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Friday, March 11, 2016

Vol. 4, No. 11

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2016 n • march 11, special sectio

Flower Hill board eyes tax rate drop

P U R I M PA R T Y

Village will increase spending by 1.08 percent while tax rate falls By S a r a h M i n k e wicz Village of Flower Hill Mayor Elaine Phillips on Monday announced the 2016-17 budget with a 1.08 budget increase in spending but a proposed decrease in the village tax rate. Phillips said the village was able to increase spending while reducing the tax rate was a result in an increase in revenue from village fees, including fencing and building permits. “It’s a great budget and I’m excited,” she said at the board’s regularly scheduled meeting. Philips said the trustees are proposing a reduction in the tax rate to 1.05 percent. The proposed budget calls for $3,566,00 in spending — an increase of 1.08 percent from last year. The budget includes $547,429 for fire safety services. Philips said village trustees will discuss the budget in more detail at a public meeting at 7:30 p.m. on

March 21 at Village Hall. Trustees gave tentative approval to a proposal by Elona Development LLC to revamp the former Landmark Diner building at 1045 Northern Blvd. in Roslyn to house Roche Bobois, a furniture store. Chuck Panetta, an engineer who appeared at the hearing on behalf of Elona Development LLC, said the village zoning board reviewed the proposal and are now awaiting a determination from Nassau County before making a final determination on their application. Pannetta said officials had expressed concerns about the design of the building and traffic that the developer had addressed. “We were able to reduce the size of the building from the previous diner,” Panetta said. “By reducing the building size we were able to increase the aisle widths.” He also said the plan would limit staking, traffic would continue to flow freely, and the trees Continued on Page 65

Photo courtesy of Temple Sinai

Young boy dressed as mickey mouse at the Temple Sinai Purim Breakfast. See story on Page 24

13 candidates vie for board seats in 4 Roslyn villages By A d e da m ol a Agboola Village of East Hills voters will choose between two incumbents and two civic activists who have engaged in a heated election race when the polls open on March 12. In Roslyn Estates, residents

And in Flower Hill and Rolwill be asked to vote for two seats on the Board of Trustees, syn Harbor, five trustees, two mayors and a village justice are up for re-election — all unopposed. Election day in Roslyn will ELECTION 2016 vary from village to village. In East Hills, former Counbut have only one candidate on try Estates Civic Association the ballot for whom to vote. Continued on Page 66

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


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E. Hills to unveil security proposal Committee will present its plans By A d e da m ol a Agboola

Mark and Ellen Newman with their son Ariel (center).

After multiple meetings, the Security Commission at East Hills, established after a high profile burglary and robbery in the village, will hold a public presentation of its proposals and recommendations. Deputy Mayor, Emmanuel Zuckerman who is in charge of security at East Hills said the commission had productive deliberations and is ready to present their proposals to residents. “The commission has met three times and they’ve come up with concrete proposals,” Zuckerman said. The main proposal, which Zuckerman has spoken publicly about is the use of security cameras at the entrance of each of the village’s developments. He said two companies presented a security surveillance proposal to the security commission and although nothing is set in stone, the commission would like to get some feedback from residents. Zuckerman who is running for re-election on March 15 has been criticized by his opponents Ariel collapsed from exertional for not making the committee heat stroke. He died later that day in an Israeli hospital. Mark said when they learned of their son’s death, he and his wife headed to Israel to find out what caused his death. After speaking with the head of the hospital’s trauma unit, he said, they believed his son died from a heat stroke rather than a separate health issue. “When we came back we said, ‘what can we do? Our son died,’” Ellen said. “How do we make his life have some meaning? What is our purpose now?” A family friend, she said, suggested the Newmans contact From left: Co-Chair Steve Mussman, Deputy Mayor Manny Zuckerthe Korey Stringer Institute, a man, Trustee Clara Pomerantz, Dorrie Meyerson, Jeff Sapper, Nick Continued on Page 65 Diamantis, Wendy Bishop, Donna Friedman.

Grieving parents aim to stop heat deaths The Newmans write guide for hikers to prevent exhaustion By J oe N i k i c

After their son Ariel died two years ago from exertional heat stroke suffered while hiking in Israel, Mark and Ellen Newman set out to improve heat safety procedures across the world. The result was Ariel’s Checklist, a 10-point guideline on how hikers and those performing physical activities in hot temperatures can better protect themselves. “I want Ariel’s name to go on and the actions of his soul to go on through saving the lives of others,” Mark Newman said. “He doesn’t have a body to be the vehicle, so we are now his vehicle.” After graduating from Ye-

shiva University High School for Boys in June 2014, the 18-yearold Ariel set off for a nine-month educational program at Mechinat Yeud in Israel on Sept. 3, 2014. Ellen said the program serves students through educational and religious studies, as well as with physical activities like hiking and traveling through the country. “It was a very small program so we thought this would be nice and he wouldn’t fall through the cracks,” she said. “There would be a sense of camaraderie and he would really feel like a part of the group of young men.” But while hiking in the Judaean Desert on Sept. 10, 2014,

meetings open to the public. “It’s a very simple answer. The committee was new and we made it a closed meeting so that they could focus on the issues,” Zuckerman said. Zuckerman said the meetings were basically a work session and meeting behind closed doors were the best way to accomplish their goals. “The meetings were concentrated, quick and productive,” he said. Zuckerman said there would be a public presentation by one of the companies bidding for the camera contracts during the April 5 meeting. “People can come, ask questions and we’ll hear what people have to say about the bids,” said Zuckerman. According to Zuckerman, a company which bid for the surveillance contract in January was asked to go back to the drawing board because they didn’t satisfy the village’s criteria. “Nothing is set it stone and its open for discussion but we have a viable presentation that we feel that makes sense for the village,” Zuckerman said. East Hills have budgeted Continued on Page 65

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Student rep reflects on time at H.S. By A d e da m ol a Agboola It’s 8 p.m. on a Thursday night and the Roslyn School District board of trustees are all gathered in the High School board room. The room is usually packed with parents, teachers and often times students who will be recognized by the board for their accomplishments. But there’s always a particular student who is always present at the meeting who sits with the board of trustees. “So Nathan, are there any updates you want to share with the board,” Meryl Waxman BenLevy, president of the board says every meeting. Yang, not looking down to any written notes, proceeds to share updates on activities Roslyn students have been up to. Nathan Yang, 16, of Greenvale is a senior at Roslyn High, president of the Roslyn Organization of Class Councils and student representative to the Board of Education. It is a meeting Nathan rarely misses. “It’s nice that I get to inter-

What Yang is really good at, however, is swimming. Yang is a member of the varsity swimming team, that includes with students from Port Washington, which has won numerous championships. Yang said when he first started swimming he struggled in the pool and out of it. The swimming team often has to be at the gymnasium by 5 a.m. for practice, making for long days. Yang said he wanted to quit, but his parents encouraged him to stick with it. “They’ve played a huge role in my life,” Yang said of his parents. “They encouraged me to stick with it.” He said what he’ll most particularly miss when he graduates are his friends on the swimming team. “There’s always a close-knit bond between the team and I and I’ll miss them,” Yang said. Yang was also particularly Nathan Yang, left pictured with his varsity swim team thankful about one of his teachIn addition to serving as the assistant section editor at the ers, who he said has been most act with the board members and get pointers on leadership and students’ liaison to the school school newspaper and is a mem- influential in his life. He said Allyson Weseley, a team building and inform them board, Yang leads the Roslyn ber of the varsity swim team. “I did track but I wasn’t very research coordinator at Roslyn, what’s happening in the school,” Student Government, leads the Continued on Page 65 Gay Student Alliance, serves an good,” Yang said laughing. Yang said.


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University Hospital takes on Zika virus

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North Shore University Hospital announced Tuesday it is opening a pregnancy clinic at the Maternal Fetal Center for Women in Manhasset to address the threat of the Zika virus. “When you have something like Zika that comes out of nowhere and there’s so much fear and demand for answers in the community, it’s better to concentrate the efforts in a coherent program,” Burton Rochelson, chief of Maternal Fetal Medicine at Northwell, said in a statement. North Shore officials said the Pregnant Clinic has been opened for expectant mothers who recently traveled to the Caribbean, South America, Latin America and other locales linked to the Zika virus. “It’s a needed service for both pregnant moms, who are understandably anxious, and for their physicians,” said Rochelson, who is also the director of obstetrics at Northshore University Hospital. In countries affected by Zika, there has been a significant increase in the number of babies born with microcephaly, a congenital birth defect marked by small head size and poor brain development. Since fear of Zika took hold in the United States last month, officials at the hospital’s Center for Maternal Fetal Health said they have been receiving more than 10 phone calls a day from nervous pregnant mothers, inquiring about the risk to their fetus and testing for the virus. According to North Shore, some cases of the mosquito-borne infection are mild with flu-like symptoms, such as body aches, fevers, rash, and red eyes. Rochelson said 80 percent of individu-

als infected with the Zika virus are asymptomatic. Zika testing requires approval by the state Department of Health, a process which may be taxing for many busy OB/ GYN practices, Rochelson said. North Shore said starting March 9, Maternal Fetal Medicine consultations, including viral testing, will be offered at the hospital on Wednesdays from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Prior to testing, pregnant women need to call 1-844-MFM-DOCS-option #1 to set up a Maternal-Fetal Medicine consultation. At the hospital, the patient’s medical history will be taken, and the fetal risks of Zika virus will be discussed. North Shore will then obtain approval from the state Department of Health for Zika virus testing. The test involves two blood draws, one to check for viral particles in the mother’s blood and the other for antibodies to see if she was exposed to the virus. Blood samples will be sent to the Department of Health’s Wadsworth Arbovirus Laboratory in Albany for processing. Results for the first blood test take about 24 hours, but results on exposure can take up to two weeks. An ultrasound will also be performed for women who test positive for the virus to check for calcium deposits in the fetal brain and liver, which has been linked to Zika infection. When appropriate, arrangements will be made for serial ultrasounds to evaluate fetal head size for the unlikely development of microcephaly. Rochelson said the hospital felt that it’d be able to meet the demand that way.


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The Sky’s the Limit in East Hills! Thanks to Manny Zuckerman and Clara Pomerantz Everything in East Hills is Dynamite! • We will Continue to Freeze Taxes for the Sixth Year in a Row • We will Continue Open and Accessible Government • We will Continue to Support and Expand Kids Programs • We will Continue to Support and Expand Seniors Programs • We will Continue the Finest Pool, Park and Services • We will Continue the Messages from the Village to Keep Everyone Updated • We will Continue, More Fireworks on July 4, 2016

On Election Day, March 15, 2016, Don’t Leave Change to Chance Re-Elect

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Dems play capital projects hardball Block $275M in spending until independent inspector general for contracts approved

B y N o a h M a n s k a r large amount of public money go- Commissioner of Investigations The Nassau County Legislature’s Democratic caucus on Monday pledged to block $275 million in capital spending until the county further reforms its highly scrutinized contract process. None of the seven Democratic Legislators will vote to approve the county’s 2016 capital budget until the Legislature creates a position for an independently appointed inspector general to oversee all county contracts, Minority Leader Kevan Abrahams (D-Hempstead) said. “We need independent, fresh eyes as we go forward, and without that, this process continues to be flawed,” Abrahams said at a press conference in Mineola Monday. The capital budget funds road, building, sewer, infrastructure and other improvements and requires 13 votes to pass the full Legislature. Without at least one Democrat on board, the 12-member Republican majority could not approve it. About 90 percent of county contracts are tied to capital projects, Abrahams said, and Democrats say they don’t want such a

ing through the contract process without independent oversight. Legislator Delia DeRiggi-Whitton (D-Glen Cove) said the move is “almost like tough love as a parent.” “If we continue to allow for these incredible amounts of money going to these projects without any type of reform, we’re enabling the process, and I think that’s what each and every one of us has a problem with,” she said. District Attorney Madeline Singas recommended the county create an independent panel to hire an inspector general with the power to review and investigate any contract after her review of the county’s contracting system last year in the wake of former Republican state Sen. Dean Skelos’ indictment on corruption charges that involved a contract with Arizona-based AbTech Industries. Democratic Legislators have introduced legislation to create the office. But Mangano and Legislature Presiding Officer Norma Gonsalves (R-East Meadow) said the county’s

and Director of Procurement Compliance — a position created upon the recommendation of a panel Mangano commissioned to review the contract system —- already fulfill the role an inspector general would have. “(S)tonewalling the capital plan is reckless and unrelated to Nassau’s contracting process — which is the most transparent in the state,” Gonsalves said in a statement. As commissioner of investigations, County Attorney Carnell Foskey has the same investigative power in Nassau as the state inspector general has on the state level, Mangano said in a March 2 letter to the Democratic caucus. The county is still searching for the first procurement officer, who will oversee all county contracts and help prepare requests for proposals, Mangano’s letter said. Officials were in the final stages of hiring Joseph LaRussa of Hauppauge to the position before he reportedly pulled out when asked about an inconsistency on his resume.

Former County Comptroller Alan Gurien is holding the position in the interim, Mangano spokesman Brian Nevin said in an email. “The position of Commissioner of Investigations and Director of Procurement Compliance are two distinct positions with very different responsibilities: the first having full investigative authority; and the latter having oversight responsibilities,” Mangano said in the letter. The Democratic Legislators said at Monday’s press conference the offices lacked independence because the county executive hired them. Abrahams questioned Foskey directly at Monday’s meeting of the Legislature’s rules committee, asking whether he acts independently and how a problem in his office would be investigated if it involved himself. Foskey acknowledged the commissioner can’t investigate himself, but said, “It has not occurred. When it occurs, we’ll deal with it in a manner that’s ethical and in a manner that’s consistent with the charter and consistent with the powers of the investiga-

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The Rules Committee also voted Monday to lower the threshold for legislative approval of personal service contracts from $25,000 to $1,000 a measure County Executive Edward Mangano proposed last week in an effort to improve contract transparency. Under the law, the rules committee would have to approve all contracts worth $1,000 or more by a majority vote. A Newsday review last year found the county executed hundreds of contracts below the $25,000 threshold, including many between $24,900 and $25,000. Mangano called the measure “belt-and-suspenders transparency” in an interview with Newsday last week. He has also reportedly started sending the Rules Committee all pending contracts to post on its agendas. Democrats credited Mangano and GOP Legislators for the measure, but said they think their calls for contract reform over the past year pushed the step.


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Herricks unveils new school district logo By N o a h M a n s k a r The Herricks school district unveiled its new logo last week, a change the district has long awaited. The district chose Herricks High School student Jillian Clark’s design featuring a shield, the letter H and the slogan “Education Today, Knowledge Forever” to represent the district from among eight student designs. Georgios Araujo and Jessica Tichauer were also chosen as finalists in a contest the district launched in the fall soliciting designs from students in Herricks High School’s various graphic design programs, overseen by teacher Allyson Zebrowski. The district launched the contest to

revamp the current logo, an outdated stock image a web designer chose that doesn’t reflect the district’s mission, Herricks school Superintendent Fino Celano has said. The students used professional design programs, including Adobe Illustrator, InDesign and Photoshop, to create their logos. A panel of judges chose eight semifinalists, who presented their designs in December. All the semifinalists’ designs featured blue, Herricks High School’s signature color, and the district’s name. Rather than outsource the logo design to a private company, Celano said in January, getting designs from students “reflects (the district’s) philosophy of empowering our students, and recognizing their outstanding work.”

Police searching for man who stole $1.3K By A d e d a m o l a Agbool a Nassau County Crime Stoppers is asking for the public to help identify an unknown man who police said shoplifted $1,290 in merchandise in November at from Salvatore Ferragamo store in Manhasset. Police said the subject, whose images

were captured on surveillance camera, was at the Ferragamo store at 2106 Northern Blvd. on Nov. 9 and stole a black USC Salvatore Ferragamo ladies handbag. The subject fled the scene in a tan or silver Chevy Malibu with other passengers, according to police. Police said all calls to Crime Stoppers will remain anonymous.

Man injured after car strikes fence, tree Additional Locations in Nassau, Suffolk, Queens, Brooklyn, The Bronx, and Staten Island.

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By A d e d a m o l a Agbool a

the southbound lanes, striking a metal fence and a tree, police said. Nassau County police said the unA 53-year-old man was seriously in- identified man was driving a 2014 Toyota jured Monday when the brakes failed in Camry at 10:45 p.m. when he lost control the car he was driving northbound on of the care. The man was listed in serious Community Drive and he veered across condition at a local hospital, police said.

For the latest news visit us at www.theislandnow.com


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Mineola school board to develop capital plan BY NOAH MANSKAR The Mineola school board is working to develop a five-year capital plan to complete more than 20 upgrade projects at its schools. The $18.8 million worth of work could be funded from a variety of sources, including $576,879 state money from the SMART Schools Bond Act to create new pre-kindergarten wings at the Hampton Avenue and Meadow Drive Schools, district Superintendent Michael Nagler said last week. That project will help the district expand its pre-kindergarten program and accommodate more parents who want their children to take full-day classes, Nagler said. “I believe that the vast majority of parents will receive what they want when we have the space,” he said. The district’s building condition survey identified 11 categories of improvements to be made across the Mineola district, Nagler said, including upgrades to handicap-accessible bathrooms, new interior doors, new playground surfaces and replacing floors containing asbestos. Estimates for that work total $8.8 million, he said. Nagler also identified a $10 million package of 11 other projects school board members and parents have said they would like to see, including the pre-kindergarten wing; a new bus loop at Mineola Middle School; and air conditioning in classrooms at Jackson Avenue School, the middle school and Mineola High School. “It gets hot, and it’s hard to be productive in sweltering classrooms,” Nagler said. To fund the projects, the district could put $4.2 million in a capital reserve fund over the next three years and hold a subsequent vote to spend it, Nagler said. The current district budget contains more than $2.5 million for capital expenses that will roll over into the 2016-2017 budget, he said, but should be spent in the near future. “You can’t think of it as never-ending, it will be there year after year,” Nagler

said. Other funding can come from the SMART Schools Bond Act and the district’s Energy Performance Contract, he said. The SMART Schools money can only be used for certain purposes, and Nagler recommended spending it on the pre-kindergarten wing because the district is well outfitted for technology. The district would add a classroom each at the Hampton Avenue and Meadow Drive Schools to create a wing of three classrooms at each school with a separate pre-kindergarten play area, Nagler said. That would give Mineola nine preschool classrooms, including three it uses at the Harbor Child Care Center for fullday classes. About half as many students are in full-day classes compared to half-day classes, Nagler said, and the district uses a lottery to determine who takes full-day classes. Adding classrooms would let the district accommodate more parents who need full-day classes, he said, some of whom send their children elsewhere for pre-school if they don’t get a full-day spot in Mineola. “I think it gets a little tricky now that you want to offer full-day and half-day, and then what buildings do you want to offer them in?” Nagler said. “But any way you look at it, we don’t have enough classrooms.”

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LI’ers ‘plunge’ for special olympics By S a r a h Minkewicz

More than 500 people entered the chilly waters at North Hempstead Beach Park in Port Washington on Saturday for the 12th Annual Town of North Hempstead Polar Plunge. The event raised more than $65,000, according to Rebecca Strickland, associate director of development at Special Olympics New York in Long Island. “It was great,” Strickland said. “The weather was beautiful, and we had a great turn-out. It was fabulous.” The “Freezin’ for a Reason” event was intended promote awareness of people living with intellectual disabilities in New York as well as raise money. All donations will go toward supporting Special Olympics New York’s programs and their athletes. More than 1,000 people were present at this year’s event, according to North Hempstead Town Supervisor Judi Bosworth. Included were those taking the plunge, spectators, and the media. Special education teachers

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Town of North Hempstead residents headed for the chilly waters. Sabrina Trigo and Jaime Parrella were just two of the 500 people taking part in the plunge. “This is my ninth year doing it,” Parrella said. “I absolutely

love it, I do it every year. Makes you feel so much better, reboots the system.” Both Trigo and Parrella teach at The Vida Bogart School For All

Children in the Bronx and said they enjoy raising money for the Special Olympics New York program and showing their support. “We are both special educa-

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tion teachers so we raise money every year,” Parrella said. “Not all that much, couple hundred dollars but you get what you get.” “For me specifically I have an autistic son so it’s important for me to be able to give to an organization that helps with kids like him, so it’s worth it,” Trigo said. Trigo also said it was her first year participating in the Polar Plunge. “I actually wanted to come to support but I was told I’d have to go in,” Trigo said. “It’s cold. It’s like walking into ice. I did go up to the waist give me credit for that.” She added that more people should sign up and participate in the event. The Special Olympics New York has 64,659 athletes training and competing year-round in 22 Olympics-style sports. The cost to support training and competition for one athlete for the sports season is $400. Polar Plunge events throughout the state last year raised nearly $1 million for Special Olympics New York. To learn more or to register for a future event, go to www. polarplungeny.org


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CONTROL YOUR COMFORT AND ENERGY CONSUMPTION…ALL AT ONCE

• • • • • • Photo by Noah Manskar

An entrance to Belmont Park in Elmont, the proposed site of a video casino, is seen in December.

Lawyer notes casino’s potential legal hurdles By N o a h M a n s k a r An attorney for the Village of Floral Park outlined a series of legal hurdles the village thinks a proposed video casino at Belmont Park must face in a letter last month to the state Franchise Oversight Board. In the Feb. 23 letter to Robert Williams, chair of the state Franchise Oversight Board that oversees development at Belmont Park, attorney Michael Murphy of the Manhattan law firm Beveridge & Diamond argues state law would have to change for Nassau Regional Off-Track Betting Corp.’s casino plans to go forward. State tax law explicitly prohibits video lottery terminals, or VLTs, at Belmont Park, the letter says. Nassau OTB aims to use a provision in the New York Racing Authority’s lease for the Elmont racetrack, which the Franchise Oversight Board owns, to “circumvent the express statutory prohibition,” Murphy wrote. The lease would allow the state to “recapture” the eight-acre parcel north of Hempstead Turnpike for OTB to build a 100,000-square-foot VLT parlor, or by another developer for “any other purpose complementary to horse racing,” such as a hotel or resort. Nassau OTB also plans to construct a temporary facility with 1,000 VLTs while it waits for approval from the state Legislature for the permanent video casino. But the tax law’s prohibition qualifies as a “statutory requirement” with which any Belmont Park would have to comply under the recapture provision, Murphy wrote. The lease also requires a competitive bidding process before the state can recapture the land, and Murphy argued there’s “no basis to avoid” that requirement.

Plans for a temporary or permanent VLT parlor would be subject to the State Environmental Quality Review Act, the letter says. Murphy argued the environmental review must consider the VLT proposal in conjunction with potential development of the 28-acre parcel south of Hempstead Turnpike. “The communities surrounding Belmont Park have the right to understand the scope and impacts of development on both parcels and not merely (Nassau OTB’s) proposal in isolation,” Murphy wrote. Nassau OTB told Newsday its attorneys are reviewing Murphy’s letter. The agency announced Belmont Park as its chosen site for a VLT facility in December. The site has met strong opposition from residents and officials in Floral Park, Elmont and other nearby communities since then. Opponents argue a casino would increase crime and traffic, decrease property values and otherwise harm the surrounding area. Proponents, including Republican Nassau County legislators and OTB employees, say a casino would bring muchneeded revenue to the county and create quality jobs. Nassau County Executive Edward Mangano has included $15 million in casino revenue in his 2016 budget. The Village of Floral Park retained Beveridge & Diamond to fight OTB’s plans in court. OTB has not formally submitted its proposal to the Franchise Oversight Board, Floral Park Mayor Thomas Tweedy said. Tweedy has asked the board to notify the village when OTB submits its plans. The village will file a lawsuit once that happens, he said.

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12 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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c o mmu n ity n e w s

Group shot of all winners: From left: (Front Row)): Vikram Krishnamoorthry, Nathan Yang, Sabreen Bhuiya, Ayesha Chhugani, Graelin Mandel, Emily Bae, E. Madeline Fagen, and Emma Feldman. (Back row): Council Member Angelo Ferrara, Council Member Peter Zuckerman, Council Member Anna Kaplan, Council Member Viviana Russell, Supervisor Judi Bosworth, Council Member Lee Seeman, Town Clerk Wayne Wink, Council Member Dina De Giorgio, and Receiver of Taxes Charles Berman.

Town Board honors Intel semifinalists

The Town of North Hempstead continued its tradition of honoring semifinalists from the Intel Science Talent Search during a ceremony before the regular Town Board meeting at Town Hall on Feb. 23. The Intel STS is the nation’s most prestigious science research

competition for high school seniors and requires students to present original research to nationally recognized scientists. Town Supervisor Judi Bosworth and the Town Board honored 10 semifinalists from eight North Hempstead schools. This accounts for more than three

percent of the 300 semifinalists nationwide. Honorees came from Herricks High School, Great Neck South High School, Great Neck North High School, Paul D. Schreiber High School, Roslyn High School and The Wheatley School. Dozens of proud fam-

ily members, administration and faculty looked on as Bosworth and the Town Board presented certificates of recognition to the extraordinary young students who also briefly explained their innovative projects. “Tonight -- the Intel semifinalist ceremony -- is one of my

favorite nights of the year as we have the opportunity to honor our brightest and most creative students in the Town of North Hempstead,” Bosworth said. “Congratulations to all the students, and to the faculty, administration, and parents for all their support along the way.”

Town to participate in ‘Solarize’ campaign The Town of North Hempstead will be one of 31 groups participating in the New York-Sun “Solarize” campaign in 2016, aimed at getting more homes and businesses to install solar, and begin saving money on their energy bills. Joining the Town in this effort will be 11 municipalities, 18 not-for-profit organizations and a private entity. Launched by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo in December 2014, New York’s “Solarize” initiative is a collaboration between the State and local communities designed to simplify purchasing and to obtain discounts for participants on solar projects. 2015 Solarize campaigns saved participants a total of approximately $1.4 million on upfront purchase costs for solar, for an average of approximately $1,590 per residential or business project. “We are thrilled to have the opportunity to partner with Gov. Cuomo’s New York-Sun ‘Solarize’ initiative,” Supervisor Judi Bosworth said. “Here in the Town of North Hempstead we are committed to providing renewable energy resources for our residents and businesses that lower costs for them while reducing our carbon footprint. The success of this program to this point speaks for itself and we look forward to being a part of it moving forward.” Gov. Cuomo said last month that

900 solar projects are already underway through 26 community “Solarize” campaigns across New York State which is part of a $1 billion initiative to advance the scale-up of solar energy and move the state closer to having a sustainable, selfsufficient solar industry. “New York is blazing the trail when it comes to transitioning to sustainable energy practices and building a clean energy economy,” Cuomo said. “By helping communities across the state install solar technologies, we are opening the door to new opportunities that will lower household energy costs while protecting the environment years into the future.” Through the Solarize campaign, the Town will create partnerships with Solar Installers that have proven track records of quality workmanship, sound finances, and who employ local workers. “The purpose of this campaign is to help Town residents and businesses partner with solar companies that have good track records,” said Erin Reilley, chief sustainability officer for the Town. “Property owners often don’t know what questions to ask when they are looking for solar companies- and the Solarize campaign lets the Town compare financial terms, warranties, and products, and check customer references on their behalf.”

North Hempstead’s campaign includes participation in New York’s Affordable Solar program, which doubles NY-Sun incentives for households earning less than 80 percent of the area or state median income, making this program particularly attractive for those of all income levels. The town will roll out the campaign

this spring, when property owners will be able to sign up for free solar power assessments. This program is only for residents who live in unincorporated areas of the Town of North Hempstead. For more information on the program or to place yourself on a waiting list for the campaign, call 311 or (516) 869-6311.

Free CarFit program for residents over 60 North Hempstead Town Supervisor Judi Bosworth, the Town Board and the Department of Services for the Aging announced that they will be offering a FREE CarFit program to Town residents age 60 and over on Thursday, April 28, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Clinton G. Martin Park. CarFit is a program designed to help seniors achieve a better fit with their vehicle for optimal safety and comfort while driving. A 12-point CarFit checklist will be reviewed with participants while in their own vehicle, including adjusting mirrors to reduce blind spots, seat belt use and steering wheel tilt. The whole

process takes between 20 and 30 minutes. This program is presented in conjunction with the Town’s Project Independence senior program, AARP, AAA and the American Occupational Therapy Association. Appointments are required. Please call AAA at 516-873-2364 to schedule your CarFit appointment or visit www. car-fit.org/carfit/FAQ for more information. Clinton G. Martin Park is located at the corner of Marcus Avenue and New Hyde Park Road in New Hyde Park. For more information on Project Independence, call 311 or 516-869-6311.


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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(C)2016 MARTHA GORFEIN PHOTOCONCEPTS/www.mgphotoconcepts.com

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14 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

Opinion

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OUR VIEWS

Who’s minding the store for North Hempstead?

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t is hard to figure what is worse – that the Town of North Hempstead was without a comptroller for more than a year or the town’s response to a town employee allegedly stealing more $98,000 in cash during that time. Town spokesperson Carole Trottere said in a statement last week that “if a dishonest employee is intent on stealing cash, they are going to do it. But the question is, ‘Did we have the controls in place to catch them?’ and we did and reported it immediately to the DA.” We congratulate the town for informing the District Attorney that it discovered an employee had allegedly embezzled more than $98,000 in cash between May 11, 2014 and Jan. 22. Better that than detention. But we can’t be as pleased

lars and to make people think twice about stealing.” In point of fact, employees of the comptroller’s office uncovered the alleged embezzlement by secretary Helen McCann in midJanuary — four months after the town hired Averil Smith as comptroller. And the fact that a dishonest person might steal doesn’t mean we shouldn’t have or don’t need police – or comptrollers. It is, in fact, one of the reasons we have police and comptrollers. The alleged theft by McCann raises other questions. As Town Councilwoman Dina De Giorgio told Newsday, “What else happened during those 18 months that we didn’t see?” Trottere, who it should be noted was speaking on behalf of Town Supervisor Judi Bosworth, was right when she pointed out

with the rest of her response. A full-time comptroller is responsible for the town’s procedures and internal controls, and making sure internal controls are followed. To suggest that not having a comptroller in place from September 2014 to August 2015 is not a problem is, to be generous, troubling. Is Trottere saying that the state of New York would suffer no harm if state Comptroller Tom Napoli and Nassau County Comptroller George Maragos stepped down and no one took their place? In fact, both comptroller positions are elective — better to keep them independent. Or as Bruce Horner, executive of the New York Public Interest Group, told Newsday: “The whole point of having financial oversight entities is to protect taxpayer dol-

that employees inclined to steal cash could do so. Prosecutors said McCann would deposit less cash than employees collected in waste dropoff fees on Sundays. This was made possible, in part, by a cash-only requirement at the drop-off site. The question is why. Why no credit cards? Why not a creditcard-only policy? And how do we know that all the money collected by employees made it to McCann? Sounds like the job for a comptroller — or a prosecutor. But McCann’s arrest raises a bigger question, coming in the wake of the revelations about former Town of North Hempstead Democratic Committee Chairman Gerard Terry. Terry until recently was the attorney for the town’s Board of

Zoning Appeals and special counsel for the town attorney during a period in which he owed more than $1.4 million in federal and state back taxes, had been party to five lawsuits and let his attorney registration lapse for three years. A week ago Blank Slate Media reporter Noah Manskar reported that the town had failed to enforce a 25-year-old town law that requires financial disclosure statements from town political party leaders like Terry. And that Concetta Terry, Terry’s wife and a deputy town clerk, had omitted her husband’s tax debts from her financial disclosure records since 2006, omissions that are now subject to a North Hempstead ethics board investigation. All of which raises the question of just who’s minding the store?

READERS WRITE

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Congrats to Blank Slate Media

Welcome Port Times

congratulate you and welcome the Port Washington Times to Port Washington. I had recently read a copy of the Roslyn Times and had wished that we had a newspaper of similar quality in Port Washington. It appears that we now do. However, I am compelled to take issue with Joe Nikic on his article “Medical pot slow to grow in N.Y.” This otherwise excellent article points out that, “medical marijuana still has negative stigmas.” Unfortunately, it is the use of the word “pot”’ in the title of the article which contributes to this unfounded stigma.

“Pot,” one of the many street names for recreational marijuana, bears little relationship to CBD oil, the active element in medical marijuana, which is extracted from cannabis. CBD, one of the hundreds of chemicals that make up cannabis,has absolutely no psychoactive effect; you cannot get high on it. Sadly,the uninformed do not make this distinction. The use of “pot” to describe “medical marijuana” perpetuates this misunderstanding.

