The Times of Smithtown - October 20, 2022

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THE EXCLUSIVE FERRY PUBLICATION Home For The Holidays Time For Giving TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA NOVEMBER 25, 2021 Free Gift & Recipe Catalog CALL 631-751-7744 NOW! TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA 185 Route 25A (P.O. Box 707), Setauket tbrnewsmedia.com©111440 Time For Giving Published Nov. 24th ✤ Ad Deadline Oct. 27th Vol. 35, No. 35 October 20, 2022 $1.00 The TIMES of SMITHTOWN
FORT
SALONGA • KINGS PARK • SMITHTOWN • NESCONSET • ST JAMES • HEAD OF THE HARBOR • NISSEQUOGUE • HAUPPAUGE • COMMACK tbrnewsmedia.com Elected o cials, volunteers and residents gather to o cially dedicate new park — A3
PHOTO BY RITA J. EGAN
SPACE RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBER ADDRESS St. James celebrates WMHO debuts a renewed Hercules Historic landmark is renovated and preserved for future enjoyment A4 Also: Paintings by William Sidney Mount up for auction, Halloween special feature B1 Inside Focus on Health

School News

Fruit and fun

Kindergarten students at St. James Elementary School have been reading and investigating all about a fall fruit. It’s crunchy, juicy and delicious. You guessed it, it’s an apple!

Mt. Pleasant Elementary School

Friday, Oct. 14, was Apple Day at St. James Elementary School. The kindergarteners explored the insides of apples, measured and weighed apples — some on their heads — and created apple crafts to celebrate their learning.

Fruit for thought

Mt. Pleasant Elementary School kindergarteners are apple “solutely” ready for fall.

Students recently participated in “Apple Centers.” They enjoyed tasting different apples,

graphing their favorite one, and strengthening their fine motor skills doing various apple activities. They also enjoyed listening to the story “Ten Apples Up on Top”, and putting apples in order from 1-10.

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Photo from Smithtown Central School District Photo from Smithtown Central School District

Elected officials, cultural arts organization celebrate St. James park, look toward future

St. James residents had a new park to visit along Lake Avenue this summer. On Tuesday, Oct. 18, elected officials, members of Celebrate St. James, donors and residents came together at Celebrate Park for an official dedication and ribbon-cutting ceremony.

The park sits where the Irish Viking pub was once located. The establishment had been closed for nearly a decade when Town of Smithtown officials considered tearing it down to make way for a park and municipal parking lot. When the bar was put up on a tax lien, the town worked with Suffolk County to acquire it through an intergovernmental contract.

Volunteers from the cultural arts organization Celebrate St. James worked with elected officials during the design and construction of the park, including soliciting donations for the brick walkways that feature stones embossed with local families’ names and special messages from residents.

In November 2020, Smithtown Supervisor Ed Wehrheim (R), other elected officials and members of the community broke ground and officially unveiled the plans for the park. On Oct. 18, among those Wehrheim thanked was Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone (D) for his part in making the park happen. Bellone was unable to be in attendance due to dealing with the recent county cyberattack issues. The town supervisor said everyone had a part in making the park a reality.

“This day marks completion of the third and final phase of the revitalization efforts in St. James,” Wehrheim said, adding that the town is working on a connection to the sewer line

installed under Lake Avenue a few years ago.

The town supervisor said before he took office in 2017, he had counted 33 vacant storefronts on Lake — now there are less than a handful. With more people strolling the street, kids riding their bikes, the park and more, he compared it to a Norman Rockwell picture.

“Today we can see what can happen when a community, the good people who call it home and local levels of government all work together as one,” he said. “Today we get to enjoy the fruits of our labor and officially welcome the people of this great town to Celebrate Park.”

Wehrheim credited the Celebrate St. James volunteers, especially former president Natalie Weinstein and current president Patricia Clark, for being a big part of the process.

Weinstein said the park came to fruition due to an “unusual administration and an unusual group of volunteers.”

“Both embody the vision of economic revitalization,” she said. “Both are committed to progress, and both attract the talent and cooperation of some pretty amazing people.”

Weinstein also credited St. James residents due to their “generous donations of dollars, service and talents.”

“We know St. James has always been a special place,” the resident of nearly 50 years said. “This little sleepy hamlet of Smithtown has a history worth sharing and perpetuating. It has been home to a famous architect [Stanford White], a New York City mayor [William Gaynor], countless vaudevillians and many hardworking people who, in good times and bad, helped their neighbors.”

Weinstein said the park was aptly named by

the town’s public information officer Nicole Garguilo, a lifelong resident of St. James.

“Today we cut a ribbon to symbolically and actually turn a vision into reality, taking an eyesore in our community and transforming it into a place of pride for all, now and in the future,” Weinstein said.

Clark said in 2017, every time she drove through Lake Avenue and other parts of town and see so many empty storefronts, she thought, “This place is dying.” Later she discovered Weinstein and Celebrate St. James vice presidents Arline Goldstein and Jack Ader had noticed the same as she did and approached town officials to see how

they could help revitalize St. James.

She said in addition to working on the park, Celebrate St. James aims to turn the former Calderone theater on Second Avenue into the St. James Community Cultural Arts Center.

“Today, we see our dream of this park become reality, and now we at Celebrate are once again on the verge of a community endeavor of unique proportions,” Clark said. “Once again it is time to come together to plan for the future for our children, for our seniors and for ourselves. Now is the time to preserve and cherish the past on which we build a future to serve the town for generations to come.”

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Oct. 18 marked the official dedication of Celebrate Park in St. James. Photo by Rita J. Egan

Stony Brook’s Hercules gets renewed vigor

A Long Island landmark is looking more vibrant.

The Ward Melville Heritage Organization debuted the restored Hercules figurehead at a press conference on Oct. 14. Recently, philanthropists Harlan and Olivia Fischer, of Head of the Harbor, noticed the figurehead needed restoration and decided to sponsor its renovation.

WMHO board members thanked the Fischers and the work crew from ART of NYC & Long Island who restored the piece located in the Hercules Pavilion overlooking Stony Brook Harbor, across from the Village Center. The Holbrook-based company was retained for the restoration, which included cleaning, sanding and replastering before repairing, painting and varnishing the landmark.

Richard Rugen, WMHO chairman, said, “It’s a work in progress, but [the Fischers] are actually going to take care of the rest of the pavilion as well.”

Additional work will be done on the weather-beaten pavilion in the near future, including roof work and painting.

