The Village Beacon Record - October 26, 2017

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he illage illage

BEACON

RECORD

MOUNT SINAI • MILLER PLACE • SOUND BEACH • ROCKY POINT • SHOREHAM • WADING RIVER

Vol. 33, No. 14

October 26, 2017

$1.00

What’s inside

North Brookhaven Chamber of Commerce disbanding A5 A psychic in Port Jeff Station provides spiritual avenue A8

Haunting happenings at Katie’s bar in Smithtown A9 Navy medic aiding hundreds in Puerto Rico A14

Celebrating Halloween on the North Shore

Also: Review of ‘Historic Crimes of Long Island,’ Photo of the Week, Fall Scavenger Hunt

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SPACE RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBER ADDRESS

The future of science in Shoreham Tesla center exec. receives $1M local donation — A3

Photo by Kevin Redding

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PAGE A2 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 26, 2017

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A police dog dressed up for the Barkfest Halloween pet costume parade last year.

A R e p u tAt i o n B u i lt o n t R u s t

Local Halloween events

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CORNER ANIMAL HOSPITAL Caring for Dogs & Cats

DOROTHY HAYES, VMD • JUDY LOMBARDI - DANIELS, VMD SARAH REED, VMD

Remember to keep your pets safe this Halloween!

The Town of Brookhaven and Suffolk County Legislature are hosting Halloweenthemed festivities this weekend.

Barnyard Scare

Come in costume and join locals at the Longwood Estate barn to take pictures at a ghostly photo station, make Halloween crafts and bring child-sized clothes to create a scarecrow Oct. 28. The event, held from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., is sponsored by the Brookhaven Town Department of Parks, Recreation and Sports and Cultural Resources. Children from 2 to 8 years old can attend the event. The cost is $10 per child. To register for the Barnyard Scare, at Longwood and Smith roads in Ridge, call 631-924-1820. Acceptable payments

include check, money order and credit card. No cash payments will be accepted. All cancellations, except by the town, are subject to a 15 percent administrative handling fee.

Barkfest

Suffolk County Legislator Kara Hahn (D-Setauket) invites community members to Barkfest 2017. Take part in Long Island’s largest pet costume contest and parade Oct. 29 at noon for the Suffolk County SPCA, Save-A-Pet and TBR News Media-sponsored event. Admission is free and there will be prizes given out to the best-dressed pets. The parade will begin at 3131 Nesconset Hwy. in Setauket. For more information call 631-471-8000.

Help Brookhaven with Puerto Rico relief efforts The Town of Brookhaven is uniting to help Puerto Rico in the wake of Hurricane Maria. Residents are encouraged to donate flashlights, batteries, portable lanterns, diapers, baby wipes, cases of water and feminine hygiene products in unopened, original packaging to the following drop-off locations: •Brookhaven Town Hall 1 Independence Hill in Farmingville

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•Henrietta Acampora Recreation Center 39 Montauk Highway in Blue Point

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•Brookhaven Town Highway Department 1140 Old Town Road in Coram

(ROUTE 25A & NICOLLS ROAD)

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•Rose Caracappa Senior Center 739 Route 25A in Mount Sinai

•New Village Recreation Center 20 Wireless Road in Centereach •Mastic Recreation Center 15 Herkimer St. in Mastic •Brookhaven Parks Department 286 Hawkins Road in Centereach •Bellport Hagerman East Patchogue Alliance 1492 Montauk Highway in Bellport For more information about the Empire State Relief and Recovery Effort for Puerto Rico, or if you would like to make a monetary donation, visit www. ny.gov/empire-state-relief-and-recoveryeffort-puerto-rico/empire-state-relief-andrecovery-effort-puerto#donate.


OCTOBER 26, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A3

Town

Tesla center begins building base for lab space CEO of Stony Brook health care efficiency company sees future benefits of constructing an incubator, science education space at Wardenclyffe By Kevin Redding kevin@tbrnewspapers.com

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The Tesla Science Center at Wardenclyffe aims to be a major hub of exploration and innovation on Long Island, not only preserving Nikola Tesla’s life but actively helping to inspire the inventors of tomorrow. It is now another step closer to that thanks to the generosity of a local entrepreneur greatly inspired by the Serbian-American scientist.

During a celebration of the nonprofit’s long-term vision for its Shoreham site last month at the The Ward Melville Heritage Organization Educational & Cultural Center in Stony Brook, it was announced that Eugene Sayan — the founder and CEO of a Stony Brook-based health care efficiency company called Softheon Inc., will donate $1 million in support of the future museum, business incubator for scientific research and student-geared education facility. With the donation, the center currently has $5 million of a $20 million capital campaign goal set up in March of this year. The funding will allow the center to begin phase one of its construction projects on the grounds of Tesla’s last remaining laboratory. The starting plan is to turn two abandoned buildings on the property into visitor and exhibition spaces for science education programs by next year, and renovate the historic, Stanford White-designed laboratory. Maintenance of the buildings and staff is also part of the overall budget. “It’s truly amazing,” said Marc Alessi, the science center’s executive director, a driving force behind the center’s plans. “There’s certainly worldwide interest in this place, but Eugene’s donation is validation that

image above from Marc Alessi; photo on left from Linkedin

eugene Sayan, CeO of Stony Brook-based Softheon inc., on left, made a $1 million donation to help with plans to renovate the Tesla Science Center at Wardenclyffe in Shoreham, seen in a rendering above. there’s also an interest from local innovators in making sure this gets launched.” Sayan, an Eastern European immigrant himself whose innovative company “strives to create simple solutions to complex problems,” has, unsurprisingly, always felt a strong connection to Tesla and looked to him as a source of inspiration while building his business. When he was made aware of Wardenclyffe during a meeting with the center’s national chair of fundraising Joe

Campolo and learned of the plan to build something more than just a museum in Tesla’s name, he quickly involved himself in the effort. In the wake of Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk’s $1 million donation to the center in 2014, Sayan wanted to be the first entrepreneur in the local area to make a significant contribution, while inspiring others to follow his lead. “It’s an honor to support the Tesla Science

TESLA DONATION continued on page A7


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PAGE A4 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 26, 2017


OCTOBER 26, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A5

Town

Chamber of commerce announces breakdown By Desirée Keegan Desiree@tbrnewspapers.com The North Shore is losing one of its most powerful lobbyists. The North Brookhaven Chamber of Commerce announced its dismantling this month, as the result of president Jennifer Dzvonar stepping down. Currently no members or outside businesses leaders have stepped up to take her place. Dzvonar did not return requests for comment, but Brookhaven Town Councilwoman Jane Bonner (C-Rocky Point), who Page a26 represents the territory that’s home to most of the area businesses involved in the chamber, said she was shocked, but not surprised, knowing the Port Jefferson Station’s Bass Electric owner has a family of young children. “It’s very time consuming,” Bonner said of being a chamber leader. “I’m surprised no one else stepped up to the plate, but I understand the quandary they’re in. Volunteerism on any level really, really does cut into your personal life. It’s a lot of balls to juggle and I know, because I’m a serial volunteer. I have a lot of respect for people who put their family first.” Losing the 17-year-old business network, a local organization of businesses whose goal is to further the interests of businesses, means losing a go-to organization for new small businesses owners seeking help. The towns it covers also lose a local advocate fighting on behalf of the business community in the community it serves. It is not only a welcoming committee but it also helps promote business in the area. The dismembering of the chamber will result in less funding and support for tourism and trade, and the loss of a large scholarship program for local high school seniors — including those who reside in Wading River, Shoreham, Rocky Point, Sound Beach, Miller Place, Mount Sinai, Port Jefferson Station and Terryville. “People will miss new business owners wanting to get involved with the chamber, not having a go-to person,” said Bonner, whose comments were also echoed by Coun-

Editorial comment

File photo at top by elana glowatz, file photo above from Jennifer Dzvonar

at top, the north Brookhaven Chamber of Commerce’s historical train on the corner of route 112 and route 347. above, chamber president Jennifer Dzvonar, also owner of Bass electric in Port Jefferson station, with her husband William.

cilwoman Valerie Cartright (D-Port Jefferson Station). “But as council people we will, as we always do, make our doors open to help with the process.” Mike Poveromo, general manager of Family Times Event Rentals in Mount Sinai and executive director of the chamber, said he knows a thing or two about how demanding the position can be. He joined the thenMiller Place-Mount Sinai Chamber, a small group of 30 local merchants, and eventually moved from membership director to president in 1997. He then served as president of the Council of Dedicated Merchants Chamber of Commerce from 1998 to 2004, which is when the chamber grew to include Sound Beach and Rocky Point. His business was also active in the Port Jefferson Station and Shoreham/ Wading River chambers. “Some of the first local merchants who welcomed me, like Mike Allen of Janitorial Plus and Paul Houghton of Miller Place Sea Food made a lasting impression,” Poveromo said. “They convinced me to become the volunteer membership director. But being a volunteer officer or director of any chamber of commerce is a demanding undertaking,

especially in this time in history when both residents and business owners feel they do not have enough time in their day for personal, meaningful and beneficial relationships.” The executive director recalled what to him was the first significant program established to connect business owners with the community — the Music and Arts Festival at Mount Sinai’s Cedar Beach. It was also the place to raise funds to support the scholarship. “The chamber membership grew quickly, the business and residential community grew rapidly once the four-lane highway was in place [on 25A],” Poveromo said. Poveromo said he is worried about the future of the area businesses. “The days of when your doctor knew you, your whole family, your pharmacist helped you personally, your local butcher, baker and dentist that had your family covered is gone,” he said. “Today it is all about fast food, cheap service and instant gratification.” He said he feels the dismantling of the chamber is a huge mistake. “I cannot answer the question of why no member business owner or director hasn’t stepped up to the plate to bring the NBCOC into the future, but it could be they feel they could not afford to volunteer their personal time and expertise away from their business and family,” he said. “With no serious candidate willing to take over, I understand and support the chamber’s decision to dismantle, and this will open up new opportunities for individual town business leaders to open a chamber of commerce and promote their community as a great place to live, work, raise a family and open a business.” Currently, a Port Jefferson Station-Terryville Chamber of Commerce is in the works, but no merchants have stepped up to fill the void in the other hamlets. “It is a loss to hometown recognition for small businesses embedded for years in the fabric of the community they serve,” Poveromo said. “Today’s new small business startups must find innovative ways and the means to become part of the community fabric. They are choosing to open and invest their time, money and talents in the American dream, and the chamber of commerce is a great re-

