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Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013 Atomic Warfare - Sick Employees Seek Justice in Lawsuit Over Former Nuclear Site in Hicksville

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Page 1: Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013

Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com 1

Page 2: Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013

2 Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com

Page 3: Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013

Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com 3

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4 Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com

January2013“Beyond warping the Bible to suit the Republican ideology, there are secular issues that have been upended by its truth-twisting dogma.”off the reservatIon p.12

fortune 52 p.14

eReading Entrepreneur: Danielle Taylor and others vie for a share of the children’s book publishing market.

InvestIgatIon p.20

Atomic Warfare: Former workers at an atomic site in Hicksville fight for their lives.

Just sayIng p.34

Brooklyn Found to Be Part of L.I.; Flatbush Home Values Plummet! out there p.46

Get Off Of My Cloud: Flying high over L.I. with stunt pilot Lt. Colonel John Klatt.

“We’re foolish if we look for 100percent recovery. We need to lookfor 200 percent recovery.”news feature p.48

rear vIew p.56

Marilyn Monroe’s Long Island Affair

four corners p.60

Barber shops across Long Island

art + souL p.62

A Decade Under the Influence: An oral history of the L.I. music scene.

staff PIcks p.66

Our favorite things on two shelves.

exPress checkout p.10 hot PLate p.30

caLendar p.68 crosswords p.75

contrIbutorsIn thIs Issue

connect enterPrIse Partners

Phone: 516-284-3300 fax: 516-284-3310575 underhill Blvd. Suite 210, Syosset, ny 11791news: [email protected]: [email protected]/LongIslandPress.com Twitter.com/LongIslandPress.com LongIsLandPress.com

56 on the cover: actress Marilyn Monroe photographed on a Long Island beach by photographer andre De Dienes in 1949. (aP Photo/Christie’s, andre De Dienes)

Copyright © 2013. The Long Island Press is a trademark of Morey Publishing, LLC. all rights reserved.

Pete tannen is a humor writer who has won multiple awards from the National Press Club (Washington, DC), the Press Club of Long Island and the Florida Press Association. His columns can also be heard on select Public Radio stations across the U.S. tannenweekly.com

JIm Lennon is a Long Island-based photographer who has been working for regional, national and international clients and publications for more than 35 years. His work has been recognized with awards from Kodak, The Association of the Graphic Arts, The Long Island Advertising Club and Graphic Design Magazine.Jimlennon.com

Jon moreno is a Colorado-based illustrator. As a child, Jon drew stick figures and stick racecars on large pieces of newsprint shanghaied from his first grade classroom. Decades later he is still drawing (at times on newsprint as seen in this issue). Although he didn’t start utilizing color until well into his 20s, Jon still enjoys a nice monochrome indulgence to this day.Jonathanmoreno.prosite.com

the PortraIt p. 16Those who know her, who’ve heard her, who’ve seen her perform, fully understand that Melissa Errico’s the real deal, one of the truly top-notch actresses and singers who can do it all.

Special Section

HigHer educationcoLLege and unIversItyoPen house guIde p.50

Special inSert

autHor SolutionS seLf-PubLIshIng PuLLout sectIon center

Page 5: Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013

Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com 5

Page 6: Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013

6 Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com

Changing your publishing schedule from 52 weekly issues to only 12 monthly copies means that every year there will be 40 (52 minus 12) mur-derers, rapists, serial killers, mass murderers, pedophiles, Ponzi thieves, crooked politicians, and dozens of other assorted miscreants who will not get “fired” by your public service “Pink Slips”—a loss to us all.Richard Siegelman

Greatly looking forward to the next chapter in the evolution of LI Press— and Jed Morey!Doris Meadows

Jed, Since the days you sat in my class, you were creative, never afraid, and knew there were no sacred cows anywhere. I am not surprised about the change…it’s the only way to grow! and I am certainly not surprised that you are leading this change. Go right on and continue to impress your audience.Rev. Allan B. Ramirez

I love reading your newspaper. Been a fan since the beginning. your paper is well written and is so much better than Newsday. Good luck with the monthly edition. I’m going to miss my weekly crossword puzzle in your newspaper.Sue

now, if you could just bring back WLIr radio, I’d be really happy!!!!Jim Perrone

I’m going to agree with Jim Perrone about WLIr — sorely missed! Other-wise, well said, Jed. Good luck with the monthly.Frank Pomata

Good luck with the new format. The weekly issue will be missed, but it should be interesting to see how the refurbished monthly edition turns out. I hope it will have more than one major article per month.Michael Cafaro

LILLIan aLzheImer tayLor Disappointed to hear this although I do understand your reasoning. PS, the

LIP is the only newspaper I enjoy reading and trust to bring me real news that matters to me. Thank you for that.

eddIe muro Going from weekly to monthly....at a time when Long Island needs another daily! I guess we’ll just be stuck with Dolan’s mouth piece.

ed gerbe I guess 12 per year beats zero. Taking a page from the Long Island Catholic?

davId Lynch Will miss the weekly.

Good luck on going to a monthly publication.

@LongIsLandPress

@JcaIro Monthly like a period. (disgruntled ex-employee)

@mIke93434086 as always, I will look forward to “Off the reserva-tion,” The Target/Equation & your cover stor(ies)...

@maura the Long Island Press is going monthly. curious to see how this move turns out.

@Inthefade I think this is a strong, good move. Online still stays current, monthly print can be more meaty.

Facebook.com/LongIsLandPress

I hope that I can get four times the following articles: Sound Smart at a Party, Letters, The Target, The Photo, The Pink Slip, The Quote,

The Equation, The Rundown, The Book, The B-list B-day, Jerry’s Ink, Crosswords and Sudoku. I’ll miss the Press every week, but I’ll survive.

Keep up the good work.Lee Blumberg, Levittown

readers reactHere’s wHat you Had to say...

Page 7: Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013

Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com 7

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Page 8: Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013

8 Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com

sound smartat a Party

by LIndsay [email protected]

schooL shootIngs may shock the nation, but unfortunately, children and violence are two words that are becoming more commonly linked with one another. The American Academy of Pediatrics named firearm-related deaths one of the top three causes of death in American youth, and the rate of violent crimes are higher for people 12 to 24 years of age than any other age group. And even if children aren’t the victims of violence, they’ve been exposed to it. According to the American Psychiatric Association, by the time the average child reaches 18, he or she will have seen an estimated 200,000 acts of violence on television alone.

hobbIt fueLDuring the filming of The Hobbit, producer Peter Jackson spent $1.5 million of the movie’s reported $150-million budget on food and $380,000 on coffee. No word on whether it was Starbucks or Dunkin’ Donuts.

snow way out!For some people, snow days are even worse than slushy roads and shoveling driveways. Chionophobia is the fear of snow, and sufferers feel panic, shortness of breath, impending death and other anxiety symptoms when icy precipitation starts falling. The cause of the phobia is usually a traumatic experience involving snow and, luckily, therapy can help. Sometimes chionophobia is mistaken as a fear of the Chinese, but that malady is actually sinophobia.

2 0 1 3 wILL be the fIrst year that doesn’t have rePeated dIgIts sInce 1 9 8 7.

that’s soooo InterestIngStudies have shown that exposure to sarcasm enhances creative problem solving. Being surrounded by sarcastic people also makes you smarter, according to the Smithson-ian. Scientists monitoring the electri-cal activity of the brain found that comprehending a sarcastic opinion as opposed to a sincere statement makes the brain work harder.

rock outBritish journal BMJ Open found that being a solo singing sensation may not be all it’s cracked up to be. A team of researchers from the Centre for Public Health at Liverpool John Moores University looked at the mortality rates of 1,489 rock and pop stars who gained fame between 1956 and 2006, and found that solo performers were about twice as likely to die at an earlier age than than members of a band. In North America, 23 percent of solo stars died early in life, while just 10 percent of stars in a band met untimely deaths. They concluded that this may be because solo stars are usually more famous than band members, and have different sets of pressures and tempta-tions. Interesting for anyone consider-ing a career in the music industry.

“Whitney Houston” was the most Googled search term of 2012. The late singer was followed by “Hurricane Sandy,” “Election 2012,” “Hunger Games,” and “Jeremy Lin.”

“An estimated 65 percent of American children will have access to an eReader by the end of 2013.”

fortune 52 p.14

If there were a database of cat

criminals, it would be full of nose prints. Each

feline’s nose print is unique, and the equivalent of a

human fingerprint.

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Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com 9

Page 10: Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013

10 Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com

the target

PInk sLIP

To see why go To longislandpress.com/pinkslip

trumP on the oceanbuLL’s eye after five years of arguing over a basement, Donald Trump’s massive on-again off-again luxury restaurant and catering facility that would have eaten up 86,000 square feet of Jones Beach with a two-story building, formal terraces, etc., is off again, after waves from super storm Sandy flooded the site. The risk of the same thing happening again sends the billionaire packing—back to his Manhattan penthouse. #1PercentProblems

the ePaPartIaL score Lisa Jackson steps down as administrator of the Environmental Protection agency, issuing a statement that she is confident “the ship is sailing in the right direction” but doesn’t mention any reason for her decision. Hey, maybe she got a job on the board of directors over at Monsanto. It wouldn’t be the first time the agency charged with protecting the environment and the corporate giant set on destroying it swapped employees! We wish we were kidding.

the fdaoff target a genetically modified salmon mutated to grow twice as fast as natural salmon is on course to become the first GM animal in the world declared safe to eat, after the Food & Drug administration gives it the OK, meaning mass production of the fish is just around the corner. So, the FDa, whose current deputy commissioner for foods is a former vice president of GM food giant Monsanto, has backed a mutant fish that will make the industry millions? Shocker!

botox off target Botox users are warned that doses of the drug received by nearly 400 medical centers in the u.S. are unapproved and from foreign sources, putting patients at risk. But what those risks are is still unclear. We’re sure it’s just the government overreacting. Injecting paralysis-inducing neurotoxins between your eyes—what could go wrong!?

snaPchatPartIaL score Sexting app Snapchat, which allows users to send videos that last only for a specified amount of time before spontaneously combusting, is outsmarted by the techies at BuzzFeed, who detail exactly how to get those files back permanently after they supposedly disappear... and the publicists of B-list celebs around the world get a belated holiday bonus this year.

ny FraCKInG rEG COMMEnT x DEC’S nEW DrILLInG + EnvIrOS’ LIKELy + EaGEr GaS - CuOMO MuM = anOTHEr yEar OF PErIOD TILL Jan. 11 ruLES In FEB. LEGaL FIGHT BarOnS On ISSuE FraCKInG FIGHTS!?

westboro baPtIst church PetItIon buLL’s eye a petition is posted on WhiteHouse.gov to legally recognize the Westboro Baptist Church, known for its extremist ideologies against homosexuals, Jews and even their fellow Christians, as a hate group. With hundreds of thousands of cyber signatures so far, it’s the most popular petition ever posted since the Obama administration launched the site last year. amen to that.

7.1%

The nassau & Suffolk County unemployment rate as of november 2012, according to the new york State Department of Labor, up

from a rate of 6.8 percent in november 2011.

an indian proTesTer holds a placard during one of many protests sparked by the Dec. 26 gang rape of a young woman who was thrown from a moving bus in new Delhi, India. The 23-year-old medical student, who was raped for nearly an hour, was flown to a Singapore hospital, where she died three days later from severe internal injuries. (aP Photo/altaf Qadri)

wayne lapierre

Silvio Berlusconi

naftali Bennett

Tony Sparano

ann Coulter

Phil Foglietta

andruw Jones

The Kardashians

Britney Spears

Donald rumsfeld

“They should have told us that place was contaminated.” —gerard depascale, one of three plaintiffs seeking to get a $12 million jury award reinstated after a federal judge voided their judgment in a toxic tort case claiming he and others developed rare cancers from a former atomic site in Hicksville. His case goes before the Second Circuit u.S. Court of appeals Jan. 15. InvestIgatIon p.20

Page 11: Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013

Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com 11

4. see bLancanIeVes Director Pablo Berger’s fairy tale/drama remake of Snow White set in 1920s Seville tells the tale of Carmen, her evil stepmother and a band of roving, bullfighting dwarves. Need we say more? The movie hits theaters Jan. 18.

5. downLoad googLe maPsIf you have an iPhone, don’t risk your safety using Apple Maps any longer. To avoid ending up in a desert with no water or dangling off a cliff, download the new Google Maps app for iPhone. It’s free and it just might save your life, literally.

6. buy an “authors are my rockstars” caLendarFrom William Shakespeare to Mark Twain to Jack Kerouac to Maya Angelou, this wall calendar features insightful quotes and photos of authors with that rock-star edge. Get it at Amazon.com.

7. toast PoeAn unknown visitor—or visitors—known as the mysterious “Poe Toaster” has celebrated Edgar Allan Poe’s birthday every year since 1949 in the early morning hours of Jan. 19 by leaving a bottle of cognac and three roses at Poe’s grave in Baltimore. But the Poe Toaster has been MIA for the past few years... Hint, hint.

8. audItIon for mtv’s true LIFeCasting calls are open for Furries (people who dress up in animal fur suits); Drunkorexics (those who skip meals to save calories for alcohol); Re-sex-changers (those who have undergone gender reassignment surgery, then changed their minds)—and many others. Visit MTV.com for details.

9. tIvo storage wars new yorkA&E’s spin-off comes to our stomping grounds in 2013, and follows a group of modern-day treasure hunters on their journeys every Tuesday at 10 p.m. beginning Jan. 1.

10. get a stargazIng PermItA $30 stargazing permit

from New York State Parks allows you entry after sunset to six LI parks—Hither Hills, Jones Beach, Montauk Point, Robert Moses, Wildwood and Sunken Meadow—to observe the skies above. Card-carrying stargazers are limited to the parking lots, so running into the ocean naked at 3 a.m. will still get you kicked out and/or arrested.

kILLer on tHe road: VIoLence and tHe amerIcan Interstate by gInger strand

An unusual mix of murderous tales and a thesis on the development of American roadways, Killer on the Road could have been two separate books, one a thriller and the other a case study. Instead, two different genres catering to two very separate types of readers are merged into one, meaning the mystery fan will likely skip over much of the historical pages in the book, and vice versa. But that dilemma aside, this is an extremely well-researched and well-written book that explores the development of the American roadway simultaneously with the development of the American serial killer. The book suggests roadways have given birth to higher murder rates and a new kind of bogeyman, one who preys upon hitchhikers and abandoned motorists. While one might argue increased transportation doesn’t create killers, but merely gives them new tools to work with, the book reinforces the connection between mobility and murder by detailing historical and notorious murders that could have never happened if a network of highways weren’t so readily available. It’s easy to get lost in the analysis of things like the sociological implications of auto ads, but lines like, “He won twenty dollars at the demolition derby the day before he killed his first victm…” will always snap you back into the plot as will true-crime characters like Ed “The Chopper”

Kemper, who hung out at the bar with cops when he wasn’t murdering and dismembering young women in California. Long Island’s master builder Robert Moses even gets a mention in the book for his role in creating these highways to hell, as do notorious killers known to have plagued them, like the I-5 Strangler, the Freeway Killer and the Beltway Sniper. But while mobility and increased crime obviously go hand in hand, such a targeted comparison of mobility and violence, specifically murder, can seem forced at times, especially when the violence most associated with highways—road rage—isn’t mentioned at all. Killer on the Road is part of the Discovering America Series, which aims to explore the history and culture of the nation by drawing unexpected connections. In this light, the book definitely succeeds, a little too well.The storytelling is gripping enough to stand on its own, and sometimes the most unexpected connections are made by simply cutting the pieces and letting the reader put the puzzle together. —Jaclyn Gallucci

1. sIP 495 wIneChardonnay, merlot… Pick your exit. Palmer Vineyards in Aquebogue has come up with a line of beverages that screams Long Island—495 Wines. They all come with an Interstate 495 label that, depending on how your commute went, will make you either smile or swear as you savor the bouquet.

2. vIsIt damnyouautocorrect.comSmart phones are great, most of the time. But if you’ve ever sent a quick email or text message, only to have it butchered by autocorrect, then the hilarious, sometimes vulgar, miscommunications compiled here are a must-read.