Harlan Fischer, president of Branch Financial Services, moved his offices from Smithtown to Setauket in 2020. Every day he passes through the village on his way to work and back, he said, and appreciates how lovely Stony Brook village is. He asked WMHO president Gloria Rocchio if she thought the renovation would be a worthwhile project, and she agreed.

“When we make contributions to places, we like to see the results of it,” he said. The Fischers are also donors to The Jazz Loft and sponsor a monthly concert series at the music venue and museum.

The full-color Hercules carving, located in Stony Brook since 1951, features the head and shoulders of the Greek demigod — known for his exceptional strength — draped in a lion’s skin. The bust was once the USS Ohio’s figurehead. The ship was the first to be launched from the Brooklyn Navy Yard in 1820.

Rugen said the figurehead was saved when the ship was decommissioned, destroyed and sunk in Greenport Harbor in 1884. It was bought by the Aldrich family of Aquebogue for $10 at the time, and from the late 1800s until the early 1950s it sat at the Canoe Place Inn in Hampton Bays after the owner, Miles Carpenter, purchased it for $15. Ward Melville bought it from the inn to be placed in Stony Brook.

Brenda Sinclair Berntson, president of Hampton Bays Historical Society, said when Hercules was located at the inn, it was popular for young women to kiss his forehead, believing that the person would be married within the year.

She said the figurehead wasn’t in the best condition, rotting and termite-ridden when it was brought to Stony Brook.

“We’re very glad that Ward Melville had the foresight and saved it,” she said.

Danielle Parisi, business development manager of ART of NYC & Long Island, said as someone who grew up and still lives in Stony Brook, it was an honor to work on the project. Parisi’s co-worker, art restorer Jessie Kefalas, said in walking by the figurehead in the past it was obvious something needed to be done. There was significant damage including the rotting of the chest of Hercules, which is constructed of plaster and wood.

Town of Brookhaven Councilmember Jonathan Kornreich (D-Stony Brook) was also in attendance and commented on the efforts.

“We’ve seen projects like this before, and so often it’s because of the community spirit of ordinary residents who love where they live or business people who reinvest in their community,” he said.

State Assemblyman Steve Englebright (D-Setauket) called WMHO “one of the custodians of our heritage.”

He added that places such as the pavilion are in danger due to rising sea levels brought on by climate change, and the spot around the structure has experienced flooding after significant rain events. In the future, he said, the Hercules Pavilion could possibly be raised to protect it further, and when such a plan comes to fruition he pledged a $125,000 matching state grant to help with the costs.

PAGE A4 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 20, 2022
Elected officials, Ward Melville Heritage Organization board members and philanthropists Harlan and Olivia Fischer announced the restoration of Stony Brook’s Hercules. Photo above from WMHO; photo below by Rita J. Egan

Local LGBTQ community faces numerous challenges, SBM survey says

In a first of its kind survey of 1,150 members of the LGBTQ+ community on Long Island, Stony Brook Medicine found that people in this group struggle with numerous health care challenges.

Over two in five people responding to an online survey between June and September of 2021 said they were in fair to poor mental health. Additionally, about one in three people had thoughts of self harm, while 23.9% had seriously considered suicide within the past three years.

People in the LGBTQ+ community are struggling with mental health and access to care, while they also have had negative experiences with health care providers, who may have been making incorrect assumptions about their lives or who haven’t respected them, said Dr. Allison Eliscu, principal investigator of the study and medical director of the Adolescent LGBTQ+ Care Program at Stony Brook Medicine.

Partnering with 30 Long Islandbased community leaders and community organizations, including Planned Parenthood, Stony Brook Medicine created the survey to gather the kinds of data that could inform better health care decisions, could provide a baseline

for understanding the needs of the LGBTQ+ community in the area, and could shed light on the disparity in health care for this community.

“The idea [for the survey] came out when

we were creating the Edie Windsor Healthcare Center” in Hampton Bays, Eliscu said, which opened its doors in 2021 and is the first such center for the LGBTQ+ population on Long

Short-term inclement weather can affect moods

October began on a somber note with several days of rain, cloudy weather and blustery winds. For many people, short-term inclement weather can lead to lethargy and depressed moods.

Dr. Veronique Deutsch-Anzalone, clinical assistant professor of psychiatry at Stony Brook University Renaissance School of Medicine, is a clinical psychologist who has researched the weather’s effect on people. The doctor said the first thing many think of regarding lousy weather and mental health is seasonal affective disorder, more commonly known as SAD. Deutsch-Anzalone said SAD is not technically considered a disorder anymore in the “Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders,” but now what patients are diagnosed with is depression with a seasonal pattern. She added seasonal pattern is considered a specifier.

“There are actually a lot of conflicting views on whether or not the lack of sun and the increase in cold and darkness causes us to have a depressed mood,” she said, adding that a 2016 study showed no objective data to support that depression is related to either latitude or season or sunlight. The doctor added that some people get depressed only

in the summer.

However, due to many having depression that tends to follow a seasonal pattern, the disorder of depression with a seasonal pattern remains in the “Diagnostic and Statistical Manual.”

She said similar symptoms that people feel in the winter could be experienced even during short-term weather patterns, such as the recent period of rain, as lack of sunlight has been a factor in psychiatric problems and depression, with females and the elderly being particularly susceptible.

There are a few reasons, the doctor said, that support cloudy, rainy days being accompanied by depressed moods which involves serotonin, a body chemical that has to do with body functions; and melatonin, a hormone that induces sleep.

“We have our circadian rhythms where we’re programmed to be alert when the sun is up and be drowsy when it’s gone, and that is because when the sun goes down our bodies produce melatonin,” she said.

On darker days, the body produces less serotonin. On sunnier days, more serotonin is made, and it’s a neurotransmitter, DeutschAnzalone said. She added, on a cloudy day, people tend to keep the lights low in their homes and cuddle up on the couch to watch TV, which increases sleepiness. In turn, she said, a person may crave carbohydrates,

sugar and salt.

“Unfortunately, when we turn to that kind of food that actually kind of makes us go into more of a slump, and can also cause some people to feel guilty and not very happy with themselves,” the doctor said.

Comfort foods raise serotonin but only briefly, Deutsch-Anzalone said. The best approach is eating healthy and drinking water. The doctor also advised against excess alcohol and caffeine intake, which can cause inflammation and dehydration.

She added an increase in aches and pains during stormy weather also doesn’t help matters. The drop in atmospheric pressure causes body fluids to move from the blood vessels to the tissues, creating more pressure on nerves and joints.

