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MOUNT SINAI • MILLER PLACE • SOUND BEACH • ROCKY POINT • SHOREHAM • WADING RIVER
Vol. 32, No. 44
May 25, 2017
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What’s inside Meet Mount Sinai’s new elementary principal A3
Police Comissioner Tim Sini testifies before Senate A4 Local POW remememberd on Memorial Day A5 North Shore spy trail gets official dedication A7 Drum roll for Drumgole’s semifinal-winning grand slam for Sinai softball A12
Theatre Three catches ‘Saturday Night Fever’ Also: Survey Says, Living History Tours at the Vanderbilt
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Slamming Wading River Wildcats smash two grand slams in 10-run 2nd inning — A13 Photo by Bill Landon
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The Parade of Flags takes place at Heritage Park in Mount Sinai on Veterans Day, Memorial Day and the Fourth of July.
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On May 29, the Parade of Flags returns to Heritage Park in Mount Sinai. At the park, located at 633 Mount SinaiCoram Road, 100 national, state, territory and local flags will be displayed exhibiting the growth of the nation. While walking down the Avenue of
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America, visitors will be able to see the flags while reading about the history of each of the areas. The symbols of the flags and landscape along the Avenue of America will be explained. Recognition of the armed forces will be observed at the Court of America.
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MAY 25, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A3
DISTRICT
Photo from Rob Catlin
Rob Catlin, reading a book with his son Ben, has been hired as the new principal of Mount Sinai Elementary School.
Mount Sinai Elementary hires new school leader BY KEVIN REDDING KEVIN@TBRNEWSPAPERS.COM Mount Sinai Elementary School has a new principal in Rob Catlin — a passionate administrator from New York City who, like his predecessor, puts kids first. Catlin, 36, principal of River East Elementary School in Harlem from 2011 to 2016, was appointed by the board of education during its May 9 meeting, effective in July. The appointment came just months after longtime principal John Gentilcore, who served the district for a total 30 years, announced he would be retiring at the end of the school year. Prior to his five-year principal gig, Catlin, a Babylon native, taught first grade and served as a math coach and staff developer at PS 11 in Chelsea, Manhattan. He’s since worked in the New York City Department of Education Central Offices.
He and his wife, Michele, after years of living in the city, look forward to settling down on Long Island with their three-yearold son, Ben. Mount Sinai, Catlin said, was a perfect fit. “What drew me here was the warm, tight-knit, small community — it was the kind of place I could see myself in,” Catlin said. “As a principal, I’m very involved with the kids and try to build strong relationships with the families and students. To me, it’s important to build trust. I want to make sure parents know they can come to me, send an email, stop by my office.” As principal, Catlin — Rob Catlin added, he likes to empower teachers to make decisions and kids to be independent thinkers. “Coming into a new setting, I’m looking forward to spending lots of time in the classrooms, listening to concerns, listening
‘I’m looking forward to spending lots of time in the classrooms, listening to concerns, listening to what people hold dear and love about the community, maybe some things we could do better.’
ROB CATLIN continued on page A8
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PAGE A4 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MAY 25, 2017
County
Police commissioner testifies before Senate committee on gang violence By Kevin Redding kevin@tbrnewspapers.com
images from department of Homeland Security website
Suffolk County Police Commissioner Tim Sini and other law enforcement officials testify before Senate committee.
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Suffolk County Police Commissioner Tim Sini took his crusade against the MS-13 gang to Capitol Hill this morning, calling on the federal government to further join in the fight. Sini testified May 24 before the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs in Washington D.C. regarding the impact of MS-13 gang activity on local communities, in a hearing entitled “Border Insecurity: The Rise of MS-13 and Other Transnational Criminal Organizations.” Despite historic reductions in crimes in Suffolk County since last year, Sini said, there’s been an increase in gang violence connected to MS-13. According to U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wisconsin), chairman of the committee, the mission of the hearing was “to highlight these problems within our government agency, within our government laws and procedures, to make the public aware [and] lay out a reality so we can actually enact public policy to combat it and keep this homeland safe.” Suffolk County has gained national attention after highprofile murder investigations connected to the gang and a visit from U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions (R-Alabama) to speak on the topic earlier in May. Sini, speaking alongside Det. Scott Conley of the Chelsea Police Gang Unit in Massachusetts and Chief J. Thomas Manger of Montgomery County Police in Maryland, outlined ways in which the federal government could assist local governments and better stamp out the escalation of gang activity. Some of Sini’s notable quotes from the testimony are below: •More federal prosecutors should be provided to arraign RICO cases, designed to combat organized crime in the United States, against MS-13 gang members. “If the Suffolk County Police Department could launch a pilot program in collaboration with the FBI and U.S. Attorney’s office whereby every MS-13 arrest could be screened for possible federal prosecution ... taking dangerous individuals off our streets, and generate incentives for defendants who cooperate with law enforcement.” •Intelligence sharing among law enforcement agencies throughout the country should be improved. “A singular database with information relating to identified MS-13 gang members would encourage multijurisdictional operations and allow departments to be more proactive in targeting MS-13 gang members in our communities.” •Additional funding for community-based gang prevention and intervention programs tied directly to the number of unaccompanied children from other countries, who are most susceptible to gang recruitment, in local communities. •Improvements should be made to the unaccompanied children program, including increased screening and monitoring of sponsors and post-placement services. Since January 2016, Sini explained to committee members Johnson and U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Missouri), out of the 45 homicides in Suffolk County, 17 of those are believed to be linked to MS-13 gangs and approximately 400 identified MS-13 gang members are active in the county. The commissioner has rolled out aggressive gang eradication strategies within the police department since becoming commissioner in 2016, to target particular communities where the gang is most active, like Brentwood, and to stamp out the activities of its members. The strategy has led to 200 MS-13 arrests, Sini said. In March, in collaboration with the FBI’s Safe Streets Task Force, the department arrested four gang members tied to the killings of Nisa Mickens, 15, and Kayla Cuevas, 16, Brentwood High School students beaten to death for “disrespecting the gang.” But, Sini said, it’s not enough. “We recognize that our targeted enforcement and enhanced patrols will not alone lead to the eradication of gangs from our neighborhoods — MS-13 preys on our most vulnerable and if we do not provide the structure for these young people, MS-13 will,” Sini said. The commissioner said the gang members in Suffolk County are predominantly male, between the ages 16 and 29, many of whom hold wage-paying jobs, differentiating themselves from other gangs.
