ARTS&LIFESTYLES TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA • AUGUST 11, 2022
Walt Whitman Birthplace hosts time capsule ceremony in honor of poet's 200th birthday ◆ B9
Photo by Heidi Sutton
ALSO: I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change opens in Smithtown B22 ■ Sleeping Beauty takes up residence at Theatre Three B31
PAGE B2 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
Stony Brook University Hospital
Ranked Top 7% Nationally in Diabetes & Endocrinology Stony Brook University Hospital has been ranked #50 nationally — out of 764 peer hospitals evaluated — for diabetes and endocrinology by U.S. News & World Report. This recognition reflects our deep medical expertise and our commitment to delivering a high-quality patient experience. Additional recognition: Urology ranked #41 nationally and Stony Brook University Hospital ranked #9 in New York State
For more information or an appointment: Stony Brook Diabetes Center (631) 444-0580
To learn more about the 2022-23 U.S. News & World Report rankings, scan the QR code or visit bit.ly/usnewsSBUH.
Stony Brook Endocrinology and Metabolism (631) 638-0597
Stony Brook University/SUNY is an affirmative action, equal opportunity educator and employer. 22070140H
98960
AUGUST 11, 2022 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B3
Main event – Federal Reserve vs. Federal Government FINANCIAL FOCUS Sometimes it makes my head hurt trying to understand how Washington works. The Federal Reserve raises interest rates in order to curb inflation. Immediately following these BY MICHAEL E. RUSSELL actions, Senate Democrats passes the Inflation Reduction Act with the blessing of the White House. This bill goes counter to what Jerome Powell and the Federal Reserve are trying to accomplish. Jim Kramer on CNBC calls this bill the “Spend Our Way To Oblivion Act or SOWOA.” If you own stocks, this could be a problem. For many U.S. companies the bill includes a tax on stock buybacks. This will impact the way companies address their capital. A 15% book tax which hurts companies with net operating losses will force them to issue debt in order to raise capital. Senator Chuck Schumer proudly states that this bill will allow Medicare to negotiate prices with drug companies. Really? This is not quite correct. Beginning 4 years from now, Medicare will only be negotiating on lowering prices on 10 drugs. Schumer also states that the bill will create higher paying Environmental Engineering jobs. This potentially will lead to hyper wage inflation. Just look at last Friday’s employment figures. Environmental groups are euphoric over the bill, providing the potential for an additional 500,000 high paying jobs. That’s awesome, but where are the applicants to fill these positions? This is the type of wage inflation that the Federal Reserve is trying to rein in.
It appears that commodity inflation has peaked, but now we will have to contend with labor inflation by creating jobs we have no ability to fill, other than to take from the private sector. I don’t want to beat a dead horse, but every time Fed Chairman Jerome Powell tries to get a handle on inflation, the Federal government throws him a curveball. The people of this country for the most part are hard-working and good-hearted. The stock market has politics, of course. We all want to slow global warming or better yet, STOP IT. However, what is occurring in Washington has the potential to destroy our free enterprise system. The government is printing money and spending it like sailors on shore leave. A final thought on this, TERM LIMITS. On a positive note: We have had a nice bounce during the month of July. The jobs number this past Friday appears to show that we may not be on the verge of a recession, but it sure puts pressure on the Fed to increase rates. Stock news. GE is splitting into 3 different companies. Those individual stocks could perform very well. Think back to the split up of AT&T into 7 different entities. I am still a big fan of ExxonMobil, even though it is already up 50% this year. JPMorgan has come down from $165 in January to $114. The potential for a higher price is very possible, while being paid with a nice dividend. Last, but not least, Proctor and Gamble. Most of us use their products on a daily basis, like toothpaste and laundry detergent, don’t we? Until next month, try to stay cool. Michael E. Russell retired after 40 years working for various Wall Street firms. All recommendations being made here are not guaranteed and may incur a loss of principal. The opinions and investment recommendations expressed in the column are the author's own. TBR News Media does not endorse any specific investment advice and urges investors to consult with their financial advisor.
In this edition: Medical Compass ................................. B7 News Around Town .............................. B7 Parent Connection .............................B13 Paw Prints ...............................................B27 Photo of the Week ..............................B29 Power of 3 .............................................B11 Religious Directory .............................B25 Theater Reviews ............................B22, 31
Email your community, business, health, class reunions and calendar listings to leisure@tbrnewspapers.com.
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Peter A. Klein, MD • Adam J. Korzenko, MD Brett M. Dolgin, DO • Wil D. Tutrone, MD Renee Fruchter, MD • Vanita Srivastava, DO
der•ma•tol•o•gist [ dur-muh-tol-uh-jist ] / .dәrmәtälәjәst/
Noun
A Doctor who is board-certified in Dermatology and Dermatologic Surgery by the American Board of Dermatology. An expert in the diagnosis and treatment of diseases of the skin, hair and nails. A physician specialist who has completed four years of medical school, one year of internship, and three or more years of residency training in Dermatology and Dermatologic Surgery.
You deserve nothing less than a Doctor who is board-certified in Dermatology.
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Business News ....................................... Bp Calendar .................................................B23 Cooking Cove .......................................B28 Crossword Puzzle/Sudoku ................. B8 Financial Focus ...................................... B3 Horoscopes ............................................B21 Kids Korner ............................................B30 Making Democracy Work .................B10
PORT JEFFERSON DERMATOLOGY DERMATOLOG Y
PAGE B4 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
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Best of the North Shore Ballot
Times Beacon Record News Media readers will be voting for the Best of the Best in over 80 categories on the ballot below. Here’s a chance to get your favorite North Shore businesses, currently operating, the recognition and fame they deserve! Readers are asked to vote by October 19, 2022. Please print your choices and use complete names and TOWN of business. Winners will be announced in the Best of the North Shore publication, inserted in the full run of all six newspapers on Thursday, February 16, 2023.
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AUGUST 11, 2022 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B5
READERS’ CHOICE:
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Insurance Agency
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PAGE B6 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
HELPING YOU NAVIGATE TO OPTIMAL HEALTH Using the LIFE Diet, A Whole Body Plant-Based Approach. Reversing, Preventing & Treating Chronic Disease and Managing Weight by Connecting Conventional Medicine with Lifestyle Modifications
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.
YOU DON’T HAVE TO SUFFER FROM CHRONIC DISEASES CAUSED BY INFLAMMATION! My research studies were recently published by the American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine showing that my whole food plant-based LIFE diet reduces inflammation, the root of many chronic diseases.
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David Dunaief, M.D. Integrative Medicine TWO LOCATIONS 47 Route 25A, Setauket, NY • 631.675.2888
41 Clark Street, Brooklyn, NY • 718.924.2655
drdunaief@medicalcompassmd.com • Visit our website www.medicalcompassmd.com
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Dr. Dunaief builds a customized plan for each patient - he knows that “no body is the same.”
AUGUST 11, 2022 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B7
Improving irritable bowel syndrome symptoms
NEWS AROUND TOWN
Fructose, lactose and gluten may be contributors
According to another study, about onethird of IBS patients are fructose intolerant. When on a fructose-restricted diet, symptoms appeared to improve (7). Foods with high levels of fructose include certain fruits, like apples and pears, but not bananas.
MEDICAL
COMPASS If you suffer from irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), its symptoms can directly affect your quality of life. They include abdominal pain, cramping, bloating, constipation and/or BY DAVID DUNAIEF, MD diarrhea. According to estimates, 10 to 15 percent of the population suffers from IBS symptoms, although only five to seven percent have been diagnosed (1). Diagnosing IBS is challenging. While the general perception is that IBS symptoms are somewhat vague, there are discrete criteria physicians use to provide a diagnosis it and eliminate more serious possibilities. The Rome IV criteria comprise an international effort to help diagnose and treat functional gastrointestinal disorders. Using these criteria, which include frequency of pain and discomfort over the past three months, in combination with a physical exam helps provide a diagnosis. So, what can be done to improve symptoms? There are a number of possibilities that require only modest lifestyle changes.
Addressing your mental state
The “brain-gut” connection refers to the direct connection between mental state, such as nervousness or anxiety, to gastrointestinal issues, and vice versa. Mindfulness-based stress reduction was used in a small, but randomized, eightweek clinical trial with IBS (2). Those in the mindfulness group (treatment group) showed statistically significant results in decreased severity of symptoms compared to the control group, both immediately after training and three months post-therapy. Those in the treatment group were instructed to do meditation, gentle yoga and “body scanning” — focusing on one area of the body for muscle tension detection. The control group attended an IBS support group once a week.
Possible link with migraines
A preliminary study has suggested there may be a link between IBS and migraine and tension-type headaches. The study of 320 participants, 107 with migraine, 107 with IBS, 53 with episodic tension-type headaches (ETTH), and 53 healthy individuals, identified
Considering the effects of lactose
METRO photo
significant occurrence crossover among those with migraine, IBS and ETTH. Researchers also found that these three groups had at least one gene that was different from that of healthy participants. Their hope is that this information will lead to more robust studies that could result in new treatment options (3).
Gluten consumption a factor?
In a small randomized clinical trial, patients who were given gluten were more likely to complain of uncontrolled symptoms than those who were given a placebo, 68 percent vs. 40 percent, respectively (4). These results were highly statistically significant. The authors concluded that nonceliac gluten intolerance may exist. Gluten sensitivity may be an important factor in for some IBS patients (5). I suggest to my patients that they might want to start avoiding gluten and then add it back into their diets slowly to see the results.
What about fructose?
Some IBS patients may suffer from fructose intolerance. In a study, IBS researchers used a breath test to examine this possibility (6). The results were dose-dependent, meaning the higher the dose of fructose, the greater the effect researchers saw. When patients were given a 10 percent fructose solution, only 39 percent tested positive for fructose intolerance, but when they were given a 33 percent solution, 88 percent of patients tested positive. The symptoms of fructose intolerance included gas, abdominal pain, bloating, belching and alternating bowel habits. The authors concluded that avoidance of fructose may reduce symptoms in IBS patients.
Another small study found that about onequarter of patients with IBS also have lactose intolerance. Two complications are at play here. One, it is very difficult to differentiate the symptoms of lactose intolerance from IBS. The other is that most IBS trials are small and there is a need for larger trials. Of the IBS patients who were also lactose intolerant, there was a marked improvement in symptomatology at both six weeks and five years when placed on a lactose-restricted diet (8). Though the trial was small, the results were statistically significant, which is impressive. Both the patient compliance and long-term effects were excellent, and visits to outpatient clinics were reduced by 75 percent. This demonstrates that it is probably worthwhile to test patients who have IBS symptoms for lactose intolerance.
Are probiotics part of the solution?
Treatment with probiotics from a study that reviewed 42 trials shows that there may be a benefit to probiotics, although the endpoints, or objectives, were different in each trial. The good news is that most of the trials reached one of their endpoints (9). Probiotics do show promise, including the two most common strains, Lactobacilli and Bifidobacteri, which were covered in the review. All of the above provides hope for IBS patients. These are treatment options that involve modest lifestyle changes. I believe there needs to be a strong patient-doctor connection in order to select an approach that results in the greatest symptom reduction for a specific patient.
References:
(1) American College of Gastroenterology [GI. org]. (2) Am J Gastroenterol. 2011 Sep;106(9):16781688. (3) American Academy of Neurology 2016, Abstract 3367. (4) Am J Gastroenterol. 2011 Mar;106(3):508-514. (5) Am J Gastroenterol. 2011 Mar;106(3):516-518. (6) Am J Gastroenterol. 2003 June;98(6):1348-1353. (7) J Clin Gastroenterol. 2008 Mar;42(3):233-238. (8) Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2001 Aug;13(8):941-944. (9) Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2012 Feb;35(4):403-413. Dr. David 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.
Community food drive
The Sound Beach Civic Association in collaboration with the North Shore Youth Council will be collecting non-perishable food, personal care items, paper and cleaning products, and pet food at the Movies in the Moonlight showing of Sing 2 at Heritage Park, 633 Mount SinaiCoram Road, Mount Sinai on Saturday, Aug. 13 beginning at 7 p.m. The drive will benefit Friends Kitchen at Trinity Lutheran Church in Rocky Point. For more information, call 631-744-6952.
Free Health Screenings
Comsewogue Public Library, 170 Terryville Road, Port Jefferson Station will hold free health screenings on Friday, Aug. 12 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. A Catholic Health registered nurse will be available on a mobile outreach bus in the parking lot to offer free services including blood pressure and BMI screenings, simple blood tests for cholesterol or glucose, referrals, and resources for those without insurance. Open to all adults ages 18 and over. For further information, call 631928-1212.
Free self-defense class
New York State Assemblywoman Jodi Giglio presents a women's self defense class free of charge at East Coast Black Belt Academy, 161 Middle Country Road, Middle Island on Saturday, Aug. 13 at 10 a.m. Martial arts instructor Sensei Figgiani will discuss street awareness, self discipline, warrior spirit and self confidence. To register, call 631-727-0205.
