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The Chief, formerly The Chief-Leader, is a long-established newspaper focused on civil service and local government in New York City. Privately owned, it was established in 1897 by Joseph J. O'Reilly, and was first aimed at city firefighters. [2] The weekly newspaper is known for in-depth coverage of the unions representing civil servants.
Jewish Post of New York (weekly) The Jewish Press (weekly) The Jewish Voice (weekly) The Jewish Week (weekly) Kanzhongguo (Chinese language weekly) The Korea Times (daily) Long Island Press (monthly) The Main Street WIRE (bi-weekly) Metro New York (free daily) Mott Haven Herald; New York Amsterdam News (weekly) New York Daily News (daily) New ...
New Hyde Park Illustrated News – Nassau County; New York Amsterdam News – New York City; The New York Observer – New York City; New York Press – New York City; New York Sun – New York City; New Yorker Staats-Zeitung – New York City; Niagara County Tribune/Sentinel – Niagara County, New York; North County News – Yorktown
A fast-moving blaze left a woman dead and her Long Island home destroyed Thursday morning, officials said. Three residents were inside when the fire broke out in the two-story house near North ...
Brentwood is a hamlet in the Town of Islip in Suffolk County, on Long Island, in New York, United States. The population was 62,387 at the 2020 Census, making it the most populous CDP in Suffolk County and on all of Long Island outside of New York City .
When the English and Dutch settled their competing claims to Long Island in the 1650 treaty conducted in Hartford, the Dutch partition included all lands west of Oyster Bay and thus the Wantagh area. Long Island then was ceded to the Duke of York in 1663–64, but then fell back into Dutch hands after the Dutch regained New York in 1673.
This hamlet is named after Chief Wyandanch, a leader of the Montaukett Native American tribe during the 17th century. Formerly known as Half Way Hollow Hills, West Deer Park (1875), and Wyandance (1893), the area of scrub oak and pine barrens south of the southern slope of Half Hollow terminal moraine was named Wyandanch in 1903 by the Long Island Rail Road (LIRR) to honor Chief Wyandanch and ...
The Ronkonkoma Moraine, a terminal moraine, predates the Harbor Hill Moraine (which reached Long Island during the Wisconsin Glacial Episode); the Harbor Hill Moraine cut through the Ronkonkoma Moraine's western portions. [2] The Ronkonkoma Moraine and the Harbor Hill Moraine intersect at Lake Success in western Nassau County. [2]