ARTS&LIFESTYLES TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA• MEDIA•MAY MEDIA •MAY 3, 2018
IN FULL BLOOM Tulip Festival returns to Heckscher Park • B11 ALSO: I-Spy 'TURN' Auction heads to Setauket B5 • Photo of the Week B14 • Art Exhibits on the North Shore B25 ©157003
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PAGE B2 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • MAY 03, 2018
SHARING THE BEST IDEAS IN MEDICINE
What You Need to Know About Stroke Dr. Michael Guido specializes in the assessment and management of acute stroke patients using diagnostic and physiological monitoring. He works with a multidisciplinary team to manage and prevent common early and late stroke complications and care for stroke patients. Dr. David Fiorella is an expert in minimally invasive treatment of brain aneurysms, arteriovenous malformations (AVMs), carotid stenosis and acute stroke.
What is stroke? Dr. Guido: There are two kinds of strokes: ischemic, in which a blockage prevents blood flow to the brain, and hemorrhagic, in which there is bleeding in or around the brain. Ischemic strokes are the most common, occurring in about 80 percent of cases in Suffolk County. You may have also heard of the term TIA (transient ischemic attack), which is also known as a “mini stroke.” TIAs are caused by a temporary clot, which usually resolves within minutes to hours. They are often a precursor to a major stroke, so it’s important to take them seriously and see a doctor if you suspect you have had one.
Why is stroke awareness so important? Dr. Fiorella: Stroke can affect people of all ages and backgrounds. It is a leading cause of disability and is now the fifth-leading cause of death for both men and women in the United States — behind heart disease, chronic lung disease, cancer and unintentional injuries. This is the second time since 2011 that stroke has dropped a spot in the mortality rankings.
OUR EXPERTS ANSWER YOUR QUESTIONS
Michael Guido III, MD
David Fiorella, MD, PhD
Neurologist Director, Stony Brook Neurology Stroke Program; Co-Director, Stony Brook University Cerebrovascular and Stroke Center
Neurointerventional Radiologist Director, Stony Brook Cerebrovascular Center Co-Director, Stony Brook University Cerebrovascular and Stroke Center
The decline in stroke deaths may be due in part to increased awareness of the signs and improvements in treatment. Speed of treatment is crucial and people are seeking treatment faster.
What are the signs of stroke? Dr. Guido: Signs of stroke include an uneven smile or facial droop, arm or leg numbness or weakness — especially on one side of the body, and slurred speech or difficulty speaking. Other warning signs include sudden confusion, sudden trouble seeing in one or both eyes, sudden trouble walking, dizziness, loss of balance or coordination, and a sudden severe headache with no known cause, often described as the worst headache of your life.
If you suspect you’re having a stroke, what should you do? Dr. Fiorella: Get immediate help. Call 911. Alert the operator that you are having symptoms of a stroke. Since speed of treatment is crucial, getting to the right place fast is key. Ask to be taken to a stroke center where advanced treatments are available. Our experienced, highly trained medical team at Stony Brook Cerebrovascular and Stroke Center performs all the latest procedures, 24/7. Our expertise includes every FDA-approved, minimally invasive stroke intervention technique. We also use the latest diagnostic tools and offer access to major ongoing clinical trials. Our center is certified by The Joint Commission and designated by the New York State Department of Health as a stroke center, meeting all the criteria and more. And Stony Brook provides advanced endovascular treatments to retrieve clots in the brain that are unable to be dissolved by medication alone.
You’ve survived a stroke. Now what? Dr. Guido: For the thousands of Long Islanders who do survive a stroke, it’s a struggle to recover from its debilitating impact. Stony Brook’s Stroke Support Group can help. You’ll receive encouragement and feedback from others who can relate to your situation; gain more knowledge from expert speakers; and learn about many programs and resources that can help. While we hope that you or someone you love never have to experience a stroke, it’s important to know that Suffolk County’s only academic medical center is leading the way in stroke care for thousands of patients in our community and across the country.
STROKE SUPPORT GROUP Last Tuesday of every month 7 to 9 pm Second Friday of every month 10:30 am to noon Open to all stroke survivors, family members and caregivers. Receive encouragement, feedback and inspiration. Gain knowledge. Learn about helpful programs and resources. For locations and other information, contact: (631) 638-2638 stonybrookmedicine.edu/patientcare/ support groups
To schedule an appointment with one of our neurologists, call (631) 444-2599. To schedule an appointment with one of our neurosurgeons, call (631) 444-1213. neuro.stonybrookmedicine.edu
All health and health-related information contained in this article is intended to be general and/or educational in nature and should not be used as a substitute for a visit with a healthcare professional for help, diagnosis, guidance and treatment. The information is intended to offer only general information for individuals to discuss with their healthcare provider. It is not intended to constitute a medical diagnosis or treatment or endorsement of any particular test, treatment, procedure, service, etc. Reliance on information provided is at the user’s risk. Your healthcare provider should be consulted regarding matters concerning the medical condition, treatment, and needs of you and your family. Stony Brook University/SUNY is an affirmative action, equal opportunity educator and employer. 18021212H
The Best Ideas in Medicine | stonybrookmedicine.edu
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MAY 03, 2018 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B3
ASK THE VETERINARIAN
Atopic dermatitis, Part 2 Getting to the source of the itch
BY MATTHEW KEARNS, DVM
Corticosteroids
• Open 7 days a week. • Sunday appointments available from 9 AM-12 PM. Drop off/Pickup boarding on Sundays as well. • ‘Care to Share Program’...Refer friends & family to Countryside, and both of you receive $25 OFF your next visit. (must be a new client - can be used cumulatively... the more referrals, the more savings!)
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Corticosteroids, glucocorticoids, or “steMy last column introduced the seasonal roids,” as they are sometimes referred to, are allergies that our pets can suffer from, also all cortisone derivatives. Systemic cortisone known as atopic dermatitis. This second part medications are prescription only. However, of the two-part article focuses more on the corticosteroids are inexpensive and very eftreatment of atopic dermatitis. The treat- fective at treating atopic diseases. They block ments we will discuss only focus on systemic the production of all cytokines (mediators of medications. It does not include supple- inflammation) and, if it wasn’t for the side ments, topical creams/powders/sprays, effects, would be a magic bullet. Short-term medicated shampoos/conditioners, etc. I’ll use is relatively safe and very beneficial. Side make sure to cover that effects include drinking/ in the future. urinating more, eating Now, if we rememmore and panting. ber from the first part However, long-term of the article, atopy is side effects include gasdefined as, “a genetic trointestinal upset/pospredisposition to desible ulcers, a suppressed velop a sensitivity to immune system, diabetes allergens (proteins in mellitus, liver damage, the environment).” The pancreatitis, thrombobody develops antibodemboli (blood clots), ies against these allerincreased risk of urinary gens (primarily IgE) If it wasn’t for the side effects, and other types of inand, once a threshold fections, lethargy and, corticosteroids would be a is reached, the IgE ansometimes, aggression. magic bullet. tibodies trigger signals We, as veterinarians, to certain white blood try to transition patients cells called basophils and mast cells to re- with chronic, recurrent skin and ear problems lease inflammatory chemicals into the sys- to other, safer long-term medications. tem (primarily histamine). This release of Immunomodulators histamine triggers all the itch and secondary skin and ear infections that frustrate These prescription medications are more both pet owners and veterinarians. What is effective than antihistamines and safer to out there to help with the problem? use long term than corticosteroids. Medications like Atopica (cyclosporine) and Apoquel Antihistamines (oclacitinib) block a specific receptor and preAntihistamines block the histamine vent specific cytokines associated with the alreceptors on nerves, vessels, muscle cells lergic itch. These are newer medications with and the lining of stomach and small intes- minimal side effects and safe to use long term tine. They are readily available without but are more expensive than antihistamines a prescription and safe so they can be an or corticosteroids. excellent first choice. Unfortunately, antiBiologic therapy histamines do not block the release of histamine from basophils and mast cells but This is the newest kid on the block. Biolograther block the receptors on the cells of ic therapy uses the body’s immune system to the organs they affect. target cytokines, or chemicals that induce inNow, you can’t block every receptor flammation. Cytopoint (lokivetmab) is a once with medication so it very much depends monthly injection that induces your dog’s imhow severely the individual pet responds mune system to produce antibodies against a to an atopic, or allergic, reaction. Pets specific class of cytokines called interleukins. with mild allergies will do Interleukins have been linked to the itch in alwell with antihista- lergic or atopic dermatitis. mines. However, pets Multiple factors play into what medicawith more severe forms tion we choose: severity, age of pet, preof allergies either do not existing disease and cost of medication. I respond well or respond hope pet owners will start the discussion temporarily to antihista- with their own vet as to which medication mines and eventually need a is best for their pet. stronger medication. Dr. Kearns practices veterinary medicine Stock photo from his Port Jefferson office and is pictured with his son Matthew and his dog Jasmine.
• Compassionate and loving care for all your pets’ needs.
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Art Exhibits ..................................B25 Ask the Vet ..................................... B3 Calendar ................................. B18-20 Cooking Cove...............................B17 Crossword Puzzle ........................ B8 Gardening ....................................B16
Legally Speaking.........................B10 Medical Compass ........................ B7 Parents and Kids ................. B26-27 Power of Three .............................. B9 Religious Directory ............ B22-24 SBU Sports ...................................B21
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In this edition:
PAGE B4 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • MAY 03, 2018
SHELTER PET OF THE WEEK ,
Stony Brook Orthopaedic Associates
Foot and Ankle Surgery Get Back On Your Feet When sudden or ongoing foot or ankle pain interferes with your daily activities, take a step towards relief.
And we treat both adults and children. Each of our orthopaedic surgeons is fellowship trained, meaning you receive
To make an appointment please call (631) 444-4233. • East Setauket • Commack
MEET TINKERBELLE!
Little Tinkerbelle was left behind in an apartment by herself while the owner went on vacation. Now this 2-year-old, female Chihuahua mix is looking for a new home where she will get the love and attention she deserves. She’s extremely sweet and ready to start living the good life with you! Tinkerbelle comes spayed, microchipped and is up to date on all her vaccines. Please come meet her at Kent Animal Shelter today! Kent Animal Shelter is located at 2259 River Road in Calverton. The adoption center is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. every day. For more information on Tinkerbelle and other adoptable pets at Kent, visit www.kentanimalshelter.com or call 631-727-5731.
the highest level of care. Whether your condition is simple or complex, our goal is the same: to get you back on your feet and back to your life as quickly as possible. Stony Brook University/SUNY is an affirmative action, equal opportunity educator and employer. 18021165H
Please join us for our
Open House Event An Exclusive Open House Event on Hearing Loss & Hearing Aids
THREE DAYS ONLY | May 14, 15, & 17 9:00am – 5:00pm Hearing & Tinnitus Management LLC 207 Hallock Rd #208 · Stony Brook, NY 11790
Photo courtesy of Kent Animal Shelter
©149051
Join us for a no-obligation open house and brunch! We will discuss hearing health, hearing loss, tinnitus, and how today’s hearing devices can help you reconnect with sounds you thought you lost. Ask yourself: • Do you often ask others to repeat themselves? • Do you prefer the volume of the television louder than others? • Do you struggle to hear in restaurants or other social situations? • Do you experience ringing in the ears? If you recognize these symptoms in yourself or a loved one, it’s important that you attend this no-obligation event.
GUEST SPEAKER:
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4/27/2018 12:12:28 PM
MAY 03, 2018 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B5
FEATURE STORY
I-Spy with my little eye ... a dragoon coat! TVHS to host ‘TURN’ Auction fundraiser BY MICHAEL TESSLER The Three Villages is home to a remarkable Revolutionary history that for over a century remained elusive to the American people ... all except in Setauket where local lore and legend preserved a tale of spies, lies, petticoats and the exceptional bravery of everyday citizens who risked everything to liberate their homes and loved ones from tyranny. General George Washington established the Culper Spy Ring in 1778 by recruiting Benjamin Tallmadge, a would-be lieutenant colonel and future congressman who called the quaint village of Setauket home. He recruited friends and schoolmates to establish a secret network, eluding the mighty British Empire that had been occupying Long Island since August 1776. Their efforts turned the tides of war in favor of the Continental Army and forever altered the course of history. It wasn’t until 1939, when amateur historian Morton Pennypacker began to decipher secret aliases and uncover the true identities of the Culper spies. In 2014, the legend of the Culper Spy Ring finally entered the public zeitgeist with the premiere of AMC’s television drama series “TURN: Washington’s Spies,” a historical fiction piece that chronicled the Culper Spy Ring. “If it weren’t for Setauket, we would have lost the war,” declared Three Village Historical Society President Steve Healy. “If Washington had been caught, he would have been
hanged. They stopped that, they saved the [American] Revolution.” And just as the Culper spies saved the fledgling United States, the Three Village Historical Society has made it its mission to keep the Culper Spy Ring and the local history of this community alive. When “TURN” ended last August, the Three Village Historical Society reached out to the show and received a very special donation: props, costumes and other memorabilia actually featured on the show during the series’ four-season run. On Saturday, May 19, the public will have the opportunity to own these pieces of history during a silent auction fundraiser on the society’s front lawn starting at noon. Bidding closes at 4:15 p.m. According to TVHS board members Cathy White and Janet McCauley, the most sought after item of the day will be a dragoon (18th century cavalry) coat worn by the actor who played Benjamin Tallmadge, Seth Numrich. “It’ll be fun to see where it ends up,” said McCauley. “Either way, it is a wonderful tool to educate our community about the area that they live in.” Other items in the auction include a reproduction of a 1730 Dublin Castle Long Land (1st Model) Brown Bess musket; autographed sheet music; a portrait of King George II, c. 1730, reproduction on canvas; as well as maps, letters and artifacts such as an astrolab, horn bowls, British army drumsticks, pewter pitchers, posters, an uncut sheet of Continental currency and more.
Photo courtesy of AMC
This dragoon coat, worn by actor Seth Numrich in AMC’s ‘TURN’ series, will be one of the items auctioned off on May 19. In addition to the silent auction, there is a Farmer and Spy, Abraham Woodhull, guided flurry of activities scheduled throughout the tour at 2 p.m. starting at the front parking lot day. From noon to 4 p.m. community edu- of the Caroline Church of Brookhaven, 1 Dyke cator Donna Smith, portraying Anna Smith Road, Setauket. From 3 to 5 p.m., “Wine and cheese will Strong, will hold invisible ink demonstrations while noted children’s author Selene Castro- be served while we have Colonial music pervilla will be selling and signing copies of her formed by Natalie Kress and Kevin Devine books. Visitors will also have the opportunity of the Three Village Chamber Players,” said to meet Benjamin Tallmadge, portrayed by Sandy White, TVHS office manager, adding, TVHS past president and trustee Art Billadel- “We want to create a dialogue about our comlo. The historical society’s two exhibits, SPIES: munity’s history. ‘TURN’ helped start that How a Group of Long Island Patriots Helped conversation. We’d like to continue it.” George Washington Win the Revolution and The Three Village Historical Society, 93 Chicken Hill: A Community Lost to Time, and North Country Road, Setauket will host an I-Spy gift shop will be open as well. “Turn” Auction fundraiser on May 19 from noon At noon, historian Margo Arceri will lead a to 5 p.m. (rain date May 20). Tickets, which are Tri-Spy Walking Tour, which starts at the post $25 adults, $5 for children age 14 and younger, office next to Frank Melville Memorial Park, cover participation in all of the day’s events, in101 Main St. in Setauket. Historian Beverly C. cluding both walking tours. To order, please visit Tyler will give a Walk Through History with www.TVHS.org or call 631-751-3730.
GRAND PREMIERE The Story of Nathan Hale, Benjamin Tallmadge & the Origin of The Setauket Spies
Coming to SBU Staller Center Sunday, June 24, 2018 at 6:45 pm ~ As TBR’s Gift to the Community Admission FREE ~ ©157561
PAGE B6 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • MAY 03, 2018
HELPING YOU NAVIGATE TO OPTIMAL HEALTH
David Dunaief, M.D. Integrative Medicine
• A Whole Body Approach • Reversing, Preventing & Treating Chronic Disease and Managing Weight by Connecting Conventional Medicine with Lifestyle Modifications Our Philosophy is simple. We believe wellness is derived through nutritional medicine and lifestyle interventions that prevent and treat chronic diseases. Medications have their place - and in some cases can be lifesaving. However, there’s no medication without side effects. The goal should be to limit the need for medications - or minimize the number of medications you take on a regular basis. You are not limited by your genes. Fortunately, most diseases are based primarily on epigenetics, which are environmental influences, and not on genetics. Epigenetics literally means above or around the gene. In epigenetics, lifestyle choices impact gene expression. Just because your first degree relatives may have had a disease, you are not predestined to follow suit. We are specialists who will partner with your primary care physician. A standard medical education does not integrate enough nutritional medicine and other lifestyle interventions. We bridge that gap.
