration from Cornell University.
The Lakeville Estates Civic Association held the frst meet and greet for candidates running in the Town of North Hempstead and Nassau County Legislature Wednesday night in North New Hyde Park.
Republican Supervisor Jennifer DeSena and Democrat challenger Jon Kaiman, who was supervisor from 2004 to 2013, each answered questions posted by civic members related to their resumes, ideas for the town and issues pertaining to the association specifcally.
The two candidates for the county’s 10th Legislative District, incumbent Mazi Melesa Pilip, a Republican, and Democrat challenger Weihua Yang also gave brief introductions on their backgrounds and platforms to civic members at the Manhasset-Lakeville Fire Department Company No. 5 frehouse.
The frst question for DeSena and Kaiman referred to their times as supervisors. DeSena, who was elected in 2021, was asked about possibly taking credit for the 5% tax cut the sevenmember town board, which has a majority of four Democrats, approved for this year’s budget after she submitted a tentative budget that had a 2.1% tax raise.
DeSena said she discovered large town reserves after submitting her tentative budget and resubmitted a new budget proposal with an 11% tax cut, which was not passed. The supervisor said it’s part of the process in the town board that once her tentative budget is submitted, the board members discuss and make amendments.
“It was a proud moment for all of us to offer that vote and that we now have that for our residents,” DeSena said.
Kaiman said a lot of people are responsible for solving problems in government and that if there are limited things to talk about, ofcials may try to take credit.
“I understand there is a divide in this town board, but we need to respect everybody when you achieve things or get results,” Kaiman said. “I think we would all be better of and probably have a friendlier environment.”
Kaiman was asked about claims against him that he raised taxes every year as supervisor, taxes increased 44% during his term, he voted himself a 33% raise and approved a $31 million tax hike as the chairman of the Nassau Interim
Finance Authority.
Kaiman said he did not raise taxes every year and in certain years the tax raises amounted to $3.50 and $7.50 increases for the average household. As for his role with NIFA, Kaiman said it was not the authority’s responsibility to set the budget but to make sure it was balanced and the numbers added up.
“The reality is taxes went up maybe $30 or $40 in the town fund over the 10 years I was there,” Kaiman said. “So it sounds really bad when you read it in their campaign mail. but the impact to the voters and taxpayers was minimal.”
DeSena said the town could have done better and returned more money to the taxpayers during Kaiman’s time as supervisor.
“I know our residents want tax relief and I’ve given that to them and I’m going to give it to them again,” DeSena said.
Both candidates said they were against Gov. Kathy Hochul’s New York Housing Compact, which called for a major increase in housing on Long Island in favor of local control from municipalities.
“We hear from everyone involved and we make a decision about where we can build new types of housing and where it’s just not appropriate,” DeSena said. “I will continue to fght for local control so that we can preserve our quality of life and our resources.”
Kaiman said he is “100% against” the proposal and that it was a violation of home rule law in the state. He responded to DeSena’s point about him proposing accessory housing during his time as supervisor, which was withdrawn after resident criticism.
“We had the ability to withdraw and we did,” Kaiman said. “That’s diferent than if the state were to make a rule that they can pass over our objections, not giving us a chance to govern ourselves. That would be a mistake.”
Kaiman said he held people accountable when asked about political mailers claiming he presided over corruption during his time as a supervisor. In 2007, a 16-month investigation into allegations of corruption led to the arrests and convictions of several North Hempstead Building Department employees.
“When you lift a rock up and dirt comes out
because you’re cleaning the grounds, you get dirty,” Kaiman said. “I came into government knowing that the Building Department was limited in its ability to do what people were asking it to do and we had problems with them.”
Kaiman said after starting the 311 Call Center in 2005 his administration was able to fnd inconsistencies in the department and brought in the district attorney’s ofce at the time.
“Once we found that they did something wrong, we were able to have them fred and ultimately they were arrested and a couple of them convicted,” Kaiman said.
DeSena, who asked Nassau County Comptroller Elaine Philips to audit the Building Department last year, said the problems currently persist from Kaiman’s time that she is still working on fxing.
“To say that you fxed it and the problem happened over the later years is really a gross oversimplifcation,” DeSena said. “I would not say you fxed it, I would say problems still exist.”
When asked about her endorsement of Congressman George Santos, DeSena said she was
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The Manhasset-Lakeville Fire Department, Roslyn Rescue and Roslyn Highlands Fire Companies extinguished a truck fre Sunday on the Long Island Expressway in North Hills that closed lanes for two hours, ofcials said.
Manhasset-Lakeville Fire Companies No. 2, 3 and 5 were dispatched to the westbound Long Island Expressway near Exit 36, the department said.
While responding, the companies were told the Nassau County Police Department’s Highway Patrol was on the scene and confrmed a
fully active fre with a trailer carrying tires.
First responders needed to stretch supply lines from Willis Avenue and Searingtown Road to extinguish the fre due to its volume and lack of hydrants in the immediate area, the department said.
Also responding to the scene were the Roslyn Rescue and Roslyn Highlands Fire Companies.
No injuries were reported in the incident, offcials said.
Two hours after the fre started, eastbound lanes reopened and westbound trafc was fully open as of Monday morning.
Ten student musicians from Manhasset Secondary School have been selected as either a participant or an alternate in the 2023 New York State School Music Association AllState Music Festival. The festival, will be held in Rochester from Nov. 30 to Dec. 3, will end with a culminating performance at the Eastman Theatre.
Those who earned a spot in one of the All-State ensembles include trumpet player Bernard Chan in Symphonic Band, Tenor 1 Adam De Leeuw in Mixed Chorus, Viola player Christian Kim in Symphony Orchestra, Tenor 1 Austyn Park in Mixed Chorus and Sonia Purani in Mixed Chorus as Soprano 1.
To be selected to attend the festi-
val, a student-musician must be recommended by their music teacher. In addition, they had to prepare a NYSSMA level VI All-State solo last spring which was evaluated by a NYSSMA Certifed All-State adjudicator. To be named an All-State participant or alternate one must be a top student musician.
Alternates from Manhasset Secondary School include Double Bass player John Paul Grassano, Jazz Drum Set player Lucas Rieppi, Zachary Rho on Double Bass, Spencer Wong playing the Violin and Alexander Zhang on the French Horn. As an alternate, these students can still be accepted to participate in the AllState Music Festival prior to Dec.
Port Washington Superintendent Michael Hynes and Meg Sheehan have received an award from Navy SEAL Foundation Ambassadors, Brian Valenza and David Kates.
The award recognizes Port Washington School District’s dedication and support for the Navy SEAL Foundation’s mission to bring joy and comfort to our nation’s heroes.
The accolade was presented to Hynes and Sheehan in honor of their contributions to the annual Navy SEAL holiday card drive, which has been a tradition in collaboration with Port Washington schools for nearly a decade.
Last year, Sousa Elementary School demonstrated its commitment by creating and delivering the most holiday cards to Navy SEALs and Special Warfare Combatant-Craft Crewmen.
The award carries with it a rich tradition in the world of Navy SEALs. The tradition of giving paddles as recognition dates back to the early days of the Navy SEALs when they operated in small teams, relying on each other for survival in the harshest conditions.
Paddles became a symbol of camaraderie, trust, and unity among SEALs. The Navy SEAL Foundation’s appreciation gift was not only a token of gratitude but also a symbol of the enduring partnership between Port Washington schools and the Navy SEAL community.
In response to the recognition, Hynes and Sheehan expressed their gratitude.
Paul D. Schreiber High School Class of 2024 students: Anna Drewes, Gabriel Furstenberg, Ian Lawrence, Max Marro, Alexander Nachman, Tej Parekh and Harrison Roth have earned the prestigious distinction of National Merit Semifnalist!
Ten student-musicians from Manhasset Secondary School were selected as 2023 All-State Music Festival participants and alternates. They were congratulated by choir director Jared Berry, high school band director Greg Sisco, Manhasset Secondary School principal Richard Roder, Superintendent of Schools Gaurav Passi and director of Fine and Performing ArtsJoseph Owens.
North Hempstead Council Member Mariann Dalimonte, the Port Washington Police Department and Bicycle Playground were proud to host a Bicycle Rodeo and Helmet Safety event at Manorhaven Beach Park on Sept. 19.
Children who attended participated in a series of courses that focused on learning bicycle safety and agility skills. They also had the opportunity to get their tires, seats, handlebar height, chains and helmets checked.
North Hempstead Town Council Member Mariann Dalimonte, Port Washington Police Sgt. Peter Griffith and Bicycle Playground owner John Pappas at the Bicycle Rodeo and Helmet Safety event.
The nationwide pool of semifnalists represents less than 1% of U.S. high school seniors.
Merit Scholars are selected on the basis of their skills, accomplishments and potential for success in challenging college studies.
Hynes remarked, “It is a tremendous honor to receive this award, and we are deeply humbled by the Navy SEAL Foundation’s recognition. We are proud to continue the tradition of supporting our brave Navy SEALs and SWCC operators.”
Sheehan added, “The dedication of our students and community in creating holiday cards for our servicemen and women is truly remarkable. This award is a testament to the collective spirit of generosity that defnes Sousa.”
Nassau County Legislator Arnold W. Drucker (D-Plainview) joined concerned residents and faith leaders on Tuesday, Sept. 12 at a community forum in Plainview where the focus was on the American Jewish Committee’s “State of Antisemitism in America” report.
During the forum, AJC Long Island Regional Director Eric Post highlighted key fndings contained within the organization’s “The State of Antisemitism in America 2022” report, including the fact that “41 percent of American Jews feel less secure in America than one year ago.
In addition, 39 percent of Jewish Americans are changing “where they go, what they wear, and what they post on social media because of fear of
antisemitism.”
In addition to unpacking the data, Post provided attendees with a plan of action for raising awareness about antisemitism and urged the public to always stand up to confront antisemitic rhetoric.
“No American should ever feel intimidated to practice their faith freely and openly. Yet, AJC’s report paints an alarming picture in which that is exactly the case for a growing number of Jewish Americans,” Drucker said.
“This is why the AJC’s eforts to educate and empower communities are so important, and I will continue to work hand in hand with Nassau County’s Task Force to Combat Antisemitism to eradicate antisemitism and hatred of all kinds wherever it continues to lurk.”
North Shore University Hospital today announced the opening of a dedicated ostomy clinic to provide personalized attention to patients within the hospital’s suite of Levitt specialty services.
Multiple medical conditions may require ostomy surgery, which allows bodily waste to pass through an opening in the abdomen to a pouch outside the body. Surgeons create a small opening in the intestine on the abdominal wall — an ostomy — where stool can leave the body. If you have a temporary ostomy, it will be closed a few months after your surgery. A permanent ostomy is rarely needed.
The new clinic is a collaboration between wound and ostomy care and colorectal surgery teams with a focus on preparing patients with the skills and confdence needed to take care of their ostomy.
“We treat a range of colorectal conditions, from minor anal rectal issues to major intrabdominal surgery,” said Dr. John Procaccino,director, division of colon and rectal surgery at NSUH. “What’s important to me is giving our patients that individualized support, which continues well after they leave the hospital. This ostomy clinic highlights our commitment to quality of care.”
The frst-of-its-kind dedicated clinic at Northwell Health is located inside the fourth foor of NSUH’s Levitt Clinic. The ostomy clinic takes a multidisciplinary approach to ostomy education and support after surgery. NSUH, which performs more than 700
colon and rectal procedures each year, will provide patient support for all related surgical procedures.
“Continuity of care is crucial to a patient’s recovery and overall experience,” said Dr. Marc Greenwald, surgeon-in-chief at NSUH. “Ofering that support within a dedicated clinic streamlines the process for our surgical teams and gives patients a convenient access point for help going forward.”
North Shore University Hospital is a Level I trauma center and teaching hospital that treats more than 90,000 patients each year. It is home to the Sandra Atlas Bass Heart Hospital, the
Katz Women’s Hospital, neurosurgery, multi-organ transplant services and one of the busiest emergency departments in the New York Metropolitan area.
It is a Magnet-recognized hospital by the American Nurses Credentialing Center, which spotlights excellence in nursing. In 2023, CMS gave North Shore gave the hospital it’s highest 5-star rating while US News & World Report named the hospital No. 1 in New York State and top 22 nationally. For more information or to make an appointment, call 516-730-2111 or go to: https://nsuh.northwell.edu/ colorectal-surgery.
On Sept. 15, members of the New York Institute of Technology community and elected ofcials gathered on the university’s Old Westbury campus for a ceremony at the site of the former 500 Building to ofcially kick of the construction of the university’s Biomedical Research, Innovation, and Imaging Center.
The state-of-the-art facility is anticipated to expand the institution’s research footprint and further its strategy to become a Carnegie-classifed Research 2 university by 2028.
The project, which is expected to be completed in the frst quarter of 2025, will transform the former 500 Building into a reimagined 20,000-squarefoot research center with collaborative laboratories and cutting-edge imaging equipment.
In turn, New York Tech faculty and students, as well as researchers from other institutions, will have new opportunities to advance discoveries and potential treatments for pressing health conditions and biomedical challenges, including heart disease, cancer, and Parkinson’s disease, among many others.
“The BRIIC will fll a need for high-resolution microscopy in the Long Island region, thereby creating the opportunity to invite researchers from other institutions to utilize our advanced visualization technologies. At the same time, while the BRIIC will centralize our research instruments, it will also propel New York Tech’s research into the future,” said President Hank Foley.
Serving as New York Tech’s primary microscopy center, the BRIIC will house a multi-color 3D
STED (stimulated emission depletion) microscope secured by the College of Osteopathic Medicine with the support of a $1.05 million grant from New York State’s Regional Economic Development Councils.
STED microscopes have a resolution approximately 10 times higher than standard confocal microscopes, providing a more precise view of cell structure.
Given this, they ofer greater possibilities to un-
derstand how cancers, multiple sclerosis, and other diseases develop. In addition, microscopy equipment currently located in NYITCOM facilities will be relocated to the BRIIC upon its completion.
The new facility will also feature a 2,000-square-foot functional magnetic resonance imaging suite dedicated solely for research purposes.
The fMRI technology will ofer a non-invasive solution to map and measure human brain activity,
allowing for better analysis of brain abnormalities, cognitive function, and treatment efcacy.
It may also advance studies previously limited to animal models by allowing scientists to observe conditions in human subjects, thereby opening the door for innovative research into Parkinson’s disease, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, autism spectrum disorder, clinical depression, brain injuries, and other critical conditions.
“Today’s complex, real-world issues cannot be solved by one scientifc discipline alone,” said Provost and Executive Vice President Jerry Balentine. “As New York Tech continues to expand its research activities, the BRIIC will provide an interdisciplinary environment in which researchers across various scientifc felds, schools, and colleges will sync their technical expertise and creativity to address some of the most vexing biomedical questions.”
In addition to its high-tech imaging equipment, the BRIIC will include a 2,880-square-foot open laboratory space with 48 lab benches designed with fexible infrastructure to accommodate additional researchers, as well as core labs, fume hoods, tissue culture rooms, a freezer room, and an autoclave. The building will also feature study and conference rooms, a postdoc area, and researcher ofces.
To date, architecture, design, engineering, and project management frms involved in the project include Buro Happold, DLR Group, Jacobs, Napach Design Group, Sherwood Design Engineers, Turner Construction Company, and Zubatkin Owner Representation.
