BRIDGES A Resource Guide Featuring Stony Brook University Offerings for the Community and Shops & Services of the North Shore Business Communities serving Stony Brook University Staff
August 31, 2017 • TImES BEacon REcoRD nEWS mEDIa Vol. 4 • No. 3
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Bridges Times Beacon Record News Media P.O. Box 707 Setauket, NY 11733 Telephone: (631) 751-7744 desk@tbrnewspapers.com www.tbrnewsmedia.com Publisher Leah S. Dunaief Advertising Director Kathryn Mandracchia General Manager Johness Kuisel Editorial Rita Egan Desirée Keegan Alex Petroski Heidi Sutton Art and Production Director Beth Heller Mason Art and Production Janet Fortuna Sharon Nicholson Internet Strategy Director Rob Alfano Advertising Elizabeth Bongiorno Laura Johanson Robin Lemkin Jackie Pickle Michael Tessler Minnie Yancey
From the university president ... I am pleased to partner again with the Times Beacon Record to share with the community the many different programs Stony Brook University offers that may be of interest to our friends and neighbors. In addition to our mission to educate the best and brightest students and to provide cutting-edge health care, we are dedicated to creating new initiatives and offering services that will also benefit the Long Island community. In September, we are celebrating our 60th anniversary. In 1957, the University began as a small teachers preparatory college with only 148 students. After moving to Stony Brook in 1962, we began to flourish, becoming a respected incubator of teaching and research innovation as well as a powerful engine for Long Island’s economic growth. We have gone far beyond the expectations of what today’s public universities can accomplish in a very short period of time. But we would not be where we are today without the support of the community and our students, faculty and staff. As part of Stony Brook University’s strong commitment to building an inclusive community for our students, employees and neighbors, we are proud to hold our first CommUniversity Day on Saturday, September 23, from 12 pm to 4 pm. Please join us for a day of celebration as we showcase the best of Stony Brook through entertaining hands-on, interactive activi-
When my husband and I moved to Long Island, we wanted a university community for its academic, cultural and worldly aspects. We wanted a top medical community, a village with a sense of its own history and pride in its roots, and a good school district. We also wanted a beautiful place with great recreational activities, near the water. We found such a location and have lived here going on five decades. It has seldom disappointed, in part because of the presence of Stony Brook University. And even as we raised our family here and grew our careers, so did SBU grow in prestige and in what it offers the community. To help you, our readers, see what is available on campus and off, we have partnered with the university to bring you a comprehensive resource guide to their events and also, on the other side of the bridge, to our excel-
North Shore Business Directory .........................S31
Above: The Melville Library goes “Far Beyond” On the Cover: Scenes from across campus. Interior photos provided by SBU unless otherwise noted. All copy provided by Liza Burby and Shelley Catalano
Samuel L. Stanley Jr., M.D. President, Stony Brook University our homecoming football game versus the New Hampshire Wildcats. This edition of “Bridges” contains a small sampling of the many things that make Stony Brook University so special. We hope you will join us for CommUniversity Day to experience them for yourself. If you can’t make it on September 23, please join us at one of our numerous fall events or simply take the time to enjoy a stroll through our campus. Our neighbors are always welcome.
From the publisher ...
Contents
Photos from SBU
ties. The Academic Mall will have themed neighborhoods for visitors to explore in a family-friendly environment. From art displays and athletic clinics to student performances and virtual reality demonstrations, there will be something for everyone to enjoy. For more details, please see the article on CommUniversity Day in this issue. While Stony Brook University is a center of academic excellence and a vital resource for Long Island, it is also the premier destination in Suffolk for arts and entertainment. The Staller Center for the Arts offers the best in music, theater, dance, cinema and comedy. This fall, Staller welcomes humorist David Sedaris on October 20 and hosts the prestigious Emerson String Quartet in October, December and March. The Charles B. Wang Center is another cultural showplace, featuring unique Asian and Asian American exhibits, lectures and performances. New this year, you can experience a Japanese tea ceremony in a specially constructed tea room. Art is always on display in the Wang Center lobbies, at the Simons Center for Geometry and Physics, and in the Paul W. Zuccaire Gallery in the Staller Center for the public to enjoy. Our athletic teams’ fall seasons are underway. Sports fans of all ages come to Kenneth P. LaValle Stadium to cheer on our football and soccer teams. We hope to see you for all the family fun at our annual Wolfstock event on October 14, celebrating
Arts and Entertainment Paul W. Zuccaire Art Gallery ..............S14 Center for Italian Studies ..............S28/31 Film Schedule .................................... S22 Homecoming — Wolfstock ................ S31 Music Department ........................ S18-20 Staller Center .............................. S12/S14 Wang Center ...................................... S21 Athletics Lacrosse ............................................. S25 Sports Schedules................................ S24 Wolfie ................................................ S25
lent shops and services. We have divided the campus into two halves: east and west. This is the fourth year of our publication, which concentrates on the west or main campus, and describes its palette of rich offerings and schedules, including sports, lectures and performances to which the public is enthusiastically invited. “Bridges” also presents the outstanding local business community on the university’s doorstep. In February, at the start of the second academic semester, we will again publish a similarly comprehensive overview of the east campus. Called “Bridges,” to symbolize the alliance of campus and community and to encourage further interaction between us, this resource guide is distributed in all six of our hometown newspapers along the North Shore of Suffolk County and to faculty, students and administration throughout SBU. Please read about and take advantage of the
many opportunities to enhance our lives by using these bridges, and think about our shared good fortune to live here.
Campus Amenities Activities .............................................. S7 Child Care.......................................... S27 Dining .................................................. S7 Student Volunteering ......................... S29
Lifelong Learning Osher Institute Learning Center ...........S26 Science Open Nights .......................... S22 School of Professional Development ...................................... S26
Chief Diversity Officer at SBU .......... S9 CommUniversity Day ........................ S9 Humanities Institute Series ............ S26 Library Special Collections............. S23 New SBU Provost ............................ S11 Olympian Swim Coach ................... S11 WUSB 40th Anniversary ................. S20
Map of SBU Campus....................S16-17
Kids Entertainment for Kids of All Ages .... S27
Leah S. Dunaief Publisher, TBR News Media
Services Career Center......................................S11 Events at SBU Medicine ................ S30-31 LI State Veterans Home ..................... S29 Small Business Development Center ..............................S7 Stanford Study ......................................S23
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Bridges
Enjoying the Day on the Stony Brook Campus
In addition to being a center of education and research, the Stony Brook campus is a wonderful place for members of our community to relax, have fun or be entertained. For a short respite from the hustle and bustle, take a walk through the Ashley Schiff Park Preserve, across from Roth Quad (also accessible from South Campus). It’s a 26-acre island of tranquility filled with trees and plants in their natural environment. Nature lovers will also enjoy a guided tour of the Life Sciences Greenhouse, situated on a quarter acre and housing breathtakingly beautiful plants and flowers from all over the world — more than 65 botanical families in all. Call (631) 632-8524 for more information. More active visitors may want to take a ride on the Paul Simons Memorial Bike Path. The sixmile-long bike lane provides students, faculty, staff and visitors with a safe, sustainable alternative way to travel around the University and improve their fitness and aerobic health. For Broadway-style shows, concerts, dance and films, the Staller Center is your ticket to firstclass entertainment. For more exotic fare, the Charles B. Wang Center dazzles visitors with cul-
The Ashley Schiff Park Preserve is one of many tranquil spots on the Stony Brook campus.
tural wonders from Asia and the Indian subcontinent. Stony Brook is also home to the best college sports on Long Island. Our 20 varsity teams include NCAA champions in football, basketball,
Where to Eat on Campus
The new Starbucks on campus, centrally located in the Melville Library, is a great spot to grab something to eat or meet friends before or after a Staller show.
Are you visiting the campus to see a show at the Staller Center or cheer on the Seawolves at an athletic game? Looking for a great place to eat? Visit Jasmine in the Charles B. Wang Center and discover new flavors with an Asian food court that offers Korean, Chinese and Indian cuisine as well as made-to-order sushi and a tea bar. A new Starbucks coffeehouse is located in the Melville Library, just a few steps away from the Staller Center. East Side Dining offers an all-youcare-to-eat restaurant, plus a large selection of diverse retail dining options such as Halal, Kosher, Southwest, Caribbean, Deli, Italian and a convenience store with grab-and-go sandwiches, salads, snacks and beverages. There are many other dining venues on campus whether you are looking for a sit-down restaurant, a quick bite to eat or just a cup of coffee. For a map of all locations and menus, visit: stonybrook.edu/dining.
lacrosse and baseball. This is just a sampling of the many things to see and do at Stony Brook University. For more, visit stonybrook.edu.
Helping Your Business Grow The New York State Small Business Development Center (SBDC) at Stony Brook University’s Research and Development Park is made up of dedicated New York State-certified business advisors who take a personal interest in the success of your business. Helping new and existing businesses leads to increased productivity and profitability, and in the long run contributes to the stability and growth of the small-business sector and the economy. Free one-on-one assistance with business planning, marketing, financial management skills and technology transfer are just a few of the ways the SBDC can help to improve the viability of your small business. Find out how it can work with you to create and sustain a healthy, profitable business.
SBDC ServiCeS • Confidential and no-cost, oneon-one counseling at one of several locations in Suffolk County • On-site assistance available at your business location • Monthly business solutions roundtable meetings with business owners
• Workshops throughout the year on key topics and areas of specific concern for business owners. Area experts in the field present workshops. A sampling of topics includes franchising, search engine optimization, operating a homebased business, business basics, cash flow management and marketing strategy. • Librarians are available through the SBDC Research Network who can assist with market information, industry trends, sample business plans, etc. Videos of past workshops are available on SBDC’s website. Topics currently available include: Technology Grants for Small Business; Exporting: Doing Business Internationally; Designing Your Website; and E-Commerce in Two Hours. The SBDC is open five days a week, year-round. Call (631) 6329070 to make an appointment to meet with business advisors at the Main Campus location at the Research and Development Park. For more information on how SBDC can help you, visit stonybrook.edu/ sbdc.
PAGE S8 • SBU BRIDGES • august 31, 2017
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Bridges
Experience the Best of Stony Brook at CommUniversity Day
On Saturday, September 23, Stony Brook is inviting the local community, friends, families and neighbors to experience CommUniversity Day, an afternoon of fun exploration, good food, hands-on activities and captivating performances highlighting the very best the University has to offer the community. Everyone is welcome to attend this free event. All activities will be centered around the University’s main Academic Mall for easy access to all events. “We’re excited to invite our neighbors and the campus community to explore and experience the many facets of Stony Brook. From the arts to medicine and sports to science, we welcome visitors to participate, to learn and to have fun,” said President Samuel L. Stanley Jr, MD. Visit a variety of themed campus “neighborhoods” and discover things about Stony Brook University that you may have never known about, such as the iCreate lab or incredible art exhibits. Check out what’s new in virtual reality and visualization. Test your skills at the drowsy driving simulator in the Health & Wellness neighborhood. Watch student performances and hear local musicians on two stages. Race a duck in the campus “brook” at 3:30 pm. Learn about music at the Instrument Petting Zoo. Drop in to hear a brief hot topic from Stony Brook’s renowned
educators. Take part in the “Kazoos at 2” campus-wide concert (kazoos provided free). And enjoy a treat in honor of SBU’s 60th anniversary. There will be hands-on activities for kids, sport clinics, health screenings, historical exhibits, giveaways and more. “It’s important to Stony Brook to be a good neighbor and to strengthen our local partnerships,” said Judith B. Greiman, Chief Deputy to the President and Senior Vice President for Government and Community Relations. “CommUniversity Day is another way that the campus and community can come together. We hope our neighbors will come to experience all that the campus has to offer.” Parking and admission to CommUniversity Day is free but registration is required to receive an event bracelet. Register at the Info Tent on the Academic Mall. The first 1,500 to register will receive a free Stony Brook University drawstring backpack, a 60th Anniversary celebration cupcake, a raffle ticket for a family 4-pack to a future Seawolves football game and a bracelet for giveaways (while supplies last) at the various neighborhoods.
CommUniversity Day will be held rain or shine from 12 pm to 4 pm. Come for the fun and food and stay for the pre-game festivities at Seawolves Town beginning at 4 pm and the football game against Towson at 6 pm. Participants who bring their CommUniversity Day event
bracelet to the LaValle Stadium box office will receive one discounted game day ticket. More information can be found at stonybrook.edu/SBUCommUniversity. A full schedule will be available online in early September.
Stony Brook Appoints Chief Diversity Officer LeManuel “Lee” Bitsóí, EdM, EdD, Director of Student Diversity and Multicultural Affairs at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, IL, has been appointed Chief Diversity Officer (CDO) at Stony Brook University. He began his new duties on July 28. Bitsóí will report to Chief Deputy to the President, Judith Greiman, and will serve on the University Council. He brings more than 20 years of experience in academia, which will serve him well in providing vision and leadership in promoting an institutional culture that supports diversity, equity and
inclusion at Stony Brook, including guiding efforts to conceptualize, assess, and cultivate diversity as an institutional and educational resource. A proud member of the Navajo Nation, Dr. Bitsóí received his undergraduate degree in Child Development and Family Relations from the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque in 1995. In 1998 he received a Master of Education in Administration, Planning and Social Policy from Harvard University and in 2007 he was awarded a Doctor of Education in Higher Education
Lee Bitsóí has joined Stony Brook as Chief Diversity Officer, a new position at the University.
Management from the University of Pennsylvania. He is active nationally in the STEM diversity movement and recently represented the Society for Advancement of Chicanos/Hispanics & Native Americans in Science as a key speaker at the Chicago March for Science. “Lee brings a wealth of academic and practical experience coupled with a deep personal connection and commitment to building inclusive communities. I look forward to working with him on the implementation of our Plan for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion,” said Greiman.
PAGE S10 • SBU BRIDGES • august 31, 2017
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Bridges
Olympian Janelle Atkinson Leads Seawolves’ Women’s Swimming & Diving Program
Two-time Olympian Janelle Atkinson, Saturday, November 4, before returning to Stony Brook University’s new head women’s Long Island for the pair of home meets. The program concludes swimming and diving coach, the 2017-18 regular seais tasked with rebuilding the son on Sunday, January 21, Seawolves’ program after 2018 at New Hampshire, Stony Brook reinstated wombefore participating in the en’s swimming and diving for America East Conference the 2017-18 academic year. tournament in February. The program was placed on “With this being the first competitive hiatus in 2012-13 year, I’m most excited about following the announcement getting [the season] started, of a multi-million dollar critihaving bodies in the pool and cal maintenance renovation building character for the proto University Pool. Atkinson gram,” Atkinson said. “It’s exrecently announced a six-meet Stony Brook’s new swim fall 2017 season that opens on coach, Janelle Atkinson, is a citing to have a blank canvas two-time Olympian. to work with. I’m very pleased October 21 and features two with the team I’ve assembled home contests, which will take place on November 18, 2017 and January thus far, and the foundation for what this program will become is quite solid.” 19, 2018. “This is a historic time at Stony Brook as we usher in a new era for our women’s swim- ABOUT THE COACH ming and diving program, and I am very Prior to her time at Fairfield, Atkinson excited to welcome Janelle Atkinson as the spent four years as an assistant coach at head coach who will lead us forward,” said the University of Connecticut. In her role at Stony Brook Director of Athletics Shawn UConn, she served as recruiting coordinaHeilbron, who announced Atkinson’s hire tor for both the men’s and women’s teams in February. “Janelle has experienced suc- and worked primarily with the distance cess at every level as a coach and competi- and middle distance freestylers, helping tor, including two strong appearances in the team set numerous school records. Before joining the Huskies, Atkinson the Olympics for her native Jamaica. I have every confidence in her ability to establish spent four seasons at Wright State Universia championship caliber program at Stony ty, coaching the distance group and directing the fundraising swim lesson program. Brook in the very near future.” On the international stage, Atkinson was Atkinson, who joined the Stony Brook family after spending the past three seasons selected as the head coach for the Jamaias the head coach of the men›s and women’s can National Team at the 2009 Swimming swimming and diving programs at Fairfield World Championships in Rome. In July University in Connecticut, said, “I’m beyond 2013, USA Swimming appointed her head thrilled and excited to be appointed to lead coach for the first Southern Zone Diversity this program. The high level of excellence Summer Select Camp. A native of Kingston, Jamaica, Atkinson this athletic department has achieved is certainly something I look forward to contrib- is a two-time Olympian who competed in the 2000 Sydney Games and the 2004 uting to in the future.” The Seawolves season will begin with an Athens Games. She finished fourth in America East matchup against Vermont in the 400-meter freestyle and ninth in the Burlington on Saturday, October 21. Stony 800-meter freestyle in Sydney. Brook then heads to Milford, Connecticut For more on the women’s swim and diving just a week later on Saturday, October 28 to square off with LIU Brooklyn and Sacred program, visit StonyBrookAthletics.com. Home Heart. The Seawolves travel to Siena on meets are free and open to the public.
