Serving The Willistons, Albertson, Herricks, Mineola, Roslyn Heights, and Searingtown
$1
Friday, March 3, 2017
Vol. 66, No. 9
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HOME & DESIGN
VILLAGE EYES ENERGY GRANT
SUOZZI, VOTERS TALK AT TOWN HALL
PAGES 29-44
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Local leaders condemn JCC bomb threats Cops step up patrols at houses of worship, community centers BY M A X Z A H N Nassau County Police will increase their patrols at Jewish institutions throughout the county in response to a bomb threat called into the Mid-Island Y JCC in Plainview on Monday, the second such threat leveled at a JCC in Nassau this year. “We’ll make sure that our religious institutions have more patrols, you will see a heightened police presence in those locations,â€? Nassau Police Commissioner Thomas Krumpter said at a press conference on Tuesday. The threat called into the Mid Island Y, one of scores directed at Jewish institutions nationwide, has prompted condemnations from local religious and political ďŹ gures. On Tuesday, U.S. Senator Chuck Schumer announced that he’s asking the Federal Communications Commission chairman to grant a waiver for tracing the phone calls made to facilities that have been targeted, according to a
Newsday report. “This news is alarming and continues a trend of anti-Semitism and hate talk of other religious and ethnic minorities that has been spreading throughout our country over the last several weeks,â€? U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-Glen Cove) said. “It’s now come to our community and it must stop.â€? At a press conference on Tuesday, County Executive Edward Mangano said, “A threat to any one person’s right to express freedom of religion is a threat to every citizen here in our county.â€? Speaking alongside Mangano, Krumpter said police are “aggressively investigating the case.â€? “We’re doing everything we can to bring the individuals to justice,â€? he added. David Black, executive director of Sid Jacobson JCC in Roslyn, said his community center has “not been aected by the robo calls and highend security is always the norm.â€? Continued on Page 56
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE SCHECHTER SCHOOL OF LONG ISLAND
Schechter School of Long Island students pose for a photo in September 2016. The school, which has a campus in Williston Park, is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year.
Schechter School looks to past, future in 50th year BY N O A H MANSKAR A close network of Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe founded the Schechter School of Long Island in 1967 as an institution of Conservative Jewish education, as were several other schools named for Solomon
Schechter, the rabbi who shaped Conservative Judaism. Over the past half-century, the school has worked to give students as rigorous an education in the Jewish faith as in all other academic subjects, said Cindy Dolgin, the current head of school. But the Schechter School in
its 50th year looks quite dierent from its ďŹ rst, she said. The 370 students at its campuses in Williston Park and Jericho come from a range of traditions, ethnic backgrounds and nations, Dolgin said; they even learn songs in seven dierent Judaic languages. Continued on Page 55
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