Solo drivers were encouraged to find a friend to carpool with at the Car Free Day Long Island Rally Friday.Nearly a million Long Islanders drive alone, but roughly 3,745 pledged to change their habits to help lower environmentally harmful carbon emissions.
A panel of speakers at Farmingdale State College held the rally to motivate drivers to set aside their car keys for a day and explore alternative transportation options. These alternatives include the Long Island Rail Road, buses, carpooling, vanpooling, bicycles, and walking. The event marked the a week filled with activities promoting walkability, bicycle parades, and an electric vehicle showcase.
Last year, 2,461 Long Islanders took the pledge to be car free, saving 27 tons of carbon emissions, at the 11th annual Car Free Day. This year about a thousand more Long Islanders took the pledge and are on track to save 80 tons of emissions, roughly a 40% increase. Pledges from local colleges and hospitals have raised the pledges higher than ever.
Dr. John Nader, president of Farmingdale State College, took the stage to recognize keynote speaker Sam Schwartz, known as “Gridlock Sam,” who authored the book “No One At the Wheel: Driverless Cars and the Road of the Future.” It is about the driverless vehicle revolution that can transform highways, cities, workplaces and laws across the globe.
Schwartz is a transportation engineer, columnist, author, and former New York City traffic commissioner.
“I am pleased to report to you this morning,” Nader said, “that last year our campus shuttle that runs to and from the Long Island Railroad Station transported more than 25,000 students over the course of the academic year. We are actually (I checked the numbers yesterday) trending ahead of that this year.”
Farmingdale State College initiated a successful bike share program on campus in collaboration with Bethpage Federal Credit Union, resulting in substantial financial benefits through energy savings and rebates. Additionally, the college secured three grants for the Offshore Wind Training Institute, supporting advancements in wind turbine technology.
Schwartz, the keynote speaker, acknowledged the significance of the rally, which coincided with the year’s most significant gridlock alert day. He commended the organizers for their efforts to alleviate traffic congestion and
reduce emissions.
At the podium, he drew attention to the connection between climate change and recent major disasters like the wildfires in Canada and Maui, emphasizing that emissions of greenhouse gases are causing the planet to warm and that scientists have predicted this happening for years.
Schwartz emphasized the transportation sector’s substantial contribution to greenhouse gas emissions and called for less driving through carpooling and consolidating trips.
“Currently, only 11% of Long Island commuters take transit,” he said. “If we simply get that up to 20%, that’s not a big number, there will be a 10% drop in greenhouse gases by those people that are commuting. Only 7% carpool. This is a very lonely place to drive. Most people love driving alone in their cars.”
Beyond emissions reduction, fewer cars on the road could open up opportunities for sustainable alternatives such as bicycle lanes and wider sidewalks. Schwartz underscored the importance of safety, noting the high number of accidents in Nassau and Suffolk counties with “75,000 crashes in Nassau and Suffolk last year in 2022.”
He added, “It doesn’t look like it’s getting any better.”
Compared to the city, the death rate per 100,000 on Long Island in car accidents is about 140% higher. “And that’s because people on Long Island drive way more than people in New York City,” Schwartz said.
Expansion and additions to the Long Island Rail Road and NICE Bus schedule were both ways mentioned at the rally that residents could use to ditch their car for the day and let someone else do the driving.
Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman proposed a $4.1 billion budget for 2024 last week that would raise county spending by $180 million over last year, fund 50 new positions, and not raise property taxes.
But Democratic Nassau County Legislators were not happy.
They said Blakeman had failed to honor a campaign promise made in 2021 to cut property taxes by over $128 million. Which is true.
“Bruce Blakeman is running for Nassau County executive with a plan to immediately cut taxes and stop the County Executive Laura Curran’s massive “Reassessment Tax Hikes that are killing our American dream,” Blakeman’s campaign wrote in a fund-raising email that county Democrats shared this week.
Noting that Nassau County had accumulated more than $1 billion in reserves, the Minority Caucus called for Blakeman to deliver on his campaign promise and cut taxes.
Oddly, no mention was made by the Democrats of Blakeman’s claim that reassessment under Curran was a massive tax hike or that many people who haven’t challenged their assessment are overpaying their taxes.
This should be considered a victory for Blakeman and a sign of Democrats abandoning previously held principles.
Blakeman is half right that Curran’s reassessment of county properties raised property taxes — on people who had been underpaying them.
For those who have been overpaying their taxes — mostly people who had not challenged the assessed value of their homes — taxes went down.
According to a Newsday report, $2.7 billion in property taxes was shifted over the eight years in which no reassessment was done during the administration of County Executive Ed Mangano, a Republican, from people who challenged the assessed value of their property to those who didn’t.
Thus, people who had been underpaying their taxes by a large amount faced large increases. So high that Curran and Republican county legislators
agreed to phase in the changes in property values over fve years.
The amount of money the county was collecting did not change. Only how much each property owner paid.
Apparently, Blakeman did not believe two years ago that those who had been overpaying their taxes were part of “our American dream.”
Curran, whose reassessment faced heated opposition, froze assessments for the 2022-23 tax year during the COVID pandemic when house prices spiked in Nassau
Curran described the move as temporary until the heated housing market settled down after the pandemic only to extend the freeze for the 2023-24 tax year shortly before she left ofce.
Upon taking ofce in2022, Blakeman called for county Comptroller Elaine Phillips to conduct an audit of the assessment system.
Phillips’ audit found that Curran’s reassessment relied on “fawed” data that was out of date and reduced the value of some 23,000 properties at the last minute without justifying the changes.
But, she noted, using this data to update the county’s assessments was up to Blakeman.
In February, Blakeman froze the tax rolls for the 2024-25 school year, keeping more than 385,000 residential properties at values last calculated in late 2019.
And so far he has not said if or when county properties will be reassessed.
Experts note that the longer the county waits to reassess properties the more inaccurate the assessment of individual properties.
The county Democrats’ call last week for Blakeman to cut taxes does not mention the many people overpaying their taxes.
“At a time when the costs for various commodities are increasing across the board, this budget provides us with an opportunity to embrace the principles of good government and deliver relief to taxpayers in a meaningful and impactful way,” Nassau County Legislator Siela
A.Bynoe (D–Westbury) said in a press
22 Planting Field Road, Roslyn Heights, NY 11577
Phone: 516-307-1045
E-mail: hblank@theisland360.com
release. “I urge the county executive and our colleagues in the Legislature to coalesce behind an approach that we successfully employed in the recent past and demonstrate to our constituents that we have the best interests of their families at the forefront of our minds.”
Other Democratic legislators issued similar sentiments.
Nassau County Legislator Delia DeRiggi-Whitton (D–Glen Cove) specifcally called for a “signifcant tax cut that will help all of our constituents.”
No one – Democrat or Republican –talked about fairness.
In light of this, we have a modest proposal.
Democrat and Republican legislators alike regularly ofer workshops to property owners on how to challenge their property taxes.
Many other homeowners hire law frms to challenge the assessment of their homes for them.
And most people are successful. This pushes more of the tax burden on those who don’t challenge the assessed value of their homes, who tend to be younger, less afuent and comprised of more minority members.
So why not help all property owners challenge their assessments even if takes flling out the applications for them or connecting them with a law frm that will do it for residents?
This would serve as a de facto reassessment of all county property.
This is not a perfect solution and there would be a potentially high cost both for conducting the grievances and paying residents back for overcharges.
There is always a margin of error when a property is assessed, hence the grievance process.
And property taxes are based on what a person’s home is worth, not their ability to pay taxes. So this is unfair to people who see a decline in their income as a result of retirement, a death, or a lost job.
But the grieving of all properties would make the tax burdens much fairer. It would also give people a more accurate picture of the cost of government.
This includes money for school districts, which usually represent twothirds of the taxes a property owner pays rather than county government, which is closer to 16% or 17%.
This is particularly important to Nassau, which agreed decades ago to guarantee the money it collects for schools and special districts. If there is a successful challenge, the county foots the bill.
Mangano tried to end the guarantee, but a campaign led by school districts successfully blocked the change in the state Legislature.
In freezing the tax rolls Blakeman and Curran efectively cut taxes for those who would have paid more under the reassessment – and raised them for those who were scheduled to see a tax cut.
Blakeman said two years ago in a tweet, distributed last week by Democrat legislators, that “Nassau homeowners need relief now, and not the peanuts [Curran] ofering us while her tax hikes settle in!”
Four years before that Curran won election by running a campaign that called for ending the county’s dysfunctional tax system.
Both Nassau Republicans and Democrats apparently have short memories about their promises. Or perhaps they believe voters do.
My frst taste of fast-food was a revelation. It was 1965, I was a 14-year-old Jersey kid and had just started a summer job selling magazines door-to-door in neighborhoods from Newark to the Jersey Shore.
One afternoon for lunch the manager, a 30-something guy, drove my two co-workers and me to a burger joint called “Carrols” located of Route 22 in North Jersey. When I stepped inside and looked up at the menu board, they featured burgers for 15-cents. I did a double-take. Wait! What! Why didn’t anyone tell me about this before?
And so my fast-food education began.
Sometime thereafter, I discovered a place called McDonalds, also on Route 22. I had to check it out. I found a ride and ordered 10 burgers for $1.50.
I was clueless and unconcerned about the nutritional value, or lack thereof, of fast-food burgers and fries. I just liked the taste and quantity available at an afordable price, especially for a young guy like me. I felt like I was really starting to live it up.
All of this happened well before the outrageous eating competitions that
have become a part of contemporary American culture, such as Nathan’s Famous July 4thhot dog eating competition. I was never a participant, per se, just a blooming gourmand, always with an eye out for “all-you-can-eat” restaurant promotions. One of my favorites was Howard Johnson’s Friday night allyou-can eat fried clams or shrimp. I received a lot of dirty looks from the wait staf on those excursions. They needed roller blades to keep up with me.
Despite the variety of establishments like KFC, Taco Bell, Popeyes, Arby’s, and so forth, for my money the kings and queens of fast-food staples are the places that continue to headline burgers and fries. Don’t get me wrong: the others have good menu choices. However, just as there are “strict constructionists” who interpret the U.S. Constitution from an “original intent” perspective, that is how I interpret fast-food – burgers and fries.
As I aged, I gradually fell out of the fast-food phase of my life. I was still a “big eater,” but not a “foodie” per se. My choices became a bit more refned. In time, I had enough disposable income to choose more upscale joints and I became more nutrition savvy. Somewhat, that is.
Now I am retired and in my 70s. As might be expected, I have health issues to contend with. Consequently, there has been another shift in my food choices and going-out-to-eat frequency. I tend to eat smaller portions with more nutritional value. I try anyway.
What I never anticipated, I confess, is that I would one day suddenly start to obsess over fast-food,some 60 years after I frst walked into Carrols. That day has come.
My current preoccupation started
when I spotted a Burger King circular inside Newsday. I didn’t need a discount, but the ad triggered me. I hadn’t had Burger King in years. After seeing that circular, which included about 20 diferent discount choices, the craving got under my skin. I couldn’t shake it.
To guarantee due diligence, I googled nutrition facts. I narrowed my research to comparing McDonald’s Big Macs and Burger King’s Whoppers. I googled, “Which one is healthier?” Regrettably, I found nothing that would justify me getting back in the game.
On one website they advised, based on a 2,000-calorie diet, one of these burgers without cheese or fries contains about 60% of one’s daily value for fat and saturated fat, 40% of daily value for sodium, and 56% of daily value for protein.
“Eating a diet that is high in saturated fat can cause high cholesterol, which can increase your risk of heart disease and stroke,” another website cautioned.
The “experts” did say that eating one of these tasty treats from time to time won’t kill you. However, the burgers are not likely to fully digest in one’s system before 72 hours. I thought I
could do without continuous heartburn for three days. In my hour of yearning, though, I decided it was worth the risk.
Since then I’ve settled on a McDonald’s Quarter Pounder with cheese, a Burger King Whopper and a Wendy’s breakfast chicken sandwich, all with fries.
Incidentally, during my research I discovered that Carrols Restaurant Group became the largest Burger King franchisee in the world. Wow! Full circle. Since 1976, Carrols has owned and operates more than 1,000-plus Burger Kings, in locations across 23 U.S. states. Who knew, all these many years later that Carrols, the frst place I tasted fastfood, would take over Burger King, my current fxation.
I cannot end without noting that a White Castle slider is still the best fastfood burger bargain for your money. The slider never made it into my teenage rotation, even though in 1965 it was only 12 cents and then 14 cents in 1967. Today, a slider is still a great buy at 72 cents.
Oops, I gotta go! Just received a notifcation from my new Burger King app. I best go see wassup!
Lately a number of politicians have been consumed by the possibility that hundreds, if not thousands of migrants, would leave New York City and invade the beautiful shores of Nassau and Sufolk counties. It is fair to say that there are not enough facilities or housing to accommodate them. While there is a lot of focus on the possible visitors, these same elected ofcials are not paying attention to the group that is leaving.
By group, I refer to the large number of young people ages 20 to 35, who are leaving Long Island because of the tragic lack of afordable housing. These departees love the many features of our region and would love to live in a community that has great parks, beaches, golf courses, restaurants and other attractions. But once they search for an apartment that meets their budget, there is nothing to be found.
If you follow the local newspapers, you will fnd numerous advertisements for new developments, but it is hard
for a 21-year-old with a new job to afford the very attractive housing that is being built. Faced with this economic dilemma, they leave the island for an apartment that they might be able to share with a roommate.
Last year, to her credit, Gov. Kathy Hochul proposed that hundreds of thousands of new housing units should be built in communities throughout the state. The faw in her plan was that the housing would not require local zoning approval. When it comes to the issue of local control, nothing infames suburban residents more than the suggestion by any elected ofcial that local zoning laws can be overridden by a higher power.
The governor, under pressure from Democratic suburban state legislators, was forced to temporarily abandon her plan, hoping to renew it in some form at the 2024 session of the two houses in Albany. New York City
Mayor Eric Adams, tired of waiting for a state plan, has just unveiled his idea of how to create 100,000 units of new
afordable housing.
While the mayor’s plan doesn’t ft that neatly into the Long Island zoning patterns, there are some concepts that are moving forward locally that resemble the city proposals. The Baldwin area on the South Shore is currently
undergoing a renewal plan that eliminates local blight and builds housing in the immediate vicinity of the LIRR station. There are other projects now under construction in the bi-county region that are utilizing vacant land surrounding other LIRR stations.
When it comes to the idea of planned communities that got stuck in a number of local issues, I recall the Heartland Town Square plan proposed by the late Gerry Wolkof. Heartland was designed to attract young residents to a town flled with enough afordable housing and attractions which would encourage residents to stay on Long Island, if they found a local job. It would also be desirable to young couples looking for some place unique to live.
Gerry Wolkof was a dreamer who was willing to spend millions to carry out his dream project. He would spend hours promoting his concept and spoke with passion about the need to keep our young people on Long Island. Wolkof had to deal with multiple gov-
ernment hurdles and opposition by unions, all which kept his Heartland proposal from moving forward.
If you want to see what a visionary mayor can do, visit the Village of Patchogue. Over a period of years, the village was transformed from a decaying area into a vibrant and creative town. It has attractive stores, restaurants, bars and apartments that appeal to younger residents and many other features. It has been voted one of the best places to live in New York.