MAY 25, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A5
history Veteran and POW from Wading River remembered ahead of Memorial Day “In the room, I am putting up some Christmas ornaments and decorations. We have no trees, but do the best we can with cardboard. Still going to Mass, hoping the war is over soon. Your son, Mike.” These were the words of World War II prisoner of war Michael O’Shea to his family during Christmas 1944. The veteran and longtime Wading River resident died in 2009. O’Shea was born in Manhattan in 1924 and his family moved to the Bronx during the Great Depression when he was a child. He attended Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan and was an avid New York Yankees fan. As the United States reeled from the surprise attack at Pearl Harbor by the Japanese, right away O’Shea expressed his desire to leave high school to enlist in the Army Air Force. During his earliest days in the service, O’Shea had to wait several weeks for uniforms, he trained with broom handles as weapons, and at his first duty station in Atlantic City, New Jersey, the government commandeered motels and made them into barracks. He was trained by instructors who had little to no experience in warfare. O’Shea was determined to gain his wings, earn more money through hazard pay, and was intrigued by the promotional films of noted actor Jimmy Stewart, who was later a brigadier general. With the stories of the German blitzkrieg that had conquered almost every part of Europe, North Africa and into the Soviet Union, O’Shea and his fellow airmen were driven to overcome the air superiority of the Luftwaffe. The Bronx native was later sent to Syracuse and onto Texas where he gained his primary instruction as a navigator. Before leaving the States, his crew was sent to Nebraska, where they picked up their B-17 Flying Fortress bomber. They flew across the country to Manchester, New Hampshire, and across the Atlantic Ocean to England. It was not until July 7, 1944, that his crew was ordered to conduct their first daytime bombing run over Germany, near Berlin. While American bombers took heavy losses during the day, it was believed by U.S. High Command that these attacks hurt the German military and war machine. O’Shea vividly recalled the enemy Messerschmitt’s fighter planes and 88 millimeter guns that targeted American aircraft over the skies of Nazi Germany. For all flyers, the threat of being shot
down was always a realistic concern. Up until the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944, there were more airmen than infantry held as prisoners of war by the Germans. It was often the case that O’Shea flew deep into enemy territory to attack the industrial might of Germany and its VI and VII rocket plants in Peenemünde and the Ploesti oil fields in Romania. On Aug. 9, 1944, during his 14th mission, O’Shea’s plane was severely damaged by antiaircraft guns. While the pilot was able to guide his plane toward Great Britain, he ordered his crew to parachute over the North Sea. While all of the men left the burning aircraft, O’Shea was left alone in the water for several hours until American P-51 fighter planes saw him. They radioed British naval vessels who rescued O’Shea from the earliest stages of hyperthermia. While he was sent to a rest camp to recover from the trauma of this mission, it did not alleviate the service pressures that were still on O’Shea. He spent time in a location that was established for men who were being sent home after they completed all of their missions. It was hard for O’Shea to hear these men speak about their desire to see loved ones, attend a ball game and have a drink. O’Shea celebrated his twentieth birthday as a prisoner of war who was now directly under German control. He had the unique experience of observing the massive wartime bombing of both London and Berlin. The German Luftwaffe sent O’Shea to a transit facility that had English-speaking German officers who interrogated all airmen before they went to the prisoner of war camps. O’Shea vividly recalled that the enemy knew more about his chain of command and the missions than he did. While this officer tried to offer O’Shea a cigarette and chocolate, he refused to accept them, as it was a ploy to get information out of him. From the solitary confinement and the poor food, he lost 10 pounds at this Dulag Luft. He was then sent to Stalag Luft III, the same camp that was made famous through the film “The Great Escape.” He often said the film was a little too much Hollywood as the actors looked too healthy to be prisoners and that the escape plans were not as publicized as in this film. According to his son Terry, his father was not a big fan of “Hogan’s Heroes,” which made light of the prisoner of war experience. When O’Shea was in the camp, escapes were discouraged from the commanding of-
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ficers, as they believed the Germans were losing the war and they would soon be liberated. During one of the severest winters on record, the prisoners of Stalag Luft III were forced to march from the eastern part of Germany toward the interior of the country. The German government did not want to have Allied fliers fall into the hands of the advancing Soviets. The prisoners had very little food and clothing to protect them from the cold. For several days, they were forced by the guards to march on the open road, where they received little rest. O’Shea’s daughter Misty recalled her father did not say much about the war, but he mentioned the hardships of this march. Misty stated that at one time her father explained how younger boys were guarding these prisoners, as most of the older Germans were at the eastern and western fronts. The men finally made it to the German town of Spremberg, where the prisoners were placed in railroad cars and transported to Mooseburg POW camp located outside of Munich. The facility housed prisoners from Australia, South Africa, France, New Zealand, Sikhs from India and the Soviet Union. At one time, Mooseburg was only supposed to house 10,000 people, but by the end of the war, it held 80,000 soldiers. By the spring of 1945, the Third Army under the leadership of General George Patton destroyed the camp’s main gate and liberated all of the men. O’Shea felt the jubilation of freedom and wanted to travel home as quickly as possible. On the troop ship that entered New York Harbor, O’Shea was pleased to be home, but the doctor treating the prisoners of war told him he would was not well enough to last a city block. When he was imprisoned at Stalag Luft III, he contracted tuberculosis from another prisoner. Although he was elated to be home, O’Shea was later sent to Fitzsimmons Veterans Hospital in Colorado to be treated for his serious condition. There was no cure for the sickness and O’Shea spent five years at the hospital, where he was quarantined away from the general patients. His family believed their father suffered from PTSD. In 1951, O’Shea was discharged from the hospital. He completed all of his high school requirements and took advantage of the GI Bill to earn his college degree in California. With the war and hospital years behind him, at 29 years old, O’Shea was a college graduate with an engineering degree. He traveled back East and was hired by Brookhaven National
File photo
A wreath is presented during a previous Memorial Day in huntington. Lab, where he was an engineer for 10 years. It was at this job that he met his future wife Rosa and they were married in 1959. By 1960, he built a home in Wading River, and they started their family. The couple had three sons — Mike, Terry and Tommy — and a daughter — Misty — along with a tribe of grandchildren. After many years as an engineer, O’Shea did not like sitting behind a desk, and he changed his occupation to become a steamfitter, a job he held as a young man before the war. The position offered him the chance to travel and to earn more money. For two years, he worked in Canada, where his family joined him in the summer. O’Shea was beloved by residents he saw at the North Shore Public Library, the Wading River Fire Department, Calverton National Cemetery and through the Suffolk and Nassau County Chapter of Prisoners of War. He had spoken several times for the films and history class at Rocky Point High School about the actual conditions that were depicted in the movie “The Great Escape.” In 2006, he was made an honorary graduate of Rocky Point High School during the senior dinner, when O’Shea stated that he still owed homework to his teachers at Stuyvesant High School in the city. Rich Acritelli is a social studies teacher at Rocky Point High School and an adjunct professor of American history at Suffolk County Community College.
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PAGE A6 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MAY 25, 2017
Cops
poliCe Blotter
File photo from Legislator anker’s office
suffolk County sheriff Vincent DeMarco cuts the ribbon at the program kickoff ceremony.
Yaphank jail unveils new addict treatment wing By Desirée Keegan Desiree@tbrnewspapers.com Suffolk County Sheriff Vincent DeMarco joined with members of the county’s drug treatment community, program volunteers and county officials to officially kick off the Sheriff’s Addiction Treatment Program wing housed in a newly renovated section of the Suffolk County Correctional Facility in Yaphank. The new wing recently replaced the jail’s former DWI initiative, and according to DeMarco, offers a timely and effective treatment course for inmates whose crimi-
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nal behavior correlates with an addiction to drugs or alcohol. “The drug epidemic is affecting every community on Long Island and across the nation,” he said. “It impacts individuals, small business, our schools and quality of life. Almost every robbery in recent years can be linked to an opioid addiction, and the Suffolk County Correctional Facility should do all it can to help address this public crisis.” DeMarco has spearheaded other initiatives throughout his tenure. Last year, he launched a Veterans Re-entry POD, and in 2011 he created the Youth Tier Initiative for incarcerated youth.
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Landscaping tools were stolen from a trailer on the property of a home on Kool Place in Terryville at about midnight May 21, according to police.
Buy and bounce
After reaching an agreement to sell a 2012 Dodge from a person living on Fairway Drive in Port Jefferson Station, an unknown person paid for the car by check May 2 which later bounced, after the car and title of ownership were transferred to the buyer, according to police. The seller of the car filed a report May 22.
Kicked out
At Junior’s Spycoast brewery on Main Street in Port Jefferson at about 7 p.m. May 22, an apparently intoxicated customer was asked to leave and refused, then kicked the front door, according to police. Police said the door was not damaged.
Fight night
A 23-year-old man from Centereach got into a fistfight and punched another man in the face at a home on Flagpole Lane in East Setauket at about 6 p.m. May 21, according to police. The victim was treated for nonserious injuries, police said. He was arrested and charged with third-degree assault.
Vanished vehicle
A 2012 Toyota was stolen from the driveway of a home on Main Street in Setauket at about 6:30 p.m. May 19, according to police.
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A 25-year-old man from Selden threatened to physically injure a woman while on Nesconset Highway in Port Jefferson in November 2016, according to police. The man was arrested May 19 in Port Jefferson and charged with seconddegree harassment.
Street robbery
A 16-year-old male from Mount Sinai stole money from a person while on Main Street in Port Jefferson May 19, according to police. He was arrested and charged with third-degree robbery.
Drug house
During the execution of a search warrant at a home on Gould Road in Centereach at about 6 a.m. May 22, heroin, crack cocaine and glassine envelopes were found, according to police. A 27-year-old resident of the Centereach home was charged with four counts of third-degree criminal sale of a controlled substance for crack cocaine and one count of third-degree criminal sale of a controlled substance for heroin. A 25-year-old woman from Holtsville who was at the home but did not live there was arrested and charged with fifth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance for crack cocaine, seventh-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance for heroin, and second-degree possession of drug paraphernalia for the envelopes.
Bringing up the rear
At Lombardi’s On The Sound restaurant on Fairway Drive in Port Jefferson, an employee’s purse was stolen from behind the bar at about 4 p.m. May 20, according to police. Police said the purse contained a cellphone, cash, gift cards and various other personal items.
A 41-year-old man from Setauket driving a 1998 Ford on Route 25 in Centereach near the intersection of Hawkins Avenue rear-ended a 1995 BMW at about 8:30 a.m. April 18 and fled the scene without exchanging contact information, according to police. He was arrested May 21 in Setauket and charged with leaving the scene of an accident with property damage.
Fight night round two
Conspiracy theory
Poor tipper
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Words can hurt
Two people were involved in a fight at Pax Christie Hospitality Center on Oakland Avenue in Port Jefferson at about 8 p.m. May 20, according to police. One of the participants fled on foot and the other was taken to John T. Mather Memorial Hospital for treatment of minor injuries.
On May 19, a 44-year-old man from Centereach was arrested for his association in the sale of narcotic drugs, according to police. He was charged with seconddegree conspiracy. — CoMpiLeD By aLex petrosKi
MAY 25, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A7
village
photos by Rita J. Egan
clockwise from left, local legislators and members of the north shore promotional alliance after the unveiling of the new washington spy trail sign; councilwoman Valerie cartright and town supervisor Ed Romaine present gloria Rocchio of nspa with a proclamation on the lawn of the Brewster House, below.
