ARTS&LIFESTYLES TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA, OCTOBER 31, 2019
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PAGE B2 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • OCTOBER 31, 2019
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OCTOBER 31, 2019 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B3
ASK THE VETERINARIAN Remember to keep your pets indoors and away from treats this Halloween! • Open 7 days a week. • Sunday appointments available from 9 AM-12 PM. Drop off/Pickup boarding on Sundays as well. • ‘Care to Share Program’...Refer friends & family to Countryside, and both of you receive $25 OFF your next visit.
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In this edition
• Compassionate and loving care for all your pets’ needs.
Visit us at www.countrysideportjeff.com Like us on to receive a complimentary nail trim for your pet 544 West Broadway, Port Jefferson 631-473-0942 • 631-473-6980
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Legally Speaking .................................B10 Medical Compass ................................. B7 Parents and Kids ...........................B24-27 Power of 3 ............................................... B9 Religious Directory ......................B21-22 Vendors Wanted..................................... B7
Email your community, business, health, class reunions and calendar listings to leisure@tbrnewspapers.com.
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When I think of turkeys in the month of November, I usually am thinking about a main course with a little stuffing, potatoes, gravy and cranberry sauce. However, many believe turkeys can also make good pets. Domesticated turkeys are quite friendly and can be socialized to humans and other pets. Before considering acquiring any turkeys please make sure to consult your neighbors. Turkeys (especially males) will make a gobble sound in reaction to any strange noise and the females will make a variety of sounds. What I mean is, both genders make a lot of noise. Make sure there is enough room to exercise. Turkeys need about 90 square feet to be able to properly “shake their tail feathers” and make sure the enclosure has a fence that is at least 6 feet high. Most domesticated turkeys cannot, or will not, attempt to fly over the fence, but it is possible and they may require routine clipping of the flight feathers to prevent a “great escape.” They also need safety from predators at night. A commercially made turkey pen or 8×6-foot garden shed makes a good enclosure. This size shed can house up to more than one turkey.
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BY MATTHEW KEARNS, DVM
Good husbandry is a key. A dirt floor with either hay or shavings is easiest to keep clean and not hard on the turkey’s feet. The hay or shavings should be changed every few days. There is also one consideration if you wish to keep both turkeys and chickens as pets. Chickens carry but are not affected by a single-celled parasite called Histomanis meleagridis, leading to a condition known as blackhead. This parasite causes diarrhea, liver damage and sudden death in turkeys. Therefore, do not house the turkeys and chickens together, nor keep the turkeys in an area that has recently been used by chickens. Periodic treatments with anti-parasitc medications also reduce the risk of blackhead. Food is easy. Fowl pellets are the mainstay of their diet and they can be bought at any feed store or online. Young turkeys may initially prefer to eat bugs such as crickets, mealworms and beetles but will quickly transition to pellets if you crush the bugs and pellets and mix them together. Turkeys also will eat a variety of fruits, vegetables and nuts. Items such as kale, grapes, berries, etc. are all delicious additions to a turkey’s diet. Crushed oyster shells make not only an excellent source of calcium but also help grind food for digestion in a part of the turkey’s stomach called the gizzard. I have to admit that I don’t own any turkeys, nor have I treated any turkeys but who knows what the future holds. “Gobble, Gobble”!!!!! Dr. Kearns practices veterinary medicine from his Port Jefferson office and is pictured with his son Matthew and his dog Jasmine. Have a question for the vet? Email it to leisure@tbrnewspapers.com to see his answer in an upcoming column.
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PAGE B4 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • OCTOBER 31, 2019
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Have you gotten your flu shot yet? Make sure you and your loved ones are ready for the flu season by getting vaccinated. While the best time to get vaccinated is October or November, you can get vaccinated before the flu season and even in December or later. We don’t yet know what type of season we will encounter, so it’s better to be safe than sorry.
Cold or flu: How can you tell?
should get their yearly flu vaccine. There are documented benefits from this, including reductions in illnesses, related doctors’ visits and missed work or school. Even an imperfect vaccination can contribute to fewer hospitalizations and deaths from influenza.
Dispelling the myths
Some people think that the flu shot can cause the flu. Not true. Influenza, or the flu, is a While some people get a little contagious respiratory illness soreness or redness where they get caused by influenza viruses and the shot, it goes away in a day or tends to be more severe than two. And the nasal mist flu vaccine a cold. A cold is caused by a might cause nasal congestion, different virus and has milder runny nose, sore throat and cough. symptoms. People with the flu will But the risk of a severe allergic usually have fever, muscle aches reaction is very rare — it’s less and more fatigue. The flu can also than one in four million. cause very severe complications Others say the flu shot doesn’t BY SAUL HYMES, M.D. including pneumonia and can lead work, which is also not true. Most to hospitalization and death. More of the time, the flu shot will prevent the flu. In mild cases may be indistinguishable from a cold scientific studies, the effectiveness of the flu shot and the duration can be the same (about 5-7 days). has ranged from 70 to 90 percent when there’s a There may be times when you’re uncertain if you good match between circulating viruses and those have the flu or a cold, so it’s good to know that in the vaccine. there’s a test to diagnose the influenza virus, which Habits that can help most doctors’ offices and ERs are able to perform. Help keep the flu at bay. Avoid those who Treating the flu vs. a cold are ill. Cover your mouth and nose with a tissue Both are treated with rest and lots of fluids, when you cough or sneeze. If you don’t have a while the pain and fever associated with either tissue, then cough or sneeze into your elbow or can be treated with medicines like acetaminophen shoulder (not into your hands). Wash your hands and ibuprofen. Influenza may also be treated with frequently and thoroughly. Stay home from work a direct antiviral medication, Tamiflu. However, if you’re sick. Keep your children out of school depending on risk factors and the person’s age, and after-school activities if they’re sick. not all people with influenza need Tamiflu. This At Stony Brook University Hospital, we also should be discussed with your physician. encourage visitors who may be experiencing symptoms not to visit their loved ones in the Who is at risk? People who are over the age of 65, adults and hospital until they are healthy. If you would like to get a flu shot, we can refer children with conditions like asthma, diabetes, heart disease and kidney disease need to get you to a provider in your area. Call Stony Brook a flu shot. Pregnant women and people who Medicine’s HealthConnect at 631-444-4000 or live in facilities like nursing homes are also visit your physician or local pharmacy. Dr. Saul Hymes is an assistant professor of clinical encouraged to get a flu shot. In fact, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends pediatrics and specialist in pediatric infectious that everyone six months of age and older disease at Stony Brook Children’s Hospital.
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PAGE B6 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • OCTOBER 31, 2019
HELPING YOU NAVIGATE TO OPTIMAL HEALTH
David Dunaief, M.D. Integrative Medicine
• A Whole Body Approach • Reversing, Preventing & Treating Chronic Disease and Managing Weight by Connecting Conventional Medicine with Lifestyle Modifications Our Philosophy is simple. We believe wellness is derived through nutritional medicine and lifestyle interventions that prevent and treat chronic diseases. Medications have their place - and in some cases can be lifesaving. However, there’s no medication without side effects. The goal should be to limit the need for medications - or minimize the number of medications you take on a regular basis. You are not limited by your genes. Fortunately, most diseases are based primarily on epigenetics, which are environmental influences, and not on genetics. Epigenetics literally means above or around the gene. In epigenetics, lifestyle choices impact gene expression. Just because your first degree relatives may have had a disease, you are not predestined to follow suit. We are specialists who will partner with your primary care physician. A standard medical education does not integrate enough nutritional medicine and other lifestyle interventions. We bridge that gap.
We use evidence-based medicine to guide our decision-making. The amount of research related to nutrition and other lifestyle issues continues to grow rapidly, with many studies showing significant beneficial effects on health. We treat each patient as an individual. We will work with you to develop a plan that allows you to take a proactive role in managing your own health. The health outcomes are worth the effort. Is disease reversal possible? Absolutely! Study evidence has found this to be true, and many of our patients have experienced reversal of diabetes, autoimmune disorders, migraines, and cardiovascular disease, just to mention a few. In many cases, because of their exceptional results, our patients have been able to reduce or eliminate their medications.
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OCTOBER 31, 2019 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B7
MEDICAL COMPASS
Tipping the sodium to potassium balance
High sodium:potassium ratio increases cardiovascular risk We need sodium in our diets in modest amounts; however, many Americans overconsume it. Meanwhile, potassium, which we also need, is underconsumed. More than 90 percent of people consume far too much sodium, with salt being By David the primary culprit Dunaief, M.D. (1). Sodium is found in foods that don’t even taste salty. Bread and rolls are the primary offenders. Other foods with substantial amounts of sodium are cold cuts and cured meats, cheeses, pizza (which has both bread and cheese), fresh and processed poultry, soups, meat dishes, pastas and snack foods. Foods that are processed and those prepared by restaurants are where most of our consumption occurs (2). By contrast, only about 2 percent of people get enough potassium from their diets (3). According to one study, we would need to consume about eight sweet potatoes or 10 bananas each day to reach appropriate levels. Why is it important to reduce sodium and increase potassium? A high sodium-to-potassium ratio increases the risk of cardiovascular disease by 46 percent, according to the study, which looked at more than 12,000 Americans over almost 15 years (4). In addition, both may have significant impacts on blood pressure and cardiovascular disease. To improve our overall health, we need to tip the sodium-to-potassium scales, consuming less sodium and more potassium. Let’s look at the evidence.
Reduced sodium
Two studies illustrate the benefits of reducing sodium in high blood pressure and normotensive (normal blood pressure) patients, ultimately preventing cardiovascular disease, including heart disease and stroke. The first used the prestigious Cochrane review to demonstrate that blood pressure is reduced by a significant mean of −4.18 mm Hg systolic (top number) and −2.06 mm Hg diastolic (bottom number) involving both normotensive and hypertensive participants (5). When looking solely at hypertensive patients, the reduction was even greater, with a systolic blood pressure reduction of −5.39 mm Hg and a diastolic blood pressure reduction of −2.82 mm Hg. This was a meta-analysis (a group of studies) that evaluated data from randomized clinical trials, the gold standard of studies. There were 34 trials reviewed with more than 3,200 participants. Salt was reduced from 9
Lowering sodium intake may have far-reaching benefits, and it is certainly achievable. Stock photo
to 12 grams per day to 5 to 6 grams per day. These levels were determined using 24-hour urine tests. The researchers believe there is a direct linear effect with salt reduction. In other words, the more we reduce the salt intake, the greater the effect of reducing blood pressure. The authors concluded that these effects on blood pressure will most likely result in a decrease in cardiovascular disease. In the second study, a meta-analysis of 42 clinical trials, there was a similarly significant reduction in both systolic and diastolic blood pressures (6). This meta-analysis included adults and children. Both demographics saw a reduction in blood pressure, though the effect, not surprisingly, was greater in adults. Interestingly, an increase in sodium caused a 24 percent increased risk of stroke incidence but, more importantly, a 63 percent increased risk of stroke mortality. The risk of mortality from heart disease was increased as well, by 32 percent. In an epidemiology modeling study, the researchers projected that either a gradual or instantaneous reduction in sodium would save lives (7). For instance, a modest 40 percent reduction over 10 years in sodium consumed could prevent 280,000 premature deaths. These are only projections, but in combination with the above studies they may be telling. The bottom line: Decrease sodium intake by almost half and increase potassium intake from foods.
Potassium’s positive effects
When we think of blood pressure, sodium comes to mind, but not enough attention is given to potassium. The typical American diet doesn’t contain enough of this mineral. In a meta-analysis involving 32 studies, results showed that as the amount of potassium was increased, systolic blood pressure decreased significantly (8). When foods
containing 3.5 to 4.7 grams of potassium were consumed, there was an impressive −7.16 mm Hg reduction in systolic blood pressure with high blood pressure patients. Anything more than this amount of potassium did not have any additional benefit. Increased potassium intake also reduced the risk of stroke by 24 percent. This effect was important. The reduction in blood pressure was greater with increased potassium consumption than with sodium restriction, although there was no head-to-head comparison done. The good news is that potassium is easily attainable in the diet. Foods that are potassium-rich include bananas, sweet potatoes, almonds, raisins and green leafy vegetables such as Swiss chard. Lowering sodium intake may have far-reaching benefits, and it is certainly achievable. We need to reduce our intake and give ourselves a brief period to adapt — it takes about six weeks to retrain our taste buds, once we reduce our sodium intake. We can also improve our odds by increasing our dietary potassium intake, which also has a substantial beneficial effect, striking a better sodium-topotassium balance.
References:
(1) Am J Clin Nutr. 2012 Sep;96(3):647657. (2) www.cdc.gov. (3) Am J Clin Nutr. 2012 Sep;96(3):647-657. (4) Arch Intern Med. 2011;171(13):1183-1191. (5) BMJ. 2013 Apr 3;346:f1325. (6) BMJ. 2013 Apr 3;346:f1326. (7) Hypertension. 2013; 61: 564-570. (8) BMJ. 2013; 346:f1378. Dr. Dunaief is a speaker, author and local lifestyle medicine physician focusing on the integration of medicine, nutrition, fitness and stress management. For further information, visit www.medicalcompassmd.com or consult your personal physician.