Blank Slate Media LLC 105 Hillside Avenue, Williston Park, NY 11596 Phone: 516-307-1045 Fax: 516-307-1046 E-mail: hblank@theislandnow.com EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Steven Blank

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would like to congratulate Steve Blank of Blank Slate Media for taking on a sixth newspaper, which is The Port Washington Times. I had discovered your newspapers when my company Northeast Plumbing moved from Great Neck into Mineola and I started reading the Williston Times, about four years ago. I then discovered the owner of the paper was Steve Blank. When Steve Blank was Donald S. Hecht the publisher of the Times/ Port Washington Ledger, I had been writing let-

ters to the editor for about 10 years. As always Steve Blank had produced local newspapers that have been quite informative, community-oriented, not to mention always having very hard working reporters over the years. Steve Blank, I would like to praise you for producing such great papers that are very colorful and exhibits great concern for the local community groups. Let me also add that you have great editorial pages. I myself would like to

thank you for publishing my opinions and helping me to get the point across on various subjects that I and others feel strongly about. And especially the letter I wrote about my homelessness, which I received a most kind letter from one of your readers. In closing let me wish you success in your latest endeavor. And maybe someday I could meet you and tell you, Kudos for a job well done. Frederick R. Bedell Jr. Glen Oaks Village

OFFICE MANAGER Holly Blank

production manager Rosemarie Palacios

assistant editor Anthony Bosco

CLASSIFIED Linda Matinale

REPORTERS Joe Nikic, Noah Manskar, Adedamola Agboola, Sarah Minkewicz COLUMNIST Karen Rubin ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Stacy Shaughenessy, Barry Vigder, Melissa Spitalnick art director Jewell Davis

PUBLISHERS OF

Williston Times • Great Neck News Herald Courier • Roslyn Times Manhasset Times • Port Washington Times


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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A loo k on the li g hter si d e

Life-changing magic with spark, joy “What on earth’s going on?” My husband’s voice sounded a little panicky. He’d come home early, to find me completely hidden by stacks of papers all around the living room. “I’m decluttering, of course,” I answered him. “De-cluttering?” he said. “Are you sure you’ve got that right? Because it looks just a tad more cluttered than usual.” He slowly turned 360 degrees, surveying the scene. The sofa and chairs were piled high with file folders and notebooks, while stacks of loose papers teetered, hip-deep, around the floor; there was barely enough room to walk between without sustaining bodily paper cuts. The television had disappeared behind a forest of magazines, and it was unclear when we would be able to reach the sofa again, let alone eat at the dining room table. “You should be happy,” I said. “Admit it, you’ve been wanting me to do this for years.” “I have?” he yelped. “Of course you have. You’re always talking about declutter-

ing. Well, I’m finally doing it! And this is how it works: this is what Marie Kondo writes about in her book, ‘The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up.’ She says you must bring everything together, one category at a time, from all over the house; then take each item in turn, in your hand, and ask one question: “Does this thing spark joy in my heart?” If the answer is “Yes,” you can keep it. If not, out it goes.” “Okayyyy,” he said slowly. It was the tone of voice you would use to a crazy person. “But surely she didn’t mean for it to look like this?” “Well, no,” I admitted. “She said put it all on the bedroom floor, but there wasn’t room — and I thought you’d like that even less.” “You’re right about that. But where does she say to live, in the meantime?” “You’ve got me there,” I answered. “But this is the method, and she says her customers never have a relapse as long as they faithfully follow it.” “That’s just because nobody

Judy epstein

A Look on the Lighter Side ever found the bodies!” “She says start with something easy, like clothes. But I finished that this morning.” “You did? What happened?” “Oh, I kept them all. You know I buy so few things.…” “But what about the 8 identical black turtleneck sweaters? What does she say about that?” “She says that she never tells people what to keep and what to toss — just keep whatever makes them happy.” “What about tossing things that make your spouse unhap-

py?” “If I were going to start with that, how many obsolete electronics parts do you think you’d have left?” He blanched. “Forget I said that.” “But actually, Marie says you can only throw out your own stuff.” He relaxed…a little. “And she’s right about one point: It isn’t a lack of space that creates clutter. It’s failing to deal with your emotions about stuff, that causes problems. That’s why you have to decide about everything if it gets to stay in your life.” “And how’s that working for you?” “It’s actually working! She’s all wrong about books, though. She actually thought it was fine to tear out pages she liked, from books, and then throw the rest away! For a woman who insists that socks are in pain if you ball them up rather than fold them, how does she not hear her own books screaming?” “It’s a mystery,” my husband agreed. “But here’s a bigger mystery: what are we doing about

dinner?” “We might have to eat out for a while. But there’s an even bigger problem.” “What’s that?” “Well, these are just the papers from the den and attic. We still have to bring in 30 boxes from the garage.” “Why, what’s in those?” “That’s the point: I have no idea.” “And you’re really supposed to dump it all out, in one place?” “That’s the KonMari Method.” “Well, I propose a slight variation,” my husband said. He grabbed up several bags of papers labeled “Discard,” took something from the fridge and said, “Follow me.” We went out to the patio, where he dragged out the firepit, piled the papers in, and lit them. “Let’s see what kind of sparks this generates,” he said. Then he placed a grill over the flames, and laid some hot dogs across the top. “I’m writing a book, too,” he told me. “‘How to Survive While Someone Declutters Your Home.’ I call it The Bonfire Method.”

O ut of left fiel d

Is the American Enlightenment dead? Early in the 2008 campaign I met Rick Shenkman when he came to speak at Hofstra. I took exception to the title of his new book, “Just How Stupid Are We?” His view of American citizens was so negative that I suggested perhaps a better word in his title would be “ignorant.” I emphasized that all of us, even those of us who were writers and academics, had lots of gaps in our knowledge. “No,” he exclaimed, “I mean it; people in the U.S. are really stupid; they don’t even care about what they don’t know.” It has never been easy for citizens anywhere to acquire reliable data as the basis for informed, public judgment. But the founders of our nation were truly radical in their belief that regular citizens would be capable of responsible democratic participation. Europe’s 18th century Enlightenment was led by an elite class that welcomed the “Age of Reason.” But they considered themselves as the societal guardians for the many who were not educated,

and, to a large extent, were regarded as not educable. Our Revolution’s “Spirit of ‘76” affirmed that all Americans were capable of being attentive to evidence and to participating in rational discourse. Still, among our founders, there were some doubters about the common folks. At the 1787 Constitutional Convention, Alexander Hamilton, one of the great American success stories, opposed extending the vote more broadly. He exclaimed: “Your people, sir, are a great beast; they seldom judge or determine correctly.” Jefferson quickly responded to that view with principles and values reinforced by Franklin, Madison and others. The aptly described “Sage of Monticello” noted: “If we think the people incapable of exercising power with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take power from them, but to inform their discretion by education.” He continued: “We must preach, my dear sir, a crusade against ignorance, for

Michael D’Innocenzo Out of Left Field

if a nation expects to be ignorant and free, it expects what never was — and never will be,” As the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Lawrence Cremin underscored, Jefferson was an early and major advocate for the popularization of education in America. This was a commitment to “Common Schools” with public financial support that would help “to enlighten the public at large.” Political campaigns were not immune from “spin” in earlier times, but many commentators now contend that levels of irrationality by voters may be the death

knell of the American Enlightenment. One critic’s essay was accompanied by a picture of a tombstone with the caption, “Truth Lies Here.” Last week the lead “Letter to the Editor” in The Wall Street Journal summarized the public state of politics in a way that affirmed Shenkman’s book “Just How Stupid Are We.” “We are witnessing an election cycle taking place in the context of an all-out assault on truth, discernment, scientific inquiry, critical thinking and civil discourse.” I was impressed that the Journal published that letter because the writer concluded: “The culpability for this precarious situation lies with a Fourth Estate (The Wall Street Journal included) that has abdicated its responsibility for holding politicians and business leaders accountable.” Newspapers were never perfect guides to our political process but now the market place of ideas has expanded so dramatically with the world-wide-web, hundreds of 24-hour cable stations, Facebook,

twitter, etc. that it is not easy to confirm reliable sources. Democracy supports the principle of being able to hear many voices, but as Eugene O’Neill’s character states in “The Hairy Ape:” “Tinkin’ Ain’t Easy.” How many citizens will invest time and thought to seek reliable knowledge? A few weeks ago, the marvelous (and once conservative) magazine The Economist stated: “To understand the Republican race, turn on the radio.” This story highlighted people like Rush Limbaugh, Mark Levin, Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck who “describe a simple world,” where even the advertisements promoting gold sales “seethe with paranoia.” Former Republican official, David Frum, has described these “talk radio men” as “entertainers without responsibility.” They operate in a “fact-free” fashion to promote fear and opposition of “The Other.” The more anger they generate, the more loyal and large their band of listeners becomes. Continued on Page 15


16 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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READERS WRITE

New developments no strain on Mineola

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ecently, a former Mineola elected official has risen up again using the housing-keep Mineola suburban as a ploy for re-election. Others are also using the same argument. The present mayor was for a time using the off-colored snide remark “Little Manhattan” for the purpose of only small development. It does not matter that much who is in the village government. It is still the same stuff.

None of them back up their statements so I am presenting a profile of the situation. The ‘Old Mineola’ before the Raines building was redone (with its relatively small number of apartments) as opposed to how it is today and the added plans for the future: The ‘Old Mineola’ had-has two apartment houses at Main Street and Harrison Avenue. Seven on First Street, three on Mineola Boulevard, nine off of Willis to the LIRR tracks. This adds up to 21.

Birchwood Court has six buildings, each one larger than the new Hudson House. There is Richlee Gardens on the west end of First Street: four blocks long extending all the way to the tracks. There are quite a number of buildings there. Adding it all up and ‘Old Mineola’ had-has the approximate equivalent of thirty five apartment houses and also a large number of tenements above stores and businesses. Beginning with the Raines

project, Mineola has added only four, all of which are south of the tracks. The ‘Village Green’ has been approved and two more are probable on the former church property. One is considered where the L.I. Taxi stand is. None of these new works has any effect on Suburban Mineola. The future might see two or three more south of the tracks, west of Roslyn Road. Those living in Greater Mineola Suburbanland don’t have to

go ‘downtown’ if they don’t want to and those living ‘downtown’ would see little need not to just stay in that area. Maybe just to go to the park. So, what’s the beef? The school district would survive too. Manhattan has its Village in The City so Mineola can have its little City in The Village. Apartment houses add little to the traffic as it exists. So be it! Charles Samek Mineola

MTA pushes the cost of projects into the future

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emember creation of the Gateway Development Corporation only months ago, just how will they manage to finance the proposed $20 billion new Hudson River Tunnel? The tunnel would connect New Jersey with Penn Station. Amtrak recently announced that the estimated project cost has grown by $4 billion to a new price tag of $24 billion. Moody’s Investor Services has recently questioned the ability of New Jersey to come up with its share of the project cost. The original New Jersey Transit Access to the Region’s Core tunnel between New Jersey and New York began construction in 2009 at $8.7 billion, with a completion date of 2018. In 2010, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie canceled the project when the estimated cost grew to $11 billion. He did not want to risk being responsible for potentially billions in cost overruns above and beyond any Full Funding Grant Agreement with the U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Transit Administration. Amtrak announced “the son” of ARC in 2011 known as the Gateway project. It would cost $14 billion and take 14 years to build. In 2015, the estimated cost grew to $20 billion with a revenue service date of 2030 based upon initiation of both environmental work, along with preliminary design and engineering. Today at $24 bil-

lion, it is anyone’s guess how many billions the final cost will be. Same for the actual revenue service date. U. S. Secretary of Transportation Anthony Fox, Senators Cory Booker and Charles Schumer ($10 billion now $12 billion), governors Andrew Cuomo of New York ($5 billion - now $6 billion) and Christie of New Jersey ($5 billion - now $6 billion) all fail to identify the specific source for their financial contributions to the project. There are no significant dollars programmed in the new Fixing America’s Surface Transportation Act for Gateway. It is wishful thinking that the U.S. DOT FTA New Starts program and Amtrak between them can come up with $10 billion (now $12 billion) for Washington’s share of this project. There are dozens of other potential New Starts projects being championed by many of the other 98 Senators and 435 Congress members. The requests already far exceed any available current or future New Starts funding. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority, New Jersey Transit, Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, New York City Department of Transportation and others from the Metropolitan New York Region all have their own respective projects competing against each other for billions in New Starts funding over coming years. Amtrak still needs billions to fully implement real

High Speed Rail on the Northeast Corridor between Washington, New York City and Boston. This doesn’t include routine State of Good Repair, Safety, fleet equipment replacement and upgrades to the East River Tunnels. The New Jersey Transportation Trust Fund is insolvent. Just like the MTA and Amtrak, NJ Transit needs billions more in coming years, just to reach a state of good repair. This does not include potential New Starts expansion projects for billions more. The PA of NY & NJ needs $10 billion for a new 42nd St. Manhattan Bus Terminal. Washington, New York and New Jersey all lack courage to increase their respective gasoline tax. This is necessary to grow revenues available to support transportation. All three remind me of the cartoon character Wimpy who famously said “I’ll gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today.” When the bills become due, taxpayers will end up picking up the tab. Larry Penner Great Neck (Larry Penner is a transportation historian and advocate who previously worked in the transportation field for 31 years).

Broken sidewalks, ‘gum balls’ create hazards

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he Coalition for a Safer Manhasset, with the support of the Manhasset Chamber of Commerce and the Council of Greater Civics Presidents, submitted a request to the supervisor of the Town of North Hempstead, Ms. Judi Bosworth. We asked that the town re-

pair the broken, cracked and uneven sidewalks along Plandome Road and replace the 25 sweet gum trees with appropriate flowering trees. It is believed that these broken sidewalks and the hundreds of sweet gum balls that fall from the trees contribute to pedestrian accidents along Plandome

Road. In addition, thousands of these gum balls end up in our storm drains every year. The trees are also growing into the overhead electric wires. Making these improvements will make the area safer for pedestrians and will also result in a much more beautiful main street

letters p olic y Letters should be typed or neatly handwritten, and those longer than 300 words may be edited for brevity and clarity. All letters must include the writer’s name and phone number for verification. Anonymously sent letters will not be printed. Letters must be received by Monday noon to appear in the next week’s paper. All letters become the property of Blank Slate Media LLC and may be republished in any format. Letters can be e-mailed to news@theislandnow.com or mailed to Blank Slate Media, 105 Hillside Ave., Williston Park, NY 11596.

for our community. The Coalition for a Safer Manhasset wishes to submit a signed petition to the town supervisor in support of the above request and invites all residents and visitors and those who work in Manhasset to sign this petition by March 15. The petition is available for signature in these local stores: Chocolate Works; Coach Realtors; Trapani Art & Frame Shop. Or you may send an email to csm556@yahoo.com with your full name and other names of family members or friends who wish to support the petition. Please indicate if you are a Manhasset resident, a Manhas-

set business owner or employee, or a visiting shopper. To view a video about the sweet gum trees and the broken sidewalks along Plandome Road, please visit the Coalition for a Safer Manhasset’s Facebook page. The Coalition for a Safer Manhasset relies on and is grateful for your support and assistance. Please ask your friends and neighbors to support and sign this petition. If you have any questions, please contact us. Thank you. Katie Miller Coalition for a Safer Manhasset


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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READERS WRITE

Was Scalia a brilliant man with no conscience?

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n Feb. 13, 2016, Antonin Scalia, the first Italian-American to serve on the Supreme Court, passed away. He was 79, a devout Roman Catholic, and an “originalist” and “textualist” in his thinking about Constitutional issues. Words used to describe him were forceful, witty, and combative. His legendary friendship with Justice Ruth Bader Ginzberg is remarkable given their diametrically opposed views. We are taught not to speak ill of the dead, so the eulogies poured in about his love of family, devotion to his church, and the approbation of those who worked closely with him. Common decency requires all of us to show respect for the man and the institution he represented for three decades. But, as I’ve previously written in these columns, actions have consequences especially political actions. Laws can enhance or detract from one’s quality of life and there are times when policy decisions can lead to suffering and even death. With this as background, let us look at the impact of some of Scalia’s votes on the Supreme Court. In Bush v. Gore, 2000, the Supreme Court called a halt to recounting ballots in Florida, thus awarding the presidency to George W. Bush. This was an interesting decision given conservatives opposition to an “activist court.” It led to eight years of Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rove, and the war in Iraq. How did Scalia vote? He voted with the 5-to-4 majority thus changing the

course of U.S. history. Ask any liberal what is the worst Supreme Court decision in recent history, and they will respond Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, 2010. This case held that corporations are people, limiting campaign contributions was a denial of free speech, and allowed SuperPACS to spend as much money as they could raise. In short, this case marked the beginning of oligarchy in America. And so we ask, how did Scalia vote and did his vote make a difference? This was another 5-to-4 decision. Scalia voted with the conservatives on the bench profoundly altering the political landscape for decades to come. In Lawrence v. Texas, 2003, the Supreme Court struck down a Texas statute that banned sodomy. How the Texas Legislature planned to enforce the law without violating privacy rights is a mystery. But Scalia did not concur with his colleagues and wrote in dissent: “Many Americans do not want persons who openly engage in homosexual conduct as partners in their business, as scoutmasters for their children, as teachers in their children’s schools…” Had the majority agreed with Scalia, it would have enshrined bigotry and homophobia as the law of the land. In a December 2015 oral argument about the future of affirmative action in higher education, Scalia shocked those in the courtroom with this statement: “…it does not benefit African-Americans to get them into the University of Texas where they do not do well, as opposed to hav-

ing them go to a less-advanced school…a slower track where they do well.” This racist and inflammatory rhetoric, harkens back to an era when blacks were considered intellectually inferior to whites. Scalia has been a consistent supporter of the death penalty. He argues that there are some crimes which are so heinous and vile that they demand the ultimate punishment. Dobie Gillis Williams was an AfricanAmerican from Louisiana sentenced to die (by an all white jury) for killing a white woman. Three years after his state-sanctioned murder, in Atkins v. Virginia, the Court ruled that executing people with mental disabilities (I.Q.s below 70) violated the Eighth amendment ban on “cruel and unusual punishment. Williams did not have to die, but once the death penalty is carried out there are no “do-overs.” In other cases, the “Innocence Project” has examined DNA evidence to prove that convicted murderers were, in fact, not guilty. Scalia’s thinking here is mind-boggling. “Mere factual innocence is no reason not to carry out a death sentence properly reached.” This mean-spirited logic holds that it is justifiable to execute an innocent person as long as the process followed the law. In Wal-Mart v. Dukes, 2011, more than 1.5 million women filed a class action suit against the retail giant claiming gender discrimination.

Scalia, writing for the majority, ignored the statistical and anecdotal evidence of discrimination letting Wal-Mart off the hook. And when it came to women in the workplace getting equal pay, he wrote: “Certainly the Constitution does not require discrimination on the basis of gender. The only issue is whether it prohibits it. It doesn’t.” Scalia always looks to the Constitution and the men who wrote it. If he can’t find it in the document or the writings of the Founding Fathers, for him it doesn’t exist. Scalia did not conceive of the Constitution as a “living document.” This despite the fact that it’s been amended 27 times; that our country has grown to 50 states; that legal slavery was ended; and that women are no longer viewed as property, but can vote, hold high office and even run for president. It is as if he were in a time warp, cemented in the past, incapable of realizing that the drafters of the Constitution could not possibly envision our world of scientific advancement and the miracles of technology. Associate Justice Antonin Scalia used his power and authority to deny minority individuals their civil and human rights. This “legal scholar and intellectual” was no friend of blacks, women and gays. I ask the question: How should Scalia be remembered? Was he a brilliant jurist or a man without a social conscience? Dr. Hal Sobel Great Neck

No practical solutions to replace fossil fuel use

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et us assume that global warming and climate change are real. Thus, the requirement to eventually eliminate coal, oil and gas from our lives. However,we need power every second of every day. My questions are: How long will it take for solar, wind, ocean waves, etc. to provide the necessary daily requirements of our nations energy needs? Where will the wind turbines be located in our country? How many solar panels will be needed and how much area will be needed on roofs of homes, on top of buildings, in open space, etc. Who will build the machinery, how long will it take to develop and then be put in the oceans to generate electricity? And how will each of the sources of energy be linked to our existing grid? Will micro grids take up some of the slack of substituting for the elimination of fossil fuels? Will the number of jobs being created in these new energy sources exceed the number of jobs being lost in the fossil fuel arena? While the angst continues here in

America, the Europeans are delighted that we have an excess of gas. Why, you ask? A little international intrigue is taking place. This headline in The Wall Street Journal on 2/16/16: “Europe’s energy escape valve: U.S. gas,” Gulf Coast exports are expected to loose Russia’s grip on the market.” Wow! While we argue here in the U.S., the article stated: “An American company left a Louisiana port this week with the first major exports of U.S. liquefied natural gas, or LNG. Like shale, gas was a game-changer in the U.S.,American gas exports could be a game changer for Europe. Many in Europe see U.S. entry into the market as part of a broader effort to challenge Russian domination of energy supplies and prices in this part of the world. Moscow has for year used its giant energy reserves as a strategic tool to influence former satellite countries...” Wow! America is taking on Putin on his own turf. Russia is hurting economically due to the decrease in energy prices and this LNG effort isn’t going to help this

dictator. Check this out. Russia supplies about a third of Europe’s gas via pipeline. Not anymore, Putin: “Deutsche Bank estimates the U.S could catch up with Russia as Europe’s biggest gas supplier within a decade, with each nation controlling around a fifth of the market.” More jobs saved in America. However, all the news is not good. The Wall Street Journal on 2/25/16 : “Energy companies have cut more than 300,000 jobs worldwide since mid2014...at least 48 North American oil and gas producers have filed for bankruptcy protection since the beginning of 2015 imperiling more than $17 billion in debt.” And “Saudi Arabia’s refusal to cut output could bankrupt as many as half of all shale producers.” This worldwide energy chess game is not for the faint of heart. We are messing with the Russians and the Saudis are doing the same to us. Stay tuned. I have to put in a word for our engineers who are attempting to take advantage of the “free” energy from our sun.

Did you know that the sun, in a single week produces 1,000 times the energy of oil, natural gas and coal does in a full year combined? A solar company that they claims it has perfected a method of capturing the sun rays in windows producing 50 times greater energy than rooftop panels and even works in the shade. I bet there are many engineers and entrepreneurs doing similar activities in sun, oil, gas and nuclear areas and some will fail and some will be successful. That’s capitalism. Going back to climate change and global warming. I bet this subject will be around during my grandchildren’s lifetimes. There will be naysayers who will point to the ice ages and those who rely on computer models with an infinite amount of data assumptions that “prove” their points. Me, I believe Mother Nature [with a God?] will do Earth just fine in the billions of years left in the energy in our sun. John Messina East Williston


18 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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READERS WRITE

Join the national populist insurgency

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he 2016 presidential race is truly firming up to be a monumental event in American political history. The 17 Republican Presidential candidates, particularly Trump, Carson, Fiorina and to a lesser extent Cruz and Rubio, and the rise of Bernie Sanders should be proof enough that the political elites are losing control. We are witnessing what veteran pollster and political pundit Pat Caddell calls an “insurgency election.” According to Caddell “Americans want their sovereignty back” and, by all appearances, 2016 is the year they intend to get it. “A new paradigm has emerged. It is a shift in political tectonic plates, the death rattle of the old order and the coming of the new political order.” As this year’s election season progresses, signs are becoming more and more evident that the reins of power are shifting from the entrenched political party leaders to everyday Americans of all ideologies. No longer are Americans content to sit on the sidelines while the political class, media pundits, and the donor elites choose their nominees. Party faithful and the media have resisted accepting what appears obvious to us. But if you doubt it, take a look at The Smith Project, authored by Caddell and colleagues at Armada Publishing (http://

weneedsmith.com/images/IssuesandAttitudes.pdf). The Smith Project is an extensively researched study that surveyed over 3,200 registered voters from a wide spectrum of political ideologies. Below are some of the findings quoted directly from The Smith Project. The numbers indicate the percentage of the respondents that agree and strongly agree with the statement. You may find some of this startling. · 87 percent - The power of ordinary people to control our country is getting weaker every day, as political leaders on both sides fight to protect their own power and privilege, at the expense of the nation’s well-being. We need to restore what we really believe in – real democracy by the people and real free enterprise. · 85 percent - Political leaders are more interested in protecting their power and privilege than doing what is right for the American people. · 82 percent - The country is run by an alliance of incumbent politicians, media pundits, lobbyists, and other powerful money interest groups for their own gain at the expense of the American people. · 80 percent - Powerful interests from Wall Street banks to corporations, unions and political interest groups have used campaign and lobbying money to rig the system for themselves. They are looting

Letter-writer wrong on German energy use In the March 04 issue, Charles Samek stated that “Germany is now getting all of its energy needs from solar and other renewable sources.” His information came from “social media.” Please refer to Wikipedia which indicates that, as of 2014, only 11 percent

of total energy was sourced from renewables. About 80 percent came from oil, natural gas and coal. Regarding electricity consumption, more than half comes from coal and nuclear fission reactors. Jerry Klein Great Neck

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the national treasury of billions of dollars at the expense of every man, woman and child; very few have been punished or have gone to jail; and this is undermining the moral foundations of America. · 80 percent - The federal government has become a special interest group that looks out primarily for its own interests. · 75 percent - The political parties, political class, and media basically limit the candidates we can choose from to people who share their view of the world, rather than reflect the views of people like me. · 67 percent - The real struggle for America is not between Democrats and Republicans but between mainstream America and the ruling political elites. Where do you stand? If you agree, what can you do about it? It seems clear that more independent candidates are needed from all points of view to compete for our votes in the open market place. If voters are to make truly informed voting decisions, we need to remove the filters and hear from the candidates directly. We need more town hall meetings, debates, and candidate interviews. What is needed is something comparable to the sidewalk stump political speech as could be found in New York’s Union Square or London’s Hyde Park Speakers’ Corner. There are many vehicles available to a free society such as ours by which the public can liberate itself from the manipulation of party leaders and a biased media. Political activism, grass roots organizing, and the use of social media are examples of the ways to make this happen, but it all has to start with one thing – the engaged and informed citizen. The founders intended ours to be a nation of citizenpoliticians – individuals who are tuned into the activities and needs of society, understand our constitutional government, and are willing to participate if and when called upon to lead their respective constituencies in defense of constitutional

principles. Sadly, far too many of our fellow Americans have foregone the important responsibilities of citizenship. Many simply do not vote citing copouts such as “The system is rigged”, “All politicians are corrupt so I’m not voting for anyone” or “How can I make a difference?” Others just vote the party line without making the effort to learn about the individual candidates and their principles. Sentiments such as these have led to the creation of a political class in this country, something the founding fathers worked very hard to avoid, and something the American voting public seems to finally be rejecting this election cycle. While it may be refreshing to see candidates such as Trump and Carson emerging from beyond the political ether, it should not stop there. What America needs now more than ever is the rebirth of the citizen-politician who can actively engage in the political process free from the manipulation of the political party apparatus. To this end, we have formed Government by the People. Our goal is to help local candidates present their policies in the open marketplace of ideas. More importantly, we hope to foster opportunities for the voting public to have a productive give and take with the candidates and make an informed and rational decision when they enter the voting booth. We invite everyone interested in being an informed and reasoned voter to become a member of our Facebook group “Government by the People” and join the conversation. Beyond that, it is our sincere hope that more and more Americans will see the paradigm shift that is taking place, get off the couch, and become part of the process, just as the founding fathers intended. Corinne A. Michels, PhD Manhasset Ray Ellers Commack


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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The Republican and Conservative endorsements follow a weekend when two The Republican and Conservative parties Democrats vying for the seat launched their have endorsed state Sen. Jack Martins (R-Old campaigns aside early allies. Former Nassau County Executive Tom Westbury) in the race for New York’s Third Suozzi officially announced his entrance into Congressional District. The Nassau County GOP decided last the race in Bayside, Queens, Sunday after sayweek to support Martins, spokesman Michael ing for several weeks he was on the fence. “I am running because we need grownWatt said. “We feel he has the best chance of win- ups in Washington, who will work with others ning,” Watt said in an interview on Wednes- to end the gridlock and partisanship that has plagued our government, and who will fight day. Suffolk Republicans nominated him Mon- for middle-class families, seniors and veterday, according to an email from Chairman ans,” Suozzi said in a statement. North Hempstead Town Councilwoman John LaValle. Queens Republicans have also backed Anna Kaplan, one of the first to announce a bid for the Democratic nomination in the disMartins, party Chairman Bob Turner said. The Conservative Party of New York State trict stretching from Whitestone, Queens to announced their endorsement of Martins and Kings Park, also kicked off her campaign Sunfive other candidates this week, according to day in Great Neck. “America is a great country — my jouran Associated Press report. “I am thankful for support I have received ney from political refugee to councilwoman to congressional candifrom Nassau, Suffolk date could only happen and Queens and happy here in America — but to have the Republiwe’re not going to be as can and Conservative great as we should be endorsements for Conuntil we have an econgress,” Martins said in omy that allows worka statement Tuesday. “I ing and middle-class look forward bringing families to get ahead, everyone together to not keep falling farther work towards victory behind,” said Kaplan, in November and carry an Iranian immigrant, the fight to Washingin a statement. ton.” Suozzi touted Martins was endorsements from among four RepubliQueens Borough Presicans aiming to replace dent Melinda Katz, who Rep. Steve Israel (D- State Sen. Jack Martins (R-Old called him “a responHuntington) in the Westbury) sible reformer who gets North Shore district. things done,” and other The GOP has approached another candidate to replace Israel, leaders from the borough. Kaplan has backing from four North retired U.S. Marine and Manhasset resident David Gurfein, to run against Rep. Kathleen Hempstead civic leaders, including officers in Rice (D-Garden City), according to a News- the Great Neck Korean-American Civic Association and the Great Neck Chinese Association. day report. “Anna Kaplan is a doer. She doesn’t just Gurfein said he’s considering several options, including a possible run in Rice’s dis- sit back,” said Matt Falcone, a Marine Corps veteran and member of the town’s Veterans trict. “A lot of people are very interested in our Advisory Committee. “She takes her job sericampaign,” he said. “They feel we’re a very ously and will do everything she can for the strong candidate and they’re just trying to fig- people she represents.” Suozzi spent the weeks leading up to ure out how to work us into the equation and how best to support everybody on the Island.” his campaign launch touring the district and Watt said Republicans are looking at sev- gathering support at town hall-style events. He and Kaplan are among four Demoeral candidates to oppose Rice, but declined crats aiming to replace Israel, who announced to give specific names. State Assemblyman Chad Lupinacci of in January he wouldn’t seek re-election to Huntington Station, another Third District a ninth term. The others are former North hopeful, told Newsday he would end his cam- Hempstead Supervisor and Nassau Interim Finance Authority Chairman Jon Kaiman and paign and support Martins. His campaign website was no longer ac- Suffolk County Legislator Steve Stern of Dix Hills. tive as of Wednesday. The Nassau, Suffolk and Queens DemoThe Republican National Congressional Committee has named Martins to its “On the cratic parties have reportedly decided not to Radar” list, part of the party’s “Young Guns” endorse a candidate leading up to the June 28 primary. program. Kaiman last month announced endorseIn a Feb. 19 statement, Martins said the distinction continues momentum he has gath- ments from former U.S. Rep. Gary Ackerman and several town officials, including Councilered since entering the race in January. Gurfein was named to the RNCC’s “Young woman Lee Seeman of New Hyde Park and Councilman Peter Zuckerman of East Hills. Guns” list last year.

By N o a h M a n s k a r


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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21

READERS WRITE

Incumbents in East Hills have done well

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am rather reticent to send a letter to the editor of our local paper regarding the election in East Hills to be held March 15 for two trustees. However I think it is important to add my perspective to this election because I have seen it go from polite and respectful to a bit nasty and quite disrespectful. Our East Hills is made up of young and old, new to the neighborhood and those who have enjoyed it for decades. Some have returned to the area to raise their family in a wonderful, safe environment with a gorgeous park and pool, steady taxes and a quality lifestyle that seems so hard to achieve on Long Island. I think it is important for me to express how our neighborhood, always nice, has truly evolved into a special place 25 miles from midtown Manhattan. I have been a volunteer and involved to some degree with three mayors and multiple trustees over 33 years. Our local government is a shining example of how an extremely competent team, led by an extraordinary mayor, works well to bring a high quality of life to an area that is populated by an educated and demanding homeowner body. The skills involved to make our Village run smoothly, hold the line on taxes, provide excellent services, and in general make life as pleasant as it can be for the

population is huge and I feel that many of our neighbors do not realize the work and skillset involved to accomplish this. Again our neighborhood is filled with educated and dedicated residents who also get involved and get things accomplished to everyone’s benefit which is terrific. Two trustees running for reelection, Manny Zuckerman and Clara Pomerantz, have dedicated tremendous personal time and huge efforts to help improve daily life in the village. Their resumes are out there for the public to view They are being attacked by two perfectly nice residents who want their jobs in a series of peculiar falsehoods and silly criticisms that are not only incorrect but rather insulting to all of us. I have read the email blasts being sent out which lately border on true vitriol and I scratch my head wondering if these folks live in the same neighborhood that I do. Constant misinformation does not make misinformation the truth but I imagine that if attacks and falsehoods are repeated often enough and loud enough some people may listen. Therein lies my desire to write this letter. Our local government is an excellent, smooth running, cohesive group that has created a success for the neighborhood.