Community Blood Drive
Harborfields Public Library, 31 Broadway, Greenlawn hosts a Community Blood Drive by the New York Blood Center on Wednesday, Aug. 17 from 1 to 7 p.m. Blood donors must be at least 16 years old, weigh at least 110 pounds and not have donated blood within the last 56 days. To make an appointment, visit www. donate.nybc.org. For more information, call 631-757-4200. Send your event listings to leisure@tbrnewspapers.com
PAGE B8 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
ONLY ON THE WEB:
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» 'On Your Feet!' extended at the John W. Engeman Theater
» New York Blood Center announces blood emergency » Theatre Three to hold auditions for 'A Christmas Carol' » Crime Alert: Three men wanted for Centereach auto stripping » September events at The Jazz Loft
825 Montauk Highway Bayport, New York 11705
SUDOKU PUZZLE
©100450
(631) 472-9090
www.lesoirbayport.com
• Open for Indoor & Outdoor Dining • Dinner Specials Tuesday - Thursday • Price of All Entrees includes soup or salad & dessert • Serving Dinner from 5 pm - (Closed Sunday & Monday)
Theme: Children's Movies CLUES ACROSS
1. Savvy 6. Churchill’s “so few” 9. Wolf in Mexico 13. Type of closet 14. “____ to Joy” 15. Giverny Impressionist 16. Select by a vote 17. Craggy peak 18. Eight voices 19. *Snow White’s posse 21. *Kevin, Stuart or Bob 23. *”Mr. __body & Sherman” 24. Fodder holder 25. Dawber of “Mork & Mindy” 28. Maastricht Treaty (1992) currency 30. Goldfinger’s henchman 35. They’re hidden up a sleeve? 37. TV’s ____ at Night 39. *”____ Got a Friend in Me” from “Toy Story” 40. Lymph ____ 41. *E.T., e.g. 43. Arctic jaeger 44. Dismal 46. Muffin Man’s Drury ____ 47. Unagi, pl. 48. Not digital 50. Word-of-mouth story 52. Actor’s domain 53. Back talk 55. “____ populi,” or “voice of the people” 57. *Mr. Miyagi’s forte 60. *”____ Life of Pets” 63. Type of renewable energy 64. Parental involvement org. 66. Have dinner at home 68. Type of sweatshirt 69. H+, e.g. 70. Spiral-horned antelope 71. Augments 72. *Jack Sparrow’s “yes” 73. Ruhr’s industrial center
Answers to last week's puzzle: American History 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
CLUES DOWN
1. Steinful 2. *”Where the ____ Things Are” 3. All over again 4. Summary 5. Dinner’s main attraction 6. Decomposes 7. Big fuss 8. Manhattan Project physicist 9. Locus, pl. 10. On top of 11. “____ there, done that” 12. Mel ____, Giant Hall-of-Famer 15. Accompanied solo song 20. The animals of a region 22. International Labor Organization 24. Parties 25. *Kung Fu-practicing animated mammal 26. Squirrel’s stash 27. Mythological princess of Colchis 29. Small stream 31. 2 aspirin, e.g. 32. Football move, pl. 33. Immature ovum 34. *Beauty’s true love 36. Finned mammal 38. Bingo-like game 42. Impulse transmitter 45. Prayer beads 49. Gangster’s pistol 51. Between Paleocene and Oligocene 54. Old photo color 56. Rˆntgen beams 57. Crazy one 58. Medicinal succulent 59. Unit of angular measure, pl. 60. Like spirit in sane body 61. Estimated arrivals 62. Bathroom flooring 63. Female pronoun 65. *Buzz or Woody 67. A Bobbsey twin * THEME RELATED CLUE
Answers to this week’s puzzle will appear in next week's newspaper.
AUGUST 11, 2022 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B9
Ronald McDonald House opens Family Room for NICU families at SB Hospital Ronald McDonald House Charities (RMHC) NY Metro officially opened its newest Family Room at the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) at Stony Brook Hospital on Aug. 4. The space will serve as a respite area for parents and families caring for a newborn in the NICU receiving life-saving treatment. The new family room was designed and decorated mostly with donated goods and services and is equipped with a kitchen area, laundry facility and shower, all to keep families close to their ill children in the hospital. Coffee and snacks are also made available free of charge and local restaurants regularly donate warm meals to serve to families. “This has been a labor of love,” said Matt Campo, CEO of RMHC NY Metro. “We have partnered with Stony Brook over the last two years to see this come to fruition. Families have been stopping in, expressing their gratitude, and using the facilities that we built for them. It’s providing so much comfort and has given us a glimpse of what this room will mean to them.” The room is the second at Stony Brook Hospital. Ronald McDonald House opened a family room in the Stony Brook Children’s Hospital before the COVID pandemic. Both
BUSINESS NEWS
Mather Hospital's Emergency Department earns national award
Mather Hospital in Port Jefferson was one of 29 hospitals nationwide to receive the Emergency Nurses Association Lantern Award in July for demonstrating exceptional and innovative performance in leadership, practice, education, advocacy, and research. “The ENA Lantern Award is a display of all the hard work and innovation that the Emergency Department nurses and staff carry out each and every day,” said Christine Carbone MBA, BSN, RN, Director of Nursing for Mather’s Emergency Department which sees about 38-40,000 patient visits a year. “It is a true testament to the commitment of quality care and compassion that our staff provides to our community and patients.” The award showcases an emergency department’s accomplishments in incorporating evidence-based practice and innovation into emergency care and serves as a visible symbol of its commitment to quality, safety, and a healthy work environment. Photo courtesy of Mather Hospital
Andy Sperling
Harbor Country Day School welcomes new Head of School
From left, Mike Fallarino, Chairman of the Board, RMHC NY Metro; Margreet Cevasco, Cevasco Design, Designer of RMHC NY Metro Family Room; Carolyn Milana, MD, Chair, Department of Pediatrics, Stony Brook Medicine; Dr. Hal Paz, Executive Vice President of Health Sciences, CEO of Stony Brook University Medicine; Carol A. Gomes, MS, FACHE, CPHQ, CEO, Stony Brook University Hospital; and Matt Campo, CEO, RMHC NY Metro cut the ribbon to officially open the new Family Room at the Stony Brook Hospital NICU. Photo from RMHC NY Metro
rooms are staffed entirely by volunteers from around Long Island. “Serving families is at the heart of what we do,” said Dr. Hal Paz, Executive Vice President of Health Sciences, CEO of Stony Brook University Medicine. “Having the opportunity
to provide a quiet space for families is an essential part of providing quality care for all of our patients. Partnerships like these are fundamental to the care that our hospital system provides, allowing us to meet the needs of our patients and their families more fully.”
Harbor Country Day School in St. James has announced Andy Sperling as the new Head of School. Sperling was selected from an impressive list of candidates through an extensive national search process. Sperling, who succeeds former Head of School, John R. Cissel, began his term on July 1. With over thirty years of experience as an educator, Sperling began his teaching career in a suburban public school after receiving his Bachelor of Science degree in Mathematics (K-12) from Illinois State University in 1990. While teaching math and providing professional development, support and curriculum coordination for K-8 within his district, he earned his Masters of Educational Administration certificate in 1997. Two years later, he joined the faculty of Lake Forest Country Day School (LFCDS) where he continued his career as a middle school math teacher and was promoted to Head of Upper School in 2012. In this role, Sperling led the effort for diversity and inclusion training, developed relationships through parent education and presentations, assisted in the planning and design of several campus renovation projects, facilitated and developed the schoolwide social and emotional learning program, developed the middle school STEAM program and prepared the students for FLL Robotics competitions. “It is a distinct honor to be named the twelfth Head of School at Harbor Country Day School. From the moment I stepped through the majestic front door at Tulip Knoll, I sensed that indescribable vibe that can only be felt when you have experienced it firsthand. It's far more than just the charm — it's the way in which the children carried themselves and how they exuded confidence that drew me in. Harbor epitomizes what it means to embrace and live its mission. It will be a privilege to lead the faculty and staff on their continued journey of excellence," said Sperling.
PAGE B10 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
Vendors Wanted
◆ Nesconset Chamber of Commerce seeks vendors for its Nesconset Day street fair along Smithtown Blvd. in Nesconset on Aug. 28 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call 631672-5197 for more information. ◆ Davis Town Meeting House Society seeks vendors for its Yard Sale & Craft Fair on Sept. 10 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Davis House, 263 Middle Country Rd., Coram. Rain date is Sept. 11. $25 per table. For an application, call Maryanne at 631-804-2256 or email: msiclaridouglas@yahoo.com. ◆ Port Jefferson Lions Club seeks vendors for its 1st annual Car Show at Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville on Sept. 18 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. (Rain date is Sept. 25) Call Warren at 631-258-6165. ◆ Caroline Episcopal Church of Setauket is sponsoring a Fall Craft Fair & Barn Sale on the Setauket Village Green (Main St. and Caroline Ave.) on Sept. 24 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Rain date is Sept. 25 from noon to 5 p.m. Limited spaces still available on the Village Green (10’x10’) and covered Carriage Shed (9’x18’). Reserve your spot at depasmarket. com. Questions? Call 631-806-4845. ◆ Stony Brook Community Church, 216 Christian Ave., Stony Brook is seeking vendors for its Apple Festival on Oct.1 from
11 a.m. to 4 p.m. (rain date Oct. 2). Spots (10’ x 10’) are $40 each; vendors can call or text 631-252-0777 for an application. ◆ St. Thomas of Canterbury, 29 Brooksite Drive, Smithtown seeks craft or new merchandise vendors for its Craft Fair and Car Show on Oct. 8 (rain date is Oct. 15 for craft fair only) $50/space. Visit www. stthomasofcanterbury.net or call 631-2654520 to obtain an application.. ◆ Northport Arts Coalition seeks artists and musicians for its annual ArtWalk on Oct. 9 from 1 to 5 p.m. ArtWalk turns the entire Village of Northport into an immersive art experience. Artists in this juried event exhibit and sell their work in shops and offices while musicians serenade visitors on the streets. Artists will need to submit samples of their work to be considered for entry, and musicians will need to submit videos or recordings of live performances. The deadline to submit is Aug.21 and you’ll be notified by Sept. 1 if you’ve been accepted. Visit www.NorthportArts.org/ArtWalk. ◆ Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church, 716 Route 25a, Rocky Point seeks vendors to be a part of their annual October Festival on Oct. 15 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The fee for vendor participation of new items, no raffles is $35 per 10’ x 10’ space. Must supply own table and chairs. Visit www.thefishchurch. com Festivals and Events page. Send your Vendors Wanted to leisure@tbrnewspapers.com
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Can we reach more voters in 2022? BY NANCY MARR
Did you know that almost half of America doesn’t vote, even in presidential elections? Elections for state and county officials, school board members, and fire department members have even fewer voters. Our primaries that are scheduled for August 23 will be open only to those registered in a party, and even those may not vote. The will of the people is reflected in the results of elections. In an effort to get 100% participation in our elections, groups like the League of Women Voters are supporting same-day registration (already in place in 23 states).
MAKING DEMOCRACY WORK
The will of the people is reflected in the results of elections.
Concerned about the low percentage of voters, Miles Rappaport and E. J. Dionne have written 100%: The Case for Universal Voting. They relate the experience of Australia, which requires all citizens to vote, just as we require all citizens to perform jury duty; they suggest ways of automatically registering voters, as we now do with the Department of Motor Vehicles. In 2022, Get Out The Vote efforts must be stronger, louder, and even more creative. We can register millions, but if only thousands vote, have we truly empowered voters? When the country was founded, voting was not secret, and the men who were eligible to vote, by virtue of race and sex and income, met in public to decide who they would choose. Nowadays, everyone 18 years or over is legally entitled to vote, and can vote privately, although some are prevented from casting their ballots by suppressive state legislation. Data from The American Presidency Project at U.C. Santa Barbara shows that 67% of eligible voters voted during the pandemic in the U.S. presidential election of 2020, but it was a record high compared with earlier elections (the election in 2012, for instance, had votes from 54.9 percent of the eligible voters). In 1965 the Federal Government's Voting Rights Act acknowledged the need to protect the rights of all to register and vote, especially in states where there had been racial discrimination, although that protection was weakened in 2013 by the U.S. Supreme Court in Shelby vs. Holder. Reaching potential voters has become more difficult as our population has become more transient, which has led many voter rights organizations to increase their efforts to find new ways to appeal to voters. Rock the Vote was founded in 2010 to recruit potential
voters on beaches, targeting youth aged 18 to 24 who represent the citizens least likely to vote. (Adults over 65 are the most likely to vote.) Training volunteers as “captains” to canvass their social networks of friends and neighbors is effective, with a follow up to answer any questions and provide support. Many groups enlisted volunteers to make phone calls to a list of registered voters. They found that a personable, non-rigid manner increased the turnout, especially if they went off-script and sounded like a real person, not a robot. Working to get out the vote is something we can all do. On your own, with your family and friends and neighbors, you can ask them to plan to vote by asking them when they plan to vote and how they plan to get there. (In a campaign to encourage people to vote, it is important to remain neutral and nonpartisan, refraining from expressing your view about the best candidates.) If you would like to do more, visit the League of Women Voters of New York’s website lwvny.org/league-toolkits/ Click on GOTV toolkit, or Voter Registration Drive toolkit. Rock the Vote (www.rockthevote.org) focuses on getting young people to vote, and Glaad (www.glaad.org/vote) focuses on LGBTQ people and their allies. Both welcome volunteers and can provide information about voting dates and places. If you wish to support a particular candidate, contact their campaign office to offer to make phone calls. We need to reach citizens in every part of the country to be sure their views are represented. As our population changes demographically, it is especially important for everyone to learn to work together to create and maintain a healthy society, beginning with our participation in elections. Nancy Marr is Vice-President of the League of Women Voters of Suffolk County, a nonprofit nonpartisan organization that encourages the informed and active participation of citizens in government and influences public policy through education and advocacy. For more information, visit www.lwv-suffolkcounty.org or call 631-862-6860.