We use evidence-based medicine to guide our decision-making. The amount of research related to nutrition and other lifestyle issues continues to grow rapidly, with many studies showing significant beneficial effects on health. We treat each patient as an individual. We will work with you to develop a plan that allows you to take a proactive role in managing your own health. The health outcomes are worth the effort. Is disease reversal possible? Absolutely! Study evidence has found this to be true, and many of our patients have experienced reversal of diabetes, autoimmune disorders, migraines, and cardiovascular disease, just to mention a few. In many cases, because of their exceptional results, our patients have been able to reduce or eliminate their medications. Read more common questions and answers on medicalcompassmd.com. Dr. Dunaief has written over 2,000 medical research articles that have been published in Times Beacon Record Newspapers.
47 Route 25A, Setauket NY
(Next to Capital One Bank & Across From Convenience Drive-thru)
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drdunaief@medicalcompassmd.com Visit our website www.medicalcompassmd.com
David Dunaief, M.D.
Clinician, Researcher, Author and Speaker Dr. Dunaief was also recently published in The New York Times and appeared on NBC, News 12 Long Island and News 12 Brooklyn.
Reversing and Preventing Chronic Conditions and Diseases Including: High Blood Pressure High Cholesterol/Triglycerides Heart Disease Stroke Diabetes Type 1 and Type 2 Obesity Breast Cancer Prostate Cancer Lung Cancer Colorectal Cancer Osteoarthritis Osteoporosis Reflux Disease Sleep Apnea Migraine and many more “My relatives all died from diabetes or complications by 57. I was on a statin and four diabetes medications including insulin when I started at 55 with Dr. Dunaief. In two months, I was able to stop them all. I’m now 59. The numbness in my feet is gone, I can move my toes much better, and I’m no longer short of breath.” – T.C.
Dr. Dunaief builds a customized plan for each patient - he knows that “no body is the same.”
MAY 03, 2018 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B7
MEDICAL COMPASS
Preventing dementia
NEWS AROUND TOWN
Managing biological age through diet can reduce risk
Dementia may be diagnosed when someone experiences loss of memory plus loss of another faculty, such as executive functioning (decision-making) or language abilities (speaking, writing or reading). The latter is known as aphasia. Alzheimer’s disease is responsible for approximately 60 to 80 percent of dementia cases (1). Unfortunately, there are no definitive studies that show reversal or a cure for Alzheimer’s disease. This is why prevention is central to Alzheimer’s — and dementia in general. In terms of dementia, there is good news and some disappointing By David news. Dunaief, M.D. We will start with the good news. Though chronological age is a risk factor that cannot be changed, biological age may be adjustable. There are studies that suggest we may be able to prevent dementia through the use of both lifestyle modifications and medications.
Telomeres’ length and biological age Biological age may be different from chronological age, depending on a host of environmental factors that include diet, exercise and smoking. There are substances called telomeres that are found at the ends of our chromosomes. They provide stability to this genetic material. As our telomeres get shorter and shorter, our cellular aging and, ultimately, biological aging, increases. In a preliminary case-control study, dementia patients were shown to have significantly shorter telomere length than healthy patients (2). Interestingly, according to the authors, men have shorter telomere length and may be biologically older by four years than women of the same chronological age. The researchers caution that this is a preliminary finding and may not have clinical implications. What I find most intriguing is that intensive lifestyle modifications increased telomere length in a small three-month study with patients who had low-risk prostate cancer (3). By adjusting their lifestyles, study participants were potentially able to decrease their biological ages.
Diet’s effect Lifestyle modifications play a role in many chronic diseases and disorders. Dementia is no exception. In a prospective observational study, involving 3,790 participants, those who had the greatest compliance with a Mediterranean-type diet demonstrated a significant reduction in the risk of Alzheimer’s disease, compared to the least compliant (4). Participants were over the age of 65, demographics included substantial numbers of both black and white participants, and there was a mean follow-up of 7.6 years. Impressively, those who adhered more strictly to the diet performed cognitively as if they were three years younger, according to the authors.
respectively, when used in combination with other blood pressure medications. Interestingly, when ARBs were used alone, there was still a 47 percent reduction in risk; however, ACE inhibitors lost their prevention advantage. High blood pressure is a likely risk factor for dementia and can also be treated with lifestyle modifications (7). Otherwise, ARBs or ACE inhibitors may be the best choices for reducing dementia risk.
Ginkgo biloba disappoints Lifestyle modifications play a role in reducing the risk of developing dementia. Stock photo
Beta-carotene and vitamin C effect In a small, preliminary case-control study (disease vs. healthy patients), higher blood levels of vitamin C and beta-carotene significantly reduced the risk of dementia, by 71 and 87 percent, respectively (5). The blood levels were dramatically different in those with the highest and lowest blood levels of vitamin C (74.4 vs. 28.9 µmol/L) and betacarotene (0.8 vs. 0.2 µmol/L). The reason for this effect may be that these nutrients help reduce oxidative stress and thus have neuroprotective effects, preventing the breakdown of neurons. This study was done in the elderly, average 78.9 years old, which is a plus, since as we age we’re more likely to be afflicted by dementia. It is critically important to delineate the sources of vitamin C and beta-carotene in this study. These numbers came from food, not supplements. Why is this important? First, beta-carotene is part of a family of nutrients called carotenoids. There are at least 600 carotenoids in food, all of which may have benefits that are not achieved when taking beta-carotene supplements. Second of all, beta-carotene in supplement form may increase the risk of small-cell lung cancer in smokers (6). Foods that contain beta-carotene include fruits and vegetables such as berries; green leafy vegetables; and orange, red or yellow vegetables like peppers, carrots and sweet potato. It may surprise you, but fish also contains carotenoids. In my practice, I test for beta-carotene and vitamin C as a way to measure nutrient levels and track patients’ progress when they are eating a nutrient-dense diet. Interestingly, many patients achieve more than three times higher than the highest beta-carotene blood levels seen in this small study.
Impact of high blood pressure medications For those patients who have high blood pressure, it is important to know that not all blood pressure medications are created equal. When comparing blood pressure medications in an observational study, two classes of these medications stood out. Angiotensin II receptor blockers (known as ARBs) and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (known as ACE inhibitors) reduce the risk of dementia by 53 and 24 percent
Ginkgo biloba, a common herbal supplement taken to help prevent dementia, may have no benefit. In the GuidAge study, ginkgo biloba was shown to be no more effective than placebo in preventing patients from progressing to Alzheimer’s disease (8). This randomized controlled trial, considered the gold standard of study designs, was done in elderly patients over a five-year period with almost 3,000 participants. There was no difference seen between the treatment and placebo groups. This reinforces the results of an earlier study, Ginkgo Evaluation of Memory trial (9). Longer studies may be warranted. The authors stressed the importance of preventive measures with dementia.
Fish oil: not the last word Many of us take fish oil supplements in the hope of preventing dementia. However, in a meta-analysis (a group of three randomized controlled trials), the results did not show a difference between treatment groups and placebo in older patients taking fish oil with omega-3 fatty acids (10). The authors stress that this is not the final word since studies have been mixed. The longest of the three studies was 40 months, yet may not have been long enough to see a beneficial effect. Also participants in the meta-analysis did not necessarily have low omega-3 levels at the beginning of the studies. This doesn’t necessarily mean fish oil doesn’t work for dementia prevention, it is just discouraging, as the authors emphasize. Fish consumption, however, has shown an inverse association with Alzheimer’s and dementia overall (11). There may be ways to prevent dementia from occurring, whether through lifestyle modifications or through the selection of medications, if they are necessary.
References: (1) www.uptodate.com. (2) Arch Neurol. 2012 Jul 23:1-8. (3) Lancet Oncol. 2008;9(11):1048-1057. (4) Am J Clin Nutr. 2011;93:601-607. (5) J Alzheimers Dis. 2012;31:717-724. (6) Am. J. Epidemiol. 2009; 169(7):815-828. (7) Neurology. 2005;64(2):277. (8) Lancet Neurol. 2012;11(10):851-859. (9) JAMA. 2008;300(19):2253-2262. (10) Cochrane Summaries online June 13, 2012. (11) Neurology. 2007;69(20):1921. Dr. Dunaief is a speaker, author and local lifestyle medicine physician focusing on the integration of medicine, nutrition, fitness and stress management. For further information, visit www.medicalcompassmd.com or consult your personal physician.
The Como Brothers
The Como Brothers in concert Save the date! Grounds & Sounds Café at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 380 Nicolls Road, East Setauket will welcome singer/songwriters The Como Brothers (pop-blues) in concert on Friday, May 11 at 9 p.m. Preceded by an open mic at 8 p.m. Tickets are $12.50 per person at www.groundsandsounds.org or at the door.
Cheese Making Class Are you a “foodie”? Do you just like to eat? Come join the Smithtown Historical Society at the Roseneath Cottage, 239 East Main St., Smithtown for an evening of cheese making on Friday, May 11 at 7 p.m. and learn how to craft cheese by hand. You will get a chance to sample it and learn how to make your own at home. Fee is $25, $20 members. Registration is required by calling 631265-6768.
Flapjack fundraiser Applebee’s, 355 Route 25A, Miller Place will host a Flapjack Fundraiser breakfast to support US-TOO prostate cancer support and education on Saturday, May 5 from 8 to 10 a.m. Tickets are $10. Come have a short stack for a tall cause. Call Craig at 631-846-4377 for further details.
LISCA celebrates 50th year St. James R.C. Church, 429 Route 25A, East Setauket will host a 50th Anniversary American Anthology concert by the Long Island Symphonic Choral Association on Saturday, May 12 at 8 p.m. Conducted by Eric Stewart, the program will feature works by Ellington, Berlin, Gershwin and more. Tickets, which are $25 adults, $20 seniors (free for student), are available online at www.lisca.org or at the door. For further information, call 631-751-2743 or 631-941-9413.
Estate Planning Workshop The law office of Craig A. Andreoli will offer a complimentary Elder Law & Estate Planning Workshop at Gurwin Jewish Nursing & Rehabilitation Center, 68 Hauppauge Road, Commack on Tuesday, May 10 from 7 to 8 p.m. Come learn about the common pitfalls and issues that arise when you don’t plan your estate properly. Admission is free and light refreshments will be served. To RSVP, call 631-686-6500.
Send your community news to leisure@ tbrnewspapers.com.
PAGE B8 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • MAY 03, 2018 Time to dust off those resumes! Sachem Public Library, 150 Holbrook Road, Holbrook will host a Job Fair on Friday, May 4 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Representatives from over 35 companies are featured: A Gentle Touch Senior Home Care, Access Staffing, ADD, AFLAC, All County Healthcare, Amneal Pharmaceuticals, Better Business Bureau, Certified Laboratories, Core BTS, DiCarlo Distributors, East End Bus, East End Disabilities, EOC of Suffolk, Express Employment Professionals, Hampton Inn Brookhaven, Home Instead Senior Care, Long Island Rail Road, Luitpold Pharmaceuticals, Nature’s Bounty, New Vitality, NY Life Insurance, People Ready, Shoprite, Sight MD, South Shore Home Health, Spellman High Voltage, Splish Splash, Suffolk Federal Credit Union, Sun Run, Supreme Screw Products, TJ Maxx, TRI/American Maintenance, UCP of Suffolk, UPS, US Nonwovens, US Postal Service, Windowrama and YAI. Open to all and no registration is required. Bring copies of your resume and dress to impress! For further details, call 631-588-5024.
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
THEME: Tourist Destinations ACROSS
What is a living will? Find out by reading my monthly column,
Linda M. Toga, Esq.
LEGALLY SPEAKING.
THE LAW OFFICES OF LINDA M. TOGA, P.C. 175 Main Street, Suite 9 • East Setauket, New York
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SUDOKU PUZZLE
1. Dog show outcasts 6. Pose a question 9. Mr. Potato Head, e.g. 13. ____ tower 14. Holstein sound 15. Liable to cry 16. Was rebroadcasted 17. Pilot’s deadline 18. Packers QB 19. *Where ATMs have instructions in Latin 21. Army bathroom 23. Surf turf 24. “At ____, soldier!” 25. Pat 28. University head 30. Pre-wedding agreement 35. Caspian Sea river 37. Like the fairy tale duckling 39. Pore in a leaf 40. Hindu Mr. 41. Intrudes 43. Month before Nisan 44. Perpendicular to the keel 46. “Pronto!” 47. Highway hauler 48. Magazine collection 50. Bike maker 52. Bro’s counterpart 53. Start of a conclusion 55. Look through a scope 57. *Popular all-inclusive location, pl. 61. *Where to visit “the happiest place on Earth” 65. Yokel’s holler 66. Crematorium jar 68. Dip a ____ ____ the water 69. General direction 70. Be indisposed 71. Jagged 72. Trees on Freddy Krueger’s street 73. Spade for stony ground 74. Roller derby turf, pl.
Answers to last week’s puzzle:
Famous Pets
DOWN 1. Type of nuclear missile 2. Eye layer 3. Legal wrong 4. *Orient Express, e.g. 5. On the same page 6. Echoed by the flock 7. Chronic drinker 8. *Down Under marsupial 9. Scorch 10. ____wig or ____winkle 11. *Middle name of Shakespeare’s hometown 12. Unit of force 15. *Taking the ____, or going to BadenBaden 20. Consumed 22. Pharaoh’s cobra 24. Joins the military 25. *Location of world’s tallest building 26. Omani and Yemeni 27. “____ in Toyland” 29. *Where to see Taj Mahal 31. #17 Across, pl. 32. Source of lymphocytes, pl. 33. Savory sensation 34. *Chunnel ride from London 36. *Party in Maui 38. *Sydney Harbour is one of first to ring in the new one 42. Ancient fishing tool 45. Modus operandi 49. Female pronoun 51. In working order 54. Run-of-the-mill *Theme related clue.
Directions: Fill in the blank squares in the grid, making sure that every row, column and 3-by-3 box includes all digits 1 through 9.
Answers to last week’s SUDOKU puzzle:
Answers to this week’s puzzle will appear in next week’s newspaper and online on Friday afternoon at www.tbrnewsmedia.com, Arts and Lifestyles
MAY 03, 2018 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B9
KNOWLEDGE SEEKERS
SBU’s Romeil Sandhu earns Air Force, NSF awards
Harnessing the Technology of our Research Giants
SPOTLIGHTING DISCOVERIES AT (1) COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB (2) STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY & (3) BROOKHAVEN NATIONAL LAB
Weekly horoscopes TAURUS – Apr 21/May 21
BY DANIEL DUNAIEF Romeil Sandhu has had a busy year. Last fall, the U.S. Air Force awarded him a $450,000 three-year grant, called the Young Investigator Research Program. At the beginning of this year, Sandhu won a $500,000 National Science Foundation Career Award. The assistant professor in the Department of Biomedical Informatics at Stony Brook University is working in several directions on basic research that could help with everything from network security to autonomous cars. The awards are a “tremendous accomplishment,” Allen Tannenbaum, a distinguished professor of computer science and applied mathematics/statistics at SBU, explained in an email. Sandhu won the career award on his “first try, which is very unusual. The Air Force award is a very high honor for a young researcher.” Tannenbaum was Sandhu’s doctoral thesis adviser at Georgia Tech. Tannenbaum recruited Sandhu to join Stony Brook University and described Sandhu’s work as going in a “very promising direction.”
‘Whether it is targeted therapy and cancer research, social computing and/or interactive computing, we are just beginning to understand very complex issues.’
— Romeil Sandhu
The Air Force funding is a new direction in which Sandhu is developing a theory around how to incorporate user input in three-dimensional autonomous systems that rely on two-dimensional imaging information. An example of this, Sandhu explained, is where a soldier might make judgments maneuvering a vehicle around potentially deadly situations. His work involves translating threedimensional interactive feedback controls based on twodimensional imaging systems.
“When you take a video of a car, it’s in two dimensions,” he explained. The computer link between the collected images and the reality relies on geometric properties. With most autonomous computer systems, a human is involved in the process, to prepare for what is called the “unknown unknown.” That is a term used to describe situations in which there is no way to predict all possible events. Through his Air Force work, Sandhu ideally would like to seek greater autonomy for some of these self-directed systems. Removing human input entirely, however, generates a risk that may be too great. That is the case in cancer treatment as well as the systems used to protect soldiers. The work he is doing with the Air Force explores how to fuse human and computerassisted decision making. The NSF award, meanwhile, will use the confluence of geometry and control to explore vulnerability in time-varying networks. Sandhu is tackling problems in social systems, communication systems and cancer biology and biomedical informatics. “We can devise this idea of a network, which is the same way with cancer and proteins,” he said. One protein sends a signal to another, causing a cascade of reactions that often promote cancer. Sandhu is interested in how microfluctuations can pave the way to larger disruptions. In the social setting, such information may infect individuals or groups and such dynamics may allow it to influence macroscopic audiences. “The prevailing idea is that there exist several changes that pave the way to a larger catastrophic failure,” he explained in an email. The grant is designed to exploit everything that can be modeled as a part of a network, to understand their vulnerability. Viral information and trending stories, Sandhu said, might have one dynamic, while conspiracy theories might have another. He would like to see how such information gains traction and spreads.