“That can lead to more increased pain or stiffness or reduced mobility, which then of course, makes us a little bit less likely to want to move,” she said.

She said on gloomy days, it can help to turn the lights on inside to increase serotonin and have more energy. Deutsch-Anzalone added some people might need a light therapy lamp or doctors may prescribe vitamin D.

She said it also helps to engage in enjoyable activities to lift one’s spirits. When a person is feeling down and can’t even

Island. “We were trying to think about what we want [the center] to provide and what does the community need.”

Without local data, it was difficult to understand what residents of Long Island, specifically, might need.

The data suggests a disparity between the mental health of the LGBTQ+ community in the area and the overall health of the population in the country.

Over half of the people who took the survey indicated that they had symptoms of chronic depression, compared with 30.3% for the nation, based on a 2020 PRC National Health Survey. Additionally, 23.9% of the LGBTQ+ community described a typical day as “extremely or very stressful” compared with 16.1% for the nation.

To be sure, the national data sampling occurred just prior to the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, in February of 2020, while the Stony Brook Medicine survey polled residents during the second year of COVID.

Nonetheless, Eliscu suggested that her anecdotal experience with her patients indicates that the LGBTQ+ community likely suffered even more during the pandemic, as some people lived at home with relatives who may not have been supportive or with whom

OCTOBER 20, 2022 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A5
Stony Brook Medicine’s Dr. Alison Eliscu, left, was the principal investigator of the study that 1,150 members of the LGBTQ+ community recently participated in including Micah Schneider, right. Eliscu’s photo from Stony Brook Members; Micah Schneider’s from Lisa Czulinski
HEALTH
Stock image from Metro LGBTQ COMMUNITY CONTINUED ON A8 WEATHER/MOODS CONTINUED
ON A8

LEGALS

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OBITUARY

Patricia Panopoulos

Patricia Elizabeth Keating Panopoulos, a trailblazing registered nurse who contributed greatly to the culture of hospital quality improvement, died on Aug. 24 at Sunrise of East Setauket.

Her passing followed a fall earlier in the summer. She would have been 92 in December.

Patricia was born in 1930 and was raised in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, with her seven brothers and sisters. She often reminisced about the halcyon days of her youth, especially on trips with friends on her prized Silver Columbia bike to Coney Island. After high school, Patricia followed her passion and attended St.Mary’s Nursing School in Brooklyn. She described graduation day from St. Mary’s as the proudest moment in her professional career, which would span 45 years until her retirement in 1995 from St. John’s Hospital in Smithtown.

There were several stops during her career of service beginning at Victory Memorial Hospital in Brooklyn, taking care of newborns in the nursery on the labor and delivery floor. Coincidentally, she was working in the nursery during the week that her future daughter-inlaw was born and probably cared for her on that service. With a growing family, Patricia and her husband, John, moved the family to Deer Park after the birth of their third child. She began working at both Southside Hospital and Good Samaritan Hospital as a bedside nurse before earning her master’s degree in Nursing at NYU during the apex of her career. Patricia took full advantage of what the south shore of Long Island could offer and was a committed Fire Island beachgoer; packing up the station wagon and spending many long summer days sprawled across the sand with her growing family.

The family eventually moved to Fort Salonga and then Northport after she accepted a position at St. John’s Hospital in Smithtown. While at St. John’s, and after earning her graduate degree, Patricia held several clinical and administrative positions including associate director of Nursing Education and associate director of Clinical Services. She described those early days of formalized quality assurance and risk management as challenging, but eventually won over many on the medical staff with her informed and collaborative professional style.

In the latter part of her nursing career,

Patricia was an invaluable resource and mentor to members of both the nursing and medical staff at St. John’s. After retiring in 1995 she resided in Northport before moving to Stony Brook. In the many years after retiring, Patricia took great pride and joy following the lives of her eight grandchildren and three great granddaughters. Patricia is predeceased by her former husband, John, and six of her siblings; and is survived by her brother Brian and her sister Sheila; her two daughters Mary Ann and Catherine; her three sons Michael, Stephen and John (Jack).

During the last few years of her life while living at Sunrise of Setauket, Patricia befriended many and was an inspiration to both clients and staff, where she continued to offer herself as a resource, especially during the difficult COVID-19 days of 2020 and 2021. After a career epitomized by the question, “How can I help you?, she was grateful for the care she received and never lost an opportunity to express appreciation and offer thanks to everyone who cared for her.

Funeral arrangements were entrusted to Bryant Funeral Home of Setauket. Services will be held at St. James Roman Catholic Church of Setauket on Saturday, Nov. 5 at 10:45 a.m.

LGBTQ COMMUNITY

they didn’t share their identity.

Additionally, the isolation removed some LGBTQ+ residents from an in-person support network.

Stony Brook Medicine has taken steps to provide specific services to residents who are LGBTQ+. People who are transitioning and have a cervix continue to need a pap smear.

Some members of the transgender community may not be comfortable going to a gynecologist’s office. Stony Brook Medicine has put in place extended hours to meet their needs.

Micah Schneider, a social worker who lives in Ronkonkoma, served as a survey participant and also as a guide for some of the wording in the survey.

Schneider, who identifies as nonbinary and transgender and prefers the pronoun “they,” said the survey can help people “recognize that

WEATHER/MOODS

Continued from A5

think of pleasant activities, she suggests googling to find a list of things to do. Some, the doctor added, might be ones a patient hasn’t thought of, such as picking up an instrument, writing poetry or decorating a room. Exercise is also recommended as well as socializing or calling a friend.

Even in the rain, she suggested embracing nature, especially for people who have young children.

“Why not just throw on some raincoats and galoshes, go out and just jump around

we’re not alone.”

When Schneider was growing up, “I had a sense that I was the only person in the entire world dealing with this,” which included a struggle with identity and mental illness.

“We as a community have each other and we can lean on each other,” Schneider said.

As for medical providers, Schneider suggested that this kind of survey can alert these professionals to the need to honor names, pronouns and identities and not make blanket assumptions.

Despite some improvements, the local and national LGBTQ+ community remains at risk, Schneider said.

“There are any number of people who are actively considering suicide,” Schneider added. “It’s a very real crisis in our community.”

On a conference call announcing the results of the survey, Dr. Gregson Pigott, Suffolk County Commissioner of Health, described the survey, which Stony Brook plans to repeat in a couple of years, as “groundbreaking. What you have here is hard data based on the survey.”

in the puddles and make those mud pies with them,” she said. “They’re going to remember that and enjoy it.”

