ARTS&LIFESTYLES TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA DEC. 24, 2020
A holiday story
Park the Christmas Puppy ✴ B11
INSIDE: Photo of the Week B10 • Weekly Calendar B14 • Winners of Stony Brook Film Festival announced B15
The holidays may look a bit different this year.
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PAGE B2 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • DECEMBER 24, 2020
But our commitment to your child’s health hasn’t changed. Now, more than ever, you need to know that your medical care is world-class, safe and readily available. We have more than 180 pediatric physicians in over 30 specialties. A dedicated 24/7 children’s Emergency Room. A Level III NICU. Eleven convenient office locations. And a family centered children’s hospital where the quality of care is something you can always count on. Wishing you and your family healthy and happy holidays.
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DECEMBER 24, 2020 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B3
THE WINE CONNOISSEUR
Armagnac — France’s other great brandy
BY BOB LIPINSKI
Armagnac is a brandy distilled from wine and is often confused with its close cousin, Cognac. However, A r m a g n a c ’s taste is fuller and richer and is described as less “burning” and more mellow. Armagnac comes from the Gascony region in southwest France, 150 miles southeast of Bordeaux and 100 miles south of Cognac. Armagnac has been distilled in Gascony since 1411, making it the world’s oldest brandy. In the mid-1600s the Dutch first exported it, and the aging of brandy in wooden barrels seems to have been practiced since 1730. In 1936 the Armagnac region was divided into three appellations: Haut-Armagnac, Bas-Armagnac, and Armagnac-Ténarèze. The best quality Armagnac comes from the Bas-Armagnac appellation, which produces over 55 percent of the region’s brandy. Armagnac is produced principally from Ugni Blanc, Colombard, Folle Blanche, and Baco Blanc grapes. The wine is distilled to produce a colorless brandy with a powerful bouquet and flavor described as “firewater.” Approximately 95 percent of the brandy undergoes only one distillation. Armagnac is aged in black, tannic-rich, 400-liter oak barrels from the Monlezun forest of France in the Bas-Armagnac. However, wood from Limousin, Allier, and Tronçais forests are being used because Monlezun forests have dwindled. After aging, the brandies of different appellations and ages are blended. Following blending, the strength of the Armagnac is reduced to 40 or 43 percent alcohol by distilled water. This is followed by adding caramel for color “adjustment” if needed. Armagnac is then kept in large
In this edition
Editor Heidi Sutton
Columnists
Photo from Pixabay
barrels for additional months to allow for the curing or “marrying” of the blend. Legislation states that a vintage date on the label of a bottle of Armagnac indicates year of harvest, not year of distillation.
Label designations
• VS or three-star. Minimum three years old • VSOP or Napoléon. Minimum four years old • XO or Hors d’Age. Minimum 10 years old • XO Premium. Minimum 20 years old • Vintage. Minimum 10 years old
Taste
Depending on the type and age, Armagnac can have aromas and flavors of flowers, caramel, toffee, cinnamon, coconut, hazelnuts, dried fruit, fresh fruit (apricot, orange, peach, plum, prune, raspberry), maple syrup, roses, spices, violets, and vanilla.
Serving Armagnac
Armagnac has traditionally been regarded as an after-dinner drink, but in some countries, it is served before or with a meal. Purists prefer to enjoy the older, finer Armagnac unmixed. Armagnac should be served in short tulip-shaped glasses tall enough to allow a reasonable aroma to build, yet small enough to be cradled in one’s hand. Bob Lipinski is the author of 10 books, including “101: Everything You Need To Know About Whiskey” and “Italian Wine & Cheese Made Simple” (available on Amazon. com). He conducts training seminars on Wine, Spirits, and Food and is available for speaking engagements. He can be reached at www. boblipinski.com OR bkjm@hotmail.com.
Movie Review .......................................B10 Photo of the Week ..............................B10 Power of 3 ............................................... B5 Religious Directory .......................B16-18 SBU Sports .............................................B19 Wine and Cheese .................................. B3 Your Turn ...............................................B11
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Barbara Beltrami Nancy Burner, Esq. Elof Axel Carlson Daniel Dunaief David Dunaief, M.D. Matthew Kearns, DVM Bob Lipinski
Nancy Marr Fr. Frank Pizzarelli Lisa Scott Linda M. Toga, Esq. John Turner
Editorial
Melissa Arnold Tara Mae Irene Ruddock Jeffrey Sanzel
Special thanks to all the photographers who have contributed to our Photo of the Week feature and to the Smithtown Animal Shelter for our Shelter Pet of the Week column.
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HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM ARTS & LIFESTYLES!
PAGE B4 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • DECEMBER 24, 2020
CROSSWORD PUZZLE THEME: Board Games
CLUES ACROSS
NYPA cartoon
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SUDOKU PUZZLE
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1. Dealer's hand, in cribbage 5. Wade's opponent 8. Galsworthy's "The Forsyte ____" 12. Nevada city 13. Prima donna 14. Weasel's cousin 15. Makes collar for RBG 16. Between the id and super-ego, pl. 17. Can be hot or cold, meteorologically speaking 18. *Real estate-related board game 20. Elvis Presley's "____ and Fortune" 21. Preface, e.g. 22. *A top one is a game piece in #18 Across 23. Open carriage 26. Having a malignant influence 30. "Wheel of Fortune" request 31. Stay clear of 34. Knife wound 35. Touch of color 37. Computer network acronym 38. Awaken 39. Wet nurse 40. Castrated man 42. Yale-____ College, Singapore 43. Aircraft's additional equipment holder 45. They're denoted in red 47. Eric Stonestreet on "Modern Family" 48. Allergic reaction to bee sting 50. Amusing 52. *Word game 55. Don McLean: "Drove my chevy to the ____" 56. Joie de vivre 57. Charlie Parker's nickname 59. Bake an egg 60. Knocks on the door, e.g. 61. 1970s hairdo 62. Milk ____, candy 63. Swallowed 64. Reason to cram
Answers to last week’s puzzle:
Year in Review
Directions: Fill in the blank squares in the grid, making sure that every row, column and 3-by-3 box includes all digits 1 through 9.
Answers to last week’s SUDOKU:
CLUES DOWN 1. Tube in old TV 2. Paper unit 3. "He's Just Not That ____ You" 4. Herzegovina's partner 5. Excessive sternness 6. Convex molding 7. *Candy Land difficulty level 8. *Napoleon-themed game of strategy 9. Niels Bohr's study object 10. Autry or Wilder 11. Simon's former partner 13. Performed comprehensively or in-____, pl. 14. Butcher's refuse 19. Beginning of sickness 22. TV classic "Hee ___" 23. *Board game island ready for settlers 24. True inner self 25. Linear particle accelerator, for short 26. Take-out handout 27. Half human-half goat, pl. 28. February "People," e.g. 29. *Game with rooks 32. *Game involving Mr. Boddy's murderer 33. Chewbacca's sidekick 36. *a.k.a. draughts 38. Type of parallelogram 40. Liberty Tree, e.g. 41. Vacuums, e.g. 44. Extra shirt, e.g. 46. Sabbath, alt. sp. 48. Audienceís approval 49. Window treatment 50. Bloody king of Israel 51. "Metamorphoses" poet 52. Serum, pl. 53. *The Game of ____ 54. Makes mistakes 55. Acid drug 58. Part of URL * THEME RELATED CLUE
Answers to this week’s puzzle will appear in next week’s newspaper and online on Friday afternoon at www.tbrnewsmedia.com, Arts and Lifestyles
DECEMBER 24, 2020 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B5
KNOWLEDGE SEEKERS
CSHL’s Michael Schatz and apprentice create Star Trek device Harnessing the Technology of our Research Giants
BY DANIEL DUNAIEF
Michael Schatz, Adjunct Associate Professor at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, saw some similarities to his own life when he met the then 14-year old Aspyn Palatnick. Palatnick, who was a student at Cold Spring Harbor High School, had been developing games for the iPhone. When he was that age, Schatz, who is also a Bloomberg Distinguished Associate Professor of Computer Science and Biology at Johns Hopkins University, stayed up late into the evening programming his home computer and building new software systems. Meeting Palatnick eight years ago was a “really special happenstance,” Schatz said. He was “super impressed” with his would-be young apprentice. When he first met Schatz, Palatnick explained in an email that he “realized early on that he would be an invaluable mentor across research, computer science, and innovation.” Palatnick was looking for the opportunity to apply some of the skills he had developed in making about 10 iPhone games, including a turtle racing game, to real-world problems. Knowing that Palatnick had no formal training in computer science or genetics, Schatz spent the first several years at the white board, teaching him core ideas and algorithms. “I was teaching him out of graduate student lecture notes,” Schatz said. Schatz and Palatnick, who graduated with a bachelors and master’s from the University of Pennsylvania and works at
SPOTLIGHTING DISCOVERIES AT (1) COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB (2) STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY & (3) BROOKHAVEN NATIONAL LAB
Facebook, have produced a device which they liken to a “tricorder” from Star Trek. Using a smart phone or other portable technology, the free app they created called iGenomics is a mobile genome sequence analyzer. The iPhone app complements sequencing devices Oxford Nanopore manufactures. A mobile genetic sequencer not only could help ecologists in the field who are studying the genetic codes for a wide range of organisms, but it could also be used in areas like public health to study the specific gene sequences of viruses like SARS-CoV-2, which causes COVID-19. In a paper published in GigaScience, Schatz and Palatnick describe how to use iGenomics to study flu genomes extracted from patients. They also have a tutorial on how to use iGenomics for COVID-19 research. While developing the mobile sequencing device wasn’t the primary focus of Schatz’s work, he said he and others across numerous departments at Johns Hopkins University spent considerable time on it this summer, as an increasing number of people around the world contracted the virus. “It very rapidly became how I was spending the majority of my time,” said Schatz. Palatnick is pleased with the finished product. “We’ve made DNA sequence analysis portable for the first time,” he explained in an email. Palatnick said the app had to use the same algorithms as traditional genomics software running on supercomputers to ensure that iGenomics was accurate and practical. Building algorithms
Michael Schatz and Aspyn Palatnick Photo by Lauryl Palatnick
capable of rendering DNA alignments and mutations as users tapped, scrolled and pinched the views presented a technical hurdle, Palatnick wrote. While Schatz is optimistic about the vaccinations that health care workers are now receiving, he said a mass vaccination program introduces new pressure on the virus. “We and everyone else are watching with great interest to see if [the vaccinations] cause the virus to mutate,” Schatz said. “That’s the big fear.” Working with the sequences from Nanopore technology, iGenomics can compare the entire genome to known problematic
sequences quickly. Users need to get the data off the Oxford Nanopore device and onto the app. They can do that using email, from Dropbox or the web. In prior viral outbreaks, epidemiologists traveled with heavier equipment to places like West Africa to monitor the genome of Ebola or to South and Central America to study the Zika virus genome. “There’s clearly a strong need to have this capability,” Schatz said. Another iGenomics feature is that it allows users to airdrop any information to people, even when they don’t have internet access. Schatz urged users to ensure that they use a cloud-based system
with strong privacy policies before considering such approaches, particularly with proprietary data or information for which privacy is critical. As for COVID-19, people with the disease have shown enough viral mutations that researchers can say whether the strain originated in Europe or China. “It’s kind of like spelling mistakes,” Schatz said. “There are enough spelling mistakes where [researchers] could know where it came from.” Palatnick described iGenomics as an “impactful” tool because the app has increased the population of people who can explore the genome from institutional researchers to anyone with an iPhone or iPad. In the bigger picture, Schatz is broadly interested in learning how the genome creates differences. “It’s important to understand these messages for the foods we eat, the fuels we use, the medicines we take,” Schatz said. “The next frontier is all about interpretation. One of the most powerful techniques is comparing one genome to another.” Schatz seeks out collaborators in a range of fields and at numerous institutions, including Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. Schatz and W. Richard McCombie, Professor at CSHL, are studying the genomes of living fossils. These are species that haven’t evolved much over millions of years. They are focusing on ancient trees in Australia that have, more or less, the same genetic make up they did 100 million years ago. As for Palatnick, Schatz described his former intern and tricorder creating partner as a “superstar in every way.” Schatz said it takes considerable fortitude in science, in part because it takes years to go from an initial idea on a napkin to something real. Down the road, Schatz wouldn’t be surprised if Palatnick took what he learned and developed and contributed to the founding of the next Twitter or Facebook. “He has that kind of personality,” Schatz said.