History remembered with spy trail dedication along 25A By Rita J. Egan Rita@tBRnEwspapERs.com
on our American Revolution and to encourage people to visit those important sites on the North Shore where history was made — the George Washington and Long Island’s George Washington Spy Trail, Route 25A.” In addition to thanking her fellow Culper spy ring continue to make history on members of the NSPA and others for their the North Shore. A press conference was held May 18 on work, Rocchio acknowledged State Sen. the lawn of the Brewster House in East Se- John Flanagan (R-East Northport) and tauket, after the installation of 26 signs along State Assemblyman Steve Englebright (Dthe Route 25A corridor from Port Jefferson Setauket) for introducing a legislative resoto Lake Success, which now designates Route lution in both the New York State Senate 25A as the Washington Spy Trail. One of the and Assembly that recognizes the dedicasigns, unveiled at the end of the event, is lo- tion of the trail as well as the service of the spy ring members. On the same day, U.S. cated in front of the Brewster property. Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-ShirThe installation of sigley) and U.S. Rep. Tom nage and the designation Suozzi (D-Glen Cove) comes after almost two were presenting a similar decades of work on the resolution in Congress. part of the North Shore Flanagan thanked Promotion Alliance. The those who gave up their state road was chosen befree time to dedicate cause President George themselves to the projWashington once traveled ect. The senator said he it to thank the patriots for and the other local legishelping him win the Revolators who were on hand lutionary War, and it was the event are proud also a route that spy Austin — Steve Englebright for of their towns. Roe used to pick up and deliver secret messages to “We brag about the military officer and spy Benjamin Tallmadge places that we come from,” he said. “We like in Connecticut. telling people about these types of things.” Gloria Rocchio, president of the Ward MelFlanagan said he hopes that residents, as ville Heritage Organization and North Shore well as those who travel to the area, will take Promotion Alliance, said during the days of advantage of the educational experiences the the Culper spy ring in the 1700s the Brewster signs call out along the way. House was one of only a few homes, and at When Englebright stepped up to the pothe time of the American Revolution, the area dium, he asked State Assemblyman Mike was occupied by 300 British troops. Fitzpatrick (R-St. James) to join him and said “Our community was divided between loy- he appreciated the partnership with his neighalists and patriots who supported the revolu- boring assemblyman as well as Flanagan tion in secret,” she said. “This history is the when it came to the legislative resolution that very history of America. Our efforts during recognizes the area’s historical significance. the past 17 years have been to shine a light “This is a special place,” Englebright said.
‘Patriots lived here. People put their lives on the line as the first espionage ring for service to our nation.’
“Patriots lived here. People put their lives on the line as the first espionage ring for service to our nation.” Englebright echoed Rocchio’s sentiments of the importance of the signs that pay tribute to the area’s history. “The memorialization of that through this signage that Gloria referred to is a chance for us to celebrate that reality, that wonderful beginning of our nation, the role that we played in it,” the assemblyman said. “It’s also important to give a sense of place and sense of context for this and future generations.” Brookhaven Town Supervisor Ed Romaine (R) and Councilwoman Valerie Cartright (DPort Jefferson Station) presented a proclamation to Rocchio, which made May 18 North Shore Promotion Alliance Day in Brookhaven. Romaine also reflected on the historical importance of the day. “Today we remember our history,” he said. “Today we remember ordinary people, living ordinary lives, who were called upon to do extraordinary things.” John Tsunis, chairman and CEO of Gold Coast Bank and owner of Holiday Inn Express Stony Brook, introduced Harry Janson, Sr.,
who was wounded in Vietnam and received the Purple Heart, a medal that originated from Washington’s Badge of Military Merit. Janson, who is on the board of the Long Island State Veterans Home in Stony Brook, said he believed the members of the Culper spy ring — Tallmadge, Roe, Robert Townsend, Abraham Woodhull, Caleb Brewster and Anna Smith Strong — were worthy of the award as well. “The difference is the example of their bravery,” Janson said. “They performed their bravery in covert, and they took their secrets to their graves.” Before unveiling the Washington Spy Trail sign in front of the Brewster House, Janson had the same wish as others who worked on the installation of the signage. “We hope that many of you drive the trail and learn about these brave men and women, and what they did for our country,” Janson said. Additional Washington Spy Trail signs include ones located on the westbound side of Route 25A at West Broadway in Port Jefferson, by the Long Island Museum in Stony Brook, before the Smithtown Bull in Smithtown and at Lawrence Hill Road in Huntington Station.
PAGE A8 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MAY 25, 2017
Photo from Rob Catlin
Rob Catlin with former student Orion Edgington, who dressed up like Catlin for Halloween.
ROB CATLIN
Project — with which he has plenty of experience — and overall climate made him feel right at home during the Continued from page A3 interview process. Following in Gentilcore’s footsteps, Catlin said he’s also to what people hold dear and love about the community, not the kind of principal to hide behind closed doors and maybe some things we could do better,” he said. “And use be seen as an intimidating authority figure. Even if he’s in that to really drive the vision of the school.” a meeting and a student peeks his head in the door, Catlin laughs, he’ll invite them in. Catlin, who graduated from New York “I always want to be accessible to the University with a degree in elementary kids and want them to see my office as a education and then Hunter College with a place to just come talk, or tell me about master’s degree in literacy, beat out seven concerns they [might] have,” said Catlin, other candidates screened by the district’s recalling a River East student he used to school-based organizations, staff, adminbond with as principal. “I would talk to istrators and board following Gentilcore’s him, spend time with him whenever he February announcement. “[Rob] Catlin emerged as the favorite — Rob Catlin was having a bad day ... and if I was having a bad day, I would go talk to him. I get after impressing many members of each committee,” wrote Superintendent Gordon Brosdal in a as much out of these relationships as the students do.” Jessica Davis, the mother of one of Catlin’s River East statement on the district’s website. Catlin said the school’s commitment to the arts, recent students, Orion, regarded him as “a great and attentive integration of the Teachers College Reading and Writing leader,” who would stand outside the school to greet the kids as they got off the bus every morning. “He always kept time open to greet children and parents and converse with them — he knew many of them, if not all of them, by name,” Davis said. “He has a very good spirit — one time [for Halloween], my son dressed up as Mr. Catlin and pretended to be the principal. Mr. Catlin took him around the school with him.” River East Principal Mike Panetta, who served as assistant principal under Catlin, said Catlin is easy to get along with, sets clear expectations and has good interpersonal relationships with teachers and students. “I think [Rob] is going to be successful wherever he goes — he really cares about kids and wants to do what’s best for them and the school,” Panetta said. Catlin, he added, “brought a lot of socio-emotional programs and clubs for kids and expertise in math” to River East. Stating “Gentilcore is the kind of principal I aspire to be,” Catlin said he looks forward to getting advice from the veteran administrator this summer before he bids farewell. In an email, Gentilcore wrote: “I would like to extend my congratulations to Mr. Catlin and wish him the very best in the years ahead.”
‘I get as much out of these relationships as the students do.’
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Suffolk County Executive Steve Bellone (D) has announced the launch of a new dedicated website – ReclaimOurWater.info – that will provide residents extensive information about the recently adopted Reclaim Our Water Septic Improvement Program. The program is the first of its kind in the county and is designed to help homeowners fund advanced nitrogen removal septic systems at an affordable rate. By installing advanced wastewater treatment systems, homeowners would in turn play a significant role in the county’s plan to reduce nitrogen pollution and protect Long Island waters. “ReclaimOurWater.info will be a one-stop shop for our residents who want to learn more about the program, how they can sign up and how we can collectively turn the tide to finally reclaim our water,” Bellone said. “We have taken significant strides in Suffolk County to formulate a comprehensive and realistic plan that reduces the high levels nitrogen in our waters, while making it affordable for homeowners to replace their outdated septic systems and cesspools with some of the most technologically advanced wastewater treatment systems.” ReclaimOurWater.info provides homeowners with financial, regulatory, technical and infrastructure aspects of the program. The website also provides wastewater industry leaders with information pertaining to septic industry training that are in accordance to county law and the county’s recently updated sanitary code. Residents are also encouraged to contact septicdemo@suffolkcountyny.gov with questions pertaining to the program and their current septic or cesspool situation. —DESIRÉE KEEGAN
MAY 25, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A9
SCHOOL NEWS Giving back to local heroes
Laddie A. Decker Sound Beach School
Hundreds of students from Laddie A. Decker Sound Beach School celebrated the school’s annual Give Back Day by hosting local heroes. More than 50 local police officers, firefighters, veterans and soldiers were in attendance and spoke with students about their careers and heroic experiences. Students in each class presented the visitors with signed posters, hand-drawn thank you cards, letters, drawings and crafts to show their appreciation. They also performed musical pieces for the visitors.
Photo from Miller Place school district
LAD & North Country Road Middle School
Photo from Miller Place school district
Photo from Miller Place school district
Toy Donation Students from Laddie A. Decker Sound Beach School in the Miller Place school district recently donated dozens of stuffed animals and toys to sick children and seniors at St. Charles Hospital. Students throughout the school participated in a month-long toy drive in order to collect
as many toys as they could, involving family, friends and the community in their efforts. The purpose of the toy drive was to help students become involved in service and the community. Through their efforts, participating students were able to bring a smile to patients’ faces and provide patients with some comfort while they are in the hospital.