Getting a good night’s sleep is also imperative, she said, since human’s circadian rhythms are thrown off when it’s dark outside for long periods of time. Napping and lying around the house most of the day also throws off a person’s sleep schedule.

“If you’re able to keep that good sleep hygiene and get a good night’s sleep, that will continue to give you a good amount of energy throughout the day, and it’ll ward off any sort of irritability.”

Deutsch-Anzalone advises anyone who is struggling with their mental health to seek professional help.

PAGE A8 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 20, 2022
A5
Patricia Panopoulos
Times Beacon Record News Media Honors Your Loved Ones Place a free obituary in any of our six newspapers. Please send photo and obituary to desk@tbrnewsmedia.com or call (631) 751-7744 for more information.

Kingsmen rain on Wildcats’ homecoming parade

Leading 27-15 after three quarters of play, the Shoreham-Wading River Wildcats looked for a win in their homecoming football game on Saturday, Oct. 15, against Kings Park, but the Kingsmen had other ideas.

Kings Park quarterback Kyles Weeks was the offensive spark in the final 12 minutes of play, orchestrating a 29-point fourth quarter explosion that rained on the Wildcats homecoming parade to win it, 44-33.

Weeks hit wide receiver Declan O’Melia on an 89-yard pass play for the score with 7:22 left in regulation. Then, Weeks, on a keeper, punched his way in for the score to retake the lead with four minutes left.

Shoreham Wading River quarterback Dylan Zahn answered with a touchdown strike to Liam Kershis. With Sam Palmer’s foot, the Wildcats retook the lead, 33-30, with two minutes left.

From there it was all Weeks, who aired one out for a 40-yard pass completion, then found the endzone on a keeper where the Kingsmen edged ahead, 37-33.

A Kings Park cornerback then intercepted a Wildcat pass and ran it back 56 yards for

the score, and Alex Squillacioti’s successful point after attempt put the Kingsmen out front 44-33 for the final score of the game.

Zahn threw for three touchdowns and rushed for another, and sophomore cornerback Michael Casey had two interceptions for the Wildcats.

The win lifts Kings Park to 5-1 in the division, and the loss drops the Wildcats to 3-3 with one game remaining before postseason play begins.

Shoreham-Wading River retakes the field Friday, Oct. 21, in their final game of the regular season where they’ll host Mount Sinai in a must-win game. Kickoff is 6 p.m.

Kings Park will also be back in action Friday, Oct. 21, solidly positioned in the playoff picture, and will host Babylon. Game time is slated for 6:30 p.m.

Pictured clockwise from above, Kings Park senior tailback Mark Griffin follows lead blocking; Kingsmen cornerback John Flynn splits a pair of Wildcat defenders; Kings Park quarterback Kyle Weeks stiff arms a Wildcat defender; Shoreham-Wading River wide receiver Will Hart comes down with the touchdown catch; and Kings Park quarterback Kyle Weeks looks for an open receiver.

OCTOBER 20, 2022 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A9
Kings Park 44 SWR 33 Go to tbrnewsmedia.com for more sports photos

Nominate your favorite businesses and be eligible to win a from any of the nominated businesses that appear in the Best of the North Shore supplement on Thursday, February 16, 2023.

Accountant

Arborist/Tree Service

Appliance Store

Gallery

Assisted Living/Nursing Home

Attorney/Lawyer

Body Shop

Dealer

Repair Shop

Shop

Bank

Specialist

Shop

Lanes

Shop

Supply/Lumber

Company

Wash

READERS’ CHOICE:

Best of the North Shore Ballot

Times Beacon Record News Media readers will be voting for the Best of the Best in over 80 categories on the ballot below. Here’s a chance to get your favorite North Shore businesses, currently operating, the recognition and fame they deserve! Readers are asked to vote by October 19, 2022. Please print your choices and use complete names and TOWN of business. Winners will be announced in the Best of the North Shore publication, inserted in the full run of all six newspapers on Thursday, February 16, 2023.

Carpet Cleaning Service

Caterer

Cesspool Service

of Commerce

Cleaning Service

Clothing Store

Co ee Shop

College/University

Computer Services

Store

School

Daycare/Preschool

Deli/Sandwich Shop

Dentist

Cosmetic Dentistry

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Diner

Doctor/Physician/Internist (see Medical & Wellness)

Dramatic Theater (Playhouse)

Cleaner

Equipment Supply/Rental

Eye Care

Eyewear

Optometrist

Farm Stand

(see Medical & Wellness)

Florist

Planner

Festival

Store (carpet/tile)

Company

Home

Furniture Store

Center/Nursery

Course

Grocery Store

Salon

Center

Hardware Store

Food Store

Cream Stand/Store

PAGE A10 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 20, 2022 TBR NEWS MEDIA
$100 GIFT CERTIFICATE $50 GIFT CERTIFICATE $25 GIFT CERTIFICATE ©111340
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Insurance Agency

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Local Brewery

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Dermatology

Family Doctor

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Hospital

Laser Treatment

Massage

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Ophthalmologist

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Pediatrician

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Physical Therapy

Psychotherapist

Vascular/Vein

Mortgage Company

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Nursing Service

Nail Salon

Painter (Interior/Exterior)

Paint Store

Party Supply/Event

Pet Boarding/Sitting Service

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Pet Hospital

Pet Supply Store

Photographer

Piano Entertainer

Pizzeria

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Pool Store & Supply

Real Estate Agency

Real Estate Agent

Restaurants

Chinese/Japanese

Security Systems Service

Senior Housing Complex

Sign Maker

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Sporting Goods Store

Tanning Salon

Shop

Studio

OCTOBER 20, 2022 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A11
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TOWN Other TOWN TBR NEWS MEDIA READERS’ CHOICE: Your Votes Can Be Hand Delivered to: TBR News Media, 185 Route 25A, Setauket, NY 11733 • 631- 751-7744 OR Mailed to: PO Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733 Attn: READERS’ CHOICE Name: Street Address: Town: Zip: Phone: Email Address: • At least 10 nominations must be lled out to be eligible, more are welcome • Employees of TBR News Media and their families are not eligible to vote • No photocopies accepted – we want you to pick up and read our papers! • Name, address, phone number & email address must be lled out • 1 entry per person RULES: Complete Business Names Required VOTE Online at tbrnewsmedia.comOR ©111350

West boys fall golf ends season

The Northport boys golf team’s wildly successful regular season campaign came to a close on Thursday, Oct. 13, at Indian Hills, as they trounced Smithtown West, 9-0, and in doing so, took a share of the League III title.