Stony Brook Welcomes New Provost Promising bold new academic leadership and commitment to excellence, Michael A. Bernstein joined Stony Brook University as chief academic officer on October 31, 2016. Bernstein, provost and senior vice President for academic affairs, was the John Christie Barr Professor of History and Economics and provost of Tulane University from 2007 through July 2016. “I’m very excited that Dr. Bernstein has joined Stony Brook University,” said President Samuel L. Stanley Jr. “Under Dr. Bernstein’s leadership as provost at Tulane, both the STEM disciplines and the liberal arts flourished, benefiting from his keen ability to understand and help meet the distinct needs of the whole research university. “His experience at Tulane,” continued President Stanley, “and in his leadership positions at University of California at San Diego (UCSD), including chair of the faculty senate — among his many other accomplishments — lends a unique and diverse perspective, and I am looking forward to his contributions and leadership.” Bernstein is highly qualified to lead Stony Brook in the fulfillment of its academic mission. He received his PhD (1982), MPhil (1980), MA (1978) and BA (1976) in economics, all at Yale University. His teaching and research interests focus on the economic and political history of the United States, macroeconomic theory, industrial organization economics, and the history of economic theory. Bernstein succeeds Dennis N. Assanis, who left Stony Brook on June 30, 2016 to become president of the University of Delaware. “The Office of the Provost fosters an enriched learning environment through enhancing faculty success, student success, diversity and inclusiveness and institutional effectiveness,” said Bernstein. “Our mission is to elevate the overall Stony
Michael A. Bernstein, Stony Brook University Provost
Brook experience through continued advancement in pursuit of these goals.” As chief academic officer, the provost is responsible for oversight of the academic mission of West campus, providing direct supervision for all academic units, support services and operations, and coordinating all academic programs. The deans and directors of the colleges, schools, libraries, centers and institutes, other than those under Stony Brook Medicine, report to the provost. Prior to his tenure as the chief academic officer at Tulane, Bernstein was at UCSD for two decades, where he served as the dean of arts and humanities and as a professor of history, a department he chaired for six years. He also served as chair of the Academic Senate of his home campus while at UCSD, and participated in the work of the UCSD Chancellor’s Diversity Council, the Advisory Board of the UCSD Women’s Center, the Advisory Committee of the UCSD Office of Sexual Harassment Prevention and Policy, and of the Chancellor’s Committee on the Status of Women.
Visit the Career Center to Find Your New Employee or Volunteer
The Career Center at Stony Brook University helps companies in the community connect with students and alumni for jobs, internships and volunteer opportunities. Its job posting and recruiting system, Handshake, offers free online job/internship listings. The Center also offers recruitment fairs, private rooms for employers to conduct interviews, and hosts presentations for employers to present their career opportunities. Just a few of Handshake’s features: • A one-stop shop for employers: you can manage all schools using Handshake with one account!
• Employers can search student profiles and resumes to connect with potential candidates. (Students self-select whether or not they would like their profiles or resumes to be searchable by employers.) • A mobile app, so both students and employers can use the system on the go. • Easy-to-use, intuitive interface (built on the same usability principles employed by Facebook and Google.) To create or access an existing Handshake account, visit stonybrook.joinhandshake.com. There are several ways for employers to brand themselves on campus, through
Attending one of the Career Center’s Job and Internship Fairs is a great way to find student employees. Visit stonybrook.edu/career to find out more.
participation in career education events, our award-winning diversity recruiting programs, partnerships with faculty, and student club presentations. The Center’s Partnership Council offers the opportunity to sponsor Career Center activities while building name recognition with the Stony Brook University community. If you would like to know more about these opportunities, please call the Career Center at 631-632-6810 or visit stonybrook.edu/career.
PAGE S12 • SBU BRIDGES • august 31, 2017
Bridges
STALLER CENTER 2017-2018 SEASON
Experience the Best Entertainment Close to Home Staller Center for the Arts at Stony Brook University offers something for everyone this fall. The 2017-2018 season opens with the renowned Emerson String Quartet on Wednesday, October 11 at 8 pm with tickets for $48. Family Fare shows kick off with “Flip Fabrique- Catch Me!” on Saturday, October 14 at 4 pm with all tickets $20. The fall season continues through December with David Sedaris, the writer and humorist; Colin Carr performing Six Suites for Unaccompanied Cello; the dance troupe Tango Buenos Aires; Stephanie Quayle, country singer; The Martial Artists and Acrobats of Tianjin; Sons of Serendip; Starry Nights; John Pizzarelli and Jessica Molaskey with Holiday Hits and the Swing 7 Band, and an all-Beethoven Emerson String Quartet concert. For more information and tickets, visit stallercenter.com or call 631-632-ARTS (2787).
OCTOBER Wednesday, October 11 at 8 pm EMERSON STRING QUARTET #1 Recital Hall, $48
The honor and distinct pleasure of presenting the Emerson Quartet has been ongoing since 2002 when the Emerson became Quartet in Residence at Stony Brook University. In three concerts during 2017-2018, the complete late quartets of Beethoven plus works of Purcell, Shostakovich and Bartok will be featured.
Saturday, October 14 at 4 pm FLIP FABRIQUE Family Fare Main Stage, $20
Tuesday, November 21 at 8 pm STARRY NIGHTS FALL Recital Hall, $38
from Cirque du Soleil and Cirque Éloize. In Catch Me! you’ll see the stars of Flip FabriQue soar and take your breath away.
The stars of the music world come out for Staller Center’s Starry Nights, with musicians who you’d otherwise find at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center or in a London or Paris world class concert hall. Musicians come together for an evening of magnificent music, with artistic director and cellist Colin Carr planning programs that have become a favorite, known for the mixing of music you won’t hear anywhere else.
Friday, October 20 at 8 pm DAVID SEDARIS Main Stage, $48 Sponsored by Applied DNA Sciences, James A. Hayward
David Sedaris, one of America’s pre-eminent humor writers, is welcomed back to the Staller Center stage. With sardonic wit and incisive social critiques, Sedaris slices through cultural euphemisms and political correctness. He is a master of satire and one of the most observant writers addressing the human condition today.
Saturday, October 21 at 7 pm COLIN CARR: SIX SUITES FOR UNACCOMPANIED CELLO Recital Hall, $46
Join the Staller Center for a rare musical experience when Colin Carr, virtuoso cellist and artist-in-residence, takes his Europe and Asian tour to Stony Brook to perform all six Bach Cello Suites in a one-night-only marathon event.
Saturday, October 28 at 8 pm TANGO BUENOS AIRES Main Stage, $40
Be transported to a Buenos Aires cabaret. The music and dance of Tango Buenos Aires showcases the beauty of tango: embracing, sensual and fluid. One critic wrote, “Fast and furious, the dancers’ feet and legs flashed and wove in and around each other, or paused to move slowly and seductively, stretching the tension within the dance.”
How do the youthful acrobats of Flip FabriQue defy gravity? They’ve learned from the best, training at the Quebec City Circus School with great performers
DECEMBER
Humorist David Sedaris takes to the Staller stage on October 20.
NOVEMBER Friday, November 3 at 8 pm STEPHANIE QUAYLE Recital Hall, $38
Rising country artist Stephanie Quayle has captivated listeners with her Top 100 Billboard Country single “Drinking With Dolly.” From her radiating energy and booming personality to the passion and intensity delivered in her music, Quayle grabs hold of an audience and doesn’t let go.
Saturday, November 11 at 8 pm THE MARTIAL ARTISTS AND ACROBATS OF CHINA Main Stage, $42 Sponsored by Times Beacon Record News Media On tour from the People’s Republic of China, the Martial Artists and Acrobats of Tianjin are considered a Chinese cultural treasure. The Artists and Acrobats bring art forms that combine music, acrobatics, mime and dancing, sharing many similarities with Western culture. The action never stops—from plate spinning to body contortion, hoop diving to martial arts moves, it’s an engaging and thrilling experience.
Saturday, November 18 at 8 pm SONS OF SERENDIP Recital Hall, $42 Sponsored by Campolo, Middleton & McCormick, LLP
The Emerson String Quartet kicks off the first of three Staller Center performances on October 11.
The Sons of Serendip are a musical group of four friends who put together the unique combination of harp, piano, cello and voice and became a big favorite on “America’s Got Talent.” Their pop creations bring fresh interpretations of music known and loved: reinventions of songs such as Chris Isaak’s “Wicked Game,” Duran Duran’s “Ordinary World,” and Evanescence’s “Bring Me to Life,” along with traditional pop-oriented covers like “How Will I Know,” “Hallelujah,” “I Can’t Make You Love Me” and “Purple Rain.”
Saturday, December 2 at 8 pm JOHN PIZZARELLI & JESSICA MOLASKEY Holiday Hits and more with the Swing 7 Band Main Stage, $46 Sponsored by Teachers Federal Credit Union
Kick off the holidays with the husbandwife vocal duo of John Pizzarelli and Jessica Molaskey, along with John’s highly acclaimed Swing 7 Band. Their December show will feature seasonal favorites, jazz standards and other surprises.
Thursday, December 7 at 8 pm EMERSON STRING QUARTET #2 Recital Hall, $48
The Emerson’s second performance this season will feature an all-Beethoven program.
JANUARY 2018 Saturday, January 20 at 8 pm THE HOT SARDINES Recital Hall, $42 Sponsored by Renaissance Technologies
Music first made famous decades ago comes alive through The Hot Sardines’ brassy horn arrangements, rollicking piano melodies and vocals from a chanteuse who transports listeners to a different era with the mere lilt of her voice.
Saturday, January 27 at 4 pm IMAGO THEATRE - LA BELLE Lost in the World of Automaton Family Fare Main Stage, $20
Elaborate puppets, a large whirring ship, original music and shadow play — the wildly creative minds of Imago Theatre unveil a romance between a coal stoker and a vacationer set on a steamship in the 1920s.
FEBRUARY Saturday, February 3 at 8 pm FELA! THE CONCERT Main Stage, $42
Fela! The Concert brings the eclectic sounds and powerful lyrics of Nigerian musician and activist Fela Kuti — founding father of Afrobeat — to the Staller
Continued on page S14
august 31, 2017 • SBU BRIDGES • PAGE S13
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PAGE S14 • SBU BRIDGES • august 31, 2017
Bridges
Staller Center
Continued from page S12 Center stage. The essence of the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical is complete with members of the original Broadway cast of Fela!
Friday, February 9 at 8 pm LEZGINKA - RUSSIAN DANCE The State Dance Ensemble of Daghestan, Russia Main Stage, $40
Over 30 dancers of the Lezginka Ensemble fi ll the stage with traditional folk songs and dances of the diverse mountain people of Daghestan.
Saturday, February 17 at 8 pm TAO - DRUM HEART Main Stage, $42
Athletic bodies and contemporary costumes meet explosive Taiko drumming! Japanese drumming by TAO is known for extraordinary precision, innovative choreography and unflagging stamina. TAO: Drum Heart sold-out at its world premiere at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe Festival.
MARCH Saturday, March 3 at 8 pm GALA 2018 - JAY LENO w/special guest The Doo Wop Project Main Stage, $75 regular ticket
Acclaimed television late-night show host Jay Leno takes the stage for the Staller Center’s Gala. He is an admired stand-up comedian, best-selling children’s book author, in-demand corporate speaker, lovable TV and movie voiceover artist, pioneering car builder and mechanic, as well as philanthropist. Jay Leno is one of comedy’s most accomplished stars.
Wednesday, March 7 at 8 pm STARRY NIGHTS SPRING Recital Hall, $38
The stars of Starry Nights are artists-inresidence, professors of music and doctor of musical arts musicians who come together for a unique concert.
Saturday, March 10 at 8 pm DUBLIN IRISH DANCE Bringing the tradition of Irish dance to the stage. Main Stage, $46
Sunday, March 25 at 7 pm ADAM PASCAL & ANTHONY RAPP ACOUSTICALLY SPEAKING Recital Hall, $42
An intimate, unplugged show featuring original Rent stars Adam Pascal and Anthony Rapp as they celebrate over 20 years of friendship. Adam and Anthony deliver solo sets featuring both original tunes and songs that have influenced their lives, capped off by some of the iconic hits from the Pulitzer Prize and Tony-winning musical, Rent.
Dublin Irish Dance brings the epic tale of Celtic culture to the stage. The journey begins in rural Ireland, prior to the Famine, where creative artists met in kitchens, barns and fields celebrating traditional melodies and dance. As the Great Hunger closes in, the people look west, across the ocean, to New York City
APRIL
Sunday, March 18 at 4 pm SPHERUS Spherus is a circus with an extra dimension. Family Fare Main Stage, $20
Big Sam’s Funky Nation plays big band funk inspired by the thrills of their New Orleans hometown. The band is led by trombone powerhouse, Big Sam Williams, who the San Francisco Chronicle calls “the top man on the slide trombone in the birthplace of jazz.” The band’s performances are fi lled with blasts of brass, bursts of electric guitar and the charisma of Big Sam, the frontman who sings, plays, dances and involves the audience in everything he does. Big Sam has played with Karl Denson’s Tiny Universe, Dave Matthews, Ozomatli and Widespread Panic.
International Juggling champion Greg Kennedy uses music as a background for his unique tricks with light, super cool props and his acrobatic duo of aerial dancers. Spherus is certain to fascinate with its stunning effects.
Tuesday, March 20 at 8 pm EMERSON STRING QUARTET #3 With Christina Dahl, pianist Recital Hall, $48
The Emerson Quartet’s March concert includes “a fearless embrace of the new and the unusual as well as the classics” (Seattle Times). Enjoy an exciting mix of music from the 17th, 19th and 20th centuries. Christina Dahl joins the Emerson for the Bolcom Quintet.
Saturday, April 7 at 8 pm BIG SAM’S FUNKY NATION Recital Hall, $38 Sponsored by Renaissance Technologies
Saturday, April 14 at 8 pm CATAPULT Main Stage, $40 Sponsored by Jefferson’s Ferry Lifetime Retirement Community
Saturday, April 21 at 8 pm AUDRA MCDONALD 6 Tony Awards, 2 Grammy Awards, 1 Emmy Award Main Stage, $54 Sponsored by Hilton Garden Inn – Stony Brook Singer and actress Audra McDonald is unparalleled in the breadth and versatility of her artistry. With a record six Tony Awards, two Grammy Awards, an Emmy Award and a long list of other accolades to her name, she is among today’s most highly regarded performers (Ragtime, Private Practice, Raisin in the Sun, The Gershwins’ Porgy and Bess, Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill, Twelfth Night and Shuffle Along.)
