THE RESULTS ARE IN

Transcription

THE RESULTS ARE IN
Vol. 44, No. 37 Sept. 11-17, 2014 • queenstribune.com
THE RESULTS ARE IN
A look at the winners
and losers of Tuesday’s
Primary elections.
By Tribune Staff … Page 3.
New Members
Appointed To
Library Board
Reflections On
13th Anniversary
Of 9/11
Queens College
Debuts New
Warhol Exhibit
PAGE 4
PAGE 16
PAGE 27
Page 2 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 3
Queens DeaDline
Avella Declares Victory, Liu Does Not Concede
BY JOE MARVILLI
Staff Writer
State Sen. Tony Avella (D-Bayside) called the Democratic Primary
Election in his favor Tuesday night,
although his opponent, John Liu, refused to concede.
With 95.4 percent of the polls
reporting in the race for State Senate District 11 Wednesday morning,
Avella garnered 52.2 percent of the
vote, equal to 6,813 ballots. Liu trails
by 568 votes. Although Liu’s campaign
said that there are around 1,000 paper
ballots still to be counted, Avella was
confident that his victory was assured.
“We feel the lead that we have is
impossible for him to overcome,” the
Senator said at his election night party
at C.J. Sullivan’s American Grill in
Bayside.
The victory party featured civic supporters, union leaders, a representative
for U.S. Rep. Steve Israel (D-Melville)
and fellow Independent Democratic
Conference member, State Sen. David
Valesky (D-Syracuse). Avella’s move
to the IDC, which caucused with Senate Republicans last session, was the
tipping point for Liu’s entry into the
race. The Queens Democratic Party,
which said they felt Avella had “betrayed” them, backed Liu from day
one.
Avella said his win proved it was
possible to go against the Queens
Democratic Party and still come out
on top.
“The victory tonight wasn’t just
about my campaign. It was a larger issue about elected officials having independence to vote the way they think is
important for their district and in this
case, the entire State. It’s a message to
people that they can take on the political machine and beat it,” he said. “Liu
had all the resources. He had four times
as much money. He had all of what I call
‘Crowley’s cronies.’ And we still won. I
think that’s an important message for
people in the Borough of Queens.”
Over at Vivaldi Ristorante, also in
Bayside, U.S. Rep. Joe Crowley (DJackson Heights), Borough President
Melinda Katz, Assemblywoman Nily
Cuomo, Incumbents Win
BY QUEENS TRIBUNE STAFF
Gov. Andrew Cuomo led the way
on Tuesday night as the highest-profile
of three Queens incumbents elected.
The governor held off a Democratic
Primary challenge from Fordham law
professor Zephyr Teachout, taking 62
percent of the vote statewide. While
Cuomo lost a number of counties upstate, Democratic voters in Queens
overwhelmingly came out to support
the incumbent. More than 74 percent
of Queens voters supported Cuomo.
The governor’s chosen running
mate, former Buffalo U.S. Rep. Kathy
Hochul, also held off an upstart challenge from Tim Wu, taking almost 60
percent of the vote.
Cuomo, who was largely out of the
public eye on Primary Day, released
a statement congratulating Teachout
and Wu while touting his victory
along with Hochul.
“Today’s outcome is a testament to
the progress we have made together
over the last four years: restoring economic opportunity, replacing dysfunction with results, putting people
before politics and re-establishing
New York as a progressive leader for
the nation,” the statement read.
Cuomo was joined by two Queens
legislators in Primary victories for incumbents Tuesday night. State Sen.
Toby Stavisky (D-Flushing) held off a
challenge from S.J. Jung while Assemblywoman Margaret Markey (D-Maspeth)
won her first primary in more than a decade, defeating Dmytro Fedkowskyj.
According to preliminary results,
Stavisky won with 57.3 percent of the
vote in State Senate District 16, taking
in just over 5,000 votes.
“This is one night, but we have a
lot of things to do,” she said Tuesday
night. “We have a long agenda for the
future come January.”
Stavisky said her three major priorities for her eighth term are passing
the Women’s Equality Agenda, the
DREAM Act and increasing the minimum wage.
In Assembly District 30, incumbent
Markey handily defeated Fedkowskyj,
a former member of the City’s Panel
for Educational Policy. Markey, who
was facing her first Primary challenge
since she took office, took in just over
75 percent of the vote in a primary
that saw less than 2,500 votes cast.
“My constituents have said I’m doing a good job and they appreciate the
work that I’m doing, and that makes
me feel good,” she said.
Markey addressed criticism from
her opponent that she was not very
visible in the district as well.
“If you do your homework, you’ll
pass. That’s not ego, that’s just reality,”
she said. “If I didn’t pay attention, or
if my staff didn’t pay attention to issues in the district, we wouldn’t be celebrating right now.”
Cuomo will go on to face Republican Rob Astorino in the Nov. 4 General Election. Markey will face another
challenge from Republican Anthony
Nunziato, while Stavisky does not have
a General Election challenger.
Reporters Luis Gronda and Jackie
Strawbridge contributed.
Photo by Joe Marvilli
state sen. Tony avella (right)
celebrated his Primary victory
with fellow iDC member, state
sen. David Valesky.
Rozic (D-Hillcrest), Councilmen Paul
Vallone (D-Bayside) and Rory Lancman (D-Hillcrest) all made appearances at Liu’s party.
Around 10:30 p.m. Tuesday
night, Liu appeared before his supporters and said the election was too
close to call. The former Comptroller said that every ballot needed to
be counted before a winner could be
determined, a process that he said
would take a few days to a week.
Even without a clear win, Liu called
his campaign a success for getting
the IDC to partner with the Democratic Party in the State Senate again
next year.
“Our campaign has succeeded already. In fact, it succeeded a number
of weeks ago when we were successful
in getting some so-called Democrats
to actually promise that they were
actually going to be Democrats,” Liu
said.
The last few months of the District
11 race featured attacks from both
sides, with Liu slamming Avella for
joining the IDC and the Senator hitting Liu over investigations into his
campaign for Mayor last year.
While Liu added that he ran an
“honest and clean campaign,” Avella
disagreed.
“I was turned off totally by the negative campaign John Liu ran. It’s just
an example of how politics isn’t getting better, it’s getting worse,” he said.
“That’s why I think winning this election was so very important, to send a
message that you can run an honest
campaign, you can be honest and still
win against the machine.”
Reach Joe Marvilli at (718) 3577400, Ext. 125, [email protected], or @JoeMarvilli.
Comrie Steamrolls Smith
On His Path To Albany
BY JORDAN GIBBONS
Staff Writer
Blasio, Borough President Melinda
Katz, U.S. Rep. Greg Meeks (D-Jamaica), Councilmembers Donovan
Former Councilman Leroy Comrie Richards (D-Laurelton) and I. Daneek
convincingly defeated incumbent State Miller (D-St. Albans), Comrie was
able to gather more
Sen. Malcolm Smith (Dthan enough votes to
Hollis) and attorney Mubring that change to the
nir Avery in the Primary
State Senate.
election for the 14th Dis“It feels good, it’s a
trict Tuesday night.
gratifying win,” Comrie
Smith has held the
said. “It’s a real testaseat for 13 years, but
ment to the power of
his legal issues based
the community, actuon an alleged corrupally. While I was hontion scheme to bribe his
ored with unprecedentway onto the Republican
ed support from every
mayoral ticket in 2013
major quarter, I was
prompted Queens legisoverwhelmed by the
lators and the Southeast
Photo by Jordan Gibbons reaction from the comQueens community to
leroy Comrie
munity.”
call on Comrie to bring a
He noted the decline in support
new face to Albany.
Comrie ended up with 69.4 percent Smith received from the community,
of the votes. Smith finished with 18.9 which has repeatedly been let down by
percent and Avery had 11.8 percent. its legislators in the past for a variety
Comrie pulled in more than 9,000 of corruption charges.
“They were disappointed in the
votes out of the impressive 13,000plus voters who came in droves to the incumbent and they really wanted
polls for a mid-term primary election. someone that would have experience
“I’m just humbled that the numbers to go to Albany to deal with the major
are strong and the turnout is better issues that are coming up in the 2015
than normal to show the community legislative agenda,” he said.
Reach Jordan Gibbons at (718)357is making a strong statement of sup7400 Ext. 123, jgibbons@queenspress.
port for my candidacy,” Comrie said
With the support of Mayor Bill de com or @jgibbons2.
Page 4 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
Two New Appointees For Library Board
BY JOE MARVILLI
Staff Writer
Two more individuals have been
selected for the Queens Library’s
Board of Trustees.
Over the past few days, Mayor Bill
de Blasio announced the appointment
of Martha Baker to the Board of Trustees. Queens Borough President Melinda Katz did the same, selecting Earl
Simons for board membership.
Simons, who lives in Cambria
Heights, is the director of Government and Community Relations at
York College. He is responsible for
overseeing civic engagement efforts,
organizing special events and helping
to secure federal, State and local funding to support the college’s capital improvement and program initiatives.
“Mr. Simons’ impressive background in higher education and government, which includes extensive
experience in overseeing capital and
operating budgets, makes him a superb choice for appointment to the
Board. His intellect, work ethic and
commitment to public service will be
a great asset to the Queens Library,”
Katz said.
Before joining York College, Simons served as the director of Budget and Grants for former Manhattan
Borough President C. Virginia Fields.
“I am honored to serve as a mem-
Earl Simons
Martha Baker
ber of the Board of Trustees for the
Queens Public Library,” Simons said.
“The Library is a critical resource to
all Queens’ residents. I thank Queens
Borough President Katz for appointing me to this important position and
look forward to serving with this exciting team.”
A resident of Fresh Meadows, Baker
is the founder of Equity in Education
and Employment. This organization
provides program design, advocacy
and training to improve opportunities
for women and girls. Outside of the
group, Baker has campaigned at a local and national level for secure leave
policies that support working families
as well as women in the workplace.
She is also the founder of the Eleanor
Roosevelt Legacy Committee.
Baker is on the steering committee
of the NY Paid Family Leave Insurance
Campaign. She formerly served as executive director and CEO at Nontraditional Employment for Women. She
was the deputy director of operations
at the New York State Workers Compensation Board and served as the executive director of the Commission on
the Status of Women during Mayor
David Dinkins’ administration.
“The Queens Library has always
provided a foundation for children.
With our growing and diverse population, we have to continue expanding and innovating to meet the needs
of today’s youth, seniors and working
families. Programs, services, books
and e-books are all part of today’s library world and Queens should be
the best,” Baker said. “Thank you to
Mayor de Blasio for giving me the opportunity to assist the board in restoring the library’s much-deserved great
reputation.”
Baker and Simons will join Coalition for Queens founder, Jukay Hsu,
and CUNY’s Campus Planning and
Facilities Management Vice President,
Robert Santos, on the Library Board.
“We look forward to working
with them and continuing the legacy
of world-class library service for the
people of Queens,” Thomas Galante,
President and CEO of Queens Library,
said about the new appointees.
The need to fill seats came out of a
controversy over Galante’s salary and
spending practices. Frustrations from
Katz and de Blasio over the trustees’
votes against removing Galante and
their rejection of Comptroller Scott
Stringer’s audit request led to the
removal of eight trustees from the
board.
Reach Joe Marvilli at (718) 3577400, Ext. 125, [email protected], or @JoeMarvilli.
YO U TH O U G H T TH E Y R EPO RTED
TH E GAS L E A K . TH E Y TH O U G H T Y OU D I D .
“Smell gas. Act fast.” Those
are the words we want you to
remember. Don’t assume that
a neighbor will call 911,
1-800-75-CONED or your local
utility. Just leave the area
immediately and make the call
yourself. If you prefer, you can
report a gas-related emergency
anonymously. You don’t even
need to be there when help
arrives. Visit conEd.com for more
gas safety information and take
safety into your own hands.
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 5
Non-Profit Looks To Open Another Shelter
By Luis Gronda
Staff Writer
With the recent rash of homeless shelters popping up throughout
Queens, there is a non-profit company looking to open up a transitional
homeless shelter somewhere in the
Borough.
A company called Vines New York
is looking for property to build an approximately four-to-five story building that would house about 20 to 25
homeless women with children, according to Mary Hernandez, the company’s president.
In an interview with the Queens
Tribune, Hernandez said they want
to offer temporary housing to these
women who do not have a roof over
their heads and offer them support
services. She said they want to help
these women better themselves so they
can get their own housing and keep it.
“You have to learn how to obtain
that apartment, you have to learn how
to better yourself so that you can keep
that apartment,” she said.
Hernandez said that while the
women are in the home, they would
assist them in finding permanent
housing. Their goal is to get them out
within six months, she said.
The St. Albans-based company has
sent out a letter to each of the 14 Community Boards in Queens introducing
the company and asking for their sup-
port. The letter itself is vague about
what the plans are with the potential
housing, but Hernandez said they
would like to meet with any of the CBs
in the near future.
There has been much controversy
with the recent homeless shelters that
have opened up in Queens, including the one at the Pan Am Hotel in
Elmhurst and the proposed shelter
in Glendale. Residents have rallied
against the shelters because of a variety of reasons including the kids from
the shelter potentially overcrowding the local schools and the crime it
could bring.
When asked about residents’ disapproval for homeless shelters, Hernandez said there needs to be a common
ground on this issue because the problem of homelessness is not going away
unless something is done about it.
“There should be a compromise so
that we can still help these people,” she
said.
Some of the Community Boards
who received the letter reached out to
Hernandez asking to speak about it,
but have not received a response yet.
That includes Community Boards 1
and 8.
Community Board 10 Chairperson Betty Braton read the letter during their meeting last week. They indicated that they would be unlikely to
support their plan considering there is
a similar facility within CB10, the Sky-
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way Hotel in South Ozone Park.
As for its location, Hernandez
said they have looked in areas such as
Springfield Gardens, Hollis and Rockaway, but they are “looking for the
best location in Queens.”
The company does not have a web-
site or any sort of online presence but
they are listed on the New York State
Dept. of State database as an active
company.
Reach Luis Gronda at (718) 3577400, ext. 127, lgronda@queenstribune.
com or @luisgronda.
Workers’ Rights Forum
U.S. Rep. Grace Meng (D-Flushing) held a workers’ rights forum at
Flushing Library on Sept. 4. The free event included appearances
from several federal agencies responsible for enforcing and overseeing the rights of workers. Representatives from the U.S. Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission, the National Labor Relations Board, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration,
the U.S. Dept. of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division and Women’s
Bureau and the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs
were all on hand to answer questions from attendees.
Page 6 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
EDIT PAGE
In Our OpInIOn
Op-ED
Getting Out The Vote
Results throughout the State for the Primary elections on Tuesday showed a lot
of districts with decreased attendance – of course, many districts had no local races
to speak of, the top of the ticket was all they had. But there were some districts on
Tuesday that had some impressive turnout. Not surprisingly, those districts featured
competitive races that had people talking.
Races for State Senate Districts 11 and 14 ended up with more than 13,000 voters each coming out to choose their candidate. District 11 featured a close race that
ended with less than 600 votes separating the candidates and calls for paper ballots
to be counted. In District 14, voters declared that they had enough of corruption in
government and removed an incumbent under indictment from his seat, overwhelmingly choosing his experienced opponent.
These vote totals are exceptions, we know. Without a cause or a tight competition,
voters are no longer likely to come out and vote in a Primary election. This is unfortunate, as many of these races determine the eventual representatives in government,
as no challenger looms on the horizon for November’s General Election. But regardless of the outlier results, we still appreciate the increased voter totals for these races
Tuesday night. Voters still care, they just need to be given a reason to.
Those two races on Tuesday were great examples of Democracy in action. We hope
we can see more of that in the future.
In YOur OpInIOn
Border Crisis Blaming Games
R
To The Editor:
epublicans continually
blame Obama, liberals
and Democrats for all
of society’s ills. Today, it’s the
border crisis. FOX “News” is
doing its job and the uneducated believe the lies. Lies like
Global warming doesn’t exist.
But we must cut these nonbelievers some slack, after all heat
stroke causes disorientation
and confusion.
But let’s focus on “illegals
and deportation.” Fact: more
people have been deported
under Obama than under
Bush. Fact: President Obama
is going to leave the White
House having deported more
immigrants than any other
president in history! Yet Republicans continue to say that
Obama is doing nothing about
the border problem. Well, that’s
just “repurposed bovine waste.”
Here is another fact (look up
the meaning, Republicans):
Obama asked for $3.7 billion
to address the border crisis,
John Boehner trimmed that
to $1.5 but the GOP House
Appropriations Committee cut
it even further to $659 million.
And then the GOP cancelled
the vote! Wow, just when
Congress (GOP) was so close
to the “appearance” of doing
“something.” How sad.
Boehner released a statement after he yanked the bill
- “There are numerous steps
the President can and should
be taking right now, without
the need for Congressional
action.” Is John Boehner suggesting that if Congress won’t
act to change a law it doesn’t
like, the President should?
Because there’s a person who
is suing the President for doing just that, right now! His
name is John Boehner. Hey,
Republicans! You’re entitled to
your own opinions, but NOT
your own facts.
robert Larosa,
Whitestone
Trouble At The Red Cross?
I
To The Editor:
was a hurricane victim as I
live a block from the ocean
in Rockaway Park for many
years and suffered a lot of mental suffering during the hurricane. The Red Cross got $300
Million in 2012 by many naive
suckers for hurricane victims,
yet denied many any financial
aid until two NYC papers exposed the Red Cross.
It screwed over 1000 hur-
ricane victims with lies.
I also was denied anything
as I went all the way over there
near 11th Ave. and 47th, asked
questions then told to contact
Catholic Charities who told me
it doesn’t give any financial aid
to anyone. Has your free community paper ever exposed the
Red Cross for screwing many
disaster victims?
eric Kemer,
Rockaway Park
Michael Nussbaum
Publisher
Queens County’s
Weekly Newspaper Group
Founded in 1970 by Gary Ackerman
Published Weekly
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Queens Tribune (718) 357-7400
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Steven J. Ferrari, Editor-in-Chief
Shiek Mohamed, Production Manager
Marcia Moxam Comrie
Contributing Editor
Ria MacPherson
Comptroller
Reporters: Joe Marvilli, Luis Gronda,
Jackie Strawbridge, Jordan Gibbons
Photographers: Bruce Adler, Walter Karling
Contributors: Melissa Hom, Eric Jordan,
Barbara Arnstein, Tammy Scileppi, David
Russell, Vladimir Grjonko
Art Department: Rhonda Leefoon,
Lianne Procanyn, Karissa Tirbeni
Webmaster: Shiek Mohamed
Protecting Elderly
Crime Victims
By Queens District
Attorney richArD A.
Brown
With an elderly population of nearly 400,000 in our
County, each year the Queens
County District Attorney’s office handles a substantial number of cases involving elderly
crime victims. To
make sure that seniors receive the support and protection
they deserve, our
office has developed
special programs
to assist them. Our
Elder Abuse Project, headed by an
attorney who is also
a social worker, has
two social workers on staff who
can assist elderly crime victims
in obtaining crime victim compensation to cover medical,
dental or eye care expenses resulting from physical or sexual
abuse or to replace personal
property damaged or stolen.
They can provide short-term
counseling to help seniors deal
with the emotional impact of
the crime. They can help victims
access related services from
other agencies, including Meals
on Wheels, Access-a-Ride and
senior home repair programs.
They can explain the criminal
justice process and help craft
case dispositions that address
elderly victims’ needs, including restitution or substance
abuse or mental health services
for family caregivers.
An emerging crime trend is
financial crimes against the elderly. We review a large number
of financial crimes complaints
each year, which may include
telemarketing scams, consumer
frauds, credit card fraud, identity theft, caregiver/familial
financial crimes, “sweetheart”
scams and “stranger” exploitation matters. In addition, there
Maureen Coppola
Advertising Director
Howard Swengler
Major Accounts Manager
Shanie Persaud
Director Corporate Accounts/Events
Account Executives
Helene Sperber
Tom Eisenhauer
Shari Strongin
Donna Lawlor
Maury Warshauer
Accounting:
Lisbet Espinal, Elizabeth Mance
are many cases of deed or equity
theft, particularly involving
individuals who befriend innocent victims and gain control
over their finances or fraudulently refinance or mortgage or
sell the victim’s home without
the victim’s knowledge or permission.
These financial exploitation
of the elderly cases
demand both intensive financial investigation and prosecution resources
and comprehensive
support services for
victims. Our office established the
Elder Fraud Unit to
address both components. Specially
trained assistant district attorneys assigned to this unit
handle these matters “vertically,” i.e. from case inception
through to disposition, and
work closely with the social
workers in the Elder Abuse
Project to offer support services to victims as they proceed
through the criminal justice
process. Where criminal prosecution is not appropriate, we
refer the victim to the appropriate agency.
Finally, a public outreach
effort focuses on education
and prevention. At community forums, senior centers and
other venues, our office seeks
to increase awareness about
financial exploitation crimes
and about the availability of
services for the elderly both
within the District Attorney’s
office and in the Queens community generally.
By utilizing these programs,
we have been successful in
holding those who commit
crimes against the elderly
accountable for their actions
while providing crime victims
with the compassion, support
and services they need.
Mitch Kronenfeld: Classified Manager
Classified Ad Representatives: Nadia Hack, Peggie Henderson, Fran Gordon, Susan Jaffe, Marty
Lieberman, Chris Preasha, Natasha Robbins,
Lorraine Shaw, Sheila Scholder, Lillian Saar
An Award Winning Newspaper
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The Tribune is not responsible for
typographical errors beyond the cost of
the space occupied by the advertisement.
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 7
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of formation of SLG
SHOP LLC. Articles of organization filed with the Secretary
of State of New York on
06/16/2014. Office location:
Queens County. Secretary of
the State of New York has
been designated as agent of
the LLC upon whom process
against it may be served.
Secretary of State of New
York shall mail process to the
LLC at 35-10 36th Avenue,
Second Floor, Long Island
City, NY 11106. Purpose:
Any lawful activity.