The future of the train car The breaking down of the North Brookhaven Chamber of Commerce leaves the future of the historic train car at Memorial American Flag Park on the corner of Route 112 and Route 347 in Port Jefferson Station in question, but executive director Mike Poveromo said residents needn’t worry. Despite the dismantling of the chamber, Poveromo, although he refrained from providing specific details just yet, said a Port Jefferson Station-Terryville Chamber of Commerce will be emerging, and taking with it, the responsibility of using dues to pay for what was once the chamber of commerce’s office. “The train is one of the first electric trains and one of the two remaining of its model on Long Island,” Poveromo said. “The train car is a 1914 baggage/ passenger car, that was in use from Jamaica Station to Grand Central Station. In my opinion, it is not only a chamber office, it is a community landmark.” At the park is also a 20-feet wide, by 30-feet long American flag. A remembrance piece from the World Trade Center is also encompassed into the foundation circle. “The picnic tables provide visitors and residents the opportunity to enjoy the area when taking a break when shopping, driving and visiting our area,” he said. “I am not concerned when the north Brookhaven chamber closes, since a new chamber is being formed, and will continue its ongoing effort in this respect.” source. New chamber leaders must find solutions to show and prove to residents the value of shopping locally at small business locations where owners are making a direct investment in the towns they chose to open a business.”


PAGE A6 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 26, 2017

Suffolk County launches drug abuse resource app A new mobile app will provide access to drug addiction services for those who need it. Stay Alive L.I. — which provides information on how to recognize and prevent overdoses, where to get help with drug addiction services, the locations of hospitals and treatment centers, links to organizations and hotlines and information on training to administer Narcan — is currently available in Android format and will soon be available to Apple users. “With a growing number of overdoses in Suffolk County we have been vigilant with instituting creative solutions for dealing with this,” Suffolk County Legislator and Presiding Officer DuWayne Gregory (D-Amityville) said. “This app is just one weapon in the fight. Too many lives have been lost and as new, deadlier drugs infiltrate our communities, the number of deaths will continue to rise unless we have the resources to provide assistance. This app will put vital information for treatment and recovery into the hands of those suffering drug addiction as well as their family members and will hopefully result in more lives saved.” According to the Public Health Emergency Preparedness division within the Suffolk County Department of Health, there was a total of 588 overdose reversals of which 152 received more than one dose of Narcan from Jan. 1 through Aug. 31 of this year. Of the 588, 25 patients were reversed at least two times within that time period, representing a snapshot of the number of overdoses in the county. “The app incorporates resources for enforcement, education and prevention in order

Police Blotter Incidents and arrests Oct. 19–23 Crack down

At about 9 p.m. Sept. 11 on William Street in Port Jefferson, a 36-year-old man from Huntington sold crack cocaine and heroin, according to police. He also sold crack cocaine on Aron Lane in Port Jefferson Station Sept. 19 and on Middle Country Road in Coram Sept. 21, police said. He was arrested Oct. 19 in Port Jefferson Station and charged with three counts of third-degree criminal sale of a controlled substance.

Hit-and-caught Image from Stay Alive L.I. app

Suffolk County’s app provides resources for individuals and families battling addiction.

to help mitigate drug use in our communities,” Legislator Sarah Anker (D-Mount Sinai) said. “It will be an invaluable resource.” The app can be downloaded by visiting the Google Play store on Android phones and searching for the Stay Alive L.I. app.

PeoPle of the Year

2017

Walk in the park

A 20-year-old man from Selden was involved in a dispute with another person at a public park on Boyle Road in Selden at about 2 p.m. Oct. 22 and stole cash from the wallet of the individual, according to police. He was arrested in Centereach and charged with petit larceny.

Drug driving

Nominate outstanding members of the community for

Brookhaven Township

Each year, with our readers’ help, we honor the people who have contributed in the communities we serve. ❖ The honorees are profiled in a special edition at the end of the year. ❖ Nominate your choice(s) by emailing desiree@tbrnewspapers.com ❖ Please include your name and contact information, the name and contact information of the individual you’re nominating and why he or she deserves to be a Person of the Year. ❖ DeaDline: novemBer 13, 2017

2017

At about 10:30 a.m. Oct. 23, a 27-year-old woman from Miller Place driving a 2004 Honda on Point Circle South in Coram was involved in a collision and left the scene without exchanging contact or insurance information, according to police. She was arrested and charged with leaving the scene of an accident with property damage.

On Buckskin Lane in Selden Oct. 20 at about 11:30 a.m., a 54-year-old man from Coram was driving a 1997 Jeep with a suspended license, according to police. A 28-year-old man from Shirley was also seated in the vehicle and possessed a hypodermic needle containing heroin, police said. The Coram man was arrested and charged with first-degree aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle, and the Shirley man was arrested and charged with unlawfully loitering for the purpose of using a controlled substance.

Lack of concentration

During a traffic stop on Main Street in Stony Brook Oct. 22 at about 11 a.m., police discovered concentrated marijuana within a car being driven by a 21-year-old man from Stony Brook, according to police. He was arrested and charged with seventh-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance.

Scratching the surface

A 2017 Audi parked on Piedmont Drive in Port Jefferson Station was keyed at about 8 p.m. Oct. 21, according to police.

Old-fashioned identity theft ©150324

A woman shopping at Marshall’s on Route 347 in Stony Brook Oct. 21 at about 3:30 p.m. either lost her wallet or had it stolen, then her credit card was used to make purchases at another business, according to police.

Gone fishing

Fishing equipment was stolen from a boat docked at Mount Sinai Marina at about 5 p.m. Oct. 23, according to police.

Cashed out

Money was stolen from a 2006 Ford parked on Crystal Brook Hollow Road in Port Jefferson Station Oct. 21 at about 10 p.m., according to police.

Shattered

The window of a 2015 Lexus was broken while it was parked outside of a home on Old Town Road in Setauket Oct. 21 at about 3 a.m., according to police.

Special delivery

A television that had been delivered to a home on Carlisle Road in Miller Place Sept. 26 at about noon was stolen off the front porch, according to police. A police report was filed Oct. 20.

Lock it up

A cellphone, tools, a GPS and sunglasses were stolen from within an unlocked 2016 Hyundai parked on Sycamore Drive in Stony Brook at about 8:30 p.m. Oct. 19, according to police.

Rubber cutter

The tires of a 2004 Subaru were slashed at about 1 a.m. Oct. 19 while it was parked on Florence Road in Port Jefferson Station, according to police.

Wild shopper

Assorted groceries were stolen from Wild By Nature on Route 25A in Setauket Aug. 30 at about 9 a.m. A police report was filed Oct. 19.

Food drive

A 50-year-old man from Stony Brook stole items from Stop & Shop in South Setauket at about 9 p.m. Oct. 19, according to police. He was arrested and charged with petit larceny.

Gamer gaffe

An Xbox console was stolen from GameStop on Nesconset Highway in East Setauket at about noon Oct. 23, according to police.

False alarm

A 41-year-old man from Port Jefferson Station pulled the fire alarm at his home on Terryville Road when there was no fire or present danger, once Oct. 20 at about midnight and once Oct. 24 at 5:30 p.m., according to police. He was arrested Oct. 21 and charged with two counts of second-degree falsely reporting an incident. — CompILed by ALex petroSkI


OCTOBER 26, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A7

‘Having a capability as a science center helps with sustainability. People will keep coming back for family memberships, our new exhibits, to send their kids to robotics and coding classes.’ — Marc alessi Image from Marc Alessi

A rendering of what the renovated exterior of the Tesla Science Center at Wardenclyffe in Shoreham will look like.

