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jscotchie@antonmediagroup.com
The Roslyn community remains in shock after an accident in Jericho claimed the lives of two Roslyn athletes.
The Nassau County Police Department Homicide Squad reported a fatal vehicular accident that occurred on Wednesday, May 3 at 10:21 p.m. on North Broadway in Jericho.
According to detectives, a 2019 Dodge Ram operated by a male 34, was traveling southbound in the northbound lanes and collided with a 2019 Alpha Romero 4-door sedan occupied by four male juveniles.
As a result of the collision, two male juveniles, both 14, suffered fatal injuries and were pronounced dead at scene. They were both from Roslyn, and their names were Drew Hassenbein and Ethan Falkowitz. The two additional males, ages 16 and 17, were taken to a local hospital and admitted for internal injuries but are currently listed in stable condition.
After the initial collision, Alpha Romero then additionally struck a 2023 Volvo, occupied by a 49-year-old female and her 16-year-old male passenger. They were treated at scene for minor injuries and released. The driver of the 2019 Dodge Ram, defendant Amandeep Singh, 34, of Roslyn, was arrested and transported to a local hospital for minor injuries. Defendant Amandeep Singh is being charged with aggravated vehicular homicide, vehicular manslaughter in the first degree, manslaughter in the second degree, leaving the scene of an auto accident with a fatality, driving while intoxicated and two counts of assault in the second degree. He was arraigned on Thursday, May 4 at the First District Court, 99 Main Street, Hempstead.
“The male subject tried to leave the scene on foot,” said Det. Capt. Stephen Fitzpatrick, chief of homicide for the Nassau County Police Department. Local officials were quick to send their condolences.
“I think this is the saddest day we have ever had in Roslyn. Two exceptional young men are gone and we now mourn their loss,” said Roslyn Mayor John Durkin. “There is no need for me to go over details, I am sure we are all aware of the circumstances. The collective heart of Roslyn is broken. I know that we will keep Ethan, Drew and their families in our thoughts and prayers and as a community surround the Falkowitz and Hassenbein families with loving support. Let us just try to all stay a little bit closer and be mindful of each other, knowing we are all Roslyn family.”
“Our community is devastated by the horrific loss of two aspiring teenage boys,” said Sandy K. Quentzel, mayor of Roslyn Harbor. “We offer our deepest condolences to the Hassenbein and Falkowitz families.”
“The loss of any child is an unimaginable tragedy that Clare and I know only too well,” said Paul Leone Peters, mayor of Roslyn Estates. “When that loss is the
consequence of such a heinous act, the pain is intolerable. No words can explain or comfort; no deeds can soothe; no prayers can bring them back. What we can do is never forget those two boys, no matter how many years pass, and no matter how normal that un-fillable hole in their parents’ lives becomes. We grieve with them and with the entire Roslyn community.”
On Friday, May 5, the Roslyn School District issued a brief statement on the tragedy.
“The tragic passing of two of our Roslyn Middle School students is a tremendous loss for their families, friends, and our school community. The district extends our deepest condolences and asks that everyone respect the families right to grieve privately during this very difficult time. District psychologists, guidance counselors, and social workers are available at each of our schools to provide any needed support for students, staff and families.
We wish a speedy and complete recovery to our two Roslyn High School students in the hospital. Our hearts are broken.”
Last Thursday, May 4, was the most remarkable day in the history of Roslyn.
Hundreds of local residents traveled to Hempstead to attend the arraignment of a Roslyn man charged with taking the lives of two Roslyn youths during an automobile accident in Jericho. The outpouring of support was courageous and poignant.
The Falkowitz family has organized an online fundraiser on the website GoFundMe to raise money for causes Ethan was passionate about.
“Ethan was killed this week when a drunk driver struck the car he was in,” the GoFundMe stated. “Ethan’s entire family is so appreciative of the outpouring of love and support and know many of you have asked how you can help. Ethan cared so
much about helping others, so to continue his legacy, we’re starting a GoFundMe to benefit all the causes Ethan cared so much about.”
The Hassenbein family has also organized a GoFundMe to make a difference in the tennis community, something Drew was passionate about. According to the family, the Roslyn High School tennis team was just celebrating a huge victory where Drew won his match at first singles.
“Our family is devastated by his loss and is so appreciative of the incredible outpouring of support and people’s desire to help,” the GoFundMe stated. “A 5013c is in the process of being set up, but we have created this page in the meantime to honor Drew’s passion for tennis and make a difference in the tennis community. Our goal is to expose underprivileged kids to tennis by providing lessons and scholarships to help the next USA Tennis champion reach their dream. Drew was a former #1 nationally-ranked boys player in the 12s, and with your help, Drew’s love of tennis will live on and help develop the next champion. Please help however you can.”
—Additional information provided by the Nassau County Police Department.
The collective heart of Roslyn is broken. I know that we will keep Ethan, Drew and their families in our thoughts and prayers and as a community surround the Falkowitz and Hassenbein families with loving support.-Mayor John Durkin Drew Hassenbein. (Photo courtesy the Hassenbein family via GoFundMe) Ethan Falkowitz. (Photo courtesy the Falkowitz family via GoFundMe)
To celebrate Earth Day on Saturday, April 22, the Town of North Hempstead announced environmental initiatives recently passed by the town board. The town board voted unanimously to add electric vehicle charging stations at facilities throughout the town and to require the installation of water-efficient fixtures in all town projects.
The North Hempstead town board recently voted unanimously to amend an agreement with Blink Charging Co. to install Level 2 EV and DC charging stations at facilities throughout the town. The stations will be installed in the Mary Jane Davies Green parking lot, the Clinton G. Martin Park parking lot, Port Washington Public Park District Lot 4, and the Michael J. Tully Park parking lot. This initiative was spearheaded by Councilmember Veronica Lurvey as part of her GoGreen environmental initiatives.
“This is an incredible opportunity for the Town of North Hempstead to increase accessibility to electric vehicle charging stations for our residents,” said Councilmember Lurvey. “This initiative was spearheaded by the Climate Smart Communities Task Force, and I was proud to bring it to the Board. By adding these charging stations, we are furthering our goals of creating a more sustainable, resilient, and green future. It is my hope that this will also incentivize North Hempstead’s residents to transition to electric vehicles.”
The town first undertook the process of issuing a request for proposals to add electric vehicle charging stations in North Hempstead in December 2020. In early 2021, the town analyzed the qualified proposals, and the town board unanimously voted on Nov. 18, 2021 to approve an agreement with Blink Charging to help facilitate this initiative. This latest amendment approves the locations in which the charging stations will be installed.
The installation of these fast-charging stations will be at no cost to taxpayers. Revenue from the charging stations will be shared with the town. The town will work with the community and Blink Charging to explore future charging location sites which may include local town parks, downtown areas, and transportation hubs.
Blink Charging is a leader in electric vehicle (EV) charging equipment and networked EV charging stations, enabling EV drivers to easily charge at any of its 23,000 deployed charging locations worldwide.
The Town of North Hempstead unanimously voted to establish a new town policy requiring the installation of water-efficient
fixtures in all town projects. This action aligns with North Hempstead’s Municipal Climate Action Plan, which outlines
strategies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and mitigate the impacts of climate change.
Councilmember Peter Zuckerman, who presented the resolution, stated, “This measure will help to ensure that North Hempstead is conserving water and reducing its carbon footprint. We are proud to find new ways to increase our energy efficiency and reduce our water usage.”
“This policy serves as a significant step towards reducing the negative impacts of climate change,” said Councilmember Lurvey. “By conserving water, we can promote a sustainable future for generations to come.”
The new policy will require all town projects to use WaterSense labeled products, a program developed by the Environmental Protection Agency to make it easier to find water efficient products and to serve as a resource to help save water.
In March, the town unanimously adopted a Climate Action Plan, which included a multitude of actions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to the changing climate within its municipal operations as well as a goal to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 20 percent. The plan was developed in collaboration with the Town’s Climate Smart Communities Task Force.
—Information provided by the Town of North Hempstead
The Village of East Hills continues its club-like events group for middle school and high school students with special needs. The program was founded and implemented by Supervising Trustee Clara Pomerantz. The Student Chair is Emma Cohen.
“It is a beautiful sight to see these teens smiling, having fun, and enjoying each other’s company,” Poimerantz said. “I thank Mayor Koblenz for his support and encouragement.”
The program involves high school students socializing with special needs children, both one-on-one and as a whole group. Together, they play games, and enjoy arts and crafts, music, and much more. The students earn necessary community service hours while making a difference in children’s lives as well as their own.
The program is held monthly at the Village of East Hills Theater and is open to anyone who wants to join. Any questions, feel free to email Clara at ccpomer@aol.com. The next fun-filled meeting will be held on Sunday, May 21, at 10:45 to 11:45 a.m.
—Submitted by the Village of East Hills
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The Town of North Hempstead unanimously voted to appoint Kristen Schwaner as the Town’s new Comptroller, effective April 25. Schwaner is a Certified Public Accountant, with more than 15 years of experience in finance and accounting.
“I am very pleased that the Town has officially appointed Kristen Schwaner as Town Comptroller,” Town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena said. “North Hempstead has been without a formally appointed Comptroller since before my first day in office almost 16 months ago, but after an extensive search process, I believe that Ms. Schwaner will be an excellent addition to our Town staff and will work hard to fulfill my administration’s mandate of protecting
our taxpayers’ wallets. Now that this has been accomplished, I look forward to working with Ms. Schwaner as we move to bring on capable and qualified deputies to fill out our Comptroller Department management team.”
“We are thrilled to have Kristen as our new comptroller,” said Councilmember Veronica Lurvey. “With her wealth of experience in both finance and accounting, I believe that our Town will benefit greatly from her expertise. Her exceptional qualifications make her a perfect fit for this role, and I am confident that she will excel in her duties.”
“The opportunity to serve as the Comptroller of the Town of North Hempstead is both an honor and a
North Hempstead Town Supervisor
Jennifer DeSena, the Town Board and the Clark Botanic Garden Auxiliary are pleased to present the Annual Spring Plant Sale at Clark Botanic Garden on Friday, May 12 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturday, May 13 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The sale will feature annuals, perennials, herbs, shrubs, hanging baskets, trees, native plants, vegetables and houseplants for purchase. The plant sale raises money for the Fanny Dwight Clark Memorial Garden, Inc.
Collections at the garden include native spring wildflowers, conifers, roses, perennials, daylilies, wetland plants, rock garden plants, herbs, butterfly plants, medicinal plants, and more than a dozen collections of plant families.
The Plant Sale will also feature:
• Twice Loved Jewelry & Accessories
• Art Exhibit
• Clark Coffee Café featuring refreshments from Serendipitea & Mongo Coffee and treats (including gluten-free) from local bakers
• Garden Gift Shop
• Taste NY Booth
• Raffles
Celebrating its tenth anniversary, Taste NY will have a booth at the plant
sale exclusively featuring Long Island products. Locally curated items will be on display and available for purchase.
Founded in 1969, Clark Botanic Garden is a 12-acre living museum and educational facility dedicated to understanding and appreciating the world’s plant life through horticulture, education and research. It is located at 193 I. U. Willets Road in Albertson.
Admission to the plant sale is free and only cash or checks will be accepted when purchasing plants. All proceeds will benefit the Fanny Dwight Clark Memorial Garden, Inc. The plant sale is rain or shine. For more information, please call 311 or 516-869-6311.
—Submitted by the Town of North Hempstead
responsibility that I do not take lightly. I am excited to be part of the Town Board’s leadership team, ensuring fiscal responsibility, transparency, and accountability. Together, we will strive to make North Hempstead an even better place to live, work, and raise a family,” said Kristen Schwaner.
Schwaner previously held positions at Sight Growth Partners, New YorkPresbyterian, and ProHEALTH Medical Management. She has also held senior positions at EY and Marcum. She holds a Bachelor’s degree in Accounting from the Frank G. Zarb School of Business at Hofstra University.
—Submitted by the Town of North Hempsead
North Hempstead Town Supervisor Jennifer DeSena and the Town Board are proud to announce that the Town’s Animal Shelter will be hosting a free rabies vaccination clinic in conjunction with the Nassau County Department of Health. The clinic will be held at the Town of North Hempstead Animal Shelter in Port Washington on Saturday, May 6 from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Rabies vaccines will be available to dogs and cats, as well as ferrets. You do not have to be a resident of North Hempstead for your pet to receive a free
rabies vaccine. North Hempstead officials will also offer on-the-spot dog licensing applications and renewals to North Hempstead residents.
Owners must bring their dogs on leashes and their cats and ferrets in carriers. Registration is required. The North Hempstead Animal Shelter is located at 75 Marino Ave. in Port Washington. To make a reservation, or if you have any questions, please call 311 or 516-869-6311.
—Submitted by the Town of North Hempstead
To place an item in this space, send information two weeks before the event to editors@antonmediagroup.com. .................
Meet Noah the Rabbit
From 2 to 3 p.m., the library will host a Noah the Rabbit family event. Thinking of getting a pet bunny? Learn everything about indoor house rabbits from whiskers to cottontails before you decide if this 10-12 year commitment is a good fit for your family. Find out more about pet rabbit rescue, fostering, and adoption. Meet local spokesbunny Noah for answers to many of your questions about rabbit care. The program presented by Long Island Rabbit Rescue Group volunteers. Online registration required. Contact Children’s Services at 516-621-2240 kids@bryantlibrary.org. .................
SUNDAY, MAY 14
Director’s Talk: The Great Collectors
On Sunday, May 14 at 3 p.m. at the Nassau County Museum of Art. Free for members, $20 for non-members. Their names
are literally carved in stone: Frick, Morgan, Barnes, Guggenheim, Freer, Marmotton, Maurits, Tate and Medici among others. They are the grand acquisitors whose passionate pursuit of art has defined what museums are today. They trace their roots to ancient and powerful forebears including Catherine the Great, Pope Julius II and Napoleon. The
story continues not just with Shin, whose possessions adorn our walls, but such “mega-collectors” of our day as Charles Saatchi and Bernard Arnault. The lecture will look into their lives and motives, with juicy anecdotes about the relentless (and sometimes unscrupulous) hunt for trophy masterworks. Please register in advance. The museum is at One Museum Drive, Roslyn.
Yoga Class
From 9:30 to 10:30 a.m., the library will present a yoga class. To participate, you must register for the full session. Refunds and/
or discounts will not be offered for missed classes. Checks can be made out to The Bryant Library with the class of your choice written on the notes line.
Focus On Fixed Income
From 1 to 2 p.m., the library will present a program on fixed incomes. Join licensed financial advisor Vincent Sama to learn the basics of fixed income investments, the seven characteristics of, the advantages of laddering, and how fixed income may be a part of your investment strategy.
Happiness, Self-fulfillment & Success: Principles to Inspire This program takes place at the library from 6 to 7 p.m. Whether you are going through a difficult situation, dealing with general anxiety, stress or experiencing some internal struggle, Clinical Art Therapist, Deborah Adler will share various techniques and creative methodology to promote happiness and success in your life. She will apply the principles based on yogi and spiritual Guru Deepak Choprah to her own concepts and philosophies. Deborah hopes she can inspire you, brighten your outlook, help you regain perspective or help you
ultimately live a happier, more hopeful and gratified life.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 17
More Tech One-on-One
Do you need help with setting up Kanopy, Hoopla or Libby, or do you have questions about Microsoft Office, PowerPoint, Google Drive or need help with basic computer questions? You can make an appointment with the library’s tech staff. Each session is for 30 minutes. To register, visit thr website at www.bryantlibrary.org and click on Programs or call the Reference Desk at (516) 621-2240 ext. 241. The event takes place from 11 to 11:30 a.m.