I am not sure why there is any desire to fix something that works really well. Let me also comment that it isn’t easy to run a village government nor is it easy to keep making things better. It is easy to always attack and complain and I invite all of my neighbors to attend some Board meetings and see how well this group involves themselves in residents’ issues and problems. There is a sincere desire to help everyone. I gather that perhaps the attacks against the current administration have gotten so nasty because it is very difficult to attack a successful group, isn’t it. Let me remind our neighbors that our taxes, which provide wonderful snow plowing services, terrific garbage pickup, road repaving, kids events, and our wonderful park, have not gone up for six years. I, for one, am very grateful for that. I love that my garbage is picked up at the back of my house three times a week, that I have not been stuck at my house because of snow, that the village addresses potholes and standing water issues along with my favorite of traffic and safety. I love the concerts, the fact that leaves are cleaned up on Glen Cove Road to make sure our neighborhood looks great even though that is a County responsibility and they refuse to do it. I can go on

and on. That all reflects a job well done. The latest attack is against our legal counsel and his salary. The last time I checked his was not a volunteer job and he has skillfully and competently done a wonderful job for our village over the course of many years. I would guess he is underpaid. Again our taxes haven’t gone up a cent so obviously our Mayor and the current trustees know how to create and follow a strict budget. Election day is March 15, just two weeks away. I, for one, will vote for both Manny Zuckerman and Clara Pomerantz for trustees because i know what they have accomplished for all of us. I do not have to make a choice based on promises. I have the facts in front of me. I encourage my neighbors, young and old, new to the neighborhood and those, like me, who have been around for a while, to support those folks who have supported us and our beautiful East Hills. They have truly earned our vote and if they want the stress and huge time commitment to make my life a little better, then they have earned our vote and our support. Steven Kafka East Hills

Incumbents have excelled during their tenure

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s you are well aware there are two trustee seats up for re-election Trustees Manny Zuckerman and Clara Pomerantz , who have served the village with many years of distinction and very little fanfare are seeking your support. I have resided in East Hills for over 35 years. During this time my family has gotten to know many of you. I have also had the pleasure to volunteer for many committees and serve as the Architectural Review Board chair and founding member, the Zoning and Tree Review Committee and various other positions, in order to give something back to a community that has given much to my family. This tenure has allowed me to know and work closely with the existing Board Of Trustees, Mayor Koblenz as well with one of the opposition candidates. It is these experiences that compel me to talk about why it is important that Manny and Clara are re-elected. In a few words , so that the Village of East Hills can continue to flourish. This is a Village that has experienced : • The creation of an award winning park. • A flat tax base for many years while the neighboring areas have had substantial increases. • One of the lowest crime rates in Nassau County despite cut backs in policing. • Substantial increase in property val-

ues as compared to neighboring prestige communities. • Maintenance of streets , snow removal and other efficiently run services. The opposition party which may be well intentioned, will have you believe that because they have done volunteer work or that they have “stomped their feet.” and “raised their voices” they are qualified to replace Manny and Clara. In fact, they cannot give a reason for you to vote for them other than the use of the word “change” and the suggestion that a lack of public fanfare is proof of a silent conspiracy. The reality is that most residents speak only of the accomplishments of a well run board of trustees. One opposition member has a history of resigning her positions on numerous committees whose membership she ironically now claims is the reason for your vote. My time working with her showed this behavior as she disguised it “as taking a stand.” It appeared to me to be a refusal to work within the framework of a committee made up of fellow residents that reflected other points of view, or not willing to accept a legal framework dictated by the State of New York. I believe there was very little achieved by these premature resignations which were based upon a rush to judgment instead of working through the issues.

Nor is this a style that is conducive to getting things done. There were times I had to prevent her from making up her mind prior to hearing homeowners or professional representatives’ technical presentations. I could only conclude that she felt that no one else had a point of view of any value. This was not only immoral but could have exposed the Village to litigation if it was not stopped. In addition it is also imperative that her running mate must have some meaningful experience within the workings of a local government to understand how to

get things done . My many years of working with trustees Zuckerman and Pomerantz have made it obvious that the Mayor has built a team of the peoples’ representatives that not only have the pulse of the community but know how to get things done without fanfare. The opposition will have you believe that a dignified and efficient methodology of “just get the job done” is out dated and a sign of weakness. What a shame! Spencer A Kanis Village of East Hills

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22 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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H H H H H ELECTION 2016

TRUSTEE, Village of East Hills H Choose H Trustee Clara Pomerantz • Served as East Hills Trustee since July 2010 • Trustee for Village-wide Special Events and Programs • Created ongoing “Neighbors for Neighbors” Program - where East Hills volunteers help fellow residents in times of need during major storms and/ or power outages to ensure their safety • Implement annual “Environmental Day” - the community’s highly successful event to encourage village residents in becoming more environmentally conscious • Organized “Power Day” held in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy, to inform residents about alternate power sources during future outages • Created annual “Wellness Day” – a special event promoting well-being for the mind, body, and soul • Supervise “Friends for Friends” Program – an ongoing socially inclusive program for special needs children in East Hills and surrounding communities • Spearheaded Krav Maga - a self-defense/fitness program • Introduced weekly Yoga class – taught by an East Hills Yoga expert • Started first Kids’ Day - now an annual event coordinated by Kids-in-the-Park Committee • Arranged Residents’ Brunch - a welcome for new residents to the Village • Co-founder and co-organizer of Women’s Softball League - involves more than 60 East Hills residents • Organized 5th Anniversary Celebration of the Park

• Supervising Trustee over Environmental Issues and programs • Assists in Application and processing of grants for the Village • Handles resident concerns on a daily basis with emails, meetings and phone calls • Supervising Trustee for Senior Activities Committee • Supervising Trustee to the Kids in the Park Committee • Supervising Trustee over the Park Rules Committee • Religious and nursery school teacher at Temple Sinai of Roslyn • Resident of Fairfield Park, East Hills since 2002 with husband, Jed, and two children, Gabrielle and Robbie What are your most important contributions as an elected official? Personally, I have stood for an open, accessible and caring approach to government. I love people, want to help people, and am committed to providing leadership that helps people. That’s my style. I am dedicated public servant who considers humility and warmth among the most important qualities to possess. My most important contribution was my work with the entire Board to keep our Village taxes flat for 6 straight years and still maintain a strong Aa1 rating from Moody’s. We carefully manage our expenses and continue to focus on doing more with less. I am also very excited to announce that I just succeeded in securing a $250,000 grant from New York State to assist in repav-

ing roads. It is demonstrative of the close relationships that I formed with our state representatives and the creative ways in which we hold costs down. I am a person who cares about our environment and have implemented programs to protect the environment. I offered residents the opportunity to learn about technological advancements to curb global warming and cope with more extreme weather patterns. I have also dedicated myself to implementing new and innovative programs which help unite the village and are self-funding. My Neighbors for Neighbors, begun in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, is a program designed to have resident volunteers check up on our senior citizens who request help during emergencies (village-wide power outages and major storms). Many of the recipients tell me that it is so reassuring to know that someone is watching over them in times of need and have formed friendships with their volunteers. I organized Power Day after Hurricane Sandy to inform residents about their options (solar,

Even though I am not an elected official of the Village of East Hills, 9 years ago Ico-founded the Shooting Stars program for children with special needs. I have also served on the Traffic & Safety Commission and I am a member of the Zoning Board of Appeals . What are the most important issues facing the village and what do you think should be

done to address them? The most important issue in my mind is to ensure that our incumbent officials understand that we are a democratic village and that no one person built the village or owns the village. Why should village residents support you in the election? I am an independent thinker and will bring a fresh perspective to the position.

Neil Foster

generators, etc.) when extended power outages occur as a result of the more violent weather patterns. Friends for Friends is another program I initiated. It is a socially inclusive program in which high school students interact with special needs children in a relaxed atmosphere. I have also developed children’s events as a precursor to the Kids in the Park committee. I coordinate other special events (green day, wellness day, women’s softball league involving over 60 Roslyn women, weekly yoga by a resident expert, weekly krav maga selfdefense by Israeli soldiers, just to name a few). I seek to create social events which build a sense of community, while dealing with substantive issues like keeping our taxes low by obtaining grants. What are the biggest issues facing the village and what do you think should be done to address them? The answer in one word is “funding” in an era of higher costs and greater needs than ever before. These costs, coupled with a state-mandated 2 percent limit on tax increases are the highest municipal concerns. Whether it is unfunded mandates, such as complying with the federal Storm water protections, or raising funds to further protect our community with security devices, we need to be economically prudent. One of the biggest line item budget expenditures that the village faces is the repavement of the roads. These roads used to last 10-12 years but now may need re-pavement in as little at eight years due to more extreme weather patterns. I realize that this is an extraordinary cost thrust upon our village government. To address this concern I have recently devoted myself to obtaining grants for our community. I continue to search and apply for NYS funds to help repave roads that are being impacted. Through these contributions by other levels of government, I am working to address the eco-

Vote Tuesday, March 15, 2016

nomic pressures that are now thrust on our community. I am also using my background to address these costs and utilize tight expense management. Programs I bring to the Village are usually self-funded and require little if any outlay from the village. I use corporate sponsors or donations for these programs. Why should village residents support you in the election? There are numerous reasons village residents should support me in the election. I am hardworking, diligent, caring, creative, and have a solid record of results. In addition, I am also part of a winning team, thanks to our mayor, my colleague, Manny Zuckerman and the other members of the board. We have great successes. Our community has all-time high property values and we have frozen our taxes six years in a row. I have also shown that I can be creative and innovative as I implemented a multitude of new programs. These programs, whether to entertain the youngest, or assist the older members of our community, embody my passions to serve in government. My family has lived in other parts of the greater Roslyn community and I can firmly say that no other area has the breadth and depth of programs, services and community involvement/ spirit as our Village of East Hills. For the most part, they don’t have pristine pools or parks, they don’t have fireworks shows, they don’t have all the great programs — from the Senior Activities Committee to Neighbors for Neighbors to Krav Maga self defense to the events for kids. I am humbled by it and will continue to cultivate a unifying force which strives to bring the community closer together, incorporating residents of all ages, and demographic types. In addition, I hope people can just tell and feel through my energy and passion that I love representing them, and being there for them, whenever and however, they need me.


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H H H H H ELECTION 2015

TRUSTEE, Village of East Hills H Choose H Deputy Mayor Manny Zuckerman • Elected as Trustee since July 2000 • Appointed Deputy Mayor in July 2010 • Supervising Trustee over Security where he is currently working with the new Security Commission to find ways to further deter and eliminate crime in East Hills • Supervising Trustee over the Department of Public Safety • Supervising Trustee over Emergency Preparedness Measures, and is in charge of Village responses to emergencies • Supervising Trustee the Kids in the Park Committee • Supervising Trustee for Senior Activities Committee • Worked with the committees to design and construct the Park at East Hills • Had an emergency generator designed and installed to power Village Hall in the case of hurricanes and other area emergencies and obtained a grant to help pay for the costs • As Deputy Mayor, reviews requisitions and approves all Village expenditures, along with the Mayor • As Deputy Mayor oversees Village capital spending budget • Supervises and arranges for the purchase of vehicles including and heavy equipment • Directs the disposition and sale of depleted Village cars and equipment

• As Deputy Mayor handles all personnel issues for all Village departments • As Deputy Mayor meets regularly with residents to assist them with issues, suggestions and requests for new village action. laws • Represents the Village at all Roslyn Rescue and Highlands Fire Department budget meetings • Coordinator of the first Long Island Village-wide natural gas program being installed by National Grid • From 1981 to 1990, President of the Nob Hill/Lakeville Estates Unified Civic Association • In 1988, became the Village’s first Security Commissioner. • Chairman of the Village Planning Board from 1989-1991 • Resident of Lakeville Estates for over 20 years. Married to Jacalyn with two adult children What are your most important contributions as an elected official? My most important contribution is getting things done for the village. As deputy mayor I handle everything from complex employment matters, to implementing entire projects like the generator to power Village Hall in times of emergencies. I utilize my experience as an owner and CEO of a number of businesses to resolve matters and make ideas become reality. Perhaps my biggest contribu-

tion has been overseeing security. I am currently working with the new Security Committee to find ways to further deter crime in East Hills. I continue to oversee the Department of Public Safety. Just a few of my responsibilities include: • Coordinating Emergency Preparedness Measures - in charge of Village responses to emergencies. I helped write the manual which directs the steps and procedures to be taken in emergency situations whether from natural causes such as hurricanes or terrorism. • Overseeing the implementation of the National Grid Project — the first of its kind on Long Island which will make gas available to all homes in East Hills • Helped design and construct The Park at East Hills, including planning, bonds, referendum, financing and re-financing.

What are the most important issues facing the village and what do you think should be done to address them? The greatest issue facing our village and every village today is the security of our families. Another great concern is emergency management. I’ve been involved with security for many years, I organized the first security patrol program in Lakeville, Nob Hill and Northern Woods. From there I helped expand it to a village wide program using outside security companies. When the outside companies were no longer effective, I planned and implemented our

own in-house security force. Today, we have one of the safest communities on the North Shore of Long Island, I am proud of our program, its results, and its cost effectiveness. I am looking into improving the safety of our village, along with our Security Committee, through a number of measures such as security cameras and lighting. Another critical issue we face today is emergency preparedness. We wrote a comprehensive plan and then implemented it. After hurricane Sandy, I help design, build and install a generator to provide a safe haven for our residents in the event of any man made or natural disaster. We even installed a state-of-the-art telephone system, and email availability to ensure our residents are contacted and kept up-to-date on all issues during an emergency. Another issue is the re-pavement of roads in our community. I oversee the replacement of roads from the analysis to the awards of bids. These projects are imperative to allow residents to enter and exit the community and pass through the roads. Yet another important issue is the replacement of vehicles and equipment that allow our crews the ability to snow plow, clean, and even remove leaves. I not only arrange for the bids on new equipment, I am in charge of selling the Continued on Page 66

fundraising, overseeing and coordinating the fifth grade dance yearbook, directory, school fair, senior party, the Parent Interview Committee and the Budget Advisory Committee. On behalf of my neighbors and the community as a whole I negotiated oil prices and service contracts for anyone who wanted to be part of the Roslyn Oil Group. The group has over 300 residents and was extremely successful until I realized that bringing gas lines to our community needed to be explored. Although others sought to take credit for my hard work, I started speaking with National Grid in 2013 to obtain the information to move forward with a gas project in Country Estates. It was solely as a result of my efforts that the first phase of installing gas mains for approxi-

mately 100 homes in Country Estates was started in December 2014. As I continued working with National Grid and the Public Service Commission, I realized that the gas project could be extended to all of the community. I worked with the Public Service Commission to get a pilot program passed to eliminate the 100 foot rule so as to enable the prohect to be brought to all residents in East Hills. I hope that my accomplishments and dedication to my friends, neighbors and Village residents as a community leader will earn your support come Election Day on March 15, 2016. On behalf of myself and my running mate Neil Foster, I can assure you that Neil and I will be a voice for all of the residents of East Hills.

• Researched and implemented an emergency generator designed and installed to power Village Hall in case of hurricanes and other area emergencies and obtained a grant to help pay for the costs • Review financial expenditures and requisitions and approve all Village expenditures, along with the Mayor • Supervise and arrange for bidding and purchase of equipment, trucks and vehicles • Handle all personnel issues for all Village departments • Supervise several committees including Kids In The Park , Senior Activities and Security • Review the Fire Departments contract and budget.

Jana Goldenberg My name is Jana Goldenberg and I am running on The Residents’ Party to become trustee of the Village of East Hills. During the 21 years I have lived in the village with my husband Rick and son Ross, I have strived and succeeded in implementing programs and projects for the betterment of our community despite not being an elected official and without a formal title. Calling on my background as a manager of operations for a financial firm on Wall Street, I was an integral part of the initial Security Commission which subsequently became dormant and is now being revitalized with an election pending; was a member of the Architectural Review Board, Tree Chairman, co-chaired the Village Appreciation Brunch, Aircraft Noise and Air Pollution Abatement Committee, the Build-

ing, Zoning, Tree Review Committee, president of the Country Estates Civic Association and cocreated the Roslyn Women’s Softball League. As a result of my role and function in various Village committees, many residents have approached me to help with their concern about airplanes flying extremely low over our homes. I am now working with Plane Sense LI and the Town of North Hempstead Aircraft Noise Education and Outreach Committee that includes writing the White Paper. As a concerned citizen and member of the community I have attended roundtable meetings and seminars to help gather information needed so that we can keep all residents updated. Outside of my participation with village committees, I have

also been a volunteer at the Sid Jacobson JCC for the PTA, Auction for Excellence, and was co-creator for Game Day Mania to help support programs for senior citizens. Once my son started school, my attention turned to volunteering for the Harbor Hill Elementary School, Roslyn Middle School and Roslyn High School doing


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Sid Jacobson JCC Temple Sinai discuss to host author Alda racism and prejudice

Sid Jacobson Jewish Community Center’s Partners with the Community program will host author Arlene Alda on Monday, April 4 at 7:45 p.m. her book “Just Kids from the Bronx: Telling It the Way It Was: An Oral History” at Temple Beth Sholom in Roslyn Heights. In “Just Kids from the Bronx” more than sixty Bronx natives including Al Pacino, Colin Powell, Carl Reiner and other leaders, artist, athletes and celebrities share their memories of what is was like growing up in the Bronx, a place the bred influencers in just about every field of endeavor. Alda, a Bronx native and wife of actor Alan Alda, arranged these pieces that span six decades into one collective story that illustrates the borough from the early twentieth century until today. Tickets are $5 in advance and $10 at the door and can be purchased at www. sjjcc.org. Temple Beth Sholom is located at 401 Roslyn Road, Roslyn Heights, NY Arlene Alda 11577.

Imagine really being able to listen to someone as they describe the pain of their personal experiences with racism and prejudice and being able to share what it is like to encounter it yourself? In an atmosphere of trust, more than 70 people from the Friendship Baptist Church and Temple Sinai of Roslyn gathered together for a productive and fascinating interfaith discussion about religion, racism and prejudice. Rabbi Michael White’s opening remarks focused on the long lasting relationship between the Friendship Baptist Church and Temple Sinai of Roslyn and invited the crowd to metaphorically “walk in each other’s shoes” for the evening. Pastor Victor Lewis shared his thoughts on the value of opening oneself up and really listening and comprehending in order to gain a new perspective. The room was silent as he described

what it feels like to be the father of an African American son and to have to worry about the prejudice and racism that his teenager might encounter simply because he is driving or making his way in the world. Rabbi Andrew Gordon then invited everyone to sit in small groups of eight, where members of the two faith communities exchanged stories and strategies about racial injustice and Anti-Semitism. The evening gave way to lively, informative and spiritually significant discussions and then outlined other interfaith opportunities for understanding. Suggestions included inviting the young people of both faiths to an outing, and having events beyond the walls of the Temple to encourage conversations outside of the faith communities. All who were present appreciated the opportunity for interfaith dialogue and understanding.

Temple Sinai to Sid Jacobson to host host Purim festival

author and chef Rossi Sid Jacobson Jewish Community Center will host chef and author Rossi on Tuesday, April 12 at 7:30pm to discuss her memoir “The Raging Skillet: The True Life Story of Chef Rossi” and do a cooking demonstration. Rossi is the owner, executive chef and catering director of The Raging Skillet in Manhattan. “The Raging Skillet” takes readers

on the wild ride that is Rossi’s life from Passover Seders in the family camper to Ground Zero as a cook for first responders to the owner of one of the most soughtafter catering companies in Manhattan. The heartfelt, gritty and hilarious memoir explores how creativity in the kitchen allows us to give a nod to our where we come from. Tickets are $20 and can be purchased at www.sjjcc.org.

Purim is the festival which celebrates the courage of Esther and the wisdom of Mordechai, as they overcome Haman’s evil plot to destroy the Jewish community of Persia. Purim is a celebration for everyone of all ages, children and adults alike, who like to laugh and sing. The Temple Sinai is inviting the entire community to join this happy, fun family event! Come one, come all to a “Beach Boys Purim”! Our Purim Shpiel is on Sunday, March 20 at 10:15 am. It is sure to have you dancing in the aisles! We “boo” Haman, sing, laugh, cheer and eat too many hamantashen. Don’t miss this fabulous Purim Extravaganza, our annual Temple-wide Purim Shpiel featuring our Purim Players, and a costume parade. Come dressed in your Purim costume and join the Purim fun! Free. Our Purim Shpiel is dedicated to the

memory of Andrew Moisoff. Following the Purim Shpiel stay on for our exciting Purim Carnival beginning at 11:00 am. Bring your whole family (in costume). The Purim Carnival has wonderful Purim games, prizes, food and raffles. Win great prizes, terrific raffle prizes, eat and have fun. Children in costume will receive five extra prize tickets, adults will receive 10 extra for dressing up. Admission is $10 per child. Raffle tickets are $5 each or three for $10. Join us for a Family-Friendly Purim Service on Wednesday, March 23 at 7:00 pm. Bring pasta in a box to use as a “grogger.” Your “groggers” will be donated to a food pantry after Purim. We will be making Shalach Manot to deliver to the elderly members of the Community. This is an important Mitzvah and fun activity.


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Street art on display at NCMA New exhibition will feature the work of influential 1980s ‘graffiti’ artist Kenny Scharf

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merging with the New York City graffiti and street art movement of the 1980s alongside such artists as Jean Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring, Kenny Scharf became known for his vibrantly colorful large-scale paintings and exuberantly playful installations, drawing upon pop icons, media advertising and consumer culture of the 1960s, including TV cartoon characters such as the Flintstones and the Jetsons. Curated by Director Karl E. Willers and museum staff, an exhibition of Scharf’s work, showcases major paintings and sculptures from throughout the artist’s career, opens at Nassau County Museum of Art on Saturday, March 19 and remains on view through July 10, 2016. Highlights of this exhibition are the expansive mural Pop Renaissance that surrounds the viewer, a version of the artist’s Cosmic Cavern club-like environment, as well as a recreation of the artist’s former Brooklyn studio complete with spattered walls, painted furniture and other workspace ephemera. In speaking about his art, Scharf said he believes the artist has a social responsibility

to engage others in a thought process that ultimately brings the creative process into everyday life thereby enhancing the quality of our experience. According to Art News, he inaugurated his iconic Cosmic Cavern installations when he turned his basement into one of the dayglo environments that have been his trademark since the 1980s. Versions of these Cosmic Cavern installations have been seen at the 1985 Whitney Biennial and at MoMA PS1 in Long Island City. Works by Scharf are also in the collections of such major New York institutions as the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Guggenheim Museum and the Jewish Museum. Internationally, works by Scharf have been collected by Mexico’s Museo de Arte Contemporaneo de Monterrey; the Ludwig Museum in Cologne, Germany; and the Stedelijk Museum of Amsterdam, The Netherlands. In conjunction with the showing of Kenny Scharf, the Museum is offering related public programming for adults and family

groups. Museum docent Riva Ettus presents lunchtime talks on Kenny Scharf and his career on April 14, May 12 and June 9. Visitors are invited on June 19 to watch Scharf paint a new outdoor mural for the future Manes Family Art & Education Center on the Museum’s grounds. While the Scharf exhibition is on view, the artist’s vibrant and imaginative works serve as inspiration for other family and children’s programs, including weekly Neiman Marcus Family Sundays at the Museum, as well as Nature + Kids = Art on April 17, Spring Break for Art on April 26-28, and Summer Picnic Party on June 26. A companion exhibition, Glamorous Graffiti, looks at the work of Scharf’s contemporaries in the exciting New York graffiti and street art movement of the 1980s. Including a 1988 portfolio of five silkscreened prints by Keith Haring, a range of graffiti styles are explored through the work of the artists Basquiat, Lee Quiñones, Crash, Futura 2000, Toxic and many others. Films documenting early 1980s graffiti

and urban culture are included in the exhibition. The artists A-One, Daze, Dondi, Koor, Lady Pink, Noc, Richard Hambleton and Rammellzee appear in the films Downtown 81 by Edo Bertoglio, Wild Style by Charlie Ahearn and Style Wars by Henry Chalfant and Tony Silver. Nassau County Museum of Art is located at One Museum Drive in Roslyn Harbor, just off Northern Boulevard, Route 25A, two traffic lights west of Glen Cove Road. The museum is open Tuesday-Sunday, 11 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Docent-led tours of the exhibition are offered at 2 p.m. each day; tours of the mansion are offered each Saturday at 1 p.m.; meet in the lobby, no reservations needed. Tours are free with museum admission. Family tours and art activities are offered Sundays from 1 p.m.; free with museum admission. Members and children under 4 are admitted free. The Museum Store is open Tuesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Call (516) 484-9337 for current exhibitions, events, days/times and directions or log onto nassaumuseum.org.


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The top seven events

1

A Spring Fling with Pink Martini Sunday, March 13, 8 p.m.

Drawing inspiration from music from all over the world ,Thomas Lauderdale founded Pink Martini in 1994 to provide more beautiful and inclusive musical soundtracks for political fundraisers for causes such as civil rights, affordable housing, the environment, libraries, public broadcasting, education and parks. Twenty years later, Pink Martini still tours the world, singing in 22 languages at opera houses, concert halls, film festivals, museums and fashion shows. Where: Landmark On Main Street 232 Main Street, Suite 1 Port Washington Info: (516) 767-1384, ext. 101 • www.landmarkonmainstreet.org

2

David Ignatius Sunday, March 13, 3 p.m.

Bestselling author and Washington Post columnist David Ignatius presents “How To Fix The World: A Foreign Policy For The Future” Sunday at Temple Emanuel. Ignatius has covered nearly every Washington beat, from the Pentagon to the CIA to Capitol Hill as well as global politics, the Middle East, and economics. He turned his experiences with the CIA into nine thrilling bestsellers. Where: Stephen C. Widom Cultural Arts at Emanuel 150 Hicks Lane, Great Neck Info: (516) 482-5701 • www.scwculturalarts.org/emanuel-series/

3

Howie Mandel Friday, March 11, 8 p.m.

Before Howie Mandel became Hollywood’s go-to TV host, he carved a career as one of North America’s sharpest comic presences. Whether he was wrapping a latex glove around his head and inflating it with his nose or honing the high-pitched voice that would give life to the titular character of Bobby’s World and Gizmo from Gremlins, Mandel’s standup act made even the most stoic viewers crack into laughter. Where: NYCB Theatre at Westbury 960 Brush Hollow Road Westbury Info: (516) 247-5200 www.thetheatreatwestbury.com


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for the coming week

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The Alan Kelly Gang Sunday, March 13, 3 p.m.

Powerful, emotive and critically acclaimed traditional Irish music band from the west of Ireland and Scotland. Fronted by Ireland’s piano accordion maestro, The Alan Kelly Gang has firmly established itself as one of Ireland’s leading contemporary traditional music groups. Its strong dynamics, driving rhythms and buoyant harmonies will draw even the most fainthearted listener into the passion that they put into the music they play. Where: Adelphi University Performing Arts Center Westermann Stage, 1 South Avenue, Garden City Info: (516) 877-4000 • http://aupac.adelphi.edu/

5

Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra Saturday, March 12, 8 p.m.

The Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra, under the guidance of conductor Dmitry Yablonsky and featuring renowned cellist prodigy Danielle Akta, will play a selection of classical standards when they take the stage Sunday at the Tilles Center, including Glinka: Ruslan and Ludmila Overture; Saint-Saens: Cello Concerto No. 1 in A minor; and Brahms Symphony No. 2. Single ticket prices are $103, $78 and $53. Where: Tilles Center for the Performing Arts LIU Post, 720 Northern Boulevard, Brookville Info: (516) 299-3100 • http://tillescenter.org

LUNCH | DINNER | CATERING

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Meat Loaf

Tuesday, March 15, 8 p.m. and Thursday, March 17, 8 p.m. The man behind such hits as “You Took the Words Right out of My Mouth,” “Bat Out of Hell,” “I’ll Do Anything For Love” and the ubiquitous “Paradise By The Dashboard Light” will return to Long Island this week. Born Marvin Lee Aday in Dallas, TX, Meatloaf also has a host of acting roles on his resumé, including starring as Eddie in the cult classic “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” and as doomed Robert Paulson in “Fight Club.” Where: The Paramount, 370 New York Ave., Huntington Info: (631) 673-7300, ext. 303 • www.paramountny.com

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Colin Quinn Saturday, March 12, 7 & 9:30 p.m.

Quinn has navigated his career from MTV’s “Remote Control” to SNL to Comedy Central’s “Tough Crowd” to Broadway with one-man shows “An Irish Wake” and “Long Story Short.” He’s been off Broadway as well with his shows “Unconstitutional” and “New York Story.” His web series “Cop Show” can be seen on LSTUDIO.com, his first and last book, “The Coloring Book,” is now out and he recently starred as Amy Schumer’s father in the film “Trainwreck.” Where: Governors’ Comedy Club 90 Division Ave. Levittown Info: (516) 731-3358 http://tickets.govs.com/index.cfm

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28 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

As the earth re-awakens, so may our spirits... Discover a religion for our time.

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The top events for kids

We warmly welcome you

Sundays at 11:00 am Easter Sunday, March 27, 2016 Sunrise Service at 6:45 am, Pondside Art Gallery in case of rain Easter Service featuring Jazz Ensemble at 11:00 am Traditional Egg Hunt follows

Nevit Dilmen, via Wikimedia Commons

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ong Island Pet Reptile Expo Sunday, March 13, 10:00 a.m.- 4:00 p.m.

48 Shelter Rock Rd • Manhasset, NY 11030 516.627.6560 • www.uucsr.org

Visit uumetrony.org for a congregation near you.

Come see thousands of live pet reptiles on display and for sale as pets. The largest Reptile Expo ever held on Long Island with more than 150 vendor and display tables. Dozens of reptile breeders will have thousands of reptiles, amphibians, and arachnids on display and for sale as pets. $10.00 adults; $5.00 children 7-12; under 7 free. Children 12 and under must be accompanied by an adult. Where: Suffolk Community College at the Health, Sports and Education Center, 485 Wicks Road, Brentwood Info: 845 526-4845 • www.reptileexpo.com

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ing and Swing Story Time Tuesday, March 15, 10:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m.

Join us for a program filled with interactive stories, fun action rhymes and songs to share together. The early literacy practices featured each week help build the foundation for a lifelong love of learning. For children ages 18 months to 3 years with an adult. No registration required. Where: Port Washington Public Library, 1 Library Drive, Port Washington Info: 516-883-4400 • www.pwpl.org

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eauty and The Beast

Show Dates: Saturday, March 5, 12, 19, 26, 2016 at 2:00 p.m. & Sunday, March 13 & 20, 2016 at 12:00 p.m. An enchanting tale as old as time about how the love of one beautiful young girl helps to transform a hard-hearted monster back into a handsome prince Where: Bayway Arts Center, 265 East Main Street, East Islip Info: 631-581-2700 • www.broadhollow.org


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erenstain Bears Live! Sunday, March 13, 4:00 p.m. -5:30 p.m.

Adapted from the classic children’s book series by Stan and Jan Berenstain, The Berenstain Bears have another adventure to share. As always, Bear Country is not without its complications: Brother Bear’s grades are slipping, Sister Bear still has a few things to learn about making new friends, and Papa Bear just can’t stop eating junk food. Thankfully, we can always depend on Mama Bear and her loving patience to help set things right. The Berenstain Bears LIVE! gives boys and girls of all ages the chance to fall in love with these characters, just as their parents did. $20/ticket. Where: Stony Brook University Staller Center, 100 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook Info: 631-632-ARTS • www. stallercenter.com

(1) FREE

SAPPORO DRAFT BEER 16 oz.

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hildsplay presents Dr. Seuss’ The Cat in the Hat

Sunday, March 13, 2 p.m. Monday, March 14, 10:30 a.m. From the moment his tall, red-and-white-striped hat appears at their door, Sally and her brother know that the Cat in the Hat is the most mischievous cat they will ever meet. Suddenly the rainy afternoon is transformed by the Cat and his antics. Will their house ever be the same? Can the kids clean up before mom comes home? With some tricks (and a fish), Thing Two and Thing One – with the Cat in The Hat the fun’s never done! Single Ticket Prices: $55, $25, $15, $10 Prices include a $3 facility fee Where: Bounce U Farmingdale, 101 Carolyn Blvd., Farmingdale Info: 631-777-5867 • www.bounceu.com/farmingdale-ny

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ll Age Open Bounce Thursdays, now through March 31, 4:15 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.