PAGE B6 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • DECEMBER 24, 2020
HELPING YOU NAVIGATE TO OPTIMAL HEALTH
EXCITING UPDATE:
Two of my research studies were recently published by the American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine showing that my whole food plant based LIFE diet reduces inflammation, the root of many chronic diseases.
David Dunaief, M.D. Integrative Medicine
• A Whole Body Approach •
We Are Accepting
NEW PATIENTS
I am open for In-Person Appointments, taking all necessary precautions with masks, meticulous disinfecting, and air purifiers with HEPA filters. I am also still offering Zoom and phone appointments.
Reversing, Preventing & Treating Chronic Disease and Managing Weight by Connecting Conventional Medicine with Lifestyle Modifications Our Philosophy is simple. We believe wellness is derived through nutritional medicine and lifestyle interventions that prevent and treat chronic diseases. Medications have their place - and in some cases can be lifesaving. However, there’s no medication without side effects. The goal should be to limit the need for medications - or minimize the number of medications you take on a regular basis. You are not limited by your genes. Fortunately, most diseases are based primarily on epigenetics, which are environmental influences, and not on genetics. Epigenetics literally means above or around the gene. In epigenetics, lifestyle choices impact gene expression. Just because your first degree relatives may have had a disease, you are not predestined to follow suit. We are specialists who will partner with your primary care physician. A standard medical education does not integrate enough nutritional medicine and other lifestyle interventions. We bridge that gap.
We use evidence-based medicine to guide our decision-making. The amount of research related to nutrition and other lifestyle issues continues to grow rapidly, with many studies showing significant beneficial effects on health. We treat each patient as an individual. We will work with you to develop a plan that allows you to take a proactive role in managing your own health. The health outcomes are worth the effort. Is disease reversal possible? Absolutely! Study evidence has found this to be true, and many of our patients have experienced reversal of diabetes, autoimmune disorders, migraines, and cardiovascular disease, just to mention a few. In many cases, because of their exceptional results, our patients have been able to reduce or eliminate their medications. Read more common questions and answers on medicalcompassmd.com. Dr. Dunaief has written over 2,000 medical research articles that have been published in Times Beacon Record Newspapers. We invite you to tune in to our new weekly Medical Compass health video at tbrnewsmedia.com
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David Dunaief, M.D. Clinician, Researcher, Author and Speaker Dr. Dunaief was also recently published in The New York Times and appeared on NBC, News 12 Long Island and News 12 Brooklyn.
Preventing and Reversing Chronic Conditions and Diseases Including: High Blood Pressure • High Cholesterol/Triglycerides Heart Disease • Stroke • Diabetes Type 1 and Type 2 Obesity • Polymyalgia Rheumatica (PMR) Rheumatoid Arthritis • Hypothyroid • Hyperthyroid Lupus • Multiple Sclerosis • Sjogren’s Syndrome Raynaud’s Syndrome • Inflammatory Bowel Disease Ulcerative Colitis • Crohn’s Disease • Psoriatic Arthritis Celiac Disease • Psoriasis • Sarcoidosis, And More “I lost 135 lbs and have kept it off for several years with the guidance, recipes and encouragement that Dr. Dunaief has provided. Also my inflammation has been reduced significantly. This means I was able to stop my two immunosuppressives for rheumatoid arthritis. I have no more pain or swelling in my joints and can move my fingers normally. This is a surreal experience. I also have reduced my CA125 by tenfold to well within the normal range associated with my BRCA1 ovarian cancer.” – C.H.
Dr. Dunaief builds a customized plan for each patient - he knows that “no body is the same.”
DECEMBER 24, 2020 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B7
MEDICAL COMPASS
The statin debate continues ...
Do primary prevention benefits outweigh the risks? Statins were first approved in the U.S. over 30 years ago. Today, they are one of the most commonly prescribed medications in the United States. Yet, many in the medical community still disagree about who should be taking a statin and for what purpose; some believe that more patients should be on this class of drugs, while others think it is overprescribed. This is one of the By David most polarizing Dunaief, M.D. issues in medicine — probably rightly so. The biggest debate is over primary prevention with statins. Primary prevention is treating people with high cholesterol and/ or inflammation who may be at risk for a cardiovascular event, such as a stroke or heart attack. Currently, recommendations of the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association do not align with those of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, which is currently reviewing its own recommendations because of data updates. Most physicians agree that statins have their place in secondary prevention — treating patients who have had a stroke or heart attack already or who have coronary artery disease. We will examine benefits and risks for the patient population that could take statins for primary prevention. On one side are those who point to statins’ benefits: reduced cancer risk, improved quality of life and lowered glaucoma risk. On the other, we have those who note statins’ side effects: increased diabetes risk, fatigue and cataracts, to name a few. Let’s look at some of the evidence.
Effect on cancer
A study published in The New England Journal of Medicine involved 300,000 Danish participants and investigated 13 cancers. It showed that statin users may have a 15 percent decreased risk of death from cancer (1). As you can imagine, this news was greeted with excitement. However, there were major limitations with the study. First, researchers did not control for smoking, which we know is a large contributor to cancer. Second, it was unknown which of the statin-using population might have received conventional cancer treatments, such as radiation and chemotherapy. Third, the dose
Waterloo Eye Study (4). Statins exacerbate the risk of cataracts in an already high-risk group, diabetes patients.
Quality of life and longevity: a mixed bag
Statins may be overprescribed for the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease. Stock photo
of statins did not correlate to risk reduction. In fact, those who took 1 to 75 percent of prescribed statin levels showed more benefit in terms of cancer mortality risk than those who took more. We need a better-designed trial to determine whether there really is an effect. Another study, a meta-analysis of 13 observational studies, showed that statins may play a role in reducing the risk of esophageal cancer. This is important, since esophageal cancer, especially adenocarcinoma that develops from Barrett’s esophagus, is on the rise. The results showed a 28 percent risk reduction in this type of cancer. The authors of the study surmise that statins may have a protective effect (2). Although there is an association, these results need to be confirmed with randomized controlled trials. Aspirin has about the same 30 percent reduction in colorectal cancer, yet is not recommended solely for this use because of side effects.
Eye diseases: mixed results
In two common eye diseases, glaucoma and cataracts, statins have vastly different results. In one study, statins were shown to decrease the risk of glaucoma by five percent over one year and nine percent over two years (3). It is encouraging that the longer the duration of statin use, the greater the positive effect on preventing glaucoma. Statins also help to slow glaucoma progression in patients suspected of having early-stage disease at about the same rate. This was a retrospective study analyzing statin use with patients at risk for open-angle glaucoma. We need prospective (forward-looking) studies. With cataracts, it is a completely different story. Statins increase the risk of cataracts by over 50 percent, as shown in the
In a meta-analysis involving 11 randomized controlled trials, statins did not reduce the risk of all-cause mortality in moderate to high-risk primary prevention participants (5). This study analysis involved over 65,000 participants with high cholesterol and at significant risk for heart disease. However, in this same study, participants at high risk of coronary heart disease saw a substantial improvement in their quality of life with statins. In other words, the risk of a nonfatal heart attack was reduced by more than half and nonfatal strokes by almost half, avoiding the potentially disabling effects of these events.
Fatigue effect
Some of my patients who are on statins ask if statins can cause fatigue. A randomized controlled trial published in the Archives of Internal Medicine reinforces the idea that statins increase the possibility of fatigue (6). Women, especially, complained of lower energy levels, both overall and on exertion, when they were blindly assigned to a statintaking group. The trial had three groups: two that took statins, simvastatin 20 mg and pravastatin 40 mg; and a placebo group. The participants were at least 20 years old and had LDL (bad) cholesterol of 115 to 190 mg/dl, with less than 100 mg/dl considered ideal. In conclusion, some individuals who are at high risk for cardiovascular disease may need a statin, but with the evidence presented, it is more likely that statins are overprescribed in primary prevention. Evidence of the best results points to lifestyle modification, with or without statins, and all patients with elevated LDL (bad) cholesterol should make changes that include a nutrient-dense diet and a reduction in fat intake, as well as exercise.
References:
(1) N Engl J Med 2012;367:1792-1802. (2) Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2013 Jun; 11(6):620– 629. (3) Ophthalmology 2012;119(10):20742081. (4) Optom Vis Sci 2012;89:1165-1171. (5) Arch Intern Med 2010;170(12):1024-1031. (6) Arch Intern Med 2012;172(15):1180-1182. Dr. David Dunaief is a speaker, author and local lifestyle medicine physician focusing on the integration of medicine, nutrition, fitness and stress management. For further information, visit www.medicalcompassmd.com.