For as long as I can remember, politicians have made the Long Island quality of life a major part of their agenda. They fght to keep communities looking the same as they did 100 years ago. I love the island and don’t want to see it lose its charm and suburban quality of life. But you can’t hold on to the past and let our young people leave at the same time. We need new dreamers to come forward with ideas on how to stop our youth from leaving. Maybe that is asking too much.
Heights,
Iwas recently contacted by a documentarian who is doing a flm about extreme sports like The Race Across The West, a 930-mile cycling endurance race. The flmmaker wanted my psychoanalytic take on what motivates these extreme eforts. Very good question.
Years ago Bob Lipsyte, the Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times sport journalist had a TV program called “The Health Show” and he invited me along with Rodger McFarlanne and Yvonne Robinson-Voaer to discuss extreme sports. McFarlanne and Robinson-Voaer were ultra-marathoners who had just participated in the Eco-Challenge, a 10-day contest of non-stop running, kayaking and mountaineering.
My unfortunate role in this affair was to publicly analyze these two super-jocks and try to explain their underlying motives that prompted them to go through such torture. Was this what they call a death wish, madness, courage in action, masochism? Now much to the chagrin of Bob Lipsyte, I could not and would not publicly shame or humiliate these two extreme athletes, especially since they were so much bigger than me.
Lipsyte, ever the ferce journalist looking for a provocative angle, proceeded to publicly humiliate me on the air by suggesting that I was
perhaps intimated by these two big athletes and so was soft soaping and minimizing their psychopathology. It was one of those extreme moments for me, but thankfully I was able to save the public face of McFarlanne and Robinson-Voaer.
A perfect example of extreme sports occurred this weekend when Long Island was host to an Ironman Triathlon Race at Jones Beach. This was actually a half triathlon with the participants swimming for 2.4 miles, biking for 56 miles and running for 13.1 miles, but let’s not quibble over minor details. If you were out driving on Wantagh State, you got a gander of these folks peddling along in the driving rain. A tropical storm is no match for these warriors.
What would motivate a person to do this? You can argue that it’s a good way to see the world since they have Ironman races in Nice, France, and Kona, Hawaii. The typical answers to the question of motivation to play a sport does not apply in the case of extreme sports. Most sports ofer the adult a chance to travel, get ft, make friends and get away from one’s normal life, but extreme sports is another matter entirely.
There are some theories we can use to comprehend the motives that lie deep within the extreme athlete.
Alfred Adler, one of the founders of
psychoanalysis felt, that such overcompensation stems from a deep sense of inferiority that the person is actually running away from. There are many examples of this. President Richard Nixon was born into poverty and so he had something to prove to the world. He eventually ruined his name and embraced the shadow of his shame by questionable covert efforts to win election.
Tiger Woods, the world’s greatest golfer, was raised in an all-white neighborhood, had a stutter and was physically abused by bullies who tied him to a tree and painted racial epithets on his chest. He reacted to this by becoming an extreme worker, similar to Ben Hogan who had similar
It’s September and with the cooler weather comes the start of school.
Already several weeks since school started, we have adjusted to the buses on the streets and groups of children walking to and from school. But what happens when they are in school? What are they learning?
Even if you have kids in school, you may not have a very good idea about what they are learning. It’s less likely you know what are they learning about climate change.
Climate change is a hot topic for today’s students. They have been hearing about climate change and its impacts from very young ages. They are leaders in the movement demanding a national and global response to climate change. They know their futures depend on what is done today to address climate change. What are the schools doing to educate them about this very real and very serious issue to prepare them to live and work in this changing world?
In 2021, at the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26), the ministers of education and environment in attendance committed to
including climate change education in all educational institutions. That same year, a United Nations study of almost 50 countries revealed that less than half made any mention of climate change in their educational policies. A February 2023 article posted by the Columbia Climate School at Columbia University reported that only 21 percent of the new or updated plans submitted by 95 countries mentioned climate change education in their Paris Agreement goals; none of them presented it as a climate strategy.
In the United States, what is taught about climate change varies by state. Even if it is taught, it may be taught with “both” sides — covering the human-caused climate change and the naturally occurring climate change as comparable and of equal consequence. Some states view the topic as too politicized, ignoring scientifc facts and allowing the curriculum to be manipulated by politicians’ agendas.
The problem with not teaching about climate change is that students need to learn about climate change to know what to do about climate change.
childhood horrors stories.
Many star athletes I work with have early childhood scars from physical abuse, poverty, emotional abuse and more. This kind of experience brings with it the shadow of shame that the athlete unconsciously attempts to undo by achieving greatness on the playing feld. This is what Adler meant by overcompensation. It is the fuel that keeps them highly driven, but it also leads to wreckage. There is an inability to assimilate their own greatness so they keep on trying in a variety of ways and this leads to burnout. Whether it’s womanizing, drug use or a greed for power, the story of overcompensation often ends badly.
Sigmund Freud also had a theory called repetition compulsions, which describes the endless tendency to face and to prove to themselves that they are strong and not helpless or weak. As an example, abused children will often choose an abusive spouse. A repetition compulsion was nicely demonstrated in the flm “The Hurt Locker” where Jeremy Renner played the part of a bomb difuser in Iraq.
He got through his tour of duty without getting killed and in the second to last scene they show him back home, shopping for cereal in a supermarket aisle, looking bored and
confused. The last scene shows him once again wearing an armed bomb suit, walking down another street in Iraq going to difuse another bomb.
What I will be telling the flmmaker about what drives endurance athletes is this valiant attempt to transform themselves from being shadow children into a better version. This drive is a part of human nature. I had an older brother who was a true genius, got straight A’s and won many academic awards. This meant that he introduced me to many good things in art and literature. He had me reading Vonnegut, Dostoevsky and Henry Miller when I was 11 years old.
But having an older brother who was so smart convinced me that I was mentally defcient which prompted me to get a Ph.D., write syndicated columns and publish two books with another two on the way. Overcompensation is what Alfred Adler called it. It gets you to reach beyond your limits.
But it also means that at 3:28 PM on a Sunday afternoon when all of my friends are watching college football on the TV, I am in my ofce typing away to meet my Monday morning newspaper deadline. Tiger Woods, Richard Nixon, Ironman runners and me, all shadow children, running frantically to get out of the shadow and into the light.
sonal connection to climate change solutions that was manifested in their daily behaviors and through their professional careers.
It is not a leap to expect that primary and secondary climate change education could have a similar impact on younger students and likely extend to changes by their families.
A 2020 study of the impact of a university level course on climate change found that a majority of the students who took the course made pro-environmental decisions (i.e., type of car to buy, food choices) because of the class. Those decisions equated to an individual carbon emissions reduction of 2.86 tons of CO2 per year. Additionally, the course participants reported a strong per-
An October 2020 Report from the National Center for Science Education and the Texas Freedom Network Education Fund gave New York an A- for its climate change education. While this may seem high and like New York is doing a good job teaching climate change, the standards were low. The reviewers evaluating each state’s climate change education indicated that New York’s standards were less explicit than they would have preferred in discussing the reality of climate change and human responsibility for it. This means that, while New York State standards address topics related to climate change, they don’t clearly connect those issues to climate change and human causes of climate change. That omission is key if we are expecting our children to acquire sufcient
knowledge to change their own behaviors and to take on professions focused on addressing climate change and its human causes.
While school leadership from my local school district has told me that teaching elementary age students about the dangers of plastic across the grades and curriculum was too controversial, hopefully that is changing as students demand to learn about this and other environmental issues like climate change for their own sake and maybe ours.
Today’s students are well aware of what is happening around them. They are impacted mentally, physically and emotionally by the realities of climate change. We owe them a science-based education on climate change to prepare them for the world they will live and work in. This is not about belief or politics. It is about our responsibility to provide a quality education. While the purpose of education has changed over the centuries, it has always been about preparing youth for their lives as adults. At this time, that must include being prepared to address climate change.
The most profound, foreboding prayer that is read during the Jewish High Holy Days is the Unetaneh tokef prayer:
“On Rosh Hashanah will be inscribed and on Yom Kippur will be sealed who will live and who will die.. who by water and who by fre, who by sword and who by beast, who by famine and who by thirst, who by upheaval and who by plague ”
It always strikes me as scary, but somehow the prayer sounded ancient and foreign. I mean “plague”? Except we’ve gone through the horror of a global deadly pandemic which took more than 1 million lives in the United States, 7 million worldwide, and now we hear leprosy has been resurrected in Florida.
Well, from the past Rosh Hashanah to this one, we’ve had wildfres, foods, hurricanes, cyclones, typhoons, heat waves of Biblical proportions. They say they are “1000-year” foods, “1300year drought.”
This is the impact of climate change now, and getting worse with the hottest the planet has been in the history of mankind.
“We’re on a pathway to lose everything,” Peter Kalmus, a climate scientist at the NASA Jet Propulsion Lab (speaking for himself), declared at the New York City Climate March, which drew 75,000 activists from around the country and around the world.
“The cause of heat waves are fossil fuels, and leaders, including Biden, are still approving fossil projects. It’s insanity… This can’t be reversed. Stop fossil fuels or ramp down as soon as possible. I’m terrifed for the future. Burning.
Flooding. Smoke. Heat waves. How will we feed 8 billion people? Heat waves will kill millions. Every year is worse, the planet is hotter.”
He want on to warn: “This is the only planet in our universe with life. We are on the brink of a sixthmass extinction. A dead planet has no economy, no politics. There is no solution – not carbon capture, not planting trees. There is no plan to deal with the decreasing habitability. We must come together. Fight.”
75,000 Climate Activists march during New York’s Climate Week to send a message to the United Nations General Assembly, President Biden and other leaders demanding climate action now © Karen Rubin/news-photosfeatures.com
This summer, 111 million Americans sufered under heat waves. Record wild fres across Canada sent air pollution levels in New York dangerously sky high. Some 40 million people around the world were uprooted from their homes by food, drought, famine and confict. Add to that, 350 million people sufer food insecurity.
At the Clinton Global Initiative, which forges commitments to address the major challenges facing humanity and the planet, the top priorities were food insecurity, migration, confict, poverty, environmental disaster. Speaker after speaker said they all are interconnected and are rooted in climate change.
“Heat is deadly – in the US, extreme heat causes more deaths than any other weather-related event, especially in urban centers,” said Sarah Kapnick, Chief Scientist of the National Oceanic and
KAREN RUBIN View PointAtmospheric Administration. “Heat is responsible for over 500,000 pre-mature deaths per year. “If all the things continue, that number will grow to 1.5 million premature deaths each year. We are expecting these temps will only go up over time.”
“Humanity has opened the gates to hell,” warned Secretary-General Antonio Guterres at the Global Climate Summit held ahead of the UN General Assembly. “Our focus here is on climate solutions – and our task is urgent.”
He warned that climate action was being “dwarfed by the scale of the challenge”, with humanity heading towards a 2.8°C temperature rise, increasing danger and social and political instability.
Greenhouse gas emissions must be reduced 43% by 2030 and reach net zero by mid-century to avoid global temperatures exceeding the dangerous 1.5°C tipping point, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change.
“The future is not fxed,” Guterres insisted. “We can still build a world of clear air, green jobs, and afordable clean power for all.”
President Biden gets it. “From day one of my administration the United States has treated this crisis as the existential threat that it is, not only to us, but to all of humanity,” he told the UN General Assembly.
The Biden administration, which has waged the most ambitious climate agenda in history, announced new climate actions including the formation of a American Climate Corps that will put 20,000 young people into the growing felds of climate resilience, conservation, and clean energy; channel $4.6 billion through the Environmental Protection Agency’s Climate Pollution Reduction Grants programto help states, cities and tribes tackleclimate pollution; direct Federal agenciesto incorporate thesocial cost of greenhouse gas emissions in key decisions;invest $40 million through the Interior Department toclean up oil and gas wells; new actions toadvance the American ofshore wind industry; and steer $400 million to states to adopt clean energy building codes. Biden also just canceled oil leases in the Arctic Refuge.
Meanwhile, New York State announced new actions with the U.S. Climate Alliance, a coalition of 25 states formed to counter Trump’s reversal of Obama’s climate actions. It’s because of the Coalition, which collectively represents 60 percent of the U.S. economy and 55 percent of the U.S. population, that the United States was able to stay on course toward its Paris Accord com-
mitments.
“It’s critical that we continue the transition to create an afordable clean energy future that benefts all New Yorkers,” Gov. Kathy Hochul said. “Climate change is the defning challenge of our era.”
Climate actions don’t just mitigate and promote resilience against climate disasters (costing the US $165 billion in 2022), but actually cut costs, create jobs, and improve quality of life for families today. “Clean energy and energy afordability go hand-in-hand,” Hochul said.
But besides the existential threat the climate crisis poses, there is also the practical reality that makes transition to 100% clean, renewable energy and a green economy inevitable: There are only 20-25 years worth of oil still in the ground. So we might as well get it done now and reduce the pain, sufering and loss of life and livelihoods that will come from failing to confront the climate crisis.
This Rosh Hashanah Torah portion was the Genesis “Creation” story, where God on the sixth day created Human and gave Human dominion over the plants, the animals “and over all earth itself.” Some like to interpret “dominion” as dominance – the right to exploit, extract, discard. But others interpret “dominion” as the responsibility to care.
There’s another theme of the High Holy Days, the obligation for “Tikkun Olam” — repairing the world.
Indeed, the end of the Unetaneh Tokef prayer shows the way to “avert the severity” of the decree: take responsibility.
The Port Washington School District needs an inoculation against its own incompetence.
As the parents of a Weber Middle Schooler, my wife and I got an email at 1 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 19, informing us that our daughter’s meningitis vaccine was lacking and she wouldn’t be allowed in school the next morning. This was unexpected.
Some panic ensued. We emailed Weber to confrm the deadline. Confrmed. Could we just get a doctor’s note that she has an appointment to get the shot but not have to miss school? No. State law. No exceptions. But it’s very short notice to try to get a doctor’s appointment. Yes, it is.
We called our pediatrician. Her ofce was fooded with similar desperate calls. The earliest appointment would be 2 p.m. Wednesday, meaning she’d miss the whole day of school, including an accelerated math class where a single absence can cripple a student’s chances of staying ahead of the material. We asked Weber if she
could go to school for a few hours pending the shot. No, no exceptions.
The emailing back and forth happened during an excruciatingly inconvenient time for the district’s phone system to fail, and took my wife and I considerable time out of our day to get anything straight.
Our pediatrician ofered to come in early and give the shot herself at 8 a.m. Wednesday, which we managed with some minor rearrangements of our schedules. Our daughter made it to school in time for the last 15 minutes of her frst period social studies class. She came home at the end of the day with stories of her fellow students being called out in the middle of class, attending as usual in the notunreasonable expectation that they could come to school on the understanding that they’d get their shots as soon as possible. Instead they were told to stand up from their desks and leave with everyone watching.
The lesson learned by all of us is the inexcusable incompetence of the
Port Washington school system.
My wife and I had reached out to members of the school board when the notice frst came Tuesday afternoon, and they were helpful and clear about the mandate of state law. The law itself is clear that all necessary vaccinations must be completed in the frst two weeks of school, a reasonable policy in a post-COVID world. This, however, is a failure of communication. That’s entirety on Superintendent Michael Hynes and his administration. No parent could be reasonably expected to know such a policy, and in the frenetic frst weeks of school even the best-informed parents can be forgiven for such a lapse. I can fnd no recent notifcation, emailed or sent home with my child, pointing out my error in time for us to schedule the necessary inoculations. The only notice we found was an email last May.