Relationships are at the forefront of your mind, Taurus. You may have specific criteria you use to assess potential friends or romantic interests, but it could pay to widen your scope.
GEMINI – May 22/Jun 21
Gemini, your charm might be on overdrive, but you are looking for more than just trivial companionship. Explore activities that will match you with those with the same interests.
CANCER – Jun 22/Jul 22
Co-workers are expecting much from you, Cancer. Although you want to promise them everything, you have doubts you can deliver. See what you can handle and farm out the rest.
LEO – Jul 23/Aug 23
Romeil Sandhu with his dog June The way people interact occurs through multiple networks. Sandhu is studying how models can exploit real-world behavior. Geometry, he suggests, can begin to assist on more complex modeling problems that are time varying and multilayered. When he describes how he studies systems such as cancer, he likens the process to a waterbed. A drug or therapy may knock out a specific gene, which could limit cancer’s growth. When that gene changes, however, it creates a wave along the bed, enabling another potential genetic process to occur. While it has a more precise definition in control, it is akin to sitting on a waterbed in suppressing one sequence only to give rise to another. Sandhu, who arrived at Stony Brook University in 2016, grew up in Huntsville, Alabama, and then spent over a decade going to school in Georgia, where he earned his doctorate at Georgia Tech. In some ways, Sandhu’s Huntsville background, which includes lettering in high school soccer for four years as a center midfielder, is similar to one of the challenges in perception he studies through his work. “Think of me as one person in a network,” he said. “In a lot of the research we look at, we want to know how microfluctuations such as myself give way to a larger perception.” Sandhu explained that the general perception of Huntsville
Photo courtesy of Romeil Sandhu
and Alabama is different from his experience. Most people are surprised that Huntsville has the second largest research park in the nation, at Cummings Research Park. Huntsville also has numerous aerospace companies. The city generally ranks highly as one of the more educated in the country, he said. This is due in large part to the tech community that supports the government. The town is largely influenced by NASA and the surrounding military aerospace community, which Sandhu believes impacted his worldview, career path and research initiatives. Indeed, one of the goals Sandhu has for his NSF grant is to help educate the high school students of people serving in the military. He said he appreciated the military families who were such an integral part of his upbringing. Sandhu has two doctoral students and two master’s students in his lab. He also plans to participate in the Simons Summer Research Program at SBU where he will add a high school student. He is excited about the next phase of his research. “The best part is the challenges that lie ahead,” he explained in an email. “Whether it is targeted therapy and cancer research, social computing and/or interactive computing, we are just beginning to understand very complex issues. Our hope is that we can make a contribution.”
You have plenty of options in your love life, Leo. Take a step back and carefully assess where you want existing relationships to go. Such a breather will only benefit you
VIRGO – Aug 24/Sept 22
It takes more than just a positive attitude to be successful this week. Virgo — although positivity is a good start. Set goals and aim for doing your fair share of hard work.
LIBRA – Sept 23/Oct 23
Libra, your intuition lets you know when to keep quiet and when to make a stir. Let events unfold around you this week, keeping your thoughts close to the vest.
SCORPIO – Oct 24/Nov 22
Scorpio, in the midst of difficult times, you may find that opportunities abound. Do not let any moment pass you by; embrace the situations and opportunities coming your way.
SAGITTARIUS – Nov 23/Dec 21
An invitation to a special event may be on the horizon, Sagittarius. Be patient and prepare for some excitement. Invite others to join in the festivities.
CAPRICORN – Dec 22/Jan 20
Capricorn, you may be on the cusp of revealing your plans to others. But a change of heart might be coming, so wait a little bit longer until you’re certain.
AQUARIUS – Jan 21/Feb 18
You might not be in the mood for small talk this week, Aquarius. But avoid being rude as you try to speak about serious matters. Allow others to express themselves.
PISCES – Feb 19/Mar 20
There seems to be no limit to your career possibilities, Pisces. Rather than staying put in your current position, branch out.
ARIES – Mar 21/Apr 20
You will have plenty of time to devote to your favorite projects, Aries. But right now you need to spend some time with close friends and family.
Send your community news to leisure@tbrnewspapers.com.
PAGE B10 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • MAY 03, 2018
LEGALLY SPEAKING Times Beacon Record News Media’s
1st Annual
&
COOKS, BOOKS CORKS
Stock photo
What is a living will?
A Fundraiser
Proceeds will be raised to underwrite a summer internship for an aspiring journalist from Stony Brook University’s School of Journalism.
The Bates House 1 Bates Road • East Setauket Opposite Emma S. Clark Library
Join Us For An Appetizing Evening! Feed your mind and body
Enjoy delicious food tastings from our top local restaurants paired with book signings/meet & greets with well-known local authors.
For tickets $50 per person or to be a sponsor, please visit our website tbrnewsmedia.com or our Facebook page at Facebook/TBRNewsMedia to pay with PayPal. Or contact Evelyn Costello 631.751.7744 or 516.909.5171.
A ticket to Cooks, Books & Corks earns a reserved seat at the premiere of our film “One Life to Give” at the Staller Center June 24th.
©157562
Tuesday, June 12th 6-8 pm
You can direct your health care provider to withhold treatment if you lack mental caTHE FACTS: I want to be sure that I pacity and need a feeding tube. You can also do not receive end-of life-medical treatment state in a living will that treatment should that will do little other than prolong my life. be withheld if you exhibit significant mental impairment combined with a condition that THE QUESTIONS: Is the document in is likely to cause death in a relatively short which I can state my end-of-life wishes time, as determined by your doctor. Examples of the types of life-sustaincalled a living trust or a living will? ing treatments and procedures you may want withheld include carTHE ANSWER: The docudiopulmonary resuscitation, ment in which you can medialysis, artificial hydration, morialize your wishes with artificial nutrition (feeding respect to the medical treattubes), mechanical respirament to be administered or tion, antibiotics, experimenwithheld when you are near tal medications and surgideath is called a living will. cal procedures. Under many A living will differs from circumstances, these sorts of a living trust, also known as treatments and procedures a revocable trust, because serve to prolong life but do a living will has nothing to not necessarily have any imdo with how your assets are pact on a patient’s underlying handled during your life or medical condition. distributed upon you death. While asking that such Instead, a living will prolife-sustaining treatments be vides the person you name as It is extremely withheld, living wills generyour agent in your health care important that you ally direct the health care proxy, your next of kin and/ or your health care provider give serious thought provider to the administration of pain medication and with important information about how you would like to to your options when to take the steps necessary to proceed if your doctor has deciding if a living keep the patient comfortable. Since a living will is a determined that your condiwill is right for you. document in which a person tion is likely to cause death essentially rejects life-sustainwithin a relatively short time ing treatments, sometimes and you are unable to express referred to as “heroic measures,” people your wishes about your medical treatment. A properly drafted and executed living who have a living will may effectively haswill can also serve as clear and convinc- ten their own death. As such, a living will ing evidence of your wishes in the event is clearly not appropriate for people who a court is asked to decide whether or not want all possible measures to be taken to your health care provider must honor your keep them alive. Because of the moral and religious wish to withhold medical treatment. A living will gives you the opportunity to issues associated with a living will, it is put into writing what types of medical treat- likely the most personal and emotionally ments, procedures and medications you do charged estate planning document you not want if you have suffered from a signifi- can sign. It is, therefore, extremely imporcant loss of mental capacity and you cannot tant that you give serious thought to your eat or drink without assistance or you have options when deciding if a living will is an irreversible or incurable medical condi- right for you and discuss your wishes with an attorney who has experience prepartion with no likelihood of improvement. For example, in your living will you can ing living wills. state that you want medical treatment withLinda M. Toga, Esq. provides personalheld if you suffer from dementia or some ized service and peace of mind to her clients other form of mental impairment and there in the areas of estate planning, real estate, is no reasonable likelihood that such treat- marital agreements and litigation. Visit her ment will restore your ability to be oriented website at www.lmtogalaw.com or call 631and interact with your environment. 444-5605 to schedule a free consultation. BY LINDA M. TOGA, ESQ.
MAY 03, 2018 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B11
COVER STORY
Town of Huntington gears up for 18th annual Tulip Festival
O
n Sunday, May 6, families across Long Island are invited to enjoy the Town of Huntington’s annual celebration of spring. The natural beauty of the historic Heckscher Park will once again serve as the backdrop for the town’s highly anticipated 18th annual Tulip Festival. The free event, located at 2 Prime Ave. in the Village of Huntington, will feature thousands of tulips planted in selected beds throughout the park, activity booths for children with creative, hands-on projects, lectures, demonstrations, a school art contest, refreshments and live entertainment on the
Chapin Rainbow Stage from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Councilman Mark Cuthbertson (D), the founder of the festival, and chief sponsor, NEFCU, are looking forward to an even bigger communitydriven event this year. “The 18th Annual Huntington Tulip Festival is a free event that has something for the whole family to enjoy,” said Cuthbertson, adding, “So please stop by and enjoy the festivities!” To help make this wonderful day a success, volunteers are needed to distribute festival programs to visitors. Any person or community group is welcome to volunteer by calling 631-351-3099.
Entertainment schedule 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. — Explore the Heckscher Museum’s current exhibits for reduced admission ($2). Docents will be in the galleries to answer questions at 2 p.m. 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. — Winning works from local School Art Contest will be on display near the Chapin Rainbow Stage.
Linda Humes
Noon to 12:45 p.m. — Chapin Rainbow Stage Performance: Gizmo Guys, a rapid-fire juggling
Winners of last year’s contest, clockwise from left, ‘Glistening Pond,’ Honorable Mention, by Dianne Selles of Huntington; Photo Contest ‘Field of Joy,’ First Place, by Vicki Dolce of NYC; ‘A Heckscher Since its inception, HunMorning,’ Second Place, by Charleen Turner of Huntington; tington’s Tulip Festival has ‘Nature’s Gift’, Third Place, by Richard Dolce of NYC included an annual photo contest. Submissions by amateur and professional photographers will be juried to select the images most evocative of the beauty and family orientation of the Festival. Enter for a chance to win awards totaling $300; no entry fee required! Entries must be postmarked or received by July 31, 2018. Prize-winning images will be used in Festival publicity. For details, visit www. HuntingtonNY.gov/TulipFestival. act with Allan Jacobs and Barrett Felker that exhilarates and inspires sidesplitting laughter in audiences of all ages. 1 to 1:45 p.m. — Chapin Rainbow Stage Performance: Griots in Concert, an inspirational and motivational performance featuring stories, music and songs from Africa, the Caribbean and America with vocalist and storyteller Linda Humes and master percussionist Sanga of the Valley. Griot is the
French term for a West African oral historian or storyteller. 2 to 3 p.m. — Chapin Rainbow Stage Performance: Funkytown Playground, a music and movement program with Aly Sunshine and band featuring interactive songs that are catchy, fun and educational — a high-energy performance delivered with contagious enthusiasm!
Gizmo Guys
4 p.m. — Festival closes. Heck- On the cover: scher Museum exhibits on view ‘Still Stunning After Storm,’ Honorable Mention, by Marianne P. Stone of Lynbrook until 5 p.m.
We Proudly Present the TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA
HISTORY HONOR ROLL
With gratitude to the many residents, businesses and organizations who continue to come forward and help us bring our local history to life through our film,
One Life to Give
Grand Premiere at SBU’s Staller Center June 24 at 6:45 pm
For their invaluable assistance we thank: For their generous support we thank: The Ward Melville Heritage Organization Gold Coast Bank & Holiday Inn Express • Empire National Bank SPLIA (Society For The Preservation of Long Island Antiquities) Daughters of the American Revolution, Anna Smith Strong Chapter Steve Healy and The Three Village Historical Society St. Charles Hospital • Todd Shapiro Associates Bev Tyler • Bridgeport-Port Jefferson Ferry Linda L. Sanders and Michael Lockhart, The Lockhart Sanders Group, Miller Place-Mount Sinai Historical Society Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc. • Glynn Mercep and Purcell, LLP Incorporated Village of Port Jefferson Margo Arceri and Tri-Spy Tours • Michael Harford • Fred and Debbie Bryant, Bryant Funeral Home Th ree Village Community Trust • Long Island Seaport and Eco Center Charles Lefkowitz and Realty Three • Peter Moloney and Moloney Funeral Homes Antique Costumes and Props by Nan Michael Ardolino of Realty Connect • Chris Nevin • Andy Polan and Stony Brook Vision World Benner’s Farm • John Worrell • Theatre Three The Connell Family and M.A. Connell Funeral Home • Long Island Speed Specialists • Trumbull Printing Stony Brook University • Caroline Church Ann Kilbourne • Matthew Duff y • Covati and Janhsen CPA • Virginia Cash • Joe DiSanti • Denise DeCrescito Setauket Gourmet Deli • Setauket Village Diner Nicholas P. Del Guercio and Helen Conroy Del Guercio Via Pizza • Pasta Pasta • Eastern Pavilion • Unique Cleaners
We welcome community participation. If you are interested in preserving our local history and wish to add your name and that of your business to our movie credits (e.g. Executive Producer), please call us at 631-751-7744
PAGE B12 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • MAY 03, 2018
M Y L A G O S M Y W AY
C AV I A R C O L L E C T I O N S
14 EAST BROADWAY | PORT JEFFERSON, NY 11777 ECOLIN.COM | 631.473.1117 ©157088
MAY 03, 2018 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B13 • Farmingville Hills Chamber of Commerce is seeking vendors for its 7th annual Farmingville Street Fair to be held on Portion Road between Leeds and S. Howell streets on June 10 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. For further details, call 631-317-1738. • Town of Brookhaven’s Office of Economic Development seeks businesses for its upcoming Job Fair at Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville on June 13 from 5:30 to 8 p.m. Reserve your recruitment table for $100. Call 631-4516563 for more info.
• The Friends of Harborfields Public Library, 31 Broadway, Greenlawn seeks vendors for its annual Flea Market & Craft Fair on Saturday, May 12 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. $30 for 10×10-foot space, extra $5 for a table. Applications are available online at www.harborfieldslibrary/ friends. For more information, call 631-757-4200. • The Lake Ronkonkoma Historical Society, 328 Hawkins Ave., Lake Ronkonkoma seeks craft vendors for its Spring Craft Fair that will be held on museum grounds and across the street on May 19 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (Rain date is May 20.) Fee is $30 a space. Please call Evelyn at 631-588-7599 for further details.
• Deepwells Farm County Park, 497 Route 25A, St. James will hold its annual Summer Art & Craft Festival on July 21 and 22 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Interested merchandise vendors should call 631-563-8551 for an application. • The Reboli Center for Art and History, 64 Main St., Stony Brook invites craft exhibitors for its first Craft by the Harbor event to be held on Aug. 25 and 26 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fee for the two-day event is $275 for a 10×10-foot space. Deadline is May 1. For further details and guidelines, call 631-751-7707 or visit www.rebolicenter.org.
• Art League of Long Island is looking for artists and craftspeople for its 51st annual Art in the Park Fine Art & Craft Fair at Heckscher Park in Huntington on June 2 and 3 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Deadline to submit application is May 24. Visit www. artleagueli.org or call 631-462-5400.
