Over 69 Years!
Transcription
Over 69 Years!
Over 69 Years! Serving the North Shore communities of Locust Valley, Oyster Bay, Glen Cove, Bayville, Centre Island, Cove Neck, Lattingtown, Matinecock, The Brookvilles and Muttontown Locust Valley, New York 11560 Photo by Phil Bellisari Vol. 69 No. 26 February 12, 2014 75¢ www.theleaderonline.com Story on page 5 The Locust Valley High School Falcons Wrestling Team, shown here in January, are heading to the County Championships on Saturday, February 15. Happy Valentine’s Day! Synthetic Marijuana Ban Animal Cruelty Charges New Principal at TR School Backyard Birdcount Page 2 Page 3 Page 9 Page 11 Page 2 The Leader February 12, 2014 Synthetic Marijuana Ban A Chilling Winter – Especially for Seniors Oyster Bay High School student makes seniors 2013 Valentine’s Day • BY SILVANA LAFERLITA GULLO With record temperatures on a daily basis, most of us need an extra sweater or a warm blanket when we settle down in the evening for our favorite television show. Not comfortable, but nowhere near as difficult as what this weather means to seniors. Seniors are often forced into isolation or left to face the danger of icy conditions on their own. As 20% of Nassau County’s population reach the age of eighty-five, Centers like the Life Enrichment Center at Oyster Bay, on East Main Street, are more critical than ever. We are proud to be the one organization in this community that focuses 100% of our efforts on improving conditions for seniors. Regardless of how brutal the weather, your community’s seniors can count on us. What Members can expect when they visit the Center this winter is a delicious bowl of soup and a thoughtfully prepared hot lunch, a warm greeting with sincere smiles from the staff and the welcoming clamor of a room full of friends. Seniors who will not venture out in this weather or those who are no longer able to visit at all can expect a friendly visit or call from our new full-time Social Service Coordinator Liz Fiordalisi, or one of her volunteers. Liz is prepared to visit member and non-member seniors for a needs assessment and to provide them a direct connection to the resources available to assist them. Seniors and their loved ones can rest assured that they will not be forgotten once they are on our radar. For many of us Valentine’s Day means a movie and dinner, a special gift and a reason to celebrate the loves in our lives. For seniors, Valentine’s Day can often be a time to remember those lost. Our Center puts seniors at the top of our Valentine’s list. Joining forces in this year’s Valentine’s Day festivities, Oyster Bay High School’s Business and Marketing Honor Society students will help fill the day with reminders of how much seniors mean to us. We urge you to keep the seniors you know in your thoughts during this difficult winter weather and especially on Valentine’s Day. Don’t forget to call regularly, visit often and make a senior special Valentine this year! For additional information contact Silvana LaFerlita Gullo, Executive Director at the Center, (516) 922-1770. Assemblyman Charles Lavine (D-Glen Cove) joined colleagues in the Assembly voting to ban the sale and possession of “made-made marijuana or synthetic cannabinoid compounds, thereby making possession with intent to sell punishable by up to two and a half years in prison. “Too many young people are being harmed by use of these synthetic compounds in what is now a growing trend among teens,” said Assemblyman Lavine. “The Assembly legislation (A.1451-A) makes these substances illegal by cracking down on its sale and distribution. Protecting families in our community is my priority.” Synthetic marijuana compounds, known as Spice or K2, are substances with features and effects that attempt to mimic Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). These products are often sold as herbal incense and labeled “not for human consumption,” allowing manufacturers to avoid government regulation. “Unfortunately, the use of synthetic substances can have serious or fatal consequences,” said Assemblyman Lavine. Using the drugs produce symptoms such as hallucinations, paranoia, rapid heartbeat, high blood pressure, violent behavior and even death. The New York State Department of Health placed a ban on the sale of synthetic cannabinoid compounds last year in an effort to protect more New Yorkers from the damaging effects. The Assembly also passed this legislation in 2012, however, the Senate failed to take up the measure. Please contact my office at 516-6760050 for additional information or assistance. Amateur Women’s Golf at Nassau Country Club In August, 156 of the top female amateur golfers will compete in the 114th U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship, conducted by the United States Golf Association (USGA) and held at Nassau Country Club. At stake will be the Robert Cox Trophy, the oldest trophy that the USGA awards in a women’s championship, as well as the title of national champion. “The USGA’s selection of Nassau Country Club to host the championship is a shining example of Glen Cove’s historic significance to golf, and a tribute to our ability to host a national golf championship,” stated Glen Cove Mayor Reginald Spinello. “The golf course and our community will be showcased to the world for five days on Golf Channel. We need to fully embrace this event to ensure it is a great experience for the players, USGA officials, media and spectators.” Noted Long Island players Annie Park (Levittown) and Kelly Shon (Port Washington) competed in the 2013 championship conducted at the Country Club of Charleston in South Carolina. Park advanced to the quarterfinals and earned an exemption into the 2014 championship at Nassau Country Club, which be conducted Aug. 4-10. “Championships do not happen without the support of the community,” said Eric Carlstrom, vice chairman of championship fundraising. “We are offering the rare opportunity for businesses to align themselves with a USGA championship and Nassau Country Club by becoming a corporate supporter. Benefits include golf, advertising, hospitality and an invitation to attend the many social events in celebration of the championship.” For more information on becoming a corporate supporter or on how to volunteer, please visit www.2014USWomensAM.com or call the championship office at 866-2122014. First conducted in 1895, the U.S. Women's Amateur Championship is one of the USGA's original three championships, along with the U.S. Amateur and U.S. Open. It is open to female amateur golfers with a USGA Handicap Index® not exceeding 5.4. Founded in 1896, Nassau Country Club held the 1914 U.S. Women's Amateur, won by Katherine Harley Jackson. This year marks the 100th anniversary of hosting the same championship, which is a rare achievement for any club. Nassau Country Club has also served as the site for the 1903 U.S. Amateur, won by Walter Travis, and has hosted many state and regional tournaments, including the New York State Amateur, Long Island Open, three Metropolitan Opens and eight Metropolitan Amateurs. Historical photograph of Nassau Country Club Over 400 volunteers are needed to at this historic event. Join us in welcoming the most talented Amateurs from across the globe August 4-10, 2014. Volunteers are needed in the following areas: • Walking Scorers • Standard Bearers • Evacuation Van Drivers • Scorecard Runners • Marshals • Forecaddies • Player Registration • Parking • Golf Cart Shuttles • Medical Services • Ecology • Scoreboard • Caddies Junior volunteers ages 12-17 years as of August 1 may apply as scorecard runners and standard bearers, and drivers must be 25 years of age or older. If you can volunteer for any of these positions, please email: volunteer@2014USWomensAM.com, or call (866) 212-2014. You can watch the event on The Golf Channel. Their telecast will cover all five match play days, Wednesday, Aug. 6, through Sunday, Aug. 10. February 12, 2014 The Leader Page 3 Village Fiscal Stress The Office of the New York State Comptroller sent a press release stating that 15 villages in New York are under fiscal stress, and seven are on Long Island. Bayville was among the 4 villages in the state to receive the “significant fiscal stress” warning label. Old Brookville was listed as in “moderate” stress. 535 villages were evaluated. DiNapoli’s Fiscal Stress Monitoring System gives an “Early Warning” to villages, cities and municipalities across the state. “Although the number of villages designated as fiscally stressed is small, village officials across the state must be alert,” said DiNapoli. He continued, “Moving forward, the drivers of fiscal stress will continue to hamper villages in many of the same ways it does our larger municipalities. I continue to emphasize to local officials that the best way their community can avoid falling into fiscal stress is through sensible budgeting and careful long-term planning.” According to the report, villages in fiscal stress share a number of common characteristics. Nearly all operate with both low fund balance and budget deficits, and may have covered low cash flow with added short-term debt. Super Storm Sandy, was not cited as an expense taken into account in the report. Villages can reach out to the Photo by Piping Rock Comptroller’s office for assistance with budget review, and risk assessment. Mayor Douglas Watson said, “The report is a “preliminary indicator”, and is based on a period of time that is in the past, things in the village have already changed for the better, since that time. All is well with the village. One of the tremendous pressures for villages is unfunded mandates. Mandates demand that something must be done, and there is no choice but to do it. And, mandates cost money, which is not provided with the mandate. One mandate that is good is MS4 reporting, which deals with clean water. As of now Bayville’s fund balance is stronger and coming back.” Mayor Watson said, “There is a revenues to expenses pressure, different budgets, including the snow budget, but services are done for the Bayville residents as they should be.” Puppy Abusers Formally Charged A seven-month old female pit bull spent the past 5 months at My Pet's Vet in Huntington recuperating from devastating injuries caused by three vicious people. After a month long criminal investigation, conducted by Nassau SPCA Detective Sowers, and The New York State Attorney General's Office, arrests were made. Shawanna Hughes 37, of Oyster Bay, Lee Hughes, 39, of Westbury, and an Elmont veterinary worker, Reginald Smith, 33, of Westbury, were charged with counts of animal cruelty, practicing veterinary medicine without a license, and conspiracy. The puppy is now called Miss Harper, and was picked up in early September by Sowers from an emergency veterinary center in Nassau County. The puppy had its ears and right hind leg severed, numerous cuts, and infected wounds. The left hind leg had left toes partially amputated, and was infected. Heinous animal cruelty has a clear connection to domestic abuse, and that may prove to be linked in this case as well. The next step in Miss Harper's rehabilitation is finding her a good home. The Nassau County Police Benevolent Shawanna Hughes of Oyster Bay Association wants her to have the best care for the rest of her life, and is donating $5000 for her continued medical care. The dog has shown a sweet, very trainable personality, and is intelligent. The SPCA is seeking applications for potential adopters. email at adopt@ncspca.us. To report animal cruelty call 516THE-SPCA. Shawanna Hughes and Lee Hughes already have a pending animal abuse case on their record. Human Trafficking Building on the 2008 Safe Harbour for Exploited Youth Act, Assemblyman Charles Lavine (D-Glen Cove) supported legislation recently signed into law that grants 16-and 17-year old victims of sex trafficking the same protection as younger victims. The new law establishes equality in how the courts treat minors who are arrested for alleged acts of prostitution. All sexually exploited youth will now be treated as victims rather than criminals. Courts will have the ability to assign teenagers who are 16 and 17 years old, the status of Persons In Need of Supervision (PINS), thereby expanding the ability of these victims to access vital services. “We need to remember that these individuals are victims, not criminals, and ensure they receive the necessary assistance to prevent them from returning to a life of abuse,” said Assemblyman Lavine. “Human trafficking is modernday slavery and it must be stopped.” The law also provides that if a person younger than 18-years old is convicted of, or pleads guilty to, a prostitution- related charge, they must be granted youthful offender adjudication, relieving them of a criminal record. It is estimated that nearly 300,000 children become victims of labor and sex trafficking in the United States each year, with the average age of prostitution for a child beginning at 13- or 14-years old. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) data reveals sex trafficking as the fastest growing business of organized crime and the third largest criminal enterprise in the world, with a yearly profit of about $32 billion. “These statistics expose an alarming crisis that we must do more to stop,” said Assemblyman Lavine. “The exploitation of children is a heinous crime. These victims must receive treatment and services to assist them in coping with their traumatic abuse and prevent them from being victimized a second time in the eyes of the law.” If you have any questions on this or any other issue, please contact my office at 516-676-0050 or email me at lavinec@assembly.state.ny.us. OB Crash Settlement In 2010, Shirley Singer, 85, was hit by an Oyster Bay town-owned utility truck. Singer suffered fractured ribs, and vertebrae, and required surgery on her injuries. It was alleged in a wrongful-death suit filed in 2011 in Mineola at State Supreme Court that she died four months later from the accident. Her son, Scott Singer, brought the suit, alleging his mother suffered pain and suffering. The driver of the truck ran a red light, and smashed into Singer’s car. An eyewitness, flown in from Florida, gave testimony about the driver running the red light. The town contended the driver did not run the light. The town attorney thought it was better to settle, than to go to trial. Oyster Bay agreed to pay $172,500 to the estate of Shirley Singer. “Miss Harper,” seen here from last September Photo by Nassau County SPCA Glen Cove February Town Hall Meetings one in our commuGlen Cove nity to attend and Mayor Reginald A. participate in both Spinello today meetings. On Feb. announced the he 12, a representative has coordinated from Glen Cove two “town hall” Hospital will be meetings that will present to provide be held in us with an update on February. On the changes being February 12, at 7 implemented there. p.m. in the main For the meeting on chambers of Glen Feb. 19, representaCove City Hall, the tives from the topic for discussion will be the Glen waterfront redevelCove Hospital. One opment team will week later, on be on hand to Glen Cove City Hall February 19, at 7 inform us on the p.m. in the main status of the project. chamber of City Hall, the waterfront I urge everyone to attend both meetings redevelopment project will be the focus. and