Assfinal Report

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Assfinal Report STATE OF NEW-YORK TAXABLE STATUS DATE 03/01/2021 COUNTY OF SUFFOLK Town of Southampton Page 2,033 2021 Assessment Roll And Levy Module Uniform % = 100 SWIS CODE 473689 ROLL SECTION 1 NAME AND ADDR. OF LAST SUFFOLK COUNTY TAX MAP, ADDRESS ASSESS LAND/TOTAL EXEMPTIONS EXEMPTIONS NET NET TAXABLE VALUE REPUTED AND ACCOUNT IDENTIF. MARKET VALUE TAXABL 1 ac30 628,800 1 ac40 628,800 1 ac50 628,800 Alan Lyman 473689 033.000-0001-002.000 $418,700 County 681,900 3 hh10 681,900 15 Stuyvesant Oval Apt 6D ITEM NO 232585.00 $681,900 Town 681,900 3 hz10 681,900 New York NY 10019 1590 Noyack Rd $681,900 473606 681,900 1 ac20 681,900 North Sea SCH # 473606 4l3606 681,900 5 fd38 681,900 TAX CODE CLASS 210 3 hp10 681,900 3 hp20 681,900 ACRES 0.960 8 ad20 681,900 4m3606 681,900 1 ac30 681,900 1 ac40 681,900 1 ac50 681,900 Roseann LaManna (Trustee) 473689 033.000-0001-003.000 $405,700 County 733,600 3 hh10 733,600 The Roseann LaManna 2007 DeclarationITEM NO of Trust 258385.00 $733,600 Town 733,600 3 hz10 733,600 300 East Overlook Rd Apt 321 1574 Noyack Rd $733,600 473606 733,600 1 ac20 733,600 Port Washington NY 11050 North Sea SCH # 473606 4l3606 733,600 5 fd38 733,600 TAX CODE CLASS 210 3 hp10 733,600 3 hp20 733,600 ACRES 0.930 8 ad20 733,600 4m3606 733,600 1 ac30 733,600 1 ac40 733,600 1 ac50 733,600 Daniel Neumann 473689 033.000-0001-004.001 $468,800 County 757,600 3 hh10 757,600 1556 Noyac Rd ITEM NO 279295.00 $757,600 Town 757,600 3 hz10 757,600 Southampton NY 11968 1556 Noyack Rd $757,600 473606 757,600 1 ac20 757,600 North Sea SCH # 473606 4l3606 757,600 5 fd38 757,600 TAX CODE CLASS 210 3 hp10 757,600 3 hp20 757,600 ACRES 1.070 8 ad20 757,600 4m3606 757,600 1 ac30 757,600 1 ac40 757,600 1 ac50 757,600 Elizabeth Mc Farlane 473689 033.000-0001-005.000 $395,200 County 854,400 3 hh10 854,400 1532 Noyack Rd ITEM NO 262825.00 $854,400 Town 854,400 3 hz10 854,400 Southampton, NY 11968 1532 Noyack Rd $854,400 473606 854,400 1 ac20 854,400 North Sea SCH # 473606 4l3606 854,400 5 fd38 854,400 TAX CODE CLASS 210 3 hp10 854,400 3 hp20 854,400 ACRES 1.130 8 ad20 854,400 4m3606 854,400 1 ac30 854,400 1 ac40 854,400 1 ac50 854,400 Stacey Campsey 473689 033.000-0001-006.000 $506,000 County 978,800 3 hh10 978,800 1520 Noyack Rd ITEM NO 272281.00 $978,800 Town 978,800 3 hz10 978,800 Southampton, NY 11968 1520 Noyack Rd $978,800 473606 978,800 1 ac20 978,800 North Sea SCH # 473606 4l3606 978,800 5 fd38 978,800 TAX CODE CLASS 210 3 hp10 978,800 3 hp20 978,800 ACRES 0.930 8 ad20 978,800 4m3606 