VENDORS WANTED • St. James Lutheran Church, 229 2nd Ave., St. James seeks vendors for its annual Holiday Craft Fair on Nov. 9 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. For details, call Herb or Marie at 631-473-7976. • Siena Village, 2000 Bishops Road, Smithtown seeks vendors for its annual Bazaar set for Nov. 9 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. For more information, call Grace at 631-656-5725 or Laura at 631-265-3415. • Yaphank Presbyterian Church, 65 Main St., Yaphank will hold its annual Holiday Bazaar & Bake Sale on Nov. 9 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Interested vendors may call 631-775-9495 for more information. • Walt Whitman Shops, 160 Walt Whitman Road, Huntington Station seeks merchandise and food vendors for the 5th annual I Love Chocolate Fest on Nov. 9 and 10. Deadline to apply is Nov. 6. Call 631-488-0521. • Preferred Promotions has a call out for merchandise vendors for an Autumn Art & Craft Festival at the Huntington Hilton, 598 Broadhollow Road, Melville on Nov. 10 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call 631-5638551 or visit www.preferredpromotions. com for a vendor application. • Ronkonkoma Middle School, 501 Peconic St., Ronkonkoma holds its 3rd annual Craft Fair on Nov. 16 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Interested merchandise and food vendors can call 631-747-2468. Deadline to apply is Nov. 1. • St. Matthew R.C. Church, 35 N Service Road, Dix Hills seeks vendors for its annual Holiday Craft Fair on Nov. 17 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Call Louise at 631586-4515 for more information. • Walt Whitman High School, 301 West Hills Road, Huntington Station seeks merchandise and food vendors for its 18th annual Fine Art and Crafts Fair on Nov. 23 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information, call 631-549-8582. • Centereach Fire Department, 9 South Washington Ave., Centereach will hold its annual Christmas Extravaganza from Nov. 29 to Dec. 1 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Interested vendors may call 631-5889220 before Nov. 1. • Sachem North High School, 212 Smith Road, Ronkonkoma seeks vendors for its annual Festival of Trees and Lights on Dec. 7 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Dec. 8 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Call Glen at 631848-4855. • Art League of Long Island, 107 East Deer Park Road, Dix Hills invites fine artists and fine crafters to submit applications to display and sell their original work at its 56th annual Holiday Fine Art & Craft Fair on Dec. 7 and 8 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Deadline to apply is Nov. 24. Call 631-4625400 or visit www.artleagueli.org.
VENDORS WANTED continued on page B10
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PAGE B8 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • OCTOBER 31, 2019
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1. Tetanus symptom 6. *Giant bird of “One Thousand and One Nights” 9. Cooking grease 13. Home to Buccaneers 14. Major division of geological time 15. Dressmaker’s measurement 16. Brown, Dartmouth and Yale, e.g. 17. “To ____ is human” 18. Provide, as with some quality © StatePoint Media 19. *Brian Jacque’s fictional world 21. *One of Mr. Popper’s visitors 23. Like a fox? 24. Play charades 25. International Monetary Fund 28. Reproductive structures 30. 7th planet from the sun 35. *Arnold Lobel’s “Mouse ____” 37. Approximately, two words 39. 50th state greeting 40. Cannonballs to cannon 41. Big Dipper shape 43. Niels ____ of quantum physics 44. Change the Constitution 46. *Hugo Cabret’s “wheel” 47. Arctic jaeger 48. *a.k.a. Caroline Augusta Woodlawn 50. ‘70s hairdo 52. “Be quiet!” - onomatopoetically speaking 53. Like never-written story 55. Mining product 57. *”Roar of ____, Hear My Cry” 61. *”The ____ in Times Square” 65. A variety show 66. *Peter Parker’s Aunt 68. Escape 69. Signs of things to come 70. Military activities 71. Burdened 72. Black or green, hot or cold, pl. 73. No longer working, abbr. 74. “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” trick
Answers to last week’s puzzle: Halloween
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OCTOBER 31, 2019 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B9
KNOWLEDGE SEEKERS
SBU’s William Farr uses the sounds of merging black holes to test Einstein’s theory Harnessing the Technology of our Research Giants
BY DANIEL DUNAIEF It’s not exactly a symphony, with varying sounds, tones, cadences and resonances all working together to take the listener on an auditory journey through colors, moods and meaning. In fact, the total length of the distortion is so short — about 0.1 seconds — that it’s a true scratch-your-ear-andyou’ll-miss-it moment. And yet, astrophysicists like William Farr, an associate professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Stony Brook University and a group leader in gravitational wave astronomy with the Simons Foundation Flatiron Institute, are thrilled that they have been able to measure distortions in space and time that occur at audio frequencies that they can convert into sounds. These distortions were made millions or even billions of years ago from merging black holes. Farr, in collaboration with a team of scientists from various institutions, recently published a paper in Physical Review Letters on the topic. While the ability to detect sounds sent hurtling through space billions of years before Tyrannosaurus Rex stalked its prey on Earth with its mammoth jaw and short forelimbs offers some excitement in and of itself, Farr and other scientists are intrigued by the implications for basic physical principles. General relativity, a theory proposed by Albert Einstein over 100 years ago, offers specific predictions about gravitational waves traveling through space.“The big excitement is that we checked those predictions and they matched what we saw. It’s a very direct test of general relativity and its predictions about a super extreme environment near a black
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hole,” said Farr. There are other tests of general relativity, but none that directly test its predictions so close to the event horizon of a black hole, he explained. General relativity predicts a spectrum of tones from a black hole, much like quantum mechanics predicts a spectrum line from a hydrogen atom, Farr explained. The result of this analysis “provides another striking confirmation of the theory of general relativity and also demonstrates that there are even more exciting things that can be done with gravitational wave astrophysics,” Marilena Loverde, an assistant professor of physics at the C. N. Yang Institute for Theoretical Physics at Stony Brook University, explained in an email. Loverde suggested that Farr is “particularly well-known for bringing powerful new statistical techniques to extract science from vast astrophysical data sets.” Farr and his colleagues discovered two distortions that they converted into tones from one merger event. By measuring the frequency of the first one, they could predict the frequency for all the other tones generated in the event. They detected one more event, whose frequency and decay rate were consistent with general relativity given the accuracy of the measurement. So, what does the merger of two black holes sound like, from billions of light years away? Farr suggested it was like a “thunk” sent over that tremendous distance. The pitch of that sound varies depending on the masses of the black holes. The difference in sound is akin to the noise a bear makes compared with a chipmunk: A larger black hole, or animal, in this comparison, makes a noise with a deeper pitch. He used data from the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave
William Farr Photo by Anja von der Linden
Observatory, or LIGO, which is a twin system located in Livingston, Louisiana, and Hanford, Washington. LIGO had collected data from black hole merger events over a noncontinuous six-month period from 2015 to 2017. Farr chose the loudest one, which came from 1.5 billion years ago. Farr was using data from the instrument, which collects gravitational waves as they reach the two different locations, when it was less sensitive. Given the original data, he might not have discovered anything. He was, however, delighted to discover the first tone. If something that far away emitted a gravitational wave sound that lasts such a short period of time, how, then, could the LIGO team and Farr’s analysis be sure the sound originated with the cosmic collision? “We make ‘extreme’ efforts to be sure about this,” Farr explained in an email. “It is one reason we built two instruments (so that something weird happening in one does not fool us).” He said he makes sure the signal is consistently recorded in both concurrently. To rule out distortions that might come from other events, like comets slamming into exoplanets, he can measure the frequency of the event and its amplitude. Black holes form when stars collapse. After the star that, in this case, was likely around 25 times the mass of the sun, exploded,
what was left behind had an enormous mass. When another, nearby star becomes a black hole, the two black holes develop an orbit like their progenitor stars. When these stars become black holes, they will emit enough gravitational waves to shrink the orbit, leading to a merger over a few billion years. That’s what he “heard” from the last second or fraction of a second. Farr expects to have the chance to analyze considerably more data over the next few months. First, he is working to analyze data that has already been released and then he will explore data from this year’s observations, which includes about 25 more mergers. “The detectors are getting more sensitive,” he said. This year, scientists can see about 30 percent further than they could in the first and second observing runs, which translates into seeing over twice the total volume. Farr has been at Stony Brook for almost a year. Prior to his arrival, he had lived in England for five years. He and his wife, Rachel, who have a 3½-year-old daughter, Katherine, live in Stony Brook. As for his work, Farr is thrilled that he will have a chance to study more of these black hole merger sounds that, while not exactly Mozart, are, nonetheless, music to his ears. “Each different event tells us different things about how stars form and evolve,” he said.
Horoscopes of the week SCORPIO – Oct 24/Nov 22 Don’t let your mind get the better of you, Scorpio. It’s easy to dream up scenarios, but put yourself in the here and now this week; the future can wait. SAGITTARIUS – Nov 23/Dec 21 Sagittarius, if an opportunity for advancement at work pops up, grab it with both hands. You have been waiting for a chance to make your mark and try new things CAPRICORN – Dec 22/Jan 20 Capricorn, you have to push through to the finish line this week even if you are feeling tired. Your reward will come with some weekend festivities. AQUARIUS – Jan 21/Feb 18 Changes at work are looming, Aquarius. Try to be receptive to the modifications and find a way to put your own mark on things. A leadership role could emerge. PISCES – Feb 19/Mar 20 Pisces, you may need to play mediator in a delicate situation this week. Take a careful approach and consider both sides of the coin. ARIES – Mar 21/Apr 20 Aries, a hectic schedule is on the horizon, so it is important to get your organizational skills in order. Things are bound to get busy as the month wears on. TAURUS – Apr 21/May 21 Taurus, take a few moments at the start of each day this week to just breathe and get ready for what’s in store for you. Doing so will help you tackle anything that comes your way. GEMINI – May 22/Jun 21 Romantic prospects have you eager to spend time with a special someone, Gemini. Block out a night or two when you can enjoy time away as a couple. CANCER – Jun 22/Jul 22 Cancer, you may have to let a situation at work blow over instead of letting it get the best of you. It is important to pick your battles in this scenario. Wait it out for the time being. LEO – Jul 23/Aug 23 Leo, a seemingly impossible situation may just need to be seen through a new perspective. Try talking to someone to get a different point of view. VIRGO – Aug 24/Sept 22 Virgo, after a lengthy period of rest and relaxation, it is time to get back to the grind. Your skills may be a bit rusty, but things will come back to you quickly. LIBRA – Sept 23/Oct 23 Libra, you can’t mask a shaky structure, no matter how many superficial changes you make. Devote some attention to those things that need fixing.
PAGE B10 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • OCTOBER 31, 2019
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THE FACTS: My grandson Frank is disabled and will likely need medical and financial assistance as an adult. I would like to name Frank and my other grandchildren as beneficiaries in my will, but I am concerned that doing BY LINDA TOGA, ESQ. so may make Frank ineligible for government assistance programs.
THE QUESTION: How can I leave Frank money without interfering with whatever government benefits he may be receiving at the time of my death?
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THE ANSWER: The best way to provide financial support to Frank without making him ineligible for needs-based government benefits like Medicaid and Section 8 housing assistance is to direct your executor to put Frank’s bequest in a supplement needs trust, (SNT). An SNT is designed so that the trustee can use trust assets to supplement the government benefits that the disabled beneficiary may be receiving. Trust assets can be used to enhance the life and well-being of the beneficiary. They cannot, however, be used to pay for goods and/or services provided to the beneficiary by the government.
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• Preferred Promotions seeks merchandise vendors for its annual Holiday Boutique at Deepwells Farm in St. James on Dec. 7, 8, 14 and 15 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call 631-563-8551 for a vendor application. • St. Elizabeth Ann Seton R.C. Church, 800 Portion Road, Lake Ronkonkoma will host a Christmas Craft Fair on Dec. 8 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Interested merchandise
For example, the trustee may pay for a disabled beneficiary’s cellphone, car or vacation but cannot pay for medical treatment if the beneficiary is receiving Medicaid. Similarly, if the beneficiary’s housing costs are covered by a needs-based government program, the trustee can use the trust asset to furnish an apartment but cannot pay the rent. As mentioned above, in your will you can direct your executor to fund a testamentary SNT that will be administered by a trustee of your choosing. In the alternative, you can create and fund an SNT for Frank during your lifetime. One advantage of this approach is that other family members can then contribute to the SNT either directly or by a bequest in their own wills. In either case, Frank will benefit from your generosity because rather than his inheritance being used for necessities, the trust assets can be used for things that will enhance his life, make him more comfortable and make each day more enjoyable. To create an SNT, you should contact an attorney who has prepared trusts in the past and who has experience working with clients concerned about the future of their disabled beneficiaries. Linda M. Toga, Esq. provides legal services in the areas of estate planning and administration, real estate, small business services and litigation from her East Setauket office. Visit her website at www.lmtogalaw.com or call 631-444-5605 to schedule a free consultation.
vendors may call 631-585-5186 for an application. Deadline to apply is Nov. 28. • St. Peter’s Lutheran Church, 11 Ogden Court, Huntington Station seeks merchandise vendors for its Christmas Boutique on Dec. 8 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Deadline to apply is Dec. 1. Call 631-3276089 for further information. • VFW Post 4927 Auxiliary, 31 Horseblock Road, Centereach seeks vendors for its Holiday Fair and Craft Show on Dec. 14 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Call Susan at 516-521-2259 or email sue806@aol.com for more information.
OCTOBER 31, 2019 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B11
BUSINESS NEWS
Mather honors three of its own
John T. Mather Memorial Hospital, in Port Jefferson recently announced this year’s honorees for its One Enchanted Evening Gala. The hospital will honor Dr. David BenEliyahu, director of Mather’s Chiropractic Collaboration and Back & Neck Pain Dr. David Shenouda Center, as its community honoree. Dr. David Shenouda, cardiologist, and Dr. Sumeer Sathi, neurosurgeon, will receive the 2019 Theodore Roosevelt Awards for service to the hospital and to the community. The prestigious awards will be presented at the gala at East Wind Long Island in Wading River on Nov. 1.
Open House Photo from Town of Brookhaven
Town of Brookhaven hosts 15th annual Building Business in Brookhaven Expo
On Oct. 10, the Brookhaven Business Advisory Council (BBAC) hosted its 15th annual Building Business in Brookhaven Expo at Town Hall. The event, which attracted 450 local business people and 100 vendors, focused on business networking and included a trade show with booths highlighting local,
regional and national companies that service businesses in Brookhaven Town. The expo was presented by the Town of Brookhaven Division of Economic Development in partnership with the Brookhaven Business Advisory Council and the Town of Brookhaven Industrial Development Agency (IDA).
Pictured from left, Brookhaven Town Director of Economic Development/IDA CEO Lisa Mulligan, BBAC President Henry Bramwell, BBAC VP Brian Cohen, Councilman Michael Loguercio, Councilwoman Jane Bonner; IDA Deputy Director James Tullo, Superintendent Ed Romaine and Councilwoman Valerie M. Cartright.