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Center and its celebration of the important work of Nikola Tesla,” Sayan said in a statement. “His work and innovation have made an impact on my life, and I’m very happy that Softheon is supporting such an important initiative on Long Island.” Tesla Science Center President Jane Alcorn said Sayan’s benefaction, and others like it, will serve to successfully energize the legacy and impact of the inventor of alternating current electricity. “Mr. Sayan is giving us support when we need it most,” Alcorn said. “We hope others will see the good that this can bring and consider giving a gift of this nature as well. Not everybody has the capacity to do something like this but when people who do have that ability act in a forwardthinking way like this, it benefits all of us. This contribution will make a real difference.” The center’s board members estimate the entirety of their planned facility will be available to the public by 2022. Upon completion of the project, they said, not only will it include a museum and an immersive science center — including a STEM education program for students, TED Talk-style lectures and workshops for emerging scientists and entrepreneurs and traveling exhibits — it will house a Makerspace program offering lab rooms and classes in areas ranging from 3-D printing to synthetic fabrication and robotics. Incubator programs will also be set up to connect startup businesses from around the world to the site. If a company meets the center’s criteria, with Teslaoriented focuses like electrical or mechanical engineering, its owners can apply for crowdsourcing and mentorships. Plans are also in place to work with the Department of Education to implement Tesla into the K-12 science curriculums of surrounding school districts. Alessi added that because the closest major regional science center, the Cradle of Aviation in Garden City, is a hike for North Shore residents, he hopes the science center will provide a similar experience for them. “Having a capability as a science center helps with sustainability,” he said. “People will keep coming back for family memberships, our new exhibits, to send their kids to robotics and coding classes. We eventually want to be the go-to source.” He said it’s important the center become a place that would make its namesake proud. “If Nikola Tesla walked onto this site after it’s opened and all we had was a museum dedicated to what he was doing 100 years ago, he would be ticked off,” Alessi said. “Just having a static museum here isn’t enough. On-site innovation really honors what Tesla was doing. [Tesla] was a futurist, he saw where things would go, and that’s what can inspire the Teslas of today and tomorrow. If you bring an 8-year-old child here who gets hands-on science experience, we’re going to inspire a future scientist. We want to help people see the value of science.”

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PAGE A8 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 26, 2017

Town

Port Jeff resident helps villagers communicate with the dead By Kevin Redding kevin@tbrnewspapers.com Along East Main Street in Port Jefferson, tucked between a plumbing company and a parking lot, sits a tiny, two-story shop where Lisa McGarrity communicates with the deceased. A new age store stocked with spell and magic books, a variety of incense and herbs, and a private space for tarot card readings, Envision Crystal has provided a spiritual avenue for residents from Port Jeff Village and beyond since 1987 as both a place for healing and closure, as well as exploration of macabre curiosities. McGarrity, a psychic medium who first discovered her necromantical gift as a child when she witnessed spirits roaming around her house, is the shop’s third owner and said there’s a reason why there’s no shortage of customers coming to her for advice on how to handle and interact with members of the afterlife. “Port Jefferson is so filled with spirits,” said McGarrity, who recalled several encounters with former, deceased village residents over the years. “I feel that wonderful energy of sea captains, people who grew up and worked here, musicians, merchants. There are a lot of psychics in the village because the energy here is conducive. I think spirits want to be here because it’s home. They want to visit and hang out.” In fact, the medium said, as the occupant of a historic home in town, she “has had friendly conversations” and sometimes shares her morning coffee with the gentleman who built her house long ago. While she used to be able to see these spectral visitors crystal clear as a child, McGarrity said now it’s more of an impression, a feeling, a sense. She described the sightings as being “a little sharper and clearer than a mind-wandering daydream.” Coming from a family of psychics and intuition-driven people, McGarrity, who studied psychology at Stony Brook University, said she’s never found this field all that unusual, but, growing up, thought it best to keep her interests in it hidden from people. “When I was young, I learned to separate it and talk about regular world things with people and leave that other world alone,” she explained. “Things have changed now and we live in a world that’s much more open now. I was born with this

‘I think spirits want to be [in Port Jeff] because it’s home. They want to visit and hang out.’

— Lisa McGarrity

Photos by Kevin Redding

Lisa Mcgarrity, above, is the owner of envision Crystal, and works as a medium in Port Jefferson village. Below, candles offered to customers by the medium along with other items ideal for supernatural encounters. curiosity and a desire to explore. I mean, I think what I do is super normal and something anyone can do if they want to pay attention to it. Some folks can sing. I’ve cultivated, developed and expanded what was a natural gift.”

St. James resident Andrea Giordano, a longtime customer of McGarrity’s shop, who developed a strong bond with the medium during a reading session, spoke highly of her friend’s gift. “What she does is get people connected,” Giordano said. “It’s not about money here. It’s about spirit, love, compassion and open mindedness. It’s universal humanity at its best. If you have faith in anything beyond this world, she helps reinforce that faith. If you don’t have faith when you walk in here, you leave here with faith.” McGarrity said, especially around this time of year, people often come into the shop on a mission to encounter ghosts in and around the area. For the budding paranormal investigators, the medium offers tips and advice — she stresses the importance of exploring in groups and with an experienced guide, equipping one’s self with protective stones and sage, which work to cleanse negative energy and drive away darker entities, and, most importantly, displaying respectful decorum. “The same rules with any human in-

teraction applies when interacting with spirits,” she said. “Start out nice, introduce yourself. That works well. Don’t go to a haunted location and shout out derogatory and inflammatory things.” Only a few minutes away, on Barnum Avenue, is the site of McGarrity’s occasional spiritual seminars: an 1890s-built, gothic-style home full of “incredible, wonderful energy,” according to its owner, L.L. Cartin. During one particular seminar, a few Halloweens ago, McGarrity said she led a group of spiritually-minded participants with electronic voice phenomenon equipment through the house. The EVP, which picks up sounds caused by ghosts, went off when they stepped into the basement. “I remember in that particular moment, I was a little scared to sleep here,” laughed Cartin, who identified herself as a spiritual person who met McGarrity as a customer. “She’s a very gentle soul, she’s not pushy, and she definitely has a gift. She’s one to be admired and her delivery is very gentle so you can receive her information the right way. I love Lisa and I think she’s an asset to the community.”


OCTOBER 26, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A9

Town

Something strange in a Smithtown watering hole Bar owner, its patrons recall multiple paranormal occurrences at Katie’s on West Main Street By Kevin Redding kevin@tbrnewspapers.com If there’s something strange in your neighborhood bar, chances are you’re at Katie’s on West Main Street in Smithtown — where ghostly happenings are just as normal as ordering a drink. The two-floor pub and live music venue, which sits on the grounds of the old Trainor Hotel that burned down in 1909, has long been a hotbed for spooky sightings and experiences according to its staff and patrons. The bar’s high level of spectral activity has even been featured on episodes of popular paranormal shows like Travel Channel’s “Ghost Adventures,” A&E’s “Paranormal State” and the Biography Channel’s “My Ghost Story.” Dominique Maciejka, a former bartender at the establishment, said she had her fair share of brushes with the bar’s spirited regulars. “I was by myself closing up, the music was off, nobody else was around, and a beer bottle cap went flying from one side of the bar to the other, like, sideways across the room,” Maciejka said, recalling one such freaky occurrence at the end of a night shift in fall 2011. “I was the only person around so there was no explanation, nothing that could’ve triggered that … other than something supernatural,” she said. “On the way home, I called my mom and asked her to stay on the phone with me.” She was also working when a soda gun behind the bar seemingly flung out of its holster on its own and dropped to the floor, an incident captured on the bar’s security cameras. Gary Bates, from Smithtown, said he once saw what he described as “a big, gray, seven-foot tall” figure walk from one end of the bar counter to the other. Another time, Bates said he was walking in the empty bar and felt the sensation of stepping into a large spider web even though there was no physical one in sight, and was then suddenly poked in the arm.

“There’s definitely something weird going on there,” Bates said of the Smithtown nightspot. Over the years, folks who frequent Katie’s have reported a wide range of eerie activity: distorted faces taking shape in the bar’s mirrors, hearing voices in empty rooms, feeling like they were being watched by unseen presences, seeing transparent children in the background of selfies and group pictures and having whatever may be haunting the place follow them home. None of these reported occurrences come as a surprise to Katie’s owner. “The whole place is active,” Brian Karppinen, 53, who has owned the bar since 2000, said. He pointed out that while the bar’s lively upstairs tends to be occupied by mischievous and relatively harmless ghosts, the basement billiards area is where he thinks more sinister ones roam. “Down there is a darker feeling, a heaviness — not as fun. You feel, spiritually, like something is not nice down there.” Karppinen recalled a night in which a tough biker went downstairs to confront one of the malevolent spirits, stood in what was considered the basement’s most active spot by the pool table and was violently punched in the stomach by an invisible force. “If he faked it, it would be amazing, but that seemed real,” Karppinen said, making clear he takes a lot of people’s reports with a grain of salt. “He hobbled out of here and I’ve never seen him again.” While there are a number of theories from various paranormal and psychic groups that have explored the bar hoping to identify the ghosts, Karppinen said little concrete evidence has emerged from such explorations. Some say the ghosts are past Smithtown residents who may have died in the Trainor Hotel fire, while others are convinced the more evil spirits could be Jinns, a Middle Eastern poltergeist that has purportedly existed before any religion. However, one of the more mischievous ghosts that has become a sort of celebrity at Katie’s is widely thought to be Charlie Klein, a Prohibition-era bootlegger and part owner

