Serving Roslyn, Roslyn Heights and Old Westbury
’S DAY MOTHER Gift Guide Dining &
$1
Friday, April 29, 2016
Vol. 4, No. 18
MOTHER’S DAY PASSING FORWARD MARAGOS BLASTS DINING, GIFT GUIDE ORGAN DONATION POLICE FINANCES PAGE 33-48
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• april 29, 2016 tions special section / litmor publica a blank slate media
Roslyn school ranks high on national list
Champions
High school among 6 L.I. schools ranked statewide and nationally B y J oe N i k ic Six North Shore high schools were ranked in the top 300 in U.S. News & World Report’s annual survey released last week. Great Neck South High School, Manhasset High School, The Wheatley School in Old Westbury, Paul D. Schreiber High School in Port Washington, Herricks High School and Roslyn High School all cracked the national list, as well as ranking in the top 50 of the U.S. News & World Report’s state ranking. U.S. News & World Report teamed with RTI International, a North Carolina-based research institute, to review almost 29,000 high schools across the country, according to the magazine. According to the survey, U.S. News and World Report based their rankings on four criteria: how an individual school’s students fared on proficiency tests in comparison with state averages, how disadvantaged, or low-
income, students were performing against the state averages for disadvantaged students, each individual school’s graduation rate and a school’s “college-readiness” level based, which used Advanced Placement or International Baccalaureate test data “U.S. News believes that the 68 percent threshold provides a basic measure to ensure that ranked schools do not struggle to graduate their students,” the survey said. “Graduation rates are an important indicator of how well a school is succeeding for all its students.” Great Neck South High School was the highest North Shore school on the list, ranking as the 136th best high school in the country and 19th best in the state. Almost 94 percent of nondisadvantaged students were “proficient” in state English Language Arts and Math exams, while nearly 84 percent of disadvantaged students were “proficient” in the state Continued on Page 64
Photo courtesy of Village of East Hills
Co-organizer of the East Hills softball tournament, Peter Wagner with Stew Faden read off the roster of athletes who were champions. See story on Page 20.
Telling stories of Holocaust survivors in photos, words B y A dedamola A gboola Brian Marcus said he was inspired by his grandfather to begin photographing Holocaust survivors in 2013. “My grandfather’s entire
life was devoted to capturing moments and preserving memories,” the East Hills resident said. “And following in my grandfather’s footsteps, mine is too.” Marcus said over the next two years he photographed
more than 175 Holocaust survivors and camp liberators and listened to their stories, which he has now turned into a book, “Still Here.” The book features, large black and white photographs Continued on Page 64
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