You don’t need a special occasion to get your bounce on. Reserve your spot and then come by and enjoy awesome inflatables, fantastic games, and wall-to-wall fun. Bring socks! All ages welcome. $12.95 per child. Where: Bounce U Farmingdale, 101 Carolyn Blvd., Farmingdale Info: 631-777-5867 • www.bounceu.com/farmingdale-ny

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rish Pirates! Saturday, March 12, 1:00 p.m. -2:00 p.m.

We invite young mateys ages 6-12 to join us and learn about Irish Pirates from the past who ruled the seas! Design your own Jolly Roger to hang at home. All ages welcome. Regular Admission + $3 per craft. Members $3 per craft (no admission). Where: The Whaling Museum and Education Center of Cold Spring Harbor, 301 Main Street, Cold Spring Harbor Info: 631-367-3418 • www. cshwhalingmuseum.org

With All-You-Can-Eat Lunch or Dinner (Mon-Thurs.)

All you can eat LUNCH - $14.95 All you can eat DINNER MON.-THURS. $22.95 FRI.- SUN $24.95 • KIDS - AGE x 1.5

ALL BEER, WINE & HOT SAKE

50% OFF

Any Order Picked-Up 30%

Off (Cash Only)

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30 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

LEO’S

Come In Thursday March 17th St. Patrick’s Day for Irish Specials Throughout the Day Join Us Easter Sunday Starting At 10:30am For Leo’s Famous Brunch

Now Taking Reservations

Saturday, March 12th • 9:00pM

Live MuSic Featuring “The UsUal sUspecTs” Friday Only 25% Off Entire

Lunch or Dinner Check

Cash Only • Alcohol not included Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included • Not available at the bar Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering Expires 3/17/16 • Dine In Only • Good for parties of 8 or less May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Saturday Only 25% Off Entire

Lunch or Dinner Check

Cash Only • Alcohol not included Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included • Not available at the bar Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering Expires 3/17/16 • Dine In Only • Good for parties of 8 or less May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Sunday Only 25% Off Entire

Brunch or Dinner Check Cash Only • Alcohol not included Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included • Not available at the bar Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering Expires 3/17/16 • Dine In Only • Good for parties of 8 or less May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Monday Only 25% Off Entire

Lunch or Dinner Check

Cash Only • Alcohol not included Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included • Not available at the bar Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering Expires 3/17/16 • Dine In Only • Good for parties of 8 or less May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Tuesday Only 25% Off Entire

Lunch or Dinner Check

Cash Only • Alcohol not included Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included • Not available at the bar Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering Expires 3/17/16 • Dine In Only • Good for parties of 8 or less May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

Wednesday Only 25% Off Entire

Lunch or Dinner Check

Cash Only • Alcohol not included Lobster Dishes & 14 oz. Black Angus Steak not included • Not available at the bar Coupon Must Be Presented At Time of Ordering Expires 3/17/16• Dine In Only • Good for parties of 8 or less May only be used on day specified. Not to be combined w/any other offer

190 Seventh St., Garden City 742-0574 • www.leosgardencity.com

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Arts & Entertainment Calendar GOLD COAST ARTS CENTER 113 Middle Neck Road, Great Neck (516) 829-2570 • http://goldcoastarts. org Saturday, March 12, 8 p.m. Your Big Break Semi-Finals Wednesday, March 16, 7:30 p.m. Margarita, with a Straw: Q&A with codirector Nilesh Maniyar Wednesday, March 30, 7:30 p.m. Film Screening: Louder than Bombs Friday, April 1, 8:30 p.m. LIVE stand-up comedy: Tyler Gildin, George Rini and Frankie Pace Tuesday, April 5, 7:30 p.m. Film Screening: Very Semi-Serious LANDMARK ON MAIN STREET 232 Main Street, Suite 1 Port Washington (516) 767-1384 ext. 101 www.landmarkonmainstreet.org Friday, March 11, 8 p.m. Paula Poundstone Sunday, March 13, 8 p.m. Pink Martini Friday, March 18, 8 p.m. Martin Sexton Sunday, March 20, 11 a.m., 2 p.m. The Very Hungry Caterpillar & Other Eric Carle Favorites Friday, April 1, 7 p.m. Karen Mason Sunday, April 3, 7 p.m. Tom Rush & John Sebastian Saturday, April 9, 2 p.m. Are You My Mother? Saturday, April 9, 2 p.m. Graham Parker w/ Brinsley Schwarz Friday, April 15, 8 p.m. Tommy Tune: Taps, Tunes & Tall Tales Saturday, April 16, 8 p.m. Dennis Elsas: Rock’n’Roll Never Forgets Thursday, April 28, 7:30 p.m. The Subdudes Friday, April 29, 7:30 p.m. Afro Cuban All Stars Saturday, May 7, 3 p.m. Pushcart Players in Peter & the Wolf Saturday, May 14, 2016, 8 p.m. Alan Cumming Sings Sappy Songs Thursday, June 23, 2016, 7:30 p.m. Tommy Emmanuel STEPHEN C. WIDOM CULTURAL ARTS AT EMANUEL 150 Hicks Lane, Great Neck (516) 482-5701 • www.scwculturalarts. org/emanuel-series/ Sunday, March 13, 3 p.m. David Ignatius Thursday, March 17, 7:30 p.m. Dr. Luis Diaz NYCB Theatre at Westbury 960 Brush Hollow Road, Westbury. (516) 247-5200 www.thetheatreatwestbury.com Friday, March 11, 8 p.m. Howie Mandel Saturday, March 12, 8 p.m. Dick Fox’s Spring Doo Wop Extrava-

ganza Saturday, March 19, 7:30 p.m. 70s Soul Jam Friday, April 1, 8 p.m. Patti LaBelle Saturday, April 2, 8 p.m. Sinbad Sunday, April 10, 7 p.m. Take 6 & The Manhattan Transfer Thursday, April 28, 8 p.m. Martin Short Saturday, April 30, 3 p.m. Kool & The Gang Sunday, May 1, 7 p.m. Under The Streetlamp Friday, May 6, 8 p.m. Generation Axe! - A Night Of Guitars Saturday, May 7, 7 p.m. The Whispers, The Manhattans, Regina Belle Friday, May 13, 7 p.m. ABBA Friday, May 14, 7 p.m. I Love the 90s Show Thursday, May 19, 7 p.m. Frankie Ballard Sunday, May 22, 7 p.m. The Zombies, Felix Cavaliere’s Rascals Tuesday, May 31, 8 p.m. Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Experience Saturday, June 4, 8 p.m. Saturday Night Summer Fever Concert Thursday, June 9, 8 p.m. Marilyn McCoo & Billy Davis, Jr. Friday, June 10, 8 p.m. Johnny Mathis Thursday, June 16, 8 p.m. Don Rickles & Regis Philbin: Conversation & Clips Saturday, June 18, 8 p.m. Happy Together feat. Flo & Eddie, Chuck Negron Sunday, June 19, 8 p.m. Boyz II Men Saturday, Aug. 20, 8 p.m. Air Supply Friday, Sept. 16, 8 p.m. Charlie Daniels Band The Space at Westbury 250 Post Ave., Westbury (516) 283.5566 www.thespaceatwestbury.com Saturday, March 12, 9 p.m. Arash Friday, March 18, 9 p.m. Joss Stone Friday, Apr. 1, 8 p.m. Keb’ Mo’ Band w/Gerald Albright Friday, Apr. 2, 8 p.m. Rock Legends Live Friday, Apr. 15, 8 p.m. Robert Randolph and the Family Band Saturday, Apr. 28, 8 p.m. Nils Lofgren Friday, May 6, 8 p.m. David Bromberg Quintet Saturday, May 7, 8 p.m. The Fab Faux Friday, June 3, 8 p.m. America


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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ELECTRONIC

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32 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

Custom Event Catering By Alexandra Troy

RT

All you need to do is shower and show up to your special event. We will create and design a menu tailored to make your next event unforgettable! Montauk to Manhattan.

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Gold Coast International Film Festival

SPRING FILM SERIES

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 7:30 PM

MARGARITA, WITH A STRAW BOW TIE SQUIRE CINEMAS

115 MIDDLE NECK ROAD, GREAT NECK

PRESENTED WITH THE

Q&A WITH CO-DIRECTOR NILESH MANIYAR!

A funky, joyous, coming-of-age tale. Laila, a Punjabi girl with cerebral palsy, is an aspiring writer who leaves India for a coveted spot at New York University, where she is exposed to and explores a new world. Visit goldcoastfilmfestival.org/furman or call 516-829-2570 for tickets. Tickets $15/$10 for students when purchased in advance, $20 at the door.

Community Calendar Project Independence Support & Social Group The Town of North Hempstead’s Project Independence would like to remind residents that they offer free support and social groups. Call 311 or (516) 869-6311 for more information. Blankets of Love Tuesday, March 15, 22 and 29. The group provides an opportunity for seniors in the community to come together and work in a collaborative manner on a meaningful and rewarding project. All members of the group are registered as volunteers with JASA. Each blanket is donated to a worthy cause. The blankets have been given to various human service programs in Nassau County and New York City. The group meets Tuesdays from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. at Clinton G. Martin Park, 1601 Marcus Avenue, New Hyde Park. North Hempstead Project Independence invites all Town residents 60 and over. Please call 311 or 8696311 to register or for more information. Senior Talk Group Thursday, March 17 . Come enjoy lively discussion on many topics at the Senior Talk Group. The group meets the first and third Thursday of every month from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. at the Roslyn Community Center, 53 Orchard Street, Roslyn Heights. North Hempstead Project Independence invites all Town residents 60 and over. Please call 311 or 869-6311 to register or for more information. Project Independence Social Discussion Group Thursday, March 17, 24 and 31. Come meet new friends! Enjoy talking with others and meeting your neighbors. The group meets at the Parkville Branch of Great Neck Library, 10 Campbell Street, New Hyde Park on Thursdays from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. North Hempstead Project Independence invites all Town residents 60 and over. Please call 311 or 869-6311 to register or for more information. What Matters to You Men’s Community Group Friday, March 11, 18 & 25. Come and discuss topics that are of mutual interest to men living in the community. The group meets at the Parkville Branch of Great Neck Library, 10 Campbell Street, New Hyde Park from 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. North Hempstead Project Independence invites all male Town residents 60 and over. Please call 311 or 869-6311 to register or for more information. Exercise for Balance and Strength to Reduce Falls Friday, March 11 and 18. Presented by Winthrop University Hospital. Join this three week program and learn how to improve your balance and strength, and reduce falls. The Advanced Fall Prevention course is on Fridays from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the North Hempstead “Yes We Can” Community Center, 141 Garden Street, Westbury. Participants must wear comfortable clothing, secure footwear and bring a bottle of water. North Hempstead Project Independence invites all Town residents 60 and over. Please call 311 or 869-6311 to register or for more information.

Improve Your Balance, Strength and Flexibility Tai Chi Friday, March 11 &18 and Monday, March 14, 21 & 28. Presented by Winthrop University Hospital. Join this eight week program and learn how to improve your balance and strength, and flexibility through Tai Chi. The course is held twice a week at the North Hempstead “Yes We Can” Community Center, 141 Garden Street, Westbury on Friday from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. and on Monday from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.Participants must wear comfortable clothing, secure footwear and bring a bottle of water. North Hempstead Project Independence invites all Town residents 60 and over. Please call 311 or 869-6311 to register or for more information. Be Active Thursday, March 17. Come and learn the best way to get active and stay healthy! Please join us at Magnolia Gardens, 899 Broadway, Westbury on Thursday, March 17 from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. North Hempstead Project Independence invites all Town residents 60 and over. Please call 311 or 8696311 to register or for more information. World in Motion Tuesday, March 22. Come join us for a lively discussion on current world issues at Clinton G. Martin Park, 1601 Marcus Avenue, New Hyde Park on Tuesday, March 22 from 2:15 p.m.-3:15 p.m. North Hempstead Project Independence invites all Town residents 60 and over. Please call 311 or 869-6311 to register or for more information. All About the Pneumonia & Prevnar Vaccines Thursday, March 24. Come learn important facts regarding the vaccines. Questions and answers will follow the presentation. Please join us at Port Washington Senior Center, 80 Manorhaven Blvd, Port Washington on Thursday, March 24 from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. North Hempstead Project Independence invites all Town residents 60 and over. Please call 311 or 869-6311 to register or for more information. All the World’s A Stage Friday, March 25. Back by Popular Demand! Join in for a casual presentation and chat about the stages of our lives, the changes we face and the best ways to live to our fullest! Please join us at Port Washington Senior Center, 80 Manorhaven Boulevard, Port Washington on Friday, March 25 from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. North Hempstead Project Independence invites all Town residents 60 and over. Please call 311 or 869-6311 to register or for more information. FOR TRIVIA LOVERS At 7 p.m. Two Wednesday nights each month at Page One Restaurant, 90 School St. Glen Cove. Call (516) 625-8804 for information. Singles Association of L.I. For information on events, please call (516) 825-0633 or (516) 333-2851 or e-mail singlesassociationofli@yahoo.com.


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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T H E C U L I N A R Y A R C H I T E C T

‘‘Go-to’ deserts for all, any occasions Everyone needs a repertoire of “go to” desserts for impromptu entertaining. Creme Brulee, Chocolate Bread Pudding and fruit, fit the bill to a “T”. With very little effort, you may easily duplicate these easy-to-make desserts. Round out the menu with fresh and/or canned Lychee nuts and you have a dessert feast. Menu Serves 8-10 Chocolate Bread Pudding Chocolate Sauce* Creme Brulee Lychee Nuts and Fresh Blueberries *Recipe Not Given Chocolate Bread Pudding 1 1/2 cups heavy cream 2 tblsp butter, plus 2 tblsp butter 2 cups bread cubes, made with slightly stale bread 2 eggs, 3 egg whites 1 cup sugar 1/2 cup unsweetened cocoa powder 1 tblsp vanilla extract

1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Lightly butter an 8-inch baking dish. 2. Combine the cream in a saucepan with 2 tablespoons butter and heat over high heat until the milk begins to scald. Put the bread cubes into the baking dish and pour the hot liquid over them. Set aside. 3. Lightly beat the eggs; then beat in the sugar, cocoa, vanilla and salt. Combine with the bread mixture. Pour into the baking dish, dot with remaining butter and bake for 45 minutes, or until firm. Serve with chocolate sauce on the side. Creme Brulee 3 tblsp light brown sugar 2 cups heavy cream 4 egg yolks, beaten 3 tblsp light, brown sugar 1. Mix together the 3 tablespoons light brown sugar and cream in the top of a double boiler, set over hot water. Bring just to a boil. 2. Add the egg yolks, a little at a time, stirring constantly.

Alexandra Troy is owner of pantry “go to”! Just keep one on hand and add fresh berries and you Culinary Architect Catering, a 32-year old Greenvale-based comhave a delicious, fruity dessert. pany, specializing in private, corporate and promotional parties. 1 20 oz. can Lychee Nuts For more photos and presentation in syrup ideas, follow Culinary Architect 1 pint fresh blueberries Catering on Facebook. Also visit 1. Place contents of Lychee Culinary Architect on the web at can in a pretty bowl. culinaryarchitect.com 2. Add fresh berries. Refrigerate for 2 hours and serve.

ALEXANDRA TROY The Culinary Architect

Continue to cook until the mixture is thick enough to coat a spoon. Do not overcook or it will curdle. Cool. Pour into a quiche dish, chill in the refrigerator until set. 3. Sprinkle the sugar on top of custard, and place under the broiler until the sugar melts. Don’t let the sugar burn! Cool; then return to the refrigerator to chill thoroughly before serving. Lychee Nuts with Fresh Blueberries Lychee Nuts in Heavy Syrup are a

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34 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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For groups or birthdays call 866.642.9849

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The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

guide to schools & education

a blank slate media / litmor publications special section • march 11, 2016

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36 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

Congregational Day Nursery School

Summer Camp Registration Camp registration is open for children entering a 3’s or 4’s program in September 2016. Children will enjoy an exciting environment that will include summer crafts,water play, sprinkler time and fun indoor and outdoor games.

June 28 to July 28 Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday 9:00 am-11:30am

RT ADVERTORIAL

AFTERNOON CLASSES FOR FALL 2016 Congregational Nursery School located at 1845 Northern Blvd in Manhasset (right across from the Apple Store) has spots available in our afternoon 3ís and 4ís classes for Fall 2016. The afternoon programs are typically smaller which promotes one on one interaction with the teachers. This nurturing atmosphere of a small group encourages individualized attention while emphasizing our natural approach to learning through play. Our afternoon 3ís meet Tuesday through Friday from 12:30 to 3:30.

Our afternoon 4ís meet Monday through Friday from 12:30 to 3:30. Tuition assistance is available. For further information about our afternoon programs or any of our other ones please contact us at: 516-365-9616 Congons9616@gmail.com Or visit our website at www.uccmanhasset.org

Contact

Congregational Day Nursery School for registration information non-denominational

Congregational Day Nursery School 1845 Northern Blvd., Manhasset, NY 11030 516-365-9616 Director - Joyce Domanico congons9616@gmail.com

non-denominational

Congregational Day Nursery School 1845 Northern Blvd., Manhasset, NY 11030 516-365-9616

Director - Joyce Domanico congons9616@gmail.com


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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Innovative Private School My Spectrum School is an innovative private school based on Harvard University’s Project Spectrum, and is directed under the passionate care of Dr. Linda DAgostino, Ed.D. It is designed to ignite the imagination, inspire selfconfidence, and instill a lifelong love of learning in all children attending Preschool, Kindergarten, Grade 1, After School Enrichment, and Summer Camp. The immersive and stimulating learning environment also extends to an Early Childhood Center licensed by the Office of Children and Family Services. My Spectrum School’s inventive curriculum masterfully integrates fine arts, literacy, social studies, movement, science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) while remaining aligned with New York State

Common Core Learning Standards. Students receive individualized instruction, and collaboratively engage in fun, hands-on projects such as: scientific experiments, computer programming, painting, yoga, poetry, bridge construction, creative play, and many more.

MY SPECTRUM SCHOOL Gifted & Talented Education

Toddlers Pre-Kindergarten Kindergarten Grade 1

“Every child possesses a unique profile of personal strengths that spans the colorful spectrum of multiple intelligences, and we welcome all children to explore their natural abilities, nurture their gifts, and maximize their potential at My Spectrum School.” – Dr. Linda DAgostino Visit myspectrumschool.com or call 516-883-8035 for additional information.

Full & Half Day Classes After School Enrichment

S.T.E.A.M. Workshops Summer Camp

My Spectrum School Gifted & Talented Education

11 Sintsink Dr. East Port Washington NY 516 - 883 - 8035 myspectrumschool.com

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38 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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Creating a helpful homework atmosphere for your children homework free from distraction. Choose the right location for the homework room. When choosing an area of your home where kids will do their homework, avoid rooms adjacent to the kitchen and living room, as these rooms tend to be popular and subject to heavy foot traffic. But don’t choose a room that’s too far away from the hustle and bustle, such as the basement, as that may make kids feel as though they are being punished. In addition, you want to be able to periodically check in on kids to see if they need help and make sure they aren’t spending their homework time surfing the Internet or procrastinating.

C

lassrooms conducive to learning may go a long way toward helping students understand the subjects they study in school, but the environment kids encounter at home also plays a big role in how well kids do in their studies. A homework-friendly atmosphere at home can facilitate learning, and there are many ways parents can create such an environment for their school-aged children.

Designate a homework zone in a distraction-free area of your home. Some youngsters are easily distracted, and those distractions come in many forms. A living room where the television is blaring, a noisy kitchen where dinner is being prepared and a room where pets can roam free are not ideal homework areas, as each can take kids’ attention away from their assignments. Designate a room in your home that is quiet and well lit so kids can do their

Keep the homework room clean. A cluttered homework room may be less appealing to children, and such disorganization also can distract kids from the tasks at hand. Encourage kids to keep their homework rooms clean, and help them clean up if need be. Supplies and other items kids need should be easily accessible in the homework room so kids are not wasting time looking for items they need to complete their homework.

Let kids rest or relax before starting their homework. Another element of a good homework atmosphere is letting kids unwind between getting home from school and cracking open the books. A break between school and homework time can help kids focus better on their studies. In the interim between arriving home from school and starting on their homework, give kids a healthy snack that can provide an extra jolt of energy they can use once they start their homework. Evaluate how the homework zone is working. Once an ample amount of time has passed, examine how kids are performing on their homework assignments. If they are doing well, then there is no reason to break up the current routine. If they are struggling, ask them if there is anything about the current setup they dislike and address those issues accordingly. Kids rarely look forward to doing their homework. But the right atmosphere can make homework seem like less of a chore and more of an opportunity for kids to apply themselves.

2016

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11AM - 1PM March 12 & March 20 April 10 & April 23 May 7 or call for a private tour

25 Store Hill Road, Old Westbury, NY 11568 (516) 626-9268

oldwestburysummercamp.org


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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39

Read All About Us a blank slate media / litmor publications special section • march 11, 2016

Focal Point Optical is a family-owned, full service eye care practice. Licensed Opticians Fred Rapps, and Walter Nacinovich have been working in the optical field since their teens. Both started as “repair and shop boys” for optometrists in Jackson Heights and Sunnyside Queens. It was the 1960’s and they both were still in high school. Both Fred and Walter decided to pursue opticianry as their chosen professions. They both became New York State licensed opticians in the early 1970’s - initially running a small optical shop from Walter’s basement. As their loyal clientele grew, they decided to open up their first office in Bayside, Queens in 1982. They always take pride in offering the highest quality workmanship and optical goods at fair prices. Each pair of glasses is crafted meticulously and will not be dispensed to patients unless it passes their rigorous inspection.

Walter, Dr. Mann, Fred, Karen and Wanda

Focal Point’s Garden City Park location was opened in March of 1988. Since its inception, Dr. Alice Mann has been the optometrist there. She came to Focal Point in Garden City Park right out of SUNY College of Optometry. She graduated first in her class, and received several clinical awards at graduation. She has developed warm relationships with the patients of Focal Point over the years, and treats each one as if they were a family member. Dr Mann routinely updates her knowledge on the latest technologies and modalities in contact lenses, as well as general optometry. She is licensed to diagnose and treat ocular pathology as well. Her comprehensive examinations include a thorough refraction, binocular vision testing, eye health evaluation and glaucoma screening. Contact lenses are fit with the latest in materials and designs.

Open Monday through Saturday

At Focal Point we strive to provide our patients with the latest innovations and technologies available. The entire staff attends continuing education classes in order to keep abreast of the latest products and materials available. All spectacle eyewear is hand finished and assembled in our on-premises laboratory by our skilled licensed opticians. We take pride in our workmanship and vast experience in the optical field. If you are already one of our many loyal patients, we thank you for your trust. If not, we welcome you to join our Focal Point family.

Focal Point Optical GARDEN CITY PARK

2453 Jericho Tpke. (Waldbaums Center)

516-746-3836

EYE EXAMS

Available Tues. Wed., Thurs. Sat. by appointment

Medicare, EyeMed & Most Union Plans Accepted


40 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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For All Your Printing Needs and local residents. Dominic knows many of the businesses and residents which keep him very involved in the community. He volunteers each year at the Street Fair. During the recent fire that destroyed a number of stores on his block, he helped those owners who lost everything. Charity is important to Dominic. After 9/11 he printed many sympathy cards for customers who lost loved ones at no charge to them. He always donates to all organizations who ask for an ad or donation of any kind. He never says no.

In October, 1981 Dominic Oreste and his childhood friend, James Laima, opened D & J’s Printing Company in Williston Park. Twenty-three years ago the business was moved to its current location at 627 Willis Avenue and has been busy every day since. His customers include villages of Williston Park, East Williston and other villages, schools, churches, temples etc. He currently has 200 regular customers that keep him busy throughout the year including architects, attorneys, doctors, hospitals as well as business owners, candidates for political office

True to its name, Salon ECO built their first 4 years on: ECO-nomical prices and ECOfriendly products such as Joico, Onesta, Wella, Redken, Peter Coppola, Rejuvenal and Chi. In just 4 short years, with our conveniently located full service salon and talented team we have exceeded every expectation. Our staff goes above and beyond to satisfy each and every client with featured services including highlights, single process color,

D & J’s

AN ECONOMICALLY & ECOLOGICALLY FRIENDLY FULL SERVICE SALON

PRINTING COMPANY 627 Willis Avenue, Williston Park, NY 11596

516-248-7524

djprint@yahoo.com

fax: 516-741-9251

vivid color, haircuts, blow outs, extensions, relaxers, updo’s and more. Salon ECO also provides an amazing nail department for all of your manicure, pedicure and waxing needs. We also have our very own, on site, certified make-up artist. In addition, we offer bridal party and prom specials. Call and schedule a Free Consultation and find out about our monthly specials.

516.427.5100 250A Jericho Tpke., Mineola

Follow Us On

Visit us at:www.saloneco.net

The new Hibachi Sushi Ya is the leading Japanese fusion eatery, with consistent and delectable dishes, very big-hearted portions, smooth service and affordable dazzling private parties with seating available for over 150. The hibachi dining room is quite popular and the catering staff superb. Considering the consistently perfect preparations and super raw materials, the easy prices on all services offered, are a gift. Minutes from the Long Island Expressway, the well-informed owners Eric Leong and Paul Chong are masters of design and style. They value the health aspect and only serve the freshest fish, sushi, sashimi, steak and vegetables. With a daily delivery of only top quality raw materials they believe one should eat light steamed vegetables, use on the best oil, so veggies are crispy and nutritional and observe healthy dining traditions. They will arrange special menus for an important event and will suggest from the many taste sensations offered by the amazing chef’s dream team with menus that will please all tastes and budgets. Daily specials along with a huge variety of creative menu options keep their loyal legions of followers coming back for more. Highly recommended on all counts. Gift certificates are available. The Staff at Sushi Ya

Mon.-Thurs. 11:30am-3pm, 5-10pm, Fri. 11:30am-3pm, 5-11pm Sat. 1:30-11pm Sun. 12-9:30pm

2311 Jericho Tpke., New Hyde Park 516-741-2288 • www.hibachisushiya.com

LOCATED AT THE CORNER OF JERICHO TPKE. Between Nassau Blvd. & Marcus Ave. in the New King Kullen Shopping Center


The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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Michael C. Adges is a 1981 graduate of Stony Brook University (B.A.) and a 1984 graduate of the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law (J.D.) In 1989, he founded the Law Office of Michael C. Adges in Bayside, New York, specializing in real estate transactions. The office later re-located to Bellerose and Mineola and is now located in Williston Park, New York. Mr. Adges has served in the capacities of both attorney and realtor on numerous real estate committees on the state and local levels. His experience as an investor - buying and selling properties in New York City and Long Island - have given him an insider’s perspective on the real estate process.

Mr. Adges has had many speaking engagements - lecturing on such topics as bankruptcy, real estate transactions and title insurance sponsored by the National Business Institute (NBI) as well as various banks and bar associations. He was also an adjunct law professor at CUNY School of Law in Queens, teaching real estate. Mr. Adges is a member of the Nassau County Bar Association, the New York State Bar Association and Vice President of the Chamber of the Willistons. In 2013 he was named an Access to Justice Champion by the Nassau County Bar for his volunteer work with mortgage foreclosure and “Sandy” recovery clinics.

We offer outpatient Orthopedic & Sports Physical Therapy, Aquatic Rehabilitation, Spine Therapy, Balance & Vestibular Therapy and a Wellness & Fitness Program. Our staff is friendly, knowledgeable and attentive. We have Physical Therapists with advanced certifications and subspecialties, including McKenzie Certified staff for spine therapy. We are Participating Providers in the Hospital for Special Surgery Rehabilitation Network. This location has been in business for 11 years and our company as a whole was started 25 years ago.

The growing need for our services, along with the vision to provide specialized PT care, in state of the art facilities is fairly unique to our field. Many Peak

225 Merrick Rd., Lynbrook, NY 11563 516. 599.8734 3961 Long Beach Rd., Island Park, NY 11558 516.897.9700 1169 Wantagh Ave., Wantagh, NY 11793 516.785.4800

516-742-1741

105 Hillside Ave., Suite D, Williston Park, NY 11596 www.adgesesq.com

than 30 years of diner experience. We strive to do better. We started off as dishwashers and after few months we became grillmen and just worked our way up. We love New Hyde Park - it’s a great town. The first time we came to the diner, we really liked the community and the people are very friendly.

Yesterday’s

Diner-Restaurant

Marian Care Inc. is family owned home care agency. We have been in business since 1989. The office staff consists of 4 working mothers. We are considerate to the needs of other families.

We Provide: Home Health Care • Nurses • Companions Marian Care, Inc.’s paraprofessional personnel include Home Health Aides, Personal Care Aides, and Companions. We provide personal care assistance, such as getting in and out of bed, toileting, dressing and walking. 467 Willis Ave. Wiliston Park, NY 11596 Call: (516) 741-8600 Toll Free 1-800-738-0007 www.mariancare.net

443 Jericho Tpke. New Hyde Park, NY 11040

516-352-5290

Open All Major Holidays

Open 24 Hours, 7 days a week FREE DELIVERY 8AM-8PM

Place your order online at: www.yesterdaysnhp.com

employees have experience lecturing at continuing education courses and are involved in their local sports communities. The fact is that we enjoy what we do, and are lucky to be in the position we are here at Peak Performance.

1730 LAKEVILLE ROAD NEW HYDE PARK, NY 11040 516.326.4580

Attorney at Law

We offer a variety of dishes from pancakes with sausage for breakfast, a hamburger deluxe for lunch or a broiled stuffed chicken for dinner. We treat everyone like family and make everyone feel right at home. We go above and beyond to make our customers happy. My brother and I have more

From left to right: Michael Foster, Jospeh Granger, Cindy DeVeaux, Katie Zammit, Natalie Antranik, Mitchell Henig

We have been exclusively in the Physical Therapy business. Several of our staff come from varied backgrounds in hospital (acute care), orthopedic and sports rehabilitation.

Michael C. Adges

Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner & more

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A Tradition Of Caring

Licensed by the New York State Department of Health


42 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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The Crew of Minuteman Press of Williston Park (Left to Right) Graphic Designer: Hanif Knight, Pressman: Steve Shan, Owner: Stephan Parmett, Sales Associate: Bentley - The Goldendoodle

Left to right: Rosemary Jibin, Sally Andrews, Elizabeth Georgey, Angie Maniego, Parvathi Maneesh and Lidia Amaya

Hillside Internal Medicine and Geriatrics first opened its doors in April 2005 on Hillside Ave in Bellerose. Dr. Thomas P. Mathew and Dr. Wilbert B. Maniego, practicing Internal Medicine and Geriatrics, wanted to provide medical and healthcare services to the community and the surrounding neighborhoods. On May 2011, to better accommodate a greater number of people, the office relocated to 915 Hillside Ave., New Hyde Park (near the corner of Lakeville Road). The new office now offer sub-specialties to include Cardiology, Gastroenterology, Nephrology and Neurology. Cardiology services are being provided by Dr. Satheesh Joseph, Dr. Deepu Alexander and Dr. Dhaval Patel. Gastroenterology services are being provided by Dr. Preeti Mehta and Dr. Nilesh Mehta. Nephrology services are being provided by Dr. Syed Ali and Neurology services by Dr. Jeffrey Mallin. The office accepts most insurances and is open Monday-Friday from 9:00 am6:00 pm and on Saturday from 9:00 am-2:00 pm.

HILLSIDE INTERNAL MEDICINE & GERIATRICS DR. WILBERT B. MANIEGO & DR. THOMAS P. MATHEW 915 HILLSIDE AVE., NEW HYDE PARK, NY 11040 tel: 718-343-7600 fax: 718-343-7603 info@hillsideinternalmedicine.com www.hillsideinternalmedicine.com

Blow Beauty Bars specializes in blowouts, updos, cuts, color, keratin treatments, and makeup services. We also recently launched our exclusive Blow Beauty Bars line of hair care products including our: Big & Bouncy Volume Shampoo and Conditioner, Argan Oil Moisture Shampoo and Conditioner, Balancing Act Violet Shampoo and Conditioner, Replenish Leave-In Conditioner, Pump It Up Volume Mist, Dial It Up Hairspray, Refresh Dry Shampoo, Sleek Silk Smoothing Serum, Set & Protect Blow Dry Crème, and Smooth Finish Argan Oil. To read more about our amazing products, visit our website at blowbeautybars.com/products Our clients love Blow Beauty Bars because they can come to us for a fun, comfortable, and easy experience. They are confident that they are getting the finest quality hair care at affordable prices. Each one of our stylists is very creative,

skilled, and expertly trained. They are always able to reproduce the latest hair trends each season. Our clients can come to Blow and get in and out before work, or stay all day and chat! I wanted to create the coffee shop of hair salons. We are unique in that we offer high-end hair services at very affordable prices. Our stylists listen to the client’s needs and provide a very personalized experience so everyone walks out of Blow feeling refreshed, beautiful, and happy for days! We opened our first Blow Beauty Bars location in Bridgehampton in April 2014. The response to Blow was so amazing that we needed to expand to various locations to keep all of our clients happy! We now have 4 locations and counting. I managed various restaurants in NYC and the Hamptons. For college I went to the Fashion Institute of Technology in NYC and always had a passion for the fashion and

beauty business. We all know how glamorous Long Island is, but we needed a place for a quick fix where women could take their bed head from flat to fab in less than an hour, without spending a fortune. With all the events that take place year-round, you have to be camera ready almost every night. Opening Blow made blowouts more accessible to women! We selected this site because Manhasset is a great location, and many of our Hamptons clients live here in the off-season! Many of the people who live there work in NYC and are used to the fast paced life style. I wanted to provide a service that was familiar to these women. We do everything we can to help our local communities and charities. We love to put together

silent auctions items and gift bags for local events.

