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January 16, 2008

Thrifty Threads in Hempstead at Josie's

By Stacey Englander
Nassau News Staff Writer


Why is it that many people decide to shop at the thrift store over, say, shopping at Nordstrom’s? Well, it could be because you can get the same quality brands at the thrift store as you can at Nordstrom’s -- for close to nothing. For the same price you pay for one shirt at Nordstrom’s, you can purchase a whole outfit (including shoes) at the thrift store.

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December 31, 2007

The Hookah Experience Comes to Uniondale

By Jill Freeman
Nassau News Staff Writer


Picture this: colorful drapery’s hung along the walls, a large room with couches and tables, the air mixed with the relaxing scents of pineapple and green tea, and a bar with no alcohol. Those four main ingredients make the recipe for a hookah bar.

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May 13, 2007

Glory Days and New Horizons in Hempstead

By Bonnie McKasty
Staff Writer


According to the National Trust Heritage Tourism Program, "81 percent (118 million) of U.S. adults who traveled in 2002 were considered cultural heritage travelers," making historic travel a very popular and rapidly growing industry. Is Hempstead Village a place to consider for the heritage traveler?

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Music for Motivation

By Dreux Dougall
Staff Writer


Music programs in schools can help children learn and grow.

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May 12, 2007

Long Island Lighthouse Project Stalled

By Lisa Bain
Staff Writer


When people think of Long Island, they generally think of beaches and huge houses in the Hamptons. It’d be an understatement to say that Hempstead is not considered the nicest town on Long Island. In fact, it’s often viewed as a sore spot in one of the wealthiest areas of our country. Charles Wang, real estate developer and owner of the NY Islanders professional hockey franchise, has proposed a new real estate development that would help change that reputation.

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April 22, 2007

Hofstra Gets A Lesson In ‘Hat-itude’

For a slide show of images taken by Prof. Steven Knowlton, click in the window below
By Chad Tangchittsumran, Tara Conry and Prof. E. R. Shipp
Nassau News Staff Writers


As ladies from the Union Baptist Church of Hempstead strutted their stuff on the runway set up in the student center on Saturday, Apr. 21, the Hofstra community gained insights into why hats -- some quite elaborate -- are an integral part of worship and history.

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November 01, 2006

This Senior Prom Has a Different Twist

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At top, Hofstra student and Newman Club member Julia Matias dances with one of the residents of the Nassau Extended Care Center at a recent "prom" the club organized for the center. At bottom, Betty Monroe claps to the music as her fellow residents dance. (Photos by Christina Fabiano and Julia Mathias)

By Christina Fabiano
Nassau News Staff Writer


Under a glittering mirror ball in the middle of a makeshift dance floor decorated in black, silver and white balloons and with gold stars, residents of the Nassau Extended Care Center clapped, danced, and wheeled themselves around the dance floor to a medley of songs from the 50s, 60s and 70s at their “Senior Prom.”

They were given the opportunity to renew their prom experience by 14 members of the Newman Club, an organization made up of Catholic students from Adelphi University and Hofstra University.

Corsages were fastened to wrists, feather boas flapped around necks and sparkling grape juice was served in elegant plastic wine glasses. Students dressed in their finest dresses and ties and spent the evening mingling with residents who, in the case of Betty Monroe, 87, have not been to a prom since as long ago as 1937. Monroe, who spent the evening clapping along to the music and watching the other residents on the dance floor, said she has been looking forward to the prom since she first heard about it. Although she denied any requests from the students to dance, Monroe nodded her head to the music and with a sly smile said, “I’ve had my share of dancing. Oh, yes!”

John Fitzgerald, Adelphi’s campus minister who conceived the idea of the senior prom, said that this is the first year it has been held by the Catholic Campus Parish, a network of Long Island college campuses. Prior to this year, Fitzgerald ran the senior prom through St. John’s University. After he discussed his past success with it, the members of Adelphi’s and Hofstra’s Newman Club members “took the idea and ran with it,” said Kacey Antonik, the president of Adelphi’s Newman Club. “We definitely want to make this a yearly thing.”