FOR BOARD OF EDUCATION - VOTE TUESDAY, MAY 16th
7 AM to 9 PM – Manhasset High School Gym
THE EXPERIENCE, PROVEN COMPETENCE & DEDICATON WE NEED
Proven record in business advisory & finance combined with governance skills developed through service to churchcommunity & on university board of trustees
PUTTING EDUCATION FIRST
Expandedcurricular & extracurricular options, maintaining high standards in education
New electives in Engineering sequence and Broadcast Journalism
Expanded AP options including Human Geography, Art History, and Capstone r esearch program
HIGH QUALITY EDUCATION AND FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY
24th in NYS Public Schools 2022
Budgets within NYS tax levy cap
2.07% average 15-year levy increase
aolsen@antonmediagroup.com
While the housing portion of the New York State budget seems to be tabled for now, housing and urban planning are ongoing issues. According to the Regional Plan Association, a non-profit organization that does research, planning, and advocacy for transportation, housing, planning and environmental issues in the tristate area, New York State will need to build over 800,000 housing units during the next ten years to address current needs and meet expected population and job growth. People need places to reside, and it’s generally better if they are able to do so near the places where they spend the rest of their time- their places of employment, schools, retail and recreation. Careful planning can result in settings that are beneficial to residents, the community, and the environment.
“(Locating) your doctor, your lawyer, where you get your groceries, fresh food, all within walking distance or within a short commute has been a planning principle for a long while. It does have a number of positive effects in terms of the livelihood of a neighborhood; the livelihood of a place makes it more attractive, it also can lead to a positive effect on property values. It also has a net effect on congestion because people don’t have to drive a couple miles just to get a quart of milk or whatever. They can do that if they can just walk a few blocks and not having to get into their car,” said Marcel Negret, Senior Planner at the RPA.
When people think of compact or high-density housing, they often think of examples like tall skyscrapers. Frequently, though, housing can be added through the application of adaptive use. This is where existing structures are modified. Examples include where a lower story has commercial space, like a store or restaurant, while the upper stories are housing units. These are sometimes called “middle density,” a unit of housing that is often missing in many parts of Long Island. “So, there’s something in between the large, high rise, multifamily buildings, a skyscraper, and low density, single family residential neighborhoods, with the detached units. There’s a lot in between. Mixed use buildings that have like some form of commercial use on the first floor, maybe two, three stories above with residential, that would fit the description of kind of middle density, that in many cases is
kind of just missing because we either have one extreme or the other,” said Negret.
There is also potential for these mixed-use buildings to plan their utilities and HVAC systems in a more environmentally sound way, rather than retrofitting them later. There is even the possibility of growing food and managing stormwater runoff. “The category of mixed uses shouldn’t be limited to just combining commercial retail and residential, but also have other more functional, utility led uses like solar panels. In places where you have issues with managing stormwater runoff, you also can retrofit some of those spaces with some form of a green roof that captures some of that water and helps manage some of the limitations with our sewer infrastructure, for example. This idea of mixed uses probably fits that description
as well,” Negret said, when discussing how these mixed-use buildings fit into a more sustainable way of developing.
One of the biggest benefits of more carefully planned, compact development is the preservation of forests and open space. Since 2001, New York State has lost over 68,000 acres of forest land, with 94 perecnt of the lost forest (64,000 acres) attributed to sprawl, according to the National Land Cover database. Building in areas that are already urbanized, called “in-fill” development, is one solution to take pressure off undeveloped land. Negret puts it this way: “One of the other great benefits of favoring this type of planning of more compact, mixed uses clustered together is the preservation of natural areas, of forest land, of watersheds. You’re meeting those needs in this more
efficient form of urban clusters or suburban villages. In the context of Long Island, it mitigates or reduces kind of pressure for sprawling out and consuming existing open space or forest land or polluting watersheds.”
Even though most of the sprawl happened in the mid part of the of the last century, with the explosion of highways and car ownership, it has continued into the present day. “We looked at those kinds of consumption rates from forest land in the past 20 years, and they’re still concerning. It’s not something that has gone away, even though planners have realized that they want to shift gears to more compact forms of development. Unfortunately, sprawl is still happening and we’re losing forest land because of that,” said Negret. “Over the past two decades Nassau County has lost over 1,100 acres of forest land to sprawl, an area larger than all of Eisenhower Park. Promoting more compact forms of housing development in the region, and in our suburbs in particular, is a smart way to advance land conservation goals and preventing future loss of forest land and open space.”
Proactive planning allows communities to make decisions collectively about how their community develops. Without direction, the development still happens, but it isn’t as organized or deliberate. Negret points out that the default ends up being sprawl. “If there’s no proactive effort to prioritize these forms of more compact forms of development, that have mixed uses, that favor adaptive reuse, the default is you will have sprawl. Like the inaction or lack of proactivity in implemented planning ideas just will result in sprawl. So regardless of who is taking the lead, there is definitely a need for action.”
Long Beach resident Arthur Gold is among the first Peace Corps volunteers to return to overseas service since the agency’s unprecedented global evacuation in March 2020. The Peace Corps suspended global operations and evacuated nearly 7,000 volunteers from more than 60 countries at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“I’m looking forward to my second encore career,” said Gold. “My desire to join the Peace Corps stems from the joy of fulfillment I feel when I am able to facilitate and witness the success of others. In my role I hope to usefully contribute to the community and realize the adventure of new people, places, and culture.”
Gold is a 1984 graduate of the New York University Tandon School of Engineering, formerly known as Polytechnic Institute of New York, with a bachelor’s degree in industrial engineering. After graduation,
he worked in industrial engineering and economic development for the manufacturing sector, later becoming a certified personal trainer. Now, at 72 years old, Gold will serve as an education volunteer in the Eastern Caribbean.
The volunteer cohorts are made up of both first-time volunteers and volunteers who were evacuated in early 2020. Upon finishing a three-month training, volunteers will collaborate with their host communities on locally prioritized projects in one of Peace Corps’ six sectors – agriculture, community economic development, education, environment, health or youth in development – and all will engage in COVID-19 response and recovery work.
Currently, the agency is recruiting volunteers to serve in 58 countries around the world at the request of host country governments, to connect through
the Peace Corps’ grassroots approach across communities and cultures. Volunteers have already returned to a total of 53 countries around the world. At the invitation of governments around the world, Peace Corps volunteers work alongside community members on locally prioritized projects in the areas of education, health, environment, agriculture, community economic development and youth development. The Peace Corps continues to monitor COVID-19 trends in all of its host countries and will send volunteers to serve as conditions permit. Since President John F. Kennedy established the Peace Corps in 1961, more than 240,000 Americans have served in 143 countries worldwide. Americans interested in transformative service and lifelong connections should apply to Peace Corps service at www.peacecorps.gov/apply.
—Submitted by The Peace Corps
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Nassau County is facing a class-action lawsuit on behalf of all Black and Latino drivers in Nassau which alleges racial bias by the Nassau County Police Department in its execution of traffic stops.
The lawsuit, which seeks $40 million in damages, local policy changes, and oversight from a federal monitor to ensure reforms happen, is similar to one that began in Suffolk County eight years ago, and has required that county to both pay millions and better train its officers while releasing better data on how they enforce the law. A judge will later decide whether to certify the suit’s class-action status.
The suit’s lead plaintiff, Tivia Leith, originally filed suit against Nassau County last November following a traffic stop for which she was held 11 hours in police custody.
In response to a request for comment on the case, NCPD Detective Lieutenant Richard LeBrun said that the department does not comment on ongoing litigation.
Ms. Leith is being represented in the case by the Law Offices of Frederick K. Brewington, whose attorneys are well known on Long Island for civil rights work.
In a phone intervew with Anton Media Group, Frederick Brewington, Esq.
explained the background and aims of the case, which he said was originally brought on behalf of Ms. Leith and her minor son.
“After we looked at it, and after issues were raised by the defendants, the County of Nassau, at a conference with a federal judge, the determination to expand this case into a class action become fairly obvious to us,” Brewington said.
“We began to look at the numbers concerning traffic stops that had been made available through Nassau County. Their reporting is limited, and even with that limited view we saw that there was a disparate treatment of persons of color, of Black and brown individuals in Nassau County, with regard to the ratio of car stops to the total number of population, that was completely out of whack.”
“So, we made the determination that we needed to expand this to make sure that all those persons, like my client, who are impacted by Nassau’s determinations to disproportionately pull over Black and Latino people, are included, and that it would be aired in a courtroom where this issue can be addressed, because this appears to be an institutional, systemic issue.”
As Brewington noted, it was data from the Nassau County Police Department itself that indicated to his firm that something was amiss county-wide.
“Their data is incomplete, it does not give source information, it doesn’t give some
of the data that’s necessary to do other statistical evaluations, but just looking at the raw numbers that they provided it’s pretty clearly that something needs to be said and done about the way that they’re treating drivers, passengers, and other folks related to car stops in Nassau County.”
“Ms. Leith’s experience was, in a word, haunting. She has issues with anxiety to
begin with, and what this did to her, both in her mind and also in her gut, made her extremely concerned about whether or not she was ever going to make it home that night. She was held for eleven hours on an alleged warrant that did not exist, and the problem about that was that even with the issue of pulling her over, it appeared to be pretextual. The officer drove up next to her, saw that she was a Black woman, then drove behind her and pulled her over. In this situation, we can’t have police officers making the determination they want to pull people over on a hunch.”
In Ms. Leith’s case, Brewington noted, “She had her minor son with her. He had to watch his mother be placed in handcuffs, and then they threatened to take him into custody, and she had to plead [with police] to allow her to get someone to come pick him up so he wouldn’t be taken into police custody. That’s just outrageous.”
He continued, “They now claim the reason she was pulled over, which is pretty ridiculous, was that the light on her license plate was out. That charge was dismissed along with any other charges.”
“What we’ve really got to do is bring accountability into the picture, and see that, in this situation, police don’t just get a chance to say anything after the fact and expect people to go for it. That ‘okey-doke’ is long gone, and never should have been in the first place.”
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN by KeySpan Gas East Corporation d/b/a National Grid (“Company”) that it has led with the New York State Public Service Commission (“PSC”) tari revisions to its Schedule for Gas Service, PSC No.1 – GAS, that are proposed to become e ective June 3, 2023.
The Company seeks to increase delivery revenues by approximately $228 million to modernize and improve the safety, reliability, and performance of our infrastructure, enhance the customer experience, reduce system emissions, and fund energy a ordability and e ciency programs. The Company’s ling is subject to approval by the PSC and the rates approved may be di erent from those proposed. The Company expects that the PSC will suspend the proposed rates for the maximum period permitted under the Public Service Law, which would mean an e ective date of revised rates of April 1, 2024.
S.C. No. 1A, 5-1A – Residential Non-Heating Service
S.C. No. 1AR, 5-1AR – Residential Non-Heating Service
S.C. No. 16, 5-16 – Year-Round Space
S.C. No. 1B, 5-1B – Residential Heating Service S.C.
–
5-2A – Non-Residential Non-Heating Service
S.C. 17 – Baseload
S.C. 17 – Baseload Distributed Generation – Rate 2 –Equal to or greater than 1 MW but less than 5 MW
5-2B – Non-Residential Heating Service
S.C. 17 – Baseload Distributed Generation – Rate 3 –Equal to or greater than 5 MW but less than 50 MW
S.C. 18/19–Non-Firm Demand Response Sales Service – Tier 1
S.C. 18/19–Non-Firm Demand Response Sales Service – Tier 2
For more information, visit ngrid.com/li-rate ling or the PSC’s website (dps.ny.gov).
KEYSPAN GAS EAST CORPORATION d/b/a
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“There is a good Norman Mailer and a bad Norman Mailer. The good Norman Mailer has won out.”
So claimed Jason Epstein, the man’s editor, sometime in the early 1990s.
Well, it better had won out, or else the novelist was certain to spend his days in the slammer. For decades, Mailer’s life and times---and brawls, one of them nearly fatal----filled the gossip pages as much as his published work.
The youngest of two children born 100 years ago in 1923 to Isaac and Fanny Mailer, the young Norman was an ace student who rose from Crown Heights to matriculation at Harvard at age 16.
At Cambridge, Mailer intended to study engineering. The late 1930s was also a Golden Age of the American novel. Mailer eagerly read Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Faulkner, Wolfe, Dos Passos, Steinbeck, and Farrell. He wrote his own stories and novels. When Pearl Harbor hit, the teen-aged Mailer vowed to write the great American novel of the war. He soon married and was shipped out to first, Texas and then the Philippines. He told his young bride to save his letters home. The Naked and The Dead, a novel about a colorful cross-section of Americans fighting in the Pacific Theatre was published in 1948. It sat on top of the best seller lists for months.
Mailer was only 25. He would spend the next 60 years trying to top his first novel. Along the way was more fiction, essays, biographies, films, the co-founding of The Village Voice , books about political conventions, the Apollo moon shot, Marilyn Monroe, prize fights and even a run for mayor of New York in 1969.
Whatever else Mailer achieved or didn’t achieve, the man was prolific. Every morning, he put on work jeans, had breakfast with his mother in her neighboring Brooklyn Heights apartment and proceeded to a daily word count that generally hit 1,500---and often, much more.
Mailer’s second novel, Barbary Shore (1951) was panned by the critics. His comeback novel, The Deer Park (1955), a send-up of Hollywood’s
decadent side, was more successful. Satisfied that he could write fiction, Mailer turned to journalism. A born polemicist, the man caught a break when Clay Felker, co-founder himself of New York magazine, assigned Mailer to cover the 1960 Democratic Party convention. Mailer was vain enough to believe that his Esquire essay on John F. Kennedy, “Superman Comes To Supermarket,” helped to win the presidency for the man. Still, he had found another niche.
Mailer covered more conventions, two of which, Miami and The Siege of Chicago (1968) and St. George And The Godfather (1972) were book-length reports. If Mailer succeeded in these books, it had to do with his self-styled standing as a “Left Conservative.” He held great hopes for Kennedy-style liberalism. Mailer was no nihilist. He admired Kennedy and Eugene McCarthy, but also the traditionalism of Robert Taft and Edmund Burke. This allowed Mailer to sympathize with such reform Democrats as Robert F. Kennedy. He also understood the desire of heartland Republicans seeking to restore a lost “Jesus land” now being obliterated by social revolution.
Mailer continued to write fiction. He also seemed liberated by journalistic ventures. From 1963 to 1975, came a creative streak that the novelist Tom Robbins claimed had no parallel in modern American culture, save the same creative outburst turned in by Bob Dylan over the same period. Mailer’s output included The Presidential Papers, Cannibals and Christians, An America Dream, Why Are We in Vietnam? The Armies of The Night, Miami and the Siege of Chicago, Of A Fire On The Moon, Marilyn, Existential Errands, The Faith of Graffiti and The Fight.
I’ll plunk out a few books from that list. Cannibals And Christians is his best non-fiction collection: An angry and fast-paced volume denouncing the deadening effects of technology and mass society on a nation’s soul. (However much he could not escape them, Mailer disliked television and modern architecture, while coming out early against the Vietnam War.)
The Armies Of The Night, Mailer’s dramatic account of the 1967 antiwar march on the Pentagon was the book that marked his rise as an avatar of the New Journalism, where the author injects himself into the action. Miami,
however, is a tighter and more prophetic book: The Vietnam War came and went; however, the civilizational crisis dramatized by the 1968 conventions still plagues the nation.
When Mailer was working on The Naked And The Dead, he showed a draft to Charlie Devlin, another writer also living in Brooklyn Heights. Devlin liked the draft, but scolded Mailer on his inability to construct metaphors, which Devlin claimed marked the true measure of any writer. The young Mailer got the message. And he went to work. Does anyone still remember the riots at the Chicago convention? You will if you read the book.
The police attacked with tear gas, with Mace, and with clubs, they attacked like a chain saw cutting into wood, the teeth of the saw the edge of their clubs, they attacked like a scythe through grass, lines of twenty and thirty policemen striking out in an arc, their clubs beating, demonstrators fleeing. Seen from overhead…it was like a wind blowing dust, or the edge of waves riding foam on the shore.
The Fight is about the 1974 heavyweight title bout between George Foreman and Muhammad Ali is the best single book I know about Sweet Science. In addition to Left Conservatism, Mailer also embraced existentialism. To the end, the man could never fully define the term. It did have everything to do with the novelist being cut from his Brooklyn roots following the success of his first novel. Mailer was condemned to be a celebrity author always promising that Great American Novel. He revered Ernest Hemingway, Ali and most erroneously Fidel Castro as existential heroes, men who stood apart from the crowd and were willing to meet---and overcome--this world on their terms.
Hemingway took his life. Castro turned Cuba into a totalitarian hellhole. That left Ali. Mailer died in 2007 at age 84. Ali lived until 2016. As long as Ali was on this side of the river, Mailer saw hope for this world.