978,800 1 ac30 978,800 1 ac40 978,800 1 ac50 978,800 Charles J Frankenbach JR 473689 033.000-0001-010.001 $610,900 County 625,400 3 hh10 625,400 Big Fresh Pond Rd ITEM NO 243577.05 $625,400 Town 625,400 3 hz10 625,400 Southampton, NY 11968 1566 Noyack Rd $625,400 473606 625,400 1 ac20 625,400 North Sea SCH # 473606 4l3606 625,400 5 fd38 625,400 TAX CODE CLASS 312 3 hp10 625,400 3 hp20 625,400 ACRES 5.600 8 ad20 625,400 4m3606 625,400 1 ac30 625,400 1 ac40 625,400 1 ac50 625,400 Francis H Hofer 473689 033.000-0001-011.000 $532,500 star $51,320 County 828,700 3 hh10 828,700 Carrie Hofer ITEM NO 646321.00 $828,700 Town 828,700 3 hz10 828,700 49 Woodland Dr 49 Woodland Dr $828,700 473606 777,380 1 ac20 828,700 Southampton, NY 11968 North Sea SCH # 473606 4l3606 828,700 5 fd38 828,700 TAX CODE CLASS 210 3 hp10 828,700 3 hp20 828,700 ACRES 1.220 8 ad20 828,700 4m3606 828,700 1 ac30 828,700 1 ac40 828,700 1 ac50 828,700 V90.003 6/26/2021 9:27:59 PM \\th-govapp\govern\reports\custom\assfinal.rpt STATE OF NEW-YORK TAXABLE STATUS DATE 03/01/2021 COUNTY OF SUFFOLK Town of Southampton Page 2,034 2021 Assessment Roll And Levy Module Uniform % = 100 SWIS CODE 473689 ROLL SECTION 1 NAME AND ADDR. OF LAST SUFFOLK COUNTY TAX MAP, ADDRESS ASSESS LAND/TOTAL EXEMPTIONS EXEMPTIONS NET NET TAXABLE VALUE REPUTED AND ACCOUNT IDENTIF. MARKET VALUE TAXABL Raphael Ouaknine 473689 033.000-0001-012.000 $501,000 star $51,320 County 859,600 3 hh10 859,600 1 Forrest Dr ITEM NO 646345.00 $859,600 Town 859,600 3 hz10 859,600 Southampton, NY 11968 1 Forrest Dr $859,600 473606 808,280 1 ac20 859,600 North Sea SCH # 473606 4l3606 859,600 5 fd38 859,600 TAX CODE CLASS 210 3 hp10 859,600 3 hp20 859,600 ACRES 0.920 8 ad20 859,600 4m3606 859,600 1 ac30 859,600 1 ac40 859,600 1 ac50 859,600 Susan Zales 473689 033.000-0001-013.000 $502,100 County 1,030,100 3 hh10 1,030,100 Tom Epstein ITEM NO 646609.00 $1,030,100 Town 1,030,100 3 hz10 1,030,100 22 N 6th St PH 2F 4 Forrest Dr $1,030,100 473606 1,030,100 1 ac20 1,030,100 Brooklyn NY 11249 North Sea SCH # 473606 4l3606 1,030,100 5 fd38 1,030,100 TAX CODE CLASS 210 3 hp10 1,030,100 3 hp20 1,030,100 ACRES 0.920 8 ad20 1,030,100 4m3606 1,030,100 1 ac30 1,030,100 1 ac40 1,030,100 1 ac50 1,030,100 David Shapiro 473689 033.000-0001-014.000 $513,600 County 1,274,300 3 hh10 1,274,300 Sophia Shapiro ITEM NO 646633.00 $1,274,300 Town 1,274,300 3 hz10 1,274,300 54 Halyard Rd 67 Woodland Dr $1,274,300 473606 1,274,300 1 ac20 1,274,300 Valley Stream NY 11518 North Sea SCH # 473606 4l3606 1,274,300 5 fd38 1,274,300 TAX CODE CLASS 210 3 hp10 1,274,300 3 hp20 