Photos by Kevin Redding

Clockwise from above, the stairway leading to the basement of Katie’s bar in Smithtown, which patrons; and owner Brian Karppinen believe might be haunted; especially at the corner, where many patrons believe is the habitat of the bar’s more sinister spirits. of the Smithtown Hotel in the 1920s, which is now Croxley’s Ale House. According to members of the Smithtown Historical Society, Klein shot himself in his house in 1933 after serving a prison sentence. Klein’s house, Karppinen said, is directly across the street from the bar. Brad Harris, the historical society’s president, said even though he’s never personally experienced any of the bar’s hauntings, he doesn’t think they’re made up. “I don’t think it’s a figment of anybody’s imagination as there does seem to be strange occurrences happening there,” Harris said. “We have always had problems trying to explain why Charlie Klein’s ghost would be disturbing the bar, as he didn’t kill himself there, but it’s a strange world.” Even stranger, Karppinen said, was when members of the Pennsylvania State University “Paranormal State” group were investigating the basement and one of them pointed to the end of the bar and said, “that’s where your ghost died — right there.” “I said, ‘no he didn’t, he died across the street, he killed himself,’” Karppinen recalled. “And he said, ‘no … I used to be a DJ here in the early ’80s and there was an old timer who used to drink and would fall asleep at the bar. We would wake him up, get him a cab, and we would send him home every night. One night, he didn’t wake up and he died at the bar.’” Karppinen said weird and unexplainable occurrences have surrounded him all his life and “it really seemed like I was called here.” It was when the Lake Grove resident was driving to his girlfriend’s house one day, he said, that something told him to go visit his friend, Rich, who owned a struggling bar called Wolfgang’s Pub. Sure enough, his instincts were right and Rich was in rough shape, depressed that his business was losing money and claiming the place was “cursed.” He asked Karppinen to be his partner and help out. Rich retired from the bar business soon after and Karppinen renamed the place after his grandmother, Katie Dunagan. Naturally, for Karppinen, it didn’t take long before things got phantasmic. Once, while jostling with a rotted door at the top of a steep stairwell in the bar, Karppinen lost his balance and felt himself tee-

tering backward when, he said, “I felt two things grab my shoulder blades and upright me. I was like, ‘wow, whoever that is, thank you.’ I got the vibe it might have been my dad or a passed away family member. It was not a spooky vibe at all.” “I think it’s some kind of a package deal that maybe this place was active and they wanted me here,” Karppinen said, laughing. “[I think] the darker thing attracted me and likes that I never really thrive. There’s times when I’m behind in bills and I’m like ‘I’m selling the place’ and then something comes through and suddenly we have money for bills again. It almost seems like they love the torture, but don’t want me to leave.” Unless you own a corporate bar, Karppinen said, the bar business is a dying industry, but the ghosts have significantly helped bring traffic to Katie’s. “People love to talk about it, people know us all over, it has definitely helped,” Karppinen said. “That and our live music. Sometimes people are jerks and they’ll come in drunk from another place, like, ‘I wanna see the ghost!’ and, spiritually, I have no idea what’s going on here … so I try not to let that happen. I don’t want to torture these [dead] people more.” Asked what he would say to any skeptics out there, Karppinen said, “I would tell them I’m not here to debate you. I don’t believe a lot of the [stuff] people say happened here, but some of it is very hard to explain.”


PAGE A10 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 26, 2017

community newS

School newS

Shoreham

Miller Avenue Elementary School

Photo from Councilwoman Jane Bonner’s office

Shoreham hosts New York BMX championship Brookhaven Town Councilwoman Jane Bonner (C-Rocky Point) attended the New York State BMX Championship at Shoreham BMX Oct. 7. The Shoreham track was selected as the venue for the championship for the fourth year in a row. Bonner, pictured above on far right with Shoreham BMX officials: president Rich Soper, representative Arin Hampson and vice president Chris Hess, was presented with a plaque in recog-

nition of her dedication and service to the Shoreham BMX community. “For over three decades, Shoreham BMX has given bike riders from all over the country a place to test their skills in a fun, safe and family-friendly environment,” Bonner said. “I am honored to receive this recognition from such a great organization.” For more infromation about the BMX organization or event, visit www.shoreham bmx.org.

obituary John Shevlin

John Shevlin, 89, of Rocky Point, died Oct. 9 at his home in Rocky Point. Born Dec. 1, 1927, in Brooklyn, he was the son of the late Thomas and Florence (Nicholas) Shevlin. Shevlin served in the United States Coast Guard during World War II from 1945 to 1946. He was employed in Manhattan as a jeweler. Shevlin is survived by his wife Marion (Shelton) Shevlin; daughters Carol Baio of Valley Stream, Linda Randolph of California,

Mary Ellen Bittrolff of Broad Channel and Denise Shevlin of Rocky Point; sons Thomas Shevlin of Miller Place and John Shevlin of Broad Channel; 10 grandchildren and five great-grand children. He was predeceased by his son Michael Shevlin. Religious services were held at Rocky Point Funeral Home. Burial followed at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Coram. The family also invited everyone to meet at Rocky Point Funeral Home for a closing prayer. Arrangements were entrusted to Rocky Point Funeral Home.

Photos from Shoreham-Wading River school district

Stop, drop and roll

Students at Miller Avenue Elementary School in the Shoreham-Wading River Central School District were eager to greet members of the Rocky Point Fire Department Shoreham Company 3 Oct. 12 to learn about fire safety and fire prevention tips. Throughout the event, students were reminded of who to call in an emergency, whether or not to go back into a home to retrieve any items and the importance of knowing where to meet family members if there was a fire in their home. The children climbed aboard an operational fire truck to learn about the lifesaving tools used by firefighters, including the fire gear and air masks that are used when responding to emergencies.

Rocky Point High School

Photo from Rocky Point school district

A culture of kindness

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Rocky Point High School’s peer networking group worked with school social worker Jennifer Zaffino to create an initiative aimed at promoting kindness and compassion within and beyond the walls of the school. Returning group members met in early September to create and promote an “upstander declaration” that speaks to behavior that the students wish to see in their lives — both at school and in the community. The pledge focuses on treating others with respect, kindness and empathy. Members of the student body had the chance to learn about

the initiative during a special morning announcement shared by group members and were invited to join the cause by becoming kindness ambassadors and signing a copy of the declaration. The school plans to celebrate those who display “upstanding” behaviors on the building’s new “upstanders tree” completed last year by the life skills students who are enrolled in Robert Ciaccio’s technology course and the students in John Schumacher’s principles of engineering class. The wooden sculpture features a number of leaves, which will each bear the names of those “caught being good.”


OCTOBER 26, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A11

“Another AAA rating for Brookhaven Town” - Long Island Advance

“Moody’s hails town “Town gets top S&P credit rating”

“Town Sees Surplus Again” - Long Island Advance

SUPERVISOR ED ROMAINE GETTING THE JOB DONE

154373

Ed Romaine has stabilized Brookhavenʼs finances

Raised R i dB Brookhaven’s kh ’ credit dit rating ti g to t the highest possible rating “AAA”.

Refinanced debt, saving more than $7 million. Ended the last four years with a budget surplus. Submitted five straight budgets that met the tax cap, spending cap, and debt cap. Paid off ALL pension debt, the only town on Long Island to do so.

ED ROMAINE

BROOKHAVEN SUPERVISOR

Paid for by Romaine for Supervisor

VOTE ELECTION DAY NOVEMBER 7, 2017


PAGE A12 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 26, 2017

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OCTOBER 26, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A13

Town

Sound Beach health fair a hit By ErnEstinE Franco The Sound Beach Civic Association brought together a number of health professionals at a health and wellness expo Oct. 21. At the health fair, professionals were on hand to provide blood pressure screenings, nutritionists discussed how to live a healthier life, representatives from the police department collected unused and unwanted medication and the Sound Beach Fire Department provided tips for calling 911 in case of an emergency Participants, screeners and presenters participating in the even included: The Chiropractic Joint, The Community Growth Center, Ear Works Audiology, Echo Pharmacy,

Harbor View Medical Services, John T. Mather Memorial Hospital, the LI Chapter of NYC + PANDAS/PANS Awareness Group and NY PANS Awareness Group, North Shore Youth Council, Rite Aid, Santi Yoga Community, Senior Callers, Suffolk Center for Speech, Suffolk County Health Department, Suffolk County Police Department’s 7th Precinct., Wellness and Chiropractic Solutions and Young Living Essential Oils. Patty Pulick, a Sound Beach resident, said she absolutely loved the health fair. “The various tables were very informative,” she said. “I got my sugar checked, learned about healthy alternatives and discussed hearing issues. It was great that the SCPD was there so I could dis-

pose of my unused medications. I hope they have it again.” Civic association president Bea Ruberto extended her gratitude to BPN Home Improvement Inc., Echo Pharmacy, Harbor View Medical Services, John T. Mather Memorial Hospital, Matt’s One Stop, Pern Editorial Services, Schwamb Plumbing and Heating and St. Charles Hospital, who sponsored the event. “I would also like to give a special thank you to all the volunteers who worked tirelessly to coordinate this event, as well as Bonnie Boeger, a Coldwell Banker residential broker who provided water,” Ruberto said. “As everything else we work on, it’s the generosity of the people in the Sound Beach community that made this event possible.”

Photo at top left from Ernestine Franco; all other photos by Heidi sutton

clockwise from top left, Heidi and Mark sutton of Farmingville get their blood pressure taken during the sound Beach civic association’s Health & Wellness Expo; Kelly Donlan, of Ear Works audiology, gives ann Moran a checkup; Dr. Helena chykyda, Dr. Minyoung Kim and Dr. James James of Mather Primary care give free blood pressure and blood sugar readings; Barbara Delledonne of santi yoga conducts a chair yoga workshop; richard nebiosini of the chiropractic Joint speaks to residents; sound Beach civic volunteers who helped put together the expo were on hand at the event; and stuart Vincent, director of public relations at John t. Mather Memorial Hospital speaks to Moran about hospital services.