Photo from Stony Brook Medicine
Stony Brook Medicine 'forward triage' site reopens due to COVID-19 spike
In response to the growing number of COVID-19 cases on Long Island, Stony Brook University Hospital has reopened its “forward triage” site at the Ambulatory Care Pavilion. Patients who arrive at the emergency room between 1 p.m. and 9 p.m. are asked to stay in their cars, where a member of the staff will determine the correct emergency care setting. Hospital staff will then direct patients to go to the main Emergency Department or to the coronavirus triage location. The site aims to limit patients with suspected COVID-19 from co-mingling with people coming to the hospital for other medical services. After seeing nearly 2,600 patients, Stony Brook Medicine closed its “forward triage” site back in May after a decline in patient visits. The site staffed with board-certified emergency medicine physicians and emergency medicine nurses was open from March 9 to May 4. The state drive-through testing site located in Stony Brook University’s South P Lot off Stony Brook Road remains open. Residents looking to get tested must make appointments in advance by phone at 888-364-3065 or online at www.coronavirus.health. ny.gov/covid-19-testing. Walk-ins are not accepted and will not be seen. The site is open seven days a week. Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Please send your community events to leisure@tbrnewspapers.com
PAGE B8 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • DECEMBER 24, 2020
COMMUNITY NEWS
Theatre Three receives $1,000 donation
COVID-19 made it impossible for the traditional Run to the Port Jeff Brewing Company happen in 2020, but the Brewery and the Greater Long Island Running Club [GLIRC] banded together to stage a “virtual” 15K, 10K, and 5K that raised $1000 for the 2020 charitable beneficiary Theatre Three in downtown Port Jefferson. A check for $1000 was presented to Theatre Three at the Brewing Company on Dec. 18. Theatre Three is a not-for-profit dedicated to developing an appreciation for the art of live theater among the residents of Long Island. The theater presents a diverse program of fresh and imaginative revivals of classics and modern plays and is an arena for previously unproduced plays, and works towards their future development. Theatre Three provides an environment in which talent can be nurtured, encouraged, and trained in the pursuit of a professional career. During the pandemic, there have been no live performances at Theatre Three, so the Brewery and GLIRC were happy to be able to help the theatre stay afloat in these troubled times. Pictured at the presentation, from left, is GLIRC Race Director Ric DiVeglio; Theatre Three Board of Directors member Brian Hoerger; Theatre Three Managing Director Vivian Koutrakos; Theatre Three Executive Artistic Director Jeffrey Sanzel; Port Jeff Brewing Company owner Mike Philbrick; and GLIRC Executive Director Sue Fitzpatrick.
Changing jobs, switching employers, or retiring? Don’t leave your 401(k) or 403(b) unattended Request a free copy of Wells Fargo Advisors’ 401(k) report and let’s discuss ways to help ensure your hard-earned retirement dollars continue to work for you.
‘Clueless’ returns to local theaters
As if! In celebration of its 25th anniversary, Clueless heads to the big screen Sunday, Dec. 27 and Monday, Dec. 28. It's not easy being the most popular and glamorous girl at Beverly Hills High. Especially when you're the envy of scheming Betties, persistent Barneys, and teachers who go postal when you turn your homework in late! Yet somehow 15-year-old Cher (Alicia Silverstone, above) keeps it all together, even finding time for extracurricular projects like finding a love match for her debate class teacher, and giving a dowdy friend a fashion makeover. But Cher's tidy world starts to unravel with the sudden appearance of two total Baldwins, and Cher's square but cute "ex-stepbrother" (Paul Rudd). Now Cher is about to learn that when it comes to love, she's ...well, Clueless. This special anniversary event includes a bonus featurette about the extraordinary dialogue in the film. Rated PG-13. Participating local cinemas include AMC Stony Brook 17 in Stony Brook, Farmingdale Multiplex Cinemas and Island 16 Cinema De Lux in Holtsville. For movie times and to order tickets, visit www. fathomevents.com.
It’s important that you understand your options so that you can take action now to help ensure your retirement savings continue working for you.
Michael Greene Senior VP - Investment Officer 70 N Country Rd Ste 301 Port Jefferson, NY 11777 Direct: (631) 642-8912 michael.greene@wfadvisors.com wfadvisors.com/michael.greene
Each option has advantages and disadvantages and the option that is best depends on your individual circumstances. You should consider features such as investment options, fees and expenses, and services offered. A Financial Advisor can help educate you regarding your choices so you can decide which one makes the most sense for your specific situation. Before you make a decision, read the information provided in this piece to become more informed and speak with your current retirement plan administrator, and tax professional before taking any action. 166582
DECEMBER 24, 2020 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B9
BUSINESS NEWS
Comings and Goings
Teachers opens in Stony Brook
Town of Brookhaven Supervisor Ed Romaine joined executives and board members from Teachers Federal Credit Union to celebrate the grand opening of their latest branch located at 1113 North Country Road in Stony Brook on Dec. 8. The company has 32 branches throughout Long Island, Queens and Manhattan. “I welcome the new Stony Brook branch of Teachers to Brookhaven Town. The company has been very active in serving our community for many years and they continue to be a great partner as a co-sponsor of our paper shredding and e-waste recycling events. Congratulations and good luck in the new location,” said Sup. Romaine. Pictured from left, Teachers President/ CEO Brad Calhoun, Teachers Board Member April Neitlich, Supervisor Ed Romaine and Teachers Board Member Tim Southerton.
Estate Planning webinar
Burner Law Group presents a free webinar, New Year! New President! New Estate Plan? on Thursday, Jan. 7 at 2 p.m. Join them as they discuss how the change in administration may affect your existing estate plan and what you need to revisit in light of proposed changes in the law. Register at burnerlaw.com/webinars/. Questions? Call 631-941-3434.
Golino joins Friends of Karen board Photo by Katherine Yamaguchi
Ralph’s Rottens in Centereach celebrates new location with ribbon cutting Dec. 18 New York State Assemblyman Doug Smith, Brookhaven Town Councilman Kevin LaValle and Robert Martinez, Chief of Staff, 4th Legislative District attended the ribbon cutting for the new location for Ralph’s Rottens Candy & Nut Shoppe in Centereach. Owner
Sally Speciale cut the ribbon surrounded by the Greater Middle Country Chamber of Commerce, family, friends and staff. The new store, located at 115 Mark Tree Road, specializes in nuts, pretzels, candies, chocolates, gift baskets, specialty trays and more.
Hours are Monday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday to Thursday from 11 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday from noon to 4 p.m. For more information, call 631-981-3051 or visit www. thecandyshop.com.
Huntington Hospital earns highest AMA ranking in heart attack care
Huntington Hospital has been recognized with American Heart Association’s Mission: Lifeline gold plus award for its high-quality care of people with severe heart attacks. The hospital earned this distinction by providing life-saving, time-sensitive patients who experience ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI), the most serious type of heart attack caused by a blockage of blood flow to the heart. National guidelines recommend that balloon angioplasty be performed within 90 minutes or less of arrival to the hospital. This is the first time the hospital has achieved the gold designation; Huntington Hospital received the silver award last year. “This achievement was made possible through Huntington Hospital’s partnership between its emergency department and cardiac catheterization laboratory teams, as well as our strong relationship with our community first responders,” said Lawrence Ong, MD, vice president of cardiology for Northwell Health’s Eastern region and chairman of cardiology at Huntington Hospital. The hospital has two cardiac catheterization laboratories as well as two electrophysiology areas.
Friends of Karen, the not-for-profit that provides support to critically-ill children and their families, has appointed Christopher Golino of Mt. Sinai to their Long Island Advisory Board. The announcement was Christopher Golino made on Dec. 14. “Knowing firsthand the life-changing impacts of cancer, Christopher values Friends of Karen as a lifeline of support, so no family has to face their child’s illness alone. From diagnosis and throughout his treatment, Christopher has been a strong ambassador for Friends of Karen. As an Advisory Board member, he looks forward to making a difference and enhancing the mission of Friends of Karen,” said the press release.
PJ Lobster House moves down port
Photo from Huntington Hospital
The PJ Lobster House has a new home. Formerly located on the corner of Main Street and North Country Road in Upper Port, owner James Luciano had to move when The Gitto Group purchased the property for a planned apartment complex. The new space, located at 134 Main St., in the former Ocean 88 restaurant location in the Harbor Square Mall, had a soft opening on Dec. 9. The restaurant and fish market offers dine-in, curbside pickup or no-contact delivery. Call 631-473-1143 for more info. Send your business news to leisure@tbrnewspapers.com.
PAGE B10 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • DECEMBER 24, 2020
MOVIE REVIEW
PHOTO OF THE WEEK
Photo from Netflix
Viola Davis celebrates the power of the blues in Ma Rainey's Black Bottom
REVIEWED BY JEFFREY SANZEL
THE LITTLE CAROLER Tom Caruso of Smithtown snapped this photo while in Port Jefferson on Nov. 27. He writes, 'It was nighttime and my wife and son were strolling down the streets in the village taking in the holiday sights. I spotted this doll in a shop window and the lighting perfectly painted the doll's face against the darkened store's interior. I couldn't resist it.'
Send your Photo of the Week to leisure@tbrnewspapers.com
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August Wilson, one of the foremost American dramatists, created the tenplay cycle The Pittsburgh Plays. The pieces explored different elements of the AfricanAmerican experience, each work set in a different decade. The second play (and third chronologically) was Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom. Inspired by blues singer Ma Rainey, it was set in a fictional recording session in Chicago. It opened on Broadway in 1984, receiving strong press and running for 276 performances. Netflix now offers an excellent film that enhances the stage production. George C. Wolfe has skillfully and sensitively directed a screenplay by Ruben Santiago-Hudson. Santiago-Hudson has wisely drawn the majority of the script from Wilson but has opened it up, most notably with a prologue showing Ma Rainey’s southern performance roots and the shift of African Americans from south to north in the Great Migration. The action shifts to the studio where the musicians await the arrival of Ma Rainey. The artists smoke, drink, and banter, and philosophize. But what seems like random chatter is a reflection of social injustice then and now. The men offer stories and anecdotes, with this slice of life elevated by Wilson’s honest and poetic words and exceptional performances. Serving as the leader is guitarist and trombonist Cutler (Colman Domingo); Toledo (Glynn Turman) is the pianist and eldest of the group; Slow Drag (Michael Potts) plays double bass and Levee Green (Chadwick Boseman) is the rebellious trumpeter with big dreams. This quartet offer a glimpse into the challenges of being both black and musicians in the Chicago of the 20’s. The studio is run by Mel Sturdyvant (Jonny Coyne), whose mercenary tactics are slowly revealed. Irvin (Jeremy Shamos) is Ma’s anxious manager.
Ma Rainey (Viola Davis) arrives an hour late, setting off various complications. She is accompanied by her girlfriend, Dussie Mae (Taylour Paige), who has eyes for Levee, as well as her stuttering nephew, Sylvester (Dusan Brown), who she insists introduce the recording of “Black Bottom.” What ensues is a battle of wills that represent issues of both music and race. While Ma appears to be difficult, it is really a matter of survival. She knows that she is being used by these white men, and they only cater to her as far as their needs. Viola Davis, possibly the finest actor working today, completely loses herself in Ma Rainey’s frustration and triumph. It is a flawless and mesmerizing performance of a woman who understands the nature of an unfair world. The film also marked the final performance of Chadwick Boseman, who sadly died of colon cancer at the age of fortythree. His performance is nothing less than brilliant, bouncing between Levee’s energetic and monomaniacal determination to create his own band and his inner demons. These lead to clashes with both Ma and his fellow musicians. His relating of his mother’s rape and his father’s revenge is one of the most chilling and raw moments in this or any film. The entire cast deliver dimensional and wholly present performances, easily drawing us into this world where they face both petty and large demands at every turn. Their stories take different shapes, some metaphoric and others brutally and vividly real. There is not a false or wasted moment. It builds to a harrowing climax and an equally brutal and telling coda. Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom celebrates the power of the blues, chronicling an important part of African American history. It is a reminder of art and of exploitation, of defiance and disappointment. It is also an exceptional film. Rated R, the film is currently streaming on Netflix.