MAY
Saturday, May 5 at 8 pm PARSONS DANCE COMPANY Delightful, vibrant and enticing… Main Stage, $42
Eight dancers of talent and passion bring sexy athleticism, exuberant personality and joyous movement to Parsons Dance. Choreographed by David Parsons, the company’s style is a fusion of the gesture and movement that makes up the modern dance vocabulary. The discipline and precise execution is what one expects from a classical company.
Schedule subject to change. Please visit stallercenter.com for updates.
Founded by Pilobolus Dance Theatre’s former creative director, Adam Battlestein, Catapult is all about surprising transformations.
Paul W. Zuccaire Gallery at Staller The Paul W. Zuccaire Gallery, located on the first floor of the Staller Center for the Arts, presents dynamic exhibitions by celebrated artists and Stony Brook University students and faculty. Join us for our lively Wednesday noon Salons, Artist Talks and Campus-wide Art Crawls. Gallery hours during the exhibitions are Tuesday to Friday, noon to 4 pm. It’s also open one hour prior to most Staller Center season performances and films. For additional Gallery hours and events, please ZuccaireGallery.stonybrook. visit edu. Follow the Gallery on Twitter at @ZuccaireGallery. Admission is Paul Mpagi Sepuya, Self Portrait After, 2010, free. included in the exhibition Race, Love and Labor.
UPCOMING FALL SHOWS Race, Love and Labor September 12 to October 21 Campus-wide Art Crawl: Thursday, September 14, 3 pm to 5 pm Salon: Wednesday, September 20, noon Jeremy Dennis, SBU BA ’13, Artist Residency at CPW 2017 Sara Greenberger Rafferty: Gloves Off November 3 to December 17 Art Crawl: Friday, November 3, 3 pm to 5 pm Artist Talk: Thursday, November 2, 1 pm Reception: Friday, November 3, 5 pm to 8 pm
Sara Greenberger Rafferty, Dress, 2016, in the exhibition Sara Greenberger Rafferty: Gloves Off.
august 31, 2017 • SBU BRIDGES • PAGE S15
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PAGE S16 • SBU BRIDGES • august 31, 2017
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Whitman College
Roth Café
L.I. High Technology Incubator
Bioengineering
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Hamilton College
Kelly Quad
Frank Melville Jr. Memorial Library
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Charles B. Wang Center
Staller Center for the Arts
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Math Tower
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Walter J. Stony Brook Hawrys Union Campus (under Recreation renovation) Center
Sports Complex
Physics
25A
Mendelsohn Quad
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Island Federal Arena
General Information (631) 632-6000 University Police (631) 632-3333
Benedict College
O’Neill College
Ammann College
Outdoor Basketball Courts
Road
James College
Student Health Center
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Langmuir College H Quad
Lacrosse Practice Field
Soccer Practice Field
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august 31, 2017 • SBU BRIDGES • PAGE S17
CAMPUS MAP INDEX Accelerator, Van de Graaff ............................................................C3 Administration Bldg.**.................................................................D4 Administration Parking Garage ....................................................D4 AERTC (Advanced Energy Research and Technology Center).........A7 Ambulatory Surgery Center ...........................................................E6 Ammann College* .........................................................................D3 Arena, Island Federal Credit Union...........................................B,C3 Baruch College* ........................................................................ A,B4 Basic Sciences Tower ....................................................................E5 Benedict College*..........................................................................D2 Bioengineering Bldg......................................................................D4 Campus Recreation Center, Walter J. Hawrys..............................C3 Cancer Center................................................................................E6 Cardozo College*...........................................................................C5 Carol M. Baldwin Breast Care Center ..........................................E6 Centers for Molecular Medicine (CMM) ........................................D4 Central Services (Receiving).........................................................B3 Central Stores (Warehouse) ..........................................................B3 CEWIT (Center of Excellence in Wireless and Information Technology) ...............................................................B7 Challenger Hall..............................................................................E6 Chapin Apartments ....................................................................F,G5 Charles B. Wang Center ................................................................D3 Chávez Hall*..................................................................................D3 Chemistry Bldg. .............................................................................C3 Child Care Center ..........................................................................C8 Children’s Hospital, Stony Brook (in MART) ................................E5 CoGen Plant ...................................................................................B3 Computer Science Bldg. ...........................................................C,D4 Computing Center .........................................................................C4 Dana Hall .......................................................................................D6 DEC (NYS Dept. of Environmental Conservation) ........................D2 Dental Clinics ................................................................................D7 Dewey College*..............................................................................B4 Discovery Hall ................................................................................E6 Douglass College*.........................................................................C5 Dreiser College*.............................................................................C5 Dubin Family Athletic Performance Center (in Sports Complex)..... C3 Dutchess Hall ................................................................................D6 Earth and Space Sciences Bldg. (ESS) ........................................C4 East Side Dining ............................................................................D3 Educational Communications Center (ECC)................................C4 Eisenhower College* ................................................................. A,B4 Endeavour Hall ..............................................................................E6 Engineering Bldg...........................................................................C4 Frank Melville Jr. Memorial Library ........................................... C3,4 Frey Hall ..................................................................................... C3,4 Gershwin College*.....................................................................C,D5 Goldstein Family Student-Athlete Development Center (in Sports Complex) .......................................................................C3 Gray College*.................................................................................D3 Greeley College* ............................................................................B5 H Quad ...........................................................................................D2 Hamilton College* .........................................................................B4 Hand College* ...............................................................................C5 Harriman Hall ................................................................................C4 Health Sciences Garage ................................................................E4 Health Sciences Tower ..................................................................E5 Heavy Engineering Bldg. ...............................................................C4 Hendrix College*............................................................................C4 Hilton Garden Inn ..........................................................................D4 Hospital Parking Garage ...............................................................E5 Hospital..........................................................................................E5 Humanities Bldg............................................................................D4 Imaging Center..............................................................................E6 Institute for Advanced Computational Science (IACS)................D4 Island Federal Credit Union Arena............................................B,C3 Irving College*...............................................................................D3 James College*..............................................................................D2 Javits Lecture Center .................................................................C,D4 Keller College* ...............................................................................B5 Kelly Quad ......................................................................................B4 Kenneth P. LaValle Athletic Stadium............................................C3 Langmuir College* ....................................................................C,D2 Laufer Center .................................................................................D4 Lauterbur Hall*..............................................................................B5
Library, Frank Melville Jr. Memorial ...........................................C3,4 Life Sciences Bldg. ........................................................................D4 Light Engineering Bldg. ................................................................C4 L.I. High Technology Incubator......................................................E4 L.I. Rail Road Station.....................................................................B2 L.I. State Veterans Home........................................................... G5,6 Louis and Beatrice Laufer Center for Physical and Quantitative Biology ..............................................................D4 Marine and Atmospheric Sciences ...............................................D6 MART (Medical and Research Translation Bldg.)........................E5 Math Tower ....................................................................................C4 Mendelsohn Quad..........................................................................D3 Mount College*.......................................................................... C4,5 Nassau Hall ...................................................................................D6 New Computer Science Bldg. .......................................................C4 Nobel Halls................................................................................. B4,5 North P Lot ..............................................................................B,C1,2 O’Neill College* .............................................................................D3 Pain Management Center .............................................................E6 Parking, Administration Garage ...................................................D4 Parking, Hospital Garage ..............................................................E5 Physics Bldg. .................................................................................C3 Point of Woods Bldgs. ...................................................................E4 Pritchard Gymnasium (in Sports Complex)..................................C3 Psychology Bldgs. A and B............................................................C4 Putnam Hall...................................................................................D6 Research & Support Services (RSS) .............................................A9 Rockland Hall ............................................................................ D6,7 Roosevelt Quad..............................................................................B5 Roth Café .......................................................................................C5 Roth Quad ......................................................................................C5 SAC (Student Activities Center) ....................................................C4 Sanger College* ............................................................................B5 SCAN (Social, Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience) Center.....................................................D5 Schick College* .............................................................................B4
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New York City
Schomburg Apartments................................................................A4 Service Group............................................................................. B3,4 Simons Center for Geometry and Physics ......................................B4 Social and Behavioral Sciences Bldg. (SBS) ...............................D4 South P Lot..............................................................................C,D8,9 Sports Complex..............................................................................C3 Sports Courts ..........................................................A4,C5, and C,D2 Stadium, Kenneth P. LaValle Athletic...........................................C3 Staller Center for the Arts .........................................................C,D3 Stimson College*...........................................................................B5 Stony Brook Children’s Hospital (in MART) ..................................E5 Stony Brook Union..........................................................................C3 Student Activities Center (SAC) ....................................................C4 Student Health Center...................................................................C2 Suffolk Hall ....................................................................................D6 Sullivan Hall ..................................................................................D7 Tabler Center .................................................................................C5 Tabler Quad ...................................................................................C5 Toscanini College* ........................................................................B5 Tubman Hall* ................................................................................D3 University Police (in Dutchess Hall)..............................................D6 Veterans Home, L.I. State.......................................................... G5,6 Visitors’ Parking ............................................................................ Wagner College*........................................................................ B4,5 Walter J. Hawrys Campus Recreation Center...............................C3 Wang Center ..................................................................................D3 West Apartment Complex ..........................................................A4,5 West Side Dining ...........................................................................B4 Westchester Hall........................................................................ D6,7 Whitman College* .................................................................... C,D5 Yang Hall* .....................................................................................B5
STONY BROOK SOUTHAMPTON
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MASSACHUSETTS CONNECTICUT
STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY
NEW JERSEY PENNSYLVANIA
NEW JERSEY MARYLAND DELAWARE WEST VIRGINIA VIRGINIA
RHODE ISLAND
PAGE S18 • SBU BRIDGES • august 31, 2017
Bridges
2017-2018 Concert Season at Stony Brook Celebrates 50 Years
The Department of Music at Stony Brook, which is celebrating 50 years of music, is proud to present its 2017– 2018 season featuring its students, faculty and professional guests. These shows, many of which are free to the public, are in addition to what is offered by the Staller Center for the Arts. Please note this schedule is subject to change. Visit stonybrook.edu/music for updates. All Department of Music programs are held in the Staller Center on either the Main Stage (MS) or in the Recital Hall (RH). Pricing is listed for community members first, then Stony Brook student pricing. Tickets can be purchased online or from the Staller Center Box Office. Seniors 65 and older and students of any school (with ID) can purchase tickets at a 50 percent discount for shows with the exception of faculty recitals, opera and Emerson String Quartet performances. To order tickets, visit stallercenter.com, call 631-632-ARTS or visit the box office in the lobby of the Staller Center, Monday through Saturday, 12 pm to 6 pm.
OCTOBER Saturday, October 7, 8 pm StOnY BrOOk SYmphOnY OrCheStra Program: Rachmaninoff, Piano Concerto No. 3, featuring Miles Massicotte, winner of the 2015 Concerto Competition; Mahler, Symphony No. 1. Conducted by Eduardo Leandro. Free pre-concert lecture with Michael Hershkowitz at 7 pm in the Recital Hall. Tickets: $20/$10 • MS Wednesday, October 11, 8 pm emerSOn String Quartet The honor and distinct pleasure of presenting the Emerson Quartet has been ongoing since 2002, when the Emerson became quartet-in-residence at Stony Brook University. In three concerts during 2017–2018, the Emerson will perform the complete late quartets of Beethoven plus the works of Purcell, Shostakovich and Bartók. Tickets: $48 • RH thursday, October 12, 8 pm aural arChiteCtureS Computers that listen, electronics that sing, and wired and wireless performers: We present an innovative concert in which the latest in sonic technology meets the most adventurous players and composers. Presented by the Stony Brook Computer Music Studios. Tickets: Free admission • RH
The Stony Brook Symphony Orchestra begins the Department of Music’s season on October 7. tuesday, October 17, 8 pm StOnY BrOOk COmpOSerS The talented student composers at Stony Brook work side by side with the stellar performers of the Contemporary Chamber Players to present new music in a colorful range of styles. Tickets: Free admission • RH Saturday, October 21, 8 pm COlin Carr in COnCert Join the Staller Center for a rare musical experience when Colin Carr, virtuoso cellist and artist-in-residence, takes his European and Asian tour to Stony Brook to perform all six Bach cello suites in a one-night-only marathon event. Tickets: $46 • RH Sunday, October 22, 3 pm BarOQue SundaYS at three Lutenist Jason Priset, a Stony Brook alumnus, and the versatile soprano Emily Eagen bring a concert of gems from Elizabethan and Jacobean England. In keeping with the improvisatory spirit of the Baroque era, a few 20thcentury classics from the jazz catalog will be performed as well. Tickets: Free admission • RH
NOVEMBER Saturday, november 4, 8 pm StOnY BrOOk SYmphOnY OrCheStra Program: Mussorgsky, Night on Bald Mountain; RimskyKorsakov, Scheherazade; Tchaikovsky, Piano Concerto No. 1, featuring Shir Semmel, winner of the 2016 Concerto Competition. Conducted by Jens Georg Bachmann. Free pre-concert lecture with Michael Hershkowitz at 7 pm in the Recital Hall. Tickets: $20/$10 • MS Wednesday, november 8, 8 pm Wind enSemBle “Bound to Sound” features the music of Mozart, Puccini, Mendelssohn and Beethoven, and a medley of music from Man of La Mancha. Conducted by Bruce Engel. Tickets: $10/$5 • MS tuesday, november 14, 8 pm uniVerSitY OrCheStra The University Orchestra’s opening concert features Mozart’s overture to Don Giovanni, Schumann’s Konzertstück for Four Horns and Tchaikovsky’s Symphony No. 1 in G minor, “Winter Dreams.” Conducted by Susan Deaver. Tickets: $10/$5 • MS
Colin Carr, virtuoso cellist and artist-in-residence at Stony Brook University, takes to the stage on October 21.