3 9 7 P l a n d o m e R d . , M a n h a s s e t , N Y 11 0 3 0 | 5 1 6 . 3 6 5 . 1111 w w w. b l o w b e a u t y b a r s . c o m


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Janine Stiene, Speech-Language Pathologist, is owner and operator of the Suffolk Center for Speech And Myofunctional Therapy and Long Island Speech. Along with her exceptional group of therapists, she supports families and children across Long Island and Queens, specializing in: PROMPT, Myofunctional Therapy, Voice Disorders, Fluency, Augmentative Communications, Articulation, Auditory Processing Disorders and Expressive/Receptive Language Disorders (adults and children). Also offered is Feeding Therapy for individuals who suffer from texture and consistency aversions. There are seven affiliated offices across Long Island, with the Lake Success office being conveniently located next to LIJ on Lakeville Road. All offices offer flexible hours and scheduling including evenings as well as Saturdays. It is also one of the only private practices that participates with most major health insurance companies. Janine Stiene, former Speech Pathologist of the Hauppauge School District, has had her rapidly growing business for ten years. Her well equipped staff of LIcensed speech Pathologists and Myofunctional Therapists come from diverse educational backgrounds and top schools such as Long Island University, St. John’s University, Hofstra University, Adelphi University, and more. Open: Monday through Saturday, Daytime and Evenings. Please call for appointment availability. PARTICIPATING WITH MOST MAJOR HEALTH INSURANCES.

LONG ISLAND SPEECH

PDE specializes in evaluations of learning disabilities including:

• Dyslexia

• ADHD

• Autism

Our psychologists are experts in identifying problems that affect learning and provide individualized recommendations tailored to the specific strengths and weaknesses of the client. If you or your child are currently experiencing problems in school, please contact us at 516-240-8212 for a free phone consultation or visit us at www.psychdxny.com.

ERIN MCDONOUGH, Ph.D. 1225 Franklin Ave • Suite 325 Garden City, NY 11530 mcdonough.e@gmail.com 516.240.8212 www.psychdxny.com

444 Lakeville Road, Suite 202 Lake Success, NY 11042 (516) 216-1791 500 North Broadway, Suite 141, Jericho, NY 11753 (516) 597-4344

www.lispeechandmyo.com

˘

PORTLEDGE

˘ SUMMER ADVENTURES

Summer Programs from June 20 to August 12

Programs for Little Ones

The Arts

Chess & Technology

Sports

Science

Summer Academic Institute

SUMMER SAMPLER

A SPECIAL EVENT Sun, March 13, 12-2pm Children engage in age-appropriate games and activities while parents meet the instructors. Every family receives a sampler of chocolates. Learn more by calling Melissa Worth at 516-750-3104, email mworth@portledge.org, or visit www.portledge.org/summeradventures

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˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘

˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘˘


44 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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This Summer, Explore Professional Options and Learn New Skills Through the NYUSPS High School Academy Career Edge Program and Beyond”; and “Exploring the Wonderful World of Special Events in New York City.”

High school students from the tristate area, across the country, and around the globe can get a head start on the college experience and explore professional options through exceptional summer courses offered by the NYU School of Professional Studies (NYUSPS) High School Academy Career Edge Program. One-week, professionally oriented intensive programs of study taught by industry experts allow students to “try on” various careers as they gain the competitive edge when applying for college. Offerings feature courses in a diverse range of fields including digital filmmaking, finance, fashion design, marketing, photography, real estate development, and special events, among others. Popular courses in the past have included “Creative Writing: Finding Your Muse in the Metropolis,” in which students have learned about generations of writers from J.D. Salinger to Michael Chabon, who have drawn inspiration from the hustle and bustle that makes New York City so unique. There is no better place to study finance than New York City, the financial capital of the world. “Finance NYC An Insider’s View” is another in-demand option, which provides students with an introduction to the foundations of financial analysis and investment management that are practiced on Wall Street.

Students who have previously participated in Career Edge courses have provided rave reviews. “I learned more in this one-week program than I learned in an entire semester,” attested Hadil Dayri from Cairo, Egypt.

“It was a great experience learning from the best in the industry.” —Dylan Guo, student Jericho, NY

For those interested in the cinema, “Digital Filmmaking: Telling the Story through Technology” allows students to gain a thorough understanding of the technical aspects of this digital art form including lens usage, light metering techniques, blocking, and professional conventions. These courses are among the 30 study options, including nine new ones offered by NYUSPS this summer. New programs include “Pre-Law Boot Camp”; “Entrepreneurial Problem Solving”;

For Jericho, NY high school student Dylan Guo, learning from “Destination Marketing: A Spotlight professionals was the highlight on NYC–The Tourism Capital of of the program, “It was a great the World”; “Drama Boot Camp: experience learning from the best in Writing and Performing under the industry.” Imaginary Circumstances”; “Artists The NYUSPS High School in the City: A History of Creative Academy Career Edge Program New York”; “Location on Film: affords high school students the From Spike Lee’s Brooklyn to Debra Granik’s Ozark Mountains”; opportunity to experience university life by living in an NYU dorm “Fashion Design in New York (optional). They can enjoy the use City”; Interior Design Studio: of NYU facilities, while they take in From Concepts to Color Theory all that NYC has to offer.

“I learned more in this one-week program than I learned in an entire semester.” —Hadil Dayri, student Cairo, Egypt

Photo credit: ©NYUSPS/Mark McQueen

The first session begins in July. The deadline to apply is June 15 for residential students and July 1 for commuter students. Space is limited.

To learn more visit sps.nyu.edu/ hsacademycareeredge email sps.hsacademy@nyu.edu or call 212-998-7006


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One Summer Week

That Can

Change Your

Child’s NYUSPS High School Academy Career Edge Program This summer, the NYU School of Professional Studies will offer high school students the opportunity to live and learn in the heart of New York City, the cultural and financial capital of the world. One-week, professionally oriented intensive programs of study allow them to explore career options and to gain the competitive edge when applying for college. They will experience university life by living in an NYU dorm (optional), while enjoying all that NYC has to offer during the summer.

Session 1: Monday, July 11 – Friday July 15, 2016 Session 2: Monday, July 18 – Friday, July 22, 2016

Session 3: Monday, July 25 – Friday, July 29, 2016 Session 4: Monday, August 1 – Friday, August 5, 2016

Students must attend mandatory Sunday orientation. Course Offerings Session 1: July 11–July 15, 2016 Art History: New York’s Masterpieces Creative Approaches to Difficult Problems: Arts-Based Practices for Social Change and Justice Creating and Writing a Television Series Creative Writing: Finding Your Muse in the Metropolis Digital Filmmaking: Telling the Story through Technology (Lab Fee: $150) Finance NYC—An Insider’s View From Writer to Reader: The Art of Editing Books Integrated Marketing: Innovation and Strategy Photographing NYC: Through the Mind’s Eye and the Camera Lens (Lab Fee: $150) Real Estate NYC: From Design to Development

Session 2: July 18–July 22, 2016 Creative Writing: Finding Your Muse in the Metropolis Destination Marketing: A Spotlight on NYC–The Tourism Capital of the World (NEW)

Digital Filmmaking: Telling the Story through Technology (Lab Fee: $150) Discovering NYC Architecture: A Foundation in Design, Theory, and Practice Finance NYC—An Insider’s View Hit Songwriting: Creating, Recording, and Marketing Your Music Investment Banking Fundamentals New York City: An Urban Laboratory Screenwriting: Visual Story Telling—From Short to Feature-Length Films

Session 3: July 25–July 29, 2016 Artists in the City: A History of Creative New York (NEW) Climate Change, Sustainable Development, and Universal Rights Digital Filmmaking: Telling the Story through Technology (Lab Fee: $150) Digital Journalism: Spreading the News through New Media (Lab Fee: $150) Fashion Design in New York City (NEW) Finance NYC—An Insider’s View Integrated Marketing: Innovation and Strategy

Interior Design Studio: From Concepts to Color Theory and Beyond (NEW) Pre-Law Boot Camp (NEW) Video Game Design: From Concept to Completion

Session 4: August 1–August 5, 2016 Creative Writing: Finding Your Muse in the Metropolis Debates in Global Affairs: The Ethics of Justice Drama Boot Camp: Writing and Performing under Imaginary Circumstances (NEW) Entrepreneurial Problem Solving (NEW) Exploring the Wonderful World of Special Events in New York City (NEW) Life in Motion: Social Justice and Dance (NEW) Location on Film: From Spike Lee’s Brooklyn to Debra Granik’s Ozark Mountains (NEW) Studio Art: Drawing: Discovering Your Inner Artist (Lab Fee: $50) Video Game Design: From Concept to Completion

Application Deadline: Residential Students: June 15, 2016 Commuter Students: July 1, 2016 For Program Details and Application Visit: sps.nyu.edu/hsacademycareeredge04 or call 212-998-7006 New York University is an affirmative action/equal opportunity institution. ©2016 NYU School of Professional Studies.

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Spend three weeks studying with professionals from the Ballet and Broadway Stage... right here on Long Island!

Our workshops offer a supportive, nurturing, and creative environment for young dancers and performers striving to reach their dreams! Our Workshops are designed for beginner, intermediate and advanced dancers, ages 7-18. What you can expect... A typical day consists of four ability and age appropriate classes from 9am to 4pm. Each dancer will choose an intensive in Ballet or Musical Theater. The classes will be held in our spacious, air-conditioned studios. There will be an informal showing for parents on the last day of the Workshop.

Our Illustrious faculty is comprised of professional dancers from some of the world’s greatest Ballet Companies, Broadway Performers, Choreographers and Musical Directors who provide training with strong technique and artistry. Their commitment and desire is to pass on their accumulated knowledge, experience, and passion. Among our Teaching Staff: Alex Tressor, Kristen McGrew, Katherine Healy, Ashley Amber, Gia Mongell Wendy Palmer Clark, Jenny Chiang, Jen Kreichman, and Michelle Vivona. Plus NYC Guest Teachers* Ballet or Musical Theater Intensives Ages 7-18 * Mon-Friday * 9am-4pm July 11 - July 29 RESERVE YOUR SPOT NOW! Ask about our Summer Stock Musical Production in August! Artistic Directors: Michelle and Jerome Vivona

AMERICAN

THEATER DANCE W o rk sh o p

BALLET TO BROADWAY VISIT OUR WEB SITE FOR COMPLETE DETAILS:

Call for information:

516-248-6420

999 Herricks Road New Hyde Park, NY 11040 www.americantheaterdance.com

3 Week Summer Workshop Ballet & Musical Theater Intensives

July 11th to 29th, 9am - 4pm, Ages 7-18 *Now accepting appointments for auditions

BALLET INTENSIVE:

Ballet, Pointe, Variations, Contemporary, Ballet, Yoga, Modern, Pilates

MUSICAL THEATER:

Theater Dance, Ballet for Broadway, Musical Theater, Acting, Voice, Lyrical Jazz, Tap

Ask About Our

Summer Stock August 1st-12th Rehearse & Perform A Musical in 2 Weeks

AMERICAN

THEATER DANCE W o r k sh o p

BALLET TO BROADWAY VISIT OUR WEB SITE FOR COMPLETE DETAILS:

Call for information:

516-248-6420

999 Herricks Road New Hyde Park, NY 11040 www.americantheaterdance.com

Signs that a tutor might be necessary S chool is not always easy, and some students struggle as they transition from grade to grade. As students get older, some who may have experienced smooth sailing as youngsters may find they need some extra help grasping the material as coursework becomes more complicated. Those who need some extra clarification and reinforcement may first turn to their parents. But parents may not be familiar with certain subjects or capable of explaining certain concepts in terms kids can understand. In such situations, tutors can prove to be valuable resources to get kids back on the right academic track. One-on-one attention from a tutor can benefit all types of learners. Students who discover newfound success under the guidance of a tutor may have more self-confidence in the classroom. Parents wondering if a tutor can help their children may want to consider the following indicators that students may need tutors. Consistently falling grades: Tutors may be necessary for students whose grades are gradually on the decline. First speak with your child’s teachers, who may recommend tutors that specialize in certain subjects.

Confusion in and out of the classroom: Some kids struggle to grasp certain concepts, and such confusion can sometimes be remedied with the kind of intense study available in tutoring sessions. Low confidence: Some kids’ confidence wanes when their grades suffer. Kids whose grades have been on the decline may feel a sense of defeat even before they take a test or work on an assignment. Tutors can help restore confidence by creating small victories that slowly build up to larger successes. Indifference to coursework: No student will be captivated by every subject he or she studies, but there should be some subjects that students find engaging. Students battling indifference toward their coursework may benefit from a dynamic tutor who can present subject matter in new ways and revive students’ interest. Students who are struggling in the classroom may need some extra help outside the classroom, and many tutors are adept at reviving interest in subjects kids are studying at school. Some teachers may recommend certain tutors, while others may do some tutoring work themselves.


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Art League hosts 9th annual AP art show The Art League of Long Island’s ninth annual “Go APE” Advanced Placement Student Exhibition features 2-D and 3-D works by 118 students from 36 Long Island High Schools. This is an opportunity for what may be the first of many times these promising young art students will show their work in a professional gallery setting. The exhibit is on view in the League’s Jeanie Tengelsen Gallery through March 13. An artists’ reception and awards presentation take place Sunday, March 13, from 1 to 3 p.m. Awards of Excellence Deanna Lazo (Bethpage HS) for “Dad’s Still Life”, soft pastel Kate Walker (Bethpage HS) for “Morning Sun”, acrylic on canvas Christina Kutulos (Garden City HS) for “Type Writer”, mixed media Kristen Van Aken (Hicksville HS) for “Urban Decay”, etching Morgan Anderson (Plainedge HS) for “Frustration”, oil paint on canvas Jennifer Bianco (Plainedge HS) for “Monsters”, paper Elise Weber (Seaford HS) for “All Wrapped Up”, colored pencil Mehrose Naeem (Sewanhaka HS) for “Untitled”, mixed media Ricky Vargas (Valley Stream HS) for “Inspired Artist”, pencil/colored pencil Isabella Brand (Ward Melville HS) for “I

Thought it was a Spider”, oil on canvas Maria Romero (Westbury HS) for “Sunkissed Water”, acrylic on canvas Honorable Mentions Geraldine Luglio (Miller Place HS) for “Still Life”, oil painting James Treadwell (New Hyde Park Memorial HS) for “Up in Flames”, photography Olivia Rouse (Northport HS) for “In a Pickle”, mixed media Jeanette Wells (Northport HS) for “Sienna’s Pants”, colored pencil/mixed media Elizabeth Pigott (Sayville HS) for “Disintegration”, marker and ink Kristen Clark (Syosset HS) for “Seasons”, collage Lauren Gruber (Syosset HS) for “Walking”, digital photography Brigid Coleman(Wantagh HS) for “Untitled”, colored pencils on paper Award for Presentation Grant Fryc (Northport HS) for “Three Figures at Midnight in August”, digital painting The Art League of Long Island is located at 107 East Deer Park Road in Dix Hills. The gallery is open to the public, free of charge, Monday through Thursday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., Fridays 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., and on weekends from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. For more information visit www. artleagueli.org or call (631) 462-5400.

“A Musical Journey From Doo Wop to Jazz”

Prosperine to share story of ‘resilience’ Ushuuda Prosperine, a survivor of multiple atrocities resulting in severe physical and emotional wounds in the Democratic Republic of Congo, will give a presentation on her experience at the Nassau Community College on Sunday, March 13, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., in the multi-purpose room at the college’s CCB Building. The talk, titled “Enduring the Unimaginable: A Survivor’s Testimony of Survival, Healing and Resilience” at Women, Not Victims: Moving Beyond Sexualized Atrocities During Genocide, which is being presented by the Holocaust Memorial & Tolerance Center of Nassau County and Nassau Community College. Prosperine had a stable, family-oriented life in the Democratic Republic of Congo until mass murder and armed conflict overtook her country, according to a release from the Holocaust Center. As an adolescent, she was abducted by terrorists and thrust into a new life dominated by terror, isolation and despair. She became a victim and witness to torture, mutilation and murder. Prosperine finally managed to escape and fled to Uganda where she experienced persistent homelessness, multiple hospitalizations, cruelty by government officials, and sexual violence in a refugee camp which resulted in

pregnancies. Joining Ms. Prosperine will be her adopted mother, Holly K. Shaw, an associate professor at Adelphi University in the College of Nursing and Public Health, who will speak about “Bearing Witness: A Companion to Survival, Healing and Resilience.” As a clinician, educator and international activist, Shaw has tried to help with Prosperine’s healing; however, her clinical expertise has not been sufficient for the challenges faced by her adopted daughter and grandchildren, and thus the therapeutic journey continues. Shaw’s presentation will include lessons learned and problems still unsolved in the healing process of genocide-rape survivors. Survivors of other genocides including the Holocaust and Rwanda will also give testimony at “Women, Not Victims.” The keynote speaker, Najwa M. Nabti, a former prosecutor at the International Criminal Tribunal, The Hague, will address “Courage and Conviction: How the Testimony of Survivors of Sexual Violence has Shaped International Law.” Registration is free and lunch is included. Space is limited so prospective attendees are advised to RSVP in advance to Deborah Lom at (516) 571-8040 or dlom@hmtcli.org, or register online at www.hmtcli.org/events/ womennotvictims.

Ian Kay and the OKs

Saturday, April 2, 2016 8:00 P.M. LeFrak Concert Hall at Kupferberg Center of the On Queens College Campus

New York Belles

IAN KAY, former orchestra/band director of Roslyn High School, presents the OK’s, the New York Belles, Low Key acappella and NY Little Big Band led by Leon Petruzzi bring an evening of high energy music from the Swing Era, 40's, Doo Wop 50's, Motown 60's, Disco 70's and Fusion Jazz 80's.

Tickets available at the box office:

718-793-8080 Leon Petruzzi

Check out www.iankaysings.com for more information


48 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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A Mineola Landmark…

RESS AVENPORT RESTAURANT • Aged Steaks • Prime Rib • Rack of Lamb • Pot Roast • Chilean Sea Bass • King Crab Legs • Bronzini • Fresh Maine Lobster • Fresh Seafood • Pasta Dishes • Daily Grilled Specialties • And Much More!

Now Accepting Easter Reservations

COMPLETE EASTER DINNER 95 $ 95 $

36

19 Children

Adults

dinner packages $ starting at…

under 10

2995

for holiday parties, rehearsal dinners, anniversaries, engagement parties, business functions or any other special occasions banquet rooms available for 20-120 people

Weekday $ Luncheon Parties…

19

95

per person

Complete Bridal & Baby Shower Packages

$

PRIX FIXE MENU…

3195

$

32

95

per person

per person Sunday-Friday, Anytime Saturday Before 5pm includes: appetizer, entree & dessert

Call today to book your celebration in one of our private party rooms

70 MAIN ST., MINEOLA • 516-248-8300 www.davenportpress.com

Ignatius to give talk at Temple Emanuel The fourth season of Stephen C. Widom Cultural Arts at Emanuel continues on March 13 2016 at 3 p.m., when David Ignatius offers the Betty & Harold Wolgel Memorial Lecture, “How to Fix the World: A Foreign Policy for the Future.” Best-selling author and Washington Post columnist Ignatius has been making sense of the world for over 40 years. During his career, he’s covered nearly every Washington beat, from the Penta-

gon to the CIA to Capitol Hill, as well as global politics, the Middle East, and economics. He turned his experiences with the CIA into nine thrilling bestsellers, because, as Bob Woodward said, “Few understand espionage culture as well as Ignatius.” For more than 15 years, Ignatius has published his twice-weekly column for The Washington Post. Appearing in scores of newspapers around the world, his column won the 2000 Gerald Loeb Award for Commentary, the 2013 Overseas Press Club award, and a Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Center for Journalists. It appeared in the International Herald Tribune while he was the IHT’s executive editor. In three decades at the Post, Ignatius has served as reporter, foreign correspondent, and editor. Following the lecture, there will be a Q&A, book signing and refreshments. Tickets are $15 or 2 for $25. For further information about subscription discounts and to purchase tickets call 516-482-5701. Temple Emanuel of Great Neck is located at 150 Hicks Lane in Great Neck.

Receive a FREE Raffle for our 15lb. 3 ft. Chocolate Egg

w/any bakery purchase. Winner announced 9am Easter Sunday!


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WHEN YOU SUPPORT THE AUCTION YOU SUPPORT PROGRAMS LIKE THESE:

CAMP KEHILLA “Lucas is involved in so many of the programs at the JCC, including Camp Kehilla. The JCC has changed my son’s life, giving him a more fulfilling and happy experience and so many wonderful opportunities to help him reach his potential.” -Joy B. As a pioneer in special needs camping for more than 20 years, Camp Kehilla provides a supportive and engaging environment for children, teens and young adults, enabling them to build social skills, lasting friendships and self-esteem, all in a place they can call home. Funds raised at our Auction & Epicurean Event ensure the availability of scholarships for those who cannot afford to attend.

SOME OTHER PROGRAMS MADE POSSIBLE BY OUR AUCTION: VOCATIONAL TRAINING AND EMPLOYMENT CENTER Affectionately known as VTEC, this innovative program ensures that teenagers and young adults with special needs obtain hands-on work experiences through vocational internships and paid employment. ADULT DAY PROGRAMS Let’s Do Lunch™, a first-of-its-kind program designed for individuals in their 30s, 40s and 50s with young onset dementia and neurodegenerative illnesses.

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Navy Band to bring sounds to Brookvile America’s Navy is coming to Brookville,, one of 23 cities in five states to host a performance by the United States Navy Band during its 2016 tour -- one of the Navy’s signature outreach programs. The United States Navy Band Concert Band performance is scheduled for March 14, at 7 p.m. at Tilles Center for the Performing Arts. The Navy Concert Band, the premier wind ensemble of the U.S. Navy, presents a wide array of marches, patriotic selections, orchestral transcriptions and modern wind ensemble repertoire. As the original ensemble of the Navy Band, the Concert Band has been performing public

concerts and participating in high-profile events for nearly 90 years. One of the U.S. Navy Band¹s primary responsibilities involves touring the country. All of the band¹s primary performing units embark each year on concert tours throughout specified regions of the country, allowing the band to reach out to audiences in areas of the country that do not have opportunities to see the Navy’s premier musical ensembles on a regular basis. The concerts are family-friendly events, meant to be entertaining to veterans, families, individuals and those interested in joining the Navy. All Navy Band performances are free and open to the public.

Temple Sinai to host Rabbi Freelander Temple Sinai will be presenting Rabbi Daniel Freelander, president of the World Union for Progressive Judaism, to discuss European anti-Semitism at Tuesday, March 15 at 7:30 p.m. at the temple, which is located at 425 Roslyn Road in Roslyn Heights, “Murder at the Jewish Museum in Brussels; attacks on Jews in Paris; swastikas painted crudely on buildings. These are among the shocking news items that fill current headlines from European cities,” the temple said in a statement announcing the presentation. “What do these incidents portend for Jews who live on the continent? Freelander offers a perspective on

trends in European Jewish Life. WUPJ is the umbrella organization of the Reform, Liberal, Progressive and Reconstructionist Movements, serving 1,200 congregations and 1.8 million people in more than 50 countries. Previously the senior vice president for Reform Judaism, Freelander is well known as a lecturer on Trends in Reform Jewish Life. All are welcome attend Suggestion donation is $10 for non-members For more information about the above program, Temple Sinai, or its many offerings, please contact Ethel Liebeskind at 516-621-6800 or visit our website at www. mysinai.org.

‘Mariposa & the Saint’ to take stage at Hofstra The Hofstra Cultural Center, the Women Studies Program and the Department of Drama and Dance present “Mariposa & the Saint,” a play starring Julia Steele Allen. “Mariposa & the Saint” was inspired by the true experiences of Sara (Mariposa) Fonseca, a woman incarcerated in Northern California and held in solitary confinement for three years. This free performance will take place on Tuesday, March 15, at 2:20 p.m. at The Helene Fortunoff Theater, Monroe Lecture Center, California Avenue, South Campus. While doing prison advocacy work in California, Allen, a performance artist, met Fonseca. Years later, upon learning that Fonseca had been placed in solitary

confinement, Allen made an effort to reach out to her and suggest that they exchange letters and work on a play to keep Fonseca’s mind from deteriorating during her isolation. The result, “Marposa & the Saint,” stars Allen, and asks audiences to engage in a dialogue regarding prison reform and the controversy of solitary confinement. The performance also features Ray Huth and direction by Noelle Ghoussaini. Allen has performed “Mariposa & the Saint” in theaters around the country. For more information call the Hofstra Cultural Center at 516-463-5669 or email Karyn.Valerius@hofstra.edu or Cindy.Rosenthal@hofstra.edu.


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LIU Post bands head to Swiss Jazz Festival By T h om a s G i ll e n From July 1-16, 2016, students in two LIU Post performing ensembles, the LIU Post Jazz Ensemble and Long Island Sound - Vocal Jazz Ensemble, will be traveling to Switzerland to participate in the annual Montreux Jazz Festival, which is the second largest jazz festival in the world. The Montreux Jazz Festival is entering its 50th year in existence and takes place on the edge of Lake Geneva. “The LIU Jazz Ensemble and Long Island Sound Vocal Jazz performed at the 2007 Montreux Jazz Festival and have been invited by a jury of peer reviewers to perform at the 50th Anniversary Montreux Jazz Festival this coming July,” confirmed Jennifer Miceli, LIU Post professor and chairperson of the Department of Music. Miceli said that the purpose of the jazz tour in Switzerland “is to provide experiential learning and performing opportunities for LIU Post music students.” According to montreux-

jazzfestival.com, “the festival rapidly earned a reputation for fantastic concerts, unbelievable artistic collaborations, rare moments, improbable anecdotes, audacity, ambitious projects, and impulsive decisions.” Past artists who have performed at the festival include David Bowie, Prince, and Deep Purple. LIU Post junior music education major Robert Riepe, the bass player in the LIU Post Jazz Ensemble and the Long Island Sound – Vocal Jazz Ensemble, is excited for the opportunity to participate in a world renowned event. He said that the groups have been preparing for the festival since last fall. Forty LIU Post student musicians will go to Montreux and push their musical careers forward by performing at the renowned event. “Students advance their musical careers by performing at a prestigious festival where intentionally recognized jazz artists will also be performing. Last year’s Montreux Jazz Festival line-up included such artists as Lady Gaga, Tony Bennett, John Legend, Len-

ny Kravitz, Mary J. Blige, and Herbie Hancock,” Professor Miceli said. Some of the festival venues where groups will perform include the Auditorium Stravski, Montreux Jazz Club, Montreux Jazz Lab, and Montreux Jazz Creations. The Auditorium Stravski is the biggest venue, with a capacity of 2,800 to 4,000 people. Besides paid events at these venues, visitors at the festival will also be able to listen to jazz music in the park and attend aftershows and workshops. “The 2016 Jazz Tour gives students the opportunity to share a uniquely American art form in a foreign country. Through jazz

music, LIU Post music students will serve as ambassadors to the Department of Music; College of Arts, Communications, and Design; Long Island University; New York State, and to the United States. Other benefits include performing in famous venues, listening to jazz greats, experiencing a foreign culture, enjoying the beauty of Switzerland, and making great music with lifelong friends,” Professor Miceli said. This article was originally published in the Pioneer, the award-winning student newspaper of LIU Post, www.liupostpioneer. com, and is republished here by Blank Slate Media with the permission of the Pioneer.

Oncologist Luis Diaz to lecture on cancer Dr. Luis Diaz, will offer The Nathan Ackerman Memorial Lecture, “A New Immunological Approach to Cancer,” at Temple Emanuel of Great Neck on March 17 at 7:30 p.m. Diaz is a leading authority in oncology, having pioneered several genomic diagnostic and therapeutic approaches for cancer. He is an attending physician at the Johns Hopkins Hospital where he specializes in the treatment of pancreatic and colorectal cancers. He is currently a member of the Ludwig Center for Cancer Genetics and Therapeutics where he directs translational medicine and is the Director of the Swim Across America Lab. Diaz has undergraduate and medical degrees from the University of Michigan, and completed residency training at the Osler Medical Service at Johns Hopkins and medical oncology training at the Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins.

Diaz is involved in near-patient translational studies with the goal of bringing diagnostic and therapeutic genomic strategies to patients with cancer. Most recently, his work has involved the clinical development of tumor-derived DNA as a biomarker for cancer screening, early detection, monitoring and measurement of early residual disease. The basis of this work is the well-accepted premise that cancer is defined by a discrete set of genetic alterations. This approach combines a next-generation genomic sequencing with novel digital techniques to count tumor-derived DNA fragments in complex mixtures of DNA. This work was highlighted in the New York Times, NPR, CNN and the NBC nightly news. Admission is free. Call 516-482-5701 for further information. Temple Emanuel of Great Neck is located at 150 Hicks Lane in Great Neck.

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‘Big Break’ semifinals this weekend Final 6 contestants in Gold Coast competition to perform at GCAC March 12 By J oe N i k i c

Six musicians and bands who survived the knockout rounds of the “Your Big Break” competition will compete Saturday to see who gets one more performance to try and become Long Island’s next big thing. On Jan. 30 and Feb. 6, the Gold Coast Arts Center and Love Revolution Org. held two competition rounds for local musicians and bands to earn their opportunity to win studio time, media exposure, equipment, and more. “We had some of the most remarkable talent this year,” said Rick Eberle, publicist for the Gold Coast Arts Center. “It’s going to be very difficult to even decide who will be in the finals, much less win them. All of our performers are deserving of the crown. Of the more than 1,500 entries submitted, 16 different singers performed to move on to the semifinals. The semifinalists are Matt Grabowski, Taylor Hogan, Days

winners Youth Be Told performing with second annual “Your Big Break” winner Katie Zimmer. Eberle said the two past winners joined together to showcase “what could happen if you win.” The judges for the competition include Neil Rubenstein, the manager of The Emporium venue in Patchogue, Chris Pati of IndiMusic TV, Lou Plaia from Reverbnation.com, Guy Brogna from All Music Inc., and Jerry Lembo, a music industry consultant who has worked with Grammy-award winners. Prizes include the chance to open up for a national act at The Emporium, recording time at IndiMusic Studios, a feature on Reverbnation.com, musical equipment from All Music Inc. and ZOOM North America, PR and social media campaigns from Rick Eberle Agency, and more to be announced. Doors open for the semifinals at 7:30 p.m. and performances will begin at 8 p.m. Tickets are $15 for adults Beneath Us, Frankel Sisters, Eberle said of the six semifi- “whose better.” Headlining Saturday’s event and $10 for students. Trish Torrales and Jaclyn Man- nalists, four will advance to the fredi. finals on April 2 depending on are first annual “Your Big Break”

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The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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Bryant Library Budget Vote The Bryant Library Budget Hearing will take place on Monday, April 18 at 8:00pm in the Helen Glannon Room of the Library. The regularly scheduled Board Meeting will start at 7:30pm. All are invited to attend.

ADULT PROGRAMS BRYANT LIBRARY’S 1st ANNUAL SHAKESPEARE FESTIVAL Shakespeare Society Sunday, April 10, 2:30 p.m. Performance by Roslyn High School’s Shakespeare Society. All the world’s a stage for the Roslyn High School Shakespeare Society! Enjoy an afternoon of traditional and modern Shakespeare performances by Roslyn’s very own aspiring actors. Expect monologues and soliloquies from Hamlet and Julius Caesar, a scene from King Lear, and modern Shakespeare-inspired musical numbers. There will also be exciting surprises, stage combat demonstrations, and opportunities for audience participation in Shakespearean trivia and early English “insult wars!” To Be or Not To Be… Wednesday, April 20, 7 p.m. Lecture by Dr. Vimala Pasupathi. Hamlet’s “To be or not to be” speech is one of the best known passages in all of English literature.