Sean Magaldi, an Adelphi student, spent the night leading the residents to the dance floor and teaching them a new dance move or two. As Betty Monroe watched Magaldi, who would later be voted Prom Prince, lead one of her floor-mates to the dance floor, she laughed, pointed and said, “Look at this one getting out on the floor!”

Magaldi paused his dancing for a moment to reflect on his experience at the care center and said, “It’s nice to give people something to enjoy.”

Evans Julce, a member of Hofstra’s Newman Club agreed with Magaldi on the issue of the residents getting some much needed downtime outside of their rooms with a vivacious group of people to make them feel young again for one night. “They don’t get enough of this,” Julce said, “It’s a great thing to know that what you’re doing is appreciated.”

For staff at the Nassau Extended Care Center, the prom served as a step in the right direction for community involvement and recreation. William Maher, director of therapeutic recreation, said that when he first started at the center there was no community involvement at all and little recreational activity provided for the residents. After being contacted by Fitzgerald about the event and then seeing the positive turnout, Maher hopes that this is the beginning of a lot of volunteer involvement.

Standing by the entrance to the dance floor, Maher observed the Newman Club students dancing with the residents as smiling, laughing family members looked on. “I think the families that are here are pleasantly surprised,” Maher said. Maher, who said that he thought the families of the residents were more curious about the prom than interested in it, added, “The ones that heard about it and weren’t here are going to regret that they didn’t come.”

Jean Devlasio is a testament to Maher’s belief that some of the families were skeptical about the event. “When I first saw ‘Senior Prom,’ I thought it was a bit of an insult,” said Devlasio, whose aunt is a center resident. Devlasio thought that perhaps “Senior Social” would have been a better title for the event, rather than “Senior Prom”, which she felt mocked the residents. At the end of a night of singing, dancing and even a crowning of a Prom King and Queen and Prince and Princess, Devlasio said, “Now that I’m here, I think it was an excellent idea.”

Beyond the excitement of the prom, the event conjured long-forgotten memories for Betty Monroe. “I remember the good old days of me,” she said as she continued watching the dancing, never missing a beat with her rhythmic claps. “I danced all over Virginia and Washington, D.C.”

Monroe reminisced about the times she had as a young woman when dancing was everything and times were more simple and innocent. “This is good, clean fun,” Monroe said.

After pictures had been taken, pigs-in-blankets had been eaten and the DJ had spun his final tune -- Donna Summer’s song “Last Dance” -- the residents began to depart, but not without saying goodbye to the students and insisting everyone visit again soon.

Megan Ciccarello, president of Hofstra University’s Newman Club, felt the night was a definite triumph. “We were just here to have fun,” she said, reflecting on the night and how it brightened more than a few lives.

As for Betty Monroe, she could not agree more. Wheeling herself out of the room with a grin, she said, “Thank you all. It was very nice. I loved it!”

For more information on the Hofstra University’s Newman Club, contact the Interfaith Center at Hofstra University at 516-463-6920. For more information on the Nassau Extended Care Center and volunteering, call 516-565-4800.
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October 13, 2006

Hofstra Museum Uses ‘Silence’ To Reach Out

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America the Beautiful, a painting by Michael Perez, is featured in an exhibition at the Hofstra Museum.

By Kaitlin Andorfer and Tiffany Ayuda
Nassau News Staff Writers


Following the grim days after September 11, 2001, Geri Solomon of the Long Island Studies Institute (LISI) knew she had to do something to preserve those emotions so the tragic day would never be forgotten.

She started collecting e-mails, newspapers, photographs, official documents and emergency responders’ gear. The Hofstra Museum is now showcasing the project created by Solomon in the exhibit, "Voiceless in the Presence of Realities" -- a physical manifestation of responses to September 11, created by the institute as a commemorative look at how the events of this day affected Long Island residents.

"As an archivist and historian, I felt that we needed to contribute, as well as to remember. We collected the materials that those in the future will use to understand the day of September 11 and the days immediately following," Solomon said in an interview.

After months of collecting these pieces, LISI then received a grant to process materials and display them to the public. Solomon named the exhibit "Voiceless in the Presence of Realities," a line from the poem "Silence" by Edgar Lee Masters because "how would one describe an overwhelming hatred or those feelings of true love? We are indeed ‘voiceless in the presence of realities’-- we cannot speak."