AUGUST 11, 2022 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B11
SBU’s surgical team reduces recovery time, incisions with robot Harnessing the Technology of our Research Giants
BY DANIEL DUNAIEF
When Jacqueline Olsen learned the day before her birthday last November that she needed surgery for lung cancer, she felt anxious about a procedure she knew could be painful and could involve a lengthy recovery. “It’s not only my birthday, it’s Thanksgiving,” said Olsen, who is a resident of St. James and is an agent for personal insurance such as home, auto and umbrella insurance. “Everybody was real tense. It was not a pleasant holiday.” Olsen’s father, William Leonard, and father-in-law, James Olsen, had died of lung cancer after having open chest surgeries. The pain of what her father went through 48 years ago and father-in-law over 20 years ago was fresh in her mind as she readied herself for her own procedure. Speaking with doctors at Stony Brook University Hospital, Olsen heard about newer, better options. Dr. Ankit Dhamija, Cardiothoracic Surgeon and Director of Thoracic Robotic Surgery at Stony Brook Medicine, suggested to Olsen that she was a candidate for a robot-assist surgery called the da Vinci Surgical System. Olsen and her family gathered considerable information about the procedure. “I did some research on it and it said it would be a faster recovery and I would be up and back to my normal self pretty soon afterward,” said Olsen. “It seemed like a less invasive surgery.” The robotic surgery does not involve turning over the procedure to a machine, Dr. Dhamija explained. Instead, the process involves making considerably smaller
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incisions and guiding the robot through the body to remove the cancerous tissue. “The robot is a machine that is an extension of our hands,” said Dr. Dhamija, who has performed about 500 such procedures with the help of a robot, including around 70 since he arrived at Stony Brook. The robotic system allows surgeons like Dr. Dhamija and Dr. Henry Tannous, Cardiothoracic Surgeon and Chief of the Cardiothoracic Surgery Division at Stony Brook Medicine, among others, to sit in the operating room with the patient while the robot enters through an incision. The robot provides a three dimensional view of the inside of the body, magnifying cells by ten times. The robot assist can also improve the ability of surgeons to perform fine operations. The system “does have a machine algorithm associated with it that actually is known to reduce tremors in surgeons that have tremors,” said Dr. Dhamija. “Someone that may not be able to do a certain portion of the operation due to their technical limitations can subsequently do it with the robot.” In the procedure, the surgeon can see and maneuver through the body effectively, searching for the specific cells to remove. An interventional radiologist can inject a dye which under CT guidance allows the surgeon to “see where the lesion is and to verify that you have adequate margins” or the border between cancerous and non-cancerous cells, Dr. Dhamija said. “Having the dye in there to identify [the cancer] is helpful,” he added. By using the robot instead of creating a large incision, doctors
Clockwise from above, Jim and Jacqueline Olsen; Dr. Henry Tannous and Dr. Ankit Dhamija can reduce the time patients spend in a hospital down to as little as one to three days from the four to eight days after an open chest lobectomy. “There’s so much to be said about someone [recovering] in their own home,” said Dr. Dhamija. They “get to sleep properly, their bowel habits are more normal, and they get to reengage in their daily life functions sooner. I’m a big proponent of a patient taking charge of their own postoperative care.” Indeed, Stony Brook doctors have become so confident and comfortable with the robot assist that it has become the main platform for thoracic oncology patients at Stony Brook Medicine, explained Dr. Tannous. Tannous estimates that 90 percent of the lobectomies will be performed robotically in 2022, up from 10 to 20 percent in 2021. In an email, Dr. Tannous wrote that other specialties that have adopted the robotic platform include gynecology, urology, colorectal, bariatrics, and general surgery.
Stony Brook is also expanding robotic surgery to include cardiac procedures in 2023. Dr. Tannous said robotic procedures that cut down on recovery time means less risk of hospital-acquired infections, lower extremities blood clots, and numerous other benefits. Some day, theoretically, the robot may enable remote procedures, with surgeons operating the robot with the help of an on-site local medical team. That could be helpful for astronauts who develop a medical problem far from home where they need emergency surgery. An important caveat with that, Dr. Dhamija said, is that the staff on site would need to be able to complete a procedure if an open chest surgery became necessary. Olsen, who was out of the hospital less than 24 hours after she had surgery in late May, has become a fan of the technology and of the team at Stony Brook. Olsen, who has three scars on her back and two on her side,
felt pain for about a week. As she recovered, she never felt the need to fill a prescription for a stronger painkiller, choosing to treat the pain with Motrin. She plans to continue to take blood tests every three months and to get CAT scans every six months. Olsen was thrilled with the quality of care she received and is pleased she can look forward to sharing quality summer time during the family’s annual beach trip. “It’s heaven to me,” she said, where she can “spoil my grandchildren. As for a perspective on her surgery, she said the difference between 20 years ago and now is “unbelievable. It was such an awful experience” for her father and father in law. “This was a million times better.”
PAGE B12 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
Photo by Michael Rosengard
Chicken Hill BBQ returns for 7th year
12880 98150
The Three Village Community Trust invites the community to its 7th annual Chicken Hill Country Picnic and Barbecue at the Bruce House, 148 Main St., Setauket on the grounds of the Setauket Rubber Factory Houses on Saturday, Aug. 20 from 4 to 7 p.m. Enjoy hamburgers, hot dogs, corn on the cob, chicken dogs, drinks, live music by Johnny Cuomo, art raffle, raffle baskets, history talks and house tours.
Proceeds from the event will go to the ongoing restoration of the Factory Worker Houses, and the other historical properties of the Trust, as well as the upkeep of the Setauket to Port Jefferson Station Greenway. Tickets are $25 in advance, $30 at the door, $5 kids 5 to 12, under age 5 free. Bring seating. Rain date is Sunday, Aug. 21. For reservations, visit www. threevillagecommunitytrust.org. For more information, call 631-689-0225.
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PAGE B14 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
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AUGUST 11, 2022 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B15
Six tips to get your kids interested in cooking
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arents introduce their children to all types of new hobbies and skills. There are plenty of opportunities to open kids’ eyes to the world around them. One of the more useful lessons parents can teach their children is how to cook. Knowing how to cook is a vital skill that can help children become more independent and ensure they know how to survive later in life on their own. So many young adults go off to college without the ability to do more than power up a microwave or boil noodles. Ordering takeout all the time is expensive, and frozen dinners often lack the nutrition of homemade dishes. Learning how to cook a variety of foods at an early age can lay the foundation for a lifetime of healthy eating and fun in the kitchen. Parents can encourage children who show early inclinations in the kitchen, but also help reluctant learners to develop some basic cooking skills. Here are some ways to make cooking something kids can look forward to. Involve children in meal planning. Get input from your children about what they might like to see on the menu. While there may be some items that are expected, including comfort foods like mac-andcheese, parents may be surprised at how
mature their children’s palates can be. Maybe they’ve heard about a dish on television or learned about a specific ethnic cuisine at school and want to give it a try. Ask for help in the kitchen. Tailor cooking activities to youngsters’ ages. Little ones can begin by adding and stirring ingredients. As they get older, children can segue into chopping or even mixing foods on the stove. Many kids like being taste testers and offering advice on whether a food needs more spices. By middle school, many kids have the wherewithal to plan meals themselves and cook them from start to finish. Begin with simple recipes. An initial foray into family cooking should involve a recipe that's easy to prepare and perhaps doesn't require too many ingredients. Build on each success after that, growing bolder with each subsequent recipe. Eliminate as many distractions as possible. The kitchen may be the heart of the home, but it can be dangerous to be around knives and other cooking utensils and instruments. Distractions like televisions or phones can draw attention away and potentially lead to injuries from pots boiling over or children getting too close to hot flames.
Watch cooking shows together. How-to cooking shows and competitions appear on both cable and network television. Kids may enjoy watching Valerie Bertinelli and Duff Goldman challenge young bakers on Kids Baking Championship, Gordon Ramsay mentor young chefs on MasterChef Junior, the kid's-themed Cake Wars or three-course competitions on Top Chef Junior. Cooking shows can introduce kids to food-related
terminology and get them heated up about cooking their own meals. Be adventurous. Introduce kids to various flavors by not only cooking various dishes at home, but by dining out at different restaurants. This can encourage kids to appreciate different cultures and cuisines. Learning to cook is a vital skill. Lessons can begin early in childhood and become more extensive as children age.✴
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PAGE B16 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
Back to school checklist
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he end of summer can be a bittersweet time for students. While many students look forward to seeing their friends, few want to say goodbye to the relaxing days of summer. Parents know that getting their children back in the school day swing of things can be a challenge. The following are some ways to make that transition go smoothly. Introduce more structure as summer vacation winds down. In the weeks before the school year is slated to begin, start waking kids up a little earlier and reintroducing bedtimes for younger children who may have been staying up later over the last couple of months. This can be an effective way to begin slowly preparing youngsters for the structure of the school year. Encourage children to read throughout the summer. A report from the education publishing company Scholastic found that 47 percent of parents are unaware of the “summer slide,” which refers to the loss of academic skills that occurs when school is not in session. Scholastic notes that the slide is largely attributed to a lack of reading when school is not in session. By encouraging kids to read during their summer vacations, parents can make sure youngsters’ brains stay sharp and are ready to learn once the school year begins. Schedule a back-to-school physical. There are plenty of reasons to schedule a back-toschool physical. Whether your little one plans to play sports, or you’re simply looking to track your child’s growth and development, you’ll want to schedule an annual physical. Getting it out of the way before the school year will help you and your child focus on other aspects of their learning, and ensure that they’re physically ready to take on another year with new classmates. Trip to the optometrist. Did you know a nearsighted student performs up to twice as well in school if they wear glasses regularly? That means students who don’t wear glasses— or don’t even know they need glasses—are more likely to struggle in the classroom. From computer screens (which are more important than ever with virtual learning) to the chalkboard, the ways students learn require them to maintain healthy vision. That’s why it’s a good idea to schedule your child’s annual eye exam before the start of the school year.
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Immunizations and screenings. Sometimes your children can’t go back to school before they receive required immunizations. This is particularly an issue if the school in question is a college or university. If your child’s school hasn’t communicated any requirements, or you’re simply unsure about recommended immunizations or vaccines for back to school, the CDC (www.cdc.gov) has helpful guidelines available to you. Let kids do some of their own back-toschool shopping. The items that constitute back to school supplies may have changed since parents were in school but there are some items that every student needs, regardless of age, including #2 pencils, pens, zippered pencil case, erasers, sharpeners, glue sticks, rulers, index cards, scissors, markers, crayons, notebooks, folders, hand sanitizer and a backpack. Take the kids on a shopping excursions and let them choose their own supplies and clothing to make them excited to go back to school. Focus on the positive. Even kids who love school may be apprehensive about returning to the classroom. After all, summer vacation is fun. Parents can confront that apprehension by focusing on the positives of returning to school. Emphasize the chance to see friends every day or participate in a beloved extracurricular activity, like sports, band or a favorite academic club. With just a little pre-planning in August, you can be ready to kick off a successful new school year.✴
Stony Brook School of Dental Medicine is hosting Give Kids a Smile Day at its Dental Care Center, South Drive, Stony Brook on Tuesday, Aug. 23 from 2 to 4:30 p.m. Children ages 1–17 will receive a FREE dental screening, cleaning, fluoride treatment, and sealants (as needed) in support of their mission to ensure that all school-aged children have access to good oral health. Each child will be provided with an oral health goody bag, string backpack, and a “Summary of Exam” form that will document the treatment rendered and recommendations for further treatment, if necessary. Appointment registration is required, and a parent or legal guardian must accompany the child on the day of the event. To schedule an appointment, call 631-632-8967 between the hour of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
AUGUST 11, 2022 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B17
Crafting is important for child development
K
ids have boundless energy. Parents of young children can look to various activities to harness that energy, and crafting is one endeavor that makes use of kids’ enthusiasm and creativity. Craft projects are more than just a means to getting energetic youngsters to sit down and focus their attention. Crafting pays various dividends for youngsters, some of which may surprise parents.
Patience
Parents know that patience is not necessarily a virtue of young children. Craft projects, particularly those that require cutting and gluing, do not provide instant gratification because they require multiple steps and time to dry before they’re completed. North Shore Pediatric Therapy notes that such projects teach kids selfregulation because they require youngsters to exhibit self-control and patience until the project can be considered finished.
Hand-eye coordination
Crafting helps children develop handeye coordination. The Illinois-based North Shore Pediatric Therapy notes that crafts that involve drawing shapes, cutting patterns and writing require youngsters to use their fine motor coordination. Coloring, drawing and cutting also require children to use their hands together, helping to develop and strengthen their hand-eye coordination. That development can help kids perform a host of additional tasks, including tying shoes, buttoning coats and eating independently.
Creativity
Crafting presents a great opportunity for kids to explore their creativity. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)
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urges parents to prioritize creative, unplugged playtime for infants and toddlers, and that can include time devoted to craft projects. Craft projects can include more complicated undertakings in which kids
follow directions, or they can simply allow kids to create something from their own imaginations. Each type of project involves creating something new and encourages kids to develop their creative skills.
A 2018 report from the AAP noted that children who use their hands are strengthening areas in the brain that are associated with spatial and mathematical learning. This is an important benefit of crafting and one that the AAP report notes is not gained by kids who forgo physical activities like crafting for play that relies on interactive media. The benefits of crafting associated with spatial and mathematical learning could help younger children once they begin their academic careers. Crafting is a fun activity for kids and it’s also one that benefits their development in some surprising ways.✴
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PAGE B18 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
Top baby names so far for 2022 Hidden sugars in your child's diet
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Olivia and Liam are once again the most common baby names in the United States while Theodore joins the top 10 baby names list for the first time. The rankings are based on recent data on birth from the Social Security Administration.