Sophomores Brodie Douglas and Jack Trizzino led the Tigers with 2-over 38s as the Tigers shot a season-low of 210 on this particular course, despite misty and windy conditions.

“We are playing well as a team,” said Head Coach Brian Sundberg. “I hope it carries over to the Counties.”

Douglas, paired with his brother and team captain Paddy, made a spectacular chip on the

undulating and difficult third hole that landed a foot away from the cup. He tapped in for par, as most of his fellow golfers were taking fives, sixes and sevens on this hole.

“I think that hole helped me settle into the round,” Brodie said. “It was definitely a great par.”

“It feels amazing to be league champs,” Brodie added. “We have worked so hard for it as a team this year and the work has paid off.”

Pictured above right, Andrew Gelfand of Smithtown West on the 4th Hole at Indian Hills in Fort Salonga. Above left, Brodie and Paddy Douglas, left, of Northport, and Christian Vinas and Michael Wagner of Smithtown West assess the distance at Indian Hills.

PAGE A12 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 20, 2022 ©108310 631-751–5534 1371 Rte. 25A, E. Setauket, NY (Three Village Shopping Plaza) Schwabs2ndwind@aol.com Come on in, or order online @ www.Schwabs2ndwind.com We carry a full line of Men’s and Women’s Hokas Go to tbrnewsmedia.com for more sports photos

Garage Sales

MOVINGSALE FRIDAY10/219:00-3:00PM, SATURDAY10/229:00-2:00PM

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PAGE A14 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 20, 2022 4 wks/$44/20 words $.40 ea. additional word 6 Newspapers/Internet Site ~ Huntington to Wading River ~ Deadline: Tuesday at noon. Call 631–331–1154 or 631–751–7663 • TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA • tbrnewsmedia.com ©101636 SELL YOUR USED MERCHANDISE & MAKE DOLLARS AND ROOM 855.281.6439 I Free Quotes American Made Family Owned Award Winning Could your kitchen use a little magic? 110430 from Physicians Mutual Insurance Company Call to get your FREE Information Kit 1-855-225-1434 Dental50Plus.com/nypress Product not available in all states. Includes the Participating (in GA: Designated) Providers and Preventive Benefits Rider. Acceptance guaranteed for one insurance policy/certificate of this type. Contact us for complete details about this insurance solicitation. This specific offer is not available in CO, NY; call 1-800-969-4781 or respond for similar offer. Certificate C250A (ID: C250E; PA: C250Q); Insurance Policy P150 (GA: P150GA; NY: P150NY; OK: P150OK; TN: P150TN). Rider kinds: B438, B439 (GA: B439B). 6208-0721 DENTAL Insurance 109610 FREE FREE FREE Merchandise under $50 15 words 1 item only. Fax•Mail•E-mail Drop Off Include Name, Address, Phone # The Classifieds Section is published by TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA every Thursday. Leah S. Dunaief, Publisher, Sheila Murray, Classifieds Director. We welcome your comments and ads. TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA will not be responsible for errors after the first week’s insertion. Please check your ad carefully. • Statewide or Regional Classifieds also available - Reach more than 7 million readers in New York’s community newspapers. Line ads 25 words : Long Island region $69 - $129 – New York City region $289 - $499 – Central region $29 - $59 – Western region $59 - $99 - Capital region $59 - $99 – all regions $389 - $689 words. $10 each additional word. Call for display ad rates. INDEX • Garage Sales • Announcements • Antiques & Collectibles • Automobiles/Trucks etc. • Finds under $50 • Health/Fitness/Beauty • Merchandise • Personals • Novenas • Pets/Pet Services • Professional Services • Schools/Instruction/Tutoring • Wanted to Buy • Employment • Cleaning The Village TIMES HERALD The Village BEACON RECORD The Port TIMES RECORD The TIMES of Smithtown The TIMES of Middle Country The TIMES of Huntington, Northport & East Northport tbrnewsmedia.com GENERAL OFFICE 631–751–7744 Fax 631–751–4165 This Publication is Subject to All Fair Housing Acts The following are someof our available categories listed in the order in which they appear. MAIL ADDRESS TBR News Media Classifieds Department P.O. Box 707 Setauket, NY 11733 EMAIL class@tbrnewsmedia.com SPECIALS* *May change without notice DISPLAY ADS Call for rates. • FIRST 20 WORDS (40¢ each additional word) 1 Week $29.00 4 Weeks $99.00 BASIC AD RATES ACTION AD 20 words $44 for 4 weeks for all your used merchandise GARAGE SALE ADS $29.00 20 words Free 2 signs with placement of ad REAL ESTATE DISPLAY ADS Ask about our Contract Rates. EMPLOYMENT Buy 2 weeks of any size BOXED ad get 2 weeks free DEADLINE: Tuesday at Noon OFFICE HOURS Monday–Friday 10:00 am–4:00 pm OFFICE • IN-PERSON TBR News Media 185 Route 25A (Bruce Street entrance) Setauket, NY 11733 Call: 631-331-1154 or 631-751-7663 CONTACT CLASSIFIEDS: (631) 331–1154 or (631) 751–7663 Fax (631) 751–4165 class@tbrnewsmedia.com tbrnewsmedia.com WE ARE: CONTACT US: • Computer Services • Electricians • Financial Services • Furniture Repair • Handyman Services • Home Improvement • Lawn & Landscaping • Painting/Wallpaper • Plumbing/Heating • Power Washing • Roofing/Siding • Tree Work • Window Cleaning • Real Estate • Residential Property • Commercial Property • Out of State Property ©98619 One touch of a button sends help fast, 24/7. alone I’m never Life Alert ® is always here for me. ® , / with GPS! For a FREE brochure call: 1-800-404-9776 Saving a Life EVERY 11 MINUTES 109620 REQUEST A FREE QUOTE CALL NOW BEFORE THE NEXT POWER OUTAGE (877) 516-1160 Prepare for power outages today WITH A HOME STANDBY GENERATOR $0 MONEY DOWN + LOW MONTHLY PAYMENT OPTIONS Contact a Generac dealer for full terms and conditions *To qualify, consumers must request a quote, purchase, install and activate the generator with a participating dealer. Call for a full list of terms and conditions. FREE 7-Year Extended Warranty* – A $695 Value! 109640

EMPLOYMENT/CAREERS

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PUBLISHER’SEMPLOYMENT NOTICE:Allemploymentadvertisinginthisnewspaperissubjecttosection296 ofthehumanrightslawwhich makesitillegaltoadvertise any preference,limitationordiscriminationbasedonrace,color,creed,nationalorigin, disability,maritalstatus,sex, ageorarrestconvictionrecord oranintentiontomakeany suchpreference,limitationor discrimination.Title29,U.S. CodeChap630,excludesthe FederalGov’t.fromtheage discriminationprovisions.This newspaperwillnotknowingly acceptanyadvertisingforemploymentwhichisinviolation ofthelaw.Ourreadersareinformedthatemploymentofferingsadvertisedinthisnewspaperareavailableonanequal opportunitybasis.