Dr. Hynes might object that the switchover from the Aspen online portal to the new one called Synergy
complicated the notifcation process.
This may be true, but the district has been planning this switch for many months and already delayed its implementation once over the summer. Surely a competent administration could have looked at the calendar for these frst weeks and made accommodations.
Dr. Hynes could also defect to other districts having the same problem with a statewide mandate, although this would defate the Synergy defense, and still reeks of being an excuse rather than a reason.
We are better of than most. My wife and I are fortunate to have enough fexibility in our schedules that we could spend an afternoon felding this crisis and then take an hour in the morning to get to the doctor. We’re familiar with the district and have friends on the Board of Education to explain the situation. And we have a long-term relationship with an excellent pediatrician who went out of her way to help us. We
know our privilege, and we know that a great many of our neighbors were abandoned by Dr. Hynes and his administrators without it.
This is especially egregious considering the way this administration preens about its communication efforts. Mercifully, the weekly “Fireside Chats” were extinguished very recently, but surely the district can share crucial information in some other medium. Dr. Hynes rarely misses an opportunity to share banal social media memes, but substantive details that afect our kids’ ability to attend school don’t make the cut? Whether incompetence or indiference, in many other professions this failure would be a freable ofense.
My daughter is now fully vaccinated. This district needs to take further action to protect her and all the kids of Port Washington Schools from a more insidious infection.
Douglas Parker Port WashingtonWe, the concerned residents of Great Neck Manor and surrounding areas, express our strong opposition to the proposed construction of an ambulance unit building on Cumberland Avenue that is strictly residential within the ManhassetLakeville Fire District.
We frmly believe that this development would signifcantly and adversely impact our quality of life, compromise the safety of our children, exacerbate trafc issues, contribute to congestion in the area, and highlight a lack of early direct communication with the afected residents and a total disregard of residents’ strong voices and concerns that were related to Manhasset-Lakeville Fire Department many times.
The plan to build a new ambulance unit on Cumberland Avenue, costing over $11 million, has raised serious concerns among residents. The projected location on Cumberland Avenue poses signifcant challenges in terms of navigation and accessibility of the ambulance services.
The narrow section of the roads leading to the proposed project site would make it difcult for emergency vehicles, additional frefghters, and accompanying equipment to maneuver efectively. These points have been repeatedly delivered to the fre department numerous times by many residents who have been residing in the areas for many decades.
Coupled with constant congestion on Lakeville Road, Community Drive, and neighboring roads leading to the proposed site, this lack of space and accessibility not only hinders emergency response eforts but also raises deep concerns about the safety of our community.
Our deep-seated discontent stems from the glaring lack of timely and direct communication with the residents directly impacted by the project prior to the frst scheduled bond vote in last June 2023 that was postponed due to the strong opposition from the residents.
The fre department overseeing the ambulance unit has shown a lamentable dearth of meaningful engagement with the Great Neck Manor community and neighboring areas, recklessly ignoring the well-being and concerns of those most afected. We adamantly assert that transparency and candid dialogue are non-negotiable requisites for adequately addressing our concerns.
Despite the relentless opposition voiced by residents, the fre department persists in its dismissive stance, pressing forward with another bond vote scheduled for October 2023, heedless of any of the residents’ valid concerns.
Constructing the Cumberland Avenue Ambulance Unit Building without considering its impact on our quality of life is a grave concern.
Our community values its peaceful
and residential character, which would be severely compromised by the addition of an ambulance unit proposed to be built right in front of residential homes.
The ensuing chaos, noise, and logistical nightmare during construction, coupled with the anticipated ceaseless presence of emergency vehicles, and siren blaring, would irreparably disrupt the tranquility of our neighborhood, casting a pall on our well-being and overall contentment with our living environment.
The constricting roads leading to the proposed site would render it a virtual obstacle course for emergency vehicles, additional frefghters, and associated equipment. These concerns have been repeatedly and unequivocally conveyed to the Fire Department by long-standing residents, whose roots in the area span decades.
Moreover, the safety of our children must not be overlooked. Cumberland Avenue is home to many families with young children who play and traverse the area regularly and walk for school buses.
Immediately next to the front gate of the proposed ambulance unit is the Great Neck Manor Park where most children in the area frequently visit and play in groups as well.
The increased trafc resulting from the ambulance unit’s operations would introduce additional risks, making it unsafe for children to move freely within
their own neighborhoods. It is our duty to protect our children and ensure their safety at all times.
In light of the aforementioned concerns, we, the vigilant residents, stand in frm opposition to the construction of the Cumberland Avenue Ambulance Unit Building. We underscore the following pressing questions and concerns regarding the proposed project:
No public impact study for the facility was conducted. The 14 sites that were dismissed were never disclosed by MLFD. The trafc study, in August 2023 after vehement resident opposition, is deeply fawed on several counts. It inadequately addressed crucial streets such as Pond Hill, Community Drive, Northern Boulevard, and Lakeville Road, and omitted consideration of the Adult Center and Great Neck Manor Park and children’s playground, all situated on Cumberland. Moreover, the streets around the curve are manifestly unsafe, with cars unable to maintain their lanes, rendering the study’s conclusions utterly baseless. The study’s impartiality is further compromised by its selection, having used the project Manager/Architects of the proposed project, a glaring confict of interest. The commissioners boldly assert that there will be no fscal burden on taxpayers, but the origin of the necessary funds remains conspicuously absent. MLFD continues to obfus-
cate essential fnancial details, including the cost of the bond, interest rate, commission to bond manager, term of bond, and projected monthly amortization cost. MLFD has failed to provide a credible explanation as to why they cannot utilize any of their existing properties or modify an existing property with a frehouse. MLFD has adamantly refused to accommodate any of the concerns and voices raised by the residents, exhibiting a shocking disregard for public input. The budget presented is devoid of substance, with mere cursory statements and a conspicuously unexplained allocation of $2.2 million in “Soft Costs” by MLFD.
We urgently implore the ManhassetLakeville Fire Department to reconsider the ill-conceived project on Cumberland Avenue and to seek better-suited locations that prioritize the well-being and concerns of the residents.
We once again urge you to earnestly consider our grievances and take swift action to rectify them, by canceling the bond vote scheduled for Oct. 10, 2023.
We demand you to explore alternative avenues for the project that mitigate the deleterious impact on Cumberland Avenue and guarantee the sustained harmony of our residential enclave.
Concerned Citizens and Taxpayers
Youngsoo ChoiIt goes like this.
In a dream I want everything perfect.
No howling at my door. Nothing distressed or repelled, and, you know, I take measure as if I were verifed.
Then I read “East of Eden” in middle school and felt shaken to the core.
Dismayed by a rawness that closed the door to certain dreams and lets others in.
Yes, I heard the teacher say those who complete the assignment early can turn in a summary for extra credit. I clearly took out a pen to start, but somehow hadn’t fnished.
There are still cherry blossoms at dawn, by the number, and this is key, behind some doors is a child admiring all the wonders, behind another one, a centered adult, who is sad or happy as a tide, coming in, going out at dusk. How gold fashes the waning light and we are among strangers on a journey of wanderings and wants. Behind one a child, behind the other an adult, together sorting things out on the shore of the world washing over.
Stephen Cipot Garden City ParkWe want to express our deep concern about voter suppression in Great Neck.
Mercedes are white, Mustangs are blue If you are from India, you’ll know it’s true At the main post ofce we had a short chat In the car is where I sat You said in Thomaston you reside, to the post ofce is a short ride You expressed interest in my car, I’m still wondering who you are It was August One, in the morning sun I should have asked your name, but just the same, If any of this rings a bell, contact me on AOL
Leslie Feldman Great NeckThe appointment of Long Island Rail Road Senior Vice President of Operations Robert Free as interim LIRR President by MTA Chairman Janno Lieber made sense.
There was no way acting LIRR Presi-
dent Catherine Rinaldi could give her full attention to this critical full-time position. There were never enough hours in the day while wearing two hats. She also served as Metro North Rail Road president.
Promoting from within the LIRR se-
nior organization management team makes sense. Rather than wasting time and money in a six-month national search for a new permanent LIRR President, Lieber should promote from within.
Continued on Page 36
Several years ago, polling was moved from the Great Neck Social Center (Senior Center) to the fre station on Prospect Street in Thomaston.
Voting there takes place on the second foor at this location and parking is virtually non-existent, limiting access for those who are disabled or live far away.
Hundreds of apartment building residents, many of them seniors, who live in the immediate vicinity of the Center, used to have the convenience of accessible voting by just walking across the street or up the block to its location on Grace Avenue and Gilchrest Road.
After many years, representatives from diferent agencies worked tirelessly to restore the voting venue at the Center, which would have encouraged a robust turnout; Republican Board of Elections Commissioner Joseph Kearney is the only offcial who refuses to allow voting there.
Voting is fundamental to our
democracy. It is incumbent upon Commissioner Kearney to carry out the mission of the NYS Board of Elections, that is, to ensure that every citizen has an equal opportunity to exercise his/her right to vote by having easy access to the polls.
All voices matter, including those of our seniors; we should listen and we should act.
If you have been adversely afected by the relocation of the Great Neck Plaza voting poll, contact Commissioner Joseph J. Kearney at (516) 571-8683. When you speak to someone, say you would like to leave a message for Commissioner Kearney.
The Executive Board of Reach Out America.
Josie Pizer Great NeckLong Island author Steve Matteo (Smithtown resident) will participate in a Q&A discussion (moderated by Tony Traguardo, Fab4Free4All podcast) and book signing event featuring his new book “Act Naturally: The Beatles on Film” at the Long Island Music and Entertainment Hall of Fame (97 Main St., Stony Brook,) on Saturday, Sept. 30 at 2 pm. The event is free with admission and open to the public.
“I grew up on Long Island and have written for many Long Island music and entertainment publications,” Matteo said. “I’m thrilled to be interviewed at LIMEHOF about my new book on the Beatles. The hall is all about honoring and celebrating the legacy of great music. When I write my books, chronicling musical history that give music fans a deeper understanding of artists and their times is very important to me. Long Island has a rich history of popular music and music fans on Long Island are some of the most knowledgeable and passionate in the world.”
This unique event bridges the mediums of books, music and film and is likely to appeal to audiences of all genres, not to mention Beatles fans. LIMEHOF plans to do more author-themed events in the future.
“We are excited to have Steve come to speak at The Hall of Fame about his book “Act Naturally” and share his insights on The Beatles on Film,” said Kelly Leung, LIMEHOF board member and director of community outreach who organized the event. “Having Tony Traguedo from the Fab4Free4All podcast moderate and speak is also an added bonus to what is sure to be a fun event. We continue to welcome opportunities to introduce Long Islanders to local authors and podcasters on a regular basis at the museum.”
For details on this and upcoming events please visithttps://www.limusichalloffame.org/museum/
The Beatles produced five films during their time together: “A Hard Day’s Night,” “Help!,” “Magical Mys-
tery Tour,” “Yellow Submarine,” and “Let It Be.”
Some were cinematic successes, and some were not, but—along with subsequent reissues, bonus material, and Peter Jackson’s “The Beatles: Get Back,” a documentary companion to “Let It Be”—they comprise an endlessly fascinating document of key phases in the group’s career.
In this comprehensive deepdive into the band’s movies, author and longtime music journalist Steve Matteo follows the origins, filming, and often frenzied fan reception of projects from the 1964 premiere of “A Hard Day’s Night” through 1970s “Let It Be” to the release of “Get
Back” in 2022.
Matteo explores the production process, original theatrical film releases, subsequent VHS, DVD, and Blu-ray releases, and bonus materials, along with the U.S. and UK soundtracks. In addition to copious anecdotes and behind-the-scenes details, he also places these films in their larger context, a period of unprecedented artistic and commercial innovation in British and world cinema.
Filled with stories and insights that will satisfy collectors, buffs, and casual fans alike, this is the definitive account of an underappreciated part of the Beatles’ creative output.
Steve Matteo is the author of “Let It Be “(33 1/3-Bloomsbury) and “Dylan” (Union Square & CompanyBarnes & Noble). He recently contributed to “he Beatles in Context,” which was published by Cambridge University Press.
He is a contributing editor with The Vinyl District and has written for such publications as The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, New York magazine, Time Out New York, Rolling Stone, Spin, Rock’s Backpages, Relix, Goldmine, Interview, Elle, Citizen Truth, Literary Hub and Salon.
He has worked for Pete Townshend of the Who in various capaci-
ties for Left Field Services, Towser Tunes and Trinifold. His radio career includes working at WLIR-FM, WNYT and FM Odyssey and he often appears on radio, including on the Sirius XM Volume Channel, Q104, Joe Johnson’s Beatle Brunch, Talk More Talk: A Solo Beatles Videocast, 21st Century Radio, WAAM, WFUV, WUSB, WPPB and WHPC and television in his capacity as a music journalist and an author.
He has lectured on Bob Dylan at the New School for Social Research in New York and journalism at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. He holds a B.F.A. in Communication Arts from the New York Institute of Technology.
Like puzzles? Then you’ll love sudoku. This mind-bending puzzle will have you hooked from the moment you square off, so sharpen your pencil and put your sudoku savvy to the test!
Here’s
Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle!
WHERE:
ALONG JERICHO TURNPIKE
between MINEOLA BLVD. & WILLIS AVE.
WHEN:
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1st from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
WHAT:
• LIVE MUSIC & ENTERTAINMENT
• ALL TYPES OF FOOD PROVIDED BY LOCAL RESTAURANTS & FOOD TRUCKS
• LOADS OF FAMILY FUN ATTRACTIONS
• CLASSIC CAR SHOW
• CELEBRITY DUNK TANK
• FREE PARKING & FREE ADMISSION
•
Mineola is ready for a sold-out street fair and a crowd that can expect loads of local food, music and businesses this weekend.
The street fair, hosted by the Mineola Chamber of Commerce, is set for Sunday, Oct. 1, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. along Jericho Turnpike between Mineola Boulevard and Willis Avenue. The rain day for the fair is set for Sunday, Oct. 8.
Attendees can expect over 120 kiosks of different vendors, businesses and community organizations lined up and down the turnpike.
“We’re gratified because the more things that we can offer the community, the more successful our events are going to be,” said Louis Panacciulli, president of the chamber.
Last year, the chamber decided to take over the full responsibility of planning the street fair with an added focus on making it a family fun day.
Children were able to enjoy a number of inflatable rides and bouncy houses, an RC car demonstration outside Willis Hobbies, carnival games courtesy of the Mineola Volunteer Ambulance Corps, a dunk tank with the Mineola Junior Fire Department and clown show, among many
offerings. Can You Escape? Long Island will also be bringing a portable escape room and attendees can expect additional activities such as axe-throwing or a car show.
“We try to include as many events at the fair to keep people engaged,” Panacciulli said.
Entertainment will be provided on the east and west ends of Jericho throughout the entire day.
At the west end mobile stage, musical duo LeeAnn & John will be performing at 11 a.m., the American Theater Dance Workshop at noon, Master Jeon Taekwondo at 1 p.m., Jason the Clown Magic Show at 1:30
p.m., a performance by The Ariel Loft at 2 p.m., singer Nick Fabiano at 2 p.m. and another magic show at 3:30 p.m.
Also at the west end, the Mineola Historical Society will be honoring businesses that have been operating in the village for over 25 years at 11:45 p.m. This year’s honorees are
Mineola Diner, Robert’s, The Valentine Agency, Harry Katz/Carpet One and Mineola Bicycle.
