Great Neck 2019_04_26

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Serving Great Neck, G.N. Plaza, G.N. Estates, Kensington, Kings Point, Lake Success, Russell Gardens, Saddle Rock and Thomaston

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Friday, April 26, 2019

Vol. 94, No. 17

HEALTH & WELLNESS

CELL NODE PLAN DRAWS FIRE

PANELISTS TOUT BENEFITS OF IMMIGRATION FOR NASSAU

PAGES 35-46

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Lost markers in cemetery spark search for vets

MAKING THE CASE

Dozens of veterans otherwise can’t be recognized for Memorial Day BY JA N E LL E CL AUSEN At Great Neck’s All Saints Cemetery, a burial ground off Middle Neck Road where more than 3,000 people rest, dozens of small markers once identified veterans whose service is not listed on their headstones. Don Panetta, a Great Neck Boy Scout leader who works with the American Legion to honor veterans for Memorial Day, discovered they went missing. Now the local American Legion, Veterans of Foreign Wars and Boy Scouts, as well as the fire companies, are looking for help identifying those veterans. “All I’m really looking for is who the veterans are,” Panetta, who also serves on the Great Neck Memorial Day Parade Committee, said last Thursday. “I’m looking for where the bodies are buried.” The four-inch circular marker sits atop a small stake at the grave

of veterans, Panetta said, which allows the Scouts to find them and place American flags there on the Saturday before Memorial Day. “Some of the graves are marked veteran,” Panetta said of the gravestones, “but not all of them are.” Gabby Avila, a secretary for the cemetery, said that according to a groundskeeper who has worked on the site for 30 years, nothing like this has ever happened at All Saints Cemetery before. The only reason a marker would ever be removed is if a veteran got a new headstone designating his or her status, she said. “They haven’t been removed on our side,” Avila said. “They’re not in storage, they’re not discarded, and we have no reason to remove them.” Asked if the cemetery had any records on veterans in the cemetery, Avila said names are tracked – there are a minimum of 3,000 Continued on Page 63

PHOTO BY JANELLE CLAUSEN

Andrew Campanelli, an attorney for Lake Success residents against cell nodes near their homes, argued that the village has grounds to reject the application from ExteNet. See story on page 2.

Burglar hits 4 apartments in Plaza on same day: cops BY JA N E LL E CL AUSEN

said last Thursday. According to police, an unknown man entered the apartA Great Neck Plaza apart- ment building at 50 Hill Park ment complex was burglarized Ave. and entered the superinmultiple times one day last tendent’s office around 1:40 week, Nassau County police a.m on April 15. Police said it

appears he then attempted to disarm the video system before leaving the building around 1:46 a.m. Police said the suspect entered the building again about Continued on Page 77

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