Serving Port Washington, Manorhaven, Flower Hill, Baxter Estates, Port Washington North and Sands Point
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Friday, September 28, 2018
Vol. 3, No. 39
Port WashingtonTimes GUIDE TO FALL
GRAPHIC EYE CLOSES
COUNTY FLUSHES AWAY $2.56M IN SEWER FEES
PAGES 37-68
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PAGE 8
9 Port students picked as Merit semifinalists
HURRICANE HELPERS
83 North Shore students among eligible for scholarship grants BY LU K E TOR R A N C E Nine students at Paul D. Schreiber High School were named as semifinalists for the National Merit Scholarship, according to the Port Washington school district. The students are! Jolie! Bercow, Emily! Doherty, Becky Han, Olivia Hansen, Jacob Keller, Benjamin Rosenberg, Edward! Samowitz, Ryan!Siegel and Leah Taylor. “Being named a semifinalist in the National Merit Scholarship Program is a tremendous accomplishment, and we are proud to celebrate this exciting announcement with these nine exceptional students,” said Kathleen Mooney, the district’s superintendent. “These exemplary individuals continue to impress us through their academic successes and participation in extracurricular activities. Their work ethic and character represent the epitome of what the Port Washington School District continuously strives to attain.”
The students! were chosen based on their scores on the Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test. The nine students from Schreiber are among 16,000 students from around the country who will be competing for 7,500 scholarships worth more than $32 million. According to the National Merit Scholarship Corp., more than 90 percent of finalists will be named finalists, while half of the finalists will win a National Merit scholarship. Finalists will be chosen based on academic achievement, skill and abilities. Further along in the process, the finalists will be assessed! by a committee! of college admissions officers and high school counselors, who will examine the students’ academic record, scores on two standardized test, contributions and leadership in school Continued on Page 90
PHOTO COURTESY OF NORTH SHORE ANIMAL LEAGUE AMERICA
A worker with North Shore Animal League America carries puppies that were among the 109 pets transported to Port Washington to escape Hurricane Florence. See story on page 4.
Pride in Port celebrates 30 years on Saturday BY LU K E TORRANCE Like the changing color of the leaves, the annual Pride in Port parade has come to signify the fall season and the start of
a new school year in Port Washington. This Saturday! will mark! the 30th time that Port students and organizations march down Main Street, but the celebration starts before and goes on long after the pa-
rade. “It’s a lot of fun,” said!Mary Balaban of the Pride in Port Committee, which organizes the parade. “[I] believe in school spirit, and it makes Continued on Page 90
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