to participate with questions and Mayor Spinello said, “I invite every- discussion.” Page 4 The Leader February 12, 2014 EDITORIAL LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: We encourage our readers to express their view regardless of opinion, through the Letters to the Editor column. Letters published represent the viewpoint of our readers. They do not necessarily reflect the opinions of The Leader and, in fact, may be of opposite viewpoint. Letters should be typed and mailed or emailed to the editor’s attention. Letters will be edited for length, clarity and accuracy. All letters should be signed and contain author’s address and telephone number for verification. Although it is discouraged, we will withhold an author’s name if the subject matter is sensitive or the writer may be subject to intimidation or harassment. Letters that contain accusations or important “facts” must demonstrate knowledge in the area described or show evidence for their writing. The Leader will not return letters and reserves the right to publish them at a later time or not at all, due to lack of space or editor’s discretion. L E T T E RS TO T HE E D I TOR UNAFFORDABLE CARE ACT Last week the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) dealt a knockout punch to the Affordable Care Act (ACA),universally known as Obamacare. They released the results of their analysis of Obamacare on the United State economy and its health care systems over the next ten years, and its bleak picture could not be worse for the administration that pushed this bill through a compliant Congress. It will no doubt be remembered that the object to Obamacare was to secure health insurance for the 30 plus million now uninsured in the United States. It will be further remembered that president Obama sought to sell this transitional health care program as not costing our citizens any additional money over their existing coverage and that they could keep their present insurance programs and doctors. This promise was repeated over and over and now we all know that such promises could not be kept and at the time they were made, the president knew that they could not be kept. What did the CBO report that was so earth-shattering? In the first place they project that the same number of people will lack health care coverage as they did prior to Obamacare being enacted into law and that there will be 2 million fewer people working than if the law hadn’t been passed. The CBO also reports that, “As a result of Obamacare between 6 to 7 million fewer people will have employment based insurance coverage each year commencing in 2016.” About 32 million non elderly residents of the United States are likely to be without health insurance in 2026, roughly one out of every nine such residents.” The know-nothings in Washington that gave Americans such a gift of total destruction of a functioning health care system should be taken to task for their incompetence. It would have been nice if they had, prior to voting, requested a scoring of the bill that they did not take the time to read. The Leader has received several unsigned letters to the editor. We will respect an author’s request for anonymity, but must have your name, address, and phone number. We want to hear from you and publish your opinions, so in the future, kindly include the above requested information. COUNTY TREE AND SHRUB SALE Nassau County Executive Edward P. Mangano and the Nassau County Soil & Water Conservation District will once again be conducting its popular annual tree and shrub sale for conservation. Nassau County’s landscape still suffers from tree and plant loss caused by Hurricane Sandy and winter storms. This sale is a great cost effective solution to help beautiful areas throughout the County that had trees and shrubs destroyed. Nassau’s replanting program will help restore the landscape in many neighborhoods, parks, and preserves and will benefit our natural environment for many generations to come. Native plants, including oaks, maples and conifers, will be available through the Nassau County Soil & Water Conservation District in the spring of 2014 to homeowners seeking to replace trees and shrubs on their property, groups helping to revitalize parks and preserves, and landscapers working in areas that have lost full-grown trees. Those interested in purchasing trees and plants through this program should download the order form from the Districts website, www.nassauswcd.org or call (516) 364-5860. Make checks or money orders payable to “Nassau County SWCD” and mail to the Nassau County Soil & Water District at 5 Old Jericho Turnpike, Jericho, NY 11753, along with the attached order form. Trees and shrubs are sold in bundles of 10 each and listed prices are for one bundle. The plants are seedlings or transplants up to 24 inches in height. Orders must be received by March 12, 2014 and must be picked up on Friday, April 18, 8.a.m to 4 p.m. and April 19 between 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in person at the Nassau County Soil & Water District offices. Those unable to pick up their order on the specified days must make arrangements to have them picked up, as the Conservation District does not have the capability to keep orders past the pickup date. The Conservation District is not responsible for seedlings after acceptance of orders or for seedlings that are not picked up, and there are no refunds for unclaimed orders. Quantities are limited and may be subject to substitution. Katie Grilli-Robles Press Secretary for County Executive Ed Mangano The Staff at The Leader Wishes Our Valued Readers a Happy Valentine’s Day WALKING IN THE SNOW AND ICE To the Editor, With significant snow and ice expected, the Snow & Ice Management Association has these tips for safe winter walking. Falls account for more than 1M injuries in the U.S. annually. The most common type of walking accidents is the slip and fall. That’s the type of fall that happens when you fall walking on a sidewalk, parking lot or street not clear of snow or ice. The most dangerous part of a snow storm may be the day or days following the snow when sunny skies and higher temperatures during the day melt the snow, and lower temperatures at night refreeze the melted snow, creating a cycle that could continue for days, a hazardous condition for walking and driving Tips for safe winter walking: wear proper footwear, and watch your balance. Plan ahead if the conditions are nice for ice. Anticipate black ice. Walk steps slowly and enter a building carefully. Be careful when you shift your weight, and avoid taking shortcuts. Scan the environment often, and be aware. Following these tips will help ensure that you survive the snow and ice season safely. For more snow and ice removal tips, visit SIMA. Martin B. Tirado, CAE Executive Director Snow & Ice Management Association (SIMA) Leader Stations Stop by these Leader Stations to pick up your copy of The Leader. BAYVILLE Twin Harbor Pharmacy Marty’s Party Bayville Pharmacy Bayville Market Oak Neck Deli EAST NORWICH East Norwich Deli & Catering GLEN COVE Glen Cove Stop n’ Shop Glen Cove Hospital Gift Shop OYSTER BAY Oyster Bay General Store Oyster Bay Stop n’ Shop Verrelli’s LOCUST VALLEY Locust Valley Deli Locust Valley Bagel Country Plaza Deli Locust Valley Convenience Store Locust Valley Market The Publisher GLEN HEAD Glen Head Deli Tobacco King LALLY COMMUNICATIONS, INC. Publisher TEL: 516-676-1434 FAX: 516-676-1414 Notice to our Subscribers Several of you have called regarding issues either not being delivered on time, or not delivered at all. If you know your subscription is up to date, please call your post office. The Leader is sent out each Wednesday morning from the Locust Valley Post Office. Their number is 516.671.1559. news@theleaderonline.com LORIANN CODY Editor Reporter VICTORIA CROSBY PATRICIA MAVROS BREXEL Art Director Reporter AIMEE EBERLE CHRISTINE LORING Editorial Assistant Reporter ADAM GROHMAN SALLY BANDOW Director of Sales Reporter CHRISTINE ROBERTS NANCY DENNIS-BROWNE Business Associate Reporter VICTORIA SIEGEL Copyright© 2013 Lally Communications, Inc. All rights reserved. Material appearing herein may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed in any form. Copying part or all of the editorial or graphic arts in any machine readable form, making multiple printouts thereof or other uses of the work product contained herein is expressly prohibited and is inconsistent with all applicable copyright laws. Advertisers purchase space and circulation only. All property rights to any advertisements produced for the advertisers by Lally Communications, Inc. using art work and/or typography furnished or arranged by Lally Communications, Inc. shall be the property of Lally Communications, Inc. No such ad or any part thereof may be reproduced or assigned without the express written consent of Lally Communications, Inc. Lally Communications, Inc. assumes no financial responsibility for errors beyond the cost of the actual space occupied by the error. Entered as Periodical postage matter paid at the U.S. Post Office at Locust Valley, NY. September 12, 1946 under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscription $32 per yr. $59 - 2 yrs. POSTMASTER: Send changes to P.O. Box 468, Locust Valley, NY 11560. The Leader, 336 Forest Avenue, Locust Valley, NY 11560 February 12, 2014 The Leader Page 5 Glen Cove Boys & Girls Club Annual Club Closet Tag Sale GCBGC Club Closet Tag Sale Chair, Betsy Gibbs of Worth Repeating, with Executive Director, Melissa Rhodes. Glen Cove Boys & Girls Club will hold its much anticipated Annual Club Closet Tag Sale on Saturday, April 5, and Sunday, April 6, with an exclusive Preview Night on Friday, April 4 (Note, there is a $10 admission fee to shop on Preview Night). The Club Closet Tag Sale will once again offer an eclectic selection of goods and products to please all types of shoppers from antique lovers to discriminate buyers on the hunt for that special one-of-a-kind find, to fashionistas looking for designer clothing. And as always, there will also be plenty of steals and deals for the bargain hunter. Betsy Gibbs, owner of Worth Repeating in Locust Valley, and chair of the 2013 Club Closet Tag Sale and Club Closet Shopping Spree, is chairing the event. “We are so fortunate to have Betsy involved in our Club Closet Tag Sale. Her expertise, energy and enthusiasm have helped to make the Club Closet Tag Sale a must visit event,” said Melissa Rhodes, Executive Director of Glen Cove Boys & Girls Club. “I am very excited to be chairing the Club Closet Tag Sale again. I am very happy to share my consignment experience and knowledge to help a great and worthy organization that does so much for the children of the Glen Cove community,” said Betsy Gibbs. The Club is accepting donations for the Tag Sale from March 24 to April 3 from 10 am to 2 pm weekdays. To find out how to donate home furnishings and accent pieces, textiles and rugs, crystal, glass and tableware, kitchen appliances and accessories, holiday and seasonal décor, high end designer apparel, and jewelry and accessories to the Club Closet Tag Sale or to schedule an alternative date to drop off items, please call 516-671-8030 ext. 110. To maintain the Club Closet Tag Sale treasure trove distinction, the Club does not accept books, children’s clothing, toys, cribs, car seats, televisions, outdated electronics, computers or monitors. The Glen Cove Boys & Girls Club Closet Tag Sale is held annually to help raise much needed funds for the Glen Cove Boys & Girls Club, servicing more than 700 children and teens from the Glen Cove community. All proceeds from the sale will benefit the Club’s programs and initiatives. To learn more about Glen Cove Boys & Girls Club and how you can help support the Club, its mission and service to the youth of the Glen Cove community, please call Melissa Rhodes, Executive Director at 516-671-8030 or visit www.glencovebgc.org. Locust Valley Wrestlers Head to County Championships! The Locust Valley High School Wresting Team continued their winning tradition, earning 400 points during the Nassau County Division II Wrestling Qualifiers. The Falcons hosted the event in which the top four wrestlers in each weight class qualified for the Nassau County Division II 99lbs- Freshman Jonathan Gomez was crowned Champion and Jonathan Romano placed fourth. The Falcons Results: • 106 lbs. - Eighth graders Jack Ward and William Holowchak took third and fourth place respectively. • 113 lbs. - Hunter Dusold was the champion (also won most pins least time) and Patrick Briody took third place. • 120 lbs. - The Falcons had two finalists, Nick Casella, who defeated teammate Andrew Cantatore and Jack DeNatale who placed fifth. • 126 lbs. - The Falcons had a trio of place winners including Bailey O'Brien in third place, Michael Minicozzi in fourth place and Robert Dressler sixth place. • 132 lbs. - Nick Petralia took third place and Erik Villalobos took fourth place. • 138 lbs. - Sam Ward finished in first place. • 145 lbs. - Michael Dusold finished in first place. • 152 lbs. - Bryce Dusold finished in second place. • 160 lbs. - Jordan Formicola finished in first place. • 170 lbs. - Sam Farren and Dean Palermo took third and sixth place respectively. • 182 lbs. - Joseph Bressingham took first place, Zach Holowchak took third place and Jaydee Medina placed fifth. • 195 lbs. - Brian Drewes placed second and Alex Cassisi and Chris Schultz took third and fourth place respectively. • 285 lbs. - It was an all Falcon final as Spencer Matthaei edged John Piscitello. The Falcons entered 29 wrestlers in the tournament and 24 will advance. Great job by the student-athletes and the Coaches, Joe Enea and Tim Bellisari! The Nassau County Championships will be held on Saturday, Feb. 15 at Carle Place High School at 9 a.m. There is a $6.00 admission fee to enter. Read the Legals! www.legals@theleaderonline.com Page 6 The Leader February 12, 2014 Legal Notices INC. VILLAGE OF CENTRE ISLAND 303 CENTRE ISLAND ROAD OYSTER BAY, NEW YORK 11771 BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS HEARING LEGAL NOTICE INC. VILLAGE OF OLD BROOKVILLE MCCOUNS LANE OLD BROOKVILLE, NEW YORK PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT the next general election for the Incorporated Village of Old Brookville, Nassau County, New York shall be held at the Village Hall on June 17, 2014. Please take notice that the Board of Zoning Appeals of the Inc. Village of Centre Island will conduct a public hearing on Saturday, March 1, 2014 at 9:00 A.M. AT 303 Centre Island Road, Centre Island, Nassau County, State of New York. The offices to be filled and the terms thereof are: The hearing will be on the appeal of Alex Koundourakis, owner of a 1.62 acre parcel of land located at 320 Seawanhaka Road in the Village, designated as Section 28, Block 60, Lot 378 on the Nassau County Land and Tax Map and located within the Village’s A-1 zoning district. Trustee for a four year term. Trustee for a four year term. Sandra Albro Village Clerk The Appellant seeks to construct a greenhouse which would be attached to an existing detached garage and shed, and which would require the following variances: February 10, 2014 1. 