________________________
Notice of Formation: Mattbeth Artisan Foods LLC
Articles of Organization filed
with The Secretary of State
of New York (SSNY) On
04/25/2014. Office located
in Queens County. SSNY has
been designated for service
of process SSNY shall mail
copy of any process served
against the LLC to c/o: United
States Corporation Agents,
INC, 7014 13th Avenue, Suite
202, Brooklyn, NY 11228
Purpose: Any lawful purpose
of activity.
________________________
SUMMONS Index No.
702308/2014 D/O/F: April
7, 2014 Premises Address:
116-32 155 ST JAMAICA,
NY 11434-1531 SUPREME
COURT OF THE STATE OF
NEW YORK COUNTY OF
QUEENS WELLS FARGO
BANK, N.A., Plaintiff, -againstJOHN DOE 1 THROUGH 50;
JANE DOE 1 THROUGH 50,
INTENDING TO BE THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, DISTRIBUTES, DEVISEES, GRANTEES,
TRUSTEES, LIENORS, CREDITORS, AND ASSIGNEES OF
THE ESTATE OF TERESITA M.
FLORES WHO WAS BORN
ON DECEMBER 17, 1939
AND DIED ON NOVEMBER
12, 2010, A RESIDENT OF
THE COUNTY OF QUEENS,
THEIR SUCCESSORS IN
INTEREST IF ANY OF THE
AFORESAID DEFENDANTS
BE DECEASED, THEIR RESPECTIVE HEIRS AT LAW,
NEXT OF KIN, AND SUCCESSORS IN INTEREST OF
THE AFORESAID CLASSES
OF PERSON, IF THEY OR
ANY OF THEM BE DEAD,
AND THEIR RESPEC TIVE
HUSBANDS, WIVES OR
WIDOWS, IF ANY, ALL
OF WHOM AND WHOSE
NAMES AND PLACES OF
RESIDENCEAREUNKNOWN
TO THE PLAINTIFF; WORLDWIDE ASSET PURCHASING,
LLC; NEW YORK CITY PARKING VIOLATIONS BUREAU;
NEW YORK CITY TRANSIT
ADJUDICATION BUREAU;
NEW YORK CITY ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL
BOARD; NEW YORK STATE
DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION & FINANCE; UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA - INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE;
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
‘’JOHN DOES’’ AND ‘’JANE
DOES’’, SAID NAMES BEING FICTITIOUS, PARTIES
INTENDED BEING POSSIBLE
TENANTS OR OCCUPANTS
OF PREMISES AND CORPORATIONS, OTHER ENTITIES
OR PERSONS WHO HAVE,
CLAIM, OR MAY CLAIM, A
LIEN AGAINST, OR OTHER
INTEREST IN, THE PREMISES, Defendant(s), TO THE
ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE HEREBY
SUMMONED to answer the
Complaint in this action,
and to serve a copy of your
Answer, or, if the Complaint
is not served with this Summons, to serve a Notice of
Appearance on the Plaintiff’s
Attorneys within twenty (20)
days after the service of this
Summons, exclusive of the
day of service, where service
is made by delivery upon you
personally within the State, or
within thirty (30) days after
completion of service where
service is made in any other
manner, and in case of your
failure to appear or answer,
judgment will be taken
against you by default for the
relief demanded in the complaint. NOTICE YOU ARE
IN DANGER OF LOSING
YOUR HOME If you do not
respond to this summons and
complaint by serving a copy
of the answer on the attorney
for the mortgage company
who filed this foreclosure
proceeding against you and
filing the answer with the
court, a default judgment
may be entered and you can
lose your home. Speak to an
attorney or go to the court
where your case is pending
for further information on
how to answer the summons
and protect your property.
Sending a payment to your
mortgage company will not
stop this foreclosure action.
YOU MUST RESPOND BY
SERVING A COPY OF THE
ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF
(MORTGAGE COMPANY)
AND FILING THE ANSWER
WITH THE COURT. The following notice is intended only
for those defendants who
are owners of the premises
sought to be foreclosed or
who are liable upon the
debt for which the mortgage
stands as security. YOU ARE
HEREBY PUT ON NOTICE
THAT WE ARE ATTEMPTING
TO COLLECT A DEBT, AND
ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR
THAT PURPOSE. The amount
of the Debt: $291,972.13
consisting of principal balance of $231,872.06 plus
interest of $43,767.83, a surrogate fee of $21.73, escrow/
impound shortages or credits
of $13,749.88, late charges of
$572.25; Broker’s Price Opinion, inspection and miscellaneous charges of $215.00;
attorney fee $1,300.00 and
title search $483.38. Because
of interest and other charges
that may vary from day to
day, the amount due on the
day you pay may be greater.
Hence, if you pay the amount
shown above, an adjustment
may be necessary after we
receive the check, in which
event we will inform you. The
name of the creditor to whom
the debt is owed: WELLS
FARGO BANK, N.A. Unless
you dispute the validity of the
debt, or any portion thereof,
within thirty (30) days after
receipt hereof, the debt will
be assumed to be valid by the
herein debt collector. If you
notify the herein debt collector in writing within thirty
(30) days after your receipt
hereof that the debt, or any
portion thereof, is disputed,
we will obtain verification
of the debt or a copy of any
judgment against you representing the debt and a copy
of such verification or judgment will be mailed to you
by the herein debt collector.
Upon your written request
within 30 days after receipt
of this notice, the herein
debt collector will provide
you with the name and address of the original creditor
if different from the current
creditor. Note: Your time to
respond to the summons and
complaint differs from your
time to dispute the validity
of the debt or to request the
name and address of the
original creditor. Although
you have as few as 20 days
to respond to the summons
and complaint, depending on
the manner of service, you
still have 30 days from receipt
of this summons to dispute
the validity of the debt and
to request the name and address of the original creditor.
TO THE DEFENDANTS: The
Plaintiff makes no personal
claim against you in this action. TO THE DEFENDANTS:
If you have obtained an
order of discharge from the
Bankruptcy court, which
includes this debt, and you
have not reaffirmed your liability for this debt, this law
firm is not alleging that you
have any personal liability for
this debt and does not seek
a money judgment against
you. Even if a discharge has
been obtained, this lawsuit to
foreclose the mortgage will
continue and we will seek a
judgment authorizing the sale
of the mortgaged premises.
Dated: April 6, 2014 Christopher E Medina, Esq. ROSICKI,
ROSICKI & ASSOCIATES,
P.C. Attorneys for Plaintiff
Main Office 51 E Bethpage
Road Plainview, NY 11803
516-741-2585Help For Homeowners In Foreclosure New
York State Law requires that
we send you this notice about
the foreclosure process.
Please read it carefully. Mortgage foreclosure is a complex
process. Some people may
approach you about “saving” your home. You should
be extremely careful about
any such promises. The State
encourages you to become
informed about your options
in foreclosure. There are
government agencies, legal
aid entities and other nonprofit organizations that you
may contact for information
about foreclosure while you
are working with your lender
during this process. To locate
an entity near you, you may
call the toll-free helpline
maintained by the New York
State Banking Department at
1-877-BANKNYS (1-877-2265697) or visit the Department’s website at www.banking.state.ny.us. The State does
not guarantee the advice of
these agencies.
________________________
Notice of formation of HELPFUL TAXI LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York
SSNY on 4/30/2014. Office
located in Queens. SSNY has
been designated for service
of process. SSNY shall mail
copy of any process served
against the LLC 525 GRAND
AVENUE JOHNSON CITY,
NY 13790. Purpose: any
lawful purpose.
________________________
administrators, assignees,
lienors and generally all
persons having or claiming
under, by or through said
ATIF A. ABASSI, by purchase,
inheritance, lien or otherwise,
of any right, title or interest in
and to the premises described
in the complaint herein, and
the respective husbands,
wives, widow or widowers
of them, if any, all of whose
names are unknown to plaintiff; NEW YORK CITY PARKING VIOLATIONS BUREAU;
NEW YORK CITY TRANSIT
ADJUDICATION BUREAU;
JPMORGAN CHASE BANK,
N.A.; NEW YORK CITY ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL
BOARD; STATE OF NEW
YORK; UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA; “JOHN DOES”
and “JANE DOES”, said
names being fictitious, parties intended being possible
tenants or occupants of premises, and corporations, other
entities or persons who claim,
or may claim, a lien against
the premises, Defendants.
TO THE ABOVE-NAMED
DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE
HEREBY SUMMONED to
answer the complaint in this
action and to serve a copy of
your answer, or, if the complaint is not served with this
summons, to serve a Notice
of Appearance on the Plaintiff’s attorney(s) within twenty
(20) days after the service
of this summons, exclusive
of the day of service, where
service is made by delivery
upon you personally within
the State, or within thirty
(30) days after completion of
service where service is made
in any other manner, and in
case of your failure to appear
or answer, judgment will be
taken against you by default
for the relief demanded in
the complaint. NOTICE YOU
ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do
not respond to this summons
and complaint by serving a
copy of the answer on the
attorney for the mortgage
company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against
you and filing the answer
with the court, a default
judgment may be entered
and you can lose your home.
Speak to an attorney or go to
the court where your case is
pending for further information on how to answer the
summons and protect your
property. Sending a payment
to your mortgage company
will not stop this foreclosure action. YOU MUST
RESPOND BY SERVING A
COPY OF THE ANSWER ON
THE ATTORNEY FOR THE
PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE
COMPANY) AND FILING
THE ANSWER WITH THE
COURT. YOU ARE HEREBY
PUT ON NOTICE THAT WE
ARE ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT, AND ANY
INFORMATION OBTAINED
WILL BE USED FOR THAT
PURPOSE. TO THE ABOVENAMED DEFENDANTS: The
foregoing summons is served
upon you by publication
pursuant to an Order of the
Honorable Robert J. McDonald of the Supreme Court
of the State of New York,
signed on May 8, 2014, and
filed with supporting papers
in the Office of the Clerk of
the County of Queens, State
of New York. The object of
this action is to foreclose a
mortgage upon the premises
described below, executed
by ATIF A. ABASSI to JPMORGAN CHASE BANK,
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
in the principal amount of
$388,000.00, which mortgage was recorded in Queens
County, State of New York,
on January 2, 2008, in CRFN
2008000000391. Thereafter said mortgage was
assigned from JPMORGAN
CHASE BANK, NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION to CHASE
HOME FINANCE LLC by assignment of mortgage dated
December 13, 2007 and
recorded on August 5, 2008
in CRFN: 20080000310534.
JPMORGAN CHASE BANK,
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
is successor by merger to
CHASE HOME FINANCE
LLC, and therefore, JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION is
now the real party in interest in the proceeding. Said
premises being known as and
by 160-63 122nd Avenue,
Jamaica, NY 11434. Date:
April 25, 2014 Batavia, New
York Virginia C. Grapensteter,
Esq. ROSICKI, ROSICKI &
ASSOCIATES, P.C. Attorneys
for Plaintiff Batavia Office 26
Harvester Avenue Batavia,
NY 14020 585.815.0288
Help For Homeowners In
Foreclosure New York State
Law requires that we send
you this notice about the
foreclosure process. Please
read it carefully. Mortgage
foreclosure is a complex
process. Some people may
approach you about “saving” your home. You should
be extremely careful about
any such promises. The State
encourages you to become
informed about your options
in foreclosure. There are
government agencies, legal
aid entities and other nonprofit organizations that you
may contact for information
about foreclosure while you
are working with your lender
during this process. To locate
an entity near you, you may
call the toll-free helpline
maintained by the New York
State Banking Department at
1-877-BANKNYS (1-877-2265697) or visit the Department’s website at www.banking.state.ny.us. The State does
not guarantee the advice of
these agencies.
________________________
NOTICE OF FORMATION
OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. Name: Tiff’s LIC(k)
Dogwalking & Playgroups,
LLC. Arts. Of Org. filed with
the SSNY on 4/21/2014.
Office location: Queens
Count y. SSNY has been
designated as agent upon
whom process against the
LLC may be served. SSNY
shall mail process to: Meri
Minatel, 22-33 19th Street,
Astoria, NY 11105. Purpose:
Dogwalking and any lawful
purpose.
________________________
Notice of formation of AAA
PARTNER LLC. Articles of org.
filed with the Secretary of
State of New York (SSNY) on
06/02/2014. Office located
in Queens country. SSNY has
been designated for service
process. SSNY shall mail copy
of any process served against
the LLC to: AAA PARTNER
LLC, 738 E. 5th Street, #5G,
New York, NY 10009. Purpose: Any Lawful activity or
purpose.
________________________
S U P P L E M E N TA L S U M MONS Index No.: 10595/13
Date of Filing: June 11,
2014 SUPREME COURT OF
THE STATE OF NEW YORK
COUNT Y OF QUEENS
JPMORGAN CHASE BANK,
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,
Plaintiff, -against- ATIF A.
ABASSI, if living, or if either
or all be dead, their wives,
husbands, heirs-at-law, next
of kin, distributees, executors,
Page 8 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
qUEENS thiS wEEk
away almost two years
ago. Although the
majority of businesses
eventually reopened,
Duane Reade never returned to the Howard
Beach location, leaving uncertainty for the
then-vacant building.
Eventually, the Almonte family opened
the Key Food in a process that took about one
Photo by Luis Gronda year to get to the ribbon
queens Borough President Melinda katz cutting due to delays
helped cut the ribbon on the new key Food of construction during
renovation.
supermarket in howard Beach last Friday.
Reach Luis Gronda
at (718) 357-7400, ext. 127, lgronda@
Key Food Opens
queenstribune.com or @luisgronda.
Howard Beach
Location
By LuiS gronda
Staff Writer
Howard Beach residents calling for
another supermarket in the neighborhood have finally gotten their wish.
The new Key Food location at 163-20
Cross Bay Blvd in Howard Beach opened
its door last Friday to much joy and celebration. The supermarket replaces the
Duane Reade store that was there before Superstorm Sandy and gives Waldbaum’s a competitor in the area.
Hundreds of residents lined up to
do their shopping at the new store at
the opening.
The store’s owner, Frank Almonte,
said they pledge to deliver the highest
quality service to the Howard Beach
community.
“This is overwhelming; I’ll be honest with you. I’m very happy to see all
these fine community leaders support
our cause,” he said. “Clearly, today,
the fruits of our labor are clearly obvious here.”
The new supermarket drew mostly
positive reviews from its new customers. The majority opinion was that it’s
a welcomed addition to the neighborhood and provides a competitor to the
two nearby Waldbaum’s locations in
Howard Beach and Lindenwood.
“It’s a good thing. Waldbaum’s
needs a little taste of competition,”
said George Polimeni, who has lived
in Howard Beach for 10 years. “Maybe
we’ll see better prices now.”
Frank Valvo, an 83-year-old Howard Beach resident, called the store
opening a “necessity” and said he is
more likely to walk to the Key Food,
located three blocks away from his
house, instead of taking the bus to the
Howard Beach Waldbaum’s located at
156-01 Cross Bay Blvd.
Angela Batista, a 42-year resident
of Howard Beach, echoed Valvo’s sentiment, saying she would do her shopping at another Key Food location on
Lefferts Boulevard, but will now do
that closer to home.
The building had been vacant since
Sandy hit southern Queens and Rock-
Housing Process To
Begin This Month
By Jackie StrawBridge
Staff Writer
Before a cluster of affordable apartments arrive on the Long Island City
waterfront, Western Queens residents
have an opportunity to get their foot
in the door.
With applications for 925 affordable housing units at the Hunters Point
South development expected to open
soon, Community Board 2 has scheduled a handful of meetings to inform the
public about the application process.
The first of these meetings is scheduled for Sept. 29 at 7 p.m. at Sunnyside
Community Services, on 39th Street
north of Queens Boulevard. CB2 also
plans to hold a meeting at the Woodside Library on Oct. 1 – time to be determined – and another in Long Island
City on Oct. 6.
The housing lottery is expected to
open in mid-October, a spokesperson
for Hunters Point South developers
Related Companies said.
According to the City Economic
Development Corporation, 60 percent
of the development’s total expected
5,000 units will be set aside as affordable for middle income families. Half
of the affordable units are targeted for
residents in CB2’s district – roughly
Sunnyside, Woodside and Long Island
City – and five percent for civil service
employees.
Councilman Jimmy Van Bramer
(D-Sunnyside), who is cosponsoring
these meetings with CB2, said that attendees can expect to learn about who
qualifies for affordable housing at this
development, the process for applying
and the timeline for when to expect
responses.
“We’re going to be encouraging
people to apply to get into the lottery,” Van Bramer said. “When people
find out that there are these beautiful
apartments on the waterfront, with
great views of Manhattan and Queens,
I think they’re going to want to become a part of this project.”
Van Bramer noted that he has already heard many of his constituents
express their interest.
“People are very anxious to find
out about when this is happening and
to get in on this,” Van Bramer said. “I
think they’re going to receive a ton of
applications.”
Reach Jackie Strawbridge at (718)
357-7400, Ext. 128, jstrawbridge@
queenstribune.com or @JNStrawbridge.
should not be anyone’s concern that
he maximizes his monetary gain on
sale of the business.”
After much discussion by the board
members, CB7 approved the renewal
of the original variance, with all restrictions still in place, by a vote of 31 to 4.
Reach Joe Marvilli at (718) 3577400, Ext. 125, [email protected], or @JoeMarvilli.
Tensions At CB7
Over Variance
Application
By Joe MarViLLi
Staff Writer
Community Board 7’s first meeting after the summer break was beset
by several arguments over a variance
renewal.
Utopia Realty, located at 167-02
Northern Blvd., applied to renew the
variance for another 10 years. The
trouble came from the owner, Paul
Luciano, who wanted to remove a
clause that restricted what type of
business could be run on the property.
Civilians and civic groups came out
in force to express their disagreement
with the owner.
Originally, it looked like the owner and board agreed about the terms
of the variance, as it was approved
in committee. However, during the
meeting, Luciano and his representative expressed that they still wanted
the variance restriction removed. The
variance limited the use of Utopia Realty to that of an office, meaning that if
the property was sold, it would have to
fit into that mold. A new owner would
not be able to come in and build a
church or restaurant, for example.
The owner would also have to notify the Board of Standards and Appeals
about any impending sales under the
variance.
All 19 public speakers said that
the variance should remain in place,
not only to protect the property and
community in question, but also other
properties in similar situations. If the
variance restriction was removed,
other owners could ask for something
similar, creating a domino effect.
“It’s a good process. It works. We
shouldn’t be changing it,” Joe Amoroso, zoning chair at the Kissena Park
Civic Association, said. “The variance
the way it is right now is fine.”
“The property in question is located within a R2/R2A area covered by a
Rickert-Finlay covenant, which allows
for only single-family homes. To operate this business in the location is
a privilege rather than a right,” Rhea
O’Gorman, president of Station Road
Civic, said. “The clause as it is written
now has no effect on the owner’s ability to run his business. What it does do
is it may lessen the amount of money
he may get in the event of a sale. It
Burglars stole multiple bottles
of liquor from Astoria’s Bohemian hall and Beer Garden last
week.
Booze Burglary At
Bohemian Beer
Garden
By Jackie StrawBridge
Staff Writer
Three thirsty thieves struck Astoria’s
neighborhood beer garden last week.
Security footage captured a late
night booze heist at the Bohemian
Hall and Beer Garden on 24th Avenue.
The burglars can be seen in images released by the NYPD with their shirts
pulled over their heads, but leaving
their faces entirely visible.
According to police, two men entered the premises by scaling an outer
wall and stole bottles of vodka, tequila,
bourbon, scotch, rum and gin. Another remained outside as a lookout.
Damages totaled roughly $1,000,
said Andrew Walters, general manager
of Bohemian Hall and Beer Garden.
“It was funny but not funny,” Walters said. “It’s stupidity run rampant.”
According to Walters, the burglars
damaged one of the beer garden canopies in their attempt to scale the wall,
and after the robbery, spent about 20
minutes trying to figure out how to
climb their way out.
“In recent memory, we’ve never
had any kind of break in or anything
of that nature,” Walters said.
He added that the establishment
has already enacted new security measures
to safeguard against future break-ins.
Anyone with information is asked
to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers
Hotline at 800-577-TIPS. The public
can also submit their tips by logging
onto the Crime Stoppers Website at
www.nypdcrimestoppers.com or texting their tips to 274637(CRIMES)
then enter TIP577.
Reach Jackie Strawbridge at (718)
357-7400, Ext. 128, jstrawbridge@
queenstribune.com or @JNStrawbridge.
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 9
Page 10 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
LI Real Estate Firm Opens In Queens
BY JOE MARVILLI
Staff Writer
One of Long Island’s biggest realestate companies has opened its first
location in Queens.
On Sept. 4, Daniel Gale Sotheby’s
International Realty cut the ribbon
on its first sales office in the Borough,
located at 35-16B Francis Lewis Blvd.
in Flushing. While the business had
launched a few weeks earlier with a
soft opening, the ceremony served as
its big introduction to Queens and its
communities.
The ribbon-cutting was preceded
by a reception, attended by about 80
people, featuring food from Papazzio
Restaurant and Caterer in Bayside.
The new office looks to match the
Borough’s diversity, as it has 30 experienced agents representing many
cultures. The agents speak a variety of
languages, including Arabic, Greek,
Italian, Mandarin, Croatian, Taiwanese and Fuzhounese.
“We believe Queens is an emerging
market. The higher prices in Manhattan
and Brooklyn are driving a lot of professionals and homebuyers to Queens.
We believe this is the next stop,” Flushing Sales Manager Donna Rubertone
said. “We’ve been doing business here
for years, but we really felt it was important to have an office here as well.”
Rubertone added that the company
selected Francis Lewis Boulevard in
Flushing because it is in the middle of
the area where Daniel Gale Sotheby’s
does its business.
“We felt this was really the heart
of where most of our business came
from,” she said. “Although, we do
business in all of Queens. We’ve had
a listing and sale in Long Island City.
We go all the way to Little Neck as well
and everything in between.”
Founded in 1922, Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty is a $2.5
billion organization that has 23 sales
offices throughout Long Island and
now Queens, with close to 600 sales
associates in its employment. The
company features a relocation division, an award-winning marketing
and technology department, a development-marketing group, commercial
and rental divisions and a Wells Fargo
Home Mortgage connection.