DECEMBER 24, 2020 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B11
COVER STORY
From left, Lexington, Melissa Tulip and Park Kirshner
Park The Christmas Puppy
BY BARBARA ANNE KIRSHNER
E
very December 21st, I pause in the midst of all the hectic Christmas preparations to hold my dachshund, Park, just a little closer and give thanks for the treasures he has brought since he joined our family on that fateful day 14 years ago. How could I have known when we met, he would bring such companionship, love and countless gifts into my life? Maybe if I had known, I would have scooped him up the minute I laid eyes on him instead of being so hesitant to add him to our little family. It was September 2006 when my husband, Gregg, and our two dachshunds, Madison and Lexington, went for a walk in Port Jefferson and wound up in the local pet store. The girl behind the counter looked at our brood and said, “You’re dachshund people. There’s a little boy here who needs some attention.” And with that she reached into one of the cages behind the sales counter and brought out a little long-hair black and tan dachshund. As she rested him on the counter, he became the clown that this breed is known for and stood way up on hind legs. He kept that pose amidst oooohs and aaaahs from passersby. He certainly left a big impression, but having three dogs was something I never imagined. Once his little act ended, he was sent back to the cage behind the counter and we went home. That was but our first encounter with the boy. Every time Gregg and I went into Port Jefferson, we’d stop at the pet store sure that the pup would be gone, but he remained in that cage — waiting. As time went on, he was moved from the preferred placement at the front of the store to be that puppy in the window with a pal, a long hair red dachshund. The next time I visited, the red doxie was gone, but the black and tan boy was now in a cage at the front of a long line of cages. That’s when things started to get pathetic for him.
Photo by Barbara Anne Kirshner
A few weeks later, he had been moved bars for the past four months and then I to one of the middle cages in the long line. fled from that pet store. Finally, he was relegated to the very last Conflicting thoughts flooded in. It cage at the back of the store. was December 20th, four days before On December 20, 2006, Gregg and I Christmas Eve when we would host the went to Port Jefferson curious to see if the family dinner followed by Christmas Day boy was still there. We fantasized that a when we would be at my sister’s house. On loving young couple came to the store, saw top of the hectic Christmas schedule, I was this was indeed a very special pup and he opening in the New Year’s show at Arena was gone. Repertory. I still had to memorize the last When we got to the pet store, I couldn’t remaining scenes. go inside. I told Gregg to go and come And on top of that was the gnawing back with happy news that the pup had hesitation that I never had a male dog, found his forever home. only female dogs. This was I went into a nearby Park was placed in my a completely different world boutique trying to busy arms and from that I knew nothing about. I was myself half looking at items, overwhelmed with worry day to this, he has anxious for the update. thoughts. Gregg rushed to me; never been far from We left Port Jefferson and alarm etched on his face. the sad little pup behind. my hugs and kisses. “Not only is he still there, The next day was Monday, but he looks despondent!” That was the December 21st. I had to teach, but Gregg word Gregg used: “despondent.” started his Christmas break. When I got I rushed out of that boutique and into home, I headed for my study complaining the pet store. I ran to the back of the store that I had to get those lines memorized. and sure enough, there he was with his But Gregg said, “You can’t do that right face turned toward the wall. now.” I halted and looked at him. I called, “Park! Park!” I had the name, He went on, “Well, I went back to Port an unusual name but perfect if he were Jefferson to the pet store and he was to join the doxie pack of Madison and still there and well, now he’s ours. Merry Lexington. Christmas — he’s your Christmas present!” Upon hearing my voice, he looked over I looked around expecting the pup to his shoulder and stared me down. His come bounding out from another room. unspoken words screamed at me. “If you “He’s at the pet store being groomed don’t get me out of this hell hole, don’t right now. I wanted us to pick him up bother to come back!” together like we did with Madison and Gregg leaned over my shoulder and Lexington. So, come on, let’s get your asked, “What should we do?” Christmas present. When we get home, you I looked from Gregg back to that sad can go into your study to work and I’ll take little pup who had been stuck behind those care of the little guy,” Gregg reassured me.
Conflicting feelings rushed in — excitement, anticipation, hesitation, worry and concern. How could I get everything done with a new pup under foot? We went to pick up the little man. He was ushered out from the grooming room, long black fur gleaming and a big, red Christmas bow bobbing around his neck. Park was placed in my arms and from that day to this, he has never been far from my hugs and kisses. He is my Velcro boy, always there for me. When I’m sad, he licks my tears away. When I’m up in the middle of the night, I hear those now familiar footsteps approach from down the hall. He stays by my side watching over me until sleep returns. He is my travel companion. Wherever we go, people flock to him. Cars stop short to admire the precious boy. People have even called out, “That’s the most beautiful dog I’ve ever seen!” I thank them, then shake my head and wonder how such a magnetic little man spent his early life behind bars, completely passed over by all who came in and out of that well-trafficked store. When Christmas rolls around each year, I thank Gregg for the best Christmas present I ever got. His response is always the same, “I’ll never be able to top that gift, right?” Right! Oh, and that Christmas Eve dinner 2006, it went smoothly with Park the hit of the party. AND I didn’t miss one line opening night of that New Year’s show. Miller Place resident Barbara Anne Kirshner is a freelance journalist, playwright and author of "Madison Weatherbee —The Different Dachshund."
PAGE B12 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • DECEMBER 24, 2020
Long Island Museum's annual art exhibition to be a virtual experience this year
C
Isolation by Doug Reina; 2020, Oil on linen, 20 x 16 (unframed)
The Long Island Museum (LIM) in Stony Brook has announced that they will be holding their annual LIMarts Art exhibition virtually. Every Day: Transforming Crisis into Art will be online from Dec. 18 until Feb. 14, 2021. The 7th annual exhibition by members of the Museum's collaborative arts group, LIMarts will be presented on the Museum’s website and across LIM’s social media. “2020 has been a year like no other,” said Neil Watson, Executive Director of the Long Island Museum. “The LIMarts exhibition has always been a year-end highlight of the LIM. While we will miss the excitement of gathering in the gallery this year with local artists, the LIM is committed to continuing to bring the community together through the arts by offering this virtual experience.” Over 70 LIMarts members have used their creativity and talent and submitted their artwork that
answers the questions “What has your every day looked like? How has it changed? How have you been spending your time? Has every day been the same or are you finding ways to make your days feel different? What have you been doing to cope or perhaps you’re not just coping but thriving?” The LIMarts collaborative arts group embraces the goal to enhance and support the rich artistic talent on Long Island. Designed for artists dedicated to creating a new forum within our cultural community, LIMarts offers space for the exhibition and sale of artwork, varied programming events, lectures and opportunities for social gathering with other artists and the public. Doug Reina, an LIMarts member and frequent participant of the Museum’s previous exhibitions will be presenting his artwork, Isolation. Reina, a local artist from Setauket who recently received his second
Pollock-Krasner grant, is enthused about the online exhibition. “Bravo to the LIM for putting this virtual show together! Using art as a way to connect us is needed now more than ever,” he said. Presented artwork that is listed for sale will be handled by the individual artist and not by the Museum. The LIM is sensitive to the current circumstances faced by artists during these challenging times and is committed to supporting them and the arts community, therefore all proceeds will support the individual artists and the Museum will not retain a commission. For more information on LIMarts membership or if interested in purchasing any of the artwork that is listed for sale, please contact Alexandria D’Auria at adauria@ longislandmuseum.org. To view the gallery of art go to the homepage of www.longislandmuseum.org and follow the links to the exhibition.
• SPECIAL HOLIDAY HOURS • Wednesday, December 23 ■ 7 AM-7 PM Thursday, December 24 ■ 7 AM-4 PM CLOSED Christmas Day WE ARE STILL FOCUSING ON SAFETY We are open for regular shopping between these hours with a few changes in our operation.
We are limiting the amount of people inside the store at one time. During a busy time you may be asked to wait for someone to come out before going inside. We are not allowing walk up service at the deli counter, we are instead asking you to call your order in allowing up to one hour in advance. The order will be waiting for you when you arrive, this way there are no lines forming for deli service. We also still slice our deli express line fresh every day, allowing for quick grab and go service. We are requiring face masks while inside the store to keep our customers and employees safe. ©163438
PORT JEFFERSON STATION, NY (Corner of Boyle Road & Old Town Road) 631–928–4607 • buttercupdairy.com CALL AHEAD DELI ORDERS Pre sliced cold cuts STILL and pre made sandwiches AV AIL ABLE Check out our heat and eat dinner options
HAPPY HOLIDAYS
DECEMBER 24, 2020 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B13
COOKING COVE
Christmas colors for Christmas dinner
BY BARBARA BELTRAMI In case you haven’t noticed, the ongoing theme of my recent columns has been coping with and compensating for COVID restrictions while celebrating the holidays. So here I go again. I believe that whether you’re alone or with just your immediate family (and I do hope for your sake and everyone else’s that it won’t be more than that), you should make the holiday as merry as you can. A great way to do that for Christmas Eve or Christmas dinner is to carry out the red and green theme in as many dishes as possible. It doesn’t have to be fancy, but it does have to be festive. I’m thinking that spinach lasagna rollups might do the trick paired with a butter lettuce and arugula salad with bell pepper confetti and a pomegranate vinaigrette. Then for dessert, how about a parfait of pistachio or mint chocolate chip ice cream with fresh raspberry sauce? These are just a few ideas. Raid your refrigerator, shop early and come up with your own red and green Christmas dishes.
Spinach Lasagna Rollups YIELD: Makes 6 servings INGREDIENTS:
For the sauce:
• 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil • 1 cup finely chopped onion • Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste • 2 garlic cloves, minced • One 28-ounce can crushed tomatoes • 1/4 cup chopped basil • Salt and pepper to taste
For the rollups:
• Nonstick cooking spray • 12 lasagna noodles (not no-boil) • One 16-ounce container ricotta cheese • Half a 10-ounce box frozen chopped spinach, thawed and all liquid squeezed out • 3/4 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese • 1 large egg • 1 handful fresh Italian flat-leaf parsley leaves, chopped • Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste • 3 cups(or more) tomato sauce to taste • 1 cup shredded mozzarella DIRECTIONS:
In a medium saucepan warm oil over medium heat; add onions, salt and pepper and cook, stirring frequently, until they become transparent, about 5 minutes. Add garlic and cook, stirring frequently, until it releases its aroma, about 30 seconds. Add tomatoes, basil, salt and pepper and a few tablespoons water and cook over medium heat, stirring frequently, until sauce is thickened and liquid is evaporated, about 15 minutes.
