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Wantagh Herald 07-03-2025

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_________________ WANtAGH ________________

Honored for their excellence

Praised for arts and academics

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Page 9

Vol. 73 No. 27

JUlY 3 - 9, 2025

516.683.8376 • 392

$1.00

EAST Meadow Ave., EAS

T Meadow

1308164

Protecting Your Home from Pests for Over 55 Year s.

Care network is expanding Mount Sinai South Nassau to open new medical center in Wantagh

Greenlawn, in Suffolk County. Dr. Adhi Sharma, president and CEO of Mount Sinai South Nearly a decade after Mount Nassau, said the facility will Sinai South Nassau purchased provide comprehensive and colproperty in Wantagh, a new laborative care, making it possible for patients to multi-specialty medreceive all the serical care facility is set to open this vices they need month, bringing under one roof expanded access to while enabling phyhealth services for s i c i a n s t o wo rk Long Islanders. closely together. The 63,000“This space is a square-foot, fourhealing space, a story facility, at 2020 welcoming space, a Wantagh Ave., will w a r m s p a c e fo r offer specialty serpatients to come, vices including oftentimes at a infusion, cardiology, point of despair in wo m e n’s h e a l t h , their care journey,” digestive health and Dr. Shar ma said or thopedics. T he during a preview building, a $70 miltour of the facility lion investment by on June 25. “So, Mount Sinai South hopefully, they’ ll Nassau — a nonfeel the love and profit teaching hosenergy that was put pital in Oceanside this space by DR. ADHi SHARmA into with regional faciliour architects and President and CEO, ties across Long designers.” Island — is expected Mount Sinai South The hospital’s to serve roughly board of directors 1,200 to 1,500 patients a day, purchased the property in 2016, according to hospital officials. intending to convert an office The medical director will be building into a state-of-the-art Dr. Sunil George, who served as medical facility. Mount Sinai associate medical director at addressed concerns about parkMount Sinai’s location in

By CHARlES SHAW

cshaw@liherald.com

T

Courtesy Wantagh School District

Hats off to us With heartfelt tributes, inspiring speeches, and a celebration of resilience and unity, members of Wantagh High School’s Class of 2025 marked their graduation at the school’s 70th commencement ceremony on June 21. Story, more photos, Page 3.

High school graduates honored for demonstrating service and commitment By CHARlES SHAW cshaw@liherald.com

The Seaford 9/11 Memorial Committee recently honored five graduating seniors from Seaford High School with the Patriot Award for their service, character and commitment — values that reflect the legacy of alumni lost on Sept. 11. This year’s recipients — valedictorian Anastasia Perlegis, salutatorian Ava Caruso, Emily Richardson, Jayne Singleton and Skyler Secondino — were announced at the graduation ceremony on June 13. They were each presented with the award and a $2,000 stipend at the June 23 dinner at the Crest Hollow Country Club in Woodbury.

The nonprofit memorial committee was established in 2002 to honor the memory of the high school’s five alumni who died in the attacks on the World Trade Center: brothers Thomas and Timothy Haskell, John Perry, Robert Sliwak and Michael Wittenstein. Perry was a New York City police officer; the Haskells were firefighters; and Sliwak and Wittenstein both worked for Cantor Fitzgerald at the World Trade Center. Memorial committee chairman Tom Condon, who started his teaching career at the high school in 1969, knew all five when they were students. He was a social studies teacher for Sliwak and Thomas Haskell, a guidance counselor for Perry, and knew Wittenstein through student Continued on page 20

his space is a healing space, a welcoming space, a warm space for patients to come, oftentimes at a point of despair in their care journey.

Continued on page 10


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