PAGE A14 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 26, 2017

SportS Shoreham-Wading River High School

Photo from Shoreham-Wading River school district

Raising funds for ALS

The Shoreham-Wading River boys soccer team helped to raise funds and awareness of an important cause when the Wildcats joined in on an ALS fundraising game at Miller Place High School. Amid the competition against the two schools was a spirit of community and giving,

with the Wildcats families, friends and other supporters taking part in halftime festivities, refreshments and raffle sales that helped raise $2,100 for ALS. To share in the fundraising efforts, the soccer team members purchased Team Up For Terry shirts to honor Terry Hobbes, a father of three students in the Shoreham-Wading

River school district who suffered a blood clot in his brain which has left him hospitalized with paralysis. They wear the shirts before every game to warm up and to let the family know that they are thinking about them and wishing him well during his recovery. “I cannot express enough how proud I am to coach this amazing group of young

men,” Shoreham-Wading River head coach and high school social studies teacher Russell Mitchinson said. “Their understanding of the bigger picture and their responsibility to the school and the community never ceases to amaze me. I am proud that I get to work with them and each day see them mature a little bit more.”

PJ Station native administering medical aid aboard Navy ship in Puerto Rico By Alex PetRoSki alex@tbrnewspapers.com A Naval emergency medicine physician from Port Jefferson Station is trying to provide comfort while aboard a ship named for it in Puerto Rico. Hurricane Maria made landfall in September as a historic Category 5 storm, devastating Puerto Rico with sustained gusts nearing 200 mph. When Lt. Katherine Biggs, a resident at Naval Medical Center Portsmouth in Virginia currently receiving training in military-specific medicine, was offered the chance to travel to the storm-ravaged island, the 2006 Comsewogue High School graduate said it was an opportunity she couldn’t pass up. Biggs is one of five from the residency program aboard the Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Comfort, which reached Puerto Rico Oct. 3 and does not have a scheduled return date, working on the boat’s casualty receiving area administering medical aid to those affected. Catastrophic flooding, damaged infrastructure and a lack of supplies, drinking water and electricity have created a dangerous situation for most Puerto Ricans trying to restore their regular routine. “We’ll be here as long as directed and as long as needed,” Biggs said in a phone interview from Puerto Rico. “I’ll stay here as long as they’ll let me.” She called the trip thus far a great learning experience, and said it’s been a change of pace helping people with severe respiratory and heart issues, for example, because she’s

Photo by Stephane Belcher

lt. katherine Biggs and other sailors aboard the Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Comfort treat a patient from Centro Medico in San Juan, Puerto Rico. used to providing medical attention to those with traumatic, combat-related injuries. Biggs has treated some with broken bones, but said many of the patients she has been tasked with treating are people with chronic issues that are flaring up because they’ve been unable to take their prescribed medicines for various reasons. The lieutenant said she knew when she was in ninth or 10th grade at Comsewogue that she wanted to pursue a career in medicine as a way to help people in need. After four years at Binghamton University as an undergraduate, she moved on to medical school

at New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine, graduating in 2015. Biggs said she was able to afford the schooling thanks to the Health Professions Scholarship Program, a financial assistance offering from the U.S. military, which she heard about from a neighbor. She is in the third year of her residency in Portsmouth, and it is a rarity for residents to be asked to go on a trip like the one she’s on now, according to residency program director Navy Cmdr. John Devlin. “I say it’s win-win,” Devlin said in a statement. “The people of Puerto Rico are getting more emergency medicine physician man-

power than they would have had, had we gone with the original plan. And from the resident standpoint and the Navy’s standpoint, we are getting five junior physicians that, for their entire career, will have this experience base to carry forward to apply to missions in the future.” With the help of the “Sea Knights” of Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron 22, Biggs and the other residents have been able to personally assist in medical evacuation missions around the island to return people to the ship for treatment via helicopter. “When I heard about Katie’s plans to head to Puerto Rico I was incredibly proud,” Biggs’ mother Laurie said in an email. “I remember reminding her that this is why she joined the Navy and wanted to become a doctor. This opportunity may be tough in the sense of the people struggling, but it is allowing my daughter to do what she was meant to do — help people in need.” Biggs’ mother added she knew from an early age her daughter, who is the oldest of four, was a caring and helpful person, ever aware of helping the less fortunate. “To us she will always just be Katie, the daughter and older sister that is always there when you need her,” she said. Biggs said her biggest takeaway from the mission thus far has been the dedication of responders on the ground to do whatever it takes to help both individuals and the island as a whole return to normalcy. To contribute to the relief effort, visit the American Red Cross website at www.redcross.org/donate.


OCTOBER 26, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A15

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Josephine Smith RE Sales Broker

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Call Your Sales Representative at Times Beacon Record News Media TODAY! 631.331.1154 or 631.751.7663 ©98467


OCTOBER 26, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A17

E M P L OY M E N T / C A R E E R S Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

1:1 AIDES; Setauket & Dix Hills, Special Ed Pre-school Program. SUB Teacher, TA’s & Aides also needed. Alternatives for Children. See complete information in the Employment Display Section.

HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT LABORER wanted for Head of the Harbor Village. Clean drivers license/CDL a plus. 3+ years experience. Snow plowing, mowing, tree trimming. Attractive benefit package. Growth opportunity. Email qualifications to: VHOHHR@gmail.com

PROOFREADER Times Beacon Record Newsmedia needs part-time proofreaders to work in the Setauket office. Must be available days and/or evenings. Proofreading and computer experience a plus! Email: Desiree@ tbrnewspapers.com

PROPANE COMPANY seeks F/T & P/T BULK DRIVER. CDL, Hazmat, Air Brakes & tank endorsement required. Must have clean driving record and be able to pass drug test. F/T Installers, Plumbers Service Techs and Yard man. Experience a plus, but willing to train. Fax resume: 631-369-2666

IMMEDIATE OPENING MEDICAL ASSISTANT Outstanding Pediatric Practice. Experience preferred but willing to train. Setauket. For more info. 631-751-7676 or fax resume to: 631-751-1152

PT RECEPTIONIST Thursday & Friday, 10am-5pm, for busy medical type office setting. Will train. Fax resume: 631-331-8507

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Receptionist

www.littleflowerny.org wadingriver-jobs@lfchild.org

MULTIPLE OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE IN WADING RIVER! Residential Clinical Director Maintenance Mechanic III RN Supervisor Waiver Service Providers

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Maintenance Mechanic III Part-Time, 12-Month Position— Weekends 7.5 hr per day - Hourly Salary $20.80 Substitute Teachers – All Areas $125 Daily/$150 Daily for Preferred Subs            Substitute Teacher Aides & Monitors – $11.00 per hour Substitute Food Service Workers - $11.00 per hour Substitute Custodians & Groundsmen —$15.00 per hour Substitute Maintenance Mechanic II - $18.86 per hour

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SHOREHAM-WADING RIVER CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT SHOREHAM, NEW YORK 11786

Submit letter of interest/resume to: Brian Heyward Asst. Supt. for Human Resources 250B Route 25A Shoreham, NY 11786 bheyward@swr.k12.ny.us

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IMMEDIATE OPENING Outstanding Pediatric Office Setauket Experience preferred but willing to train. Call for more info.

Place your ad by Tuesday noon and it will appear in that Thursday’s editions.

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AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here. Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information, 866-296-7094

LITTLE FLOWER CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES OF NY SEEKS: Waiver Service Providers RN’S RN Supervisor Residential Clinical Director Nursing Supervisor Maintenance Mechanic III Direct Care Workers Child Care Workers Valid NYS Driver’s License required for most positions. Little Flower Children and Family Services in Wading River NY. Send resume to: wadingriver-jobs@lfchild.org or fax to: 631-929- 6203. EOE PLEASE SEE COMPLETE DETAILS IN EMPLOYMENT DISPLAY ADS

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PUBLISHER’S EMPLOYMENT NOTICE: All employment advertising in this newspaper is subject to section 296 of the human rights law which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, creed, national origin, disability, marital status, sex, age or arrest conviction record or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. Title 29, U.S. Code Chap 630, excludes the Federal Gov’t. from the age discrimination provisions. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for employment which is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that employment offerings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154

Thursday & Friday 10 am - 5 pm for busy medical type office setting. Will train.

Full-Time/Part-Time/Per Diem positions available. Valid NYS Driver’s License required for most positions. Send resume & cover letter to wadingriver-jobs@lfchild.org or fax to 631-929-6203

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Join the Little Flower family and be part of a dynamic organization that is turning potential into promise for at risk EOE youth and individuals with developmental disabilities!

FAX RESUME TO

631-331-8507


PAGE A18 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 26, 2017

E M P L OY M E N T / C A R E E R S

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154

Take the First Step towards a Great Career working with children. 1:1 AIDES

Setauket & Dix Hills Special Ed Pre-school Program SUB Teachers, TAs & Aides also needed. Help Special Ed Teachers with a student with special needs on a 1:1 basis. You will assist with structured activities, snack feeding, and implementing educational goals. Hours: M-F 9:00am 2:30pm or 9am - 1pm. Must have a HS Diploma/GED; exp working with pre-school population preferred. 98435

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Alternatives For Children 14 Research Way E. Setauket, NY 11733

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Experience with Creative Suite software and pre-press experience a plus. Potential room for growth. Please email resume and portfolio to beth@tbrnewspapers.com ©97649

Looking for that perfect career? or that perfect employee? Search our employment section each week!