3. get a desktoP dumPsterIt’s January, a time for making New Year’s resolutions you probably won’t keep come February. If yours is to get organized, this mini dumpster from SteelPlant.net will do the trick, and look awesome holding your pens, scissors, mini liquor bottles, or whatever else you keep in your desk. Hey, we’re not judging.

r E v I E Wthe rund wnyour to-do LIst For tHIs montH

Page 12: Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013

12 Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com

by Jed morey Publisher, Long Island Presswww.jedmorey.com

facebook.com/jedmorey

he Republican Convention was going rather poorly. The crowd was homogenous, the speakers were flat and the

enthusiasm in the room was manufac-tured at best. And Clint Eastwood hadn’t even begun a rambling conversation with a chair. The Republican Party’s best hope for the convention was for its candidate to appear “human.”

Although “Eastwooding” would eventually enter the American lexicon and Willard Romney would do his best to connect with his fellow Homo sapiens, it was a quiet delegate from New York who captured the essence of the modern GOP.

Wading in among his fellow delegates, billionaire industrialist David Koch smugly took in the proceedings. Though the convention offered little in the way of celebration, he told a group of supporters at a nearby reception later that he and his brother, Charles, were “in this for the long haul.” Indeed they are. The Koch brothers are part of a well-established movement designed to vilify liberalism and many of the core tenets of democracy.

They are hardly original. But they are unique in that they have elevated their in-sidious brand of propaganda to a high art form. Groups such as the nativist Know Nothings of the 1850s or the John Birch Society of the 1950s espoused similar hate-filled political messages as today’s GOP but they flamed out as quickly as their stars rose. In terms of longevity, the Kochs and their inspired think tanks such as Americans for Prosperity—busy these days attempting to deny Hurricane Sandy relief funds to our region—have succeeded where their predecessors have failed. For the first time in American his-tory, a small band of angry white men has galvanized a vast number of Americans and irrevocably turned public policy on its ear. The modern American conserva-tive movement has finally arrived.

Much of this has been accomplished through the elaborate and coordinated messaging emanating from the right-wing propaganda machine. Theirs is a two-part strategy. The first is to con-sistently contend that the media have a liberal bias when the opposite is true. Talk radio is virtually owned by the right

wing. Fox News has become an insanely biased juggernaut and the print media, with few exceptions, has essentially fallen in line with the conservative agenda. Even the majority of the New York newspapers—The Daily News, Wall Street Journal, Newsday and New York Post—endorsed Mitt Romney over Barack Obama. But to hear conser-vative pundits talk about media bias, one would think the New York Times is the only newspaper on the planet.

The second part of the strategy is to plant false information from seemingly credible sources with patriotic names such as the Heritage Foundation, Americans for Pros-perity and the American Enterprise Institute. Representatives from these organizations, which are funded by billionaires such as the Koch broth-ers, routinely appear on right wing talk shows spouting bogus statistics. These sources are then quoted in newspaper articles that are again mentioned in on-air reports. This is what is known as “the echo chamber.”

The rationale behind their approach is simple and time-tested. Over time repeti-tious lies begin to have the resonance of

truth, no matter how far fetched. Selling an idea as its exact opposite, a mirrored reality, via the continual amplification of such lies has been an effective strategy employed by tyrannical regimes since time immemorial. For example, Adolf Hitler extolled the virtues of physicality, and gushed over the domineering blond-haired, fair-skinned Aryan, who was tall, reasoned and even-tempered. But Hitler himself possessed none of these traits. He was short, pudgy, greasy, and ill tempered.

Likewise, the right-wing echo chamber has been successful in instilling a back-ward self-loathing belief system among its followers who blithely campaign on behalf of billionaires.

Witness the retired worker receiving

Social Security and Medicare benefits carrying a sign bashing entitlements at a Tea Party rally. Or the middle-income wage earner resisting tax increases on the wealthiest Americans because they’ve been told it smacks of socialism. Or per-haps the enraged grandmother who be-lieves “Obamacare” is a Communist plot, even though the concept was hatched in a conservative think tank and first passed into law by a Republican governor.

Brilliantly, there is no single face of modern conservatism, only a secret cabal of dangerous men such as Charles and David Koch, who work behind the scenes to pull the last remaining threads from our democracy. In another stroke of genius, the GOP has joined forces with Christian Fundamentalists to misappro-

priate scripture while wrapped in the flag to sell the American people on perverted interpretations of the teachings of Christ.

The GOP has wed itself to funda-mentalist leaders such as Douglas Coe who, since 1969, as the head of a secret society known as “The Family,” has presided over several Washington “prayer cells” that have been linked to some of the most deadly despots in modern

times such as Indonesia’s General Suharto, Haiti’s Papa Doc Duvalier

and Yoweri Museveni of Uganda. Not only have Coe’s associates been linked to some of the most heinous genocidal acts in history, they were all at one time members

of Family-sponsored prayer cells. Genocide, it seems, is easily over-looked in Coe’s movement so long as

lip service is paid to Christ and oil and other natural resources are provided to well-heeled Family members.

Beyond warping the Bible to suit the Republican ideology, there are secular issues that have been upended by its truth-twisting dogma. The vilification of labor in this country, for one, is sickening and self-defeating. To wit, only 12 percent of the American workforce is unionized, but conservative pundits would have the public believe that unions are wholly responsible for our employment woes and lack of competitiveness. They would also have us believe that Social Security is collapsing under its own weight even though it is, by design, self sustaining and fully funded.

Equally as disturbing is the malicious stance toward immigrants in the United States. The extent of Republican soul-searching post election was to examine strategies going forward that would deal with the problem of changing demo-graphics: how to woo more Latinos into the fold instead of actually adopting more progressive policies.

In fact, Republicans were anything but contrite in the wake of electoral defeat. Forgotten were the insults to women, equating nearly half of America with system-sucking leeches, and the notion of self deportation. The GOP has built a platform based upon misogyny, fervent nationalism, elaborate propaganda, and suppression of intellectualism—each one a hallmark of fascism. Others include high levels of incarceration, secrecy, mili-tarism, and anti-union rhetoric.

These are the enduring legacies of a party gone horribly wrong. The problem we face is that the men behind the curtain believe this past election was a momen-tary setback, a bump in the road. But this stands to reason. They are, after all, in this for the “long haul.”

to comment on “off the reservation” email Jed at [email protected].

Grand Old PogromT

Illustration by Jon Moreno

“The GOP has joined forces with Christian Fundamentalists to misappropriate scripture

while wrapped in the flag.”

O f f t h e R e s e R v a t I O n

Page 13: Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013

Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com 13

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14 Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com

by beverLy fortune [email protected]

anielle Taylor, a mother of two from Oyster Bay, wanted to instill her love of reading into her sons Andrew and

Christian, now ages 4 and 3. She began reading to the boys when they were very young and found that sitting quietly and enjoying a book was a wonderful way to connect with them.

Danielle, who has a background in software development, had worked for a global investment bank creating software solutions but decided she wanted to use her skills in a more altruistic profession.

“I wanted to do something heartfelt,” Danielle says. “Something that I believed in.”

For Danielle, reading eBooks to her children became an interactive experi-ence that was fun and exciting. She was intrigued with the confluence of tech-nology, education, literature and art, and began to explore the business side of publishing.

The world of children’s book pub-lishing is growing larger by the minute as more small companies and entrepreneurs vie for a share of the market. For Danielle, publishing quality children’s books was a profession she believed in.

She launched Bish Bash Books in January 2012, offering original reading material that is written to engage, educate and entertain children in a variety of formats including eBooks, classic paper books, storybook apps and podcasts.

Millions of parents eager to introduce their children to reading at an early age are furiously gobbling up this new tech-nology, resulting in skyrocketing sales of eBooks. According to Digital Book World, an online eBook community, an estimated 65 percent of American children will have access to an eReader by the end of 2013.

Some books from our childhood still hold a special place in our hearts. Many of us can even recall the scent that wafted from the pages of a favorite book along with memories of a family member reading a story aloud or the hours spent

totally immersed in a story, escaping from the cares of the world.

Today, eBooks can almost make a story magically come to life. Danielle says there’s a need for both traditional and digital formats and has plans to produce paper books from her original eBooks and vice versa.

Last September Bish Bash Books published its first eBook through iTunes, and next plans to distribute its titles through Amazon and Google.

Even though Bish Bash Books is small, it can still compete with publish-ing giants like Simon and Schuster and Random House.

“New technology levels the playing field,” Danielle explains. “With eBooks you develop the book once and distribute it over and over.”

Because today’s global market is as accessible as the local Barnes and Noble, a best-selling eBook is a distinct possibility.

Recently Bish Bash Books announced a give-back program to benefit the local community and help

promote children’s literacy.“When we sell 50,000 eBooks, we

will donate a set of iPads fully loaded with our eBooks to a classroom in a local school,” Danielle says.

Her company’s goal is to publish 20 eBooks per quarter which will contain all original characters, stories, illustrations and music. Danielle is very cognizant of the quality of the material that is published so she can ensure that the reading experience is educational and not like a video game.

“Right now we have six books published, so that’s really exciting,” she says.

“I want children to get hooked on the simple pleasure of reading,” Danielle says. “We want to encourage and help children learn to read in a fun way.”

In the near future Danielle has plans to begin publishing non-fiction eBooks on topics like the weather, constellations, water and dinosaurs.

“I’d like to focus next on young adventurous readers,” says Danielle.

Reading is critical to a child’s success in school and in life, so Danielle wants to make it fun and educational.

“Reading, music, and art—all of these are what keep me going,” she continues.

“It’s all of our responsibility to expose children to everything we can.”

For more information, visit www.bishbashbooks.com, call 1-866-944-8236 or email [email protected]

eReading entrepreneur Danielle Taylor of Oyster Bay

brings the best of both worlds together: traditional paper books and quality eBooks published by her company Bish Bash Books.

danIeLLe tayLorPresident & OwnerBish Bash Books

f O R t u n e 5 2

D

PrESEnTED By

In every issue of the Long Island Press and our sister publication, Milieu Magazine, the Fortune 52 column brings you stories of dynamic women who have made a significant and unique contribution to Long Island. To acknowledge their success, Beverly hosts tri-annual networking events that are attended by hundreds of LI business professionals, non-profit leaders and entrepreneurs. If you are interested in learning more about the Fortune 52, or know a super woman who deserves good Fortune—and a profile—email Beverly at [email protected].

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thePortrait

QuadruPLe threatMelissa Errico can act,

sing, dance. Oh, and did we mention she’s

stunning?

Melissa Errico Hits All The Notes

Those who know her, who’ve heard her, who’ve seen her perform, whether in My Fair Lady and Dracula on Broad-way or on national television, fully understand that Melissa Errico’s the real deal. She’s graced large concert halls like the Kennedy Center and intimate night clubs like Joe’s Pub and is no doubt des-tined to take her deserved place in the pantheon of truly top-notch American actresses and singers who can do it all.

When we caught up with her re-cently, Errico had just finished filming an episode of CBS’ The Good Wife, playing an attorney vigorously objecting to Juliana Margulies in the courtroom—

no easy task. The episode will air at the end of January, but that is only one of her long list of upcoming appearances.

Errico will also guest-star on CBS’s Blue Bloods with Tom Selleck, while she simultaneously readies for her per-formance in Passion, one of acclaimed composer Stephen Sondheim’s most challenging works. Errico sings two to four hours a day, several days a week, to prepare for the Classic Stage Company production opening Feb. 7.

Musically, she’s also worked closely with Marvin Hamlisch and even Randy Newman, whose “When She Loved Me” from Toy Story 2 ranks as one of her favorite songs. She recently released her third album, Legrand Affair, produced by Phil Ramone, in which she performs the songs of French composer Michel

Legrand with a 100-piece orchestra. Her next album “isn’t clear to me yet,”

she says, but it may include material by Rosemary Clooney, because she loves “keeping that stuff alive.”

As for her acting, she’s done a TV pilot for Spike Lee, starred opposite Angelina Jolie in the film “Life or Something Like It,” and performed Camelot with Jeremy Irons, who used to pick her up on his motorcycle in SoHo, where she and her family live, and take her to rehearsals uptown, much to the amazement of her kids.

She’s the mother of three girls—in-cluding 4-year-old twins—and just cel-ebrated her 14th wedding anniversary to Patrick McEnroe, former tennis pro, TV commentator and U.S. Davis Cup team captain. Her oldest, Victoria, now

6, has been playing “since she could stand,” says Errico with a laugh, adding that she has her taking piano lessons “to temper her passion for tennis.”

Errico says that she played tennis with her future husband while they were dating, but likes to point out that they first met at Buckley Country Day School in Roslyn when she was 5 and he was in second grade. Later she went to Friends Academy in Locust Valley, before graduating from Yale, where she studied theater and launched her career.

Long Islanders will get a chance to appreciate Errico’s wide-ranging reper-toire on Oct. 18, when she comes to the Tilles Center for the Performing Arts at LIU Post. Until then, stay tuned. Or catch her on Broadway. She’s a star and she’s in her prime. —Spencer Rumsey

Photo by andrew Parsons

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Atomic WarfareSick Employees Seek Justice In Lawsuit Over

Former Nuclear Site in HicksvilleB Y C H R I S T O P H E R T W A R O W S K I

Photo b y Jim Lennon

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here’s a stretch of Cantiague Rock Road in Hicksville, just north of Hicksville High School, its middle school and Lee Avenue Elementary, where pedestrians aren’t permitted to stand on the sidewalk.

There are no signs stating this, no barricades cordoning the area off, no flashing lights demar-cating a construction zone or telling passersby it’s private property. But if you stop there for even a few moments to take a gander at the fenced-off property—three decrepit-looking buildings and their equally decrepit-looking parking lots—any day of the week, during any time of day, 24/7, someone will unquestionably instruct you to keep moving, to shuffle along, scram.

If your intention is to snap a few photos, as mine was at about 3 p.m. on the Sunday before Christmas Eve, you’ll get more than advice; undoubtedly you’ll receive an angry visit by one of several charged-up, plain-clothed men shouting for you to buzz off—they might even chase you away.

There’s really not much to look at, though. Sandwiched between a distribution warehouse on its south, a driving range and children’s play-grounds of Nassau County’s Cantiague Park on the east, and the county’s Department of Public Works headquarters on the north, the three parcels at 140, 100 and 70 Cantiague Rock Road are silent and devoid of life.

The latter’s facade is a beat-up, worn-down brown, with cloudy windows, drawn blinds and the faded outline of its former tenant, Air Techniques, tattooed on its side. At 100 next door stands a naked flagpole, a vast loading dock area long since abandoned and weeds towering several feet high. Several massive metal frames arch above an alley between it and the 140 building, which has part of its exterior wall peeling off and is covered in shredded plastic.

It’s here where an outhouse-shaped guard booth is manned around the clock.

“Off the property,” said an agitated, bespectacled, middle-aged man sporting a moustache when a camera crew and I recently visited to ask a few questions. A mock “Terrorist Hunting Permit” was fastened to his window. “This is private property. Get off the property,” he commanded, refusing to explain who he worked for before slamming the door.

There’s a secret in Hicksville. It’s a secret that only a handful of residents of this suburban hamlet know all too well while way too many others haven’t a clue. A secret that has already cost one of the biggest communications companies in the world millions and may end up costing them much, much more. It’s a secret that no matter how tight a lid the security guards stationed there or the site’s owners, Verizon, try to keep on it, the truth is literally leaking out—bleeding into the soil, contaminating the air and poisoning Long Island’s

precious groundwater supply.It’s a revelation that Ronkonkoma resident

Gerard Depascale, a father of three and recent grandfather, and his former coworker Liam Neville, of Bayside, Queens fought relentlessly to find out, a reality they live with every single moment of their lives, one the global communi-cations giant is doing everything in its power to control. It’s an ongoing tragedy that a federal judge recently made even more tragic for the plaintiffs; a reality that will undoubtedly affect more families in the future.

This vacant 10.5-acre stretch of land, just north of those schools, separated by a chain-link fence from the public park and situated directly across the street from Nassau BOCES Career Pre-paratory High School, is a radioactive toxic waste site where nuclear elements and fuel rods were fabricated and processed during the nation’s early atomic energy program in the 1950s and 1960s.