One of the artists featured in the exhibit, Robert Harrison, a photographer from East Meadow, photographed many permanent memorials that individual artists, as well as Long Island towns, created to remember September 11th. The exhibit includes photographs of a wall of names of loved ones at the Holy Rood Cemetery in Westbury, and of a memorial fountain at Overlook Beach in Babylon entitled "Broken Heart." The exhibit also includes Harrison’s photograph of the "Phoenix" sculpture by John Safer erected in 2002 on Hofstra’s South Campus to pay tribute to 9/11 victims who were part of the Hofstra community.

"After the shock and horror of the events on September 11th, they were fleshed out in my consciousness and seemingly took on a life of their own. They are the visual expression of my own feelings to this tragedy," Susan Oakes said about her design of computer graphics and images that she transfered onto canvas entitled September 11th, 2001: Untimely Death.

Michael Perez, a painter, captures the sadness of the tragic event in America the Beautiful, which is the exhibit’s program cover artwork and shows the reflection of the towers in the eyes of a girl with a single tear.

Solomon says that Perez’s painting is considered to be the visual embodiment of Master’s poem "Silence." "The poem describes a variety of instances where the ability to express oneself is stifled," she said.

"This is such a touching emotional display of how Americans felt on 9/11," Dolores Buckley, a museum visitor from Massapequa, said.

The current exhibit was a top rated pick by Newsday for fall, according to Beth E. Levinthal, who has been the museum’s director for two months. A Hofstra alum, she was previously executive director of the Heckscher Museum of Art in Huntington for 12 years.

"There has been a major thrust at promoting the museum to the community," she said."We hope the community will see the museum as a great resource."

The 9/11 exhibit is drawing in students as well. The School for University Studies will now hold seven of its sessions in the museum, in which Levinthal will talk about works in the current collection along with sculptures on campus. In addition, students in a sociology class on terrorism will meet in the museum to talk about the 9/11 exhibit.

A relatively new addition to the University, the museum was established in 1999 and showcased its first exhibit, "Nassau County at 100: Now and Then Photographs." Through the years, the museum has steadily grown and has attracted some permanent visitors, but it has not gained as much recognition from the public until recently.

The museum is located on the south side of campus, behind Lowe Hall. "Voiceless in the Presence of Realities" will be displayed until December 10th. For more information, call 516-463-5672.

Silence
Edgar Lee Masters
(1869-1943)

I have known the silence of the stars and of the sea,
And the silence of the city when it pauses,
And the silence of a man and a maid,
And the silence of the sick
When their eyes roam about the room.
And I ask: For the depths
Of what use is language?
A beast of the field moans a few times
When death takes its young.
And we are voiceless in the presence of realities --
We cannot speak.

A curious boy asks an old soldier
Sitting in front of the grocery store,
"How did you lose your leg?"
And the old soldier is struck with silence,
Or his mind flies away
Because he cannot concentrate it on Gettysburg,
It comes back jocosely
And he says, "A bear bit it off."
And the boy wonders, while the old soldier
Dumbly, feebly lives over
The flashes of guns, the thunder of cannon,
The shrieks of the slain,
And himself lying on the ground,
And the hospital surgeons, the knives,
And the long days in bed.
But if he could describe it all
He would be an artist.
But if he were an artist there would be deeper wounds
Which he could not describe.
There is the silence of a great hatred,
And the silence of a great love,
And the silence of an embittered friendship.
There is the silence of a spiritual crisis,
Through which your soul, exquisitely tortured,
Comes with visions not to be uttered Into a realm of higher life.
There is the silence of defeat.
There is the silence of those unjustly punished
And the silence of the dying whose hand
Suddenly grips yours.
There is the silence between father and son,
When the father cannot explain his life,
Even though he be misunderstood for it.
There is the silence that comes between husband and wife.
There is the silence of those who have failed;
And the vast silence that covers
Broken nations and vanquished leaders.
There is the silence of Lincoln,
Thinking of the poverty of his youth.
And the silence of Napoleon
After Waterloo.
And the silence of Jeanne d'Arc
Saying amid the flames, "Blessed Jesus" --
Revealing in two words all sorrows, all hope.
And there is the silence of age,
Too full of wisdom for the tongue to utter it
In words intelligible to those who have not lived
The great range of life.
And there is the silence of the dead.
If we who are in life cannot speak
Of profound experiences,
Why do you marvel that the dead
Do not tell you of death?
Their silence shall be interpreted
As we approach them.