• The Yaphank Historical Society is looking for craft and merchandise vendors for its annual Spring Yard Sale, to be held on the grounds of the Robert Hawkins House, 4 Yaphank Ave., Yaphank on May 19 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. (Rain date is May 20.) Vendor fee is $10 for a 10×10-foot space. For further info, call 631-924-4803. • East End Arts, 133 East Main St., Riverhead seeks street painters and artisan vendors for its 22nd annual Community Mosaic Street Painting Festival in downtown Riverhead on May 27 from noon to 5 p.m. Deadline to register is May 10. For additional information, call Pat at 631-727-0900. • Starflower Experiences will hold its annual Community Yard Sale at Manor Farm, 210 Manor Road, Huntington on June 2 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. For a donation of $20 you can reserve a 10×10-foot space to sell your unwanted stuff. For more info, visit www.starflowerexperiences.org. • Ward Melville High School’s Habitat for Humanity Club, 380 Old Town Road, East Setauket is seeking a variety of vendors for a fundraising event on June 2 from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. at the school. Club is asking for a 20 percent donation of profits to help purchase supplies. Deadline to apply is May 26. Please call 631-751-5131 or email 47sblake@gmail.com for further info and to book a table. You must bring your own chairs. • The Three Village Historical Society, 93 North Country Road, Setauket will hold its annual Antiques & Yard Sale on June 9 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. (Rain date is June 10.) Vendors and individuals wanted. 10×10-foot spaces available for $35, $30 members. To print out an application, visit www.tvhs.org or stop by the society. For more information, call 631-751-3730. • Saddle Rock Ranch, 41 Coram-Sweezeytown Road, Coram will host a Family Fun Day on June 10 from noon to 4 p.m. Merchandise vendors wanted for the event. Deadline to apply is June 1. Call 631-841-1141 for more information. • St. Thomas of Canterbury Episcopal Church, 90 Edgewater Ave., Smithtown seeks craft, new “flea market” merchandise and mini yard sale vendors for its annual Strawberry Festival & Craft Fair on June 16 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. (Rain date is June 23.) $40 for a 10×12-foot space. Call 631-265-4520 or email stthomasofcan@ optonline.net. • Farmingville Residents Association will host its annual Flea Markets on May 27, June 24, Aug. 26 and Sept. 30 at the corner of Horseblock Road and Woodycrest Drive in Farmingville from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Rain dates are the following Sundays. Interested vendors should call 631-880-7996 or email fra23@optonline.net for an application and pricing. • Setauket Presbyterian Church and Caroline Church of Brookhaven seek vendors for their annual Setauket Country Fair to be held on the Village Green in Setauket on June 2 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Please call Mark at 631609-0993 for more information.
Send your vendors wanted listing to leisure@tbrnewspapers.com 149068
PAGE B14 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • MAY 03, 2018
PHOTO OF THE WEEK
Dining & Entertainment ©152868
WHAT A RIDE! Elisa Hendrey of Mount Sinai visited the Heritage Park’s annual Fling into Spring Carnival last Sunday and captured this stunning image. She writes, ‘[It seems as if] the ride, called Pharaoh’s Fury, is sailing up into the deep blue sky. A huge crowd turned out to enjoy the event and the warm weather.’
Send your Photo of the Week to leisure@tbrnewspapers.com.
Open at 2 pm on Mother's Day Dinner Specials 825 Montauk Highway Bayport, New York 11705 ©157028
149070
(631) 472-9090
www.lesoirbayport.com
Tuesday – Thursday
27 ❑
• Price of all entrees includes soup, salad and dessert • Serving Dinner from 5 pm (closed Monday)
Food rating "...'outstanding' French destination in Bayport offering 'exquisitely prepared' dinners; the service is 'amazing' too ..." 2011-2012 Zagat Guide, Long Island Restaurants
MAY 03, 2018 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B15
Photo courtesy of Fathom Events
Gloria Swanson and William Holden in a scene from ‘Sunset Boulevard’
‘Sunset Boulevard’ heads to local theaters
S
ave the date! Fathom Events and Turner Classic Movies are bringing the timeless classic “Sunset Boulevard” to select cinemas nationwide for a special two-day event on Sunday, May 13 and Wednesday, May 16. Winner of three Academy Awards, the 1950 film directed by Billy Wilder stars Gloria Swanson, as Norma Desmond, an aging silent-film queen, and William Holden, as the struggling young screenwriter who is held in thrall by her madness. From the unforgettable opening sequence — a body found floating in a decayed mansion’s swimming pool — through the inevitable unfolding of tragic destiny, “Sunset Boulevard” is the definitive statement on the dark and desperate side of Hollywood.
The film also stars Erich von Stroheim as Desmond’s discoverer, ex-husband and butler, and Nancy Olson as the bright spot amid unrelenting ominousness. The screening will also include an exclusive commentary from TCM Host Ben Mankiewicz. Participating movie theaters in our neck of the woods include AMC Loews Stony Brook 17, 2196 Nesconset Highway, Stony Brook at 2 and 7 p.m. on both days; Farmingdale Multiplex Cinemas, 1001 Broadhollow Road, Farmingdale on May 13 at 2 p.m. and May 16 at 7 p.m.; and Island 16 Cinema de Lux, 185 Morris Ave., Holtsville on May 13 at 2 p.m. and May 16 at 7 p.m. To purchase your ticket in advance, visit www.fathomevents.com.
©156998
Treat the amazing Mom in your life to East Wind her’s Day Br unc t o h M
her’s Day Dinner t o M
Sunday, May 13th
Gift Card
in the Grand Ballroom
Reservations 10:00am - 3:30pm
Celebrate MOM! Bring together generations and honor the mothers, daughters and sisters in your family. Enjoy a full gourmet buffet and kids station. One Complimentary Mimosa or Bloody Mary Cash bar available!
A is a perfect way to say
Thanks Mom!
Children’s menu available at
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Beverages not included
Purchase Online, By Phone or In Person
631.846.2339
Visit our website for Full Menus Call
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Reservations 1:00 - 7:00pm Spend a quiet dinner with Mom at Desmond’s and enjoy an amazing three course meal with the entire family!
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5720 Rte. 25A Wading River, NY 631.929.3500 EastWindLongIsland.com 2018 EW Mother's Day TBR 5318.indd 1
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PAGE B16 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • MAY 03, 2018
THE GARDENER’S DELIGHT
Dream It... It... Design It... It... Create It... It... Create
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DESIGN • CONSTRUCTION • MAINTENANCE Established 1960
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21 Bennetts Road, Suite 200, Setauket, New York 11733
The long, scented racemes of Japanese wisteria, W. floribunda, ‘White/Blue Eye’, trained here as a tree, appear before the vine leafs out. Photo by Kyrnan Harvey
A wisteria or lilac for mom
BY KYRNAN HARVEY
Wisterias and lilacs are reliably in flower around the second Sunday in May on Long Island and, being 100 percent deerproof, make wonderful gifts for a mom who loves her garden. They are long-lived and durable, which is certainly an understatement regarding wisteria. When I bought my house in East Setauket there was 20 or 30 years of unchecked growth between my house and a neighbor’s that was serving as a de facto privacy barrier: Oriental bittersweet, English ivy, Russian olive and natives poison ivy and greenbrier that were choking to near death a pair of American dogwoods and a few native spicebushes (Lindera benzoin). There was wisteria too, clambering all over the dead limbs of a fallen spruce. My neighbor bemoaned the invasiveness of the wisteria, which was running along the ground, rooting in and climbing her Chinese dogwoods, an old beautybush (Kolkwitzia) and her giant old weeping cherry tree. I agreed that it is awfully invasive but that I would not remove it, valuing as I do the beauty and delightful scent of its flowers. I cut any vines that were not supported by the dead fallen spruce and initiated a war on the other nonnative invasives, preserving the dogwoods and clearing the way for my wife’s cut-flower/ kitchen garden, and, yes, diminishing the privacy between our houses. Yes, wisteria is horribly invasive, but sometimes it is worth leaving to climb into weed trees or over a chain-link fence, in which case you will want to be vigilant with the secateurs and folding pruning saw. If you have a pergola, the posts and beams of which are tall enough and strong enough, and you want a vine to grow over it, then wisteria is certainly at the top of the list of options. Consider well though the commitment of maintenance, which is to climb a ladder and cut-cut-cut the
endless yards of rampant new growth all summer after flowering in May. I have been planting wisterias since I started gardening 30 years ago. One of the first mistakes I made was buying a young (two- or three-year-old), unnamed, Chinese wisteria (Wisteria sinensis). I trained it to grow as a standard (tree form), but it was years before it flowered and, when it did, the flowers appeared simultaneously with the leaves, which partially obscured the flowers. After 15 years of cut-cut-cut atop a stepladder summer after summer, I asked Joe, my assistant, to cut it down. I couldn’t do it myself but I was ready with a superior replacement: a grafted tree form, Wisteria floribunda, ‘Shiro-noda’ (Snow Showers), in a 15-gallon container. For the next 10 years this was an absolute highlight of the gardening year, the very long fragrant white racemes appearing before the “tree” leafed out and with forget-me-nots and tulips below and a tree peony nearby. If you want to buy a wisteria, seek a named cultivar of the Chinese (W. sinensis) or Japanese (W. floribunda) variety. Unless you want to grow it up a pergola, see if you can find one trained on a single trunk. It will always need support, as the physiology of the trunk is that of a vine, needing support to climb, and not that of a self-supporting tree. Grow it as a tree and curtail its growth. If you plant a grafted wisteria, you won’t have to wait years for it to start flowering. And I very much prefer varieties that flower before leafing out. If wisteria sounds like too much of an undertaking and commitment, there is the option of a lilac (Syringa) for mother. These are nearly carefree, of equally delightful scent and the topic of my next gardening column. Kyrnan Harvey is a horticulturist and garden designer residing in East Setauket. For more information, visit www.boskygarden.com.
MAY 03, 2018 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B17
COOKING COVE
Tapping into tapas
• 2 garlic cloves, minced • Salt and freshly ground pepper • ¼ cup olive oil • 1 tablespoon unsalted butter • 6 slices crusty bread DIRECTIONS: In a small bowl beat the eggs and water; add garlic, salt and pepper and beat again. Transfer egg mixture to a large shallow baking dish, add bread slices; soak for 30 seconds, then turn and let sit until all the egg mixture has been absorbed. Heat oil and butter in a large skillet until hot. Fry bread, turning when bottom is golden., about 1 minute. When other side is golden, remove immediately or garlic will burn. Serve hot or warm with a red or white sangria.
BY BARBARA BELTRAMI
Call them what you will … hors d’oeuvres, appetizers or tapas. In Spain and Portugal, tapas abound in many bars, and at least one legend has it that long ago an innkeeper put a slice of cured ham on top of a glass of wine to keep the flies away, as a makeshift lid. To cover in Spanish is “tapar,” so a lid is a “tapa” — hence the name. Depending on how many or how few you pop or scoop into your mouth as you’re sipping your wine or beer, they will either whet or whip your desire to proceed to the main attraction, the meal that is sometimes meant to follow. In fact, in Spain and Portugal, it is part of the culture to stop by a bar to sit and relax and share a few little plates of tapas, often twice a day. While they can be anything as simple as a well-cured olive on a toothpick, they can also be as complex as an artichoke stew or empanada. Eaten as a snack, a first course or a prelude to a meal, tapas are rapidly becoming standard fare in American cuisine as well. So think of anything savory, serve it in small portions and you’ve got tapas. And doesn’t that sound so much better than munchies, finger food or snacks?
Colossal Shrimp with Anchovies and Cherry Tomatoes
YIELD: Makes 6 servings INGREDIENTS: • 6 wooden skewers (about half the size of a pencil) • 6 colossal shrimp, peeled, deveined and boiled • 6 anchovy fillets • 6 cherry tomatoes • ½ cup mayonnaise DIRECTIONS: On each skewer, spear a shrimp, anchovy fillet and tomato. Cover and chill until ready to serve with mayonnaise as a dip. Serve with ice cold beer or a chilled crisp dry white wine.
Garlic French Toast
YIELD: Makes 6 servings INGREDIENTS: • 3 large eggs • A few drops water
Stuffed Baby Zucchini Boats DIRECTIONS: Stuffed Baby Zucchini Boats Preheat oven to 400 F. Grease a shallow YIELD: Makes 16 pieces 8×13-inch baking dish. Wash zucchini, trim INGREDIENTS: off ends and halve lengthwise. With a sharp• 8 tiny zucchini (about 4 to 6 inches long) edged spoon, scoop out seeds and pulp; chop • 2 tablespoons olive oil pulp and reserve. In a large skillet over me• ½ medium onion, minced dium heat, warm the oil; add onion, meat, • ½ pound ground beef, lamb or sausage lemon zest and chopped zucchini. Saute, stir• 1 tablespoon grated lemon zest ring frequently, until vegetables are tender • 1 teaspoon tomato paste and meat is brown, 5 to 10 minutes. • 2 garlic cloves, minced Add tomato paste, a tablespoon or two • ½ teaspoon sugar of water, garlic and sugar; stir and cook over • Salt and freshly ground pepper, low-medium heat for 5 minutes. Add salt to taste and pepper. Stir in the yogurt, chopped to• ½ pint plain Greek yogurt mato and mint leaves. Remove from heat and • 1 fresh medium tomato, spoon mixture into hollowed out zucchini. finely chopped Sprinkle tops with Parmesan cheese. Place • 8 mint leaves, minced filled zucchini in prepared dish and bake for 5 • 1/3 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese to 7 minutes, until cheese melts.
SAVE THE DATE! Buttercup Day is Coming!
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PAGE B18 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • MAY 03, 2018
TIMES
Thursday 3 Civil War Roundtable meeting
South Huntington Public Library, 145 Pidgeon Hill Road, Huntington Station will host a meeting of the North Shore Civil War Roundtable at 7 p.m. Civil War author Scott Mingus will speak on the "Battle of Gettysburg." Free and open to all. Call 549-4411 for more info.
An evening of jazz
The Jazz Loft, 275 Christian Ave., Stony Brook will host a concert with the Jazz Loft Big Band at 7 p.m. The 17-piece big band led by trumpeter Tom Manuel will play original compositions and arrangements written by band members. Tickets are $20 adults, $15 seniors, $10 students. To order, call 751-1895 or visit www.thejazzloft.org.
... and dates MAY 3 TO MAY 10, 2018
Bright Hopes Community Quilt Project will hold its 13th annual Garage Sale fundraiser at 286 Hallock Road, Stony Brook today and May 5 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Featuring household goods, bicycles, toys, clothing, fabric, furniture, tools, books, new handcrafted items and more.
The Wading River Historical Society, 300 North Country Road, Wading River will hold its annual Plant Sale and Craft Fair from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Call 929-4082 for information.
Barn sale
Calling all job seekers! Sachem Public Library, 150 Holbrook Road, Holbrook will host a Job Fair by the Suffolk County One-Stop Employment Center from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Meet representatives from over 35 local businesses actively seeking employees. Bring your resume and dress to impress. No registration required. Call 588-5024. See more on page B8.
Helping homeless animals is no laughing matter but Laughter Saves Lives! Join Kent Animal Shelter in celebrating its 50th anniversary with an Evening of Comedy at Hotel Indigo, 1830 West Main St., Riverhead from 7 to 10 p.m. Featuring first responder comedians from Laughter Saves Lives, snacks, cash bar, Chinese auction and 50/50. $30 in advance, $35 at the door. To reserve, visit www.kentanimalshelter. com or call 727-5731.
Drumming Circle
Join Hope Academy at Little Portion Friary, 48 Old Post Road, Mount Sinai for its monthly Drumming Circle from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Led by Charlie Holdener and Tom Pumo. Bring your own drums or borrow theirs. Meet in the Chapel of St. Francis located on the lower level of the friary. Free will donation. Questions? Call 473-0553.
Do-ing Music at the library
The Northport Arts Coalition will present the Joel Lambdin Quartet in concert at the Northport Public Library, 151 Laurel Ave., Northport at 7:30 p.m. as part of its Do-ing Music series. Program will feature medieval to world music with traditional repertoire. Open to all. Call 261-6930 for more info.
Spring Concert
Join the Northport Symphony Orchestra for its annual Spring Concert at Northport High School, 154 Laurel Hill Road, Northport at 8 p.m. Titled Music of the Masters, the program will include works by Vivaldi, Mozart and Beethoven. Featuring Christine Dore on piano. Free and open to all. Visit www.northportsymphony.org for more information.
* All numbers are in (631) area code unless otherwise noted.
Long Island Cars will present a Car Show & Swap Meet at Flowerfield Fairgrounds, Route 25A, St. James from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. (rescheduled from April 28). Show will feature classic and collectible automobiles including show cars from the '50s, '60s and '70s, music, food, vendors and more. Admission is $9 adults, free for ages 12 and under. Questions? Call 567-5898 or visit www.LongIslandCars.com.
Plant Sale and Craft Fair
Job Fair
An Evening of Comedy
Car Show & Swap Meet
Time to shop 'till you drop! Northport High School, 154 Laurel Hill Road, Northport will host the 17th annual Spring Arts & Crafts Fair from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. With 125 artists and artisans featuring one of a kind creations and designs. Held rain or shine. Free admission. Call 846-1459.
Garage Sale fundraiser
Join St. Thomas of Canterbury Church, 90 Edgewater Ave., Smithtown for a Paint Night Party at 6:15 p.m. Create an original painting on canvas. Light refreshments will be served. Cost is $45, which includes all supplies. To reserve your spot, call 804-9625.
Sunday 6
Spring Arts & Crafts Fair
Friday 4
Paint Night Party
Centerport at 8:30 p.m. Preceded by an open mic at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $25, $20 members at the door (cash or checks only) or at www. fmsh.org. Call 425-2925 for additional info.
Temple Beth Emeth’s Barn Thrift Shop, located at 52 Mount Sinai Ave., Mount Sinai will be open from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., rain or shine. Featuring clothing, books, CDs, DVDs, small appliances, cookware and more. Hundreds of new items. For more info, call 928-4103.