Boy names: 1. Liam 2. Noah 3. Oliver 4. Elijah 5. James 6. William 7. Benjamin 8. Lucas 9. Henry 10. Theodore 11. Jack 12. Levi 13. Alexander 14. Jackson 15. Mateo 16. Daniel 17. Michael 18. Mason 19. Sebastian 20. Ethan 21. Logan 22. Owen
23. Samuel 24. Jacob 25. Asher 26. Aiden 27. John 28. Joseph 29. Wyatt 30. David
15. Eleanor 16. Ella 17. Abigail 18. Sofia 19. Avery 20. Scarlett 21. Emily 22. Aria 23. Penelope 24. Chloe 25. Layla 26. Mila 27. Nora 28. Hazel 29. Madison 30. Ellie
Girl names: 1. Olivia 2. Emma 3. Charlotte 4. Amelia 5. Ava 6. Sophia 7. Isabella 8. Mia 9. Evelyn 10. Harper 11. Luna 12. Camila 13. Gianna 14. Elizabeth
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hildhood obesity poses a serious threat to the long-term health of kids across the globe. According to the World Health Organization, 39 million children under the age of five were overweight or obese in 2020. That means that tens of millions of kids across the globe are facing a serious and potentially chronic health problem before they even begin kindergarten. The data pertaining to childhood obesity is Help your child establish healthy eating habits at an early age. PACKAGED FRUITS: Here’s another undoubtedly alarming, but the good news is that obesity is preventable. Parents can food that appears healthy on the surface but provide nutritious foods for children and could be anything but. WebMD notes that help them establish healthy eating habits at a one-cup serving of mandarin oranges in an early age, which could lay the foundation light syrup contains right around 39 grams of sugar. The same goes for apple sauce and for a lifelong commitment to eating right. One of the issues parents may encounter dried fruit like raisins. Offer fresh fruit in when planning kids’ diets is foods that lieu of packaged fruits. SAUCES: Many kids look forward to seem healthy but are actually hidden sources of sugar. That’s a big problem, as nights when pasta is the main course at the Johns Hopkins Medicine notes that excess dinner table. But even parents who serve sugar consumption is associated with an whole grain pastas could be unknowingly elevated risk for cardiovascular disease. serving up a sizable amount of sugar if they Sugar consumption has long been linked to aren’t careful about which sauce they buy obesity, which is one reason why the WHO at the store. Some pasta sauces contain as recommends that individuals get less than much as 12 grams of sugar per half-cup 10 percent of their daily calories from sugar. serving. Tomato soup is even higher with On the surface, it may seem simple for 20 grams of sugar. Barbecue sauces and parents to heed that warning from the WHO. ketchup also tend to be high in sugar, which However, various foods and beverages, underscores the importance of reading labels including ones kids typically love, are hidden before serving up saucy meals. Salad dressing: Many salad dressings can sources of sugar. Identifying those foods and avoiding them or choosing versions that are take fresh lettuce and vegetables and turn it not high in sugar can help kids maintain into a sugary meal or side! Sweet dressings like honey mustard, French, Italian, and healthy weights. CEREALS: Parents may fondly recall raspberry vinaigrette can have around 7 overindulging in cereals with popular grams of sugar per 2 tablespoons of dressing. cartoon mascots on the box as kids. No One potential swap is to make your own matter how much nostalgia such memories dressing of oil and vinegar; this helps you may generate, parents must resist the stay in control of the ingredients and ensures temptation to recreate them for their own it is low in sugar! YOGURT: While many consider yogurt children. That’s because many popular cereals marketed to children are loaded with to be a healthier snack, it can actually contain sugar. However, even seemingly healthy the same amount of sugar as a Snickers bar cereals could be loaded with sugar. Read does if you don’t check the nutrition label. nutrition labels before buying cereal for kids Since milk already has naturally occurring and choose cereals with 10 to 12 grams or sugar, when flavors get added to the yogurt less of sugar per serving. The same goes for the sugar content can sky-rocket. As an alternative, try purchasing plain yogurt and fruit-filled breakfast bars and granola bars. BEVERAGES: Sugar-laden beverages adding in green light fruits, like berries, to like sodas, canned or bottled tea, certain add extra sweetness and flavor. Other foods that contain a lot of sugar fruit juices and even some flavored waters increase kids’ risk of being overweight or include instant oatmeal, bread, canned obese. Acidity from sweetened drinks can vegetables, flavored popcorn and peanut butter. Childhood obesity is preventable, erode tooth enamel and their high sugar content can cause dental cavities. Encourage especially when parents learn to identify youngsters to drink more water and only hidden sources of sugar that could be putting serve sugary beverages on special occasions. kids’ healthy in jeopardy.✴
AUGUST 11, 2022 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B19
Exercise can improve teens' mental health BY DR. RICHARD CARMONA
It’s important that parents and community leaders identify and support activities to keep young people engaged and active once school is out. Civic summer recreation programs, community pools, and camps can provide important and inclusive outlets for kids and teenagers. The National Suicide Prevention Hotline will launch its nationwide 3-digit hotline – 988 – so that anyone can quickly get in touch with a mental health professional whenever they need may it. In response, several fitness centers are opening its doors for teens to use their facilities free of cost this summer. Planet Fitness is letting high school teenagers ages 14-18 work out for free at any location now through Aug. 31 as part of the gym’s High School Summer Pass. Empowering physical activity and health is paramount in fighting the mental health challenges our youngest generations now face. Nearly all teens, 92%, agree that regular physical activity helps them feel better mentally. Lockdowns and restrictions during the pandemic effectively hamstrung parents and children for nearly two years. Classrooms and offices went virtual, and the majority of the day was spent behind screens. While adults had to manage the same circumstances as
T
he Covid-19 pandemic has presented numerous challenges for our country. The disease has taken more than a million lives in the United States, and adversely affected tens of millions more. The U.S. is now facing a mental health crisis on top of and in part because of the health emergency these last two years. Between lockdowns, restrictions and virtual schooling and work, we have lacked the human interaction and physical activity that helped keep us mentally and emotionally healthy. These situations have also led to harmful routines and bad habits for many of us, most acutely among kids and adolescents. There is a real need for government institutions, non-profit organizations, and companies to step up and provide mental health services — especially for our nation’s young people. Nearly half of Gen Z (46%) said that their mental health was worse than before the pandemic, according to a survey by the American Psychological Association. And this summer, kids will be left to their own devices to find ways to occupy themselves and their minds. Those struggling with emotional challenges already may find the summertime detachment more than they can handle.
their children, their situations allowed for far more freedom. Adolescents, on the other hand, reported that their usual health and fitness routines were disrupted as a result of the last two years. Combine that with the findings from the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) in which only 15% of middle and high school aged children reported having met the recommended hour of physical activity a day, and it is quite clear that the pandemic has exacerbated an adolescent health crisis. The CDC found that the rate of body mass index (BMI) increase doubled during the pandemic, compared to pre-pandemic levels,
in kids ages 2 to 19. Exercise and a strong immune system can significantly lower the risks of comorbidities such as obesity and diabetes that contribute to long term health consequences. As the pandemic seems to near its end, the physical and mental health challenges of the last two years cannot be forgotten. We must commit to strengthening our youths’ physical and mental health — and only by working together can we move forward toward a healthier America.✴ Richard H. Carmona, M.D., M.P.H., F.A.C.S., was the 17th surgeon general of the United States.
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AUGUST 11, 2022 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B21
HOROSCOPES OF THE WEEK
Time capsule ceremony held at Walt Whitman Birthplace BY HEIDI SUTTON
W
alt Whitman Birthplace Association State Historic Site in Huntington Station hosted a time capsule ceremony on Aug. 5 in honor of Walt Whitman’s 200th birthday. Conducted by the WWBA’s board of trustees and WWBA Executive Director Cynthia Shor, the historic event was attended by many public officials on state, county and town levels, members of the chambers of commerces, Walt Whitman personator Darrel Blaine Ford and members of the public. Guest speakers included Long Island Parks Regional Director George “Chip” Gorman, NYS Assemblyman Steve Englebright and Town of Huntington Deputy Supervisor John McCarron. The event also celebrated the life of William T. Walter, Ph.D. (1931-2020) who served on the WWBA Board of Trustees in 1980 and was Trustee President from 1980-1984 and again from 2010 to 2020. Described as “a visionary” at the ceremony, Walter was instrumental in the creation of the WWBA Interpretive Center which opened in 1999. He also served as the Chairman of the Town of Huntington Beautification Council for over 40 years. Walter’s widow, Sukey, her three sons and family were in attendance for the event. William R. Walter spoke fondly of his father and recited Whitman's poem "From Montauk Point." The idea for the time capsule was initiated by WWBA Trustee Jo-Ann Raia in recognition of Walt Whitman’s 200th birthday in 2019. A committee consisting of Raia, Dr. Maria Basile and Mark Nuccio was formed and funds were obtained from the Town of Huntington’s Cultural Affairs Division with no additional cost to taxpayers. The COVID pandemic
COVER STORY
sidelined the event until now. When buried in the near future, the 12” by 12” stainless steel time capsule will contain Whitman memorabilia including a mug and medallion, a boxed original Nathan Hale bicentennial coin from the Town of Huntington along with a photocopy of the original wax seal from the establishment of the Town of Huntington signed by Supervisor Ed Smyth, two coins honoring Long Island State Parks staff, a copy of the Suffolk Hotel Motel bill sponsored by Assemblyman Englebright, manuscripts commemorating the life of William T. Walter, written historic texts and books along with newspaper articles of the current times reflecting a significant economic, political, or social news event and a scroll containing all the names of the event’s attendees on acid-free paper. The time capsule itself has a shelf-life of 200 years. “The historical materials that we have put into the time capsule tell the story of the Walt Whitman Birthplace Association. It is a story of our success in bringing to life the voice and values of “The Good Gray Poet” for generations to come,” said Trustee President Jack Coulehan, MD. A boulder donated by WWBA Trustee Steve Gittelman will be placed at the site with a commemorative plaque inscribed: “I bequeath myself to the dirt to grow from the grass I love, If you want me again look for me under your boot-soles.” — W.W., Song of Myself, Section 52. The time capsule will be opened during Walt Whitman’s 250th birthday celebration in 2069 and then every 50 years henceforth.
Top photo, Walt Whitman personator Darrel Blaine Ford, center, with NYS Assemblyman Steve Englebright, WWBA members and attendees; above, from left, WWBA Trustee Robert Savino, NYS Assemblyman Keith Brown, Sukey Walter and her son William R. Walter; below, the time capsule and plaque.
Photos by Heidi Sutton
“It’s really an incredible cultural asset that we are here to support and to make sure Walt Whitman is remembered 50 years from now when this time capsule is opened. I don’t think anyone is going to forget Walt Whitman. He is one of the literary giants of Western civilization. He is America’s poet,” said Englebright.
LEO – Jul 23/Aug 23 A powerful energy will be brought to your professional life, Leo. Use these vibes to take inventory of your space at work and get organized. It may help you be more successful. VIRGO – Aug 24/Sept 22 Virgo, cosmic energy could light a fire within you this week, helping you tap into your creative side. You will find a way to merge the analytical with the creative. LIBRA – Sept 23/Oct 23 Your love life could use a little support this week, Libra. Figure out how to spend more time with your significant other. Something different from your usual activities can create a spark. SCORPIO – Oct 24/Nov 22 Scorpio, use your time this week to engage in important conversations and discussions, especially if they pertain to your career. There’s never been a better time to get ahead. SAGITTARIUS – Nov 23/Dec 21 Lean into your playful side, Sagittarius. Resist any urge to be too serious. Give yourself a break to pursue some new recreational outlets and hobbies. CAPRICORN – Dec 22/Jan 20 Capricorn, you will be more outspoken and authoritative than usual this week. Using your voice will compel others to take you more seriously, including those at home. AQUARIUS – Jan 21/Feb 18 Avoid any temptation to act impulsively this week, Aquarius. Doing so could be a misstep. Self-discipline can help you get where you want to be. PISCES – Feb 19/Mar 20 Pisces, individuals you currently characterize as acquaintances may become very close friends in the days ahead. Embrace this change. ARIES – Mar 21/Apr 20 Aries, your energy levels are elevated this week and that’s just the start of the positive energy floating around you. Harness your energy and use it to complete a project. TAURUS – Apr 21/May 21 A quiet week is ahead, which is the perfect opportunity to sort through your feelings and thoughts, Taurus. Not every day has to be a “get up and go” adventure. GEMINI – May 22/Jun 21 Gemini, you will have plenty of time to meet new friends and acquaintances this week, whether inperson or online. Networking is an important skill. CANCER – Jun 22/Jul 22 Try to take initiative at work as it will possibly gain you favor with your bosses, Cancer. Even while getting ahead, be sure you continue to be a team player. Famous Birthdays: Aug. 11 - Hulk Hogan (69); Aug. 14 - Steve Martin (77); Aug. 15 - Jennifer Lawrence (32); Aug. 16 Steve Carell (60); Aug. 17 - Robert DeNiro (79)
PAGE B22 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
A joyous I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change ushers in a new era at SPAC BY BARBARA ANNE KIRSHNER
I Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey in a scene from the 1987 classic ‘Dirty Dancing.’ Image courtesy of Fathom Events
'Dirty Dancing' returns to select theaters nationwide
The iconic summer romance between Baby and Johnny returns to the big screen when Dirty Dancing hits select theaters nationwide on Sunday, Aug. 14 and Wednesday, Aug. 17 for a special 35th anniversary presentation courtesy of Fathom Events and Lionsgate. Loved by generations of fans, this cinematic treasure has inspired multiple films, a stage version, and reality dance competitions watched around the world. In the summer of 1963, 17-year-old Baby (Jennifer Grey) vacations with her parents at Kellerman's resort in the Catskills. One evening she is drawn to the staff quarters by stirring music. There she meets Johnny (Patrick Swayze), the hotel dance instructor, who is as experienced as Baby is naive. Baby soon becomes Johnny's pupil in dance and love. The film also stars Jerry Orbach, Cynthia Rhodes, Jack Weston, Kelly Bishop, Jane Brucker and Lonny Price. A worldwide box-office sensation when it was released in 1987 and generating over $213 million, Dirty Dancing captured hearts worldwide and took home the Best Original Song Oscar® for "(I've Had) The Time of My Life." The screening will also include an exclusive behind-the-scenes featurette, along with a new interview with Jennifer Grey. Locally the film will be shown at Island Cinema De Lux, 185 Morris Ave., Holtsville and Farmingdale Multiplex, 1001 Broadhollow Road, Farmingdale on Aug. 14 at 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. and Aug. 17 at 7 p.m. To purchase tickets in advance, visit www.fathomevents.com. Lionsgate is currently planning to return to Kellerman's for a new Dirty Dancing film, starring and executive produced by Grey, to be released in 2023.