2. TENTATIVE ASSESSMENT ROLL VILLAGE OF BROOKVILLE 18 HORSE HILL ROAD NEW YORK 11545 PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Assessor of the Incorporated Village of Brookville, Nassau County, New York, has prepared the Tentative Assessment Roll of said Village for the fiscal year beginning June 1, 2014 and ending May 31, 2015. A copy thereof has been filed with the Village Clerk-Treasurer at the Village Offices, 18 Horse Hill Road, in said Village, where it may be seen and examined by any person at all times during the business hours, 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, from February 3, 2014 until February 18, 2014, at the Village Offices located at 18 Horse Hill Road, Brookville, New York. On February 3, 2014, in said Village, the Village Clerk will be available between the hours of 12:00 noon and 4:00 p.m. for the purpose of hearing complaints in relation thereto on the application of any person considering himself or herself aggrieved thereby. Complaints must be filed with the Village Clerk-Treasurer on or before the 18th of February 2014, a statement under oath, specifying the respect in which the assessment complained of is incorrect, which statement must be made by the person whose property is assessed, or by some person authorized to make such statement and who has knowledge of the facts stated therein. Winsome Citarella Clerk Treasurer Dated: JANUARY 27, 2014 Brookville, New York NOTICE TO BIDDERS INC. VILLAGE OF OLD BROOKVILLE NASSAU COUNTY, NEW YORK SEALED PROPOSALS will be received by the Village Clerk at Village Hall located at 201 McCouns Lane, Old Brookville, New York 11545, until 12 noon (prevailing time) on March 5, 2014 at which time they will be publicly opened and read aloud and the Contract awarded as soon thereafter as practical for: Old Brookville Police Department Partial Renovation of Police Station Contract Instructions to bidders, plans, project specifications, project manual, and form of contract may be procured at the Village Hall located at 201 McCouns Lane, Old Brookville, New York 11545 between the hours of 9:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. of all usual business days on and after February 5, 2014. A non-refundable fee of fifty ($50.00) dollars made payable to the Village of Old Brookville will be required for a CD with bid documents in PDF format. All bidders are required to visit the site prior to submitting proposals. Walk-throughs of the premises have been scheduled for the following times: February 20, 2014 between the hours of 12 noon and 3pm. If a bidder is unable to make a scheduled time they may schedule an alternate time by contacting the Architect directly. The Contractor will be required to comply with the provisions of the Labor Laws of the State of New York. The successful bidder will be required to enter into a contract for the performance of the work that may be awarded to said bidder for the total amount of the awarded contract price. The Village, upon direction from the Board of Police Commissioners, reserves the right to reject any and all bids, to waive any informality in any bid, and to accept the bid of the lowest responsible bidder as it determines, after all bids and bidders have been examined and checked. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES Village of Old Brookville, New York Sandra Albro, Village Clerk DATED: January 29, 2014 Old Brookville, New York 3. Section 122-10(B)(2): to allow the enlarged accessory structure to have an aggregate roofed area of 672.74 feet rather than the maximum permitted 500 square feet. Section 122-10(B)(3): to allow the accessory building to be located forward of the rear line of the principal building to which it is accessory. Section 122-8(B): to allow the greenhouse addition to have a northerly setback of 23' 6" rather than the required 25 feet. A copy of said appeal is on file at the office of the Village Clerk and may be viewed during the hours of 10:00 AM TO 1:00 PM Monday through Friday. All interested parties will be given the opportunity to be heard at said time and place. If any individual required special assistance to attend, please notify the Village Clerk at least 48-hours in advance of the hearing. BY ORDER OF THE ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS Ann G. Vessalico Clerk Treasurer Z-2014-01 PUBLIC NOTICE ON PROPOSED CONTRACT FOR FIRE HYDRANT RENTAL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE That a Public Hearing will be held by the Town Board of the Town of Oyster Bay in the Hearing Room, Town Hall, East Building, Oyster Bay, New York, on Tuesday, March 11, 2014, at 10:00 o’clock a.m., prevailing time, at which Hearing residents and parties interested will have an opportunity to be heard on the proposed contract with New York American Water for the rental of two hundred fifty (250) hydrants at an agreed per annum rental fee of $187,155.00, for the period from January 1, 2014 to December 31, 2014, for the benefit of the Glenwood-Glen Head Fire Protection District. In addition, $9,732.05 is due for the 2013 calendar year, for additional hydrants previously installed. The Contract shall provide in general that any recognized and established fire company or department, which, from time to time, may furnish fire protection to the inhabitants within the Glenwood-Glen Head Fire Protection District, or to persons having property located therein, shall be allowed to use said fire hydrants, and all necessary water which can be drawn therefrom, for the fighting and control of fires and such other purposes as are generally customarily used for fire fighting and control. BY ORDER OF THE TOWN BOARD OF THE TOWN OF OYSTER BAY. JOHN VENDITTO, Supervisor. JAMES ALTADONNA JR., Town Clerk. Dated: February 4, 2014, Oyster Bay, New York. NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT: NASSAU COUNTY. AMERICAN COMMUNITY BANK, Pltf. vs. KEVIN S. DALY, et al, Defts. Index #797/10. Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure and sale entered Dec. 10, 2013, I will sell at public auction in the Calendar Control Part (CCP) Courtroom of the Supreme Court, 100 Supreme Court Dr., Mineola, NY on Tuesday, Feb. 25th, 2014 at 11:30 a.m., prem. k/a 3 Frost Creek Dr., Locust Valley, NY. Said property BEGINNING at a point on the westerly side of Frost Creek Dr., distant 210 ft. northerly from the extreme northerly end of the arc connecting with the westerly side of Frost Creek Dr. with the northerly side of Lattingtown Rd.; being a plot 436 ft. x 209.42 ft. x 433 ft. x 210 ft. Approx. amt. of judgment is $515,797.39 plus costs and interest. Sold subject to terms and conditions of filed judgment and terms of sale. MARK RICCIARDI, Referee. CULLEN AND DYKMAN LLP, Attys. for Pltf., 100 Quentin Roosevelt Blvd., Ste. 307, Garden City, NY. #83671 # $ # ! # $ # $ " # $ # # $ # $ # # $ February 12, 2014 The Leader Page 7 The Forgotten Aviator - Charles Yager • BY ADAM M. GROHMAN On August 1, 1937, Charles Yager, a thirty-year old New Rochelle, New York native, smartly attired and prepped in his flying jacket, cap and goggles, eased into the cockpit of his small seaplane. Owner of an automotive repair shop, Yager’s fascination with machinery of fast cars had been eclipsed only by his passion for soaring into the heavens. Buying out his fellow co-owners of the seaplane, Yager had logged roughly fifty-hours of solo flying and had proudly earned his coveted student pilot’s certificate. As the sun arched achingly into its late summer afternoon routine, Yager tested the controls and felt the pontoon-equipped sea plane gently bob in the calm waters off of Davenport Neck. As he throttled up the engine, the small seaplane eased forward and Yeager maneuvered the seaplane for take-off. As the seaplane’s twin pontoons began to skim across the water, Yeager slowly pulled back on the stick and the seaplane cast off its gravity-stricken circumstances. The seaplane’s engine roared evenly as it alighted into the late afternoon sky. A bevy of boats and small crafts dotted the waters of the Long Island Sound as Yager’s seaplane rose higher into the heavens. The seaplane banked as Yeager took an easterly compass heading and all of the controls responded smoothly to his deft hands. For the first few minutes of the flight, the seaplane answered his each and every command. Suddenly, something went terribly wrong. Though only a student pilot, his training immediately took over as he reacted to the seaplane’s violent lurch earthward. Those along the shoreline and aboard the fleet of pleasure boats watched as the seaplane tumbled from the sky minus a wing. Charles Yager, strapped securely into the cockpit of his seaplane and starring at the surface of the ever-approaching expanse of the water of the Long Island Sound. Sixteen years later on December 12, 1953, another Charles found himself being bounced around in the cockpit of his aircraft. Having been dropped from the aluminum belly of a B-50, Charles “Chuck” Yeager ignited the four rocket chambers of the Bell X-1A’s engines. At sixty-thousand feet, he eased the aircraft into a pushover as it rocketed toward seventy-thousand feet. Within seconds, having attained the speeds of Mach 2.3 and Mach 2.4 and having reached nearly eighty thousand feet, the Bell X-1A began to “yaw.” Yeager fought the controls but to no avail. The aircraft “began to go in four different directions simultaneously, snapping, rolling, and spinning in what is termed ‘going divergent on all three axes.” After his flight helmet smashed the cockpit window, Yeager thrashed wildly about. Only his seat straps kept him in the aircraft as his flight suit inflated and his body was physically tortured as the aircraft plummeted earthward. Amazingly, notwithstanding the mental and physical experience of a nearly fifty-five thousand foot drop, Yeager was able to regain control of the aircraft as it reached twenty-five thousand feet. Despite his harrowing experience, Yeager was able to establish radio communications with the control tower and eventually safely landed the aircraft. It was just another close call for Charles Yeager during his efforts of not only opening but pushing the envelope on aviation technology and progress. Born on February 13, 1923, Charles Elwood “Chuck” Yeager was six years junior to the Charles Yager of New Rochelle. Raised in West Virginia, “Chuck” was raised amidst a humble and proud family, and after graduating high school, quickly joined the United States Army Air Corps with dreams of becoming a pilot. Without a college degree he was quickly relegated to serve his nation as an aircraft mechanic. Yeager was not to be grounded for long and after proving his mettle as a crew chief for a Beech At-11 bombing trainer aircraft and despite some “rough” initial flights, he decided to take a chance by applying for acceptance in the service’s “Flying Sergeant” program. By March 1943, after his successful completion of flight training, he received his wings and was promoted to Flight Officer. After recovering from a violent bailout and rough landing when his P39 exploded midair, Yeager received orders to join the Eighth Air Force Fighter Command to support the war effort. He scored his first victory on March 4, 1944 when he downed a Luftwaffe Messerschmitt Me-109. His opportunity to revel in his dog-fighting victory was temporary. The following day, honed in by three enemy aircraft, Yeager’s P-51 Mustang was riddled by enemy ordnance. Under the envelope of his silk parachute, Yeager landed in enemy territory with extensive wounds. After completing self triage, he struck out for freedom. Thanks to his selfdetermination and a score of French civilians and members of the French Resistance, Yeager eventually escaped, in a most dramatic of fashions, to freedom to neutral Spain via the Pyrenees Mountain. By the conclusion of hostilities, Yeager had returned to flight status assisting the allied war effort in the waning days of the war in Europe, was commissioned as an officer, Charles “Chuck” Yager crash and eventually promoted to the rank of captain. His tally of air combat victories included the destruction of eleven enemy aircraft, the assisting of the destruction of another enemy aircraft, and damage to three others. Returning to the United States as a welldecorated veteran, Yeager served briefly as a flight instructor before receiving the nod for his next stage in his aviation training. After an intense academic and practical course of study, Charles Yeager became a test pilot for a nation starving and striving for superiority in aviation advancement over the space-enthralled red menace of the U.S.S.R. Yeager, strapped into the cockpit of experimental aircraft as one of the nation’s test pilots, was on the brink of reaching new heights and level of celebrity that the Charles Yager of August 1937 would never witness. As Charles Yager vainly attempted to gain control of the spiraling seaplane, one of the wings violently sheared off. A collective gasp overcame those along the shores of Long Island and Connecticut and those aboard their pleasure craft on that early August day. Charles Yager and his crippled craft tumbled toward the waters off of Fort Slocum. From a height of 1,500 feet, the seaplane slammed into the waters of the Long Island Sound. The first boat on scene was able to maneuver alongside part of the seaplane’s fuselage and wing but the seaplane quickly sank into fifty feet of water. Patrolman Lewis Odell, after bringing his boat’s engine to neutral, quickly donned a light diving rig and plunged into the abyss to try and extricate Charles Yeager. His efforts were in vain. Charles Yeager, student pilot, was somewhere in the dark depths of the Long Island Sound. Ten years later on October 14, 1947, nestled in the instrument chocked cockpit of the Bell X-1, Charles “Chuck” Yeager, rocketed into the annals of aviation history when he pushed the orange hued experimental aircraft Bell X-1 past Mach 1. He achieved history when he pushed the limits of aviation technology and broke the sound barrier. It would mark his catapulting “to fame and celebrity and make his name as well known in the annals of the history of aviation as the Wright brothers, Charles Lindbergh, and Amelia Earhart.” Charles Yeager and his exploits as both a fighter pilot during World War II and as a test pilot with the “right stuff” has rightly earned a place in the aweinspiring history of aviation. For Charles Yager of New Rochelle, New York, an amateur student pilot with a mere fifty-hours of dream chasing, his fateful plunge from fifteen hundred feet into the waters off of Fort Slocum have long been relegated to the footnotes of aviation history and the rich and varied history of the Long Island Sound. Both, as diametrically opposed as their careers were in aviation, deserve to be remembered as they both chased their dreams into the heavens despite the terrible risks involved in their pursuits of attaining new heights. Page 8 The Leader February 12, 2014 Bishop Murphy’s Visit at St. Dominic’s Hazy Daze These are photos from the Bishop Murphy's visit at St. Dominic's. One of our faculty members, Mrs. Kristine Caro-Sanchez, is on military leave and when she was here she would dress on Fridays in red to show support to the troops. In her honor, today the entire student body dressed in red so that we could send a photo to her and the students are going to write letters to her. Portledge Student to Compete in Pee Wee Hockey Portledge 7th grader Vincent