Urban Air Adventure Park set to open in Lake Grove in November Urban Air has announced it plans to open its newest location in Lake Grove in early November, bringing a new brand of indoor Adventure Park to Long Island. Located at 3147 Middle Country Road, Lake Grove in the former JCPenny Home Store, the 48,000 sq. ft. indoor Adventure Park will include the Urban Air Sky Rider Indoor Coaster, a winding track that has young thrill-seekers flying along 30 feet in the air. “We’re excited to be bringing Urban Air to Long Island – we live and work here and know it will be a huge success,” said Urban Air Lake Grove co-owner David Wolmetz. “From trampolining to dodge ball to rock climbing to obstacle courses, we have something for every age group and athletic level.” In addition to the wall-to-wall trampoline adventures, adrenaline junkies will be able to experience High Ropes, an obstacle course in the sky; Spin Zone Bumper Cars, where you can bump into your friends and send them into an uncontrolled spin; the Drop Zone, an enormous inflatable landing pad perched below a series of trampolines; the Runway Tumble Track, a unique attraction for flips, handsprings and cartwheels; the Slam Dunk Zone, which allows guests to emulate their favorite basketball heroes with a trampoline-induced slam dunk of their own; a tubes playground
Stony Brook Children’s Hospital, 101 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook hosts a community Open House on Saturday, Nov. 2 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tour the new facility, meet a pet therapy dog and enjoy fun activities including a teddy bear clinic, healthy eating games, finger casting, giveaways, food and refreshments. Questions? Call 631-4445437 or visit www.stonybrookchildrens. org/openhouse.
Made to Move fundraiser
Join Made to Move Tennis & Wellness, 5 South Jersey Ave., Setauket for a Davinci Body Board fitness class fundraiser for Hope House Ministries in Port Jefferson from Nov. 4 to 9. All classes will be $12 per person and all monies will be donated. Check out the schedule at www. madetomovewellness.com or call Tara at 631-751-6767 to sign up.
Huntington bakery to close
Wild Flour Bake Shop, 11 New St. in Huntington, recently announced they are closing on Nov. 9. The shop is known for its gluten-free products, many of them made without dairy products or refined sugars. Owners Carolyn Arcario and Mary Mucci made the announcement on Oct. 5. “After 10 years, Wild Flours will be baking our last cakes. Our lease is winding down and we will not be renewing. We have truly enjoyed baking for you and your families,” reads a post on the bakery’s Facebook page.
Bryant Funeral Home food drive
Photo from Urban Air Lake Grove
with several suspended levels of pipes and tubes for younger visitors to crawl through and slide down; and Urban Air’s exclusive Urban Warrior Course and Battle Beam. The facility will also feature the Urban
Café, with food, drinks and snacks available for purchase. The location will also be available for birthday parties, corporate retreats, team building and private events. For more information, visit www.UrbanAirParks.com.
Bryant Funeral Home, located at 411 Old Town Road, E. Setauket hosts a Thanksgiving Food Drive through Nov. 23. Please drop off nonperishable food at the funeral home from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Every five items you bring will earn you a raffle ticket. All food collected will be donated to the Our Daily Bread Soup Kitchen and Food Pantry. For more information, call 631-473-0082.
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PAGE B12 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • OCTOBER 31, 2019
OCTOBER 31, 2019 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B13
ART EXHIBITS The Atelier at Flowerfield
‘Painting is just another way of keeping a diary.’ ~ Pablo Picasso
Reboli Center for Art and History
The Atelier at Flowerfield is located at 2 Flowerfield, Suite 15, in St. James. Through Nov. 21 Atelier Hall will present The Long Island Young Artists Exhibition, a juried show for Long Island’s next generation of fine artists. 631-250-9009.
The Reboli Center for Art and History is located at 64 Main St. in Stony Brook Village. From Nov. 1 through Jan. 26 the center will present an exhibit titled The White House Calendar featuring the original artwork of 9 of the 14 images depicted in a commemorative calendar printed in 2000 on the 200th anniversary of the White House, including one from Joseph Reboli. See more on page B15. 631-751-7707, www.ReboliCenter.org.
Art League of Long Island
The Art League of Long Island is located at 107 E. Deer Park Road, Dix Hills. From Nov. 2 through Dec. 1 and again from Dec. 14 to Jan. 5 the Jeanie Tengelsen Gallery will host the 64th annual Members’ Exhibition featuring over 200 works of art including paintings, drawings, collage, photography, print-making, ceramics, sculpture, jewelry, and fiber arts created by the Art League of Long Island’s many talented members. A reception will be held on Nov. 3 (A to L) and on Dec. 15 (M to Z) both from 3:30 to 5: 30 p.m. 631-462-5400.
Sachem Public Library
Sachem Public Library is located at 150 Holbrook Road in Holbrook. In the gallery through November will be a photography exhibit by Clarence Simpson titled What I See I Think I Shoot. Join the photographer for a reception on Nov. 9 from 1 to 3 p.m. 631-588-5024.
Setauket Neighborhood House
Comsewogue Public Library
Comsewogue Public Library is located at 170 Terryville Road, Port Jefferson Station. During the month of November the library will present Abstract Expressions by Bruce Levine The exhibit may be seen during regular library hours. 631-928-1212.
East Northport Public Library
The East Northport Public Library is located at 185 Larkfield Road in East Northport. In celebration of Veterans and Military Families Month, the library, in conjunction with the Northport Library, will present an art exhibit titled Ink Stories: Symbols of Service, featuring over 20 veterans, their tattoos and the stories behind them, through the month of November. An opening reception will be held at the Northport Library on Nov. 8 at 7 p.m. The exhibit may be seen during regular library hours. 631-261-2313.
Emma S. Clark Library
Emma S. Clark Memorial Library is located at 120 Main St., Setauket. Through the month of November, the Four Harbors Audubon Society will present an exhibit titled Long Island Wilderness Through the Lens. The exhibit may be seen during regular library hours. 631-941-4080.
Gallery North
Gallery North is located at 90 North Country Road, Setauket. Currently on view through Nov. 10 is an exhibit by Christian White titled Revisions. Join the artist for an Artalk on Nov. 10 from 3 to 5 p.m. The gallery presents its annual Deck the Halls holiday exhibition from Nov. 15 to Dec. 22 with an opening reception on Nov. 15 from 6 to 8 p.m. Call 631-751-2676 or visit www.gallerynorth.org.
Harborfields Public Library
Harborfields Public Library is located at 31 Broadway, Greenlawn. View the automotive photography and artwork of Bruce L. Marcais in the gallery through November. An artist reception will be held on Nov. 3 from 3 to 4:30 p.m. 631-757-4200.
Heckscher Museum of Art
The Heckscher Museum of Art is located at 2 Prime Ave., Huntington. Currently on view is an
‘Cold Spring Harbor’ by William Pardue will be on view at the Huntington Library from Nov. 1 to 29. exhibit titled Mort Künstler:“The Godfather” of Pulp Fiction Illustrators through Nov. 17 along with A Brush With HerStory: Paintings by Gabriela Gonzalez Dellosso and A Fine Line: Sketches, Drawings, and Illustrations from the Collection, both on view through Nov. 10. From Nov. 23 to March 15, 2020 the museum will present Locally Sourced: Collecting Long Island Artists. 631-351-3250, www.heckscher.org.
Huntington Arts Council
Huntington Arts Council’s Main Street Gallery is located at 213 Main St., Huntington. Through Nov. 16 the gallery will present Nightmare on Main Street, a juried student exhibition inspired by the theme of Halloween. 631-271-8423.
Huntington Public Library
Huntington Public Library is located at 338 Main St., Huntington. Artist William Pardue returns to the library with his latest exhibit, Landscape – 25 Years of Experiment from Nov. 1 to 29. An artist reception will be held on Nov. 3 from 2 to 4 p.m The exhibit may be seen during regular library hours. Call 631-427-5165.
Long Island Museum
The Long Island Museum is located at 1200 Route 25A, Stony Brook. Currently on view is Found@LIM: Long Island’s Unidentified Photographs through Dec. 29 and, in honor of National Alzheimer’s Disease Awareness Month and Family Caregiver’s Month, the museum will present its 7th annual Through Our Eyes exhibition featuring the artwork of participants from Day Haven Adult Day Services from Nov. 14 to Dec. 1 in the Gillespie Room. 631-7510066, www.longislandmuseum.org.
Mills Pond Gallery
The Smithtown Township Arts Council’s Mills Pond Gallery is located at 660 Route 25A, St. James. Currently on view through Dec. 20 is the gallery’s annual juried Member Artist Showcase,
a unique exhibition of original fine art for sale by member artists. A wide variety of media is represented including oil, watercolor, acrylic, pastel, charcoal, mixed media and photography. 631-862-6575.
Northport Public Library
The Northport Public Library is located at 151 Laurel Ave., Northport. In celebration of Veterans and Military Families Month, the library, in conjunction with the East Northport Library, will present an art exhibit titled Ink Stories: Symbols of Service, featuring over 20 veterans, their tattoos and the stories behind them, through the month of November. An opening reception will be held on Nov. 8 at 7 p.m. The exhibit may be seen during regular library hours. Call 631-261-6930.
North Shore Public Library
North Shore Public Library is located at 250 Route 25A, Shoreham. Enjoy a unique photography exhibit, Waiting on the Shoreham Light, by James William through the month of November. Join the photographer for an artist reception hosted by The Friends of the Library on Nov. 3 from 2:30 to 4 p.m. 631-929-4488.
Port Jefferson Free Library
Port Jefferson Free Library is located at 100 Thompson St., Port Jefferson. November’s gallery exhibition will be Wild Places – Wild Things by Chris Bazer with contemporary acrylic art by Laura Hill Timpanaro in the display case. 631-473-0022.
Port Jefferson Village Center
The Port Jefferson Village Center is located at 101A E. Broadway, Port Jefferson. From Nov. 1 to Dec. 3 the center will present an exhibit titled “All In the Family” curated by Gay Gatta on the second floor. Join them for a reception on Nov. 16 from 2 to 4 p.m. Viewing hours are 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. every day. 631-802-2160.
The Setauket Neighborhood House is located at 95 Main Street in Setauket. Through Nov. 19 the venue will present the 39th annual Setauket Artists’ Exhibition. An open house will be held on Nov. 9 and 10 and again on Nov. 15 to 17 to meet the artists and observe an artist demonstration by pastel and oil painter Anthony Davis. 631-3651312, www.setauketartists.com
Smithtown Library
The Smithtown Library’s main building is located at 1 North Country Road, Smithtown. In the Community Room through November will be a photography exhibit by Mery Flahery featuring photos from Greenland, Iceland, Tahiti, Brazil, Chile and Argentina. 631-360-2480.
South Huntington Public Library
South Huntington Public Library is located at 145 Pidgeon Hill Road, Huntington Station. From Nov. 9 to Dec. 4 the library will present Freeze & Counterpoint, a photography exhibit featuring the works of Scott Farrell, Paul Mele and Davie Reichhold. Join the artist for an opening reception on Nov. 9 from 2 to 4 p.m. 631-549-4411.
Call for artists:
The Art League of Long Island, 107 East Deer Park Road, Dix Hills hosts its 56th Holiday Fine Art & Craft Fair on Dec. 7 and 8 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Artists and craftspeople can reserve a spot at this well-attended event, Only original works in all mediums of fine arts and crafts will be accepted into this juried fair. Deadline to apply is Nov. 24. Visit www.artleagueli.org or call 631-462-5400.
Art College Fair
Join the Atelier at Flowerfield, 2 Flowerfield, Suite 15 for an Art College Fair on Saturday, Nov. 2 from 1 to 5 p.m. Take advantage of the opportunity to get your artwork critiqued, make connections with other art students, professional artists and teachers and improve and upgrade your art portfolio with the input of representatives from art institutions, accredited colleges, and creative professionals. This free event is open to any young artist looking for art portfolio reviews, artistic guidance, and information on applying to college art programs. For more information or to register, call 631-250-9009.
PAGE B14 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • OCTOBER 31, 2019
Blast from the past Old Field Nursery School Halloween Party 1949 (loaned from a private collection). The Old Field Nursery School was located in the school building next to the Old Field Club in East Setauket. Photo submitted by Barbara Russell
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OCTOBER 31, 2019 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B15
FEATURE STORY
NEWS AROUND TOWN
Reboli Center honors artistic connections to White House history
Hauppauge Craft & Gift Fair
Time to shop! Hauppauge High School, 500 Lincoln Blvd., Hauppauge will host the 8th annual Hauppauge Craft & Gift Fair on Nov. 9 and 10 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Over 100 exhibitors with arts, crafts and gift items – the perfect opportunity to spend a day shopping with Christmas just around the corner. Refreshments served by the Hauppauge H.S. Robotics Club. Free admission. Call 631-846-1459.
Casino Night
Back by popular demand, Kehillath Shalom Synagogue, 58 Goose Hill Road, Cold Spring Harbor hosts Casino Night on Saturday, Nov. 16 from 7 to 11 p.m. with poker, prizes, raffles and other casino games. $50 per person includes a buffet dinner and dessert, one free drink and $100 in KSS bucks. Visit https:// tinyurl.com/y4524gpd for tickets. For more information, call 631-367-4589.