Uranium was burned here. It was released into the surrounding neighborhood from an open “smelting oven,” according to one former worker—or within a “burning building,” according to another. It was also buried here, along with nickel and much more. Unknown amounts of chlorocar-bons—Tetrachloroethene, or Perchloroethylene, known as PCE and PERC, respectively—and byproduct chlorinated hydrocarbon Trichloroeth-ylene, or TCE (classified as a human carcinogen by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency), were dumped into unlined sumps and leeching pools, and currently reside in the soil, the groundwater and have volatilized into the air.

People who unknowingly worked atop the

site, such as Depascale and Neville, have con-tracted rare—make that extraordinarily rare and obscure—cancers.

Neville has a rare kidney cancer called mem-branous nephropathy. Following years of dialysis, he was lucky enough to find a donor and receive a transplant, though now he’s currently facing some complications.

Depascale has an even rarer cancer, called extra-skeletal myxoid chondrosarcoma. It’s Stage Four and it’s in his bone marrow.

Besides the unquantifiable pain and anguish suffered by the two and their loved ones are insur-mountable medical bills and an inability to work, not to mention their shortened lifespan.

Depascale and Neville, both former employees of Magazine Distributors, Inc. (MDI),

who worked at the 100 building and its warehouse from about 1990 till 2002, when the company suddenly moved (employees were told it was the end of their lease; court transcripts reveal General Telephone and Electronics Corp. (GTE), who merged with Verizon in 2000, “assumed” the lease from MDI after purchasing the 140 property in 1999 for contamination remediation efforts and the 70 location in 2004) are literally battling for survival.

They’re also fighting for justice.Depascale, his wife Joanne and Neville filed a

toxic tort lawsuit against Verizon and its prede-cessors claiming negligence and liability, among other charges, in Nassau County State Supreme Court in 2007. The case was moved to federal court at the request of the defendants, who argued defense under government contractor immunity law—which protects contractors who perform federal work from lawsuits such as theirs. The jury heard expert testimony from both sides, also learning that an untold number of records relating to the Hicksville site had simply disappeared from GTE/Verizon’s files. Near the end of the trial, the presiding judge in that case, U.S. District Judge Leonard D. Wexler, impaneled an additional two alternate jurors, and according to Neville, ordered that for them to win, the verdict would have to be unanimous.

It was, and on Nov. 12, 2009 after just eight days of testimony, the jury issued its verdict, awarding the trio $12 million on the grounds of causation, negligence and damages, finding they got past the federal contractor immunity.

That detail of this saga has been reported before—as well as the settlement of a 2002 complaint alleging that nearly 300 Hicksville residents who live near the site developed cancers and related injuries because of it.

Unreported is that more than five months after Depascale and Neville’s win, following an appeal by Verizon, Wexler, in the rare instance of a judge going against the will of a jury—ordered the case be retried, on limited grounds, effectively nul-lifying the award and ultimately, deeming the jury’s verdict a “miscarriage of justice.”

They lost that trial—Neville bleeding through his shirt in the courtroom, though restricted to tell the jury that he or Depascale were even ill. They appealed, Verizon filed a cross-appeal, and now the pair is set to present oral arguments for why Wexler’s order for retrial should be overridden and the jury’s award reinstated before the Second Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals Jan. 15. Yet it’s not simply reparations for their medical debts that they’re fighting for now.

The fate of countless other former residents, former MDI employees and others who’ve worked at the site may literally hang in the balance, since Wexler ordered a stay on another pending class action “medical monitoring” suit that could include innumerable plaintiffs until Depascale and Neville’s appeal has been decided.

A Press investigation—part of an ongoing

“They should have told us that that place was contaminated. If I knew about it, at least it

would have been my choice to be there, not their choice.” —gerard depascale, a former Magazine Distributors, Inc. employee, who developed

Stage Four Extra-skeletal Myxoid Chondrosarcoma, an ultra-rare cancer, after unknowingly working atop a former nuclear fuel site in Hicksville

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series into how its industrial and military past is affecting the Island’s cur-rent-day environment and residents and consisting of the analysis of hundreds of pages of state and federal records, including investigative reports concern-ing contamination to the soil, air and water at the site, remediation plans, maps, assessments, internal correspon-dence and thousands of pages of court filings and transcripts, among others—has discovered that GTE, Verizon and state regulators certainly knew or should have known about the site’s contamina-tion years before Neville and Depascale and the hundreds of others who worked along Cantiague Rock Road ever stepped foot there. It reveals a twisted and unconscionable game of pass-the-buck when it comes to informing these workers of even the potential for adverse health effects, a game that continues to this day. What’s absolutely indisput-able is that many people living around that site and who’ve worked there have developed horrific cancers. And that some have already died from these.

Additionally, the records reveal that despite several state-supervised “voluntary” remediation efforts at the site—the largest conducted by GTE, which one report states included the excavation and removal of at least approximately 100,000 tons of contami-nated soil and unearthed, partially filled tanks of radioactive and carcinogenic elements and chemicals—it remains contaminated and its true ramifica-tions on the health and safety of not only Hicksville residents, but all Long Islanders (since we all share drinking water aquifers), may never be known.

Neville, a bachelor, self-professed pessimist, horse bettor and the more outspoken of the pair, staked he and Depascale’s odds in court at 60-40 in Verizon’s favor when I first sat down with them six months ago. Recently, those self-ascribed odds have gotten worse. He says 70-30 now, in Verizon’s favor.

“You ever feel like punching someone in the face and there’s no one there to punch, you’re that angry?” says Neville of how he felt when he learned what was beneath his workplace. “This is a 60 Minutes episode. This happens to somebody else. This doesn’t happen to me. This is insane.”

For Depascale, who has a family to provide for, things have been even worse. Adding even more insult to so much injury, his workman’s compensa-tion claim—which he originally won, is back in court again following two appeals.

“Betrayed,” is how he feels. “They should have told us that that place was contaminated. If I knew about it, at least it would have been my choice to be there, not their choice.

“It’s been a nightmare since I got

sick,” he says.Requests for comment to the

plaintiffs’ attorney, Joseph D. Gonzalez, and William H. Pratt, a lead attorney for the defendants in the litigation, went unanswered for this story.

MuM’s The Wordith the birth of the Cold War at the end of World War II fueling a nuclear arms and energy race with the

Soviet Union, the U.S. government turned to the private sector for help with its atomic energy program—one of its earliest attempts at a public-private partnership. The initiative was spear-headed by the Atomic Energy Commis-sion (AEC), created in 1946 to “manage the development, use and control of atomic (nuclear) energy for military and civilian applications,” according to its successor, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

In 1952, the AEC entered into a contract known as 1293 with Sylvania Electric Products in Hicksville to produce nuclear fuel rods and elements; there was also commercial work being performed at the site. Historically, the complex consisted of three main buildings and 12 support structures, according to state and federal environmental remediation plans and court filings—all demolished prior to 1970 but for a portion of the present-day 70 building. Atomic operations ceased at the site in 1967.

Sylvania merged with the GTE around 1959, and GTE merged with Verizon in 2000—the latter thus inherit-ing successor liability for the site’s nuclear past.

MDI, now Hudson News, then one of the largest magazine and book dis-tributors in the Northeast, moved onto the site around 1990 before relocating to Farmingdale in 2002.

Neville worked as a night and delivery foreman, among other positions there, with roughly 100 others in the company’s large warehouse in the 100 building. Depascale, among duties, was a driver and warehouseman.

Whenever it would rain, the parking lot and the warehouse would flood—the workers wading through the smelly stew to rescue stacks of products or trying to squeegee it into overwhelmed drains that spouted like geysers.

Then, there was the dust.“It was all over the covers of the

magazines, all over the plastic, and people kept asking what it was, because it looked like dust,” says Linda Miranda, a longtime MDI employee who worked as a merchandiser in the warehouse. “It was so bad that they had to wear masks. And nobody would give anybody an answer.”

The 56-year-old didn’t know about

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much of the details of the site’s past until I informed her. She has lung and brain cancer, and says there’s no question it came from working at that site.

“I had partial lung removal,” says the Levittown resident. “And then I had a piece of it that went into my brain, so I had radiation… I never had a problem [before working there].”

Miranda expressed concern for park-goers and children at Nassau’s Cantiague Park, believing there should be warnings posted there to inform the public. It was a sentiment echoed by many interviewed for this story.

“There should be signs, but they’re not going to do that, because they don’t want to alarm the public,” she says. “Just like MDI. They never told us, because they didn’t want us to know. Because they didn’t want to be where they are now, what, 14 years later? That so many people have problems? It’s all about money.”

Another former MDI employee, Larry Moore, also has cancer, and two separate types: squamous cell carcinoma in situ of his right vocal chord and Stage Four Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, a blood

cancer. He worked at the site even before the company moved in, when Harbor Distributor was located there.

The throat cancer he says could be attributed to smoking, but he believes it was brewing his daily coffee with the building’s tap water that spawned the latter.

“Problem is I drank an exorbitant amount of coffee, I actually still do, and I used tap water not knowing what was looming underneath that building at the time,” he says in a raspy voice that he keeps apologizing for. “It was probably two pots of coffee a day.

“At no time we were in that building were we informed,” he continues, later adding that it’s not a matter of “if ” the Non-Hodgkins “is going to rear its ugly head,” but “when.”

“It’s there,” he says. “And then chemo is definitely in my future.”

Moore isn’t one to sit around and cry about his situation, however. Despite his ailments, the 55-year-old husband and father holds down two jobs—driving a truck and a limousine—and hasn’t missed a day’s work, even throughout his radiation treatments. Ironically, Moore lives on Hope Place, in Wantagh.

He quotes a scene from 1994’s The Shawshank Redemption to sum up his attitude: “‘You either get busy living or you get busy dying.’”

“I get busy living,” says the former MDI distribution and bookroom manager.

So does Joe McCarthy, another longtime MDI employee that worked at the Hicksville site who was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2007.

“It was a very aggressive form,” he explains. “It was a very quick thing and it could have been fatal. But thank God, someone upstairs was watching me, I guess.”

McCarthy rattles off a list of names of coworkers he knows who’ve also developed cancers, noting that some have died from their ailments.

That grim reality is not lost on Pasquale “Patsy” Lobosco. Before MDI, he worked for Imperial News, he says, and was eventually put in charge of all the men coming back from their delivery routes at MDI. He says he was stationed at the back of the warehouse “right over the sump pump.”

The father of three suffered a heart attack inside that warehouse, he says, and was later also diagnosed with prostate cancer. Patsy has endless stories about the

cast of characters who passed through its doors, adding that despite the deplorable conditions, they all shared a special bond.

“We were like a family,” he says. “We were really tight… We had a family there. I didn’t want to leave.”

“But we didn’t know—you’re an amateur at this stuff—what do you know about diseases?” he asks. “Nobody ever said anything to us. They kept it secret.”

That’s something they’re all infuri-ated about, including Paul Walters, a former fire chief for East Williston who’s currently a fire communications tech for Nassau County. Walters was a longtime foreman at MDI’s Hicksville site, among other roles, working there from 1991 to 2002, when the company suddenly informed him they were relocating due to the expiration of its lease.

Walters believes his contact with the warehouse floodwaters gave him skin ailments. He is also a prostate cancer survivor. He says he knew from the first day on the job there was something unhealthy about the site.

“I went upstairs to the second floor to get a drink of water out of the water fountain…and there’s this green line running from where the water comes out of the fountain down to the drain,” he says. “It had a metallic taste to it… So that place was a cesspool to begin with, it

“They kept it secret.” —Pasquale “Patsy” Lobosco, a former employee at Magazine Distributors, Inc., referring to the fact his building was located atop a radioactive toxic waste site in

Hicksville and neither its owners nor regulators told him or his coworkers

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was just nobody ever knew it.”Walters recalls visits around 1995

from county and New York State (NYS) Department of Environmental Conser-vation (DEC) officials conducting air and water samples and inquiring what the company was manufacturing that could be polluting the groundwater. They toured the facility and were shown that they were simply distributing magazines.

He believes MDI’s urgency to relocate in 2002 had little to do with the end of a lease and everything to do with GTE’s looming remediation efforts.

“We were all kept in the dark,” he says.

Yet some higher-ups at MDI, GTE and the state DEC weren’t, documents show.

When pressed by Neville and Depascale’s attorneys during their initial trial about what information GTE shared with “workers and individuals who were still working at the 100 building from 1999 to 2002,” Jean Agostinelli, a director at Verizon, confessed: “GTE did not share that information. It was provided to management.”

Letters dated Nov. 10, 1998 and Oct. 12, 2001 from the DEC to MDI’s VP at the time, Joseph Elm—the October cor-respondence accompanying an investiga-tive report on the site’s contamination, a “Monitoring Well Work Plan” and a “Radiological Survey Report” from the NYS Department of Health state—explic-itly instruct him to inform and share their contents with employees.

The 1998 correspondence refers to an “Investigative Work Plan” for the site that had been sent previously to Elm. The three-page letter then reminds him of its nuclear history, contamina-tion and upcoming investigations into the “extent of chemical and radiological contamination.”

“During a recent radiation survey of your property by GTE Operations Support Incorporated, elevated radiation readings were observed possibly resulting from activities involving material disposed of by Sylvania,” it reads. “Additionally, tetrachloroethene (PCE), a chlorinated solvent used for degreasing, has been detected in groundwater samples.”

“We would appreciate it if you would notify your employees about the availability of the work plan in the public repository and/or make the copy that was sent to you available for your employees to read,” it continues, additionally listing the names of DEC officials—specialists on public health issues and chemical and radiological contamination—“should any of your employees have any questions or comments.”

“Please share this information with your employees or let them know that a copy of these documents is available at the Hicksville Public Library,” echoes the 2001 letter, also including contacts for the

agency’s Radiation Section.Resoundingly, the current and

former employees interviewed for this story say they were never informed. And they’re absolutely livid.

Contacted on his cell phone, Elm denies ever seeing the letters.

revelaTIons n August 2004, Neville’s ankles, legs and torso swelled out “like a water balloon,” he says.

Two weeks later, he was 25 pounds heavier. A week later, he was another 10 to 15

pounds heavier. A week after that, he was admitted into the hospital at 302 pounds—up from about 235 four weeks earlier.

Doctor after doctor didn’t know what was wrong with him. Eventually he found a specialist that did: membranous nephropathy, a rare kidney disease. He suffered with the weight buildup until 2009, when he went onto dialysis, for nine hours a day, daily—self-dialysising in his Woodside apartment and draining the dialysis fluid into his bathtub.

On July 20, 2011 he received a transplant from a childhood friend, Colleen Fortuna, something he’s forever grateful for.

“Fifty percent of the people die on dialysis,” he says. “She saved my life and gave me life.”

Neville didn’t know it back in 2004, but Depascale was also having serious health problems; the 53-year-old considers himself lucky compared to what he was enduring.

One night in May 2006, Depascale woke up to find that he couldn’t breathe.

“I thought I was having a heart attack,” he recalls. “I went to the hospital. They did an EKG, they did everything. They did the X-Rays and then they found something in my lungs. There was a shadow in my lung. That’s how I found out I was sick. A month later, I got a heart attack. I had both at the same time,

“We would appreciate it if you would notify your employees...” —an excerpt from a nov. 10, 1998 letter from the nysdec to mdI’s vP Joseph elm, suggesting he inform employees about the availability of an “Investigative Work Plan” outlining contamination remediation efforts at their workplace. Elm says he never read it.

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cancer and a heart attack.”Following several biopsies, they

cut into his side to reach his lungs. He underwent chemotherapy and had a tumor removed from his leg and about a quarter of one of his lungs. It was Stage Four extraskeletal myxoid chondrosar-coma, an ultra-rare bone cancer that had originated in his leg and spread to his lungs. Depascale’s still undergoing periodic surgeries.

After seeing a news report on TV about the Sylvania site’s history and thinking back to what looked like a remediation project taking place at the site during a chance drive-by sometime shortly after they left the company in 2002, he called Neville.

“I didn’t believe Gerry when he told me,” says Neville. “But he filed a Freedom of Information Act and in December we went into that building.”

The pair was briefly allowed access to a room at the DEC’s offices at Stony Brook University filled with boxes of documents about the site’s nuclear past. Then Neville filed Freedom of Informa-tion requests of his own, for anything and everything to do with it. The DEC and state Attorney General’s Office, however, stonewalled him for months, he says.