Zone award winners North Country Road Middle School and Laddie A. Decker Sound Beach School students were recently recognized for their excellence during a recent Suffolk ZONE physical education awards ceremony. Four students — Daniel Paesano and Paulina Gasparis from North Country and Abi-
gail Nam and Michael Giugliano from Laddie A. Decker — were selected by physical education teachers to receive the award based on their exemplary effort, attitude, conduct and compassion within the curriculum of physical education. The Suffolk Zone Chapter of the New York State Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance distributes this award once a year.
SPORTS
Photo from Miller Place school district
State star:
College-bound Eagles:
Photo from Rocky Point school district
Eighteen Rocky Point High School student-athletes recently put pen to paper and celebrated their college commitments during a commemorative ceremony at the school. Vanessa Costa, Justin Curreri, Victor Davila, Kristin Flatley, Jessica Friedman, Robert Grady, Meagan Haviland, Brendan Heggers, Bailey Klein, Anthony Lucia, Jaime Maggio, Morganne Nofi, Brittany Reh, Alexandra Salamone, William Smith, Kamdyn Steets, Dylan Trude and Christopher Valleau will continue their athletic endeavors at the next level.
Miller Place High School track and field athlete Amanda Stead recently competed in the New York State championship track and field meet held at Ocean Breeze Athletic Complex in Staten Island. She placed fourth in the 300-meter dash among all public schools and placed fifth in the federation, which includes all public, private and parochial schools in the state.
PAGE A10 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MAY 25, 2017
SCHOOL NEWS Shoreham-Wading River school district
Shoreham-Wading River High School
Photo from Shoreham-Wading River school district
Counselor recognized Photo from Shoreham-Wading River school district
STEM-tastic The Shoreham-Wading River school district held its second successful Science Technology Engineering and Math Symposium May 16 in the high school gymnasium. The event featured over 40 STEM-related booths and exhibits for students and community members to explore. A number
of the booths were run by district educators and featured hands-on STEM activities including slime making, robotics and binary codes. More than 10 community organizations, including Brookhaven National Lab and Port Jefferson’s St. Charles Hospital were on hand to explain and demonstrate to participants how STEM topics relate to the real world.
Shoreham-Wading River High School guidance counselor Sal Rosato has been named an honorary member of the National Technical Honor Society by the Eastern Long Island Academy of Applied Technology, which is part of Eastern Suffolk BOCES. Rosato was nominated for the honor for continuously demonstrating a commitment to students and continued support toward
technical education. “It is a well-deserved recognition” Shoreham-Wading River High School Principal Dan Holtzman said. “One of Mr. Rosato’s strengths as a guidance counselor is his unwavering championing for his students.” Rosato has served as a high school guidance counselor in the Shoreham-Wading River school district for 18 years. He holds a bachelor’s degree from St. Joseph’s College and a master’s degree from C.W. Post.
Rocky Point High School
Miller Avenue School
Little scientists Out of a field of 500 students, two Miller Avenue students were awarded honorable mentions at the Brookhaven National Lab’s recent Elementary Science Fair. Projects are created by Suffolk County children ranging from kindergarten to sixth grade. The student projects include charts, experiments, demos, diagrams and collections with a scientific objective. Brookhaven National Lab scientists and elementary school teachers judge the contest. The Shoreham-Wading River school district extended congratulations to kindergartner Ella Nowaski for her hard work on her project, “Soccer Deflategate” and to first-grader Joseph Losquadro for his project, “Water Pollution.”
Photo from Rocky Point school district
Honoring a student leader
Photo from Shoreham-Wading River school district
Rocky Point High School senior and Class of 2017 valedictorian Pooja Deshpande was recently named one of eight Suffolk County Principals Leadership Award winners. The awards are presented to extraordinary scholars in recognition of their outstanding leadership contributions to their
schools. Deshpande was honored for her character, leadership and service to Rocky Point High School. “Pooja has boundless energy, which she funnels into many activities,” Rocky Point High School Principal Susann Crossan said. “She has earned the respect and admiration of the students and will certainly be leaving a legacy of leadership for others to follow.”
and formally of East Setauket, died March 20 at John T. Mather Memorial Hospital with family by his side. He was born to Gerald and Norma Belvedere of Commack May 6, 1956. After college, he started Belvedere Construction where his sons eventually joined him and continue the business today. He left his impact on his family and many people whom he had touched through his business ventures and coaching over the years. Belvedere is survived by his wife, Debra; sister, Suzanne Evangelista; sons Gerry (Melissa), Nicholas (Dawn), Anthony (Teal),
Dominick and Zach; and grandchildren Nicholas, DeAnna, Anthony, Blake, Kayden, Alexia and Jax; along with many close friends. His charismatic and loving personality will be greatly missed, but his legacy will be forever carried on through his sons. Funeral arrangements were entrusted to Bryant Funeral Home in Setauket. Funeral Mass was celebrated at St. Louis de Montfort R.C. Church in Sound Beach. Belvedere was laid to rest at Cedar Hill Cemetery in Port Jefferson. The family asks donations be made to Hope House Ministries, P.O. Box 358, Port Jefferson, NY 11777.
OBITUARIES Ann Passavia
Ann Passavia, 90, of Mount Sinai, and formerly of Oakdale, died May 12. She was the beloved wife of the late Vincent, and loving mother of Gary (Cindee), Vincent and Robert (Donna). She was also the cherished grandmother of Travis (Christina), Lee (Tara), William, Christopher (Amanda), Alyssa, Justin, Brittany and Samuel; and adored great grandmother of Sofia, Luca, Isla, Boden and Isabella. She is survived by many other family members and friends.
Funeral Mass was celebrated at St. John Nepomucene R. C. Church in Bohemia.Entombment followed at Pinelawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Farmingdale. If you would like to make a donation, the family requests donations be made to Childrens Cardiomyopathy Foundation, P.O. Box 547, Tenafly, NJ 07670. Arrangements were entrusted to the Branch Funeral Home of Miller Place.
Gerry Belvedere
Gerry Belvedere, 60, of Miller Place,
MAY 25, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A11
Honor and Remember The Men And Women Who Served Our Great Country
We remember those who did not come home, and thank those that did for the sacrifices you made for our country. Your bravery & dedication is what keeps our country safe & strong. Wishing All Veteran’s and their Families a Happy & Healthy Memorial Day.
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PAGE A12 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MAY 25, 2017
SportS
Photos by Alex Petroski
Clockwise from above, lové Drumgole rounds the bases after her grand slam; Drumgole greets her teammates following her grand slam; Julia Golino tosses a pitch; and Drumgole up to bat.
Mount Sinai keeps perfect season galloping forward By Alex Petroski alex@tbrnewspapers.com The Mount Sinai softball team is on to the Suffolk County Class A championship thanks to a stellar pitching performance by an underclassmen, and a little dose of Lové. Sophomore starting pitcher Julia Golino shut down Westhampton Beach in a complete game performance in the semifinals May 23, and junior shortstop Lové Drumgole provided the bulk of the offense with a secondinning grand slam to help the Mustangs secure a 7-4 win at home. Mount Sinai will face the winner of the May 25 matchup between Westhampton Beach and Sayville for the right to wear the Suffolk County crown. The
Mount Sinai 7 Westhampton 4
Mustangs, who went 18-0 during the regular season, have still yet to lose a game in 2017. If Mount Sinai were to lose to the winner of the May 25 matchup during the May 26 final, the teams will play a final elimination game at Mount Sinai May 27 at noon. “They’ve been battle tested,” head coach Thomas Tilton said of his team. “You’re talking about a team that was 65-3 over the last three years. They’ve been behind, they’ve been in front — they just lean on one another. Everyday there’s a different hero, and that’s the way they play. It’s a team, that’s all I can say. They’re gritty and they don’t give up.” Tilton spoke highly of his sophomore starter, who held Westhampton to one run through six innings before surrendering a walk and two hits sandwiched around a two-run error. It created some tense moments for the Mustangs in the final frame, though they held on for the victory. “She’s a warrior,” Tilton said of Golino. “She got a little tired in the end; she was getting caught on her hip a little bit, but our defense is usually better than that. We stress fundamentals, especially on defense, and we got away from it a little bit, but they collected themselves.” Drumgole came to the plate in the second inning with the bases loaded and no outs and a run already in during the frame to put the Mustangs ahead 2-1. “That felt great,” Drumgole said of the grand slam home run which put her team ahead 6-1. “It was an outside pitch and I just hit it where it was pitched.” When asked if the four-run-producing swing relieved some of the pressure the team might have been feeling in a tight playoff game, Drumgole downplayed the
significance and said her approach never changes based on the score. “She’s for real — that’s one of the best players on the island, by far,” the head coach said of his star shortstop and leadoff hitter. “She does it all. She’s one of the cornerstones of the team, so they all look up to her.” Drumgole and team captain and senior left fielder Angela Bukofsky praised the “youngin” Golino for her toughness in the performance, repeatedly using the word “amazing.” Golino said she gained confidence after Drumgole’s big swing.