1,274,300 ACRES 0.990 8 ad20 1,274,300 4m3606 1,274,300 1 ac30 1,274,300 1 ac40 1,274,300 1 ac50 1,274,300 Vladimir Sankovich 473689 033.000-0001-015.000 $501,100 County 937,900 3 hh10 937,900 Aleksandra Sankovich ITEM NO 646657.00 $937,900 Town 937,900 3 hz10 937,900 5 Franklin Pl Apt 15C 73 Woodland Dr $937,900 473606 937,900 1 ac20 937,900 New York NY 10013 North Sea SCH # 473606 4l3606 937,900 5 fd38 937,900 TAX CODE CLASS 210 3 hp10 937,900 3 hp20 937,900 ACRES 0.920 8 ad20 937,900 4m3606 937,900 1 ac30 937,900 1 ac40 937,900 1 ac50 937,900 Robert Oppenheimer 473689 033.000-0001-016.000 $502,100 County 937,100 3 hh10 937,100 40 Park Ave Apt 12H ITEM NO 646585.00 $937,100 Town 937,100 3 hz10 937,100 New York, NY 10016 62 Woodland Dr $937,100 473606 937,100 1 ac20 937,100 North Sea SCH # 473606 4l3606 937,100 5 fd38 937,100 TAX CODE CLASS 210 3 hp10 937,100 3 hp20 937,100 ACRES 0.920 8 ad20 937,100 4m3606 937,100 1 ac30 937,100 1 ac40 937,100 1 ac50 937,100 Howard J Martin 473689 033.000-0001-017.000 $501,700 County 801,200 3 hh10 801,200 Mary P Martin ITEM NO 646369.00 $801,200 Town 801,200 3 hz10 801,200 135 79th St 46 Woodland Dr $801,200 473606 801,200 1 ac20 801,200 Brooklyn, NY 11209 North Sea SCH # 473606 4l3606 801,200 5 fd38 801,200 TAX CODE CLASS 210 3 hp10 801,200 3 hp20 801,200 ACRES 0.920 8 ad20 801,200 4m3606 801,200 1 ac30 801,200 1 ac40 801,200 1 ac50 801,200 Josephine Hurley 473689 033.000-0001-018.000 $502,100 County 1,023,800 3 hh10 1,023,800 2951 Bent Cypress Rd ITEM NO 646297.00 $1,023,800 Town 1,023,800 3 hz10 1,023,800 Wellington, FL 33414 45 Woodland Dr $1,023,800 473606 1,023,800 1 ac20 1,023,800 North Sea SCH # 473606 4l3606 1,023,800 5 fd38 1,023,800 TAX CODE CLASS 210 3 hp10 1,023,800 3 hp20 1,023,800 ACRES 0.920 8 ad20 1,023,800 4m3606 1,023,800 1 ac30 1,023,800 1 ac40 1,023,800 1 ac50 1,023,800 Sampson Giat 473689 033.000-0001-019.000 $513,300 veteran $75,000 County 903,070 3 hh10 903,070 Jacqueline H Giat ITEM NO 646273.00 $1,025,600 veteran $12,000 Town 903,070 3 hz10 903,070 70 50 Ingram St 37 Woodland Dr $1,025,600 veteran $47,530 473606 973,600 1 ac20 903,070 Forest Hills, NY 11375 North Sea SCH # 473606 veteran $40,000 4l3606 973,600 5 fd38 1,025,600 TAX CODE CLASS 210 3 hp10 903,070 3 hp20 903,070 ACRES 0.940 8 ad20 1,025,600 4m3606 973,600 V90.003 6/26/2021 9:27:59 PM \\th-govapp\govern\reports\custom\assfinal.rpt STATE OF NEW-YORK TAXABLE STATUS DATE 03/01/2021 COUNTY OF SUFFOLK Town of Southampton Page 2,035 2021 Assessment Roll And Levy Module Uniform % = 100 SWIS CODE 473689 ROLL SECTION 1 NAME AND ADDR.