TIMES BEACON RECORD CLASSIFIED ADS 631.331.1154 or 631.751.7663

SPORTS REPORTER, PT

WANTED

Looking for a Freelance Reporter to cover local high school sports. Sports writing experience necessary. Must have a car and camera to shoot photos during games. Ability to meet deadlines is a must.

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Tuesdays and Wednesdays 9 am to 5 pm

pamela.demeo@alternativesforchildren.org EOE or fax: 631.331.6865

Send resume and clips/photo samples to desiree@ tbrnewspapers.com


OCTOBER 26, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A19

E M P L OY M E N T / C A R E E R S 7966-9,(+,9

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Get Your News From Your Mailbox! Get the best in local news delivered right to your home every week and stay informed throughout the year!

SUBSCRIBE TODAY AND SAVE UP TO 40% OFF NEWSSTAND COVER PRICE

Use this form to mail your subscription or call 631–751–7744

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Visit us on the Web at www.tbrnewsmedia.com

Exp. Date

Make checks payable to: 7,0(6 %($&21 5(&25' 1(:6 0(',$ Mail completed order form to: P.O. BOX 707, SETAUKET, NY 11733 EXCELLENCE. WE MAKE AN ISSUE OF IT EVERY WEEK.

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PAGE A20 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 26, 2017

S E R V IC E S Cleaning COME HOME TO A CLEAN HOUSE! Attention to detail is our priority. Excellent References. Serving the Three Village Area. Call Jacquie or Joyce 347-840-0890.

Decks DECKS ONLY BUILDERS & DESIGNERS Of Outdoor Living By Northern Construction of LI. Decks, Patios/Hardscapes, Pergolas, Outdoor Kitchens and Lighting. Since 1995. Lic/Ins. 3rd Party Financing Available.105 Broadway Greenlawn, 631-651-8478. www.DecksOnly.com

Electricians ANTHEM ELECTRIC Quality Light & Power since 2004. Master Electrician. Commercial, Industrial, Residential. Port Jefferson. Please call 631-291-8754 Andrew@Anthem-Electric.net FARRELL ELECTRIC Serving Suffolk for over 40 years All types electrical work, service changes, landscape lighting, automatic standby generators. 631-928-0684 GREENLITE ELECTRIC, INC. Repairs, installations, motor controls, PV systems. Piotr Dziadula, Master Electrician. Lic. #4694-ME/Ins. 631-331-3449

Fences SMITHPOINT FENCE. Vinyl Fence Sale! Wood, PVC, Chain Link Stockade. Free estimates. Commercial/Residential 70 Jayne Blvd., PJS Lic.37690-H/Ins. 631-743-9797 www.smithpointfence.com.

Furniture/Restoration/ Repairs REFINISHING & RESTORATION Antiques restored, repairing recane, reupholstery, touchups kitchen, front doors, 40 yrs exp, SAVE$$$, free estimates. Vincent Alfano 631-286-1407

Gardening/Design/ Architecture DOWN THE GARDEN PATH *Garden Rooms *Focal Point Gardens. Designed and Maintained JUST FOR YOU. Create a “splash� of color w/perennials or Patio Pots. Marsha, 631-689-8140 or cell# 516-314-1489

Handyman Services HANDYMAN SERVICES “No job too big or small� Very Neat. Kitchens, baths, roofing, windows, decks, brick work, siding, etc. Free estimates. Over 30 yrs experience. Old World Restoration, Inc. Old World Craftsmanship. Lic/Ins. #41083-H. 631-872-8711 JOHN’S A-1 HANDYMAN SERVICE *Crown moldings* Wainscoting/raised panels. Kitchen/Bathroom Specialist. Painting, windows, finished basements, ceramic tile. All types repairs. Dependable craftsmanship. Reasonable rates. Lic/Ins. #19136-H. 631-744-0976 c.631 697-3518

Housesitting Services TRAVELING? Need someone to check on your home? Contact Tender Loving Pet Care, LLC. We’re more than just pets. Insured/Bonded. 631-675-1938

Floor Services/Sales

Home Improvement

FINE SANDING & REFINISHING Wood Floor Installations Craig Aliperti, Wood Floors LLC. All work done by owner. 25 years experience. Lic.#47595-H/Insured. 631-875-5856

MEIGEL HOME IMPROVEMENT Extensions, dormers, roofing, windows, siding, decks, kitchens, baths, tile, etc. 631-737-8794 Licensed in Suffolk 26547-H and Nassau H18F5030000. Insured.

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 Home Improvement

Lawn & Landscaping

ALL PHASES OF HOME IMPROVEMENT From attic to your basement, no job too big or too small, RCJ Construction www.rcjconstruction.com commercial/residential, lic/ins 631-580-4518.

SETAUKET LANDSCAPE DESIGN Stone Driveways/Walkways, Walls/Stairs/Patios/Masonry, Brickwork/Repairs Land Clearing/Drainage,Grading/Excavating. Plantings/Mulch, Rain Gardens Steve Antos, 631-689-6082 setauketlandscape.com Serving Three Villages

*BluStar Construction* The North Shore’s Most Trusted Renovation Experts. 631-751-0751 Suffolk Lic. #48714-H, Ins. See Our Display Ad THREE VILLAGE HOME IMPROVEMENT Kitchens & Baths, Ceramic Tile, Hardwood floors, Windows/Doors, Interior Finish trim, Interior/Exterior Painting, Composite Decking, Wood Shingles. Serving the community for 30 years. Rich Beresford, 631-689-3169 SUPER HANDYMAN DTA CONTRACTING WE CAN FIX OR BUILD ANYTHING. Kitchens/Baths, Tile Flooring, Doors, Windows/Moulding, Painting; Interior/Exterior, All credit cards accepted. Senior discount. daveofalltrades @yahoo.com 631-745-9230 Lic#-37878-H/Ins

Home Repairs/ Construction LONG HILL CARPENTRY 40 years experience All phases of home improvement. Old & Historic Restorations. Lic.#H22336/Ins. 631-751-1764 longhill7511764@aol.com

Lawn & Landscaping LANDSCAPES UNLIMITED SPRING/FALL CLEANUPS Call For Details. Property Clean-ups, Tree Removal, Pruning & Maintenance. Low Voltage lighting available. Aeration, seed, fertilization & lime Package deal. Free Estimates. Commercial/ Residential. Steven Long Lic.#36715-H/Ins. 631-675-6685, for details

SWAN COVE LANDSCAPING Lawn Maintenance, Cleanups, Shrub/Tree Pruning, Removals. Landscape Design/Installation, Ponds/Waterfalls, Stone Walls. Firewood. Free estimates. Lic/Ins.631-689-8089

Masonry ALL SUFFOLK PAVING & MASONRY Asphalt Paving, Cambridge Paving Stone, Belgium Block Supplied & fitted. All types of drainage work. Free written estimates. Lic#47247-H/Ins. 631-764-9098/631-365-6353 www.allsuffolkpaving.com Carl Bongiorno Landscape/Mason Contractor All phases Masonry Work: Stone Walls, Patios, Poolscapes. All phases of Landscaping Design. Theme Gardens. Residential & Commercial. Lic/Ins. 631-928-2110

Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper ALL PRO PAINTING Interior/Exterior. PowerWashing, Staining, Wallpaper Removal. Free estimates. Lic/Ins #19604HI. 631-696-8150, Nick BOB’S PAINTING SERVICE 25 Years Experience Interior/Exterior Painting, Spackling, Staining, Wallpaper Removal, Power washing. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins. #17981. 631-744-8859 COUNTRYSIDE PAINTING A Company built on recommendations interior/exterior power washing, expert painting and staining, all work owner operated, serving The Three Villages for 23 years, neat professional service, senior discount, affordable pricing, 631-698-3770.

Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper COUNTY-WIDE PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Painting/Staining. Quality workmanship. Living/Serving 3 Village Area Over 25 Years. Lic#37153-H. 631-751-8280 GREG TRINKLE PAINTING & GUTTER CLEANING Powerwashing, window washing, staining. Neat, reliable, 25 years experience. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins.#31398-H 631-331-0976 LaROTONDA PAINTING & DESIGN Interior/exterior, sheetrock repairs, taping/spackling, wallpaper removal, Faux, decorative finishings. Free estimates. Lic.#53278-H/Ins. Ross LaRotonda 631-689-5998 WORTH PAINTING “PAINTING WITH PRIDE� Interiors/exteriors. Faux finishes, power-washing, wallpaper removal, sheetrock tape/spackling, carpentry/trimwork. Lead paint certified. References. Free estimates. Lic./Ins. SINCE 1989 Ryan Southworth, 631-331-5556

Power Washing EXTERIOR CLEANING SPECIALISTS Roof cleaning, pressure washing/softwashing, deck restorations, gutter maintenance. Squeaky Clean Property Solutions 631-387-2156 www.SqueakyCleanli.com POWER WASH AND APPLY APPOXY to your garage floor before the winter. Durable with a great finish, $500. Driveway sealing also available. 25 years experience. Call 631-742-7838.