The two began connecting the dots. “I was healthy all my life,” says

Depascale. “There’s no cancer in my family. There’s no heart attack history in my family… The doctors told me it was environmental.”

In February 2009, only after Neville enlisted the help of a state senator, the DEC released 1,300 out of approximately 3,400 records it withheld from him. It was a treasure trove docu-menting exactly what went on at the site, and besides validating their worst suspicions, proved that GTE and regula-tors also knew of its radioactive past as early as 1986. They just kept it all to themselves.

Some highlights from just one of those reports:

“In 1986, during construction of a 30,000 square-foot (ft2) addition on the east side of Building #4, a cache of 57 buried drums was discovered. These drums, along with 80 to 90 cubic yards (yds3) of soil (containing primarily PCE and TCE), were removed from the area for off-site disposal,” states a December 2006 Soil Remediation Report prepared for GTE.

“During this soil remediation, a total of 194,733,449 pounds (approxi-mately 97,000 tons) of soil was excavated and shipped from the site for proper disposal,” it reads, referring to another phase of GTE’s remediation efforts.

Even excavating nearly 100,000 tons and shipping it by train to Utah still wasn’t enough to clean the site, however, the records show: “isolated areas” of uranium, thorium, nickel and other

contaminants remained. Neville also got photos: men

in full-body Haz-Mat suits excavat-ing massive buried containers full of radioactive sludge and liquids; another conducting a “field survey of blue-green material;” crushed subterranean metal anomalies; “gamma spectroscopy analytical equipment;” an extremely deep excavation pit; and a movable tented “excavation enclosure with airlock entrance” half the size of a football field; among many others.

Also eye-opening were the deposi-tions he obtained from the 2002 class-action on behalf of Hicksville residents.

Stuart Opdahl, who worked at the Sylvania site in the 1950s, said he origi-nally contacted plaintiffs’ attorneys out of concern some of the operations may have polluted the area. He told defense attorneys he incinerated uranium fibers in a “very crude smelting oven” outdoors:

“You would get this blue flame coming out. And many times, it would carry some kind of waste product with it. You know, just like any burning fire that was open of this nature. It didn’t have any—any kind of cleaning mechanism above this that, you know, would drop fibers back…This went straight out above the—the oven.

Neville, upon finally learning the truth, says he “flipped out.”

“I knew right away what happened. How could they possibly do this and allow us to move into that building?” he asks.

The fact that Verizon has already performed so much remediation at the site is proof of their accountability, he contends. So is the massive paper trail.

Regardless, the Jan. 15 oral arguments must focus on convincing federal Appeals judges that the 88-year-old Ronald Regan-appointed Wexler abused the district court’s discretion by granting a limited retrial, among other things.

And though Neville’s a betting man, he still doesn’t like his odds. But he holds onto hope. It’s not just about two warehouse workers holding a $230 billion company responsible, he insists. He and Depascale will shoulder the weight of countless other workers from that site who may be sick or will get sick because of its atomic past, too.

“How do I shave in the morning, look in the mirror, if I didn’t go all the way with this?” he asks. “Suppose, just suppose I walked away from this during the second trial, and just let it end. What about the other people that are sick? It ends here; then they can’t sue. Then Verizon wins the whole ball of wax.

“It’s for all of us,” he continues. “If we lose with fighting the whole way, that’s fine, I just lost the fight… But if we can beat them here, then, everyone’s got a chance.

“That’s what Verizon’s afraid of.”

COnTInuED FrOM PaGE 24

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hot PLate

2013 sIngle dIsh Trends

standout seLectIons From LI’s best restaurantsby rob donovan

the greek PLace2144 Jericho Tpke., Garden City Park 516-673-4545 www.thegreekplacegcp.com

Consider this the Hellenic home of the reinvention trend: An innovative storefront eatery where you can get quesadillas or Philly cheesesteaks made with gyro meat. This is Greek like you’ve never seen, and it’s a gem of a find. BesT dish: wings—all of Them The Greek Place’s Athenian Wings are prepared with a spicy creamy feta and are juicy, flavorful and damn delicious. The Spartan Wings, perhaps my favorite, feature the tang of lemon oreganato. And don’t forget to try the Chef ’s Special Wings with feta and owner Pete Kantoulakos’ own terrific tomato balsamic dressing.

InsIgnIa60 nesconset Hwy., Smithtown631-656-8100 www.insigniasteakhouse.com

Anthony Scotto’s upscale steakhouse delivers first-rate food and quality service but it’s the seemingly simple, but surprisingly bold bisque that will knock your socks off. BesT dish: loBsTer BisqueWith all of that excellent high-end food, it was our starter, the remark-able Lobster Bisque. Simply put, it’s the best I’ve had in years. Filled with chunks of buttery, meaty lobster and mushrooms, the broth hit the impos-sible spot between sweet and savory. I would have been satisfied to order bowl after bowl throughout the night.

maggIe’s on Park1020 Park Blvd., Massapequa Park516-798-1555 www.maggiesonparkblvd.com

Thanks to Chef John Orphanos, the menu at Maggie’s is inventive and quality goes well beyond expectation. I was impressed by every single dish

we ordered but, alas, I must pick one.BesT dish: chianTi shorT riBs The Chianti Braised Short Ribs were served over a stunningly delicious creamy Gorgonzola polenta with grilled asparagus and topped with a roasted tomato demi glace and crispy onion strings. If you’ve had better, more tender, short ribs, I want to know where.

maIn catch1095 Jericho Tpke., Commack631-486-8664; 631-486-8865www.maincatch.com

Many Long Islanders know its sister location, the venerable Southside Fish & Clam in Lindenhurst, which opened in 1934. This is the upscale version. BesT dish: Bar harBour loBsTerThis 1.25-pound lobster, prepared in an insanely delicious, chardonnay lemon garlic sauce, will have you lick-ing every last morsel off your plate. A gallon of sauce to go, please!

medford PastarIa3209 Horseblock rd., Medford631-758-5252www.medfordpastaria.com

You can’t miss at this Italian eatery, and this pick is totally cheating and really unfair to you, because it’s about a dish they no longer serve. However, if you all call and ask for it, they might just add it back. BesT dish: pumpkin raVioli The unreal, heavenly Pumpkin Ravioli is drizzled with an amaretto and sage sauce and topped with homemade whipped cream. ’Nuff said.

metroPoLItan bIstro39 roslyn ave., Sea Cliff516-801-4500www.themetropolitanbistro.com

From soup to dessert, I enjoyed every single item I experienced here, but

Any good restaurant can make quesadillas or sushi, but if you add a twist like a quesadilla with gyro meat or a bagel-and-lox sushi roll, then you’re part of the latest trend in Long Island eats—traditional with a twist. So, just because you

know that a good steakhouse will wow you with its chops or a seafood joint with its swordfish, don’t bypass their potentially addictive reinventions or their updated

classics. Here are some of the best single dishes on LI, from Floral Park to West Islip, that do just that. Expect the unexpected.

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nothing beats the burger. BesT dish: fancy Burger The Bistro’s Fancy Burger, moist and flavorful with chopped short rib, grilled red onion and Man-chego cheese, is my favorite burger on Long Island, period.

mIraku31 S. Middle neck rd., Great neck516-466-6369www.mirakuny.com

Modern Japanese food with a focus on small, seasonal plates makes Miraku a true foodie destination.BesT dish: eVeryThing Bagel signaTure sushi roll The Everything Bagel Signature Roll, with smoked salmon, scallion, cream cheese, and “everything” seasoning is the extremely clever epitome of sushi reinvention. Simply genius.

mIzuno2849 Jerusalem ave., Wantagh516-785-0036www.mizunony.com

Traditional Japanese cuisine with a modern twist is what you’ll get at Mizuno. BesT dish: Tuna crackerAn inventive selection, the Tuna Cracker Appetizer is unlike any I’ve had before. Tuna, mango, apple, avocado, tobiko, with a special chef ’s sauce, all on a surprisingly crisp pota-to chip, this dish was fresh, innovative and filled with the perfect marriage of ingredients and textures. It’s probably the best single bite I’ve had all year.

PoPeI’s cLam bar & seafood house299 raft ave., Sayville631-567-9054www.popeissayville.com

The menu is huge, the service is attentive and friendly, and the food, especially their seafood, is first-rate.BesT dish: calienTe calamari Piled high with incredibly tender fried calamari, heated with jalapeños and Cajun spices, and served with sweet marinara sauce, this is the best cala-mari dish I’ve ever had.

souvLakI stoP111 Mineola Blvd., Mineola 516-747-3458 156 Gardiner’s ave., Levittown516-605-1282

Their signature green sauce, fresh ingredients and large variety of Greek specialties are worth the a stop at either location. BesT dish: shrimp souVlaki Tender, marinated, char-broiled shrimp served with pita, lettuce, tomato, onion and tzatziki sauce. It just doesn’t get any better than this.

vILLa d’este186 Jericho Tpke., Floral Park516-354-1355www.villadesterestaurant.com

This low-key, 44-year-old Italian restaurant is well worth the ride from…well, almost anywhere.BesT dish: chicken chesTnuTsThe showstopper here is the Chicken Chestnuts, tenderized thin, with a sublime chestnut and red wine sauce that is almost fruity and completely reinvents the poultry flavor profile.

vILLa monaco778 Montauk Hwy., West Islip631-661-5599www.villa-monaco.com

Villa Monaco is somewhat of an institution in West Islip—a local Italian favorite for nearly four decades.BesT dish: shrimp orange Lightly breaded shrimp wrapped in prosciutto and melted mozzarella in an orange sauce flavored by Triple Sec, this dish also can be made with chicken or veal. There’s an old adage that you don’t mix cheese and seafood, but this dish proves that sometimes old adages are just plain wrong.

vInoco wIne bar & taPas restaurant147 Mineola Blvd., Mineola516-307-8056www.vinocony.com

Vinoco itself is like a tapas—a small, unlikely treat. The food is as hip and sophisticated as culinary fare you’d find in trendy Manhattan. The inventive offerings and sauce combinations here are brilliant. BesT dish: skewers & shooTers The Vinoco Marinated Chicken is fla-vorful, and arrives with a shot glass of Black Olive aioli. The Drunken Lump Crab Cake with its spicy Pina Colada shooter is another jaw-dropping dish with fresh ingredients and unexpected flavor combinations.

wILd honey on maIn172 Main St., Port Washington516-439-5324www.wildhoneyonmain.com

I haven’t eaten here since Chef Roberto Baez left, but many of his exquisite dishes are still on the menu. The intimate, romantic Wild Honey is full of bold, rich flavors and subtle finesse. BesT dish: oVen roasTed french cuT chickenThe Oven Roasted French Cut Chicken with whipped Idaho pota-toes, smoked garlic spinach and dark pan sauce was a spectacular twist to a classic.

For more standout selections from Long Island restaurants, visit www.longislandpress.com/hotplate.

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J u s t s a y I n g

rom DUMBO to Coney Island, shock and disbelief gripped residents of Brooklyn when surveyors confirmed

that Brooklyn was actually part of a very long island known as, well, Long Island.

“No doubt about it,” said Chief Surveyor Eudora Fletcher, “Brooklyn is really the western end of an island, 118-miles long, that juts out into the Atlantic.”

The survey was on everyone’s mind at a local bar in Cobble Hill.

“I didn’t spend all this money moving to Brooklyn just to live on Long Island,” said one clearly annoyed patron. “They shudda told me where the house was located before I bought it.”

“Look,” said another Brooklynite, “my 11201 ZIP Code has got real status. What will people think when they find out it’s on Long Island?”

Two men wearing dark suits, obviously visitors, sat quietly in a booth across from the bar.

“Where youse guys from?” asked a local resident, noticing the strangers.

“Yaphank,” one man replied.“You’re kidding. There’s a place

named Yaphank?” said the guy at the bar.

“It’s on Long Island,” the man said.“So whatta you guys doing in

Brooklyn?”“We’re theft consultants.”“Theft consultants?” “Yes, sir. You people stole the

Islanders out from under our noses, and you’ve got Long Island worried. We’ve been hired to find out what Brooklyn is going to steal next.”

“This is a joke, right?”“Nope. We’ve even heard talk about

building a wall across the whole island. Or taking over Queens as a de-milita-rized buffer zone.”

“Jeez. What do the other boroughs think about all this?”

“Well, Queens is nervous, of course. The Bronx isn’t worried—they’re sure the Yankees are too classy to ever move

to Brooklyn. And, as usual, nobody really knows what they think in Staten Island,” said the consultant.

“And Manhattan?”“Most people in Manhattan can’t

even find Long Island on a map,” he laughed. “The only the people who know where Long Island is have houses in the Hamptons.”

“Listen,” said the guy at the bar, “Brooklyn is nuts about sports. And we didn’t just nab the Islanders, we got the Nets, too. You gotta problem with that?”

The Long Islander shrugged. “What’s done is done. But Long Island accounts for a lot more interesting people than just athletes.”

“Yeah, like who?”“LL Cool J’s from Long Island.”“O.K. But Jay-Z’s a Brooklyn boy.”“Alec Baldwin’s from Massapequa.” “Eddie Murphy comes from

Bushwick.”“How about Jackie Kennedy?”“Classy, but we got Ruth Bader

Ginsburg.”“Long Island’s Billy Crystal.”“Brooklyn’s Woody Allen.”“Rodney Dangerfield came from

Babylon.”“Brooklyn’s got Bob Guccione.”“But you have to admit that Long

Island’s way ahead when it comes to corrupt police officials.”

“On the other hand, Bugsy Siegel and Al Capone were both born in Brooklyn.”

“Fair enough. But who’ve you got to match our Bill O’Reilly?”

“Hmmm. How about Curly from the Three Stooges?”

The man from Yaphank called out to the bartender: “A glass of Brickhouse Red from Patchogue for our friend at the bar, please.”

The guy at the bar laughed, “And two Brooklyn Lagers for my buddies in the booth.” He came over and sat down.

The Long Islanders smiled. “So tell us, do you have anything worse than the LIE?”

“What?! You guys have never been on the BQE?”

The bartender brought over their beers.

“So,” asked the guy from Brooklyn, “seeing as we share an island and all, do you think Long Island and Brooklyn will ever understand each other?”

“Well,” said one of the Yaphankers, “we could run a ‘Know Your Neighbors’ event, so Brooklyn could find out what’s happening in foreign places like Mineola and Hicksville.”

“And even Suffolk County,” said the other consultant. “You think Brooklyn people would be interested?””

“Not a chance in hell.”They raised their glasses.

Brooklyn Found to Be Part of L.I.; Flatbush Home Values Plummet!

by Peter tannen

“I didn’t spend all this money moving to Brooklyn just to live on Long Island. They shudda told me where the house

was located before I bought it.”

FIllustration by

Jon Moreno

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ClearetteElectronic Cigarette

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hen I told people I would be spending the afternoon with an emergency chute glued to my back, while

strapped into the front seat of a plane the size of a Smart car, they looked at me like I was not too long for this world.

I pulled up to Republic Airport in misty could-go-either-way weather, parked my car in a back lot and walked toward the hangar. In front of me was this model toy plane, red and blue, plastic bubble on top.

It was adorable, and presumably left there to greet guests, like me, at the entrance. I stopped and peered inside, then made my way to Lt. Colonel John Klatt’s trailer.

Klatt was in town to perform at the Jones Beach air show. And if you’ve ever been there, he’s the guy bouncing around the clouds in the world famous Staudacher S-300D, a 1,250-pound high-performance aerobatic aircraft, which tops out at 250 mph.

He’s also a veteran of three combat tours in Iraq, who has logged more than 2,000 hours at the controls of the F-16 alone and served in the Air National Guard for more than 20 years, flying combat, air support and humanitarian missions throughout the world.

Now a member of the 148th fighter wing of the Duluth Air National Guard, Klatt spends his free time wowing audiences across the world by defying gravity every chance he gets.

Today he was meeting me in Farmingdale for a tour of Long Island’s skies in his two-seater plane, capable of pulling more than 20 Gs, which is twice the load of the F-16 “Fighting Falcon” Klatt flies in his “day job.”

That toy plane in the parking lot—not a toy.