Recommended publications
  • The New Yorker the Conciliator
    THE NEW YORKER THE CONCILIATOR Where is Barack Obama coming from? by Larissa MacFarquhar MAY 7, 2007 Begin in farm country, late last summer, no particular day. Carmi, Illinois—a town on the Little Wabash River, down in the southern tip of the state, twenty-five miles from Kentucky, population about fifty-five hundred. A group of twelve farmers—burly white men with ruddy complexions and very short hair—sitting around a rectangle of pushed-together tables in a nondescript room, talking with their junior senator, Barack Obama. It was long before Obama decided to run for President, and he wasn’t in a rush. He sat at one end of the tables, leaning back in his chair, his knee propped against the table edge. He wore a tie but had removed his jacket and rolled up his shirtsleeves. A young farmer complained about the Jones Act, a 1920 law that he felt was partly responsible for a detrimental consolidation in the barge market. Another farmer had a question about ethanol. “My question first arose in my mind during the State of the Union address,” the farmer said. “President Bush said I’m all for biofuels, and then he started talking about switchgrass. And I’m, like, now wait a minute, we’ve got a system where we can make ethanol out of corn. I guess cellulosic ethanol”—which can be made from switchgrass—“is more efficient. But we don’t know how to do it, and we don’t know if farmers are ever going to grow switchgrass, and we don’t know if we would even want to grow switchgrass, so why so much emphasis on cellulosic ethanol?” “Well, I’m not a scientist,” Obama said, in a leisurely way, “so I gotta be careful when I start getting into this stuff that I don’t wade too deep and then can’t get back to shore.
    [Show full text]
  • 11090389 Stony Brook Foundation Annual Report to Donors 28 Stony Brook Foundation Annual Report to Donors 29
    STONY BROOK FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT TO DONORS FISCAL YEAR 2010-2011 MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT CONTENTS extend my sincerest thanks to each and every one of our fiscal year 2010-2011 donors. Your generosity continues to provide Stony Brook MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT 1 I University with the resources we need to make a difference in the class- MESSAGE FROM THE 2 room, the laboratory, and at the patient’s bedside, as well as in the cultural, FOUNDATION CHAIRMAN technological, and economic life of our region. We greatly appreciate your commitment to us. THE YEAR IN REVIEW 4 Stony Brook’s promising students look to our donors with gratitude for BOARD OF TRUSTEES 7 continuing to strengthen our ability to serve as a world-class research DONORS OF DISTINCTION 8 university. From fostering academic excellence across a broad spectrum of Samuel L. Stanley Jr., M.D. Association of American Universities-caliber programs to providing the means REPORT ON COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 24 for talented candidates to earn their degrees at a prestigious institution, you can be proud of the active role you have chosen to take in our success—and in the lives and careers of our alumni long after they graduate. As donors, you also can look with pride to your support of Stony Brook’s faculty and the impact that they are having on both our students and our collective knowledge. In a span of just a few months last year, for example, our faculty’s research was recognized through the $1 million Abel Prize in Mathematics; the R&D 100 Award for an energy-harvesting shock absorber; three American Association for the Advancement of Science Fellowships for groundbreaking work in infectious diseases, ecology, and nuclear physics; and three Guggenheim Fellowships to further innovative work in religious studies, linguistics, and political science.