“This is a particularly exciting opening for Daniel Gale Sotheby’s, as we
expand our presence into the outer
boroughs of New York City,” President
and CEO Patricia Petersen said. “While
we’re well known on Long Island for
our real estate expertise and professionalism, we’ve been steadily growing
our number of listings and transactions
in Queens, so much so that it made
sense to take the next step and establish
a neighborhood sales office.”
According to spokesperson Kath-
In Flushing, (from left) Daniel Gale Sotheby’s general sales manager Deirdre O’Connell, Flushing sales manager Donna Rubertone, president and CEO Patricia J. Petersen and COO Tom Calabrese cut the ribbon on the company’s first Queens office.
leen Caputi, Daniel Gale Sotheby’s
Queens office has already attracted
many walk-ins from neighbors, buyers and people who are considering or
want to list their property.
Despite its recent opening, the office is already taking an active role in
the Queens community. It is an active member of the Bayside Business
Association, attending a Sept. 11
dinner/fundraiser for first responders. It is also hosting a networking
event on Oct. 23 and taking part in
an event sponsored by St. Nicholas
Church in October.
Daniel Gale Sotheby’s is a member
of the Queens Northeast Chapter of
the Long Island Board of Realtors as
well. Rubertone is going to be named
as a director for the group.
For more information about its services, visit www.danielgale.com. You
can reach the Queens office directly at
(718) 762-2268 or queens@danielgale.
com.
Reach Joe Marvilli at (718) 3577400, Ext. 125, [email protected], or @JoeMarvilli.
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 11
Van Bramer Wants Heavier Hit And Run Penalties
By Jackie StrawBridge
Staff Writer
alty in New York City for leaving the
scene of a collision without reporting.
Advocates joined Van Bramer to
call for speedy passage of the bill at a
City Council hearing last week.
“When an injury occurs as a result
of a collision, the failure to report the
accident delays the response of emergency personnel and could be the difference between life and death,” Van
Bramer said.
“This legislation…will not return
my child, but will help to make penalties stronger for those people who
don’t think before running from their
responsibilities,” Bravo’s mother Marta Puruncajas said in a statement released last week.
The bill has the support of City
Council transportation committee chair Ydanis Rodriguez
(D-Manhattan),
the NYPD and nonprofit
Transportation Alternatives.
Attorney Steve Vaccaro of Vaccaro and White,
legal advocates for crash
victims and leaders in the
movement against New
York City traffic violence,
called this legislation “a
welcome step” while also
noting some factors that
after the cause and complicate hit
and runs.
In a Borough already plagued by
traffic deaths, three fatal hit and runs
have inspired legislative action.
Councilman Jimmy Van Bramer
(D-Sunnyside) said he would champion legislation that would double
penalties for hit and run drivers, after
three pedestrians – 19-year old Luis
Bravo, 20-year-old Karen Pheras and
64-year-old Kumar Ragunath – were
killed in his district within 18 months.
The legislation specifies civil penalties for drivers who leave the scene of
an accident without reporting it, with
fines of up to $5,000 for drivers who
run from a collision that results in
death. There is currently no civil pen-
Van Bramer (center) speaking
death of Kumar Ragunath.
For Vaccaro, effectively deterring
hit and runs would require hit and
run penalties to exceed those of drunk
driving or driving without a license, so
that drivers who cause collisions under those circumstances are discouraged from fleeing. This bill approaches
that goal by setting substantial civil
penalties, he said.
Vaccaro also applauded the bill’s
effort to demand some personal obligation from hit and run drivers. A
civil penalty “would make drivers like
that open up their wallets,” he said.
Reach Jackie Strawbridge at (718)
357-7400, Ext. 128, jstrawbridge@
queenstribune.com or @JNStrawbridge.
Delay In A Train
Station Renovations
By LuiS gronda
Staff Writer
Renovations at some A train stations are going to take a little longer
than expected.
The subway platforms at 88th and
104th Streets are expected to be reopened to straphangers on Sept. 29,
more than a month after the originally-announced target date.
According to the Metropolitan
Transportation Authority, the reason
for the delay is so the transit agency
can perform some extra work on the
subway stations.
“This delay is due to our need to
make additional, unanticipated repairs to badly deteriorated steel girders supporting the station platforms,”
MTA spokesperson Kevin Ortiz said
in an email.
The work on the Rockawaybound side of the platform began last
year and was expected to be finished
on Aug. 18 of this year. Renovations
would then begin on the Manhattanbound side soon afterwards.
That will now begin on Oct. 4, a few
days after the Rockaway-bound platform is finished. Ortiz said that work
is expected to take about 14 months
to complete, which would put it at a
December 2015 completion date.
Ortiz also said new costs have not
yet been calculated to include the unanticipated repairs.
Reach Luis Gronda at (718) 3577400, ext. 127, [email protected] or @luisgronda.
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Page 12 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
Flushing Fire Set During Murder-Suicide
BY JOE MARVILLI
Staff Writer
A blaze that broke out in an apartment in Flushing was part of a murder-suicide that took place early Tuesday morning.
The fire in Apartment 6C at 14340 Roosevelt Ave. was noticed by a
neighbor around 4:50 a.m. When
firefighters broke down the door to
the apartment 15 minutes later, they
discovered three bodies with stab
wounds. The three victims were from
the same family.
An investigation by the NYPD revealed a note in Korean by Jong Lee,
50. The letter talked about the multiple
problems in his life, though it did not
go into details. It also revealed Jong’s
intent to kill his wife, Sung Lee, 54,
and his son, Brian Lee, 15. Brian was
a junior at Brooklyn Technical High
School. The note was discovered in
Jong’s pocket, singed by the flames.
After killing his family, Jong set
the apartment on fire before taking
his own life. His body was discovered
with a slash to his throat. It is still unclear how Jong started the fire.
The fire was contained to the apartment and put out shortly before 5:30
a.m. No other residents of the building
were hurt. However, three firefighters
went to New York Hospital Queens
with minor injuries.
Reach Joe Marvilli at (718) 3577400, Ext. 125, [email protected], or @JoeMarvilli.
Photo by Joe Marvilli
Police and firefighters investigate a fire in downtown Flushing that was set during a murder-suicide.
Insurance Refuses To Cover Broken Sewer Line
BY JOE MARVILLI
Staff Writer
When Thomas and Linda Sindoni
paid for the Water and Sewer Service
Line Protection Program offered by
the Dept. of Environmental Protection in March 2013, they expected the
insurance company to hold up its end
of the bargain. One year later, though,
insurance company American Water
Resources is refusing to pay to fix a
broken sewer pipe.
According to the Beechhurst couple, American Water Resources has
stymied efforts for them to find the
underlying cause of their broken sewer pipe and to get the issue fixed and
covered. The company claims that the
J E W E L R Y
broken pipe is a pre-existing condition it does not have to cover.
On July 4, 2014, more than a year
after their coverage began, the Sindonis got a routine maintenance check
from Hands of Gold Sewer Corp.
Hands of Gold discovered that the
sewer trap in the Sindonis’ garage was
backed-up. The employee suspected a
broken sewer pipe.
Once this happened, the couple
called American Water Resources,
who sent a technician from Liberty
Water and Sewer, LLC. The Liberty
technician snaked 50 feet and determined that the line was not broken.
However, he did not do a camera inspection.
“He didn’t have a camera, he went
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around the pipe and jetted out alongside the sewer pipe,” Linda said. “I
called American Water Resources.
I said I needed a camera inspection.
They refused.”
On June 17, On Drain Sewer Service arrived to remove the rubber jetter hose and perform a camera inspection. The footage revealed that they did
have a broken sewer pipe. The service
cost the couple $1,000.
Despite the evidence, American
Water Resources denied the claim for
a broken sewer pipe as they said it was
a pre-existing condition.
“They put nothing in writing. They
didn’t even tell me it was pre-existing.
They told [State Sen. Tony Avella (DBayside)],” Linda added. “I am paying
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The Sidonis said they are prepared
to take legal action against the company if the issue remains unresolved.
“This is the second occasion within
the last three months where a homeowner has contacted American Water
Resources and American Resources
said ‘no, it’s a pre-existing condition,
we’re not going to do anything about
it,’” Avella said. “If you follow that
reasoning, then every condition will
be a pre-existing problem. To say that
it’s a pre-existing condition is baloney
and totally unacceptable.”
Reach Joe Marvilli at (718) 3577400, Ext. 125, [email protected], or @JoeMarvilli.
www.scsny.org
[email protected]
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 13
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice of Formation of
GOLDEN LOTS, LLC. Arts.
of Org. filed with SSNY
on 7/1/14. Office location: Queens County. SSNY
designated as agent of LLC
whom process against may
be served. SSNY shall mail
process to: c/o THE LLC, 4633 66th St., Woodside, NY
11377. Purpose: all lawful
activities.
________________________
3805 31ST STREET LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of
State (SSNY) 5/26/09. Office
in Queens Co. SSNY design.
Agent of LLC upon whom
process may be served. SSNY
shall mail copy of process to
Anastosios Matsikas 21-19
40th Ave LIC, NY 11101. Purpose: Any lawful activity.
________________________
Notice of Formation of JELB
Y15, LLC Arts. of Org. filed
with Secy. of State of NY
(SSNY) on 07/29/14. Office
location: Queens County.
Princ. office of LLC: Douglaston Development, 42-09
235th St., 2nd Fl., Douglaston,
NY 11363. SSNY designated
as agent of LLC upon whom
process against it may be
served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC at the addr.
of its princ. office. Purpose:
Any lawful activity.
________________________
ORIGIN WEALTH ADVISERS
LLC, a foreign LLC, filed with
the SSNY on 7/7/14. Office
location: Queens County.
SSNY is designated as agent
upon whom process against
the LLC may be served. SSNY
shall mail process to: Morgen
J. Beck, 212 Beach 136th
St., Belle Harbor, NY 11694.
General Purposes.
________________________
42-11 Northern, LLC Arts of
Org filed with Secy. of State
of NY (SSNY) on 6/24/14.
Office in Queens Co. SSNY
desig. agent of LLC upon
whom process against it may
be served & shall mail process
to C/O Mark D. Mermel, Esq.,
2001 Marcus Ave. Ste W180,
Lake Success, NY 11042. Dur.
Date: 06/23/2114. Purpose:
General.
________________________
7900 DEVELOPMENT LLC
Articles of Org. filed NY Sec.
of State (SSNY) 3/18/13.
Office in Queens Co. SSNY
design. Agent of LLC upon
whom process may be
served. SSNY shall mail copy
of process to Solomon Borg
630 3rd Ave New York, NY
10017 Purpose: Any lawful
activity.
________________________
Notice of Formation of STUDIO BKBZ LLC Arts. of Org.
filed with Secy. of State of NY
(SSNY) on 08/14/14. Office
location: Queens County.
SSNY designated as agent
of LLC upon whom process
against it may be served.
SSNY shall mail process to
Schnader Harrison Segal &
Lewis LLP, Attn: Cynthia G.
Fischer, 140 Broadway, Ste.
3100, NY, NY 10005. Purpose: Any lawful activity.
________________________
At an IAS Part 4 of the Supreme Court of the State of
New York, County of Queens
at the Courthouse located
at 88-11 Sutphin Boulevard,
Jamaica, New York on the
21 day of August, 2014.
Index No. 12574/14 Date
Purchased: 8/21/14 Order to
Show Cause Hon. Marguerite
A. Grays, Justice In the Matter
of the Application of Margo
Randazzo, as Court Appointed Administrator of the
Estate of Anthony Randazzo,
holder and owner of 25% outstanding shares of 31st Street
Pizza Palace, Inc., Petitioner,
-against- Jack Brucculeri, Jack
Vitale, for the Dissolution of
31st Street Pizza Palace, Inc.,
a Domestic Corporation and
New York State Department
of Taxation and Finance,
Respondents. Upon the reading and filing of the annexed
petition of Margo Randazzo,
as petitioner, duly verified
on the 20th day of August
2014, whereby it appears
that 31st Street Pizza Palace,
Inc., is a domestic corporation organized and existing
by virtue of the laws in the
County of Queens, City and
State of New York and that
the respondent/corporation,
31t Street Pizza Palace, Inc.,
a pizzeria, has its principal
place of business located at
29-29 Ditmars Boulevard,
Astoria, New York 11105 and
that the petitioner, Margo
Randazzo, as the Court Appointed Administrator of the
Estate of Anthony Randazzo,
her late husband, by Letters
of Administration, dated February 4, 2014 issued by the
Surrogate’s Court/Queens
County, and thereby is the
owner and holder of 25%
of the voting and common
stock of said respondent/
corporation, and respondent,
Jack Brucculeri, is a director,
officer and holder of 50% of
the voting and common stock
of said respondent/corporation, and respondent, Jack
Vitale, is a director, officer and
holder of 25% of the voting
and common stock of said
respondent/corporation and
it further appears from the
said annexed Verified Petition
that there are irreconcilable
differences and controversies
among, by and between the
three (3) shareholders, the
petitioner, Margo Randazzo,
being the owner of 25% of
the respondent/corporation’s outstanding shares
and it further appearing from
the Verified Petition, that
the respondents, either individually or corporately, are
in control of the respondent/
corporation, a closely held
corporation and the individually named respondents, Jack
Brucculeri and Jack Vitale,
having been and are guilty of
illegal, fraudulent and/or oppressive acts towards the petitioner, Margo Randazzo, as
the complaining shareholder
and the property assets of the
respondent/corporation are
being looted, wasted, or diverted for their individual and
non-corporate purposes by
the respondents, Jack Brucculeri and Jack Vitale, who
are in sole control of the respondent/corporation to the
exclusion of the petitioner,
Margo Randazzo and there,
it is beneficial to the interests
of the shareholders and to
the respondent/corporation,
31st Street Pizza Palace, Inc.
and that the respondent/
corporation be dissolved
and its business and affairs
be liquidated, and it further
appearing that this special
proceeding is commenced
pursuant to the Business Corporation Law, Article 11, and
more particularly, sec. 1103,
1104 and 1104(a) of the BCL;
LET, respondents, Jack Brucculeri, owner and holder of
50% of the voting shares of
the respondent/corporation
and Jack Vitale, owner and
holder of 25% of the voting
shares of the respondent/
corporation, both shareholders, officers and directors of
the respondent/corporation,
31st Street Pizza Palace, Inc.,
New York State Department
of Taxation and Finance, and
all other persons interested in
said respondent/corporation,
appear and SHOW CAUSE
before this Court to be held
in CMP Part, Room 25 of
the Supreme Court/Queens
County Courthouse located
at 88-11 Sutphin Boulevard,
Jamaica, New York 11435
to be held on the 30 day
of September, 2014 at 2:15
pm in the afternoon of that
day, or as soon thereafter as
counsel can be heard, WHY
an ORDER should not be
made and entered seeking
the following relief: A) That
this matter is one specified in
BCL sec. 1104(a) in that the
petitioner, Margo Randazzo,
as owner of 25% of the
respondent/corporation’s
shares, is entitled to a dissolution of the respondent/
corporation, 31st Street Pizza
Palace, Inc. as against the
respondents, Jack Brucculeri
and Jack Vitale, who are in
sole control of the corporate restaurant business, its
management and operations and have been guilty
of illegal, fraudulent and
oppressive acts towards the
petitioner, Margo Randazzo
and because the assets and
property of the respondent/
corporation, 31st Street
Pizza Palace, Inc. are being
looted, wasted and diverted
for non-corporate purposes
by the individually named
respondents, Jack Brucculeri
and Jack Vitale; B) Respondent/corporation, 31st Street
Pizza Palace, Inc., a domestic
corporation duly organized
under the laws of the State
of New York, should be dissolved, pursuant to Article 11
of the Business Corporation
Law, more specifically, BCL
1104(a)(1), (2) and (3); C)
It further appearing to this
Court from the verified petition submitted by the petitioner, Margo Randazzo, as
Court Appointed Administration of the Estate of Anthony
Randazzo, her late husband,
that a Temporary Restraining
Order, preliminary and pending a hearing upon the motion
for a preliminary injunction,
be issued pursuant to CPLR
sec. 6301; D) Appointment of
a Receiver, pursuant to CPLR
sec. 6401; and E) Together
with such other and further
relief as to this Court may
deem just and proper granting the relief sought herein
under the circumstances
should be granted, together
with costs and disbursements
of this proceeding awarded to
petitioner, Margo Randazzo,
together with reasonable
attorney fees. ORDERED
that pending the hearing of
the motion for a preliminary
injunction, all persons interested in the said respondent/
corporation, 31st Street
Pizza Palace, Inc. be and
are hereby RESTRAINED,
ENJOINED and STAYED from
expending or disbursing any
corporate funds or property
including expenditures and
disbursements in favor of, or
to any shareholder, officer
and/or director of the said
respondent/corporation,
31st Street Pizza Palace,
Inc., except in the ordinary
course of business; and salary
for defendants Jack Vitale in
the sum of $1,200 per week;
and it is further ORDERED
that pursuant to Section
1106(a) of the BCL, respondents, Jack Brucculeri and
Jack Vitale and respondent/
corporation, 31st Street Pizza
Palace, Inc. shall furnish the
Court and petitioner, Margo
Randazzo, with a statement
of the corporate assets and
liabilities together with the
corporate books and records,
and the name and address
of each and every creditor,
tax due, and rent paid and
owing and each and every
claimant thereof including
any and all with unliquidated
or contingent claims from the
inception of the respondent/
corporation, 31st Street Pizza
Palace, Inc., including, federal, state and/or city taxes
paid or due to date; and it
is further ORDERED that
pursuant to Section 1106(b)
of the BCL, the petitioner,
Margo Randazzo shall cause
to be published a copy of
this Order at least once in
each week for the three (3)
weeks immediately preceding the time fixed herein for
the hearing in the following
newspaper: Queens Tribune.
SUFFICIENT REASON APPEARING THEREOF, let service of a copy of this Order
to Show Cause together with
supporting verified petition
and upon papers which it is
based, shall be served upon
the following: (i) respondent,
Jack Brucculeri, 50% shareholder of the corporation,
(ii) respondent, Jack Vitale,
25% shareholder of the
corporation, (iii) respondent/
corporation, 31st Street Pizza
Palace, Inc. and (iv) New York
State Department of Taxation
and Finance and (v) Attorney
General of the State of New
York and all other interested
parties by personal service
on all or before the 29 day
of August, 2014 be deemed
good and sufficient service.
ENTER Marguerite A. Grays
J.S.C.
________________________
Rich Man Dan LLC filed Art.
of Org. with NY Secy. of State
(SSNY) 6/19/14. Office loc:
Queens County. SSNY has
been designated for service
of process. SSNY shall mail
process served against the
LLC to 30-70 35th St, 2nd Fl,
Astoria, NY 11103. Purpose:
any lawful purpose.
________________________
THE QUEENS ATTIC, LLC
Articles of Organization were
filled with Secretary of State
Of NY SSNY on 7/30/2014,
Office location: Queens
County. SSNY is designated
as service for process. SSNY
shall mail process to LLC at
80-17 221st Street, Queens
Village, NY 11427. Any lawful
purpose.
________________________
Notice of formation of Pan
Ocean Develop LLC. Articles
of organization filed with
the Secretary of State of NY
(SSNY) on 2/11/2013. Office
located: Queens County.
SSNY has been assigned as
agent of the LLC upon whom
process against it may be
served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 50-11 188
Street, Fresh Meadows, NY
11365. Purpose: Any lawful
activity.
________________________
PROBATE CITATION File
No. 2014-2208 SURROGATE’S COURT – QUEENS
COUNTY CITATION THE
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
NEW YORK By the Grace of
God Free and Independent
To Augustin Ros if living and
if dead, to his heirs at law,
next of kin and distributes
and if any of them be dead,
their heirs at law, next of
kin, distributes, legatees,
executors, administrators,
assignees and successors in
interest whose names are
unknown and cannot be ascertained after due diligence,
whose names and places of
residence are unknown and
if he died subsequent to
the decedent herein, to his
executors, administrators,
legatees, devisees, assignees
and successors in interest
whose names and places
of residence are unknown
and to all his heirs at law,
next of kin and distributes of
Francisco Ros, the decedent
herein, whose names and
places of residence are unknown and cannot after diligent inquiry be ascertained.
A petition having been duly
filed by Liliana F. Chiu who
is domiciled at 49 Harvest
Drive, Scarsdale, N.Y. 10583
YOU ARE HEREBY CITED TO
SHOW CAUSE before the
Surrogate’s Court, Queens
County, at 88-11 Sutphin
Boulevard, Jamaica, New
York, on 9th day of October,
2014 at 9:30 A.M. of that day,
why a decree should not be
made in the estate of Francisco Ros lately domiciled at
2 Bay Club Drive, Apt. 1V,
Bayside, N.Y. 11360 admitting to probate a Will dated
February 1, 2013, a copy of
which is attached, as the Will
of Francisco Ros deceased,
relating to real and personal
property, and directing that
Letters Testamentary issue to:
Liliana Chiu AUG 26 2014
(Seal) HON. PETER J. KELLY
Surrogate Margaret M. Gribbon Chief Clerk Bruce Montague & Partners Attorney
for Petitioner 718-279-7555
Telephone Number 212-45
26th Ave, Suite #7, Bayside,
N.Y. 11360 Address of Attorney [Note: This citation is
served upon you as required
by law. You are not required
to appear. If you fail to appear
it will be assumed you do not
object to the relief requested.
You have a right to have an
attorney appear for you.] (Pro
Cit./4-99)
________________________
RAMPERTAB ENTERPRISES,
LLC Articles of Org. filed
NY Sec. of State (SSNY)
7/16/14. Office in Queens
Co. SSNY design. Agent of
LLC upon whom process may
be served. SSNY shall mail
copy of process to Mahadeo
Rampertab 217-02 77th
Ave Oakland Gardens, NY
11364. Purpose: Any lawful
activity.