thursday, november 16, 8 pm and Friday, november 17, 8 pm 30th annual StOnY BrOOk premiereS! Created by Stony Brook faculty composer John Lessard in 1988, the Premieres! Series has commissioned more than 100 works for the Stony Brook Contemporary Chamber Players from composers in the United States and abroad. This year’s Premieres! concerts feature new works by Michelle Lou, Wang Lu, Ushio Torikai and Amy Williams. Directed by Eduardo Leandro. Tickets: Free admission • November 16, RH; November 17, Roulette, NYC Friday, november 17, 8 pm Opera SCeneS A gala program of scenes from familiar and contemporary operas, sung in the original languages with projected titles in English; semi-staged, with piano accompaniment. Conducted by David Lawton and staged by Brenda Harris. Tickets: $10/$5 • RH Sunday, november 19, 3 pm BarOQue SundaYS at three The Stony Brook Baroque Players will usher in the holiday season with vocal and instrumental masterpieces from the entire Baroque period. Don’t miss this traditional autumnal treat featuring our cream-of-the-crop graduate students from the Stony Book Department of Music. Tickets: Free admission • RH tuesday, november 21, 8 pm StarrY nightS nOVemBer Staller Center’s Starry Nights features musicians who you’d otherwise find at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center or in a world-class concert hall in London or Paris. Artistic director and cellist Colin Carr — known for mixing music that you won’t hear anywhere else — plans an evening of magnificent music programs that have become favorites. Tickets: $38 • RH tuesday, november 28, 8 pm StOnY BrOOk COmpOSerS The talented student composers at Stony Brook work side by side with the stellar performers of the Contemporary Chamber Players to present new music in a colorful range of styles. Tickets: Free admission • RH thursday, november 30. 7:30 pm WeSt aFriCan drumming enSemBle (VOlta) Stony Brook’s West African music student ensemble, VOLTA, will perform a selection of dance drumming pieces from Togo, Ghana and Benin. Featuring guest artists Nani Agbeli from Ghana and the Gnonlonfoun brothers from Benin. Tickets: Free admission • RH
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MARCH
Music Schedule
Friday, March 2, 8 pm and Sunday, March 4, 3 pm STONY BROOK OPERa aND BaROQUE ENSEMBLE Stony Brook Opera joins with the Stony Brook Baroque Players to present a staged production of Rameau’s celebrated Pygmalion, an opera-ballet in one act, based on the story of Pygmalion from Ovid’s “Metamorphoses.” Arthur Haas conducts the Stony Brook Opera cast and Stony Brook Baroque Players; Catherine Turocy directs. Tickets: $10/$5 • RH
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DECEMBER
Tuesday, December 5, 8 pm jazz GROUPS Small jazz and improvising music groups led by Ray Anderson perform new works and jazz standards. Come hear the “Bright Moments.” Tickets: Free admission • RH Wednesday, December 6, 8 pm CHORaL ENSEMBLES The Camerata Singers presents Morten Lauridsen’s Lux Aeterna with piano. The Stony Brook Chorale will be performing love songs from around the world. Conducted by Shoshana Hershkowitz. Tickets: $10/$5 • RH Thursday, December 7, 8 pm EMERSON STRiNG QUaRTET The 2016–2017 season marked the Emerson Quartet’s 40th anniversary. Formed in 1976 and based in New York City, the Emerson took its name from the American poet and philosopher Ralph Waldo Emerson. Featuring an allBeethoven program. Tickets: $48 • RH Friday, December 8, 8 pm jazz ENSEMBLE Stony Brook University’s famed big band, The Blowage, swings the night away with original charts, sizzling classics and hot soloists, featuring Ray Anderson. Tickets: $10/$5 • RH Saturday, December 9, 8 pm DEPaRTMENT OF MUSiC 50th aNNiVERSaRY CONCERT FEaTURiNG CHRiSTiNE GOERKE This concert will benefit Stony Brook Opera and features dramatic soprano Christine Goerke — Metropolitan Opera star and Stony Brook alumna — with the Stony Brook Symphony Orchestra. Program: Wagner, Tannhäuser Overture; Elisabeth’s Aria “Dich teure Halle” from Tannhäuser; Strauss, “Dance of the Seven Veils” from Salome; Wagner, Immolation Scene from Götterdämmerung. Conducted by Timothy Long. Free pre-concert lecture with Michael Hershkowitz at 7 pm in the Recital Hall. Tickets: $30 Adults/$15 Students • MS Sunday, December 10, 3 pm aNNUaL MESSiaH SiNG-aLONG The audience is the chorus in this seasonal tradition at Stony Brook. The performance features members of the University Orchestra, guest soloists and conductors in a performance of Handel’s Messiah. Scores will be available for purchase at the door. Tickets: Free admission • RH Monday, December 11, through Friday, December 15, TBa FaLL CHaMBER MUSiC FESTiVaL Faculty, students, guest artists and members of the Emerson String Quartet will perform chamber works of all genres, style periods and configurations. Check the Department of Music website for the complete list of concerts and repertoire. Tickets: Free admission • RH Tuesday, December 12, 8 pm CONTEMPORaRY CHaMBER PLaYERS The New York Times called the Stony Brook Contemporary Players “a small army of musicians who demonstrate consistent accomplishment.” Two seminal works by Iannis Xenakis — Palimpsest, for piano and ensemble, and Persephassa, for six percussionists — frame this portrait concert of one of the most influential composers of the second half of the 20th century. Directed by Eduardo Leandro. Tickets: Free admission • RH Saturday, December 16, 5 pm, 8 pm and Sunday, December 17, 12 pm, 3 pm, 7 pm UNDERGRaDUaTE RECiTaLS Undergraduate music majors perform select solo and chamber works in these featured recitals. Tickets: Free admission • RH
Monday, March 5, 8 pm STONY BROOK COMPOSERS The talented student composers at Stony Brook work side by side with the stellar performers of the Contemporary Chamber Players to present new music in a colorful range of styles. Tickets: Free admission • RH
To Celebrate the Department of Music’s 50th Anniversary, Alumna Christine Goerke joins the Stony Brook Symphony Orchestra for a Special Performance on December 9.
FEBRUARY 2018 Wednesday, February 7, 8 pm and Thursday, February 8, 8 pm CELEBRaTiNG THE MUSiC OF SHEiLa SiLVER An all-Silver program spanning 25 years, including Silver’s work for two pianos and percussion, Twilight’s Last Gleaming, performed by Gilbert Kalish, Christina Dahl and Eduardo Leandro. The program will include Silver’s To the Spirit Unconquered and songs and arias, including a guest appearance by Dawn Upshaw. Tickets: Free admission • February 7, RH; February 8, Merkin Concert Hall, NYC Sunday, February 11, 3 pm BaROQUE SUNDaYS aT THREE The Parnassus Historical Dance Ensemble presents the glorious music of French Baroque opera with the original dances by the ballet masters of the royal court and theater. You will be awed by the deft footwork, dramatic gestures and lavish costumes of one of New York’s premier historical dance companies, accompanied by a period instrument band. Tickets: Free admission • RH Friday, February 16, 8 pm EaRFEST Sit back in your chair and be surrounded by sumptuous sound, including the latest in fixed-media audio and video. Presented by the Stony Brook Computer Music Studios. Tickets: Free admission • RH Saturday, February 24, 8 pm STONY BROOK SYMPHONY ORCHESTRa Program: Rossini, Overture to La gazza ladra; Magnus Lindberg, Clarinet Concerto, featuring Carina Canonico, winner of the 2016 Concerto Competition; Ginastera, Variaciones Concertantes. Orpheus-style concert performed without a conductor except for the concerto. Conducted by Alan Kay. Free pre-concert lecture with Michael Hershkowitz at 7 pm in the Recital Hall. Tickets: $20/$10 • MS
Tuesday, March 6, 7:30 pm FaMiLY ORCHESTRa CONCERT “Adventures in Orchestral Music:” This one-hour concert, an annual favorite of the Stony Brook community, will feature pieces by well-known classical composers, including John Williams. Featuring the winner of the 2017 Young Artist Concerto Competition and conducted by Susan Deaver. Tickets: $5 • MS Wednesday, March 7, 8 pm STaRRY NiGHTS MaRCH The stars of Starry Nights — artists-in-residence, professors of music and doctors of musical arts — come together for a unique concert. Tickets: $38 • RH Thursday, March 8, 8 pm CONTEMPORaRY CHaMBER PLaYERS One of the country’s finest collegiate contemporary music ensembles performs Steve Reich’s Music for 18 Musicians, the piece that shaped minimalism. The evening will feature constant hypnotic pulses, human breath pulses and 11 chords in a continuous hourlong performance. Directed by Eduardo Leandro. Tickets: Free admission • RH Tuesday, March 20, 8 pm EMERSON STRiNG QUaRTET The Emerson Quartet’s March concert includes “a fearless embrace of the new and the unusual as well as the classics” (The Seattle Times). Enjoy an exciting mix of music from the 17th, 19th and 20th centuries. Christina Dahl joins the Emerson for the Bolcom quintet. Tickets: $48 • RH Thursday, March 22, 8 pm NEW MORSE CODE Cellist Hannah Collins and percussionist Michael Compitello are New Morse Code, a chamber group devoted to bold and engaging performances that champion the compelling works of young composers; featuring the premiere of a new work by Stony Brook composer Matthew Barnson. Tickets: Free admission • RH Saturday, March 24, 8 pm STONY BROOK SYMPHONY ORCHESTRa Program: Berlioz, Overture to Béatrice et Bénédict; SaintSaëns, Violin Concerto No. 3, featuring Dami Kim, winner of the 2016 Concerto Competition; Beethoven, Symphony No. 2. Conducted by Larry Rachleff. Free pre-concert lecture with Michael Hershkowitz at 7 pm in the Recital Hall. Tickets: $20/$10 • MS Tuesday, March 27, 5 pm, 8 pm PiaNO PROjECT The Stony Brook Piano Project is an annual collaboration between more than 25 graduate pianists at Stony Brook University who put together a marathon concert series of solo, four-hand and duo piano music centered on a single theme or group of composers. Tickets: Free admission • RH
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APRIL
Tuesday, April 3, 8 pm sTony brook composers The talented student composers at Stony Brook work side by side with the stellar performers of the Contemporary Chamber Players to present new music in a colorful range of styles. Tickets: Free admission • RH sunday, April 8, 3 pm bAroque sundAys The Stony Brook Baroque Players brings its season to a rousing finale with vocal and instrumental treasures, featuring virtuoso graduate students performing music from the early 17th century to the late Baroque. Tickets: Free admission • RH Wednesday, April 11, 8 pm JoAnne shenAndoAh In concerT The Associated Press called Joanne Shenandoah one of “America’s most celebrated and critically acclaimed Native American musicians of her time.” She has garnered a Grammy Award and more than 40 additional awards for work that runs the gamut from solo songs to symphonic pieces and is captured on 18 recordings. She will perform original music that represents her work as a peace advocate. This event is co-sponsored by the Stony Brook Department of Music and the Stony Brook University Libraries, and is supported by a Stony Brook Presidential Mini-Grant for Departmental Diversity. Tickets: Free admission • RH Friday, April 13, 8 pm sonIc sprInG Experience the sizzling energy and subtle expressions of electronic sounds and “musique concrete.” This dazzling program includes electronic music sound sculptures, virtuoso instrumental performance and video projection. Tickets: Free admission • RH Tuesday, April 17, 8 pm conTemporAry chAmber plAyers Young America, Let’s Do It Again! We feature our annual concert of works by young American composers, including Christopher Cerrone, Alex Mincek, Paula Matthusen and others. Directed by Eduardo Leandro. Tickets: Free admission • RH
Wednesday, April 18, 8 pm WInd ensemble “Child’s Play:” This performance features music from the opera Hansel and Gretel and excerpts from The Nutcracker, plus music from the film E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial and a medley of music from The King and I. Conducted by Bruce Engel. Tickets: $10/$5 • MS Thursday, April 19, 8 pm chrIsTInA dAhl And oksAnA eZhokInA Sergei Rachmaninoff composed three major works for two pianos, which spanned the entirety of his compositional life and reflected his nostalgia for his Russian roots. Longtime Stony Brook faculty member and alumna Christina Dahl and alumna Oksana Ezhokina, currently chair of the piano faculty at Pacific Lutheran University, have embarked on a recording project of these towering works. They present all three in concert and honor the 50th anniversary of the Department of Music. Tickets: Free admission • RH Tuesday, April 24, 8 pm JAZZ And neW musIc nIGhT Small jazz and improvising music groups led by Ray Anderson perform new works and jazz standards. Come hear the “Bright Moments.” Tickets: Free admission • RH Friday, April 27, 8 pm JAZZ ensemble Stony Brook University’s famed big band, The Blowage, swings the night away with original charts, sizzling classics and hot soloists, featuring Ray Anderson. Tickets: $10/$5 • RH saturday, April 28, 8 pm and sunday, April 29, 3 pm sTony brook operA Die Fledermaus: The Stony Brook Opera and Stony Brook Symphony Orchestra present a staging of Johann Strauss’ popular comic operetta Die Fledermaus (The Bat), sung in English with projected titles. David Lawton will conduct the Stony Brook Opera cast and Stony Brook Symphony Orchestra, and Brenda Harris will direct the production. Tickets: $20/$15 • MS
MAY Tuesday, may 1, 8 pm unIVersITy orchesTrA Spotlighting Beethoven, Coriolan Overture, and Brahms, Symphony No. 4. Featuring the winner of the 2018 Undergraduate Concerto Competition and conducted by Susan Deaver. Tickets: $10/$5 • MS Wednesday, may 2, through saturday, may 5, TbA sprInG chAmber musIc FesTIVAl Faculty, students, guest artists and members of the Emerson String Quartet will perform chamber works of all genres, style periods and configurations. Check the Department of Music website for the complete list of concerts and repertoire. Tickets: Free admission • RH Thursday, may 3, 5:30 pm WesT AFrIcAn drummInG ensemble (VolTA) Stony Brook’s West African music student ensemble, VOLTA, will perform a selection of dance drumming pieces from Togo, Ghana and Benin. Featuring guest artists Nani Agbeli from Ghana and the Gnonlonfoun brothers from Benin. Tickets: Free admission • Staller Center Steps (Rain location: RH) Wednesday, may 9, 5 pm, 8 pm; Thursday, may 10, 5 pm, 8 pm; Friday, may 11, 5 pm, 8 pm underGrAduATe recITAls Undergraduate music majors perform select solo and chamber works. Tickets: Free admission • RH saturday, may 12, 8 pm AckermAn honors chAmber concerT The Lauren V. Ackerman Memorial Chamber Concert was endowed by Dr. Ackerman’s family as a tribute to his memory and a continuing reminder of the arts that he cherished. Beginning in 2010, the Department of Music established a competition for the purposes of identifying a particularly worthy group to receive a prize and to perform at this concert. Tickets: Free admission • RH
monday, April 30, 8 pm chorAl ensembles The Stony Brook Chorale performs Ralph Vaughan Williams’ Five Mystical Songs with Stony Brook University voice faculty member Randall Scarlata. The Camerata Singers perform a set of classic and contemporary choral works with piano and a capella. Conducted by Shoshana Hershkowitz. Tickets: $10 • RH
Wusb 90.1 celebrates 40th Anniversary This past June, WUSB 90.1 FM Stony Brook celebrated 40 years of Long Island non-commercial radio broadcast service. WUSB was originally an on-campus carrier-current student station from 1963 until receiving Federal Communications Commission licensing for FM transmission in June 1977. WUSB has achieved this noteworthy 40-year milestone due to the efforts of a supportive administration at Stony Brook University as well as to the students, staff, faculty, alumni and community volunteers who have provided creative and innovative radio programming to listeners on Long Island and in Southern Connecticut for four decades. WUSB’s purpose is to provide a forum for innovative and commercial free radio in the form of public service announcements, educational use, music of varied genres and cultures, community affairs and events, campus and local news, collegiate and national sports, and other student and community oriented programming. WUSB’s primary broadcast coverage area reaches from Western Nassau County to Suffolk’s East End and southern Connecticut. According to the most recent listener surveys, nearly 40,000 off-campus listeners tune into WUSB’s unique and
live programming each week. Listeners can also enjoy WUSB over the Internet via its website, www.wusb.fm. WUSB serves the community and campus with information on events, exposure to new music, news, expanding awareness to other cultures and to provide students with an understanding of radio. WUSB represents a wide variety of music, opinion, talk and local Stony Brook University Seawolves sports. WUSB freeform radio blends a diverse mix of entertainment and information programs and music ranging from pop, metal, classical, jazz, ska, polka, rock, hip hop, indie, electronica, country, Reggae, Celtic, Italian, Chinese, African, Korean, hip-hop, folk and world music to news, talk and public affairs shows Since WUSB’s “sign on” 40 years ago, more than 2,000 campus and community volunteers have served as staff members, thousands of nationally-acclaimed artists, musicians, newsmakers, public figures and educators have participated in live broadcasts, over 30,000 public service announcements have been aired, and tens of thousands of listeners have enjoyed quality, commercial free, thought provoking, inspired and creative radio programs. WUSB Stony Brook can be heard on Long Island and the
Some of WUSB’s volunteer DJs in the new studio. surrounding areas on your FM radio at 90.1 and 107.3fm and all over the world on the internet via www.wusb.fm. If you’d like to learn more about the station’s history or become a volunteer, please call (631) 632-6828.
august 31, 2017 • SBU BRIDGES • PAGE S21
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2017 Wang Center Cultural Offerings
The Charles B. Wang Center is dedicated to presenting the public with a multifaceted, intellectually sound and humane understanding of Asian and Asian American cultures, and their relationship to other cultures. The Wang Center serves as a conference facility and venue for cultural events, offering lectures, workshops, film, gallery shows, festivals and more. The Center offers dozens of events and exhibits each semester. Please visit the website for the upcoming fall schedule or to sign up for the mailing list at stonybrook.edu/wang. Come and experience the varied cultures of Asia this fall, no passport required. Contact the Wang Center at 631-632-4400 or wangcenter@stonybrook.edu with any questions.