With The Fight, Mailer’s third-person forays into the swirling controversies of the 1960s and ‘70s ended. It was back to the fiction grind. Next week, we’ll look at the man’s ruminations on God, Christianity, and its implications for America.
Smartphones are loaded with applications and features that let you enjoy social interactions and meet new friends. Why are they so popular? I can only assume that people look to avoid live face-to-face disruptions that can go bad real fast. Or maybe not. But if it’s true, there is a better way. Instead of downloading an application, many people use a feature not advertised by cell phone companies called the phantom conversation. This allows you to hide from others seeking to borrow your car, money and valuable time.
The history of the phantom phone conversation goes back to the 40s, at least in the movies. Take the PI who shadows a suspect, careful not make any abrupt movements that may blow his cover. He stays back a safe distance as he follows the suspect through the crowded streets of New York City. Suddenly, the suspect darts into a hotel and sits down in the lobby. The PI nonchalantly walks to the other end of the lobby, ducks into a phone booth, and lifts the receiver. Keeping an eye on his suspect, he waits a few moments and starts to mouth the fake dialogue.
Avoiding a face-to-face conversation with someone you know, for any reason, has long been a sore spot for many people. I’ve learned that it’s painfully obvious when you suddenly take off when you first notice the person. The phantom conversation provides a means to eliminate this embarrassment. All you need to do is pull out the phone, start talking and wave to the person as you walk by. Even Miss Manners would agree that a person on a phone call is off limits to interruption. True, it’s a fake conversation, but that’s not important. The fact is that you’ve succeeded in your goal to avoid a face-to-face conversation. Here is a true-life example that may drive home the point.
One afternoon, I pulled into my apartment building lot when I noticed a group of neighbors standing near the front entrance. I had just laid out six hundred dollars to my mechanic and wrenched my back reaching into my glove compartment for the checkbook. I didn’t want to enter the fray with their conversation suddenly turning to me and my disgust over a car bill. As I
approached the group, the cell phone came out and I started a dialogue with nobody.
“Yeah, Danny, how goes it? They ever fix that pot- hole at the end of your block?”
As I walked past the group, we all exchanged friendly waves. They knew the deal and stayed a safe distance away. This signaled a respect for what appeared to be a legitimate two person dialogue. Once safely in my apartment, I buried the phone in my pocket and made lunch.
If you think that was good, another favorite application of mine is using the phantom
conversation as a salesperson repellant. The strategy here is to whip out the phone as the salesperson approaches and quickly begin your non-existent conversation. What salesperson is going to walk up to a potential customer and say, “Excuse me, as soon as you’re finished, can I help you?” In this scenario, I was able to take pictures of certain items, go home and purchase them online. Now, you may be asking, “Who the hell started this farce of the phantom conversation?”
Besides the PI using the phone booth, history also documents that women were and are, true pioneers of the phantom conversation. What choice do they have with these derelict dudes lurking around bars, gyms and the ladies room? Back in the day, I had friends that went to bars armed with lame pick up lines that never worked. Yet, the lines stay in their arsenal. Women quickly learned how to combat this arsenal. For example, a woman is sitting at the bar waiting for her girlfriend, when she notices a guy approaching. The woman pulls out the cell as if she’s Annie
Oakley drawing a pistol on some cowboy, then rolls into her phantom conversation.
“Hi, honey. You won your WWF match? Almost killed the guy? What, you’re only five minutes away? Great, see you soon.” She watches as the prying panther does a 180 and takes off in the other direction.
You might also question the ethics of the phantom conversation, asking what kind of world do we live in? I agree. As a civilized society, we should be able to speak directly to another human being and tell them you don’t have time to talk. We’re not that civilized. Many people are too sensitive to another person’s feelings. More to the point, they don’t have the guts. Phantom conversations act like Prozac. They come to people’s rescue by mellowing the mood. They allow a person to feel they are involved in a legitimate act of conversation even though it’s more a case of deception. Deception or not, feel free to dive into a phantom conversation if you fear that a conversation may glide into the spewing of information not meant to be spewed.
Karl V. Anton, Jr., Publisher, Anton Community Newspapers, 1984-2000
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A man sitting on the deck of a boat reaches into his toolbox, pulls out a drill, and proceeds to bore a hole in the hull. Suddenly, the people sitting next to him begin to shout, “Stop! What are you doing?”
“I’m drilling a hole,” the man says. “I can do what I want. Why is it any of your business?”
“Are you kidding? We’re all together on this boat!” They exclaim. “You may think you’re only making a hole under your own seat, but because of your actions, we are all going to sink!”
This famous parable reminds us that our personal choices have ripple effects, consequences that affect others. Though we may think we can be self-sufficient, in fact, we are interconnected. As such, we must be respectful in our dealings with others, and always aware of our responsibility to treat people fairly, in our pursuit of a just and moral society.
Do you remember the character of the Count, the Dracula-like figure on Sesame Street who loved to enumerate? If the Count were Jewish, he would love this time of year, for we Jews are currently in the middle of counting the Omer. This is a daily practice
intended to remind us of the link between Passover, which commemorates the exodus from Egypt, and Shavuot, which commemorates the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai. The counting of the Omer brings home the notion that our redemption from slavery was not complete until we received the Torah and became a holy people.
The Talmud recounts that the students of Rabbi Akiva died in a plague during this season because they did not give each other
proper respect. Rabbinic sources attested that the plague ended on Lag B’Omer–the thirty-third day of the Omer. By Lag B’Omer, the thirty-third day of this counting period, the Jews began to treat each other with kindness and humility, and the plague receded. For this reason, Lag B’Omer is a happy occasion for Jews all over the world, who are permitted to celebrate anew with weddings, music, and outings. Families and neighbors gather together around bonfires, barbecues, and picnics, uniting to enjoy a day of community and camaraderie in a celebration of Jewish history.
In modern day Israel, this day has morphed into one that’s celebrated with barbecues. We must not forget, however, that the Omer is also a semi-mourning period, commemorating the many thousands of Rabbi Akiva’s students who died via plague so long ago. Although they were brilliant scholars, they perished because they did not treat each other with the appropriate respect granted to men of their station.
The Israeli mountain-town of Meron turns
I think newspaper columnists like me might soon be out of a job.
You may have heard about a computer program called Chat GPT which will have a virtual conversation with you. Ask the program a simple question and get an answer. Ask a follow-up question and get another answer. Before you know it, you are conversing with a computer that generates instantaneous responses based on what it can find about the subject on the internet.
If you are old enough to remember the original AOL chat rooms, it’s the same idea. However, instead of having a text-based conversation with another human, it’s a computer. Chat GPT is a highly developed Artificial Intelligence (AI) designed to take Google searches to another level. Instead of using Google to research articles requiring you to read about, say, Abraham Lincoln’s assassination, it does the research for you. But the best part is that it will provide you with an impressively comprehensive document that doesn’t just contain non-sequiturs or bullet-point facts. If you need 500 words, ask for 500 words on the topic, and Chat GPT obliges.
Of course, this renders the need for students to research and compose homework moot. If teachers thought allowing their students to produce book reports by just reading the “Cliff Notes” was a menace to society, what would they do once they get hold of Chat GPT? At the absolute minimum, students still needed to read the Cliff Notes. Now all they do is type text into a chat box and hit enter.
As a columnist, the most challenging part of my job is coming up with an interesting idea to entertain my readers in roughly 650
words. I depend on reader emails, conversations with friends and family, and snippets from the news. I’ll then do my research and produce the Award-Winning column you are enjoying right now.
But with Chat GPT, maybe I don’t have to work as hard.
Ah, Chat GPT. The magnificent machine that can answer just about any question thrown at it. It’s like having a personal genie trapped inside a computer instead of a lamp. And let’s be honest; sometimes it feels like we’re asking it to perform magic.
Chat GPT is not some all-knowing being gifted with the power of speech. No, it’s a machine programmed to generate responses based on the vast amount of data it’s been fed. In other words, it’s just a really smart parrot.
I mean, think about it. You ask Chat GPT a question, and it spits out an answer. Sure,
it might be a perfect answer, but it’s not like it came up with it independently. It’s just repeating information that’s already been stored in its vast database, like when your pet parrot repeats what you say. Polly might sound like she’s talking, but she’s not really understanding the words.
But at least Chat GPT is a parrot that doesn’t require any cleaning up after. Can you imagine if it actually had a physical form? It would be like having a really talkative but also really messy bird in your house. Plus, you’d have to worry about it flying away and joining a group of rogue AI that are plotting to take over the world.
And let’s not forget about the times when Chat GPT gets it wrong. It’s like when your
Lag B’Omer into a mega-celebration. There, hundreds of thousands of people come to pray at the gravesite of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai, a holy scholar who studied Jewish mysticism, otherwise known as Kabbalah, while he and his son hid in a cave for thirteen years to escape Roman persecution. It is said that by praying and connecting oneself to the soul of a tzaddik, a completely righteous person, one can alter the course of one’s destiny. The spirit of the tzaddik is said to inhabit the space around his gravesite and act as a conduit for sincere believers seeking G-d’s blessings. Particularly on the anniversary of the death of a tzaddik, the connection to his spirit is intensified.
As we count towards Lag B’Omer, we also look forward to the Jewish holiday of Shavuot, which commemorates the receiving of the Torah by the Jewish people. The Midrash teaches that every Jewish soul that would ever be born was gathered at Mount Sinai when our Creator gave the Torah to His people. Now, like then, we are all in this together. In that spirit, may we draw strength and understanding from each other and become a more unified people.
pet parrot accidentally swears in front of your grandparents. You can’t blame the bird since it’s just repeating what it’s heard, but it’s still embarrassing.
In conclusion, Chat GPT is like a parrot on steroids. It’s incredibly smart and can spout off information like nobody’s business, but at the end of the day, it’s still just a machine. So, next time you’re impressed by Chat GPT’s ability to answer your questions, just remember that it’s not really magic. It’s just a really good parrot.
And now, dear readers, take another look at this column and try to figure out what parts came directly from Chat GPT and what parts came from your humble narrator.
Looking to reduce the amount of time, money, chemicals, and effort needed to have a beautiful lawn or garden? Here are some tips to get started:
• In late April, apply corn gluten to lawns. While it will not kill weeds, it will stop new ones from germinating that year. Corn gluten is also a great natural source of nitrogen.
• Place two to three inches deep of mulch to application areas to provide nutrients and shade out weeds in plant beds. Types of mulch include bark clips, leaves, or recycled rubber. But do not allow mulch to touch tree trunks so growth is not inhibited.
• Pour boiling water over weeds and repeat as needed.
• Select native species and non-invasive plants. Perennials are a good choice and can help reduce costs from having to purchase new plants annually.
• Use “minimum risk pesticides.”
An example is nematodes which can be used on the lawn for grub control.
• Don’t bag your grass clippings. Leave them on the lawn.
• Let grass grow and mow less. The taller the grass, the deeper the roots - this can aid in getting through dry spells.
• Seed bare patches in lawns with grass seed.
• Remember lawns need about an
inch of water per week—water once a week if necessary and do so early in the day to help prevent conditions that encourage pest infestations.
• Follow local watering restrictions.
• Make sure your gutters flow onto lawns—not pavement.
• Collect water in a rain barrel to use in the yard.
• Conduct a soil test to see if you need to fertilize.
• Broadcasting up to a half of an inch of compost can provide nitrogen along with other trace nutrients and organic matter to the soil.
• Nitrogen deficiencies can be corrected with a slow-release, organic source of nitrogen such as blood meal, cottonseed meal, or fish meal.
• Applications should be when soil temperatures are above 65 degrees.
• Half of a lawn’s needed nitrogen can be obtained by leaving clippings on the lawn. The other half can be applied in the fall by shredding leaves with a mulching mower and leaving them on the lawn.
• Do not fertilize an established lawn in mid-summer. Doing so just feeds the weeds.
• Backyard composting
• Indoor vermicomposting bin
• Subscribing to a local food scraps collection or participate in a drop-off program in your community
—Department of Environmental Conservation
Luxury has been reimagined in this Locust Valley home at 10 Overlook Court. It sold on April 26 for $2,600,000. It is an exquisite and tastefully appointed custom brick Colonial. Enjoy scenic views of the lushly manicured four-acre property. A gracious two-story entry foyer welcomes you to the sprawling main level with grand entertaining as well as everyday living in mind. Bathed in sunlight and featuring sophisticated artisan detailing throughout, this residence boasts five bedrooms, seven bathrooms. It has three fireplaces and more than 6,000 square feet of living space. This home offers its own outdoor paradise featuring an in-ground pool with a poolhouse, an outdoor kitchen, bluestone patios and a koi pond.
This charming Colonial in the heart of Locust Valley at 41 Bella Vista Street sold on April 18 for $905,000. It has a semi-open floor plan, an entryway, a formal living room with a fireplace and French doors. It has four bedrooms and one bathroom. One of the bedrooms is on the first floor. The other three are on the second floor. The home has a den, a formal dining room and a large country-style eatin-kitchen with granite countertops, a copper farm sink and a new refrigerator. The home has central air conditioning, Nest thermostats and a new water heater. There are wood floors throughout. The private backyard is fenced in and has a patio for entertaining. This home is located near shopping, dining and the train station.
Homes shown here represent closed sales, sold by a variety of agencies and are selected for their interest to readers by the Anton Media Group editor. Except where noted, data and photos are provided courtesy of Multiple Listing Service of Long Island, Inc. and Zillow.
Sleep plays a vital role in the body’s cycle of healing, growing and rejuvenating. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled ergonomic support to help you experience significantly higher quality sleep.
Sleep plays a vital role in the body’s cycle of healing, growing and rejuvenating. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled ergonomic support to help you experience significantly higher quality sleep.
Resolve to invest in your health. Visit a DUXIANA® store near you to discover the difference The DUX Bed can make in your life.
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Catholic Health gratefully acknowledges the more than 4,000 members of our Long Island nursing sta who bring outstanding care to our patients every day. Throughout our many inpatient and outpatient facilities, your dedication to excellence makes our driving mission real —to give the very best care to every patient, in every encounter, every time.
Our most heartfelt appreciation— during Nurses Week and every week.
chsli.org
Every year from May 6 to 12, nurses are recognized for their service and dedication to caring for others and improving the health of patients nationwide through National Nurses Week. Throughout the week, healthcare organizations celebrate their teams, and you’ll even see nurses featured on the news. People across the nation thank the nurses that have made a difference in their lives.
Nurses Week celebrates the effort, dedication, and sacrifice nurses make every day. Nurses are essential members of America’s healthcare workforce who provide care through every stage of life, working with patients at their most intimate and vulnerable moments. Nurses Week offers a chance to highlight and celebrate nurses for all we do.
Several individuals, organizations, and political leaders contributed to the efforts that have evolved into Nurses Week as it is celebrated today. The American Nurses Association (ANA) has compiled several facts about the history of Nurses Week:
1953: The first effort to establish a recognition day for nurses was when Dorothy Parker of the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare sent a proclamation to then-President Eisenhower. He never signed the proclamation.
1954: A National Nurse Week was observed October 11-16 in recognition of the 100th anniversary of Florence Nightingale’s work during the Crimean war.
From the 1950s to 1970s, several bills were introduced to Congress, but none made it through the legislative process.
1974: The International Council of Nurses declared May 12 International Nurses Day. In the US, President Nixon signed a proclamation recognizing National Nurse Week.
1982: The ANA declared May 6 as National Nurses Day, which Ronald Reagan signed as an official proclamation
1990: The ANA extended the celebration to “Nurses Week,” and the dates May 6-12 became permanent as of 1994.
Within Nurses Week, National Student Nurse day is May 8, and National School Nurse Day is celebrated on the Wednesday that falls during Nurses Week.
The ANA and other nursing organizations promote Nurses Week as a time to thank and recognize nurses across the country for the dedication to the profession and patients we serve. Healthcare organizations throw celebrations, and the public is encouraged to “thank a nurse” that’s made a difference in their lives.
Nurses Week is our time to shine. Let’s lift each other up and recognize the good in what we do every day. It’s easy to dwell
on everything that needs to be changed, but for one week, I challenge you to look for the good. Recognize your nurse besties, mentors, and the nurses who make a difference in your day.
Every healthcare organization celebrates its nurses a bit differently. Many hold events throughout the week to recognize their nurses, and meals or gifts for the entire nursing team are common.