You Can E-Mail Your Legal Copy to
[email protected]
to Place Your Legal Advertisement
or Call the Tribune at
(718) 357-7400 Ext. 149
Page 14 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
POLICE BLOTTER
YOU’RE IN THE
Driver’s Seat!
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109th Precinct
Homicide – At approximately
5:33 p.m. on Sept. 8, police responded
to a call of an assault with shots fired
in front of 133-58 41st Ave. in Flushing.
Upon arrival, police observed
one male, identified as Xie Bin, 51,
of Flushing, and one female, identified as Ya Ling Meng, 46, lying on
the sidewalk with gunshot wounds to
their heads. EMS responded and pronounced both individuals dead at the
scene. Further investigation revealed
that the male displayed a firearm and
shot the female one time in the head.
The male then shot himself one time
in the head. The investigation is ongoing.
110th Precinct
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Sexual abuSe – The NYPD is
asking the public’s assistance with the
whereabouts and identity of the following individual wanted in connection to two sex abuse incidents within
the confines of the 110th Precinct.
At approximately 3 p.m. on Sept.
4, an unknown male approached
a 25-year-old female employee of
a clothing store located inside the
Queens Center Mall in Elmhurst. The
suspect placed his hand along the victim’s leg and grabbed her genital area
over her clothing. The suspect fled and
approximately five minutes later, he
approached a 34-year-old female from
behind, put his arms around her waist
and began rubbing his groin area on
her buttocks, over the clothing. The
suspect then fled.
The suspect is described as a Hispanic male, 30-35 years old, approximately 6-foot-1, between 200-230
lbs., with dark hair. He was last seen
wearing a blue varsity jacket with red
sleeves, black sunglasses, dark jeans,
white sneakers, a black baseball hat,
white scarf and carrying a briefcase.
Anyone with information is asked
to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers
at (800) 577-tips, visit www.nypdcrimestoppers.com or text tips to
274637(CRIMES), then enter TIP577.
All calls are confidential.
112th Precinct
110-00 Rockaway Blvd. Jamaica, NY 11420
rwnewyork.com • 1-888-888-8801
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PLEASE PLAY RESPONSIBLY. 24-hour Problem Gaming Hotline: 1-877-8-HOPENY (846-7369).
aSSault – The NYPD is asking
the public’s assistance identifying and
locating the following suspect wanted
for an assault incident that occurred
within the confines of the 112th Precinct.
At approximately 11:45 a.m. on
Aug. 23, a 20-year-old male victim,
who was on a southbound R train, was
punched in the mouth and the nose
with a closed fist by the suspect as the
train doors opened at the 63rd Avenue
station. After the assault, the suspect
fled on foot toward street level.
The victim sustained a bloody nose
and a laceration to his right upper lip,
but was not
hospitalized as
a result of this
incident. There
were no words
exchanged prior to the assault
between
the
victim and the
suspect.
The suspect
is described as
T his suspec t is a white male
wanted f or an or Hispanic in
assault that oc- his late 20s or
curred within the 30s, 5-foot-7,
conf ines of the 170 lbs. The
suspect was last
112th Precinct.
seen wearing a
pink short-sleeve polo shirt, pink and
grey striped shorts with a white string
and a book bag.
Anyone with information is asked
to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers
at (800) 577-tips, visit www.nypdcrimestoppers.com or text tips to
274637(CRIMES), then enter TIP577.
All calls are confidential.
113th Precinct
city employee arreSted
– At 10:45 p.m. on Sept. 4, inside of
Rockaway Tire Center, 153-36 Rockaway Blvd., Jamaica, police arrested
Jason Whyte, 37, an NYPD officer,
and charged him with second-degree
felony assault, petit larceny and thirddegree misdemeanor assault.
114th Precinct
burglary – The NYPD is asking
the public’s assistance identifying the
suspects wanted for a burglary within
the confines of the 114th Precinct.
At approximately 2:25 a.m. on
Sept. 2, two of
the three suspects
scaled
the fence in
the rear of the
Bohemian Hall
Beer Gardens,
located at 2619 24th Ave.,
Astoria, while
the third stood
look out. The
two then went
inside and removed bottles
Surveillance pho- of vodka, tetos of the three quila, bourbon,
suspects outside scotch,
rum
t h e B o h e m i a n and gin. All
Hall Beer Garden three then fled
in Astoria.
the location together.
Anyone with information is asked
to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers
at (800) 577-tips, visit www.nypdcrimestoppers.com or text tips to
274637(CRIMES), then enter TIP577.
All calls are confidential.
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 15
Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association
of the City of New York
125 Broad Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10004 • 212-233-5531
Patrick J. Lynch, President
www.nycpba.org
Page 16 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
Four 9/11 First Responders Reminisce
About Tragic Day
BY LuIS GRONDA • Staff Writer
The first responders, all of
whom are Queens residents, sat
down at North Shore-LIJ’s Queens
WTC Clinical Center of Excellence
to share their personal stories and
talk about the treatment they have
received at the center as a result of
the Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act.
The four first responders at the
press conference were: Patricia
Workman, 76, from Flushing, Joe
Ramondino, 52, who lives in Maspeth, Christian Foggy, 67, a Jamaica resident and John Licato, who
resides in Howard Beach.
Workman was a Red Cross volunteer at the time the planes crashed
into the Twin Towers. She spent two
years providing assistance to other
first responders. In 2008, she was diagnosed with multiple myeloma after
she asked for treatment for several
fractures and other health concerns.
Ramondino was at Ground Zero
for two months, lending a helping
hand to whatever was needed, including joining the bucket brigade to
help remove buckets of debris from
the site. He was diagnosed with lymphoma last year and has been a patient at the center since earlier this
year.
Foggy was an NYPD electrician
during that time. He spent about
two months helping transport electric generators to Ground Zero and
connecting light and other needs
to that area. Foggy was diagnosed
with prostate cancer in 2012, but
was declared cancer-free in 2013.
Licato is now a retired NYPD officer, but during that time, he was
in the 110th Precinct in Corona.
He was at Ground Zero for several
months. In 2012, he felt a lump on
his neck. A few months later, he
was diagnosed with neck cancer.
Licato has been a patient at the
center for just more than a year.
At the press conference, Dr.
Jacqueline Moline, the Vice President and Chairperson of population
health at the hospital, said the work
they do at the center is their way of
giving back to the people who put
their lives on the line to try to help
people in a terrible situation.
“We had selfless individuals,
thousands upon thousands of
folks, be volunteers and all they
thought about was getting involved
in the rescue and recovery efforts,”
she said.
The quartet described how they
felt when they were first diagnosed
Photo by Luis Gronda
As the 13th anniversary of 9/11 passes, four first responders gathered in Rego Park on Tuesday to remember that tragic
day and discuss the health issues they have been battling as a
result of being at Ground Zero.
9/11 first responders, along with Dr. Jacqueline Moline, discuss the
tragic events of that fateful day 13 years ago. From left to right:
Moline, John Licato, Christian Foggy, Joe Ramondino and Patricia
Workman.
with their diseases.
“When you hear that ‘c’ word, it’s
a life changing diagnosis. It’s a life
changing word,” Licato said, referring to his neck cancer. “I’m saying,
‘my god I’m 50 years old and I’m
going to die.’ It’s just not supposed
to happen, you’re supposed to live
another 20 to 30 years.”
Ramondino described getting
that news as “devastating” but also
had a more positive outlook on his
situation.
“It’s just something you have to
accept and move on with it. Things
could always be worse,” he said.
“We’re still here. A lot of people lost
their lives that day. We’re the lucky
ones.”
They were also asked if they had
any sort of regret about going to
Ground Zero considering the diseases they are battling now. In hindsight,
they all said they would do it again.
“I’m sure all of us would respond again in the same way because that’s what we were there
for,” Foggy said. “Whenever there’s
a situation such as the worst of human behavior, from that moment
on, you saw the best of human
behavior, where everybody came
together.”
The day after the press conference, Workman was scheduled to
go to Washington D.C. to testify
before a congressional committee on 9/11-related illnesses. She
said she planned on relaying her
story about her illness and urged
lawmakers to continue funding for
programs like the WTC center at
North Shore-LIJ.
Reach Luis Gronda at (718) 3577400, ext. 127, [email protected] or @luisgronda.
Remembering The Lives Lost On 9/11
BY JORDAN GIBBONS
Staff Writer
On the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, nearly
3,000 innocent lives were taken in the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, the
Pentagon and United Airlines Flight 93, which
crashed in Pennsylvania.
The City and the nation united together in
the aftermath of that tragic morning to rebuild
and to console the families of lost loved ones.
Even now, first responders are still suffering
from illnesses related to the recovery efforts
that occurred for years after the attacks.
Mayor Bill de Blasio was at Ground Zero earlier this week to pledge his support to reauthorize the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act for Sept. 11 first responders.
“It’s so appropriate that we remember 9/11
in so many ways. It’s so appropriate that we
have the powerful memorial near this site that
people go to and reflect upon those they lost,
they reflect upon what we owe to their memory,”
de Blasio said. “Let’s do more than just reflect
upon those who are still alive, who we can help
right now, whose suffering we can ease. Let’s
devote ourselves to them. Let’s walk hand in
hand with them. Let’s get our Congress to do
the right thing and support our heroes.”
This week marks the 13th anniversary of
that day and there are several events taking
place throughout the City where the victims
and heroes of that day can be remembered
and honored.
The annual anniversary ceremony at the
9/11 Memorial Plaza at the World Trade Center
begins at 8:39 a.m. and will have six moments
of silence signifying when each tower was hit
and collapsed, when the Pentagon was struck
and when Flight 93 crashed. The names of the
victims of both the 1993 and 2001 attacks will
be read. An honor guard made up of members
from the FDNY, NYPD and Port Authority Police will also be in attendance.
For the first time, family members of the
victims of both attacks are exclusively invited
to visit the National September 11 Memorial
Museum to tour the museum from 7:30 a.m. to
9 p.m. on Sept. 11. The museum will be closed
to the general public.
The “Tribute in Light” will begin at 6 p.m. as two
beams of blue light will shine into the sky until sun-
rise Friday morning, symbolizing the Twin Towers.
In Bayside Hills, residents are gathering at
the 9/11 memorial plaque at Bell Boulevard
and the Horace Harding Expressway at 7 p.m.
for the Bayside Hills Civic Association’s candlelight tribute. Bring candles.
Another candlelight vigil will be taking place
at Juniper Valley Park between 77th and 78th
Street at 7:30 p.m. Attendees are asked to
bring a chair, blanket, flag and flashlight.
On Saturday Sept. 13, St. Michael’s Cemetery in East Elmhurst is hosting its two-mile
Remember Me Run in honor and celebration
of the first responders who sacrificed their lives
on 9/11. The run begins at 3 p.m. and will be
followed by a memorial service to remember
the first responders. There is a $25 registration
fee and the proceeds will be donated to the
Christopher Santora Scholarship Fund, which
was started in memory of a FDNY firefighter
who lost his life on 9/11 after only two months
on the job. For more information, visit www.stmichaelscemetery.com/remember-me-run.
Reach Jordan Gibbons at (718)357-7400
Ext. 123, [email protected] or @
jgibbons2.
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 17
Target
Your
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Local, Optimized Job Search Results
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Sustaining Senior Health With Parker Jewish
Learning never stops, and with
age comes wisdom. In no arena are
these truisms more important than in
health.
Fortunately for today’s proactive
seniors, a number of options are
available to sustain
good health and prevent illness, as well
as to manage emergencies.
“The whole push is
to keep people out of
hospitals,” said Lina
Scacco, director of
outreach at Parker
Jewish Institute, a nonprofit dedicated to senior care at every level
and located at the Queens-Nassau
border.
According to Scacco, much of this
mission involves providing community members with resources and education. Such resources might include
home health care and day programs
or information on Medicare, Medicaid and other insurance.
Community health programs available at the institute include adult day
health care with door-to-door transportation, while sub- and post-acute
care options include therapeutic recreation, dining and nutrition services,
and a 24-hour question hotline.
The Parker Jewish Institute also
has partnerships with area hospitals
and universities.
“We’re exposing the community to
what’s out there,” Scacco said. “Making growing older not so scary.”
“That education is going to be
able to help them better inform themselves on what they should be doing
to stay healthy,” Scacco added, noting that
Parker Jewish staff
regularly hold presentations on fall prevention, nutrition and diet
at health fairs.
For seniors with
adult children, familycentric education can
be important to health as well, Scacco said.
“People usually aren’t paying attention until something goes wrong,
and [then] it becomes very overwhelming,” she explained. By keeping informed, family members “can be
better prepared as a crisis strikes.”
The Parker Jewish Institute’s
social workers provide supportive
counseling to patients and their families, to help them negotiate aging
and illness, as well as institutional
and community living.
When a senior’s health does falter, he or she can seek inpatient and
rehabilitation services for recovery.
According to Scacco, the Parker
Jewish Institute has 320 longterm
beds and 180 shorterm beds and its
facilities are designed with a pleasant
ambiance in mind. Renovations are currently
at work to keep the
rooms and floors stateof-the-art and “reflective
of their home environment,” Scacco said.
Once an individual is
ready to return home,
Parker Jewish creates
a transition plan to ease
him or her back into the
home environment.
Scacco also noted
a psychological component to maintaining
day-to-day health.
“Some of us get
caught up in, ‘we know
how to take care of
ourselves,’” she said.
“We don’t always want
to take someone’s advice.”
However,
she
warned, it is important
to keep open communication with medical
professionals and to Parker Jewish Institute offers community
accept that keeping health programs that include adult day health
healthy is a learning care.
process.
“Everyday we redefine what is 76th Ave., New Hyde Park. Admis‘old’ for ourselves. It’s all about per- sion forms are available 24/7 at
spective,” Scacco said.
www.parkerinstitute.org. For more
The Parker Jewish Institute’s information, call (718) 289-2100 or
main campus is located at 271-11 (516) 247-6500.
50 PLUS Lifestyle
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 19
Page 20 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
Parker Jewish Honors Seniors/Grandparents
BY JOE MARVILLI
Staff Writer
An institute in New Hyde Park celebrated both seniors and grandparents from Queens and Long Island
last weekend.
On Sept. 7, Parker Jewish Institute for Health Care and Rehabilitation hosted both the Savvy Senior
Award Day and its own Grandparents Day, two events that honored
the contributions of the surrounding
neighborhoods’ elder populations.
Parker Jewish has been holding
a Grandparents Day celebration for
about 10 years now, with new activities and games added on an annual
basis. Besides Parker Jewish seniors, the event also invites families,
staff members and other members of
the community to join in.
“We do this every year. We really promote all seniors, all aspects
of community. That’s our mission, to
get people to feel good about themselves,” Lina Scacco, director of corporate outreach and development,
said. “We as a society need to embrace that it doesn’t matter what age
you are. You can be creative. You
can express yourself in any shape or
form.”
The fun and games at this year’s
Grandparents Day included a petting
zoo, a dunk tank, tattoos, a man on
stilts juggling, a Wild West shootout,
The ceremony accepts nomiice cream and much more.
nations for active seniors conThe festivities have increased
tributing to their community,
each year, with between 200
from all AGES-associated venand 300 people attending last
ues on the Island.
year’s event.
This year, out of more than
“We’re just trying to always
30 nominees, William Young
find better games for the kids,
and Lillian Guadagno, the latthings that the residents can
ter who is from South Ozone
participate in,” Jacob Berlin,
Park, were named as the Savdirector of therapeutic recrevy Senior King and Queen of
ation, said. “What gets them
2014.
is the petting zoo and the
“Going back five, six years
horses, something they don’t
ago, we decided to do someget to see much of anymore.
thing like this, because we
When they see the animals
coming in, they love it. They
Photo by Joe Marvilli came across so many seniors
love seeing the kids that William Young (right) and Lillian Guadagno were that were doing phenomenal
come to this event.”
named the Savvy Senior King and Queen at an things,” AGES’ director of
The day also gave Parker award ceremony at Parker Jewish, organized by Medicare sales Kevin Lawrence said. “They didn’t let age
Jewish a chance to honor AGES.
define what they could and
those residents who are 100
years old and up. This year, the insti- the auditorium for some of the other could not do.”
The award ceremony, which is
tute has 16 members who are over events, every floor does something.”
Berlin added that he puts on 40 now five years old, has grown by
a century old, including one member
entertainment events each month for about 20 percent every year. With
who is 107.
Activities for seniors are not lim- the residents, with options including a luncheon and a musical perforited to events like Grandparents Day cooking, baking, tai chi, horticultural mance, the event had many seniors
laughing and clapping throughout.
though. Scacco said that the resi- programs and yoga.
“The expectations I have of my
“It showcases our elderly. It showdency holds dozens of events per
month, with different activities of- staff are huge,” he said. “I want them cases our seniors. It proves that
fered to each floor. That way, seniors to think outside the box, be creative. keeping yourself informed and knowwho may not be as mobile can still It’s about the residents. Give them ing about different resources in the
community only helps to further their
be part of and enjoy their time in the what they want.”
Grandparents’ Day was preceded health,” Scacco said.
community.
Reach Joe Marvilli at (718) 357“We do these types of activities by the Savvy Senior Awards, orgaevery week,” she said. “Even if a res- nized by the Association of Genera- 7400, Ext. 125, jmarvilli@queenstriident or patient can’t come down to tional Experts for Seniors (AGES). bune.com, or @JoeMarvilli.
Which is why more parents
bring their kids to us.
Kids can’t always say what’s wrong with them.
But our pediatric cardiologists can, because they
know kids better than anyone. Our entire staff is
dedicated to one goal – diagnosing, treating and
healing children for everything from playground
injuries to complex illnesses. And we’re right
here on Long Island.
We’re not just a hospital wing. We’re far more.
We’re Cohen Children’s Medical Center.
For a full list of specialties, visit choosecohen.com.
Or call 1-855-850-8611 to find a pediatric specialist.
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 21
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE TO LARRY SANDERS IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to S.C. Code 15-9740, that you are hereby
summoned and required to
answer the Complaint filed
April 14, 2014 by Desa Ballard and in the Orangeburg
County Probate Court, Case
No. 2012-GC-38-00041 captioned “Michael Jeffcoat,
Petitioner vs. James Delton
DeWitt et al.,” and to serve
a copy of your answer to the
Complaint upon the attorney
listed below at the address
listed below within thirty
days after the service hereof,
and if you fail to answer the
complaint within the time
aforesaid, Plaintiff will apply
to the Court for the relief demanded in the Complaint, by
judgment by default. A hearing for this matter has been
set for October 23, 2014 at
10AM EST at the Orangeburg
County Probate Court, Orangeburg, SC. ANSWER TO:
Desa Ballard, Esquire Ballard
& Watson Post Office Box
6338 West Columbia, South
Carolina 29171
________________________
hereof. In case of your failure
to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against
you by default for the relief
demanded in the complaint.
NOTICE OF NATURE OF ACTION AND RELIEF SOUGHT
THE OBJECT of the above
captioned action is to foreclose a Mortgage to secure
$469,342.50 and interest,
recorded in the QUEENS
County Office of the City
Register on August 5, 2005,
in CRFN: 2005000439006
covering premises known as
225-02 Mentone Avenue,
Laurelton, NY 11413. The
relief sought in the within
action is a final judgment
directing the sale of the
premises described above
to satisfy the debt secured
by the Mortgage described
above. Plaintiff designates
QUEENS County as the place
of trial. Venue is based upon
the County in which the
mortgaged premises is situated. NOTICE YOU ARE IN
DANGER OF LOSING YOUR
HOME IF YOU DO NOT
RESPOND TO THIS SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT
BY SERVING A COPY OF
THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE MORTGAGE COMPANY WHO
FILED THIS FORECLOSURE
PROCEEDING AGAINST
YOU AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT, A
DEFAULT JUDGMENT MAY
BE ENTERED AND YOU CAN
LOSE YOUR HOME. SPEAK
TO AN ATTORNEY OR GO
TO THE COURT WHERE
YOUR CASE IS PENDING
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ON HOW TO ANSWER THE SUMMONS AND
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY.
SENDING A PAYMENT TO
YOUR MORTGAGE COMPANY WILL NOT STOP THIS
FORECLOSURE ACTION.
YOU MUST RESPOND BY
SERVING A COPY OF THE
ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF
(MORTGAGE COMPANY)
AND FILING THE ANSWER
WITH THE COURT. Dated:
October 9, 2013 Frank M.
Cassara, Esq. Shapiro, DiCaro
& Barak, LLC Attorneys for
Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard, Rochester,
NY 14624 (585) 247-9000
Our File No. 13-025362
Premises known as 225-02
Mentone Avenue, Laurelton,
NY 11413. All that certain
property situate, lying and
being in the Borough and
County of Queens, City and
State of New York. Block
13193 Lot 1
________________________
Notice of Formation of 63rd
Street Woodside LLC. Arts. of
Org. filed with Secy. of State
of NY (SSNY) on 7/30/14.
Office location: Queens
County. SSNY designated
as agent of LLC upon whom
process against it may be
served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 203 Park
Lane, Douglas Manor, NY
11363. Purpose: any lawful
activity.
________________________
Notice of formation of FIT.
Connections, LLC. Articles
of Organization filed with
the Secretary of State of
New York SSNY on June
20th 2014. Office location
in Queens. SSNY has been
designated for service of
process. SSNY shall mail
copy of any process to c/o
United Stated Corporation
Agents, Inc, 7014 13th Avenue, Suite 202, Brooklyn,
NY 11228. Purpose: any
lawful purpose.
________________________
SUPREME COURT OF THE
STATE OF NE W YORK
COUNT Y OF QUEENS
Index No.: 4615/14 SUMMONS Plaintiff resides at 6
Birchwood Lane Great Neck,
NY 11024 SHARON KALIN
and GARY G. KALINICH,
Plaintiffs, -against- SAINT
MARY’S BYZANTINE CATHOLIC CHURCH, Defendant,
TO THE ABOVE NAMED
DEFENDANT(S): YOU ARE
HEREBY SUMMONED to
appear in this action by
serving a notice of appearance on Plaintiffs’ Attorney
within 20 days after service
of this Summons, exclusive
of the day of service or
within 30 days after service
is complete, if this summons
is not personally delivered to
you within the State of New
York. In case of your failure
to answer, Judgment will be
taken against you be default
for the relief demanded in the
Complaint. The basis of the
venue designated is the place
of incident. Dated: New York,
New York March 20, 2014
Yours, etc., By: Andrew C.