t’s hilarious, fast-paced and so much fun with toe-tapping music — those are the ingredients that make I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change the right choice to breathe life into the latest era of the Smithtown Performing Arts Center. The historic 365-seat theatre with its grand marque still stands proudly on Main Street in Smithtown even after going through several incarnations since first opening its doors in 1933 as a movie house. It was acquired by United Artists in 1968 and ran movies until 2001 when it was purchased privately and segued into presenting live theatre in 2002. The Smithtown Performing Arts Council, a non-profit organization, was formed in 2008 to oversee operations of the theatre. Then when the theatre was put up for sale once again in 2021, the Council, with the support from the Town of Smithtown, grants, and community donors, purchased it in April 2022. On August 4 the curtains went up, ushering in a new era of live main stage productions with this gleeful musical comedy. I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change is a series of vignettes joined by an overriding arc that dissects the stages of love and relationships. The musical comedy, with book and lyrics by Joe DiPietro and music by Jimmy Roberts, is the second-longest running Off-Broadway musical having premiered at the Westside Theatre August 1, 1996, until it closed July 27, 2008. The show calls upon its four-person cast to be outstanding actors and singers with high energy sustained throughout the two hours of lively entertainment. An additional challenge is to be one character in one scene, then do a quick transformation including costume to hair and reappear as an entirely different character with a distinctly different way of walking, talking and feeling. The cast, simply referred to in the program as Woman 1 (Laura Meade), Man 1 (James M. Lotito Jr.), Woman 2 (Christina Muens) and Man 2 (Steve Corbellini) have taken on this impressive task to perfection with the audience leaving the theatre exclaiming “That was fabulous!” “Weren’t they amazing?!” YES, all four actors were AMAZING! Each carried his or her parts with gusto and without a weak link in the cast — no small accomplishment since all four actors span the ages from young daters to young marrieds to parents to middle aged into the elderly years and must be believable every step of the way.
THEATER REVIEW
From left, Laura Meade, Steve Corbellini, Christina Muens and James M. Lotito Jr. in a scene from the show. Photo by Jackie St. Louis/SPAC See more photos online at www.tbrnewsmedia.com
Act I opens with "Cantata for a First Date" chanted by four images swathed in white sheets representing monks and giving the impression that we are about to embark on a magical journey. The Cantata is reprised three times throughout the show. Act I is so much fun as it exploits all the quirks in dating and early relationships. The first scene is hilarious when Muens and Corbellini confess “We’ve got baggage” and we are off to the dating disaster stage. In "A Stud and a Babe," Lotito sits opposite Meade in a restaurant as both feel obviously awkward and Lotito mutters to himself, “I’d be better at flirting if I had looks that kill.” Another scene has the two women lamenting “There’s a serious single man drought!” The men follow that up with “I’m a guy! I never stop to ask directions.” Act II starts off on high test with Meade fluttering around in a hideous bridesmaid dress as she drones, “All those husbands are gone but those dresses live on.” Act II is poignant as it focuses on marriage, parenthood, divorce then old age. The message that the Epilogue sends is “Go forth with joy. Find someone to love, then spend the rest of your life trying to change them.” Hence, I love you, you’re perfect, now change! To assist in the smooth transitions is a set that morphs easily from scene to scene constructed by Keith Blum, Jacques St. Louis and Michael Mucciolo. The giant screen upstage center is a nice touch that highlights each scene projecting images including a swirling constellation, a tennis
court, a stained-glass cathedral, a cascade of twinkling stars and so on. A few well-placed chairs, round tables and sofa move into place according to their function in each scene. With so many scene changes, Chris Creevy’s lighting design seems to take the audience by the hand leading them from one vignette into the next with a fluidity that never interrupts the flow of action. Carmela Newman’s costumes define characters and at times add humor like with the loud print Hawaiian shirt in "Why? Cause I’m a Guy?" and the cringe-worthy pink flouncy gown replete with puffs of red, white and coral flowers in "Always a Bridesmaid." Musical Director Bobby Peterson appears upstage center at the piano throughout the entire show with extraordinary accompaniment that makes this production seamless. Sound design by Jacques St. Louis enhances the gorgeous sopranos of Meade and Muens while it adds crispness to the vocal calisthenics of Corbellini and Lotito. Sound operator Harrison Giordano smoothly navigates through all the sound cues in this show. I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change is such fun especially on a warm summer night, so come see it at the Smithtown Performing Arts Center. You’ll be glad you did. The Smithtown Performing Arts Center, 2 East Main St., Smithtown presents I Love You, You're Perfect, Now Change on Aug. 11, 12 and 13 at 8 p.m. and Aug. 14 at 3 p.m. Tickets are $45, $40 seniors. To order, visit www. smithtownpac.org.
AUGUST 11, 2022 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B23
Thursday 11
Huntington Walking Tour
The Huntington Historical Society will host a Centers of Controversy guided walking tour from 6 to 9 p.m. Visits sites in central Huntington that gave rise over the centuries to scandals, lawsuits, and other controversies. Tour ends at Six Harbors Brewing Company. Tickets are $25, $20 members (drinks not included). Tours will begin at the Soldiers & Sailors Memorial Building, 228 Main Street, Huntington. Reservations are required. Call 427-7045 or visit www.huntingtonhistorical.org
Times ... and dates
European Car Show
Aug. 11 to Aug. 18, 2022
U2 tribute concert
Art of the Guitar Festival
The Jazz Loft, 275 Christian Ave., Stony Brook kicks off the second annual John Monteleone Art of the Guitar Festival tonight at 6 p.m. with a reception, exhibit viewing and two concerts and continues Aug. 12 and 13. The three day event will feature more than 18 musicians over the days and nights and include performances by Monteleone, Russell Malone Quartet, Anthony Wilson Trio, John Pizzarelli Trio, Tal Yahalom Quartet and Ratko Zjaca Duo with James Commack and a screening of the documentary The Chisels Are Calling. Call 751-1895 or visit www.thejazzloft. org for festival schedule and ticket prices.
Smithtown Library concert
The Dennis Cannataro Family Summer Concert Series concludes at the Smithtown Main Library, 1 North Country Road, Smithtown tonight at 7:30 p.m. with a performance by The Gold Coast Orchestra (Motown). Bring a chair or blanket for seating. For more information, call 360-2480 ext.150 after 3 p.m.
Harborside Concerts
The Village of Port Jefferson continues its free Harborside Concert series at the Show Mobile at Harborfront Park, 101-A East Broadway, Port Jefferson with Refugee at 8 p.m. Bring seating. For more information, call-473-4724 or visit www.portjeff.com.
Friday 12
Art of the Guitar Festival See Aug. 11 listing.
Happenings on Main Street
The Northport Arts Coalition presents a free concert by the Kerry Kearney Band at the Northport Village Park Gazebo at the harbor at 7 p.m. as part of its Happenings on Main Street Series. Bring seating. Call 827-6827 or visit www.northportarts.org.
The Suffolk County Vanderbilt Museum, 180 Little Neck Road, Centerport continues its Concert in the Courtyard series with a performance by Almost U2 paying tribute to the live experience of the iconic band U2 from 7 to 10 p.m. Held rain or shine. Tickets are $30 per person at www.vanderbiltmuseum.org.
Tribute to the Doobie Brothers
Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson continues its 2022 Summer Concert Series with Doobie Brothers tribute band Doobie Others at 8 p.m. From the jammin' rock of "Long Train Runnin" to the Grammy award winning pop of "What a Fool Believes," the Doobie Others recreate the powerful multi-part harmonies of the pop hitmakers with stunning accuracy in a fun-filled high energy performance covering an amazing catalog of hits spanning both the Johnston and McDonald eras. Tickets are $59. To order, call 928-9100 or visit www. theatrethree.com.
Vanderbilt Planetarium lecture
Join the Suffolk County Vanderbilt Planetarium, 180 Little Neck Road, Centerport for a lecture with Eric K. Washington, a New York Citybased independent historian, on the life of James H. Williams from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Washington’s lecture will draw heavily from his years of archival research and from his acclaimed 2019 book Boss of the Grips: The Life of James H. Williams and the Red Caps of Grand Central Terminal (Liveright Publishing). Tickets are $10 at www.vanderbiltmuseum.org.
Stony Brook Community Church, 216 Christian Ave., Stony Brook presents its 17th annual Vintage European Sports Car & Motorcycle Show on the front lawn of the church from noon to 4 p.m. with live music by the Barking Men and refreshments. Free admission. Rain date is Aug. 14. Call 751-1097 for more information.
VINTAGE EUROPEAN
The 17th annual Vintage European Sports Car & Motorcycle Show heads to the Stony Brook Community Church on Aug. 13. Photo from Malcolm Bowman
Concert at the Library
Emma S. Clark Memorial Library, 120 Main St., Setauket invites the community to an outdoor concerts on the lawn from 6:30 to 8 p.m. featuring jazz, blues and Americana ensemble CB Jacobs and the Say Hey Crew (Claudia Jacobs and musical collaborators Mark Coffey, Dan Weymouth, Kevin Twigg and perhaps a secret guest or two). No registration required. Questions? Call 941-4080.
Tribute to Carole King
Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson continues its 2022 Summer Concert Series with Carole's Kings — All Male Tribute to Carole King at 8 p.m. With lush orchestrations from the same team as Broadway's "Beautiful" and a cast of three incredibly talented New York stage veterans, Carole's Kings is a dynamic act jam-packed with chart-topping sensations such as "The Locomotion," "I Feel the Earth Move," "You've Got A Friend," and many more. Tickets are $59. To order, call 928-9100 or visit www. theatrethree.com.
Comedy In The Café
Cinema Arts Centre, 423 Park Ave. Huntington presents Comedy in The Cafe with comedian Nick Griffin at 9:30 p.m. A comic for more than 25 years, Griffin's smart, sarcastic and hilarious style makes him one of the most wellrespected in the business. Tickets are $17, $13 members. To purchase tickets in advance, visit www.cinemaartscentre.org. * All numbers are in (631) area code unless otherwise noted.
Saturday 13
Art of the Guitar Festival See Aug. 11 listing.
Run on the Farm
Get ready, set, go! The 8th Annual Run the Farm 4-Mile Challenge at Bethel Hobbs Community Farm, 178 Oxhead Road, Centereach will kick off at 9 a.m. (Kids Fun Run at 8:30 a.m.) Friends of Hobbs Farm and Town of Brookhaven Councilman Kevin LaValle invite you to lace up those sneakers and traverse a 4-mile course whose fast start on roughly two miles of flat terrain precedes a mile of rolling hills and two mildly challenging ascents before concluding at the historic grounds of the farm. Registration is $25 in advance, $30 on race day. Proceeds will support the farm's mission is devoted to servicing local food pantries and food programs. To register, visit www.hobbsfarm. info. Call 451-6647 for more information.
All Souls Poetry Reading
Join All Souls Church in Stony Brook for its Second Saturdays Poetry Reading via Zoom from 11 a.m. to noon. Hosted by Suffolk County Poet Laureate Richard Bronson, the featured poet will be Barbara Segal. An openreading will follow the featured poet; all are welcome to read one of their own poems. Participants can access the program through the All Souls website https://www.allsoulsstonybrook.org/, For more information, call 655-7798.
Sunday 14 Art in the Park
Join the Northport Arts Coalition for an Art in the Park festival at Northport Village Park from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Featuring music, dance, poetry readings and other performances plus more than thirty artists displaying and selling their original work, this free event in Northport Park is a fun day for the entire family. Visit www.northportarts.org
Wind Down Sundays
The popular summer concert series continues at Hap’s historic Red Barn at Frank Melville Memorial Park, 1 Old Field Road, Setauket tonight with The New Students (Rock, Bluegrass, Americana) at 5:30 p.m. Bring seating. Call 689-6146 or visit www. frankmelvillepark.org.
Summer Concerts on the Green
Summer concerts are back in front of the Stony Brook Post Office at the Stony Brook Village Center, 111 Main Street, Stony Brook from 7 to 9 p.m. every Sunday through Aug. 21, courtesy
TIMES ... and dates continued on page B24 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 B24 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
TIMES ... and dates Continued from page B23
of the Ward Melville Heritage Organization. Tonight’s performance will be by the NY Exceptions, a doo-wop band performing songs from the 50s, 60s and 70s. Free. Bring seating. Call 751-2244 or visit wmho.org.
Monday 15 Tide Mill Tour
The Huntington Historical Society will lead a tour of the Van Wyck-Lefferts Tide Mill, one of the best preserved 18th century tide mills in the country at 1:30 p.m. The tour begins with a short boat ride from Gold Star Battalion Beach into Puppy Cove, past waterfront mansions with sightings of egrets, ospreys, and visiting waterfowl. Your guide will explain the workings of the mill with some related social history, and each tour participant will receive a comprehensive, illustrated booklet. Ticket are $20 per person, $15 members. To purchase, call 427-7045 or visit www. huntingtonhistoricalsociety.org.
Tuesday 16
Cooking with the Stars
The Smithtown Historical Society, 239 Main St., Smithtown continues its Cooking With the Stars series, featuring local culinary pros sharing tips, tecnhiques and a taste to bring the community together, with "Vegging Out" tonight from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Chef Stephen Gallagher of The Trattoira in St. James will prepare two dishes using seasonally fresh vegetables. This is an outdoor event. $25 in advance, $35 at the door (cash or check). Visit www.eventbrite.com to register. For more information, call 265-6768.