BY MELISSA ARNOLD
F
or more than three decades, Joseph Reboli dedicated his life to creating art and sharing it with the world. His vibrant oil paintings, many of which focused on scenes in the Three Village area, were beloved not only here on Long Island but around the world for the way they captured the essence of the places he loved. Reboli’s work has been on display in museums, private collections and homes around the world. Since its founding in 2016, the Reboli Center for Art and History in Stony Brook has worked to preserve the legacy of its namesake, who died in 2004, while also highlighting the people and places that most inspired him. Its newest exhibit, on display beginning Nov. 1, will focus on one of Reboli’s unique honors: his inclusion in an exhibit at the White House. “Joe was a very modest guy, but I think he was really honored by this opportunity, and it was one of the highlights of his career,” said Lois Reboli, Joe’s wife of 14 years. In 2000, the nation’s capital was preparing to mark the 200th anniversary of the White House. To celebrate, the White House Historical Association planned an art exhibit and companion calendar titled White House Impressions: The President’s House Through the Eye of the Artist. The association selected 14 well-respected artists to participate, with one artist representing each of the 13 original colonies and the District of Columbia. Among the chosen artists were Reboli, who represented New York for the month of March, as well as realist painter Ken Davies of Massachusetts, Reboli’s former professor at the Paier College of Art, representing February. The other artists were Domenic DiStefano (Pennsylvania, December 1999), Al Alexander (New Jersey, January 2000), Ray Ellis (Georgia, April 2000), John Barber (Virginia, May 2000), Marjorie Egee (Delaware, June 2000), Marilyn Caldwell (Connecticut, July 2000), Tom Freeman (Maryland, August 2000), West Fraser (South Carolina, September 2000), Richard Grosvenor (Rhode Island, October 2000), Carol Aronson-Shore (New Hampshire,
Tribute to ABBA
‘View from the Red Room’ by Joseph Reboli Image courtesy of the Reboli Center
November 2000) and Bob Timberlake (North Carolina, December 2000). Carlton Fletcher of the District of Columbia was granted the cover. “We made the trip down to the White House in 1999, and the artists got to meet with Bill and Hillary Clinton. It was our first trip to the White House, and definitely impressive to us both,” Lois Reboli recalled. “Joe had been in the Army and he was a very patriotic person. A White House photographer walked around with each artist as they decided what they wanted their piece to be — the photographer was the only one allowed to take pictures. Then the artists took the photos home to work.” Reboli was the only artist in the White House exhibit to choose a point of view from inside the building. His painting, “View from the Red Room,” looks outside to the South Portico with the Jefferson Memorial in the background. The Red Room has served a variety of purposes in different presidencies, from a music room to a meeting space, the backdrop for official photos and family dinners. First Lady Jackie Kennedy once said that the view from the Red Room was her favorite in the White House because it looked out on the American people. “When I saw this particular view, I loved the light on the South Portico with the landscape in the background,” Reboli wrote at the time about his choice. “The light’s reflection on the portico contrasted nicely with the dark interior of the room.” The painting from the Red Room will be on display at the Reboli Center, along with the White House calendar and original work from
Participating Artists: Al Alexander Carol Aronson-Shore Marilyn Caldwell Ken Davies Domenic DiStefano Ray Ellis West Fraser Richard Grosvenor Joe Reboli
nine of the 14 artists featured in the 2000 exhibit, said Reboli Center secretary Colleen Hanson. “This exhibit was a huge undertaking, and took a lot of detective work in some cases. Lois has been working on this exhibit for more than 8 months. It was a search for contacts with the artists of the calendar, communicating back and forth, and then finally getting the artwork. This was a rather complicated exhibit to put together because of the number of artists involved, the time span of an event that happened more than 20 years ago, and the fact that during those 20 years not everyone had stayed put and that deaths had occurred,” Hanson said. “We wanted to share the work the artists did for the White House as well as some of their original work to give a greater sense of who they were and their artistic interests.” The White House Calendar exhibit will be on display from Nov. 1 through Jan. 26, 2020 at the Reboli Center for Art and History, 64 Main St., Stony Brook. For more information, call 631- 751-7707 or visit www.rebolicenter.org.
Save the date! Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson welcomes ABBA tribute band, Dancing Dream, in concert on Friday, Nov. 8 at 8 p.m. Enjoy favorites including “Dancing Queen,” “Mamma Mia,” “Super Trouper” and more. Tickets are $55 per person. To order, call 631-928-9100 or visit www.theatrethree.com.
An evening of salsa fundraiser
The Bates House, 1 Bates Road, Setauket hosts an evening of salsa music, dance lessons, delicious food and raffles on Dec. 8 from 2 to 6 p.m. Tickets are $75 per person and include food, wine, beer, dance lessons and entertainment. All proceeds will go to help rebuild Puerto Rico’s natural barrier. Please RSVP by calling 631-608-6988 or email lizkdinaz@gmail.com by Nov. 9.
‘Men Who Cook …’ fundraiser
Majestic Gardens, 420 Route 25A, Rocky Point hosts a “Men Who Cook and Women Who Bake” fundraiser on Thursday, Nov. 14 from 6 to 9 p.m. Sample dishes from area restaurants and enjoy signature dishes prepared by St. Charles Hospital’s staff and Foundation Board members with an open bar and raffle prizes. Tickets are $50 per person/$90 for 2. Proceeds benefit the Comprehensive Epilepsy Center of Long Island at St. Charles Hospital. To order, call 631-474-6465.
Fall Celebration Dinner Dance
Join Ronald McDonald House Charities for its third annual Fall Celebration Dinner Dance at Flowerfield, 199 Mills Pond Road, St. James on Wednesday, Nov. 13 from 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. $115 per person includes cocktails, passed hors d’oeuvres and gourmet food stations. Proceeds will benefit the Ronald McDonald Family Room and future Ronald McDonald House in Stony Brook. To RSVP, visit www.rmhcnym. org. For more information, call 516-775-5683, ext. 129.
PAGE B16 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • OCTOBER 31, 2019
Buttercup’s Dairy Store!
SALE DATES WED. OCT. 30 THROUGH TUES. NOV. 5, 2019 Land-O-Lakes
Tropicana
BUTTER $ 3.99
TWISTER
FRUIT DRINKS $ .99
Store Sales
Doritos
Boar's Head
BACON 4.99 /lb
FLAVORED
TORTILLA CHIPS $ 2.99
$
Good Humor
ICE CREAM BARS 2/$7
59 oz. varieties $4.29 varieties
one pound varieties
Deli Sales BOAR’S HEAD Rotisserie Chicken Breast
©165128
$
6.99 /lb.
$
Produce Sales
BOAR’S HEAD
PREMIUM
Maple Glazed Honey Coat Turkey Breast $
IDAHO POTATOES
1.99
$
7.99 /lb.
BOAR’S HEAD Londonport Roast Beef
BOAR’S HEAD Muenster Cheese
8.99 /lb.
6 pack varieties
/5 lb. bag
US EXTRA FANCY
AVOCADOS FROM MEXICO $
2/ 3 DOLE
CLASSIC ROMAINE OR HONEYCRISP APPLES GREENER SELECTION $ SALAD 2.99 /lb.
5.99 /lb.
$
2/$3
BUTTERCUP’S DAIRY STORE
(Corner of Boyle Road & Old Town Road)
PORT JEFFERSON STATION, NY • 631–928–4607
Check out our weekly sales at Buttercupdairy.com
OPEN MON–FRI 8 AM–8 PM • SAT 8 AM–7 PM • SUN 8 AM–6 PM
9-12 oz.
FALL IS HERE!!
WE HAVE PUMPKINS, PUMPKIN PIES AND MUFFINS!
LOCAL SQUASH, BROCCOLI & CAULIFLOWER!
COOKING COVE
As American as apple pie
BY BARBARA BELTRAMI
Election Day is next Tuesday and it brings with it political polarity the likes of which we’ve never seen until recently. Nobody seems to agree about anything anymore, and most people dare not bring up the subject of politics, lest it bring a shouting match, a détente among friends or family members or worse, the end of a formerly close relationship. Red or blue, Democrat or Republican, we are fortunate enough to have Election Day, an institution as American as, well, apple pie. In its honor I’ve decided to present three different apple pie candidates. You choose the one you think will be best.
Basic Pie Crust
YIELD: Makes two 8- or 9-inch pie crusts. INGREDIENTS: • 21/4 cups flour • 3/4 teaspoon salt • 3/4 cup solid shortening • 4 to 5 tablespoons ice water DIRECTIONS:
In a large bowl, thoroughly combine the flour and salt. With two table knives or a pastry cutter, work the shortening into the flour mixture until flour-coated particles are the size of peas. Sprinkle ice water, one tablespoon at a time, into mixture until it is completely moistened and all dry ingredients have been incorporated. Divide dough in half; shape each half into a disc; lay between two large sheets of waxed paper on a floured surface, and with a rolling pin, roll out a crust approximately 10 inches in diameter. Carefully transfer to pie plate by inverting waxed paper and peeling it off. Use any torn parts to patch irregularities in crust.
Traditional Apple Pie
Make Your Landscape Dreams A Reality In Any Season FU L L S E RV I CE CR E AT I V E L A N D S C A P I N G ©145489
D ES I G N • C O N S TRU C TI O N • M A I N TE N A N CE Established 1960
R.J.K. GAR DENS
547 Lake Avenue • St. James, NY 11780 w w w.rjkgardens.com 631.862.7056
YIELD: Makes one 9-inch pie. INGREDIENTS: • Two 9-inch pie crusts, each crust rolled out to 10-12 inches • ½ cup granulated sugar • ½ cup brown sugar • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon • ¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg • 1½ tablespoons cornstarch • 7 cups pared sliced firm tart apples such as Granny Smith, Winesap or Jonathan • 1½ tablespoons unsalted butter • 2 to 3 tablespoons milk DIRECTIONS:
Preheat oven to 425 F. In a large bowl combine sugars, cinnamon, nutmeg and cornstarch; add apples and toss to coat evenly with dry mixture. Letting edge drape over rim of 9-inch pie plate, line it with one crust. Heap apple mixture evenly over crust; dot with butter. Top with second crust; seal crusts by pinching edges of both crusts together and pressing them down on pie plate rim with fingers or a fork; flute edge. Cut slits in top
Traditional Apple Pie Stock photo
crust, then brush with milk. Bake until crust is golden and apples are soft, about 50 to 60 minutes. If edge of crust starts to get too brown, cover with strips of aluminum foil.
Deep Dish Apple Pie
YIELD: Makes one pie. INGREDIENTS: • Nonstick cooking spray • 6 cups tart, firm apples such as Granny Smith, Greening, Winesap or Jonathan • 2 tablespoons flour • 1 cup sugar • ¼ teaspoon nutmeg • ½ teaspoon cinnamon • Small pinch of salt • 1 tablespoon freshly squeezed lemon juice • Pie crusts for 9-inch pie, rolled out 1⁄₈ inch thick • 2 tablespoons milk • 1 tablespoon unsalted butter DIRECTIONS:
Preheat oven to 425 F. Spray sides and bottom of 10×6×2-inch baking dish. In large bowl thoroughly combine all ingredients except butter. Transfer to baking dish; spread evenly. Dot with butter and top with pastry crust; with small sharp knife, make a few slits in crust, then brush with milk. Bake until crust is golden and apples are soft, about 40 minutes.
Apple Crumb Pie
YIELD: Makes one pie. INGREDIENTS: • Pie crust for 9-inch pie • Filling for traditional apple pie, above • ½ cup unsalted butter • ½ cup brown sugar • 1 cup flour • Pinch of salt DIRECTIONS:
Preheat oven to 400 F. Line pie plate with crust and seal edges against rim. Put apple mixture into crust. In medium bowl combine butter, sugar and flour and salt; mix until crumbly. Spread evenly over apple mixture. Bake 50 minutes, until topping starts to crisp and apples are soft.
OCTOBER 31, 2019 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B17
YOUR TURN
A fiddler’s convention
BY JOHN L. TURNER If you visit just about any salt marsh fringing Long Island’s interdigitated coastline, you’ll experience the fiddlers — they simply can’t be avoided. And while you won’t hear fiddle music, despite the fact there are many hundreds if not thousands of fiddler’s ceaselessly “rosining up their bows,” you will certainly be entertained and amused by male fiddler crabs waving their unusually large claws back and forth like a convention of fiddle players at a folk music festival. This prominent and highly distinctive abnormally large claw possessed by the male fiddler crab, which can weigh half as much as the rest of its body, isn’t used as a defense against predators. Rather, it’s used in combat with rival males and for attracting a mate; male crabs possessing larger claws generally having more success (yes, for this species size appears to matter!). As a female crab walks by a courting male, he vigorously waves the claw back and forth in an attempt to interest her in mating (this behavior also explains their other name — the calling crab). If his display proves successful, she follows him back to his burrow to take a closer look. If she accepts him, the male grabs material to seal the burrow and within it mates with her. He will later emerge, resealing the burrow within which she is incubating the eggs. In a week or two she’ll emerge to release her eggs, generally timing release to coincide with a high tide. They hatch and the larvae float in the water column before eventually settling out; this dispersal helps to maintain genetic diversity among crab populations. Three species of fiddler crabs inhabit Long Island’s coastal environments: the mud fiddler (Minuca pugnax) appears to be the most common, followed by the sand fiddler (Leptuca pugilator) with the red-jointed or brackishwater fiddler (Minuca minax) being the least common. They segregate habitat as their names suggest — mud fiddlers found in the mud-rich, organic areas of salt marshes, sand fiddlers utilizing sandy areas, and the red-jointed fiddlers occurring in areas where waters are more brackish, containing lower salt content. They can be a bit of a challenge to identify but with some practice it can be done. Worldwide, 105 species of fiddler crabs are currently recognized. They are found along the coastlines of every continent, thus having a global distribution, specifically occurring along the coastlines of southern Asia, Africa (especially the east coast), northern Australia, both coasts of Central America, South America and the southern half of North America. They
Two fiddler crabs battle it out at West Meadow Beach last year. Photo by Jay Gao
are distributed within a band of about 40 degrees north and south of the equator; our fiddler populations are among the farthest from the equator, being able to occur this far north due to the provisioning warmth of the Gulf Stream current. The colder waters bathing the coast of Europe preclude their presence there.