    [Show full text]
  • Party of the Year
    SOCIAL SAFARI | by R. COURI HAY Ariana Madonna @ Rockefeller, Raising Malawi Hannah Selleck and Georgina Bloomberg @ NY Botanical Garden Winter Wonderland Ball Event planner Harriette Rose Katz @ Animal Ashram Anne Hathaway @ NY Botanical Prince Pavlos, Garden Princess Marie- Winter Chantal and Wonderland Princess Olym- Bal pia of Greece and Denmark graced Gstaad Board Members Audrey and Martin Gruss @ Lincoln Center Fund Gala, Georgina Chapman honoring Carolina Herrera hosted a dinner in Gstaad PARTYGstaad,Valentino, Georgina OF Chapman, THE Botanical Garden, CarolinaYEAR Herrera, Karolína Wilbur Ross, Madonna & Animal Ashram Kurková @ Raising Malawi TEARS OF A CLOWN artwork by Damien Hirst, Ai Weiwei, Julian Schnabel, Cindy Sher- If parties could win an Oscar, then Madonna’s Raising Malawi baccha- man, Richard Prince, Steven Meisel and a piece by Tracey Emin, nal would take home top honors for 2016. It was a night of a hundred who beamed from the audience when it sold for $550,000. Karolína stars including Leonardo DiCaprio, Adriana Lima, A-Rod, Donna Kurková sold a diamond snake by Bulgari to Prince Alexander von Karan, Len Blavatnik, Jeremy Scott, Natasha Poly, Alexander Gilkes, Furstenberg for $180,000, but only afer she ofered to lick the serpent. P. Diddy, Calvin Klein, Ron Burkle and David Blaine, who smirked Ooh la la! When a Fiat 500 came on the block, she slapped Agnelli as he swallowed a broken wineglass. Tey all played a role in this night heir Lapo Elkann, saying, “Tis car has been arrested along with its of fun, performance
    [Show full text]
  • Interviews - Cassandra Butts | the Choice 2008 | FRONTLINE | PBS
    Interviews - Cassandra Butts | The Choice 2008 | FRONTLINE | PBS http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/choice2008/interviews/butts.html Search Search This Site Search PBS Support for PBS.org provided by: What's this? WATCH SCHEDULE TOPICS ABOUT FRONTLINE SHOP TEACHER CENTER Highlights from this interview When did you first meet The politics of the Law Review Barack Obama? Obama's search for It was one of the first few days of identity our law school experience. We Putting down Chicago met at the financial aid office at roots Harvard Law School. We were The grassroots going through the process of filling presidential campaign out a lot of paperwork that would Obama's "blackness" make us significantly in debt to Harvard for years to come. We bonded over that experience. What was he like? The Barack that I knew at the time is fundamentally the Barack that you see today, the candidate. He was incredibly mature. He had spent three years as a community organizer in Chicago, so he came to law school without some of the angst I think that many of us had who were only a year, or maybe less than a year, away from college. He was very mature, and he was very directed. He knew what he wanted to do: get his law degree and learn as much as he possibly could and take that experience back to Chicago and work in the same communities that he had worked as an organizer. He was a very calm presence and someone who had a very good sense of himself, where he fit in, and what he wanted to do with his life.
    [Show full text]
  • CAT Fall14.Pdf
    tabLe oF coNTeNTs: tabLe oF coNTeNTs: WHAT MY IN THE VALE OF ON TOUR WITH DAUGHTER CASHMERE LEONARD COHEN WORE By Thomas Roma, By Sharon Robinson By Jennifer Williams Introduced by G. powerhouse books Foreward by Olivia Bee Winston James Fall 2014 catalog ON TOUR WITH LEONARD COHEN photographs by Sharon Robinson pg. 26-27 pg. 28-29 pg. 30-31 THE ART OF U.S. MARSHALS MODEST MOUSE MODEST MOUSE OH BABY! COUNTING ON MODEST MOUSE EATING WELL By Brian Finke By Pat Graham By Chad Geran LETTERS By Jasmine and Foreward by Edith By Mark Gonyea Melissa Hemsley Zimmerman Design by Roberto Festino pat graham pat photographs by “Modest Mouse are many things; open spaces, bleakness and beauty, brotherhood, fun, loneliness, insanity, chemistry, defiance and true punk rock. You see all of it in these pictures, just as you hear all of it in the music. Being in that band was one of the greatest times of my life.” —Johnny Marr photographs by 52995 pat graham 9781576 876510 pg. 38-39 pg. 2-3 pg. 4-5 pg. 6-7 pg. 36-37 HIGH TIMES: MALFORMED: PAPER BOTS ATTACH! BOSS! TODAY I’m GOING STEAMPUNK A 40-YEAR HISTORY OF FORGOTTEN BRAINS By PaperMade CHEAT CODE! TO WEAr… CITY: THE WORLD’s Most OF THE TEXAS STATE A GAMER’s AlPHABET By Dan Stiles AN ALPHABETICAL INfamOUS MAGAZINE MENTAL HOSPITAL Written by Chris Barton JOURNEY By The Editors of High By Adam Voorhes and Illustrated by Joey Spiotto By Manuel Sumberac Times Magazine Alex Hannaford Introduced by Tommy Chong pg.
