Roslyn times 2018 03 16

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Serving Roslyn, Roslyn Heights and Old Westbury

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Friday, March 16, 2018

Vol. 6, No. 11

TOWN EMPLOYEE ROSLYN ELECTION MANGANO SENTENCED PREVIEW TRIAL BEGINS PAGE 26

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Roslyn students walk out for Parkland vigil

TEACHING TECH

Join nation in 17-minute memorial for lives lost in February school shooting BY A M E L I A C A M U R AT I , J A N E L L E CL AUSEN, REBECCA KLAR AND LUKE TORRANCE Thousands of North Shore students left their classrooms Wednesday morning as part of a nationwide walkout in a call to action and a memorial for the 17 people who were killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, a month earlier. Manhasset Superintendent Vincent Butera said the students brought the idea to the administration, and Manhasset High School Principal Dean Schlanger and the administration supported the decision. During a school-wide announcement, Schlanger held a 17-second moment of silence, one second for each life lost in the Parkland shooting, before Madeline Clinton and Gabriella Stein, president and vice president of the Class

of 2018 respectively, made a joint announcement about the purpose of the walkout. “While this walkout is meant to honor the victims of Parkland and other victims of gun violence, it is also a political call to action,” Stein said. “We are fortunate enough to live in a state that has good gun laws, but other states such as Florida do not.” The walkouts were a mix of memorials and a call for legislators to pass meaningful gun reform legislation to prevent mass shootings. Many also featured voter registration forms for students turning 18 before Election Day. Clinton said the call included raising the minimum age to purchase a gun from 18 to 21, a ban on bump stocks and an extended waiting period to include background checks. Manhasset, Roslyn, Herricks, Great Neck and Port Washington schools as well as Buckley Country Continued on Page 59

PHOTO COURTESY OF BILL BURTON

East Hills resident Lillian Krasner is assisted by Gabi Pergament during an East Hills technology workshop for seniors taught by teenagers. See story on page 69.

Broken parking meters said to hinder business BY A M E L I A C A M U R AT I When Barbara Kaplan and her husband were running late for a movie at Bow Tie Cinema in Roslyn, the couple searched

for a parking space. While a spot was quickly found, a parking meter machine to pay for the spot was not. Kaplan, a Roslyn Chamber of Commerce board member,

said they scurried from one meter to another only to find the first three out of service before finding a working parking meter machine, then trekking back to the car to put the ticket Continued on Page 59

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