At the east end’s mobile stage, musical outfits Calliope Wren will be performing at 11 a.m., Original Gossip at noon, Skyward Effect at 1 p.m., Fuzz at 2 p.m., School of Rock at 3 p.m. and the Tony Santos Band at 4 p.m.
The Mineola Street Fair started over 200 years ago but adopted the name “Mineola Fair” in 1899, according to the chamber. It was held in Mineola Memorial Park from 1991 until 2013 when it moved to Main Street. It then settled into its current Jericho Turnpike location in 2016.
The decision to move the fair to Jericho Turnpike was made because the chamber’s goal is to help local businesses and it thought the park was too small to help them, according to the chamber.
Looking ahead to Sunday, Panacciulli said he is excited for the residents to see the variety of vendors available, specifically the food options.
“There will be a lot more choices this year for people to make,” Panacciulli said. “We’re looking forward to having all these organizations benefitting from the event.”
North Hempstead Supervisor Jennifer DeSena and the Town Board have announced that the Fall Family Festival will be returning to the beach. The family-friendly celebration will be held at North Hempstead Beach Park in Port Washington on Saturday, Sept. 30 from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m.
“The Town’s free fall festival is a great opportunity for our residents to celebrate the fall season with activities that are fun for all ages on a beautiful autumn day at the beach,” DeSena said. “I encourage all to come out and enjoy a day of entertaining activities, as the Town’s free fall
festival is the perfect opportunity for families to celebrate Halloween and usher in a new season with live music, a craft fair, and so much more.”
The annual Fall Family Festival will feature many free activities including pumpkin decorating, arts & crafts, bouncy slides, train rides, character meet-and-greets, a craft fair, along with cultural and local vendors.
There will also be live performances from Porch Light featuring an eclectic mix of dance music. Attendees will be able to purchase food and refreshments.
Admission and parking are free. For more information about the event, please call 311 or 516-869-6311.
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Fri 9/29
Andrew Weiss and Friends @ Spotlight @ 10pm Spotlight NY Huntington, 370 New York Ave, Huntington
Sat 9/30
Run for Hope 5K Run/Walk @ 8am / $10-$25
99 Quaker Meeting House Rd, Farmingdale
Nurse Blake: Shock
Advised @ 8pm / $40.50
Bring out your friends, family, and coworkers for an EPIC night as Nurse Blake shares new stories with a comedic twist of the ins and outs of being a nurse. Tilles Center, LIU Post College, 720 Northern Boulevard, Greenvale
LET IT BLEED IN CONCERT FREE @ 2:30pm
LET IT BLEED FREE CONCERT Sousa Band Shell, Main Street, Port Washington. vinerb@ pwpl.org, 516-423-0168
MOMIX: Alice @ 8pm / $54
Seamlessly blending illusion, acrobatics, magic, and whimsy, MOMIX Dance Company will send you �ying down the rabbit hole in Moses Pendleton’s newest creation, Alice. Tilles Center, LIU Post College, 720 Northern Boulevard, Greenvale
Jimmy & Jackie Playing Dead With Allmost Brothers Band @ 8pm / $45-$70
The Space at Westbury The‐ater, 250 Post Avenue, West‐bury
Pinky Patel: New Crown, Who Dhis @ 8pm / $35
A TikTok Sensation, Performing for One Night Only! Jeanne Rimsky Theater, 232 Main Street, Port Wash‐ington. bo�of�ce@land markonmainstreet.org, 516-767-6444
Long Island Walk for Pancreatic Cancer Research @ 8:30am
Be Part of the Commu‐nity United in the Vision to Transform Pancre‐atic Cancer into a Cur‐able Disease The Lust‐garten Foundation’s Walk for Research is your chance to join thousands of others whose live Jones Beach State Park, Park‐ing Field #5, 1 Ocean Parkway, Wantagh. sja cobson@lustgarten.org, 914-589-7553
Sun 10/01
Paint like Picasso! @ 1:30am
Join us for our Picasso SelfPortraits Workshop at Gold Coast Arts! Spend an afternoon learning the techniques of the inventor of cubism. Gold Coast Arts Center, 113 Middle Neck Road, Great Neck. info@gold coastarts.org, 516-829-2570
Walk to End
Alzheimer’s - Nassau
@ 9am / Free
This inspiring event calls on participants of all ages and abilities to join the �ght against Alzheimer's disease and associated demen‐tias. Join us at Field 6/ 6A! Eisenhower Park, 1899 Park Boulevard, East Meadow. thard ekopf@alz.org, 631315-8486
Sunday Oct
15th Annual "Let's Walk, Let's Talk: Stepping Together to Prevent Suicide"
@ 10:30am / $25
1 Laurelton Blvd, 1 Laurelton Boulevard, Long Beach. tengel @liccpfy.org, 516-940-2225
Since 2009, The Walk has been an opportunity for people from across Long Island to come together, walk together, and raise awareness of suicide pre‐vention in our community. Each year, this moving and spirited event is at‐tended by individuals and families – of all ages and backgrounds – with the aim of spreading the message: "No one walks alone." Anyone can partici‐pate. Join us for this important event!
Crabtree's NY & Main, 330 New York Ave, Huntington
Fall Fun Fest at Sands Point Preserve
@ 12pm / $35-$40
Celebrate the Autumn season at our Fall Fun Fest at Sands Point Preserve Sands Point Preserve, 127 Middle Neck Road, Sands Point. info@sandspoint preserve.org, 516-5717901
Tom Chapin: Clean Machine @ 12pm / Free Welcoming Back Grammy-award Winning Children’s Artist, Tom Chapin! Jeanne Rimsky Theater, 232 Main Street, Port Washing‐ton. bo�of�ce@land markonmainstreet.org, 516-767-6444
Ben Folds: What Matters Most Tour @ 8pm / $39.50-$99.50
The Paramount, 370 New York Ave, Huntington
BUS TRIP: Mills Manor at Staatsburgh Historic Site @ 8am / $125
Join us as we head upstate to Mills Manor at Staatsburgh State Historic Site on Tuesday, October 3rd! Old Westbury Gar‐dens, 71 Old Westbury Road, Old Westbury. tickets@oldwest burygardens.org, 516-333-0048
Social Singles
@ 6:30pm / $12
Join us at the Mid-Island Y JCC for ongoing social programming for singles ages 55+ to connect with one another. Mid-Island Y JCC, 45 Manetto Hill Road, Plainview
Dan Reardon @ 8pm
Henry Rollins: Good to See You @ 7:30pm / $35
Henry Rollins: Good to See You Jeanne Rimsky Theater, 232 Main Street, Port Washing‐ton. bo�of�ce@land markonmainstreet.org, 516-767-6444
Maluma: Don Juan Tour @ 8pm / $31-$191 UBS Arena, 2400 Hempstead Turnpike, Belmont Park - Long Island
Fri 10/06
Spooky Fest @ 6:30pm / $27 Oct 6th - Oct 29th
Our updated Halloween adventure is perfect for families who don't want to be scared.... or maybe just a little. 1450 Tanglewood Rd, 1450 Tanglewood Road, Rockville Centre. helpdesk@cstl.org, 516-764-0045
Famous Food Festival 2023 - Oct 6th - 9th - Deer Park, Long Island NY @ 1pm / $8 Oct 6th - Oct 9th
Famous Food Festival "Taste the World" Re‐turns To Tanger Outlets (Deer Park, NY) this Columbus Day Week‐end With over 60 food vendors on deck, get ready to taste the world!www Tanger Out‐lets - Deer Park, 152 The Arches Circle, Deer Park. management@fa mousfoodfestival.com, 662-221-2223
Suzanne Vega: An Intimate Evening of Songs and Stories @ 8pm / $51
Suzanne Vega – An Inti‐mate Evening of Songs and Stories Jeanne Rimsky Theater, 232 Main Street, Port Washington. bo�of�ce @landmarkonmain street.org, 516-7676444
Head Automatica @ 8pm / $30-$65
The Paramount, 370 New York Ave, Huntington
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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.
Many of us want a home, whether a large spacious one or an average-size one of 1,800 sq. ft. or a medium size of 2,273 sq. ft. as was the case in 2021, according to Realtor.com But what was afordable and reasonably priced years ago is now beyond the reach of a majority of purchasers, due to higher interest rates and prices as well as the continued increases in monthly costs.
In a June 6th article in Yahoo Finance, there were only four U.S. cities where it was more economical to buy than to rent, which were Detroit, Philadelphia, Cleveland, and Houston. More than 50% of the homes in those specifc markets were more afordable to buy than to rent. I have said in a previous column that New York State as well as well as other states are losing their young populations and families. Not much has been accomplished in alleviating and solving this issue to keep them in place.
I have seen a trend that has been developing, however, over the last number of years throughout the U.S. It is a based on low-priced, tiny houses and has been gaining huge popularity. The trend is designed to maximize functionality and minimize space requirements, ofering a minimalist and
sustainable living solution.
Tiny houses have gained traction in recent years due to their afordability, mobility, and eco-friendly nature. They can range from 100 to as much as 500 sq. ft. They generally can have the amenities that a much larger home would have, just downsized. This trend started to increase during the implosion of the market back in 2007-2008 as people were losing their jobs and their homes were foreclosed on.
The afordable alternative to a traditional home was a tiny house. They were cost-efcient, low carbon footprint and the savings on utilities were dramatic. This enabled many to simplify their lives, even going as far as living of the grid and downsizing, leading to a less stressful, minimalist lifestyle. Prices can range from as little as $15,000 for the smallest house, if you’re salvaging materials and your DIY skills come into play, up to $100,000, for a home that has most of the extras.
Tumbleweed Tiny House Company is the nation’s leading builder of tiny houses. The cost is extremely low and doable for most, compared to a typical contractor-built, median-sized home of 2,383 sq. ft, where the median price was $383,500 in 2022.
There are so many Gen Z members and others with student loans that must be paid back starting in October. Assuming the borrower is gainfully employed and has good credit, a tiny house could be the answer to becoming a homeowner. Once constructed, a tiny house can be placed on a trailer and brought to any location where the zoning permits these types of homes. As so many people leave larger,
more costly cities, especially in New York State, this could potentially ease the exodus of those who would consider ownership of a tiny house. Possible changes in zoning within certain locations, allowing sub-dividing a typical lot that would allow a tiny house, would help in easing the current housing crisis.
Sufcient research in fnding the land to place the tiny house will be necessary. Going out into Sufolk County or Upstate New York should enable you to fnd available land. However, if you are just one or two people, this can work well. But if you have a larger family, a tiny house most likely will not provide the required space. The word is sacrifce in what you are willing to do to determine whether this will properly work for you.
If and when Gov. Kathy Hochul has a plan put into efect to ofer lowcost housing that will be available for rent or sale, it still might be a more expensive way to go. It is obvious that you will need to be a minimalist when downsizing to a tiny house. This efectively will eliminate all your current clutter and allow you to live a more carefree, afordable lifestyle.
Your real estate taxes should be
considerably lower, too, based on the value of both house and land. You will also have to search for a mortgage broker and/or lender that will allow fnancing for your tiny house (we can assist you in your search). Pursuing this path could help in building your wealth as opposed to continuing to rent.
You must determine all your monthly costs in renting compared to purchasing a tiny house. Not everyone will want to adapt to this type of living environment, but renting is a guarantee that will only decrease your wealth monthly while you are handing it over to your landlord as well as all the other benefts that he/she is gaining.
Philip A. Raices is the owner/Broker of Turn Key Real Estate at 3 Grace Ave Suite 180 in Great Neck. For a free 15-minute consultation, value analysis of your home, or to answer any of your questions or concerns he can be reached by cell: (516) 647-4289 or by email: Phil@TurnKeyRealEstate.Com or via https://WWW.Li-RealEstate.Com Just email or snail mail (regular mail) him with your ideas or suggestions on future columns with your name, email and cell number and he will call or email you back.
Phishing is a form of cyber fraud that uses bogus emails in order to lure victims to part with something of value, such as passwords and credit cards. It does this by mimicking a trusted sender, convincing an employee to click a link. This immediately installs malware like viruses and ransomware to the company’s network where it can access invaluable data.
Sandwire Technology Group fights back on behalf of its clients, small and midsize businesses (SMBs), with limited budgets. Our CyberSafe stack serves as a defensive shield, featuring:
• Email/data backup to retrieve and restore data
• Spam filtration, secure email platform
• Artificial Intelligence (AI) driven anti-phishing software
• Dark web monitoring/credential exposure protection
• Employee training with phishing tests and educational videos
Phishing emails are becoming increasingly difficult to spot, a trend that sees no end. Today, nearly every major data breach begins with a successful attack. Is your company protected?
The Financial Planning Association of Long Island will be hosting free educational webinars to the general public through its “Wednesday Webinars” series. The association’s financial professionals will provide expert financial education and consultation on a variety of pertinent topics.
To register for the webinars, visit www.fpali.org
Wednesday, September 27. 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Over 65? Navigating Your Health Insurance Needs Presented by Rhonda Cooper, United Healthcare Reverse Mortgage 101: How to Use them in Retirement Presented by Stephen Conroy, Longbridge Financial
Wednesday, Oct. 4. 7:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Divorce Finances and the Marital Residence presented by Donna LaScala, Comprehensive Divorce Solutions, LLC and Robert Tollin, Nationwide Mortgage Bankers, Inc.
Continued from Page 18
Besides Free, there are a number of very capable other senior LIRR vice presidents such as Executive Vice President Elisa Picca, Senior Chief Engineer Ed McGoldrick and several others who could easily step in to fill this position full time.
They, like Free, already have a good understanding of the LIRR’s organization, staff, operations, facilities and customers’ needs. Any would be able to hit the job running with little need for on the job training.
There are a number of issues facing management that recent past LIRR Presidents Phil Eng and Catherine Rinaldi have not resolved. They include significant overtime abuse and outof-control pensions, fare evasion, periodic cancellation and combining of trains due to signal, power and other problems in the East River tunnels, Harold Interlocking, Jamaica Station and other locations and several new union contracts.
Some of these have gone on for far too long.
Amtrak will begin repairs to the four East River tunnels in 2024. This will result in one tunnel at a time being removed from service. With access to only
three tunnels, Free will need to develop a new Penn Station service plan. It should keep to a minimum the number of combined and canceled trains during this multi-year construction period.
Free will need to meet with and develop a working relationship with the Federal Transit Administration Region 2 New York office. FTA plays a critical role in funding the LIRR capital program
Free must continue progressing the LIRR to reach a state of good repair for the existing fleet, stations, signals, interlocking, track, power, yards and shops.
FTA , Albany, other funding agencies, commuters, taxpayers, transit advocacy groups and elected officials on the local, county, state and federal level all wish him success in his new role.
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.
All-Girls, College Preparatory High School sponsored by the Sisters of St. Joseph
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BLANK SLATE MEDIA is a fast-growing media company with 6 award-winning weekly newspapers and a website in Nassau County, a full array of digital services and high-profle events.
We have openings in several categories that we are looking to fll immediately.
