Serving Manhasset
$1
Friday, October 14, 2016
vol. 4, no. 41
Guide to the
Great Neck Plaza AutoFest
A Blank Slate Media / Litmor
What:
Publications Special Section
Where:
32nd Annual Great Neck Plaza AutoFest & Street Fair
Middle Neck Road in Great Neck Plaza
• October 14, 2016
When:
Sunday, October 16 from Noon to 5:00 p.m. (Rain date: October 23)
GUIDe to G.N. eD BoArD DIsCoUNts HABer, CALLs oNLINe street FAIr CoMMoN Core resULts AD ‘ANtI-seMItIC’ PAgES 35-38
PAgE 20
PAgE 2
Classiest lashes in town
SCHOOL’S BACK IN SWINg!
Eyelash salon has Chinese roots BY M A X Z A H N After graduating from college in Eastern China, Xian Li took an office job in Shanghai with an international shipping company. “I didn’t like it,” she recalled. It wasn’t until many years later, after living in her small hometown and eventually traveling to New York City, that she discovered a job she enjoyed: eyelash extensions. Just six years later, on Saturday, Li opened her own eyelash extension salon in Manhasset. Bedecked with pink curtains and arranged with six beds against a long back wall, the salon offers eyelash extension and waxing services that range from $80 to $120 per visit, depending on whether they involve real mink or synethic mink lashes. The salon’s hours will run 9:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m, though the last time for an appointment is 6:30 p.m. because each appointment lasts one hour. It will be closed on Sundays. Continued on Page 22
PHOTO COURTESY OF BUCkLEY COUNTRY DAY SCHOOL
Eighth grade students from Manhasset attend Buckley Country Day School. See story on page 47.
L.I. Sound water quality gets F rating Report cites high nitrogen levels, poor clarity near Manhasset BY st e p H e N roMANo
Save the Sound, a program working to preserve the Sound. The report classifies the area The quality of the water in as the Western Narrows, stretchLong Island Sound near Port ing from New York City to Sands Washington, Manhasset and Point, and said it “is affected by Great Neck received an F rating in the highly populated suburbana report card released last week by urban communities surrounding New York City, and received a very poor grade.” The report evaluated water quality on five criteria: overall quality, dissolved oxygen, nutrients, chlorophyll
and water clarity. The overall health index, nutrients and water clarity all received a rating of 60 or below. The dissolved oxygen and chlorophyll a received a grade between 70 to 80. “I thought the community was making progress cleaning up the Sound,” Port Washington North Mayor Bob Weitzner said. “This is very disheartening to see we’re not. We need to turn this around and figure out what’s go-
ing on and whether it’s dumping or boating.” According to the report, the Western Narrows “is shallow, has a high tidal range, but the flushing is fairly inefficient between the East River and the rest of Long Island Sound.” The bottom of the Western Narrows, the report said, is a muddy area that’s highly contaminated from industrial activity, and there are “chronic dissolved oxyContinued on Page 12
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