Career Services

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Employment

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PJ Chamber of Commerce Administrative Aide

15 hours a week

Tuesday-Thursday • 11-4pm

Description job responsibilities: Assist Director of Operations in daily operations. Duties include: daily banking, member relations (updating member records, billing, new member intake); answering phones, social media updates; interacting with visitors to the Chamber. Qualifications: Computer literate; Word, Excel, Quickbook, Word Press, Can work UNSUPERVISED, Detail-oriented Understand the operations of a non-profit organization or similar operation. Good communication skills and multi-tasker.

Contact by email: info@portjeffchamber.com or call 631-473-1414

Customer Service

experience and excellent spelling skills

or customer service experience

have good people and

631-751-4165

OCTOBER 20, 2022 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A15
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Carpentry

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Cesspool Services

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PAGE A16 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 20, 2022 ©98994
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RCJ

pleasure working

Beacon News Media. Sheila always keeps me informed of deadlines and is aware of what I am looking for pertaining to advertisement locations. With our hectic schedule it is nice to know she is my safety net . I am happy to advertise in the publication. I know my message is getting to my audience.“

“We have been an advertiser for many years with the Times Beacon news for our home improvement company. The response of customers answering our advertisements has been very high steady. The representative we have been dealing with (Shelia) has been very helpful and is always there to advise me of the best advertising strategies. The cost is very affordable too.

I will continue to use this paper as we feel it’s been the best way along with the social media ads they run to reach our customers.”

PAGE A18 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 20, 2022
a
with Times
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PAGE A20 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 20, 2022 Are you allowing your property to Grow natural? NATURAL will soon become a JUNGLE! Invasive Vines and Noxious Weeds kill trees and take over. For best results and a park-like setting regular inspections and treatments are needed twice per year. CDH ©111240 Local family owned business since 1993 CALL 631-689-1421 WWW.REACTPESTCONTROL.COM CALL REACT TO PREVENT UNWANTED WINTER GUESTS ©111050 Craig Aliperti, Wood Floors, LLC Fine Sanding & Refinishing Wood Floor Installations Old Wood Floors Made Beautiful All Work Done By Owner Formerly Of A Huntington Father & Son’s Business Lic. #47595-H/Insured 631-875-5856 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE , g g 10% OFF ©109830 Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154HOME SERVICES 45 YEARS EXPERIENCE Full Service contractor –complete jobs from start to finish Licensed H-22336 and fully insured ✔ All Phases of Home Improvement ✔ Old & Historic Home Restorations ✔ Extensions & Dormers ✔ Siding & Windows ✔ Porches & Decks ✔ Aging in Place Remodeling ✔ Custom Carpentry: Built-ins, Pantries, and More ©88630 longhill7511764@aol.com REFERENCES AVAILABLE Specializing in all phases of fencing: Wood • PVC • Chain Link • Stockade Now offering 12 month interest-free financing FREE ESTIMATES COMMERCIAL/ RESIDENTIAL OVER 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE DEER PROBLEM? WE CAN HELP. New Location 70 Jayne Blvd., Port Jeff Station (631) 743-9797 ©110900 RCJ CONSTRUCTION From Your Attic To Your Basement All Phases of Home Improvement KITCHENS • BATHROOMS • DOORS • WINDOWS • TILE • FLOORING CUSTOM FINISHED CARPENTRY & MOLDING www.rcjconstruction.com (631) 580-4518 COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIAL • LIC. #H-32198/INS OWNER OPERATED ©111070 SPECIALIZING IN FINISHED BASEMENTS 534 North Country Rd., St. James, NY 11780 www.scientificext.com Find us on Facebook©110450 Licensed #55203-H & Fully Insured ©106680 Historical Restorations Extensions & Dormers Cedar Siding & Clapboard Installation Basement Renovations Kitchens & Bathrooms • Doors & Windows Finish Carpentry & Moulding Interior/Exterior Paint Restoration Owner is a Three Village Resident for Over 30 Years Licensed #55203-H & Fully luxdevelopment.com 631-283-2266 ©111180 Lic. #48714-H & Insured www.BluStarNY.com • Windows & Doors • Siding & Roofing • Kitchens & Baths • Basements • Additions & New Construction • Decks & Custom Carpentry (631) 751-0751

REAL ESTATE

Real Estate Services

PUBLISHERS’NOTICE

AllrealestateadvertisedhereinissubjecttotheFederalFair HousingAct,whichmakesit illegaltoadvertise“anypreference,limitation,ordiscriminationbecauseofrace,color,religion,sex,handicap,familial status,ornationalorigin,orintentiontomakeanysuchpreference,limitation,ordiscrimination.”

Wewillnotknowinglyaccept anyadvertisingforrealestate whichisinviolationofthelaw. Allpersonsareherebyinformedthatalldwellings advertisedareavailableonanequal opportunitybasis.

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Letters to the editor

EditorialDrive with care or pay the price

The last few days marked National School Bus Safety and National Teen Driver Safety weeks. The lessons and tips organizations shared during these respective periods are vital to remember all year.

School bus laws seem easy for drivers to understand when they are behind the easy-to-spot, yellow vehicle. However, confusion seems to ensue when it is situated elsewhere on the road. If a driver is in the vicinity of a school bus with its red lights flashing and its “stop” sign extended, it means to stop and wait. This applies not only when a driver is behind the school bus but also when it’s on the opposite side of the road, whether it be on a two-way street, divided highway or multiple-lane roadway. The rules also apply in parking lots and school grounds.

In New York, respecting the law can mean saving anywhere from $250 to $1,000 in fines, avoiding jail time, having points on a license or its being revoked. Most important of all, stopping when seeing a school bus saves children’s lives.