Managers and administration plan and prepare for months to make the week special.
In the community, you’ll see news reports highlighting extraordinary nurses who go above and beyond for their communities and patients. In addition, many local businesses also create special offers for nurses - watch your local news and social media outlets to see what might be available near you.
Several major sports teams offer “Nurses Night Out” events. It’s a great time to grab your favorite group of nurses and enjoy an evening of fun and relaxation. Some teams, like the Red Sox, have a nurse throw the first pitch.
Nursing has always been a profession that needs more than just your time and knowledge. Nursing requires heart, passion, and dedication to serving others. Nurses Week allows the public to acknowledge and thank nurses for the work you choose every day. It’s a chance for us to pause and thank the nurses who have made a difference in our careers.
—Joleen Sams is a family nurse practicioner and writes for Nurse.org
Molloy University’s School of Nursing and Health Sciences has received the prestigious Healthcare Simulation Standards Endorsement Designation from the International Nursing Association for Clinical Simulation and Learning (INACSL) for its state-of-the-art healthcare simulation facilities that are the training ground for the nursing and healthcare professionals of the future. The endorsement recognizes healthcare institutions and practices that have demonstrated excellence in applying simulation standards.
“We are the first nursing school on Long Island to receive this recognition, and one of only twenty-five institutions worldwide,” said Lori Persico, PhD, CHSE, RN, director of simulation education and assistant professor at Molloy University.
“This is a direct result of the collaboration between our highly trained Clinical Learning Center (CLC) facilitation team, faculty, and our simulation technology specialists, who serve more than 1,000
nursing students each semester. Our CLC simulation programs exemplify excellence in applying Healthcare Simulation Standards for Best PracticesTM in the core four categories: professional integrity, facilitation, prebriefing: preparation and briefing, and debriefing.”
The Molloy University simulation program provides high-tech, interactive
opportunities allowing the student to bridge theory to practice in a safe learning environment. A team of dedicated CLC nursing instructors facilitate the simulation learning session for students. CLC sim facilitators, simulation specialists, and faculty work collaboratively with students, individually or in group settings, to master the clinical skills essential for competent and safe nursing practice at two sites: the main campus in the Barbara H. Hagan Center for Nursing, Rockville Centre and at Route 110 in Suffolk County. Each nursing instructor has worked in various capacities within the clinical setting and brings a wealth of professional expertise to share with students. Simulation facilitators guide students through replicated clinical scenarios using state-of-the-art technology that promotes safe nursing practice by stimulating critical thinking, reasoning, and judgment.
—Barbara H. Hagan School of Nursing and Health Sciences/Molloy CollegeMolloy was one of 25 schools worldwide and the only one on Long Island to earn the recognition.
QI have knee arthritis causing ongoing pain. An MRI also showed a torn meniscus cartilage. A doctor is recommending arthroscopic surgery, but I’ve read that doesn’t help with arthritis. Could you provide some advice?
AThree words: Don’t Do It. Studies show, and we know from our own experience, that arthroscopic surgery does nothing to relieve arthritis pain. Not only is this surgery useless; it often makes arthritis worse by causing more inflammation in the joint.
I typically see one or two patients a week after another orthopedic surgeon performed arthroscopic surgery a few months earlier. Patients are very unhappy because they are in worse pain than before they had the procedure. Many were told minimally invasive arthroscopic surgery would buy them time before needing a knee replacement, and they are disappointed
Patients hoping to put off joint replacement may have heard that it’s a painful surgery with a long recovery. However, major advances in technology, surgical technique and pain control have benefited patients. Robotic-assistance and computer navigation have enabled a very accurate surgery using smaller incisions. A long-lasting anesthetic nerve block applied during surgery and an improved pain management protocol after the procedure result in less discomfort. Many times, motivated patients in good general health can go home the same day.
The first line of treatment for people with arthritis should be nonsurgical. This often includes physical therapy, pain medication such as anti-inflammatories, activity modification and possibly a steroid injection.
When conservative treatments fail to provide relief, joint replacement surgery is the only tried-and-true remedy for ongoing, painful arthritis. If the damage is limited to just one area of the knee, we can do a partial joint replacement, which generally leads to a quicker recovery. It’s important to get the proper diagnosis and the right treatment sooner, rather than later.
You may be wondering when arthroscopic knee surgery would be appropriate. It may be recommended if a patient has “mechanical symptoms” that are causing pain and making it difficult to walk. There could be a large cartilage tear or a loose body in the knee – a small fragment of cartilage or bone - that’s getting caught in the joint and preventing normal movement. In these cases, minimally invasive arthroscopic surgery may be indicated to repair the tear or remove a loose body. But it is not recommended for someone with ongoing symptoms from arthritis.
Bottom Line: A second opinion is always a good idea when elective surgery is recommended. For patients with ongoing, painful knee arthritis, arthroscopic surgery usually does more harm than good.
HealthyWage Jackpot & Step Challenges proffer healthful weight loss motivation in a way that entertains, challenges and financially rewards good choices through game play. Having paid out over $52 million cash for a collective 10 million pounds lost, HealthyWage participation—and prize pots—surge as behavioral economics studies continue to substantiate gamification efficacy for weight loss-driven wellness.
Wellness gamification pioneer HealthyWage—the world’s leading purveyor of money-driven diet contests and challenges for individuals, teams and corporate wellness groups that has paid more than $52 million cash rewards for more than 10 million collective pounds lost—recently announced that it’s current round of weight loss “Jackpot” and “Step” challenges boasts a collective cash pot prize opportunity of nearly $95,000. The proof is in the performance in the form of quantifiable and undeniable metrics that behavioral economics-based gamification works to promote healthful weight loss. Exemplifying the power and efficacy of HealthyWage’s approach are many success stories (both female and male).
With reports indicating that four in ten American adults (about 41.9 percent) are currently obese, and with nearly 20 percent more states today suffering obesity rates above 35 percent versus the year prior, there are compounding concerns as the condition escalates nationwide. Not the least of which is untold millions of Americans needlessly putting themselves at higher risk of—or exacerbating—serious medical conditions per CDC warnings. A Harvard School of Public Health report underscores an ominous trajectory if obesity is not aptly addressed by the end of this decade, revealing that, “If U.S. trends continue unabated, by 2030, estimates predict that roughly half of all men and women will be obese.” Other dire study-driven forecasts through 2030 estimate a staggering “33 percent increase in obesity prevalence and a 130 percent increase in severe obesity prevalence over the next two decades,” also noting that this reality would further hinder healthcare containment cost efforts.
Understanding the need for serious health-focused intervention to get America’s collective weight-driven wellness trending in the right direction, category pioneer HealthyWage continues to tackle the U.S. obesity epidemic head on by using the psychological benefits of game mechanics to motivate weight loss. This as the company is helping more people than ever lose weight and get healthy through its gamification platform
Cash inspires weight loss challenge-driven wellness.
founded on study-driven behavioral science and economics principles validated by many esteemed medical research institutions.
“Studies continue to show that monetary incentives serve to enhance the effectiveness of, and duly complement, weight-loss programs of any and all sorts, especially when paid out quickly like our various programs,” said HealthyWage co-founder David Roddenberry. “Loss aversion is a powerful dynamic and the reality of having ‘skin in the game’ can propel the results of a gamified weight loss initiative. Indeed, a key element for the success of a gamification program is giving participants something to lose if they fail to meet their goal—whether tangible or intangible.”
Whether one is dieting in a personal or professional environment, an array of studies reiterate the importance of the “stick” in the design of a wellness incentive program. “There are many studies demonstrated that the threat of losing something of value is much more effective than the opportunity to win something of equal value,” Roddenberry continued “That’s precisely why we advocate that program participants ‘pay to play’ and make an investment out of their own pocket in order to win rewards—in our case large cash prizes— for losing weight and getting more active in the program. The average HealthyWager participant more than doubles their investment if they are successful at achieving their goal. The financial upside potential is impressive.”
So effective is the company’s diet gamification method, famous personalities have joined HealthyWage in the fight to get America fit. For one, the company partners with global health and fitness expert Jillian Michaels to provide free six-month access to The Fitness App by Jillian Michaels for participants taking a HealthyWager challenge. Beyond the cash prize potential, this partnership additionally provides participants with custom workouts and meal plans—everything they need to succeed—along with other wellness resources like recipes and that related to meditation, mindfulness and sleep.
—HealthyWage
Not all liver test abnormalities originate in the liver. Sometimes it is the gallbladder. As many as 50 percent of people with a “gallbladder attack” or medically termed acute inflammation of the gallbladder will have abnormal liver tests. Many patients become jaundiced from gallbladder or bile duct disease. Gallbladder disease is common, especially among an overweight population. A good diet with maintenance of a healthy weight may help reduce the likelihood of developing gallstones.
Most people with acute gallbladder inflammation complain of pain in the right upper abdomen. Coincidentally, this also happens to be the area where the liver is located. It is for this reason that your doctor may ask you to undergo a sonogram of the liver, gallbladder, and bile ducts if you have abdominal pain and abnormal liver tests. This test is looking for changes in the gallbladder consistent with inflammation, gallstones, bile duct obstruction or structural liver abnormalities.
A thickened gallbladder wall, fluid around the gallbladder or pain on performing the ultrasound are all commonly seen in a “gallbladder attack”. Stones seen within the gallbladder do not necessarily mean that the gallbladder is sick or that the stones are a problem. Gallstones are very common and large stones seldom cause problems.
The treatment for an inflamed gallbladder is surgical removal
of the gallbladder. There is no medicine for this. Patients whose gallbladders are removed are generally out of the hospital within 48 hours and the recovery time is significantly less than older, open gallbladder surgery. Despite the commonality of this type of surgery, it is still a surgical procedure with potential significant risks for both long and shortterm complications. You should ask your surgeon to answer any questions prior to the surgery.
The gallbladder is not an essential organ and most people who have had their gallbladder removed feel fine without any changes to their usual activities. Rarely, people can develop diarrhea following surgery and sometimes years later, a new stone forms in the biliary tract that can be endoscopically removed. Following gallbladder removal, the liver tests should return to normal. If they do not, further evaluation of the liver should be performed.
—David Bernstein, MD, MACG, FAASLD, AGAF, FACPGraduating students at the Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell learned where they would spend the next phase of their medical training during the school’s Match Day ceremony on March 17. Clutching small white envelopes containing their “match,” the 91 graduating students that make up the Class of 2023 eagerly awaited the stroke of noon, the time all medical students nationwide open a personalized letter from the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) revealing their residency results. This rite of passage is the culmination of years of preparation, hard work, and determination.
Anise Diaz is the only student who successfully matched into the competitive otolaryngology specialty at Boston University Medical Center.
“I’m so grateful for all the support and for all the mentors that I had here at the School of
Medicine,” shared Diaz. “I’m super ecstatic that I made it and I’m ready for the future.”
Eric Lee and Erika Rivera were one of three couples at the Zucker School of Medicine who went into the match process together via “Couples Match”.
“It was a little scary applying to the match as a couple. There’s already so much uncertainty with a match and having to apply as a couple further adds to that uncertainty,” said Lee, who expressed both nervousness and excitement for his and Rivera’s future. “It was really helpful to have someone by your side to ground each other during the stressful parts of this entire process,” explained Rivera. Lee and Rivera successfully matched and will begin their residencies in anesthesiology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Yale New Haven Hospital.
—Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell
Productivity and mental health are closely linked. With depression, anxiety and burnout being the most common manifestations of poor mental health, the experts at Joy Organics have compiled a list of five tips to help manage your mental health and increase productivity both in and out of the workplace.
It’s important to step away from your work every few hours otherwise your brain will freeze up and feelings of burnout or anxiety will start to become stronger. Only eleven out of fifty states mandate some type of rest break for workers. If your employer allows a break, you should make sure it is uninterrupted.
Having a break allows your brain to reset itself from any stressful situations. Research from the Association of Psychological Science suggests that a ten-minute break for every hour you work is a good balance to maintain
Looking at your work as a huge single object is daunting. Those feelings of dread can feed into depression and anxiety so splitting up your work into manageable chunks will make things easier. A simple way to do this is by using Stephen Covey’s four quadrants of time management approach. This method uses four categories:
• Urgent and important—unforeseen events and urgent matters
• Not urgent but important— smaller tasks that won’t affect your deadlines
• Urgent but not important— meetings and phone calls
• Not urgent and not important— checking social media Compartmentalizing can also help with ADHD as your brain can tick off small steps as you go.
Having another perspective is useful for lowering your stress levels. Talking to your team or
a manager not only gives you a break from staring at a screen, but it means that you can solve problems faster.
Instead of struggling with a project alone, ask for a quick meeting or an informal chat to have another set of eyes on it. Don’t take on too much
Hustle culture has become common in workplaces over the past few years, where everyone is trying
to take on everything their managers give them. This can be a huge contributor to stress and depression as the work keeps coming in.
You have a finite number of hours at work, so don’t take on a week’s worth hoping to get it done in a day. Set boundaries and know when to focus on the work you already have.
When you’re tired and low on
energy it becomes harder to concentrate. Getting at least eight hours of sleep each night will allow your brain to rest and you will be better equipped to deal with whatever the workplace throws at you.
Before going to bed, you should do something relaxing and not stare at a phone screen or catch up on work. This helps to signal that it’s time to sleep.
According to a study by stress. org, more than 50 percent of workers are not as productive at work due to stress, and 39 percent claim workload is the main cause. Workplace stress can affect anyone, but research has shown that women must contend with their hormones on top of everyday stresses. In fact, 57 percent of women reported feeling burnout because of work stress, compared to 48 percent of men.
It’s important that companies work towards more inclusive workplaces that have a healthy work-life balance and manage employee stress by being transparent.
—Joy OrganicsA widowmaker heart attack happens when you have a blockage in the biggest artery in your heart. That means blood can’t move through your left anterior descending (LAD) artery, which provides 50 percent of your heart muscle’s blood supply. Immediate treatment is crucial for a chance at survival.
—The Cleveland Clinic
Kevin Kapela of New Hyde Park has a favorite saying regarding our final passage.
“When they call your number, you go,” daughter Nicole, of Garden City, quoted her father. “So when I got up to the [hospital] room that night he said, ‘My number wasn’t called.’”
“Have you ever heard that word before, widowmaker?” she was asked.
“I did, but I didn’t hear good things,” she replied. “I never heard of a happy story on the other side.”
Thanks to some luck and skilled intervention at North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset, Kapela, 64, had a happy ending.
March 21 was the day his number could have been called. What medical professionals call a “myocardial infarction” was far from his mind as he stood at the ninth tee at the Christopher Morley Park golf course in Roslyn. It was his first outing of the year and he wasn’t keeping score, just getting his golf game tuned up.
“I took it nice and easy the first eight holes,” he related, adding that, as usual, he walked the course. “I’m loosened up and I usually like to get my drive over the trees [on the ninth]. I said, ‘I’m going to swing for the stars.’ As soon as I took the swing I felt like lightning bolts coming down my arm.”
His first thoughts were that he had pulled
some muscles, but quickly realized that he was having a heart attack.
Kapela made the crucial decision to drive himself to nearby North Shore University Hospital. The first of what he called “the stars being aligned” in his favor came into play when he caught all green lights out of the park south on Searingtown Road to the LIE Service Road and past Shelter Rock Road to Community Drive, where the hospital was located,
En route, he called his wife Gina and told her, “Just come to the hospital. I think I’m having a heart attack.”
About five minutes after leaving the park—and keeping to the speed limit, he emphasized—he pulled into an ambulance bay at the ER entrance and an attendant came out to aid him.
Kapela said he was bent over in excruciating pain as he was helped out of his car.
“All I remember is the kid’s sneakers, he’s got beautiful sneakers,” he said, being unable to look up at the attendant.
The stricken man handed his license to an ER nurse and noted that he was already in the hospital’s records system, saving precious time. Within 20 minutes, he was in the cardiac catheterization lab for the life-saving stent procedure.
At an April 20 press conference, flanked by his wife and interventionist cardiologist Dr. Gaurav Rao, Kapela described his discomfort, imitating his moaning as he crossed his arms over his chest. On the proverbial pain scale of 1 to 10 he called it a “12.”
“The EKG was the first thing they did and they knew what I had immediately,” he said, hearing the scary word “widowmaker” being called out.