If the large claw is lost to a predator or in battle, the smaller claw enlarges to become the ‘fiddler’ claw. One of my favorite places to observe fiddler crabs in the Three Village area is Flax Pond, the wonderful natural area owned by New York State (hence you!) located in Old Field, in the northwestern corner of Brookhaven Town. A newly reconstructed boardwalk bisects the marsh, passing over a tidal marsh and stream. About 100 yards north of its beginning the boardwalk offers an ideal vantage point to view these intertidal crabs feeding below in the salt marsh, the boardwalk itself effectively serving as a blind. If you time the tides right (low tide or falling tide is best), many hundreds of fiddlers will dot the marsh surface — many courting, waving their big claw to and fro while many more take advantage of the exposed mud to feed. If you stroll along one edge of the boardwalk where the crabs can see you, the marsh will appear in motion from the action of countless crabs moving away from you. Other local productive sites include West Meadow Creek and Stony Brook Harbor. The fiddler’s burrow, as much as 2 feet long, is critical to a crab’s survival. Here it finds
protection from predators and shelter from the high tides which twice daily inundate the burrow (they’re safe in their plugged, air-filled chamber). Even if water enters, they can survive since fiddler crabs have both gills allowing them to breathe in water and a primitive lung which allows them to breathe when feeding in the air on the marsh surface. Studies document their burrow is the “hub of the wheel” from which they never move too far. One study, by an Australian researcher, documented that crabs tend to orient themselves to their burrow, not by facing it or having their back to it, but rather sideways with one half of their set of four legs facing the burrow in the event they have to rapidly scurry sideways to gain protection from a predator. If you pay closer attention to the crabs’ enlarged claws, you’ll notice that they’re about evenly split between left-handed and righthanded individuals, with some populations having slightly more of one or the other. If the large claw is lost to a predator or in battle, the smaller claw enlarges to become the “fiddler” claw while the regenerated claw remains small, becoming the feeding claw. Watching crabs feed is fun; the females with two normal size claws feed more efficiently than do the males who can utilize but one claw, since the larger one is useless as a feeding tool. Recently, I watched several females feeding and they brought food to their mouths about once a second for minutes on end. Fiddlers feed on decaying vegetation, bacteria, algae and other organic matter found in the sand or mud, efficiently sifting out with their mouthparts the sand particles which they cast aside in the form of little balls or pellets. Their distinctive stalked eyes provide an alien, other-world look to the species. They
have compound eyes, like dragonflies, with up to 9,000 eye facets that can see into the ultraviolet range of the light spectrum! Being on stalks allows them to have slightly elevated, panoramic vision of the marsh around them, a good thing since they face numerous predators that frequent tidal wetlands. The visual sensors on top of their eyes enable them to see motion from overhead, a key adaptation since they are subject to predation by birds. Speaking of birds, several species routinely eat fiddlers. American bittern and clapper rails feed on them as do a variety of wading birds such as white and glossy ibis and American egret; yellow-crowned night herons, whose diet is largely restricted to crabs, especially focus on fiddler crabs. Diamondback terrapins eat them as do river otters. Being a key part of the estuarine or coastal food chain is one of the important ecological benefits fiddlers provide; they also play a key role in recycling marsh nutrients through their feeding activities. Their burrows, which collectively can number in the many thousands in a large marsh, help to oxygenate the soil, helping marsh plants to grow such as cordgrass and salt hay. Their presence is also a “bio-indicator” — a general indication of a salt marsh’s high ecological health, generally occurring in tidal wetlands free of pollution and contamination. Why not make their acquaintance before they retreat deeply into muddy burrows for their long winter slumber? A resident of Setauket, John Turner is conservation chair of the Four Harbors Audubon Society, author of “Exploring the Other Island: A Seasonal Nature Guide to Long Island” and president of Alula Birding & Natural History Tours.
PAGE B18 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • OCTOBER 31, 2019
Thursday 31
Tide Mill Tour
Times ... and dates
Oct. 31 to Nov. 7, 2019
fee includes 20 auction tickets, door prize ticket, coffee and cake. Call 744-7730.
Comedy Night in Centereach
Centereach Fire Department Company 3, 9 South Washington Ave., Centereach presents its 5th annual Comedy Night starting at 6:30 p.m. Stand-ups include John Santo, Peter Sasso, Tom Whiteley, Debbie Bazza and Rick Morgan. $40 per person includes a buffet dinner, beer, wine, soda, coffee and dessert. For mature audiences only. Call 588-0118 for tickets.
The Huntington Historical Society will present a tour of the Van Wyck-Lefferts Tide Mill at 1:15 p.m. Built in 1795, the mill is one of the best preserved 18th-century tide mills in the country. The 1½-hour tour includes a short boat ride. For ages 12 and up. $20 per person, $15 members. Advance reservations required by calling 4277045, ext. 401.
An evening of Swing Dance
Halloween Festival
Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson hosts the Long Island Comedy Festival showcasing stand-ups Dennis Rooney, Leighann Lord, Joe Starr and Maria Walsh at 8 p.m. Tickets are $45. To order, call 928-9100.
Swing Dance Long Island will hold its monthly dance featuring the Mala Waldron band at The Jazz Loft, 275 Christian Ave., Stony Brook from 8 to 11 p.m. Beginner lesson will be held at 7:30 p.m. Come alone or bring a friend. $15 admission. Call 476-3707.
Long Island Comedy Festival
The Ward Melville Heritage Organization hosts its annual Halloween Festival at the Stony Brook Village Center, 111 Main St., Stony Brook from 2 to 5 p.m. Trick or treat in the shops and restaurants, take part in a costume parade and enjoy games galore. Free. Call 751-2244.
Harvest Moon Raffle
St. James R.C. Church’s Parish Center, 429 Route 25A, Setauket presents its 8th annual Harvest Moon Basket Raffle at 7 p.m. Entry tickets are $10 per person and include five basket raffle tickets, refreshments, snacks and desserts. Bring a pantry item and receive an additional basket raffle ticket (one per ticket). For more information, call 941-4141.
Trunk or Treat in PJS
Kids Clubhouse of Suffolk at Cornerstone Bible Church, 324 Jayne Blvd., Port Jefferson Station invites you to wear your costume and join them as they go from trunk to trunk for a fun, safe, family event from 3 to 5 p.m. Enjoy music, games and peanut-free treats. Call 675-1615.
Halloween Costume Parade
The Town of Huntington will present its annual children’s Halloween Costume Parade starting at Gerard Street in Huntington Village from 4 to 5 p.m. Children of all ages (and their parents or guardians) are welcome to dress in costume and walk in the parade. Parade route will move east down Gerard Street and south down Wall Street, ending where Wall Street meets Main Street. Village merchants will pass out candy to trick or treater’s. Call 351-3112.
Trunk or Treat in Setauket
Three Village Church, 322 Route 25A in East Setauket, hosts a Trunk or Treat event from 6 to 8 p.m. with trick or treating at decorated car trunks, a bounce house, crafts, games and more! Call 941-3670.
Friday 1
Marc Berger Band in concert
Huntington Public Library, 338 Main St., Huntington welcomes the Marc Berger Band (American roots, folk) in concert at 7 p.m. The group will perform songs from its RIDE album as well as selections from its in-the-works album, Folk Music. Open to all. Call 427-5165 to register.
Drumming circle
Join Charlie Holdener and Tom Pumo for a drumming circle at Hope Academy at Little Portion Friary, 48 Old Post Road, Mount Sinai from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Bring your own drums or borrow theirs. Drumming will take place in the Chapel of St. Francis, located on the lower level of the friary. Free will donation. Call 473-0553 for more information.
Sunday 3 A CELESTIAL EVENING
Canta Libre Chamber Ensemble presents a fall concert at the Vanderbilt Planetarium on Nov. 2. Photo from Vanderbilt Museum
Friday Night Face Off
Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson will host Friday Night Face Off, Long Island’s longest running Improv Comedy Show, on the Second Stage from 10:30 p.m. to midnight. $15 per person. Cash only. For ages 16 and up. Call 9289100 or visit www.theatrethree.com.
Saturday 2
Christmas Craft & Vendor Fair
Time to shop! St. Anthony’s High School. 275 Wolf Hill Road, S. Huntington hosts its annual Christmas Craft & Vendor Fair featuring over 100 vendors from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Come enjoy food, shopping and raffles. Free admission. Call 271-2020.
Scales and Tails Pet Fair
Middle Country Public Library, 101 Eastwood Blvd., Centereach hosts the 12th annual Scales and Tails Pet Fair from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Learn about animal adoption organizations from all around Long Island, and maybe bring home a new furry friend! Exhibits and informational booths will be provided by local and regional organizations including rescue groups, shelters and pet therapy programs. Call 585-9393. * All numbers are in (631) area code unless otherwise noted.
Special Needs Fair
Sachem Public Library, 150 Holbrook Road, Holbrook presents a Special Needs Fair from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. In partnership with Sachem SEPTA and Sachem Transitions Connect, the library will host 30 local organizations that provide services for special needs children, teens and adults. Call 588-5024.
Slavic Dinner fundraiser
Join the Resurrection Byzantine Church, 38 Mayflower Ave., Smithtown for its annual Slavic dinner with seatings at 4 and 6:30 p.m. $23 per person includes a traditional dinner of cucumber salad, Troika plate, handmade desserts, coffee and tea. For reservations, call Lisa at 265-6701. Walk-ins welcome.
Canta Libre in concert
The critically acclaimed Canta Libre Chamber Ensemble returns to the Suffolk County Vanderbilt Planetarium, 180 Little Neck Road, Centerport for a fall concert featuring music of the late 19th and early 20th centuries from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Tickets for adults are $20 online at www.vanderbiltmuseum.org, $25 at the door; $15 for children ages 15 and under.
Basket Auction
St. Anselm’s Episcopal Church, 4 Woodville Road, Shoreham hosts a Basket Auction with fantastic prizes and raffles at 6 p.m. $10 admission
Fall Rummage Sale
The Sisterhood of the Huntington Jewish Center, 510 Park Ave., Huntington will sponsor a Fall Rummage Sale today from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Nov. 4 (Bag Day) from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Gently used and new clothing, jewelry, electronics, CDs, DVDs, toys, books, household items and much more. Enter through door in rear of building. Questions? Call 427-1089.
Indoor Yard Sale
Temple Isaiah, 1404 Stony Brook Road, Stony Brook holds an indoor yard sale today from noon to 4 p.m. (no early birds please) and Nov. 4 (Bag Day) from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Something for everyone, from apparel, housewares, tools, collectibles to toys and sporting goods. Many new items. Call 751-8518.
WMHO hosts Festival of Lights
At 1 p.m. the Ward Melville Heritage Organization’s Education & Cultural Center, 97P Main St., Stony Brook will host a Hindu Diwali Festival of Lights celebration featuring a dance performance by the Nartan Rang Dance Academy of Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan and a drumming performance by the Tamil Academy. Enjoy food tastings by the Curry Club. Admission is $15 adults and $12 seniors and children under 12. Call 689-5888 for reservations.
Halloween Hayride
Rescheduled from Oct. 27. The Northport Chamber of Commerce hosts a day of fun at Northport Village Park, 1 Bayview Ave., Northport from noon to 4 p.m. featuring hayrides,
OCTOBER 31, 2019 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B19 music, pumpkin patch, petting zoo, costume contest and refreshments. Call 754-3905 or visit www.northportny.com.
Wednesday 6
Thursday 7
Tribute to John Prine
Have you heard the whole story about America’s fight for independence? Historian Beverly Tyler shares the saga of Long Island’s Setauket-based Culper Spy Ring through artifacts from the Three Village Historical Society’s SPIES! at Jefferson’s Ferry, One Jefferson Ferry Drive, South Setauket at 2 p.m. Valet parking available. Wine and cheese will be served. Free but reservations are required by calling 253-8585.
Middle Country Public Library, 101 Eastwood Blvd., Centereach will host a Veterans Resource Fair from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Visit with local organizations dedicated to helping veterans and their families. Over 30 organizations will be attending the event and the Long Island Cares Veterans Project Outreach unit will also be on hand distributing meals. For more information, call 585-9393.
The Long Island Museum, 1200 Route 25A, Stony Brook presents Souvenirs: The Songs of John Prine in the Carriage Museum’s Gillespie Room at 5 p.m. An array of Prine’s songs will be performed by Emily Duff, Dan Hartmann, Cassandra House, Mary Lamont with Jim Marchese, Pete Mancini, Dave March, Travis McKeveny, Miles to Dayton, Quarter Horse and Russ Seeger. Tickets are $20 in advance at www. sundaystreet.org through Nov. 1, $25 at the door. Call 751-0066.
Monday 4
Fall Rummage Sale See Nov. 3 listing.
Indoor Yard Sale See Nov. 3 listing.
Getting a Civil Service Job
Northport Public Library, 151 Laurel Ave., Northport presents a program, How to Get a Civil Service Job at 10 a.m. A Suffolk County Department of Civil Service representative will discuss civil service employment opportunities in the county, towns, schools, libraries and villages. Open to all. Call 261-6930 for further info.
Culper Spy Ring lecture
Tribute to Schubert
Stony Brook University’s Staller Center for the Arts, 100 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook presents Triumph and Tragedy: Songs from Schubert’s Final Year with distinguished baritone Randall Scarlata and multi-award-winning pianist Gilbert Kalish in the Recital Hall at 7 p.m. The program will feature “Schwanengesang,” a work from Schubert’s final year. Tickets are $44. To order, call 632-2787 or visit www.stallercenter.com.
Israeli and international dancing
RJO Intermediate School, located at the corner of Church Street and Old Dock Road, Kings Park will host an evening of international and Israeli folk dancing every Wednesday (when school is in session) from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. $10 per person. For further details, call Linda at 269-6894.
Veterans Resource Fair
Theater
‘What’s Going on Here?’
Township Theatre Group’s Literary Touring Company presents “What’s Going on Here?” at the Northport Public Library, 151 Laurel Ave., Northport on Nov. 3 at 2 p.m. Come enjoy a trio of short humorous plays about some very unusual events. Open to all. Call 261-6930.
‘Sunset Boulevard’
The John W. Engeman Theater, 250 Main St., Northport will present Andrew Lloyd Webber’s masterwork, “Sunset Boulevard,” now extended through Nov. 3. Impoverished screen writer Joe Gillis stumbles upon faded, silent-screen goddess Norma Desmond’s mansion on Sunset
Historical Society lecture
Miller Place-Mount Sinai Historical Society will hold a general meeting and history lecture titled “Why Did They Do It?” at the Rose Caracappa Senior Center, 739 Route 25A, Mount Sinai at 7 p.m. Learn the true story of how and why ordinary people from Setauket did extraordinary things to help win our independence. Why did our local civilians decide to endanger their lives for a cause? What personal events and tragedies occurred that led to this decision? These and other questions will be answered by guest Art Billadello during this informative presentation. Call 476-5742 or visit www. mpmshistoricalsociety.org.
