Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 50. Chapters: Adelphi University, People from Garden City, New York, Telly Savalas, Harvey J. Levin, Steven Chu, Al Davis, Alexander Turney Stewart, Mitchel Air Force Base, Susan Lucci, John Silber, John Tesh, Ethan Phillips, Gerald Guterman, Dean Skelos, Nelson DeMille, Michael Hole, Chris Armas, Kathleen M. Rice, Cradle of Aviation Museum, Theodore Curphey, St. Paul's School (Garden City, New York), Garden City Golf Club, Paul Zaloom, Garden City Hotel, Hossein Khan Motamed, William B. Turner, WLIW, Johnny Sylvester, Nassau Community College, Lara Spencer, WBAU, Timothy L. Woodruff, Matthew Goldstein, Stewart Manor, Stephen Danbusky, Garden City High School, Merillon Avenue, Cathedral of the Incarnation, Garden City, National Arbitration and Mediation, Liza Huber, Apostle Houses, Herb Fitzgibbon, R. Inslee Clark, Jr., Nassau Boulevard, United States Post Office (Garden City, New York), Country Life Press, Robert A. Scott, PAWS Web Radio, The Delphian, The Ivy Three, Horace Hagedorn, Garden City Union Free School District, Long Island Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives. Excerpt: Harvey Joshua Levin (July 1, 1924-April 30, 1992) was an American economist. He was University Research Professor in the Department of Economics at Hofstra University (1989-92), Augustus B. Weller Professor of Economics at Hofstra (1964-89), and Founder and Director of its Public Policy Workshop (1975-92). He was also a Senior Research Associate at the Center for Policy Research. Dr. Levin is generally considered the first economist to propose the auctioning of broadcast frequencies as a means of allocating the airwaves as a natural resource. His work anticipated the evolution of television, satellites, cellular telephones, electronic remote boxes and wireless internet, and their demands on increasingly congested airwaves. He consulted for the President'...