When those children grow up and are ready to learn how to drive, there is a lot to take in, and safe driving behaviors should be of the utmost importance. Parents need to have meaningful conversations with their children about making sure seat belts are used and traffic laws are followed.

The repercussions of distracted driving, such as loud music, goofing around with friends and checking text messages, must also be brought up. Parents can lead by example by ensuring when their teens are behind the wheel, they avoid bad driving habits, especially when other young people are in the car.

One of the most important conversations parents can have with their children is that if using alcohol or drugs at a party, make sure to have a designated driver, sleep over or use Uber or Lyft. While the use of these apps has increased, providing rides when needed, some still insist on getting behind the wheel after drinking. With the holidays around the corner, incidents of people too impaired to drive will inevitably increase. A car can always be retrieved from where it was left the night before, but a life can never be replaced.

With the cooler weather here, there is another traffic safety reminder for people of all ages to heed. It’s the beginning of mating season for deer, also known as rutting season. The animals can run out on the road without warning. Usually when a driver sees one, there may be another or a few right behind the first, especially around dusk. When one is spotted, proceed with caution — and respect deer-crossing warning signs.

Dangers on our roadways seem to be increasing every day, but with a little bit of education and care, we can make our roads safer for all.

WRITE TO US … 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: rita@tbrnewsmedia.com or mail them to TBR News Media, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733

Say ‘no’ but this is the solution

I may agree with your conclusion in the Oct. 13 editorial, “Say ‘no’ to nuclear energy, Long Island,” that without easy exit from Long Island nuclear power is out of the question. So what is the solution? Long Island already pays some of the highest electricity rates in the nation.

First, convert the decommissioned Shoreham Nuclear Power Plant to natural gas, wind and solar. We already have the transmission lines and rights of way in place.

Next, encourage fracking everywhere, in a responsible, environmentally friendly manner. Our neighbors in Pennsylvania encourage responsible fracking, mostly for American Natural Gas, and their economy is booming with excellent, high-paying jobs and phenomenal tax revenue to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

Now, encourage on Long Island conservation and retrofitting to LED lights, newer appliances, focusing on air conditioning and refrigeration which are the No. 1 users of energy on the Island. In the water area, mandate steep fines for watering in the rain and require a rain sensor on all irrigation systems — a very cheap item. All toilets must be dual flush, one for “lighter,” one for “heavier.” These are in use throughout Europe and will save substantial fresh water.

Now encourage every homeowner to install solar and wind power. There are vertical wind turbines that make little noise and generate energy. Wind, plus solar, plus natural gas are Long Island’s future as we lessen our dependence on oil and gasoline.

Why so many ‘whys’

We are living in a time of “information overload” and being bombarded with many lies, deceit, corruption and the orphan of “truth” has been attacked. This present administration is attacking every principle, tradition, institution and virtue that has made America historically exceptional. U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin [RNY1] is being “borked” … lies, lies, lies from this radical Democratic Party that effectively implements “Rules for Radicals” (Saul Alinsky) and are “master distractors.”

Here are questions we all need to ponder:

•Why is this administration inviting “illegal” immigration resulting in a government-made humanitarian crisis? (Mass invasion of a country is an “act of war” and a government failing to protect a country is an “act of treason.”)

•Why is there a hiring of 87,000 IRS agents to go after the American citizen and not hiring of border agents to protect the American citizen?

•Why are we allowing the castration and mutilation of our children?

•Why are we letting men who say they are women compete in women’s sports and then give them a medal when they win?

•Why are we tolerating a dystopian delusional world? (Finally, Jamie Dimon, chairman and CEO of JPMorgan Chase stood up stating, “You are destroying the country” when in Congress Rep. Rashib Tlaib [D-MI] challenged Dimon over ceasing funding to fossil fuels.)

•Why are cars called “gas guzzlers” and electric cars not called “electric guzzlers”? Electricity has to be created. What creates it? Coal, oil, nuclear power. And what would they do to the batteries that weigh 1,000 pounds and are very toxic to the environment after 10 years?

•Why are we allowing President Joe

Biden [D] to deplete our oil reserves that are supposed to be used for the military and emergency crisis that President Donald Trump [R] found “empty” and filled them when cost was low. Why has Biden given our reserves to China? (Be prepared for the fictitious gas prices to go sky high after the election.)

•Why was the president of the USA begging an enemy — Saudi Arabia — for “dirty” oil, when God has blessed our nation with plentiful resources. (Biden had placed a “lockdown” and has created an act of war on our coal and oil industry.)

•Why are all the government agencies arming their untrained staff members with ammunition, guns, etc. Why does social security need weaponry? (Remember, the first thing that Hitler did to control the people was to take away the guns. By the way, Hitler was a “left-wing socialist,” according to “Mein Kampf.”)

•Why is this administration spending, spending, spending, continually weakening the dollar? We do not hear mention of “posterity” anymore.

•Why is this administration doing everything opposite to prevent a recession? (JFK quote: “Now is the time.”)

•Why are parents being labeled and targeted as terrorists for speaking out at school board meetings?

America is not being conquered by a foreign enemy — yet it seems it is being strangled to death by its own leaders. This election has nothing to do with whether you are a Democrat, Republican, Libertarian or Independent but everything to do with “American Marxism.“ We need to vote out those politicians that are pushing for “anti-American” policies in our local, state and federal government. God help America.

The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.

PAGE A22 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 20, 2022
The decommissioned Shoreham Nuclear Power Plant, pictured above. Photo by Paul Searing, sourced from Wikimedia Commons

COVID woes reduced the level of climate change concerns, SBU study says

My grandmother was a worrier. Even she, however, would have had a hard time worrying about other major challenges, problems and threats during the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic. That, it turns out, was also true for the world during COVID when it came to discussions about the threat from climate change.

developed, environmental and climate concerns decline amid worries about other major threats.

Smirnov found that the total number of tweets that mention climate change dropped to 5.6 million in 2020 and 5.3 million in 2021, from 8 million in 2019. This, Smirnov points out, occurred despite an increase in Twitter users, more climate disasters and more climate news in 2021.

While Smirnov understood the need to focus on the pandemic, he suggested a lack of concern about climate change could disrupt efforts to protect the planet

“This has profound implications,” Smirnov said. “Without a focus on climate change, without an emphasis on its importance, there is less urgency and less pressure on politicians to do something about it.”

course of days, such an approach provides “no substantial improvement in your health” longer term, he said.