As he drifted in and out of what he called “a twilight zone” of consciousness, he also
(Contributed Photo)
heard the medical personnel ask, “How did this guy not have a stroke yet? How did this guy not have a blood clot?” Kapela described the immediate pain relief he felt when the stent cleared the blockage.
Afterward, Dr. Rao asked permission to perform a fairly new procedure, recently approved by the FDA—TherOx treatment. According to a press release, it “provided his own super oxygenated blood to the site of
the heart attack, helping prevent irreversible damage to the heart muscle and decreasing risk of long-term heart failure. Doctors liken the one-hour therapy as a hug for the heart because it brings oxygen-rich blood to millions of micro vessels in the organ and breaks up artery-clogging plaque in that area.”
North Shore is the only hospital in the state and one of the few in the Northeast to offer this therapy.
Kapela said he was “high-fiving” the medical personnel after the procedure, and when Nicole entered the room she was shocked for the second time that day—the first was when her mom informed her of the emergency.
“He looked amazing,” she related. “He was sitting up. His color was back in his face. He didn’t look like someone who had a massive heart attack.”
Nicole said Kevin was a very active grandfather with her four kids and said he stayed on top of his medical care.
“Ever think this would happen to you?” Kevin was asked.
“Never, not me,” he replied. “I didn’t have any symptoms. I felt great. I was walking with no sweat, no shortness of breath. I slept good. I don’t smoke, and I’m not a heavy drinker.”
Kapela is a semi-retired clothing
manufacturer with a factory in Los Angeles. He said he did well on a stress test when he was 50 and walked up to two miles per day and also played pickleball.
Wife Gina also detailed that scary day, praising the nurses for comforting her with the assurance that her husband was in good hands.
In an interview with Anton Media Group, Dr. Rao said of the new therapy, “[it helps] those cells on a cellular level stay alive. So what does that mean long term? It means that patients are going to have less scar, [which] means less hospitalizations for heart failure and less death. And when your heart is stronger, you’re able to do more things that you want to do and the quality of life stays high. You’ll be able to spend time with family and do all those things that you were able to do before because your heart function has improved.”
He added, “And that’s exactly what happened in Kevin’s case by the end of his hospitalization. His heart function had improved, [going from] 25 percent to 50 percent. Normal is about 55 to 60 percent.”
Gina, reflecting on her husband’s close shave, said, “We’re going to do everything now, enjoy the grandchildren [more]. He got a new lease on life, really.”
I didn’t have any symptoms. I felt great. I was walking with no sweat, no shortness of breath. I slept good. I don’t smoke, and I’m not a heavy drinker.—Kevin Kapela
May is National Stroke Awareness Month, an important time to review the facts about strokes so you can better understand the risks—for you and for your loved ones.
About 795,000 people have a stroke every year, including thousands of people in New York, according to the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC). The good news is up to 80 percent of strokes are preventable and if one occurs, it is possible to treat and recover if caught early.
Getting smarter about strokes is crucial as time is a major factor in preventing disability or death. Understanding the symptoms of stroke and risk factors can help you get help fast and reduce your risks.
A stroke is a medical emergency caused by the interruption of the flow of blood to the brain as a result of a clot or internal bleeding. Our brains require a continuous supply of oxygen and nutrients. If blood flow stops, brain cells start to die in just a few minutes.
Because of this, a stroke can have a serious impact on many functions of your body, including speech, respiration,
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movement, cognition, and bladder control. Strokes reduce mobility in more than half of stroke survivors 65 and over. In fact, stroke causes more serious long-term disabilities than any other disease, according to the National Institute on Aging. Individuals who survive strokes often need physical, speech, occupational therapy and other medical care.
Older adults are at an increased risk of having a stroke. However, there are several ways you can help reduce those risks, including:
• Make exercise part of your daily routine. Many people don’t know that many
Medicare Advantage health plans include fitness benefits. For example, UnitedHealthcare’s Renew Active program offers free gym memberships, personalized fitness plans, workout videos, and group fitness classes.
• Maintaining a relationship with a primary care provider is an important part of managing chronic conditions like hypertension that can lead to stroke.
• Quit smoking, which increases your risk of a stroke, disease, and death. Talk to your
• Eat healthy foods, like those low in cholesterol and saturated fat, plus lots of fruits and vegetables
If you know the signs and symptoms of a stroke and act quickly, it can mean the difference between life or death, major disability or a better quality of life. If you experience the sudden onset of any of these symptoms, seek medical care immediately:
• Numbness or weakness in the face, arm, or leg—especially on one side of the body
• Confusion or trouble speaking or understanding
• Problems seeing in one eye or both eyes
• Dizziness, loss of balance or coordination, or trouble walking
• Severe headache with no known cause
Every year strokes take a toll on far too many of us. Reducing the risks of this too-often devastating condition starts with educating ourselves about stroke and taking small steps to improve our overall wellbeing.
—Dr. Steven Angelo is the chief medical
THE DUX ® DYNAMIC EVERYBODY CAN USE A LITTLE LIFT
DUX ® DYNAMIC EVERYBODY CAN USE A LITTLE LIFT
Sleep plays a vital role in the body’s cycle of rejuvenating, healing, and growing. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled ergonomic support to help you experience significantly higher quality sleep.
Sleep plays a vital role in the body’s cycle of rejuvenating, healing, and growing. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled ergonomic support to help you experience significantly higher quality sleep.
Sleep plays a vital role in the body’s cycle of rejuvenating, healing, and growing. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled ergonomic support to help you experience significantly higher quality sleep.
Sleep plays a vital role in the body’s cycle of rejuvenating, healing, and growing. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled ergonomic support to help you experience significantly higher quality sleep.
The DUX Dynamic combines the best that a traditional DUX bed has to offer, with the added advantage of adjustability. Not only can you customize each side of the bed for optimal support and comfort with our patented Pascal system of interchangeable cassettes, but now with a simple press of a button on a handheld controller you can choose a sleeping position separate from your partner.
Sleep plays a vital role in the body’s cycle of rejuvenating, healing, and growing. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled ergonomic support to help you experience significantly higher quality sleep.
Sleep plays a vital role in the body’s cycle of rejuvenating, healing, and growing. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled ergonomic support to help you experience significantly higher quality sleep.
Sleep plays a vital role in the body’s cycle of rejuvenating, healing, and growing. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled ergonomic support to help you experience significantly higher quality sleep.
Sleep plays a vital role in the body’s cycle of rejuvenating, healing, and growing. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled ergonomic support to help you experience significantly higher quality sleep.
Resolve to invest in your health. Visit a DUXIANA® store near you and discover why The DUX Bed is more than just a bed, it’s the first step to a better, healthier way of living.
The DUX Dynamic combines the best that a traditional DUX bed has to offer, with the added advantage of adjustability. Not only can you customize each side of the bed for optimal support and comfort with our patented Pascal system of interchangeable cassettes, but now with a simple press of a button on a handheld controller you can choose a sleeping position separate from your partner.
The DUX Dynamic combines the best that a traditional DUX bed has to offer, with the added advantage of adjustability. Not only can you customize each side of the bed for optimal support and comfort with our patented Pascal system of interchangeable cassettes, but now with a simple press of a button on a handheld controller you can choose a sleeping position separate from your partner.
The DUX Dynamic combines the best that a traditional DUX bed has to offer, with the added advantage of adjustability. Not only can you customize each side of the bed for optimal support and comfort with our patented Pascal system of interchangeable cassettes, but now with a simple press of a button on a handheld controller you can choose a sleeping position separate from your partner.
Sleep plays a vital role in the body’s cycle of rejuvenating, healing, and growing. The DUX® Bed’s unique, customizable component system provides unrivaled ergonomic support to help you experience significantly higher quality sleep.
The DUX Dynamic combines the best that a traditional DUX bed has to offer, with the added advantage of adjustability. Not only can you customize each side of the bed for optimal support and comfort with our patented Pascal system of interchangeable cassettes, but now with a simple press of a button on a handheld controller you can choose a sleeping position separate from your partner.
The DUX Dynamic combines the best that a traditional DUX bed has to offer, with the added advantage of adjustability. Not only can you customize each side of the bed for optimal support and comfort with our patented Pascal system of interchangeable cassettes, but now with a simple press of a button on a handheld controller you can choose a sleeping position separate from your partner.
Resolve to invest in your health. Visit a DUXIANA® store near you and discover why The DUX Bed is more than just a bed, it’s the first step to a better, healthier way of living.
The DUX Dynamic combines the best that a traditional DUX bed has to offer, with the added advantage of adjustability. Not only can you customize each side of the bed for optimal support and comfort with our patented Pascal system of interchangeable cassettes, but now with a simple press of a button on a handheld controller you can choose a sleeping position separate from your partner.
The DUX Dynamic combines the best that a traditional DUX bed has to offer, with the added advantage of adjustability. Not only can you customize each side of the bed for optimal support and comfort with our patented Pascal system of interchangeable cassettes, but now with a simple press of a button on a handheld controller you can choose a sleeping position separate from your partner.
The DUX Dynamic combines the best that a traditional DUX bed has to offer, with the added advantage of adjustability. Not only can you customize each side of the bed for optimal support and comfort with our patented Pascal system of interchangeable cassettes, but now with a simple press of a button on a handheld controller you can choose a sleeping position separate from your partner.
Resolve to invest in your health. Visit a DUXIANA® store near you and discover why The DUX Bed is more than just a bed, it’s the first step to a better, healthier way of living.
Resolve to invest in your health. Visit a DUXIANA® store near you and discover why The DUX Bed is more than just a bed, it’s the first step to a better, healthier way of living.
DUXIANA MANHASSET 1522 Northern Boulevard 516-869-1700 www.duxiana.com
Resolve to invest in your health. Visit a DUXIANA® store near you and discover why The DUX Bed is more than just a bed, it’s the first step to a better, healthier way of living.
Resolve to invest in your health. Visit a DUXIANA® store near you and discover why The DUX Bed is more than just a bed, it’s the first step to a better, healthier way of living.
Resolve to invest in your health. Visit a DUXIANA® store near you and discover why The DUX Bed is more than just a bed, it’s the first step to a better, healthier way of living.
DUXIANA MANHASSET 1522 Northern Boulevard 516-869-1700
Resolve to invest in your health. Visit a DUXIANA® store near you and discover why The DUX Bed is more than just a bed, it’s the first step to a better, healthier way of living.
www.duxiana.com
Resolve to invest in your health. Visit a DUXIANA® store near you and discover why The DUX Bed is more than just a bed, it’s the first step to a better, healthier way of living.
DUXIANA MANHASSET 1522 Northern Boulevard 516-869-1700 www.duxiana.com
DUXIANA MANHASSET 1522 Northern Boulevard 516-869-1700
www.duxiana.com
THE DUX DYNAMIC EVERYBODY CAN USE A LITTLE LIFT
jcorr@antonmediagroup.com
The inspiration behind Yuko Kyutoku’s art spans from Japan to New York City.
Currently based in New York, she was born in Gifu and grew up in Aichi, Japan. According to her website, “Having grown up next to both nature with mountains and rivers, and urban areas, her love of nature and the outdoors grew tremendously. Throughout her life, Yuko has always been fascinated by images and how the world is represented through the eyes of others. Also, she was born into a doctor’s family that appreciates art, and her grandmother was also an artist who exhibited her works throughout Japan. Naturally, she was drawn to drawings and paintings.”
Her passion for art continued on into her young-adulthood. She completed her Associates degree in Visual Arts at Westchester Community College, and then her Bachelor’s Degree in Fine Art and Masters degree in Art Therapy at New York University in 2022.
Today, she works at a children’s hospital where she serves children with disabilities and provide various recreational therapy sessions for them to support their well-being and developmental needs. She provides four group sessions per day and documentation as well as preparing and creating other artworks to be displayed in the unit of the hospital. She did not provide the name of the hospital.
QLong Island Weekly: What inspires you so much about American culture? I also see that in your art, you like to infuse your Japanese background with American inspiration. Would you say that’s accurate?
AYuko Kyutoku: “I grew up watching American movies and listening to American music, including Elvis Presley, Madonna, Janis Joplin, and James Brown. I personally think the elements of free expression and authenticity speak to me the most. Each artist expresses their backgrounds, beliefs, and values authentically, and I really like that. It impacted me a lot during my teenage years. I would say
my art expresses more about myself than it focuses on cultural aspects. I am not really thinking about expressing or incorporating Japanese and/or American influences in my art, so much as these aspects come up naturally. As a Japanese person living in New York, it is natural that my work reflects both cultural aspects without my express intention. My work always reflects what I like, value, and believe at the time of its creation, so I would say my art reflects more about where I am in my life than it does my background. I see art as a personal journal or recording process that like snapshots reflect what I do and what my interests are in the individual moments of my life.”
QLong Island Weekly: What’s your favorite art form? How do you find time to do art when you’re a busy art therapist in New York City?
AKyutoku: “I enjoy painting and drawing the most. My art style is a combination of both painting and drawing. I use papers and create gouache paintings. I then use gel pens, markers, or pastels to create textures. I also enjoy exploring some pigments, such as marble powders and glitters. I regularly create art when I have time, and I also do visual journals where I process my experiences with my clients. As an art therapist, art making is required for my profession, however, it is also something that brings me
joy. Dedicating myself to visual journaling and an art-making practice help me to process, ground myself, and gather ideas and perspectives for upcoming sessions, thus I create art whenever I get the chance. I sometimes create art after I get home and on weekends. It is not only my professional practice but also one of my hobbies.”
QLong Island Weekly: What keeps you in New York City?
AKyutoku: “I enjoy being in New York City because of the various opportunities and the high quality of education that I can receive. I would say that I can receive great psychotherapy training and resources in New York City, which I enjoy the most. I am always eager to study something new and look for new therapy training to expand my skills. For instance, recently I took a sound bath workshop in the city, and it was an interesting experience that I will probably want to add it to my art therapy practice in the future.”
QLong Island Weekly: In what ways would you say art therapy helps people? How has it helped you?
AKyutoku: “Art therapy can address various issues, including PTSD, trauma, anxiety, family conflicts, and others. Art therapists use patients’ free-form art and creative expressions to encourage them to share and talk about
the artwork they made and to begin to look within themselves for meaning and insight. Art therapists use both creative expression and talk therapy and other modalities to help people deal with unresolved emotions, increase self-awareness and reflection, increase self-worth, and decrease stress and other emotional issues and disorders. I found art and creative expression helped clients work through strong emotions in a non-harmful way.”
QLong Island Weekly: Is it hard to leave home behind to live abroad? What do you miss most about your home in Japan? What were your favorite parts about growing up there?
AKyutoku: “Adjusting to American culture is of course challenging, and there are many things that one must learn in order to finish school and thrive at work. New York is similar to my hometown in Japan, which is why I like living here. I sometimes miss the Japanese food I grew up with... My favorite part about growing up is the many opportunities I’ve had to expand my skills and knowledge and grow as a person. Since New York is very diverse and I am able to meet people from so many different cultures, which is a life-changing experience, I definitely think that the diversity inspires me to think and live in richer ways.”
—To view Kyutoku’s art, visit www.yukokyutoku.com.
frizzo@antonmediagroup.com
Long Island Cares–The Harry Chapin Food Bank has a friend in the Parkway Community Church in Hicksville. President/CEO Paule Pachter stopped by the church recently to accept the annual donation raised by the congregation, singling out Richard Cardozo for his efforts.
Co-pastor Aric Balk, who shepherds the church along with wife Ellen, presented the check.
In expressing his gratitude, Pachter noted that “when it comes to food insecurity and hunger, we still have a lot of work to do. During the three years that all of us were
functioning under a cloud of global pandemic, we saw an additional 223,000 people coming to the food pantries for food and to support their families. That was on top of the 230,000 people that we already provide services to here in Nassau County and Suffolk County. It was extremely challenging. It was difficult. It was expensive. But we did get the job done. And we’re able to help people come through what many have said were their darkest hours. As we gather within the church this morning, there are still too many people who are struggling to put food on their table.”
Among these were 87,000 children and the approximately 2,000 seniors and 3,000 veterans served by the agency, the last two groups via home delivery.
