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Sea Cliff/Glen Head Herald 10-13-2022

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___________ SEA CLIFF/GLEN HEAD __________

HERALD

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George Santos shares his vision

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VOL. 31 NO. 42

OCTOBER 13 - 19, 2022

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Plans to keeps Mini Mart spirit alive By WILL SHEELINE wsheeline@liherald.com

Herald file photo

PRE-COVID ROUGHLY 12,000 fairgoers attended Mini Mart in Sea Cliff each year.

Business owners and shoppers from the North Shore were united in their disappointment of the cancellation of the Oct. 2 Sea Cliff Annual Mini Mart due to inclement weather. However, the community has banded together to give local shoppers and vendors a second chance by extending the Saint Luke’s Episcopal Church Fall Bazaar. Mini Mart is an annual street fair in Sea Cliff held nearly every year for the past 51 years, barring the last two due to the CONTINUED ON PAGE 19

Lavine ships 10,000 pounds of aid to people of Ukraine By WILL SHEELINE wsheeline@liherald.com

As the Russian war on Ukraine grinds into its eighth month, many people have already begun to put the ongoing crisis into the back of their minds. For some Long Islanders like Assemblyman Chuck Lavine of District 13 however, the efforts of the Ukrainian people to defend their families, country and liberty have not gone unnoticed. Lavine helped send off a shipment of 10,000 pounds of humanitarian aid goods Sept. 30 which will go to aid Ukraine and its people in their struggle for free-

dom. The war in Ukraine has been the largest European conflict since World War II, and the effects on the people of the region, their homes, livelihoods and standard of life has been catastrophic. Though the country has scored several key victories over their Russian foes, such as their ongoing counterattack against Russian-occupied territories in the southeast and the destruction of the Crimean Bridge, the cost to Ukraine and its people has been enor mous, with between 6,000 to 14,000 civilian casualties in the last eight months amid numerous allega-

A

mericans of good faith want to make a difference here for the better, and those are the people who contributed to this drive. CHUCK LAVINE Assemblyman

tions of Russian war crimes. “You can see that the range of criminal actions of (Russia) is very wide — missile terror, mass

murders, criminal deportations, radiation blackmail at, for example, our captured Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, food crisis, energy crisis, etc.,” Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky said in an Oct. 6 speech to the Lowy Institute in Australia. “At the level of cooperation with Ukraine, regular and demonstrative support packages are need-

ed, primarily defensive and financial, so that the aggressor sees that his criminal actions only complicate the situation for him.” Aid and support packages such as Zelensky described were frequently being shipped in the first few weeks and months of the war. As the incursion has CONTINUED ON PAGE 2


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