Salgado will travel to Quebec, Canada, in February to play goaltender for the Junior Islanders hockey team in the 55th Quebec Pee Wee Hockey Tournament. Salgado joins 17 other elite players to participate against 2,300 young hockey stars from 16 countries in what is considered the most important minor hockey tournament in the world. Salgado began skating at age 4 and playing hockey on the house league at the Iceland Rink near his home in New Hyde Park at eightyears old and has sinced played on a variety of Long Island teams, including the Ice Cats and the Gulls. Now Salgado is skating under Frank Barker, current assistant and goalie coach of the Junior Islanders Hockey team, with amazing results. He credits Barker with building both his physical and mental skills, and says he feels, “transformed.” His experience speaks to the importance of good coaching in building character. If it were not for Frank Barker, “my mentor,” he says, he would not be at Portledge, where he feels supported academically and on the ice, with a flexible schedule that allows him to pursue his dream. The Portledge Middle School program emphasizes character develop- ment through trying, learning from mistakes, and trying again in all pursuits: academic, artistic, athletic and social action. It is a philosophy that resonates with Vincent, who says simply,“I need to push if I want to succeed.” On the eve of playing in the World Pee Wee Championships, which attracts 200,000 fans per year and is responsible for introducing legendary players like Wayne Gretzky, Guy Lafleur and Mario Lemieux, is Salgado nervous? “Inside I get nervous. That’s natural. But I’m focusing on now, year by year, game by game, it’s all now.” The following local students have been named to the Marist College Dean’s List for the fall 2013 semester: Katieann Albro of Bayville, Alexandra Ayers of Locust Valley, Liana Babich of Glen Head, Alexander Gietz of Oyster Bay, Gabrielle Luisi of Bayville, Brianna Magamas of Glen Head, Ashley Morris of East Norwich, Victoria Saperstein of Glen Cove, Sarah Tyree of Laurel Hollow, Ryan Verola of Glen Head, Karina Wrona of Locust Valley, and Christopher Zbikowski of Glen Head Ashley Levy of Glen Cove, whose major is Financial Management, has been named to the Dean’s List at Clemson University for the fall 2013 semester. The following local students were named to the Fall 2013 Dean’s List at Wake Forest University: Evan Adonailo of Glen Cove, Aaron Lee of Glen Cove, John Koslow of Glen Head, Zachary Rowe of Locust Valley, Molly Kirkpatrick of Muttontown, and Natalie Flammia of Oyster Bay. The following students were named to the University at Albany’s Fall 2013 Dean’s List for outstanding academic achievement: Madelyn Fisichella of Bayville, Briana Moglia of Glen Cove, Robert Krisch of Glen Cove, Jason Ho of Glen Cove, Monique Szafranski of Glen Cove, Cindy Amaya of Glen Head, Adam Mrowca of Glen Head, James Passarelli of Glen Head, and Michael Torba of Glen Head. New DBE Members at Page One Westminster Abbey Chapter of the Daughters of the British Empire (DBE) recently held their monthly meeting at Page One Restaurant in Glen Cove. Two new members were sworn in and presented with their badges by NY State president and chapter Regent Victoria Crosby. Pamela Block, whose mother was English, and Indeg Curtis, who is from Wales. Meetings are normally held in each other's homes, but during the winter months they are held at a restaurant. DBE is non-profit charity of women of British birth and heritage who raise funds for the Victoria Home, a rehabilitation nursing facility in Ossining NY. For further information contact DBENY.org or visit westminsterabbeydbe@aol.com. Legal Notice Create something great SM ecycled culpture Contest NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING PROPOSED LOCAL LAW A-2014 INC. VILLAGE OF MATINECOCK BOARD OF TRUSTEES NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing will be held before and by the Board of Trustees of the Incorporated Village of Matinecock, Nassau County, New York at the Portledge School, Gilmour Library (Upper School), 355 Duck Pond Road in said Village on Tuesday, February 25, 2014 at 6:30 p.m. The hearing will be on whether to enact proposed Local Law A-2014 which will allow the Board of Trustees to override the tax levy limit established in the General Municipal Law §3-c as it pertains to the Incorporated Village of Matinecock’s budget for the fiscal year commencing June 1, 2014. A copy of proposed Local Law A-2014 is on file at the office of the Attorneys for the Village, Humes & Wagner, LLP, 147 Forest Avenue, Locust Valley, New York, where it may be reviewed between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. during usual business days until the time of the hearing. Portledge School and the Cradle of Aviation Museum are proud to sponsor the fourth annual Create Something Great Recycled Sculpture Contest that combines creativity, innovation and environmental awareness. This year students in pre-kindergarten through eighth grade are challenged to create a robot-themed sculpture. Entries will be judged on aesthetics and the creative use of recycled materials. Prizes will be awarded in each grade category at the Create Something Great Award Ceremony at the Cradle of Aviation Museum on Saturday, March 22 at 9:00 a.m., and winning entries will remain on display at the museum. For complete contest rules, visit www.portledge.org/createsomethinggreat All interested persons will be given an opportunity to be heard at said hearing. Any person needing special assistance in attending, please notify the Village Clerk at (516) 671-7790 at least 48 hours in advance of the meeting. By Order of the Board of Trustees William H. Simonds Village Clerk Dated: February 12, 2014 Pre-nursery through Grade 12 SUMMER˘ADVENTURES PORTLEDGE ˘ February 14, 2014 The Leader Page 9 Theodore Roosevelt Elementary School Welcomes New Principal Ms. Tami McElwee Ms. Tami McElwee’s first day as the new principal of Theodore Roosevelt Elementary School in Oyster Bay is Wednesday, February 12, however she has already met with her faculty and has taken part in the 2nd Grade Science Fun Night in January. She comes with a positive energy and has worked with Interim Principal Ms. Bonnie Epstein to make the transition seamless. While saying hello to Ms. McElwee, the Oyster Bay community must bid farewell to Ms. Epstein who served as Interim Principal for two months. The community owes Ms. Epstein a debt of gratitude for taking care of the youngest students with kindness, caring and compassion. Ms. McElwee comes to Oyster Bay from the Great Neck School District where she was the Literacy Coordinator since 2011. Ms. McElwee attended Manhattanville College where she earned a Bachelor of the Arts Degree in English, and Masters in Teaching and Elementary Education. Ms. McElwee also studied Educational Leadership at the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. Ms. McElwee lives in Bethpage with her husband, Craig, and their three children. When asked what it is that made her decide to come work in Oyster Bay, Ms. McElwee said, “When the opportunity arose, I felt many connections to the OBEN School District. As a Literacy Coordinator for the Great Neck School District, my involvement in Teachers College had afforded me the opportunity to study literacy practices in a TC Coaching group with the OBEN literacy coaches. Through this coaching group, I had the opportunity to visit the Theodore Roosevelt School and study the successes within the building. I feel honored to serve a community with such a rich tradition and history of providing outstanding educational opportunities for children.” Cabaret Night at Tifereth Israel Glen Cove’s own acoustic guitar artist, Don Bikoff, who has appeared at Port Washington’s Landmark on Main Street, Manhattan’s The Living Room and Riverhead’s Vail-Leavitt Music Hall, presents a concert at Congregation Tifereth Israel (CTI) in Glen Cove, on Saturday, March 1, at 8:00 PM. The concert, Don Bikoff and Friends, is also a release party for Bikoff’s latest album, Hallowed Ground. Appearing with Bikoff are fellow guitarists Mark Fosson and Matt Sowell. The performers will be presented in an elegant cabaret setting featuring a dessert buffet and cash wine and beer bar during intermission. At only 19 years old, Glen Cove resident, Don Bikoff, released his first recording, Celestial Explosion, a collection of finger-picking acoustic guitar solos heavily influenced by Delta blues, American folk and Eastern classical music. Last year this album was reissued as a result of several of its tracks being included in WFMU’s playlist. The rerelease of Celestial Explosion launched a major revival of Bikoff’s musical career, one he had almost abandoned 40 years ago. His second album, Hallowed Ground, has just been released. Joining Don are guitarists Mark Fosson and Matt Sowell. Fosson, a 12string guitarist, who is also a songwriter, was based on the west coast where he recorded several albums. Fosson’s Jesus On a Greyhound, a solo recording project for Otis Records, has been compared to Don Bikoff such American musical legends as Ramblin‘ Jack Elliott, Joe Ely, John Prine and Guy Clark. Matt Sowell, based in Philadelphia, is an American Primitive guitar player who is deeply influenced by the finger stylings of Jack Rose and John Fahey. Tickets to attend Don Bikoff and Friends on Saturday, March 1, at 8 p.m. are $20 may be reserved by calling (516) 676-5080 or writing to office@ctionline.org. Since seating is strictly limited, advance reservations are strongly advised. If available, tickets may be purchased at the door for $23. The synagogue is located at 40 Hill Street in Glen Cove, at the intersection of Hill Street and Landing Road. Call (516) 676-5080 to reserve tickets for the concert or for further information. Love Your School Ms. Tami McElwee with Interim Principal Ms. Bonnie Epstein ! Portledge School %( &$$" ( # !$( # ( &( $ '( $&* * (# # ( #(&! & $#($## # ' '"#( *( &%! %& )( +& *( %($ & (( & &( $& #(& (## !$' ($ '$$!' '$%%# # (&#'%$&(($# P O R T L E D G E S C H O O L E '% *"5" -#201 "**%4 6 -2/ ,%3 '-+% 0%"/#' 01"/10 3(1' -2/ "$$/%00 .(.(,&/-#)/%#-+ Co-ed college prep Grades Pre-nursery – Grade 12 Competitive athletics and extensive art and music offerings Financial assistance X PL OR E C R E AT E EX C E L Portledge School 355 Duck Pond Road Locust Valley, NY 11560 516-750-3203 www.portledge.org Page 10 The Leader February 12, 2014 All Parents Paren nts & Educators Are Welcome! Wel elcome! Camellia House Weekend SAT. & SUN., FEBRUARY 22ND & 23RD, 2014 / 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM At Coe Hall & Planting Fields Arboretum State Historic Park No parking fee CAMELLIA HOUSE FREE WEEKEND ACTIVITIES Live music with The Good Old Days Barbershop Quartet and keyboardist all day! Camellia Plant Sale provided by Martin Viette Nurseries 10:00am Camellia Greenhouse & Coe Hall open 11:00am Vincent Simeone talks about camellias 12:00pm Henry B. Joyce talks about the Camellia House 1:00pm Vincent Simeone talks about camellias 3:00pm Henry B. Joyce talks about the Camellia House 4:00pm Camellia House closes Nassau Count ty District Attorney Kat thleen Rice County Kathleen Will Intr roduce Her Office’s Pro ogram Introduce Program “STOP STOP P THEN SE SEND” END” END COE HALL WEEKEND ACTIVITIES 10:00am – 4:00pm / $10 entrance fee / Members and children under 12 are free All Day! Enjoy ukelele music with Josh Kekoa Cho, Watercolor Workshop for children, Mad Hatter’s Tea Party, Bingo, and make your own greenhouse craft. Mad Hatter’s Tea Party & Storytelling with Jonathan Kruk & Andrea Sadler featuring Mad Hatter's Tea with Tales, Silly Skits and the Queen of Hearts. All Day! How to paint camellias - watercolor demonstrations with Roberta Erlagen 2:30pm - Lecture with Vincent A. Simeone “The Amazing Story of Camellias: Past, Present and Future” This informative lecture will cover the history of camellias as tea and garden plants, their significance to Planting Fields and the garden world, and how new plant breeding techniques allow home gardeners to plant hardy ones in their own garden on Long Island. Periwinkles Café at the Hay Barn open 11:00am–4:00pm. A special Camellia Weekend Afternoon Tea will be served at 12pm & 2pm. Call Pat (516) 922-5700 for reservations and more information. @8:45 am INFORMATION: (516) 922-8678 or (516) 922-8682 or email: jlavella@plantingfields.org Thursday, Thursd day y, February y 20 Planting Fields Foundation • Planting Fields Arboretum State Historic Park 1395 Planting Fields Rd., Oyster Bay, New York 11771 Lear rn How to T alk a to Kid ds Learn Talk Kids K B T Location: Location n: The Green V Vale aale School S About the t real-life consequences consequencces of cyber-bullying cyber-bullyin ng and other risky online onlin ne activities Study the content Think of others Only send if appropriat appropriate te Photographs are foreve forever! er! T Then Send! Prime Land For Sale Lattingtown, NY: This 2.02 flat acres of the former Meudon Estate is graced with the original specimen trees and plantings on the estate. Located within the Lattingtown Harbor Property Owners Association Waterfront Community. An outstanding Beach Clubhouse is nearby for summer enjoyment. This is a perfect location to build in a peaceful North Shore community. Asking $975,000 Listing Broker - Clifford Packingham - Mobile 516 502 5055 Locust Valley · Telephone +1-516-277 2371 Clifford.Packingham@EVUSA.com www.locustvalley.evusa.com · EVLV Realty,LLC 250 Valentine’s V alentine’s Lane, Lanee, Old Brookville, NY 11545 516.621.2420 ggreenvaleschool.org reenvaleschool.org We are pledged to the letter and spirit of U.S. policy for the achievement of equal housing opportunity throughout the Nation. We encourage and support an affirmative advertising and marketing program in which there are no barriers to obtaining housing because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin. February 12, 2014 The Leader Page 11 Sagamore Hill Hosts Great Backyard Bird Count Event On Saturday, February 15, come celebrate Theodore Roosevelt’s love of birds by participating in the Great Backyard Bird Count at Sagamore Hill National Historic Site. The program will run from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., and will begin indoors at the Theodore Roosevelt Museum at Old Orchard. Participants will learn about using binoculars and field guides, and about basic bird identification techniques and some commonly seen local birds. Weather permitting, the talk will be followed by a nature walk to see and hear birds in their natural habitats. Data gathered during the walk will be entered into the Great Backyard Bird Count website, and attendees will learn how to submit their own observations at home. Participants are encouraged to bring binoculars and a bird field guide. Anyone with an interest in birds is welcome and no previous experience in birding is necessary. Please wear appropriate clothing and shoes for a moderate winter hike along steep woodland paths. The annual Great Backyard Bird Count is sponsored by the National Audubon Society and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. People across the country can participate by recording the types and numbers of birds that they see in their own backyards. Thousands