“And that is the challenge we have—that in a region with such significant resources, there are so
many people that need [help],” he continued. “And it’s because of communities like this that we’re able to provide the support that so many people need. And so the contribution (holding up the
check) helps us do our work, but more importantly [is] your support of your fellow neighbors—you know who they are, you know who’s struggling in your community. And they need the support of
their neighbors, especially in the churches and synagogues. We in the faith-based community, we understand exactly what it is to be in need.”
Pachter declared himself fortunate to run an organization founded in 1980 by the late singer-songwriter, who unfortunately lost his life in 1981, before he saw his efforts come to fruition.
He praised his staff and volunteers, saying that without them, all the appreciated donations from individuals, governments, corporations and foundations would not help the organization reach its goals.
Pachter was joined at the service by Sheila Flythe, the agency relations assistant manager, and Sonia Pluchinotta, director of agency relations.
For more information visit www. licares.org.
Girl Scouts of Nassau County recently announced that, since December 2022, more than 270 Girl Scouts have achieved patches as part of the Project C patch program, which was sponsored by National Grid as part of a $75,000 donation to help empower girls and provide them with the resources to excel as they pursue careers in STEM-related fields. The Project C patch program featured a series of activities for Girl Scouts that promoted environmental advocacy, social justice, workforce development and community engagement.
In addition to the patch program, National Grid’s generous contribution also helped fund the Girl Scouts’ efforts to plant 186 new trees throughout Nassau County, a series of storytelling workshops and the Girl Scouts’ Unapologetically Fearless Since 1912 event that gave Girl Scouts a platform to learn from inspirational women in a range of non-traditional industries.
“The Project C patch program is the epitome of the Girl Scouts of Nassau County’s mission to empower girls and help provide them with the resources to hone their leadership capabilities,”
said Randell Bynum, the CEO of Girl Scouts of Nassau County.
“Through the collaboration, we will continue to provide a number of opportunities to girls that will help boost their confidence and unlock their potential to make the world a better place by prioritizing environmental and sustainable changes in their communities.”
The Project C patch program features four distinct areas that Girl Scouts of Nassau County geared toward equipping girls with the tools to become leaders in tomorrow’s workforce and inspire positive, sustainable changes in their neighborhoods.
The patches, which represent the four pillars of the Project C program, are: clean energy and sustainability, environmental justice and social equity, neighborhood development and community engagement, and workforce development. Since the program’s launch on November 15, 2022, 78 earned the clean energy patch, 77 earned the community development patch, 78 earned the environment justice and social equity patch and 77 earned the community development patch.
Girls earned these patches by completing a rigorous curriculum that included activities such
as making a video message to bring awareness to environmental justice and social equity, brainstorming ways to use clean energy in their communities and inviting a woman from National Grid’s Women in Non-Traditional Roles (WiNTR) organization to speak to their troop.
In addition to the patch program, National Grid funded a successful event the Girl Scouts of Nassau County held in September at the Long Island Children’s Museum Entitled Unapologetically Fearless. Since 1912, seventh through twelfth-grade students learned about the experiences of female
professionals in non-traditional careers and trades. Through National Grid’s funding, girls also planted 186 new trees throughout their communities as part of GSUSA’s Tree Promise, which encourages Girl Scouts across the nation to plant 5 million trees in five years to contribute to overall environmental progression and to protect and honor new and existing trees. Lastly, National Grid funded a series of workshops called Telling Your Story, through which girls work with expert speakers and teachers to learn about public speaking and sharing their own stories in unique ways as a means to gain a greater understanding and appreciation of lifestyle differences.
“It’s inspiring to see how girls throughout Nassau County are prioritizing sustainability and environmental consciousness in their communities while developing their own business and career skills. We applaud the Girl Scouts of Nassau County for their efforts to empower Long Island’s youth,” said Kathy Wisnewski, the Director of Customer and Community Management of National Grid.
—Submitted by Girl Scouts Of Nassau County
Kara Thomas has mesmerized critics and fans alike with her bestselling psychological thrillers for young adults—The Darkest Corners, Little Monsters, The Cheerleaders and That Weekend, a Barnes & Noble YA Book Club Pick. Her expertly crafted novels of suspense featuring young adults have also led to significant cross-over appeal with adult readers.
Now, Thomas makes her adult novel debut with Out Of The Ashes, her darkest, grittiest, and most compelling work to date.
Having grown up on Long Island, a notorious hotbed of unsolved crimes and corrupt law enforcement, Thomas has been obsessed with unsolved mysteries and conspiracy theories. She became particularly transfixed by the tragic 1945 mystery of the Sodders, a family whose home burned while they were sleeping. While the parents and four children escaped, five other children were trapped and their remains were never found. Imagining what that kind of uncertainty would mean to a family member who survived the tragedy, Thomas created her own story, centering on a fatal fire
and a child whose body was never retrieved from the ashes.
In the novel, Samantha Newsom has rebuilt her life after a house fire killed her family twenty-two years ago. She’s certain it was murder, but the case went cold. Samantha returns to her hometown of Carney, NY when a prison inmate claims he saw someone leaving the property carrying her baby sister the night of the fire. What else did he see, and could Samantha’s sister really be alive? It’s up to her—with the help of investigator Travis Meacham—to determine what really happened that night.
Out Of The Ashes features all the juicy ingredients for an unputdownable cover to cover read. Thomas will be lauching her new
novel at The Next Chapter, 204 New York Ave. Huntington, NY on Thursday, May 18 at 7pm.
Visit kara-thomas.com to
purchase Out Of The Ashes and learn more about Thomas.
—Submitted by Thomas & Mercer Publishing
The first round of the National Hockey League’s Stanley Cup playoffs has now ended. Much is going to be made of the fact that players and coaches line up in the sporting gesture of shaking hands at the conclusion of each hard-fought best-of-seven playoff series. There will be approximately 6,000 handshakes in total after the 15 playoff series.
But that pales in comparison to what is happening in the Eastern New York Youth Soccer Association (ENYYSA), where the ideals are sportsmanship, safety, fun and fundamentals. Our 100,000 players, both boys and girls from the East End of Long Island to the Canadian border, plus their coaches and match referees will participate in approximately 10 million handshakes during this Spring Season.
“Now that the pandemic has faded and youth soccer has returned to normalcy, it’s important that teams have started shaking hands and bumping fists after every game once again,” explained ENYYSA President Richard Christiano.
Shaking hands is not just a spring thing, as it occurs throughout the year. It is estimated that 25 million handshakes will happen after Eastern New York soccer games in 2023.
The non-profit Eastern New York Youth Soccer Association (ENYYSA) stretches from Montauk Point, Long Island to the Canadian border. Members are affiliated with 10 leagues throughout the association, which covers the entire state of New York east of Route 81. No child who wants to play soccer is turned away. ENYYSA is a proud member of the United States Soccer Federation and United States Youth Soccer.
—Submitted by Randy Vogt, Director of Public Relations, Eastern New York Youth Soccer Association
Led by Hofstra Baseball head coach and 14-year MLB veteran Frank Catalanotto and his NCAA Division I staff, the New York Baseball Academy at Hofstra provides players with an opportunity to develop their skills through daily workshops, offensive and defensive technique instruction, and game play. With one through six weeks of instruction available, players can customize their camp experience around their schedules.
Learn more about the New York Baseball Academy at hofstra.edu/nyba
lfeldman@antonmediagroup.com
After a rousing and tense matchup, the Islanders lost to the Carolina Hurricanes in an overtime game by a score of 2-1 in Game 6 of their first playoff round, killing their chance at the Stanley Cup for the first time in two years. The loss came as an abrupt end to the efforts of a team who truly fought for a playoffs shot, with the final blow coming as a steep-angled side shot at 6 minutes into OT by Paul Stastny.
Things had been looking strong for the Islanders, who led the game by 1-0 by midway though the opening period. However, despite outshooting the Hurricanes 28-19, they were unable to build on their lead. This proved fatal as the third quarter saw the Hurricanes outshooting the Islanders 19-5, ultimately leading to the goal which tied up
the game. Big saves from goalie Ilya Sorokin kept the Islanders in the game well into the third period, though without another point, both teams headed into OT, where ultimately the Hurricanes came out victorious.
The loss was hard for the Islanders, particularly for Sorokin, who earned some extra good spirits from his teammates following the game. While the goal was an unusual one for Sorokin, his team is confident that they would not have made it so far without him.
“The goalies... we wouldn’t be here without them,” said Scott Mayfield, of Islanders defense, in a statement. “They know that. They know how special they are.” Defenseman Ryan Pulock concurred. “[Sorokin] was spectacular for us all season and all playoffs.”
Many members of the Islanders have played together for a long time, leading to not only a cohesive team but a brotherhood. While the end of the playoffs was disappointing, this was a large improvement from the 2022 season, in which the Islanders did not make the playoffs. Left wing Matt Martin is
disappointed, but hopeful for the future. “We put a lot of work into getting here and battled adversity throughout the year,” Martin said in a statement. “At the same time it hurts, it
hurts bad and we’ll sit on this one for a little while and then get ready for next season.”
Onwards and upwards for the Islanders next year!
Not all Amazon packages are created equal. Just ask Hilary Rojas Rosales, ‘23 and Shadia Suha, ’23, high school seniors at Sacred Heart Academy in Hempstead, New York. Returning home from school one afternoon, both young women were surprised to open an Amazon package naming them as recipients of the 2023 Amazon Future Engineer Scholarship--a $40,000 tuition scholarship ($10,000/year) toward an undergraduate degree in engineering or computer science. As if that was not exciting news in and of itself, they also were offered a guaranteed, paid 12-week summer internship at Amazon after completing their freshman year of college. While working at Amazon, AFE interns work on a software or hardware engineering team and pair up with a co-intern, manager, and mentors to build projects that have a real impact on Amazon customers. Interns get to work on some of Amazon’s groundbreaking technologies and core platforms, like Alexa voice technology, Amazon Web Services, and the Amazon retail platform.
It is not at all surprising the Hilary and Shadia took the initiative to apply for this prestigious opportunity. Hilary, a Hempstead resident, has always had a passion for computer science so it is not surprising that she plans to attend SUNY Binghamton’s Watson College of Engineering and Applied Science in fall 2023. Aside from the challenging
science and research program, Hilary says that she has made new friends every single year and is quick to point out that she still finds time to take care of two parakeets, Bella, and Jacob. Shadia, a West Hempstead resident, also cites the lifelong friendships that she has made at Sacred Heart and says that the research she was able to do at SHA through the Brookhaven National Laboratories reinforced her passion for the study of medicine through engineering and robotics. Somehow, she also manages to play violin, piano and guitar just for fun.
Sister Jean Amore, CSJ, Ed. D, principal at Sacred Heart, shared that “Not only are Shadia and Hilary intelligent, hardworking young scholars, they lead with compassion, courage, and commitment. Sacred Heart Acad. is so proud of them.” Sister Jean Amore, CSJ, Ed.D. principal.
Sacred Heart Academy’s focus in science and math prepares students to apply their scientific knowledge to real-world
challenges. Both young women have spent a great deal of time in the Science Research Center at Sacred Heart Academy, a state-of-the-art facility, designed specifically for student-developed research projects.
Amazon Scholarship recipients applied
for the opportunity and were selected based on academic achievement, demonstrated leadership, community involvement, work experience, future goals, and financial need. Amazon surprised four hundred students with news of the award. We met with two of the recipients to learn what inspired them to study computer science. Besides their project work, Amazon Future Engineer interns get exposure to the Amazon business through fireside chats with senior leaders, deep dives from technology teams, and an annual Alexa skills-building hackathon.
“Every year, I continue to be inspired by our scholarship recipients’ academic achievements and drive to use their problem-solving abilities to build solutions for
their communities,” said Victor Reinoso, global director of Philanthropic Education Initiatives at Amazon. “With students from historically underrepresented and underserved communities representing only 18% of CS [computer science] bachelor’s degrees, we believe that connecting students to computer science education and opportunities helps create a more equitable and inclusive future, across all industries and sectors, for generations to come.”
The future is extremely bright for Hilary, Shadia, and their classmates, and the entire SHA community is very proud of all they have accomplished.
Sacred Heart Academy (SHA) is an all-girls Catholic college preparatory school sponsored by the Sisters of St. Joseph. Founded in 1949, SHA has over 12,000 alumnae who live and work around the world. Current students come from over forty school districts. Graduates go on to recognized top-tier colleges and universities, receiving significant academic and athletic scholarship offerings each year.
Sacred Heart Academy combines rigorous academics with leadership opportunities that foster the values of courage, commitment, and compassion. Lead with Heart is the essence of the Sacred Heart Academy experience.
—Submitted by Sacred Heart Academy
Art League of Long Island is pleased to announce the upcoming Art in the Park event. After a three-year hiatus due to the pandemic, the Art League of Long Island’s 53rd Art in the Park Fine Art & Craft Fair is back with an eclectic variety of one-of-a-kind art and craft work made by the exhibitors at Huntington’s Heckscher Park. The fair takes place June 3 and 4 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the spacious grounds of the park, located at the intersection of Rt 25A and Sabbath Day Path. This exciting two-day event will be filled with fine art sales, music, food trucks, and art demonstrations. The event promises to be a fun-filled day for the whole family and is free to attend.
Art in the Park is an opportunity for local artists to showcase their talents and for art enthusiasts to purchase unique pieces of art. Booths will be judged by Long Island Museum’s Alexandria D’Auria Director of Advancement and Huntington Arts Council’s Executive Director Kieran Johnson on Saturday and ribbons will be awarded in the afternoon. Attendees will have the opportunity to view and purchase paintings, sculptures,
pottery, jewelry, and other forms of fine art.
The event will also feature live music performances by local musicians and food trucks offering a variety of delicious foods and beverages. Art demonstrations will also be available for those who are interested in learning more about different art forms.
The Art League is excited to bring back this
event for its 53rd year to Heckscher Park and to showcase the incredible talents of our local artists. Our hope is that the community will come out and enjoy a day filled with fine art, music, food, and fun.
Established in 1955, the Art League is a notfor-profit visual arts center whose mission is to provide a forum and showcase for artists
of all ages and ability levels, whether through art education in the studios or exhibition opportunities in the gallery and art fairs. Artwork on display in the gallery may be available for purchase. The Jeanie Tengelsen Gallery is open free of charge.
—Submitted by the Art League of Long Island
On January 2, 2013, Charlee Miller walked through the front doors of the Art League of Long Island as the newest Executive Director. Coming from 37 years in the banking industry, retiring as a Vice President for J.P. Morgan Chase, she was hired for her financial acumen and for her prior experience as Treasurer of the Dystrophic Epidermolysis of America, known as Debra of America. The thenboard of directors knew that the Art League would be in good hands...and little did they know how true that sentiment would be for the Long Island artist community.
Says Miller, “My favorite memories of working at the Art League include interacting everyday with students of all ages and abilities, talented teaching artists and a dynamic and creative staff. It was a privilege and honor to be part of Long Island’s creative class of artists, photographers, designers, and doers who infused every corner of the Art League’s amazing building with energy, innovation and excitement. The whole experience was unique, fulfilling and rewarding.”
During the quarantine, Charlee began major fundraising for the Art League, as classes were cancelled and students were owed credits for classes for which they had already enrolled. She jumped into action,
seeing the opportunity in the challenge.
“The pandemic was the most devastating event the Art League had to deal with financially, emotionally and spiritually. The health and safety of our employees, students and visitors was the number one concern. Shutting down for six months was tough on employees wondering when and where their next paycheck would come from and when and if we’d be able to reopen.
Thanks to government support, understanding creditors and our banks who
worked with us, we were optimistic. A tremendous amount of support came from donors, students, business partners and people who wanted to support us through the crisis! The pandemic meant business! And that meant change. The challenges were great and it required immediate changes to the business model, a reduction in operating hours and expenses and better use of the building space.” Miller acknowledges and appreciates everyone who stepped up, donated to the Art League, and made it possible for the Art League to begin
the road to recovery.
Once the Art League reopened, she then began to plan for her retirement, knowing a succession plan would be needed to hire a new Executive Director. The search took only a few months before the Art League moved forward with hiring Marianne Della Croce, who began in her current position in January 2022. Charlee then transitioned to Director of Development, bringing in much needed funds through capital grants, our Annual Appeal and partnering with other nonprofits for additional revenue streams.