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A HOME HEALTH CARE AIDE Irish trained woman with 10 years experience and excellent checkable references available. Honest and reliable. Licensed driver with own transportation. Please call 516-383-7150
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INVITED ESTATE SALES BY TRACY
JORDAN is doing VIRTUAL TAG SALES and ONLINE AUCTIONS now! Sell the contents of an entire house or sell just a few things! You can host your own sale on invitedsales.com and Facebook and Instagram or we can do it for you. We can photograph, advertise and handle the winning pickups for you within a week! Don’t worry about your closing date, we can get your house ready on time! We are a one stop service for all your needs when you are moving or selling a property! Selling, donating, discarding and cleaning out services can be done to meet your time frame with minimal stress. Contact info@invitedsales.com for more information or call 516-279-6378 to schedule a consultation or receive more information. Visit us at www.invitedsales.com for a listing of our upcoming Virtual Tag Sales and Weekly Auctions!
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Continued from Page 1
facade closer to the street, provide fewer parking spaces and construct a second-foor deck/ gathering place.
“We’re talking about a restaurant that’s been here for a hundred years, we’re talking about a tired building, we’re talking about something that could be transformative and maybe inform future developments there that really are within the code,” said Kathleen Deegan Dickson, the attorney representing Louie’s.
She said that while prior owners had implemented illegal expansions to the building without permits, the restaurant’s application is seeking to legalize those additions after the fact. She said the current owner bought the property with these elements already in place.
Deegan Dickson said the variance for the facade is not seeking to move the building closer to the property line, but increasing the height in the front of the building.
She said the building is constructed in a unique location as it is built over the water. Because of this, the building grade is established at the beach below and the street in front, making establishing the maximum height diferent due to the varying grades.
The height of the building’s existing elevation is at 23 feet above the average grade, and 18 feet from the sidewalk to the top of the building.
The proposed building would have a height of 26.3 feet above the sidewalk grade.
Deegan Dickson said the parking variance overall is to accommodate 20 fewer parking spaces than required. She said the trafc engineer confrmed the surrounding area could handle the lack of parking.
She said that they have worked with the community on this project as there has been opposition.
“I know that this area of Port Washington
and Port Washington in general has a very active citizenry and rightfully so,” Deegan Dickson said. “They are very protective of the beauty that is Port Washington.”
About 18 people spoke during the public comment period, with an even split between people advocating for and against the site plan proposal and its variances.
Residents’ concerns included adverse efects on the character of the neighborhood, impact on the surrounding natural environment and exacerbated trafc due to an insufcient amount of parking.
Shahnaz Autz, founder of the Mitchell Farms Neighborhood Association, said the residents are not against renovations but they are against the “aggressive expansion.”
She asked the board to deny the application
as it is “a signifcant departure from the spirit of the code.”
“Ultimately these changes will cause a decline in the charm and beauty of the whole waterfront and the Port Washington community and signifcantly will diminish the quality of life for all residents of the surrounding community,” Autz said.
Many of the neighboring residents said that their residential streets are inundated with Louie’s patrons parking their cars, so an expansion would aggravate an already existing problem.
Lavi Finkelstein, and other residents, also raised safety concerns with increased patronage at Louie’s, citing prior alleged incidents of patrons driving drunk after leaving the restaurant.
“An outdoor terrace might be good for business, but at what cost to our environment and
Continued from Page 4
board data concerning what it views as a massive number of irregularities in recent elections.
The group contended it has submitted a formal complaint asking the state board to investigate each of the “millions of suspected illegal registrations, the apparent existence of an algorithm injecting synthetic voters into the voter rolls, the large discrepancy between the number of voters counted and the number of voters who voted and the voters with apparently non-
compliant registrations who were permitted to vote.”
McKenzie said her ofce had found no evidence to support the claims made by these impersonators. She said that the reaction from affected voters ranged from outrage to fear that their voting activities might have violated the law.
NYCA describes its mission as dedicated to ensuring honest and verifable elections in New York and across the nation. It actively seek dona-
tions on its website to support their eforts.
The organization holds non-proft status, as determined by the Internal Revenue Service in 2022, allowing it to receive tax-deductible donations and exempting the group from federal income taxes. Their IRS report for 2022 indicates it received less than $50,000 in gross receipts.
Hornik, NYCA’s executive director, was said to be an election denier in a November 2022 news article by New York Now, a PBS public afairs show, in which she falsely claims that
Continued from Page 2
this cause, with the staf and board of directors unwavering in their commitment, Murphy said.
In 2008, Tuesday’s Children launched Project Common Bond, a program born from the desire of teenagers to connect with others who’ve experienced similar losses due to terrorism and military confict. This program, designed for those aged 15 to 22, brings together young people from diverse backgrounds to learn about concepts of dignity and shared humanity.
“We’ve had kids from Palestine and Israel at the same time,” Murphy said. “In the beginning, they were not going to talk with each other. And in the end, they were like, we didn’t cause this in our countries. It’s political, but I like you.”
In 2017, they expanded their mission to help Gold Star families—the families of those who went into the military post-9/11 because of the attack. With 22 years of lessons learned, they’ve developed a long-term healing model that prioritizes trust, listening to concerns, and providing assistance to both parents and children.
Adapting quickly to the challenges of the Covid-19 pandemic, Tuesday’s Children transitioned all their programs to a virtual format. They provide assistance with college applications and scholarships, along with support for internships and career development. With 140 corporate relationships, they help young adults navigate internships, career development, and their goals.
peace?” Finkelstein asked. “ We must ask ourselves: Are we making changes for the community or merely for commercial interests?”
Some residents also expressed concerns about the restaurant not abiding by maximum seating requirements and getting away with violating regulations. Deegan Dickson assured the board that the owners have no interest in perpetuating violations.
“The last thing you want is somebody coming in, counting seats and shutting you down,” Deegan Dickson said. “That’s the death knell of a restaurant business.”
Stuart Rosen, a Port Washington resident since 1969, said that this building renovation will be benefcial to Louie’s operation. He said the proposal is “gorgeous” and he does not understand why the community would oppose the renovation.
“But I could tell you based on these pictures that I would much rather look at this than what is there now,” Rosen said.
Cindy Lee, owner of Fathoms Hotel and Marina in Port Washington, said she is also in support of her neighboring business’ application. She said the renovations would help to bolster the business along Main Street and revitalize the area.
Neighboring residents said the variances Louie’s is seeking are not to alleviate hardships the restaurant is experiencing but to bolster its business. They said because of this, the variances should not be granted, among other reasons.
“If they bypassed regulations in the past, what guarantees do we have in the future, especially with an even larger operation?” Port Washington resident Anna Isaac asked.
Deegan Dickson said she is unsure of whether or not a compromise can be achieved, despite residents’ requests for one.
She said they are looking to close the restaurant on Oct. 1 to begin construction. It would then reopen May 2024, with the goal of doing so by Memorial Day weekend.
former President Donald Trump won the 2020 election.
Hornik’s involvement in election-related activities gained more attention in August when she was a speaker at a gathering of election deniers in Springfeld, MO. The event was hosted by My Pillow CEO Mike Lindell, who faces a defamation suit from Dominion Voting Systems for his false claims that its machines rigged the 2020 election.
The group is still seeking volunteers on its social media accounts such as X, formerly Twitter, and says the goal is to contribute to accurate elections.
The organization hosts monthly dialogue groups for surviving spouses. Over the years, the organization has seen issues evolve as the spouses age. Initially overwhelmed by loss and paperwork, they now face the challenges of being empty nesters, moving, assisted living and more.
“We created this dialogue group to let them know you’re not alone. A lot of others are feeling the same way,” said Murphy.
As the children who lost parents on 9/11 enter their 30s and start their own families, they too face a new difcult task of explaining the tragedy to their own children.
“They want to fnd the right words to try and explain it,” Murphy said.
Continued from Page 5
“I know our residents want tax relief and I’ve given that to them and I’m going to give it to them again,” DeSena said.
Both candidates said they were against Gov. Kathy Hochul’s New York Housing Compact, which called for a major increase in housing on Long Island in favor of local control from municipalities.
“We hear from everyone involved and we make a decision about where we can build new types of housing and where it’s just not appropriate,” DeSena said. “I will continue to fght for local control so that we can preserve our quality of life and our resources.”
Kaiman said he is “100% against” the proposal and that it was a violation of home rule law in the state. He responded to DeSena’s point
about him proposing accessory housing during his time as supervisor, which was withdrawn after resident criticism.
“We had the ability to withdraw and we did,” Kaiman said. “That’s diferent than if the state were to make a rule that they can pass over our objections, not giving us a chance to govern ourselves. That would be a mistake.”
Kaiman said he held people accountable when asked about political mailers claiming he presided over corruption during his time as a supervisor. In 2007, a 16-month investigation into allegations of corruption led to the arrests and convictions of several North Hempstead Building Department employees.
“When you lift a rock up and dirt comes out because you’re cleaning the grounds, you get dirty,” Kaiman said. “I came into government knowing that the Building Department was lim-
ited in its ability to do what people were asking it to do and we had problems with them.”
Kaiman said after starting the 311 Call Center in 2005 his administration was able to fnd inconsistencies in the department and brought in the district attorney’s ofce at the time.
“Once we found that they did something wrong, we were able to have them fred and ultimately they were arrested and a couple of them convicted,” Kaiman said.
DeSena, who asked Nassau County Comptroller Elaine Philips to audit the Building Department last year, said the problems currently persist from Kaiman’s time that she is still working on fxing.
“To say that you fxed it and the problem happened over the later years is really a gross oversimplifcation,” DeSena said. “I would not say you fxed it, I would say problems still exist.”
When asked about her endorsement of Congressman George Santos, DeSena said she was lied to along with the 3rd Congressional District and she too was ofended and victimized by his lies. DeSena has since called on his resignation from Congress.
“I helped in every way I could, I have encouraged everyone to report what they knew,” DeSena. “He’s a liar, I have not worked with him.”
If re-elected, DeSena said her top goals are to provide tax relief, continue improving North Hempstead’s infrastructure and renovate the town’s parks which have lacked support.
“I am committed to moving those projects forward to improving our parks and doing it with great management, continued tax cuts and in a very responsive way,” DeSena said.
When asked to describe his new vision for town government, Kaiman said it’s to use the technology and resources in the town to give people confdence in their government.
“People need to know that the government can their money, be responsive, call them back when they call and get problems solved in realtime, and that’s what I’ve always done,” Kaiman said.
Continued from Page 5
Another public hearing was held to establish categories of memberships, annual membership fees, guest privileges and other fees and charges for recreational facilities at The Village Club.
No member of the board nor anyone from the public spoke during the public hearing, and the proposal was adopted later in the meeting.
Representatives from Salerno Brokerage Corporation, an insurance consulting frm, made a presentation to the board of trustees about the renewal of village insurance policies from Oct. 1 through Sept. 30, 2024.
Salerno Brokerage’s services include looking
into vendor agreements, reviewing policies and assisting in negotiations.
The insurance policy renewal was approved unanimously by the board.
The board also approved the appointments of two individuals as assistant building inspectors and code enforcement ofcers. These positions will be held by Peter Albinski, who is currently the village’s architect, and Michael Rider.
The village also authorized the purchase and installation of perimeter fencing for its new pickleball courts, which are close to being completed. Along with this approval was one for the purchase of sound attenuation panels and light-
ing.
Forman said the board’s approval for lighting on the pickleball courts is not to construct lighting, but rather to establish the lighting infrastructure underneath the courts in case the village chooses to add lighting in the future.
The Sands Point Board of Trustees will convene again on Oct. 23, where it will hold another public hearing for three other proposed local laws.
These laws, like the ones discussed Tuesday night, are to amend the village’s code and will concern the chapters of vehicles and trafc, zoning and licensed occupations.
Continued from Page 10
lied to along with the 3rd Congressional District and she too was ofended and victimized by his lies. DeSena has since called on his resignation from Congress.
“I helped in every way I could, I have encouraged everyone to report what they knew,” DeSena. “He’s a liar, I have not worked with him.”
If re-elected, DeSena said her top goals are to provide tax relief, continue improving North Hempstead’s infrastructure and renovate the town’s parks which have lacked support.
“I am committed to moving those projects forward to improving our parks and doing it with great management, continued tax cuts and in a very responsive way,” DeSena said.
When asked to describe his new vision for
town government, Kaiman said it’s to use the technology and resources in the town to give people confdence in their government.
“People need to know that the government can their money, be responsive, call them back when they call and get problems solved in realtime, and that’s what I’ve always done,” Kaiman said.
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and I knew that the facts would speak for themselves,” Dalimonte said. “The allegations made by my opponent were a desperate attempt to distract voters from the real issues facing our district.”
Franklin did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
During the Sept. 5 town board member, Supervisor Jennifer DeSena, a Republican, said Dalimonte can’t submit resolutions regarding Sunset Park due to her role with the town and Business Improvement District.
When asked for clarifcation by Dalimonte, Town Attorney John Chiara said he was not aware of a confict of interest and added the board of ethics – where Franklin fled his complaint – is the determining body on conficts of interest.
“I am not aware of a confict of interest,” Chiara said during the Sept. 5 meeting.
Continued from Page 3
The video goes on to show the entirety of the chat that Kinsley has with “Blue”, including graphic and sexual language and explicit pictures, which are censored in the video.
After Kinsley shares a phone number for “Blue” to call, he tells “Blue” that he discovered his name is Geof and plans to forward their conversation to his family and the NYPD.
One comment under the video said the man in the video was their band teacher in eighth grade, with others alleging the man worked at Herricks High and Middle School.
The name of Taylor has been removed from the music department’s page on the Herricks Middle School website this week, and his page in the district’s online directory has been removed.
Geofrey Taylor’s name was removed this week from the music department’s page on the Herricks Middle School’s website. (Screencap by Brandon Dufy)
A previous version of this article was published, it has since been updated.
North Hempstead Town Supervisor
Jennifer DeSena and Council Members
Robert Troiano Jr., Peter Zuckerman, and Veronica Lurvey attended the annual bar-
becue at Magnolia Gardens in Westbury on Sept. 14.
The North Hempstead Housing Authority hosts the barbeque every year for
all the tenants of Magnolia Gardens and Manhasset Valley.
This year’s theme was A Day at the Derby and featured food, music, and activities
for residents. Other elected officials in attendance included: state Assemblywoman Gina Sillitti and Joseph Galante representing state Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli.
Players and families associated with the Brentwood Soccer Club RUSH visited the campus of SUNY Old Westbury on Saturday, Sept. 16, to participate in activities surrounding the Panther Women’s soccer game against Lehman College.
The Brentwood RUSH Boy’s U10 and U14 teams were brought to campus through the work of Head Coach Betty Bohringer and a former Old Westbury player, Shauna Henderson,who serves as the registrar for the Brentwood Soccer Club and coaches teams from the club.
“Our program demands excellence from our studentathletes both on the field of competition and in service
to their communities,” said Bohringer. “Welcoming these young players and their families and being able to interact with them was a great way for our players to show what being a college athlete is like.”
The Brentwood players participated in the introductory “walk-out” of the players from both SUNY Old Westbury and Lehman and played an exhibition game during halftime of the Old Westbury Panthers’ 7-0 victory over the Lightning. The U14 players also worked as part of the sideline operations crew during the game.
This visit was the first of its kind since before the COVID-19 pandemic. During her time as a Panther athlete,
Henderson also arranged for visits from the Brentwood Soccer Club. She was a member of the Panther women’s soccer team from 2017-2019.
“Our goal is to show these young people what a college campus is like through their love of soccer in the hopes that we might be able to also show them college is an achievable dream for them,” said Bohringer.
The Panther Women’s Soccer team is one of 12 teams competing at the NCAA Division III level at SUNY Old Westbury. For more information about the campus’ athletics program, visit the Old Westbury Panthers Athletics website.