Laufer Law Office of Andrew
C. Laufer, PLLC Attorney
for Plaintiffs 255 West 36th
Street, Suite 1104 New York,
NY, 10018 (212) 422-1020
DEFENDANT’S ADDRESS:
SAINT MARY’S BYZANTINE
CATHOLIC CHURCH 246
East 15th Street, New York,
New York 10003 This action
is pursuant to Art. 15 of the
RPAPL to quiet title for the
property located at 144-45
85th Avenue, Queens, New
York; Block 9723, Lot 109.
________________________
AND DIED ON NOVEMBER
20, 2011, A RESIDENT OF
THE COUNTY OF QUEENS,
THEIR SUCCESSORS IN
INTEREST IF ANY OF THE
AFORESAID DEFENDANTS
BE DECEASED, THEIR RESPECTIVE HEIRS AT LAW,
NEXT OF KIN, DISTRIBUTES, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, TRUSTEES, LIENORS,
CREDITORS, ASSIGNEES
AND SUCCESSORS IN INTEREST OF THE AFORESAID
CLASSES OF PERSON, IF
THEY OR ANY OF THEM BE
DEAD, AND THEIR RESPECTIVE HUSBANDS, WIVES
OR WIDOWS, IF ANY, ALL
OF WHOM AND WHOSE
N A M E S A N D P L AC E S
OF RESIDENCE ARE UNKNOWN TO THE PLAINTIFF,;
NEW YORK CITY TRANSIT
ADJUDICATION BUREAU;
NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND
FINANCE; NEW YORK CITY
PARKING VIOLATIONS BUREAU; UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA - INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE; NEW YORK
CIT Y ENVIRONMENTAL
CONTROL BOARD; UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA O/B/O
SECRETARY OF HOUSING
AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT;; ‘’JOHN DOES’’ AND
‘’JANE DOES’’, SAID NAMES
BEING FICTITIOUS, PARTIES
INTENDED BEING POSSIBLE
TENANTS OR OCCUPANTS
OF PREMISES, AND CORPORATIONS, OTHER ENTITIES OR PERSONS WHO
CLAIM, OR MAY CLAIM, A
LIEN AGAINST THE PREMISES, Defendant(s), TO THE
ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE HEREBY
SUMMONED to answer the
Complaint in this action,
and to serve a copy of your
Answer, or, if the Complaint
is not served with this Summons, to serve a Notice of
Appearance on the Plaintiff’s
Attorneys within twenty (20)
days after the service of this
Summons, exclusive of the
day of service, where service
is made by delivery upon you
personally within the State, or
within thirty (30) days after
completion of service where
service is made in any other
manner, and in case of your
failure to appear or answer,
judgment will be taken
against you by default for the
relief demanded in the complaint. NOTICE YOU ARE
IN DANGER OF LOSING
YOUR HOME If you do not
respond to this summons and
complaint by serving a copy
of the answer on the attorney
for the mortgage company
who filed this foreclosure
proceeding against you and
filing the answer with the
court, a default judgment
may be entered and you can
lose your home. Speak to an
attorney or go to the court
where your case is pending
for further information on
how to answer the summons
and protect your property.
Sending a payment to your
mortgage company will not
stop this foreclosure action.
YOU MUST RESPOND BY
SERVING A COPY OF THE
ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF
(MORTGAGE COMPANY)
AND FILING THE ANSWER
WITH THE COURT. The following notice is intended only
for those defendants who
are owners of the premises
sought to be foreclosed or
who are liable upon the
debt for which the mortgage
stands as security. YOU ARE
HEREBY PUT ON NOTICE
THAT WE ARE ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT,
AND ANY INFORMATION
OBTAINED WILL BE USED
FOR THAT PURPOSE. The
present amount of the debt
as of the date of this summons: $437,949.69 consisting of principal balance of
$362,456.37 plus unpaid accrued interest of 53,285.78,
escrow/impound shortages
or credits of $1,900.68; MIP
Insurance of $16,446.86;
Servicing Fees of $1m820.00;
Broker`s Price Opinion/ Appraisal, Property Inspection
and miscellaneous charges
of $565.00; attorney fee
$1,200.00 and title search
$275.00. Because of interest
and other charges that may
vary from day to day, the
amount due on the day you
pay may be greater. Hence,
if you pay the amount shown
above, an adjustment may be
necessary after we receive
the check, in which event
we will inform you. The name
of the creditor to whom the
debt is owed: LIVE WELL
FINANCIAL, INC. Unless you
dispute the validity of the
debt, or any portion thereof,
within thirty (30) days after
receipt hereof, the debt will
be assumed to be valid by the
herein debt collector. If you
notify the herein debt collector in writing within thirty
(30) days after your receipt
hereof that the debt, or any
portion thereof, is disputed,
we will obtain verification
of the debt or a copy of any
judgment against you representing the debt and a copy
of such verification or judgment will be mailed to you
by the herein debt collector.
Upon your written request
within 30 days after receipt
of this notice, the herein
debt collector will provide
you with the name and address of the original creditor
if different from the current
creditor. Note: Your time to
respond to the summons and
complaint differs from your
time to dispute the validity
of the debt or to request the
name and address of the
original creditor. Although
you have as few as 20 days
to respond to the summons
and complaint, depending on
the manner of service, you
still have 30 days from receipt
of this summons to dispute
the validity of the debt and
to request the name and
address of the original creditor. TO THE DEFENDANTS,
except: The Plaintiff makes no
personal claim against you in
this action. TO THE DEFENDANTS: If you have obtained
an order of discharge from
the Bankruptcy court, which
includes this debt, and you
have not reaffirmed your liability for this debt, this law
firm is not alleging that you
have any personal liability for
this debt and does not seek
a money judgment against
you. Even if a discharge has
been obtained, this lawsuit
to foreclose the mortgage
will continue and we will
seek a judgment authorizing
the sale of the mortgaged
premises. Dated: November
26, 2013 Susan A. West,
Esq. ROSICKI, ROSICKI &
ASSOCIATES, P.C. Attorneys
for Plaintiff Main Office 51
E Bethpage Road Plainview,
NY 11803 516-741-2585
Help For Homeowners In
Foreclosure New York State
Law requires that we send
you this notice about the
foreclosure process. Please
read it carefully. Mortgage
foreclosure is a complex
process. Some people may
approach you about “saving” your home. You should
be extremely careful about
any such promises. The State
encourages you to become
informed about your options
in foreclosure. There are
government agencies, legal
aid entities and other nonprofit organizations that you
may contact for information
about foreclosure while you
are working with your lender
during this process. To locate
an entity near you, you may
call the toll-free helpline
maintained by the New York
State Banking Department at
1-877-BANKNYS (1-877-2265697) or visit the Department’s website at www.banking.state.ny.us. The State does
not guarantee the advice of
these agencies.
________________________
SUPREME COURT OF THE
STATE OF NE W YORK
COUNT Y OF QUEENS
S U P P L E M E N TA L S U M MONS AND NOTICE Index
No. 11496/2013 Date Filed:
2/13/2014 Wells Fargo Bank,
N.A., Plaintiff, against Rolester Fludd, if he be living
or if he be dead, his spouse,
heirs devisees, distributees
and successors in interest, all
of whom and whose names
and places of residence are
unknown to Plaintiff; The
United States of America
acting through the Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development; City of New
York Environmental Control
Board; City of New York
Parking Violations Bureau;
City of New York Transit
Adjudication Bureau, State of
New York; and “JOHN DOE
#1” through “JOHN DOE
#10”, the last ten names being
fictitious and unknown to the
Plaintiff, the person or parties
intended being the person or
parties, if any, having or claiming an interest in or lien upon
the mortgaged premises
described in the complaint,
Defendants. PROPERT Y
ADDRESS: 225-02 Mentone
Avenue, Laurelton, NY 11413
TO THE ABOVE NAMED
DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE
HEREBY SUMMONED to
answer the complaint in this
action and to serve a copy of
your answer, or a notice of
appearance on the attorneys
for the Plaintiff within thirty
(30) days after the service
of this summons, exclusive
of the day of service. The
United States of America, if
designated as a defendant in
this action, may appear within
sixty (60) days of service
SUMMONS Index No.
21854-13 D/O/F: November
27, 2013 Premises Address:
159 04 84th Rd JAMAICA, NY
11432 SUPREME COURT OF
THE STATE OF NEW YORK
COUNTY OF QUEENS LIVE
WELL FINANCIAL, INC,
Plaintiff, -against- JOHN DOE
1 THROUGH 50; JANE DOE
1 THROUGH 50, INTENDING TO BE THE UNKNOWN
HEIRS OF THE ESTATE OF
SOFIA MICHAIL WHO WAS
BORN ON MAY 6, 1916
Notice is hereby given that
an Order entered by the Civil
Court, Queens County, on
AUG 14 2014, bearing Index
No. 632-14, a copy of which
may be examined at the office
of the clerk, located at 89-17
Sutphin Blvd Jamaica NY
11435 Room 357, grants me
the right, to assume the name
SOPHIE COLLEEN WALTERS.
My present address is 75-48
255th St, Unit 2, Glen Oaks,
New York 11004; The date
of my birth is September 16,
2010, I was born in Oceanside, New York; My present
name is SOPHIE COLLEEN
BAILEY
Page 22 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
Prep Outdoor Equipment For Winter And Spring
How well your outdoor power
equipment works the next time you
need it could depend on how you winterize and store it. Here are hints that
can help:
Do your winterization tasks in a
safe work zone. Before you start, set
up a safe work zone. Work only in a
well-ventilated area that is away from
heat sources, sparks or flames.
Collect your outdoor power equipment that you intend to store. This
might include a lawn mower, generator, string trimmer, chain saw, edger,
power washer, blower, chipper, splitter or other tool that uses a small engine to do outdoor work.
Read the owner’s manual. Always
consult your owner’s manual for directions on how to properly winterize
and store your equipment. If you can’t
find your manual, check the manufacturer’s website.
Be safe. Before servicing or repairing any outdoor power equipment, disconnect the spark plug and
battery cables. Wear safety glasses
and gloves to protect against harmful
chemicals and debris.
Drain the fuel. Stored equipment
should not have fuel in its tank. Many
fuels today contain ethanol, which absorbs water and may phase separate,
causing operating problems. If there
is fuel in the tank, remove what remains. Run the engine until it stops.
Store leftover fuel properly. Gasoline should be stored no more than
30 days without being treated with a
fuel stabilizer. Use a sealed container that is approved for fuel storage.
Always keep fuel out of the reach of
children and away from heat sources
or flames.
Check and clean your equipment.
Check for loose belts or missing or
damaged guards. Check and tighten
all screws and nuts. Grass, leaves
and dirt that have accumulated on the
equipment should be removed.
Lubricate, sharpen and charge as
needed. Check the oil level and blade
condition. Change the oil now if needed. Get your lawn mower blade sharpened so it will be ready for spring. Inspect the spark plug, replace it and
add clean engine oil. Check the air filter and clean or replace as needed. If
your equipment has a removable battery, take it out and store it in a warm
spot. If you have a battery charger,
you may want to charge the battery
before storing.
Take your equipment in for servicing if needed. A busy lawn care season may have left your equipment
worn and in need of repair. The winter season is when repair shops are
the least busy, so if your equipment
needs a tune-up or additional servicing, now is a good time to take it in.
Store your lawn care equipment carefully so it will be ready to restore your
lawn when the weather warms.
Find a safe storage space. Store
your equipment away from pool
chemicals, cleaners or fertilizers—
anything that could cause corrosion
from spills. Your storage area should
be cool and dry, and your equipment
should be out of the reach of children
and pets.
Properly store your supplies. Avoid
spills in your storage space by storing
your lawn care and outdoor supplies
properly. Leftover lawn care materials
should be stored in sealed containers, so pests such as rodents are not
drawn to your storage space.
Find your winter equipment and
place it in an accessible location. Dig
out the snow shovels, snowblowers
or throwers, scrapers, ice melt or rock
salt. If you are out of winter supplies,
now can be a good time to stock up
before you need them. Place your
winter equipment and supplies in an
accessible location.
“Well-maintained equipment will
last longer and save consumers
money. Winterizing and storing outdoor power equipment properly over
the winter means that when spring
arrives, your equipment will be
ready,” explained Kris Kiser, president and CEO of the Outdoor Power
Equipment Institute (OPEI), an international trade association representing power equipment, small engine,
and utility vehicle manufacturers and
suppliers.
- North American Press Syndicate
Tips To Give Homes An Annual Checkup
There’s no better time than now
to give your home the attention it deserves. Give it an annual checkup before cold weather arrives to help add
comfort, save energy and cut home
maintenance in the long-run.
When inspecting your home’s
windows and doors, here’s what to
check:
Inspect interior and exterior finishes: over time, paint and stain can
weather away. Flaking or peeling
may mean that it’s time to refinish or
replace the unit. When replacing windows or doors, consider factory prefinished wood or fiberglass options
from Pella, or vinyl options that don’t
need painting or staining, to save time
and money.
Look for damaged exterior surfaces or signs of leaks: Check your sprinkler system to make sure it’s watering
your lawn and landscape, not soaking your windows or doors. Cracked
or deteriorated wood may be a sign
of water penetration. Leaks can linger
and affect interior walls, floors or ceilings, so look closely for discoloration
or other moisture signs.
If you spot a problem, track its trail.
For example, discolored trim around
a window might actually be caused by
moisture entering a ways away. With
ping can affect the performance of your windows and
doors. Open the windows
and clean the opening with
a soft brush, like a dry paint
brush or vacuum attachment. Do the same for sliding patio doors.
Try opening and closing:
Open your windows and
doors to make sure moving
parts work, and units close
properly. Replace worn or
broken parts.
Inspect
weather-stripping:
Re-attach
loose
weather-stripping
around
windows or doors, and replace material that’s ripped
or torn.
Replace or repair broken
locks: If locks feel loose or
don’t work smoothly, reGive your home an annual checkup before the place them. Keep windows
and doors locked when
rough winter weather arrives.
not in use. Locks help hold
a leaky roof, water may run down in- doors and windows tightly, to lock
side the wall and appear at the win- out rain, wind, snow and insects.
dow. Contact a professional for help
Inspect weep and breather holes:
in making home repairs.
Weep holes in the exterior of winClear windowsills and tracks of dirt dows, allow excess moisture to esand debris: Sand, leaves, insects or cape, while breather holes allow air
pine needles stuck in weather-strip- exchange within certain components.
Clear blocked holes of dirt or debris
with a wire or toothpick.
Check exterior sealants and caulk
on and around windows and doors.
Pay attention to areas susceptible to
rain, water and extreme sunlight. Remove damaged material and reapply
sealant.
In coastal locations, rinse exterior
metal like exterior aluminum trim or
cladding: Rinsing exterior metal parts
three or four times a year can help
extend the life of your windows and
doors by minimizing corrosion from
salt spray or fog.
Feel for signs of air leakage
around the window or door: Improperly installed windows or doors can
be drafty, decrease energy efficiency,
and allow unwanted moisture into
your home. To help save on utility
bills and keep your home more comfortable year-round, replace drafty
old, leaky windows with new, ENERGY STAR-qualified Pella windows
installed properly.
Visit Pella Windows and Doors on
Pinterest for design inspiration or Pella.com/news to connect with a Pella
representative for tips on caring for
your windows and doors, or choosing
new replacements.
- BrandPoint
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 23
Page 24 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
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QUEENS
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• MIDDLE VILLAGE
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63-27 Metropolitan Ave..............718.497.0212
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ypetype
§ Manufacturers
gg. Retail.
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 25
PIX
Stringer Goes Back To School
Soccer Lessons In The Park
Comptroller Scott Stringer visited PS 234 in Astoria to welcome kids and parents
back to school last week. Here, he is pictured with second-grader Ahmed Gendia.
Photo by Jackie Strawbridge.
Flags Wave Proudly In Bayside
The New York Cosmos soccer team held back-to-school soccer clinics for Queens
kids as part of a City-wide tour on Sept. 8 at Flushing Meadows Corona Park. Photo
by Luis Gronda.
Queens Marches With Labor
Councilmembers Mark Weprin (from left) Elizabeth Crowley and Rory Lancman
took part in the Labor Day parade in Manhattan over the weekend.
3 Celebs Come Home
Returning home from a trip to Italy, Dale Nussbaum
(right), wife of Queens Tribune publisher Michael Nussbaum, met up with TV host Kelly Ripa (left) and her
husband, actor Mark Consuelos, at the airport. The
couple were on their way back from a wedding.
In Bayside, on the Bell Boulevard overpass of the LIRR, there is a series of flags flying
in the wind. Edward Teran, the founder of American Vision, has spearheaded these
flags, which include two American flags and all eight branches of the military. The
project, sponsored by Daughters of the American Revolution, started five years ago.
Every six months, the military flags are rotated and the American flags are refreshed
three times a year. Photo by Joe Marvilli.
A U.S. Open Tennis Legend In The Making
Serena Williams celebrated her 18th Grand Slam tennis victory on Monday, defeating Caroline Wozniacki to win the U.S. Women’s Open. The win tied Williams with Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert (pictured with Williams above)
for fourth place in all-time Grand Slam wins. Photos by Bruce Adler.
Page 26 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 27
LEISURE
Godwin-Ternbach Looks Back At Warhol
BY JOE MARVILLI
Staff Writer
Queens College’s Godwin-Ternbach
Museum will welcome students back for the new
semester with an exhibit
on a cultural icon.
The museum will look
at the work of experimental artist Andy Warhol in
“Andy Warhol’s PhotoAesthetic and Beyond.”
The exhibit, which will
include photographs
and silkscreen prints
from the Andy Warhol Foundation as
well as loans from
other collections,
will look at the
artist’s pho-
tography style and its place in the genre
of Pop Art.
“We had planned to do this show
some years ago when we first got the
donation of photographs from The
Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual
Arts, but it didn’t work out,” Amy Winter, Godwin-Ternbach’s director, said.
“Then last year, we got an additional
donation of seven silkscreen prints,
and at the same time, our new Modern
and Contemporary Art professor, Eddie Powers, is a Warhol expert - he’s
lectured on Warhol at MoMA - so it
was a perfect time to do it.”
These recently donated silkscreens include portraits of American icons, such as Muhammad
Ali and Sitting Bull, as well as
landmarks like the Brooklyn
Bridge and Cologne Cathedral.
Warhol made the prints by
taking a Polaroid portrait
image, silk-screening it onto paper or
canvas and adding silkscreen ink in
a bright array of nearly psychedelic
colors.
Winter added that despite Warhol’s
efforts to make art that anyone would be
able to afford, his work on canvas sells
for tens or hundreds of millions.
“I find it somewhat ironic that his
stated intention and feeling was that
‘art should be for everyone’ and his use
of printed media, advertising, brands,
celebrities, news and inexpensive
methods of production,” she said. “But
affordable it is not, for the average person. As one of our labels reads: ‘While
few of us can afford an original Warhol
artwork, we can buy a can of soup.’ I
wonder what Andy would say to the
way things are now – art is once again
only for the rich and famous.”
Warhol’s work also fits into modern
culture, particularly today’s media
saturation and celebrity worship, both
of which the artist displayed through
his work nearly 50 years ago.
“He and his art tell us so much about
our contemporary culture even while
being so accessible to the average person,” Winter said. “He understood the
significance of fame, and created images
of celebrities, for instance, that many
critics have discussed in terms of his
perceptiveness (and somewhat ironic
understanding) of the way we worship
celebrities and fame.”
“Andy Warhol’s Photo-Aesthetic and
Beyond” opens on Sept. 11 and runs
until Nov. 1. There will be an opening
reception at the museum on Sept. 18
from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Reach Joe Marvilli at (718) 357-7400,
Ext. 125, [email protected],
or @JoeMarvilli.
Step Behind The Scenes At
‘New York On Location’
BY JAckIE StRAwBRIdgE
Staff Writer
Long Island City’s Secret
Theatre To Stay Open
BY JAckIE StRAwBRIdgE
Staff Writer
The show will go on.
Long Island City’s Secret Theatre
reached its fundraising goal of $10,000
last week, two days before its deadline.
The campaign, called “Can You Keep
the Secret” and hosted on fundraising
site Indiegogo.com, garnered almost
$11,000 in total.
According to Richard Mazda, founder and artistic director of the Secret
Theatre, financial problems arose due
to building fines and permits.
Mazda described feeling both “humbled” and “elated” by the results of the
fundraiser. He said the funds will go
towards upgrades and renovations such
as adding a restroom to the Secret’s
smaller venue space.
“What’s important about it, that
I’d like people to take away, is it’s not
just the money,” Mazda said. “It’s the
support that gives me mental energy
to move forward, to make sure that we
correct any problems, that we survive
for a long time.”
According to Mazda, part of making this success sustainable involves
continued fundraising. He pointed
to a planned fundraiser hosted by
the Hunter’s Point Civic Association,
which HPCA president Brent O’Leary
confirmed is slated for the end of this
month or early October.
“When I heard that the theater
was in trouble, I called [Mazda] immediately,” O’Leary said. “The Secret
Theatre is one of the cultural assets of
Long Island City and Western Queens,
so we wanted to make sure that it
stayed alive.”
Mazda also noted that the theater
might modify its production model
by, for example, increasing weekday
classes and activities to make up for
slow periods during summer and winter
vacations.
For now, Mazda said, he is looking
forward to continuing Secret Theatre
work.
“If you look at the fundraiser as a
kind of vote of confidence, I think that
we were answered loud and clear that
the community wants us and they want
us to survive,” Mazda said.
He added, “now, if anything, I feel
more engendered to give back.”
Reach Jackie Strawbridge at (718)
357-7400, Ext. 128, jstrawbridge@
queenstribune.com or @JNStrawbridge.