Della Croce said, “If it wasn’t for the forethought of Charlee, the Art League would not be in such a secure place as it is now. I am honored to have her trust, and the support of Charlee as well as the board of directors, students and supporters to continue to make the Art League of Long Island the premiere visual arts organization that it is.”
Janette Simms, ALLI Board President, said, “We owe Charlee an immense debt of gratitude for her knowledgeable, experienced and determined leadership during a time of unprecedented challenge. Her tenure put the Art League on the path to a more sustainable future.”
—Submitted by the Art League of Long Island
This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direction always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you have pleted the puzzle, there will be 31 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
ARIES (March 21-April 19). Repetition has its own kind of magic. Duplication is creation. Cells divide and multiply to make life. Words said time and again lose and gain meaning. Recurrent tasks become harder, then easier, then harder. e transformations of this week will be the result of echoed behaviors. Be careful what you repeat.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). e existence of original ideas has been long contested. From the ancient Greeks to Shakespeare and beyond, it’s suggested there’s nothing new under the sun. Nonconformity is often characterized by conforming to other nonconformists. Still, mix the old elements in novel ways, knowing there’s never been another you and there never will be.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). In Shakespeare’s “Hamlet,” the ever-hopeful Ophelia says, “We know what we are, but not what we may be.” While others around you may struggle with cynicism this week, you’ll shine a light on the truth. Everything changes including people, and often we can steer the change. Your positive views will be contagious.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). All are called to service, many will answer, and a few will uphold duty to the very end. For the ultra-responsible who live their loyalty, duty can, at times, feel like a curse. Work through such feelings without guilt. ey come with the territory. ere’s something beautiful on the other side.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). ere are things you’ve seen so often, your mind glosses over them, making it impossible to notice anything new about them. It will take a perspective shift to get back to really seeing, and this can only occur after going out into the world and gathering new experience. Consider this your invitation to change things up.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Life seems to be withholding information from you, but there’s an upside to this: You can focus on the task at hand without getting distracted by work that’s further down the line. Life is more exciting when you don’t know what to expect. Trust that there are delights in store.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Just because you’re not sure a thing will work doesn’t mean you shouldn’t take it on. But when? Start with the work you have more con dence in. Getting a win or two under your belt will positively a ect your morale and keep you moving ever-forward. Momentum counts for a lot!
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Your mind is even busier than usual this week, and the extra information oating around up there makes it harder to prioritize. Try talking to yourself out loud. Since you can only say one thing at a time, verbalizing imposes a linear order to your thoughts. e important points emerge -- ah, clarity!
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Trust yourself and have faith in life’s process. It helps to be surrounded by positive people who focus on the right things, which is to say whatever moves it all forward. Don’t expect the whole picture to be revealed at once. More likely, you’ll handle step one and then step two will become clear.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You bring something special to projects -- talent, plus your big heart and an inclusive attitude that attracts people of di erent strengths. Some are clever and can see multiple angles. Some drive the action forward quickly. e combined power of your group will be greater than the sum of its parts.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You don’t love all of your habits, although even the ones you don’t prefer serve a purpose. Understanding that purpose will give you the keys to change if you want to. But regardless of what you decide, you can still fully accept yourself just as you are. Doing so will only make you more powerful.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You’ll be well aware of the limited amount of time you have to get a thing done and just how important it is for you to stay on track. Distractions are costly. While you can’t control everything about your environment, certain obvious preventative measures around timing, laying social boundaries and setting digital limits will greatly bene t your productivity.
It will be a transformative year as you bring your bright intellect to your experiences. Because you’re curious and creative, you’ll come at topics from di erent angles, pursue interesting tangents and ask good questions. You quickly become a favorite of those with knowledge to impart. You’ll learn how to make things run better. Knowledge about processes will apply to relationships, too. You’ll simultaneously grow in many ways at once, including personally and professionally COPYRIGHT 2023 CREATORS.COM
Solution: 31 Letters
This is a theme puzzle with the subject stated below. Find the listed words in the grid. (They may run in any direction but always in a straight line. Some letters are used more than once.) Ring each word as you find it and when you have completed the puzzle, there will be 31 letters left over. They spell out the alternative theme of the puzzle.
Grafton’s glory
Solution: 31 Letters
Architecture Arts
Bridges
Cane field
Clarenza
Colour
Dairy
Drought Gallery
Gardens
Gwydir Heat
Architecture Arts
Gwydir Heat
Princess River
Highway Hospitality
Bridges
Cane field
Clarenza
Hotels
Colour
Houseboat
Dairy
Highway
Hospitality
Hotels
Houseboat Junction Hill Koolkhan
Junction Hill
Koolkhan
Drought Gallery Gardens
Nymboida
Parks
Nymboida Parks
Rural Southampton Street
Trails
Ulmarra
Princess River Rural Southampton Street Trails Ulmarra Vast Welcome
Vast
Welcome
FROM KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, 300 W. 57th STREET, 41st FLOOR, NEW YORK, NY 10019
Solution: Having fun at the Jacaranda Festival
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CONTRACT BRIDGE — BY STEVE BECKER
Date: 5/10/23
Solution: Having fun at the Jacaranda Festival
FOR RELEASE SUNDAY, MAY 14, 2023
Creators Syndicate
By Steve BeckerDate: 5/10/23
737 3rd Street • Hermosa Beach, CA 90254 310-337-7003 • info@creators.com
mistically reached five diamonds on the sequence shown. Hayden’s oddlooking three-spade bid conventionally indicated a singleton spade and good diamond support.
The Italian West led the jack of clubs. East cashed the A-K and then erred by continuing with a third club. This was greeted like manna from heaven by Becker, who ruffed the club with the ten, led a heart to the ace, ruffed a heart and easily made the rest of the tricks after drawing trump.
At the time, it seemed that the Americans would gain substantially as a result of having made an “impossible” game. But there were also strange goings-on at the other table. With an Italian pair now North-South, the bidding went:
WestNorthEastSouth Pass1 ♥ Pass2 ♦
There are not many hands in world championship play where the defense slips so badly at both tables that each declarer is permitted to make an unmakeable game. But this rarity did in fact occur in the match between Italy and the United States in 1965.
At the first table, where Dorothy Hayden and B. Jay Becker were North-South for the U.S., they opti-
Tomorrow:
2 ♠ 3 ♦ 3 ♠ 3 NT
The American West, on lead against three notrump, chose a heart as his opening salvo. The grateful Italian declarer rose with the ace, cashed the king — felling East’s queen — and ran his diamonds to finish with 10 tricks. Had West led a club instead, South would have lost two clubs and six spades and gone down four!
Enter digits from 1 to 9 into the blank spaces. Every row must contain one of each digit. So must every column, as must every 3x3 square.
Answer to last issue’s Sudoku Puzzle
Answer to last issue’s Crossword Puzzle
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Equal Housing Opportunity
Federal, New York State and local laws prohibit discrimination because of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, disability, familial status, age, marital status, sexual orientation or disability in connection with the rental, sale or financing of real estate. Nassau also prohibits source of income discrimination. Anton Community Newspapers does not knowingly accept advertising in violation of these laws. When you suspect housing discrimination, call Long Island Housing Services’ Discrimination Complaint Line at 800660-6920. (Long Island Housing Services is the Fair Housing Agency of Nassau and Suffolk Counties.)
I read with total enjoyment, your articles of the original Yankee Stadium (“There Used To Be A Ballpark Here,” Anton Media Group, April 12-18, 2023 and “The Home Of Giants,” Anton Media Group, April 19-25, 2023) and it brought back my fondest memories.
Back in the day, I was a Brooklyn kid, but a die-hard Yankee fan.
The year was 1947, and the Yankees, as expected won the American League pennant. My closest friend, Larry Goldberg and I decided to take the train up to the stadium, to see the first game of the season. Let me preface this story, by saying that we were both 13 years old, and to think that we would have been given permission these days to travel from Brooklyn to the Bronx, would be unheard of. Of course, the subway was a nickel.
We departed at 3 a.m., as we wanted to be early birds to get bleacher seats.
We arrived at near 4 a.m., stopped off at Nedick’s for orange juice, a donut, and hot chocolate.
The fun just began. The bleacher seats were $1.00, and I still have the stubs.
The most important aspect of this game, was that Jackie Robinson was playing second base, the first Black person in the majors. More than memorable. Of course, my heroes playing that day were
Joe DiMaggio, George Sternweiss, Phil Rizzuto, and Yogi Berra. I remember the other players, but these names would probably mean so much more. The Yankees won, and we did a repeat trip for game seven, which they won, including the series.
Other major guys on the team were their two standout pitchers, Vic Raschi, and Allie Reynolds. Baseball was so different in those days. Money was secondary, and you could get a bag of peanuts for a dime, that a peanut guy would toss to you, from about 20 feet away.
Not only was I a Yankee fan, but I had season tickets to the New York Giants football team from 1959 to 1972, played at Yankee Stadium. When they betrayed their fans by leaving for New Jersey the following year, for me they were history.
Once again, it was all money.
Here are some memories. My season tickets, since they only played 12 games in a season, were six dollars, total $36.00. I shared a pair with my cousin. How’s this for memories: Charlie Connerly, quarterback; Frank Gifford, halfback; Alex Webster, fullback; and Roosevelt Brown, offensive lineman.
The monster defensive line was comprised of Rosey Grier, Jim Katcavage, Dick Modzelewski, and Andy Robustelli. The
Glen Cove residents Colleen Callan and Timothia Sellers-Hogan, an Emmy nominated sound engineer, are behind the new documentary Hot Water on Long Island. Callan embarked on 12 years of research, followed by the filming of a documentary, to explore the safety of Long Island’s drinking water, and the direct health impacts it may have had on residents.
Callan is an investigative reporter who has roots with Anton Media Group’s publication The Westbury Times. Callan said SellersHogan inspired her to move forward with the documentary.
Hot Water on Long Island, focuses on three schools that were also the subject of a report by the The Earth Law Center in 2019. The report followed Bethpage High School, Northport Middle School and Frank P. Long Intermediate School in North Bellport, which all received air and water testing.
The results of the testing found that students and staff of the schools have been exposed to deadly, cancer causing toxins and Radon, a naturally occurring radioactive gas that can cause lung cancer.
All three of these schools educate children in their classrooms a short distance away from where toxins once, or continue to, seep into the ground.
Bethpage High School is located near where the Long Island Grumman Aerospace Corporation facility once operated. This facility from Grumman, an aircraft engineering corporation, was instrumental in putting a man on the moon, but it may have also caused toxins to penetrate the ground water and aquifer (where all of Long Island gets its drinking water from) below the property.
Two decades ago, Callan met Dr. Carmine Vasile, an electro-physicist, who worked at Grumman and who had begun doing research about the dangers of Radon in drinking water. He contributed to Callan’s collection of documentation that would inform the documentary.
Northport Middle School is located near the Northport Power Plant, Covanta Huntington (a waste-to-energy plant) and toxic plumes, according to the documentary’s press release. These elements are suspected of causing rare cancers and illnesses in Northport Middle School students and staff.
And then there’s Frank P. Long Intermediate School in North Bellport, which is located seven minutes away from the Town of Brookhaven Landfill that accepts the ash that comes from Covanta facilities
around Long Island.
In the documentary, residents who went to these schools, or have children that go to these schools, were interviewed about the health impacts they’ve faced, such as cancer and other sicknesses. Residents who also worked at facilities like the Northport Power Plant were also interviewed.
Among those interviewed was Christopher Cornett, who is now in his thirties. He had previously attended one of the schools, and when he became ill with cancer, he was given a 5 percent chance to survive. Members of his family were also diagnosed with cancer within 18 months of
when he was diagnosed, according to the film’s website.
This film is dedicated to the children, teachers, staff and residents who have gotten sick or who have passed from exposure to toxic chemicals at or near schools, workplaces, or homes.
“People are really willing to tell the truth,” Callan said. “As a matter of fact, somebody is already coming forward because they saw the trailer. They said ‘my father worked there and he died of cancer.’ People are coming forward already saying ‘yes, this is true.’”
Solutions that individuals inspired by the
documentary can take are investing in good filter systems and aerators.
“This documentary is not meant to scare people,” Callan said. “It’s not to scare people or bring up horrors or anything, it has educational information, it has scientific information and it also has potential solutions, which I think is really important.”
The documentary also examines solutions and clean up plans already underway.
Hot Water on Long Island won the Alan Fortunoff Humanitarian Film Award at the 25th Annual Long Island International Film Expo.
To learn more about Hot Water on Long Island, review Callan’s research and find out how you can watch the documentary, visit hotwateronlongisland.com.
Herricks Special Education Parent Teacher Association recently hosted the 2023 Student Peer Awards.
Students, family members and staff were invited to the ceremony that was held in the Herricks Middle School cafeteria. Herricks Superintendent Tony Sinanis opened the event that celebrated 12 Herricks students for their kindness and compassion to their peers with different learning abilities.
Awards were presented to the following students representing each of the district’s schools:
• Millie Adhvaryu-Valente from Denton Avenue Elementary
• James Haddock from Herricks Middle School
• Panagiotis “Peter” Katehis from Herricks High School
• Camryn LaRock from Herricks High School
• Abby Mannino from Searingtown
Elementary
• Harshee Patel from Denton Avenue Elementary
• Eduardo Santana from Herricks High School
• Zohra Sohail from Herricks High School
• Willow Umlauf from Center Street
Elementary
• Daisy Van Groningen from Herricks Middle School
• Cocona Wang from Searingtown Elementary
• Allen Xiang from Center Street
Elementary
—Submitted by Herricks Public Schools
The North Shore Land Alliance and Friends of the Bay were pleased to bring New York Times bestselling author and acclaimed presidential historian Douglas Brinkley to Oyster Bay to discuss his latest book Silent Spring Revolution.
The book chronicles the rise of environmental activism during the Long Sixties (1960-1973), telling the story of an indomitable generation that saved the natural world under the leadership of John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon.
Brinkley is the Katherine Tsanoff Brown Chair in Humanities and Professor of History at Rice University, a CNN Presidential Historian and a contributing editor at Vanity Fair. He has received seven honorary doctorates in American Studies. Six of his books were named NY Times “Notable Books of the Year” and seven became NY Times bestsellers.
Other revered works include:
• The Great Deluge: Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast, 2007, which received the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Book Award
• Biographies of Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Walter Cronkite
• American Moonshot: John F. Kennedy and the Great Space Race which received the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction
• The Nixon Tapes, 2016, which won the Arthur S. Link – Warren F. Kuehl Prize.
• He also received a Grammy Award in 2017 as co-producer of Presidential Suite: Eight Variations on Freedom (Best Jazz Ensemble). In 2021, the Garden Club of America
awarded Brinkley the Frances K. Hutchison Medal for his distinguished service to conservation efforts.
With the United States grappling with climate change and resource exhaustion, Douglas Brinkley’s meticulously researched and deftly written Silent Spring Revolution reminds us that a new generation of 21st-century environmentalists can (and must) save the planet from ruin.
The event was held on April 19, at the Oyster Bay Town Hall, 54 Audrey Avenue.
The North Shore Land Alliance, Inc. is a nationally accredited nonprofit land trust founded in 2003 whose mission is to conserve and steward Long Island’s natural and historic lands, waters and environmental resources. Through education, outreach and volunteerism, we connect people to nature and inspire a community conservation ethic. The Land Alliance hosts free educational programs throughout the year. For a complete listing of upcoming events, visit their website. For questions regarding this event or more information about the North Shore Land Alliance, please call 516-922-1028 or visit www.northshorelandalliance.org.
Friends of the Bay’s mission is to preserve, protect and restore the Oyster Bay/Cold Spring Harbor Estuary and the surrounding watershed. Friends of the Bay monitors Oyster Bay and Cold Spring Harbor water quality. The organization also sponsors community events on the water and beaches and works with citizens and local government officials for wetland restoration and habitat protection.
—Submitted by Friends of the Bay
Participants can now register for the Hope For The Warriors Memorial Day 30x30 Virtual Fitness Challenge. Running through the month of May, this virtual and free challenge focuses on an individual’s physical and emotional well-being while honoring and remembering those who paid the ultimate sacrifice while serving.