FALL SCHEDULE
All events held in the Wang Center. Some events require pre-registration and/or have fees. Please see stonybrook.edu/wang for details.
2017 EXHIBITIONS OPENING RECEPTION
Thursday, September 14, 5 pm, Skylight Gallery THE WAY OF TEA IN ASIA ON VIEW September 7 through December 10 Skylight Gallery OM LAB ON VIEW September 7 through December 10 Zodiac Gallery SIMPLICITY OVER COMPLEXITY By Jongil Ma Long-term Installation, Wang Center Outdoor Garden EXPLORE HISTORY: OBJECTS FROM ASIA Mitsuko’s Garden: A Bit of Kyoto in Stony Brook Long-term Installation, Garden View Gallery
LECTURES, FILMS and OTHER PROGRAMS SEPTEMBER
Sunday, September 10, 11 am, 12 pm, 1 pm, 1:45 pm WORKSHOP: JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY Skylight Gallery Hosted in a tearoom designed by Shigeru Uchida (1943–2016) as a part of the exhibition The Way of Tea in Asia, the Wang Center offers the chance to participate in an authentic Japanese tea ceremony. Keiko Kitazawa, a licensed instructor of the Omotesenke school of tea ceremony, will be leading the ceremony. We welcome all participants, especially those who have never experienced Japanese tea ceremony before. The ceremony will includes tea tasting and a discussion of the history and culture of tea in Japan as well as the traditional Japanese aesthetics of wabi-sabi, which emphasizes the beauty found in asymmetry, simplicity, austerity, and modesty. Please note: Tea ceremonies are performed in a kneeling position on the floor. This position puts pressure on the
knees and ankles. If you have a condition that would prevent you from sitting this way for 30 minutes, you may not wish to take our standard class. Please contact us for more information about alternatives. Thursday, September 14, 3 to 5 pm ART CRAWL: GUIDED EXHIBITION TOUR BY MR. KUNIJI TSUBAKI, MODERN TEA SUITCASE FOR THE GLOBETROTTERS Alloway Gallery, Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center (Stony Brook LIbrary Special Collections Seminar Room), Zuccaire Gallery, Charles B. Wang Center Sunday, September 23, 12 to 4 pm COMMUNIVERSITY DAY Attendees of CommUniversity Day may attend a tea ceremony workshop at 1 pm, 2 pm or 3 pm. From 12 pm to 4 pm, participants may visit the OM Lab and record their own chants of this ancient Sanskrit mantra “OM.” Monday, September 24, 11 am, 12 pm, 1 pm, 1:45 pm WORKSHOP: JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY Skylight Gallery
OCTOBER
Sunday, October 1, 11 am, 12 pm, 1 pm, 1:45 pm WORKSHOP: JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY Skylight Gallery
NOVEMBER
Sunday, October 1, 4 to 5:30 pm PERFORMANCE: INDIAN MODERN DANCE: FINDING MY VOICE AND OUT OF BOUNDS Theatre
Friday, November 3, 3 to 5 pm ART CRAWL: GUIDED EXHIBITION TOUR Simons Center, Stony Brook Library Special Collections, Zuccaire Gallery
Thursday, October 5, 1 pm LECTURE: THE DAWN OF KOREAN DESIGN: VIBRANT MODERNISM IN EARLY 20TH CENTURY KOREA Lecture Hall I
Sunday, November 5, 11 am, 12 pm, 1 pm, 1:45 pm WORKSHOP: JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY Skylight Gallery
Sunday, October 9, 1 to 3 pm WORKSHOP: ORIGAMI HEAVEN, FOLDED WEAVES Chapel Friday, October 13, 3–4:30 pm WORKSHOP: KINTSUGI, THE ART OF BROKEN CERAMICS Chapel
Sunday, November 11, 3 to 4 pm LECTURE: THE FUNDAMENTALS OF CHINESE TEA Chapel Sunday, November 12, 11 am, 12 pm, 1 pm, 1:45 pm WORKSHOP: JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY Skylight Gallery Friday, November 17, 5:30–7 pm FILM: THE SEARCH FOR GENERAL TSO Theatre
Sunday, October 15, 11 am, 12 pm, 1 pm, 1:45 pm WORKSHOP: JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY Skylight Gallery
Sunday, November 19, 11 am, 12 pm, 1 pm, 1:45 pm WORKSHOP: JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY Skylight Gallery
Sunday, October 15, 4 to 5 pm PERFORMANCE: TWO PERSIAN TALES: SHADOW PUPPET PERFORMANCE WITH LIVE MUSIC Theatre
DECEMBER
Thursday, October 19, 1 pm LECTURE: MILLENNIAL MAIKO: THE GEISHA APPRENTICE IN JAPANESE POPULAR CULTURE Lecture Hall I Thursday, October 19, 5:30 to 7 pm FESTIVAL: DIWALI: LIGHTS UP! 5:30 to 6:30 pm, Chapel (for worship ritual) 6:30 to 7 pm, Theatre Lobby (for procession of lights) Friday, October 20, 3 to 4:30 pm WORKSHOP: KINTSUGI: THE ART OF BROKEN CERAMICS Chapel Friday, October 27, 3 to 4:30 pm WORKSHOP: KINTSUGI: THE ART BROKEN CERAMICS Chapel
Enjoy a performance by the Korean music group Fairy Tale on Sunday, December 3 (top photo). Visitors to the Wang Center will have multiple opportunities to attend a Japanese tea workshop (above photo).
Sunday, October 29, 11 am, 12 pm, 1 pm, 1:45 pm WORKSHOP: JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY Skylight Gallery
Friday, October 27, 5:30 to 7:30 pm FILM: TAMPOPO Theatre
Friday, December 1, 11 am to 1 pm, 2 to 4 pm WORKSHOP: MAEDEUP, THE ELEGANT ART OF KNOT JEWELRY FOR THE HOLIDAYS Chapel Sunday, December 3, 11 am, 12 pm, 1 pm, 1:45 pm WORKSHOP: JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY Skylight Gallery Sunday, December 3, 4–5 pm PERFORMANCE: FAIRY TALE: A CREATIVE AND TRADITIONAL KOREAN MUSIC GROUP Theatre Friday, December 8, 11 am to 1 pm, 2 to 4 pm WORKSHOP: MAEDEUP, THE ELEGANT ART OF KNOT JEWELRY FOR THE HOLIDAYS Chapel Sunday, December 10, 11 am, 12 pm, 1 pm, 1:45 pm WORKSHOP: JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY Skylight Gallery
PAGE S22 • SBU BRIDGES • august 31, 2017
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2017 Fall Movies at Staller
open nights series
Shining A Light on Astronomy, Physics, Geology and Ecology This September the University kicks off its 44th year of hosting the Stony Brook Open Nights lecture series. This free series, geared to the general public, began in fall 1973 with the arrival of Comet Kohoutek and proved to be so popular that they have continued ever since. The talks are held most Fridays during the fall and spring semesters. The lectures are grouped into four categories: Astronomy Open Night, The Worlds of Physics, Geology Open Night and the Living World. Faculty speak on aspects of their expertise, research or a topic of public interest. All lectures are held in Room 001 (ground floor) of the Earth and Space Sciences (ESS) Building at 7:30 pm. The lectures are growing in popularity, so please
arrive early to get a good seat. Weather permitting, viewing using the University’s telescopes on the roof of the ESS building will follow the lectures. Teachers take note: It may be possible to get in-service credit for any or all of these lectures, as well as for related geology programs. Visit the website and follow the in-service link for more details. For the Astronomy Open Night speakers, visit astro.sunysb.edu/openight. For Physics Open Night speakers, visit physics.sunysb. edu/Physics/calendar. Living World Open Night speakers can be found at life.bio. sunysb.edu/marinebio/livingworld; and Geology Open Night speakers, at geo.sunysb. edu/openight/index.html. Abstracts for each talk are usually posted about three weeks before the lecture.
The Staller Center’s Friday Night Film Series brings great movies to Stony Brook at an even better price. All films are shown on the Main Stage, which has the largest movie screen in Suffolk County. Passes for all 10 films for the fall are available in person at the Staller Center Box Office for a discounted price of $30. Stony Brook University students can see all films with a $20 pass. Individual tickets are $10 for adults; $7 for students, seniors and children; $5 for Stony Brook students. The Staller Center Box Office is open noon to 6 pm, Monday to Saturday and one hour before screenings. For more information visit stallercenter.com.
Friday, October 6
My Cousin Rachel, 7 pm 106 minutes; rated PG-13 A young man seeks revenge against the mysterious woman he believes caused the death of his guardian, but instead finds he is falling under the spell of her charms. With Rachel Weisz, Sam Claflin and Holliday Grainger. Directed by Roger Michell. Beatriz at Dinner, 9 pm 83 minutes; rated R Beatriz (Salma Hayek) is a holistic healer who is spontaneously invited to a wealthy client’s dinner party when her VW won’t start, only to find herself drawn into a wine-fueled showdown with the guest of honor, arrogant real-estate billionaire Doug Strutt (John Lithgow). Directed by Miguel Arteta.
Friday, October 27
Dean, 7 pm 94 minutes; rated PG-13 A New York illustrator falls hard for a Los Angeles woman while trying to prevent his father (Kevin Kline) from selling the family home in the wake of his mother’s death. Demetri Martin wrote, directed and stars in this comedy about loss, grief and the power of love.
The Earth and Space Sciences building is home to the Open Night Series of lectures.
2017-2018 Astronomy Open Night Schedule SEPTEMBER
JANUARY 2018
Friday, September 1: Astronomy Friday, September 8: Physics Friday, September 15: Living World Friday, September 22: Geology Friday, September 29: Astronomy
Friday, January 26: Astronomy
OCTOBER Friday, October 6: Geology Friday, October 13: Living World Friday, October 20: Physics Friday, October 27: Astronomy
NOVEMBER Friday, November 3: Physics Friday, November 10: Living World Friday, November 17: Geology
DECEMBER Friday, December 1: Astronomy Friday, December 8: Physics
The Beguiled, 9 pm 94 minutes; rated R Sofia Coppola won best director at Cannes for this Civil War era drama about a wounded Union soldier (Colin Farrell) who is taken in and cared for by the young women at a girls school in Virginia, until
The Journey, 7 pm 94 minutes; rated PG-13 Two implacable enemies from Northern Ireland, firebrand Democratic Unionist Party leader Ian Paisley and Sinn Fein politician Martin McGuinness, take a car ride together that will change the course of history. With Timothy Spall and Colm Meaney. Directed by Nick Hamm. Jasper Jones, 9 pm 101 minutes, unrated Set in 1969 Australia, 14-year-old Charlie Bucktin is entrusted with a terrible secret by the town’s mixed race outcast, Jasper Jones. To find the truth he must face racism, his parents, first love and the cost of courage. With Toni Collette and Hugo Weaving. Directed by Rachel Perkins
Friday, December 1
Lady Macbeth, 7 pm 89 minutes, unrated In 19th century rural England, a young bride is stifled by her loveless marriage to a bitter man twice her age. When she embarks on a passionate affair, she finds that an unquenchable force has been unleashed inside of her. With Florence Pugh. Directed by William Oldroyd. Patti Cake$, 9 pm 108 minutes, Rated R. Newcomer Danielle Macdonald is a revelation as Patricia Dombrowski, a young, white, plus-size, down-on-her-luck Jersey girl with a troubled home life, ambitious dreams and genuine talent as a rapper. Written and directed by Geremy Jasper.
Emma Stone and Steve Carrel star as Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs in Battle of the Sexes, showing on the Staller screen on Friday, December 8.
Battle of the Sexes, 7 pm rated PG-13 Emma Stone plays tennis champion Billie Jean King and Steve Carell plays serial hustler Bobby Riggs in this retelling of the world famous 1973 tennis match that became the most watched television sports event of the time. Directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris.
Friday, February 2: Geology Friday, February 9: Living World Friday, February 16: Physics Friday, February 23: Geology
MARCH
Wind River, 9 pm 110 minutes, rated R. An FBI agent teams up with a local game tracker to investigate the murder of a young woman whose frozen body is found on a snow-covered Native American reservation. With Elizabeth Olsen, Jon Bernthal and Jeremy Renner. Written and directed by Taylor Sheridan.
Friday, March 2: Astronomy Friday, March 9: Physics Friday, March 23: Living World Friday, March 30: Geology
APRIL
Friday, April 6: Astronomy Friday, April 13: Physics Friday, April 20: Living World Friday, April 27: Geology Friday, May 4: Astronomy
Friday, November 17
Friday, December 8
FEBRUARY
MAY
tensions and rivalries take an unexpected turn. With Nicole Kidman, Kirsten Dunst and Elle Fanning.
See Sofia Coppola’s The Beguiled on Friday, October 27 at the Staller Center.
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Stanford Study: Stony Brook Creates Upward Income Mobility for Low-income Students
A Stony Brook University education provides a proven path toward upward mobility for students from low-income households, according to a new study led by the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research. Titled “Mobility Report Cards: The Role of Colleges in Intergenerational Mobility,” the report ranks Stony Brook among the top 10 colleges and universities in the nation whose students begin college at the bottom fifth of income distribution and then go on to earn in the top three-fifths. According to the study, 51 percent of students from the bottom quintile reach the top quintile at Stony Brook. Because 16 percent of students at Stony Brook are from the bottom quintile compared with 4 percent at the IvyPlus colleges, Stony Brook has a bottom-to-top-quintile mobility rate of 8.4 percent, substantially higher than the 2.2 percent rate on average at Ivy-Plus colleges. “The study is a striking confirmation of Stony Brook’s unique strengths as an engine of social mobility,” said Stony Brook University President Samuel L. Stanley Jr. “We admit the best and brightest students, regardless of economic status, and give them the top-flight education they need for success.” “Stony Brook offers an environment in which a diverse student body is encouraged to thrive,” continued
President Stanley, “and a wide array of programs — from EOP/AIM [Educational Opportunity Program/Advancement on Individual Merit] to intensive academic counseling — help to facilitate their success. In addition, I give significant credit first to our students for their perseverance; our faculty for their mentorship, academic rigor and guidance; and the staff in our career counseling services program who help our students achieve their potential.” The study tracked 14 years of financial records for col-
lege students, aged 18 to 22, at all public and private U.S. colleges and universities from 1999 through 2013. Using de-identified IRS data, researchers compared the reported earnings of college graduates in their early 30s to their parents’ income during student college years. Researchers examined the percentage of students from each institution and found that Stony Brook’s high mobility rate shows graduates reach high income levels within 10 years of graduation. According to the study, Stony Brook graduates were shown to have earned incomes “that are nearly comparable” to those of Columbia University graduates and Stony Brook “has a bottom-to-top-quintile mobility rate of 8.4 percent, channeling nearly 3 times as many children from the bottom to the top of the income distribution as Columbia.” “Improving access to higher education and minimizing student debt are vital to the role of higher education in economic mobility,” said President Stanley. “Also crucial are programs that ensure that economically disadvantaged students receive the support on campus that they need in order to benefit as fully as possible from a proven engine of economic mobility. I’m proud to say that is a top priority at Stony Brook.”