So, what about now, as concerns about the pandemic abate, people have stopped wearing masks and schools and stadiums are full?

“The psychological foundation tell us that people may only really respond to one threat at a time,” Smirnov said in an interview. The anxiety and the reaction to that threat may be limited because it requires major energy.

“Maybe, for biological reasons, [people] put all their energy into responding to the most immediate threat,” Smirnov added.

Even in better times, climate change efforts are “fragile,” he said, which adds to the uncertainty about the ability to address the challenge adequately.

Smirnov plans to continue to collect Twitter data for the remainder of this year, to see whether a return to normalcy brings the focus back to the threat from climate change.

As for his own experience, Smirnov recognized that climate change took a back burner amid the worst of the pandemic.

In a recent study published in the prestigious journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Oleg Smirnov, associate professor in the Department of Political Science at Stony Brook University, examined the level of concern on Twitter about climate change during 2020 and 2021 and compared those numbers to 2019, the last year before COVID.

According to the pool of finite worry, which Princeton professor of Psychology Elke Weber

By tracking daily tweets and various measures of COVID cases, Smirnov found on a finer scale as well that discussions of climate change diminished amid higher infections and mortality.

For every thousand new COVID-19 cases in the United States, climate change tweets decreased by about 40.5 tweets per day. Every thousand new deaths resulted in 3,308 fewer climate tweets.

Indeed, even the sentiment analysis, in which Smirnov reviewed the emotional content of words used to describe climate change and the threat to the planet and humanity, became less negative during the worst of the pandemic.

When asked about the possibility that climate change concerns might have declined during COVID in part because the carbon footprint declined amid travel restrictions and slowdowns in industrial production, Smirnov likened such an approach to short-term fasting or extreme dieting.

While spending a few days on these extreme diets can reduce a person’s weight over the

“My attention certainly was hijacked by COVID-19, despite the fact that climate change is part of my work,” Smirnov said. In April of 2020, Smirnov recalled worrying about where his family would find food instead of thinking about greenhouse gases and rising sea levels.

In the present, Smirnov remains concerned about the kind of tipping points and climate inertia that threatens the future.

Ever the worrier, my grandmother might be relieved enough by the less virulent form of the virus and the availability of vaccines and treatment to return to worrying about the threat climate change poses.

When you have the urge to get away, here’s a possible destination

Itwas time to get away, even for a day, and when better than on foliage weekend! So Saturday, we took the ferry to Connecticut and started up Route 8 to get to the Berkshires and the seasonal colors.

and

Were we too late in the fall? Shortly after we left Bridgeport, our choice of time and place were confirmed. It was a perfect autumn day, sunny, bright, soft breeze, balmy even, and the colors burst upon us, the reds, oranges, yellows mixed with a still significant amount of green as we began to drive through the hills. No, we were not too late.

We had been concerned, too, about the effects of the summer’s drought on the leaves.

We needn’t have worried. Perhaps, it wasn’t the most dramatic foliage we had ever witnessed, some trees were already bare, but it was brilliant enough to excite our eyes. We whooped around every bend in the road that presented us with a new palette of hills and color.

The timing of foliage season has altered somewhat over the past few years. Climate change has impacted peak leaf peeping by extending the warmer weather that keeps trees green. Hence the optimal viewing time has also been delayed. This year, according to records, seems like it will clock in as the fifth warmest. So it turned out that our urge for an outing was right on.

Where to go?

While it was possible just to drive slowly, drinking in the scenery, it was also fun to have a destination in mind. We left the highway, or rather it left us as it ended in Winsted, incidentally, my dad’s birthplace, and we started on a local road that eventually led us to Southfield, the home of a long-ago college

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roommate with whom we had lost contact. She, and her family, as we discovered, no longer lived there, but that didn’t stop us from enjoying the tiny town. Yes, it was one of those “blink and you will miss it” villages, but we didn’t blink. We parked and had lunch at The Store, a delightful coffee, pastry and sandwich shop with tables inside as well as out front. Happily installed in one corner of the patio with a turkey and avocado sandwich and a generous slice of chocolate-banana bread, to be washed down with ambrosial coffee, we chatted up the couple at the adjoining table, who were smiling at us.

In fact, it was the kind of day that prompted everyone to smile. There we were, amid glorious leafage, basking in ideal temperature and bright sunlight in the peaceful countryside. They told us their names, Paul and Julia, and that they were from Westchester County and celebrating their anniversary. For the first time, they were at leisure to do that because their two children, a son and a daughter, were at college. She was a psychologist, he worked in finance,

and they had left their responsibilities behind to stay at the historic inn in the next village for the weekend.

They were fun to talk to, as was every other person who went by, walking their dogs. We asked each one if they knew the roommate’s family, but just about each one apologized and explained that they had only moved there 20 years ago. What a coincidence, we thought. They had all come more or less at the same time. It wasn’t until the next day that we realized what had happened those two decades ago: 9/11 happened. If one wanted to escape from a city to a safe and bucolic place, here was one such location. Perhaps that was what brought them there.

We stayed in the area, driving around, enjoying the typical New England white clapboard church with its distinctive steeple, the inn and the village common along with glorious Nature. Then, as night fell, we had dinner at the inn before returning home.

The next day, I felt as if I had been aired out.

AwardWinning Newspapers

Year After Year

OCTOBER 20, 2022 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • PAGE A23
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We welcome letters, photographs, comments and story ideas. Send your items to P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733 or email rita@tbrnewsmedia.com. Times Beacon Record Newspapers are published every Thursday. Subscription $59/year • 631-751-7744 www.tbrnewsmedia.com • Contents copyright 2022 EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Rita J. Egan EDITOR Rita J. Egan LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton COPY EDITOR John Broven ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathleen Gobos ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Elizabeth Bongiorno Robin Lemkin Larry Stahl Minnie Yancey ART AND PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Beth Heller Mason PRODUCTION Janet Fortuna Sharon Nicholson CLASSIFIEDS DIRECTOR & SUBSCRIPTIONS MANAGER Sheila Murray BUSINESS MANAGER Sandi Gross CIRCULATION & LEGALS MANAGER Courtney Biondo INTERNET STRATEGY DIRECTOR Rob Alfano SPECIAL PROJECTS MANAGER Kathryn Mandracchia 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021
D. None of the above

A

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BEST HOSPITAL TO MATCH.

Northwell.edu/RegionsBest

PAGE A24 • TIMES OF SMITHTOWN • OCTOBER 20, 2022
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