‘Phantom’
Star Playhouse at Suffolk Y JCC, located at 74 Hauppauge Road in Commack, presents Maury Yeston and Arthur Kopit’s musical “Phantom” on Nov. 9 and 23 at 8 p.m. and Nov. 10, 17 and 24 at 2 p.m. Tickets are $25 adults, $20 seniors, students and members. To order, call 462-9800, ext. 136.
‘Annie’
The Smithtown Center for the Performing Arts, 2 East Main St., Smithtown opens its 2019-20 season with “Annie” from Nov. 9 to Jan. 20. Based on the popular comic strip by Harold Gray, the story follows little orphan Annie on her quest to find the parents who abandoned her on the doorstep of a New York City orphanage. Tickets are $40 adults, $36 seniors, $25 students. Call 724-3700 or visit www.smithtownpac.org.
‘Almost, Maine’
The Carriage House Players, Suffolk County Vanderbilt Museum, 180 Little Neck Road, Centerport continues its fall 2019 season with John Cariani’s “Almost, Maine,” a series of nine vignettes about love, on Nov. 15, 16, 22 and 23 at 8 p.m. and Nov. 17 and 24 at 3 p.m. Tickets are $20 adults, $15 seniors and children. To order, call 516-557-1207 or visit www. carriagehouseplayers.org.
‘Matilda’
The John W. Engeman Theater, 250 Main St., Northport presents the inspiring story of an extraordinary girl in “Matilda the Musical” from Nov. 14 to Dec. 29. Packed with high-energy dance numbers and catchy songs, children and adults alike will be thrilled and delighted by this holiday treat. For ticket information, call 2612900 or visit www.engemantheater.com.
‘A Christmas Carol’
“I will honor Christmas in my heart …” Celebrate the holiday season with the 36th annual production of “A Christmas Carol” at Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson from Nov. 16 to Dec. 28. Follow the miser Ebenezer Scrooge on a journey that teaches him the true meaning of Christmas – past, present and future. Tickets are $35 adults, $28 seniors and students, $20 ages 5 to 12. To order, call 9289100 or visit www.theatrethree.com.
Movie Trivia Night
Do you know a lot about movies? Now you can prove it at Movie Trivia Night at the Cinema Arts Centre, 423 Park Ave., Huntington at 8 p.m. Hosted by Daniel French, tickets are $8, $5 members. Visit www.cinemaartscentre.org.
Tuesday 5 Titanic sites
NYC tour guide Dave Gardner, member of Titanic societies around the world, will share Titanic history including details about the victims and survivors, scandals, Titanic pop culture, monuments to the disaster and more at Sachem Public Library, 150 Holbrook Road, Holbrook at 7 p.m. Open to all. To register, call 588-5024.
TIMES ... and dates Continued on page B20
Book signing
Book Revue, 313 New York Ave., Huntington welcomes back best-selling authors Phil Keith and Tom Clavin as they speak about and sign copies of their new book, “All Blood Runs Red: The Legendary Life of Eugene Bullard – Boxer, Pilot, Soldier, Spy,” at 7 p.m. Call 271-1442.
Boulevard and is persuaded to work on Norma’s “masterpiece.” Features the much-loved score including “With One Look,” “As If We Never Said Goodbye” and “Perfect Year.” Tickets range from $75 to $80 with free valet parking. To order, call 261-2900 or visit www.engemantheater.com.
REVISIT THE MAGIC Marc Strauss and Caitlin Nofi star in Maury Yeston and Arthur Kopit’s hauntingly beautiful musical masterpiece ‘Phantom’ at Star Playhouse in Commack. The show opens on Nov. 9. Photo by Gene Indenbaum
CALENDAR DEADLINE is Wednesday at noon, one week before publication. Items may be mailed to: Times Beacon Record News Media, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733. Email your information about community events to leisure@tbrnewspapers.com. Calendar listings are for not-for-profit organizations (nonsectarian, nonpartisan events) only, on a space-available basis. Please include a phone number that can be printed.
PAGE B20 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • OCTOBER 31, 2019
TBR NEWS MEDIA
Celebrates Our Hometown Heroes To Honor Our Local Servicepeople For Veterans Day We Will Publish A Special Section in the November 7th Issue
Celebrate the 80th anniversary of ‘The Wizard of Oz’ with a screening at the Port Jefferson Free Library on Nov. 1. Photo courtesy of MGM
TIMES ... and dates
Please send us photos of your friends and loved ones in uniform*
Continued from page B19
‘Jacob Marley’s Christmas Carol’
The Carriage House Players, Suffolk County Vanderbilt Museum, 180 Little Neck Road, Centerport continues its season with Tom Mula’s “Jacob Marley’s Christmas Carol” on Dec. 13, 14, 20 and 21 at 8 p.m. and Dec. 15 and 22 at 3 p.m. “Marley was dead, to begin with ...” but what happens to Ebenezer Scrooge’s business partner after that? Tickets are $20 adults, $15 seniors and children. To order, call 516-557-1207 or visit www.carriagehouseplayers.org.
‘Learning to Stay’
THIS FORM MUST ACCOMPANY YOUR PHOTO
Suffolk County Community College, 533 College Road, Selden continues its 2019 theater season at the Shea Theatre in the Islip Arts Building with Jim DeVita’s “Learning to Stay,” in which attorney Elise Sabatto is thrilled when her husband returns home in one piece from his military service in Iraq but discovers he suffers from PTSD, on Nov. 21, 22, 23, 29 and 30 at 8 p.m. and Nov. 24 and Dec. 1 at 2 p.m. Mature content. Tickets are $14 adults, $9.75 age 16 or younger. Call 451-4163 to order.
Name Hometown
(YOUR name and phone # also on back of photo, please)
Branch of Military Rank Years of Service
(-)
Film
year to year
Phone Number (will not appear in paper)
Comsewogue Public Library, 170 Terryville Road, Port Jefferson Station will screen “Tolkien” starring Nicholas Hoult as J.R.R. Tolkien on Oct. 31 at 2 p.m. Open to all. Registration optional by calling 928-1212.
E-mail:
If you would like your picture returned, please enclose a self-addressed stamped envelope. You may also pick up the picture at the newspaper office after it appears in print.
‘The Evil Dead’ ©162671
If you wish to email: • Send photo as jpeg attachment • Include information fields required on this form • Subject line must read: Hometown Heroes Photo • Email to: art@tbrnewsmedia.com OR send or bring your photo to: 185 Route 25, Setauket, NY 11733 by Friday, November 1.
Friday afternoon matinees continue at Emma S. Clark Memorial Library, 120 Main St., Setauket with a screening of “Yesterday” starring Ed Sheeran on Nov. 1 at 2 p.m. Rated PG-13. No registration required. Call 941-4080.
‘The Lion King’
Northport Public Library, 151 Laurel Ave., Northport presents “The Lion King” (2019) on Nov. 1 at 2 p.m. Rated PG. Open to all. Call 2616930.
‘The Wizard of Oz’
Join the Port Jefferson Free Library, 100 Thompson St., Port Jefferson for a silver screen showing of “The Wizard of Oz” (1939) starring Judy Garland on Nov. 1 at 2 p.m. No registration necessary. Open to all. Call 473-0022.
SBU Fall Movies
Stony Brook University’s Staller Center for the Arts continues its Fall Movies series on Nov. 1 with “The Farewell” at 7 p.m. (in English and Mandarin subtitles, rated PG-13) and “The Art of Self Defense” at 9 p.m. (rated R). Tickets are $10 adults, $7 seniors and children 12 and under. Call 632-2787 or visit www.stallercenter. com to order.
‘Blade Runner’
‘Tolkien’
*Those who are newly graduated, currently serving, veterans and deceased service members. Pictures of military service animals are also welcome for inclusion.
‘Yesterday’
The Cinema Arts Centre, 423 Park Ave., Huntington will screen Sam Raimi’s iconic horror film “The Evil Dead” (new 4K remaster) on Oct. 31 at 10 p.m. followed by a costume contest. Tickets are $12, $7 members. Visit www. cinemaartscentre.org.
Night Owl Cinema presents a screening of “Blade Runner” starring Harrison Ford at the Cinema Arts Centre, 423 Park Ave., Huntington on Nov. 1 at 10 p.m. Rated R. Tickets are $12, $7 members. Visit www.cinemaartscentre.org.
‘Some Like It Hot’
Celebrate St. James continues its Classic Movie Nights series at the historic St. James Calderone Theater, 176 Second St., St. James with a screening of “Some Like It Hot” (1959) on Nov. 2 at 7 p.m. Drinks and desserts will be served. Tickets are $25, $20 seniors. To purchase, call 862-4615 or visit www.celebratestjames.org.
* All numbers are in (631) area code unless otherwise noted.
OCTOBER 31, 2019 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B21
Religious D irectory
Assemblies Of God
STONY BROOK CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY Connecting to God, Each Other and the World 400 Nicolls Road, E. Setauket 631–689–1127 • Fax 631–689–1215 www.stonybrookchristian.com PASTOR TROY REID Weekly Schedule Sunday Worship w/nursery 10 am Kidmo Children’s Church • Ignited Youth Fellowship and Food Always to Follow Tuesday Evening Prayer: 7 pm Thursday Morning Bible Study w/Coffee & Bagels: 10 am Friday Night Experience “FNX” for Pre K-Middle School: 6:30 pm Ignite Youth Ministry: 7:30 pm Check out our website for other events and times
Byzantine Catholic RESURRECTION BYZANTINE CATHOLIC CHURCH
38 Mayflower Avenue, Smithtown NY 11787 631–759–6083 resurrectionsmithtown@gmail.com www.resurrectionsmithtown.org FATHER TYLER A. STRAND, ADMINISTRATOR, JOSEPH S. DURKO, CANTOR Divine Liturgy: Sundays at 10:30 am Holy Days: See website or phone for information Sunday School Sundays at 9:15 am Adult Faith Formation/Bible Study: Mondays at 7:00 pm. Men’s Prayer Group Wednesdays at 7 pm A Catholic Church of the Eastern Rite under the Eparchy of Passaic.
Catholic ST. GERARD MAJELLA ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
300 Terryville Road, Port Jefferson Station 631–473–2900 www.stgmajella.org REV. GREGORY RANNAZZISI, PASTOR Mass: Saturday 5:00pm Sunday: 7:30am, 9:00am & 11:00am Weekday Mass: 9:00am Confessions: Saturday 4:00-4:45 or by appointment Baptism and Wedding arrangements can be made by calling the Parish Office Thrift Shop: Mon-Fri 10am-4pm Saturday 10am-2pm
©160545
INFANT JESUS ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
110 Myrtle Ave., Port Jefferson, NY 11777 631-473-0165 • Fax 631-331-8094 www.www.infantjesus.org REVEREND PATRICK M. RIEGGER, PASTOR ASSOCIATES: REV. FRANCIS LASRADO & REV. ROLANDO TICLLASUCA To schedule Baptisms and Weddings, Please call the Rectory Confessions: Saturdays 12:30-1:15 pm in the Lower Church Religious Ed.: 631– 928-0447 Parish Outreach: 631–331-6145 Weekly Masses: 6:50 and 9 am in the Church, 12 pm in the Chapel* Weekend Masses: Saturday at 5 pm in the Church,
5:15 pm in the Chapel,* Sunday at 7:30 am, 10:30 am, 12 pm, and 5 pm in the Church and at 8:30 am, 10 am, and 11:30 am (Family Mass) in the Chapel* Spanish Masses: Sunday at 8:45 am and Wednesday at 6 pm in the Church *Held at the Infant Jesus Chapel at St. Charles Hospital
ST. JAMES ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
429 Rt. 25A, Setauket, NY 11733 Phone: 631–941–4141 • Fax: 631–751–6607 Parish Office email: parish@stjamessetauket.org Mission Statement: Formed as the Body of Christ through the waters of Baptism, we are Beloved daughters and sons of the Father. We, the Catholic community of the Three Village area, are a pilgrim community on Camino-journeying toward the fullness of the Kingdom of God, guided by the Holy Spirit. Nurtured 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; so that in Jesus’ name, we may be a welcoming community, respectful of life in all its diversities and beauty; stewards of and for God’s creation; and witnesses to Faith, Hope and Charity. REV. JAMES-PATRICK MANNION, PASTOR REV. GERALD CESTARE, ASSOCIATE PASTOR REV. JOHN FITZGERALD, IN RESIDENCE Office Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9am - 4pm; Sat. 9 am - 2 pm Weekday Masses: Monday – Saturday 8:00 am Weekend Masses: Saturday (Vigil) 5:00 pm (Youth) Sunday 8:00am, 9:30 am (family), 11:30 am (choir) Baptisms: Contact the Office at the end of the third month (pregnancy) to set date Matrimony: contact the office at least 9 months before desired date Reconciliation: Saturdays 4:00 – 4:45 pm or by appointment 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 Lady of Wisdom Regional School: 631- 473-1211 Our Daily Bread Sunday Soup Kitchen 3 pm
ST. LOUIS DE MONTFORT ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
75 New York Avenue, Sound Beach, N.Y. 11789 Parish Office: 631-744-8566; FAX 631-744-8611 Parish Website: www.stlouisdm.org Office Hours: 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. REV. MSGR. CHRISTOPHER J. HELLER, PASTOR REV. LENNARD SABIO, ASSOCIATE PASTOR REV. MSGR. DONALD HANSON, IN RESIDENCE REV. FRANCIS PIZZARELLI, S.M.M., PARISH ASSISTANT REV. HENRY VAS, PARISH ASSISTANT Weekday Masses: Monday through Friday: 8:30 am in the Chapel Weekend Masses: Saturday Vigil: 5 pm Sunday: 7:30 am; 9:00 am; 10:30 am; 12 noon. Baptisms: Most Sundays at 1:30 pm. Please contact Parish Office for an appointment. Reconciliation: Sat.: 4-4:45 pm or by appointment. Anointing of the Sick: by request.
Holy Matrimony: Contact Parish Office at least six months in advance of desired date. Religious Education: Contact 631-744-9515 Parish Outreach: Contact 631-209-0325 Our Lady of Wisdom Regional School: Contact 631-473-1211.