Special Collections: Preserving and Uncovering History Spy letters written by George Washington during the American Revolution. A history of the world published in 1493. One of the first maps depicting Long Island as an island. Photographs of Stony Brook’s original train station. These are just a few examples of the one-of-a-kind, library collections awaiting you in Special Collections and University Archives, the library division with a leading role in developing research collections at Stony Brook University. The department acquires, preserves and provides access to the University’s most rare, historic and unique books, maps and manuscript collections. Special Collections recently acquired an important local history collection: the papers of Eversley Childs (18671953) and family members of Crane Neck, Village of Old Field, New York, New York City and Greenwich, Connecticut. The collection is a trove for researchers studying all facets of Long Island history, from local politics to busi-
ness to marine sciences. It includes thousands of photographs, papers, maps and textiles documenting generations of the family. Childs headed and invested in several lucrative companies in the early 1900s, including Bon Ami and Technicolor, and was a philanthropist, founding a hospital in the Philippines for treating leprosy and donating land in Setauket to the Salvation Army. The collection will receive archival processing and be open for research in 2018. The department hosts several events each semester that are free and open to the public. Visit w w w.l i b r a r y. s t o n y b r o o k .e d u /s p e c i a l- c o l l e c t i o n s university-archives for more information or contact Kristen Nyitray, Department Head and University Archivist at (631) 632-7119. All are welcome to schedule an appointment to consult the collections. — By Kristen J. Nyitray
ColleCtion HigHligHtS inClUde: • George Washington spy letters: original correspondence written in 1779 and 1780 to Major Benjamin Tallmadge about the Culper Spy Ring and espionage activities in Setauket during the American Revolutionary War. • Long Island history: an extensive collection of books, maps and papers on regional history, including the Robert M. Emery Long Island Rail Road Collection. • Environmental Defense Fund Archive: efforts in 1967 of this organization founded in Stony Brook led to the nationwide ban on DDT and the birth of modern environmental law. • Senator Jacob K. Javits Collection: nearly two million items that document modern United States history and the career of New York’s longest serving state senator. • Early printed books: features a 1493 edition of the Nuremberg Chronicle, the first attempt to tell the history of the world with text and illustrations. • University Archives: includes newspapers, yearbooks and photographs of the University.
Stony Brook Train Station, 1905. Robert M. Emery Long Island Rail Road Collection. Special Collections, SBU Libraries.
Four generations of the Childs Family. From left to right: Jane Ketchum Childs, Dorothy Shubrick Childs, Eversley Childs and Maria Eversley Childs, 1892. Special Collections, SBU Libraries.
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FALL 2017 Seawolves Sports Schedules
Experience Division I NCAA athletics at Stony Brook University. For updates, team rosters and the latest news on athletics, visit StonyBrookAthletics.com.
Football
All home games are held on Seawolves Saturday’s in Kenneth P. LaValle Stadium. A Seawolves game day is an experience to remember, so get your tickets today. With season tickets starting at just $65, you can save up to 50 percent throughout the season. Stony Brook Athletics provides an exhilarating, family atmosphere at all sporting events and wants you to join the Seawolves family. Visit StonyBrookAthletics.com or call (631) 632-WOLF for more ticket information. Saturday, September 16 vs. Sacred Heart, 6 pm Saturday, September 23 vs. Towson*, 6 pm (CommUniversity Day) Saturday, October 7 vs. Delaware*, 6 pm Saturday, October 14 vs. New Hampshire*, 6 pm (Homecoming) Saturday, November 4 vs. Albany*, 1 pm Saturday, November 11 vs. Wagner, 1 pm *CAA Conference Game
Women’s soccer
All home games are held in Kenneth P. LaValle Stadium. Free admission to all games. Thursday, September 14 vs. Hofstra, 7 pm Thursday, September 28 vs. UMass-Lowell*, 7 pm Sunday, October 8 vs. New Hampshire*, 1 pm Sunday, October 15 vs. UMBC*, 1 pm Thursday, October 19 vs Albany*, 7 pm *America East Conference Matches
men’s soccer
All home games are held in Kenneth P. LaValle Stadium. Free admission to all games. Wednesday, September 6 vs. CCSU, 7 pm Wednesday, September 13 vs. NJIT, 7 pm Saturday, September 30 vs. Binghamton*, 7 pm Tuesday, October 3 vs. Sacred Heart, 7 pm Wednesday, October 11 vs. Vermont*, 7 pm Sunday, October 15 vs. Harford*, 4 pm Saturday, October 28 vs. Albany*, 7 pm *America East Conference Matches
Volleyball
All home games are FREE and held in the Pritchard Gymnasium. Tuesday, September 5 vs. Hofstra, 7 pm Friday, September 29 vs. Hartford*, 6:30 pm Sunday, October 1 vs. UMBC*, 1 pm Tuesday, October 10 vs. Iona, 6:30 PM Friday, November 3 vs. UMass-Lowell*, 6:30 pm Sunday, November 5 vs. New Hampshire*, 1 pm Friday, November 10 vs. Albany*, 5 pm Sunday, November 12 vs. Binghamton*, 1 pm *America East Conference Matches
men’s and Women’s cross country Both meets are held on Stony Brook University’s campus. Saturday, September 3, Stony Brook Season Opener, 10:30 am Saturday, September 10, Wolfie Invitational, 10:30 am
The Seawolves athletic teams are winning games and winning fans — stop by to join in the fun.
men’s and Women’s basketball Stony Brook Men’s and Women’s Basketball teams look to defend Island Federal Credit Union Arena beginning in November. Seawolves games are electric to watch in the IslandFCU Arena, so don’t miss the 2017-18 season. Get your season tickets today to lock in your low-cost, highvalue seats. Visit StonyBrookAthletics.com for complete schedules in September and to purchase your season tickets.
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Stony Brook Women’s Lacrosse Reaches New Heights in Record-Breaking 2017 Season
The Stony Brook women’s lacrosse team reached new heights in 2017, as the Seawolves shattered numerous NCAA records on their way to a program-best, 20-2 season. Stony Brook won its fifth-straight America East conference championship as the Seawolves advanced to the NCAA quarterfinals for the first time in program history. Stony Brook broke the NCAA single-season team records for points and assists, while junior Kylie Ohlmiller broke the single-season individual records for points and assists. The Seawolves had the nation’s top defense for the fourth time in the last five seasons under head coach Joe Spallina, who won his hundredth game with Stony Brook in May. The Seawolves were dominant at home, posting an 11-0 mark at LaValle Stadium and extending their home winning streak to 22 games, the third longest in the nation. The home-field advantage at LaValle was fueled by the second-highest attendance in the nation in 2017. Kylie Ohlmiller tallied 78 goals and 86 assists for 164 points on her way to firstteam All-American honors and Tewaaraton finalist distinction. Defender Brooke Gubitosi was also a first-team All-American, while midfielder Dorrien Van Dyke
and freshman attacker Taryn Ohlmiller added third-team All-American honors. The Ohlmiller sisters had the most combined points of any two teammates in 2017, as freshman Taryn notched 101 points in her first collegiate season to help the nation’s No. 3 scoring offense. The creative ways in which the sisters scored and assisted — often behind the back, between the legs or in mid-air — landed them on SportsCenter and other national highlight shows throughout the season. Spallina’s trademark Stony Brook defense was dominant again this spring, as in an era of increased offense with a shot clock, the Seawolves were still the nation’s top scoring defense. The Seawolves allowed 7.27 goals per game in 2017, giving them the top mark for the fourth time in the last five seasons. Goalie Anna Tesoriero led the nation with a 7.27 goals-against average, while Gubitosi’s 55 caused turnovers were a program and America East conference record. The Seawolves’ increased success was driven in part at the draw circle, where sophomore Keri McCarthy collected a program and conference-record 106 draw controls. Stony Brook was in the top-20 in the nation on the draw, a program-best.
Junior Kylie Ohlmiller broke the NCAA single-season assists and points records in 2017 and was named a first-team All-American and Tewaaraton finalist.
Freshman Taryn Ohlmiller was one of two freshmen in the nation to tally 100 points in 2017 and was selected as an All-American.
Stony Brook finished the year No. 3 in the Inside Lacrosse media poll after a stellar 2017 season that saw the Seawolves reach new heights in the NCAA tournament and throughout the record book. In 2018, Stony Brook returns nine starters — including the 100-point Ohlmiller sisters and fellow All-American
Gubitosi — and regains the services of NCAA single-season goals record-holder Courtney Murphy, who missed the majority of 2017 due to injury. Stony Brook will host the 2018 NCAA Division I National Championship Memorial Day weekend at LaValle Stadium.
Meet Wolfie, Stony Brook’s Lovable Mascot Wolfie the Seawolf is the fun-loving mascot who loves Stony Brook Athletics and promotes it around Stony Brook University (SBU) and in the local community. Wolfie has been a part of the Stony Brook family since 1995 — just a year after the SBU varsity teams became known as the Seawolves. The fourth nickname in SB history, “Seawolves” was selected from a list of more than 200 possible names by a 32-person committee of students, alumni, faculty and administrators. There’s no doubt that Wolfie is a celebrity: He was the 2009 Three Village Sportsman of the Year and a finalist for Best Mascot in the Long Island Press Best of Long Island 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015 and 2016 contests. He was also featured in the 2011 ESPN College Gameday commercial with fellow collegiate mascots and marched in New York City’s Columbus Day Parade. Wolfie’s favorite activities are cheering at Stony Brook games and having fun with SBU fans of all ages. You can find Wolfie cheering for the Seawolves student athletes wherever he goes. Be sure to say “hi” to Wolfie when you see him out and about. He’s always happy to greet Seawolves fans with a friendly high five or a hearty hug.
Wolfie the Seawolf is Stony Brook University’s mascot and a friend to all. Stop by an athletic event to meet him or have him visit your school or attend your special occasion.
Visits From WolFie Although he’s very busy at Stony Brook, Wolfie enjoys making special appearances at lots of events, like birthday parties, reunions, corporate events, charity events, fairs, festivals and more. If Wolfie comes to
your special event, you can be sure it’ll be fun, exciting and memorable. Please give Wolfie at least two weeks’ advance notice. Call (631) 632-7705 or email Wolfie@stonybrook.edu. You can also make a request online by visiting stonybrookathletics. com/wolfie.
Stay in touch with Wolfie all year. Check out what Wolfie and Stony Brook Athletics are up to this fall, on game day and throughout the year at: Twitter.com/SBAthletics Facebook.com/StonyBrookAthletics Instagram.com/SBAthletics Snapchat – @WolfieSeawolf
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Learning at Any Age: Osher Lifelong Learning Institute Stony Brook University’s Osher Lifelong Learning Institute (OLLI) — formerly the Round Table — is open to all retired and semi-retired individuals who are interested in expanding their intellectual horizons in a university setting. Avenues for participation include workshops, lectures, business meetings, committees, offices and social activities. The mostly peer-taught workshops, which carry no credits or prerequisites, are designed to offer an informal exchange of ideas among participants within a framework of accomplishing workshop objectives. Stony Brook University’s School of Professional Development administers the program. Membership is required ($325 for the year); interested individuals can apply online. The membership fee covers the academic year, September through June, and includes registration
in workshops for fall, spring and summer semesters; a monthly newsletter; special planned events/trips; and access to library facilities at Stony Brook. The Fall 2017 schedule of workshops is now online. Among the offerings are Advanced Competitive Bridge, Conversational French, Food: A History, Memoir Writing, Movie Musicals, Stained Glass Workshop, and Practical Mysticism. The Fall semester at OLLI begins on Monday, September 25. Visit stonybrook.edu/olli/ for the full schedule. If you have any questions, please call (631) 632-6554 (OLLI) Retired and semi-retired community members are encouraged to join OLLI and take advantage of its many programs. The programming and membership of OLLI — Now in its 30th year — continue to grow.
Dissent is the Theme for 2017-2018 at the Humanities Institute at Stony Brook The Humanities Institute at Stony Brook (HISB) will follow up last year’s programming theme, “Histories of the Future,” with our 2017-2018 theme, “Dissent!: Cultures and Counter-Cultures of Resistance.” Its fall 2017 events calendar will feature a two-day conference, “Caribbean Cosmopolis: Timeports of Modernity” on Thursday and Friday, October 12 and 13. The event will bring together a cross-disciplinary and inter-hemispheric group of scholars to explore the Caribbean as a crucial space of time-making, calibration and reinvention, where indigenous and farther-flung communities from the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific ocean worlds fetched up, galvanizing diverse forms of cultural interaction and production.
Other lectures will include: Thursday, September 14
Thursday, November 16
A lecture by Jennifer Christine Nash from the African American Studies and Gender & Sexuality Studies Department at Northwestern University. This event is part of our Q/F/T* (Queer/Feminist/ Trans Theories) lecture series with the Women’s Gender and Sexuality Studies Department.
A panel discussion on disability, theory and cultural production.
Thursday, November 9
Enhance Your Career Potential Through SPD The School of Professional Development (SPD) offers more than 40 noncredit and graduate programs for individuals who are looking to gain the skills or credentials they need to further their careers. Whether it’s a labbased computer training course, an online professional certificate program, or a customized on-site training series designed for your workgroup, SPD has a practical, up-to-date program to meet your educational and career goals. If you are interested in taking courses, but are not yet ready to commit the time and resources necessary to pursue a degree, a digital badge might be what you are looking for. SPD’s innovative University Badge program allows students to complete a short course of study to earn a digital badge: a microcredential that you can display on your LinkedIn profile or other online portfolio to show that you have learned a particular set of skills. Badges can be earned for non-credit or graduate course sequences. SPD’s Career Development (notfor-credit) programs offer a variety of skills-based programs in convenient formats, including computer training for business; food literacy and wellness; paralegal certificate programs;
and a wide range of courses for teachers and school administrators. New for fall: a course that will teach new photographers how to get the most out of their digital cameras. Part-time graduate study is also a great way to start a second career or enhance an existing one. SPD’s graduate programs are designed to be stackable: Learners can first take some courses to earn a digital badge, then apply those courses toward an advanced certificate, and then take a few more to complete their master’s degree. SPD offers 24 graduate certificate or degree programs in human resource management, liberal studies, teaching (grades 7-12), higher education administration, K-12 administration, finance, coaching and industrial management, among others. In addition, the school also offers customized learning programs for corporations and nonprofit organizations that will bring any of our programs to their workplace. SPD has the faculty, industry connections and expertise to create new programs designed specifically for your workgroup. Visit stonybrook.edu/spd for complete details on all of SPD’s educational programs.
A lecture by environmentalist J. Drew Lanham and Lauret Savoy, co-sponsored with Sustainability Studies.
Thursday, December 7 A lecture on Indigeneity by Jhasikarn Dhillon from The New School. All HISB events are free and open to the public. Please visit www.stonybrook. edu/hisb for the full calendar, event details, times, locations and updates for the upcoming year, or browse through the events from the previous year.
Wildlife Ecologist and Clemson University professor J. Drew Lanham will give a Humanities Institute lecture on November 9.
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Entertainment for Kids of all ages
The Staller Center for the Arts offers a range of entertainment, including shows for children. The upcoming Staller season features four shows that may be of particular interest to those under 12. For the complete schedule of the 2017–18 Staller Center season, please visit stallercenter.com. saturday, october 14, 4 pm
FLIP FABRIQUE
Main stage, $20 How do the youthful acrobats of Flip FabriQue defy gravity? They’ve learned from the best, training at the Quebec City Circus School with great performers from Cirque du Soleil and Cirque Éloize. In Catch Me! you’ll see the stars of Flip FabriQue soar and take your breath away. saturday, november 11, 2017, 8 pm
THE MARTIAL ARTISTS AND ACROBATS OF CHINA
Main stage, $42 Sponsored by Times Beacon Record News Media On tour from the People’s Republic of China, the Martial Artists and Acrobats of Tianjin are considered a Chinese cultural treasure. The artists and acrobats bring art forms that combine music, acrobatics, mime and dancing, sharing many similarities with Western culture. The action never stops — from plate spinning to body contortion, hoop diving to martial arts moves, it’s an engaging and thrilling experience.