New Yorkers will get a chance to
see how movie magic is made on our
City streets at “New York on Location,” next Sunday in Astoria.
The free event, presented by the
Museum of the Moving Image, Theatrical Teamsters Local 817 and Kaufman Astoria Studios, will bring the
public behind the scenes of film and
TV outdoor shooting. Throughout the
day at the museum, the Kaufman Astoria Studios backlot and surrounding
streets, spectators will tour star dressing rooms, special effects trucks and
light and camera equipment, while
stunt professionals perform. Food will
also be available from movie catering
trucks.
“All those names that you see at
the end of a film – what are they doing? The museum has devoted itself to
that,” said Carl Goodman, executive
director of the Museum of the Moving Image.
“It’s wonderful to learn about
what they are doing when they’re
making movies on the street. But
even more exciting is that we actually
can meet the people who do it – it’s
almost like a living exhibit,” Goodman continued.
The Museum of the Moving Image originally presented this event in
2007. Goodman said the museum was
glad for the opportunity to revive it
now that there is increased space from
their new courtyard and the Kaufman
Astoria Studios backlot, which both
opened in 2013.
He also noted that Queens is a
particularly appropriate host for a
celebration of film production, as the
home to Kaufman Astoria Studios
and Silvercup Studios, and where so
many prominent shows and movies
have been made, such as “Orange is
the New Black,” “Men In Black” and
“Sesame Street.”
For Tim Gallin, an event organizer
and veteran stuntman, “New York
on Location” provides film and TV
craftspeople an opportunity to give
back to the City.
“It’s a good thing for the people
of New York to have an understanding of what all the equipment and
all the people in their neighborhood
are doing,” Gallin said. “We respect
your neighborhood and we want to
say thanks for letting us come in and
work.”
Gallin also noted that he invited
many young and emerging stuntpeople to volunteer for “New York on
Location,” because the event offers a
chance to network and show off their
skills.
According to Gallin, some featured stunts will include high falls,
martial arts and car demonstrations.
Goodman also noted that spectators
can look forward to deluges of movie
snow, rain and wind, and can have
a movie star moment with makeup
demonstrations in deluxe trailers.
“New York on Location” will run
from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sept. 21. In
the case of rain, the event will be
rescheduled for Sept. 28.
Reach Jackie Strawbridge at (718)
357-7400, Ext. 128, jstrawbridge@
queenstribune.com or @JNStrawbridge.
Page 28 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
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www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 29
Queens today
SENIORS....................
Men’s exercise
Tuesdays and Thursdays
@ 10:30 a.m. Beginning
Sept. 9. For men 60 and
older. Queens Community House, Pomonok
Senior Center, 67-09
Kissena Blvd., Flushing.
718-591-3377.
senior Fitness
Mondays and Wednesdays
@ 10 a.m. CityParks Senior
Fitness Tennis, Astoria
Park, 21st Street and Hoyt
Avenue South.
Mondays and Wednesdays
@ 10 a.m. CityParks Senior
Fitness Tennis, Flushing
Meadows Corona Park.
Tuesdays and Thursdays
@ 9 a.m. CityParks Senior
Fitness Tennis,
Cunningham Park.
Tuesdays and Thursdays
@ 9 a.m. CityParks Senior
Fitness Yoga,
Roy Wilkins Park.
Tuesdays and Thursdays @
10 a.m. CityParks Senior
Fitness Yoga,
Cunningham Park.
Tuesdays and Thursdays @
10 a.m. CityParks Senior
Fitness Tennis,
Roy Wilkins Park.
Driver saFety
Sept. 12 @ 11 a.m. A ARP
Course. Register at
718-641-3911. Glen Oaks
Library, 256-04 Union Tpke.
718-831-8636.
DeFensive Driving
Sept. 12 @ 11 a.m. A ARP.
McGoldrick Library,
155-06 Roosevelt Ave.
718-461-1616.
senior theater
Sept. 12 @ 11 a.m. Queens
Village Library, 94-11
217th St. 718-776-6800.
cOmputERS............
coMputers For
Beginners
Sept. 12 @ 11:30 a.m.
Middle Village Library,
72-31 Metropolitan Ave.
718-326-1390.
intro to coMputers
Sept. 12 @ Noon. Poppenhusen Library, 121-23 14th
Ave. 718-359-1102.
MicrosoFt excel
Sept. 13 @ 9:30 a.m. For
Spanish Speakers. Flushing
Library, 41-17 Main St.
718-661-1200.
MicrosoFt WorD
Sept. 13 @ 2:30 p.m. In
Spanish. Langston Hughes
Library, 100-01 Northern
Blvd. 718-651-1100.
tEENS & KIDS......
toDDler tiMe
Sept. 12 @ 11:30 a.m. For
ages 18-36 months. South
Ozone Park Library, 128-16
Rockaway Blvd.
718-529-1660.
Sept. 15 @ 10:30 a.m.
Hillcrest Library, 187-05
Union Tpke. 718-454-2786.
Mother goose tiMe
Sept. 12 @ 11:30 a.m. For
ages 6-18 months. Sun-
nyside Library,
43-06 Greenpoint Ave.
718-784-3033.
Fun FriDays
Sept. 12 @ 4 p.m. Central
Library, 89-11 Merrick
Blvd. 718-990-0778.
Wii gaMes
Sept. 12 @ 4 p.m. Poppenhusen Library, 121-23 14th
Ave. 718-359-1102.
gaMe FriDays
Sept. 12 @ 5 p.m. Rosedale
Library, 144-20 243rd St.
718-528-8490.
Book BuDDies
Sept. 13 @ 10 a.m. For ages
4-8. Bayside Library,
214-20 Northern Blvd.
718-229-1834.
aniMal care
trainee
Sept. 13 @ 10 a.m. For
ages 8-12. $21. Alley Pond
Environmental Center,
228-06 Nothern Blvd.,
Douglaston. 718-229-4000.
www.alleypond.com.
auDition
Sept. 13 @ Noon. CYCNY
Youth Orchestra, for ages
10-18. MS 158, 46-35
Oceania St., Bayside.
www.youthorchestra.com.
conversations For
kiDs
Sept. 13 @ 1 p.m. 9/11
National Day of Service
and Remembrance.
Queens Historical Society,
143-35 37th Ave., Flushing.
718-939-0647.
chilDren’s garDen
sessions
Sept. 13 @ 2 p.m. Herb
garden. For ages 5-12.
Queens Botanical Garden,
43-50 Main St., Flushing.
www.queensbotanical.org.
Dino-Mite
Dinosaurs
Sept. 14 @ 1:30 p.m. For
ages 5-6. $18. Alley Pond
Environmental Center,
228-06 Nothern Blvd.,
Douglaston. 718-229-4000.
www.alleypond.com.
picture Book tiMe
Sept. 15 @ 2 p.m. For ages
3-5. Hillcrest Library,
187-05 Union Tpke.
718-454-2786.
storytiMe
Sept. 15 @ 3:30 p.m. For
children in pre-school to
grade 2. Auburndale Library, 25-55 Francis Lewis
Blvd. 718-352-2027.
ENtERtAINmENt..
Movie
Sept. 12 @ 11:30 a.m.
“Heaven is for Real” St.
Albans Library, 191-05 Linden Blvd. 718-528-8196.
scraBBle
Sept. 12 @ Noon. Whitestone Library, 151-10 14th
Road. 718-767-8010.
aM i Blue?
Sept. 12 @ 2:30 p.m. Blues
Revue with Stacia Hobdy.
Howard Beach Library,
92-06 156th Ave.
718-641-7086.
chess cluB
Sept. 12 @ 4 p.m. New
York Cares. Woodside Li-
brary, 54-22 Skillman Ave.
718-429-4700.
classical Quartet
Sept. 12 @ 6 p.m. $25/30.
King Manor Museum, 15003 Jamaica Ave., Jamaica.
www.kingmanor.com.
Jazz up in the sky
Sept. 12 @ 7 p.m. Jazz
musician Hernan Romero.
$100. Flushing House,
38-20 Bowne St., Flushing.
www.flushinghouse.com.
park Fair
Sept. 13 @ 10 a.m. Richmond Hill Block Association. Buddy Monument at
Forest Park, Myrtle Avenue
and Park Lane South.
Fresh MeaDoWs
poets
Sept. 13 @ 10:15 a.m. Forest Hills Library, 108-19
71st Ave. 718-268-7934.
Fall concert
Sept. 13 @ 1:30 p.m. New
York Vocal Artists Research
Center. Flushing Library,
41-17 Main St.
718-661-1200.
Fiesta FlaMenca
Sept. 13 @ 2 p.m. Lincoln
Center Local. Langston
Hughes Library, 100-01
Northern Blvd.
718-651-1100.
Winnie the pooh
Sept. 13 @ 2:30 p.m. Plaza
Theatrical Productions.
Central Library, 89-11 Merrick Blvd. 718-990-0778.
Music oF JuDy
garlanD
Sept. 13 @ 2:30 p.m.
Forest Hills Library, 108-19
71st Ave. 718-268-7934.
Movie
Sept. 13 @ 2:30 p.m. “Girl
With the Pearl Earring”
Fresh Meadows Library,
193-20 Horace Harding
Expy. 718-454-7272.
Dance nights
Sept. 13 @ 8 p.m. Italian
Charities of America, 8320 Queens Blvd. Elmhurst.
718-478-3100.
Musical
perForMance
Sept. 14 @ 11 a.m. By
Karen Feit. Sisterhood of
the Jewish Center of Oak
Hills, 50-35 Cloverdale
Blvd. 718-631-0100.
la gioconDa
Sept. 14 @ 4 p.m. New
York Opera Forum.
$12/10. St. Luke’s Church,
85 Greenway South, Forest
Hills. 718-268-7772.
luncheon carD
party
Sept. 16 @ 11:30 a.m.
Sisterhood of Bay Terrace
Garden Jewish Center,
13-00 209th St. $20/22 To
register, call 718-468-6363
or 718-631-5468.
Movie
Sept. 16 @ 1 p.m. “Heaven
Is For Real” Kew Gardens
Community Center,
80-02 Kew Gardens Road,
Kew Gardens.
EDucAtION..............
Dance instruction
Mondays and Fridays
@ 7:15 p.m. $10 Italian
Charities of America,
83-20 Queens Blvd.,
Elmhurst. 718-478-3100.
art classes
Saturdays @ 10 a.m. Latin
American Cultural Center
of Queens. ARROW Community Center, 35-30 35th
St., Astoria. 718-261-7664.
aDvanceD italian
Sept. 11 @ 7 p.m. 14
week course, $80. Italian
Charities of America,
83-20 Queens Blvd.,
Elmhurst.
718-478-3100 for info.
art classes
Saturdays @ 10 a.m. Sponsored by LACCQ. ARROW
Community Center, 35-30
35th St., Astoria.
718-261-7664.
Funeral
preplanning
Sept. 12 @ 11 a.m. With
Ronald Fatoullah. Samuel
Field Y, 58-20 Little Neck
Pkwy., Little Neck.
718-225-6750, Ext. 236.
english
conversation
Sept. 12 @ 1 p.m. Glen
Oaks Library, 256-04
Union Tpke. 718-831-8636.
BackyarD
photography
Sept. 13 @ 9:30 a.m. Alley
Pond Environmental Center, 228-06 Nothern Blvd.,
Douglaston. 718-229-4000.
www.alleypond.com.
Buzz aBout Bees
Sept. 13 @ Noon. Queens
Botanical Garden, 43-50
Main St., Flushing. Registration required, www.
queensbotanical.org.
718-539-5296.
MeDicare 101
Sept. 16 @ 5:30 p.m. EmblemHealth Neighborhood
Care Center, 206-20 Linden
Blvd., Cambria Heights.
HEALtH......................
health exercises
Saturdays @ 9:30 a.m.
Economics and Trade Association, including hand
craft salon and health
exercises. 41-60 Main St.,
Flushing. 347-585-2798
to register.
Saturdays @ 11 a.m.
Economics and Trade
Association. Musical and
health exercises therapy.
Flushing Medical Center,
146-01 45th Ave.,
Flushing. 347-585-2798
to register.
ahava love
Sept. 11 @ 7:30 p.m.
Rosh Hashanah Meditation with Cantor Moti
Fuchs. Hillcrest Jewish
Center, 183-02 Union
Tpke., Flushing.
718-380-4145.
loW iMpact zuMBa
Sept. 12 @ 11:30 a.m.
EmblemHealth Neighborhood Care Center,
206-20 Linden Blvd.,
Cambria Heights.
Moving anD
grooving
Sept. 12 @ 11:30 ShapeUp
NYC with Tenaria. Briarwood Library, 85-12 Main
St. 718-658-1680.
Work out asthMa
Sept. 12 @ 1 p.m. Zumba
Style. EmblemHealth
Neighborhood Care Center, 206-20 Linden Blvd.,
Cambria Heights.
BlooD pressure
screening
Sept. 12 @ 3 p.m. Healthy
foods, healthy eating.
Laurelton Library,
134-26 225th St.
718-528-2822.
Walk
Sept. 13 @ 8:30 a.m. At
Flushing Marina, with
Corona-East Elmhurst Kiwanis. $20 includes T-shirt
and water. 27th Avenue
and Ditmars Boulevard.
yoga in the
eleMents
Sept. 13 @ 9:15 a.m. $12.
Alley Pond Environmental
Center, 228-06 Nothern
Blvd., Douglaston.
718-229-4000.
www.alleypond.com.
get Fit
Sept. 13 @ 2:30 p.m.
High Impact Workout.
EmblemHealth Neighborhood Care Center,
206-20 Linden Blvd.,
Cambria Heights.
BlooD Drive
Sept. 14 @ 2 p.m. Bait Uz
Zafar Mosque,
188-15 McLaughlin Ave.,
Holliswood.
loW iMpact zuMBa
Sept. 15 @ 10:30 a.m.
EmblemHealth Neighborhood Care Center,
206-20 Linden Blvd.,
Cambria Heights.
sitting exercise
Sept. 15 @ Noon. EmblemHealth Neighborhood
Care Center,
206-20 Linden Blvd.,
Cambria Heights.
MeDitation
Sept. 15 @ 7:30 p.m. Fourpart workshop series with
Rajin Rajkumar. 80-01
30th Ave., Jackson Heights.
MeDitation For
healthy living
Sept. 16 @ 2 p.m. With
Frank Pawlowski, Ed.D.
Bayside Library, 214-20
214-20 Northern Blvd.,
Bayside. 718-229-1834.
MeDitation For
optiMuM Well Being
Sept. 16 @ 2:30 p.m. With
Renate Lanotte. Glen Oaks
Library, 256-04 Union
Tpke. 718-831-8636.
DiaBetes
ManageMent
Sept. 17 @ 10:30 p.m.
EmblemHealth Neighborhood Care Center,
206-20 Linden Blvd.,
Cambria Heights.
Managing
hypertension
MeDs
Sept. 17 @ 2 p.m.
EmblemHealth Neighborhood Care Center,
206-20 Linden Blvd.,
Cambria Heights.
mEEtINGS................
zoning ForuM
Sept. 12 @ 8 a.m. Queens
Chamber of Commerce,
Bulova Corporate Center,
75-20 Astoria Blvd.,
Jackson Heights.
recovery
international
Sept. 12 @ 4:45 p.m.
Forest Hills Library,
108-19 71st Ave.
718-268-7934.
BriarWooD action
netWork
Sept. 13 @ 10 a.m.
Briarwood Playground,
148th Street between 85th
Avenue and 85th Road.
Quiet skies rally
Sept. 14 @ 1 p.m. Cunningham Park. [email protected].
aWarDs Dinner
Sept. 14 @ 4 p.m. United
For Progress Democratic
Club. Antun’s Caterers,
96-43 Springfield Blvd.,
Queens Village. $80.
718-454-5632 or
718-723-5970.
ozone park civic
association
Sept. 16 @ 7:30 p.m.
Ozone Howard Little
League, 97-14 135th Drive,
Ozone Park.
646-298-7575.
netWorking night
Sept. 17 @ 5 p.m. Austin’s
Ale House Outdoor Garden, 82-70 Austin St., Kew
Gardens.
richMonD hill
south civic assn.
Sept. 18 @ 7:30 p.m.
Knights of Columbus Hall,
135-45 Lefferts Blvd.
SALES.........................
green Market
Saturdays @ 8 a.m. Skillman and 43rd Streets,
Sunnyside.
outDoor Flea
Market
Sept. 13 @ 10 a.m. Fun
Day at Ridgewood Library,
20-12 Madison St.
chinese auction &
Flea Market
Sept. 18 @ 10 a.m. and
1:30 p.m. Kew Gardens
Community Center,
80-02 Kew Gardens Road,
Kew Gardens.
ENVIRONmENt.......
DocuMent
shreDDing
Sept. 13 @ 9 a.m. Laurelton Library, 230-22 Merrick Blvd. 718-276-3500.
nyc coMpost
proJect
Sept. 13 @ 10 a.m. $5
Queens Botanical Garden,
43-50 Main St., Flushing.
Registration required,
[email protected]. 718-539-5296.
e-recycling
Sept. 13 @ 10 a.m. Jackson
Heights Shopping Center,
77th Street, between 30th
and 31st Avenues.
718-457-8254.
Page 30 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
Dining & Entertainment
Dining & Entertainment
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 31
Queens today
FRIDay 9/12
CLASSICAL QUARTET
The New York Classical Quartet, featuring
violinists Judson Griffin and Margaret Ziemnicka, violist Chiu-Chen
Liu and cellist David
Bakamjian, will put on
a concert at King Manor
Museum in Jamaica. The
group will share the riches
of the string quartets of
Joseph Haydn, the first master of the form in the 18th
century. Tickets are $25 in
advance and $30 at the door.
For reservations and more
information, visit kingmanor.org/events/concert.php or
call (718) 206-0545.
saTURDay 9/13
CEMETERY CLEANUp
The Woodhaven Cultural
& Historical Society, the
Woodhaven History Club
and All Saints Cemetery
will host the third annual cleanup of the
cemetery beginning at 9
a.m. The groups get together to clean parts of the
Woodhaven-based cemetery.
The cleanup will go on until
noon. For more information, please contact the
cultural society at info@
woodhaven-nyc.org.
COMEdY FUNdRAISER
Resorts World Casino
will host a fundraiser
for the Boys and Girls
Club of Metro Queens.
The fundraiser is a comedy show featuring several
comedians. They include
A.G. White, Marshall Brandon, Kenny Williams and
more. All proceeds from the
show will go to the club.
The show begins at 10 p.m.
Tickets for the show cost
$25. Resorts World Casino is
located at 110-00 Rockaway
Blvd.
‘THE NATURAL HISTORY
MUSEUM’
The Natural History Museum, a new ongoing project
initiated by arts collective
Not An Alternative, will
have its grand
opening at the
Queens Museum from 5
p.m. to 8 p.m.
The ribboncutting ceremony and
reception starts at 5 p.m.,
followed by a presentation
at 6 p.m. and the rest of the
reception at 7 p.m.
OkTObERFEST
The Poppenhusen Institute will hold an Oktoberfest fundraiser from
noon to 6 p.m. Historic presentations, German singers
and dancers, tournaments,
games, face painting and a
beer stein holdings contest
are some of the highlights
at the festival. GermanAmerican food, beer, wine,
apple strudel and black forest cake will be available for
purchase. Admission is $15.
Call (718) 358-0067 or email
[email protected] for
more information.
SPOTLIGHT OF THE WEEK
sUNDay 9/14
ANTIQUE MOTORCYCLE SHOW
The 34th edition of the antique motorcycle show
at the Queens Farm Museum will run from 11 a.m.
to 4 p.m. This show will include a display of various
makes and models of motorcycles that have been out
of production for 10 years or more. Music, farmhouse
tours, hayrides and food will provide fun for the
entire family.
Admission is $5 per person. Call (718) 347-3276 to
learn more.
STITCH N’ pITCH
pARk FAIR
The Richmond Hill Block
Association will host its 41st
park fair. The free event
will have rides, games,
carnival food, dance
and music groups and
raffles. The fair will begin
at 10 a.m. and finish at 6
p.m. The event will take
place at Forest Park, which
is located at Myrtle Avenue
and Park Lane South. For
more information, call the
RHBA at (718) 849-3759.
TOUR NOgUCHI MUSEUM
Artist Rona Pondick will
lead a tour of the Museum, lending her unique
perspective to the experience of seeing Noguchi’s
work. Pondick’s attention
to detail, from structure to
surface, makes her uniquely
qualified to give visitors a
high-resolution look at Noguchi’s work. The tour runs
from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. For
more information, call (718)
204-7088.
for children ages 18 months
and older and will be held
in the museum’s Maker
Space. There is an $8 materials fee per family, plus museum admission. For more
information, visit nysci.org/
little-makers or call (718)
699-0005.
MYRTLE AvENUE
FESTIvAL
The Myrtle Avenue
Business Improvement
District will host the
Myrtle Avenue Festival
from noon to 6 p.m., along
Myrtle Avenue between
Wyckoff Avenue and Fresh
Pond Road in Ridgewood.
There will be plenty of food,
music and fun for everyone
to enjoy.
The 8th Annual Stitch
N’ Pitch will take place
at 1:10 p.m. at Citi Field,
hosted by the New York
Mets and Metropolitan Hospitality. Attendees will enjoy
discounted seats in the Left
Field Landing and an opportunity to stitch 7x9 inch
squares to benefit Warm Up
America, a
non-profit
organization
that collects
and distributes handknit afghans,
caps and
other items
to a variety of social service
agencies nationwide. A complimentary limited edition
“Mrs. Met” plush doll will
be included in the price of
admission for the first 1,000
fans purchasing tickets
through an advanced offer
at www.mets.com/stitchnpitch. Tickets are $30.
WEDNEsDay 9/17
WHAT’S THE bUzz
AbOUT bEES?
