{ title: 'The Freeport Baldwin Leader. (Freeport, N.Y.) 1987-current, July 21, 1994, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071065/1994-07-21/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071065/1994-07-21/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071065/1994-07-21/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071065/1994-07-21/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Freeport Memorial Library
^ • i < ■ / i.'-; • !■ I ^ ! { ' i - I » .. * : s Free Jim, free services, free products! Sec 8-23 Freeport * Baldwin 60ih Year. Ko. 28 Freeport, N.Y. 11520 The Cboummity Newspaper •nnusday, July 21.1994 25c Residents question legality of E. Dean Street 'school by Sue Morgan failure to ioform oeigbbors directly years.*'Leo Schulte of tbe Kortii East ship wiQ be given. What ti 2 q;^;)eAs to the . . until two weeks aga Freeport Gvie Associados urged the hoosebuptothedistna\ Angry H. Dean Street teside&is \None of the lesidenis were * sehod board. MrsJCaskellb “dead end assailed the Board o f Educatioo last contKted directly by anyone about 8< ^ youte doing what you w » t Wsdiesday on the subject of plans for a 'ptans and the itupaci on our with die boose.\ boose the school d i s t ^ inherited. . ' oeighboihood,\ charged Frances Siein.. Mr^ Schultz . . One man pledged to picket (he bouse who has lived for over 40 years on East right should go to Freeport High at 2 0 9 ^ Dean \24 hours a day,\ aM '.Dean, a womn lald sbe \would lay down In frost of the cement mixers\ if oonsttuctka work was resumed. .When questioned by residents, Mr. __________ Schlesinger s^d the interprctaUoo of Mr^ Schultz also said the money by (hewillwashis a n d thcsdi^boanrs. . Intent of will? Community outreach Superintendent of Schools Or. School, not to allevitie space constrainis. but School District Attorney Stephen Schlesingcr replied that \ b gaily, there b no s u ^ thing as RichaidBonea opened the incettng last . Also (^Kstiooed many times was the Freeport High School, only the week with a review of the district's Residents qaestkxied the legality o f intent o f (he late Jeannette Kiskeli, Freeport Uaioa Free School District. If duperate need Cx add&ibnal spye, and the suddenness with which they said who left her home, valued at a b o u t' something is gi^-en to the left arm, it is its attempts to encourage \a cUsuue of - the district moved in to begin $200J)00.as«'eUascloseto$80j00Qin given to the \khols body. The scholar- shared decision-making.” ceoovatioQ work on 209 East peaa, and cash to Freeport High School to . (eentmuadenpooeiT) the morality of placing the cenual establish an annual scholarship of . registry and other programs on one of SI,000 to be awarded in her name to the \most presiigiDua\ blocks in Lhesenicrclass northeast Freeport in the first place. \Sell o;:se and you’ll have all They also reiterated the d * »y you need for DISCUSSING PLANS for the irterior of 209 East Dean Street at a meet;nf» last week at Atkinson S'^hool schor • residents and staff n v r. GHOST lETTERS $pe3 out Grand Unicvi, whlch d o ^ for business s t 5 . last Wednesday. A s s i s t e d markets has bought the S. Long Beach Avenue store. . Goodbye, Grand Union! NEFCA'S Len Schultz was among the first speakers to assail the school board over its plans to renovate the inherited home of Jeannette KaskeH as a site for the school district’s central registry and several other ^ g r a m s . ' by Sue Morgan It has DO great historic agnificance, the buU£ng is unrem a r^le, but the closing of Freeport's Grand Union supermarket will Dcvenheless leave a hole in the neighhoihbod it served for over20yeais. The Grand Union chain, which recently, took over a large Shoprite market in North Bcllmore, basjiold the Freeport Store to Associated food : mariiks. Regutar shoppers were startled last Wednesday *to see a oodee oa the door saying (be supennarket would close at 5 p A . that day. Shelves were virtriDy te n of periduddes. \This is very sad,” said Kathy Zamoch, who grew up in Freeport \i loved Graxal Unica. Ii'a small cooogh, ftot too big, so you can find, everything.\ \What a disappointment this is.\ lo.'zrented neighborhood shopper Izeua Gale'. . Frtepbrter Louise Fox worked at Grand Union for 22 years uhiil she rctiral two years ago. She recalled the many l e g i ^ shoppers over the yean. Many of them walked to the super* . market from nearby apartments, and were on a Hrst name basis with employees. ' ' \I'm so sad it's closing,\ said Fox. It's a real neighborhood storel I stiU^top there my^lf.\ ' ' Sbe remembered occasions when c a r ters kicked in their own money . 'when a casiomer inadvetuntly ran shoo. Over h a years at Grand Uiuon, said Ms. Fox, tots whose moms poshed them through the store riding in shopping cans wound wocklng there yearsh^ Asked why the store was closing after so many years. Grand Union Vice Prerideiu D n >Ulencoort replied, \We received a good offer for the store and we took IL It's as simple as Uut\ i . f