“I think it gave us an advantage, coming out strong, and I think it made us able to stay strong throughout the game and determined — you can’t let up,” she said. Mount Sinai had chances to put the game further out of reach, but left the bases loaded in the third inning, and left runners on second and third in the fourth. In the fifth inning, with runners on first and third, a line drive to shortstop was turned into a 6-3-2 triple play with Drumgole getting cut down trying to score by Westhampton’s first baseman. Golino recorded the final out of the game with the tying run in the on deck circle.
MAY 25, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A13
sports
Photos by Bill landon
Clockwise from above, Shoreham-Wading River’s dean Stalzer and Brian Morrell watch their home runs leave the park; Mount Sinai’s Jared donnelly tags out Thomas Brady; T.J. Sicoli makes a play; and Kyle Baylous smacks the ball deep to right field.
Wildcats head to finals with win over Mount Sinai By Bill landon Slamming home a win was exactly what Shoreham-Wading River’s baseball team did. Wildcats ace Brian Morrell, and first baseman Dean Stalzer both hit grand slams in a 10run second inning to lead ShorehamWading River past Mount Sinai, 16-4, in the Class A semifinals May 20. The team will face Bayport-Blue Point May 24 in the championship round. Morrell’s bat got the game started in the first inning with a two-run home run over the left field fence. Senior Thomas Brady singled next, and classmates Vincent Uzzi and Jon Luppens hit RBI singles for a 4-0 ShorehamWading River advantage.
Shoreham-WR 16 Mount Sinai 4
The Mustangs were unable to answer, and the Wildcats bats went back to work in the bottom of the second. Senior Kyle Baylous hit a ground-rule double, Morrell followed with a single that put runners at the corners and senior Nick Manesis drew a walk to load the bases. With the table set, Stalzer jumped out on a fastball, and sent it flying over the left field fence with room to spare for a grand slam that doubled the Wildcats lead. “We came out hot like we planned to do,” he said. “It was a fastball inside and I knew it right away [that it was gone].” The inning was far from over. Uzzi and senior Alex Bettenhauser hit singles, and Luppens drove Uzzi home for a second time. Senior T.J. Sicoli smacked the ball through the gap to load the bases, and Baylous was hit by a pitch to walk home the Wildcats 10th run. Enter Morrell. The University of Notre Dame-bound pitching ace also jumped on a fastball, and blasted it the opposite way for the second grand slam of the inning and a commanding 14-0 lead. “That just doesn’t happen … two grand slams in one inning is amazing,” Morrell said. “They pitched me outside all day ... it was a fastball away and I just wanted to beat them.” Morrell, who has pitched three no hitters this season and six in his varsity career, was critical of his performance on the mound despite earning the win and going 2-for-4 with two home runs and six RBIs. “My command was pretty bad today — I made my pitches and got outs, but they hit me a little bit,” he said. “Going to the county finals means a lot especially after last year where we fell short. We have a great team and I feel that we can do a lot.” Senior Will Esposito lit up the scoreboard first for Mount Sinai, and Morrell walked the next batter to load the bases. Looking to spark a rally, junior Ryan Picarello nailed a two-run
shot to right field, but the Mustangs couldn’t keep the inning going. In the bottom of the fifth, Mount Sinai tacked on its final run. After a close game between the two teams in their last outing, Shoreham-Wading River head coach Kevin Willi said he was surprised by the margin of victory. He added he was impressed with the collective effort his squad showed and how everyone made a contribution. He said the Wildcats have scored 32 home runs in its 22-1 season. “The potential is always there to put together two good innings early, but that was pretty intense,” he said. “It was good because we just came off our closest game of the season, the 3-2 win over Mount Sinai, where we had to come back down 2-1 in the bottom of the seventh. To come back — getting the bats going — that’s been the story all year.” But not this time around. Stalzer, who finished 2-for-5 with five RBIs, plated Morrell in the bottom of the sixth, and Uzzi drove home Stalzer to give the game its final score. “We knew that Mount Sinai wasn’t going
to lay down and let us have it,” Stalzer said. “So our mindset was to be really focused today. If we lost today it would’ve been our first loss [in the postseason], and we didn’t want to play them again.”
PAGE A14 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MAY 25, 2017
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PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Never Known To Fail) Oh, most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of heaven, blessed mother of the Son of God, immaculate virgin, assist me in my necessity. Oh star of the sea, help me & show me here in, you are my mother. Oh Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth, I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in this necessity There are none who can withstand your power. Oh show me herein you are my mother. Oh Mary conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee. (3 times). Oh Holy Mary, I place this cause in your hands. (3 times). Holy Spirit, you who solve all problems, light all roads so that I can obtain my goals. You gave me the divine gift to forgive and forget all evil against me, and that in all instances of my life, you are with me. I want in this short prayer to thank you for all things as you confirm once again that I never want to be separated from you in eternal glory. Thank you for your mercy toward me and mine. T.G. The person must say this prayer 3 consecutive days. The request will be granted. This prayer must be published after the favor has been granted.
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OFFICE HOURS Monday–Friday 9:00 am–5:00 pm
(631) 331–1154 or (631) 751–7663 Fax (631) 751–4165 class@tbrnewspapers.com tbrnewsmedia.com
DEADLINE: Tuesday at Noon
Classifieds Online at www.tbrnewsmedia.com
The Classifieds Section is published by TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA every Thursday. Leah S. Dunaief, Publisher, Ellen P. Segal, 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 Classifieds - Reach more than 6 million readers in New York’s community newspapers. Line ads: Long Island region $250 – New York City region $325 – Central region $95 – Western region $125 – all regions $495.25 words. $10 each additional word. TIMES BEACON RECORD is not responsible for errors beyond the first insert. Call for display ad rates.
E M P L OY M E N T / C A R E E R S Help Wanted 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. Administrative Assistant, F/T, to various school department heads as well as front office responsibilities. Harbor Country Day School. Cover letter and resume to: jcissel@hcdsny.org DRIVER/APPLICATOR Local Tree & Lawn Care Company. Looking for local driver. Earn $800-$1000/wk. Clean license, CDL perferred. M-F daytime hours. Must be reliable. Call, 631-549-5100
Help Wanted ART & PRODUCTION INTERN WANTED. Immediate Availability. Excellent opportunity for recent college graduate or part-time student to gain valuable work experience with a multi-media, award winning news group. Tuesdays & Wednesdays, 9am-5pm. Experience with creative suites software a plus. THIS IS A PAID POSITION! Email resume and link to portfolio to beth@ tbrnewspapers.com CALL CENTER/ RESERVATION AGENT Port Jefferson Ferry Seeks P/T- F/T agent for a fast-paced call center. Nights, weekends & holidays a must. Great communication skills. Computer literate. No calls accepted. Fax resume to 631-473-0920, or E-Mail customer-service@mcallistertowing.com EOE CALLING ALL THEATER BUFFS! Times Beacon Record Newspapers is looking for a theater review intern. Please send a sample to leisure@ tbrnewspapers.com * The position is unpaid, but two tickets to each play are complimentary with each assignment.
Help Wanted DENTAL ASSISTANT F/T Port Jefferson/Medford Looking for a career minded, professional team member for our fully digital busy Orthodontic practice. See complete information in our Employment Display Ads. DOG GROOMER P/T - F/T Family Owned, same owner 40 years. Very busy shop, extremely high income. Minimum 2 years experience. Career oriented. Must love pets and people. 631-871-1160 ask for Alan. DRI RELAYS INC. IS HIRING ASSEMBLERS: Temp/Summer, F/T, P/T, days M-F. $10-$11/hr. Mech’l ass’y working w/small parts & hand tools. Entry-level, will train. Good communication skills and hand/eye coordination a must. HS Dipl or equiv. req’d. JR MANUFACTURING TECH: F/T, days, M-F, $17-22/hr DOE. Preventive maintenance, repairs, set-up of equipment. Electronics Cert or Degree preferred. Call or apply in person. 631-342-1700. 60 Commerce Dr. Hauppauge EOE
• Garage Sales • Tag Sales • Announcements • Antiques & Collectibles • Automobiles/Trucks /Rec. Vehicles • Finds under $50 • Health/Fitness/Beauty • Merchandise • Personals • Novenas • Pets/Pet Services • Professional Services • Schools/Instruction/Tutoring • Wanted to Buy • Employment • Appliance Repairs • Cleaning • Computer Services • Electricians • Financial Services • Furniture Repair • Handyman Services • Home Decorating • Home Improvement • Lawn & Landscaping • Painting/Wallpaper • Plumbing/Heating • Power Washing • Roofing/Siding • Tree Work • Window Cleaning • Real Estate • Rentals • Sales • Shares • Co-ops • Land • Commercial Property • Out of State Property • Business Opportunities
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
EXPERIENCED TRAVEL AGENT/Administrative Assistant Needed. Computer skills, SABRE a plus. Flexible days and hours. Northport. 631-757-8500 or burrtravel@aol.com
FULL TIME, YEAR ROUND MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN POSITION. Ability to operate tractors and landscaping machinery. Other responsibilities: snow removal, irrigation, carpentry, painting, driving a truck and trailer. Lifting of over 50 lbs. We are willing to provide training for some of these tasks. Contact info@silveroakstable.com or Matt 631.236.6802
HOBBY LOBBY JOIN OUR TEAM! Accepting applications for new store temporary setup help with the opportunity for full & part time positions in: Floral, Crafts, Art, Custom Frames, Hobbies, Fabric, Cashiers. For complete information, please see TBR’s employment display section.