FLOATING ON AIR 'Exuberant, virtuosic, sexy — everything that is right about American modern dance.' Catch a performance of Parsons Dance Company at the Staller Center on May 5. Photo by Lois Greenfield
Friday Night Face Off
Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson will host Friday Night Face Off, Long Island's longest running Improv Comedy Show, on the Second Stage from 10:30 p.m. to midnight. $15 per person. Cash only. For ages 16 and up. Call 928-9100 for more information.
Palmedo (soprano) and Marjorie Fitts (harp), the program will include classic repertoire and folk songs of England, Scotland, Ireland and the U.S. Free and open to all. Call 655-7798 for more information.
Eagles tribute concert
See May 4 listing.
The Smithtown Center for the Performing Arts, 2 E. Main St., Smithtown will welcome Eagles tribute band Desert Highway in concert at 8 p.m. The six-member group will play the "Hotel California" album in full. Tickets are $40 per person. To order, call 724-3700 or visit www. smithtownpac.org.
Pet Adoption Fair
Parsons Dance Company at SBU
Saturday 5 Garage Sale fundraiser Join Emma S. Clark Memorial Library, 120 Main St., Setauket for its 6th annual Pet Adoption Fair on the library lawn from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Featuring various animal rescue organizations and animal advocacy associations. Bring the whole family and pick out a new family member! Nonperishable pet food donations will be collected. Questions? Call 941-4080. See more on page B24.
The Staller Center for the Arts at Stony Brook University, 100 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook will present a performance by the Parsons Dance Company (contemporary American dance) on the Main Stage at 8 p.m. The ensemble features eight dancers who embody sexy athleticism, exuberant personality and joyous movement. Tickets are $42. To order, call 632-2787 or visit www.stallercenter.com.
Civil War Encampment
Improv Comedy Night
The Farmingville Historical Society will host a Bald Hill School House and Civil War Encampment at 505 Horseblock Road, Farmingville from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Experience what school was like in the 1850s, connect with Union and Confederate Civil War soldiers and civilians, experience life during the Civil War and watch as the soldiers march and fire muskets. Free to the public. Visit www.farmingvillehistoricalsociety. org for further details.
Saturdays at Six Concert
All Souls Church, 61 Main St., Stony Brook will present North Shore Pro Musica in concert at 6 p.m. Featuring Terry Keevil (oboe), Betsy
The Minstrel Players will hold its first Improv Comedy Night at Houghton Hall, Trinity Episcopal Church, 130 Main St., Northport at 8 p.m. Come join them for an evening of comedy. Do you like laughing? Then this is the evening for you. Tickets are $15 at the door with one water and popcorn included with admission. For more information, call 750-3417.
Lucy Kaplansky in concert
Contemporary folk singer-songwriter Lucy Kaplansky will be the featured artist during the Folk Music Society of Huntington’s monthly First Saturday Concert series at the Congregational Church of Huntington, 30 Washington Drive,
Spring Seasonal Stroll
Join the staff at Caumsett State Historic Park Preserve, 25 Lloyd Harbor Road, Huntington for a Spring Seasonal Stroll from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. On this short stroll, observe seasonal changes and nesting birds. Adults only please. $4 per person. Advance registration required by calling 423-1770.
Huntington Tulip Festival
Heckscher Park, 2 Prime Ave., Huntington will host the village’s annual Tulip Festival from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. The free, family-oriented, floral festival features more than 20,000 tulips, hands-on children’s activity booths, family performances on the Chapin Rainbow Stage, art exhibitions, lectures and demonstrations. Held rain or shine. For further details, call 351-3000. See page B11 for story.
Mayday Festival
Benner’s Farm, 56 Gnarled Hollow Road, Setauket will hold its annual Mayday Festival from noon to 4 p.m. Come dance to the tallest Maypole on the island, meet the baby animals, enjoy live music, the big swing and more. Admission is $8 adults, $6 children. Questions? Call 689-8172 or visit www.bennersfarm.com.
Sheep to Shawl Festival
The Huntington Historical Society will host its 34th annual Sheep to Shawl Festival at the Dr. Daniel Kissam House Museum, 434 Park Ave., Huntington from noon to 4 p.m. Featuring sheep shearing, games, craft demonstrations, music, face painting, refreshments and free tour of the museum’s exhibit, Poetry in Thread, featuring the society’s lace collection. Free admission. For more information, call 427-7045, ext. 401.
Coffee, Comedy & Croissants
Celebrate St. James will present a lecture by Sal St. George titled "The 'I Love Lucy' Show: Birth of a Modern Day Sitcom" at the original Calderone Theater, 176 2nd St., St. James from noon to 2 p.m. Hear how Desi Arnaz and Lucille Ball revolutionized the television industry. Tickets are $25 per person. RSVP at www. celebratestjames.org or call 862-6198.
MAY 03, 2018 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B19
Giant Rummage Sale
Temple Isaiah, 1404 Stony Brook Road, Stony Brook will hold a Giant Rummage Sale today from 1 to 4 p.m., April 7 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and again from 7 to 9 p.m. and April 8 (Bag Day) from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Questions? Call Teddy at 928-5392.
Local Authors Fair
Emma S. Clark Memorial Library, 120 Main St., Setauket will hold its annual Local Authors Fair at 1:30 p.m. Come meet some of the authors whose works you have come to know through the library’s Local Focus collection. Following the festive reception, there will be refreshments and an informal book-signing opportunity downstairs in the Vincent R. O’Leary Community Room. No registration is necessary for the general public. For more info, call 941-4080.
Nature and Bird Walk
Join the Friends of Flax Pond, 15 Shore Drive, Old Field for its annual Nature and Bird Walk from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. Led by Malcolm Bowman from SBU and birder Anthony Graves, the walk will include bird watching at Flax Pond and a look at the invasive perennial pepperweed. Please bring water and wear comfortable shoes. Registration is not required. Call 767-6287 for directions.
Spring High Tea
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Church Hall, 800 Portion Road, Lake Ronkonkoma will host a Spring High Tea at 1:45 p.m. With scones, tea sandwiches, sweets, 50/50 and prize for most elegant and original hat. Bring your own teacup. Tickets are $15 in advance only. For reservations, call Gerry at 585-9291.
Lois Morton in concert
Cold Spring Harbor Library, 95 Harbor Road, Cold Spring Harbor will welcome singer/ songwriter Lois Morton in concert at 2 p.m. The program, titled Edith, Marlene, Sophie … and Me, will pay tribute to the music of Edith Piaf, Marlene Dietrich and Sophie Tucker. Free and open to all. Register in advance by calling 692-6820.
Silver Chords concert
St. Andrew’s Lutheran Church, Brooksite Drive, Smithtown will host a concert by the Silver Chords Chorus at 2 p.m. Titled Young at Heart: Songs of Youth and Innocence, the program will feature a medley from "Rent," selections from Disney films, classic and American folk songs and "Lamiya Songs" by composer Michael Bussewitz-Quarm. Admission is free and no tickets are required. Questions? Call 235-3593.
Ginger Rogers lecture
Northport Public Library, 151 Laurel Ave., Northport will present a lecture titled "Ginger Rogers: Backwards and in High Heels" at 2 p.m. Presented by Marc Courtade, the talk will examine Rogers’ extraordinary career. Free and open to all. Call 261-6930.
Tuesday 8 Giant Rummage Sale See May 6 listing.
Adult coloring class
Harborfields Public Library, 31 Broadway, Greenlawn holds an adult coloring class every Tuesday from 1 to 4 p.m. in the Kitchen Meeting Room. All are welcome. Registration is not required. Call 757-4200 for more information.
Northport Public Library, 185 Larkfield Road, East Northport on May 10 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Participants will include the Alzheimer’s Association, Retired Senior Volunteer Program, Suffolk County Office of the Aging, Town of Huntington Senior Division and more. Open to all. Call 261-2313.
The NY Trio in concert
Theater
Book Revue, 313 New York Ave., Huntington will welcome writer Sudi (Rick) Karatas as he speaks and signs copies of his debut parenting book, "Rainbow Relatives," at 7 p.m. Call 271-1442.
The Northport Public Library, 151 Laurel Ave., Northport in cooperation with the Northport Arts Coalition will present The NY Trio in concert at 7 p.m. A cross between Crosby, Stills & Nash, Everly Brothers and Peter, Paul & Mary, The NY Trio invites you to tune up you voices, put on your dancing shoes and experience a festive delight. Free and open to all. Call 2616930 for more information.
Thursday 10 Let’s Talk
Book signing
Join Book Revue, 313 New York Ave., Huntington for an evening with entrepreneur and writer Jordan Gross as he speaks and signs copies of his new personal growth book, "Getting COMFY," at 7 p.m. Call 271-1442.
FTC Spring Concert
Five Towns College Wind Ensemble, 305 North Service Road, Dix Hills will present a Spring Concert at 7:30 p.m. Under the direction of Peter Philip DeSalvo with guest artist Douglas Jones. Tickets are $10 per person. To order, call 656-2148.
Wednesday 9 International folk dancing
RJO Intermediate School, located at the corner of Church Street and Old Dock Road, Kings Park will host an evening of international and Israeli folk dancing every Wednesday (when school is in session) from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. $9 fee. Questions? Call Linda at 269-6894.
Audubon lecture
Book signing
The Huntington-Oyster Bay Audubon Society will host a lecture titled "Trashed Nests, Poisoned Bellies and Entangled Wings: A Bird’s Eye View of Plastic Pollution" at Cold Spring Harbor Library, 95 Shore Road, Cold Spring Harbor at 7 p.m. With guest speaker Erica Cirino. This event is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be served. Call 692-6820 for details.
As part of its new lecture series titled Let’s Talk, the Ward Melville Heritage Organization’s Educational & Cultural Center, 97P Main St., Stony Brook will welcome archaeologist Brad Phillipi who will discuss his findings from the 2014 archaeological dig at the historic Thompson House (circa 1709) in Setauket at 6:30 p.m. Admission is $15 per person. Refreshments will be served. Reservations are required by calling 689-5888.
An evening of jazz
The Jazz Loft, 275 Christian Ave., Stony Brook will present Bob Merrill: Trumpet Kings in concert at 7 p.m. Tickets are $20 adults, $15 seniors, $10 students. To order, call 751-1895 or visit www.thejazzloft.org.
For seniors Senior Tuesday
On May 8 from 10 a.m. to noon, the Long Island Museum, 1200 Route 25A, Stony Brook will welcome seniors 62 and older for a free, self-guided tour of Wanderlust, an art exhibit in the Visitors Center featuring the final entries in the museum’s 2018 juried art competition. Sponsored by Jefferson’s Ferry. Free. Call 7510066 for additional information.
Senior Information Fair
In recognition of Older American’s Month, Suffolk County Leg. Robert Trotta will sponsor a Senior Information Fair at the East
Church Spring Concert
First Presbyterian Church, 107 Main St., Port Jefferson will present a Music on the Sound Spring Concert titled Music in May at 3 p.m. Sopranos Lia Stengren and Cheryl Savitt Spielman with Daniel Ragone on piano will perform varied programs of songs, operatic arias, duets and selections from Broadway. $20 suggested donation. For more information, call 473-0147.
See May 6 listing.
'12 Angry Men'
Through May 5 Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson will present a production of "12 Angry Men" on the Mainstage. A teenage boy has just stood trial for the fatal stabbing of his father and it looks like an open-and-shut case — until one of the jurors begins challenging the others. Reginald Rose’s electrifying classic explodes like 12 sticks of dynamite in one of the finest, most powerful courtroom dramas of all time. Mature content. Tickets are $35 adults, $28 seniors and students, $20 children ages 5 to 12. To order, call 928-9100 or visit www. theatrethree.com.
Festival of One-Act Plays
Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson will present its 21st annual Festival of One-Act Plays featuring the world premieres of seven original plays at the Ronald F. Peierls Theatre on the Second Stage through May 6. Contains adult language and subject matter. All seats are $20. To order, call 928-9100 or visit www. theatrethree.com.
Tribute to Barbra Streisand
The Ward Melville Heritage Organization’s Educational & Cultural Center, 97P Main St., Stony Brook will present a St. George Living History Production titled Tribute to Barbra Streisand, from May 9 to June 14. Tickets, which includes lunch, tea and dessert, are $50 adults, $48 seniors. To order, call 689-5888.
‘Precious Little’
The Carriage House Players continue their spring season at the Vanderbilt Museum’s Carriage House Theater, 180 Little Neck Road, Centerport with Madeline George’s "Precious Little" on May 11, 12, 18 and 19 at 8 p.m. and May 13 and 20 at 3 p.m. Tickets are $20 adults, $15 seniors and children. To order, visit www. vanderbiltmuseum.org.
From May 12 to June 17 the Smithtown Center for the Performing Arts, 2 East Main St., Smithtown will present the musical "Dreamgirls," a show about the creation of a new American sound — the blending of rhythm and blues with other styles of popular music — a sound that came to be known as Motown. Tickets are $38 adults, $34 seniors, $25 students. To order, call 724-3700.
Abbie Gardner in concert
Giant Rummage Sale
The John W. Engeman Theater, 250 Main St., Northport will present "In the Heights," a musical by Lin-Manuel Miranda and Quiara Alegria Hudes set in the Dominican-American neighborhood of Washington Heights, now extended through May 6. Tickets range from $73 to $78. To order, call 261-2900 or visit www.engemantheater.com.
‘Dreamgirls’
As part of its Sunday Street Concert series, the Long Island Museum, 1200 Route 25A, Stony Brook will welcome Abbie Gardner in concert in the Carriage Museum’s Gillespie Room at 5 p.m. Jesse Terry will open the show. Tickets are $22 in advance at www.sundaystreet.org through May 4, $27 at the door. Questions? Call 751-0066.
Monday 7
'In the Heights'
TIMES ... and dates continuted on page B20
KEEPING HISTORY ALIVE The Farmingville Historical Society will host a Bald Hill School House Civil War Encampment on May 5. Visit the 1850s one room schoolhouse and see what school was like when Laura Ingalls was a little girl and then experience what is was like to be in a Civil War Camp 150 years ago through this hands-on event. Photo by Heidi Sutton
CALENDAR DEADLINE is Wednesday at noon, one week before publication. Items may be mailed to: Times Beacon Record News Media, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733. Email your information about community events to leisure@ tbrnewspapers.com. Calendar listings are for not-for-profit organizations (nonsectarian, nonpartisan events) only, on a space-available basis. Please include a phone number that can be printed.
PAGE B20 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • MAY 03, 2018
TIMES... and dates
May the 4th be with You!
Join Harborfields Public Library, 31 Broadway, Greenlawn as they celebrate George Lucas’ Star War films on Stars Wars Day, May 4. Enjoy a free screening of "A New Hope" at 4 p.m. and "Empire Strikes Back" at 6:30 p.m. Registration is appreciated but not required. Call 757-4200 for more information.
Continued from page B19
‘Singin’ in the Rain’
The John W. Engeman Theater, 250 Main St., Northport will conclude its 2017-2018 season with the romantic musical comedy "Singin’ in the Rain" from May 17 to July 1. Join Don Lockwood, Lina Lamont, Cosmo Brown and Kathy Selden as they make a big splash with singin’ and dancin’ and yes, it really will rain on stage! Tickets range from $73 to $78. To order, call 261-2900 or visit www.engemantheater.com.
‘NOVA: Search for the Super Battery’
Join Four Harbors Audubon Society for a free screening of "NOVA: Search for the Super Battery" at the Smithtown Library, 1 North Country Road, Smithtown on May 4 at 7 p.m. as part of its Friday Movie Nights documentary film series. Reservations required by calling 766-3075.
‘Mad Max’
‘Curtains: The Musical’
Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson, will continue its 48th annual Mainstage season with "Curtains" from May 19 to June 23. It’s Boston 1959 and chief sleuth Lt. Frank Cioffi investigates the murder of a Broadway-bound theater company’s untalented star on opening night. From the creators of "Cabaret" and "Chicago," the musical whodunit, played against the fictional cowboy musical "Robbin’ Hood!," will have you on the edge of your seat … laughing! Tickets are $35 adults, $28 seniors and students, $20 children ages 5 to 12. To order, call 9289100 or visit www.theatrethree.com.
‘Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat’
Star Playhouse at the Suffolk Y JCCC, 74 Hauppauge Road, Commack will present "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat" on June 2, 9 and 16 at 8 p.m. and June 3 and 10 at 2 p.m. The rollicking Biblical story set to music — a dream of a show. Tickets are $25 adults, $20 members, seniors and students. To purchase, call 462-9800, ext. 136, or visit www.starplayhouse.com.