    [Show full text]
  • The Office of Presidential Personnel
    THE WHITE HOUSE RANSITION ROJECT T P 1997—2017 SMOOTHING THE PEACEFUL TRANSFER OF DEMOCRATIC POWER Report 2017—27 THE OFFICE OF PRESIDENTIAL PERSONNEL James Pfiffner, George Mason University White House Transition Project Funded by the Smoothing the Peaceful Transfer of Democratic Power WHO WE ARE AND WHAT WE DO The White House Transition Project. Established in 1999 to provide information to incoming White House staff members so that they can hit the ground running, The White House Transition Project includes a group of presidency scholars from across the country who participate in writing essays about past transitions and the inner workings of key White House offices. Since its creation, it has participated in the 2001, 2009 and now the 2017 presidential transitions with the primary goal of streamlining the process and enhancing the understanding of White House operations. WHTP maintains an important, international dimension by consulting with foreign governments and organizations interested in improving governmental transitions. Rice University’s James A. Baker, III Institute for Public Policy. Founded in 1993 on the campus of Rice University, the Baker Institute has 20 programs that focus on a broad range of issues including energy, health, conflict resolution, science and technology, tax and expenditure policy and Latin America and China studies. With an eye toward educating and engaging the next generation of leaders, the Baker Institute collaborates with experts from academia, government, the media, business, and nongovernmental and private organizations. The Moody Foundation. Chartered in 1942 by William Lewis Moody, Jr., a successful businessman from Galveston, Texas, the Moody Foundation makes a difference for the people of Texas.
    [Show full text]
  • The Climate Is Right for Al Gore's Nobel Prize -- Newsday.Com 3/27/11 4:23 PM
    The climate is right for Al Gore's Nobel Prize -- Newsday.com 3/27/11 4:23 PM October 15, 2007 Search Go Newsday.com Web enhanced by Get Home Delivery Login or register Home > Top News > Columnists Classifieds Jobs The climate is right for Al Gore's Nobel EDITORIAL CARTOONS Real Estate Cars Prize Walt Handelsman Apartments Ellis Henican Newsday's Pulitzer Prize- Pets winning cartoonist. October 14, 2007 Event Tickets Cartoon archive Cartoons Place an ad Compared to the U.S. presidency, it might feel like a consolation Article tools Animations Multimedia News prize. E-mail Long Island Share New York City But take a bow, Al Gore. You have every right to bust your Print State/Region buttons over this shiny new Nobel. ADVERTISEMENT Nation/World Single page view AP Top News I know a thing or two about prizes. Like almost anyone who's Reprints Health/Science VIDEO worked in the news business for 15 minutes or more, I've won an Reader feedback And in other news... armload of them. Hardly any are worth the brass, glass, crystal or Columnists wood they're made of. Text size: Special reports Photos & Multimedia Local Videos Opinion You write a 10-inch puff piece about a Boy Scout or a four-eyed engineer. Sports Pretty soon, you'll be clutching an ornate "Friend of Scouting" plaque or a "Golden Slide Rule." High School Sports We never get tired of giving prizes in my field. Some days, all we do is sit around, giving Entertainment prizes to each other.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2017