METR0 photo
Preheat oven to 350 F; coat a shallow baking pan with nonstick cooking spray. Cook lasagna noodles according to package directions and drain, then lay out in baking pan. In a medium bowl thoroughly combine the ricotta, spinach, Parmesan cheese, egg, parsley, salt and pepper. Spread a thin layer of tomato sauce on bottom of baking pan spread ricotta mixture evenly along each noodle, then top with a thin layer of tomato sauce and carefully roll up; place seam side down evenly in baking dish and spoon remaining sauce over them. Sprinkle mozzarella on top. Bake until they are heated through, sauce is bubbly and mozzarella has melted, about 20 minutes. Serve hot with arugula and butter lettuce salad.
Arugula and Butter Lettuce Salad with Pomegranate Vinaigrette YIELD: Makes 6 servings INGREDIENTS: • 1 large bunch arugula, washed and stems removed • 1head butter lettuce or Boston lettuce • 6 radishes, cleaned and cut into matchsticksize strips • 1/2 cup fresh or bottled pomegranate juice • 1/4 cup red wine vinegar • 1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar • 2 to 3 tablespoons honey • 1 teaspoon prepared mustard • Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste • Seeds from half a pomegranate • 1/2 green bell pepper, seeded and finely diced • 1/2 red bell pepper, seeded and finely diced
DIRECTIONS:
In a large salad bowl, toss together the arugula, lettuce and radishes. In a small mixing bowl, whisk together the pomegranate juice, vinegars, honey, mustard, and salt and pepper. Just before serving, toss the salad with the dressing, then sprinkle with pomegranate seeds and diced peppers. Serve immediately at room temperature with lasagna rollups.
Fresh Raspberry Sauce YIELD: Makes 1 1/2 cups INGREDIENTS: • 3/4 pound fresh raspberries, picked over • 2 tablespoons sugar or to taste • 1/2 tablespoon water • 1 tablespoon freshly squeezed lemon juice DIRECTIONS:
In a medium saucepan over medium heat, combine the berries, sugar, water and lemon juice. Stirring frequently, cook until sugar dissolves, raspberries fall apart and sauce bubbles, about 5 minutes. Remove from heat and press through a fine mesh strainer to remove seeds. Cool to room temperature, cover and refrigerate or serve warm over pistachio or mint chocolate chip ice cream accompanied by Christmas cookies.
Horoscopes of the week CAPRICORN – Dec 22/Jan 20 A healthy hobby like exercise can be just what you need at the moment, Capricorn. Slowly increase your workout frequency and take a friend along for the ride. AQUARIUS – Jan 21/Feb 18 Aquarius, try to be artistic this week. Don’t worry, you don’t have to create a masterpiece. Working on creative projects can be a form of meditation and help alleviate stress. PISCES – Feb 19/Mar 20 You are open to change more so than other people you know, Pisces. It’s a good thing, because lastminute changes are coming. ARIES – Mar 21/Apr 20 Someone could be extremely generous to you soon, Aries. It may be out of the goodness of his or her heart, or it may be because of a guilty conscience. You may never know. TAURUS – Apr 21/May 21 Avoid power struggles at work or even among your circle of friends, Taurus. It is not worth the trouble to get involved, and things will calm down soon. Keep your distance. GEMINI – May 22/Jun 21 Gemini, this week may be well suited to contemplation about certain decisions that have been on your mind. Find a quiet place and put all of the puzzle pieces together. CANCER – Jun 22/Jul 22 Cancer, if you feel like you are ready to make a difference in someone’s life, then be honest about what you can take on. You may need a little help along the way. LEO – Jul 23/Aug 23 Leo, if you need someone to motivate you, seek out a trustworthy friend with your best interests in mind. A qualified mentor might be the way to go. VIRGO – Aug 24/Sept 22 Virgo, sometimes a daily routine can land you in a rut. This is the time to change things up a bit. Mix up your regular schedule by trying a new activity or taking a trip. LIBRA – Sept 23/Oct 23 Rough patches will quickly smooth over if you don’t fret about them, Libra. Just have a little patience and everything will work out for the best. SCORPIO – Oct 24/Nov 22 Right now stability means much more to you than taking risks. Stick with those people who support you, and don’t worry about sitting on the sidelines for a bit. SAGITTARIUS – Nov 23/Dec 21 Sagittarius, you may not realize it, but you have been slowly pulling back from those around you for some time now. Make a concerted effort to focus on important relationships.
PAGE B14 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • DECEMBER 24, 2020
Ongoing
Times ... and dates
Festival of Trees
The Port Jefferson Village Center, 101-A East Broadway, Port Jefferson kicks off the holiday season with its annual Festival of Trees featuring 20 professionally decorated 6 ft. trees on display on the second floor now through Dec. 30. Enjoy a magnificent display of themed holiday trees. Viewing hours are 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily. Social distancing protocols will be followed and masks are required. Free. For more information, call 802-2160.
Dec. 24 to Jan. 2, 2020 30 from 5 to 9 p.m. Enjoy a winter walk on the estate’s grounds with festive light displays and holiday music. Tickets are $5 per person at www.vanderbiltmuseum.org.
The Girl Scouts of Suffolk County and County Executive Steve Bellone invite the community to the 17th annual Smith Point Light Show at Smith Point County Park, 1 William Floyd Parkway, Shirley. Drive along the 1.5 mile trail at Smith Point County Park Campgrounds filled with dazzling holiday light displays. Enjoy new surprises and some of your old favorites! Proceeds support programs for girls and families across Suffolk County. The event runs through Dec. 30 (closed Dec. 24 and 25). Hours are 5 to 9 p.m. Monday to Thursday, 5 to 10 p.m. Friday through Sunday. $25 per car, $22 online at www.SmithPointLightShow.com.
Monday 28
Riverhead Holiday Light Show See Dec. 24 listing.
Movie Trivia Night at CAC
Do you know a lot about movies? Well here’s your chance to prove it! Join the Cinema Arts Centre in Huntington for a virtual Movie Trivia Night at 8 p.m. Hosted by Dan French, the winning team will get up to four CAC Gift Cards (1 per team member) and bragging rights. Tickets are $10 per team, $7 members. Visit www.cinemaartscentre.org to register. Any questions please email Danlovestrivia@ gmail.com.
‘A Carol for This Christmas’
Thursday 24
Christmas Eve Riverhead Holiday Light Show
The Riverhead Holiday Light Show, 149 Edwards Ave., Calverton continues tonight from 5 to 20 p.m., on Dec. 25 and 26 from 5 to 11 p.m. and Dec. 27 to 30 from 5 to 9 p.m. The largest drive-through light show in Suffolk County features dozens of dazzling displays to delight the entire family! Runs through Dec. 30. Tickets can be purchased online at www. riverheadlightshow.com or at the gate for $25.
Friday 25
Christmas Day Riverhead Holiday Light Show See Dec. 24 listing.
* All numbers are in (631) area code unless otherwise noted.
First hike of the year
Join the staff at Caleb Smith State Park Preserve, 581 W. Jericho Turnpike, Smithtown in kicking off the New Year with a hike to explore the meandering trails of the park from 1:30 to 3 p.m. Bring a camera for some winter wonderland pictures. Please dress for the weather. Masks are required. $4 per person. Advance registration required by calling 265-1054.
Superheroes of the Sky
Smith Point Light Show
Theatre Three in Port Jefferson presents A Carol for This Christmas, a virtual performance adapted from Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, accessible through the theater’s website and Facebook page on the Vimeo platform. This new take on the holiday classic features six actors ( Jeffrey Sanzel, Andrew Lenahan, Michelle LaBozzetta, Linda May, Douglas J. Quattrock, and Steven Uihlein) playing the many roles in the holiday classic, filmed socially distanced, with actors both onstage and in the theater’s auditorium. As a gift to the Long Island community, the presentation will be offered for free. Visit www.theatrethree.com.
Saturday 2
Sweetbriar Nature Center in Smithtown presents Superheroes of the Sky on Jan. 2.
Tuesday 29
Saturday 26
Riverhead Holiday Light Show See Dec. 24 listing.
See Dec. 24 listing.
See Dec. 27 listing.
Riverhead Holiday Light Show
Bright Lights encore
Huntington Farmers Market
Wednesday 30
The Huntington Winter Farmers Market runs every Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. through March 27, 2021 at the John J. Flanagan Center, 423 Park Ave., Huntington (behind the Cinema Arts Centre). Shop for local gourmet foods and beverages, sweet and healthy treats, organic bath and body products, in an “all under one roof” Farmer’s Market setup. Live music. Masks are mandatory. Call 944-2661 for more info.
Sunday 27
Riverhead Holiday Light Show See Dec. 24 listing.
Port Jefferson Farmers Market
The Port Jefferson Farmers Market heads indoors to the Port Jefferson Village Center, 101 E. Broadway, Port Jefferson every Sunday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. through April 25, 2021. Social distancing required. Call 802-2160.
Bright Lights encore
Join the Suffolk County Vanderbilt Museum, 180 Little Neck Road, Centerport for a Bright Lights encore presentation tonight, Dec. 29 and
Riverhead Holiday Light Show See Dec. 24 listing.
Bright Lights encore See Dec. 27 listing.
Thursday 31 New Year’s Eve
Friday 1
New Years Day Hike at Sweetbriar
Start the New Year outdoors! Join Sweetbriar Nature Center, 62 Eckernkamp Drive, Smithtown at 10 a.m. for a morning hike down the woodland and wetland trails to the historic red barn, Enjoy an animal presentation with visits from the Center’s ambassador animals, including Tulip the opossum, Nugget our new screech owl and a few others. Tickets are $10 per person. Register at www.sweetbriarnc.org. Call 979-6344 for more information.
Sweetbriar Nature Center 62 Eckernkamp Drive, Smithtown presents Superheroes of the Sky at 11 a.m. Take a walking tour with Raptor Dan while he feeds the Center’s Birds of Prey (bald eagle, turkey vulture, owls, hawks and more) and learn how about their incredible adaptations that help them survive in the wild. Tickets are $10 per adult, $5 for children under age 12. Visit www.sweetbriarnc.org to register. Call 979-6344 for more information.
Upcoming
The Audubon Bird Mural Project
On Jan. 6, the Huntington-Oyster Bay Audubon Society presents a virtual walking tour of The Audubon Bird Mural Project, an impressive effort to create murals of over 300 North American birds threatened by climate change. View about 40 murals, plus Audubon’s grave site, in a 50-minute slide presentation with live commentary. There will be time afterwards for Q&A. Free. Register in advance for this webinar using the following link: http://bit.ly/HOBASJanuary2021
Author Talk
On Jan. 6, Book Revue in Huntington hosts a virtual Author Talk with Olympic medalists Lindsay Dare Shoop and Mary Whipple as they discuss Shoop’s new book, Better Great Than Never: Believing It’s Possible Is Where Champions Begin live on CrowdCast at 7 p.m. Free. Register at www.bookrevue.com.