Concerts at The Gazebo
Enjoy Tuesday night concerts at The Gazebo, 127 Smithtown Blvd., Nesconset through Aug. 30 at 7 p.m., courtesy of the Nesconset Chamber of Commerce. Tonight’s performance TBA. Rain dates are the next day. Bring seating. Questions? Call 672-5197 or visit www.nesconsetchamber.org
Northport with a performance by the Little Wilson Band (Funky Rock 'n Soul, with a little bit of roll) on Aug. 17 from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Bring seating. For more info, call 754-3905.
Port Jefferson Sunset Concert
Greater Port Jefferson Arts Council presents Sunset Concerts at Harborfront Park, 101A East Broadway, Port Jefferson every Wednesday from 6:30 to 8 p.m. through Aug. 31. Tonight’s performance will be by the Ray Lambiase Band. Bring seating. Call 473-5220 or visit www.gpjac.org.
Thursday 18
St. Joseph's Family Festival
St. Joseph Parish, 59 Church St., Kings Park hosts a Family Festival tonight from 6 to 10 p.m., Aug. 19 and 20 from 6 to 11 p.m., and Aug. 21 from 6 to 10 p.m. Enjoy four days of fun with carnival rides, food, raffles, entertainment and more. Fireworks on Aug. 19. Purchase tickets in advance at www.stjoekp. com/festival or at the door.
Film 'Sing 2'
Heritage Park, 633 Mount Sinai-Coram Road, Mount Sinai continues its Movies in the Moonlight series with a screening of Sing 2 on Aug. 13 at 8:15 p.m. Presented by the North Shore Youth Council and Suffolk County Legislator Sarah Anker. Free. Bring seating. Questions? Call 403-4846.
‘The Thing’
In celebration of its 40th anniversary, John Carpenter’s The Thing will be screened at the Cinema Arts Centre, 423 Park Ave., Huntington with new 4K restoration on Aug. 13 at 9:30 p.m. Tickets are $12 adults, $10 seniors and students, $5 children 12 and under. To order tickets in advance, visit www. cinemaartscentre.org.
'So This Is Paris'
As part of its Anything But Silent series, the Cinema Arts Centre, 423 Park Ave., Huntington will screen Ernst Lubitsch’s So This Is Paris (1926) on Aug. 17 at 7:30 p.m. with live theatre organ accompaniment by Ben Model. Tickets are $17, $12 members. To order tickets in advance, visit www.cinemaartscentre.org.
'The Goonies'
Join the Middle Country Public Library, 101 Eastwood Blvd., Centereach for an Under the Stars Movie Night free screening of The Goonies on Aug. 17 from 8 to 10 p.m. As this movie will be held outside, patrons should bring their own chairs and blankets. In the event of rain, the program will be rescheduled for Aug. 25. Food truck will be on hand beginning at 7 p.m. Questions? Call 585-9393.
'Spider Man: No Way Home'
St. James Chamber of Commerce invites the community to Deepwells Farm County Park, 497 Route 25A, St. James for a screening of Spider Man: No Way Home on Aug. 18 at 7:45 p.m. (rain date is Aug. 25). Free. Bring seating. No pets. Call 584-8510.
'Encanto'
Northport-East Northport Community Drug and Alcohol Task Force will host a Family Movie Night at Northport Village Park on Aug. 18 at 8:30 p.m. with a free screening of Disney's Encanto. Bring seating. First 50 attendees will receive a free lawn blanket. Call 516-361-6540 for more info.
Theater
‘Every Brilliant Thing’
Theatre Three, 412 Main Street, Port Jefferson, in association with Response Crisis Center, presents the Long Island premiere of Every Brilliant Thing, a one-man show starring Jeffrey Sanzel, on the Second Stage Sundays at 3 p.m. from July 10 to Aug. 28.
‘On Your Feet!’
Extended! The John W. Engeman Theater, 250 Main St., Northport presents On Your Feet! The Story of Emilio and Gloria Estefan from July 14 to Sept. 3. From their humble beginnings in Cuba, Emilio and Gloria Estefan came to America and broke through all barriers to become a crossover sensation at the very top of the pop music world. But just when they thought they had it all, they almost lost everything. On Your Feet! takes you behind the music and inside the real story of this record-making, and groundbreaking couple who, in the face of adversity, found a way to end up on their feet. Get ready to get on your feet, and dance to the smash hits “Rhythm Is Gonna Get You,” “1-23,” “Live For Loving You,” “Conga,” and many more. Tickets range from $75 to $80 with free valet parking. To order, call 261-2900 or visit www.engemantheater.com.
‘The Comedy of Errors’
The Carriage House Players continues its annual Shakespeare Festival at the Suffolk County Vanderbilt Museum, 180 Little Neck Road, Centerport with The Comedy of Errors from July 29 to Aug. 24 on Wednesdays and Fridays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 7 p.m. Performances take place outdoors on stage in the courtyard, where the Spanish-Mediterranean architecture adds a touch of timeless charm and magic. Bring a picnic dinner to enjoy before the show and bring your own lawn chair. Inclement weather cancels. Tickets are $20 adults, $15 seniors and children ages 12 and under. To order, visit www.vanderbiltmuseum.org.
‘I Love You, You’re Perfect ...’
The Smithtown Center for the Performing Arts, 2 E. Main St., Smithtown presents the hit musical I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change from Aug. 4 to Aug. 14. This hilarious revue pays tribute to those who have loved and lost, to those who have fallen on their face at the portal of romance, to those who have dared to ask, ‘Say, what are you doing Saturday night?’ Tickets are $45 adults, $40 seniors. To order, visit www.smithtownpac.org. Read review on page B22.
Wednesday 17
Cruise Night at The Shoppes
Cruise Nights are back at The Shoppes at East Wind, 5768 Route 25A, Wading River from 5 to 9 p.m. every Wednesday through Oct. 26. Visit the Shoppes, enjoy a bite to eat and then check out the fine array of classic and coveted automobiles from car enthusiasts from across Long Island in The Shoppes parking lot. Questions? Call 929-3500 or visit www. eastwindlongisland.com
Class Reunion
Summerfest Concerts
The Northport Chamber of Commerce continues off its August Summerfest Concert series at the Northport Village Park Bandshell,
You’re seven years old. Your mother is in the hospital. Your father said she’s “done something stupid.” So, you begin a list of everything that is truly wonderful about the world — everything worth living for. With audience members recruited to take on supporting roles, Every Brilliant Thing is a heart-wrenching, hilarious story of depression and the lengths we will go for those we love. All seats are $20. Fifty percent of the gross proceeds of this production will benefit Response Crisis Center. To order, call 9289100 or visit www.theatrethree.com.
ANYTHING BUT SILENT Catch a screening of the 1926 flick So This is Paris at the Cinema Arts Centre on Aug. 17.
Port Jefferson (ELVHS) Class of 1972's 50th reunion is planned for September 9 and 10, 2022. Please spread the word, and visit Facebook page "Port Jefferson(ELVHS) Class of 1972 50th Reunion" for details or e-mail itskuhl@yahoo.com.
AUGUST 11, 2022 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B25
Religious D irectory Catholic INFANT JESUS ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH 110 Myrtle Ave., Port Jefferson 631-473-0165 Fax 631-331-8094 www.www.infantjesus.org REVEREND PATRICK M. RIEGGER, PASTOR, ASSOCIATES: REV. FRANCIS LASRADO & REV. ROLANDO TICLLASUCA Parish Outreach: 631-331-6145 Weekly Masses: 6:50 and 9am in the Church, 12pm in the Chapel* Weekend Masses: Saturday at 5 pm in the Church, 4:00 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
Anointing of the sick: by request Bereavement: 631-941-4141 X 341 Faith Formation Office:631-941-4141 X 328 Outreach: 631-941-4141 X 313 Our Daily Bread Sunday Soup Kitchen 3:00pm closed....reopening TBD Food Pantry Open ... Wednesdays 12Noon to 2pm and Sundays 2pm to 3pm Mission Statement: We, the Catholic community of the Three Village area, formed as the Body of Christ through the waters of Baptism, are a pilgrim community journeying toward the fullness of the Kingdom of God, guided by the Holy Spirit, nourished by the Eucharist and formed by the Gospel. We strive to respond to Jesus invitation: to be faithful and fruitful disciples; to be a Good Samaritan to our neighbor and enemy; to be stewards of and for God’s creation and to be living witness of Faith, Hope and Charity...so that in Jesus name, we may be a welcoming community, respectful of life in all its diversities.
ST. LOUIS DE MONTFORT ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
300 Terryville Road, Port Jefferson Station 631-473-2900 www.stgmajella.org REV. GREGORY RANNAZZISI, PASTOR Mass: Saturday 5pm Sunday 8am, 10am & 12pm Weekday Mass: 9am Confessions: Saturday 3:45pm-4:45pm Office Hours: Monday-Thursday 9am - 4:30pm Thrift Shop: Monday-Thursday 10am - 4pm and Friday 10am-2pm. Baptism and Wedding arrangements can be made by calling the Parish Office
75 New York Avenue, Sound Beach Parish office: 631-744-8566; fax 631-744-8611 Parish website: www.stlouisdm.org REV. MSGR. CHRISTOPHER J. HELLER, PASTOR REV. ALPHONSUS IGBOKWE, ASSOCIATE PASTOR REV. MSGR. DONALD HANSON, IN RESIDENCE REV. FRANCIS PIZZARELLI, S.M.M., PARISH ASSISTANT REV. HENRY VAS Office Hours: Mon., Tues., Thurs.: 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. Weekday Masses: Monday through Friday 8:30 am in the Chapel Weekend Masses: Saturday Vigil: 5 pm Sunday: 7:30 am; 10:00 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.
429 Rt. 25A, Setauket Phone: 631-941-4141 Fax: 631-751-6607 Parish Office email: parish@stjamessetauket.org www.stjamessetauket.org REV. ROBERT KUZNIK, PASTOR REV. ROBERT SCHECKENBACK, ASSOCIATE PASTOR REV. MIKE S. EZEATU, SBU HOSPITAL CHAPLAIN, IN RESIDENCE Office Hours: Monday-Friday 9am to 4pm ... Saturday 9am to 2pm Weekday Masses: Monday to Saturday 8am Weekend Masses: Saturday (Vigil) 5pm (Youth) Sunday 8am ... 9:30am (Family) 11:30am (Choir) Baptisms: contact the Office at the end of the third month of pregnancy to set a date Matrimony: contact the Office at least nine months before desired date to set a date. Reconciliation: Saturdays 4:00 to 4:45 or by appointment
Catholic Traditional Latin Mass ST. MICHAEL THE ARCHANGEL SOCIETY OF SAINT PIUS X 900 Horseblock Road, Farmingville 631-736-6515 sspxlongisland.com Sunday Masses at 7am and 9am Please consult sspxlongisland.com for updates and current mass times.
CAROLINE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF SETAUKET 1 Dyke Road on the Village Green, Setauket Web site: www.carolinechurch.net email: office@carolinechurch.net 631-941-4245 REV NICKOLAS GRIFFITH PRIEST-IN-CHARGE Let God walk with you as part of our family-friendly community. 10:00am Thursdays Healing Service 5:00pm Saturdays Holy Eucharist 8:00am & 9:30am Sundays Holy Eucharist w/ music
Congregational CHRIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH MT. SINAI CONGREGATIONAL UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 233
ST. GERARD MAJELLA ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
ST. JAMES ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
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
North
Country Road, Mt. Sinai 631-473-1582 www.msucc.org REV. DR. PHILIP HOBSON Mount Sinai Congregational Church is open to the public “Masks are not required, but are suggested.” We will continue to provide our online service on our You Tube channel at 10am, and any time thereafter, with Rev. Phil Hobson. Through our worship and by our actions we strive to live out Christ’s message to love one another. The Island Heart Food Pantry continues to help those in need at 643 Middle Country Road, Middle Island, N.Y. Our hours are Wednesday and Thursday from 2:30-4:30pm. Wear a mask and stay in car “No matter who you are or where you are on life’s journey, you are welcome here.” Grace and Peace, Rev. Phil
Episcopal ALL SOULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH Our little historic church on the hill across from the Stony Brook Duck Pond 61 Main Street, Stony Brook Visit our website www.allsoulsstonybrook.org or call 631-655-7798 allsoulschurch@optimun.net REV THOMAS REESE Interdenominational Morning Prayer ServiceTuesday 8:00am- Half Hour Interdenominational Rosary Service-Wednesday 12noonSunday Services: 8am Virtual Service 9:30am Service at the Church-Organ Music All Souls collects food for the hungry of L. I. every day. Please leave non-perishables in vestibule of Church.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.
127
Barnum
Av e . , P o r t J e f f e r s o n 631-473-0273 email: ccoffice@christchurchportjeff.org www.christchurchportjeff.org Church office hours: Tues. - Fri. 9am - 12pm FATHER ANTHONY DILORENZO: PRIEST IN CHARGE Please join us for our 8:00 and 10:00 Sunday Eucharist´s and our 10:00 Wednesday Eucharist in our Chapel. Please wear masks. GOD BLESS YOU Father Anthony DiLorenzo 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 “To know Christ and to make Him known” Rev. Duncan A. Burns, Rector Rev. James E. Reiss, Curate Rev. Claire D. Mis, Seminarian Alex Pryrodny, Music Director & Artist-inResidence 12 Prospect St, Huntington (631) 427-1752 On Main St. next to the library Sunday Worship In Person, Zoom & Facebook 8:00am Rite I Holy Eucharist 10:00am Rite II Holy Choral Eucharist Sunday School resumes in September Morning Prayer Via Zoom 9:00am Monday thru Friday OPERATION: OPEN DOORS & Noonday Prayer 12:00pm Wednesdays in our beautiful church Thrift Shop 12 to 3pm Tuesdays, Thursdays, & Saturday info@stjohns1745.org (631) 427-1752 www.stjohns1745.org Facebook.com/stjohns1745
PLEASE CALL OR VISIT YOUR PLACE OF WORSHIP’S WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION AND GUIDANCE.