I was climbing in the front seat, and Klatt was climbing in behind me, with only a thin plastic canopy between us and the wild blue yonder. He’d be controlling the plane from the back so I’d get the full pilot experience.

I took a deep breath as one of the guys strapped me in so tightly I couldn’t move any part of my body even an inch. Then he tucked something under the belt on my leg.

“Just in case,” he said. It was a plastic bag. Now I was really getting nervous, and thankful the only thing I had eaten that day was a strawberry.

Klatt started the engine. I couldn’t see him but I was wearing a mic so we could talk to each other and I could ask questions.

We sped down the runway, I felt like I was strapped to a cannonball. Then, in a matter of seconds, I was in another world, 3,000 feet up.

I couldn’t stop looking down at the ground. The sky was blue up above the clouds, and another toy plane, this one red, pulled up right next to us.

The pilot waved to me. I waved back. I felt like the Red Baron—the Snoopy version.

Klatt asked me, “So, you want the regular ride or the wild ride?”

I was feeling great, so I didn’t give it a second thought before I asked for the latter.

With that the plane jerked 90 degrees and we were going straight up to the sun, perpendicular to the ground. I felt weightless as we paused for barely a second before swirling and spinning straight back down, then flipped over and flew in a straight line upside-down over the Robert Moses Causeway.

Strangely enough, dangling upside down over Long Island seems very natural. Things don’t look real from up there, where the tide is coming in above and the sky is at your feet.

Today, I can’t even get down to the

beach because the bridge is closed. After Superstorm Sandy, the whole area is shut down. There are orange cones and construction vehicles everywhere so the view over the causeway just isn’t the same on the ground. But if I were up there, I’m sure nothing would be lost.

From above, everything looks so small, especially the things that are so big and heavy down here. We flew over a cemetery, which looked like a checkerboard of little white Chiclets from up there and nothing more, and I didn’t even realize what it was until I saw a group of little dots gathered around one of the small boxes. 

“I’ve always enjoyed airplanes,” said Klatt, who began flying at 17. “My dad used to take me to air shows as a kid and I was always excited about it.”

After a few more loops, rollovers and a hammerhead or two—whereby the plane did a literal cartwheel across the sky—it was time to head back down to Earth. We had been up there about 20 minutes. I didn’t want to come down.

Slowly the beautiful white Chiclets became headstones and everything was real again. I felt sick, not in some spiritual and transformative way. I felt sick to my stomach, and I was reaching for the bag tucked in the straps on my leg, simultaneously glad that I had only eaten that strawberry and remembering that there was a video camera focused right on my face, recording every second of my in-flight experience.

Klatt later explained to me that the body has to learn to adapt to the changes in gravity. This was my first step. In other words, next time I’d be a little less nauseous.

Back on the ground, I climbed out of the plane, a little wobbly on my feet. Someone handed me a tape that I vowed to never let anyone watch, ever.

Back home, I turned the TV on, popped the tape in, cringed for a few minutes, then pushed the play button.

Nothing.It was blank. The camera on the plane

didn’t record. I was a little disappointed and a little

relieved. If something on the plane had to fail 3,000 feet above the ground, I’m glad it was the camera.

Get Off Of My Cloudby Jaclyn gallucci

W

O u t t h e R e

Illustration by Jon Moreno

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ith tons of Sandy debris at Nickerson Beach shipped away, Long Island down-

towns bustling again and conversations turned from hurricanes to holidays, it almost seems as if normalcy has returned two months after the superstorm.

But the side streets in the hardest-hit communities like Long Beach are still littered with debris. Stray sandbags used in futile attempts to stop the historic floodwaters continue to blot some sidewalks. Eerily darkened waterfront apartment buildings sit vacant.

Although most of the Island has cleaned up and dried off after the worst storm to hit the region since 1938, more questions than answers remain. Many are tedious, like queries listed in insurance paperwork and Federal Emergency Management Agency applications. Others are unanswerable.

“But, mommy, if we’re not home, how will Santa Claus know how to find me?” was one question Rev. Msgnr. Donald Beckmann of St. Ignatius Martyr church in Long Beach recalled hearing during Christmas Eve mass.

The hardest of all to answer may be this: how much longer will it take?

Local officials say it may be at least a year. Those still recovering from Katrina—the only hurricane to cost more than Sandy—and officials in other tropical cyclone-prone regions say a comeback could take even longer. Less certain is recovery from the incalculable emotional toll—or how many residents will permanently move off LI as a result.

In the days immediately following Sandy, Gov. Andrew Cuomo called getting hit with such devastating storms “the new normal” after tropical storms Lee and Irene caused comparatively catastrophic flooding upstate last year.

Amityville Mayor Peter Imbert is among those doubting the possibility of returning 100 percent to pre-Sandy conditions.

“Some homes just won’t be rebuilt,” he says of his village. “I think we can hope for a 99 percent recovery.”

Other local officials, like Long Beach City Manager Jack Schnirman, see the recovery as a chance to plan for future storms.

“We’re foolish if we look for 100 percent recovery,” he says. “We need to look for 200 percent recovery. If we build back exactly as things were before, we miss the opportunity to provide the protection and the security that our residents need and deserve.”

Nassau County Executive Ed Mangano, who’s requested nearly $1 billion to repair the troubled Bay Park Sewage Treatment Plant that failed during the storm, characterized the superstorm as a turning point.

“There are now two eras in the history of our county: pre-Hurricane Sandy and post-Hurricane Sandy,” he said in November.

Clockwise from top left: This Oct. 30 aerial photo shows 126 burned-out homes in Breezy Point. (aP) Homes surrounded by floodwaters in the aftermath of Hurricanes

Katrina and rita Sunday, Sept. 25, 2005 in new Orleans. (aP). a new Orleans resident walks through floodwaters coated with a fine layer of oil in the flooded

downtown area on Tuesday, aug. 30, 2005. (aP) The remnants of the west end of the Long Beach boardwalk in December. (Joe abate).

Are We Normal Yet? Looking to Katrina for Perspective on Sandy Recovery Timeline BY Dan O’Regan

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waItIng gameWhen Katrina, the costliest

and fifth-deadliest hurricane in national history, breached the levees in New Orleans in 2005 and government response efforts collapsed, now-retired Gen. Russel Honoré was sent in to clean up the disaster.

“Nothing will ever be exactly like it was before,” Honoré says of the Sandy recovery, noting that the Crescent City’s population is about two thirds what is was before Katrina. “Regardless of what politicians have said, they will not make this whole again. It will never be the same. Never.”

LI will likely see a similar population drop as New Orleans, says Honoré, who has been called in to help with the Sandy recovery efforts. He attributes the decline after Katrina to increased insurance and property costs. Those working toward recovery shouldn’t be too hasty, he warns.

“There’s a term we used to use in the Army called, ‘rush to failure,’” says Honoré. “In disaster recovery, you can literally rush to failure and people never recover because they made decisions too quickly.”

Long after Katrina, New Orleans continues to work with FEMA on recovery efforts, according to Cedric Grant, the city’s deputy mayor. City officials are now planning to service their subsurface water lines and finally make permanent repairs to roads that were torn apart by Katrina.

“This is just stuff that has taken that much time to get to,” Grant says. He expects all of the work to continue well into 2018—13 years after the catastrophic hurricane.

It’s unlikely that LI will be dealing with Sandy through 2025. But, even if New Orleans is more vulnerable since it’s below sea level, Grant says that the best advice he can give to municipal leaders in areas affected by Sandy, is to practice patience.

“[Recovery] is a long process,” says Grant. “I’m hoping that everyone in the country learns from us…it just takes time.”

In North Carolina’s vulnerable barrier islands—the Outer Banks—officials say they only recently recovered from the damage left by Hurricane Isabel in 2003.

“We were still working on [reconstruction] after Isabel as

late as 2010,” says Jessica Phillips of the Emergency Management Agency in Dare County, which includes Hatteras Island, the state’s easternmost tip. “The last problems we had to deal with were mostly mitigation projects, raising houses up out of the flood zones.”

In Florida, home to the National Hurricane Center and the country’s most hurricane strikes, some officials say it’s the mental impact, not the structural damage that lasts the longest. Hurricanes can shake residents’ faith in the area as a safe place to live, causing some to move away for good.

“I think the psychological effects last a long time afterwards,” says West Palm Beach City Administrator Ed Mitchell.

After the back-to-back hurricanes of Frances and Jeanne in 2004, he recalls, some West Palm Beach residents packed up and simply said, “We’re not living through another hurricane season, this was bad enough.”

The damage of those storms doesn’t compare to Sandy’s devastation, but the vacuum left by residents who fled can still be felt today, he says.

sInk or swImThe hits LI took from Sandy

likewise may be felt in more than just the destroyed homes and ruined beaches.

Carole Shepherd, a therapist practicing traumatology with an office in Long Beach, is among those trying to heal the invisible wounds residents suffered when they lost their homes, possessions, or both.

“I specifically have created group programs for this particular disaster because the need is so great,” says Shepherd. “Most importantly, the groups help to build community. A lot of people have different resources and information that other people could use, that’s happening all over already so this group is a way of consolidating that.”

Shepherd says that trauma therapy has helped her patients put the past behind them and start to create a new present and future for themselves.

“It’s inevitable that things are going to happen, the only question is, how are we going to deal with them?” says Shepherd.

Predicting a timeline for

recovery is hard to do. “There is no way to put a time

frame on it,” says Gordon Tepper, a Long Beach city spokesman. “There is a lot of work left to be done. We’ve worked around the clock and will continue to work around the clock and rebuild stronger, smarter and safer. We want to get the beach and the boardwalk up and running as soon as possible.”

One thing is clear: it’s going to be very expensive.

“Money is the fuel of the engine of recovery, says Schnirman, city manager of Long Beach. “Whether it be rebuilding the boardwalk or the beach; repairing and improving our water plant and our sewer plant to protect our residents and guarding against future storms, all of that takes money.”

More than 100,000 people have registered for individual FEMA assistance in Nassau and Suffolk counties, totaling about $316 million in individual assistance. Long Beach has already received $24.3 million to help fuel their recovery, although a $9 billion request for all of LI’s municipalities was pending in Congress as of press time.

“I would expect we are going to be reimbursed,” says Steve Bellone, Suffolk County executive, “but of course that’s going to be a concern because it’s a major hit in your budget in a time where we are already facing great fiscal challenges.”

Village officials across LI were also facing the same cash crunch before the storm blew an even bigger hole in their checkbook.

“If we didn’t receive FEMA money, we would be in big trouble,” says Imbert, Amityville’s mayor. “Spending that kind of money could cripple our budget.”

Rev. Beckmann of St. Ignatius recalled that although the recovery process is still underway and uncertainties abound, there’s still plenty to be thankful for.

“I can’t count how many have said to me, after talking about all of the things that you’ve lost…but those are just things,” he says. “We have our lives. We have one another…and in light of that, the other things really aren’t important.”

—With additional reporting by

Rashed Mian, Timothy Bolger and Lindsay Christ

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by aLyssa meLILLo

Preparing for college is one of the most important parts of high school. Although it can be a long process, it doesn’t necessarily have to be hard.

There are many ways students can get ready for their undergraduate careers, and college officials rec-ommend starting as early as sophomore year. Sunil Sam-uel, director of admissions at Hofstra University, says that students should begin making lists of potential schools during sophomore year and take more action once they become juniors.

“College fairs are very good for students once they have their college lists,” he says. “The more they know about the school, the better.”

But simply showing up at a college fair, which almost every high school holds at least once a year, might not be enough. Admissions officials stress that it’s important for students to do preliminary research on schools beforehand. Checking out a school’s web-site and preparing questions will give students a better idea of what the institution offers. It will help students

shape their questions, which officials say should include queries about the school’s academic offerings, campus life, application process, scholarships and internship opportunities.

Presentation is key, too. Judith Berhannan, dean of admissions at Stony Brook University, suggests that students “dress for success” and bring printed address

labels with them, as some schools like to collect infor-mation to compile mailing lists.

Going to a college fair is a good way to get acquainted with a host of schools. The next step is attending an open house at a particular college or university. An open house gives students the opportunity to ask in-depth questions pertaining

to their desired majors and special needs, such as pro-grams for athletics and those with learning disabilities, and it gives prospective students a better sense of what campus life is like. Marguerite Lane, dean of admis-sions at Molloy College in Rockville Centre, says stu-dents really can’t make an objective decision on where they want to go without visiting the campuses they are most interested in.

“It’s difficult for students to make a decision based on a website,” she says. When they do visit a campus, she advises students to make an appointment with the school’s admissions counselor and prepare questions to show that they are interested in attending.

As intimidating as the college prep process sounds, students don’t have to go it alone. Their school coun-selors are there to help. They typically sit down with every student to go over their transcripts and help guide them where they might want to go. At Commack High School, where college fairs are held at least twice a year and college representatives visit almost every week, Commack’s counselor James Del Giudice begins holding conferences with students in the middle of their junior year. He recommends they use websites such as CollegeBoard and Naviance to narrow their options to about 20 or 25 schools at the most. Many students dread doing the required essay on the college applica-tion, but Del Giudice tells them to consult the Common App, where many schools’ essay questions are posted long before their applications are due.

As many admissions officials suggest, Del Giudice says a student should avoid becoming a “phantom applicant.”

“What really matters to a college is whether or not a student visits,” he says. Students should make sure a school knows they visited by either signing up for a tour or dropping by the admissions office to introduce themselves.

As Molloy’s Lane says, though, applying to college is all about both students and schools finding “the best match.”

hIgher educatIon /// special advertising section

Navigating College Fairs

“It’s difficult for students to make a

decision based on a website.”

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Moving Forward

At Hofstra University, innovation is central to everything we do.

In the past few years, we’ve opened the Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine and announced a new School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. With a rising national reputation, new opportunities in research and the scienc-es, small classes and a student-faculty ratio of 14-to-1 in over a hundred areas of study, Hofstra University is more than you expected and all you can imagine.

Each year, hundreds of students transfer to Hofstra, and now, transferring to Hofstra is simpler than ever. Our transfer students are given greater fl exibility in fulfi lling general education requirements with coursework from a prior institu-tion. At a Transfer Day students can apply and receive an admission decision and credit evaluation, meet with an academic advisor and register for the spring 2013 semester.

Discover what Hofstra’s pride and purpose is all about at a Transfer Day this January.

