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April 2, 2008
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Former Amityville Record publisher, Barbara Cahn, dies

Barbara Cahn
Barbara Freis Cahn, the founder of the Massapequa Post and former editor and publisher of the Amityville Record newspapers, died March 16 in Palm City, Florida. She was remembered locally as a woman who had a passion for journalism and provided a fair and balanced voice for the communities she covered.

"She ran a tight ship, but she was fair and very competent," said Jane Prescott, who wrote a weekly column at the Massapequa Post under Barbara Cahn, entitled Between Us Girls. "She was kind and very much a lady."

In 1947, a few weeks after moving into their rental home in the new veteran-oriented community on Long Island, Mrs. Cahn and her late husband, Ira L. Cahn, founded the Island Trees Eagle. As co-editor and publisher, Mrs. Cahn handled the editorial and news side of the operation, at first from the kitchen table of their modest Cape Cod home. Shortly thereafter, the Cahns proposed that the community be named Levittown in honor of the family that built the homes, and changed the newspaper's name to the Levittown Eagle.

Barbara Cahn, third from left, is shown wit her husband Ira, far right, and former N.C. Exec. Ralph Caso and his wife at a meeting of the New York Press Association where the newspaper won many awards.
Within a few years, the paper had grown along with the community and was winning state and national awards for best editorial page, community service, and general excellence.

The Cahns founded a second newspaper, the Massapequa Post, in 1951, and some years later closed the Eagle to concentrate on the newer ven- ture. Once again, Mrs. Cahn was responsible for the news content, covered the activities of three local school boards, and wrote most of the editorials. The Cahns later bought the Amityville Record and published the two papers until their retirement to Florida in the mid-1980s. Ira Cahn died in 1988.

The couple's son, Dave, remembered his mother as a woman who combined career and family with ease. "She was a successful professional and a successful mother," he said. "She did much of her own writing at home, so she could be with her children when they needed her."

Wilma Diehl, who was at one time the assistant superintendent and director of guidance in the Massapequa School District, said that the Cahns always provided the school district with fair coverage and were helpful to the district whenever possible.

A hard-hitting journalist, Mrs. Cahn didn't shy away from reporting and commenting on controversial issues. While her editorials gave praise when it was due, she never hesitated to criticize government officials, regardless of party, for failing to serve their community. She preferred, however, to remain in the background, often accepting praise on behalf of her husband for editorials she herself had written.

"My mother saw herself as serving the community by publishing accurate, complete and unbiased information so that her readers could make up their own minds from reading the news," said Dave. "She always was sure to keep the facts and her opinions separate."

During the Cahns' ownership, the Post and Record won more than 100 journalism awards from the New York Press Association, the National Newspaper Association, and other professional organizations. In 1969, for example, that year's annual Teen Edition, which Mrs. Cahn produced, won first place in both the state and national contests.

"They were both great newspaper people," said Billy Beato, whose family has lived in Massapequa for years, of the Cahns. "I respected them alot because they would always tell it like it was."

In 1976, Mrs. Cahn retired from her active operational involvement with the newspapers. She subsequently served for 10 years as Coordinator of Community Information for the Valley Stream Central High School District.

Mrs. Cahn remained an active journalist, even after her retirement. At the age of 73, she learned desktop publishing and for several years produced an award-winning newsletter for her local chapter of the American Association of University Women in Stuart, Florida.

The holder of a Master's degree in Economics from Brooklyn College, Mrs. Cahn is survived by her sons David L. Cahn of Upper Marlboro, Maryland, and Michael D. Cahn of Rancho Cucamonga, California, five grandchildren, and ten great-grandchildren.
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