PAGE B26 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
Religious 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.
TEMPLE ISAIAH (REFORM) 1404 Stony Brook Road, Stony Brook 631-751-8518 www.tisbny.org A Warm And Caring Intergenerational Community Dedicated To Learning, Prayer, Social Action, and Friendship. Member Union For Reform Judaism RABBI PAUL SIDLOFSKY CANTOR INTERN KALIX JACOBSON EDUCATIONAL DIRECTOR RABBI PAUL SIDLOFSKY, RABBI EMERITUS STEPHEN A. KAROL RABBI EMERITUS ADAM D. FISHER CANTOR EMERITUS MICHAEL F. TRACHTENBERG Sabbath Services: 1st Friday of the month 6pm, all other Fridays 7:30pm and Saturday B’nai services at 10am Religious School Monthly Family Service Monthly Tot Shabbat Youth Groups 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 Email: office@hopelutheran.com Website: www.hopeluth.com REV. DR. RICHARD O. HILL, PASTOR
DALE NEWTON, VICAR On Sundays the services are at 9 and 10:30 a.m. A link for all these services is on the website: www.hopeluth.com. Our Food Pantry is open to everyone on Thursdays from 12:30-2:30 p.m. for picking up food. Also, donations can be made from 11 a.m.-noon or by making arrangements by leaving a message on the church answering service. Offerings to support our ministry can be made at church services and through our website’s “Share God’s Mission” page. In any emergency, call the pastor at 516-848-5386
ST. PAUL’S EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH 309 Patchogue Road Port Jefferson Station 631-473-2236 e-mail pastorpauldowning@yahoo.com pastor’s cellText or voice347-423-3623 www.StPaulsLCPJS.org facebook.com/stpaulselca For July and August one service each Sunday at 9:30am. Parking lot is behind church enter from Maple Avenue If you are not vaccinated and boosted, please wear a mask. Service is also available on facebook live at the church website starting at 9:30am We resume 2 services on September 4 at 8:30 and 10:30 am
Lutheran-LCMS MESSIAH LUTHERAN CHURCH 465 Pond Path, East Setauket 631-751-1775 www.messiahny.org PASTOR NILS NIEMEIER ASSOCIATE PASTOR STEVE UNGER Sunday Summer worship at 9:30am Sunday School will resume in the Fall.Register on our website or call the church office. Bible study on Wednesday and Thursday nights. Our services are live-streamed. Go to our website for link. We are here for you and if you are in need, please call us. Our Pastors are available and you are welcome to call the church to speak to them. May God keep you safe and shine His light and love upon you.
Methodist
Lectionary Reading And Prayer: Wed. 12 Noon Gospel Choir: Tues. 8 Pm Praise Choir And Youth Choir 3rd And 4th Fri. 6:30 PM.
SETAUKET UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 160 Main Street, Corner of 25A and Main Street East Setauket 631-941-4167 REV. STEVEN KIM, PASTOR Sunday Worship Service Indoor at 10am Services are streamed online @ www.setauketumc.org and livestreamed on Facebook Holy Communion 1st Sunday of Month Mary Martha Circle (Women’s Ministry) meets every 2nd Tuesday each month at 1pm No matter who you are or where you are on life’s journey, you’re welcome here!
Presbyterian FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF PORT JEFFERSON 107 South/Main Streets 631-473-0147 We are an accepting and caring people who invite you to share in the journey of faith with us. Email: office@pjpres.org Website: www.pjpres.org THE REV. DR. RICHARD GRAUGH Sunday Worship Service-10 am (social distancing & masks required) service is also broadcast on church FB page under “Missions and Activities” Christian Education Activities: Call 631-473-0147 Bible Study: Tuesday 2 pm via Zoom Holy Communion 1st Sunday of the Month Hot meals, groceries & clothing provided on a take out basis by Welcome Friends on Wednesday 5:00-6:00pm and Fridays 3:30-5:00 pm Call the church office or visit our website for current activities and events. NYS Certified Preschool and Daycare The purpose of First Presbyterian Church of Port Jefferson is, with God’s help, to share the joy & good news of Jesus Christ with the congregation, visitors and the community at large; to provide comfort to those in need and hope to those in despair; and to seek justice for all God’s people.
BETHEL AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
S E TA U K E T P R E S B Y T E R I A N CHURCH
33 Christian Ave/ PO 2117, E. Setauket 631-941-3581 REV. LISA WILLIAMS PASTOR Sunday Worship: 10:30 Am Adult Sunday School 9:30 Am
5 Caroline Avenue ~ On the Village Green 631- 941-4271 Celebrating & sharing the love of God since 1660 All are welcome!
THE REV. DR. JOHANNA McCUNE WAGNER LEAD PASTOR THE REV. ASHLEY MCFAUL-ERWIN, COMMUNITY OUTREACH PASTOR Worship with us in-person Sundays at 9:30AM Masks required Our service is available via live-stream. Visit www.setauketpresbyterian.org to watch and learn about us.We are a More Light and Matthew 25 congregation We believe ALL are created in the image of God and we actively engage in making our faith come alive. Sunday childcare available & Church School Weekly small groups, Bible Study & Adult Christian Ed.Youth Group & Bell Choir all ringers welcome Setauket Presbyterian Preschoolwww.setauketpreschool.org Open Door Exchange (ODE)- furniture ministry www.opendoorexchange.org Follow us on Facebook and Instagram
Quaker QUAKER
RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
Conscience Bay Meeting 4 Friends Way, St. James 11780 631-928-2768 www.consciencebayquakers.org We gather in silent worship seeking God,/the Inner Light/Spirit. We’re guided by the Quaker testimonies of simplicity, peace, integrity, community, equality and stewardship. In-person worship blended with virtual worship. Monthly discussions, Sept.June. Religious education for children. Sept.-June, 11 a.m.; July-Aug., 10 a.m. All are welcome. See our website.
Unitarian Universalist UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP AT STONY BROOK 380 Nicolls Road, East Setauket 631-751-0297 uufsb.org office@uufsb.org A spiritual home for individuals, couples, and families of diverse religious and social backgrounds. A place to nurture your spirit and help heal our world. PASTOR MADELYN CAMPBELL (minister@uufsb.org) Sunday Service: 10:30am Please visit uufsb.org and click on the green “Visitor Sign In” or “Covid Protocols” buttons at the top of our home webpage to find out how to join our in-person Sunday services. Or visit uufsb.org to join us via live streaming on Sunday mornings. Religious Education at UUFSB: Registration is ongoing. For more information please email our Director of Religious Education: dre@uufsb.org.
PLEASE CALL OR VISIT YOUR PLACE OF WORSHIP’S WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION AND GUIDANCE.
AUGUST 11, 2022 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B27
SHELTER PETS OF THE MONTH
paw prints
Welcome to the eighth edition of Paw Prints, a monthly column for animal lovers dedicated to helping shelter pets find their furever home!
Meet Chai
Meet Butterscotch & Patch
These five-month-old Labrador mixes recently arrived at Little Shelter in Huntington via the Passage to Freedom Program and are quickly acclimating to New York life on their road to adoption. Eager about the prospect of finding their forever homes, they can hardly contain their excitement, as evidenced by enthusiastic wiggles and wagging tails! Gentle, sweet-spirited, and slightly goofy, it’s easy to see why Labradors are Americans favorite breed. Stop by to meet Butterscotch (female) and Patch (male) and choose the one that’s just right for your family. *Butterscotch & Patch are not yet fully grown nor completely housebroken.* Call 631-368-8770, ext. 21.
A beautiful balance of smooth and spicy, this five-month-old Shepherd mix is Chai, currently up for adoption at Little Shelter in Huntington. Full-bodied and fun-loving, she is ready to find her forever home and begin her life as part of a loving family. Intelligent and intrigued by everything around her, she’ll show you the world through puppy dog eyes, renewing your appreciation for the simple things. Eager to learn and develop into her best self, she’ll quickly move to the top of the class during obedience training, proudly wearing the title of “best girl”. Stop by Little Shelter today and request to meet the most delicious Chai! *Chai is not yet fully grown nor completely housebroken.* Call 631-368-8770, ext. 21.
ADOPT ME!
Meet Betty Boop
Betty has been waiting at the Smithtown Animal Shelter for her knight in shining armor for a very long time. A low key and loving 10-12 year old spayed female pit bull mix, Betty suffers from significant arthritis of the hips and knees and will need a home that can manager her medications. She is available for adoption or Forever Foster. Betty loves all people, but must be the only pet in an adult only home. She will roll over for belly rubs from absolutely anyone and loves food and snuggles! She also likes to dip her feet in the kiddie pools and shred dog toys. Betty hates to be away from people and would love to be by your side all day long, though she deals with her alone time well. Snuggle up with Betty and be lulled to sleep by her adorable snore. Call 631-360-7575.
Meet Dandelion
Meet Robert
Robert is a short-haired, adult/senior male waiting at Little Shelter for his furever home. He enjoys being around people and seeks out attention from everyone! Come meet this happy gentleman! Call 631-368-8770, ext. 36.
Dandelion, a three-year-old Boxer mix, was recently rescued from a shelter in Texas and is now safe at Kent Animal Shelter in Calverton. A bundle of sunshine, she LOVES to snuggle, get ear rubs, go for walks, play with other dogs, chew on her toys, and meet new people! She is affectionate, outgoing, smart, eager to please, energetic, and would make a wonderful family dog! She is as sweet as pie and has even spent some time in a foster home learning some good manners. Will you make Dandelion's day and come visit her? Call 631-727-5731, ext. 1.
Did you know? The Town of Brookhaven Animal Shelter, 300 Horseblock Road, Brookhaven currently has many beautiful kittens available for adoption including Jan and Marsha, pictured above. Visit www. brookhavenny.gov or call 631-451-6950.
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PAGE B28 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
A medley of melon recipes
Meditative & Wellness Arts
Fall Registration
BY BARBARA BELTRAMI
The day you start moving
COOKING COVE
is the day you stop aging We offer 12 week sessions catering to all levels and abilities in • Tai Chi • Kripalu Yoga • Essentrics Perfect for people suffering from arthritis, joint problems and balance issues
Contact Julia Dillon 631-748-7887 MedArts.UUFSB@gmail.com Classes are held at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship at Stony Brook
©100440
Meditative & Wellness Arts
REGISTER NOW!
380 Nicolls Rd East Setauket
Melon Salad with Shrimp, Prosciutto and Feta
YIELD: Makes 4 to 6 servings INGREDIENTS: • 1 pound medium shrimp, peeled, deveined and cooked • Freshly squeezed juice of one lemon • 3 pounds melon, seeded, peeled and cut into bite-size pieces • 1/2 red onion, finely chopped • 1 jalapeno, seeded and diced • 1/2 red bell pepper, seeded and diced • 2 teaspoons freshly squeezed lime juice • 1/2 tablespoon honey • 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil • Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste • 8 slices prosciutto, torn into bite size pieces • 1/2 cup crumbled feta DIRECTIONS:
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In a large bowl, toss together the shrimp, lemon juice, and melon mixture with onion, jalapeño and bell pepper. Cover and refrigerate at least one hour. In a small bowl, whisk together the lime juice, honey, oil, salt and pepper. When ready to serve, toss shrimp and melon mixture with lime juice mixture and top with prosciutto and feta. Serve immediately with corn bread. .
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Send your upcoming calendar events (fairs, festivals, concerts, walking tours, etc.) from September 15 through December 31, 2021 to leisure@tbrnewspapers.com for publication in TBR News Media’s Harvest Times supplement. Deadline for submissions is Sept. 1.
Melon Salsa
©99060
185 Route 25A, Setauket, NY 11733 tbrnewsmedia.com
It used to be that melon was melon. Period. My mother used to halve or quarter a cantaloupe or honeydew, scoop out the seeds, plunk the salt shaker on the table, and that was melon the only way I knew it. Watermelon got a little different treatment; it was halved or quartered and sliced into triangles, but there was no salt. But now melon has become a whole new phenomenon. Used in an amazing variety of preparations and dishes, it’s all grown up and no longer a loner, but an actual ingredient in myriad recipes. You are probably familiar with cantaloupe or honeydew with prosciutto and watermelon with feta cheese, two winning combos that are testimony to sweet and salty being ideal complements to each other. Maybe you’ve even had melon gazpacho or soup or salad where it’s enhanced by savory herbs, spices and veggies. My mother would be incredulous!
YIELD: Makes about 3 cups INGREDIENTS: • Zest from 1 small lime • 1/4 cup freshly squeezed lime juice • 1 tablespoon sugar • Freshly ground white pepper to taste
METRO photo
• 3 cups seeded and minced cantaloupe, honeydew or watermelon or a combination • 1 medium cucumber, peeled, seeded and finely diced • 1 mango, peeled and finely diced • 1 jalapeno pepper, seeded and minced • 1 small onion, peeled and minced • Leaves from one sprig fresh basil, chopped • 1 garlic clove, minced DIRECTIONS:
In a small bowl combine the lime zest, juice, sugar and pepper; add remaining ingredients, toss, cover, and refrigerate up to 4 hours. Serve with tortilla chips as an hors d’oeuvre or with grilled beef, pork or chicken
Green Gazpacho with Honeydew
YIELD: Makes 4 servings INGREDIENTS: • 1 ripe honeydew melon, seeded, removed from rind and coarsely chopped • 1 English cucumber, peeled, seeded and coarsely chopped • 1 ripe kiwi, peeled and chopped • 1/2 cup seedless green grapes, washed, halved • 1 cup packed arugula • 1/4 cup chopped basil leaves • 1/4 cup cilantro leaves • 4 scallions, white and green parts sliced • 1 serrano chili, seeded and chopped • 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil • 1 tablespoon white wine vinegar • Freshly squeezed juice of one lime • 1 tablespoon sugar • 1 ripe avocado, peeled and coarsely sliced or chopped • Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste • 1 cup sour cream DIRECTIONS:
In the bowl of an electric food processor, puree the melon, cucumber, kiwi, grapes, arugula, basil, cilantro, scallions, chili, oil, vinegar, lime juice, sugar, avocado and salt and pepper; stop to scrape bowl often. When smooth, transfer to large bowl, cover and refrigerate until chilled, at least one hour. Ladle into four soup bowls, top each with a dollop of sour cream and serve with a corn, bean and tomato salad.