Find out more @ hofstra.edu/transferdays

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suny oswego January 1information program, www.oswego.edu

st. JosePh’sJanuary 3one-stop adult under-grad enrollment, 8 a.m. www.sjcny.edu

adeLPhI January 7Transfer registration Day, 1 p.m.www.adelphi.edu

hofstraJanuary 8mfa open house, 2-4 p.m. www.hofstra.edu

LIu Post January 8adult admissions event, 5:30-7:30 p.m. www.liu.edu/post

suny coLLege at oLd westburyTBa, register online at www.oldwestbury.edu

hofstra January 8 graduate studies open house, 6-8 p.m. www.hofstra.edu

adeLPhI January 9graduate open house, 6 p.m. www.adelphi.edu

st. JosePh’sJanuary 9graduate information session, 6:30-9 p.m. www.sjcny.edu

st. JosePh’sJanuary 10one-stop adult under-grad enrollment, 8 a.m. www.sjcny.edu

moLLoy January 10graduate information session, 6 p.m. www.molloy.edu

fIve townsJanuary 12open house, 1-5 p.m. www.ftc.edu

mercy coLLege January 12. Open House, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. www.mercy.edu

LIu Post January 15enrollment day, 3-7:30 p.m. www.liu.edu/post

moLLoy January 15pharmacy Technician seminar, 6-7:30 p.m. www.molloy.edu

adeLPhI January 15 & 17Transfer Day, 12 p.m. www.adelphi.edu

st. JosePh’sJanuary 17one-stop adult under-grad enrollment, 8 a.m. www.sjcny.edu

st. JosePh’sJanuary 17undergrad preview day, 11 a.m.-12 p.m.www.sjcny.edu

vassar coLLege January 21campus Tours & information session, 12 p.m. www.vassar.edu

LIu Post January 21 preview day, 1 p.m. www.liu.edu/post

LIu Post January 26 preview day/afford-ability & financial aid seminar, 9 a.m.www.liu.edu/post

suffoLk county communIty coL-Lege - aLL cam-PusesTBa, visit www.scc.edu

st. JosePh’sfebruary 2 preview day, 11 a.m.-12 p.m. www.sjcny.edu

marIst coLLege february 2. Graduate Programs Open House, 10 a.m. www.marist.edu

corneLLfebruary 6 Biology open house, 4-6 p.m. www.cornell.edu

Iona coLLegefebruary 9Campus Preview Day, 10 a.m.-noon, www.iona.edu

brIarcLIffefebruary 9 Open House, 11 a.m. www.briarcliffe.edu

LIu Post february 9 college affordability seminar, 9 a.m. www.liu.edu/post

LIu Post february 12doctor of education information session, 6:30 p.m. www.liu.edu/post

nyIt february 16Tours/information ses-sion for hs Juniors, 11 a.m. www.nyit.edu

coLgate unIversItyfebruary 16Tour/Information Ses-sion, 10 a.m. www.

colgate.edu

suny fredonIa february 18open house, www.fredonia.edu

LIu Post february 19adult students open house, 5:30 - 7:30 p.m. www.liu.edu/post

touro Law february 20open house, 6:15-9:15 p.m., www.tourolaw.edu

LIu Postfebruary 20post preview day, 1 p.m. www.liu.edu/post

st. JosePh’sfebruary 22preview day, 3-4 p.m. www.sjcny.edu

skIdmorefebruary 22.introduction hsJuniors/sophomores,8 a.m.-2:30 p.m.www.skidmore.edu

LIu Post

february 22post preview day, 10 a.m. www.liu.edu/post

brIarcLIffe february 28 open house, 7 p.m. www.briarcliffe.edu

LIu Postmarch 5graduate open house, 6:30-8:30 p.m.www.liu.edu/post

st. JosePh’smarch 6nursing grad program, 6:30-9 p.m.www.sjcny.edu

fIve townsmarch 14

open house, www.ftc.edu

nassau communIty coLLegemarch 14Transfer day, 4:30-7:30 p.m. www.ncc.edu

skIdmore march 22introduction for hs Juniors/sophomores, 8 a.m.-2:30 p.m. www.skidmore.edu suny cobbLeskILLmarch 23open house, 8 a.m. - all day. www.cobleskill.edu

suny oswego aPrIL 1

information program, www.oswego.edu

LIu PostaPrIL 7 open house, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. www.liu.edu/post

st. JosePh’saPrIL 9 graduate open house, 6:30-9 p.m. www.sjcny.edu

LIu PostaPrIL 12 Transfer registration day, 10:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. www.liu.edu/post

suny farmIngdaLeaPrIL 13open house, 10

a.m.-12 p.m., www.farmingdale.edu

fIve towns aPrIL 13open house,www.ftc.edu suny cobbLeskILLaPrIL 27open house, 8 a.m. - all day. www.cobleskill.edu

Ithaca coLLegeaPrIL 27Open House, www.ithaca.edu hofstra aPrIL 28oPen house for hs JunIors, 8 a.m.-2 p.m., www.hofstra.edu

oPen housesIt may be January, but spring semesters at local colleges and universities begin this month. Too soon? There’s always summer or even fall. With many schools not only offering undergraduate, graduate and adult undergrad studies, but a rolling admissions process, and even online classes, the enrollment process has never been more convenient. Here are a few events to get you started.

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hen Marilyn Monroe came out to Fire Island in 1955 to spend

the weekend with Lee and Paula Strasberg, who were mentoring

her at their famed Actors Studio in Manhattan, she famously remarked,

“What a lovely place this is—it’s got water all around it.”

But that wasn’t her first time on Long Island. In 1949 Monroe had visited the Town of Oyster Bay’s Tobay Beach with Andre de Dienes, a photographer friend who’d once been her lover in California when she was still using her real name, Norma Jeane, and struggling to get her footing in Hollywood as a model.

Then she was a budding starlet and she’d come east to promote the Marx Brothers’ forgettable last film, Love Happy, in which she tells Groucho that she needs his help because “some men are following me” and he lasciviously replies, “Really. I can’t imagine why.”

In de Dienes’ pin-up photograph, Monroe was 23 and full of promise. Her troubled childhood in orphanages and foster homes were long behind her. A bright future lay still ahead.

By the summer of 1955 Monroe had become one of the most famous women in America. Her marriage to Joe DiMaggio, the Yankee Clipper, was over, and she’d left Hollywood in a contract fight with 20th Century Fox. Her studio bosses had

Marilyn Monroe’sLo n g I s L and affaIr

a reader among the reeds: Marilyn Monroe was already one of the most famous women in america when she posed for Eve arnold, herself a pioneering photographer, at a Mt. Sinai playground and in a nearby marsh in 1955. (Eve arnold/Magnum Photos)

by sPencer rumsey [email protected]

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wanted her to do The Girl in Pink Tights. She balked and formed Marilyn Monroe Productions in New York.

The image of her skirt billowing in the breeze from the Lexington Avenue subway—a still from the 1954 movie The Seven Year Itch—had become “the shot seen ’round the world.” Adding to the attraction was her 1953 appearance as the nude centerfold in the first issue of Playboy magazine, because the enter-prising publisher Hugh Hefner had paid $500 for the rights to Tom Kelley’s nude photos that the California cameraman had taken of her in 1949, paying her $50 to pose on a swath of crushed red velvet.

The news that the Hollywood star had been fully exposed broke in 1952 when Kelley’s photos turned up in a calendar illustration. Monroe showed her genius for self-publicity—and earned even more money for 20th Century Fox—by owning up to it. In answer to reporters’ breathless queries about what she’d been wearing during the shoot, she said she only had on “the radio.”

At the Strasberg’s place on Ocean Beach, Monroe was sharing a bedroom with their teenage daughter Susan, who was about to appear on Broadway in The Diary of Anne Frank. There were “a lot of theater people” at that part of the island, Susan Strasberg recalled. “They were sophisticates, which meant they stared at Marilyn Monroe from a distance instead of staring up close.”

Over the Labor Day weekend in 1955 Monroe was on the North Shore, staying at Norman and Hedda Rosten’s cottage in Port Jefferson. They were artistic college friends of Arthur Miller’s, whom Monroe had been seeing since she moved to Manhattan even though they were both still married at the time. Late that September afternoon she left to do a photo shoot with famed photographer Eve Arnold, the second woman to join Magnum Photos, the world-renowned agency founded by Robert Capa and Henri Cartier-Bresson.

Arnold, then living in Miller Place, took Monroe to a playground in Mt. Sinai. Monroe brought along three bathing suits and a copy of James Joyce’s Ulysses, which she kept in her car.

“She said she loved the sound of it and would read it aloud to herself to try to make sense of it,” Arnold recalled, “but she found it hard going.”

Monroe had performed Molly Bloom’s sensual soliloquy to much acclaim at a small workshop at the Actors Studio. While Arnold was

changing film, Monroe got the book out to read.

“So, of course, I photographed her,” Arnold explained. It was almost 5 o’clock, the golden hour, photographers say. “The timing for the marshes was just right,” Arnold wrote, “the light soft and shadowless and ranging from pale yellow through deep saffron.”

Monroe changed into a one-piece bathing suit with a leopard-skin print and waded in.

“She was intrepid,” Arnold enthused later. “She stood in [it], sat in it, lay in it until the light started to go and I called a halt. She climbed out, covered in mud, but she was exhilarated—and giggling.” Later, Arnold would insist that Monroe told her “she had loved the day and kept repeating that these were the best circumstances under which she had ever worked.”

Monroe’s career was nearing its apogee. In the summer of 1957 Monroe was married to Miller, who had won a 1949 Pulitzer for his tragic play Death

“adding to the attraction was her 1953 appearance as the nude centerfold in the first issue of Playboy magazine.”

COnTInuED On PaGE 58

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of a Salesman. They were living in a weather-worn farmhouse in Amagansett near the Rostens, who were renting a cottage in Springs. Also nearby was the abstract e x p r e s s i o n i s t painter Willem de Kooning, who painted Monroe for his series Women. The image, which Monroe biographer Lois Banner likened to “a cross between a grinning child and a screaming fury,” did not appeal to Monroe’s playwright husband but she didn’t mind. The married couple was in a hopeful phase: He was writing in his studio near the main house and she was cooking and tending her garden. And she was pregnant.

But on Aug. 1, 1957 she cried out in pain. An ambulance rushed her to Manhattan where she hoped that her own doctor could save her baby. He could not. Suffering from a painful uterine condition called endometriosis, she had an ectopic pregnancy, and it had to be terminated. She spent 10 days in the hospital, Miller by her side.

The loss was devastating. When the season was over, they moved back to Manhattan, he ensconced himself in a book-lined study at one end of the apartment struggling over a screen-play that would eventually become The Misfits, while she was at the other end, strumming a ukulele and crooning, “I Wanna Be Loved By You.”

The next year they moved to a new house they had built in Connecticut, but they never could recreate the idyllic summer they’d shared on the South Fork. And Monroe’s happy times on Long Island faded into memory.

above: Marilyn Monroe is made comfortable in a car by

her husband, playwright arthur Miller, following her release from Doctors Hospital in Manhattan,

where she spent 10 days in august 1957 recuperating from

an ectopic pregnancy. (aP Photo)

Below: an effervescent Marilyn Monroe manages to get a laugh

out of her serious husband, arthur Miller, in this series of candid black and white

photographs taken in July 1956 when they were the most curious

couple in the country. (aP Photo/Julien’s auctions)

COnTInuED FrOM PaGE 57

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Are You Single?Now is the perfect time to meet someoNe for the New Year! matchmakiNg theN aNd Now….By Maureen Tara nelson, Private MatchMaker, dating coach, and singles advice coluMnist.

In an ever changing world one trend that has not gone out of style is Matchmaking, because what could be more important than choosing the right person to spend your life with? After 12 years of experience in this field I know it is not an easy undertaking. With technology advancing daily, the increased divorce rate, as well as the fairly modern idea of “romantic love” being ones right, the need for a Matchmaker has never been greater. Although with the current burst of technology it is easier to cast a wider net on your own that does not mean you should seek a partner on your own without guidance. With well over a thousand dating sites active it has never been easier to connect with others, however it in no way means the people you are connecting with are right for you or even available. Every day I hear the same stories from online dating….there are misrepresentations online. The internet may always be a choice for some singles, but it could never be as safe and accurate in finding your partner as a Matchmaker will be. Most Matchmakers make the entire decision of the potential match for the client. We do not! The Matchmaker must really come to know and understand their clients, which is why intuition is key. We at Maureen Tara Matchmaking believe

chemistry is equally as important as compatibility, and we let our clients decide if the chemistry is there first before meeting, by showing photos. All of my 1200 clients appreciate the fact that by us showing photos, there is no “blind “dating in our program. I am proud to say I have over 1000 success stories with the old fashioned type of Matchmaking program that I have developed. In today’s world Matchmaking is no long viewed as a vehicle for people who cannot find someone themselves, quite the opposite. For successful, busy, selective singles looking for marriage, using a Matchmaker gives singles the opportunity to find someone who is at the same level of quality as themselves. I believe that there is a right person for everyone. The exact term I use is there is a lid for every pot. It is my job to find the proper lid that fits for my clients. Lastly I believe that although the roles of a Matchmaker may evolve and change within society the core values of a Matchmaker which are love, family, and happiness are time transcendent. I am fortunate enough to see these connections being made every day all the while hoping that perhaps I have filled my couple’s lives with happiness as they have mine!

If you wish to make your complimen-tary appointment with Maureen Tara person-ally, please call 516-444-2861, or 1-888-31-match(62824). We have offices in Manhattan and L.I. Mention this article and receive a fantastic holiday discount.

advertorial

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FourcornerS

one common tHread---

by rashed [email protected]

haIrcuts for heroeszoIa wILheLm admits that her thick ukrainian accent has hindered her along the way since she landed in new york two decades ago. But that’s okay—the 52-year-old Glen Head resident lets her hands do the talking. For three days a week Wilhelm blissfully occupies the barber shop at the northport veterans affairs Medical Center, treating her hero patients from several wars to warm shaves and well-earned haircuts. “Life is so beautiful,” she says. Wilhelm is proud of her work and believes a higher power has played a role in shaping her own life. “I believe in God, and I think it’s maybe my path here to help people,” she says. Despite the misfortunes these brave american soldiers may have weathered, she says they are thankful for all she does. Her job isn’t about the money, she says, her customer’s appreciation is her reward. “I work to make people feel better. I love to do this.” 79 Middleville Rd., Northport. 631-261-4440. www.northport.va.gov.

the styLe artIst It was a simple, yet easily answerable question posed 14 years ago to James kILey: Would he want to flip burgers at McDonald’s or learn to style hair at a salon? The Wantagh resident considers himself an artist (even though he jokingly says he can’t draw a stick figure), and jumped on the opportunity. now 29 and a hair stylist at Beautiful People Salon in Merrick, Kiley’s living his dream. For him, styling hair is very much an art—a client will come to him with an idea, he’ll consult, and then stylist and customer will find a happy medium. Kiley cares deeply about his work. “My biggest concern for any client I have is the integrity of the hair and making sure I don’t damage or ‘F’ it up,” he says. Judging by the amount of clients he shapes per day (15 when it’s busy), he’s doing all right. “I grew up in the field,” he says. “at 15 I ended up with a career.” 145 Merrick Avenue North, Merrick. 516-341-0276.

hIs father’s sonIt’s a few minutes before 8:30 a.m. and JosePh mazzeo is already in his Sea Cliff barber shop soaking in 19th Century classical music as a cold wind climbs over the hills of the idyllic north Shore village. Mazzeo took over his father’s shop after he passed away in 1980 and transformed the place into an antique barber shop with modest charm. His father’s death instilled in him respect for the fragility and fleeting preciousness of life, so he decided to cut his own work week to four days. “you only have so many heartbeats,” he says. now 70, Mazzeo works—and lives—at his own pace, collecting items given by customers and friends and proudly hanging them on the wall. Mazzeo treats all his patrons the same, and that includes academy award-winning actress natalie Portman, who wandered in one day in search of a mohawk. He came close to selling his small shop seven years ago, but decided to hold on. “It didn’t work out,” he says of the sale, “and I’m happy.” 272 Sea Cliff Ave., Sea Cliff. 516-676-9770.

the bLessed barberThe voices of SportsCenter mix with the whirring of buzzers at rockabilly Barbers north in Huntington where, for eight years, katIe PoPe, 30, has used children, teens and middle-aged men as her personal canvas, trimming beards, cutting hair and mastering her craft. Sporting a festive fedora and holiday-themed earrings during an interview, Pope (“like the guy with the hat,” she says) got her start after offering a free haircut to a homeless man who sneaked two $1 coins onto her workstation and mysteriously disappeared. The coins, tucked away in a jewelry box, serve as a heartwarming reminder of generosity from a man who didn’t have “a penny to his name,” she says. For her, cutting hair can be cathartic. She takes joy in lifting a person’s spirit with clippers and a razor—baptizing them with powder and rubbing alcohol. “I have a great feeling knowing he left the barber shop feeling better about himself,” she says of the homeless man. 188 New York Ave., Huntington. 631-673-1750. www.rockabillybarbers.com

FoR MoRe go to LoNgISLANDPReSS.CoM/FouRCoRNeRS

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a R t + s O u L

earLy memorIeso’conneLL: I just remember getting into Eddie [Reye]’s van and going from city to city playing shows every night. I also remember thinking, “We can do this. We can become a really big band if we just keep on playing with the enthusiasm we are playing with.” I just knew something big was going to happen. We could feel it.

amIruddIn: Prior to 2002, the scene was an exciting and creative thing to be a part of. Both the bands and shows were diverse and people came out regardless of who was playing. Heavier bands played with the more emo, indie and punk bands. I made friends with people from all over the Island and it was a really good feeling.

bennett: For me, the local scene was becoming a place I felt as if I had even less in common with than before…It had little or nothing to do with what Mind over Matter, Neglect, Berzerkers, Silent Majority and Clockwise were doing, yet in a lot of ways, it grew out from Silent Majority, Clockwise and Glassjaw.

reILLy: I have very warm memories of those days. It was such an exciting time. I’ve never been quite certain of the reason, but it always seemed like kids all across the States were so perpetually drawn to anything that the Long Island bands were doing. Kids wanted to move to Long Island just for the scene and what we had, and in fact, many of them did just that. Ironically, I was doing all I could just to get out of Long Island.