of citizen scientists worldwide provide valuable contributions like these to scientific research about bird populations and critical issues affecting birds. Sagamore Hill National Historic Site, located at 12 Sagamore Hill Road, Oyster Bay, New York, is a unit of the National Park Service. The site was established by Congress in 1962 to preserve and interpret the structures, landscape, collections and other cultural resources associated with Theodore Roosevelt’s home in Oyster Bay, New York, and to ensure that future generations understand and appreciate the life and legacy of Theodore Roosevelt, his family and the significant events associated with him. NOTE: The Roosevelt Home was closed to the public for an extended period beginning in December of 2011 to accomplish a major rehabilitation of the home. However, the Visitor Center, Theodore Roosevelt Museum at Old Orchard, and the grounds are open and free interpretive programs are offered daily. The Visitor Center and Theodore Roosevelt Museum at Old Orchard are open five (5) days a week, from Wednesdays through Sundays, and the grounds are open seven (7) days a week. For further information, visit our website at www.nps.gov/sahi, or call 516-922-4788. Robin Tufted Titmouse Cardinals in the snow DELIGHT YOUR VALENTINE WITH A LITTLE ARM CANDY BEAUTIFUL BANGLES FOR YOUR SWEETHEART THIS VALENTINE’S DAY – JUST $99 EACH AMERICANA MANHASSET 516.627.7475 | WHEATLEY PLAZA 516.621.8844 GLEN COVE 516.671.3154 | EAST HAMPTON 631.329.3939 | SOUTHAMPTON 631.287.4499 LONDONJEWELERS.COM Red-Headed Woodpecker . Page 12 The Leader February 12, 2014 Legal Notice PUBLIC NOTICE OF COUNTY TREASURER’S SALE OF TAX LIENS ON REAL ESTATE Notice is hereby given that I shall on February 18, 2014, and the succeeding days, beginning at 10:00 o' clock in the morning in the Legislative Chamber, First Floor, Theodore Roosevelt Executive and Legislative Building, 1550 Franklin Avenue, Mineola, Nassau County, New York, sell at public auction the tax liens on real estate herein-after described, unless the owner, mortgagee, occupant of or any other party-in-interest in such real estate shall pay to the County Treasurer by February 14, 2014 the total amount of such unpaid taxes or assessments with the interest, penalties and other expenses and charges, against the property. Such tax liens will be sold at the lowest rate of interest, not exceeding 10 per cent per six month's period, for which any person or persons shall offer to take the total amount of such unpaid taxes as defined in section 5-37.0 of the Nassau County Administrative Code. As required by section 5- 44.0 of Nassau County Administrative Code, the County Treasurer shall charge a registration fee of $100.00 per day to each person who shall seek to bid at the public auction defined above. The liens are for arrears of School District taxes for the year 2012 - 2013 and/or County, Town, and Special District taxes for the year 2013. The following is a partial listing of the real estate located in school district number(s) 1, 301, 6, 5, 2, 4 in the Town of Oyster Bay, Town of North Hempstead, City of Glen Cove only, upon which tax liens are to be sold, with a brief description of the same by reference to the County Land and Tax Map, the name of the owner or occupant as the same appears on the 2014/2015 tentative assessment roll, and the total amount of such unpaid taxes. IMPORTANT THE NAMES OF OWNERS SHOWN ON THIS LIST MAY NOT NECESSARILY BE THE NAMES OF THE PERSONS OWNING THE PROPERTY AT THE TIME OF THIS ADVERTISEMENT. SUCH NAMES HAVE BEEN TAKEN FROM THE 2014/2015 TENTATIVE ASSESSMENT ROLLS AND MAY DIFFER FROM THE NAMES OF THE OWNERS AT THE TIME OF PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. IT MAY ALSO BE THAT SUCH OWNERS ARE NOMINAL ONLY AND ANOTHER PERSON IS ACTUALLY THE BENEFICIAL OWNER. Town of North Hempstead School: 301 Glenwood Landing Name Group Lot Parcel SLATE & WE&RE VEITH NM 20 P 00350 35-36 ALLO S CAPONI & JUDITH 20 P 00400 BURKE HAROLD J & ALICE M 20 P 07180 718 BADOLATO THERESA M 20 P 07220 722 CAMPIONE TARA 20 P 07240 724 LUGONES BRENDA & LUGONES SR ROL 20086 00050 PAPPAS THEODORE & KATHLEEN 20088 00020 Amount 11,994.58 14,992.49 1,569.15 1,544.73 669.78 22,834.23 17,374.30 Town of Oyster Bay School: 1 Glenwood Landing Name Group Lot Parcel PARKER STELLA 20 F 02700 BATAS HEATHER & FOTI 20 P 00670 KHALADI SHIRIN 20 P 0403G KOBLENZA WM 20012 00550 MCAREE KAREN & NICHOLAS 20030 00230 MELILLO WILLIAM & DEBORAH 20033 04750 ESTATE OF EDW G MOTT 20043 02160 MEEHAN STEWART 20048 00080 YELON JAY & MARJORIE 20058 08190 819 STENGER ANNE E 20079 00210 GOLDEN SCOTT & LISA 20106 00050 GLADSKY JR JOHN 21 F 00030 GLADSKY JR JOHN 21 F 19770 1977 HESSKAMP WALTER 21 P 04210 BEREST ALLISON & BUSCHING TIMOT 21082 00170 GEBHARD HENRY & KATHLEEN 21206 00180 EMPIRE PROPERTY SOLUTIONS LLC 21206 03620 GRANELLI JOHN & DANIELLE 21218 00650 SMALL JR THOMAS A 21226 00490 Amount 3,628.04 4,019.14 14,928.41 241.92 7,842.98 12,147.12 370.59 3,300.12 11,125.17 4,444.00 2,967.38 2,003.62 8,576.99 2,080.72 5,619.61 370.59 55,024.10 3,019.72 5,317.15 9,497.05 6,097.21 3,417.79 370.59 2,706.32 4,627.84 8,503.59 2,322.04 19,010.59 2,962.61 5,115.94 67,280.26 225.50 19,137.38 6,340.18 16,353.91 3,092.15 7,360.83 3,398.84 2,727.70 12,394.65 12,249.08 7,320.43 Town of Oyster Bay School:2 Glen Head Name Group Lot Parcel KAMEN JEFFREY L 20 H 03330 FARRELL JAMES 20 H 03800 PRUDENTE ROBERT & TERESA 20 J0402630 CHAN DOUGLAS & SHARON LEUNG 20 J0708490 WESTBURY BUILDERS 20 J0709180 WHITE KATHRYN 20 J0800070 7-8 BARAVARIAN KOUROSH & AFSANEH 20 J0800140 LOU SHAOBO 20 J0900220 INCVILLAGE OF OLD BROOKVILLE 20 L 07170 SADOWSKI ETAL ELIZABETH 20014 02550 255-258 KOPETIC JEAN LIFE ESTATE 20017 00210 21,121 SHEPHERD CATHERINE 20021 03430 GREGORIO SALVATORE & TERESA 20024 00310 31,131 SOOS CJ 20024 01400 BURGEON CAPITAL LLC 20063 01380 138,154,256 HSBC BANK USA NA 20066 01890 CARNEY DENISE & COURTNEY 20093 00010 MAKOWSKI WALTER & VALERIA 21 Q 00320 MAGNER JAMES & PATRICIA 21052 00140 14-15 MC CRANN EDWARD & MARY A 21053 00470 47-48 OSWALD PHILLIP H 21234 00140 BRAGOLI DANIEL W 22 F0102610 GRAME MICHELINA A 22 F0103150 LIOTTA VINCENT & MARY 22 F0103460 SUTHERLAND C CUTHERLAND TR & D 22 F0104160 SUTHERLAND DENISE 22 F0104170 OHARE DANIEL 22 F0206400 KUCICH GARY & PATRICIA 22 H 10340 GAMBINO THOMAS & LYNN 22 K 0021C LAVI PARVIZ 22027 0010A PALMIERI MICHAEL 23036 00030 GRELLA ANGELO & ANNA 23039 00150 Amount 29,648.99 23,170.46 12,514.65 23,470.84 183.54 9,151.30 11,390.95 2,210.55 20,527.05 Town of Oyster Bay School: 4 Locust Valley Name Group Lot Amount Parcel WINSTON EVE STRAUSMAN 9,458.94 23 B 03640 MORSE JOHN & KATHLEEN 24,706.01 23 B 04690 DEPASQUALE JOHN 24,064.58 23 K 05750 575,626 BAST CHARLES & W 207.06 23 K 06660 OLSON DONNA 20,402.91 23 K 07050 GRAHAM CATHLEEN&GRAHAM GORDON& 3,558.97 23070 00140 KOSOFF STEVEN & HELENE 10,009.77 24024 00120 12 ZAHRINGER ANNE C & GEORGE J III 4,751.66 29 J 02080 FOX BRUCE R & VICTORIA 3,248.09 29 M 13950 DELROSARIO JUSTIN & DANA SCHILL 8,376.49 29 M 14050 KIEMLEMACHE RACE TRUST 1,792.23 29 M0200030 TREPETA LIVING TRUST 20,024.45 29 R0102620 COHEN MICHAEL & JOANNE 5,453.40 29 R0211520 1152 OLSON PETER W & DONNA M 8,954.36 29 R0211660 OLSON PETER W & DONNA M 17,288.02 29 R0211670 RIVARDO DONNA M & WAYNE 30,873.60 29 R0211780 FITZGERALD BRIAN J & MARY 32,492.16 29 R0302780 FROST MILL INC 172,969.96 29 R0303050 PASTER MARY ROSE 29001 00230 DE RANCY JAMES & M 29002 00330 O T S ASSOCIATES INC 29039 03130 313-321 MICRO LEASING 29040 03480 CATALFO LE MARIE DALLI,A & L 29063 04300 430 DELORENZO ETAL ANTHONY 29068 00180 HANSTON HOMES LTD 30 B 08010 RAYMOND L ENGEL & PAUL 30 B 12450 1245 ZACK I LLC & ZACK II LLC 30 B 12560 1256 MC CULLY ROBERT 30 F 03370 ESPOSITO WILLIAM A & KIEM 30 F 03540 354-355 NISSEQUOGUE REALTY GROUP LLC 30 G 04150 STIMOLA LE S BALES ETAL,EVELYN 30 H 00120 BROACH R MOHRING & KATHY 30 H 00560 56,155,157 BRESSEL BERND ELIZABETH 30 K 03640 DELLAQUILA MICHAEL & KELLY A 30 M 01620 CHAMBERLAIN JOHN 30 M 01640 HUTTON JANE 30007 01420 GALLO JOHN & GALLO AUGUSTINO 30016 01080 GALLO AUGUSTINO 30016 01090 29 BIRCH STREET LLC 30019 01030 103-104,205 NORTH GROVE ENTERPRISES INC 30020 00170 17-18 GROSS & RAMIREZ REALTY LTD 30022 00340 34-35 BROWN JOSEPH 30022 00570 57-58 ZAND LLC 30027 01100 110-112 PETRUZZIELLO L E L PETRUZZIELLO 30030 00770 77-78 DEARING GERALD 30045 00150 15-17 DALY KEVIN & KATHLEEN 30046 00230 APPEL JOCELYN & STEPHEN 30055 00190 ARDI STEVEN R & CARLA 30068 00380 MINOGUE JR JAMES J & MARY ELLEN 30084 00070 KARAGEORGIOU PETER & JOANNA 30084 00420 MINKOFF LAWRENCE A & DIANE B 30086 00170 COLEMAN ALEXANDER P 30089 00160 1,613.31 700.62 364.44 7,648.99 1,353.79 2,694.86 18,683.88 28,029.22 44,684.60 28,213.90 11,521.28 9,657.64 6,012.29 1,604.01 1,051.61 5,221.52 13,133.80 9,070.95 2,422.62 1,870.52 16,925.11 32,765.77 8,160.72 1,062.98 24,255.03 3,545.21 24,975.84 30,364.64 22,145.97 12,196.84 32,423.02 43,493.17 16,895.77 192.70 Town of Oyster Bay School: 6 Bayville Name Group Lot Parcel SCOTT SIOBHAN 28004 00260 26-27 SCHETTINI FRANCIS D & MARY A 28004 00550 MUZIO JOHN 28018 00090 DUNN ROSEMARY R 28034 03450 SCHNEIDER ANDREW & YVESMAY 28037 01040 104-105 PACIFICO BEVERLY 28042 00010 1-4 KAPPEL MARY 28049 00710 71-74 Amount 955.58 902.16 6,242.98 5,250.94 3,315.04 4,681.19 DERIZIOTIS IRENE 2,720.70 28072 00040 TEAGUE HOWARD C 10,845.34 28075 00040 4 R & R MOHRING ENTERPRISES INC 3,959.05 29 D 00100 10-15,21-26 CAMERA JERRY & CARMELA 2,669.28 29 D 0500180 18-19,28-29 ARENA STEVEN & MARIA 1,186.18 29 D 0800180 18-21 BARRY JAMES & ROSEMARY 743.92 29 D 1201280 128-129 262 BAYVILLE AVENUE CORP 22,678.35 29 G 02310 231-232 GIUSTI JOHN E 2,110.09 29 G 02390 FLANAGAN MICHAEL V & VIRGINIA D 4,221.19 29007 00360 36-37 SPERANDEI LAWRENCE & SARAH 1,495.12 29007 00460 46-48 MACDONALD CINDY 1,029.55 29009 00420 SALTARELLI VINCENT & FRANCES 258.32 29009 03670 SALTARELLI VINCENT & FRANCES 274.64 29009 03710 DEBORAH GELFMAN TRUST 1,088.28 29012 00830 83-84 DEBORAH GELFMAN TRUST 311.97 29012 01630 ALESSI JAMES F & SUSAN B 632.77 29013 00250 ALESSI JAMES F & SUSAN B 650.96 29013 00260 26-27 MORTON DOUGLAS & MORTON LEONOR 4,772.72 29018 01140 BRACKENRIDGE STEVEN 906.62 29020 01820 MARCARIO FRANK 2,412.06 29021 01920 BLAHA ROBERT & ELEANOR 1,779.79 29021 01990 PEDONE CHRISTINE 6,483.64 29024 00140 LUISI ANTHONY & CATHERINE 10,193.73 29024 00150 FINN WILLIAM G 2,029.20 29028 00250 BEBRY JANET 660.04 29033 01150 PORRELLO MARY 9,427.97 29054 03580 CHILKO LE K & L KOCH, PAULINE 4,221.42 29059 00800 80 DECESARE ANGELA 7,619.21 29062 05820 RUSSO EUGENE & MARIANNE 7,448.71 29071 00040 BLUE CHIP AERO SERVICES LTD 13,790.71 29073 00050 FULMER JR GEORGE T & SILVANA M 10,525.78 29073 00120 RAINERI LORRAINE 1,757.25 29079 00020 2 LEE DONNA 7,219.27 29080 00140 14 LUCRETIA MARTINO TRUST 1,163.35 29080 00220 R H SPITTEL POST 1285 20,311.99 29082 00060 6 MANTEGARI M T STRECKER & C 7,068.48 29083 00320 ROSBORG ROBERT & LINDA 8,499.89 29084 00120 BARTOLOTTO KEVIN & DOROTHY & 1,549.49 29084 00160 SOBRERO JILL 2,416.51 29088 00050 DANNEBAUM WILLIAM & ANNE 571.27 29090 00090 MINICOZZI WILLIAM JR TRUST 2,336.01 29101 00040 VIVONA ESTATES INC 19,222.52 29103 00010 EHRLER ROGER K & JOYCE A 9,819.85 29103 00180 1,037.97 Legal notice continued on page 13 February 12, 2014 The Leader Page 13 Legal Notice City of Glen Cove School: 5 Glen Cove Name Group Lot Parcel GLEN COVE CREEK INC 21 A 05130 4 PARK PLACE CORP 21 A 05690 4 PARK PLACE CORP 21 A 05720572 WEISER JOSEPH 21 A 06520 MASTROIANNI DOMINIC 21 A 06770 CHASE JOHN M 21 B 05840 SMITH R J 21 C 00090 6 GROVE STREET LLC & FLEET HOLD 21 H 01030 103,242 HEENAN FRANK J & MARY ANN 21 N0104050 ENF INC 21 S 08490 SANDERS LEROY 21005 00010 CONTINENTAL HILL CORP 21009 00060 PANJOJ PEDRO 21011 00300 30,31 HERMAN RJC 21015 00110 MELCHIONE JOSEPH & RITA 21017 00010 1-2 PAULINO E DELAROSA & JOSE 21021 00220 VAZQUEZ HERIBERTO & SYLVIA 21038 01390 GIORDANO SALVATORE JOSEPH & VER 21040 00240 PELLEGRINI JEANNE M 21086 00460 46,145,415 74 GLEN COVE AVENUE CORP 21199 04610 FRENCH DAVID 21229 00410 MATTERN MICHAEL B & MICHELLE M 21237 00050 PERCIBALLI VINCENT & ELIZABETH 21240 00050 SLAUGHTER KEVIN 21244 00020 CURRY WADE 21246 00070 BUCHANAN SR HENRY & WILLIE MAE 21251 00170 REESE JOSEPH 21256 00690 BARAJAS CARLOS 21256 01270 Amount 4,133.17 3,854.93 185.27 5,196.69 4,376.17 251.29 681.21 1,026.48 244.58 2,451.67 895.07 2,952.37 1,182.40 959.67 855.88 614.46 1,246.81 909.15 928.65 1,956.18 1,329.42 661.04 746.09 1,412.98 1,304.95 946.30 1,117.36 519.64 SACCHETTA GIOVANNI & P 430.19 22002 02460 SACCHETTA GIOVANNI & P 213.03 22002 02470 ORCHARD PROPERTIES LLC 3,278.86 22003 00150 15-16 DIMAGGIO, GIACOMO & ANGELA 271.34 22006 00030 FAMIGLIETTI ROCCO & TERESA 658.86 22008010009 09-10 FAMIGLIETTI ROCCO & TERESA 210.87 220080100110 ROGERS JANE ANNE 618.79 22012 00080 TODISCO ETAL ARCANGELO & MARIA 1,674.70 22012 00880 88-89 FERRICCHIO FRANCESCO LIFE ESTAT 879.33 22015 02110 SALPETER JAY & CHERYL 1,985.48 23 D 02020 99 GLEN LLC 3,954.33 23 E 00960 MAIER MICHAEL & NANCY 1,377.08 23 E 05110 511 TSRM LLC 1,077.30 23 E 05210 521 COLOMBO DOLORIS F TRUST 4,863.50 23 F 17040 BOZZELLO LE C BOZZELLO JR, C 744.48 23 G 10550 PASCUCCI STEFANO & ELIZABETH 1,411.30 23 G 10560 ST ANDREWS PROPERTY LLC 1,478.70 23002 00460 CHASE LESTER H 3,230.06 23002 02430 GAGLOIN HOLDING CORP 2,108.19 23002 02460 GORDON TRUST 838.17 23005 00030 SCHOOL DOSORIS INC 2,322.79 23005 00230 JENSEN RICHARD C & LESLIE D 2,007.73 23008 00100 KNOWLES CO 1,446.39 23009 00250 AHMED TARIK & TAREQ 1,856.86 23011 01260 149 GLEN STREET CORP 4,338.82 23011 01350 135-136 MCALEER JAMES F & HELEN M 1,088.89 23021 00380 38-39 CAPOBIANCO GIUSEPPE & CARMELINA 612.81 23027 00050 BORUTA VINCENT 1,094.43 23028 00050 DI PAOLA GENNARINO & IOLANDA 1,003.10 23030 00190 PETULLA MARCELLO & LAURA 925.93 23045 00150 PETULLA MARCELLO & LAURA 214.67 23045 00230 CAVISE JOHN & ROSEMARY 1,206.91 23055 00510 51,81 TODESCO PETER 1,015.38 23055 00610 TODESCO J CORBO & P 1,042.08 23055 04290 BORDONE JOHN & DESIREE 1,286.17 23057 00130 CAPOBIANCO LEO 323.69 23065 00080 PEZZA ANDREA S 1,538.06 23065 00140 HAFERS LAUREN & NURIELI ELLIO 1,041.32 23066 00130 WILDWOOD PARTNERS LLC 1,489.31 23069 00340 MURRAY THOMAS & MARGARET 828.09 30 D0105350 41 FOREST REALTY LLC 14,035.00 30 D0105660 SYDOR JOSEPH J 1,555.54 30 D0105780 578 VENIA CATHERINE 1,515.43 30 D0105820 582 MARINO JOSEPH 1,121.18 30 D0300150 LANCASTER WILLIAM & LYNN 1,040.23 30041 01020 MANNO, IMMACOLATA 840.23 30047 00120 QUINONES LEONARDO & VISCO MARIA 826.79 30048 00430 MAICHIN JOHN C & ARDEN 1,556.64 30048 00520 DOSORIS REALTY LLC 1,118.92 30054 00010 PACE GARY S 1,284.60 30056 00650 65,71,89 MILANESE S BIFONE & VITO 946.52 30057 00270 FOLAN STEPHEN J & ANNA M 1,440.81 30067 00050 THURMOND ALBERT & PATRICIA 1,546.61 30069 00010 ASIP SHARON S 1,605.66 30080 00040 ROMANO THOMAS & HUNTE ROCHELLE 936.77 30091 00170 ANDREWS STEPHANIE 1,078.69 30091 00280 ZANGARA THERESE 3,560.37 30092 00050 MORGAN COURT OF GLEN COVE LLC 714.12 31 E 03650 CASTRONOVO GRAIG 509.36 31 F 00060 FARR PATRICIA 1,126.74 31 F 00130 EDWARDS GILES G & DORIS M 909.53 31 F 00800 MISIAKIEWICZ JOSEPH 931.81 31 F 00850 MISIAKIEWICZ STEVEN J & JOSEPH 1,128.97 31 F 00860 DOXEY CHARLES 251.29 31002 01280 128,131 KIEL LE G NOWAK,M 902.80 31002 02780 MARROQUIN E CRUZ & ILEANA 882.60 31004 00270 GREFE MATTHEW & MARIE 247.92 31005 01850 185,388 