Politics & Government

Headlines From Around LI

Bollywood dancing, a book drive and perfect bowlers.

Some of the news from communities around Long Island this week.

Spreading Indian Culture

Herricks Middle School plays host to a different sort of class and courseload as was children and parents bustled about the building’s halls being taught dance moves by the Young Indian Culture Group.

Find out what's happening in Port Washingtonwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The YICG was formed in 1994 when Executive Director Rathi Raja, President Urmila Shivaram, Treasurer Vasundhara Sureka and Secretary Runi Ratnam came together in order to create a more structural basis for celebrating Indian culture.

The group teaches a variety of 55 classes every Saturday from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m at the middle school, some of which include teaching, Hindi, Cooking, Tabla and Bollywood Dance among others.

Find out what's happening in Port Washingtonwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Chaminade Bowling Completes Perfect Season

The Chaminade Flyers ended the season with a perfect record, 14-0, with a 6-3 win over Holy Trinity.

New Hyde Park Awarded $125,000 in Community Development Grants

The Village of New Hyde Park will receive $125,000 in a Community Development Block Grant. It will fund a variety of projects in the village, including streetscape improvements and commercial façade enhancement that will complement already-completed sidewalk improvements, newly installed decorative street lights, pocket parks and new brick paving.

Farmingdale Book Drive

The Farmingdale School District, along with the Farmingdale Breakfast Rotary Club, recently participated in an island-wide project which collected more than 2,500 textbooks for students in Kenya.

Massapequa Contractor Renovates Home of Leukemia Patient

Gary Zaccaro has been doing business as a contractor in Massapequa for nearly 20 years. He's also in the business of being a good neighbor.

Zaccaro, the president of Ambassador Home Improvement, may have done his finest work these past few weeks, when he renovated the basement of a Massapequa man who has leukemia and paid for the job himself.

"He's the most kind-hearted person there is for reaching out and doing this," said , who will use the basement as a place to recuperate.

Nassau Planned Parenthood Welcomes Fund Decision

The president of Planned Parenthood of Nassau County expressed joy Friday at the decision of the Susan G. Komen for the Cure to reverse course and not cut funding to her organization.

Komen earlier this week revealed that it would sever ties to any organization under investigation, which included Planned Parenthood, because a Republican congressman is looking into whether the organization spent tax dollars on abortions. The reaction against Komen's decision was immediate and intense, across Facebook, Twitter and othe social media sites. And on Friday, Komen reversed itself, saying its stance had been misinterpreted as political.


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