    Central Park Conservancy ANNUAL REPORT 2017 Table of Contents 2 Partnership 4 Letter from the Conservancy President 5 Letter from the Chairman of the Board of Trustees 6 Letter from the Mayor and the Parks Commissioner 7 Serving New York City’s Parks 8 Forever Green 12 Honoring Douglas Blonsky 16 Craftsmanship 18 Native Meadow Opens in the Dene Landscape 20 Electric Carts Provide Cleaner, Quieter Transportation 21 Modernizing the Toll Family Playground 22 Restoring the Ramble’s Watercourse 24 Enhancing and Diversifying the Ravine 26 Conservation of the Seventh Regiment Memorial 27 Updating the Southwest Corner 28 Stewardship 30 Operations by the Numbers 32 Central Park Conservancy Institute for Urban Parks 36 Community Programs 38 Volunteer Department 40 Friendship 46 Women’s Committee 48 The Greensward Circle 50 Financials 74 Supporters 114 Staff & Volunteers 124 Central Park Conservancy Mission, Guiding Principle, Core Values, and Credits Cover: Hallett Nature Sanctuary, Left: Angel Corbett 3 CENTRAL PARK CONSERVANCY Table of Contents 1 Partnership Central Park Conservancy From The Conservancy Chairman After 32 years of working in Central Park, Earlier this year Doug Blonsky announced that after 32 years, he would be stepping down as the it hasn’t been an easy decision to step Conservancy’s President and CEO. While his accomplishments in that time have been too numerous to count, down as President and CEO. But this it’s important to acknowledge the most significant of many highlights. important space has never been more First, under Doug’s leadership, Central Park is enjoying the single longest period of sustained health in its beautiful, better managed, or financially 160-year history.
    [Show full text]
  • Full Beacher
    THETHE Volume 36, Number 43 Thursday, October 29, 2020 TMTM 911911 FranklinFranklin StreetStreet WeeklyWeekly NewspaperNewspaper MichiganMichigan City,City, ININ 4636046360 HHappapp y HHallall o woweeee n THE Page 2 October 29, 2020 THE 911 Franklin Street • Michigan City, IN 46360 219/879-0088 e-mail: News/Articles - [email protected] email: Classifieds - [email protected] It’s Time http://www.thebeacher.com/ PRINTED WITH Published and Printed by To Fall Back TM Trademark of American Soybean Association THE BEACHER BUSINESS PRINTERS Sunday, November 1st Delivered weekly, free of charge to Birch Tree Farms, Duneland Beach, Grand Beach, Hidden Shores, Long Beach, Michiana Shores, Michiana MI and Shoreland Hills. The Beacher is also delivered to public places in Michigan City, New Buffalo, LaPorte and Sheridan Beach. Wha t Lies ea th Ben ea th by William Halliar I can still feel the dust of long-forgotten spaces and old bones in the back of my throat. I shiver as I recall ducking under rough-hewn fl oor joists and between cobwebs to peer at gravestones in the dark basement of St. Mary’s Church. I remember the un- derground rooms that form the basement of Trinity Episcopal Church and Barker Hall. As we drive past these and other land- marks, we may admire the beauty of their architecture, but we seldom think of what lies below. Many of these sturdy old build- ings hide dusty secrets beneath their stout walls. Seldom visited spaces nestled be- tween thick foundations, hidden beneath well-maintained workspaces, they contain bits and pieces of the history of lives lived in the world above.