MISIAKIEWICZ LE MISIAKIEWICZ ET 931.81 31009 00200 20,221 MISIAKIEWICS STEVEN 247.92 31009 04620 HERBERT GERARD M & SUSAN B 1,318.27 31010 00100 HERBERT GERARD M & SUSAN B 242.39 31010 00180 MAHER MICHAEL & NANCY 1,075.49 31018 01410 COHEN CRYSTAL & DOUGLAS 662.12 31018 05120 512,516 GIWOJNA HELEN M LIFE ESTATE 915.82 31021 01300 BANCALE GREGORY 1,327.20 31026 00460 CRUZ YESENIA 616.61 31033 00280 BERMUDEZ JULIA 946.30 31038 00060 PARKER ROBERT H & JAMES H 986.42 31048 02140 BLACHARSKI THOMAS 1,378.43 31049 06050 BARBARA LESLIE F 3,060.26 31051 05800 TRAIL JESSE F & THOMAS PETER 1,774.97 31060 00600 ZEITLIN STANLEY S & SUSAN 1,324.65 31064 00200 BRASIELLO NICOLA & ELIZABETH 733.61 31074 00070 ROMERO DONNA 1,290.48 31074 00130 LEVINE ROBIN & MIHEALI ISAAC 748.80 31075 00220 T ZEAM REALTY LLC 2,198.14 31085 0026UCA01020 26 CA 102 UNIT 206 SCRENCI CATHERINE 726.68 31085 0028UCA01270 28 CA 127 UNIT 313 SCRENCI CATHERINE 1,497.55 31085 0028UCA01270 28 CA 127 UNIT 314 MOTTCO REALTY GROUP LLC 19,537.14 31085 00300 LI FIBER EXCHG 1,828.13 4254005900 73SF 09000 TERMS OF SALE Such tax liens shall be sold subject to any and all superior tax liens of sovereignties and other municipalities and to all claims of record which the County may have thereon and subject to the provisions of the Federal and State Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Acts. However, such tax liens shall have priority over the County's Differential Interest Lien, representing the excess, if any, of the interest and penalty borne at the maximum rate over the interest and penalty borne at the rate at which the lien is purchased. The Purchaser acknowledges that the tax lien(s) sold pursuant to these Terms of Sale may be subject to pending bankruptcy proceedings and/or may become subject to such proceedings which may be commenced during the period in which a tax lien is held by a successful bidder or the assignee of same, which may modify a Purchaser's rights with respect to the lien(s) and the property securing same. Such bankruptcy proceedings shall not affect the validity of the tax lien. In addition to being subject to pending bankruptcy proceedings and/or the Federal and State Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Acts, said purchaser's right of foreclosure may be affected by the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act(FIRREA),12 U.S.C. ss 1811 et.seq., with regard to real property under Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation(FDIC) receivership. The County Treasurer reserves the right, without further notice and at any time, to withdraw from sale any of the parcels of land or premises herein listed. The Nassau County Treasurer reserves the right to intervene in any bankruptcy case/litigation where the property affected by the tax liens sold by the Treasurer is part of the bankruptcy estate. However,it is the sole responsibility of all tax lien purchasers to protect their legal interests in any bankruptcy case affecting their purchased tax lien, including but not limited to the filing of a proof of claim on their behalf, covering their investment in said tax lien. The Nassau County Treasurer and Nassau County and its agencies, assumes no responsibility for any legal representation of any tax lien purchaser in any legal proceeding including but not limited to a bankruptcy case where the purchased tax lien is at risk. The rate of interest and penalty at which any person purchases the tax lien shall be established by his bid. Each purchaser, immediately after the sale thereof, shall pay to the County Treasurer ten per cent of the amount for which the tax liens have been sold and the remaining ninety per cent within thirty days after such sale. If the purchaser at the tax sale shall fail to pay the remaining ninety per cent within ten days after he has been notified by the County Treasurer that the certificates of sale are ready for delivery, then all amounts deposited with the County Treasurer including but not limited to the ten per cent theretofore paid by him shall, without further notice or demand, be irrevocably forfeited by the purchaser and shall be retained by the County Treasurer as liquidated damages and the agreement to purchase shall be of no further effect. Time is of the essence in this sale. This sale is held pursuant to the Nassau County Administrative Code and interested parties are referred to such Code for additional information as to terms of the sale, rights of purchasers, maximum rates of interest and other legal incidents of the sale This list includes only tax liens on real estate located in the Town of Oyster Bay, Town of North Hempstead, City of Glen Cove.Such other tax liens on real estate are advertised as follows: Legal notice continued on page 14 Page 14 The Leader February 12, 2014 Legal Notice Town of Hempstead Dist 1001 HEMPSTEAD/UNIONDALE TIMES, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEW YORK TREND, NEWSDAY INC., UNIONDALE BEACON, Dist 1002 HEMPSTEAD/UNIONDALE TIMES, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., UNIONDALE BEACON, Dist 1003 EAST MEADOW BEACON, EAST MEADOW HERALD, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEIGHBOR NEWSPAPERS NEWSDAY INC., Dist 1004 BELLMORE HERALD/LIFE MERRICK/BELLMORE TRIBUNE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 1005 HICKSVILLE ILLUSTRATED NEWS, LEVITTOWN TRIBUNE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEIGHBOR NEWSPAPERS NEWSDAY INC., Dist 1006 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., SEAFORD/WANTAGH CITIZEN, Dist 1007 BELLMORE HERALD/LIFE MERRICK/BELLMORE TRIBUNE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEIGHBOR NEWSPAPERS NEWSDAY INC., Dist 1008 BALDWIN/FREEPORT TRIBUNE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., POINT OF VIEW, Dist 1009 BALDWIN/FREEPORT TRIBUNE, FREEPORT BALDWIN LEADER, THE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., POINT OF VIEW, Dist 1010 BALDWIN HERALD BALDWIN/FREEPORT TRIBUNE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 1011 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., OCEANSIDE TRIBUNE OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD, Dist 1012 MALVERNE/WEST HEMPSTEAD HERALD, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., VALLEY STREAM/MALVERN TRIBUNE, Dist 1013 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., VALLEY STREAM HERALD, VALLEY STREAM/MALVERN TRIBUNE, Dist 1014 FIVE TOWNS TRIBUNE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NASSAU HERALD (FIVE TOWNS), NEWSDAY INC., Dist 1015 FIVE TOWNS JEWISH TIMES FIVE TOWNS TRIBUNE, JEWISH STAR, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 1016 FRANKLIN SQ/ELMONT HERALD, FRANKLIN SQUARE BULLETIN, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 1017 FRANKLIN SQ/ELMONT HERALD, FRANKLIN SQUARE BULLETIN, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEW HYDE PARK ILLUSTRATED NEWS, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 1018 GARDEN CITY LIFE, GARDEN CITY NEWS, GARDEN CITY TRIBUNE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 1019 EAST ROCKAWAY TRIBUNE LYNBROOK/EAST ROCKAWAY HERALD, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., ROCKAWAY JOURNAL, Dist 1020 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., ROCKVILLE CENTRE HERALD, Dist 1021 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., ROCKVILLE CENTRE HERALD, ROCKVILLE CENTRE TRIBUNE Dist 1022 FLORAL PARK BULLETIN, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., THE GATEWAY, Dist 1023 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., SEAFORD/WANTAGH CITIZEN, Dist 1024 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., VALLEY STREAM HERALD, VALLEY STREAM/MALVERN TRIBUNE, Dist 1025 MERRICK HERALD/LIFE MERRICK/BELLMORE TRIBUNE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 1026 HICKSVILLE ILLUSTRATED NEWS, LEVITTOWN TRIBUNE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 1027 MALVERNE/WEST HEMPSTEAD HERALD, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., WEST HEMPSTEAD BEACON, Dist 1028 LONG BEACH HERALD LONG BEACH TRIBUNE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 1029 MERRICK HERALD/LIFE MERRICK/BELLMORE TRIBUNE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 1030 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., VALLEY STREAM HERALD, VALLEY STREAM/MALVERN TRIBUNE, Dist 1031 ISLAND PARK TRIBUNE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., OCEANSIDE/ISLAND PARK HERALD, Dist 1201 EAST MEADOW BEACON, EAST MEADOW HERALD, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., WESTBURY TIMES, Dist 1205 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEW HYDE PARK ILLUSTRATED NEWS, NEWSDAY INC., Town of North Hempstead Dist 2001 MINEOLA AMERICAN, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., WESTBURY TIMES, Dist 2002 MINEOLA AMERICAN, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., WILLISTON TIMES, WILLISTON,PARK EDITION Dist 2003 MANHASSET PRESS, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., ROSLYN NEWS, Dist 2004 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., PORT WASHINGTON NEWS, Dist 2005 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEW HYDE PARK HERALD COURIER, NEW HYDE PARK ILLUSTRATED NEWS, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 2006 MANHASSET PRESS, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., PORT WASHINGTON NEWS, Dist 2007 GREAT NECK NEWS, THE, GREAT NECK RECORD, JEWISH STAR, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 2009 MINEOLA AMERICAN, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., WILLISTON TIMES, WILLISTON,PARK EDITION Dist 2010 MINEOLA AMERICAN, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEW HYDE PARK ILLUSTRATED NEWS, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 2011 MINEOLA AMERICAN, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., WESTBURY TIMES, Dist 2122 FLORAL PARK BULLETIN, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., THE GATEWAY, Dist 2301 GLEN COVE RECORD PILOT, LOCUST VALLEY LEADER, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 2315 JERICHO NEWS JOURNAL, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., SYOSSET JERICHO TRIBUNE, Town of Oyster Bay Dist 3001 GLEN COVE RECORD PILOT, LOCUST VALLEY LEADER, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 3002 GLEN COVE RECORD PILOT, LOCUST VALLEY LEADER, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 3003 JERICHO NEWS JOURNAL, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., SYOSSET JERICHO TRIBUNE, Dist 3004 LOCUST VALLEY LEADER, LONG ISLAND PRESS, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 3006 LOCUST VALLEY LEADER, LONG ISLAND PRESS, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 3008 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., OYSTER BAY ENTERPRISE PILOT, OYSTER BAY GUARDIAN, Dist 3009 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., OYSTER BAY ENTERPRISE PILOT, OYSTER BAY GUARDIAN, Dist 3011 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., OYSTER BAY ENTERPRISE PILOT, SYOSSET ADVANCE, Dist 3012 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., SYOSSET ADVANCE, SYOSSET JERICHO TRIBUNE, Dist 3013 NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., SYOSSET ADVANCE, SYOSSET JERICHO TRIBUNE, Dist 3014 JERICHO NEWS JOURNAL, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., SYOSSET JERICHO TRIBUNE, Dist 3015 JERICHO NEWS JOURNAL, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., SYOSSET JERICHO TRIBUNE, Dist 3017 HICKSVILLE ILLUSTRATED NEWS, HICKSVILLE/LEVITTOWN TRIBUNE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 3018 BETHPAGE TRIBUNE NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., PLAINVIEW/OLD BETHPAGE HERALD, Dist 3019 BETHPAGE NEWSGRAM, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., PLAINVIEW/OLD BETHPAGE HERALD, Dist 3020 BETHPAGE NEWSGRAM, BETHPAGE TRIBUNE NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 3021 BETHPAGE NEWSGRAM, BETHPAGE TRIBUNE NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 3022 FARMINGDALE OBSERVER, MASSAPEQUA POST NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Dist 3023 MASSAPEQUA POST NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., THE MASSAPEQUAN OBSERVER, Dist 3024 GLEN COVE RECORD PILOT, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., THE GOLD COAST GAZETTE, Dist 3203 LONG ISLAND PRESS, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., ROSLYN NEWS, Dist 3306 FARMINGDALE OBSERVER, MASSAPEQUA POST NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., THE MASSAPEQUAN OBSERVER, City of Glen Cove Dist 4005 GLEN COVE RECORD PILOT, LOCUST VALLEY LEADER, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., THE GOLD COAST GAZETTE, City of Long Beach Dist 5028 LONG BEACH HERALD LONG BEACH TRIBUNE, NASSAU COUNTY WEB PAGE, NEWSDAY INC., Nassau County does not discriminate on the basis of disability in admission to or access to, or treatment or employment in, its services, programs, or activities. Upon request, accommodations such as those required by the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA) will be provided to enable individuals with disabilities to participate in all services, programs, activities and public hearings and events conducted by the Treasurer's Office. Upon request, information can be made available in braille, large print, audio tape or other alternative formats.For additional information, please call 571-2090 Ext. 13715. Dated: January 21, 2014 THE NASSAU COUNTY TREASURER MINEOLA, NEW YORK February 12, 2014 The Leader Page 15 LVHS Honor Society Induction One of the goals of Grenville Baker Boys & Girls Club is to provide the children of our community with a safe haven and a place to learn, to grow and to have fun. Kids need a space they can call their own where they can explore and create in a healthy, social environment. While this is important for kids of all ages, it is especially true for our tweens (grades 6 – 8) and teens (grades 9 - 12). Here at the Club, tween and teen members have their own area: the Florence Auerbach Teen Center, which is open until 9 pm Monday through Thursday, 10 pm on Friday and 4 pm on Saturday, and the Tween Center which is adjacent to the Teen Center and is open until 8 pm Monday through Thursday, 9pm on Friday and 4pm on Saturday. During afterschool hours, the teens and tweens participate in the Club’s Power Hour, when the entire Club focuses on completing their homework for the day. Study groups and tutoring are available and encouraged. Once homework is completed there is time to participate in programs such as Money Matters, Debate Club and College Prep. There is also plenty of time for fun and entertainment. The designated spaces for teens and tweens ensure that both age groups can socialize in a healthy atmosphere and participate in a variety of positive activities including music, movies, and games. These two Centers are supervised by Stephanie Urio, Director of Program Outcomes, Nikita Gandhi, Teen Supervisor and Danielle Laria, Tween Supervisor, who all help provide our tweens and teens with guidance and support as they make use of all the Club has to offer. This well supervised setting makes it less likely that our teens and tweens will become involved with drugs, alcohol and other behaviors that threaten kids today. Our purpose here goes beyond the