The Godfather Legacy
On Jan. 6, The Smithtown Library presents a virtual program, The Godfather Legacy, via Zoom from 7 to 8 p.m. Film historian Greg Blank will analyze clips from the films for the cultural and cinematic qualities and show clips from the documentary The Godfather Legacy for insights into the development, production and legacy of the films. Free. Join the program at www.facebook.com/thesmithtownlibrary. For more information, call 360-2480, ext. 235. 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 may be published.
DECEMBER 24, 2020 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B15
FEATURE STORY
Winners of 2020 Stony Brook Film Festival announced
O
rganizers of the Stony Brook Film Festival hosted a virtual awards ceremony on Tuesday, Dec. 15. All of the festival winners were in attendance at the ceremony to accept their awards.
Jury Award for Best Feature The Subject, directed by Lanie Zipoy and written by Chisa Hutchinson, won the Jury Award for Best Feature. The Subject tells the story of a successful documentary filmmaker haunted by his last film, which captured the murder of his subject, a black teen in Harlem. The timely film explores the relationship between an artist and their subject and addresses the harsh reality of race and class among the privileged. The film features Jason Biggs, Aunjanue Ellis, Anabelle Acosta, Carra Patterson, Nile Bullock, and Caleb Eberhardt. Audience Award for Best Feature When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit, directed by Caroline Link and written by Anna Brüggemann, Judith Kerr, and Caroline Link, won the Audience Award for Best Feature. The film features Riva Krymalowski, Marinus Hohmann, Carla Juri, Oliver Masucci, and Justus von Dohnányi. When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit is a German film based on the beloved semiautobiographical children's book by Judith Kerr. Anna is a nine-year-old living with her family in Berlin in 1933 when her life completely changes. To escape the Nazis, her father — a well-known Jewish journalist — quietly flees one night, and the rest of the family follows. Anna has to leave everything behind, including her beloved pink rabbit, and begins a new life full of challenges as a refugee abroad. A beautiful story for the whole family, filled with suspense, drama, sadness, and hope, with a timely message about being a refugee in a foreign land. Jury Award for Best Short They Won't Last, a lighthearted short film written and directed by Portlynn Tagavi, won the Jury Award for Best Short. The film tells the story of a woman's uncertain future when her hopeless boyfriend proposes after a friends' perfect wedding. Audience Award for Best Short The Audience Award for Best Short was presented to Extra Innings. Written and directed by John Gray, the film tells the story of a reporter who interviewed the Boston Red Sox manager in an attempt to uncover secrets from his past.
Above, a scene from When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit; below, a scene from The Subject. Photos courtesy of Staller Center for the Arts
Malan Breton and Consuelo Vanderbilt Costin in the Vanderbilt Mansion library in Centerport Photo by Bryan Griffen
Great-great granddaughter of William K. Vanderbilt II shoots music video at Vanderbilt Museum
Spirit of Independent Filmmaking The final award presented was the Spirit of Independent Filmmaking, which is awarded to a filmmaker whose work exemplifies the spirit and breadth of filmmaking where the focus is on the art and most often produced with an extremely limited budget. This year's recipient was Higher Love. Written and directed by Hasan Oswald, the film is a harrowing and unblinking documentary about lives affected by hard drugs, shown with honesty, compassion, desperation, and hope. Like many other events around the country, this year's Festival went virtual through a partnership with IndieFlix. Attendance soared with the virtual option as patrons across the country tuned in to watch the films with family and friends every weekend. Attendees sent regards from across the country, saying "what a relief to have this escape during this time," and "these films are the only bright spot in our week."
"We were thrilled to be able to offer this virtually during the Pandemic, and we were so happy to receive such positive and uplifting feedback from our patrons. The arts are needed now more than ever, and we can't wait to get back to offering world-class programming in person as soon as it's safe to do so. Until then, we'll keep getting creative with virtual programming," said Alan Inkles, Director of the Stony Brook Film Festival and the Staller Center for the Arts. The Staller Center for the Arts also announced on Tuesday night that virtual films will continue. Patrons can purchase a Spring Movie Pass to view 14 films for only $40. Films will be offered virtually throughout the Spring using the IndieFlix app. Additionally, the center will continue to provide virtual arts and education outreach and other virtual programming options throughout the year. Visit stallercenter. com or stonybrookfilmfestival.com for more information.
Singer Consuelo Vanderbilt Costin, the great-great granddaughter of William K. Vanderbilt II, has just collaborated with fashion designer Malan Breton on a new duet version of the classic I’ll Be Home for Christmas. The pair performed the song in a music video shot recently at her ancestor’s Centerport estate, Eagle’s Nest, home of the Suffolk County Vanderbilt Museum. The video was released on November 30. Proceeds will benefit Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS and the Vanderbilt Museum. Costin is also a composer, songwriter, designer, actress, philanthropist, and entrepreneur. She has recorded five Top 10 singles on the Billboard Dance Club Songs charts and her music has skyrocketed on numerous international charts. British Vogue has called Breton “the most influential designer you’ve never heard of.” He is also a film and music video director, columnist, costume designer, pop-music performer, and a television and film producer and actor. For the backdrop of her new video, Costin selected the Vanderbilt Mansion and Estate, a place with personal resonance. “Coming to the Vanderbilt Museum always makes me feel so connected to my family legacy,” Costin said. “Willie K., my great-great grandfather, was such an incredible voyager. "It always astounds me how he had the foresight to preserve all the extraordinary artifacts in the museum. He lived such an adventurous life, and I only wish I had had the chance to meet him. “The Vanderbilt Museum has stretched way beyond my family to become a place of love and discovery for generations of other families, which is the most amazing gift imaginable.”
PAGE B16 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • DECEMBER 24, 2020
Religious D irectory
Byzantine Catholic
RESURRECTION BYZANTINE CATHOLIC CHURCH
38 Mayflower Avenue, Smithtown NY 11787 631–759–6083 resurrectionsmithtown@gmail.com www.resurrectionsmithtown.org FATHER VLADYSLAV BUDASH, ADMINISTRATOR DEACON ROBERT KNAPP JOSEPH S. DURKO, CANTOR Divine Liturgy: Saturdays 4:45 pm Sunday Liturgy: 10 am For Weekday and Holy Day Schedule: See website or phone for information Sunday School Sundays at 9:15 am Christmas schedule: 12/24 Thursday - Vigil of Christmas 8.40 pm - Compline, 9.00 pm - Liturgy (Mess) 12/25 Friday - Day of Christmas 10.00 am - Liturgy (Mess) 12/26 Saturday - Second Day of Christmas ( Synaxis of the Theotokos - The memory about Holly Mother of God) 4.45 pm - Liturgy (Mess) 12/27 Sunday - Third Day of Christmas ( St. Stephen - Protomartyr) 10.30 am - Liturgy (Mess) and mirovania 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 Schedule for the Holy Days of December The exemption for Catholics to attend Mass because of the pandemic remains in effect. However, due to the solemn nature of these days, we are scheduling Masses as usual. They will also be live-streamed and available to view on our website. Solemnity of the Nativity of the Lord Jesus Christ ~ Christmas Thursday, December 24th – 2:00pm, 4:00pm, 6:00pm Friday, December 25th – 8:00am, 10:00am, 12:00pm Solemnity of the Blessed Virgin, Mother of God Thursday, December 31st - 5:00pm Friday, January 1st - 9:00am, 12:00pm, 5:00pm Sacrament of Reconciliation (Confession) Come & prepare your heart for the coming of Christ! Each Saturday 3:45pm – 4:45pm Mass: Saturday 5 pm only mass Sunday 8 am, 10 am & 12 pm Weekday Mass: 9 am Confessions: Saturday 3:45-4:45 pm Office Hours: Monday-Thursday 9 am - 4:30 pm Thrift Shop: Monday-Thursday 10 am - 4 pm Baptism and Wedding arrangements can be made by calling the Parish Office
To be listed in the Religious Directory please call 631–751–7663
©169451
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 Christmas Mass Schedule: Christmas Eve - Thursday, December 24th Infant Jesus Church: 3:00pm, 5:00pm, 7:00pm, Midnight Infant Jesus Chapel: 4:00pm, 6:00pm, 8:00pm, Midnight Montfort Hall: 3:00pm, 5:00pm, 7:00pm, Midnight Christmas Day - Friday, December 25th Infant Jesus Church: 7:30am, 10:30am, 2:00pm (Spanish) Infant Jesus Chapel: 8:30am, 10:00am, 11:30am Montfort Hall: 7:30am, 10:30am, 2:00pm (Spanish) 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 www.stjamessetauket.org REV. JAMES-PATRICK MANNION, PASTOR REV. ROBERT SCHECKENBACK, ASSOCIATE PASTOR REV. JOHN FITZGERALD, IN RESIDENCE REV. MIKE S. EZEATU, SBU HOSPITAL CHAPLAIN, IN RESIDENCE Christmas Mass Schedule 2020 Christmas Eve, Thursday, December 24 4 pm in the Church; 4:15 pm in the Parish Center 7 pm in the Church; 10:30 pm Carols in the Church 11 pm ‘Midnight Mass’ Christmas Day, Friday December 25 8 am in the Church; 9:30 am in the Church 10:30 am in the Parish Center 11:30 am in the Church New Year’s Eve, Thursday, December 31 5 pm in the Church Gentle Eve Mass 7 pm in the Church New Year’s Day, Friday, January 1, 2021 8 am in the Church; 9:30 am in the Church MISSION STATEMENT We, the Catholic community of the Three Village area, formed as the Body of Christ through the waters of Baptism, are a pilgrim community journeying toward the fullness of the Kingdom of God, guided by the Holy Spirit, nourished by the Eucharist and formed by the Gospel. We strive to respond the Jesus’ invitation: to be faithful and fruitful disciples; to be Good Samaritan to (our) neighbor and enemy; stewards of and for God’s creation and living witnesses of Faith, Hope and Charity...so that in Jesus’ name, we may be a welcoming community, respectful of life in all its diversities.
ST. LOUIS DE MONTFORT ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
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. ALPHONSUS IGBOKWE, 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; 10:00 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.
Catholic Traditional Latin Mass ST. MICHAEL THE ARCHANGEL
Society of Saint Pius X 900 Horseblock Road, Farmingville, NY 11738 631–736–6515 • sspxlongisland.com Sunday Masses at 7 am and 9 am Christmas Mass at 9:00am Confessions are heard prior to each Mass Jan. 1 Masses at 9:00am and 7:00pm Please consult sspxlongisland.com for updates and current mass times
Congregational MT. SINAI CONGREGATIONAL UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
233 North Country Road, Mt. Sinai • 631–473–1582 www.msucc.org • REV. DR. PHILIP HOBSON Take care of yourselves, wash your hands, wear your mask, check on your neighbors. Grace and Peace, Rev. Phil Online Worship each Sunday at 10 am on our YouTube channel, and accessible anytime thereafter. Christmas Eve, we will have a special video worship service with familiar numbers sung by our choir (safely socially distanced) and the telling of the Christmas story. The Sunday after Christmas will feature a worship service put together by the United Church of Christ, available on our YouTube channel. Our Island Heart Food Pantry continues to help those in need.
