Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Association for a Better New York (ABNY) is a real-estate advocacy group in New York City founded in late 1970 by Lewis Rudin and other prominent CEOs to market New York as business-friendly amid concerns about crime and lobbied for policies friendly to members.
During 1991, the Long Island Business Journal, a small monthly published in Westhampton by Sheahan Communications, [23] reported in a brief gossipy item that the Association for a Better Long Island was deeply displeased with on-going "business-bashing" in the pages of Newsday, and considering an advertising boycott or the creation of a ...
The committee also advocated for gardens as a way to develop skills in the hopes that gardeners would relocate to the country. The garden was located in Long Island City on 7,200 city lots donated by William Steinway. Allotments for the roughly 100 families who tended the land ranged from one-quarter of an acre to eight acres.
Two Long Island women were arrested for their roles in the month-long disappearance of 14-year-old Emmarae Gervasi — increasing the number of suspects in the case to seven. Suffolk County police ...
Block Associations and Neighborhood Associations in New York City are non-profit organizations. [1] [2] A block party requires that an applicant must have a block association membership and the supporting signatures of the majority of block residents. [3]
Sarah and her husband currently pay $3,850 to live in a one-bedroom apartment in Long Island, New York and it’s adding up. “We’re just blowing away our savings in this apartment,” she says.
Fire Island National Seashore Map. Fire Island is not a separate town, but its villages are listed here due to its geographical isolation. Villages in the Town of Islip: Ocean Beach, Saltaire; Hamlets in the Town of Brookhaven: Cherry Grove (a.k.a. Fire Island), Fire Island Pines.
Lewis Rudin (April 4, 1927 – September 20, 2001) was an American real estate investor and developer. Along with his older brother Jack Rudin, he presided over a family empire of 40 buildings valued at $2 billion including more than 3,500 apartments in 22 buildings in New York City.