confines of our Club, encouraging our young people to visualize themselves attending college, working to their potential and contributing to their community. We provide our tween and teen members with the tools, resources and training to help them build a successful future for themselves. Through a variety of initiatives designed to build character, healthy attitudes and lifestyles, we teach money management, leadership skills and career development. As members of our Keystone and Torch Clubs, our kids can make a difference, helping younger members with homework and raising money for various causes such as animal shelters, children’s hospitals and volunteer fire departments. Our teens and tweens worked in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy on Staten Island, in Long Beach and Oceanside gutting houses, removing mold and putting up dry wall. They delivered hot and cold food to displaced families in the Rockaways. I am proud to be part of an organization that provides teens not only with a place to have fun, but the knowledge, skills and attributes they need to pursue their dreams and to succeed in life. National Honor Society inductees Locust Valley High School inducted almost 100 students into the National Honor Society, recognizing their achievements in the areas of scholarship, leadership, service, and character. The newest inductees join their fellow members in upholding these principles by contributing their time and talents to better the school and local community through volunteer activities, civic involvement and adherence to the highest standards of academics, morality and ethics. Master of ceremonies Madison Davidson welcomed the inductees, their guests and the honored speakers. High School Principal Dr. Kieran McGuire addressed the inductees acknowledging the tremendous amount of work each one had to undertake to achieve this honor. Following Dr. McGuire’s speech, high school student Caoimhe Stafford played Schubert’s Impromous Opus 90 No. 4, and she did so to perfection. Superintendent of Schools Dr. Anna F. Hunderfund praised the students for their dedication to being the “best of the best.” The Locust Valley High School National Honor Society officers led the entire ceremony and lit the ceremonial candles for each characteristic., with the inductees each lighting their own candle in the traditional style. Joseph Palumbo spoke about scholarship; Raysa Bousleiman about service; Gregory Caso about leadership; and Amanda Caso about character. The Honor Society advisors, Ms. Courtney McKay and Ms. Jennifer Masa led the inductees in the official installation into this prestigious club as each honoree recited the oath. Congratulations to the new inductees! Ray Reyes Advertising Directory Daniel Gale. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Dodge-Thomas Funeral Home . 17 EVLV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Frank Flower & Sons . . . . . . . . . 6 GBB&GC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Graziose Plumbing. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Green Vale School . . . . . . . . . . . 10 London Jewelers. . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 O’Connor Petito . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Oyster Bay Funeral Home. . . . . 17 Piping Rock Associates . . . . . . . . 9 PlantingFields. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Portledge. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8, 9 Valley Fireplace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Whitting Funeral Home . . . . . . . 17 25 Years Ago... By LC Colgate It was announced that David L. Luke III of Locust Valley was chairing the campaign to raise $44 million for the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. $28,700,000 had been raised in the quiet phase from leadership grants, pledges from foundations, individuals and New York State. The Dolan Family Foundation had contributed $2 million. Mr. Luke was treasurer of the board and Bayard Clarkson was chairman of the board. George W. Cutting Jr., Mrs. Sinclair Hatch and Townsend J. Knight were also taking on leadership roles in the fundraising campaign. It was noted that Olga Duke not Luly Duke, was the co-chair of the annual dance to benefit the Grenville Baker Boys and Girls Club. Robin Gimbel Senior was the other co-chair. Pauline Boardman was in charge of decorations. The dance was to be held in June at Floralyn, the residence of the Shelby Bryan’s on Feeks Lane in Locust Valley. Friends of Raynham Hall was organizing a large gala cocktail party. Carley Wagner was president of the Friends. Katherine B. Holmes and Mrs. William Roche were chairing the event. A symposium on Long Island’s water problems was to be held at the Haybarn at Planting Fields. Michael Monty reported that a new GE dishwasher was taken from a house under construction on Centerview Drive in Upper Brookville. The daughters of Susan and Alex Rizea of Locust Valley participated in the Miss Long Island Beauty Pageant that had been sponsored by the Melville Lions Club. North Shore High School mathe- 50 Years Ago... matics teacher Robert Gerver received a NYS Senate commendation for his teaching skills. Christopher Morris, an eighth grade student at East Woods School won the school’s geography bee and a chance for a $25,000 college scholarship. Doug Browne, son of George and JoAnn Browne of Locust Valley was the advertising manager of The Stentor newspaper at Lake Forest College. Navy seaman recruit William J. Piriczky, son of William J. Piriczky of Oyster Bay completed recruit training at the training command, Great Lakes. Dylan Ade, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Ade of Upper Brookville, a sophomore at Canterbury, was named to the honor roll for the third marking period. Christine Melbinger, a senior at the University of Scranton, was playing at the guard position for the school’s varsity basketball team. They were tied for first place in the MAC Northern Section. Maureen Snyder of Locust Valley, a sophomore at William Smith and a member of the school’s varsity basketball team scored ten points against the Albany team. Among the local residents who died were Henry R. Grimm, age 79, Charles Bjorklund of Roslyn Heights, Robert R. Merhige, age 90 and a former Oyster Bay resident, and Emily Tranter of Glen Head. A Muttontown country house, situated on nearly three acres, featuring Parquet de Versailles floors, boiserie, marble moldings, pool, pool house, apple orchard and a detached two-story, three-car garage was listed for sale for $1,650,000. By LC Colgate Hundreds of trees were being cut down to widen Route 25A near East Norwich. Discussion was underway about the removal of trees to widen West Shore Road. New stores were being built at 200 Forest Avenue in Locust Valley. The village of Old Brookville held its first police court session. Newly appointed Police Justice A.J. Powers presided. Acting Police Justice Charles Siefert was in attendance. The North Nassau Council of Girl Scouts presented a certificate of thanks for time and legal advice to Mrs. Grant Whipple of Locust Valley. James Schmidt of Locust Valley, a sophomore at St. Michael’s College, was chosen for the drill team. A three-bedroom ranch in Glen Head was listed for sale for $31,800. Taxes on the property were $450. A case of Alpo dog food cost $4.55. A quart of gin cost $4. ORIGINS BEWARE OF GREEKS BEARING GIFTS MEANING DON’T TRUST YOUR ENEMIES. This saying refers to the story of the Trojan Horse, the large wooden horse used by the Greeks to trick their way into the city of Troy. It is recorded in Virgil’s Aenid, Book 2, 19 B.C. Page 16 The Leader February 12, 2014 The Leader Business Directory NEW & USED BOATS Preception Kayaks - Full Line of Fishing Tackle & Bait, Marine Supplies & Accessories Come visit our Clam bar at 40 Ludlam Ave. 19 Ludlam Avenue, Bayville, NY 11709 www.bridgemarinesales.com (516) 628-8686 *0&-1# #!+.0&2# #0( #/0+.0&+* .// +(&/%&*$ !-1#.&*$ 6 #!+.0&2# ."3.# &.#,(!# !!#//+.&#/ 6 &$%0&*$ &401.#/ .+1$%0 .+* *" (/0&*$ &*0&*$ 1/0+) #0( .&!0&+* CALLAHAN HOME HOME SERVICES SERVICES Home Improvement & Caretaking Services SMALL REPAIR SPECIALIST Licensed Insured Local (516) 671-8757 )&( /2$#)#0()!!+) &!'1, #(&2#.5 "Don't Move, Improve!" Please call Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty for all your real estate needs Launch Service and Moorings Mechanical, Fiberglass, Rigging Repairs and Upgrades 516.759.4800 “Seasonal maintenance will help insure an enjoyable and safe boating season” Call us at (516) 624-2400 or Visit www.obmc.com for more information 5 Bay Avenue Ɣ Oyster Bay, New York 11771 R.W. Weitzmann, Jr., Inc. GENERAL CONTRACTORS Serving the North Shore Since 1930 Custom Building, Alterations, Cabinet Shop FOREST IRON WORKS 671-8793 671-4093 Lic. #H1707690000 Walter Uhl Tom Uhl Christian Uhl Toys & Unique Gifts Three Generations of Quality Traditional Home Building, Additions, Alterations & Design Since 1939 Licensed and Insured Locust Valley Office 71 Forest Ave | 516.759.0400 www.walteruhlbldr.com 22 Forest Avenue, Locust Valley, NY 11560 AskElliman.com 631.261.3830 ©2013 Douglas Elliman Real Estate. Mon. - Sat. 10 - 6 Sunday 11 - 3 516 • 671 • 3335 Equal Housing Opportunity. www.gwillikersgifts.com !# $ "! !# " Errand Helpers+ Roland Auctions Are there enough hours in a day? Buy - Sell - Appraise Monthly Auctions Bid online or in person We are here to get your to do list done! Including groceries, dry cleaning, pet help, bookkeeping etc. To make life a little easier. Since 1975 Bill & Rob Roland 516-759-9400 212-260-2000 RolandAntiques.com 80 East 11st Street New York, NY 10003 info@rolandantiques.com Contact Christine & Nancy 516 859 6427 Reasonable and Reliable &'"!& $ $&$ #%&' Matthews Painting February 12, 2014 The Leader Page 17 Obituaries Legal Notice ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS LOCUST VALLEY WATER DISTRICT TOWN OF OYSTER BAY | NASSAU COUNTY, NEW YORK SEALED PROPOSALS for the following contract: WELLHEAD TREATMENT AT PLANT NO. 5 CONTRACT G – GAC INSTALLATION & BUILDING CONSTRUCTION PROJECT NO. LVWD 13-04 for the Locust Valley Water District, Nassau County, New York will be received by the Board of Commissioners in the Administration Building at 226 Buckram Road, Locust Valley, New York, 11560 until 10:00 AM, prevailing time, on Thursday, February 27, 2014 at which time they will be publicly opened and read aloud. Proposals may be hand delivered or mailed to the above address for the Locust Valley Water District. No bids will be accepted after 4:00 PM on the date of the bid opening. NO EXCEPTIONS WILL BE GRANTED. Do not remove any pages from bid document; all bids are to be submitted intact, and each proposal must be identified by contract and project numbers on the outside of the sealed bid envelope. Plans and specifications may be obtained in electronic format at the office of the District Engineer, H2M architects + engineers, 538 Broad Hollow Road, Melville, New York 11747, upon deposit of Twenty-Five Dollars ($25.00). Make deposit check payable to H2M architects + engineers. Bidder’s deposit will be refunded when the set is returned in good condition within ten (10) days after the bids have been opened. Additional sets may be purchased at a cost of Twenty-Five Dollars ($25.00) per set. No refunds will be provided for additional sets purchased. GREEN, Ann M. of New York City, and Glen Cove, on February 2, age 97. Beloved aunt of six nieces and four nephews. Also survived by many grandnieces and grandnephews. Over 50 year employee of Proskauer, Rose, Goetz & Mendelsohn Law Firm. Interment Baron Hirsch Cemetery. Donations may be made to the Holocaust Memorial and Tolerance Center of Nassau County (www.holocaust-nassau.org) and Calvary Hospital Hospice (http://www.calvaryhospital.org). www.DodgeThomas.com ROBERTS, Laurence J. "Tex" or "Larry" of Locust Valley, on January 23, age 80. Born April 9, 1933 in Ellsworth, Maine, he was the son of Lorin and Persis Roberts. He served in the United States Army during the Korean War. While in the Army, he attained the rank of Sergeant and held many jobs, among them he was an instructor, as well as a certified Locksmith. His former wife, Rosina Roberts, survives, along with 5 Children: Lorin, Wendy, Glenn, Sheila and Dale; many grandchildren, along with 2 sisters, Katherine Conary and Delores. He was preceded in death by his parents Lorin and Persis, along with his late brother Donald. Interment Calverton National Cemetery. www.DodgeThomas.com WILLETT, Annie Mae of Glen Cove, NY on Feb.8, at age 65. Beloved wife of the Late Marston. Loving mother of Willie. Proud grandmother of GracieAnn Howard. Dear sister of Nick Davis, Oliver Davis and Sam Davis (Patri). Also survived by many nieces and nephews that were very dear to her. Proud employee of Glen Cove Hospital for over 40 years. She enjoyed watching TV dramas and reading. Arrangements handled by Dodge-Thomas Funeral Home. Interment Calverton National Cemetery. www.DodgeThomas.com news@theleaderonline.com Phone: 516-676-1434 All proposals submitted must be accompanied by a bid bond or certified check on a solvent bank or trust company in an amount not less than five (5%) percent of the proposal, made payable to the Locust Valley Water District, which will be held by the Board until signing the contract. Checks of unsuccessful Bidders will be returned following the award of the contract. No bid may be withdrawn until the expiration of forty-five (45) calendar days after the date of the opening of bids. Any withdrawal of a bid must be in writing and hand delivered to the District. Dodge-Thomas Funeral Home The right is reserved by the Locust Valley Water District to reject any or all bids, waive any informality, and to accept such bid which, in the opinion of the Board of Commissioners, is in the best interest of the Water District. Dated: February 12, 2014 BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS Anker Johansen, Chairman Louis P. Savinetti, Treasurer Pasquale J. Eliseo, Secretary Marylin Johnson, Gregg Minutoli, Guy Minutoli and Jeanine Minutoli-Sand Family Owned Family Traditions Personalized Service with Attention to Details ~ Combining Quality and cost is one of the things we do best. ~ 26 Franklin Avenue, Glen Cove 676-1180 dodgethomas.com LOCUST VALLEY WATER DISTRICT NASSAU COUNTY, NEW YORK (' % ") The North Shore’s Leading Funeral Home ( %' & " "! "# " !" ! " " ) ! #! #" # #" "# " "$ $ ' ' % ! $ ! #" % '# %"#" '" *$%'& " % #("& " %'#" (% & " %!'#" 516-671-0807 300 Glen Cove Avenue, Glen Head, LI, NY whitting@whitting.com • www.whitting.com David & Codge Whitting, Pre-Arrangement Counselors #(& % % # " #(' '%' +&'% + ) #% #% )))#+&'%+("% #!#! The Leader Business Directory Over 50 Years Of Service To The North Shore Page 18 The Leader February 12, 2014 Classifieds Seasoned Firewood CASH FOR COINS! Buying ALL Gold & Silver. Also FIREWOOD 80 cents per log. Cash and carry. 80 cents Stamps & Paper Money, Entire Collections, Estates. each for delivery. 