Celebrate bees at this
family-friendly workshop
at the Queens Botanical
Garden. From noon to 1:30
p.m., take a tour of the
Bee Garden, learn about
these amazing insects,
sample local honey and
make a beeswax candle
to take home. Registration is required and can
be completed at www.
eventbrite.com/e/whatsthe-buzz-about-bees-tickets12475351111. Tickets cost $5.
sUNDay 9/14
CARdbOARd CREATIONS
Transform cardboard
pieces into cool creations at the New York Hall
of Science. The Little Makers
workshop is recommended
pATTI LUpONE
Tony and Olivier Award
winner will appear at
Queensborough Performing Arts Center in
her new concert, “COULDA,
WOULDA, SHOULDA...
played that part.” She will
perform songs from musicals that she could have
played, should have played,
did play and will play. Tickets cost between $55 and
$65. The concert starts at
3 p.m. To buy tickets, visit
www.qcc.cuny.edu/qpac or
call (718) 631-6311.
‘MORE THAN JUST A
pIECE OF SkY’
At 8 p.m., Marissa Perel’s
“More Than Just A Piece
Of Sky” comes to the
Chocolate Factory. The
performance mines personal and cultural exile as
a site for the exploration
of gender and sexuality,
knowledge and power, and
ability and disability. Perel
examines her relationship to
patriarchy, inheriting Jewish narratives of diaspora,
and creating new narratives
where difference can create
new terms and ways of seeing self and other. Tickets
are $15. For more information, call (718) 482-7069.
QUEENS COLLEgE
ORCHESTRA
The Queens College
Orchestra will perform
several works at LeFrak
Concert Hall at 12:15 p.m.
Led by music director Maurice Peress, they will play
“Appalachian Spring” by
Aaron Copland, “An American in Paris” by George
Gershwin, “Black, Brown,
& Beige Suite” by Duke Ellington and a piece by Leo
Kraft. Call (718) 997-3800 to
learn more.
THAT OLd MERCER
MAgIC
Vocalist Diane Hoffman
presents a musical tribute to Johnny Mercer, the
prolific lyricist responsible
for close to 1,500 songs,
including “Ac-Cent-TchuAte the Positive,” “That
Old Black Magic,” “Come
Rain or Come Shine” and
other American standards.
She will sing at Bay Terrace
Library, located at 18-36 Bell
Blvd., at 1:30 p.m.
THURsDay 9/18
SUNNYSIdE TRIvIA
NIgHT
Think you are smart?
Come out and prove it at
trivia night! The fun starts
at 8 p.m. at Sunnyside’s
Bliss Street Station bar. $15
per person, $50 per team.
Prizes and drink specials
are available and all funds
raised will be donated to the
Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. For more information,
call (718) 729-2547.
Page 32 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
Dining & Entertainment
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 33
QUEENS FOCUS
Literacy Programs
Vallo Transportation, an
independent school bus
transportation company
located in Queens, recently
sponsored two unique literacy programs designed
specifically for children in
Queens. Pictured (from
left) are Harriet Novet,
Member Advisory Committee, Queens Library
Foundation; Basbeo Pillai,
Vallo Transportation;
Ellen Young, Director of
Donor Relations, Queens
Library Foundation; Linda
DeSabato, President, Vallo
Transportation; Nonyem
Iloabachie, Whitestone
Community Library; and
Nick Vallone, Vallo Transportation.
Juliana Rima of Jackson Heights
has received a Merit Scholarship to attend Wofford College in Spartanburg,
S.C. for the 2014-15 academic year.
The National Law Enforcement
and Firefighters Children Foundation
recently announced that Francesca
Mosomillo of Astoria has been named
a recipient of the NLEAFCF Scholarship. Mosomillo received the scholarship in recognition of her exceptional
leadership, community service and
scholastic achievement.
Her father, Anthony Mosomillo, a
member of the NYPD, was shot and
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that
an Order entered by the
Civil Court, Queens County
on AUG 21 2014 bearing
Index Number NC-00065914/QU, a copy of which
may be examined at the
Office of the Clerk, located
at 89-17 Sutphin Boulevard,
Jamaica, NY 11435, grants
me the right to: Assume the
name of (First) Daud (Last)
Hussain My present name
is (First) Muhammeddaud
(Middle) Kashifovich (Last)
Hussain (infant) My present
address is 3033 71 St, 2nd Fl,
East Elmhurst, NY 11370 My
place of birth Kazakhstan My
date of birth is November 15,
2005 Assume the name of
(First) Rehan (Last) Hussain
My present name is (First)
Rehan (Middle) Kashifovich
(Last) Hussain (infant) My
present address is 3033 71
St, 2nd Fl, East Elmhurst, NY
11370 My place of birth is
Kazakhstan My date of birth
is February 25, 2008
________________________
S U P P L E M E N TA L S U M M O N S I N TA X L I E N
FORECLOSURE–SUPREME
COURT OF THE STATE OF
NEW YORK, COUNTY OF
QUEENS – NYCTL 2012-A
TRUST AND THE BANK
OF NEW YORK MELLON
AS COLLATERAL AGENT
AND CUSTODIAN FOR
THE NYCTL 2012-A TRUST,
Plaintiffs, against ROBERT
R. BERKLEY, if living, et
al. Defendants. Index no.
5578/13. Plaintiffs designate Queens Count y as
the place of trial site of the
real property. To the above
named Defendants–YOU
ARE HEREBY SUMMONED
to answer the complaint in
this action within twenty days
after the service of this summons, exclusive of the day of
service or within thirty days
after service is completed if
the summons is not personally delivered to you within
the State of New York. In
case of your failure to appear
or answer, judgment will be
taken against you by default
for the relief demanded in
the complaint. Plaintiffs designate Queens County as the
place of trial. Venue is based
upon the county in which the
property a lien upon which is
being foreclosed is situated.
The foregoing summons is
served upon you by publication pursuant to an order of
the Hon. Bernice D. Siegal
filed on August 11th, 2014.
The object of this action is to
foreclose a New York City Tax
Lien as evidenced by a certain Tax Lien Certificate No.
4A, dated August 8, 2012,
recorded August 20, 2012,
CRFN 2012000329364 and
covering the premises known
as 120-30 178th Street, St.
Albans, NY 11434 located
at Block 12482 Lot 144.
Dated: August 28, 2014
WINDELS MARX LANE &
MITTENDORF LLP, Attorney
for Plaintiffs, By: Amy E. Korn,
Esq. 156 West 56th Street,
New York, NY 10019 (212)
237-1014.
________________________
Notice is hereby given that
a license, number pending
for beer and wine has been
applied for by Md Azizur
Rahman DBA Desert Rain
Lounge, Inc. to sell beer and
wine at retail in a restaurant
lounge under the Alcoholic
Beverage Control Law at
10729 Metropolitan Avenue
Forest Hills, NY 11375 for on
premises consumption.
________________________
Notice of formation of STAT
MEDICAL SERVICES OF NY
PLLC. Arts of Org filed with
Secy of State of NY (SSNY)
on 9/2/14. Office location:
Queens County. SSNY designated as agent upon whom
process may be served and
shall mail copy of process
against PLLC to: 132-59 41st
Rd., Ste 1A & 1B, Flushing, NY
11355. Purpose: Medicine.
You Can E-Mail Your
Legal Copy to legals@
queenstribune.com to
Place Your Legal
Advertisement or
Call the Tribune at
(718) 357-7400 Ext. 149
killed in the line of duty in 1998 when
Francesca was only two years old. A
graduate of the Academy for Careers
in Television and Film in Long Island
City, she has enrolled in Iona College
this fall.
Local students have received
$18,800 Presidential Scholarships
from SUNY Oswego. The Scholarships
were given to incoming freshmen at
the college. Recipients include:
Ridgewood: Karolina Trojanowski.
Woodside: Sabrina Singh, Yingying Xia.
Lucas Burton of Glendale was one
of 550 students from Culver-Stockton
College in Canton, Mo., to participate
in the sixth annual Extreme Dome
Makeover, volunteering to fix 16 different sites around the Canton area.
Air Force Airman 1st Class Andrew D. Gonzalez graduated from
basic military training at Joint Base
San Antonio-Lackland, San Antonio,
Texas. The airman completed an intensive, eight-week program that included training in military discipline
and studies, Air Force core values,
physical fitness, and basic warfare
principles and skills.
Gonzalez is the son of Duvan Gonzalez of Astoria and Alexandra Gonzalez of Flushing and the husband of
Heather Gonzalez of Rego Park.
Our Lady of Fatima Church,
located at 25-02 80th St., Jackson
Heights, will host a defensive driving
course for insurance and point reduction, sponsored by the National Safety
Council from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. on
Sept. 27. Cost is $45. For information
and registration, call (631) 360-9720.
District Council 16 Cement and
Concrete Workers Training and Education Fund will hold a recruitment
Oct. 1-15 for 12 skilled construction craft labor apprentices. Applications can be obtained from the DC
16 Training Center, 29-18 35th Ave.,
Long Island City, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
weekdays during the recruitment period, excluding Columbus Day. Only
the first 300 people to respond will receive an application. For information,
call (718) 392-6970.
Greater Woodhaven Development
Corporation’s 34th annual Wonderful Woodhaven street festival will
run from noon to 6 p.m. Oct. 19 on
Jamaica Avenue, from 80th Street to
Woodhaven Boulevard. For information, call (718) 805-0202.
Richmond Hill Block Association will host the 41st annual park
fair from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sept. 13 at
Forest Park. The fair will feature local
vendors, carnival food, rides, games
live music, a book sale and more.
The Sanctuary at
Mount Lebanon
The only Indoor Jewish Community
The only Indoor
Mausoleum
in NewJewish
York’s Community
Five Boroughs
Mausoleum In New York’s Five Boroughs
Special Prices and Choice Locations in the
All New Building for a limited time
• Single & Companion Gravesites • Family Plots
• Niche Space for Cremated Remains
Affordable Payment Plans • Credit Cards Accepted
AANot-For-Profit
serving the
the Jewish
Jewish Community
Communitysince
since1914
1914
Not-For Profit Cemetery serving
7800 Myrtle Ave • Glendale, Queens, NY 11385
718-821-0200 • www.MountLebanonCemetery.com
Classifieds
CALL: 718-357-7400
Page 34 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
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CAREGIVER’s Wanted
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OUTDOOR TICKET
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Email: [email protected]
BUS DRIVERS
CDL/BUS MATRONS
BOE 5 boros. Age 21+, Hiring Now!!!
RETIREES WELCOME
Call 347-386-8925
Office 718-257-5555 Ext #1
or email
[email protected]
business/finance
business/finance
WEALTH BUILDING OPPORTUNITY
We are one of the fastest growing privately held
companies expanding in the NYC & NJ area. We are
looking for men & women interested in earning a full time
income on a part time basis. This is not a job this is a
business opportunity no exp. nec. we will train.
MEETINGS EVERY THURSDAY, 7 P.M.
CROWN PLAZA
138-10 135TH AVE (9 FLR.)
JAMAICA NY 11436
TEXT TO: PODERL ATINO @ 55469
FOR FURTHER INFO CALL: 347-672-0585
TELEMARKETERS PT
FLEXIBLE HOURS
Salary plus commission
Non smoking building
Glendale Area
Call Mr. Robert’s
718-418-6589
WOODSIDE
CUSTOMER SERVICE
Growing internet business is
seeking an experienced
professional in E-Commerce
Customer Service. Candidates
should possess: a professional
phone manner, must be computer
literate, and have strong
communication skills. Must be
willing to learn. Long term. No
medical benefits. experience a must!
Contact Lillian at
718-478-0304
[email protected]
NURSES AIDE
TRAINING
21 Days Only $535
HOME HEALTH
AIDE TRAINING
14 Days Ony $340
Job Placement Assistance
Flexible Payment
Plans Available
Licensed by NY State Ed.
QUEENS 718-480-1804
FORDHAM INSTITUTE, INC.
MEDICAL BILLER
WANTED
Full time or Part Time
A.D.S. Experience a plus Min.
2 years exp. with medical billing
Busy Medical Office. Bayside Area
Email Resume to:
[email protected]
or Call 718-225-4740
business opp.
BUSINESS FOR SALE
Turn Key Jewelry Store in
Excellent Shopping Ctr. In
Staten Island. Owner Retiring.
Exclusive Location,
No Competition.
Call 646-522-7349
Your
Ad
Could
Be
HERE
718-357-7400
ext 151
HHA, PCAs Live in/out
Work in your neighborhood
Start Immediately
Permanent Cases
Flexible & Long HRs Available
Bilingual a plus Span/Eng
2wk vac, sign on bonus
QUEENS, BKLYN, MANH, BX
& NASS. CTY
718-261-6400
631-271-8931
Email: [email protected]
apt for rent
house for sale
Stunning 3BR, 2BA, 1450 SF,
custom built ....................................$2200
Gorgeous 3BR, updated kitchen, new
baths, new carpets, HW, freshly painted,
heat incl...........................................$2100
Fabulous 2BR, Renovated kitchen,
ren. bath, HW, freshly painted .......$1,850
Spacious 2BR, PVT entrance, HW,
heat included .................................$1,600
Lovely 2BR, 1st floor, 5 rooms total,
plus heat ....................................... $1,500
Good Loc., 2 BR, 1st floor, heat inc....$1,500
Great 1 BR, 1st floor, Heat Inc.......$1,350
an Affordable & Active
Adult Community in
Toms River, NJ
NEW manufactured HOMES
for SALE starting at $54,900
Call today! 800-275-2911
*Attendance Bonus Included
www.lynnhomecare.com
Real Estate
♦ ♦ ♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦ ♦ ♦
WHITESTONE • BAYSIDE
ADRIANNE REALTY
718-767-0080
condo for sale
PORT WASHINGTON
Mill Pond
LUXURY SENIOR CONDO
2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH
$595K
718-291-2172
medical office
UNION TURNPIKE
Excellent Location
Great Price
Nutritionist, Acupuncture, Etc.
Large Recpt. Exam Room
Close to Q88 - Q17 - Q46
Grand Central/L.I.E
HOMESTEAD RUN
39 KNOLCREST RD.
NESCONSET, NY
Lg. Colonial legal mother/daughter,
mint & LOADED, 3000 sq ft
6 BR, 3½ baths, Smithtown schls.
Granite EIK, hardwood fls,
inground pool & deck
$529,999
Mary Noble 631-838-0968
631-366-4272
GLENDALE
New Brick 3 Family
Garage - $989K
12 Family - Brick
Inc. 2.2m
Wanted:
20,000-40,000 sq. ft.
Call: 718-386-4680
[email protected]
out of state
Union Dale, PA
close to Elk Mtn
Lux 3,000 sq ft. home
w/hot tub vac yr round
4 BR, 3 full Bth, gar,
Owner moving, $425K
570-350-8648
house for sale
house for sale
1563 TOWER MOUNTAIN ROAD
STAMFORD, NEW YORK
New Construction built 2006-2007 3700 sq. ft
Contemporary Cape on 2.8 acres located 2 and a half
hours from the GWB. Features scenic mountain views,
good school system, new heating system, flash hot water
heater, heated garage, radiant heat, cathedral ceilings in
LR, large country kitchen, Den/TV room or formal dining
room, Tulikivi Wood Stove, Pella doors
and windows, 3 car garage, 1200 sq ft loft, lots of
closet space, and a recently drilled well.
For pictures http://www.zillow.com/homes/1563-TowerMountain-Road,-Stamford,-NY-12167_rb/
$500,000 or best offer. [email protected].
WHAT IS YOUR HOME WORTH?
house wanted
house wanted
Real Estate
house for sale
house for sale
Free, quick over the Net evaluation of your home.
Learn about homes that have been sold and are currently
listed in your neighborhood.
GET THE FACTS WITHOUT THE PRESSURE.
Based on this information, you will know what
your home is worth. This is a complete confidential market
analysis and is absolutely free!!
718-217-2000
Visit: www.PriceMyHouse.us
house for sale
house for sale
r.e. seminar
house for sale
BAYSIDE
3 Bedroom 2 bath SD
Colonial. Hdwd Floors,
Full fin bsmnt. Beautiful Eat
in Kitchen. Call Today!!
TMT Realty 718-229-5200
properties 4 sale
REPAIR SHOP - 4000 sf
plus house on 1 Acre
House need TLC
Eastern Long Island
Additional Acreage Available
other possibilities
Call for Details
631-722-4307
7 UNIT INVESTMENT
PROPERTY
In Ozone Park. Rental 120K
2 Family Custom Built
New House In
Wakefield $799K
Contact Raj
917-957-9969
restaurant 4 sale
RESTAURANT
on .6 acres, 5 min to beach,
Emerald Isle, NC.
Est. 20 years, seating cap for 60.
Principals Only.
Call Mike 252-342-6161
or 919-482-0119
upstate
LAKEVIEW, DEEDED
LAKE RIGHTS
houses sold
houses sold
HOUSES BOUGHT
ALL CASH
ANY CONDITION
house wanted
ESTATE SPECIALIST
or call 1-800-882-6030 Ext 607
24/7 FREE Community Service
houses sold
Health
Services
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 35
WALKING
DISTANCE TO
SHUL, WHITE
LAKE, NY
Jason Grossman
845-796-6065
Stamford, NY. Close to Ski lodge
and Windom Baseball Hall of Fame. 6 yr
old Ranch 3 brs, 2 full bths, kit, dining rm,
Bsmt., garage, huge generator, water
filter system. Move-in-cond. Great views.
40 ft storage bin, 24 ft shed. Reduced to
$169K. DVD avail. Owner will
partially finance qualified buyers.
718-979-2265
BRICK TOWNHOUSE
SOUTH FALLSBURG, NY
WALKING DISTANCE TO
SHUL, LESS
THAN ½ MILE
$129,000
Call Jason
Grossman
845-796-6065
JEFFERSON, NY
Close to Wyndom Ski Lodge
Baseball Hall of Fame
Hunters Paradise w 40/ft.
deluxe RV, 40’ Storage Bin
34’ shed, 24 ft. storage shed,
electric well, 1000 gal
Septic tank, 2.2 Acres
Low taxes, $95,000
718-979-2265
*FREE
REAL ESTATE
SEMINAR
Call now to register and
get additional details.
Inviting all Buyers and
Sellers. Don’t miss out.
Complimentary snacks
and refreshments
will be served.
718-454-9000
upstate
DOWNTOWN BINGHAMTON
Great Investment or house to live in.
2 Fam. Vic. Old world style,
6 RM on 1st & 2nd Floor,
fireplace, Attic, Bsmt, Pvt. Drwy, Gar
$1800 income, Asking $129K
347-866-5619, 607-655-1962
718-266-9700
warehouse 4 rent
RIDGEWOOD
WAREHOUSE LOFT
2nd Floor Loft 4000 Sq. ft.
Clean- Secure- 3 phase pwr.
Gas Heat- Heavy Floor Load
$3500/mo.
516-946-7771
unfurnished apt.
CALL DAVE DAYS
FLUSHING 158TH ST.
Near Northern Blvd. &
LIRR. New 1 BR - $1,275
4th flr. walkup. No Pets. No
brokers. No Fee
718-358-3564
718-575-9600
Health
Services
body work
SUMMER
PROMOTION
$35
$40/hr
body work
PLUS 30 MINUTES
FREE FOOT RUB
718-224-0648
200-12 44 AVE BAYSIDE
FOREST HILLS
BODY WORK
NICE ASIAN GIRLS
7 Days 10am - 12am
718-520-6688
109-09 72nd Road 2nd Fl.
Bet. Queens Blvd. & Austin St.
Natural
Health Service
Muscle Relaxation
718-207-2634
$35
90 Minutes
60 min. Body Work
30 min. Free Foot Massage
7 Days 10:00am - 9:30pm
718-357-8889
192-04 Northern Blvd.
Flushing, NY 11358
$35 90 min
60 min Body Work
30 min Free
Foot Massage
718-631-5888
7 Days 10:30am-9:30pm
45-43 C Bell Blvd
Bayside, NY 11361-3352
FREE Parking
GRAND OPENING
Bodywork $40/hr.
Plus 20 min FREE
Foot Rub
Women & Couples Welcome
347-200-7200
87-18 Queens Blvd., 2nd Fl. Elmhurst
massage therapy
We treat many health issues
NYS Licensed
Call
6am-8pm
718-321-2235
143-25 41 Ave Flushing NY 11355
BEST BODY RUB
BY BEAUTIFUL
ASIAN GIRLS
$50/HR
347-233-7662
GRAND
OPENING
ACU SPA
11am-10pm • 1 hr. $40
718-205-2502
85-14 Queens Blvd. 2nd Fl.
Elmhurst NY
Grand Opening
MASSAGE
ACUPUNCTURE
347-348-6584
Applehealingspa.com
41-28 71st St. Woodside
Page 36 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
Health Services
massage therapy
massage therapy
Home Services
air conditioning
air conditioning
AVELLINO
CONSTRUCTION CORP
construction
construction
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
LICENSED & INSURED
acupuncture
acupuncture
Medical
Medical Acupuncture
Acupuncture
RRoonnggllaann ((RRhhooddaa))ZZhheenngg,, M
MDD
YYaallii LLii,, M
MDD
We treat the following problems and many more
bathrooms
bathrooms
• Landscaping
• Basements
• Roofing
• Carpentry
• Extensions
• Sidewalk
• Point
917-804-0531
Lic#28584
•Neck, Back pain • Arthritis joint and spine pain
•Rotator cuff syndrome, shoulder bursitis
•Tendonitis, Fibromyalgia • Various headaches
•Allergies, Dry cough • Infertility, PMS
•Menopause Syndrome • Acne, and other skin problems
•Peripheral neuropathy, Post-chemo reactions • Weight loss
SQUARE
CONSTRUCTION & DESIGN
EXTERIOR:
EXTERIOR: Roofing • Siding • Decks
Concrete • Brick
Driveways
Pavers • Stoops
We do it•all!All
household•needs!