KEYS TO A GREENER FUTURE Catch a free screening of 'NOVA: Search for the Super Battery' at the Smithtown Library's Main Branch on May 4. Presented by Joyann Cirigliano of the Four Harbors Audubon Society, the film follows David Pogue, left, as he investigates how batteries work and what the future may hold for technical innovation. Photo from WGBH Boston
‘The 25th annual Putnam County Spelling Bee’
The Township Theatre Group opens its 65th season with a production of "The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee" at Temple Beth El, 660 Park Ave., Huntington on June 2, 9 and 16 at 8 p.m. and June 3 and 10 at 2 p.m. A fast-paced and witty musical comedy that looks at a small-town spelling bee with six quirky student contestants and three equally unconventional grown-ups running the show. They battle the English language, as well as personal circumstances, and ultimately uncover the universal truth that winning is not, in fact, everything. Features concession and wine/ beer bar. Tickets are $25 adults, $22 seniors and students. Call 213-9832 or visit www.townshiptheatregroup.org to order.
Join the Cinema Arts Centre, 423 Park Ave., Huntington for a Cult Café screening of "Mad Max" (1979) starring Mel Gibson with live accompaniment by Morricone Youth on May 5 at 10 p.m. Tickets are $14, $10 members. Call 423-7611 to order.
‘The Test & the Art of Thinking’
Film The Smithtown Library, Commack Branch, 3 Indian Head Road, Commack will screen "Wonder" starring Julia Roberts on May 3 at 1:30 p.m. Free to all but registration required by calling 360-2480, ext. 235.
As part of its Real to Reel series, the Cinema Arts Centre, 423 Park Ave., Huntington will screen "The Test and the Art of Thinking" on May 9 at 7:30 p.m. The documentary takes a fascinating look at the American rite of passage, taking the SAT or ACT, and how it reflects deeper issues in our education system and society as a whole. Followed by a panel discussion. $16, $11 members includes a reception. Call 423-7611 to order.
‘The Greatest Showman’
‘Same Kind of Different as Me’
‘Wonder’
Northport Public Library, 151 Laurel Ave., Northport will screen "The Greatest Showman" starring Hugh Jackman on May 4 at 2 p.m. Rated PG. Free and open to all. Call 261-6930.
Smithtown Library, Commack branch, 3 Indian Head Road, Commack will screen "Same Kind of Different as Me" starring Greg Kinnear on May 10 at 1:30 p.m. Rated PG-13. Open to all. Call 360-2480, ext. 235, for more information.
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MAY 03, 2018 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B21
SBU SPORTSWEEK MAY 3 – MAY 9, 2018
TOMORROW IS FRIDAY – WEAR RED ON CAMPUS!
STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY
SBU
No. 1 Seawolves lax finishes its first undefeated season No. 1 Stony Brook women’s lacrosse finished off its unbeaten 2018 regular season Saturday at John Fallon Field, cruising past University at Albany, 21-8. With the victory, the Seawolves (17-0, 7-0 AE) will be the No. 1 seed in the 2018 America East Championship, earning the right to host the postseason conference tournament at LaValle Stadium May 4 and 6.
Stony Brook’s win caps off a recordbreaking campaign, as the program becomes the first team in Seawolves’ history to post an unbeaten regular-season record and to achieve a No. 1 national ranking. “It’s great for us to secure another regularseason conference title, but the biggest thing is securing home field advantage for the America East Tournament,” head coach Joe Spallina said. “I thought we played well — some patches of greatness and some patches of mediocrity. We’ll continue to strive for consistency as we head into the postseason. Being 17-0 and finishing our regular season undefeated is incredible, but our real season starts on Friday.” Kylie Ohlmiller had six goals and four assists to lead the way for Stony Brook. The senior finishes the 2018 regular season with 128 total points in 17 contests. She was named America East Offensive Player of the week for the seventh time this year. Courtney Murphy tallied six goals and two assists to finish the season with a team-best 77 goals. Taryn Ohlmiller, Kylie’s younger sister, added three goals and four assists. Ally Kennedy scored twice, and Port Jefferson Station’s Kasey Mitchell, Hauppauge’s Keri McCarthy, Samantha DiSalvo and
Stony Brook men’s lax shares piece of regular season title SBU
The Stony Brook men’s lacrosse team was named America East co-regular season champions Saturday afternoon, sharing the title with University at Albany following the Seawolves’ final regular season game. This is the fifth America East regular season title for Stony Brook, which has earned the No. 2 seed in the championship tournament. With the Great Danes winning the head-tohead tiebreak with the Seawolves, they have earned the top spot and will host the threegame tournament at Casey Family Stadium. The Seawolves, which ended the regular season with a 15-9 win over Binghamton University April 27, will face No. 3 University of Vermont in the semifinals May 3 at 4:30 p.m. Sophomore Tom Haun earned America East Offensive Player of the Week honors after scoring a hat trick and adding two assists in the Friday win over the Bearcats. Albany will take on University of Massachusetts Lowell in the night game. The winners advance to the championship game May 5 at noon. The first-rounders will air on ESPN+ and the title game will be on ESPNU.
Chris Pickel Jr. Stony Brook finished 5-1 in conference play for the third time in four years, earning its first regular season championship since 2012. It took two extra periods to decide the regularseason meeting between the Seawolves and Catamounts, but sophomore Chris Pickel Jr. was the hero early in the second overtime to help Stony Brook pick up its first win over a ranked opponent this season, 8-7 April 14.
Kyle Ohlmiller, above, and Courtney Murphy, on left, had record-breaking seasons. Siobhan Rafferty all added a goal in the win. McCarthy led the way with six draw controls, DiSalvo recorded four draw wins and Kennedy tallied three. Anna Tesoriero, of Huntington, made nine saves on 17 shots on goal, earning her 17th win of the season and finishing the 2018 regular season ranked No. 1 nationally in goals-against average. The Seawolves opened on a 4-0 run, with Kennedy, DiSalvo, Murphy and Kylie Ohlmiller
each tallying a goal in the first four minutes. The Seawolves assisted on 10 goals, and have now registered double-digit assist totals in 12 contests this year. Stony Brook has won five straight America East championships under Spallina — looking to become the first program in America East conference history to win six straight postseason conference titles. Stony Brook will host No. 4 University of New Hampshire at 4:30 p.m. May 4.
Five Seawolves get chance to play for NFL teams The NFL Draft has still eluded the Stony Brook football program, but following Sunday’s final day of the draft, former Seawolves Timon Parris and Chris Cooper signed Football Association contracts with NFL teams, and Tyrice Beverette, Ray Bolden and Stacey Bedell were each invited to an NFL Camp. Parris, an All-American left tackle signed a contract to join the Washington Redskins, while Cooper, a defensive, signed a contract with the Indianapolis Colts. Beverette was invited to the New York Jets camp, while Bolden will head down to Philadelphia for the Eagles camp, and Bedell travels west to take part in the San Francisco 49ers camp. Parris started the first eight games of 2017 before he suffered a season-ending leg injury. The American Football Coaches Association, Associated Press and STATS FCS All-American helped Stony Brook average 29.2 points and 351.2 yards per game. Cooper earned second team All-Colonial
Content for this page provided by SBU and printed as a service to our advertiser.
Athletic Association honors in 2017 following a season that saw him collect 88 total tackles. For his three-year Stony Brook career, Cooper recorded 147 tackles and 12 tackles for loss. Beverette, a two-time second-team All-CAA honoree, led the Seawolves with 96 total tackles in 2017 and collected 262 career stops including 27.5 tackles for loss. Bolden, a two-time first-team All-CAA selection, pulled down 66 receptions for 780 yards and nine touchdowns in 2017 to lead the Seawolves’ receiving corps. The wide receiver completed his three seasons at Stony Brook with 171 catches for 2,081 yards and 15 touchdowns. Bedell, a 2017 first-team All-CAA selection, gained 835 yards on 159 carries with eight touchdowns this past season for the Seawolves. He tallied 2,954 yards and 31 touchdowns during his career at Stony Brook. The NFL teams can elect to hold one three-day postdraft rookie minicamp on May 4-7 or May 11-14.
PAGE B22 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • MAY 03, 2018
Religious ASSEMBLIES OF GOD
CATHOLIC
EPISCOPAL
STONY BROOK CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY
ST. JAMES ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
ALL SOULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Connecting to God, Each Other and the World
400 Nicolls Road, E. Setauket 631–689–1127 • Fax 631–689–1215
www.stonybrookchristian.com Pastor Troy Reid Weekly Schedule Sunday Worship w/nursery 10 am Kidmo Children’s Church • Ignited Youth Fellowship and Food Always to Follow Tuesday Evening Prayer: 7 pm Thursday Morning Bible Study w/Coffee & Bagels: 10 am Friday Night Experience “FNX” for Pre K-Middle School: 6:30 pm Ignite Youth Ministry: 7:30 pm Check out our website for other events and times
BYZANTINE CATHOLIC RESURRECTION BYZANTINE CATHOLIC CHURCH
38 Mayflower Avenue, Smithtown NY 11787 631–759–6083
resurrectionsmithtown@gmail.com www.resurrectionsmithtown.org Father Tyler A. Strand, Administrator, Joseph S. Durko, Cantor Divine Liturgy: Sundays at 10:30 am Holy Days: See website or phone for information Sunday School Sundays at 9:15 am Adult Faith Formation/Bible Study: Mondays at 7:00 pm. PrayerAnon Prayer Group for substance addictions, Wednesdays at 7 pm A Catholic Church of the Eastern Rite under the Eparchy of Passaic.
CATHOLIC CHURCH OF ST. GERARD MAJELLA 300 Terryville Road, Port Jefferson Station 631–473–2900 • Fax -631–473–0015
www.stgmajella.org All are Welcome to Begin Again. Come Pray With Us. Rev. Gregory Rannazzisi, Administrator Office of Christian Formation • 631–928–2550 We celebrate Eucharist Saturday evening 5 pm, Sunday 7:30, 9 and 11 am Weekday Mass Monday–Friday 9 am We celebrate Baptism Third weekend of each month during any of our weekend Masses We celebrate Marriage Arrangements can be made at the church with our Pastor or Deacon We celebrate Reconciliation Confession is celebrated on Saturdays from 4–5 pm We celebrate You! Visit Our Thrift Shop Mon. – Fri. 10 am–4 pm + Sat. 10 am–2 pm
INFANT JESUS ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH 110 Myrtle Ave., Port Jefferson, NY 11777 631-473-0165 • Fax 631-331-8094
www.www.infantjesus.org Reverend Patrick M. Riegger, Pastor Associates: Rev. Francis Lasrado & Rev. Rolando Ticllasuca To schedule Baptisms and Weddings, Please call the Rectory Confessions: Saturdays 12:30-1:15 pm in the Lower Church Religious Ed.: 631– 928-0447 • Parish Outreach: 631–331-6145 Weekly Masses: 6:50 and 9 am in the Church, 12 pm in the Chapel* Weekend Masses: Saturday at 5 pm in the Church, 5:15 pm in the Chapel* Sunday at 7:30 am, 10:30 am, 12 pm, and 5 pm in the Church and at 8:30 am, 10 am, and 11:30 am (Family Mass) in the Chapel* Spanish Masses: Sunday at 8:45 am and Wednesday at 6 pm in the Church *Held at the Infant Jesus Chapel at St. Charles Hospital Religious Education: 631–928-0447 Parish Outreach: 631–331-6145 ©155760
D irectory
429 Rt. 25A, Setauket, NY 11733 Phone: 631–941–4141 • Fax: 631–751–6607 Parish Office email: parish@stjamessetauket.org Office Hours: Monday-Saturday 9 am - 2 pm
Rev. James-Patrick Mannion, Pastor Rev. Gerald Cestare, Associate Pastor Rev. John Fitzgerald, In Residence Weekday Masses: Monday – Saturday 8:00 am Weekend Masses: Saturday Vigil 5:00 pm Sunday 8:00am, 9:30 am (family), 11:30 am (choir), 6:00 pm (Youth) Friday 9:00 am – 12:00 pm, Saturday 9:00 am – 2:00 pm Baptisms: Contact the Office at the end of the third month (pregnancy) to set date Reconciliation: Saturdays 4:00 – 4:45 pm or by appointment Anointing Of The Sick: by request Holy Matrimony: contact the office at least 9 months before desired date Bereavement: 631– 941-4141 x 341 Faith Formation Office: 631– 941-4141 x 328 Outreach: 631– 941-4141 x 333 Our Lady of Wisdom Regional School: 631– 473-1211 Our Daily Bread Sunday Soup Kitchen 3 pm
ST. LOUIS DE MONTFORT ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
75 New York Avenue, Sound Beach, N.Y. 11789 Parish Office: 631-744-8566; FAX 631-744-8611
Parish Website: www.stlouisdm.org Office Hours: Monday, Tuesday, Thursday: 9 am to 5 pm Wednesday: 9 am to 8 pm; Friday: 9 am to 4 pm; Saturday: 9 am to 1 pm; Closed on Sunday Mission Statement: To proclaim the good news of Jesus Christ’s love through our active involvement as a parish family in works of Charity, Faith, Worship, Justice and Mercy. ALL ARE WELCOME! No matter what your present status is in the Catholic Church. No matter your family situation. No matter your practice of faith. No matter your personal history, age or background. YOU are invited, respected and loved at St. Louis de Montfort. Rev. Msgr. Christopher J. Heller, Pastor Rev. Lennard Sabio, Associate Pastor Rev. Msgr. Donald Hanson, In Residence Rev. Francis Pizzarelli, S.M.M., Parish Assistant Rev. Henry Vas, Parish Assistant Weekday Masses: Monday through Friday: 8:30 am in the Chapel Weekend Masses: Saturday Vigil: 5 pm Sunday: 7:30 am; 9:00 am; 10:30 am; 12 noon. Baptisms: Most Sundays at 1:30 pm. Please contact Parish Office for an appointment. Reconciliation: Saturday: 4-4:45 pm or by appointment. Anointing of the Sick: by request. Holy Matrimony: Contact Parish Office at least six months in advance of desired date. Religious Education: Contact 631-744-9515 Parish Outreach: Contact 631-209-0325 Our Lady of Wisdom Regional School: Contact 631-473-1211.
CONGREGATIONAL MT. SINAI CONGREGATIONAL UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
233 North Country Road, Mt. Sinai • 631–473–1582 www.mtsinaichurchli.org
“No matter who you are or where you are on life’s journey, you are welcome here” Worship hour is 8:30 am and 10 am Sunday School and Childcare offered at 10:00 am open to all children (infants to 8th grade). The last Sunday of every month is our Welcome Sunday Service. This service has been intentionally designed to include persons of differing abilities from local group homes. We are an Open and Affirming Congregation.
“Our little historic church on the hill” across from the Stony Brook Duck Pond
Main Street, Stony Brook • 631–751–0034
www.allsouls–stonybrook.org • allsoulsepiscopalchurch@verizon.net Please come and welcome our new Priest: The Rev. Farrell D. Graves, Ph.D., Vicar Sunday Holy Eucharist: 8 and 9:30 am Religious instruction for children follows the 9:30 am Service This is a small eclectic Episcopal congregation that has a personal touch. We welcome all regardless of where you are on your spiritual journey. Walk with us.
CAROLINE CHURCH OF BROOKHAVEN The Rev. Cn. Dr. Richard D. Visconti, Rector
1 Dyke Road on the Village Green, Setauket Web site: www.carolinechurch.net Parish Office email: office@carolinechurch.net 631–941–4245
Sunday Services: 8 am, 9:30 am and 11:15 am Church School/Child Care at 9:30 am Church School classes now forming. Call 631-941-4245 for registration. Weekday Holy Eucharist’s: Thursday 12:00 pm and first Friday of the month 7:30 pm (rotating: call Parish Office for location.) Youth, Music and Service Programs offered. Let God walk with you as part of our family–friendly community.
CHRIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH 127 Barnum Ave., Port Jefferson 631–473–0273 email: ccoffice@christchurchportjeff.org www.christchurchportjeff.org
Father Anthony DiLorenzo: Priest–In–Charge Sunday Services 8 am & 10 am Sunday Eucharist: 8 am and 10 am/Wednesday 10 in our chapel Sunday School and Nursery Registration for Sunday School starting Sunday after the 10 am Eucharist Our ministries: Welcome Friends on Mondays at 5:00 pm AA meetings on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 7 pm/Prayer Group on Wednesdays at 10:30 am/Bible Study on Thursdays at 10 am. It is the mission of the people of Christ Church to grow in our relationship with Jesus Christ and to make his love known to all through our lives and ministry. We at Christ Church are a joyful, welcoming community. Wherever you are in your journey of life we want to be part of it.
ST. JOHN’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
12 Prospect St, Huntington, • 631-427-1752
“To know Christ and to make Him known” Rev. Duncan A.Burns, Rector Rev. John Morrison, Assistant Priest Rev. Anthony Jones, Deacon Alex Pryrodny, Organist & Choir Director www.stjohnshuntington.org • LIKE us on Facebook Sunday Worshop 8:00am - Rite I Holy Eucharist 10:00am - Rite II Choral Holy Eucharist with Sunday School - 9:40am Thrift Shop Hours Tuesdays & Thursdays - Noon to 3pm Saturdays - 10am to 3pm All Are Welcome!