FYI: Membership, which now includes 120 people, includes admission to all university art exhibitions, invitations to museum receptions, discounts on museum-sponsored trips, and discounts in the museum gift shop. An annual membership costs $35, but it's $30 for Hofstra alumni, $25 for senior citizens, and $5 for students.
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May 14, 2006

Exploring the African-American Journey in Long Island

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The African-American Museum in Hempstead recently hosted an exhibition of a doll collection owned by Judith Krownin. The exhibit included celebrity dolls of such performers as Michael Jackson (second photograph) and Beyonce Knowles and tennis pros Venus and Serena Williams.

By Megan Salzano
Nassau News Staff Writer

Behind a facade of plainly-colored concrete with red and green accents lies an extensive visual diary of the past. This crème-colored mask, which some passersby in this now predominantly Hispanic and Asian community may deem common, veils an exquisite collection of African-American heritage from Long Island.

The African-American Museum was founded during the height of the civil rights movement by Dr. Leroy Ramsey. The museum, at 110 North Franklin St., in Hempstead, first opened its doors on Sept. 14, 1970, as the Black History Exhibit Center. It is the only African-American history museum on Long Island.

“We had no representation on Long Island at that time period,” said Mildred Calyton, a tour guide at the museum.

When the museum first opened it was located one block from its current location, in a store front.

“Through the efforts of a community based organization, the African-American Heritage Association, we were able to negotiate with the county and acquire this building,” Calyton said.

The move took place in 1985, and offered more staffing and programming. The 6,000-square-foot space now offers programs, events and hands-on exhibitions for community members and visitors in the hopes of advancing understanding of African-American history, culture and societal contributions.

The recent exhibit was a famous doll collection owned by Judith Krownin that dates back to the 1700’s. The exhibit included celebrity dolls such as performers Michael Jackson and Beyonce Knowles and tennis pros Venus and Serena Williams. The collection also included action figures and Civil War soldiers.

“They go wild. Not just girls, boys as well,” Calyton said of reactions to the exhibit.

According to Calyton, on opening day the exhibit attracted around 200 people, and after that attracted students from most of the neighboring school districts.

In past years the African-American Museum has been home to many major traveling exhibitions such as, A Slave Ship Speaks: Henrietta Marie and The Dreaming of Timbuctoo.

The Henrietta Marie told the story of the triangular slave trade.

“It’s exciting when you can listen to tapes and come through areas of the ship where the slaves actually were taken. You had a chance to see some of the hardships the Africans had to endure,” Calyton said.

The Dreaming of Timbuctoo honored the Voting Rights Act of 1965. It was a hands-on exhibit that helped visitors understand the hardships African-Americans faced.

“We had visitors, visitors, visitors,” Calyton said. According to Calyton, students from most of the Nassau County school districts visited the exhibitions. “They even came from Brooklyn, the Bronx and Manhattan.”

The south wing of the building houses the museum’s rotating exhibits, which are usually showcased for three months. Permanent collections are also on display.

The museum hopes to soon display The Long Island Story. This exhibit was founded to trace the history of African-Americans on Long Island, with changing exhibitions to portray Africans in the Diaspora.

James Hubert “Eubie” Blake’s piano is also housed as a permanent exhibit at the museum. Blake was a prominent African-American pianist and lyricist. Musicians are often honored by being allowed to sit at the piano and play for an audience.

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Annual celebrations run from December through March. Kwanza is celebrated in December as a celebration of the fresh fruit of the harvest. “It’s not a religious holiday. It has nothing to do with government. It is a cultural holiday, celebrated by African-Americans in the African tradition.”

January begins the commemorative exhibit of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Photographs of Dr. King as well as letters and other documents from his life are showcased, as well as readings of his speeches.

For more information about current exhibits or group tours, call 516-572-0730. Or, on the Internet, go to: http://aamoflongisland.org. It is open Tuesdays through Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

“It has been a rewarding and an educational experience. It’s been a wonderful, a wonderful journey,” Calyton said.


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