Congregational MT. SINAI CONGREGATIONAL UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
233 North Country Road, Mt. Sinai • 631–473–1582 www.msucc.org • REV. DR. PHILIP HOBSON We invite you to worship with us in our judgement-free sacred space. Come experience our tradition, where freedom of thought and exchange of ideas are encouraged and celebrated. Join us as we put our Christian values into practice, following the example of Jesus, by caring for our neighbors near and far, as they suffer food insecurity, homelessness, political and domestic violence, gender discrimination and other injustices. We know it is God who put the wiggle in the children, so bring them with you so they can participate in worship and in our lively Sunday School program. Service and Sunday School on Sundays at 10:00 AM. Meditative service at 8:30 AM on Sundays. Thanksgiving Beach Worship Service November 28, 2019 at 9:00 am Cedar Beach on Harbor Beach Road, Mt. Sinai A brief service will be led by Dr. Rev. Phil Hobson of Mt. Sinai Congregational Church, and we’ll sing with the gulls and the breaking waves. Service begins at 9 am, left of the main building. All are welcomed!
Episcopal ALL SOULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH
“Our little historic church on the hill” across from the Stony Brook Duck Pond Main Street, Stony Brook • 631–751–0034 www.allsouls–stonybrook.org • allsoulsepiscopalchurch@verizon.net Sunday Holy Eucharist: 8 and 9:30 am All Souls now offers a 30 minute Inter-Faith Service every Wednesday Morning at 7:00 AM This is a small eclectic Episcopal congregation that has a personal touch. We welcome all regardless of where you are on your spiritual journey.Walk with us.
CAROLINE CHURCH OF BROOKHAVEN
THE REV. CN. DR. RICHARD D. VISCONTI, RECTOR 1 Dyke Road on the Village Green, Setauket Web site: www.carolinechurch.net email: office@carolinechurch.net • 631–941–4245 Thursday Noon: H.E. and Healing Service Saturday Service: 5 pm Holy Eucharist Sunday Services: 8 am - Rite I; 9:30 am - Rite II (family Service) 9:30 Children’s Chapel & Sunday School Classes Sunday School Classes now forming; Call 631-941-4245 to register. Let God walk with you as part of our family– friendly community.
CHRIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
127 Barnum Ave., Port Jefferson • 631–473–0273 email: ccoffice@christchurchportjeff.org www.christchurchportjeff.org FATHER ANTHONY DILORENZO: PRIEST–IN–CHARGE Sunday Services: 8 am & 10 am Sunday Eucharist:8 am and 10 am; Wednesday 10 in our chapel Sunday School and Nursery Registration for Sunday School starting Sunday after the 10 am Eucharist
Our ministries: Welcome Friends on Mondays at 5:00 pm AA meetings on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 7 pm Bible Study on Thursdays at 10 am. Friday: Hands of Love knitting, crocheting and stitching ministry 10 am - 12 pm 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. JAMES EPISCOPAL CHURCH
490 North Country Road, St. James, NY 11780 631-584-5560 www.stjamesstjames.org Parish Office email: stjamesc@optonline.net THE REV. DAVID GABLE, INTERIM PRIEST Where is God calling us? To grow in faith through Scripture and prayer, To build relationships in Christ, To serve one another and the world. Sunday Holy Eucharist: 8 a.m. (Rite I) and 9:30 a.m. (Rite II, with music) Prayers for healing after both 8 and 9:30 worship Children welcome at all services, religious formation offered for all levels Active Choir, Altar Guild, Lay Eucharist Ministry, Fellowship and Bible Study programs We are a friendly community church, and we welcome everyone to join us to worship, learn, serve, share and have fun!
ST. JOHN’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
“To know Christ and to make Him known” REV. DUNCAN A. BURNS, RECTOR ALEX PRYRODNY, ORGANIST & CHOIR DIRECTOR 12 Prospect St, Huntington ● (631) 427-1752 On Main St. next to the Library www.stjohnshuntington.org ● LIKE us on Facebook Sunday Worship: 8:00 am – Rite I Holy Eucharist 10:00 am – Rite II Choral Holy Eucharist Cultural Events Series: “Jazz on Tap” - Alex Pryrodny & Alex McDonald Sunday, November 10th at 4pm “Year’s End” - the Rambling Readers & Guests Sunday, November 27th at 4pm “Sing Noel!” - Christmas Music, Stories & Cheer Sunday, December 15th at 7pm All are Welcome!
Evangelical THREE VILLAGE CHURCH
To Know Christ and To Make Him Known 322 Main Street, East Setauket www.3vc.org • 631-941–3670 LEAD PASTOR JOSH MOODY Sunday Worship Schedule: 9:15 am: Worship Service, Sunday School (Pre-K–5TH grade), Nursery 10:30 am: Bagels & Coffee 11:00 am: Worship Service, Nursery, We Offer Weekly Teen Programs, Small Groups, Women’s & Men’s Bible Studies, Alpha, Stephen Ministry, Faith Preschool For Ages 3 & 4, Mommy & Me, Join Us As We Celebrate 60 Years Of Proclaiming The Good News Of Jesus Christ!
Continued on next page •
PAGE B22 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • OCTOBER 31, 2019
Religious D irectory
CHURCH OF THE ASSUMPTION
Jewish
TEMPLE ISAIAH (REFORM)
430 Sheep Pasture Rd., Port Jefferson 11777 Tel: 631-473-0894 • Fax: 631-928-5131 www.kimisis.org • goc.assumption@gmail.com REV. DEMETRIOS N. CALOGREDES, PROTOPRESBYTER Sunday Services: Orthros 8:30 Am - Divine Liturgy 10 Am Services Conducted In Both Greek & English* Books Available To Follow In English* Sunday Catechism School, 10 Am - 11 Am* Greek Language School, Tuesdays 5 Pm - 8 Pm* Bible Study & Adult Catechism Classes Available* Golden Age & Youth Groups* Thrift Store* Banquet Hall Available For Rental* For Information Please Call Church Office*
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 MARCEY WAGNER RABBI EMERITUS STEPHEN A. KAROL RABBI EMERITUS ADAM D. FISHER CANTOR EMERITUS MICHAEL F. TRACHTENBERG Sabbath Services Friday 7:30 pm And Saturday 10 am Religious School • Monthly Family Service Monthly Tot • Shabbat Youth Groups • Senior Club Adult Education Sisterhood Brotherhood • Book Club-More
Jewish
Lutheran–ELCA
CHABAD AT STONY BROOK
“Judaism With A Smile” 360 Nicolls Road, East Setauket Next To Fire Dept. 631-585–0521 • 800-My-Torah • www.chabadsb.com RABBI CHAIM & RIVKIE GROSSBAUM RABBI MOTTI & CHAYA GROSSBAUM RABBI SHOLOM B. & CHANIE COHEN Membership Free Weekday, Shabbat & Holiday Services Highly Acclaimed Torah Tots Preschool Afternoon Hebrew School Camp Gan Israel • Judaica Publishing Department Lectures And Seminars Living Legacy Holiday Programs Jewish Learning Institute Friendship Circle For Special Needs Children The Cteen Network N’shei Chabad Women’s Club • Cyberspace Library Chabad At Stony Brook University – Rabbi Adam & Esther Stein
KEHILLAT CHOVEVEI TZION
764 Route 25A, Setauket (At The Old Victoria House) Mail: P.O. Box 544, E. Setauket, NY 11733 631-689-0257 (leave a message & you’ll get a call back) Visit Us At: www.kct.org. We Are A Traditional Conservative Congregation, Run Entirely By Our Members. We Have Services every Shabbat And All Jewish Holidays, Along With Other Community Activities, With Participation Opportunities For All Jews. Join Us Shabbat Morning And You’ll Get A Warm Welcome! KCT - An Old Fashioned Friendly Shul
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
HOPE LUTHERAN CHURCH AND ANCHOR NURSERY SCHOOL
46 Dare Road, Selden 631-732-2511 Emergency Number 516-848-5386 REV. DR. RICHARD O. HILL, PASTOR ERIC FARET, VICAR Email: office@hopelutheran.com Website: www.hopeluth.com Holy Communion Is Celebrated Every Weekend Saturday Evenings 5 pm. Sundays at 8, 9:30 & 11 am. Sunday Services Are Live-Streamed Through Our “Friends Who Like Hope Lutheran Church” Facebook Group. Sermons are posted on Youtube.com at “Pastor Richard O Hill” Children’s Programs Sunday School (3-11) 9:30 am, Saturday Sparklers 5 pm Anchor Nursery School Tuesday-Thursday 9:15 am - 12:15 pm. Tuesdays Hugs Toddlers (ages 18 mos-3 yrs) 9:15 am Hugs (ages 3-5yrs.) 12:15 pm Wednesdays - Kids’ Club 4:15 pm
ST. PAUL’S EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH
309 Patchogue Road, Port Jefferson Station 631-473-2236 REV. PAUL A. DOWNING PASTOR E-mail: Pastorpauldowning@yahoo.com Pastor’s cell: 347–423–1523 (voice or text) www.StPaulsLCPJS.org facebook.com/stpaulselca Service Times: Sundays 8:30 am and 10:30 am Adult Bible Study 9:30 am Sunday School during 10:30 am service Holy Communion offered at both services Fridays: Power of Prayer Hour 10:30 am Meal provided by Welcome Friends Sundays at 1:00 pm and Wednesdays at 5:45 pm We continue to seve the Port Jefferson Community Now in our 102nd year
Would You Like to Join Our
Religious Directory? For More Information Please Call
631-331-1154
Lutheran–LCMS
MESSIAH LUTHERAN CHURCH
Messiah Preschool & Day Care 465 Pond Path, East Setauket 631-751–1775 • www.messiahny.com PASTOR STEVE UNGER We welcome all to join us for worship & fellowship. It would be wonderful to have you with us. Sunday Worship Services: 8:15, 9:30 & 11am (All with Holy Communion), Sunday School at 9:30am, Sunday Bible Study at 9:30am We have NYS Certified Preschool & Day Care
Methodist BETHEL AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
33 Christian Ave/ PO 2117, E. Setauket NY 11733 631-941–3581 REV. GREGORY L. LEONARD–PASTOR Sunday Worship: 10:30 Am Adult Sunday School 9:30 Am Lectionary Reading And Prayer: Wed. 12 Noon Gospel Choir: Tues. 8 Pm Praise Choir And Youth Choir 3rd And 4th Fri. 6:30 Pm
ST. JAMES UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
532 Moriches Road, St. James 11780-1316 REV. PRINCE DONKOR, PASTOR 631-584-5340 Sunday Service and Sunday School at 10 am Tuesday Evening is Prayer Group at 7:30 pm Wednesday Morning Bible Study at 7:30 am Wednesday Afternoon Bible Study at 1 pm Wednesday Evening Choir Practice at 7:30 pm AA Ministry Every Monday and Wednesday Evenings at 6:30 pm Upcoming Events Open Hearts Open Minds
SETAUKET UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
160 Main Street, Corner Of 25a And Main Street East Setauket • 631–941–4167 REV. STEVEN KIM, PASTOR www.setauketumc.org sumcny@aol.com Sunday Worship Service & Church School: 10 am Holy Communion 1st Sunday Of Month Mary & Martha Circle (Women’s Ministry) Monthly On 2nd Tuesday At 1pm
STONY BROOK COMMUNITY CHURCH UNITED METHODIST 216 Christian Ave., Stony Brook, 11790 Church Office: 631-751-0574 stonybrookcommunitychurch@gmail.com www.stonybrookcommunitychurch.org REV. CHUCK VAN HOUTEN, PASTOR Connecting People To God, Purpose And Each Other Sunday Worship: 10:00 am Sunday School: 10:00 am Renewing, Restoring, Reviving For The 21st Century!
Presbyterian
THE REV. DR. RICHARD GRAUGH Email: office@pjpres.org Website: www.pjpres.org Sunday Worship Service -10am (Childcare Provided) Christian Education-Sunday School: 10:15am Coffee and Fellowship 11:15am Bible Study: Tuesday 3pm Holy Communion 1st Sunday of the Month Meals Provided by Welcome Friends every Friday at 6pm Call the church office or visit our website for current activities and events. NYS Certified Preschool and Daycare - Noah’s Ark The purpose of First Presbyterian Church of Port Jefferson is, with God’s help, to share the joy and 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.
SETAUKET PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
5 Caroline Avenue ~ On the Village Green 631- 941-4271 Celebrating and Sharing the love of God since 1660. THE REV. KATE JONES CALONE, INTERIM PASTOR THE REV. ASHLEY MCFAUL-ERWIN, COMMUNITY OUTREACH PASTOR www.setauketpresbyterian.org Email: setauketpresbyterian@verizon.net Sunday Worship: at 9:30 a.m. (childcare available) Sunday school at 9:45 (grades pre-k through 6) Adult Education at 11 am Outreach Ministries: Open Door Exchange Ministry: Furnishing homes...Finding hope www.facebook.com/welcomefriendssoupkitchen Welcome Friends Soup Kitchen Prep Site: tfolliero@yahoo.com All are welcome to join this vibrant community of worship, music (voice and bell choirs), mission (local, national and international), and fellowship. Call the church office or visit our website for current information on church activities. SPC is a More Light Presbyterian Church and part of the Covenant Network of Presbyterians working toward a church as generous and just as God’s grace.
Quakers RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
4 Friends Way, St. James 631–928-2768 • www.cbquakers.org Worship Sundays: Sept. - June 11 am , July - Aug. 10:00 am We gather in silent worship seeking God • the Inner Light • Spirit. We are guided by the Quaker testimonies of simplicity, peace, integrity, community, equality, and stewardship. Weekly coffee and fellowship, monthly discussions, Religious Education for children.
Unitarian Universalist UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP AT STONY BROOK
380 Nicolls Road • between Rte 347 & Rte 25A 631–751–0297 • www.uufsb.org • office@uufsb.org REV. MARGARET H. ALLEN (minister@uufsb.org) Sunday Service: 10:30 am
Religious Education at UUFSB: Unitarian Universalism accepts wisdom from many sources and offers non-dogmatic religious education for children from 4-18 to foster ethical and spiritual development and knowledge of world religions. Classes Sunday mornings at 10:30 am. Childcare for little ones under four. Senior High Youth Group meetings Sunday evenings. Registration is ongoing. For more information: dre@uufsb.org.