Episcopal ALL SOULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH
“Our little historic church on the hill” across from the Stony Brook Duck Pond Visit our website www.allsouls–stonybrook.org or call 631-655-7798 allsoulsepiscopalchurch@verizon.net Sunday Services: 8am Virtual Service 9:30am Service at the Church-Organ Music 8am Tuesday-Morning Prayer Service at the Church Christmas Services: Saturday December 24th 4pm Service at the Church-Music 11pm Service at the Church-Organ Music Sunday December 25th- 9:30am Service at the Church-Organ Music Happy Holidays and Safe to You and your Family 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 EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF SETAUKET
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 Our worship services for Christmas Eve and Christmas Day are as follows: Christmas Eve, Thursday, Dec 24: 4,5:30,7,8:30 and 10pm Christmas Day, Friday, Dec 25: 10am Reservations are required for all Christmas Eve services. Please visit our website, and click on the reservation link in order to guarantee your seat(s) Church School Classes now forming; please call the office to register Let God walk with you as part of our familyfriendly community
CHRIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
127 Barnum Ave., Port Jefferson • 631–473–0273 email: ccoffice@christchurchportjeff.org www.christchurchportjeff.org Church office hours: Tues. - Fri. 9am - 12pm FATHER ANTHONY DILORENZO: PRIEST–IN–CHARGE Please join us for our 8:00 and 10:00 Sunday Eucharists and our 10:00 Wednesday Eucharist in our chapel. Please wear masks. GOD BLESS YOU. Father Anthony DiLorenzo It is the mission of the people of Christ Church to grow in our relationship with Jesus Christ and to make his love known to all through our lives and ministry. We at Christ Church are a joyful, welcoming community. Wherever you are in your journey of life we want to be part of it.
PLEASE CALL OR VISIT YOUR PLACE OF WORSHIP’S WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION AND GUIDANCE.
Peace On Earth Continued on next page • Continued on next page •
DECEMBER 24, 2020 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B17
Evangelical
Religious D irectory
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 Please get connected by visiting www.3VC.org for more information and service times – Your 3VC church family Join Us As We Celebrate 60 Years Of Proclaiming The Good News Of Jesus Christ!
Greek Orthodox CHURCH OF THE ASSUMPTION
430 Sheep Pasture Rd., Port Jefferson 11777 Tel: 631-473-0894 • Fax: 631-928-5131 www.kimisis.org • goc.assumption@gmail.com REV. ELIAS (LOU) NICHOLAS, PROISTAMENOS 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 Banquet Hall Available For Rental* For Information Please Call Church Office* Adjustments to services will be made according to CDC and NYState DOH COVID-19 guidelines. Please call Church office for updates.
Jewish VILLAGE CHABAD
Center for Jewish Life & Learning “Judaism With A Smile” 360 Nicolls Road, East Setauket Next To Fire Dept. 631-585–0521 • www.MyVillageChabad.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
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 ©169452
Innovative Curriculum And Programming For Children Ages 5-13 Imagine A Synagogue That Feels Like Home! Come Connect With Us On Your Jewish Journey. Member United Synagogue Of Conservative Judaism
TEMPLE ISAIAH (REFORM)
1404 Stony Brook Road, Stony Brook 631-751–8518 • www.tisbny.org A Warm And Caring Intergenerational Community Dedicated To Learning, Prayer, Social Action, And Friendship. Member Union For Reform Judaism RABBI PAUL SIDLOFSKY CANTOR INTERN EMILY HOOLIHAN EDUCATIONAL DIRECTOR RABBI MICHAEL S. CHURGEL, RJE RABBI EMERITUS STEPHEN A. KAROL RABBI EMERITUS ADAM D. FISHER CANTOR EMERITUS MICHAEL F. TRACHTENBERG Sabbath Services Friday 7:30 pm And Saturday 10 am Religious School • Monthly Family Service Monthly Tot • Shabbat Youth Groups • Senior Club Adult Education Sisterhood Brotherhood • Book Club-More
Lutheran–ELCA HOPE LUTHERAN CHURCH AND ANCHOR NURSERY SCHOOL
46 Dare Road, Selden 631-732-2511 Emergency Number 516-848-5386 REV. DR. RICHARD O. HILL, PASTOR ERIC FARET, VICAR Email: office@hopelutheran.com Website: www.hopeluth.com Christmas Eve services: 4, 7, 9, and 11 p.m. There is limited seating for in person worshippers on Christmas Eve at 4 and 7 p.m. and on Christmas Day at 10:30 a.m. They will also be online on Zoom, Facebook and Youtube. On Sundays the services are at 9 and 10:30 a.m. A link for all these services is on the website: www.hopeluth.com. Our Food Pantry is open to everyone on Thursdays from 12:30 – 2:30 p.m. for picking up food. Also, donations can be made from 11 a.m.-noon or by making arrangements by leaving a message on the church answering service. Offerings to support our ministry can be made at church services and through our website’s “Share God’s Mission” page. In any emergency, call the pastor at 516-848-5386.
ST. PAUL’S EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH
309 Patchogue Road, Port Jefferson Station 631-473-2236 REV. PAUL A. DOWNING PASTOR E-mail: Pastorpauldowning@yahoo.com Pastor’s cell: 347–423–3623 (voice or text) www.StPaulsLCPJS.org facebook.com/stpaulselca Out of concern for our members and the community at large and at the encouragement of our synod bishop, St. Paul’s will be discontinuing live indoor worship effective immediately. The Sunday morning service will still be broadcast on Facebook live at Facebook.com/ stpaulselca or on our website at www.StPaulsLCPJS.org.
available–wafer only. We will follow CDC Guidelines on social distancing and mask wearing. Singing is allowed in your car with the windows closed.
Christmas Eve–we will have a drive-in service at 5:00pm in the parking lot with candle lighting and communion broadcast over FM radio. Please stay in your car. We will also be broadcasting our indoor service at 7:30pm on Facebook. No members or visitors will be allowed to enter the church. New Years Eve Service will be broadcast on Facebook at 5:00pm. We continue to serve the Port Jefferson Community Now in our 102nd year
Lutheran–LCMS MESSIAH LUTHERAN CHURCH
Messiah Preschool & Day Care 465 Pond Path, East Setauket 631-751–1775 • www.messiahny.com PASTOR NILS NIEMEIER ASSOCIATE PASTOR STEVE UNGER Christmas Eve Worship 5:30 and 8pm Christmas Day Worship 10am To attend, register on our website. Check our website often for any changes. We are thrilled to announce we are open for worship in the church. Two services at 9 am & 10:30 am. Space is limited so please go to our website (www.messiahny. com) to register or call the church office (631-7511775). See our website for the procedures we will have in place. For those who are not comfortable with going to church, you can still watch the service online. Go to our website to find links to our church YouTube page and live streams of the service. We, as a church, are here for you and if you are in need, please call us. Our Pastors are available and you are welcome to call the church to speak to them. May God keep you safe and shine His light and love upon you.
Methodist BETHEL AFRICAN METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
33 Christian Ave/ PO 2117, E. Setauket NY 11733 REV. GREGORY L. LEONARD–PASTOR • 631-941–3581 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
SETAUKET UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
160 Main Street, Corner Of 25A And Main Street East Setauket • 631–941–4167 REV. STEVEN KIM, PASTOR Sunday Worship Service Streamed temporarily online @www.setauketumc.org or visit us on Facebook Church School meets online Holy Communion 1st Sunday Of Month Mary Martha Circle (Women’s Ministry) meets every 2nd Tuesday each month at 1 pm No matter who you are or where you are on life’s journey, you’re welcome here!
Presbyterian FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF PORT JEFFERSON
107 South/Main Streets • (631) 473-0147 We are an accepting and caring people who invite you to share in the journey of faith with us. THE REV. DR. RICHARD GRAUGH Email: office@pjpres.org Website: www.pjpres.org Sunday Worship Service-10 am (social distancing & masks required) service is also broadcast on church FB page under “Missions and Activities” Christian Education Activities: Call 631-473-0147 Bible Study: Tuesday 2 pm via Zoom Holy Communion 1st Sunday of the Month Hot meals, groceries & clothing provided on a take out basis by Welcome Friends on Fridays 4-5:30 pm Call the church office or visit our website for current activities and events. NYS Certified Preschool and Daycare The purpose of First Presbyterian Church of Port Jefferson is, with God’s help, to share the joy & good news of Jesus Christ with the congregation, visitors and the community at large; to provide comfort to those in need and hope to those in despair; and to seek justice for all God’s people.
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 Christmas Eve, December 24 10:30 am-Informal interactive service with story & song for children via Zoom 3-4 pm-in person Blessing of the Animals-in SPC parking lot *7:30 pm-Traditional Candlelight Christmas Eve Worship Service 11 pm-Traditional Candlelight Christmas Eve Worship Service-in person outside in front of the church *Sunday, December 27 9:30 am-Lessons & Carols Service Our Outreach Programs Are Continuing Setauket Presbyterian Pre-School, ages 2-5 Open Door Exchange (furniture ministry) *Most services streamed online from website, Facebook and SPC App. For all program information visit our website Setauketpresbyterian.org for Zoom links • email the church office: Setauketpresbyterian@verizon.net • Follow us on FB
Would You Like to Join Our Religious Directory? For More Information Please Call 631-331-1154
We will also be offering a drive-in church in our parking lot at 12:30pm each Sunday. Please stay in your car and we will be broadcasting over FM radio. Stay in your car and still participate in the service. Communion will be
PLEASE CALL OR VISIT YOUR PLACE OF WORSHIP’S WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION AND GUIDANCE.
Continued on next page •
PAGE B18 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • DECEMBER 24, 2020
SHELTER PETS OF THE WEEK
KIDS KORNER
MEET MATTY, MOTOR AND SID
Shy cats need love too! This week's shelter pets are, from top, Matty, Motor and Sid, 1-yearold cats at the Smithtown Animal Shelter that are overlooked time and again because they are shy. All 3 grew up in the shelter and watched their more outgoing siblings get happy homes. They may take time to let you in, but when they do, they are loving, playful and sweet. These three boys are buds but not bonded. They’d love to be homed together, but will adjust if they aren’t. Shy cats need quiet homes with patience and lots of love to give but they are worth it! The trio come spayed, microchipped and is up to date on their vaccines. If you are interested in meeting Matty, Motor and Sid, please call ahead to schedule an hour to properly interact with them. The Smithtown Animal & Adoption Shelter is located at
Learn all about turtles on Dec. 28. Photo from Pixabay
Programs
Winter Craft Weekends
Every weekend in December, the Whaling Museum, 301 Main St., Cold Spring Harbor invite children enjoy winter-inspired selfserve crafts in the museum workshop. Free with admission! Call 367-3418 for more info. Photo from Smithtown Animal Shelter
410 Middle Country Road, Smithtown. Shelter operating hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. during the week, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on the weekend. For more information, please call 631-360-7575 or visit www.smithtownanimalshelter.com.