Kids of all ages will flip for the acrobatic talents of Flip FabriQue on October 14.
saturday, January 27, 2018, 4 pm
IMAGO THEATRE - LA BELLE
Lost in the World of Automaton Main stage, $20 Elaborate puppets, a large whirring ship, original music and shadow play: the wildly creative minds of Imago Theatre unveil a romance between a coal stoker and a vacationer set on a steamship in the 1920s.
sunday, March 18, 2018, 4 pm
SPHERUS
Main stage, $20 Spherus is a circus with an extra dimension. International Juggling champion Greg Kennedy uses music as a background for his unique tricks with light, super cool props and his acrobatic duo of aerial dancers. Spherus is certain to fascinate with its stunning effects.
Nationally Accredited Child Care Available to the Community Did you know that child care is available for your child on the Stony Brook University campus? Stony Brook Child Care is nationally accredited by the National Academy of Early Childhood Programs, which means the Center has voluntarily undergone a comprehensive process of internal self-study and invited external review to verify compliance with the academy’s criteria for high-quality early childhood programs. The Center is open year-round Monday through Friday, 6:30 am to 6 pm, with various shifts available, and serves the local community as well as University,
Stony Brook Child Care is located on the corner of South Drive and Stony Brook Road near the University campus and offers children outdoor and indoor play spaces.
health sciences and hospital faculty staff and students. The Center cares for and educates children from 8 weeks old to 3 years in the Infant-Toddler Program, and from 3 to 5 years in the Preschool program. The primary aim is to provide a warm, supportive and creative atmosphere. Each room is “family-grouped,” enabling children to interact with others of different ages. Since children at this stage of their development learn by doing, there are plenty of hands-on activities to build a child’s self-reliance. The Center is staffed by full-time professionals and assisted by part-time support staff and University students enrolled in the Psychology 488 Internship. Under the supervision of the staff, the students work closely with the teachers in the classroom and attend weekly training. Students who have completed the internship are often invited to work as part-time support staff. The child-teacher ratio in the 3-to-5 year-old preschool program is 7 to 1; the Infant-Toddler program ages 2 months to 3 years, is 4 to 1. The Stony Brook Child Care Mission Statement is that Stony Brook Child Care is an early childhood education center that fosters learning, creativity and individuality in children while serving as a teaching model. We embrace diversity, value our highly qualified staff, and cultivate partnerships among our families, staff, board of directors and community. We support the University’s missions by providing educational experiences, research opportunities and service to the community. For more details on the Center’s facilities and pricing or to arrange a tour, please visit stonybrook.edu/ childcare.
Visit a Dinosaur
You don’t have to travel to New York City to see a dinosaur. There is one right in the lobby of Stony Brook University’s Administration Building — the Majungasaurus crenatissimus. The exact replica of this Cretaceous Period meat eater is patched together from specimens unearthed in Madagascar by a team of Stony Brook University paleontologists. The skeleton has even acquired a nickname: “Stony Bones.” Viewing of the dinosaur is free. Hours are Monday to Friday, 8:30 am to 5 pm.
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Experts on All Things Italian
The Center for Italian Studies 2017-2018 Programs Since its establishment in 1985, the Center for Italian Studies has become an integral part of the Italian and Italian-American community on Long Island, planning events that meet both the expectations of the mission of a research university and the cultural interests of the community. The Center’s mission from its outset has been to build a cultural bridge with the community through events that present both the rich Italian cultural heritage and reflect the contributions and impact of Italian-Americans on the historical evolution of our country. Those already familiar with the Center’s events are aware of its program and activities, which are richly diverse both in format and topics. The Center’s staff hope the preliminary calendar for fall 2017 noted below continues to stimulate interest and ongoing participation and, at the same time, clearly extends an invitation to all to explore and join in on the spirit of “italianita” they have generated for the campus and community. The Center for Italian Studies is located in Stony Brook University’s Frank Melville Jr. Memorial Library, Room E4340. If you would like to visit, please contact us at 631-632-7444 or email Josephine Fusco at josephine.fusco@stonybrook.edu. Also visit the Center’s website www.stonybrook. edu/italianstudies for additional information and updates on its activities.
Fall 2017 Preliminary Calendar Unless stated otherwise, all events are free and open to the general public. Events are subject to change, so please always check the website for updates. Sunday, September 10, 10 am to 1 pm Robert D. Cess Concorso d’Eleganza XII Annual Celebration of Italian Vehicle Excellence and Beauty A display of “art forms on wheels” as a means of illustrating one form of Italian culture. Display vehicles will rally at Stony Brook University campus on the lawn adjacent to the Graduate Physics Building and directly across from the Sports Complex off John S. Toll Drive. Participation and viewing are free and open to the public. Owners of Italian vehicles interested in participating in this display should contact Josephine Fusco at josephine.fusco@ stonybrook.edu or call 631-632-7444. Saturday, September 23, 9 am to 5 pm Science Research Forum offered collaboratively with the Italian American Scientists of Long Island (IASLI). Program includes presentations and a poster symposium by Italian scientists working at Stony Brook University, Brookhaven National Laboratory and Cold Spring National Laboratory. Breakfast and light lunch refreshments will be offered to provide an opportunity for an informal meet-and-greet exchange with and among the participating scientists. Location: Stony Brook University’s Center for Italian Studies Meeting Hall in the Frank Melville Jr. Memorial Library, Room E4340. Free and open to the public. Please
call 631-632-7444 if you will be attending. Thursday October 12, 4 pm Tuesday, October 17, 5:30 pm Thursday, October 19, 4 pm October Lecture Series on the Topic: Story Telling and Food History Through Recipes Books, and Periodicals (1945-1980). With Italian historian from Rome, Francesco D’Ausilio, whose area of research is Italian food history and culture. This series provides a unique opportunity to learn of and share the presenter’s original and multidisciplinary approach to Italian food history and culture. All lectures will be held in Room E4340, Frank Melville Jr. Memorial Library. The series includes three presentations and schedule as follows: Thursday, October 12, 4 pm Looking for a National Culinary Identity and Kitchen Since World War II to the Economic Boom (1945-1956) Tuesday, October 17, 5:30 pm Gastronomy in the Years of the Economical Miracle (1958-1963) and Between Controversy and Crisis in Food Culture (1963-1972) Thursday, October 19, 4 pm The Seventies: Between Tensions and Austerity in the Kitchen (1973-1980) and The Eighties: Between Modernity and Turning Left into the Kitchen (1981-1992) Friday and Saturday, October 13 to 14, Hours to be Announced A Latin and Linguistic Workshop The workshop will be offered to explore the various initiatives taking place in the United States and abroad to introduce the field of linguistics in the high school curriculum through the teaching of Latin, and to revitalize the teaching of Latin through the insights of linguistics. The program will include short “pecha kucha” talks by teachers and scholars in the U.S. and abroad on their efforts in this area and will feature a presentation by Prof. Renato Oniga of the University of Udine, author of Latin: A Linguistic Introduction. Location: Room E4340, Frank Melville Jr. Memorial Library. Additional and updated information on this workshop may be obtained by emailing Dr. Lori Repetti at LLW@stonybrook. edu or visiting the website: www.stonybrook.edu/llw. Saturday and Sunday, October 21 to 22 Film Festival: “Italy on Screen Today, Edizione II,” a two-day event at Stony Brook University to promote Italian Contemporary Cinema. Screening Schedule: Saturday, October 21, 3 to 8 pm; Sunday, October 22, 2 to 8 pm Directed by Loredana Commonara, Cultural Association: ArtMedia (Rome). With Q & A sessions conducted by Giacomo Rocchini, New York based Italian actor/ director. Location: Stony Brook University’s Wang
Center Lecture Hall 1. For additional and updated program information, consult the Center for Italian Studies web page www.stonybrook.edu/ italianstudies. Thursday, October 26, 4 pm Richard Nasti Lecture Series Event: Presentation by Luca Zanchi (Fulbright Grantee, Cultural Studies, Stony Brook University). Facing the Gorgon: Trauma and Autobiographical Narrative in Primo Levi and Virginia Woolf. Through a comparative analysis of the writings of P. Levi and V. Woolf, the presenter will reflect on issues related to the autobiographical narrative of traumatic experience. Location: Room E4340, Frank Melville Jr. Memorial Library. Thursday to Saturday, November 2 to 4 Conference: The Challenge of Migration in Europe and the United States. Comparing Policies and Models of Reception. This conference, the second part of a two-series international conference, analyzes the causes, behavior and effects of both voluntary and forced migration across Europe and North America. It will examine the political, cultural, religious, social and economic policy requirements generated by international norms, such as the Geneva Convention for refugees and national conditions nominating both legal and unauthorized economic migrants. Keynote Speaker: Alan Bersin, former assistant secretary for International Affairs and Chief Diplomatic Officer for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
Location: Stony Brook University’s Simons Center for Geometry and Physics, Lecture Hall One. All are invited. Consult the Center for Italian Studies web page www.stonybrook.edu/italianstudies or call 631-632-7444 for additional and updated information. Sunday, November 12, 2:30 pm Richard Nasti Lecture Series Event Presentation and Screening of the Documentary: Don’t Talk About It. It’s the story of Gino Bartali, the renowned Italian cyclist who won two Tour de France titles and is also revered for his heroism during World War Two in helping to save over 800 Jews during the Holocaust. Location: Room E4340, Frank Melville Jr. Memorial Library, Room E4340. Thursday, November 16, 6 pm Dr. Joseph Tromba Lecture Series Event Book presentation by Professor Stanislao Pugliese (Hofstra University): The Routledge History of Italian Americans edited by William J. Connell and Stanislao G. Pugliese. Books will be available for purchase and autographing by editor. Location: Room E4340, Frank Melville Jr. Memorial Library. Thursday, November 30, 5:30 pm Dr. Joseph Tromba Lecture Series Event Book presentation: Dinner with Di Maggio with author, Dr. John Positano. Books will be available for purchase and autographing by the author. Location: Room E4340, Frank Melville Memorial Library.
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Thursday, November 2, Opening Ceremony, 7:30 pm In the Center for Italian Studies, Melville Library, Room E4340 Friday, November 3 and Saturday, November 4, 8:30 am to 5 pm
Wolfie loves Italian cars. Come meet him and see even more “art on wheels” at the Robert D. Cess Concorso d’Eleganza XII Annual Celebration of Italian Vehicle Excellence and Beauty on September 10.
august 31, 2017 • SBU BRIDGES • PAGE S29
Bridges
Caring for America’s Heroes
The Long Island State Veterans Home The Long Island State Veterans Home (LISVH) is a special place that veterans are proud to call home, whether they are receiving rehabilitation, staying as a long-term resident or participating in the Adult Day Health Care Program. The 350-bed skilled nursing facility is located on 25 wooded acres on the east campus of Stony Brook University. The LISVH is a major teaching affiliate of Stony Brook Medicine and continues to be one of the only skilled nursing centers and adult day health care programs in the country that is fully integrated into the health and educational mission of a major teaching and research university. The programs at the LISVH are licensed by the New York State Department of Health and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Through its relationship with Stony Brook Medicine, LISVH provides state-of-the-art, comprehensive medical, nursing and ancillary services. The LISVH provides a fulltime medical director and a staff of full-time physicians with double board certifications in internal medicine and geriatrics. Its doctors have access to an in-house pharmacy operated by certified geriatric pharmacists, providing a comprehensive formulary. With a full complement of registered nurses on duty 24 hours a day and an onsite certified nursing assistant training program, the LISVH remains attentive to residents’ skilled nursing needs.
SERVICES The Long Island State Veterans Home offers: • Full-time physicians with double board certifications in internal medicine and geriatrics • A full array of rehabilitation services, including physical, occupational, respiratory and speech therapies • An on-site pharmacy staffed with a full complement of certified geriatric pharmacists • Additional on-site services, including dentistry, optometry, ophthalmology, podiatry, audiology, and geriatric psychiatry and psychology
The Long Island State Veterans Home is located on the campus of Stony Brook University, across from Stony Brook Medicine.
• A team of licensed clinical social workers and comprehensive counseling services • A 55-bed respiratory care unit for oxygen-dependent residents and those with additional respiratory requirements, including tracheostomy care • Reflections Unit: A 55-bed secured unit caring for those suffering from Alzheimer’s disease and dementiarelated disorders • Wound care • Individualized dietary programs • Therapeutic recreation • Pastoral care • Palliative care and hospice services • Barber and beauty shop • On-site Medicaid coordinator and VA benefits counselor
ADULT DAY HEALTH CARE Caring for a physically or cognitively impaired family member at home 24 hours per day, seven days per week can be one of life’s most difficult challenges. Whether you are a spouse or a caregiver, the Adult Day Health Care
SBU Students – A Force for Good in Our Community No matter where you look in our local communities, you’ll find Stony Brook students giving, volunteering and lending a hand to their neighbors. In fact, the next time you see a group of young men and women pitching in to help with a community project, more likely than not they will be from the Stony Brook campus. For example, the Red Watch Band CARE Team, a bystander intervention program, visited three area high schools this year. The program is designed to inform college and high school students of the numerous ways that toxic drinking deaths can be prevented, and to promote an atmosphere of respect, responsibility and kindness. It was created after a Stony Brook Medicine doctor’s son died tragically due to alcohol poisoning, and the campus community felt compelled to create a program that could educate students on how to be an active bystander in an alcohol-related medical emergency. The Red Watch Band CARE Team plays a vital role in the program’s success. Committed student leaders conduct outreach at campus events and partner with various student groups, such as fraternities, sororities and athletes, as well as departments like Campus Residences. In fall 2016, Red Watch Band CARE Team members were determined to train at least 1,000 students. They exceeded this goal with a total of 1,284 students trained by the end of the semester. This was the highest number of students ever trained in one semester, making it a very important milestone for the program. SBU students participate in many other community service projects. Stony Brook’s Interfaith Center serves the commu-
At Comsewogue High School in Port Jefferson Station, Stony Brook University’s Kerri Mahoney and Lara Hunter, along with students Joel Cohen, Rakia Syed and Christian Rodriguez, gave Comsewogue students Red Watch Band Training.
nity by providing counseling, guidance and opportunities to serve others through community engagement. Some of the Center’s projects include the Midnight Run — when students bring donated clothes and food to New York City to share with the homeless — and the Special Needs Sing-Along, through which students and staff serve food and facilitate singing and dancing with special needs adults. These are just a few of the many ways that Stony Brook University students are giving back to our communities. To learn more about our efforts in the community, please visit the Stony Brook University Community Relations website, stonybrook.edu/community-relations or email Joan.Dickinson@stonybrook.edu.
program at LISVH - which was just voted 2016 Best of Long Island by the Long Island Press - may be a welcome solution. Participants in the Adult Day Health Care program receive the skilled nursing care they require while continuing to live at home. Adult Day Health Care permits caregivers to meet professional and family obligations or take a well-deserved rest while their loved one attends the program. Our Adult Day Health Care program provides our participants with: • Door-to-door transportation • Delicious and nutritious meals • Care for the body, mind and soul: Medical, nursing, rehabilitation, psychosocial, recreational, nutritional, spiritual and personal needs • Comprehensive medical, nursing and personal care services: skilled nursing care, monitoring of health conditions, and administering medications by our licensed nursing staff • Assistance with personal hygiene, including bathing and grooming • Monthly visits from a certified therapy dog For more information about the Vets Home or to volunteer, visit listateveteranshome.org.