AUGUST 11, 2022 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B29
PHOTO OF THE WEEK
SUNSET SPLENDOR
Elisa Hendrey of Sound Beach submitted this gorgeous photo taken at the end of July. She writes, 'Cars were pulling up along the shore of Mt. Sinai Harbor to take photos or simply
gaze at what seems to have been one of the most stunning sunsets this summer. I had seen clouds earlier in the day and made a mental note that they might become part of a special sight as the sun went down.'
Send your Photo of the Week to leisure@tbrnewspapers.com
Our Local Farmer’s Market Cart is back! Shop Local Farmed Produce In Your Own Back Yard SUNFLOWERS – CORN CUCUMBERS – BEANS – SQUASH PEPPERS – TOMATOES
THIS WEEK’S SPECIALS CALIFORNIA RED OR GREEN SEEDLESS GRAPES – 2 LBS./$5 ORE-IDA FROZEN POTATOES $3.99 ASST. VARIETIES PORT JEFFERSON STATION, NY (Corner of Boyle Road & Old Town Road) 631–928–4607 • buttercupdairy.com
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Pre sliced cold cuts and pre made sandwiches
Check out our heat and eat dinner options
CALL AHEAD DELI ORDERS STILL AVAILABLE
FLORIDA’S NATURAL ORANGE JUICE 2/$7 52 OZ. VARIETIES EGGO WAFFLES 2/$6 $3.99 EACH
BUTTERCUP’S OWN FRESH BAKED BLUEBERRY PIE - $4.99 8 INCH SALE DATES – Wednesday, Aug.10 - Tuesday, Aug. 16, 2022
STORE HOURS: MON-FRIDAY – 8am-7pm • SAT-SUN – 8am-6pm
PAGE B30 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
kids korner
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PROGRAMS Summer Drop-In Workshop
Join the Heckscher Museum of Art, 2 Prime Ave., Huntington for a Summer Drop-In Workshop on Aug. 11 and Aug. 18 from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Create fun works of art in a variety of materials inspired by artwork in the Museum’s Collection and exhibitions. Each week’s project will be exciting and different. Programs will be held both in the Museum and in Heckscher Park. Fee is $10 per child, adults free, payable at the door and includes all art supplies and general admission to the museum. Call 380-3230.
Love Our Grandparents
Spoon Man Show Grandparents Day, celebrated September 11, is designated to honor grandparents and to help children become aware of the strength, information, and guidance older people can offer. The passing of knowledge is one of the greatest gifts we can give to future generations.
Love Our Grandparents is the perfect opportunity to show your love and support to our grandparents and remind them just how important they are to you, your family and our community.
On Aug. 12 from 4 to 5 p.m., Emma Clark Library, 120 Main Street, Setauket invites the community to a family show featuring the "Spoon Man," a published author who offers a hilarious interactive comedy program for all ages with an audience sing-along competition and creates a Mountain Band out of members of the audience. It's a spoonful of family fun! No registration necessary. Call 941-4080 for more info.
Superheroes of the Sky
Join Sweetbriar Nature Center, 62 Eckernkamp Drive, Smithtown for Superheroes of the Sky on Aug. 13 from 11 a.m. to noon. Take a walking tour with Jim while he feeds the Center's Birds of Prey and tells you about their incredible adaptations that help them survive in the wild. You’ll be seeing and learning about a bald eagle, turkey vultures, owls, hawks and many more. $10 adults, $5 children under age 12. To register, visit www.sweetbriarnc.org. Call 979-6344 for more info.
Celebrate... Send in your favorite grandparents photo, could be a photo of just the grandparents, or a group family photo or of the grandparents and grandchildren, your choice! Photos must be received by 5:00pm on Thursday, August 25. Include names in photo, town and name of relative submitting the photo and email to loveourphotos@tbrnewsmedia.com with Grandparents in the subject line and we will publish it for FREE! This special issue will be inserted into all six TBR Newspapers, from Cold Spring Harbor to Wading River.
Special advertising opportunities available.
WMHO’s Pop Up Saturday
For Details Call 631–751–7744
The Ward Melville Heritage Organization continues its Pop-Up Saturdays at the Stony Brook Village Center with storytelling and singing by Johnny Cuomo in the Inner Court on Aug. 13 from 2 to 3 p.m. Rain date is the following day. Free. Call 751-2244 or visit www.wmho.org.
Published September 8
Magic of Amore
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Wildwood State Park, 790 Hulse Landing Road, Wading River presents the Magic of Amore on Aug. 13 at 7 p.m. Part of Long Island State Parks Summer Entertainment, this magic show will amaze and astound no matter your age! Colorful handkerchiefs turn to magic canes and objects materialize out of thin air. Bring your chair or blanket and get ready for an amazing show! $10 vehicle use fee. Questions? Call 929-4314.
Mouse Paint Movement
The Reboli Center for Art & History, 64 Main St., Stony Brook presents a Mouse Paint Movement class for students ages 4 to 7 on Aug. 15 from 10 to 11 a.m. This exciting program includes reading of the book Mouse Paint, creative movement using a parachute, a balance beam, tubs, ribbons and hoops all while learning about primary and secondary colors. All materials necessary will be provided. $20 per participant. To register, visit www.rebolicenter.org or call 751-7707.
Family Scavenger Hunt
Frank Melville Memorial Park, 1 Old Field Road, Setauket continues its Summer program series with a Family Scavenger Hunt on Aug. 16 at 11 a.m. Meet at the Red Barn for a morning of fun in a beautiful place! Free. No registration necessary. Call 689-6146 for more information.
Butterflies & Moths
Sunken Meadow State Park, Sunken Meadow Parkway, Kings Park hosts a Tiny Tots class titled Buttlerflies & Moths on Aug. 18 from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Children ages 3 to 5 and their parents will connect with nature through short walks, animal visitors, and crafts. $4 per child. To register, visit www/Eventbrite. com and search #NatureEdventure. For more info, call 269-4333.
Dance Party
It's time to dance! The Village of Port Jefferson concludes its Children Shows series at the Jill Nees Russell Performance Stage at Harborfront Park, 101-A East Broadway, Port Jefferson with A Little Bit of Magic Dance Party on Aug. 18 at 6:30 p.m. Free. Bring seating. Visit www.portjeff.com.
Build a Pirate Ship
Shiver me Tuesdays! The Whaling Museum, 301 Main St., Cold Spring Harbor presents a Pirate Ship Workshop every Tuesday in August from 2 to 4 p.m. Adults and kids can design and build a unique pirate ship model from a variety of wooden materials and more during this drop-in program. Complete your craft with a Jolly Roger! Bring your imagination. Kids, bring your adults for supervision. Admission + $10 participant. Questions? Call 367-3418.
Owl Prowl Thursday
Visit Sweetbriar Nature Center, 62 Eckernkamp Drive, Smithtown on Aug. 18 from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. to meet and learn about some of their resident owls. Embark on a walk into the darkness to enjoy the night. Wear bug spray and bring a flashlight just in case. Open to families with children ages 5 and up. $15 per person. To register, visit www.sweetbriarnc. org. Call 979-6344.
KIDS KORNER continued on page B31
All numbers are in (631) area code unless noted.
AUGUST 11, 2022 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B31
KIDS KORNER
Continued from page B30
FILM 'Shark Tale'/'Finding Nemo'
The 5th annual Farmingville Flicks Movie Series continues with Shark Tale on Aug. 11, Finding Nemo on Aug. 18 and Moana on Aug. 25 at the Local Church, 1070 Portion Road, Farmingville at dusk. Presented by Farmingville Hills Chamber of Commerce and Sachem Public Library. Bring seating. Free but registration is required by visiting www. farmingvillechamber.com.
'Howl's Moving Castle'
A timeless Sleeping Beauty heads to Theatre Three
THEATER
BY HEIDI SUTTON
L
ooking for something to do with the kids on a hot and humid summer day? Allow me to recommend an afternoon of live theater. And with a princess, a prince, a wicked fairy and a spinning wheel, Theatre Three's latest offering, the premiere of the timeless tale of Sleeping Beauty, will surely fit the bill. Oh and did I mention there's A/C? Written by Jeffrey Sanzel and Douglas J. Quattrock, the musical follows the storyline closely but goes one step further in questioning why the wicked fairy put a curse on the princess ultimately causing her to fall asleep for one hundred years. Is she just plain evil or was it all just a misunderstanding? Directed by Sanzel, a cast of 7 adult actors along with 26 preteen and teen actors from Theatre Three's Dramatic Academy present this charming re-telling of the most wonderful fairy tale of all. King Gilder and Queen Gwen have sent out invitations for Briar Rose's first birthday party. While the good fairies Aurora and Lily receive theirs, the wicked fairy Algabrine does not. Insulted, she crashes the party and as her "gift" to the little princess, she casts a spell that Briar Rose will prick her finger on a spinning wheel on her 18th birthday and die. When she leaves, Lily, who has not given her gift yet, changes the spell to have Briar Rose fall into a deep sleep for one hundred years only to be awakened by her one true love. The king decries that all spinning wheels be destroyed. But there's always one somewhere, isn't there?
The Cinema Arts Cenre, 423 Park Ave., Huntington continues its Cinema For Kids series with a screening of Howl's Moving Castle on Aug. 14 at noon. Sophie, a quiet girl working in a hat shop, finds her life thrown into turmoil when she is literally swept off her feet by a handsome but mysterious wizard named Howl. The vain and vengeful Witch of the Waste, jealous of their friendship, puts a curse on Sophie and turns her into a 90-year-old woman leading her on a quest to break the spell. Tickets are $12 adults, $5 children. Call 423-7610. See more film listings on page B24.
'Mary Poppins'
Productions Over the Rainbow present Disney's Mary Poppins The Broadway Musical at Sachem High School East, 177 Granny Road, Farmingville on Aug. 11, 12 and 13 at 7 p.m. performed by POTR's Summer 2022 Teen and College students. Tickets are $18. To order, visit www.potr.org.
'Knuffle Bunny'
Above, Cassidy Rose O'Brien and Josie McSwane in a scene from the show; top photo, the entire cast. Photo by Peter Lanscombe/Theatre Three Productions, Inc. See more photos online at www.tbrnewsmedia.com
Steven Uihlein serves as narrator and uses flashbacks to tell the story and to teach an important lesson along the way. Here we meet Algabrine when she was kind and sweet and witness the moment things take a dark turn. A nice touch. Cassidy Rose O'Brien is perfectly cast as Briar Rose. Strong-willed, confident, thoughtful and kind, she is the perfect fairy tale heroine and quickly becomes the audience favorite as does her counterpart, a terrific Kiernan Urso as Prince Constantine. Accompanied on piano by Quattrock, their duet, "When I Close My Eyes," is magical. Aria Saltini and Heather Rose Kuhn are wonderful as fairies Aurora and Lily, as is Marianne Schmidt as Cecelia, Constantine's mother. Josie McSwane knocks it out of the park as Algabrine and has the best entrance I've ever seen, thanks to the incredible sound effects and lighting. Costumes by Jason Allyn are the icing on the birthday cake.
The preteen and teen supporting cast play numerous roles throughout including singing and dancing and several have lines (great jokes!). For many, this is their first time performing in front of an audience and it is an amazing opportunity to hone their craft and all did an amazing job. With only three performances left, order your tickets now. And if you reserve seats in the center section of the theater, you will be in for a special treat! Take a keepsake photo with the cast in the lobby on your way out. Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson presents Sleeping Beauty on Friday, Aug. 12 at 11 a.m. and Saturday, Aug. 13 at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Children's theater continues with A Kooky Spooky Halloween from Oct. 8 to 22 and Barnaby Saves Christmas from Nov. 19 to Dec. 30. All seats are $10. To order, call 631-9289100 or visit www.theatrethree.com.
From Aug. 5 to Sept. 3, the Smithtown Center for the Performing Arts, 2 East Main St., Smihtown will present Mo Willems' Knuffle Bunny: A Cautionary Tale from Aug. 5 to Sept. 3 with one special performance on the grounds of the Smithtown Historical Society, 239 E. Main St., Smithtown on Aug. 3 at 2 p.m. Trixie, her father, and her favorite stuffed bunny set off on a trip to the laundromat. The trip brings wonder, excitement and joy to the lively toddler until she realizes that she has lost Knuffle Bunny. Filled with adventure, song and dancing laundry, it's the perfect show for a family-friendly outing! Tickets are $18. To order, visit www.smithtownpac.org.
'Junie B. Jones The Musical'
Children's theater continues at the John W. Engeman Theater, 250 Main St., Northport with Junie B. Jones The Musical from July 23 to Aug. 28. Sneak a peek into the "TopSecret Personal Beeswax Journal" of the outspoken and lovable Junie B. Jones! Based on the top selling children’s book series, this upbeat musical follows the spunky Junie as she navigates through the ups and downs of her first day of 1st grade. All seats are $20. To order, call 261-2900 or visit www.engemantheater.com.
'Sleeping Beauty'
Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson presents Sleeping Beauty, a charming re-telling of the most wonderful fairy tale of all, from Aug. 5 to Aug. 13. When Briar Rose falls asleep because of a wicked fairy's evil spell, all seems lost until true love's first kiss breaks the spell. A memorable story for this or any time. $10 per person. To order, call 928-9100 or visit www.theatrethree.com. All numbers are in (631) area code unless noted.
PAGE B32 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • AUGUST 11, 2022
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