To be listed in the Religious Directory, please call 631–751–7663
MAY 03, 2018 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B23
Religious EVANGELICAL
INTERNATIONAL BAPTIST CHURCH Loving God • Loving Others • Sharing the Gospel
1266 N. Country Road, Stony Brook, NY 11790 631-689-7660 • www.internationalbaptistsb.org Pastor Hank Kistler Sunday Worship 11 am Thursday Small Groups 7 pm
THREE VILLAGE CHURCH Knowing Christ...Making Him Known
322 Route 25A, East Setauket 631-941–3670 www.3vc.org
LEAD PASTOR JOSH MOODY Sunday Worship Schedule: 9:15 am: Worship Service, Sunday School (Pre–K – Adult), Nursery 10:30 am: Bagels & Coffee 11:00 am: Worship Service, Nursery, Pre–K, Cornerstone Kids (Gr. K–5) We offer weekly Teen Programs, Small Groups, Women’s & Men’s Bible Studies, Alpha, Stephen Ministry Faith Preschool for ages 3 & 4, Mommy & Me for age 2 Join us as we celebrate 55 years of proclaiming the good news of Jesus Christ!
GREEK ORTHODOX
CHURCH OF THE ASSUMPTION
430 Sheep Pasture Rd., Port Jefferson 11777 Tel: 631-473-0894 • Fax: 631-928-5131 www.kimisis.org • goc.assumption@gmail.com
Rev. Demetrios N. Calogredes, Protopresbyter Sunday Services Orthros 8:30 am - Devine Liturgy 10 am Services conducted in both Greek & English* Books available to follow in English* Sunday Catechism School, 10:15 am - 11:15 am* Greek Language School, Tuesdays 5 pm - 8 pm* Bible Study & Adult Catechism Classes Available* Golden Age & Youth Groups* Thrift Store* Banquet Hall available for Rental* For information please call Church office*
JEWISH
CHABAD AT STONY BROOK
“Judaism with a smile” Future site: East side of Nicolls Rd, North of Rte 347 –Next to Fire Dept. Current location: 821 Hawkins Ave., Lake Grove
631-585–0521 • 800- My–Torah • www.ChabadSB.com
Rabbi Chaim & Rivkie Grossbaum Rabbi Motti & Chaya Grossbaum Rabbi Sholom B. & Chanie Cohen Membership Free •Weekday, Shabbat & Holiday Services Highly acclaimed Torah Tots Preschool • Afternoon Hebrew School Camp Gan Israel • Judaica Publishing Department • Lectures and Seminars Living Legacy Holiday Programs • Jewish Learning Institute Friendship Circle for Special Needs Children • The CTeen Network N’shei Chabad Women’s Club • Cyberspace Library www.ChabadSB.com Chabad at Stony Brook University – Rabbi Adam & Esther Stein
D irectory JEWISH
NORTH SHORE JEWISH CENTER
385 Old Town Rd., Port Jefferson Station 631-928–3737 www.NorthShoreJewishCenter.org Rabbi Aaron Benson
Cantor Daniel Kramer Executive Director Marcie Platkin Principal Heather Welkes Youth Director Jen Schwartz Services: Friday at 8 pm; Saturday at 9:15 am Daily morning and evening minyan- Call for times. Tot Shabbat • Family Services • Sisterhood • Men’s Club Seniors’ Club • Youth Group • Continuing Ed Adult Bar/Bat Mitzvah • Judaica Shop • Food Pantry Lecture Series • Jewish Film Series NSJC JEWISH LEARNING CENTER RELIGIOUS SCHOOL Innovative curriculum and programming for children ages 5-13 Imagine a synagogue that feels like home! Come connect with us on your Jewish journey. Member United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism
LUTHERAN-LCMS
MESSIAH LUTHERAN CHURCH
Messiah Preschool & Day Care 465 Pond Path, East Setauket • 631-751-1775 www.messiahny.com
Rev. Charles Bell- Pastor We welcome all to join us for worship & Fellowship Sunday Worship Services 8:15 am, 9:30 am, 11 am Sunday School at 9:30 am We have a NYS Certified Preschool & Day Care Thursday, May 10th - 7:30pm Ascension Worship Service
METHODIST BETHEL AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
33 Christian Ave/ PO2117, E. Setauket NY 11733 631-941–3581 Rev. Gregory L. Leonard–Pastor
TEMPLE ISAIAH (REFORM)
Sunday Worship 10:30 am • Adult Sunday School 9:30 am Lectionary Reading and Prayer Wed. 12 noon Gospel Choir Tues. 8 pm Praise Choir and Youth Choir 3rd and 4th Fri. 6:30 pm
A warm and caring intergenerational community dedicated to learning, prayer, social action, and friendship. Member Union for Reform Judaism
COMMACK UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
1404 Stony Brook Road, Stony Brook • 631-751–8518 www.tisbny.org
Rabbi David Katz Cantor Marcey Wagner Rabbi Emeritus Stephen A. Karol Rabbi Emeritus Adam D. Fisher Cantor Emeritus Michael F. Trachtenberg
Sabbath Services Friday 7:30 pm and Saturday 10 am Religious School • Monthly Family Service • Monthly Tot Shabbat Youth Groups • Senior Club • Adult Education Sisterhood • Brotherhood • Book Club-more
LUTHERAN–ELCA
HOPE LUTHERAN CHURCH AND ANCHOR NURSERY SCHOOL
46 Dare Road, Selden 631-732-2511 Emergency number 516-848-5386
Rev. Dr. Richard O. Hill, Pastor email: hopelutheran@msn.com • website: www.hopeluth.com Holy Communion is celebrated every week Saturdays at 5 pm, Sundays at 8, 9:30 and 11 am Service of Prayers for Healing on the first weeked of each month at all services Children and Youth Ministries Sparklers (3-11) Saturdays 5 pm • Sunday School (ages 3-11) 9:30 am Kids’ Club (ages 4-10) Wednesdays 4:15 pm Teen Ministry (ages 11-16) Saturdays 3 pm
ST. PAULS EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH
486 Townline Road, Commack Church Office: 631-499–7310 Fax: 631-858–0596 www.commack–umc.org • mail@commack–umc.org Rev. Linda Bates–Stepe, Pastor
SETAUKET UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 160 Main Street, Corner of 25A and Main Street East Setauket • 631–941–4167
Rev. Steven kim, Pastor
www.setauketumc.org • SUMCNY@aol.com Sunday Worship Service & Church School 10 am Holy Communion 1st Sunday of Month Mary & Martha Circle (Women’s Ministry) monthly on 2nd Tuesday at 1pm
STONY BROOK COMMUNITY CHURCH UNITED METHODIST
216 Christian Ave., Stony Brook, 11790 Church Office: 631-751-0574 stonybrookcommunitychurch@gmail.com www.stonybrookcommunitychurch.org Rev. Chuck Van Houten, Pastor Connecting people to God, purpose and each other Sunday Worship 10:00 am Sunday School 10:00 am
Renewing, Restoring, Reviving for the 21st Century!
309 Patchogue Road, Port Jefferson Station 631-473–2236
Rev. Paul A. Downing, Pastor email: pastorpauldowning@yahoo.com • pastor’s cell: 347–423–3523 Services: Sundays-8:30 and 10:30 am—Holy Communion Sunday School during 10:30 service Adult Bible Study — 9:30 am on Sundays Wednesday Night — 7:30 pm — Holy Communion Friday Morning —Power of Prayer Hour 10:30 am Join us for any service-all are welcome We are celebrating 100 years in Port Jefferson Station
To be listed in the Religious Directory, please call 631–751–7663 Religious Directory continued on next page ©155761
PAGE B24 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • MAY 03, 2018
COMMUNITY NEWS
Wildlife Yoga Sweetbriar Nature Center, 62 Eckernkamp Drive, Smithtown offers Wildlife Yoga for adults and teens every Friday evening in the warmer months from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. A resident animal will be introduced at each class. Instructor Lisa Iacono will lead a 45-minute class. All levels welcome. Fee is $15 per person. Advance registration required by calling 631-979-6344.
Victorian Tea The Joan of Arc Columbiettes will host a Victorian Tea on Sunday, May 20 from 1 to 4 p.m. at Infant Jesus Montfort Hall, 110 Myrtle Ave., Port Jefferson. Enjoy finger sandwiches, cakes, tea, desserts and raffles. Come in Victorian dress (optional) and bring your own teacup and saucer. All proceeds to support the group’s many charities. Tickets are $15 adults, $10 for children over 10. To order, please call Carol at 631-585-1968.
Weekly Bingo Photo from Emma Clark Library
A lucky puppy is adopted at last year’s Pet Adoption Fair at Emma S. Clark Memorial Library
Pet Adoption Fair Open your hearts to a new addition to the family! Emma S. Clark Memorial Library, 120 Main St., Setauket will hold its 6th annual Pet Adoption Fair on the front lawn of the library on Saturday, May 5 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Various animal rescue organizations and animal advocacy associations will be in attendance including Gimme Shelter Animal Rescue, Happy Tails Dog Rescue, Last Chance Animal Rescue, My Shadow Rescue along with Kids Adopt a Shelter, Post Consumer Pet Rescue, Save-A-Pet Animal Rescue and Adoption Center and Sweetest Dog Rescue. There is no need to register and all are welcome to attend. The library will also be collecting donations of pet food at the event. Questions? Call 631-941-4080.
Temple Beth Chai holds Bingo Nights at the 110 Bingo Hall, 585 Broadhollow Road, Melville (new location) every Tuesday at 7:15 p.m. $1 entrance fee for the initial Bingo card with other Bingo forms and cards available for purchase. For additional information, call Lori at 631-724-5807.
Mother’s Day Plant Sale Save the date! Just in time for Mother’s Day, the Centerport Garden Club will hold its annual plant sale at Harborfields Public Library Circle, 31 Broadway, Greenlawn on Friday, May 11 from 9 to 11:30 a.m. Featuring perennials, annuals and hanging baskets. Held rain or shine.
Green Thumbs wanted Sweetbriar Nature Center, located at 62 Eckernkamp Drive in Smithtown, is seeking volunteers interested in helping out either in its formal gardens or in Long Island’s only enclosed Butterfly Garden. If you enjoy the outdoors, nature’s beauty and a family atmosphere, join the center’s team of dedicated volunteers. Schedules are flexible depending on the needs of each volunteer. Call Eric 631-979-6344, ext. 302, to sign up.
Religious
Photo from Gurwin Jewish
Resident Sherle and recreation therapist Nicole Hopper pose with the center’s new therapeutic pet
Gurwin bunny has new name
COMMACK: The votes are in and tallied for the Gurwin Jewish Nursing & Rehabilitation Center’s bunny naming contest. As a result of a social media contest, Gurwin residents revealed today the new name of their adopted pet therapy bunny, now known as Nelly Furwin. In the few short weeks he’s been at Gurwin, Nelly has endeared himself to both staff and residents alike. “Spending time snuggling and stroking his soft fur provides a source of comfort and happiness and induces a sense of nurturing,” said Dawn Lettau, director of therapeutic recreation at Gurwin. “A daily dose of Nelly is the ideal prescription to improve overall mood. Thank you to all who participated in our contest to help give our furry friend the perfect name!”
D irectory
METHODIST
QUAKERS
WOODBURY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
UNITY CHURCH OF HEALING LIGHT
www.cbquakers.org
www.unityhuntingtonny.org email: unitychurchny@yahoo.com FB & YouTube: Unity Church of Healing Light
577 Woodbury Rd., Woodbury Church Office: 516-692-7179 Rev. Erik Rasmussen wumc11797@optonline.net
Join us for Sunday church at 10:30 am. “Open hearts...open doors.” Adult Discussions on Matter of Faith, Tuesdays at 4 pm Kids Sunday School Available.
PRESBYTERIAN
SETAUKET PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
5 Caroline Avenue ~ On the Village Green 631- 941-4271 Making God’s community livable for all since 1660!! www.setauketpresbyterian.org Email: setauketpresbyterian@verizon.net
Rev. Mary, Barrett Speers, pastor
SPECIAL SERVICE: “All Will Be Well” A joyful communion in the style of Iona Community inspired by Julian of Norwich Church School 9:30; Adult Education: 11:00 Outreach Ministries: Open Door Exchange Ministry: Furnishing homes...Finding hope www.facebook.com/welcomefriendssoupkitchen Welcome Friends Soup Kitchen Prep Site: tfolliero@yahoo.com All are welcome to join this vibrant community of worship, music (voice and bell choirs), mission (local, national and international), and fellowship. Call the church office or visit our website for current information on church activities. SPC is a More Light Presbyterian Church and part of the Covenant Network of Presbyterians working toward a church as generous and just as God’s grace.
4 Friends Way, St. James 631–928-2768
Worship: Sept. - June 11 am , July - Aug. 9:30 am We gather in silent worship seeking God • the Inner Light • Spirit. We are guided by the Quaker testimonies of simplicity, peace, integrity, community, equality, and stewardship. Weekly coffee and fellowship, monthly discussions, Religious Education for children.
UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP AT STONY BROOK
380 Nicolls Road • between Rte 347 & Rte 25A 631–751–0297 • www.uufsb.org • office@uufsb.org Rev. Margaret H. Allen (minister@uufsb.org)
UNITY
203 East Pulaski Rd., Huntington Sta. 631–385–7180
Rev. Saba Mchunguzi, Minister
Sunday Service - 11:30 am - 12:30 pm (Sign Language Interpreter) Sunday school for children and youth 3-17 years old Wednesday Prayer Group - 7:30 p.m. - 8:30 pm We believe that everyone is a child of God and entitled to live a fulfi lling and productive life. We teach spiritual principles, such as affirmative prayer, the power of thought and the law of attraction (LOA). We celebrate a diverse fellowship where everyone finds acceptance. We are a member of Unity Worldwide Ministries and affi liated with the Daily Word devotional booklet, and Silent Unity.
Sunday Service: 10:30 am
Religious Education at UUFSB: Unitarian Universalism accepts wisdom from many sources and offers non-dogmatic religious education for children from 3-18 to foster ethical and spiritual development and knowledge of world religions. Classes Sunday mornings at 10:30 am. Childcare for little ones under three. Senior High Youth Group meetings Sunday evenings Registration is ongoing. For more information: dre@uufsb.org.
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MAY 03, 2018 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B25
ART EXHIBITS ‘There are always flowers for those who want to see them.’ — Henri Matisse Art League of LI
Editions from May 11 to Sept. 3. Call 631-7510066 or visit www.longislandmuseum.org for more information.
The Art League of Long Island is located at 107 E. Deer Park Road, Dix Hills. Next up in the Jeannie Tengelsen Gallery will be the Long Island Center of Photography’s Members Exhibition titled 60 Inches from May 5 to 20. Join them for a closing reception on May 20 from 1 to 3 p.m. Call 631-462-5400 or visit www. artleagueli.org for more information.
Northport Public Library
The Northport Public Library is located at 151 Laurel Ave., Northport. Through the month of May the library’s gallery will present Empowering Women thru the Lens by Lori Bockelken. An Art Talk will be held on May 4 from 7 to 9 p.m. Call 631-261-6930 for additional details.
The Atelier at Flowerfield
North Shore Public Library
The Atelier at Flowerfield is located at 2 Flowerfield, Suite 15, in St. James. Atelier Masterworks 2018, featuring artwork by John Traynor, Leo Mancini, David Shevlino, Leeanna Chipana, Tyler Hughes, Bill Graf, Wendy Jensen and Kevin McEvoy, will run from May 17 to Aug. 30 in Atelier Hall. Join them for an opening reception on May 17 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. For more information, call 631-2509009 or visit www.atelierflowerfield.org.
North Shore Public Library is located at 250 Route 25A, Shoreham. Ray Germann’s The American West will be on view through May. The black and white photography exhibit is the result of 15 trips to the American West. The Friends of the Library will host a reception for Germann on May 5 from 2:30 to 4 p.m. All are invited. Questions? Call 631-929-4488.
Port Jefferson Free Library
Brookhaven Town Hall
Brookhaven Town Hall is located at 1 Independence Hill in Farmingville. Through May 7, the second-floor Rotunda Gallery will present Essence of Nature featuring the photographs of Jeff Bevis and Christopher Bazer. For more information, call 631-331-2438.
Cold Spring Harbor Library
Cold Spring Harbor Library is located at 95 Harbor Road, Cold Spring Harbor. A collection of Lucia Fangman’s watercolor, mixed media watercolor, designed sketches and acrylic paintings titled Hidden Beauty will be on display through June 28. The exhibit may be seen during regular library hours. Call 631-692-6820 for more information.