2017 LISVH Golf Classic The Long Island State Veterans Home Sixteenth Annual Golf Classic will be held on Thursday, September 14, 2017 at the Willow Creek Golf and Country Club in Mt. Sinai, New York. Proceeds from the event will be used to enhance programs, services and activities at the Long Island State Veterans Home (LISVH), benefiting our residents and those who care for them. If you enjoy playing golf, we encourage you to sign up early for this fun and worthwhile event. There are still many sponsorship opportunities available. The Veterans Home is also looking for raffle prize donations. Your support will enable LISVH to continue to provide the highest quality care to all veterans from the “Greatest Generation to the Latest Generation.” If you have any questions or need any additional information about the Long Island State Veterans Home’s Golf Classic, please contact the Community Relations Department at (631) 444-8615.
PAGE S30 • SBU BRIDGES • august 31, 2017
Bridges Events and Support Groups at Stony Brook Medicine
Surviving the Search: a Free college WorkShop and expo For StudentS With cancer and Blood diSorderS
Saturday, Sept. 9, 1 to 3 pm (registration begins at 12:30 pm); Optional essay writing workshop begins at 9:30 am Stony Brook University, Charles B. Wang Center, 100 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook A special free workshop and expo designed to educate middle and high school students with cancer and blood disorders, or other chronic illnesses, as well as their siblings, parents and school personnel, about their unique needs when transitioning to college. To register, call Nicole Gutman at (631) 444-7521 or visit stonybrookchildrens.org/ collegeworkshop.
Bariatric and MetaBolic Weight loSS SeMinar
Mondays, Sept. 11, Oct. 2, Nov. 6 and Dec. 4, 5 to 6 pm Bariatric and Metabolic Weight Loss Center, 23 S. Howell Ave. Suite D, Centereach Freedom from obesity is attainable with the right combination of tools and support. Learn about the causes, health risks and treatment options, tailored to each patient’s needs, lifestyle and goals. Both medical and surgical options will be discussed followed by a question-and-answer session. To register, call (631) 444-4000.
gaStric Balloon: neW Weight loSS option
Mondays, Sept. 11, Oct. 9, Nov. 13 and Dec. 11, 5 to 6 pm, Stony Brook University Hospital, Lobby Conference Room 1, 101 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook The gastric balloon, a new, nonsurgical weight-loss option, is being offered by the bariatric surgical specialists at Stony Brook Medicine’s Bariatric and Metabolic Weight Loss Center. Inserted into the stomach, the balloon works by taking up space, helping to decrease portion sizes. The program requires a 12-month commitment to diet and exercise. Our team of experts — bariatric surgical specialists, dietitians and medical staff — will assist you at every step. Attend an information session and meet our surgeons in the Division of Bariatric, Foregut and Advanced Gastrointestinal Surgery, who will lead the discussion and answer questions. For additional information or to register, please call (631) 444-2274.
Stepping on: Building conFidence and reducing FallS
Tuesdays, Sept. 12, 19, 26, Oct. 3, 10, 17, 24 (7-week workshop, meets once weekly), 1 to 3 pm, Smithtown Library, Smithtown, (631) 360-2480 Thursdays, Sept. 28, Oct. 5, 12, 19, 26, Nov. 2, 9 (7-week workshop, meets once weekly), 1:30 to 3:30pm, Mastics-MorichesShirley Community Library Central Library, Shirley, (631) 399-1511 Stepping On is a program that empowers older adults to carry out healthy behaviors that help reduce the risk of falls, improve self-management and increase quality of life. Facilitated by an injury prevention specialist from Stony Brook University Trauma Center and a health professional from the Suffolk County Department of Health,
subjects covered include improving strength and balance, home and community safety, vision, footwear and medication review. The workshop is free, but space is limited. Pre-registration is required by calling numbers above.
docS Who rock
Sunday, Sept. 17, 2 to 8 pm 89 North Music Venue, 89 North Ocean Avenue, Patchogue Enjoy an afternoon out for a rockin’ good cause. Participating bands feature musicians who are also physicians at Stony Brook Medicine, Southampton Hospital and Eastern Long Island Hospital, as well as other Long Island hospitals. All proceeds benefit bone marrow transplant programs for patients. Tickets are $20 per person, which include admission, food and a 50/50 raffle. Cash bar. For additional information, email Terri Quinn at Terri.Quinn@stonybrookmedicine.edu or call (631) 444-1088.
Fit kidS For liFe prograM
Begins Monday, Sept. 25, 6:30 to 8:30 pm Ward Melville High School, 380 Old Town Road, East Setauket A comprehensive lifestyle-modification approach structured in a 10-week, supervised curriculum, emphasizing healthy nutritional, physical and behavioral instruction for children ages 8 to 17 years. Children meet twice weekly on Monday and Wednesday evenings for two hours each day. Parental and child participation is essential for improved compliance and efficacy. With the assistance of certified nutritionists, a board-certified pediatric cardiologist/certified personal trainer, and several physical therapists and personal trainers, children are taken through a fun and vigorous curriculum fostering a healthy lifestyle. There are two 10-week sessions each year. Please call (631) 444-2730 for more information.
Mall WalkerS
Wednesdays, Sept. 27, Oct. 25 and Nov. 29, 8 to 10 am Smith Haven Mall, Food Court, Lake Grove Enjoy a morning of exercise, complimentary snack, blood pressure screening and an informative health lecture by a Stony Brook Medicine expert. For more information about the Mall Walkers program, call (631) 444-4000.
heartSaver/aed cpr claSS
Wednesdays, Sept. 27, Oct. 25, Nov. 29 and Dec. 27, 4 to 7 pm Stony Brook University Hospital, 101 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook Learn lifesaving skills from nurse educators at Stony Brook University Heart Institute. The class is free, but for those who would like an American Heart Association CPR card, there is a $20 fee. Learn how to respond to an adult, child and infant who is in cardiac arrest. Demonstrations on the use of an automated external defibrillator (AED) are also covered. Registration is required. (Same-day registration is possible, but please call first.) To register, call (631) 444-3322.
candlelight cereMony
Wednesday, Sept. 27, 6 to 7:30 pm Hilton Garden Inn, 1 Circle Road, Stony Brook University Join the staff of Stony Brook University Cancer Center at a special evening honoring patients and their families affected by gynecologic cancers during Gynecologic Oncology Awareness Month and Ovarian Cancer Awareness Month. A reading of patients’ names will follow. All are welcome. Call (631) 444-4000 to RSVP.
celeBratory Bra Burning FundraiSing event
Saturday, Oct. 7, 3:30 to 7:30 pm Bayport Fire Department, 251 Snedecor Avenue, Bayport This evening of support for cancer survivors, family and friends will include dinner, raffles, Chinese auction, bra burning (bring your old, ugly post-up bra to display and burn in the bonfire) and a fire truck visit. Proceeds from the event will benefit breast cancer programs and services at Stony Brook University Cancer Center. Tickets cost $20 for adults and $10 for children ages 12 and younger. For more information, contact Sal Makely at (516) 250-7058 or salmakely7@gmail.com. To purchase tickets, donate a gift or make a donation, visit facebook.com/CeleBRAtoryBraBurning.
the lateSt treatMentS For patientS With BreaSt cancer
Tuesday, Oct. 17, 6 to 9 pm Hilton Garden Inn, 1 Circle Road, Stony Brook University Stony Brook Medicine physicians will discuss the latest treatment and surgical advances, including minimally invasive techniques and reconstructive surgery. Hosted by Brian J. O’Hea, MD, Director, Carol M. Baldwin Breast Care Center. The event is free. Call (631) 444-4000 to pre-register.
16th annual educating the educatorS conFerence
Thursday, Oct. 19, 4:30 to 9 pm Hilton Garden Inn, 1 Circle Road, Stony Brook University This year’s conference theme, “Staying on Course…Surviving and Thriving in the Classroom,” will address pediatric cancer and blood disorders, and the need for resilience building and strategies to build resilience in the school setting. For healthcare professionals, educators and parents. There is no cost to attend; however, a $20 refundable deposit is required to secure space. Attendees will earn CEU credits. To register, call Nicole Gutman at (631) 444-7521, or email nicole.gutman@ stonybrookmedicine.edu or cara.giannillo@ stonybrookmedicine.edu.
Meeting oF the MindS SyMpoSiuM: Stroke
Friday, Oct. 20, 8 am to 12:30 pm Stony Brook University, Charles B. Wang Center, 100 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook This year’s event features lectures by several stroke experts and celebrates the ongoing achievements of Stony Brook faculty in the field, that in turn, lead to “real world” applications that ultimately benefit stroke patients. Our keynote speaker is Michael Tymianski, CM, MD, PhD, FRCES, FAHAD, of University Health Network, University
Stony Brook Medicine offers many free programs to help keep the community healthy. of Toronto, Krembil Research Institute, Toronto Western Hospital and NoNO, Inc. A renowned cerebrovascular neurosurgeonscientist, Dr. Tymianski will discuss the development of PSD 95 inhibitors for the treatment of ischemic stroke. The event is open to the public and of special interest to physicians, nurses, researchers, students and other healthcare professionals with an interest in field of stroke. To register, visit stonybrookmedicine.edu/meetingoftheminds. For more information, call (631) 444-4000.
FiFth annual WoMen’S health day
Saturday, Oct. 21, 8:30 am to 2 pm Melville Marriott Long Island, 1350 Walt Whitman Road, Melville Join us for an informative and inspiring day featuring a luncheon with award-winning journalist, bestselling author, and women’s health and wellness advocate Joan Lunden. Morning breakout sessions, led by Stony Brook Medicine experts, will offer information and resources, and answer questions on a variety of health topics. Continental breakfast and a buffet lunch will be served. The event fee is $25, and registration is required. For more information, call (631) 444-4000.
take StepS For crohn’S & colitiS
Sunday, Oct. 22, 11:30 am (check-in and registration); 11:30 am to 2:30 pm (family friendly festival); 1 pm (walk start) Stony Brook University, Student Activities Center (SAC) Plaza, 100 Nicolls Road, Stony Brook This 2.3-mile walk will help Stony Brook Medicine and the Long Island Chapter of the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation raise money for crucial research and a future that’s free from Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. Bring the family, and enjoy festivities for all. There will be live music, food, kids’ entertainment and interactive educational stations. Come take a walk with Wolfie leading the way! Learn more at stonybrookmedicine.edu/ccfawalk.
Shine a light on lung cancer
Tuesday, Nov. 7, 6 to 8 pm Hilton Garden Inn, 1 Circle Road, Stony Brook University Join the staff of Stony Brook University Cancer Center’s Lung Cancer Evaluation Center for a special evening in honor of patients and their families affected by cancer. Presented in partnership with the Lung Cancer Alliance and supported by Lilly Oncology. RSVP to (631) 444-4000.
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august 31, 2017 • SBU BRIDGES • PAGE S31
Bridges Italian
Hospital Events
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ITALIAN CLASSES FOR THE COMMUNITY 2017-2018
For those adults interested in learning to speak Italian, the Center offer classes for beginner, intermediate and advanced students. Classes are 40 hours of instruction (20, two-hour sessions) beginning in October and running through April for an annual fee of $260 at these locations: Kings Park High School, beginner Italian on Tuesdays from 7:30 to 9:30 pm; Kings Park High School, intermediate Italian on Wednesdays from 7:30 to 9:30 pm; and Stony Brook University, beginner, intermediate and advanced on Saturdays from 10 am to noon. People interested in enrolling in any of these classes may call 631-632-7444. For more detailed information, schedule and registration materials, email Donna Severino at Donna.Severino@stonybrook.edu. Also visit www.stonybrook.edu/italianstudies.
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CLASSES IN ITALIAN LANGUAGE FOR CHILDREN: AGES 3 TO 11
Classes for children continue to enjoy successful development and we’re pleased to offer two, 12-class sessions in the fall and spring. The fee for each session is $120. Classes meet at Setauket Elementary School on Main Street. Classes for ages 3 to 5 meet Tuesdays from 4 to 4:45 pm. Classes for ages 6 to 11 meet Tuesdays from 5 to 6 pm. Please call 631-632-7444 and for more detailed information, schedule and registration materials, email Josephine Fusco at Josephine.Fusco@stonybrook.edu. Also visit www.stonybrook.edu/italianstudies. April 4 to June 13 Times: For children ages 3 to 6, 4 pm to 4:45 pm; for children ages 6 to 11 who are continuing students, 5 pm to 5:50 pm; and for new students ages 6 to 12, 6 pm to 6:50 pm Cost per each 10 Class Session: $100. Please call (631) 632-7444 for additional information or to enroll a child in one of these classes.
Enjoy Family Fun at Wolfstock on October 14
VARICOSE VEIN SCREENING
Open to individuals between the ages of 18 to 80 who suffer from large varicose veins that are causing pain and/or swelling, this free screening includes a brief, noninvasive examination of the lower legs by boardcertified physicians. Registration is required. For information about the next screening, call (800) 345-VEIN (8346).
VASCULAR SCREENING
Are you 60 or older? Are you a current or past smoker? Smoking is the single most important risk factor for vascular disease. Other major risk factors include diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, heart disease and a family history of aortic aneurysm. Aneurysms and strokes — common conditions caused by vascular disease — can strike suddenly and without warning. That’s why it’s best to identify and treat
HeALTH AND WeLLNeSS
Danfords Inn .......................................................6
(Continued)
ATTOrNey Mark Freeley, Esq. ..............................................8
bANkINg Island Federal Credit Union ...........................4
St. Johnland Nursing Center .......................15 Stony Brook Medicine .....................................2 Stony Brook Vision World .............................8 Varicose Vein Center ....................................10
HOMe AND gArDeN Setauket Kitchen & Bath .................................4
DININg
Archdeacon Insurance Agency ....................6 ABMM Financial ...............................................15
FITNeSS Long Island Speed Specialists ....................15
HeALTH AND WeLLNeSS Virginia Cash .....................................................13 In Good Hands .................................................10 Peter Klein, M.D................................................10 Andrew Mastronardi, D.D.S. ........................13
MuSeuM Long Island Museum .......................................6
PeT SerVICeS Animal Health & Wellness ..........................15 Corner Animal Hospital ...............................13
reAL eSTATe Coldwell Banker, Kay Gemelas ...................15 Douglas Elliman Real Estate ........................32 Ellen Galbraith, Realtor .................................13 Kristin Bodkin, Realtor .....................................8
THeATer Staller Center For The Arts .............................3
Not getting the attention you deserve online this year? TBR NEWS MEDIA
The Stony Brook Seawolves take on the New Hampshire Wildcats at 6 pm. This is Stony Brook’s fifth football season in the tough Colonial Athletic Association — catch the action at LaValle Stadium and enjoy a fun halftime show where we’ll crown the homecoming court winners.
can help. ©153923
For more information, visit stonybrook.edu/wolfstock.
Stony Brook Medicine offers a wide range of support groups for our patients, family members and caregivers. Everything from cancer support, to epilepsy support, to stroke support and more. All programs are free but require registration. Call (631) 444-4000 for information or visit stonybrookmedicine.edu/patientcare/ supportgroups.
ACCOMMODATIONS
FINANCIAL
From 2:30 to 6 pm enjoy food, music and games for the whole family. Then kick your game day spirit into high gear with the marching band and our beloved mascot Wolfie!
SUPPORT GROUPS FOR PATIENTS AND CAREGIVERS
North Shore Business Directory
Country House .................................................10 The Wave at Danfords .....................................6 Villa Sorrento ....................................................13
Come to Stony Brook University on Saturday, October 14, for our annual homecoming football game and celebration.
underlying causes before symptoms appear at this free screening. Pre-registration and a brief qualifying interview are required. For information about the next screening, call (631) 444-2041.
www.tbrnewsmedia.com For more information call 631.751.7744
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