PART-TIME DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANT Excellent organizational, written & oral skills. Have proficiency in Word & Excel. Experience on Raiser’s Edge a plus. Some evenings and weekends required. For complete information, please see our Employment Display ad.
TO SUBSCRIBE
CALL 631.751.7744
©51942
MEDICAL OFFICE Immediate. P/T Front Desk Receptionist. Wed, Thurs, some Saturdays. Will train. 631-331-4340 x131. Fax resume: 631-928-2353
3DUW 7LPH 'HYHORSPHQW $VVLVWDQW Seeking a detail oriented team player to work with development staff on clerical and administrative aspects of special events, membership and special projects. Excellent organizational, written & oral skills and have proficiency in Word & Excel. Experience on Raiser’s Edge a plus. 15 hours per week. Flexible schedule– some evenings and weekends required. Send letter of interest and resume to: Anna Gass, HR Administrator Long Island Museum 1200 Route 25A Stony Brook, NY 11790 Fax: 631-751-0353 or E-mail: agass@longislandmuseum.org
©97069
AD RATES
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
INDEX The following are some of our available categories listed in the order in which they appear.
PAGE A16 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MAY 25, 2017
E M P L OY M E N T / C A R E E R S Help Wanted
JOB FAIR MAY 24TH, 2017, 9AM-4PM 51 Terryville Rd, Port Jefferson Station, NY Direct Support Professionals, Asst. Residential Mgr, Activities Coordinator, Health Office Tech, Medical Caseworker, Teacher Aide, RN’s, LPN’S, Drivers B & C class, Housekeeper/Cook, Lifeguards, Transportation Aides Excellent salary and benefits! Website: www.maryhaven.chsli.org
Media Sales and Marketing Excellent opportunity for right advertising professional. Well established loyal account base to start with and build from on Suffolk’s North Shore. If you are a good communicator with a spring in your step, and you want to earn a good living, please call Kathryn at 631-751-7744 or email kjm@tbrnewspapers.com
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 a must. Send resume and clip/photo samples to desiree@ tbrnewspapers.com
LITTLE FLOWER CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES OF NY SEEKS: Waiver Service Providers RN’S Asst. House Manager Medicaid Service Coordinator Budget Analyst Maintenance Worker Corporate Trainer 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
MILLER PLACE Small local office seeks F/T or P/T, M-F, 9-5, to answer phones, light office work, run local errands. Knowledge of Word and excel a plus. Will train. Email or fax Resumes angela@intlcomputer.com 631-223-1882
Š94606
631.751.7663
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is Tuesday at noon. If you want to advertise, do it soon! &DOO
Call (631) 474-4917 or fax resume to: (631) 331-1048
631.331.1154
OPTOMETRIC ASSISTANT PT. (Shoreham) Experience preferred, but willing to train. Technical testing, answering phones, processing orders. Long term comittment. Mon., Wed., PT Sat. Email: Drkraushaar@ optonline.net SUMMER HELP 3 Village Area. Buildings and grounds outside work, 6/1-8/19. (Approximately). M-F, 9am-4pm, hard worker, reliable, minimum age 18. Email resume to: pdilucca@stonybrookvillage.com
EOE M/F/D/V
Flexible hours Wed, Thurs, some Sats. Will train. Telephone
(631) 331-4340 ext. 131 Fax resume to
(631) 928-2353
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CALL CENTER/ RESERVATION AGENT Port Jefferson Ferry seeks PT/FT reservation agent for a fast-paced call center. Nights, weekends & holidays a must. Great communication skills. Computer literate.
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OB/GYN Office Days & evenings Flexibility a must
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Experienced Travel Agent/ Administrative Assistant needed
Medical Office Immediate Opening
Nursing Assistant
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No calls accepted. Fax resume to 631.473.0920 or email to customer-service@ mcallistertowing.com
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Š97055
NURSING ASSISTANT OB/GYN office days & evenings, Flexibility a must. Call 631-474-4917, or fax resume to: 631-331-1048
Š97021
Help Wanted
Š96933
Help Wanted
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
MILLER PLACE Small local office seeks
2)),&( $66,67$17
Excellent Sales Opportunity for Advertising Specialist at Award-Winning News Media Groupâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s North Shore Market and Beyond
Š96894
FT or PT, M-F 9-5 Answer business phones, light office work and run local errands. Knowledge of Word and Excel a plus. Will train. 93708
Email or fax resume: angela@intlcomputer.com 631.223.1882
EARN SALARY & COMMISSION WORKING ON AN EXCITING HISTORIC PROJECT!
Need more employees?
Find qualified people by advertising today!
Call Kathryn at 631.751.7744 or email resume to: kjm@tbrnewspapers.com
+ Appear in all 6 newspapers & on our website
+ Display Ad Special:
BUY 2 WEEKS, GET 2 FREE!
Call 631.331.1154 or 631.751.7663
Š97047
www.tbrnewsmedia.com
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+ Includes FREE 20 word line ad
TBR NEWSMEDIA
MAY 25, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A17
E M P L OY M E N T / C A R E E R S Our Classifieds Section
With a 2 week APPEARING Classifieds IN ALL 6 display ad, NEWSPAPERS you will receive TWO FREE WEEKS... PLUS a FREE 20 word line ad & on our Internet site!
Call For Rates:
970329
Port Jefferson/Medford Looking for a career minded, self motivated, well spoken, professional team member for our busy, fully digital Orthodontic practice. Candidates must have good communication and computer skills. Experience preferred. We will support the right candidate in acquiring licensure and education. Mon, Tues, Thurs & some Fridays, 9:30 to 6:30 or according to our busy patient schedule, Wed afternoons only.
Full-time, motivated individual to assist various school department heads as well as front office responsibilities.
Please send cover letter and resume to: jcissel@hcdsny.org
Ask for Alan
Seeking responsible, motivated individual for full time, year round Maintenance Technician position.
This position is open to applicants with an ability to operate tractors and landscaping machinery. Other responsibilities to include snow removal, irrigation, carpentry, painting and driving a truck and trailer. Lifting of over 50 lbs may be required. We are willing to provide training for some of these tasks.
Salary is commensurate with experience. Contact info@silveroakstable.com or Matt 631.236.6802
www.littleflowerny.org wadingriver-jobs@lfchild.org
MULTIPLE OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE IN WADING RIVER!
WANTED
Waiver Service Providers Medicaid Service Coordinator Maintenance Worker Direct Care Workers RN’s
Asst. House Manager Budget Analyst Corporate Trainer Child Care Workers
Send resume and clips/photo samples to desiree@ tbrnewspapers.com
©96916
©97040
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.
631.871.1160
©97119
©96904
Please email your resume and cover letter introducing yourself to us. marci@coolsmiles.com
Administrative Assistant
• Very busy shop • Extremely high income • Minimum 2 years experience • Must love people and pets • Career oriented
631.331.1154 or 631.751.7663
DENTAL ASSISTANT - F/T
SPORTS REPORTER, PT
Family owned. Same owner for 40 years.
©89982
Email: drkraushaar@ optonline.net
Will Help You Find Qualified Employees or A New Career!
Harbor Country Day School is seeking
©96966
(Shoreham) Must love working with people and be warm and friendly. Experience preferred, but willing to train. Technical testing, answering phones, processing orders. Looking for long term commitment. Hours: Mon, Wed & PT Sat.
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Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
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 Join the Little Flower family and be part of a dynamic organization that is turning potential into promise for at risk youth and individuals with developmental disabilities!
PAGE A18 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ MAY 25, 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
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SPORTS FREELANCER
WANTED
);3 )*7=< 7=: ;8-+1)4; Place your ad by Take advantage Tuesday noon and of our North Shore it will appear in that distribution. Reach over Thursdayâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s editions. 169,000 readers.
Š96276
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.
Looking for a nanny â&#x20AC;˘ nurse â&#x20AC;˘ medical biller computer programmer â&#x20AC;˘ chef driver â&#x20AC;˘ private fitness trainer...?
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Send resume and clips/photo samples to desiree@ tbrnewspapers.com
CALL TIMES BEACON RECORDâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT
WZ
S E R V IC E S Carpet Carpet Cleaning Specials! Deals you canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t refuse! CLEAN QUEST High quality service at reasonable prices. See Display ad in Home Services. 631-828-5452.