I remember leaving college in ’99 after only completing a half semester and then exclusively touring, writing and recording essentially 11 months out of each year for about four years straight with the Movielife. It was a great adventure, yet exhausting, and I look back on it not understanding how I achieved that sort of lifestyle. Surely, I had youth on my side.

o’conneLL: At that time, [TBS] was just starting to tour full-time. It was a really special feeling. One crazy memory that I have is doing a tour with Brand New. In the beginning of the tour, we were playing to 150 to 200 people max, and what we were doing blew up so much during that time, that on the last show in Worcester, Mass., we played in front of 4,000 people.

bennett: K.Y.I. had made the decision to stop touring as hard as we were…We all formed side projects—S.S.S.P., Celebrity Murders and Deathcycle—and all three bands were an attempt to be more extreme than what was currently going on here on LI.

amIruddIn: Around 2002 and 2003, I had quit the Movielife and was trying to find a different path outside of music. I still played in bands, but I didn’t have the same

a decade under the InfLuence

an oraL hIstory of LI musIc scene’s cLass of ’02-’03 by brendan manLey

the PLayersaLex amIruddInGuitar, the Movielife, 1997-2002; Guitar, Wiretap Crash, 2011-present

gary bennettGuitar, Kill your Idols, 1995-2007; Guitar, Deathcycle, 2003-2009; Guitar, Black anvil, 2007-present

Larry gormanDrums, Glassjaw, 2000-2004; Drums, Head automatica, 2003-2006; Drums, asobi Seksu, 2009-present

mark o’conneLLDrums, Taking Back Sunday, 1999-present

brandon reILLyGuitar, the Movielife 1999-2003; Guitar/vocals, nightmare of you, 2004-present

Taking Back sunday: (Left to right) drummer Mark O’Connell, vocalist adam Lazzara, guitarist Eddie reyes, guitarist/vocalist John nolan and bassist Shaun Cooper

arly in the millennium, around 2002-03, the underground music “scene” that had been steadily building for so many years on Long Island finally reached its watershed moment, thanks in no small part to the monumental records released during that period. Ten years ago, for both aspiring young

musicians and their frenzied fans, Long Island was the place to be.After years of LI’s punk, emo, ska and hardcore bands packing VFW halls

and bowling alleys—including seminal, often-overlooked outfits like Kill Your Idols, Mind Over Matter, Inside, Neglect, Silent Majority and Clockwise—a new breed of bands had started to materialize, ultimately centered around the “Big Four”: Glassjaw, the Movielife, Brand New and Taking Back Sunday (with the latter perhaps the most commercially successful of the LI crop). While the histories of these bands—and the tangled web of interconnections between members—are far longer than the space afforded here, 2013 seems the perfect time to take a look back.

This past year the recently reunited Taking Back Sunday toured behind the 10-year anniversary of their wildly successful Tell All Your Friends record, released in 2002, the same year as Glassjaw’s last proper full-length, Worship And Tribute. It didn’t stop there: Brand New’s game-changing Deja Entendu dropped in 2003, as did the Movielife’s final opus, Forty Hour Train Back To Penn, and that’s just mentioning the “Big Four,” and not the countless other acts you’d catch at the Downtown or the Vanderbilt back in the day.

Thus, to take stock of where the LI scene was a decade ago, and how it’s changed since, we tapped members of some of its most influential bands, who share their unique perspectives on a milestone period for Long Island music.

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drive to be in a touring band that I had prior to forming the band. I cherish my experiences and memories from my time in the Movielife, but grew disenchanted with the new direction of the music, and my friendships with the other guys in the band suffered for various reasons.

gorman: I remember mostly skipping school and going to shows.

sudden famereILLy: It was wild. It baffled me a great deal, and I still look back on it pretty dazed…[But] as far as Taking Back Sunday, Brand New and Glassjaw are concerned, that was a much higher level of fame and success. It’s hard for me to put the Movielife into the same category as the truly famous Long Island bands.

o’conneLL: It came so quickly, that I didn’t really have time to have a reaction. I just remember thinking that this is crazy, and how could this actually be happening to us.

amIruddIn: I was really excited, but I was definitely overwhelmed with all of the attention. I liked being part of something that people were excited about, but I was a little weird when it came to being the center of attention. I would probably appreciate the attention more now. [laughs] I think I’m a little more well adjusted now than I was.

bennett: When hard work pays off for anyone, I’m glad for them. Eddie Reyes of TBS is my friend. We met at Wilson Tech when I was in 11th grade. He was in Mind Over Matter back then. He gave me a demo and introduced me to all these new hardcore bands…I was in Clockwise with Ed for two years. TBS isn’t my thing, but I’m glad my friend was able to succeed and buy a house from playing his guitar. He’s earned it.

reILLy: I’m not sure why certain scenes and particular types of musical genres all of the sudden explode and ultimately fade away. I’d like to think the stars just align sometimes, or pandemonium, perhaps?

o’conneLL: Maybe it’s because what we were doing was special and original, and there was no other music at the time that sounded like that. When all the bands would play shows together, there was also a competitiveness to be the best, which made each band better and better.

gorman: I think like most things, it just became a focal point for labels to cash-in on.

bennett: I don’t know…Right place, right time? Hard work? Perseverance? All those things, I guess.

amIruddIn: I think it was due to the strong scene and work ethic of the

The moVielife: (Left to right, back row first): drummer Evan Baken,

bassist Phil navetta, guitarist alex amiruddin, guitarist Brandon reilly

and vocalist vinnie Caruana

glassJaw: (Left to right) vocalist Daryl Palumbo; bassist Dave allen, guitarist Justin Beck, guitarist Todd

Weinstock, and drummer Larry Gorman

COnTInuED On PaGE 64

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bands. Relentless touring, label interest and talent formed some sort of synergy that spread. My band worked damned hard and sacrificed a lot to do what we loved. Not every band worked horrible temp jobs to save enough money to tour across the country and play in front of five people and have half of the shows canceled, just to do the same again when it was over, for years.

Present-day LI musIc sceneamIruddIn: There is a great band called Playing Dead that I like a lot [featuring original TBS drummer Steve DeJoseph]. Iron Chic is great, too; They are becoming very popular on LI and around the country.

o’conneLL: I make beats with a friend of mine, Kenny Truhn. He is a really talented engineer, singer, songwriter and producer. He has his own band, and has a very original sound, which is why I like him so much. I definitely think people should check him out.

bennett: I will give a shout out to Polygon; they remind me of Sunny Day Real Estate. There’s a band called GANGWAY! who play real good hardcore punk. Primitive Weapons is from Brooklyn, but all those guys used to play in various LI bands. They are really awesome. Wiretap Crash is great.

o’conneLL: [TBS] are going to start writing a new record in February. We are actually renting a farm in West Virginia, so it is just us five together, with no interruptions. We are all pretty excited about it.

reILLy: I just continue to write and record music for myself and Nightmare of You. We’ve slowly been releasing songs

throughout the last few years. I’ve also been playing a few acoustic shows here and there, along with mini tours and a couple shows in Italy, where my wife is from. My main focus as of the last two years has been on my 18-month-old son. He finds a way to make sure that every moment of mine is accounted for.

gorman: I’ve been playing with a band called Asobi Seksu for the last four years; I’ve also been working at a studio called Astoria Soundworks with A.J. [Novello], who used to play in Leeway, Both Worlds and is currently in the Cro-Mags; and also with Pokey, who also used to play in Leeway, and is currently the drummer for Agnostic Front. I’m right where I belong: back where I grew up and discovered hardcore music, chilling with all my heroes and peers, very content.

bennett: Black Anvil is almost ready to record our third release for Relapse records. It will be called Hail Death!...Deathcycle will play the Acheron with Catharsis in January…I just quit Sheer Terror after a year of running around the world with them again…I’m much too focused on Black Anvil and that’s where my vibe is, mentally. My last show with Sheer Terror is December 30th.

amIruddIn: I’m playing in a band now called Wiretap Crash with George [Reynolds] from Mind Over Matter. We have an EP [Hand Over Fist]. They’re a group of some of my best friends…We all just love to hang, with writing and practicing as a way to justify the hang. We aren’t really a band looking to be rock stars. It’s all love.

COnTInuED FrOM PaGE 63 kill your idols: (Left to right) vocalist andy West, roadie anthony “The Watch”

venticinque, bassist Paul Delaney, guitarist Tom Chapman, drummer raeph

Glicken, guitarist Gary Bennett, and M.a.D. Tourbooking tour manager Daniel

Quade on 2000 European tour

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sPencer’s PIck

HaLLucInatIons by oLIver sacksare the pink elephants real? They are if you think so. In Hallucina-tions, the brilliant professor of neurology, Oliver Sacks, shows how substantial our curious apparitions can be, and what their appearance says about the brain and its grip on reality. He says hallucinating is a vital part of the human condition. Come along as this wise guide explores the far reaches of our minds.

rashed’s PIck

Jack reacHer’s ruLesDon’t let Tom Cruise’s role as crime-busting Jack reacher fool you. The fictional former military officer is as tough as it gets and this book explains why. reacher’s “rules of Coffee” are a must-read!

JacLyn’s PIck

andy warhoL LImIted-edItIon camPbeLL’s tomato souP The soup tastes the same, but these limited-edition, Warhol-inspired cans are way better. They come in four styles, are available at Target stores and each comes with a nugget of wisdom from the pop art icon. Get them while you “can”—their 15 minutes are almost up!

chrIs’ PIck

wIretaP crash’s Hand oVer FIst ePWiretap Crash is a kick-ass post-hardcore band from LI that’s best experienced live. a super-group of sorts—with former members of Mind Over Matter, The Movielife and Dearly Departed, among others—this EP, Hand over Fist, their only release to date, is the perfect introduction.

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January 5davId wax museum @ Landmark on maIn streetThe folk/roots band, primarily comprised of vocalists David Wax and Suz Slezak—who also plays a mean quijada made from a donkey’s jawbone—are known for combining Latin rhythms and infectious melodies, and have rocked stages at both the Boston Music Awards and South by Southwest. Hosted by WFUV’s John Platt. 232 main st., port washington. 516-767-6444. www.landmarkonmainstreet.org. $50, $45, $40. 8 p.m.

January 9morrIssey @ tILLes centerBritish pop icon and former Smiths’ front man Morrissey performs his greatest hits from his legendary catalog plus new, unreleased songs in an intimate show. An outspoken artist who is no stranger to bashing other musicians, Morrissey has said in the past that having the head of Elton John on a plate would be the one time he wouldn’t consider eating meat murder. He may not be the most likable guy, but his music sure kicks ass. With special guest Kristeen Young. 720 northern Blvd., greenvale. 516-299-2752. www.tillescenter.org. $89.50, $69.50, $49.50. 8 p.m. also Jan. 11 @ Bam gilman opera house, Brooklyn.

January 11cake @ bowery baLLroom The original Cake boss, John McCrea says there are two different things about the band’s latest album, 2011’s Showroom of Compassion: piano and reverb, both usually shunned by the Sacramento alt-rock band. But, no worries, the sarcastic lyrics, trumpet and word play are still exactly where they should be. 6 delancey st., manhattan. www.boweryballroom.com. $49.50. doors: 8 p.m.; show: 9 p.m.

January 11-13tracy morgan @ governor’s comedy cLubCurrently starring on NBC’s Emmy and Golden Globe Award-winning 30 Rock, Morgan appears opposite Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin as the unpredictable Tracy Jordan. Morgan recently wrapped production on his next film, Predisposed, starring Jesse Eisenberg and Melissa Leo. 90 division ave., levittown. 516-731-3358. www.govs.com. $75, $45. Jan. 11 - 8 & 10:30 p.m.; Jan. 12 - 7:30 & 10:30 p.m.; Jan. 13 - 7 p.m.

January 12martIn kLIne: excerPts In encaustIc @ nassau county museum of artNew York Artist Martin Kline uses pigmented hot wax to sculpt the surface of his paintings, allowing them to literally jump off the page. The artist appears in person

to discuss how he moved from representation to abstraction and then into three-dimensional encaustic wax technique and cast-metal works. 1 museum dr., roslyn harbor. 516-484-9337. www.nassaumuseum.com. $15, $5. work on view through Feb. 24.

January 12 amy heLm @ ymca bouLton centerAmy Helm’s deep musical roots were enriched by a lifetime of exposure. The daughter of music legend Levon Helm and singer/songwriter Libby Titus Fagen, Helm wields a powerful, spellbind-ing voice, whether singing traditional gospel, blues standards or as part of NY-based folk group, Ollabelle. 37 w. main st., Bay shore. 631-969-1101. www.boultoncenter.org. $35, $30. 8 p.m.

January 12sheLby Lynne @ the stePhen taLkhouseThe country music sensation is on a solo tour supporting the release of a deluxe edition of her 13th studio album, Revelation Road, which includes bonus tracks and a live DVD. 61 main st., amagansett. 631-267-3117. www.stephentalkhouse.com. $90, $75. 8 p.m. also Jan. 14 @ city winery, manhattan.

January 12fLemIng artIst showcase @ cIty wIneryA stellar line up of musicians, including Paula Cole, Kris Allen, Brother Joscephus and the Love Revolution, Teitur and Leroy Bell and his Only Friends, perform as part of the APAP Music Confer-ence. 155 varick st., manhattan. 212-608-0555. www.citywinery.com. $40, $38, $35, $30. doors: 5 p.m.; show: 7 p.m.

January 12yeLLowcard @ the Paramount Florida pop punkers and Warped Tour alums Yellowcard broke through in late 2003 with their radio hit single, “Ocean Avenue.” Four albums later, the band is on the road playing new tracks and debuting an acoustic cover of Mumford and Sons’ “I Will Wait.” With special guests Fireworks, Young Blood and The Call Out. 370 new york ave., huntington. 631-673-7300. www.paramountny.com. $52.75, $40; $27. doors: 6 p.m.; show: 7 p.m.

January 13hard tImes: Lost on Long IsLand @ cInema arts centreA powerful look at the human costs of the recession on ordinary Long Islanders in documentary form, with Peggy Boyd of the Family Service League and Paule Pachter of Long Island Cares in person. 423 park ave., huntington. 631-423-Film. www.cinemaartscentre.org $14, $9. 11 a.m.

January 13JIm kogeL’s madonnas @ rIPe art gaLLeryCenterport painter Jim Kogel creates truly original masterpieces, painting traditional Madonnas and renaissance-style layered portraits on pages from the New York Times. His newest collection is on display through Feb. 9. 67a Broadway, greenlawn. 631-239-1805. www.ripeartgal.com. opening reception, 2 p.m.

Long IsLand Press event LIstIngs for the month of January 2013

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January 15Lynyrd skynyrd @ beacon theatreRock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees Lynyrd Skynyrd continue to make music and rock stages with classics like “Sweet Home Alabama,” and “Free Bird” decades later. Don’t miss this legendary band’s only New York performance. 2124 Broadway, manhattan. 212-465-6500. www.beacontheatre.com. $70.50, $60.50, $55.50, $46. 8 p.m.

January 15 & 16the aIrborne toxIc event @ webster haLLNamed after a chapter in Don DeLillo’s novel, White Noise, in which a chemical spill from a rail car releases a black noxious cloud over a residential neighborhood, The Airborne Toxic Event is the brain child of writer/essayist turned musician Mikel Jollett and combines rock with orchestral arrangements. 125 e. 11th st., manhattan. 212-353-1600. www.websterhall.com. $30. 7 p.m.

January 16soundgarden @ termInaL 5While Seattle grunge rockers Soundgarden have often taken a backseat to Nirvana, the band still came out on top during the grunge explosion of the early ’90s. Their album Superunknown became one of the most popular records of 1994, with radio hit, “Black Hole Sun.” The band plays three dates this week, including a second run Jan. 22 & 23 at Hammerstein Ballroom. 610 w. 56th st., manhattan. 212-582-6600. www.terminal5nyc.com. $15. doors: 7 p.m.; show: 8 p.m.

