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Want to try a new restaurant? Now is the time: It's Jersey Shore Restaurant Week. The 10-day celebration of local dining, which happens each spring and fall, kicks off Friday, Nov. 8. Nearly 70 ...
Jersey Shore Restaurant Week, which actually spans 10 days, kicks off Friday, Nov. 3, and features more than 60 Monmouth and Ocean county restaurants serving lunch and dinner prix fixe menus for ...
Irish restaurant chain Bennigan's is unleashing a special St. Patrick's Day menu for March. Exclusive food items include Loaded Blarney Pub Fries, the Reuben brat, Molly Malone's Irish linguine ...
The shape of Bay Shore CDP differed in the 2010 and previous censuses, [16] and so that boundary did not extend into West Islip School District. [17] In addition, Bay Shore Parochial School of St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church (of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rockville Centre) offers elementary education covering grades K–8 courses and ...
The route crosses into Brightwaters before passing back into Bay Shore. [4] NY 27A westbound at the junction with NY 111 in Islip. In Bay Shore, NY 27A crosses an intersection with the southern terminus of CR 13A (Clinton Avenue) and soon CR 13 (Fifth Avenue). Now known as West Main Street, NY 27A crosses through downtown Islip, changing to ...
The mall was opened in 1963 by the R.H. Macy Company, which opened the 3-level, 318,800-square-foot (29,620 m 2) Macy's as the original anchor. [2] The open-air, 70-store first phase of the mall was completed by 1967, and originally included stores such as Record Town, Woolworth's, Lerner Shops, Bond's, [3] and JCPenney, which was the first in-line JCPenney location in the New York area at the ...
Down home restaurant Bob Evans is open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Thanksgiving for dine-in and takeout meals, including breakfast. andipantz/istockphoto Restaurants That May Be Open
The St. Patrick's parade is the most significant expression of Irish culture and celebration in this city, and the parade in Queens, for many of us, was a first-time experience. It was the first parade since the first St. Patrick's parade in New York City, which was in 1762, [that] was open and welcoming to all". [131]