Fiesta in the Park, Sunday, October 1 @ 2 p.m., Of-site. Enjoy live music, dance lessons, children’s performances, sweet and savory Latin American cuisine, quality children’s crafts and entertainment – a family event for our community by our community! This Hispanic Heritage Month celebration is in partnership with the Port Washington Public Library, Port Washington Friends of the Library, the Parent Resource Center (PRC), Landmark on Main Street and the Township of North Hempstead.
Raindate: Sunday, Oct. 8.
A Time For Kids-Baby Start, Monday, October 2 @ 10 a.m., Lapham Meeting Room. Join Ms. Karen as we introduce our littlest learners to the wonderful world of library programs. Activities include music, movement, fne and gross motor development, and stories. Focus is on early literacy, early language development and socialization. For children ages three months to 17 months. Registration required.
A Time For Kids, Monday, October 2 @ 10:45 a.m., Lapham Meeting Room. Ms. Karen presents educational activities, movement, music and a craft. For children ages 18 months to fve years with an adult. Separate registration is required for each month.
Medicare Explained, Monday, October 2 @ 7 p.m., Lapham Meeting Room. Join us for a presentation on Medicare—the open enrollment period for Medicare runs from Oct.15 — Dec. 7 this year. Bring your questions!
Support Group for Caregivers of Elderly Relatives, Tuesday, October 3 @ 7 p.m., Children’s Workshop Room. This support group for adults will give participants the opportunity to talk with others experiencing similar circumstances as well as share ideas for the best ways to handle a variety of situations.
Kids’ Chess, Wednesday, October 4 @ 5 p.m., Children’s Workshop Room. Learn the rules and strategies of chess and practice what you have learned by playing against your peers. For children in 3rd to 6th grade. Sponsored by the Friends of the Library in memory of Lawrence Kamisher. Registration required.
Discussion Group (Ages 60+): Our Visible and Invisible World, Wednesday, October 4 @ 7 p.m., Lapham Meeting Room. Join us for an informal discussion that aims to build community with intelligent discussion, laughter and social interaction.
Baby Rhyme Time, Thursday, October 5 @ 9:30 a.m., Children’s Room. A lap-sit storytime with songs, music and bouncing rhymes that emphasizes early literacy skills. For children ages birth to 17 months. Admittance is on a frstcome, frst-serve basis.
Baby Rhyme Time, Thursday, October 5 @ 10:30 a.m., Children’s Room. A lap-sit storytime with songs, music,and bouncing rhymes that emphasizes early literacy skills. For children ages birth to 17 months. Admittance is on a frstcome, frst-serve basis.
Art Lecture with Thomas Germano: Max Beckmann, Thursday, October 5 @ 3 p.m., Lapham Meeting Room. Professor Thomas Germano will present a visual lecture about German painter Max Beckmann and the censorship his
art experienced during the 1930s. Sponsored by the Friends of the Library. This event is part of Banned Books Week.
Knitting Workshop, Thursday, October 5 @ 6 p.m., Children’s Workshop Room. Learn the basics of knitting and complete a small beginner project, such as fngerless gloves or a scarf. For children in 4th to 6th grade. Sponsored by The Friends of the Library. Registration required.
Park Story Time, Friday, October 6 @ 9:30 a.m. Join your favorite librarians at Blumenfeld Park (across the street from the library) for Park Story Time! In inclement weather, the program will be moved to the Lapham Meeting Room—no registration required.
Sandwiched In with Dr. William Thierfelder — Changing Your Perspective: Five Women Authors, Friday, October 6 @ 12 p.m., Lapham Meeting Room and on Zoom. William Thierfelder explores the works of fve women authors who have changed or challenged our perspective on how we see the world. He will present virtually, but we will live-stream the event in Lapham and on Zoom. Sponsored by the Friends of the Library.
Coding for Kids, Friday, October 6 @ 4:30 p.m., Children’s Workshop Room. Ignite the love of coding by learning to create animations and computer games using Scratch. A graphical programming language developed by MIT and taught by AP Computer Science HS students from PW for children with no prior programming experience in 3rd to 6th grade. For more information, visit youngcoderspw.com. Registration required.
SoundSwap: Velvet Mills, Friday, October 6 @ 7:30 p.m., Lapham Meeting Room. Long Island’s rock artists Velvet Mills bring their audience a “sought after, profound musical experience.” The band ofers a dynamic mix of eclectic songs. Three passionate characters playing songs unlike any you’ve heard before make Velvet Mills a band to see.
“Flora and Fauna” Reception with Lisa Stancati, Saturday, October 7 @ 2 p.m., Hagedorn Meeting Room. Join us for this special reception event with photographer Lisa Stancati. This exhibition celebrates the beauty of plants and our connections with the natural world. Ms. Stancati’s photographs have been included in numerous exhibitions and publications, and her work can be found in the collection of the Brooklyn Museum and the Museum of Photographic Arts in San Diego. This exhibit is made possible with funds from the Statewide Community Regrant Program, a regrant program of the NYS Council on the Arts with the support of the Governor and the NYS Legislature, administered by the Huntington Arts Council. For full details, pwpl.org/events
Moon Festival, Saturday, October 7 @ 1:30 p.m., Lapham Meeting Room. Hear stories about the Moon Festival, enjoy a Chinese culture fashion show and a Chinese yo-yo (diabolo) performance by artist Graham Lo, and create a beautiful lantern. Registration Required. Sponsored by the Library Foundation and the Children’s Advisory Council.
Family Film: Encanto, Monday, October 9
@ 2 p.m., Lapham Meeting Room. Walt Disney Animation Studios’ Encanto takes place in the mountains of Colombia, in a hidden place called Encanto. Mirabel Madrigal has to face the frustration of being the only member of her family without magical powers. When she discovers that the magic surrounding the Encanto is in danger, Mirabel decides that she, the only ordinary Madrigal, might be her family’s last hope. The flm will be shown in English with Spanish subtitles. No registration is required. Rated: PG, 1 hour 42 minutes. No registration is required.
Hypertension Screenings, Tuesday, October 10, from 11 a.m. — 2 p.m., Joan and Arnold Saltzman Reading Room. St. Francis Blood Pressure screening.
(Not So) Alternative Health Practices, Tuesday, October 10 @ 7 p.m., Lapham Meeting Room. Join Winifred Boyd, Lisc. Acupuncturist MS, Reiki Master for an interactive 90-min. Lecture on methods for helping yourself to be both healthier and happier. Please wear loose clothing, bring water, and a towel or yoga mat is suggested but optional. Sponsored by the Health Advisory Council.
Kids’ Chess, Wednesday, October 11 @ 5 p.m., Children’s Workshop Room. Learn the rules and strategies of chess and practice what you have learned by playing against your peers. For children in 3rd to 6th grade. Sponsored by the Friends of the Library in memory of Lawrence Kamisher. Registration required.
Job Interviews: Impress and Achieve Success! (Session 1), Wednesday, October 11 @ 7 p.m., Online. Learn how to prepare yourself efectively before and during the interview and what to do afterward to increase your chances of getting hired. See pwpl.org/events for complete details.
For the Record: Bob Dylan’s Self Portrait, Wednesday, October 11 @ 7 p.m., Hagedorn Meeting Room. Join George Walsh, host of WCWP Radio’s Knockin’ on Dylan’s Door (Mondays 7–9 p.m.), for a look at Dylan’s tenth studio album, Self Portrait. For full details, visit pwpl. org/events
Baby Rhyme Time, Thursday, October 12 @ 9:30 a.m., Children’s Room. A lap-sit storytime with songs, music and bouncing rhymes that emphasizes early literacy skills. For children ages birth to 17 months. Admittance is on a frstcome, frst-served basis.
Baby Rhyme Time, Thursday, October 12 @ 10:30 a.m., Children’s Room. A lap-sit storytime with songs, music and bouncing rhymes that emphasizes early literacy skills. For children ages birth to 17 months. Admittance is on a frstcome, frst-served basis.
Latino Talent Night, Thursday, October 12 @ 6 p.m., Lapham Meeting Room. A vibrant musical night flled with Tango dancers, famenco dancers and Latin performers. This event is part of the Hispanic Heritage Month celebration. Knitting Workshop, Thursday, October 12 @ 6 p.m., Children’s Workshop Room. Learn the basics of knitting and complete a small beginner project, such as fngerless gloves or a scarf. For children in 4th to 6th grade. Sponsored by The Friends of the Library. Registration required.
Park Story Time, Friday, October 13@ 9:30 a.m. Join your favorite librarians at Blumenfeld Park (across the street from the library) for Park Story Time! In inclement weather, the program will be moved to the Lapham Meeting Room—no registration required.
Sandwiched In with Tennessee Walt: The Hank Williams Century, Friday, October 13 @ 12 p.m., Lapham Meeting Room. Join us as Tennessee Walt takes us on a musical journey through ‘The Hank Williams Century’ and explores the man, the music and the legend.
Medicaid Sign-Up Help, Friday, October 13 @ 2 p.m., North Study Room. Free walkin assistance from the Nassau-Sufolk Hospital Council.
Alzheimer’s Information Session, Friday, October 13 @ 2 p.m., Hagedorn Meeting Room. Representatives from Parker Institute’s Willing Hearts, Helpful Hands program will be available to provide information on their services to Alzheimer’s patients and their caregivers, which include counseling, evaluation, information and referrals, and respite services.
Coding for Kids, Friday, October 13 @ 4:30 p.m., Children’s Workshop Room. Ignite the love of coding by learning to create animations and computer games using Scratch, a graphical programming language developed by MIT. Taught by AP Computer Science high school students from Port Washington for children with no prior programming experience in 3rd to 6th grade. For more information, visit youngcoderspw.com. Registration required.
SoundSwap Event: Any Given Sunday, Friday, October 13 @ 7:30 p.m., Lapham Meeting Room. Any Given Sunday Band plays a variety of American Roots, Classic Rock and R&B music. Watch this 8-person band perform live for our Library audience as part of our SoundSwap series—no registration required.
Monotype Print Workshop, Saturday, October 14 @ 11 a.m., Children’s Workshop Room. Children will explore printmaking with color, texture and composition while creating original monotypes. For children in 3rd to 5th grade. Registration required.
Artist Talk and Reception with Beth Atkinson, Saturday, October 14 @ 2 p.m., Lapham Meeting Room. Adler Gallery exhibiting artist for September and October, Beth Atkinson, will discuss her current exhibit, Making an Impression. She will explain her medium and some of her creative process. A reception will follow the talk. Refreshments will be served. Sponsored by the Art Advisory Council.
The Opus Zoo Woodwind Quintet, Sunday, October 15 @ 3 p.m., Lapham Meeting Room. The Opus Zoo Woodwind Quintet is a professional ensemble of musicians from Copenhagen, Denmark, making a limited engagement tour of Long Island. They mold each player’s unique virtuosity into a brilliantly blended sound. They expanded their repertoire for this ensemble by commissioning new works, including a new Quintet by American composer Edward Smaldone, receiving its American Premiere performance at the PWPL concert. Sponsored by the Friends of the Library.
New York Institute of Technology is again ranked among the top 25 universities in the North, improving its position to No. 21 in the regional ranking, and for the 13th consecutive year, is ranked among the top 50 universities in the North in the U.S. News & World Report 2024 Best Colleges ranking.
In addition to the university’s ongoing eforts to enhance the student experience and improve overall graduation and retention rates, New York Tech’s strong ranking position is supported by increases in its peer assessment and Pell grant graduation rate ranks.
New York Tech’s 2024 rankings include:
#21 Best Regional Universities (North), up from #22 in the 2022-2023 ranking #5 Best Colleges for Veterans (Regional Universities North), up from #9 last year #50 Top Performer in Social Mobility (Regional Universities North), maintaining last year’s position #49 Best Under-
graduate Engineering (National, no doctorate), maintaining last year’s position
In the Regional Universities (North) group, New York Tech also was ranked above all other private universities on Long Island and was the second most highly ranked private university in the New York metropolitan area. Among all public and private universities in the state, it was ranked tenth.
“The rankings continue to underscore our unwavering commitment to the quality of the student experience at New York Tech,” said President Hank Foley.“Providing access to education for all qualifed students is a cornerstone of our mission, and a key determinant of social mobility. Our ranking in New York and the region refects that we are operating from a position of strength as we educate the next generation of doers, makers, healers, and innovators.”
The Parker Jewish Institute is pleased to announce that its President and CEO Michael N. Rosenblut was recognized with the Humanitarian Award by Voices for Truth and Humanity. The honor was presented to Rosenblut at the 4th Annual Remembrance Awards dinner, at Crest Hollow Country Club in Woodbury on Wednesday, Sept. 27.
Voices for Truth and Humanity promotes U.S. public-school education about the Holocaust, slavery, and genocide. The organization aims to fght hatred against Jews as well as all bigotry.
The Parker Jewish Institute for Health Care and Rehabilitation is headquartered in New Hyde Park, New York. The facility is a leading provider
of Short Term Rehabilitation and Long Term Care. At the forefront of innovation in patient-centered health care and technology, the Institute is a leader in teaching and geriatric research. Parker Jewish Institute features its own medical team, and is nationally renowned as a skilled nursing facility, as well as a provider of community-based health care, encompassing Home Health Care, Medical House Calls, Palliative Care and Hospice. Parker Jewish Institute is also home to Queens-Long Island Renal Institute (QLIRI), led by an interdisciplinary team of experienced Nephrologists and Dialysis Registered Nurses, a Renal Social Worker, and a Registered Renal Dietitian.
Planting Fields Foundation is holding the 3rd annual Fall 5K on Oct. 8.
The course is both scenic and dynamic, taking you through various terrains of the Olmsted Brothers-designed landscapes of Planting Fields at its autumn peak with the oranges, reds and yellows of the leaves providing the perfect backdrop.
The Fall 5K will take attendees on a journey through history, as you pass by landmarks like the Carshalton Gates and Taxus Field. Run or walk at your own pace and enjoy the energy of the community as you make your way to the fnish line.
Whether you’re a serious runner, new to the sport or just want to enjoy a beautiful fall morning with friends and family, Planting Fields’s Fall 5K will challenge and inspire you. Register now to secure your spot!
All registrants will receive a personal bib, photo, and fnisher medal.
Registration opens at 7:30 a.m., and the race begins at 8:30 am from the Haybarn. Now through 10/7, $40 per person. Day of race, $50 per person.
For more information and to register, visit us at plantingfelds. org/happenings/planting-fieldsfall-5k/
Parker is now home to an Indian Cultural Unit, the frst of its kind, serving East and West Indian older adults in the region.
Through a grant from the Jewish Federation of North America, Parker recently deployed its Hope and Healing program. This innovative program is designed to address the unique challenges faced by family caregivers of older adults with dementia and a history of trauma, regardless of their age, gender, race, ethnicity, geography, or sexual orientation.
Under Rosenblut’s direction, Parker embraces diversity and meritocracy, where team members boost their skill sets through education and mentor-
ship. Parker focuses on service, where the staf takes pride in exceeding the expectations of the institute’s patients, residents and their families, treating everyone with respect.
Rosenblut said he was honored to accept this recognition from Voices for Truth and Humanity.
“I am very humbled to receive the 2023 Humanitarian Award,” Rosenblut said. “As leaders, we all have a role to play in fghting hate in all forms. Educating our children and leading by example, is the best insurance against a repeat of the atrocities of the past. Thank you Voices for Truth and Humanity for this truly distinguished honor.”