Tree Work ARBOR-VISTA TREE CARE Complete Tree care service devoted to the care of trees. Maintenance pruning, waterview work, sun-trimming, elevating, pool areas, storm thinning, large tree removal, stump grinding. Wood chips. Lic#18902HI. Free estimates. 631-246-5377 RANDALL BROTHERS TREE SERVICE Planting, pruning, removals, stump grinding. Free Estimates. Fully insured. LIC# 50701-H. 631-862-9291

Tree Work CLOVIS OUTDOOR SERVICES LTD Expert Tree Removal AND Pruning. Landscape design and maintenance, Edible Gardens, Plant Healthcare, Exterior Lighting. 631-751-4880 clovisoutdoors@gmail.com EASTWOOD TREE & LANDSCAPE, INC. Experts in tree care and landscaping. Serving Suffolk County for 25 years. Lic.#35866H/Ins. 631-928-4070 eastwoodtree.com GOT BAMBOO? Bamboo Containment & Removal Services with Guaranteed Results! Free Estimate and Site Analysis Report Servicing All of Long Island. 631-316-4023 www.GotBamboo.com NORTHEAST TREE EXPERTS, INC. Expert pruning, careful removals, stump grinding, tree/shrub fertilization. Disease/insect management. Certified arborists. All work guaranteed. Ins./Lic#24,512-HI. 631-751-7800 www.northeasttree.com SUNBURST TREE EXPERTS Since 1974, our history of customer satisfaction is second to none. Pruning/removals/planting, plant health care. Insect/Disease Management. ASK ABOUT GYPSY MOTH AND TICK SPRAYS Bonded employees. Lic/Ins. #8864HI 631-744-1577 TIM BAXLEY TREE INC. ISA Certified Arborist Tree removal, stump grinding, expert prunning, bamboo removal. Emergency Services Available. Ins./Lic. Suffolk#17963HI, Nassau#2904010000 O. 631-368-8303 C.631-241-7923

Window Cleaning SUNLITE WINDOW WASHING Residential. Interior/Exterior. “Done the old fashioned way.� Also powerwashing/gutters. Reasonable rates. 30 years in business. Lic.#27955-H/Ins. 631-281-1910

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OCTOBER 26, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A21

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PROF E S SIONA L & B U SI N E S S ;/, 7* +6*;69

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Providing solutions to all your home or office computing needs. • Software and Hardware Installation • Wireless Home and Office Networking Reasonable • PC System Upgrades and Repairs Rates, • Internet, Web, and Email Systems Dependable • System Troubleshooting Service, • Software Configuration and Training • Computer System Tune-Up Plenty of • Network Design, Setup and Support References • Backup and Power Failure Safety Systems

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H O M E S E R V IC E S

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PAGE A22 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 26, 2017

H O M E S E R V IC E S

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OCTOBER 26, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A23

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PAGE A24 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 26, 2017

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PAGE F


OCTOBER 26, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A25

R E A L E S TAT E Commercial Property/ Yard Space

Houses For Sale ROCKY POINT Move right in! 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Absolutely charming. Clean. Walk to town. Updated exterior. Full attic w/potential. Good value. Principals. $210,000. 631-689-5789 STRONGS NECK/ SETAUKET Entertain and enjoy Strong Neck. Charming Center Hall Colonial. HW Floors throughout, great room with abundant lighting, den with fireplace. 3/4 BR, 2.5 baths, full basement, new heating system, beach & mooring rights. $600,000s. By appointment only. No Brokers. 631-902-8917

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EAST SETAUKET WATERVIEW GORGEOUS DIAMOND LUXURY HOME. Heated IGP, huge hot tub w/stereo, huge deck w/playground, acre+ serene oasis, huge 5 bedrooms, 5 baths. Completely updated. 3VSD, $4500 +utilities/maintenance. Credit check/references, 2 months security. MUST SEE. No pets/smoking. 631-473-1468

SATURDAY 10/28 2:00-4:00PM SMITHTOWN 1 Judges Ln. Historic District. Fully Updated, 2 Fpl, CAC, SD #1. MLS# 2973018. $549,000. DANIEL GALE SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY 631.689.6980

MILLER PLACE BRAND NEW SPACIOUS ONE BEDROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT. All new appliances, private entrance, single occupancy only, all utilities included, no smoking/pets $1300. george@ekundig.com ROCKY POINT 2 Bedroom house for rent, LR/DR, kitchen, W/D, no pets/smoking, references/credit check a must. $1250 +utilities, 1 mo security. 6 month rental. 631-751-2690 STONY BROOK Newly renovated Colonial house in historic Stony Brook Village. 3 bedrooms, full LR, full DR, 1.5 new baths, new appliances, new kitchen, cabinets/countertops, wood floors, fireplace, enclosed deck. Immediate. Call Patty, 631-751-2244, M-F 9AM-5PM STONY BROOK VILLAGE Walk to university. 3 bedroom, +den w/seperate entrance and fireplace, 2 full baths, fully updated. 1 mo. deposit $3000/mo. +utilities. 631-902-3464

Rentals Wanted APARTMENT WANTED For mature, professional female, 1 bedroom, clean, attractive, unfurnished, Three Village, St. James, Mt Sinai area. No basement. 11/1 occupancy. 516-383-2562

SATURDAY/SUNDAY Open House by Appointment PORT JEFFERSON VILLAGE 415 Liberty Ave #26. Soundview almost new condo main flr master, waterview, 2 car gar, upgrades $949,000. VILL OF OLD FIELD 159 Old Field Rd. Water Front, Private Dock/Boat Slip Contemporary, $999,990 SO SETAUKET 24 Hancock Ct, Post Modern, IGP/Hot Tub, FFin. Bsmt w/walkout, 5 BR, $899,990. MILLER PLACE 8 Sweetgum Ln, Post Modern, IGP/Hot Tub, Solar Panels, 5 BRs, $679,000 Price Change PT JEFFERSON STATION 3 Ranger Ln. Post Modern, cul de sac, Porch, 4 BR, ffin bsmt, 4 bth, 2.5 gar. $559,000 SATURDAY 1:00-2:30PM SETUAKET 37 Stadium Blvd, New Listing, Magnificent, sports court, IGP, Fin bsmnt, $999,000 Reduced. 12-1:30PM MT SINAI 54 Hamlet Dr, Gated Hamlet, Main Floor Master Suite, full unfin bsmt, $699,990 Dennis Consalvo ALIANO REAL ESTATE 631-724-1000. www. longisland-realestate.net

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PUBLISHERS’ NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.

Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154

&ODVVLILHG 5HDO (VWDWH 'LVSOD\ 6SHFLDO Buy 2 Weeks & Get 1 Week FREE Offer ends March 19, 2017

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SUNDAY, 10/29 2:00-4:00PM STONY BROOK 157 SYCAMORE CIRCLE For sale by owner. Expanded Farm Ranch in Ssection with 2 large EIKs and many upgrades. $548,000. 631-941-1007

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PAGE A26 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • OCTOBER 26, 2017

OpiniOn Editorial

Letter to the editor

File photo

Safety is a key to enjoying Halloween, and Brookhaven’s highway superintendent has some tips. File photo by Erika Karp

The North Brookhaven Chamber of Commerce announced it will be disbanding next year.

Understanding the real importance of a chamber Economic development is key to the success of any society, so seeing the North Brookhaven Chamber of Commerce disbanding is concerning for all of the areas it serves. Who will help welcome new businesses to the area and be the point person to reach out to when a company owner has questions? We need chambers to promote integrity and principles, acquire information and distribute relevant statistics, promote the businesses and services our hamlets have to offer and generate funding to support tourism and trade. Chambers also supply family fun events that can connect residents or store owners to their customers. Who will advocate for a community where business can prosper? A chamber of commerce is a crucial component to a successful business district. Through these committees, local companies can communicate with one another and work together to improve the economic, civic and cultural well-being of an area. The widespread coverage of the North Brookhaven Chamber of Commerce may have ultimately contributed to its downfall. Having small, separate chambers form to support the hamlets across Route 25A could create better networking opportunities and synergy. If creating smaller chambers is not in the cards, maybe another solution would be to try a different business model. With components of a conventional chamber of commerce being difficult to manage on top of owning a business and managing a family, perhaps there are some new-age solutions. A website or mobile application could be created to connect business owners, which could explain how a new business can integrate into a community; lay out what is being done to support the community and encourage its residents to shop locally; have a newsletter component with local updates; and detail scheduled socials that get owners together to discuss ways to attract out-of-area shoppers to boost the economy of the hamlet. The pros outweigh the cons in connecting our area companies. Strong local networks can result in business-to-business exchange, problemsolving solutions and lead to social and economic growth. We need members of our communities to step up to the plate to support our businesses, advocate for them and promote them.

Letters … We welcome your letters. They should be no longer

than 400 words and may be edited for length, libel, style and good taste. We do not publish anonymous letters. Please include a phone number and address for confirmation. Email letters to desiree@tbrnewspapers.com or mail them to The Village Beacon Record, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.