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.
©160546
Greek Orthodox
OCTOBER 31, 2019 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B23
SBU SPORTSWEEK OCTOBER 31 TO NOVEMBER 6, 2019
TOMORROW IS FRIDAY – WEAR RED ON CAMPUS!
STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY
Men’s soccer topples UAlbany in overtime
Redshirt junior Gabriel Fernandes (North Babylon) scored the game-winning goal in the 98th minute to propel the Stony Brook men’s soccer team past UAlbany, 3-2 on Oct. 26 from LaValle Stadium. The goal was Fernandes’ first game winner of his career. With the win, Stony Brook improves to 4-92 (1-4-0 AE) while UAlbany falls to 8-5-1 (3-2-0 AE). Highlights: Senior Jarred Dass (Marabella, Trinidad) opened the scoring in the 11th minute when he snuck one past Albany keeper Isac Hjerten. Freshman Sebastian Rojek (Wayne, N.J.) notched the assist. The visitors equalized in the 24th minute on a goal by Austin DaSilva. In the 63rd minute, junior Kori Cupid (Chaguanas, Trinidad) scored off a free kick by sophomore Trausti Birgisson (Kopavogur, Iceland) to put the Seawolves in front. Just three minutes later, the Great Danes leveled it at two on a goal by Kaio DaSilva.
Albany had a shot on goal in the 88th minute but freshman keeper Edmond Kaiser (Karlsuhe, Germany) kept the contest scoreless. In overtime, sophomore Jack Valderrabano (New York City) nearly won it for the Seawolves but his shot in the 94th minute was saved. In the 98th minute, junior Joey Landicino (Yorktown) put the ball in front of the net, where Fernandes buried a redirected kick to win it for the Seawolves. “I’ve said it all season, the guys have continued to pick themselves up even when things haven’t been going their way and they did that tonight. They came out and battled from the start. I thought we looked like the aggressors, we wanted to get the three points and I’m just so proud of how the guys battled for the entire night,” said head coach Ryan Anatol. Up next, the Seawolves hit the road for two games to conclude the regular season, starting with a trip to UMass Lowell on Nov. 2. Opening kick is set for 7 p.m.
Home games for SBU Seawolves WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL.
Nov. 1 vs. Binghamton Nov. 15 vs. New Hampshire
FOOTBALL.
Nov. 9 vs. Towson Nov. 23 vs. UAlbany
6:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m.
WOMEN’S SOCCER. Nov. 3 vs. America East Quarterfinals Nov. 7 vst America East Semifinals Nov. 10 vs. America East Final MEN’S BASKETBALL
Nov. 5 vs. Yale Nov. 11 vs. Farmingdale State Dec. 2 vs. Manhattan Dec. 7 vs. Brown
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL Nov. 8 vs. Manhattan Nov. 21 vs. Iona Nov. 24 vs. Sacred Heart Dec. 3 vs. Molloy
2 p.m. 2 p.m. TBA TBA TBA 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.
6:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 2 p.m. 6:30 p.m.
Jordan Gels (6) got 14 kills during last Friday ‘s game. Photo from SBU
Women’s volleyball earns big conference win over Hartford
Gabriel Fernandes, left, celebrates last Saturday’s victory with his teammates. Photo from SBU
Women’s soccer takes down New Hampshire 2-0
After a two hour and 17 minute rain delay, the Stony Brook women’s soccer team and the New Hampshire Wildcats came out with their regular pregame routines with just 66 minutes to work with instead of the usual 90. It was the Seawolves who made the best of it, scoring a pair of goals in the second half to clinch a home game in the 2019 America East Women’s Soccer Tournament, defeating the visiting Wildcats 2-0 at LaValle Stadium on Sunday afternoon. “It was obviously very difficult circumstances with the heavy rain and over twohour delay after 21 minutes. It’s tough to stay focused but that’s one of the strengths of our team. They are staying
Photo by Jim Harrison/SBU Athletics
focused and can handle difficult circumstances, which is not easy, but they did a terrific job,” said head coach Tobias Bischof. Up next, the regular season finale is set for Halloween
night in West Hartford, Conn. The Seawolves and Hawks will kick off at 6 p.m. on Oct. 31 with a win or draw clinching Stony Brook’s second consecutive America East regular season title.
The Stony Brook volleyball team returned to Pritchard Gym on Oct. 25 in full force, earning a huge America East victory over Hartford (20-25, 25-21, 25-17, 25-22). After dropping the first set to the Hawks, the Seawolves rebounded and won the next three to put the match away. As the season starts down the home stretch, Stony Brook (8-13, 3-3 AE) is now tied for third in the conference standings along with Hartford. “Tonight we put emphasis on effort on defense and transition scoring and I thought this result is a direct reflection of working well in those areas. We managed their weapons and were able to keep Hartford uncomfortable most of the night by taking aggressive swings. Looking forward to another great week of training before being back home next Friday,” said head coach Kristin Belzung. One of three Seawolves to hit double digits in kills, senior Jordan Gels (Lewis Center, Ohio) paced the squad with a seasonhigh 14 as well as a season-high four block assists. Classmates Kendra Harlow (St. James) and Liz Pulver (Temecula, Calif.) backed her up with a combined 25 kills between the two of them. Senior LeAnne Sakowicz (Wauconda, Ill.) had a productive night as well, putting up 50 assists. Junior Kiani Kerstetter (Cardiff, Calif.) led all players on the court with 21 digs and redshirt freshman Enitan Omolewa (Laurel, Md.) paced both teams in block assists. Don’t miss your chance to see the Seawolves take on Binghamton when they return home to Pritchard Gym on Nov. 1. Opening serve is set for 6:30 p.m.
Content for this page provided by Stony Brook University and printed as a service to our advertiser.
PAGE B24 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • OCTOBER 31, 2019
ish” imes v a l “ T Y the N on,
SEISKAYA BALLET’S
Nutcracker
Lips
KIDS KORNER
6 Spectacular Performances
December 19 thru 22 Thursday at 7PM Friday at 7PM Saturday at 2PM & 7PM Sunday at 1PM & 6PM
Staller Center for the Arts Stony Brook University Box office (631) 632-ARTS
Join the Staller Center’s Instrument Petting Zoo for its first concert on Nov. 3, a perfect way to introduce young children to classical instruments and music! Photo courtesy of Staller Center
Programs
www.nutcrackerballet.com $5 discount on all tickets purchased before 12/1/19.
Creatures of the Night 162711
“ENCHANTING” Parks, Newsday
Museum Scholars
Come down to Sweetbriar Nature Center, 62 Eckernkamp Drive, Smithtown for a post Halloween nocturnal adventure on Nov. 1 at 7 p.m. Meet some nocturnal animals that enjoy the cover of darkness and explore the trails at the Center. Dress warmly and bring a flashlight. For families with children ages 7 and up. $10 per person. Call 979-6344.
Storytime at Barnes & Noble
SHELTER PET OF THE WEEK MEET KING ROJOR! This week’s shelter pet is King Rojor, a mixed-breed dog rescued from the meat trade in Thailand and now safe at Kent Animal Shelter. King, who weighs approximately 35 pounds, has a very sweet disposition, and even though he is missing one of his back legs he is still a happy-golucky fella! He gets around just fine, and loves to go for walks with the shelter’s volunteers. This sweet boy comes neutered, microchipped and up to date on his vaccines. Kent Animal Shelter is located at 2259 River Road in Calverton. The adoption center is open seven days a week from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. For more information on King Rojor and other adoptable pets at Kent, call 631-727-5731 or visit www.kentanimalshelter.com.
Barnes & Noble in Lake Grove at 600 Smith Haven Mall and in East Northport at 4000 E. Jericho Turnpike will present a reading of “The Crayons’ Christmas” by Drew Daywalt on Nov. 2 at 11 a.m. An activity will follow. Free. Call 724-0341 (LG) or 462-0208 (EN).
Mad Scientist Lab
Conduct different science experiments using household items at the Mad Scientist Lab at Caleb Smith State Park Preserve, 581 W. Jericho Turnpike, Smithtown on Nov. 2 from 10 to 11:30 a.m. You never know what you might create, split in half or even blow up! This family program is recommended for ages 7 and up. $4 per person. Advance registration required by calling 265-1054.
Family Hour Sundays
The Heckscher Museum of Art, 2 Prime Ave., Huntington will present a Family Hour Sunday on Nov. 3 from 1 to 2 p.m. Join museum educator Tami Wood for a family-friendly museum tour and enjoy hands-on gallery projects. For ages 5 to 10. $5 per child, parents pay museum admission. Advance registration required by calling 351-3250.
Instrument Petting Zoo concert
Photo from Kent Animal Shelter
The Staller Center Instrument Petting Zoo steps out of schools and libraries and onto the Staller Center Recital Hall stage, 100 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook, for an introduction to their instruments and a performance of the symphonic fairy tale Prokofiev’s “Peter and the Wolf” that kids will love on Nov. 3 at 3 p.m. Tickets are $20 per person. To order, please call 632-2787 or visit www.stallercenter.com.
New! Join the Long Island Museum, 1200 Route 25A, Stony Brook for a new 5-week after-school museum course for grades K through 2. Students will join museum staff for an exploration of galleries and exhibits on view at LIM. Gallery experiences will inspire students to utilize a wide scope of art and history concepts as a springboard for the creative process. The program will culminate with a student-curated exhibit and reception for families to attend on the last class date. Students will leave with a portfolio of their work. Sessions will be held on Thursdays, Nov. 7, 14, 21, Dec. 5 and 12 from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. Fee is $95 per child, $85 members. Register by Nov. 1 by calling 751-0066, ext. 212.
Theater
‘The Wizard of Oz’
John W. Engeman Theater, 250 Main St., Northport continues its Children’s Theater season with “The Wizard of Oz” now extended through Nov. 3. Join Dorothy Gale as she ventures down the yellow brick road to see the Wizard. The classic story by L. Frank Baum is presented as a fresh new musical comedy, containing adventure, friendly characters and humor. Tickets are $15. To order, call 261-9700 or visit www. engemantheater.com.
Preschool Fair
Emma S. Clark Memorial Library, 120 Main St., Setauket presents its annual Preschool Fair on Saturday, Nov. 2 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Representatives from preschools in the Three Village and surrounding area will be on hand to answer questions. Open to all. No registration required. Call 941-4080.
All numbers are in (631) area code unless noted.
OCTOBER 31, 2019 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B25
COVER STORY
Halloween contest celebrates the spirit of the season Thanks to all the children who entered Times Beacon Record News Media’s annual Halloween contest and for helping to make it so successful! This year we had 35 entries making it very difficult to choose a winner. Congratulations to Madison T. of Wading River and sisters Gabriella and Gianna I. of Stony Brook for being this year’s winners and receiving a family four-pack of tickets to Port Jefferson Cinemas in Port Jefferson Station. Special thanks to PJ Cinemas for sponsoring our contest! See all of this year’s entries on this and the following pages and be sure to be on the lookout for our upcoming Thanksgiving Coloring Contest. Happy Halloween!
By Madison T., age 6, Wading River
By Gabriella I., age 6, Stony Brook
By Aura V., age 6, Stony Brook
By Gianna I., age 7, Stony Brook
By Stella J., age 7, Setauket
By Lina L., age 6, Miller Place
By Julia D., age 8, E. Northport
PAGE B26 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • OCTOBER 31, 2019
By Juliana N., age 10, Ridge
By Allison V., age 9, Lake Ronkonkoma
By Andrew C., age 6, Rocky Point
By Bobby B., age 6, Ridge
By Cecilia S., age 5, Stony Brook
By Charlee H., age 5, Sound Beach
By Chloe L., age 5, Commack
By David Z., age 6, East Setauket
By Dominick L., age 6, Mount Sinai
By Emily M., age 5½, Stony Brook
By Ethan M., age 5½, Stony Brook
By Gabrielle S., age 9, Rocky Point
By Gracie L., age 8, Stony Brook
By Hannah F., age 6, Port Jeff. Station
By James D., age 6, Miller Place
By Jessica S., age 7, Port Jefferson
OCTOBER 31, 2019 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B27
W By Alexa D., age 9, Shoreham
By Luke H., age 8, Stony Brook
By Violet A., age 7, Northport
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PAGE B28 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • OCTOBER 31, 2019
ACCEPTED HERE • Ancient Ginger
• Fratelli’s
• Anthony’s
• Friendly’s
Coal Fired Pizza Stony Brook
• Applebee’s Lake Grove
Wolfie Wallet is the easy, safe and convenient way for the more than 35,000 Stony Brook University students, faculty and staff to make purchases at local shops or on campus using their Stony Brook ID card.
• Bagel Express Setauket
• Greek To-Go! Stony Brook
• The Greene Turtle
Smithtown
• Jamba
• The Bench
• L.I. Bagel Cafe
• Buffalo Wild Wings
• Luigi’s Pizzeria
Port Jefferson Stony Brook
• Burger King Stony Brook
• Cabo Fresh Stony Brook
• Chocology Stony Brook
COMING SOON!
• CVS Pharmacy
stonybrook.edu/wolfiewallet
Stony Brook
• Barito
Centereach and Miller Place
Specials and discounts are available at some stores. Check our website for weekly updates. If you are a merchant and would like to participate in the Wolfie Wallet program, visit us at
Stony Brook
Setauket
• CVS Pharmacy
Port Jefferson Station
COMING SOON!
• Domino’s Pizza Stony Brook
• Domo Sushi Setauket
Wolfie Wallet cannot be used for the purchase of alcohol, tobacco or gift cards. Participating merchants as of 10/15/19. Stony Brook University/SUNY is an affirmative action, equal opportunity educator and employer. 19090423
Stony Brook Stony Brook Setauket
• Margaritas Cafe
Port Jefferson Station
• O Sole Mio Stony Brook
• Pumpernickle’s Deli
Setauket
• Shake Shack Lake Grove
• The Steam Room Port Jefferson
• Stop & Shop
Centereach and Setauket
• Strathmore Bagels
Stony Brook
163513
St. James