The free challenge is designed to get people moving by incorporating any type of physical activity for a minimum of 30 minutes for 30 days in a row to show their commitment and support to the military community. Any activity counts — walking, running, hiking, swimming, lifting, dancing, etc. Participants are encouraged to register for the free 30-day fitness challenge at hopeforthewarriors. org. Individuals can log their daily activity through the website to maintain a
cumulative total for the challenge. Prizes will be awarded to the overall top leaderboard winners at the end of the challenge. The leaderboard will house three mini-competitions - top time (minutes), top motivator and top fundraiser (dollars).
Twice a week, participants will receive emails that motivate, inspire and to share ideas to help sustain well-being. In addition, signing up for the 30x30 challenge provides access to the Hope For The Warriors’ sports and recreation resource library, that contains exercise demonstrations, healthy eating tips, and mindfulness activities.
For more information or to sign up for the Memorial Day 30x30 Virtual Fitness Challenge, visit hopeforthewarriors.org.
—Submitted by Hope For The Warriors
MAY 12
MAY 11
MAY 14
MAY 21The Marshall Tucker Band
JUN 3Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons
JUN 10Happy Together Tour
JUN 23Chicago
JUN 24Les Claypool Fearless Flying Frog Brigade
JUN 25Colin Mochrie & Brad Sherwood
JUL 16Gladys Knight
JUL 18Belinda Carlisle
JUL 22Johnny Mathis
AUG 5Air Supply
AUG 9The Concer t: A Tribute to Abba
AUG 18 Elvis Tribute
MAY 10 LiveNation.com
MAY 13
Artist Spectacular
MAY 18
AUG 19The Fab Four: The Ultimate Tribute
SEP 9Lar Enterprises Presents: Oh What A Night of Rock & Roll
SEP 23Hermans Hermits starring Peter Noone
OCT 1The Price is Right
OCT 19+20 Lee Brice
OCT 21Monsters of Freestyle
OCT 21Parliament Funkadelic feat. George Clinton
NOV 10Masters of Illusion
NOV 12Celebrating David Bowie featuring Peter Murphy, Adriant Belew, Scrote & more
was afflicted with Alzheimer’s for many years. Her granddaughter approached the microphone to say some words about her.
lfeldman@antonmediagroup.com
IFor many families, spring break marks the beginning of their children’s return to the water since the previous summer. This can be a fun time, where lifelong memories are created. However, it is important not to forget that a lack of swimming knowledge presents a very real and present danger to many young kids.
t was a cool cloudy Saturday morning in Massapequa’s Marjorie Post Park, but this did nothing to dim the light of friends, families and community members who had gathered to remember and combat a terrible disease. The Alzheimer’s Disease Resource Center (ADRC) put on their annual Memory Walk & Spring Festival; the conclusion to months of organizing and planning. Led by Lauren Vlachos, CEO and Executive Director of ADRC, as well as a hoard of volunteers and ADRC members, the festival brought together a community of those affected by memory decline conditions.
“She was a generous woman who led a really inspirational life. She had a heart full of joy, and a smile that could make anyone smile. I was lucky enough to call her my Grannie. For many years, Grannie battled Alzheimer’s, which truly stripped her of her memory little by little. Although her joyous spirit remained deep down, her memories did not.”
Practice basic moves before returning to the pool: One of the best ways to protect your children against drowning is to improve comfort level in the water and strengthen swimming capabilities through swim lessons, which have been proven to reduce the risk of childhood drowning by 88 percent.
Visitors were invited to form teams for the walk around the park, which would kick off the festival. This included “Team Come On, Eileen”, the Kiwanis Club of LI, “Team Irwin’s Champions” and “Team Lois”. Lois Martin, who would have been 91 that day,
Sadly, drowning remains the number one cause of unintentional injury-related death among children ages 1 to 4, taking the lives of three children in the United States every day. Recent studies have shown that fewer and fewer children are taking to water-based team activities each year since 2016, with a record low in 2020 at less than 1 percent. According to a 2021 survey by Fox Business, there are over one million children in the U.S. that cannot swim. In other words, it is more important than ever to ensure your child knows what to do if they find themselves in the water.
However, there are several barriers which can interfere with proper childhood swimming education. Many parents or guardians do not have access to a pool - or controlled body of water – to teach swimming lessons. Many do not know how to swim themselves and may therefore struggle with giving instructions. And private swimming lessons can be too expensive and time-consuming, keeping many would-be swimmers out of the water year after year. The same 2021 Fox survey suggests that up to 19 percent of families in the U.S. simply cannot afford swimming lessons for their children.
Lois’ granddaughter continued, “I have the most incredible memories of my Grannie growing up and seeing these same memories – and countless others – being stolen from her was devastating.”
She believed if Lois could have been present at the event, she would have said ‘thank you’.
“It’s important for us to do what we can
This is why Farmingdale’s Goldfish Swim School launched their Jumpstart Clinics; to provide kids with ways to stay safe – and flourish – in the water. These clinics took place from April 11-14, and operated as a crash course in water safety for families that are not able to enroll weekly in lessons or are looking to give swim lessons a try.
The 30-minute swim lessons focused on everything from teaching the fundamentals of water safety to fine-tuning stroke technique. Because children between four months and twelve years old can enroll, they were separated not only by skill level but age, in order to avoid crowding and address the different needs of swimmers at different stages of development.
Families were also able to stay close during the lessons. The lobby of the swim school featured chairs and floor-to-ceiling glass through which moms, dads, siblings, and other family members could cheer on their swimmer. Several kids even stopped to wave after completing a technique.
The effects of a single decision can ripple through a family for years... even generations. We’re experts on one of the most impactful decisions your family will face—preplanning your funeral. Knowing that everything is taken care of, you spare your family any stressful or confusing considerations. Preplanning is simple, and surprisingly, not something you have to pay for immediately. Preplanning... a decision that’s as easy to make as picking up the phone.
It is critical to review water safety reminders before heading to the pool or beach this season. For those with young or inexperienced swimmers, please consider the importance of awareness and education around pool or water safety. It can save lives!
always, because no matter how big or small, it makes a difference.” Team Lois has been walking for many years, and this was the first year that her great-granddaughter, two-year-old Lily, came to walk as well. Lois’
Swap out floaties & puddle jumpers for U.S. Coast Guard-approved life jackets: Don’t rely on floaties and puddle jumpers to keep your kids afloat. They give children a false sense of security in the water, they can easily come loose or deflate, and they teach children to float in a vertical position which is the opposite of how our bodies actually float. Search for the United States Coast Guard approval on floatation devices because it means the life jacket has met all the regulations that the United States Coast Guard has set in place as it relates to performance, construction and materials. Pay attention to proper fitting too. Fit matters, because if your head or ears can slip down beneath the life jacket, the device won’t be able to work as designed to keep your head above water and allow for proper breathing.
granddaughter ended her speech with a wish. “My hope is that, in my lifetime, we won’t be fighting to end Alzheimer’s, we will be celebrating Alzheimer’s end. Memories should be forever.”
Following the walk was a festival throughout the park. Activities included live music, games, a roaming photo booth,
Seek out bright colored swimwear & properly fitted goggles: When shopping for swimwear, avoid colors that could blend in with the water and choose swimsuits with bright colors instead. They will stand out in the water and make it easier to spot a swimmer in need of help. When shopping for goggles, there’s a couple of factors to look for: making sure they fit around the eye comfortably (the top of the goggle cup should fit under the eyebrow and comfortably seal on the bottom under the eye socket), that the nose piece is not too tight or too wide, straps easily adjust.
Play it cool and follow the rules: Sometimes when our little ones are in play-mode, rules fall by the wayside. Review rules together as a family before letting your kids loose to enjoy the water. Pay special attention to pool hours, and always schedule your swims when lifeguards are present, if possible.
Make sure your kids know what to do in a water emergency: Their first instinct may be to go toward the person having trouble in the water. Instead, they should throw or reach a life preserver of sorts – and don’t go! That way, they aren’t putting themselves in jeopardy as well and are truly able to help.
Designate a water guardian: Make sure to keep your eyes on your kids at all times – even if lifeguards are present. Kids are as curious as they come and are always willing to push the limits without knowing the true hazards. Designate an adult “Water Guardian” and be sure to change guardians every 30 minutes so he/she is alert and refreshed. A Water Guardian’s sole responsibility needs to be keeping an eye on the swimmers. Vigilance is key – no chatting, no checking your phone, no distractions.
—Water safety tips provided by Lisa Armitage, owner of Goldfish Swim School
Temple Judea recently hosted two special and meaningful programs in honor of Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day. The programs were both held in the Irving Roth Holocaust Resource Center, located within the synagogue, and were coordinated by Mrs. Lauren Resnikoff, Director of the Center and Dr. Richard Quinlan, Scholar-inResidence at the Center.
Holocaust educator and international lecturer Adi Rabinowitz, visiting from Israel, spoke to a group of adults about the various ways that Jews resisted during the Holocaust. In addition to speaking about physical resistance, she shared examples of how recording atrocities and carrying on with Jewish traditions were also ways in which Jews countered the Nazis. Ms. Rabinowitz further explained that the date of Yom HaShoah was chosen specifically to acknowledge that Jews did resist during the Holocaust. Yom HaShoah is held annually on the anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, which took place on April 19, 1943. This uprising was the largest uprising by Jews during World War II.
Ms. Rabinowitz lectures about the Holocaust as a third-generation (3G) survivor, whose grandparents suffered at the hands of the Nazis. She has taught at Israel’s Holocaust memorial, Yad Vashem. She has developed a way of teaching about the Holocaust called Activist Holocaust Education, through which the messages of the Holocaust are translated to our everyday lives, in order to inspire participants to fight antisemitism and injustices throughout the world. Women of Reform Judaism at Temple Judea were proud to cosponsor this important lecture with the Irving Roth Holocaust Center. Another 3G survivor, Danielle Bass O’Connell, also led a moving presentation in the Center on Sunday, April 23. Mrs. O’Connell, an artist, spoke about an exhibit she created, entitled Those We Remember, which is currently on display in the Center. Her art is based on the experiences of her grandmother and her grandmother’s two sisters during the Holocaust. She used the stories they told her, in addition to letters they wrote, to inspire intricately detailed art books and drawings. Ms. O’Connell’s exhibit will be on display at Temple Judea throughout the summer.
The Irving Roth Holocaust Center is home to both permanent and rotating art displays and is named in honor of Irving Roth z”l, a Holocaust survivor who lectured all over the world and who was the Director of the Center at Temple Judea
for over 20 years. The Center is open to the public and offers lectures, exhibits, and programming on the Holocaust. The mission of the Center is to educate young and old on the evils of prejudice, teach the lessons of the Holocaust, and combat ignorance, hatred, and violence.
For more information about visiting the Center, or for group visits, please contact Lauren Resnikoff, Director at (516) 621-8049.
Temple Judea offers a wide range of interesting, vibrant, and community-based programs year-round, in addition to
engaging learning opportunities for children and teenagers. New members are always welcome. Temple Judea is located at 333 Searingtown Road, Manhasset (exit 36N on LIE); 516 621-8049; temple-judea.com.
—Submitted by Irving Roth Holocaust Resource Center at Temple Judea
The New York Coalition for Transportation Safety (NYCTS) is the first Long Island-based organization named to the U.S. Department of Transportation’s “First Movers” coalition of Allies in Action. “First Movers” are committed to implementing the National Roadway Safety Strategy (NRSS) to achieve a collective goal of zero roadway fatalities. Other allies include AAA, Amazon, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, Families for Safe Streets, the Governors Highway Safety Association, the National Sheriffs’ Association, the Vision Zero Network, and many more.
“The DOT’s National Roadway Strategy call to action seamlessly aligns with the work we’ve been doing for decades throughout Long Island and Queens to reduce injury and fatality on our roads. We’re honored to be an ally in their efforts, and we’re committed to moving the needle in a positive direction -alongside our fellow first movers,” said Cynthia Brown, Executive Director of NYCTS.
Long Island’s epidemic of traffic injury and fatality is well documented. The New York State Sheriffs’ Association’s Crash Dashboards show that from October 2021 to September 2022, there were 34,704 crashes, 11,670 people injured, and 86 people killed in Nassau County crashes. During the same time period, there were 35,575 crashes, 11,842 people injured, and 117 crash fatalities in Suffolk County.
Visit NYCTS’ interactive website that provides information on laws, data, roadway safety news, educational programs available and learn more about the organization’s local public awareness campaign–Walk Safe Long Island.
NYCTS is a non-profit, statewide organization established in 1982 with the mission to reduce the number of injuries and fatalities occurring on our roadways through outreach and education programs aimed at pedestrians, bicyclists and motorists. Since 1987 NYCTS has received grants from federal, state, local and private agencies to develop and conduct public information and education campaigns in a variety of localities. Types of grant-funded activities conducted by the NYCTS include assembly programs for children in grades K-12, bicycle safety programs, pedestrian safety programs, school bus safety programs, mature driver and pedestrian programs, bilingual (English/Spanish) programs, programs for children with special needs, classroom instruction in travel training for young people with disabilities, child passenger safety seat installation, and more.
WSLI is a pedestrian and cyclist safety campaign that aims to teach Long Islanders about walking and biking safely through law-based education. WSLI is produced for the New York Coalition for Transportation Safety by the Long Island Health Collaborative, funded by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration with a grant from the New York State Governor’s Traffic Safety Committee.
New York State is taking numerous measures to tackle the issue of pedestrian and cyclist safety, all of which culminate in the New York State Pedestrian Safety Action Plan (PSAP). The plan emphasizes making streets safer by implementing the “Three Es—” engineering, enforcement, and education.
LIHC is a partnership of Long Island’s hospitals, county health departments,
health providers, community-based social and human service organizations, academic institutions, health plans, local government, and members of the business sector, all engaged in improving the health of Long Islanders. Collaborative members
Assemblywoman Gina L. Sillitti (D-Port Washington) announced that she will be hosting two informational sessions on elder fraud prevention, in conjunction with New York State Attorney General Leticia James’ Office, to help educate Long Island seniors and their loved ones about ways to identify scams.
“Most New Yorkers are familiar with the wide variety of scam calls and unsolicited emails that fill our inboxes, and sadly, our seniors are a frequent target of these despicable criminal enterprises,” said
Sillitti. “Older adults lose billions of dollars to scammers each year and we must do our utmost to stop this criminal behavior. These information sessions will provide valuable information and resources for local seniors and help all of us keep our hard-earned money where it belongs – in our pockets.”
The “Don’t Fall for Fraud: Helping our Seniors Spot the Scam” events will be held on May 25, at Clinton G. Martin Park, and on Wednesday, June 14, at the Great Neck Senior Center. The latter informational
session is being held in partnership with North Hempstead Councilwoman Veronica Levy. Attendees will learn how to protect their personal and financial information and what to do if they are a victim of fraud. Anyone interested in attending an informational session should RSVP by visiting NYASSEMBLY.GOV/SILLITTI or contacting Sillitti’s office at 516-482-6966.
—Submitted by the Office of Assemblywoman Gina Sillitti
are committed to improving the health of people living with chronic disease, obesity, and behavioral health conditions in Nassau and Suffolk counties.
—Submitted by the Long Island Health Collaborative
It was an amazing day in the Sea Cliff neighborhood when the North Shore Kiwanis Family distributed more than 60 Easter baskets to the residents at the Robert J. McMahon Children’s Center. A special thank you to Kiwanis President Roger Hill and Past Distinguished President John Kle for arranging this wonderful event. Pictured are The Kiwanis Family Group Teams: The Kiwanis Club of North Shore, NS Key Club, Connelly K Kids and North Shore Middle School Builders Club.
Imagine living a carefree suburban lifestyle in luxurious comfort with only a short commute to Manha an within easy reach of delightful boutique shops and restaurants, train station, and all the recreational venues for which the North Shore is famous including beaches, yacht clubs, parks, and golf courses. Luxury living in this new 40-unit, 3-story sophisticated condominium building with your choice of 1, 2, and 3-bedroom sunny and spacious units, all with laundry, well-equipped kitchens, and most with glorious palatial primary suites. Amenities include a lobby meeting place, gym, optional exclusive membership to the Great Neck Estates Park and Pool complex. On the main street near the bustling business district of Great Neck, you will be part of a community of grand estates, apartments, and luxury condos. Arrange to order your new home at the Rose before its completion date and choose the oor plan that ts your needs. For more information and a virtual tour, please call our sales o ce at 516.953.4388.