But the earliest printed version of the speech differed rather significantly from the speech we typically see printed and performed today. For instance, instead of the contemplative “That is the question,” readers of the 1603 edition would find the more concrete “there’s the Point!” And where we now usually expect his dark reflection on what it means “To sleepe, perchance to dreame,” Hamlet’s 1603 speech concluded that reflection with a rather stark and simple concession, “there it goes.” Why do these different versions exist, and what do their differences teach us about the play and playwright? This (program?) considers what we can learn by looking at printed texts of Shakespeare’s Hamlet during Shakespeare’s lifetime and gives participants new ways to think about both play and playwright thanks to electronic resources and digitized archives. Vimala C. Pasupathi earned a Ph.D in 2005 from The University of Texas at Austin. She is an Associate Professor of English at Hofstra University and the author of more than a dozen scholarly publications on Shakespeare and Early Modern drama and culture. Her current research examines intersections between English drama and the English militia, the principal institution of local defense during the Tudor and Stuart dynasties.

Shakespeare Star Wars Thursday, April 21, 7 p.m. Performance Directed by Rory Allan Meditz Join us April 21 for a special one night only reading of Ian Doescher’s William Shakespeare’s Star Wars, an imaginative retelling of Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope in iambic pentameter, accompanied by illustrations by Rory Allan Meditz. Rory Allan Meditz is a graduate of Pace University’s BFA acting program. A founding member of The Beautiful Soup Theater Collective and The Uncivilization Project as well as a frequent collaborator with Brainmelt Consortium, Rory is thrilled to showcase his talents as a cartoonist for the first time. Favorite roles include Peter Evans (Bug), Willy Loman (Death of a Salesman), Hamlet, and Norman (A Touch of Forever).

In Honor of Women’s History We will be celebrating some of the most influential women of our past and present. Learn about the glory days of Long Island’s fabled Gold Coast, ruled by an elite group of glamorous women that included Alva Vanderbilt, Mrs. Clarence Mackay, Barbara Hutton and the Countess of Bismark. We will also host a lecture and book talk by Julia Markus, author of Lady Byron and Her Daughters, a novel that presents the previously maligned Lady Byron in an astonishing new light. Do you love Lucy? How about Gabriela Mistral? Hear about the extraordinary lives of these women and how they’ve left their mark on the world. North Shore Reads 2016 Tuesday, April 12, 7 p.m.

The Metropolitan, Glen Cove. The Bryant Library will once again team up with neighboring libraries for the popular North Shore Reads, a local celebration of Long Island Reads and National Library Week. This year’s title is Leaving Time by Jodi Picoult and the event will once again be held at The Metropolitan in Glen Cove. This entertaining evening has become a popular, annual event. It includesthe wit and wisdom of Master of Ceremonies John Canning, and lively book talk. Delicious desserts from Diane’s Bakery will be served along with coffee.

CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS Giggles And Wiggles 12 - 18 Months. Mondays, April 4, 11, 18 or Tuesdays, April 5, 12, 19 at 9:45 a.m. Music, fingerplays, toys, & simple stories will help develop early literacy skills. Parent or guardian must accompany the child. Child must be 12 months by April 1. Toddler Storytime 2 - 3 1⁄2 years Session I: Feb. 26, March 4, 11, 18 • 11 a.m. or 2 p.m. Session II: April 1, 8, 15, 22. Fridays at 11 a.m. or 2 p.m. Our goal is to provide a pleasant introductory experience to library storytime. Child must be 2 years old by March 1 for Session I. Child

must be 2 years old by April 1 for Session II. NOTE: A parent or guardian must accompany the child to each class. Registration begins on Friday, Jan. 22. Pre-K Storytime 31⁄2 - 5 Years. Mondays: Feb. 29, March 7, 14, 21; Tuesdays: March 15, 22 at 4 p.m. A storytime with books, fingerplays, rhymes, and short films. Child must be 31⁄2 years-old by March 1. Registration begins on Friday, January 22. Kindergarten Tales Children attending kindergarten Wednesdays, March 16, 23 Or Thursdays, March 10, 17, 24. 4:15 p.m. Explore favorite authors and illustrators, such as Mo Willems, Dr. Seuss, and Cynthia Rylant. Join us each week as we share tales, make a take-home craft, and end with a short film. Sack Full Of Surprises Grades 1-3, Friday, March 11 or March 18 at 4 p.m. March is National Craft Month and Youth Art Month. We’ll focus on crafts and creativity. Registration begins on Friday, Jan. 22. Little Sprouts 18 - 24 Months. Mondays: April 4, 11, 18. Tuesdays: April 5, 12, 19. 11 a.m. Toys, books, and fun await little ones. Parent or guardian must accompany the child. Child must be 18 months by April 1. 2 – 5 years

Roslyn Community Calendar ACBL BRIDGE ACBL sanctioned Bridge games take place in the Nursery School Atrium every Wednesday evening at 7 p.m. and Thursday afternoon at 12:30 p.m. in the main building at Shelter Rock Jewish Center, 272 Shelter Rock Rd., Roslyn. Call 917-658-5991 to make a reservation. SUFFERERS OF ARTHRITIS Glen Cove Hospital offers a free, weekly class for people with arthritis on an ongoing basis every Thursday, 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. in the hospital’s 1 South Dining Room, 101 St. Andrew’s Lane, Glen Cove. The class is

taught by Merav deGuzman, the hospital’s recreational therapy supervisor, who is also certified by the Arthritis Foundation. The low-impact exercises are designed to reduce joint pain and decrease stiffness. The program is open to the community. For more information or to reserve a place in the arthritis class (limited space available), please contact Merav deGuzman at Glen Cove Hospital at: 516-674-7696. EASTER EGG HUNT Saturday, March 26, from 1 to 3 p.m. at Roslyn Presbyterian Church, 140 East Broadway, Roslyn. Children and their

families are invited for an afternoon of fun with games, face painting, prizes, egg hunts and maybe an appearance by the Easter Bunny. RABBI DANIEL FREELANDER On Tuesday, March 15 at 7:30 p.m. Temple Sinai Invites the community to hear Rabbi Daniel Freelander, president of the World Union for Progressive Judaism (WUPJ) who will discuss European Anti-Semitism. Rabbi Freelander offers a perspective on trends in European Jewish Life. WUPJ is the umbrella organization of the Reform, Liberal, Progressive and Recon-

structionist Movements, serving 1,200 congregations and 1.8 million people in more than 50 countries. All are welcome. Suggestion donation is $10 for non-members ,Temple Sinai of Roslyn is located at 425 Roslyn Road, Roslyn Heights, NY. For more information contact Ethel Liebeskind at 516-621-6800 or visit our website at www. mysinai.org. AUTHOR TO VISIT SINAI Temple Sinai of Roslyn, 425 Roslyn Road Roslyn Heights, invites the entire community to save the date, April 12 at 7:30 p.m. to hear Frank Bruni, best selling author and New

York Times Columnist, who will discuss his book “Where You Go is Not Who You’ll Be”, an antidote to the College Admissions Mania. There is no charge for this program and refreshments will be served. All are invited. For more information about the above program, contact Ethel Liebeskind at 516-621-6800 or visit www.mysinai.org. TUESDAY NIGHT BINGO Veterans of Foreign Wars Post #5253 will host bingo on Tuesday nights from 7 to 11 p.m. The top prize is $1,500 with additional cash prizes totaling $1,700. Admission is $4 at the post, 155 Searingtown Road.


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Principals laud budget at board meeting At the March 2nd Budget Workshop, each principal highlighted what the recommended budget for the 2016-17 school year specifically means for their building and where funds will be allocated. North Side: James Bloomgarden, Principal of North Side, spoke about the additional teacher that has been added to the budget to maintain class sizes that will average 20.6. A new academic support teacher is being recommended so that students in grades K-2 can receive Math AIS support as they now do in grades three and four. Two early intervention teaching assistants will be added to support literacy in the early grades, including the “doubledose” portion of the Fundations phonics/word work program for students whose progress monitoring indicates additional support. Continued literacy staff development in Reading/Writing workshop and guided reading including a teacher on parttime special assignment for one year to provide onsite staff development support to staff during program implementation. North Side will also benefit from

the purchase of two additional Chrome Book Carts, which will provide an additional 50 lap top computers for our students’ academic use. Willets Road: Stephen Kimmel, principal of Willets Road, shared that the recommended budget contains some additional staff time to support smaller class sizes in grade 7 as well as to provide an additional period of English instruction every other day in that grade. This is similar to the literacy block already established in grades five and six that provides opportunity for further engaged and authentic reading and writing. Additional staff is provided in foreign language to offer the opportunity for students who receive additional supports to also have time in their schedule to begin a foreign language before Wheatley. A new Mandarin and Sports Club will be added to the after school enrichment program. Wheatley: Dr. Sean C. Feeney, principal of Wheatley, highlighted the additional teacher and teaching assistant to expand opportunities for students in the Learning Lab as well as providing consultancy services to gen-

Reflections: Our principals shared updates regarding ongoing and recent building initiatives, as it is always the goal to make decisions that align program and budget choices to successful student academic and social/emotional learning. Some examples included: Mr. Bloomgarden shared the student growth on New York State assessments; Mr. Kimmel highlighted the progress of students in the Leveled Literacy Intervention reading AIS program (LLI) at Willets Road, where approximately one-third of the current students in LLI will exit the program by the end of this school year. Dr. Feeney shared the strong Regents scores, highest on-time graduation rate in NasElaine Kanas sau County and many student Superintendent awards. Music, art, and athletic program recognitions as well as a variety of community service grade and builds on and ex- initiatives were also highlighted. pands our current K-12 research Budget Dollars: Jacqueinitiative. This course, for which line Pirro, assistant superintenstudents will receive AP credit, dent for business presented an lays the foundation for the in- overview of the recommended depth research projects students budget for the next school year. choose to undertake in grades Highlights are: 11 or 12, in their Science, So• Proposed Tax Levy and cial Science or Math Research Recommended Budget are lower classes. than what the district is allowed eral education students who need support in organizational and study skills. An exciting new program will be AP Capstone. This course, a seminar and research class, will be offered in 10th

per the tax cap calculation. • The Recommended Budget has an increase of 1.83 percent over last year’s budget. (The allowable budget increase is 2.34 percent.) The tax levy has an increase of 0.35 percent over last year’s tax levy. (The allowable tax levy increase is 0.89 percent.) • The Recommended Budget is $288,015 below the allowable budget under the tax cap. If you are not able to attend but have any questions or comments to share, please do not hesitate to contact me at kanase@ewsdonline.org or by phone at 333-3758 or Mrs. Pirro at pirroj@ewsdonline.org or by phone at 333-1707. North Side on Display North Side was invited to display student artwork at the East Williston Village Hall. The second grade project, abstract cubist hearts, and fourth grade project, a study of Canadian artist Ted Harrison and paintings inspired by his work are currently on display through the month of March. You can visit the Village Hall and enjoy the student artwork. Thank you to North Side art teacher Kiki Kyrou!

Searingtown kids showcase February activities The Searingtown School held a number of initiatives during the month of February. Students engaged in lessons and activities that supported curriculum in various subject areas and enhanced skills and knowledge. Students explored language arts and social studies through a six-week-long integrated project in which they studied different cultures from around the world. The unit culminated with a “Heritage Celebration,” where parents were invited to the second-grade “Treasure Museum” followed by a festival that featured international food and performances of songs promoting peace. In the area of English language arts, students studied the Caldecott Medal award in the library and read and analyzed books nominated for the prize. They later developed their own award, the Searingcott Medal, and awarded it to “Finding Winnie: The True Story of the World’s Most Famous Bear,” which happened to be the same book that won the actual Caldecott Medal. After presenting the honor,

students participated in a Searingcott Medal design contest. Rebecca Song designed the gold medal, while Gavin Zhang, Elliot Shim, Angelina Liu and Rachel Ha created the silver medals. February also marked the kick-off for the first ever Searingtown LITfest, where the PTA teamed up with the Searingtown Library to celebrate the power of written word. During LITfest students participated in World Read Aloud Day, in which they invited others to share in their reading through Skype.

The PTA later held their annual Scholastic Book Fair and authors Dan Yaccarino and Michael Sampson visited the school to speak with students about reading. Searingtown students also advanced their physical fitness while supporting a good cause. In conjunction with American Heart Month, Searingtown students participated in Jump Rope for Heart and raised approximately $11,145 to help fight heart disease. Michael Chaitman and Ashton Ismael each raised more than $1,000.


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4 Chinese students visit Roslyn High Four students from Beijing No. 35 High School received a warm welcome from Roslyn High School and their host families as they arrived last week for a twomonth residency in our school district. It is the first long-term extended stay for visiting students from China as part of the d istrict’s exchange program, and the culmination of an initiative that has been several years in the making. The four students, along with two faculty members who are here for the first week to help them get settled, come from the same Beijing high school where two Roslyn students spent two months a year ago last spring. The visiting students are following a daily academic schedule created for each of them, and will participate in school events and activities throughout their visit. The visiting students pictured with their host families

Photo courtesy of the Roslyn School District

Roslyn writers, artists shine in competition Five Roslyn High School students won 11 awards for the pieces submitted to the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards competition. Chloe Kaplan, senior at Roslyn High submitted four pieces for the competition, winning awards for all four submissions, including two Gold Keys. Her works “The boy who rocked (back and forth)” in the Poetry category, won a Gold Key; “Nothing is Explained”

in the Flash Fiction category, won a Gold Key; “I Remember” in the Short Story category, won a Silver Key; “(A)musing” in the Poetry category, won an Honorable Mention. Chloe primarily worked on the pieces in various writing retreats during the summer months as well as in the English Department’s Independent Study program with her advisor, Matthew Vogt. English Chairperson Joshua Cabat along

with English teacher Marigrace Cirringione also helped her select and revise various drafts. Angela Tran, a sophomore who also works with Mr. Vogt in the Independent Study program, won an Honorable Mention for a collection of her poems. Vicky Zhou, a junior, submitted five art pieces and received two Gold Keys, two Silver Keys and an Honorable Mention for her works. Claire Hsiao, a junior,

submitted art work that was awarded a Gold Key, and Sharlene Deng, a freshman received a Silver Key for her piece. Vicky, Claire and Sharlene are all students of Art Teacher Laurie Schoenberg. The Scholastic Art & Writing Awards competition was founded in 1923 and is open to teenagers in grades 7-12 in public, private and home schools though out the United States, its territories, and American-run schools abroad.

February Rotary Student Roslyn High School senior Deena Farnam was honored by the Roslyn Rotary Club as the February Student of the Month at its luncheon on Feb. 25, 2016. Deena’s community service has included volunteering as a Teen event coor-

dinator for Torah Ohr creating and planning events for teens at her temple and also organizing seasonal holiday parties for the congregation. She also worked as a scribe taking notes and has tutored children between the ages of 9-13.

From left: Allison Brown, Deputy Superintendent; Meryl Ben-Levy, Board of Education President; Odellia Fischer; Jared Feldman; Jason Garmise, READ President; David Herman; Allison Fliegler; Jessica Garmise; Jason Lopez, Chief Technology Officer.

READ presents $65K check

From left: Cathy Mealing, Rotary Co-President; Cherie Totillo, Guidance Counselor, Deena Farnam, and Rotary Co-President Deborah Zenir.

The board of directors of the Foundation for Roslyn’s Educational Advancement & Development (READ) presented a donation of $65,000 to the school district at the Feb. 25 Roslyn Education Board meeting. The funds will be used to provide 20 elementary school classrooms with full Apple TV/Interactive Classroom technology and will further advance the district’s goal of providing our children with today’s

most powerful learning tools. The Board of Education and District Administration say they are grateful to all of the hard-working READ volunteers and the generous support of its many parents and community members. The collaborative efforts of our school community have helped us to build one of New York’s most innovative school technology programs.


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AP students’ artwork on display at LIU To showcase their artistic talents, the artwork of 34 Herricks High School students in Richard Ganes’ Advanced Placement studio art class and Jennifer Cavalluzzo’s AP photography class was framed and placed on the walls of the Patron’s Lounge in the LIU Post Tilles Performing Arts Center. The Herricks related arts department, in cooperation with Long Island University Post campus arts and admissions departments, hosted a special AP Student Art Show Opening Reception on Feb. 25. “We have many art shows throughout the school year but, this is the first time we have separated the AP art and photo students for one exhibit,” Related Arts and Business Department Chairperson Mary Passero said. In a room full of students, parents, friends, family members, administrators and LIU Post faculty, LIU Post campus arts liaison Clara Zehler afforded words of welcome and congratulations. She said that from approximately 90 school applicants, eight were selected to have student artwork showcased in the Patron’s Lounge. This provides students with a unique opportunity to share their artwork because the venue is visited by a minimum of 4,000 people each day. To commemorate this special experience, each student was presented with an award certificate. “Your artwork speaks to many people,” Zehler said. “This is a wonderful opportunity to share your talents with them.” Attendees circulated the room and had refreshments as they admired the students’ artwork. Their artwork will remain on display in the Tilles Center for a month.

Mural makers Under the instruction of art teacher Jaclyn Manouvrier, each of the students at Hampton Street School in the Mineola school district assisted in the completion of a mural that was painted in the school’s new wing. With the assistance of visiting artist John Dinaro, the mural depicts a pollutionfree environment where all living organisms are able to flourish harmoniously. The theme ties in to the student’s lessons on the importance of environmentalism.

Mineola Robotics team wins award The Mineola Motors Robotics team from Mineola Middle School won the Innovative Solutions award at the Long Island Lego Robotics Championship held at Longwood High School. The Mineola Motors competed against 40 teams who qualified as the best of the best in Nassau and Suffolk Counties. As part of the project, Mineola Middle School collected over 9,000 pounds of e-waste and disposed of it without harming the environment.


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Initiative celebrates 2 year anniversary To celebrate the second anniversary of President Barack Obama’s “My Brother’s Keeper” initiative, the U.S. Department of Energy’s Brookhaven National Laboratory collaborated with SUNY Old Westbury to bring more than 160 students from New York City and Long Island to the Laboratory on Wednesday, March 2, 2016 for a day of mentorship and engagement in science. The students—most from economically challenged, diverse community high schools—experienced the exciting possibilities offered by careers in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields in the company of mentors from Brookhaven Lab and SUNY Old Westbury and national leaders of the My Brother’s Keeper initiative. Broderick Johnson, Assistant to the President, Cabinet Secretary, and Chair of the My Brother’s Keeper Task Force gave a keynote address on the importance of government, businesses, non-profits, local education agencies, and individuals stepping up and doing their part to ensure all of our nation’s youth have the tools they need to succeed. “Together we can highlight the importance of inclusive and active STEM engagement here in the United States, and why every one of us needs to do more to ensure that every American—including those underrepresented in STEM, like women and people of color—are exposed to this ecosystem through active and hands-on experience,” Johnson said. LaDoris Harris, Director of the Department of Energy’s Office of Economic Impact and Diversity and an engineer by training, also urged the students to take advantage of the mentorship and support networks available to them. “We’re here because our future relies on you,” Harris said. “Whether you want to become STEM leaders or President of the United States, make sure that you do each and every day all you can do, be excellent at what you do, and know that we recognize how important it is for us to do what we can for each of you.” The morning session kicked off with a panel discussion, and the attendees were enthralled by the personal and educational journeys of the speakers, which included scientists and staff from the Lab, educators from Old Westbury, and leaders from public and private sector organizations, including Con Edison. “By listening to the stories and college experiences that these influential men and women of color shared today, it is my hope that these young people gain a sense of perspective that education and hard work can help change the trajectory of their life, and put them on a path to a productive and successful future,” said SUNY Old Westbury President Calvin O. Butts, III, who served as panel moderator. The day’s program included a tour of the Lab’s premiere Department of Education Office of Science User Facilities— the National Synchrotron Light Source II,

Westbury High School students at the Brookhaven National Laboratory Center for Functional Nanomaterials, and Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider control room — along with hands-on activities that highlighted the Lab’s current research initiatives and world-class facilities, organized by the Lab’s Office of Educational Programs. A follow-up event will be held in April at SUNY Old Westbury to sustain engagement with the students, and provide an opportunity to meet with recent graduates and faculty from various disciplines. “As a national laboratory, our greatest asset is our employees and the strengths, skills, and creativity they bring to work each day,” said Brookhaven Lab Director Doon Gibbs. “Keeping our nation competitive on the global technology stage will require a new generation of scientists and engineers that is truly representative of our nation as a whole—and programs like My Brother’s Keeper can help make that goal a reality.” My Brother’s Keeper is a public-private initiative launched by President Obama in February 2014 to address persistent opportunity gaps faced by young men of color and to ensure that all young people can reach their full potential. Supported by the White House, several departments of government, and many foundations and corporations, this long-term program joins federal, state, and local government agencies with businesses, educational institutions, and foundations, who together are taking important steps to connect young people to mentors, support networks, and the skills they need to succeed. Nine DOE national labs are hosting My Brother’s Keeper events this year in partnership with local educational

Westbury High School student Arahmus Brown makes a comment at the ‘My Brother’s Keeper’ event.

SC H OO L n e w s

Obama acknowledges Mineola The Mineola Union Free School District is proud to have been acknowledged by President Obama in his final State of the Union address. The address announced a “computer science for all” initiative in which the president would like to make computer science curriculum available to every American student. The work Mineola has done

with technology received a direct mention from the White House and in the president’s speech. Mineola was listed among 25 districts that offer expanded computer science opportunities for students. It was also the only district in New York State to receive a mention. The mention was made possible through the district’s involvement in the League of Innovative

Schools and Digital Promise, as well as a paragraph that district Superintendent Michael Nagler submitted to the White House regarding the district’s kidOYO platform and K-12 coding initiative. “Our partnership with kidOYO is unique and I believe an exemplar to replicate,” Nagler said. “Clearly, the White House agreed.”

Transportation requests due April 1 In accordance with New York State Education Law and Board of Education policy, all requests for transportation of children in the Roslyn School District to private and parochial schools, as well as before and/or after school child care locations for the 20162017 school year must be submitted in writing by a parent, guardian or authorized representative no later than April 1, 2016. Parents whose children cur-

rently receive transportation to private and parochial schools must submit a new request each year along with proof of residency. Failure to meet the April 1 deadline may result in the loss of transportation services. If you haven’t received a transportation request form, the forms can be obtained from the Transportation Office by calling 516-801-5190 on weekdays.


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Town officials defend lack of comptroller By J oe N i k i c Following the arrest last Monday of a former Town of North Hempstead employee for allegedly embezzling $98,000 from the town’s Solid Waste Management Authority, town officials defended the absence of a comptroller for 12 of the 20 months during the alleged theft. North Hempstead spokeswoman Carole Trottere said even if a permanent comptroller was in place, the alleged theft could still have taken place. “People that are intent on stealing are going to steal,” she said. “The only thing we can do as a government is make sure procedures

and policies were in place to catch those incidents.” “Wherever there is money, there is someone sitting there and figuring out how to get it,” Trottere added. After former comptroller Kathleen Mitterway left the town post in August 2014, the town hired former Nassau County Comptroller Howard Weitzman as a financial consultant, but Trottere said his role was not to perform the comptroller’s duties. “Howard was an outside contractor but he wasn’t brought in to do the comptroller’s duties,” Trottere said. “He did things with the financial and comptroller’s office as far as bond sales and helped with the budget, which was a huge thing

that need to be worked on.” She added that Director of Finance and Deputy Supervisor Aline Khatchadourian handled comptroller duties during that time. Helen McCann, 51, of Roslyn Heights, pleaded not guilty to second-degree grand larceny and second-degree corrupting the government charges. McCann began working for the town in 1998, and in January 2014 was transferred to the Solid Waste Management Authority to serve as an administrative assistant. Between May 11, 2014 and Jan. 11, 2016, it is alleged that she embezzled $98,862.91 from the Solid Waste Management Authority. The alleged embezzlement

was discovered by the town comptroller’s office in mid-January four months after Averil Smith began working for the town as its permanent comptroller. Employees who work at the Solid Waste Management Authority facility handle cash payments and garbage scale records, which they then bring to the authority’s administrative offices once collected. An administrative employee then deposits the cash into the authority’s Chase Bank account and sends a memo to the Town Comptroller’s office detailing the amount received and attaching bank deposit slips. Beginning Jan. 26, 2014, McCann was responsible for receiving

and depositing the money, according to Nassau County DA Madeline Singas’ office. The DA’s office is still investigating the case. A financial expert has criticized the cash-only policy at the Solid Waste Management Authority’s drop-off site. “It would have been better if they collected it by credit card,” Alex Dontoh, Director of the Master of Science in Accounting program at NYU’s Stern School of Business, told Newsday. “That would have added another layer of protection.” At Tuesday’s board meeting, the board passed a resolution implementing a credit card processing service at the transfer station.

NCC board waiting to name new president By J oe N i k i c Following an almost four-year search for a permanent president, the Nassau Community College Board of Trustees announced Wednesday night they have made a selection, though they did not announce the name of the person chosen. “We are pleased to report that the board has reached a decision on a candidate for president

of Nassau Community College,” board Chair Jorge Gardyn said in a statement at a special board meeting. “But the name will not be released until the process is finalized and approved by the SUNY Board of Trustees.” On Jan. 19, Gena Glickman, president of Manchester Community College in Connecticutt; Tyjuan A. Lee, vice president of student services at Prince George’s Community College in Maryland;

Stephen Schoonmaker, former president of College of the Ouachitas in Arkansas; and Kenneth Saunders, who now serves as executive vice president at NCC; were announced on the school’s website as the four finalists for the post. Gardyn said the board submitted the selection to State University of New York Chancellor Nancy Zimpher, who, along with the SUNY Board of Trustees, must give final approval.

NCC has been seeking a permanent president since Donald Astrab left the position in July 2012. Former Great Neck Superintendent of Schools Thomas Dolan has served as interim president since September. Saunders, who was an administrator at NCC for more than 13 years, was acting president prior to Dolan’s appointment until SUNY officials recommended a 60-day limit in June to his tenure as act-

ing president. The Garden City institution is the largest community college in the state system, with more than 22,000 students enrolled. According to Newsday, Glickman withdrew her name from the search, saying she was “unsure that in the current environment I would be able to make the difference I wanted to make.” Efforts to reach Dolan were unavailing.

Stern calls on GOPers to denounce Trump B y N o a h M a n s k a r the radically racist KKK has called of Congress have rejected Trump. As he seeks the Democratic nomination for a congressional seat, Suffolk County Legislator Steve Stern has called on his Republican rivals to stand against presidential candidate Donald Trump. Stern, of Dix Hills, said state Sen. Jack Martins, the GOP nominee to replace Rep. Steve Israel (D-Huntington) should refuse to support Trump, citing Trump’s apparent endorsements from former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke and Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan. Duke, once the grand wizard of

voting against Trump “treason to your heritage”; and Farrakhan, known for anti-Semitic comments, has said he liked Trump’s refusal to take “Jewish money” toward his campaign. “Hatred and anti-Semitism have no place in our politics,” Stern said in a statement. “... (T)he public deserves to know whether Jack Martins and the Republican candidates for Congress would back a presidential candidate who is willing to accept support from David Duke and Louis Farrakhan.” A Stern statement noted 11 current or former Republican members

E. O’Brien Murray, Martins’ campaign strategist, said the Democrats vying to hold the district stretching across the North Shore from Whitestone, Queens, to Kings Park should focus on each other until the general election. “When the Democrats finish their bloodbath of a primary and are crawling across the finish line, we’ll be happy to address the attacks from any one of them,” Murray said. Martins, who got backing from the Nassau, Suffolk and Queens Republican parties in the past week, has not decided whom to support in

the presidential race, Murray said. Retired U.S. Marine David Gurfein of Manhasset, who has been working on a run for Congress for months, also said he hasn’t chosen a presidential candidate. But he credited Trump for creating “more interest in our political system in recent history than anyone I can think of.” Gurfein, whom the GOP has reportedly approached about running against Rep. Kathleen Rice (D-Garden City), said he rejected a “litmus test” for who should be allowed to support a presidential candidate. While Duke is “despicable,” he said, Stern’s call and others like it

are “not a rational argument.” “It’s an emotional argument that Democrats are trying to make to undermine people’s freedom of speech, and it’s despicable,” Gurfein said. Stern is among four Democrats running to replace Israel. Others are former Nassau County Executive Tom Suozzi, former North Hempstead Town Supervisor Jon Kaiman and North Hempstead Town Councilwoman Anna Kaplan. Democratic leaders have reportedly decided not to endorse a candidate before the June 28 primary.

Town looks to amend financial disclosure law By J oe N i k i c

ic Party leader Gerard Terry. North Hempstead Town SuTown of North Hempstead of- pervisor Judi Bosworth said at ficials are seeking to amend the Tuesday’s town board meeting the town’s financial disclosure policy 25-year-old law needed to be upafter it discovered it failed to col- dated to ensure that everyone who lect financial disclosure statements is required to file will do so. “Some of those positions no from the town’s former Democrat-

longer exist and there are new positions,” Bosworth said. “We want to make sure all of those who need to file disclosure forms are doing so.” Pursuant to state law, North Hempstead adopted a code of ethics in December 1990, the online

version of the town code says. Section 16A-7 outlines who is required to submit the town’s financial disclosure statement each year, including elected officials, candidates for town office, purchasing and contract officers, department heads and their depu-

ties, in addition to party leaders. The form requires filing officials to report financial interests, outside employment, debts, investments and other information for themselves and their spouse and children. Continued on Page 61


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Taking the plunge for a good cause

(C)2016 MARTHA GORFEIN PHOTOCONCEPTS/www.mgphotoconcepts.com

More tha 500 people braved icy waters at North Hempstead Beach Park in Port Washington March 5 for the annual Town of North Hempstead Polar Plunge. The event raised more than $65,000 for Special Olympics New York.

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Recent Real Estate Sales in Roslyn The information about the homes and the photos were obtained through the Multiple Listing Services of Long Island. The homes presented above were selected based solely on the fact that they were recently sold.

4 Squirrel Hill, Roslyn

97 Salem Rd, East Hills

Sold Price: $620,000 Date: 11/20/2015 Style: Condo, 2 beds, 2 Full/1 Half baths

Sold Price: $729,000 Date: 10/28/2015 Style: Colonial, 3 beds, 2 Full/1 Half baths

55 Montrose Court, Roslyn Harbor Sold Price: $1,500,000 Date: 11/20/2015 Style: Colonial, 6 beds, 4 Full/1 Half baths

We live where we work. We love where we live. Our reach is global, our expertise is local.

Old Westbury Office • 516.626.7600 342 Wheatley Plaza (Wheatley Plaza), Greenvale NY

Roslyn Office • 516.484.1800 1400 Old Northern Blvd, 2nd Floor, Roslyn NY

danielgale.com Each office is independently owned and operated. We are pledged to provide equal opportunity for housing to any prospective customer or client, without regard to race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin.