Comsewogue Public Library
The Comsewogue Public Library is located at 170 Terryville Road, Port Jefferson Station. Through the month of May, view Shapes and Color by Robert Jones. The exhibit may be seen during regular library hours. For more information, call 631-928-1212 or visit www.cplib.org.
East Northport Public Library
The East Northport Public Library is located at 185 Larkfield Road in East Northport. During May the library will present a photography exhibit, An Eyewitness to Ocean Plastic Pollution: The Beauty and the Pain of the Seas, by Erica Cirino. Join her for an Art Talk on May 11 from 7 to 9 p.m. For additional information, call 631-261-2313.
Port Jefferson Free Library is located at 100 Thompson St., Port Jefferson. All through May the works of the Port Jefferson Photo Club will be on view in the Meeting Room. Call 631-4730022 for further info.
INTERPRETING THE FLOWER: Sachem Public Library will present an exhibit by artist Renee Blank through the month of May. Image courtey of Sachem Public Library
Heckscher Museum of Art
The Heckscher Museum of Art is located at 2 Prime Ave., Huntington. Through July 29 the museum will present Heavy Metal, photographs by Jan Staller with a gallery talk and tour on May 10 at 7 p.m. Also on view through July 22 will be The Age of Tiffany: Between Nouveau and Deco. Call 631-351-3250 or visit www. heckscher.org for details.
Huntington Arts Council
Huntington Arts Council’s Main Street Gallery is located at 213 Main St., Huntington. From May 4 to 26, the Main Street Gallery will present 12 × 12, a juried exhibition featuring artwork inspired by the LP Record Jacket. An opening reception will be held on May 4 from 6 to 8 p.m. Call 631-271-8423 for more info.
Huntington Public Library
Huntington Public Library is located at 338 Main St., Huntington. Through the months of May and June enjoy an ALA Poster Exhibit: a collection of posters published by the American Library Association featuring celebrities extolling the virtues of libraries and of reading in the Main Art Gallery. Questions? Call 631-427-5165.
The Long Island Museum
The Long Island Museum is located at 1200 Route 25A, Stony Brook. Current exhibits include Perfect Harmony: The Musical Life and Art of William Sidney Mount through Sept. 3; Wanderlust, an exhibit featuring the finalists in the museum’s annual juried art competition, through June 3. Up next is Revolution in Printmaking: Larry Rivers and Universal Limited Art
The Port Jefferson Village Center is located at 101A E. Broadway, Port Jefferson. Through the months of May and June the second-floor gallery will present an exhibit by the Wet Paint Artists. Viewing hours are 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. every day. For more information, call 631-8022160 or visit www.portjeff.com.
Reboli Center for Art and History
The Reboli Center for Art and History is located at 64 Main St. in Stony Brook Village. Currently on view through July 29 is an exhibit titled Artistic Dimensions featuring the works of Joseph Reboli, Bill Jersey, Pat Musick and Doug Reina. For more information, call 631-751-7707 or visit www.ReboliCenter.org.
Sachem Public Library
Sachem Public Library is located at 150 Holbrook Road in Holbrook. In the gallery through the month of May will be an art exhibit titled Interpreting the Flower by Renee Blank featuring flowers created in pastel, pencil, watercolors and acrylics. Friends of Sachem Library memorabilia will be on view in the Display Case. Call 631-588-5024 for more info.
STAC
The Smithtown Township Arts Council Gallery is located at the Mills Pond House, 660 Route 25A, St. James. Through May 19 the Mills Pond Gallery will present a Juried Documentary Photography Exhibition featuring the works of 13 photographers whose work uses visual narratives to tell stories and draw attention to real-life situations. The works of artist Lori Scarlatos will be on view at Apple Bank, 91 Route 111, Smithtown through May 25. The exhibition, part of STAC’s Outreach Gallery Program, may be viewed during regular banking hours. For more information, call 631-862-6575.
Emma S. Clark Library
Emma S. Clark Memorial Library is located at 120 Main St., Setauket. Enjoy oil paintings of Setauket by Stanley Siegelman through the month of May. The exhibit may be seen during regular library hours. Call 631-941-4080 for more information.
Gallery North
Gallery North is located at 90 North Country Road, Setauket. Now through May 18, visit The Spirit of the Brush by artist Sungsook Setton, bringing new excitement to the age-old art of Asian brush painting. An opening reception will be held on May 4 from 5 to 7 p.m. In conjunction with the exhibit, the gallery will present Voice of the Brush: an artist’s interpretation to live jazz on May 10 from 6 to 8 p.m. and Asian Brush workshops on May 18 and 25 from noon to 4 p.m. For additional information, call 631751-2676.
Studio 268
Studio 268 is located at 268 Main Street in Setauket. On May 5 (wine and cheese art reception from 5 to 8 p.m.) and May 6 (from noon to 5 p.m.) the studio will present Change the Landscape, a benefit show and sale for Hope for Javier, featuring the work of Russell Pulick and Mary Jane van Zeitjts. Call or text 631-220-4529 for more information.
Harborfields Public Library
Harborfields Public Library is located at 31 Broadway, Greenlawn. In the gallery through May 30 will be an exhibit titled Light on the Land: The Photography of Michael Lang. An artist reception will be held on May 3 from 7 to 8:30 p.m. The works of collage artist Rebecca Bahr will be on view in the showcase. Questions? Call 631-757-4200.
Port Jefferson Village Center
Three Village Historical Society
12 X 12: Kasmira Mohanty’s ‘She’s Got Moxie’ will be on exhibit at the Huntington Arts Council’s Main Street Gallery through May 26. Image courtesy of HAC
Three Village Historical Society, 93 North Country Road, Setauket, is presenting Chicken Hill: A Community Lost to Time, along with the SPIES exhibit about the Culper Spy Ring. Viewing hours are Sundays, 1 to 4 p.m. and by appointment. $10 adults, $5 children and students, members free. Call 631-751-3730 or visit www.tvhs.org.
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KIDS KORNER
37 Crystal Brook Hollow Rd.
631-331-5351
www.kidsofmountsinai.com
Come in for a tour & experience what makes us different!
43 Echo Ave.
631-403-4790
www.kidsofmillerplace.com
Toddler/Preschool
School-Age Care
Infant Care
A developmentally appropriate program that promotes learning in a safe, fun and caring environment. Separate Toddler, Preschool, & Pre-Kindergarten classes are offered.
Whether your child wants help with homework, work on a creative art project, play games, or just relax, we provide a safe and fun place before/after school where your child will love to be.
A safe, warm, and stimulating home away from home filled with singing, talking, holding, & playing. Your baby’s every need will be cared for by our dedicated and loving nursery staff.
School Year And Year Round Programs
(Grades K-5)
(Ages 6 weeks & up)
All Programs Offer Extended Care Hours
Locally Owned And Operated
156566
(Ages 18mos.-5yrs.)
Camp & School DIRECTORY
IN PERFECT HARMONY Join the staff at the Long Island Museum for some after-school fun on May 3 at 4:30 p.m. View the works of William Sidney Mount including ‘Dance of the Haymakers’ (1845), above, and be inspired!
Programs Hands-On Art BENNER’S FARM 56 GNARLED HOLLOW RD., SETAUKET • 631.689.8172 bennersfarm.com
Farm the kids out this summer! Be a farmer for a week and experience summer life on a real working farm. Benner’s Farm dates back to the mid-1700s and as the children explore the farm, gardens, fields and woods, they’ll hear stories of the farm’s history and how people lived on Long Island before cars, malls and electricity. There are all kinds of new things to explore from tractors and tools to vegetables and herbs, collecting eggs from the hens, and picking a snack from the garden. Camp groups start with Kinder camp for those 3 -6, and Explorers and Senior Campers for children from 7 to 17 years old. Each day, campers are busy learning about animals, plants and nature, history, science, crafts and food. Each week includes fun and games of all kinds, special guests, and creative endeavors. Registration is by the week for up to 7 weeks of summer fun. CIT programs and before and after care are available. See our website Bennersfarm.com for more information!
Students in grades K through 4 may join the Long Island Museum, 1200 Route 25A, Stony Brook for a Hands-On Art program, Music & Art in Harmony, on May 3 from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. Visit the Perfect Harmony exhibition in the Art Museum and take inspiration from William Sidney Mount to combine music and art. $10 per child. Preregistration required by calling 751-0066, ext. 212.
Storytime at Barnes & Noble Barnes & Noble in Lake Grove at 600 Smith Haven Mall or in East Northport at 4000 E. Jericho Turnpike will host a storytime event on May 5 at 11 a.m. Enjoy a reading of “Llama Llama Loves to Read” by Anna Dewdney followed by a special activity. Free. Call 724-0341 (LG) or 462-0208 (EN) for more information.
Viking Invasion!
KIDS COUNTRY DAY CAMP 37 CRYSTAL BROOK HOLLOW RD, MT. SINAI 631.331.5351 • KidsCountryDayCamp.com
Kids Country Day Camp is a 10 acre recreational children’s summer day camp filled with indoor and outdoor adventure, sports, activities and special events. Children 3-12 yrs. of age take part in over 50 fun & exciting activities. Special events include a Talent Show, Carnival, Survivor, Glow Party, Animal Show and more. NEW for 2018! SUMMER QUEST! Let the ADVENTURE begin! The Camp Program runs 8 weeks with various combinations of weeks & days available. Rates include lunch, snack, refreshments, towel service and 2 camp shirts. OPEN HOUSES: May 19 & June 9 11 am - 2 pm Kids Country Day Camp & Kids of Mount Sinai, 37B Crystal Brook Hollow Rd., Mount Sinai
WORLD GYM’S CAMP SETAUKET AND GAME SET MATCH TENNIS ACADEMY CAMPS 384 MARK TREE ROAD, EAST SETAUKET • 631.751.6100
Camp Setauket: For over 29 years, creating memorable summer camp experiences: General Camp for ages 3–12 ; Theatre Arts Camp and Sports Camp for ages 7–12; and C.I.T. Program for ages 13 thru 15. Game Set Match Tennis Academy Camp for ages 4–18 and all skill levels. Our unique camps offer indoor & outdoor pools, indoor & outdoor fields and indoor & outdoor tennis courts. Activities include: arts & crafts, sports such as soccer, basketball, softball and volleyball, interactive games, drama and hands on science. Swimming is included in every camp and several indoor activity areas for rainy days. Early enrollment, sibling, & member discounts available. Parisi Training Camps - focuses on speed and agility for all sports.
Celebrate National Viking Day at the Whaling Museum, 301 Main St., Cold Spring Harbor on May 5 from 1 to 2 p.m. Explore the early whalers and seafarers — the Vikings! Create an array of Viking gear such as a helmet, beard and a sparkly Viking brooch. Admission is $12 for children, $5 adults. Call 3673418 for additional details.
Open Farm Days Benner’s Farm, 56 Gnarled Hollow Road, Setauket is open to the public this weekend, May 5 and 6 (May Day Festival), from noon to 4 p.m. Visit with the animals, swing on the BIG swing, enjoy the farm grounds and trails and hold baby bunnies, ducks and chicks! Bring your camera. Admission is $8 adults, $6 children. Call 6898172 or visit www.bennersfarm.com.
Exoplanet Transits
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The Long Island Explorium, 101 East Broadway, Port Jefferson will present a walk-in program, Exoplanet Transits, on May 5 and 6 from 1 to 5 p.m. Design your own exoplanet transportation to assist NASA scientist’s search for distant planets! Meet Ray and his robot Volt, learn about robotics and build your own “bristlebot” on May 5 at 2 p.m. $5 per person. Call 331-3277 for more info.
Book signing Join Book Revue, 313 New York Ave., Huntington for an evening with author Jennifer Zelman as she speaks about and signs copies of her new children’s picture book, “I Have a Stepmom, HOORAY!,” on May 10 at 7 p.m. Call 271-1442 for more information.
Theater ‘Stand Up! Stand Out!’ Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson will present a two-in-one special event, an original musical titled “Stand Up! Stand Out! The Bullying Project” and a concert by Lena & The Happy Clam Band on May 5 at 11 a.m. When Peg watches as Nellie is bullied in school, she is launched into a wonderland of fantastical folks who teach her that you don’t stand by — you stand up! Featuring live actors, puppets and a toe-tapping original score. All seats are $10. To order tickets, call 928-9100 or visit www. theatrethree.com.
‘Willy Wonka Jr.’ Time to enter the Chocolate Factory. Roald Dahl’s “Willy Wonka Jr.” comes to the Smithtown Center for the Performing Arts, 2 East Main St., Smithtown from May 19 to June 17 on Saturdays at 2 p.m. and Sundays at 11 a.m. (no performance on May 27) All seats are $15. Get your golden ticket today! To order, call 724-3700 or visit www.smithtownpac.org.
‘Goldilocks — Is That You?’ Join Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson for a delightful musical retelling of the famous story as Goldilocks meets three nice show biz bears and helps them foil the villainous plans of Billy de Goat Gruff from May 26 to June 9. Don’t miss this hysterical melodrama about safety. Tickets are $10. To order, call 928-9100 or visit www.theatrethree.com.
All numbers are in (631) area code unless otherwise noted.
MAY 03, 2018 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B27
NEWS AROUND TOWN
Harbor Country Day School celebrates 60th anniversary
On March 23, Harbor Country Day School celebrated its 60th anniversary with a Diamond Jubilee event at Flowerfield in St. James. Nearly 250 guests gathered at the catering venue to celebrate the independent school’s 60 years of “embracing the extraordinary in every child.” Guests included current and former faculty and staff, members of the board of trustees, parents of current and former students and alumni from nearly every decade the St. James school has been in operation. In addition to honoring the school’s milestone year, guests feted the Malcolm Smith Jr. family, one of Harbor Country Day School’s inaugural families and descendants of Richard Smith, who settled the town of Smithtown in 1665. Attendees also celebrated Natalie Scheyer, who served as Harbor Country Day’s first grade teacher for 29 years — the longest tenure of any teacher since the school was founded in 1958. “Eighteen families joined forces in 1958 to create an educational opportunity for their children that was different from anything available in their community at the time,” said Head of School John Cissel. “When Harbor Country Day School opened its doors for the first time on Sept. 12 of that year, I wonder if those families knew they were building
something so special, so extraordinary, that we would be here celebrating its existence 60 years later.” Cissel continued, “I suspect they must have known, because although much has changed since 1958, the mission — to cherish childhood, cultivate wonder and inspire confident learners and leaders — has remained the same so many years later, with children at the center of everything Harbor does.” For more information, visit www. hcdsny.org.
Above photo by Harbor Country Day School; others by Diana Rice, Park Ave Studios
Clockwise from above, gala co-chairs Cynthia Wong Lippe and Andrea Dagnelli Cristobal; Harbor Country Day School alumni; Head of School John Cissel honors Helen and Jennifer Smith
Benner's Farm
CAMP SETAUKET at
WORLD GYM
Old Fashioned Family Fun
BABY BARNYARDS
EARLY BIRD DISCOUNT 5% OFF
WEEKENDS, 12 TO 4PM Mayday Festival
through April 30
• Instruction & Competition • Soccer • Volleyball • Softball • Basketball and more • Singing • Dancing • Acting • Stage & Costume Design • Casting for Performances
Huge Maypole, Live Music, Dance, Crafts, Food and Fun
Your Child Will Never Be Bored This Summer!
Summer Farm Camp
General Camp
(Ages 3 - 12)
• Arts & Crafts • Hands on Science • Interactive Games • Recreational Sports
Tennis Academy
(Ages 4 - 18)
• 1/2 Day • Full Day • Advanced Training • 9 Indoor, 7 Outdoor Har-Tru Courts
C.I.T. Training
Registration going on now!
(Ages 13 - 15)
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• Counselors in Training • Learn Leadership Skills
• Enjoy the Activities • Special Reduced Rate Swimming is included in all camps! All camps provide: Snacks, Drinks, Lunch & a T-Shirt
Discounts for Siblings and World Gym Members! 157102
631-689-8172 - bennersfarm.com 56 Gnarled Hollow Rd. Setauket
Sports Camp (Ages 7 - 12)
Theatre Arts Camp (Ages 7 - 12)
May 6th, 12-4
After School Programs, Mommy & Me, Birthday Parties, Workshops
“Celebrating our 28th Year!” 4 Exciting Camps To Choose From! Large Outdoor And Indoor Space For Numerous Sports & Activities. New Enormous Carnival Bouncer!
348 Mark Tree Road, East Setauket 631-751-6100 www.WorldGymSetauket.com Less than 5 minutes from SBU Campus, 800’ north of Rte. 347
Stony Brook University/SUNY is an affirmative action, equal opportunity educator and employer. 17110770H
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24/7 emergency medicine Kids never stop being kids. So our children’s ER is open 24 hours. Part of Stony Brook Medicine | stonybrookchildrens.org ©157552