Halloween safety tips from Brookhaven In preparation for Halloween, Brookhaven Town Highway Superintendent Dan Losquadro (R) is offering parents some tips, courtesy of the American Academy of Pediatrics, to help ensure children enjoy the holiday safely. All dressed up • Plan costumes that are bright and reflective. Make sure that shoes fit well and that costumes are short enough to prevent tripping, entanglement or contact with flame. • Consider adding reflective tape or striping to costumes and trickor-treat bags for greater visibility. • Because masks can limit or block eyesight, consider nontoxic makeup and decorative hats as safer alternatives. Hats should fit properly to prevent them from sliding over eyes. Make-up should be tested ahead of time on a small patch of skin to ensure there are not unpleasant surprises on the big day. • When shopping for costumes, wigs and accessories, look for and purchase those with a label clearly indicating they are flame resistant. • If a sword, cane or stick is a part of your child’s costume, make sure it’s not sharp or long. A child may be easily hurt by these accessories if he stumbles or trips. • Review with children how to call 911 if they ever have an emergency or become lost. Carving a niche • Small children should never carve pumpkins. Children can draw a face with markers; then parents can do the cutting. • Consider using a flashlight or glow stick instead of a candle to

light your pumpkin. If you do use a candle, a votive candle is safest. • Candlelit pumpkins should be placed on a sturdy table, away from curtains and other flammable objects, and not on a porch or any path where visitors may pass close by. They should never be left unattended. Home safe home • To keep homes safe for visiting trick-or-treaters, parents should remove from the porch and front yard anything a child could trip over such as garden hoses, toys, bikes and lawn decorations. • Parents should check outdoor lights and replace burned-out bulbs. • Wet leaves or snow should be swept from sidewalks and steps. • Restrain pets so they do not inadvertently jump on or bite a trick-or-treater. On the trick or treat trail • A parent or responsible adult should always accompany young children on their neighborhood rounds. • Obtain flashlights with fresh batteries for all children and their escorts. • If your older children are going alone, plan and review the route that is acceptable to you. Agree on a specific time when they should return home. • Only go to homes with a porch light on and never enter a home or car for a treat. • Because pedestrian injuries are the most common injuries to children on Halloween, remind trick-or-treaters: • Stay in a group and communicate where they will be going. • Remember reflective tape for costumes and trick-or-treat bags.

• Carry a cellphone for quick communication. • Remain on well-lit streets and always use the sidewalk. • If no sidewalk is available, walk at the far edge of the roadway facing traffic. • Never cut across yards or alleys. • Only cross the street as a group in established crosswalks. Never cross between parked cars or out of driveways. • Don’t assume the right of way. Motorists may have trouble seeing trick-or-treaters. Just because one car stops, doesn’t mean others will. • Law enforcement authorities should be notified immediately of any suspicious or unlawful activity. Healthy Halloween • A good meal prior to parties and trick-or-treating will discourage youngsters from filling up on Halloween treats. • Consider purchasing non-food treats for those who visit your home, such as coloring books or pens and pencils. • Wait until children are home to sort and check treats. Though tampering is rare, a responsible adult should closely examine all treats and throw away any spoiled, unwrapped or suspicious items. • Try to ration treats for the days and weeks following Halloween. Have a Happy Halloween. Please remember to take precautions and be safe.

Dan Losquadro Brookhaven Town Highway Superintendent

Get into the mix. Participate in our reader forums @ www.tbrnewsmedia.com


OCTOBER 26, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A27

OpiniOn Wouldn’t-it-be-nice costume ideas for Halloween

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alloween has always seemed like an opportunity to explore the creatively terrifying parts of our imagination. We put up ghosts, goblins, skeletons and spiderwebs around our houses; we dress our children as Dracula, Frankenstein’s monster and zombies; and we jump out from behind bushes, yelling “Boo” or “Happy Halloween.” Maybe, instead of indulging the frightening side By Daniel Dunaief of life that seems present almost daily, we should take this opportunity to develop wouldn’t-it-be-nice costumes. For starters, we could dress our kids, or ourselves if we’re in jobs that allow us to come to work in costume, as giant, dirty hands. When asked to explain ourselves, we could suggest that we’re helping hands, willing to

D. None of the above

get our hands dirty to help those in need anywhere. This includes Puerto Rico, where people are still without power and are seeking to meet basic needs such as food and water. It also could include a co-worker dealing with an illness or death in the family, or an injured neighbor who can’t get his recycling to the curb. While we’re at it, we could dress as a door with a giant lever people could pull to knock. What are we? We could be opportunity. Every day presents an opportunity to become what we wish, whether that’s someone who can and will lose weight, or someone who sets an incredible example for our children and for other people’s children, or someone who no longer stays silent when he or she sees any type of injustice, whether that’s discrimination, harassment or bullying. Maybe, we could send our kids out as giant ears. They could become the great listeners. We have so many aspiring great speakers who share every thought in their head, whether that’s online, in a tweet or on a TV show,

scoffing, pontificating and secondguessing everyone and everything. What does a great listener do, besides absorbing the deluge of thoughts coming his or her way? That person imagines the ideas and motivation behind those words, considers the hurt or vulnerability that those ideas might convey, and thinks of ways to change negative thoughts and behavioral patterns into something positive and inspiring. Extending the auditory idea, we could also send our kids out in togas with a bucket of fake ears. Why the togas? They could be Romans. Why the ears? Just ask Shakespeare, whose Mark Antony exhorts a crowd in Act III, scene ii of “Julius Caesar” with the opening line, “Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears.” We could encourage children to listen and read one of the greatest and most often cited speeches from Shakespeare, helping them learn about the power of rhetoric and the passion of ideas. The older children might even suggest that they are a walking exam-

ple of praeteritio, the literary technique Antony uses when he suggests he’s not going to discuss that which he shares in great detail, namely, the recently deceased Caesar’s contributions to Rome and its citizens. For those who need something with a shriek component, we could create a costume in which someone dresses up in everyday clothing. An individual could hold a small cage or a tight box containing whatever horrifying image that person imagines in connection with a disease. He or she could suggest that the disease is contained and that this illness, which is locked in a box, is being taken for a walk. As a result, a horrifying disease is minimized and contained. Finally, we could cover our kids in the kind of headlines we’d like to see, including “Peace breaks out all over the world,” “Children cure cancer,” “Bullying takes a day off,” “Endangered species recover from the brink of extinction” and “Leaders agree to work together.” What would we call such a costume? Fake news.

My enduring love affair is celebrated this week

A

t some point along my ancestral chain, I must have been Italian. Or Chinese. How do I know? I have an unbelievable passion for pasta. That’s not a carbohydrate lust. While I have never met a carb I don’t like, I can take or leave rice or bread and the many other forms in which carbohydrates can be found. But my soul soars for pasta. It was World Pasta Day Oct. 25, and that got me to thinking about my affair with By Leah S. Dunaief love pasta. I suppose it started in my early childhood, as almost everything does. SpaghettiOs came in a can, and my mother occasionally served it to us as part of a meal. However, the story is not that straightforward. She felt the sauce was a bit sharp, and so she

Between you and me

sprinkled the spaghetti with a little sugar. Now this is enough to make any self-respecting Italian restaurateur gag. Many did, as I would ask, “Can I have some sugar please?” of my waiter as I was served a bowl of steaming pasta. “Sugar? You mean Parmesan cheese?” he would ask. “No sugar, thank you, granulated sugar,” I would patiently explain. Then he would watch in fascination as I topped off my dish accordingly. It wasn’t until I visited Italy for the first time that I understood the miracle of pasta. The secret is in the sauce, which decidedly is not improved with the addition of sugar. Somehow the pasta itself tastes different there too, the same way water does depending on where it comes from. I remember that first trip very well, as I fell in love with the beauty of the country, the kindness of the people, the richness of its art. But what I remember best is the pasta, which I will tell you that I came to eat there three times a day. And it never tasted the same way twice because all chefs proudly make their own secret sauces. The high point occurred in

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Amalfi, in a small restaurant on the side of a mountain overlooking the sea. We were with a tour but unscheduled for lunch, and we wandered around the town looking for a likely eatery. They are all charming, you know, but one in particular attracted us and we went in to find that the luncheon special consisted of six different kinds of pasta. Six! I thought I had died and gone to heaven. The chef, who spoke no English and needed none, came out to explain that we should start with the mildest pasta on the huge plate, then work our way around much as an artist does with his paint palette, to the one with the strongest flavored sauce. The six pastas were each different and the experience was, as you can tell, exquisitely memorable. Although some think pasta was invented in Italy, others believe Marco Polo brought it back from his travels to China, where he supposedly tasted it at the court of Kublai Khan. There is record of the Chinese eating noodles as early as 5000 B.C. and, in fact, the Etruscans from western Italy seem to

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have made pasta in 400 B.C. There are bas-relief carvings in a cave 30 miles north of Rome depicting instruments for making pasta: a rolling-out table, pastry wheel and flour bin, according to the National Pasta Association. Anyway in the 13th century, the pope set quality standards for pasta. Thomas Jefferson fell in love with a macaroni dish he tasted in Naples while serving as ambassador to France and promptly ordered crates of the pasta, along with the pasta-making machine, sent back to the United States. Indeed, he may have been the one to introduce macaroni to this country. Cortez brought tomatoes back from Mexico in 1519, but it took two centuries before the marriage with pasta was consummated. There have been many imitation pastas, meaning not made from wheat, that have come along, but only one makes the grade with me, and I give it a shameless plug here for those who can’t or won’t eat the real thing. Manufactured by Tolerant, it is made of beans and called Organic Red Lentil Pasta. Buon appetito!

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