516-671-1386. All Jan/Feb Travel to your home. Call Marc in NY 1-800-959-3419 Real Estate Boat for Sale BUY AND SELL LAND, land & cabin, farm or country property through New York Land Quest. Northern Division 315-269-3487 or Southern Division 607-2805770 online www.nylandquest.com 3 COUNTY LAND LIQUIDATION! UPSTATE NY 21 TRACTS, 5-147 acres from $14,900 Southern TIERCATSKILL MOUNTAINS- CAPITAL REGION! State Land, Ponds, Views! Special financing & incentives until 2/23! Call for free info packet: (888)905-8847 newyorklandandlakes.com SEBASTIAN, FLORIDA Affordable custom factory constructed homes $45,900+, Friendly community, No Real Estate or State Income Taxes ,minutes to Atlantic Ocean. 772-581-0080, www.beach-cove.com. 55’ CUSTOM FRERS, 1984 aluminum extensive inventory, yard maintained, full sail inventory, electronics and mechanical all upgraded. Low engine hours $140,000. 516-661-7258 11 Miscellaneous BUY OR SELL AT AARAUCTIONS.COM. Contents of homes, businesses, vehicles and real estate. Bid NOW! AARauctions.com Lights, Camera, Auction. No longer the best kept secret. DONATE YOUR CAR TO WHEELS FOR WISHES, benefiting Make-A-Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call 631-317-2014 Today! CLASSIC CARS WANTED!! 1950-1960 Cadillacs. Especially 1959’s & any convertibles. Will consider Buicks, Chevrolets & other makes & models. (Finders fee paid) Call/Text Steve @ 315- 863- 1600 or Email: eldo1959@live.com VIAGRA 100MG, 40 PILLS+/4 FREE, only $99.00. Save Big Now, Discreet shipping. VIAGRA 100MG, 40 pills+/4 free, $99.00. Save Big Now, Discreet shipping. 1-800-491-9065 Today! HAS YOUR BUILDING SHIFTED OR SETTLED? Contact Woodford Brothers Inc, for straightening, leveling, foundation and wood frame repairs at 1-800-OLDBARN. www.woodfordbros.com.Suffolk Cty~ License #41959-H Nassau Cty~ License #H18G7160000 HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA FROM HOME. 6 - 8 weeks. ACCREDITED. Get a Diploma. Get A Job! No Computer Needed. FREE Brochure. 1-800-264-8330. Benjamin Franklin HS www.diplomafromhome.com Leader Stations Help Wanted HOME HEALTH AIDES WANTED Free HHA Training, 175 Fulton Avenue, Hempstead, NY 11550, 516538-1400. Cases in Nassau and Suffolk. Live-In Cases & Flexible Shifts. Union Benefits, Health Insurance & 401K. Driver Incentive. AHCS is an Equal Opportunity Employer. allenhealth.com AIRLINE CAREERS begin here– Get FAA approved Aviation Maintenance Technician training. Financial aid for qualified students– Housing available. Job placement assistance. Call AIM 866-296-7093 AIRLINES ARE HIRING– Train for hands on Aviation Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualifiedJob placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866-296-7093 DYSONSPAREPARTS INC. CURRENTLY HAS AN OPENING FOR AN ONLINE BOOK/STOCK KEEPER - PT/FT. It takes only a little of your time. Should be computer literate. 2-3 hours access to the internet weekly. Must be efficient and dedicated. If you are interested and need more information, please send your resume to Mr Murray Email: murraycandy56@yahoo.com Babysitter Available EXPERIENCED BABYSITTER AVAILABLE for school-age children. During day, evening hours. References. Barbara. 516-671-7498. Autos Wanted CASH PAID FOR ALL VEHICLES or donate tax deductible - we come to you. Call Johnny 516-297-2277. Elderly Companion Available COMPANION FOR THE ELDERLY. Chores, light housekeeping, cooking, errands. Part-time/full-time. Barbara. 516-671-7498. References available. LOCUST VALLEY Locust Valley Deli Locust Valley Bagel Country Plaza Deli Locust Valley Convenience Store Locust Valley Market OYSTER BAY Oyster Bay General Store Oyster Bay Stop n’ Shop Verrelli’s GLEN HEAD Glen Head Deli Tobacco King The U.S. Government and State of New York have financial incentives that provide homeowners the opportunity to replace your electric provider with solar power. Roof Diagnostics Solar is now qualifying 50 homes for a FREE home solar system. Call 1-800-75-SOLAR to see if your home qualifies! Offer valid for West Chester, Rockland and Orange County Homeowners Only 1-800-75-SOLAR WP-0000175073 WC-24767-H12 www.roofdiagnostics.com Outer Banks, NC Vacation Homes! Over 500 Vacation Homes, from Duck to Corolla, rindley Oceanfront to Soundfront, each Private Pools, Hot Tubs, VACATIONS & SALES Pets and More… Book Online at www.brindleybeach.com 1-877-642-3224 The Leader Classifieds 516-676-1434 • $22 for the first 15 words, then 30 cents each additional word. NIGHT TIME TRIPS TO THE BATHROOM KEEPING YOU AWAKE? BAYVILLE Twin Harbor Pharmacy Marty’s Party Bayville Pharmacy Bayville Market Oak Neck Deli GLEN COVE Glen Cove Stop n’ Shop Glen Cove Hospital Gift Shop Own Your Own Home Have a Southernly-Facing Roof Little to No Shading Pay an Electric Bill “ S E R V I C E F I R S T … F U N A LWAY S ! ” Stop by these Leader Stations to pick up your copy of The Leader. EAST NORWICH East Norwich Deli & Catering Looking for 50 Homeowners to Qualify for a FREE Home Solar System We are currently recruiting men & women, age 50 & older who urinate 2x or more each night, for a research study to evaluate the effectiveness of an investigational nasal spray to reduce the number of times you wake up to urinate. Physician exam, tests and meds at no cost. Comp for travel & expenses. Call Diane: 516-742-3200, Ext. 302 WHY W HY DDI? DD DI? Syosset, LI - 125 Michael Drrive Call To oday!! 1-800-659-ST TA AR R www.StaarCareer.edu TRAINING TR AINING EXPERIENCE EXPERIENCE REWARDING R EWARDING A For over four decades, DDI has been creating everyday miracles for children and adults with developmental disabilities. We provide the training and career path for a fulfilling role. Locations throughout Suffolk County. Direct Care Counselors F/T, P/T, Per diem. Requires a HS diploma/equivalency and a NYS Driver’s license 2+ years, with less than 5 points. For immediate consideration, please call Angele at 631-366-2955 or apply online at jobs.ddiny.org An EOE/UNITED WAY AGENCY Licensed by N.Y Y..S. Ed. Deptt.; Accredited byy ACCSC. For more infformation about our grradduation rates, the meddian deb d bt of students who completed the program and other important information, please visit our website at www..starcareer.edu/cconsumerinfo.php February 12, 2014 The Leader Page 19 Community Calendar BAYVILLE Bayville Free Library 34 School Street 628-2765 Truth What is It? February 13 - 7:00 - 9:00 P.M. Back by popular demand, Dr. Philip A. Pecorino, PhD will lead a philosophical conversation about truth. Registration begins January 30. Story Time Through February 19 Tuesdays at 10:30 A.M. 2 year-old Bookworms Tuesdays at 1:30 P.M. 3 year-old Bookworms Wednesdays at 10:30 P.M. Baby Bookworms Wednesdays at 1:30 P.M. 4-5 year-old Bookworms Ms. Stacy to read stories, sing songs, and create a craft. Do You Play Mah Jongg? Wednesdays through March 26 - 1:00 3:00 P.M. A Night At The Oscars February 27 - 7:30 - 10:00 P.M. The Friends of the Bayville Library is sponsoring a fundraising event at the Crescent Beach Club. The attendees will have an opportunity to walk the red carpet, and possibly have a picture taken with Oscar. The ticket price is $30 dollars a person which includes: wine, beer, soda, tapas, hors d’oeuvres, dessert, coffee, tea. A cash bar is available for mixed drinks. for tickets call 628.1632 or 802.7860. Computer Classes Febraury 26 - 1:00 P.M. Join Koula Achillea to learn about topics including: internet for beginners, Word, Excel, and Power Point Microsoft Access Database. Registration is open now. GLEN COVE Glen Cove Library 4 Glen Cove Avenue 516.676.2788 Free Tax Assistance Provided by AARP February 5 - April 9, 2014 -10:00 -2:00 P.M. Free tax assistance throughout the tax season. Individuals of all ages and not limited to senior citizens. Bring , tax pakage, W-2 forms, a copy of your 2012 tax return and all other information that could determinge a tax refund. Movie The Sessions February 14 - 2:00 P.M. Based on the moving autobiographical writings of California-based journalist and poet Mark O’Brien, confined to an iron lung. Great Trials in American History Presented by Don Parker February 21 - 2:00 P.M. Two of Americas’s famous trials: the trial of John Brown and the trials of the Scottsboro Boys will be discussed. John Brown waged a fight against slavery, and was captured, tried, convicted and hung. Nine Black boys seeking empoloyment as laborers and riding a freight train, were accused of rape by two young women. The boys were convicted on false charges, sentenced to death and after spending years in prison appealing the charges, their convictions were overturned. LOCUST VALLEY Locust Valley Library 170 Buckram Road 516.671.1837 Crafts Corner Wednesdays - 1:00 - 3:00 P.M. Meeting twice a month -next one, February 19 Valley Quilters All levels of quilters are welcome to share ideas, work on projects and help beginners or enthusiasts with quilting . Middle School Book Cafe Grades 6-8 Meetings always on a Wednesday at 8:00 P.M. Enjoy some pizza and book talk with other middle school teens. Come in or call to register, get the schedule and pick up a book. Teens in the Night Kitchen Movie at the Library Power Foods February 24 - 7:00 P.M. This very informative lecture will discuss antioxidants and free readicals in food and what they do for you. A list of these power foods will be discussed. Program is free. Registration requested. Movie Darling Companion February 14 - 1:30 P.M. Diane Keaton, Kevin Kline, Dianne Wiest Summer Camp Information Fair Mar 1 - 1:00-4:00 P.M. Several summer day camps in the surrounding communities will be available to answer questions and distribute information. Take advantage of this opportunity to see the variety of summer day camps available for your children this summer. All welcome to this free event. Great Books The Heart is a Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers Febraury 20 - 1:30 - 3:30 P.M. Everyone is welcome to join the discussion. See Jennifer at the Reference Desk for a copy of the book. Long Island and the Woman Suffrage Movement March 4 - 7:00 - 8:30 P.M. Fore seventy-two long years American FOR THE COMPLETE CALENDAR PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE: www.theleaderonline.com women fought for the right to vote, and many remarkable ladies on Long Island worked tirelessly during this important civil rights movement. The colorful, and exceedingly wealthy Alva Vanderbilt Belmont was undoubltedly the Island’s more outspoken and controversial advocate for women suffrage, but many other women joined her in the fight, including Katrina Ely Tiffany of LaurelHollow, and Rosalie Gardiner Jones of Cold Spring Harbor. Local historian Antonia Petrash will give the presentation. It is Women’s History Month. OLD BROOKVILLE The Green Vale School 250 Valentine’s Lane 516.628.5122 Kathleen Rice will introduce her office’s STOP THEN SEND program at 8:45 A.M. Designed to help adults talk to children about the real consequences of cyber-bullying and other high-risk behaviors “online.” OYSTER BAY Planting Fields 1395 Planting Fields Road 516.922.9200 Art Exhibition February 1-28 - 11:00 - 4:00 P.M. Visitors Center Celebrating Black history Month, paintings from some of America’s Greatest black artists. Posters displaying black educators, ecologists, scientists, horticulturists, and abolitionists. Camellia House Weekend February 22nd and 23rd 10:00 A.M. - 4:00 P.M Featuring live music, walking tours of the Camellia House, activities for children. Coe Hall open for self-guided visits. Rain or Shine. ROSLYN HEIGHTS Temple Sinai 425 Roslyn Road Roslyn Heights 516.621.6800 Shabbat LaNeshama February 21 - 7:45 P.M. On the third Friday night of each month, the service is of gentle, soothing, comtemplative music. Its rhythms, melodies and English readings will quiet the heart, slow the mind and relax the spirit. The talented Isra-Alien Duo join cantors Sergei and Elena Schwartz and give a beautiful, peaceful reprieve from the hectic pace of our daily lives. all are welcome. Got Shabbat! February 28 - 5:30 P.M. For children in grades K-2 and their families. Join Cantor Sergei Schwartz, Cantor Elena Schwartz and Nursery School Director, Debbie Zamoiski. A 20 minute interactive, creative Shabba service followed by pizza for the kids and wine and cheese for the adults. Activities include a scavenger hunt and more! This program is open to everyonecommunity members, nursery school alumni, religious school students and beyond. Mussar Study with Rabbi Andrew Gordon March 5 - 11:00 A.M. Mussar is a medieval and Chasidic study that focuses on Tikkun Middot, the refining of our soul’s traits. Together, we will use the Torah, ancient Mussar texts, and the modern commentary of Alan Morinis to focus on our own character development. Each month we will study a different Middah - a quality of our heart - such as patience, generosity, humility, compassion and simplicity. All are welcome. ROSLYN Oyster Bay Historical Society 20 Summit Street 516.922-5032 Snow Day in Oyster Bay The Life and Times of Oyster Bay in Winters Past Through March 23 The exhibition features artifacts, images, and clothing from the Society’s permanent collection, as well as costumes on loan from the personal collections of Monica Randall and other lenders. The exhibition highlights many of the traditional activities of Oyster Bay in winter, including sledding, bobsledding, skating, and skiing. Raynham Hall Museum 20 West Main Street 516.922.6808 Valentine Evening Gala February 14 - 6:30 - 11:30 P.M. Celebrate Valentine’s Evening honoring Patricia P. Sands and the Oyster Bay Main Street Association. Dinner, music and auctions: basic tickets are $250 and $200 for junior members, 35 and under. Come wearing Festive Attire and Red Shoes, dance till you drop!! Please call for reservations. Nassau County Museum of Art One Museum Drive 516.484.9337 Garden Party March 8 - Jyly 6 GardenParty, explores the imagery of fete champetre - outdoor entertainements and garden parties - through paintings, sculpture, costume, fabrics and decorative arts and designs. There are paintings and objects illustrating the appeal of flowers in every season. Included are works by a range of artists emerging from many different traditions, among them Louis Comfort Tiffany, Marc Chagall, Larry Rivers, James Rosenquist, Maurice Prendergast, David Hockney, Janet Fish, Jane Freilicher, Robert Mapplethorpe and Georgia O’Keeffe, among others. Visit the Sculpture Park with more than 40 works, many of them monumental in size, by renowed artists including Fernando Botero, Tom Otterness, George Rickey and Mark DiSuvero among others, are situated to interact with nature on the museum’s magnificent 145-acre property. danielgale.com Barbara Catalano Suzi Chase Barbara Candee Katherine Cuddeback Kathy Borg Bonnie Devendorf 2013 Eloise Halpern Margaret Mateyaschuk Robert (Alex) Hulse Locust Valley Office Gold Circle of Excellence Members Kathryn (Cottie) Maxwell Pournaras Paul J. Mateyunas Bryan McMillen Susana Muir Kathy Wallach Michael Piccolo Margaret Trautmann Christina Porter Locust Valley Office ∙ 516.759.4800 1 Buckram Road, Locust Valley, NY 11560 locustvalley@danielgale.com Each office is independently owned and operated.We are pledged to provide equal opportunity for housing to any prospective customer or client, without regard to race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin. Sarah A. (Sally) Shea Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty has been providing unsurpassed service and real estate expertise for more than 92 years. We know Long Island and have an established reputation for successfully marketing fine properties. Please call us for all your real estate needs.