    [Show full text]
  • Le Tout Paris
    WWD MILESTONES: COTY AT 100/SECTION II Women’sWWD Wear Daily • The Retailers’ FRIDAYDaily Newspaper • September 3, 2004 • $2.00 Beauty LeNEW YORK — TParisout Hilton, the media’s Paris favorite bad girl, just can’t stay out of the spotlight. Having starred in her own reality TV show and that infamous video, the hotel heiress is stepping into the world of fashion and beauty with a vengeance. No sooner had she launched a signature jewelry line on Amazon.com than she was talking of visions of a fashion empire, including jeans, sweatsuits, shoes and color cosmetics. In the meantime, she also found time to produce her own fragrance, pictured here and called — inevitably — Paris Hilton. For more, see story on page 6. Polet’s Debut for Gucci: CEO Lauds ‘Mini-Boom’ As Profits Climb 33% By Robert Murphy PARIS — Robert Polet has spent the last two months getting a crash course in luxury, Gucci style — and so far, the Dutchman likes what he sees. The former Unilever frozen-foods honcho on Thursday delivered an upbeat assessment of his new job as Gucci Group’s chief executive, praising its brands, business fundamentals and entrepreneurial spirit, but stopping short of providing a strategic plan. He isn’t expected to table that until December. “I’ve been around the world in 60 days,” said a relaxed and charismatic See PPR, Page14 The Economy in the Spotlight: August Comps/10 GOP Wrap-Up/12 PHOTO BY JOHN AQUINO, STYLED BY BRYN KENNY STYLED BY JOHN AQUINO, PHOTO BY 2 WWD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2004 Esprit’s spacious store in the Flatiron district.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Delegations to the Seventieth Session of the General Assembly
    UNITED NATIONS ST /SG/SER.C/L.624 _____________________________________________________________________________ Secretariat Distr.: Limited 18 December 2015 PROTOCOL AND LIAISON SERVICE LIST OF DELEGATIONS TO THE SEVENTIETH SESSION OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY I. MEMBER STATES Page Page Afghanistan......................................................................... 5 Chile ................................................................................. 47 Albania ............................................................................... 6 China ................................................................................ 49 Algeria ................................................................................ 7 Colombia .......................................................................... 50 Andorra ............................................................................... 8 Comoros ........................................................................... 51 Angola ................................................................................ 9 Congo ............................................................................... 52 Antigua and Barbuda ........................................................ 11 Costa Rica ........................................................................ 53 Argentina .......................................................................... 12 Côte d’Ivoire .................................................................... 54 Armenia ...........................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Proposal for Nmsac on Second Amendment Rights of Seamen
    For the National Maritime Security Advisory Committee IN SUPPORT FOR A NEW MARITIME TREATY FOR ARMED MERCHANT VESSELS TO DEFEND AGAINST PIRACY AND ARMED ROBBERY ON THE HIGH SEAS, AND IN SUPPORT FOR THE NATIONAL OPEN CARRY ENDORSEMENT FOR THE TWIC, MMC, AND THE NATIONAL DRIVERS REGISTER Respecting and Defending the International Human Right and the Sovereign Right to Armed Self-Defense Against Piracy and Armed Robbery on the High Seas under the Treaty Clause of the Constitution of the United States and the Merchant Marine Act of 1936 and for Revisions to Federal Laws and Regulations of the United States in Accordance with the Constitution of the United States and Articles 43, 49, 53, 61, 62, and 64 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties 1969 and the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties between States and International Organizations or Between International Organizations 1986 And To Restore the Second Amendment and Ninth Amendment Rights of American Merchant Seamen to Openly Keep and Bear Arms in Intrastate and Interstate Travel as a Function of the Common Defence Clause of the Preamble to the Constitution of the United States And In Support for the Establishment of a Federal Preemption of State and Local Laws Infringing or Prohibiting the Right to Travel Intrastate and Interstate While Exercising the Rights Protected by the First, Second, Fourth, Fifth, Thirteenth, and Fourteenth Amendments PRESENTING EVIDENCE IN SUPPORT OF THE ABOVE The Exchange of Email Messages Between Don Hamrick, Able Seaman & Advocate for Second Amendment and Ninth Amendment Rights of American Merchant Seamen and Ryan Owens, Chief, Industry Outreach Branch, Domestic Ports Division, U.S.
    [Show full text]