Cleaning ENJOY COMING HOME TO A CLEAN HOUSE! Attention to detail is our priority. We promise you peace of mind. Excellent References. Serving the Three Village Area. Call Jacquie or Joyce 631-871-9457, 631-886-1665
Decks DECKS pre-season special Creative designs our speciality, composite decking available. Call for FREE estimate. Macco Construction Corp 1-800-528-2494
Decks DECKS ONLY BUILDERS & DESIGNERS Of Outdoor Living By Northern Construction of LI, Inc. Decks, Patios/Hardscapes, Pergolas, Outdoor Kitchens & 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
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 Electricians GREENLITE ELECTRIC, INC. Repairs, installations, motor controls, PV systems. Piotr Dziadula, Master Electrician. Lic. #4694-ME/Ins. 631-331-3449 SOUNDVIEW ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING Prompt* Reliable* Professional. Residential/Commercial, Free Estimates. Ins/Lic#57478-ME. Owner Operator, 631-828-4675 See our Display Ad in the Home Services Directory
Errand Services MY PERSONAL CONCIERGE BY DEBZ is the solution to your sanity! Let me save the day! Errands of every kind are my speciality. (including housesitting.) A temporary need for help or a permenant personal assistant, let me coordinate and complete what you couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t get done. You can email me at mypersonalconceiergebydebz@gmail.com Call or text 631-299-1310.
Exterminating KILL BED BUGS! Harris Bed Bug Killers/Kit complete treatment system. Available Hardware Stores. The Home Depot, homedepot.com. Try Harris Guaranteed Roach Killers Too!
Fences GOT SPRING FEVER? We have just what the doctored ordered. Our 65 years of experience, combined with a healthy dose of the finest fencing materials available. Wayside Fence 631-968-6828 See our display ad for more information. 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.
Financial Services FIX & FLOPS SFH 1-4 Units, Hard/Bridge loans, stated income, NO Doc Loan. Up to 90% Cost, 100% Rehab, Purchase Refinance, Multi-Unit, Mixed-Use, Commercial. 888-565-9477
Floor Services/Sales
Gardening/Design/ Architecture DOWN THE GARDEN PATH *Garden Rooms *Focal Point Gardens. Designed and Maintained JUST FOR YOU. Create a â&#x20AC;&#x153;splashâ&#x20AC;? of color w/perennials or Patio Pots. Marsha, 631-689-8140 or cell# 516-314-1489
Gutters/Leaders 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
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
GREG TRINKLE PAINTING & GUTTER CLEANING Powerwashing, window washing, staining. Neat, reliable, 25 years experience. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins.#31398-H 631-331-0976
Handyman Services HANDYMAN SERVICES AVAILABLE â&#x20AC;&#x153;No job too big or smallâ&#x20AC;? 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
MAY 25, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A19
S E R V IC E S
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
Home Improvement
Lawn & Landscaping
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
PRS CARPENTRY No job too small. Hanging a door, building a house, everything in-between. Custom cabinets, windows roofing/siding/decks. POWER WASHING. Serving North Shore 40 years. Lic/Ins. 631-744-9741
LANDSCAPES UNLIMITED SPRING CLEAN-UPS 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
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
Home Improvement 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. 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. *BluStar Construction* The North Shore’s Most Trusted Renovation Experts. 631-751-0751 Suffolk Lic. #48714-H, Ins. See Our Display Ad DUMPSTERS 10-40 YARDS, Bobcat service, no job too big/small, fully licensed and insured, serving all of Suffolk, Islandwide Industrial Services inc. 631-563-6719,516-852-5686. JOHN PISANO HOME IMPROVEMENT “All Phases of Home Renovation” Kitchens, Bathrooms, Basements, Decks, Windows, Siding. Lic/Ins. #H-51622. Call for Free Estimate. 631-599-3936
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 JOSEPH BONVENTRE CONSTRUCTION Roofing, siding, windows, decks, repairs. Quality work, low prices. Owner operated. Over 25 years experience. Lic/Ins. #55301-H. 631-428-6791 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 SPRING LANDSCAPING SPECIALS throughout Suffolk County, full service landscaping, mulching, lawn cutting, planting, etc. Family owned/operated Call or email 631-283-2266 Luxorganization@gmail.com
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 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
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper BOB’S PAINTING SERVICE 25 Years Experience Interior/Exterior Painting, Spackling, Staining, Wallpaper Removal,Powerwashing. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins. #17981, 631-744-8859 COUNTY-WIDE PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Painting/Staining. Quality workmanship. Living/Serving 3 Village Area Over 25 Years. Lic#37153-H. 631-751-8280 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 PAINTING & CARPENTRY BBB & Angie’s Liat (A+) Rating. Fine Interior Painting & Finish Carpentry. Nassau Lic. #H3811050000, Suffolk Lic. #43882-H 516-921-0494, 631-316-2223 classicrenovator.com
Masonry
Power Washing
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 ISLAND PAVING AND MASONRY Specializing in Driveways, Patios, Interlocking pavers and stones, steps, walkways and walls. Free estimates and design. 25% Off Any Job for The Spring. Suffolk Lic #55740-H. 631-822-8247
EXTERIOR CLEANING SPECIALISTS Roof cleaning, pressure washing/softwashing, deck restorations, gutter maintenance. Squeaky Clean Property Solutions 631-387-2156 www.SqueakyCleanli.com
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper
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
ALL PRO PAINTING Interior/Exterior. PowerWashing, Staining, Wallpaper Removal. Free estimates. Lic/Ins #19604HI. 631-696-8150, Nick
WORKING & LIVING IN THE THREE VILLAGES FOR 25 YEARS. Owner does the work & guarantees satisfaction. COUNTY-WIDE Lic. & Ins. 37153-H 631-751-8280
Tree Work
Tree Work
Tree Work
CLOVIS OUTDOOR SERVICES LTD Expert Tree Removal land Pruning. Landscape design and maintenance, Edible Gardens, Plant Healthcare, Exterior Lighting. 631-751-4880 clovisoutdoors@gmail.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
EASTWOOD TREE & LANDSCAPE, INC. Experts in tree care and landscaping. Serving Suffolk County for 25 years. Lic.#35866H/Ins. 631-928-4070 eastwoodtree.com FREE CONSULTATIONS AND ESTIMATES. Tree removal, stump grinding, pruning, land clearing, storm cleanups, emergencies. A FIRST QUALITY TREE SERVICE 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 LOU’S ALL ISLAND TREE SERVICE All Phases Of Tree Care Safety pruning and trimmings, cutbacks, stump grinding. Bobcat Service Available. Residential/Commercial. 24hr emergency Storm Service available. Lic/Ins. Lic#28593H. 631-455-8739 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 RANDALL BROTHERS TREE SERVICE Planting, pruning, removals, stump grinding. Free Estimates. Fully insured. LIC# 50701-H. 631-862-9291
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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$44 for 4 Weeks
20 Word Reader Ad Free Listing on Our Internet Site: tbrnewsmedia.com Ad Appears in All 6 Papers
Call Classifieds @ 631–331–1154 or 631–751–7663 TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA 185 Route 25A, Setauket New York 11733
Handyman Services
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TIMES BEACON RECORD CLASSIFIEDS • 631.331.1154 0R 631.751.7663
PAGE A20 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ MAY 25, 2017
H O M E S E R V IC E S
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PAGE C
MAY 25, 2017 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE A21
H O M E S E R V IC E S Construction
Owner/Operator has 25+ years serving 3 Villages
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Additions & renovations, decks, windows, doors, siding, kitchens, baths, roofs & custom carpentry. We love small jobs too!
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
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PAGE B
PAGE A22 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ MAY 25, 2017
H O M E S E R V IC E S
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
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TREE REMOVAL STUMP GRINDING EXPERT PRUNING BAMBOO REMOVAL
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Serving Suffolk County for 25 Years Specializing in:
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throug hout Suf folk County
Full Service Landscaping Mulching, Lawn Cutting, Planting, etc.
TIM BAXLEY TREE INC
Family Owned & Operated
Call Today
ISA CERTIFIED ARBORIST NY 0598A
LUX PROPERTY SERVICES
O: 631.368.8303 C: 631.241.7923
631.283.2266
INSURED/LICENSED SUFFOLK 17963-HI NASSAU H 2904010000 Š96772
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EastwoodTree.com 631.928.4070 Lic. 35866H/Ins.
Landscaping SPECIALS Š96610
Ornamental Pruning Storm Damage Prevention Deadwood Removal Crown Thinning Organic Tree/Shrub Spraying/Fertilizing Natural Stone Walls & Walkways Waterfall/Garden Designs Sod Installations
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Spring Clean Ups
Low Voltage Lighting Available Spring Lawn Renovation Special Aeration, Seed, Fertilization & Lime Package Deal Call for details
FREE ESTIMATES
Lifelong Three Village Resident
631-675-6685 Free Estimates
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www.islandpavingandmasonry.com Info@islandpavingandmasonry.com
Š96488
Member 3 Village Chamber of Commerce
We Represent a Green Approach For the Discerning Property Owner or Management Firm
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Steven Long, Lic.#36715-H & Ins.
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PAGE A
MAY 25, 2017 â&#x20AC;¢ THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD â&#x20AC;¢ PAGE A23
H O M E S E R V IC E S
Since 1995 Family Owned & Operated
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343 So. Country Rd., Brookhaven
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PAGE F
PAGE A24 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ MAY 25, 2017
May 25, 2017 â&#x20AC;˘ CLASSIFIEDS â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE C11
PROF E S SIONA L & B U SI N E S S ;/, 7* +6*;69
Phone:
821-2558
Email: jim@pc-d-o-c.com
Place Your Ad in the
by Raffaella G. Š97050
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PS PAGE G
R E A L E S TAT E PUBLISHERSâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise â&#x20AC;&#x153;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.â&#x20AC;? 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.