Religious D irectory Quakers
RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
4 Friends Way, St. James 631–928-2768 • www.cbquakers.org 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. During this time when we are asked not to gather together physically, we are gathering online for worship. Please see our website (www.consciencebayquakers.org) for information about joining in. All are welcome.
Unitarian Universalist UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP AT STONY BROOK
380 Nicolls Road, East Setauket, NY 11733 631–751–0297 www.uufsb.org • office@uufsb.org REV. MARGARET H. ALLEN (minister@uufsb.org) Sunday Service by Zoom: 10:30 a.m. (go to uufsb.org for Zoom links) We welcome people of all faiths to holiday services that celebrate the traditions of Christmas and other winter liturgies, and honor their messages of hope and joy.
Holiday Schedule (uufsb.org for Zoom links): 12/24 - Candlelight Christmas Eve Service: 7:00 p.m. Adult Faith Development Choir, Folk Group, classical music Vespers, Sangha Meditation, Labyrinth Walks, Tai Chi, Chi Gong, Yoga, Essentrics, Grounds & Sounds Café, Le Petit Salon de Musique Our website also offers information about other activities we are currently holding online, such as our Humanist Discussion Group and meditative and wellness arts classes
Please call 631–751–7663 To be listed in the
Religious Directory
PLEASE CALL OR VISIT YOUR PLACE OF WORSHIP’S WEBSITE FOR MORE INFORMATION AND GUIDANCE.
©169453
Hatchery Scavenger Hunt
Take your family on a walk around the Cold Spring Harbor Fish Hatchery, 1660 Route 25A, Cold Spring Harbor Dec. 26, 27 or 28 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. as you follow the clues to a fish themed scavenger hunt. Participants who successfully complete the scavenger hunt can enter a raffle to win a prize. Admission is $7 adults, $5 children ages 3 to 12. Call 516692-6768 for more information.
The Hard Facts About Turtles
Cold Spring Harbor Fish Hatchery presents a virtual program, The Hard Facts About Turtles, on Dec. 28 via Zoom from 10 to 11 a.m. Can turtles come out of their shells? Learn the hard facts about turtle shells with a storytime, craft, and by meeting some of the hatchery's terrific turtles. Craft materials needed: paper plate (or a circle cut from paper), printed turtle template (or make your own, scissors, glue, crayons or markers scraps of colored paper (optional) $15 registration fee. To sign up, visit www. cshfishhatchery.org. Call 516-692-6768 for more information. All numbers are in (631) area code unless noted.
Harbor Country Day School hosts annual toy drive to benefit Toys For Tots On Dec. 11, officers from Harbor Country Day School’s Student Council visited Long Island Elite Limousines in St. James to drop off toys donated to the Suffolk County Toys for Tots program. The toys were donated by Harbor Country Day School students as part of their annual toy drive. Given the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic this year, more than ever, there was a tremendous need for donations. Because visitors are not permitted to Harbor Country at this time, and due to social distancing requirements, both the result of COVID-19, this year’s toy drive looked different than in years past. Historically, Harbor Country Day School was a local drop off point in the community and donated toys were picked up by the Marine Corps. This year, Harbor students and faculty loaded toys onto the Harbor Country
Day School bus to bring to Long Island Elite Limousines where they were subsequently delivered to Suffolk County Toys for Tots. Harbor has contributed to the Toys for Tots drive since 1998, when former Harbor employee and former Marine Mike Guido instituted the program. Now retired from the school, the St. James school continues this tradition begun by Mr. Guido. “We’re honored to have the opportunity to contribute to the Toys for Tots drive and to work ... on such a wonderful program,” said John Cissel, Head of School for Harbor Country Day School.
DECEMBER 24, 2020 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B19
SBU SPORTSWEEK TOMORROW IS FRIDAY – WEAR RED ON CAMPUS!
DEC. 24 TO DEC. 30, 2020
Men’s hoops caps weekend sweep with OT victory
VESTAL: The opening weekend of America East play proved a sweeping success for the Stony Brook men’s basketball team. The Seawolves withstood a comeback bid from Binghamton en route to an 80-70 overtime victory on Dec. 20 afternoon. The Seawolves captured back-to-back weekend games against the Bearcats to begin conference play 2-0. “We were terrific in crunch time,” said coach Geno Ford, who had warned his players after Saturday’s game about the glut of splits across the nation in back-to-back games against the same opponent. Hartford and UMBC also swept their opening series, while Vermont-UMass Lowell was postponed. It marked the sixth straight season that the Seawolves (4-4 overall) have opened conference play with consecutive victories. Frankie Policelli began the extra session with a deep three-pointer and Stony Brook never trailed in OT. Juan Felix Rodriguez’s three-pointer with
Tykei Greene fires from the perimeter during the first half of Sunday’s game.
2:42 remaining opened a 72-66 lead. “I didn’t see that many open looks today,” Policelli said. “I just saw it and shot it.” The teams were deadlocked at 64 after a pair of free throws from Policelli with 2:01 remaining in regulation. That score held into the extra session. Stony Brook, which had difficulty early in the season from the free-throw line, shot 20-for-27 on Sunday, including 8-for-8 to
close OT. Four Seawolves scored in double-figures — Policelli (16 points), Tykei Greene (16), Omar Habwe (14) and Rodriguez (14). Greene contributed his second double-double of the season. Jaden Sayles followed with eight points, snapping his streak of seven straight games with double-figures to open his Stony Brook career. “That makes us extra dangerous. We have so many guys
who can create their own shot and fill up the bucket,” Policelli said. “It’s hard to defend us because we have so many guys.” Rodriguez’s jumper with 13:43 remaining in the first half had opened a 17-5 lead. However, Binghamton responded with an 11-0 run. The Bearcats took their first lead, 46-45, on a layup from George Tinsley with 10:40 to go in the second half and eventually led by as many as five points. “That might be best jumpshooting team in the league,” Ford said. “... They played very well.” The Seawolves had won Saturday’s conference opener against Binghamton, 73-59. “We know we’re a pretty good team,” Greene said. “We just want to show people that we are.” Stony Brook also defeated Fairfield in overtime back on Dec. 4. The Seawolves, who had a game on Tuesday at Fordham canceled, next host UMass Lowell next Sunday and Monday at Island Federal Arena.
Cat’s meow! Another big 3rd quarter leads women’s hoops to sweep
After racing to a 61-52 victory against Binghamton on Saturday afternoon at Island Federal Arena the Seawolves continued their winning streak on Sunday and rallied for a 55-47 win against Binghamton to sweep the consecutive games at Island Federal Arena to open America East play. “We talk about our strength being in our numbers and I believe that was important in these backto-back games,” said head coach Caroline McCombs. “It took us a while to get in a flow, but we were able to raise our intensity in spurts. Our focus is going to be putting together a complete game which is what we need to do in these early conference games.”
Nairimar Vargas-Reyes drives in traffic against Binghamton on Sunday.
Stony Brook (4-2, 2-0 AE) missed its first six field goals of the game, until Asiah Dingle converted with 4 minutes, 23 seconds remaining in the first quarter. However, Binghamton failed to
take advantage and the score was still tied at 4 at that point. The Bearcats nonetheless built as much as a 10-point lead in the second quarter. Yet Stony Brook only trailed by a point at
halftime thanks to an 11-2 run to close the period. Earlette Scott sparked the streak when she drained a three-pointer out of a timeout. Nairimar VargasReyes’ layup with 10 seconds remaining before intermission pulled Stony Brook within 27-26. The Seawolves then produced an 9-0 run to open the third quarter — with seven of the points coming from India Pagan — and led the rest of the way. Dingle, Vargas-Reyes and Pagan all scored in double-figures. Stony Brook similarly used a 23-11 third quarter on Saturday to defeat Binghamton in the conference opener, 61-52. The team next hits the road for consecutive games against UMass Lowell next Sunday and Monday.
STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY
Seventeen studentathletes earn degrees at December ceremony
Seventeen members of the Stony Brook Athletics family are closing out the year with a celebration. Football’s Sam Kamara, Peter McKenzie, Peterson Octavien, Tyquell Fields, Augie Contressa, Ian McLean, Jack Cassidy, Mitchell Wright and TJ Morrison, men’s soccer’s Stephen Turnbull, track and field’s Matthew Cappock and Janelle Pottinger, women’s basketball’s McKenzie Bushee, softball’s Dawn Bodrug, women’s soccer’s Sofia Manner and Alyssa Francese, and men’s lacrosse’s Harrison Matsuoka all were virtually presented degrees on Dec. 18 as part of the university’s commencement ceremony. The bulk of the December graduates will remain at Stony Brook and continue to participate with the Seawolves. “We are so proud of our student-athletes who will earn their undergraduate degrees today,” senior associate director of athletics Courtney Rickard said. “The ceremony is the culmination of their hard work as they balanced their demands on the court and field as well as in the classroom. In seeking a Division I institution where they could compete at the highest level, these student-athletes chose Stony Brook University above all others for our academic excellence and worldclass education. Congratulations to them for achieving their degrees as Seawolves.”
Seawolves Home Games
MEN’S BASKETBALL
Dec. 27 vs. UMass Lowell Dec. 28 vs. UMass Lowell Jan. 2 vs. UMBC Jan. 3 vs. UMBC Jan. 16 vs. New Hampshire Jan. 17 vs. New Hampshire
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL Jan. 9 vs. UAlbany Jan. 10 vs. UAlbany
2 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m.
*Please note this schedule can change at any time. Visit www.stonybrookathletics.com for any last minute cancellations. Photos courtesy of SBU Athletics
Content for this page provided by Stony Brook University and printed as a service to our advertiser.
PAGE B20 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • DECEMBER 24, 2020
Stony Brook Proud. Stony Brook Strong. The unprecedented global pandemic has forever changed how we live. During this challenging time, Stony Brook University and Stony Brook Medicine are collaborating to create innovative ways to serve our community. We’ve manufactured and delivered hand sanitizer and thousands of face shields to caregivers on our front lines. And our response teams have collected thousands of comfort-care items, protective personal equipment and other vital donations for our healthcare teams working tirelessly around the clock to fight the coronavirus. A crisis can tear a community apart, but for Stony Brook it has made us stronger. Together we stand Stony Brook Strong.
#StonyBrookStrong Stony Brook University is an affirmative action, equal opportunity educator and employer. 20031605
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