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Behind the scenes access to the new NYCB Live Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum. more
In recent weeks, local teens have serenaded the Glen Cove community with their vocal skills as part of a contest for Downtown Sounds Teen Idol contest. The contest wrapped up its second year, naming Tatiana Andino-Mendez as the winner, who only auditioned for the contest after some encouragement from her friends and choir teacher Ed Norris. more
Candidates vying for 12 seats on the City Council took part in a two-hour forum at Glen Cove High School on Oct. 25, hosted and moderated by the local League of Women Voters. The forum gave … more
Glen Cove police were led on a car chase after receiving a call at 12:15 on Monday alleging a woman was being held against her will. Detective Lt. John Nagle of the Glen Cove Police Department … more
Following a fire in August 2021, Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 347 in Glen Cove has been restored with community support, set to reopen after this year's Memorial Day parade. The fire also affected Nosh, a pandemic initiative providing meals, but they've returned to the VFW, grateful for the additional space. Challenges persist, including depleted scholarship funds, but initiatives like Niko Stavrianos' Eagle Scout project aim to support veterans and their families. more
The political similarities between former President Donald Trump and Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman are now impossible to miss. Which is probably just what Blakeman intends. more
An aphorism often attributed to Mark Twain states that “History doesn’t repeat itself, but it does rhyme.” Readers of a certain age will, as I do, recall the upheavals of the 1960s and early ’70s. Recent events set me musing about the similarities and differences between today’s “student protests” and those of yesteryear. more
The Uniondale HS show choir, Rhythm of the Night, dazzled the crowd with their performance. more
Commuters on the Oyster Bay Branch of the Long Island Rail Road can expect a lot of changes come Sept. 5. But what the LIRR is touting as simplified trips will be expensive for commuters like Jeffry Brown. A CEO of a company in Manhattan, he is trying to convince his employees to return to work in person, which would require for most taking the Long Island Rail Road. Brown wrote in an email to the Herald that the changes will cost him an additional $120 a month for a municipal parking permit to use another station which he will need to do because of the LIRR’s changes. Although public policies should encourage people to take mass transit, the proposed changes will do the opposite for the Greenvale commuter. more
The next congressional election is still a year and a half away, but the roster of candidates lining up to evict Congressman George Santos from his House seat is already sizable. more
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