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Will water affect real estate values? I regularly watch the weekly show “Vice” on HBO Cablevision Ch 301 @ 11pm on Fridays. It is one of the most interesting series on T.V. talking and showing the critical issues of today and the future from around the world. This week was about the process of beef production, and the fact that Brazil has become a major player in the world, behind the U.S. However, a little fact that I was not aware of is the outrageous and absurd amount of water needed to produce one pound of beef, 17991847 gallons, depending on what article you read and 576 gallons for one pound of pork and 395 gallons for chicken/eggs. In comparison it takes 216 gallons to produce a crop of soybeans(great source of protein) and 108 gallons for corn. Now I am not a vegan or true vegetarian, but I do not eat that much beef; but after reading and gaining the knowledge that I now have, I may just cut back even more on ingesting beef, which is not really the most healthy for you anyway. Link to articles: http://www.huffingtonpost. com/2014/10/13/food-waterfootprint_n_5952862.html http://foodtank.com/ news/2013/12/why-meat-eatsresources The reason I have brought this up is what will the effect on diminishing water supplies, not only have on our most important food supply around the world, but real estate? There are so many things that we do that are decreasing the amounts of water that we need to

survive on this earth! On Long Island over the next 50 years, water will become the most serious issue. I could see a war occurring over water, which one needs to live. One can survive for several weeks without food, but only last a few days without potable water. Nitrates, pollutants and salt water intrusion have increasingly been infiltrating our aquifers for years and has been threatening our water supply, causing many wells to be closed on Long Island. Observe what has happened in Flint, Michigan and the lead contamination of their water supply and what should and could have been done to minimized or eliminate the current problem of their contaminated water supply. But human nature is to “avoid, procrastinate and deny” and now everyone is suffering and the future affects are undeniable. What do you think is happening with the price of real estate right now in Flint, probably a great buyer’s market, if you want to live where you can get poisoned to death! I think this is the tip of the iceberg! As the warming of the North and South Poles and the melting of the glaciers increase the oceans levels, that is another issue that will have tremendous effects on our coastal real estate values; because we may try, but we will not be able to control mother nature. Remember Hurricane Sandy and Irene and their impact then and still today, on thousands of families and their homes who are still trying to recover. Also, the cost of home own-

philip a. raices Real Estate Watch

ers insurance is another variable that has spiraled out of control for many homeowners in those areas and the new revised flood planes that are having effects on values now and in the future. We can already see California’s drought worsening and will it make more people want to move out or into a state that has the most serious decreasing water supply, that it has experienced in decades? Regional climate change, global warming, the destruction of the Amazon and other rain forests, and the ozone layer, has an effect on rainfall. This will surely, somewhere in the future decrease the value of real estate, if we don’t come to a reckoning now to come up with solutions, especially here on Long Island. Like gasoline rationing in 1973, water rationing most likely will occur if we do not figure out how to increase supply with the ever increasing populations here, especially in the southwest and around the globe. Read more

here: http://cis.org/southwest-water-population-growth There are major metropolitan areas that have or will have major issues with water: http://finance.yahoo.com/ news/pf_article_111186.html Even going back to 1986, there were signs of potential overdevelopment on Long Island effecting water supplies: h t t p : / / w w w. n y t i m e s . com/1986/12/10/business/realestate-li-water-resources-examined.html More heavier sudden and severe downpours will occur but will not be as helpful as snow in the mountain locations, where a slower process of melting and filling reservoirs occurs year round; as opposed to a heavy rain and a quick refilling of and then depletion occurring more rapidly without a normal and regular rainfall occurring. Another article on Long Islands water supply: h t t p : / / w w w. g r a c e l i n k s . org/2380/the-impact-of-climatechange-on-water-resources Since the globe (71 percent) is covered with water and the oceans contain 96.7 percent of it, more info here: (http://water. usgs.gov/edu/earthhowmuch. html) we need to figure out how to create fast tract methods to push desalinization of water in the most economical way possible. The world population by the year 2050 will be somewhere between 9.5-11 billion: http:// www.pewresearch.org/facttank/2014/02/03/10-projections-for-the-global-population-

in-2050/ We will have to feed more people, with probable diminishing water supplies and food, unless we figure out and plan now what needs to be done. However, the one saving grace is that many times (not always) humans usually figure out how to solve and fix their problems. So I am fairly positive, that will happen; although we might wait until the last minute to come to this realization and do something. But what will our real estate values look like if we don’t address our issues now and what areas of our country will be better investments than others if there is a lack of water? Let’s face it, we will still need to live somewhere, the question will be, in what location will be best, maybe based on the local water supplies. I do not have an answer to that question, but time will tell and be determined by our government and our changing habits. We must take the bull by the horns and the necessary actions to begin saving water now and come up with sound solutions to create more, that we will absolutely need. Philip A. Raices is the owner of Turn Key Real Estate in Great Neck. He can be reached by email: Phil@ TurnKeyRealEstate.Com or by Cell, (516) 647-4289 to answer any of your questions. To search for property, see what your home is worth or homes that have sold in your area, go to: WWW.Li-RealEstate. Com

Filing taxes just got (a little bit) easier By D i a n e Brangman Social Security District Manager in Mineola Now that it’s March, your annual tax filing deadline is fast approaching. If you receive Social Security benefits, one of the documents you need to file your federal income tax return is your Social Security Benefit Statement (Form SSA-1099/1042S). Your Social Security benefits may be taxable. This includes monthly retirement, survivor, and disability benefits. About one-third of people receiving Social Security benefits must pay

taxes on some of these benefits, depending on the amount of their taxable income. This usually happens if you have other substantial income — such as wages, self-employment, interest, dividends, and other taxable income that must be reported on your tax return — in addition to your Social Security benefits. You will never have to pay taxes on more than 85 percent of your Social Security benefits, based on Internal Revenue Service (IRS) rules. To find out if you must pay taxes on your benefits, you will need your Social Security Benefit Statement (Form SSA-

1099/1042S). You should automatically receive it in the mail each January. It shows the total amount of benefits you received from Social Security in the previous year so you know how much Social Security income to report to the IRS on your tax return. The benefit statement is not available for people who receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI), as SSI payments are not taxable. Whether you file your taxes early or wait until the deadline, Social Security makes it easy to obtain a replacement benefit statement if you didn’t receive one or misplaced it. You can get

an instant replacement easily by using your secure online my Social Security account. If you don’t already have an account, you can create one in minutes. Follow the link below to the my Social Security page, and select “Sign In or Create an Account.” Once you are logged in, select the “Replacement Documents” tab to obtain your replacement 1099 or 1042S benefit statement. You can also use your personal my Social Security account to keep track of your earnings each year, manage your benefits, and more. You can also obtain a replacement benefit statement by

calling us at 1-800-772-1213 (TTY 1-800-325-0778), Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., or by contacting your local Social Security Office. If you live outside of the United States, please contact your nearest U.S. Embassy or Consulate. But by going online you can print your replacement benefit statement immediately and not have to wait to receive it in the mail. With a my Social Security account, gathering your Social Security information for tax season has never been easier. Open your own personal my Social Security account today at www.socialsecurity.gov/myaccount.


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East Hills to present Nathan Yang praises security proposals time at Roslyn school Continued from Page 2 about half a million dollars for the project. Zuckerman said the village isn’t giving out a figure as to how much the project will cost but that they are looking at other avenues to supplements the amount budgeted for the program. “Again, when we have major expenditures like this, we usually get grants from other places. We don’t just jump into taxpayer dollars,” Zuckerman said. Zuckerman said East Hills is also exploring other multiple avenues to beef up security at East Hills. According to Zuckerman, the commission is looking installing more street lights and giving vehicle bumper stickers to easily identify commuting residents. Zuckerman said a security kit will also be sent out to residents containing numbers and information that will help residents in case of emergency. The Security Commission at East Hills was first established in 1988 after the village took over policing from private security contractors. Prior to that, Country Estates and Lakeville Estates, Northern Woods and Nobhill area all contracted private secu-

rity being paid for by the civic association. As security conditions improved in the area, residents became hesitant to contribute to a program that wasn’t needed, Zuckerman said. He said lobbied the village to take over security for the entire village, which they did by also hiring a private security. In 1998, the village hired a director of security for oversight of the program and disbanded the commission. “We’re definitely a not high crime area,” Zuckerman said. “But after the high profile crime in the area, we had to look into additional and innovative ways to make the community safer.” The village reinstated the committee after an East Hills resident was struck in the face several times and robbed in her own driveway after she was followed home from Wheatley Plaza in December. The alleged attackers in the driveway robbery were later arrested by Nassau County Police. The driveway robbery followed shortly after a burglary at an East Hills home in which a police officer was injured attempted to restrain a man found hiding there.

Continued from Page 3 had pushed him to pursue his interests. “She has always been a supervisor to me and always expects the most out of her students,” Yang said. “The most important thing I’ve learned from her are the moral values I always apply in the real world.” Yang said Wesely set him up with a medical research internship at Northwestern University over the summer in 2015. He said he has already accepted an offer from Northwestern University in Chicago after his internship. “I don’t know what my major will be yet,” Yang, who has many interests said. “But I’m looking to minor in something in the social sciences.” He said his interests lie in social science research from the gender wage gap and compensation in the workplace to family dynamics. Yang was was named a semifinalist in the 2016 Intel Science Talent Search, the

nation’s most prestigious research competition for high school students in January. His project explored perceptions of single parents. Having read that in general people have negative stereotypes about single parents, he said, he became interested in whether the gender of the parent and the reason they were single would influence perceptions. He said he recruited more than 450 participants online and had them read a one-page vignette about a single working parent with one son. He has an opportunity to be chosen as one of 40 finalists from among the 300 semifinalists nationwide. Yang said his success at Roslyn High School shouldn’t be attributed to just him. “Roslyn is a very great environment for any kid,” Yang said. “The teachers and faculty work very hard to motivate me and they want the students to do their best.”

Parents author hiking Flower Hill board guide after son’s loss

plans tax reduction Continued from Page 1 won’t block traffic view because they plan on using sidewalk trees. Trustee Gary Lewandowski said he had concerns with the parking plan, saying it might lead to a dead zone with the parking lot and create a dead end situation. “It’s right near a hotspot,” Lewandowski said. “Doesn’t give you much time to make your decision before someone is on your back.” Panena said the type of parking lot they are designing would allow drivers to pull in and out without a problem. The trustees also offered suggestions for developers to look into adding more handicap parking spots. The trustees approved the proposal, subject to approval from the Zoning Board of Appeals. The board also reviewed a proposal by property owner Michael Cohen to replace a car rental business at 1045 Northern Blvd. in Roslyn with a two-story building that would house a Yoga Works on the second floor and retail space on the first. “The one property that needed an upgrade is this one so we’re glad you’re here,” Phillips said. Yoga Works will be take up 5,000 square feet and the first floor would be 500 square feet, according to Anthony Guardino from Farrell Fritz, P.C., who was representing Cohen at the hearing.

“We don’t know who that’s going to be yet,” Guardino said when referring to who will rent out the first floor of the building. “The tenant may have need for additional parking.” Guardino said the developer is seeking three forms of relief in proposal, including a rear set back to include more parking. He said Cohen plans to move the building back for reasons of noise and give more privacy and to give Northern Boulevard more breathing room. Developers are looking into using stone materials and other high-quality materials, which they will present at the next zoning board meeting. The application will also require approval from the Nassau County Health Department, according to Panetta. Phillips said the proposal could not be approved at the meeting because it hadn’t gone before the zoning board yet. She added the board would continue to work with the developer on the proposal. “We encourage you to move forward with the tremendous improvement on a site that needs to be improved and it would really be one of the last things in our village,” Phillips said. “Obviously we have to get a lot of issues addressed, but we’re willing to work with you.” The next zoning board meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. on March 16 at the Village Hall.

Continued from Page 2 research center at the University of Connecticut that aims to prevent death in sports through health and safety initiatives. The institute is named after former National Football League offensive lineman, Korey Stringer, who, in 2001, suffered exertional heat stroke during preseason training camp and died. After speaking with Dr. Robert Huggins from KSI, Mark said, he was determined to create a method of informing the public on how heat safety can be improved. He said he decided on a detailed checklist that used simple terms so all people, not just academics, could understand the heat stroke prevention procedures. “Mark worked on it like it was a PhD paper,” Ellen said. She added that they wanted to speak with heat stroke professionals to back the claims Mark made in Ariel’s Checklist. “We felt it wasn’t enough for two grieving parents to come up with this list,” she said. “This really has to be grounded in real science.” The list includes detailed steps to preventing exertional heat stroke such as hydration, heat acclimation, ample sleep prior to physical activity, preparedness for medical emergencies and more. Mark said the list has been vetted by both Huggins and KSI professor Douglas Casa, as well as Yoram Epstein, an Israeli professor who, he said, is a leading ex-

ertional heat stroke expert in the world. “Nothing alone on this checklist, except in ridiculous extremes, is going to harm you to the point of hospitalization,” Mark said. “But if you have a multiplicity of factors to dangerous degrees, then you’re virtually guaranteed hospitalization and/or death.” He added that KSI has posted Ariel’s Checklist on its website even though its main focus is on sports safety. “They realized they could include hiking and expand their realm,” Mark said. While they want to see change enacted in heat safety procedures all over, the Newmans said they expect opposition to stricter safety procedures on tour guides in both Israel and America. “We’re going to have a lot of push back,” Ellen said. “It’s going to be very painful to hear people say ‘don’t change our rules.’” “Nobody wants change,” Mark added. Despite possible opposition, the Newmans said they will continue to push their efforts and spread Ariel’s Checklist to as many people as they can possibly reach. “The bottom line still is, we want this to get to as many people as possible to save other lives,” Mark said. “That’s the real goal.” “This is not about trying to scare people from Israel,” he added. “It is about trying to make it safe to help encourage more people to go.”


66 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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13 candidates vie for trustee seats

Continued from Page 1 president Jana Goldenberg and Neil Foster, an alternate on the village’s board of appeals, both running under the Resident’s Party line, have been embroiled in a bitter campaign with Deputy Manny Zuckerman and Trustee Clara Pomerantz in the run up to the March 15 elections. Goldenberg, who has served on several village committees and backed Zuckerman and Pomerantz four years ago, has accused current trustees and Mayor Michael Koblenz of meeting in violation of public meetings laws and the trustees of not standing up to what she said was Koblenz’s bullying. Foster said last month that what he wants is a more open government in East Hills where residents have direct access to the board, village budgets and its expenditures. Foster, who works as a personnel recruiter, and Goldenberg said they want to institute an outside Budgetary Advisory Committee similar to what is being done in the Roslyn School District. Zuckerman and Pomerantz have both rejected Goldenberg’s accusations of meeting in violation of open meetings requirements and of not standing up to Koblenz who she has called a “bully.” Pomerantz said Koblenz is not a bully and members of the board feel free to disagree with Koblenz, who works to resolves differences by consensus. Both sides have taken to their party’s Facebook pages to connect directly with voters, tout their accomplishments and disprove of each other’s allegations. On March 2, Goldenberg posted a FOIL request of payments made by the village to Sagat & Burton, village attorney, Bill Burton’s law firm since 2005 totalling over $1.59 million. Koblenz responded on the East Hills Connection page, often used by supporters of the village board, explaining the legal services Burton provides to the village. Goldenberg, who as president of the County Estates Civic Association helped secured a partnership between East Hills and National Grid to extend village gas lines to residents, has also clashed with Koblenz and the trustees over an offer for Goldenberg to serve as the village’s liaison with National Grid for the project. Zuckerman said she requested $100,000, Koblenz said Goldenberg was offered $20,000 and Goldenberg said she requested $125 an hour but was not serious in her request. She said she was just responding to what she said was an effort by Koblenz to take credit from her on the project. Both Pomerantz said they are running for re-election based on their records as well as what they intended to do in the future. We were able to freeze taxes in the village for the past six years and that’s a huge accomplishment,” said Pomerantz, who was appointed by the board in 2010 when Linda Nathanson moved to Florida and ran in 2010 and 2011, both contested elections. Pomerantz, who has been a Hebrew and nursery school teacher at Temple Sinai for almost 19 years, also pointed to the

activities she has established for children and seniors at the Park at East Hills as supervisor of the Kids in the Parks Committee and the Senior Activities Committee. Pomerantz was appointed to her trustee seat in 2010 after former Trustee Linda Nathanson moved to Florida. She retained it in a 2011 special election and 2012 general election. Among his accomplishments, Zuckerman said, was his work in the village’s purchase of the property for the Park at East Hills and subsequent development as well as the villages’s agreement with National Grid to install gas lines throughout the village with the assistance of a grant obtained by state Sen. Jack Martins. Zuckerman was first elected as a trustee in 2000, having previously served as president of the Nob Hill/Lakeville Estates Unified Civic Association for 10 years. He was selected by Koblenz as deputy mayor in 2010. said she is challenging for the deputy mayoral seat on a board of trustees she said are intimidated by longtime Mayor Michael Koblenz. Zuckerman and Pomerantz both get paid $27,500 and $22,000 respectively. Voting will be held in the theatre building at Village Hall at 209 Harbor Hill Road from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. The villages of Roslyn Estates and Roslyn Harbor will see changes to the board of trustee come March 15. Brian Finegold, who is running unopposed under the Sunshine Party ticket, is seeking a sixth two year term as Trustee in Roslyn Estates. But Trustee Sandy Joel Siff has declined to run for re-election and no candidate has stepped forward so far to run for his spot. According to village clerk, Brian Rivera, the board of trustees will select someone to take Siff’s seat should there be no write-in candidates by the March 15 elections. In Roslyn Harbor, Deputy Mayor Louis Badolato is running unopposed for Mayor David Mandell’s seat whose term ends in May and have decided not to rerun. With Badolato’s trustee seat open, Roslyn Harbor resident Jasun Fiorentino is running for a spot on the board. Trustee Jeremy Rosof is also running for re-election. Terms lengths for board of trustee members in Roslyn Heights and Roslyn Harbor are two years and unpaid. Efforts to reach Rosof and Badolato were unavailing. Roslyn voters will cast ballots March 15 at Village Hall at 25 The Tulips. In Flower Hill, trustees Randall Rosenbaum, Karen Reichenbach and Gary Lewandowski are running for re-election as well as Mayor Elaine Phillips and Village Justice Dennis Reisman. All positions are unpaid. Reisman is running for the first time after being appointed Village Justice by Phillips after Justice Bruce Byrne moved out of the village and resigned his position. Prior to his appointment, Reisman had served as acting justice for five years,

filling in for Byrne when he was not available. “I was honored to accept the appointment,” Reisman said. “In order to continue in that position, I am now required to run for election.” Reisman, who also serves as Flower Hills’ village justice, said he has been in legal practice for more than 38 years and has extensive litigation experience. He also served for 20 years as an arbitrator in the Nassau County District Court, adjudicating civil actions. “As the acting justice of the village, I have presided over hundreds of traffic violations and village code violations giving me the experience to serve as the regular justice of the Village of Flower Hill,” Reisman said. He said village justices deal primarily violations of traffic laws and ordinance. “In dispensing justice, I have always tried to be just and fair yet courteous and compassionate with all the individuals who have come before the court charged with violations,” Reisman said. “I will continue in the same vein.” Phillips is seeking a third term as mayor and said she plans on updating the village website and get more online, to help residents fill out forms. “This is a big step for government,” she said. “We think we a new website and it’ll make things easier for permits.” During her administration, Phillips said there haven’t been any tax increases due to strong fiscal management by her and the other trustees. “I’m as good as the team around me,” Phillips said. “I believe we’ve done a great job.” She also said one of problem areas in the village is the traffic along Port Washington Boulevard. She said she wants to use traffic cones on Port Washington Boulevard to help reduce congestion. “Traffic gets backed up into middle lane,” Phillips said, referring to the left hand turn on Middle Neck Road. “It’s an accident waiting to happen.” Reichenbach, who is running for reelection as two-year term trustee in the Village of Flower Hill, said she has represented the residents of the village fairly and with integrity and will continue to do so if re-elected. “I have faithfully carried out my duties to the village for two terms,” Reichenbach said. “Experience in village governance is important to maintain momentum. Right now, we have a great group of trustees anchored by an excellent mayor. We all make every effort to represent our residents in an honest and straightforward manner. Each of us brings different skills to the board, which results in a good balance of knowledge and experience. The Village of Flower Hill is in good hands.” Reichenbach has headed the Tree Committee, working with the Board of Trustees, Mayor and Village Administration to achieve Tree City USA status with the National Arbor Day Foundation. She is also the village’s representative on the Hempstead Harbor Protection Committee. If re-elected she said she intends to continue to monitor the villages finances

and make sure the expenditures are necessary to maintain the quality of life in the village. She said one of the biggest problems in the community has to do with the safety of drinking water. “The mayor and I serve on a committee sponsored by Residents for a More Beautiful Port Washington that has been very effective in serving the Port Washington and Manhasset peninsula’s water issues,” Reichenbach said. “Gov. Cuomo has just funded a study of our aquifer. The committee also successfully stopped Queens from opening wells that were closed for many years, which would have had a negative impact on our drinking water.” All board positions are unpaid according to village administrator Ronnie Shatzkamer. Voting will take place at Village Hall at 1 Bonnie Heights Road from noon to 9 p.m. Village of Roslyn Deputy Mayor Marshall Bernstein and Trustee Craig Westergard are both running for re-election. Bernstein has served on the Board of Trustees since 1995. Westergard was first elected in 2000. Both won their most recent two-year terms in unopposed 2014 bids. Roslyn voters will cast ballots March 15 at Village Hall at 1200 Old Northern Blvd.

Candidate Zuckerman Continued from Page 23 used equipment, trucks, and vehicles we own to obtain the highest possible value. Why should village residents support you in the election? I would hope that residents would support my re-election based on my accomplishments and what I have done for the Village. There are two basic reasons to vote for me: 1. East Hills is one of the most desirable communities on Long Island. We have kept taxes frozen for six years and have one of the highest bond ratings for any Village. We enjoy the highest property values, the best park, programs, events and services.. The Mayor, the Board and I have worked long and hard to make this happen. 2. I have been the man behind the scenes. Always available, always accessible. I love getting results, building and implementing. Yet there is a lot more work to be done. Solar heating the pool, installing security cameras, making the park a more all year round facility with snow making machines . These are just a few ideas I see for the near future. Everybody – I mean all our residents - love East Hills. That’s what we want. That’s what we work for. That’s what makes us so very, very proud. I hope our residents realize it takes a village and that I am an integral part of that work.


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Community Meetings Village Elections Will Be Held Tuesday, March 15 with the exception of Sands Point and Manorhaven

Bryant Library Board of Trustees Meeting Monday, March 14 @ 7:30 p.m. Valentine House, 2 Paper Mill Road, Roslyn (516) 621-2240 Village of East Hills Board of Trustees Meeting Wednesday, March 16 @ 8:00 p.m. Village Hall 209 Harbor Hill Road, East Hills (516) 621-5600 Village of East Williston Board of Trustees Meeting Monday, March 14 @ 7:30 p.m. Village Hall, 2 Prospect Street, East Williston (516) 746-0782 East Williston School District Board of Education Budget Workshop #4 Wednesday, March 14 @ Wheatley School 11 Bacon Road, Old Westbury (516) 333-7804 Village of Floral Park Board of Trustees Meeting Wednesday, March 16 @ 7:30 p.m. Village Hall, 1 Floral Boulevard, Floral Park (516) 326-6300 Village of Flower Hill Board of Zoning and Appeals Meeting Wednesday, March 16 @ 7:30 p.m. Village Hall 1 Bonnie Heights Road, Manhasset (516) 627-5000 Great Neck Water Pollution Control District Board of Commissioners Meeting Thursday, March 17 @ 8:30 a.m. District Office, 236 E Shore Rd, Great Neck (516) 482-0238 Village of Great Neck Board of Trustees Meeting Tuesday, March 15 @ 7:30 p.m. Village Hall, 61 Baker Hill Road, Great Neck (516) 482-0019 Village of Great Neck Planning Meeting Thursday, March 17 @ 7:30 p.m. Village Hall, 61 Baker Hill Road, Great Neck (516) 482-0019 Village of Great Neck Estates Board of Trustees Meeting Monday, March 14 @ 8:00 p.m. Village Hall Atwater Plaza/4 Gateway Drive, Great Neck (516) 482-8284 Village of Great Neck Plaza Board of Trustees Meeting Wednesday, March 16 @ 8:00 p.m. Village Hall, 2 Gussack Plaza, Great Neck (516) 482-4500 Herricks School District Board of Education Budget/ Regular Meeting Thursday, March 17 @ 7:30 p.m. Herricks Community Center 999 Herricks Road, New Hyde Park (516) 305-8900

Hillside Public Library Board of Trustees Meeting Wednesday, March 16 @ 7:30 p.m. 155 Lakeville Road, New Hyde Park (516) 355-7850 Village of Kensington Board of Trustees Meeting Wednesday, March 16 @ Village Hall 2 Nassau Drive, Kensington (516) 482-4409 Village of Lake Success Board of Trustees Meeting Monday, March 14 @ 7:30 p.m. Village Hall 318 Lakeville Road, Lake Success (516) 482-4411 Manhasset Public Library Board of Trustees Meeting Thursday, March 17 @ 7:30 p.m. 30 Onderdonk Avenue Manhasset (516) 627-2300 Village of Mineola Board of Trustees Meeting Wednesday, March 16 @ 6:30 p.m. Village Hall 155 Washington Avenue, Mineola (516) 746-0750 Mineola School District Board of Education Meeting Thursday, March 17 @ 7:00 p.m. Willis Avenue School 121 Jackson Avenue, Mineola (516) 237-2900 Village of New Hyde Park Board of Trustees Meeting Tuesday, March 15 @ 8:00 p.m. Village Hall 1420 Jericho Turnpike New Hyde Park (516) 354-0022

The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

New Hyde Park-Garden City Park School District Budget Presentation/ Regular Meeting Monday, March 14 @ 7:30 p.m./ 8:00 p.m. New Hyde Park Road School, New Hyde Park (516) 434-2370

67

Port Washington Public Library Board of Trustees Meeting Wednesday, March 16 @ 7:30 p.m. 1 Library Dr, Port Washington (516) 883-4400

Village of North Hills Board of Zoning and Appeals Tuesday, March 15 @ 7:30 p.m. Village Hall, 1 Shelter Rock Road, North Hills (516) 627-3451

Village of Roslyn Board of Trustees Meeting Tuesday, March 15 @ 8:00 p.m. Village Hall 200 Old Northern Boulevard, Roslyn (516) 621-1961

Village of North Hills Board of Trustees Meeting Wednesday, March 16 @ 7:30 p.m. Village Hall, 1 Shelter Road, North Hills (516) 627-3451

Village of Roslyn Estates Board of Trustees Meeting Monday, March 14 @ 7:30 p.m. Village Hall, 25 The Tulips, Roslyn Estates (516) 621-3541

North Lakeville-Lakeville Estates Civic Association Meeting Wednesday, March 16 @ 7:00 p.m. 21 78th Avenue, New Hyde Park

Village of Roslyn Estates Board of Zoning and Appeals Meeting Wednesday, March 16 @ 7:30 p.m. Village Hall, 25 The Tulips, Roslyn Estates (516) 621-3541

Village of Old Westbury Board of Zoning and Appeals Meeting Monday, March 14 @ 7:30 p.m. Village Hall, 1 Stone Hill Road, Old Westbury (516) 626-0800 Village of Plandome Board of Trustees Meeting Monday, March 14 @ 8:00 p.m. Village Hall, 65 South Drive, Plandome (516) 627-1748 Village of Plandome Manor Board of Trustees Meeting Tuesday, March 15 @ 7:00 p.m. Village Hall, 55 Manhasset Avenue, Manhasset (516) 627-3701 Village of Plandome Manor Board of Zoning and Appeals Meeting Thursday, March 17 @ 8:00 p.m. Village Hall 55 Manhasset Avenue, Manhasset (516) 627-3701

Village of Roslyn Harbor Board of Trustees Meeting Monday, March 14 @ 7:00 p.m. Village Hall, 500 Motts Cove Road, Roslyn Harbor (516) 621-0368 Village of Sands Point Board of Zoning and Appeals Meeting Monday, March 14 @ 7:30 p.m. Village Hall, 26 Tibbits Lane, Sands Point (516) 883-3044 Village of Thomaston Board of Trustees Meeting Monday, March 14 @ 7:30 p.m. Village Hall, 100 East Shore Road, Great Neck (516) 482-3110 Meetings are held at the respective Village Halls except where noted. All meetings, dates and times are subject to change.


68 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

School & camp directory

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Is the American Enlightenment dead? Continued from Page 68

Our 67th Summer!!

More advertising revenue pushes their salaries up to $40 and $50 million a year. The remarkable former Long Islander, Bill Moyers, pointed to the perils for “Enlightenment” thinking

in our nation. He said that he came out of retirement “because I could not remain on the sidelines while the delusional was becoming normative.” Can American people and our expanded, diverse media reclaim the noble

principles of informed, rational, civic engagement? The whole world is watching in 2016 because everyone has a stake in an American presidential election (to be continued). D’Innocenzo’s website is:

Town aims to amend financial disclosure law Continued from Page 68 Bosworth ordered a review of town policies and procedures after a Newsday report revealed last month that Terry, who until recently was the attorney for the town’s Board of Zoning Appeals and special counsel for the town attorney, owes more than $1.4 million in federal and state back taxes, has been party to five lawsuits and let his attorney registration lapse for three years. The town never collected financial disclosure statements from Terry, the head of the North Hempstead Democratic Committee from 2007 until he resigned Feb. 1 except for a brief period, or any other party leader, town attorney Elizabeth Botwin said. Nassau County District Attorney Madeline Singas has said she is investigating Terry’s tax issues and public jobs. The North Hempstead ethics board is investigating Concetta Terry, Gerard Terry’s wife and a deputy town clerk, for allegedly omitting her husband’s tax debts from her financial disclosure records. None of her disclosure reports from the 2006 calendar year list Gerard Terry’s tax warrants or liens, though she did report her and her husband’s outstand-

ing auto loans. Botwin said she had drafted an amended law and would propose it to the board before the next meeting on March 22. Bosworth said the town attorney’s office reviewed the financial disclosure policy and received recommendations from the town’s ethics board about who should be required to file disclosure forms. The town code calls for a civil penalty of up to $10,000 if a filer “knowingly and willfully with intent to deceive makes a false statement or gives information which such individual knows to be false” on a disclosure statement. “We strive for transparency,” Bosworth said. “We believe that this expansion of the town’s financial disclosure law will further advance that objective.” The board unanimously voted to set a public hearing for the law amendment on March 22. Reach reporter Joe Nikic by e-mail at jnikic@theislandnow.com, by phone at 516.307.1045 x203. Also follow us on Twitter @joenikic and Facebook at facebook.com/theislandnow.

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pr o fe s s i o n al dire c t o ry

The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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70 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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72 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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Sage Oil

516 485-3900 Quality Oil at a Great Price Since 1960

No Fee For Visa/MC/Discovery or Debit Cards

• We haul anything & everything • Entire contents of home and/or office • We clean it up and take it away Residential - Commercial Bonded Insured / Free Estimates

STRONG ARM CONTRACTING, INC.

516-538-1125

Serving the community for over 40 yrs

BRIAN CLINTON

MOVERS

One Piece to a Household/ Household Rearranging FREE ESTIMATES

333-5894

Owner Supervised Licensed & Insured Licensed #T-11154


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buyer’s guide ▼ landscaping

PAINTING/POWERWASHING

moving N.Y.D.O.T.#10405

ADVERTISE HERE

MOVING & STORAGE INC.

Long Island and New York State Specialists

516.307.1045

• Residential • Commercial • Piano & Organ Experts • Boxes Available FREE ESTIMATES www.ajmoving.com

516-741-2657

114 Jericho Tpke. Mineola, NY 11501

PAINTING/CARPENTRY/POWER WASHING

painting, carpentry & powerwashing

SWEENEY

ADVERTISE HERE 516.307.1045

PAINTING and CARPENTRY Interior/Exterior B. Moore Paints Wallpaper Faux Finishes

Renovations New Mouldings Doors Windows

Licensed & Insured

516-884-4016 resd/Comm cleaning

roofing

STRONG ARM CLEANING

GRACE ROOFING

Residential and Commercial Cleaning Specialist • Post construction clean ups • Stripping, waxing floors • Move ins and move outs

Free estimates / Bonded Insured

516-538-1125

www.strongarmcleaningny.com

Est. 1977

• Slate, Tile, Flat Roofs • Asphalt and Wood Shingle Roofs • Gutters & Leaders Cleaned/Replaced • Professional New Roof Installation Free Estimates Expert Leak Repairs Lic./Ins. • Local References RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL

516-753-0268

tree service

ADVERTISE HERE 516.307.1045

window repairs

631-385-7975

WINDOW REPAIRS & RESTORATIONS

Outdated Hardware • Skylights •Andersen Sashes • New Storm Windows • Wood Windows • Chain/Rope Repairs • Falling Windows • Fogged Panes • Mechanical Repairs • Wood Repairs

ALL BRANDS

ADVERTISE HERE 516.307.1045

W W W. S K YC L E A RW I N D OW. CO M Call Mr. Fagan • 32 Years Experience Lic. # H080600000 Nassau

tree service

OLD VILLAGE TREE SERVICE 24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE

ADVERTISE HERE 516.307.1045

ADVERTISE HERE 516.307.1045

Owner Operated Since 1989 Licensed & Insured

26

FREE ESTIMATES

ADVERTISE HERE

516-466-9220

516.307.1045

Member L.I. Arborist Assoc.

73


nassau

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COMMUNITY CLASSIFIEDS to advertise call: 516.307.1045

▼ Employment To Place Your Ad Call Phone:

516.307.1045

Fax:

516.307.1046

e-mail:

hblank@theislandnow.com

In Person:

105 Hillside Avenue Williston Park, NY 11598

We’re Open:

Mon–Thurs: 9am-5:30pm Fri: 9am-6pm

Deadlines

Tuesday 11:00am: Classified Advertising Tuesday 1:00pm: Legal Notices/ Name Changes Friday 5:00pm Buyers’s Guide Error Responsibility All ads placed by telephone are read back for verification of copy context. In the event of an error of Blank Slate Media LLC we are not responsible for the first incorrect insertion. We assume no responsiblity for an error in and beyond the cost of the ad. Cancellation Policy Ads must be cancelled the Monday before the first Thursday publication. All cancellations must be received in writing by fax at: 516.307.1046 Any verbal cancellations must be approved by a supervisor. There are no refunds on cancelled advertising. An advertising credit only will be issued.