January 18mIssIon of burma @ bowery baLLroom An integral part of the postpunk movement, Boston’s Mission of Burma has been cited as a major influence on bands like Nirvana, Pearl Jam, R.E.M., Throwing Muses, The Pixies and Moby. The band parted ways in 1983, reunited

in 2002, and are touring in support of their latest release, Unsound, with Exclamation Pony (Ryan Jarman of The Cribs and Jen Turner from Here We Go Magic). 6 delancey st., manhattan. 212-533-2111. www.boweryballroom.com. $22, $20. doors: 8 p.m.; show: 9 p.m.

January 18LIsa LamPaneLLI @ nycb theatre at westburyThe insult comic and Celebrity Apprentice grad famous for her controversial style—on stage as well as off stage, brings the drama and her dirty comedy to the North Shore. 960 Brush hollow rd., westbury. 877-598-8694. $49.75. also Jan. 30 @ apollo theater, manhattan. 8 p.m.

January 19seLena gomez @ best buy theaterThe Disney star, UNICEF ambassador—and Justin Bieber’s on-again, off-again girlfriend—plays a one-night-only concert benefiting the U.S. Fund for UNICEF. 1515 Broadway, manhattan. www.bestbuytheater.com. $250, $100. doors: 7 p.m.; show: 8 p.m.

January 19 & 20macabre fILm festIvaL @ best western – mILL rIver manorHorror filmmakers, actors and movie fans convene for independent gems past and present. Experience hours of uncompromising films from local and international filmmakers in this spine-tingling genre. 173 sunrise hwy., rockville centre. 516-678-1300. www.livingdeadma-fia.com. $15. 1-9 p.m.

January 20sonIa sotomayer @ barnes & nobLe - unIon sQuareThe first Hispanic and the third woman appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court, Sonia Sotomayor has become an American icon. She signs copies of My Beloved World, in which she recounts her life from a Bronx housing project to the federal bench. 33 e. 17th st., manhattan. 212-253-0810. 2:30 p.m.

Great Cover: google the airborne toxic event covering the magnetic

Fields’ “the Book of love.”

January 14yo La tengo @ barnes & nobLe - unIon sQuareThe indie rock trio celebrates the release of their 13th album, Fade—a musical nod to the band’s earlier albums like And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out—by signing copies for fans on the store’s second level. 33 e. 17th st., manhattan. 212-253-0810. www.bn.com. 7 p.m.

Competitors shown are subject to change.

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January 20kIngs Park: storIes from an amerIcan mentaL InstItutIon @ cInema arts centre

A powerful and very personal documentary about the history and legacy of the now-abandoned Kings Park State Mental Hospital by filmmaker and former patient Lucy Winer, who will appear in person. 423 park ave., huntington. 631-423-Film. www.cinemaartscentre.org. $15, $10. 1 p.m.

January 21 & 22eLLIe gouLdIng @ termInaL 5The pop singer best-known for the song “Lights” has also collaborated with Skrillex on “Bittersweet” for the soundtrack of The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2. But we love her anyway. 610 w. 56th st., manhattan. 212-582-6600. www.terminal5nyc.com. $35. doors: 7 p.m.; show: 8 p.m.

January 23coLIn QuInn @ governor’s

comedy cLubHis one-man show, “Long Story Short,” was an award-winning Broadway hit and the HBO version was nominated for an Emmy. But before Colin took his show to the bright lights, he worked it out right here on LI. 90 division ave., levittown. 516-731-3358. www.govs.com. also

Jan. 9 & 30 @ Brokerage, Bellmore; Jan. 16 @ mcguire’s, Bohemia. $42,

$12. 6:30 p.m.

January 24 & 25Potted Potter: the unauthorIzed harry exPerIence @ tILLes centerThis parody by Dan and Jeff takes on the ultimate challenge of condensing all seven classic Harry Potter books (and a real-life game of Quidditch) into 70 hilarious minutes. Dumb-ledore would be amused. 720 northern Boulevard, greenvale. 516-299-2752. www.tillescenter.org. $90, $45. 5 & 8 p.m.

January 25JIm breuer LIve taPIng @ gramercy theatreFormer Saturday Night Live cast member and Valley Stream native Jim Breuer brings the funny to NYC. 127 e. 23rd st., manhattan. 212-614-6932. www.thegramercytheatre.com. $30. doors: 6:30 p.m.; show: 7:30 p.m.

January 25Pat benatar @ nycb theatre at westburyThis Lindenhurst High School grad went from playing Queen Guinevere in her school’s production of Camelot to becoming the real-life queen of MTV in the ’80s. This week Benatar is back on Long Island with guitarist and producer Neil Giraldo. 960 Brush hollow rd., westbury. 516-334-0800. www.thetheatreatwestbury.com. $49.50, $39.50. 8 p.m.

January 28reeL bIg fIsh @ IrvIng PLazaSka punk ’90s staple, Reel Big Fish, recently released their seventh studio album, Candy Coated Fury, an inspired and infectiously catchy return to the hyperkinetic ska and biting wit of the band’s beloved early albums. 17 irving pl., manhattan. 212-777-6800. $22.50. 7 p.m.

January 28 & 29tegan & sara @ beacon theatreThe 13-year career of Canadian twin sisters and new wave duo, Tegan & Sara, has seen them bridge the pop and indie worlds. Their songs have been covered by bands like The White Stripes and col-laborated with David Guetta. 2124 Broadway, manhattan. 212-465-6500. www.beaconthe-atre.com $75, $39.50. 8 p.m.

January 24waIt untIL dark @ John w. engeman theater at northPortFrederick Knott’s thriller tells the harrowing tale of a blind housewife trapped in a battle of wits with three con-men searching her home for illicit drugs. 250 main st., northport. 631-261-2900. www.engemantheater.com. runs through march 10.

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January 29 cat Power @ termInaL 5Six years after her last album of original material, Chan Marshall, better known as Cat Power, has moved on from her collab-orative forays into Memphis soul and Delta blues, writing and recording the entirety of SUN by herself. 610 w. 56th st., manhattan. 212-582-6600. www.terminal5nyc.com. $35, $29.50. doors: 7 p.m.; show: 8 p.m.

January 29Peter hook (Joy dIvIsIon/new order) @ strand booksSinger and bassist, Peter Hook of Joy Division discusses his new book, Unknown Pleasures: Inside Joy Division, with The New Yorker music critic Sasha Frere-Jones. 828 Broadway, manhattan. www.strand-books.com. 7 p.m.

January 31comPany of thIeves @ hIghLIne baLLroomVocalist Genevieve Schatz and guitarist Marc Walloch launched this co-ed indie rock group in Chicago in 2007, and have since graduated from coffeehouse gigs to the stages of New York City, hitting the road with bands like OK Go and The Hold Steady. With Von Grey. 431 w. 16th st. 212-414-5994. www.highlineballroom.com. $17, $15. doors: 7 p.m.; show: 8 p.m.

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across1 Building front7 Tube commercials12 Selective breeding

site20 Dreamy guy21 Opponent22 Waters off Buffalo23 Honor given by a

mayor25 1953 Frankie Laine

hit26 - Island (old immigra-

tion gateway)27 not - bet28 rock music subcat-

egory29 “Er” actress Laura30 year’s 365

31 Hillary Clinton, e.g.36 Ball caller38 Port of Cuba39 “- now or never!”40 Lower back’s area44 Sty dwellers46 Phi follower49 yoko of “Milk and

Honey”50 98-Down’s partner in

comedy51 Mama’s other half52 Is sorry about53 Walesa of Solidarity55 Those elected56 More ogreish58 “and I mean fast!”59 age-old61 Western film for

which Burl Ives won an Oscar

64 Isn’t able65 Magic-using illness

curers66 Kilt wearer67 1951 Cesar romero

film70 Iroquois tribesmen73 Falco or Sedgwick74 Heard things75 “How about that!”76 Craps cubes77 Ward (off)78 Make fun of79 astronauts’ gar-

ments82 Whodunit cry83 Grid six-pointers84 Salmon hue85 “Cats 101” channel88 Mu - pork89 unemotional90 Internet access co.91 Hit nintendo game

for the Wii97 Captain of the

Pequod101 Bara of silent films102 Continuity inter-

rupter103 yale Daily news

reader104 Cybernotes105 Like russia107 Big annual beauty

contest111 Contacts via a

letter112 ready if required113 Intrude114 vending guys115 Fry a bit116 appealed to God

down1 Simulated2 Writer - rogers St.

Johns3 In a shy way4 used against u-boats,

e.g.5 Spanish for “God”6 SC hours7 Ditchdiggers8 Church officer’s resi-

dence9 Prefix for the birds?10 “What’s up wit -?”11 Foxy12 Like sludge13 Forbidden14 Island guitar15 removes from a

roster16 Deceptive moves17 Sporting site18 Bolt variety19 Edwin of the reagan

cabinet24 Weeding tool28 Period in history31 ankle injury32 Sinful33 Chinese “way”34 novelist Brashares35 Mozart’s “The Mar-

riage of -”37 - de mer40 “Whatever - wants

...”41 not in cipher42 Heelless slip-ons43 Litter’s littlest44 Is suspended45 Oily org.?46 Caretaker47 Grief48 Early Cosby Tv

series51 Palette filler52 rotten54 Implied subtly56 Internet - (viral phe-

nomena)57 “My People” author

abba60 Plus others: abbr.61 Get ideas62 Finger locale63 Draw on65 In a rut

67 remaining68 Heavy metallic ele-

ment69 1200 hours70 Eye, in nice71 Salary after taxes72 See 99-Down75 Texas river or county79 - monster (lizard

type)80 Looks upon with

a grin81 - -mo (replay option)

84 Sentence units85 - Z (the gamut)86 Holiday quaff87 Shady walk88 Calm down89 Tiny drink91 Fricassees92 “Star Trek” role93 risk94 Quartz used in

marbles95 Babbled96 Mark, as a ballot box

98 50-across’ partner in comedy

99 With 72-Down, air passenger’s prefer-ence

100 Be in need of sutures

104 - -popular106 Doctrine107 apr. and Jul.108 - sense109 r followers110 Devilish kid

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across1 Served in blazing

liquor7 Wise saying12 Little hit15 Pea protectors19 Of direct descent20 True-blue21 Lilting melody22 region23 Classic 1942 horror

film, in old addis ababa?

26 Lab animals27 Ovid’s “Lo!”28 Salute29 nephew of abel30 Question to

someone who’s

not responding, in Isfahan?

37 Lasagna cheese38 P, in Greece39 advice bits40 School for Prince

Harry41 reply to “no you’re

not”44 Born, in a bridal bio45 1965 Jane Fonda

comedy, on an Indo-nesian island?

50 Firearm-cleaning aid55 atlanta-to-Tampa dir.56 Fish hawk57 Partner of ifs and

ands59 Singer nyro

60 Costa -, California61 “La Cage aux Folles”

role63 Much-loved64 Harry Chapin hit, on

Mt. Everest?71 Ellipsoidal72 ump’s cry73 Molecular bit74 rigatoni, e.g.76 Bonkers77 Italian port80 Soft drink83 under one’s control85 “Peace Train” singer,

in rangoon?88 - step further90 nothing91 3/15, e.g.92 asthma spray, e.g.97 - -Magnon man98 Pooch pace101 Tennessee Wil-

liams play, in old Bangkok?

105 Lot division106 Drive along107 Socks108 Switzerland’s

capital109 Flogging whip, in

Mogadishu?117 Sooner State city118 Comic Gasteyer119 Concerning birds120 Old Toyota model121 More or -122 Longing123 Dogs’ cries124 Covered with frozen

rain

down1 Tampa loc.2 ad- - (play it by ear)3 “- news?”4 Month, in Monterrey5 Most sordid6 Bring out7 noncitizen8 - good job9 Objectivist writer rand10 Chasm11 Mourner’s poem12 Bind with a bandage13 airplane part14 Less ugly15 Mom or dad16 navel, e.g.17 reroute18 Is cheeky with24 univ. sports org.25 Genoa gold30 Gyro wraps31 School, in Somme32 rice-a- -33 Loonlike bird34 “-, can you see ...”35 Travail36 nBa’s Shaq37 Soldiers in gray41 Suffix with law or

saw42 u.S. vice president

Barkley43 Get up onto46 Caroling song47 Lamb writing48 Fixed, as a dog49 Orrin Hatch’s state51 Woman of the house52 repented of53 verbal54 Take a risk58 Is larcenous60 Island off Sicily

61 Slowing, on a mus. score

62 Four duos64 Southwest tribe65 Tennis’ Lendl66 Squoosh67 Iraqi or Saudi68 Quite a drag69 Karamel - (Ben & Jerry’s flavor)70 Wooer’s flower

75 It may be acute or right

77 united - College Fund

78 Take - at (try)79 animal companion80 Pitcher Martinez81 “It’s just - those

things”82 Low-key “Hey!”84 “Obey me!”

86 a great deal87 Head Corleone89 Sea - (reef creature)92 actress Sanford93 - Creed94 Emmylou or Franco95 alters formally96 Boss98 Leader of the Bel-

monts99 First phases

100 Hansel’s sib102 3 r’s org.103 Pacify104 Waters down110 “- heard enough!”111 Texas tea112 40 winks113 Live114 apply frosting to115 authorize to116 Stealthy

PartIcuLar cats

Last Month’s Answers confecTion collecTionanSWErS Can aLSO BE FOunD IMMEDIaTELy By CaLLInG 516 284-3300 Or GO TO FaCEBOOK.COM/LOnGISLanDPrESS

Double Crossword

Page 78: Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013

78 Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com

Januaryby PsychIcdebHoroscopes

arIesMarch 21

to april 19

LIbraSeptember 23 to

October 22

cancerJune 21

to July 22

caPrIcornDecember 22 to

January 19

taurusapril 20

to May 20

scorPIoOctober 23 to november 21

LeoJuly 23

to august 22

aQuarIusJanuary 20 to

February 18

gemInIMay 21

to June 20

sagIttarIusnovember 22 to

December 21

vIrgoaugust 23 to

September 22

PIscesFebruary 19 to

March 20

Your self-confidence can cause others with less drive to view you as antagonistic. Do what you have to do to complete your tasks. Don’t worry about what others think.

There is a greater sense of loyalty toward friends, groups and organizational affiliations now. A friend from the past may find you again.

A short trip with a loved one can be just what you need right now. A rest from all the hard work you’ve put in for the past few months is just the ticket. Try meditation or yoga to calm you.

You could be questioning your security now as Saturn, the planet of karma, completes its cycle past your sun. Whatever you put out for the past two years will come back ten-fold.

You may feel a desire to escape your re-sponsibilities at this time. That’s fine for a while, but you have to come back down to earth eventually.

Power struggles with loved ones can be dif-ficult. You can’t please everyone, so don’t take it personally. Listen to music to calm your nerves.

Hard work is the only way to achieve your goals this month, but it will pay off in the near future. Spend time with a good book or hobby to take your mind off things.

Your vitality may be lowered during your Saturn transit and, along with that, more responsibilities are added to your already full plate. Use this time to learn something new.

You may feel resentment toward a friend. Try to avoid angry confrontations that you may regret later. Be thankful for the things you have now.

Now is the time to seek out spiritual groups that meet for creative or altruistic purpos-es. Look for the dream that keeps coming back. It is your destiny.

Your ruling planet in your seventh house will bring harmony in your marriage and partnerships, both personal and business. Revel in the moment.

Control your spending this month. You’re a very generous person but you don’t have to impress anyone with extra nice gifts. They like you just the way you are.

PsychIcdeb has been a professional astrologer for more than 25 years. She began her studies when she was 8 years old, learning what she could from her mother’s astrology magazines. As she got older, she searched for books on astrology and taught herself how to construct a chart. Now she teaches astrology for a nominal fee. Psychicdeb also uses the tarot to do psychic readings, channeling her spirit guide, Helen. She is a reiki master and loves to teach others its benefits. You can find her at the Original Psychic Fairs on Sundays. A listing of the fair dates are on her website, www.astro-mate.org.

IF YOU KNOW YOUR RISING SIGN, CONSULT THE HOROSCOPE FOR THAT SIGN AS WELL.

Page 79: Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013

Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com 79

Page 80: Volume 11, Issue 01 - January 2013

80 Long IsLand Press for January, 2013 /// www.LongIsLandPress.com