INTERIOR:
INTERIOR: Remodelling • Kitchens • Bathrooms
Basements • Carpentry • Painting
• Sheetrock • Wood Floors
Most Insurance Accepted
(718) 961-9618
39-07 Prince Street, 4J, Flushing, NY 11354
(Tue, Thurs & Sat)
FREE ESTIMATES
Cell: 347-662-0651
Lic. #1470188 / Insured
Off: 718-659-0405
[email protected]
ELDER CARE SERVICES, INC.
elder care consult
• Kitchens
• Painting
• Bathrooms
• Concrete
elder care consult
MEDICAID PROFESSIONALS
• Over 18 years experience filing Medicaid
Home Care and Nursing Home applications
• Apply for pooled income trusts
• Protect your home, assets and income
• Advocate for additional Home Care hours
• Nursing Home placement of your choice
• Full service including challenge denials,
JACK LIPPMANN recertification representation & much more
FREE Consultation
www.eldercareservicesny.com
108-18 Queens Blvd. Suite 801, Forest Hills, N.Y. 11375
(718) 575-5700
medical care
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Dermatology
Rapid, Effective Treatment,
Confidential. HIV test.
Dr. D. Park, MD, Specialist
40-44 82 St., Elmhurst, Queens
(1 blck frm Roosevelt Ave. #7 Train)
Accept Major Insrnce, Credit Cards
718-429-3800
lose weight
ACCEPT THE
WEIGHT LOST
CHALLENGE!
the SHAKE!
Drink Drink
the SHAKE!
the FLAKE!
Eat theEat
FLAKE!
Get
in SHAPE!
the WEIGHT!
Get inLose
SHAPE!
Lose the WEIGHT!
Go to www.overview.vi.com
Call 917-754-2731
Join @ http://nandranie.bodybyvi.com
Home
Services
bed bugs
WHO’S SLEEPING
WITHYOUTONIGHT!
Remove Bed Bugs,
REMOVE HEAD LICE
Environmentally Friendly
Lice & Mites!
Nontoxic Kleen Green Stops
pests dead, Safe for children
and pets. Fast Shipping!
Mention code FALL & get 10% off
www.KleenGreen.com
800-807-9350
research study
Do you have
CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE
PULMONARY DISEASE
also known as
COPD?
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(COPD) includes chronic bronchitis and
emphysema. If you have COPD you may
be interested in volunteering for our
COPD CLINICAL RESEARCH STUDY
Qualified participants must:
• Have COPD
• Be 40 years of age or older
• Be a current or former smoker
Those who qualify receive study-related
exams, evaluations and study drug or
placebo at no cost. Medical insurance
is not required and compensation for
time and travel may be provided.
For more information call
Home
Services
212-777-6977
awnings
CLASSICAL CUSTOM
AWNINGS
ALUMINUM • LEXAN
RETRACTABLE
FREE ESTIMATES
SINCE 1980
CLASSICAL-IRON.COM
718-528-2401
LIC#1069538
NEW HEIGHTS
CONSTRUCTION LLC
construction
construction
Siding • Windows • Roofing
Fences • Kitchens • Painting • Baths
Basements • Decks • Doors
Awnings • Patio Enclosures
Brick Pointing • Concrete Stucco
VISIT OUR ONLINE SHOWROOM
800-525-5102
718-767-0044
S&S CONSTRUCTION
FALL SPECIALS
ON WINDOWS
NYC License
#1191201
www.newheightsconstructionllc.com
FREE ESTIMATES
QUALITY WORK THAT FITS YOUR BUDGET
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR
SPECIALIZING IN BATHROOM, KITCHEN AND
BASEMENT DESIGNING AND REMODELING
EXTENSIONS, SHEETROCK, FLOORING,
FRAMING, PAINTING, WINDOWS & DOORS
LICENSED WITH NYC AND DOB
INSURED
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE
347-665-3832
FRANCISCAN
CONSTRUCTION CORP • EST. 1977
• Dormers & Extensions
• New Homes/Doors/Windows
• Alterations & Repairs
• Kitchens & Bathrooms
• Tile, Marble & Granite
10%
OFF
• Fire & Water Damage Repairs
• Concrete pavers
• Masonry • Stucco
Violations Removed!
FREE ESTIMATES
Licensed in ALL 5 Boroughs & Nassau County
347-242-1521
Fax #: 516-739-5173
[email protected]
AHMED
CONSTRUCTION CO.
construction
Brickwork, Sidewalks, Waterproofing,
Roofing, Painting, Silicone Coating,
Steam Cleaning, Pointing, Sheetrock
Tel. 718-740-2532
Cell 917-862-1632
Free est.
Lic # 1001349
carpentry
GARY GRAY
718-658-7264
•Kitchens •Bathrooms
•Custom Closets •Windows
•Doors •General Contracting
Lic #858480
Approved by NY Rising & EPA
for Sandy Repairs
•Quality Workmanship
PLACE YOUR AD 718-357-7400 Ext.151
Home Services
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 37
contracting
contracting
contracting
cleaning
MURPHY’S
MAIDS
cleaning
Give Dust A Clean Sweep!
Book Your First
Home Cleaning
With Us!
We Specialize in
DEEP CLEANING
Call us:
718-865-8583
www.spotlesscastle.com
cleaning
Old Fashioned Irish Cleaning”
(718) 279-3334
Specializing in all phases of Domestic Service
(one time, weekly or monthly service)
PETER
GENERAL
contracting
CONTRACTING
Roofing Tile Work
Painting Brickwork
Bathrooms Kitchens
Woodwork Painting
718-710-8114
home improve
home improve
COST RITE
CONTRACTING
FreeEstimates • Licensed&Insured
• Kitchens
• Tile Work
• Painting
• Doors
• Bathrooms
• Sheetrock
• Wood Floors
• Carpentry
• Windows
718-945-6612
917-676-0021
Ken LIC# 1210212
HANDYMAN
SPECIALIST
handyman
All types of Home Repairs
Painting • Tiles • Sheetrock
Concrete • Bricks • Pavers
Honest & Reliable
Cell:
Lic. NYC 1421790 • Insured
631-286-0049
516-523-2090
PAINTERS & TILES R US
HANDYMAN
I Will Beat Any Estimate
Interior & Exterior - Over 20 Years of Experience
BASEMENTS • KITCHENS • BATHROOMS
•
•
•
•
•
•
Painting/Skincoating
Waterproofing
Custom Tile Installation
Sheetrock & Taping
Flooring
Carpentry/Doors
•
•
•
•
•
•
Wallpaper Removal
Tile Repair
Water Damage Repairs
Wood Floors
Plasterwork & Moldings
Custom Decks
LOW
Call Anthony 347-226-0202 PRICES
15% OFF Fully Insured • Free Estimates
with this ad
ALL WORK GUARANTEED!
exterminator
ACE PEST CONTROL
Over 35 years service
to the community
Residential/Commercial
Call for all your
pest problems
718-225-8585
Lic. & Ins.
exterminator
JOHN J. MCCANN
EXTERMINATING COMPANY
Family Owned & Operated Since 1934
ALL PEST CONTROL SERVICES
STRUCTURAL REPAIRS
TERMITE & HOME INSPECTIONS
43-25 162nd St. Flushing
Tel: 718-359-6454
[email protected]
www.mccannexterminating.com
HANDYMAN JOE
Painting Specialist, Tile Work,
Bathrooms & all types
of Installation
Free Estimates
Reasonable Rates
718-907-0618 • 917-865-5033
Lic. & Insured
Your Friendly
HANDYMAN
Painting, Wallpapering, Tiling,
Clogged Tubs, Carpentry, Roofing.
No Job is too small for us!
We also alter clothes in your home
Call William (718-793-3531)
MY HOUSE HOME IMPROVEMENT INC.
We Do It All! No Job Too Big or Small!
• Extensions
• Basements
• Kitchens
• Painting
• Sheetrock
• Cement
• Carpentry
• Tiles
• Bathrooms
• All Woodwork
ADRIAN Project Manager
A Full Line of All
Your Home &
Building Needs
Lic. #1282515
GREAT WORK
At LOW PRICES
718-974-6983
PLACE YOUR AD HERE
718-357-7400 Ext. 151
Page 38 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
Home Services
furniture repair
furniture repair
floors
floors
J&S FLOOR SERVICE
•Scraping •Polyurethane
•Staining
•Bleaching White Floors
•Waxing •Stripping
•Repairs & Installation
We also do Painting,
Wallpaper Removal,
Tiling & Dry Wall
WOOD FLOORS
Sanding & Refinishing
89¢sq.ft.
plumbing
heating
P&H Time Corp.
moving
iron work
stone & tile work
tree service
tree service
Water, Sewer, Gas, Boiler & Radiator
Installation & Repair.
Commercial & Residential
718-926-4621
DECK RESTORATIONS
Shomer Shabbos
We’re available till Midnight
painting
Reasonable Prices • Free Estimates
moving
646-715-8626
917-459-2421
718-464-4535
roofing
roofing
ON TOP CONSTRUCTION
& ROOFING
24/7
Lic.# 1301530
painting
Anthony’s 1st Class
Painting & Handyman
$50 Per Room
Insured Bonded
• Roofing
• Shingles
• Rubber Roofs
• Skylights
718-852-3481
347-457-0147
with your paint
ars
20 yerience
Lic. & Ins.
Expe
Family Owned
25 Years Exp.
We Start / We Finish
• Soffits
• Rip-Outs
• Waterproofing
• Carpentry
• Masonry
• Sheetrock
• Painting
• Power Washing
15% Senior Discount - FREE ESTIMATES
All Work Guaranteed - Owner Operated Every Job
CELL:
786-763-5888
Allstate Tree & Shrub
Tree Removal • Pruning • Trimming & Stump Removal
painting
gutters
gutters
LOCAL
PAINTER/
HANDYMAN
No job too big or too small.
Free Estimate.
Senior Citizen Discount.
Work area cleaned daily.
Polite, professional service.
718-352-2181
OLD H.P.
WATERPROOFING &
ROOFING
• Steam Cleaning • Brick Pointing
• Cement & Brickwork • Stucco
• Windows • Shingling
• Flat Roofs
• Gutters & Leaders
• Painting • Scaffold Work
Free Estimates
All Work Guaranteed
Fully Insured/Lic. #883368
EveryDayMovers
(718) 969-6752
moving & storage
917-873-4169
718-200-0598
Residential & Commercial
Local/Long Distance
24/7 Lic & Ins.
moving
Moving and delivery service
Van Line. 5 Boroughs & NJ
Last minute moves
Commercial/Residential
www.everydaymovers.com
BEST DEALS
MOVING & STORAGE
718-640-4153
Owner Operated Over 20 Years Experience
• Hazardous & Large Tree Removal
• 75 Foot Aerial Bucket
Licensed &
• City Permits Obtained
Insured
• Residential/Commercial
• Immediate Response to all inquires
• Available Year Round - Free Estimates
Cut & Split Seasoned FIREWOOD Delivered
Prompt Service
800-557-0026
telephone serv.
telephone serv.
Home Services
JP MUSSO
roofing
roofing
ROOFING AND SIDING
• Roofing
• Re-Roofing
• Siding
• Rips
• Gutters
• Slate etc.
• Painting
• Plastering
• Taping
• Sheet Rock
• Tile Work
• Kitchen
• Bathroom
NO JOB TOO BIG OR SMALL
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 39
General Services
WANTED: USED CARS!!
autos wanted
autos wanted
HIGHEST CASH PAID!!
WE VISIT YOU!!
ANY YEAR CONDITION & MILEAGE
OR DONATE TAX DEDUCTIBLE
- PLUS CASH!
CALL JOHNNY: 516-297-2277
ANY CONDITION
Lic. & Insured
718-600-5186
home improve
Mr. G’s Home
Improvements
Bathrooms • Carpentry • Kitchens Painting • Decks • Windows
Doors • Tiles • Wallpaper
• Free Estimates
No Job Too Small • Lic. 1035048
718-762-1442
A1
tree services
TREE
SERVICE
WE SHOW UP
• Pruning
• Toppings
• Removals
24 Hour Emergency Service
Fully Insured |Senior Citizen Discount
TOM
718-430-7142
917-364-9059
ALL
SEASONS
AUTO
SCHOOL
41-02 Bell Blvd. Suite L1
Bayside, NY 11361
5 Hour Class
DDC - Course
718-225-8438
situation wanted
Very Reliable &
Trustworthy middle aged
woman is seeking
A Live-in Position to take
care of an elderly person,
child or do house keeping
Call Joyce 516-808-5459
security training
Are you interested in
becoming a Security Guard?
Lea For Security Officers can
help you. Get your training
from former & present Law
Enforcement Professionals
Schedule your training TODAY
347-293-7224
attorney
• FALSE ARRESTS
• CRIMINAL DEFENSE
• PERSONAL INJURY
• ACCIDENTS
• POLICE BRUTALITY
• TRAFFIC VIOLATIONS
LAW OFFICES OF
MICHAEL J. LARSON, P.C.
401 Broadway, Suite 806, New York, NY 10013
FIRED?
Free Consultation • 212-528-0886
Email: [email protected] • www.mlarsonlaw.com
*No fee on false arrest or personal injury cases
unless you recover*
Former prosecuter and United States Army Attorney
OWED OVERTIME?
212-286-1425
Windows
Falling Down?
windows
LAW OFFICE OF WILLIAM C. RAND
488 MadisonAve., Suite 1100, New York, NY 10022
[email protected]
Need Caulking
or rescreening?
Window & Door
Repairs & Replacements.
birth injury
legal
bus tours
bus tours
funeral services
funeral services
CALL DEN-MAR:
718-457-8068
den-marcontracting.com
License # 0672990
“Like” us
on Facebook
Queens Tribune
Newspaper
General Services
auto instruction
attorney
COMPUTER
HELP
computer services
Software/Hardware
Problem Fixing,
DSL/Cable Connection
Internet Troubleshooting,
Data Recovery, Tutoring,
Upgrades,
Performance Tuning,
Networks
Home or Office
Michael
718-261-8314
COMPUTER
SERVICES
Home / Business, Repair,
Upgrades, Tune-Ups,
Tutoring, Sales,
Tablets, Smart Phones
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Queens Tribune
Newspaper
Page 40 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
General Services
dating service
dating service
FAST DIVORCE
divorce
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auto repair
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SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR 50 YEARS
DJ’S SHORT NOTICE
DJs/Parties
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office furniture
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5 HOUR BLOCK PARTY PACKAGE, MOON BOUNCE,
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psychic
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TOOLS, ALL KINDS.
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Ext. 151
Watches, broken or working lighters,
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pens, costume jewelry, statues,
clocks, mirrors & pre-1965 furniture!
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wanted to buy
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seeks either naturalist,
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QUEENS TRIBUNE NEWSPAPER
VISIT US ONLINE QUEENSTRIBUNE.COM
CLASSIFIED DEADLINE Monday Before 5 P.M.
Unless Otherwise Specified
Queens Tribune Policy: All advertisers are responsible to give correct advertising as it will appear. The Queens Tribune will assume no financial responsibility for errors or omissions. We
reserve the right to edit, reject or reclassify any ad. All ads are prepaid! NO REFUNDS, FUTURE AD CREDIT ONLY. Ads ordered to run more than one week as part of a consecutive
week rate may be cancelled after the first week but no refund will be issued!
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 41
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QueensTribune.com
6 4 6 -3 9 9 -5 0 5 4
N ear Queens Blvd.
Unless Otherwise Specified
Queens Tribune Policy: All advertisers are
responsible to give correct advertising as it
will appear. The Queens Tribune will assume no financial responsibility for errors
oromissions. We reserve the right to edit,
reject or reclassify any ad. All ads are prepaid! NO REFUNDS, FUTURE AD
CREDIT ONLY. Ads ordered to run more
than one week as part of a consecutive
week rate may be cancelled after the first
week but no refund will be issued!
Q
The Tale Of Joe Hosey
A former Queens Tribune
reporter has found himself at
the center of a fairly gruesome
trial out in Chicago's south
suburbs.
Joseph Hosey worked for
the Tribune in the early-1990s,
under editor David Oats, before moving to Illinois.
As a reporter for Patch.com,
Hosey broke the story last year
of a double murder in Joliet,
south of Chicago. Hosey got
a hold of police reports before
any other reporters and used
the detailed info from those
reports to tell the tale of a
gruesome double murder.
The stories led to an investigation on how Hosey got a
hold of the police reports - 500
city officials swore they never
released them. Hosey was
ordered to reveal his source.
He refused, and is now facing
CONFIDENTIAL
Page 42 Tribune Sept. 11-17, 2014 • www.queenstribune.com
Photo Courtesy of Twitter
heavy fines and jail time as a
debate over Sunshine Laws in
Illinois rages.
QConf is following the case
closely, as Hosey's case not
only could affect the future of
Sunshine Laws - which call for
transparency in government but also because he's an alum
of this publication.
Good luck, Joe!
U.S. Open Photo by Bruce Adler
Droning Over The U.S. Open
Feighery was charged with
reckless endangerment, violation of local law and failure to
comply with a sign, according
to reports.
Instead of joining tennis
fans for a beer in the Borough
that night, Feighery – and his
drone, which the police confiscated – spent an unceremonious night at the 110th precinct
station house.
Game, set, match, Queens
cops.
Something Stinks In Queens
According to this survey,
you might want to cover your
nose the next time you are in
Malba.
The neighborhood was
found to be the smelliest in
Queens, according to the website brickunderground.com,
which conducted the survey
of the stinkiest areas in the five
Boroughs.
The study collecting 311
odor-related complaints between July 2013 and 2014,
based off the population of the
2010 census.
The survey found that, dur-
Penny Louis
QConf is edited by:
Steven J. Ferrari
Contributors: Bruce
Adler, Jordan Gibbons,
Vladimir Grjonko, Luis
Gronda, Walter Karling,
Joe Marvilli, Marcia
Moxom Comrie, Michael
Nussbaum, Michael
Schenkler, Jackie
Strawbridge.
Follow us on Twitter:
@QueensTrib
@SEQueensPress
Like us on
Facebook:
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QueensTrib
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QueensPress
If you can’t get tickets, just
get a drone.
That was the thinking behind one Yonkers resident’s
scheme for a sneak peek at the
Serena Williams-Flavia Pennetta semi-final match at the
U.S. Open last Wednesday.
Police spotted the drone
hovering near empty courts
early in the evening, and had
its pilot, Daniel Feighery,
in custody before Williams’
match point.
Musicians OF QuEEns
ing that time period, there were
29.9 odor-related complaints
per capita in Malba. Second
on that list is Lindenwood,
the southern Queens neighborhood adjacent to Howard
Beach, with 22.75. Third is
Nesponsit with 21.9, after
them is St. Albans with 17.8
and rounding out the top five
is College Point with 17.2.
Data was also posted for the
least smelly neighborhoods in
Queens, with North Corona,
Corona and Woodside found to
have the least smell complaints
during that year.
X-Mas Back
In Bayside
It may still be 90 degrees
outside, but Councilman
Paul Vallone (D-Bayside) is
already making plans for the
holidays.
Vallone announced recently
that he is bringing back the
Santa Claus Parade that has not
marched down
Bell Boulevard
since 2004.
Bayside resident Ben Fried
began organizing
the event in 1995 and raised
funds by asking local merchants to chip in $10 each to
cover the expenses. In 2005,
no one was able to organize it
so it fell to the wayside.
Fried passed away last year
at the age of 98 and was honored by Vallone when a portion
of 43rd Avenue was renamed
after him.
While we here at QConf
think it’s a great idea to get the
community together during
the holidays, the only thing
that would make this idea
better is if Vallone volunteered
his time to be Ol’ Saint Nick
himself and toss candy canes
to his constituents.
Some bands create music
that you want to listen to with
your headphones on at night,
sitting back, closing your
eyes and focusing all your
attention on the intricacies
and subtle melodies that
come up. Penny Louis fits
this category wonderfully.
With touches of keyboards,
strings and tight, almost
jazzy guitar lines, this western Queens group writes
songs with many layers to
unveil.
The five-piece has slowly
evolved since its first two
members, vocalist/keyboardist Pauline and percussionist
MC, started jamming together
in 2012. The two were friends
before they were collaborators, a situation that was
true for most of the group’s
origin. MC was friends with
a violinist, May, who joined
Penny Louis. While John, the
bassist, discovered the band
through Facebook videos in
early 2013, he too had run into
the band when they played a
restaurant during his dinner.
Guitarist Nikholai is the latest
addition to Penny Louis.
For Pauline, Penny Louis
challenged her both on stage
and off. She said she struggles with her stage presence
during live concerts as well
as with creating a sound
that stands out from the
thousands of bands already
in existence.
“Personally, it would
be the parts where I'm not
singing or playing the guitar
or keys. My band would tell
you that I was horrible at
talking to the audience and
outside of thank you's and
how are you's, I'm just pretty
much speechless,” she said.
“Another thing would be
creating an original sound
that sets you apart from other
musicians who are already
out there.”
Despite these challenges,
Pauline said she loves playing live and getting the
audience’s attention with the
band’s songs, no matter how
the crowd chooses to experience and enjoy the music.
“Ironically, I do love being
on the stage and singing my
songs, swaying my hips a
little, nodding my head, closing my eyes and feeding off
of the crowd's energy,” she
said. “Whether they're dancing like a looney or as quiet as
a church dweller, it's amazing
to have an audience.”
Penny Louis also pushed
Pauline to write more often,
using time at work on the train
to create sounds in her head
that she can bring back to the
band for them to build on.
The group is working on
its debut EP/album, a process
that has been both frustrating and inspiring for Pauline.
She compared the nature of
writing and recording a song
to an oil painting. The final
product is not discovered or
noticeable at the beginning
of the road.
“I have learned so much
because of it. I am more attentive, I am more open-minded
and I can pinpoint what I
wanted to add or tweak,”
she said. “I also think that
the band improved after we
started recording - we are
more aware of what we are
playing and how it would
sound together.”
Penny Louis will play at
Choga Restaurant in Manhattan on Sept. 24 and The Bitter
End in Brooklyn in October.
For the latest from Penny
Louis, visit www.wearepennylouis.com.
Got Talent?
Email us at [email protected]
for inclusion in an upcoming edition of
QConfdential!
www.queenstribune.com • Sept. 11-17, 2014 Tribune Page 43
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