• Great Neck News • Williston Times • New Hyde Park Herald Courier • Manhasset Times • Roslyn Times • Port Washington Times • Garden City News • Bethpage Newsgram • Jericho Syosset News Journal • Mid Island Times • Syosset Advance

Help Wanted

Employment

Help Wanted DISPLAY ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE: Blank Slate Media, a fast growing chain of 6 award winning weekly newspapers and website, is looking for an energetic, service oriented professional with good communication skills to sell display, web and email advertising. Earn up to $60,000 in the first year representing 6 Blank Slate Media publications and website as well as 5 publications and 1 website owned by Blank Slate Media’s partner, Litmor Publications. Minimum 2 years outside sales experience required. Must have own car. Protected sales territory, salary plus commission, health insurance, paid holidays and sick days. To apply, please email resume and cover letter to sblank@theislandnow.com or call Steve Blank at 516-307-1045 x201

B A B Y S I T T E R ​/ ​H O U S E H O L D HELP WANTED For 12 and 13 year olds. 3-7pm Mon-Fri with flexible hours​/​hourly compensation. Driving to practices, activities, etc.; homework help, laundry, light housework and meal prep. Must have own car and references. Please contact Lauren 917-796-4443 BENEFITS CONSULTANT: AFLAC Fortune 500 Company. With an AFLAC career, there are no limits to what you can achieve. It’s a unique opportunity to take control of your career and set your own unlimited goals. Looking for individuals to grow with the largest provider of voluntary employee benefits in the country. Sales experience welcome but not necessary. Lifetime vesting renewals. Office located in Garden City. Please call Director of District Sales, Bill Whicher 516-574-1064

COMPANION & HHA WANTED

516 328-7126 Agency seeks experienced workers who love working with the elderly. P/T and F/T hours Drivers preferred

WANTED

• Full Time Waitstaff • Full Time Dishwasher • Part Time Grillman Diner Experience • Inquire within

Yesterday’s

Diner-Restaurant 443 Jericho Tpke.,New Hyde Park, NY 11040

516-352-5290

Receptionist (Part Time) Biener Audi seeks evening receptionist to receive calls, greet customers and perform various other light clerical functions. Professional appearance, pleasant phone voice a must, with some computer skills helpful. Hours: Monday-Thursday 5:00pm-8:00pm with occasional weekend hours to start. Competitive salary & clean friendly, energetic work atmosphere. For immediate consideration email resume in confidence to:

careers@biener.com


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▼ MARKETPLACE Help Wanted HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR CAN YOU DIG IT? We offer training and certifications operating bulldozers, backhoes, excavators. Lifetime job placement VA benefits eligible! 1-866-362-6497 HOME CARE SERVICES Caring and compassionate people needed to enhance the lives of the elderly. We are a caring and compassionate company to work for providing home care services for the elderly. Please call 516-710-7995 or email resume to:info@gardencityhomecare.com NEWSPAPER PRODUCTION PART TIME: Blank Slate Media, a fast growing chain of 6 award winning weekly newspapers and website, is looking for a person experienced in Adobe In-Design to lay out classified and legal pages on Tuesday evening. Office conveniently located in Williston Park. To apply please email resume and cover letter to sblank@theislandnow.com or call Steve Blank 516-307-1045 x201

Situation Wanted

Situation Wanted

Situation Wanted

Situation Wanted

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT AVAILABLE: Available P/T 2-3 days a week. Experienced in Microsoft Word & Excel. Past experience includes Department of Education & Legal Secretary background. Outgoing & strong work ethic. References available. Available immediately. Call 917770-7965

CLEANING AVAILABLE Houses and Apartments. Flexible days and hours. Experienced, reasonable prices. Very good references. Own transportation. Please call 516-272-5154 or 516-385-5547

ELDER CARE: Woman seeking position caring for the elderly. Live in or out. Over 20 years experience. References furnished upon request. Call Florence 718-288-6123

CNA / HOME HEALTH AIDE Available for quality care at home for your elderly parent. Experienced CNA / HHA is highly recommended. Please call 516417-4898 or 516-270-0888. No agencies please.

EXPERIENCED POLISH HOUSE CLEANER Good references. Very honest, reliable, responsible and hard working. Own transportation. English speaking. Flexible days​/​hours. I will do a good job. Please call 516-589-5640

NANNY: EXCELLENT NANNY AVAILABLE Our situation has changed and we are trying to help our former Nanny find a job. She’s had experience caring for multiple children at various ages (we had 4yr old twins). Hard worker, great with the kids and she is able to drive. References available. Call Olivia 516-884-8111

COMPANION AVAILABLE Available Full Time Looking for someone to take care of your elderly parents in the comfort of your own home for peace and tranquility? 18 yrs. experience, references, driver w/ reliable vehicle. Please call 516-410-1892

HHA CERTIFIED Seeking live in or live out position to care for the sick & elderly or as companion. Kind, honest, hardworking, compassionate individual with experience in home and hospital. Call Monica 346-770-9546 or 646-359-1809

AIDE​/​CARE GIVER: CARING, EFFICIENT, RELIABLE looking to care for your sick or elderly loved one. 14 years experience. Just ended 7 years with previous patient. Live in, live out, ft​/​pt nights, weekends. References available. Call 516-448-0502 BABYSITTING​/ NANNY Loving, caring woman with 15 years experience in Garden City, seeking full or part time position with local references. Licensed driver. Please call: 347-593-7897

OFFICE WORK TOWN INSURANCE AGENCY in Garden City is hiring for office help including computer work, Full or Part Time. Starting at $15​/ hr. Call Robert Sommer 516-294-1000

CARE GIVER​/ ELDER CARE: Seeking live in or live out position. Full or Part Time. Housekeeping as well. Flexible hours. Excellent references. 10 yrs experience. Call Colleen 516-732-2189

TEACHER’S ASSISTANT FT and PT at Romper Room Nursery School. Email resume to romperroomschool@verizon.net Or call 516746-8606 Closed all school holidays.

CERTIFIED NURSES AIDE​/ HHA: Seeking position weekdays live in or live out. Experienced, references. Call 347-257-4367 OR email Irie.rbeckford@gmail.com

DONATE YOUR CAR

Wheels For Wishes Benefiting

Make-A-Wish

®

Suffolk County x % Ta Call: (631) 317-2014 0 0 1 le uctib Ded Metro New York (631) 317-2014 Call: WheelsForWishes.org

*Free Vehicle/Boat Pickup ANYWHERE *We Accept All Vehicles Running or Not *Fully Tax Deductible

* Wheels For Wishes is a DBA of Car Donation Foundation.

COMPANION AVAILABLE: Experienced LPN​/ completing RN seeks position as companion for overnight hours. Very reliable and able to offer helpful solutions & insight for peace of mind. Family resided Garden City. Please call 212-592-4066

HOME HEALTH CARE AIDE: Humble Home Health Care Aide available. 5 years experience assisting senior citizens with their daily needs. Able to provide housekeeping tasks, grocery shopping and any daily task needed. I am a licensed driver w/ own car. Call Linda 917-723-5789

COMPANION SERVICES I am available for a companion position for the elderly. Licensed driver with own car will also do light housekeeping, cooking, driving errands, to and from doctor​ / hospital appointments. Full or part time. Live out. Experienced with references available upon request. Call Evonie 516-673-3479

HOME HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONAL Over 30 years experience caring for elderly including patients with Alzheimer’s and Dementia. All long term assignments. Just completed 2 year assignment. Available immediately days, nights or weekends. Excellent references. Call Monica 516-325-5774

COMPANION​/ HOME HEALTH AIDE: Are you looking for someone to take care of your elderly parents in the comfort of their own home? I am a home health aide and companion with years of experience and very reliable. Please call 917-889-1606

HOUSE CLEANING Highest quality cleaning service. Reliable with excellent references. Please call: 516-642-6624

ELDER CARE AVAILABLE Woman from Ukraine is seeking position for full time or part time. Experienced & references available. Please call Olha 516-547-8882

NEW FLORIDA HOMES

FROM THE $170s

HOUSECLEANING Cleans homes, offices, apartments. I will get your home or office sparkling clean! Hardworking with good references. Free estimates. Call Fatima 646-671-4687 HOUSECLEANING GARDEN CITY AREA available weekdays anytime. Experienced. Excellent references. Own transportation. English speaking. Contact Jeanette 516-385-8151 MAYA’S CLEANING Very good work Own supplies​/ cleaning & vacuum Good prices Own transportation 516-859-5355 516-244-3535 NANNY AVAILABLE: With over 15 years experience caring for newborns, todddlers & twins. Seeking F/T or P/T long term position. Excellent references upon request. Call Paula 347-741-4320

NURSE’S AIDE Certified, 15 yrs experience, honest, reliable, licensed driver with own car. Available full time, part time, overnights. My name is Barbara and I can be reached at 516-468-1340 NURSING ASSISTANT I’m a certified nursing assistant seeking private home care position. Over 15 years experience. Licensed driver. Available Monday to Friday daytime hours and some weekends. Contact Cynthia 917-805-7782 Career Training AIRLINE CAREERS Start here. Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information 866-296-7093

announcements

HUNTERS Our hunters will pay top $$$ to hunt your land. Call for a free base camp leasing info packet & quote 866-309-1507 www.basecampleasing.com

Novenas/Prayers PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Never known to fail). Oh Most Beautiful Flower of Mount Carmel, fruitful vine of Splendor of Heaven, Blessed Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate Virgin assist me in this necessity. Oh Star of the Sea help me and show herein you are my Mother. Oh Mary Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth I beseech thee from the bottom of my heart to succor me this necessity (make request). There are none that can withstand your power. Oh show me herein you are my Mother. Oh Mary conceived without sin pray for us who have recourse to Thee (three times). Oh Holy Mary I place this cause in your hands (three times). Thank you for your mercy to me and mine. Amen. This prayer must be said for three days and after three days your request will be granted. The prayer must be published. Grateful thanks. (T.Y.)

marketplace

for sale KENTUCKY DERBY Going to the Kentucky Derby and haven’t booked your flight yet? Why not travel in style!! 2 seats available on Private Jet that seats 10. Leaving Tetoboro Airport Thursday May, 5 mid afternoon and returning Sunday May 8 mid morning. Cost is approximately $3,500 total for both seats!! Please call 917-747-5237 if interested. APPLE iMAC FOR SALE 24 inch Core 2 Duo 2.66Ghz. 4GB older model, 2009 purchase. Works fine, was used just for home. $350 or best reasonable offer. Call 516-319-3559 HP 2840 ALL IN ONE LASER JET PRINTER FOR SALE Network printing, faxing and scanning, plus walk up copying and direct digital photo printing. Used, excellent condition. Located in Garden City. Pick up only. Cash. $400. Needs color toner. Call 516-489-2891 MOUNTAIN BIKES FOR SALE GARDEN CITY: Used Women’s DIAMONDBACK Outlook DX 26”​​ $125 Used Men’s 26” SCHWINN Sidewinder​​$125 CASH ONLY. Call 516-489-2891(leave msg) or email:pasgmineola2015@ gmail.com OFFICE EQUIPMENT FOR SALE GARDEN CITY: HON (600 Series) Lateral File Cabinet 42”W x 19 1/4” D x 53 1/4”H $300 BROTHER IntelliFax 4100E High Speed Business Class Laser Fax $175 Pickup only. CASH only. Call 516-4892891 (leave msg) or: email: pasgmineola2015@gmail.com PRIVACY HEDGE SPRING BLOW OUT SALE. 6’ Arborvitae (cedar) reg. $129 NOW $59. Beautiful, nursery grown. FREE installation​/ FREE delivery. Limited supply! ORDER NOW! 518-536-1367 www.lowcosttrees.com

Wanted to Buy LOOKING TO BUY! Records, oriental items, clothing, art, old & modern furniture, estates, jewelry, silver, glassware, dishes, old photos, coins & stamps, flatware. Call George 718-386-1104 or 917-775-3048

MACUL AR DEGENERATION? On Top of the World in Ocala is Florida’s Premier Active Adult Community • Over 250,000 sq. ft. of amenities • 54 holes of golf on three courses and much more Call us at 1.877.704.9447 or visit OnTopoftheWorld.com On Top of the World Communities Inc., Ocala, Florida a 55+ community. On Top of the World Communities reserves the right to change or withdraw any offer at any time. Prices, features and specifications are subject tochange without notice. Certain conditions may apply. Void where prohibited by law. NY Registration #H13-0004, NJ Registration #09-04-0018 and #NJ12-04-2019.

Consider a Low Vision Evaluation Diabetic Retinopathy Stargardt’s Disease

Glaucoma Stroke

Call Steven Schoenbart, O.D. Low Vision Optometrist

516-794-0704

www.SchoenbartVisionCare.com


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▼ REAL ESTATE, SERVICE DIRECTORY Wanted to Buy

Tag Sale

TOP CASH PAID: JEWELRY, Furniture, Art, etc. Please call 718598-3045 or 516-270-2128. www. iBuyAntiquesNYC.com

HICKSVILLE AMAZING TAG SALE! CHILDREN’S ITEMS Saturday 3/19 10:30am-2:00pm Parkway Community Church 95 Stewart Ave (lower level) Clothing, shoes, toys, accessories, bedding and more!! A variety of exciting vendors will be there as well.

Tag Sale *BROWSE *SHOP *CONSIGN A.T. STEWART EXCHANGE CONSIGNMENT SHOP 109 Eleventh Street Garden City 11530 516-746-8900 China, Silver, Crystal, Jewelry, Artwork, Furniture, Antiques, Collectibles Tues-Fri 10-4 Sat 12-4 Every Tuesday: 10% Senior Citizen Discount. All proceeds benefit The Garden City Historical Society email: store@ atstewartexchange.org www.gardencityhistoricalsociety. org INVITED SALES BY TRACY JORDAN 839 Stewart Ave Garden City, NY 11530 516-279-6378 www.invitedsales.com Open 7 Days! Mon, Tues, Wed, Fri 10-6 Thurs 10-4 Saturday 10-5 Sunday 12-5 Consignments by Appointment Estate Sale and Tag Sale services available to liquidate the contents of your home. Call 516279-6378 for a consultation. LIVE AUCTIONS are held monthly. You can place items on auction by scheduling an appointment to bring your items in to the shoppe for consideration. Email pictures to be considered for consignment or auction to info@invitedsales. com Invited Sales also offers TRUCK SERVICES to move your items to or from your home or office to the consignment shoppe to sell on your behalf, and help clean out your home, attic or garage! Check out our website at: www. invitedsales.com for special sales and shopping events, tag sales, auctions and more!!

YOU’RE INVITED! Friday, March 18 9:30 am 244-35 85th Road Bellerose, NY 1426 Packed house and basement, collectibles, lighting, vintage items and furniture including bar ware, 50’s mid-century items and many tools. Visit www.invitedsales. com for pictures and details! YOU’RE INVITED! Tuesday, March 15 9:30 am 33 New Hyde Park Rd Garden City, NY 11530 Beautifully decorated home selling contents including furniture and decorative items, household, artwork, garage items, packed attic and more... Visit www.invitedsales.com for pictures and details!

pets

Pet Services A GARDEN CITY ANIMAL LOVER doesn’t want to leave your precious pooch or fantastic feline alone all day. I’m reliable, dependable and will walk and feed your pet while you work or travel. Please call Cheryl at 516-505-9717 DO YOU HATE KENNELS? OR STRANGERS IN YOUR HOUSE? HOME AWAY FROM HOME will care for your dog in my Garden City home while you are away. Dog walking also available. Pet CPR & first Aid Certified. Numerous referrals and references. Limited availability. Book early! Annmarie 516-775-4256

PROFESSIONAL DOG TRAINING

Apartment For Rent

Doggie Day Care Boarding Dog Walking Mobile Socialization Program Backyard Clean-up GC Resident 516382-5553

GARDEN CITY Large 1 Bed, New EIK Immediate $2200 Four Rooms, 2 Bed, updated Kitchen and Bath $2800 up Five rooms, 3 Bed, 2 Full Baths, Many Extras $3400 up Many other rentals available!! GARDEN CITY PROPERTIES 516-746-1563

automotive

Autos Wanted DONATE YOUR CAR to Wheels For Wishes, benefitting Makea-Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call 631-317-2014 Today!

Real estate for rent

Apartment For Rent GARDEN CITY Large 1 Bed, New EIK Immediate $2200 Four rooms, 2 Bed, updated Kitchen & Bath $2,800 up Five rooms, 3 Bed, 2 Full Baths, Many Extras $3,400 up Many other rentals available!! GARDEN CITY PROPERTIES 516-746-1563 GARDEN CITY PARK: 1st floor, private bedroom and bath, full use of basement with separate washer​/ ​d ryer, share kitchen, $1,100 utilities included. Move right in! Jill 516-354-4340

Office Space GARDEN CITY SOUTH Ideal location, mint, large office space, 1st floor. Must see to appreciate. Near LIRR, stores. Available now. $1,475​/​mth. Call Owner 516-5387474 or 538-7476 WILLISTON PARK Office Space: 2000 sf. available on Hillside Ave. Professional Building. Parking Lot, near LIRR & parkways. Full commission paid. Tony 516-248-4080

Vacation Rental OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND Best selection of affordable rentals. Full​ /​partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Resort Services. 1-800-638-2102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com

Real estate for sale

service directory

Lots for Sale

Services

CATSKILL FARM LIQUIDATION! March 12 & 13! Lender ordered! 5 to 39 acre tracts. Foreclosure prices! Mountain views, streams, ponds, gorgeous setting just 2.5 hours from GW Bridge. Terms available! Call 888-905-8847 to register or go to NewYorkLandandlakes.com

NEED A CLEANOUT OR A MOVE? We can move it or haul it away! 2 Guys and a Truck 2 Hours for $200 Call 516-279-6378 839 Stewart Ave Garden City, NY 11530 www.invitedsales.com

UPSTATE NY LAND BARGAIN! 11 acres. Stream, pond $39,900. Beautiful woods, long rd frontage, utils, EZ drive from NYC! Terms avail. Call 888-479-3394 NOW

NEW YORK MARRIAGE AND FAMILY THERAPISTS: Joan Atwood, Ph.D. An experienced therapist makes all the difference. Individual, couple, family therapy and anger management. 516-764-2526. jatwood@optonline.net www.NYMFT.com

Out Of Town Real Estate

Home Improvements

FLORIDA EXCLUSIVE GATED COMMUNITY Corner lot, pristine 3BR, 2.5 Bath in prestigious Sugar Mill Country Club​​New Smyrna Beach. Located on 27 hole golf course w/ water & golf course views. Minutes to Daytona Int’l Airport & beaches. $334,900 Contact Patsy Bradley, Watson Realty, 386-689-4849

AMBIANCE PROFESSIONAL SERVICES *Repairs & Maintenance *Handyman & Remodeling *Kitchen Installations *Furniture Assembly *Finish Carpentry *Minor Electrical & Plumbing 23year GC Resident Lic & Ins H18E2170000 Call BOB 516-741-2154

Real estate wanted

Homes Wanted HOUSE WANTED TO BUY: Good or bad condition to build or fix. Fast closing. Call George 516-972-8787

DEVLIN BUILDERS Since 1979. We do all types of improvements including HANDYMAN REPAIRS. No job too small. Bob Devlin 516-3656685. Insured License H18C730000 GRACE ROOFING: Est. 1977. slate, tile flat roofs, asphalt and wood shingle roofs, gutters and leaders cleaned and replaced, professional new roof installation. Free estimates, expert leak repairs. lic​ /​ins, local references, residential​/​ commerical 516-753-0268

Advertising Sales Executive Blank Slate Media Blank Slate Media, a fast-growing chain of 6 award-winning weekly newspapers and website, is looking for an energetic, service-oriented professional with good communications skills to sell display, web and email advertising. Earn up to $60,000 in the first-year representing the 6 Blank Slate Media publications and website as well the 5 publications and 1 website owned by Blank Slate’s sales partner, Litmor Publications. We are looking for an enthusiastic and service-oriented sales professional with good communication skills. Requirements: Minimum of 2 years outside sales experience. Newspaper sales experience a plus. Must have your own car. • Exclusive, protected territory • Opportunity to sell both print and online programs • A collegial, supportive sales team • Award-winning editorial coverage. • A separate newspaper for each community allowing advertisers to target their markets. And you to provide the most cost-effective way to advertise. • Represent media that produce superior response for clients. Compensation • Salary plus commission • Health insurance • Paid holidays • Sick days & holidays

To apply, e-mail your resume and cover letter to sblank@theislandnow.com or call Steve at 516.307-1045 x201 for more information.


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service directory ▼ Home Improvements LAMPS FIXED $65 In home service. Handy Howard 646-996-7628 ONE STOP FOR ALL YOUR HOME improvement needs! Basement, bathroom & kitchen remodeling, carpentry, crown molding, closets, doors, sheetrock, painting, dry wall, repairs, spackling & wall paper removal and installation, decks power washed, stained and built. Gem Basement Doctor 516623-9822. www.gem-home.com SKY CLEAR WINDOW and Restorations Inc. Window Restorations, Outdated Hardware, skylights, Andersen Sashes, new storm windows, wood windows, chain​/​rope repairs, falling windows, fogged panes, mechanical repairs, wood repairs, restorations, all brands. Call Mr. Fagan, 32 years experience. 631-385-7975 www.skyclearwindow.com

Painting & Paperhanging JV PAINT HANDYMAN SERVICES Interior-Exterior Specialist Painting, Wallpapering, Plastering, Spackling, Staining, Power Washing. Nassau Lic#H3814310000 fully Insured Call John 516-741-5378

Party Help LADIES & GENTLEMEN RELAX & ENJOY Your Next Party! Catering and Experienced Professional Services for Assisting with Preparation, Serving and Clean Up Before, During and After Your Party Bartenders Available. Call Kate at 516-248-1545

Tutoring BAR​/ BAT MITZVAH LESSONS Take the struggle and hassle out of Hebrew and Bar​/​Bat Mitzvah lessons. Michael Marcus Bar and Bat Mitzvah Tutoring and Services. Call 516-524-0191 email michael@ barbatmitzvahlessons.com ENGLISH TUTOR: Diane Gottlieb M.Ed., M.S.W. SAT​/​ACT, College Essays, AP, Regents, ELA Test Prep, Reading comprehension and writing proficiency. 917-5998007 or email: dianegot@gmail. com LongIslandEnglishTutor.com Providing one-on-one professional support to build confidence, knowledge and skills in every student. MATH, SAT, ACT TUTOR: Algebra, Geometry, Algebra 2 plus Trig, Pre-Calc, AP Calculus. Norm 625-3314 ENGLISH, ACT, SAT TUTOR: 25+ year experience Critical Reading, Writing, Grammar, Essays. Lynne 625-3314 SPANISH TUTOR: High School​ /​Middle School, College. Spanish Grammar-Literature, SAT II, AP Exam. William Cullen, M.A., M.B.A., S.D.A. Chaminade, Fairfield Alumnus. 516-509-8174 wdctutor06@aol.com STOCK MARKET TUTOR: Retired banker and experienced stock market trader available for tutoring high school students on the stock market. Should have some knowledge of the market. Adults welcome. Text​/​call Ron Goldberg 516-567-8434

Instruction PIANO LESSONS By Ira Baslow. Experience the joy of playing the piano. Private lessons in your home, free no-obligation piano lesson, all levels, all styles, all ages. Beginners a specialty. 516-312-1054 www.iwantmypianolessons.com

Cleaning CLEANING HOME​​OFFICE: Weekly, monthly since 1979. Insured​ / bonded. Trusted​/ reliable. Call Olympia Cleaning 516-883-0359 EVON’S SERVICES We offer the following services: Companions, Home Health Aides​/​Elder Care Child Care and Housekeeping

Laborers Days / Nights Live In or Live Out NO FEE TO EMPLOYERS Call: 516-505-5510 STRONG ARM CLEANING: Residential and commercial cleaning specialist, post construction clean ups, shipping and waxing floors, move ins and move outs. Free estimates. Bonded and insured. 516-538-1125 www.strongarmcleaningny.com

Services A & J MOVING & STORAGE: Established 1971. Long Island and New York State specialists. Residential, Commercial, Piano & Organ experts. Boxes available. Free estimates. www.ajmoving.com 516-741-2657 114 Jericho Tpk, Mineola NYDOT# 10405 COLLEGE ARTS ADMISSIONS: College Counseling in the Visual and Performing Arts. Dance, Musical Theatre & Drama. Film, Instrumental & Vocal Music. Audio Recording & Production. Theatre Technology & Production. Visual & Graphic Arts. Resume, Essays, Repertoire Lists. Michele Zimmerman. 516-353-6255 CollegeArtsAdmissions@gmail.com www. CollegeArtsAdmissions.com

Herald C To place a legal noticeGreat N in one of Manhas

Blank Slate Media’s 1 0 5 H i l l s i d e Av e n u e , S u i t e I , W i l l i s t o 6 weekly newspapers, please call 516-307-1045 x201 or e-mail us at legals@theislandnow.com Prompt service, low prices, convenient deadlines, easy-to-understand instructions and free online distribution and affadavits guaranteed.

COMPLETE JUNK REMOVAL​/​DEMOLITION SERVICE: Strong Arm Contracting Inc. We haul anything and everything. Entire contents of home or office. We clean it up and take it away. Residential​/​Commercial. Bonded​/​Insured. Free estimates. 516-538-1125

Herald Great N Manha

OLD VILLAGE TREE SERVICE: Owner operated sine 1989. 24 hour emergency service. Licensed​/​insured. Free estimates, member LI Arborist Assoc. Please call 516-466-9220 TAX PREPARATION by Maria Passariello. Registered IRS & NYS Tax Preparer. We make house calls! New client discount 10%. 25 years experience. Available all ye ar, appointments 7 days. 516-9843328 or mptax1040@gmail.com WOULD YOU LIKE TO LEARN TO manage your own money? Would you like to avoid large brokerage houses with their high fees? Learn how to set up and manage your portfolio. Learn the reasons for asset allocation and diversification. Learn how to apply it to your specific situation. Protect yourself in case of a financial crisis. I have no incentive and no control over your money. I strictly give advice; I do not sell any financial products. 917-453-0703. Email helpwithwealthnow.com

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78 The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

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Floral Park wins county hoop crown By N o a h M a n s k a r With a 23-1 record and a Long Island championship, Floral Park Memorial High School’s girls basketball team has made major gains this season. But the Lady Knights’ sights were set on the state title this week as they prepared to leave for Troy to play in the state tournament. “I would say I’m happy, but I’m not satisfied ...,” senior point guard and team captain Kaela Hilaire said. “I really don’t think we’re done yet.” Seeded No. 2 in the Nassau County championship tournament, the Lady Knights beat the No.1-seeded Elmont Memorial High School Spartans Feb. 27 60-49 in a Sewanhaka district matchup. Hilaire, a South Floral Park resident who’s bound for the University of Albany on a full athletic scholarship, scored 37 points. Floral Park went on to beat Islip High School Buccaneers 62-53 in the Long Island championship March 5, earning a spot in the state tournament. “I feel we have every piece of the puzzle to compete with anybody,” Coach Michael Spina said. The team has been preparing to take on the state contest since the fall, playing in tournaments and against toplevel schools before the regular season started, Spina said. The Lady Knights’ sole loss to North Shore High School’s Panthers came in December. North Shore has become a rival for the team, junior forward Natalie Hickman said. The Panthers beat the Lady Knights in the Nassau County semifinals last year, knocking them out of the tournament. But Floral Park “avenged” this year’s defeat by beating North Shore at home in January by a 12-point margin, Spina said. “Everything since that, we’ve been on a roll,” he said. “All the things we’ve done, as far as (non-league games) and our style of play — everything and everybody has picked up their goals.” Hilaire, 18, has proven a “dynamic player” Floral Park’s opponents have to watch, Spina said. Hilaire said she felt she had more to work for this year after an early exit from the playoffs last year. “I didn’t want to leave here without getting some type of championship,” she said. But Hickman, 16, could prove a secret weapon for the Lady Knights as a power forward who can rebound well and make three-point shots, Spina said. Hickman, a Floral Park resident, was a backup for her sister, Lorraine, until she became injured last year, Spina said. She felt a lot of pressure to fill her sister’s shoes, but she “just took (her) own path,” she said. Hilaire said she helps the team bond as captain and has individual conversations with her teammates to encourage them. That closeness helps the Lady Knights take on their opponents, Hickman said, and could lead them to the state championship. “We already have the chemistry, so we just have to perform, and if we do that, we’ll come out on top,” she said. The Lady Knights will play the Rye High School Garnets in the state semifinal at 3:15 p.m. March 11 at Hudson Valley Community College in Troy. The winner will play in the championship Saturday evening.

Photos courtesy of the Sewanhaka Central High School district

Floral Park Memorial High School’s Lady Knights are hoping to cap a 23-1 regular season with a state championship. They play the Rye High School Garnets at 3:15 p.m. March 11 at Hudson Valley Community College


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The Roslyn Times, Friday, March 11, 2016

79

End of the road for LIU Post Pioneers Dotson, Hall lead team to first round win before bowing out to St. Thomas Aquinas By M i c h a e l Ot e r o The fourth-seeded LIU Post men’s basketball team came out on top on Wednesday, March 2, against fifth-seeded University of Bridgeport in the first round of the East Coast Conference Championship (ECC) at the Pratt Recreation Center in Brookville, N.Y. The 73-68 overtime victory sent the Pioneers to the ECC semifinals, where they met up with St. Thomas Aquinas College in Washington D.C. In the Bridgeport game, the Pioneers trailed 59-51 with less than three minutes in regulation, but a 9-1 run tied the game at 60. Junior guard Jared Hall had the clutch shot of the run and of the night; knocking down a game-tying trey with a minute and a half left. Hall had a chance to win the game for the Pioneers in regulation, but his walk-off attempt did not fall. In overtime, the Pioneers fell behind early, but were brought back to life when senior guard Dillon Burns hit a go-ahead three pointer to kick start an 11-2 burst. After Burns’ field goal, junior forward Barrington Alston brought the house down with a powerful two-handed dunk over a Bridgeport defender that helped propel LIU Post to the win. For the match, junior forward Greg Dotson had a team-high 22 points on 50 percent shooting from the field and also grabbed nine rebounds. In addition to Hall’s clutch shooting, he poured in 17 points and also inhaled five rebounds and dished out two assists. Burns racked up 11 points, five boards and four assists, while Alston added seven points and seven rebounds to his stat line. As a team, the Pioneers got extra possessions with their work on offense. As

March 5, the Pioneers suffered an 85-58 loss. With the victory, the Spartans from St. Thomas won their 19th consecutive game while the Pioneers finish their season with an 18-12 record. Early on, the Pioneers held their own against St. Thomas, mainly because of the efforts from Dotson, who scored six straight points in the game’s opening minutes. With the Pioneers trailing 16-13, senior guard Akosa Maduebugnum nailed a triple to even up the score, but that was the last time the Pioneers held the lead. A 7-2 run after that three pointer shook the confidence of the Pioneers and a later 9-0 run led to the Spartan lead ballooning to 13 at the break. In the second half, the Pioneers couldn’t right the ship and the Spartans took advantage; extending their lead to as much as 20. The Spartans were led by a quartet of double-digit scorers; the high man being junior guard Chaz Watler, who poured in 15. For the Pioneers, Dotson was the top dog in the scoring department with a team-high 19 points, while Hall added 13 of his own. As a team, the Pioneers don’t have to look far to see why they lost this game. They lost the turnover battle by a wide margin and failed to stop the Spartans from getting out in transition. The PioThe LIU Post Pioneers’ season came to an end in the second round of the ECC neers committed 24 turnovers and alTournament against St. Thomas Aquinas College Saturday. lowed 26 fast break points. a result, they outscored Bridgeport 15-4 bounds and three steals. Bridgeport shot This is the third consecutive year that in second chance points. The Pioneers’ just 33 percent from the floor, but kept St. Thomas Aquinas College has knocked dominance down low didn’t stop on the themselves in the game because of their out LIU Post in the ECC Tournament and offense either; they scored 32 of their 73 efficiency from behind the arc and their subsequently ended their season. points from the paint and limited Bridge- ability to force turnovers on defense. This article was originally published Unfortunately for Bridgeport, it wasn’t in the Pioneer, the award-winning student port to 10 points. Bridgeport was led by junior guard enough to upend the Pioneers. newspaper of LIU Post, www.liupostpioneer. But, in their matchup against St. com, and is republished here by Blank Slate Devon Elliot, who scored 18 points on CHERRY - 1-8 Page GENERAL 08-28-15_Layout 1 8/25/15 12:04 PM Page 1 18 shots. He also contributed five re- Thomas Aquinas College on Saturday, Media with the permission of the Pioneer.

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