In October, Sands Point Preserve Conservancy is bringing “Asylum: A Love Story” to Hempstead House for 10 nights, offering a frightening immersive experience.
Those who dare will enter the 50,000-square-foot mansion and fnd themselves in a realm where madness and love intertwine. From the darkest recesses of the mind emerges passion that is at once beautiful and grotesque.
Halloween enthusiasts, ages 21 and up, will have to think like detectives to determine the outcome of a young intern who has vanished from the depths of the Asylum, leaving behind a web of clues. Along the way, they will tread through terrifying rooms and corridors as they unlock the dwelling’s spine-chilling secrets.
The thrilling attraction will feature actors who will travel with audience members in small groups throughout Hempstead House during this all-new theatrical presentation. The performance is approximately 120 minutes in length with an intermission and wine bar.
The Preserve’s immersive experiences transport ticket-holders each year into an unforgettable time and place, and to rave reviews, including these from 2022:
“This writer’s personal favorite Halloween tradition, this annual immersive theatrical experience sees the … Productions team draw you into a living, breathing horror movie experience inside of Sands Point’s unparalleled castle estate.” — Ken W. Hanley, buzzfeed.com
“Sands Point has an infuriating habit of producing spectacular shows that are only given the most limited of runs. I pray to whoever’s listening, be they gods or trustees, that this team be given the run they deserve. They are worth the drive from Philadelphia,
and worth well more than ten nights a production.” — Blake Weil, noproscenium.com
This year, tickets are available for October 13, 14, 15, 19, 20, 21, 22, 26, 27 and 31. Most nights will feature two performances at 7-9 p.m. and 9:30-11:30 p.m., with the exception of October 19, 22 and 31, when there will only be a 7 p.m. performance.
Ticket price is $140.
For more information, visit http://sandspointpreserveconservancy.org/
In addition to the Asylum: A Love Story immersive experience, this year’s Sands Point Preserve Halloween Ball will be held on Oct. 28 with a VIP experience from 7-8 p.m., and the much-anticipated party from 8-11 p.m.
There are standard, decades-old excuses public school teachers are used to hearing from students when it comes to why they were not in class or didn’t turn in their homework.
I was sick. My family was at Disney World. I had too much other stuf to do. Yep, educators have heard them all. But Kristiana Kolega, senior at Herricks High School, has thrown a diferent one at her teachers the last few years:
“I was busy playing international soccer for the country my grandparents came from.”
That’s not one that gets trotted out too often. But the 17-year-old senior doesn’t have an active imagination: that’s actually what she’s doing when missing math and science class.
Kolega’s grandparents were born and raised in Croatia, and since she was a child her parents, Claudio and Daniela, have taken Kristina and younger brothers Niko and Marko back to that country during summer vacations and other time of from school.
When Kristina was around 10, she recalled, she was playing in a local league on an island near Zadar when she was invited to come train with a local youth development team. One thing led to another, and each time Kristina visited Croatia she would train with youth teams and continue to get better at the sport.
Eventually, as a teenager, she was asked to join the Croatian girls national U-16 team, and play tournaments and matches with them. So since 2020, the jet-lagged teen has fown several times per year 10 hours back to Croatia for training sessions and games with her team; she’s now on the U-19 team, with a decent chance of making the Croatian women’s national team someday.
“It’s a lot of sacrifce and a lot of missing things here, but it’s such an incredible experience for me,” Kolega said after a recent Highlanders practice. “I love the people there, I love the country, and it’s an incredible honor and opportunity to be able to play for them.”
Kolega is a soccer fanatic; in addition to starring at midfeld for Herricks, she plays club soccer for SUSA, a top Long Island program, and of course for Croatia.
Her national team duties mean
she sometimes misses weeks at a time of school, and unfortunately for Herricks soccer, last year had to miss a portion of the high school season as well.
“Every time she comes home she has a great story to tell,” Herricks coach Alexa Riegel said. “It’s such an amazing opportunity, to represent the country of your ancestors, and we’re very proud of her.”
Kolega said her teachers at Herricks are very understanding, and that she uses the long fights and idle time in hotels across Europe (she’s played international matches in Bulgaria and Poland, among other places) to fre up her Chromebook and do some work.
“The girls on the (Croatia) team make fun of me for always doing homework in our hotel,” she said with a laugh. “But I have to do it to try to keep up!”
Kolega’s good friend and club
soccer teammate, Sofa Bigeni of New Hyde Park High School, said as hard as it is seeing her friend go away for long stretches, it’s totally worth it.
“We watch her matches and I’m texting her and it’s still like we’re connected even though she’s so far away,” Bigeni said. “And it’s so obvious that when she comes back from playing (internationally), she’s so much more confdent and skillful.”
Kolega said she tries to bring some of the American-style physicality to her play in Croatia, and attempts to use the European-style skill set and precision passing back to Long Island.
“It’s a very diferent kind of soccer in both places, but you try to learn and get better playing both styles,” Kolega said. “It’s defnitely helped my game.”
Riegel said that Kolega, who has committed to play for Division I University of Maryland-Baltimore Coun-
ty next year, has a non-stop motor that powers the Herricks attack.
In 2022, Kolega helped Herricks reach the second round of the state playofs.
“She’s in great shape because she plays all the time, and she has great footwork,” Riegel said. “She controls the center mid and she runs the show when she’s out there.”
Riegel admitted that it’s disruptive to the Herricks squad when Kolega has to miss time because of Croatian team responsibilities, but never holds it against her player.
“Being on that stage and getting to develop her game like she can, it’s just so incredible for her,” Riegel said. “And we’ve all become Croatia soccer fans now; the kids were having World Cup watch parties last year when (Croatia) was playing, it was awesome.”
Kolega said high school soccer, with less international pressure, is
“so much fun for me. I can just forget about everything and play with these awesome girls.”
With the season underway, Kolega hopes to help the Highlanders advance farther than the second round of the Class AA playofs, which is where they were stopped last season. After that, Kolega has some more international tournaments to play before graduating from Herricks and matriculating to UMBC, whose coaches, she said, are all in favor of her continued trips to Croatia.
“They think it’s great for me, and that’s one reason I’m so excited to play there at UMBC,” Kolega said. “I love the coaches, the girls on the team, I know it’s the right place for me.”
And for someone who’s been to a lot of places in the last few years, that’s saying something.
On Friday, Sept. 22 frst-year medical students at the Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/ Northwell responded elbow-to-elbow with Homeland Security forces straight into an active shooter simulation to test their newly acquired emergency medical skills.
The all-day disaster drill, which included other mass casualty incident scenarios, was orchestrated by Nassau County Fire Service Academy instructors and held on their multi-acre campus in Old Bethpage, NY. For the frst time, the Nassau County Police Department’s special forces assisted with the active shooter portion of the exercise.
Mass Casualty Incident training day is part of the Zucker School of Medicine’s innovative curriculum that includes Emergency Medical Technician instruction and, ultimately, state certifcation for all students beginning their frst day of medical school.
The annual exercise culminates nine weeks of EMT training for the students.
“Our EMT curriculum and the Mass Casualty Incident training day is an example of how our students put their knowledge into action,” said Dr. David Battinelli, dean of the Zucker School of Medicine and executive vice president and physician-in-chief of Northwell Health. “The EMT program is an innovative early clinical immersion that helps students contextualize the basic sciences within clinical practice and builds skills, confdence and critical thinking.”
With EMT training under their belts, the 101 students who make up the Class of 2027 were immersed in near-realistic catastrophic events, including a terrorist bus bombing, train derailment, car crash, chemical disaster, and the active shooter
scenario, which enlisted the expertise of the NCPD’s Homeland Security team.
The EMTs, and future doctors, were under police force protection as they aggressively entered the simulated building attack, located shooting victims, secured their safety, triaged, and administered lifesaving care.
The collaboration between law enforcement, paramedics, EMTs, and other frst responders became a critical aspect of disaster training following the attack by two active shooters at Columbine High School in Colorado on April 20, 1999.
Since then, law enforcement and other frst responders have dramatically changed their training protocols to focus on more rapid response in an active shooter event. Part of that is having law enforcement and emergency medical services personnel working and training together to better respond to these incidents.
“We wanted the medical students to see what it’s like to be embedded into a Rescue Task Force and feel some of the stresses that a police medic would feel because as medical professionals they might fnd themselves in a scenario where it erupts around them,” explained Lt. Robert Connolly, NCPD Homeland Security. “We incorporated Nassau County Police ofcers using rapid deployment equipment, and the students had the opportunity to manipulate some of the stretchers and tourniquets that we would realistically provide in an active assailant situation. So, it’s a real practical application of skills and equipment.”
This important exercise, made possible through a unique partnership between the Zucker School of Medicine, Northwell Health’s Emergency Medical Institute, the NCFSA, and the NCPD, highlights the many disciplines that must work in lock-
step to rapidly neutralize a threat and save lives. Each scenario is played out with accurate details, complete with the chaotic sights and sounds of an actual disaster, including fre, smoke, darkness, sirens, noises, and the screams of frst responders and the injured.
“The day was high stress and anxiety because you don’t deal with real-life emergencies on a normal basis,” said frst-year medical student Ivory Jean-Paul. “Reading a textbook is so diferent than being put into the actual experience. The number one thing that we did today was to think and act quickly. We also learned that in a real-life emergency, it’s also important to have a certain level of empathy for everyone’s situation.”
When it opened its doors in 2011, the Zucker School of Medicine became one of the frst institutions nationwide to devote part of its curriculum to EMT training –today, the program is a model for other medical schools nationwide. Because of the partnership between Hofstra University and Northwell Health, the Zucker
Long Island University men’s ice hockey team will partner with the Alzheimer’s Association for an awareness game when they take on Penn State on Saturday, Oct. 7 at Northwell Health Ice Center.
Throughout the game, there will be a 50/50 rafe with donations benefting Walk to End Alzheimer’s — Nassau. The hockey team will also be featured guests at the Walk to End Alzheimer’s — Nassau on Sunday, Oct. 1 at Eisenhower Park Field 6/6A in East Meadow.
“Long Island University Hockey is proud to partner with the Alzheimer’s Association,” said Ryan Kelly, director of athletics at Long Island University. “We look forward to collaborating to make this a great experience for the community and our student-athletes.”
More than 6 million Americans are living with Alzheimer’s disease—a leading cause of death in the United States. In New York alone, there are more than 410,000 people living with the disease and 546,000 friends and family caring for them.
Representatives from the Alzheimer’s Association Long Island Chapter will be at the game to share information and answer questions.
“Thank you to Long Island University Athletics for helping the Alzheimer’s Association raise awareness and funds for families facing the disease,” said Tinamarie Hardekopf, director of development for the Alzheimer’s Association Long Island Chapter. We look forward to attending the game and cheering on the team as they play Penn State.”
To learn more about the game,click here
To register and receive the latest updates on this year’s Walk to End Alzheimer’s, visitact.alz.org/nassau. Long Island University athletics
School of Medicine can provide students with the unique opportunity to complete clinical rotations in one of the most extensive hospital-based ambulance services in the United States.
During their EMT training, students ride alongside and learn from the more than 100 ambulance crews in the Northwell Health system while providing care to a widely diverse population. Dr. William Rennie is one of the medical school’s founding faculty members who helped create the popular EMT curriculum.
“We designed the course to include community interactions with the students not as observers, but as participants in community health care by riding on ambulances and visiting people in their homes and stores and laundromats, on highways and wherever they are needed,” explained Dr. Rennie, associate professor of emergency medicine and science education. “The ambulance rotations allow students to work with emergency medical care professionals who can give them insight into what it takes to do the job every
day and how to interact with every patient efectively, both interpersonally and medically; both are equally important.”
First-year medical student Brandon Smith described EMT training as an intensive two months that exposed him to a broad spectrum of life-and-death situations, from transporting a week-old premature baby to the hospital to performing CPR on an elderly patient. “As an EMT about to enter someone’s home, you have absolutely no idea what will be behind the door,” explained Smith. “Having that experience and getting that extra knowledge of a patient’s living conditions can help provide the extra care they may need.” Smith, who hails from Levittown, is the frst in his family to attend medical school. He admits that caring for patients as a frst responder was an eye-opening experience that will help him become a better doctor.
“When you do the ambulance rotations and see how people live and work, you start to appreciate the fact that everyone has a diferent situation, so as a doctor, I’m going to have better questions for EMTs, paramedics, and patients coming into the hospital,” said Smith, who holds a bachelor’s degree in Biological Sciences from SUNY Binghamton. “There’s been much research about how the social determinants of health impact health outcomes, so it’s important to ask questions – a patient is a person, not just a list of symptoms.”
Zucker School of Medicine’s newly certifed EMTs will celebrate their transformation to active participants in meaningful patient encounters during a White Coat Ceremony on October 13, ofcially marking their transition from students to colleagues in medicine. To learn more about the Zucker School of Medicine’s EMT curriculum, visit the website.
North Hempstead Town Council Member Veronica Lurvey has introduced Go Green North Hempstead TV, a series designed to help residents take actionable steps to live a more sustainable life.
Each topic is broken down into easy steps so residents can have fun while doing something great for the planet. This initiative is being launched as part of the community engagement plan for the Climate Smart Communities Task Force.
“Through ‘Go Green NHTV,’ we aim to inspire positive change in our community that benefts our environment,” said Lurvey. “Our residents want to make changes to help North Hempstead thrive in a changing climate. This series will help them get started.”
In the frst episode to be released, “Plant Native for the Planet,” Lurvey leads viewers into the world of native plants — why they are important, how to choose the right plants and get started planting a native garden as well as how to maintain the garden for years to come.
“I hope residents discover that by using native plants you fnd yourself in a win-win situation. They are beautiful, benefcial to pollinators and other wildlife, less work, less stress on our natural
resources, and less costly to maintain,” Lurvey added.
“Planting Native for the Planet” is currently available on the Town’s YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/ user/townofnorthhempstead. This episode will be premiering on Friday, Sept. 29 at 5:30 p.m. on NHTV — channel 18 or 65 on Cablevision, 46 on Verizon, or through MyNHTV.com.
Expanding beyond Council Member Lurvey’s contributions, upcoming episodes will feature a segment with Council Member Mariann Dalimonte, ofering valuable insights on sustainable transportation.
Council Member Dalimonte’s program will ofer practical tips and creative solutions to diminish our carbon footprint while encouraging eco-friendly commuting choices among North Hempstead residents. The transportation episode will aim to cultivate a more environmentallyconscious community, inspiring positive change in our residents’ transportation habits.
‘Go Green North Hempstead TV’ is part of the Town’s Climate Education and Engagement Plan. For more information on the Town’s Sustainability initiatives visit North HempsteadNY.gov/Sustainability.
Available for the frst time in nearly half a century and one of only a handful of Sands Point waterfront homes to ofer signifcant acreage, 120 West Creek Farms Road allows you to experience coastal living at its best with rolling lawns, in-ground pool and expansive bluestone terraces for lounging and for dining while enjoying sensational sunsets. The approximately 4,500sf home is elevated above the food plain and positioned to capture panoramic views from west to east. Located at the end of one of Sands Point’s loveliest streets and surrounded by magnifcently landscaped property, this home ofers both true privacy and easy access to the Village and to Port Washington’s convenient and vibrant services and amenities. Ofered at $12,000,000.
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