Rentals
Open Houses
Open Houses
PORT JEFFERSON 1 bedroom apartment, (NOT A BASEMENT). Mostly Furnished or unfurnished. LR, EIK, bath, separate entrance, private deck, AC, ceiling fans. Off-street parking. No smoking/pets. $1425 includes heat, electric, Cable TV & WiFi. Security/references/credit check. Village amenities. Walk to Mather or St. Charles Hospitals. STONY BROOK HOSPITAL/UNIVERSITY, 10-15 minute drive. 631-655-6397
SATURDAY - 5/27 12:00-2:00PM SETAUKET 172 Thomas Ln. Unit Condo, Close to Pool and Tennis, 2 BR, 2.5 Bath. 3VSD #1. MLS# 2869305. $375,000. DANIEL GALE SOTHEBYâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S INTERNATIONAL REALTY 631.689.6980
SUNDAY 5/28 12-3PM PORT JEFFERSON 215 Grant St. 11 room Village Oldie. Half acre, walk to beach and harbor.
Rentals-Rooms
STONY BROOK Immaculate Colonial. 5 BR, 4 bath, accessory apartment, CAC, new boiler, roof, windows, siding. 3VSD. Owner. $449,000. 201-233-8144
PORT JEFFERSON Room for rent. Clean, quiet, share bath and kitchen. $550/all utilities included. 1st month plus 1 mth security deposit. References. 631-804-5834
STONY BROOK SAT 5/27, 12-3 For sale by owner. Charming village home close to RR, SBU and shops. Reasonable taxes. 5 New York Ave. $599,000.
PORT JEFFERSON STA. 1 Bedroom, LR, EIK, full bath, private entrance, A/C, offstreet parking. No pets/smoking. $1200/all. Cable ready. 1 mo security. Available 5/1. 631-473-8176, leave message. SETAUKET Lovely 3 BR, 2 bath Ranch, near West Meadow Beach. Updated kitchen w/granite, hwd. floors, good closets, large bsment, washer/dryer. 1.7 miles to Stony Brook train station. Terrific landlord. Available 7/1. $2800/mo. Please call 631-751-7744 or 631-903-5447
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PORT JEFFERSON VILLAGE... Huge 11 Room Home on Private Half Acre in Historic District. Boasts â&#x20AC;&#x153;Old World Charmâ&#x20AC;? with Modern Amenities. Wrap Around Porch, Waterview from 50â&#x20AC;&#x2122; Deck, Basement/2 Car Garage. Stroll to Harbor, Beach, Marina, Library, Shops, Restaurants and So Much More!! Offered at $950,000. By Appointment. 631-816-6401
SATURDAY/SUNDAY Open House by Appointment PORT JEFFERSON VILLAGE 415 Liberty Ave, Sales office. Call for directions. Starting at $799,000. New Village Vistas 55+ Condo Waterview VIL OF OLD FIELD 159 Old Field Rd. Waterfront, Private Dock/Slip. Contempory, chefâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s kitchen, pvt location, $1,100,000 Reduced. MT SINAI 12 Hamlet Dr, Gated Hamlet, 5 Bdrms, full unfin. bsmt w/2 walkouts. $899,990 Reduced MT SINAI 73 Hamlet Dr. Gated Hamlet, Large Lot, Main Floor Master Suite. $849,000 New Listing SETAUKET 16 Stadium Blvd. Gated. New listing. 5-6 Bdrms, sep Guest area, full finished bsmt, pool, $949,990 Dennis P. Consalvo Aliano Real Estate Licensed RE Salesperson www.longisland-realestate.net 631-724-1000 Email: info@longisland-realestate.net
Houses For Sale
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
YOUR AD COULD BE HERE!
Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
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GOWNS DESIGNED WITH YOU AND MADE FOR YOU
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dream of a dress
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PAGE A26 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MAY 25, 2017
OpiniOn
Editorial
Letters to the editor
County’s ‘Preventative Healthcare Month’
Stock photo
So you think you know your government? Last week our editorial staff thought we’d take a break and test our brains with a little quiz about our government. We wanted to challenge our readers to the same task and see how well you know the system that runs your life: 1. Name the three branches of the federal government. 2. In which branch of government are members appointed? 3. How many amendments are there to the U.S. Constitution? Name/describe three of them. 4. What year was the sitting president elected? Which party is he from? What state? What position did he last hold? Which number president is he? 5. Which political party has control of the U.S. House of Representatives? 6. Which political party has control of the U.S. Senate? 7. Name the speaker of the House. 8. Name the minority leader in the House. 9. Name the Senate majority leader. 10. Name the Senate minority leader. 11. Name the nine justices on the U.S. Supreme Court. 12. How many terms can the president of the United States serve? 13. Name the two U.S. senators from New York state. What parties are they from? 14. How long are their terms? 15. Name the congressman representing the congressional district in which you live. What party is he/she in? 16. How long is his/her term? 17. Name the two legislative bodies that govern New York state.
18. Name the state senator who represents the district in which you live. How long is his/her term? 19. Name the assemblyman who represents the district in which you live. How long is his/ her term? 20. Name the legislative body that governs Suffolk County. 21. Name the elected official from that body who represents the district in which you live. How long is his/her term? 22. Name the legislative body that governs the town in which you live. 23. What is the title of the official in charge of a town on Long Island? 24. What is the title of the official in charge of a school district? 25. Which legislative body governs a school district? How do its members attain their seats? 26. Who approves the budgets for said school district? 27. Which police precinct covers your neighborhood? 28. What is the difference between Medicaid and Medicare? 29. “Obamacare” is a nickname for what piece of legislation? 30. What does the acronym SCOTUS stand for? Were you surprised by some things you didn’t know? Were you certain of a fact that you ended up getting wrong? Let us know what you thought of this quiz! Email your reaction to news@tbrnewspapers.com.
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.
Prevention is one of the most important aspects of living a healthy and long life. However, recent studies indicate that millions of children, adolescents and adults in the United States do not receive crucial services such as routine screenings and annual checkups. Recognizing that preventive care is the key to good health and wellbeing, my colleagues and I have declared May “Preventive Healthcare Month” in Suffolk County. In passing this bill, we hope to encourage residents to prioritize themselves and resolve to make healthy choices to guard against preventable chronic diseases that account for seven out of 10 deaths among Americans each year. Small changes can make a huge difference in the long run. As Benjamin Franklin once said, “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure” — and that starts with you. Preventive care can help patients avoid serious problems and is vital in helping to detect illness or disease at an early stage when treatment is likely to work best.
The combination of an annual checkup, screenings and patient counseling allows health care providers to establish a baseline for an individual’s general health, and directs them as they work with their patients to determine personal wellness goals to manage overall health. Preventive services include immunizations, physical evaluations, lab work and other medically appropriate screenings determined by factors such age, gender, overall health status, personal and family health history, and current symptoms. Risk of chronic disease can be reduced through lifestyle choices which play a critical role. Maintaining a healthy weight, eating nutritiously, getting active, managing stress, avoiding tobacco and limiting alcohol use are some of the most simple, yet effective defense options. For example, a sustained weight loss of 10-15 pounds reduces the risk of diabetes by 58 percent; a 12-13 point reduction in systolic blood pressure can reduce cardiovascular disease deaths
by 25 percent; and a 10 percent decrease in total cholesterol levels reduces the risk for coronary heart disease by 30 percent (according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention). Suffolk County offers a variety of services and classes to help residents manage their health, including the Diabetes Prevention Program, Smoking Cessation Classes, the Immunization Action Program and the Falls Prevention Program. In addition, the Health Department through the Bureau of Public Health Nursing offers resources to help vulnerable populations with prenatal/ postpartum care, chronic disease prevention and management, wound care, and also provides child abuse and neglect referrals. Visit www.suffolkcountyny.gov/ health for more details. In the spirit of “Preventive Healthcare Month,” take the time to talk with your medical provider.
Legislator William Spencer, M.D. Centerport
A warning about a new craze among youths Our Port Jefferson school district support staff has informed me of a dangerous online “game” that has appeared on social media very recently of which all parents should be made aware. “The Blue Whale challenge” asks students to participate in a series of risky and potentially harmful behaviors leading to the ultimate challenge of taking one’s life. Although the game may start innocently (for example, the player has to wake up at 4:20 a.m.), it gradually builds to acts of selfinflicted harm, such as carving the image of a whale into their skin.
The game preys on students who may be vulnerable or unaware of its inherent danger. It has been reported that once downloaded to their phone, students may be made to feel that they have to complete the tasks assigned by their online “mentor” because of threats that their personal information will be released online or that harm would come to their family and friends. Please be advised that this game may also be known by other names such as “A Sea of Whales,” “A Silent House,” and “Wake Me Up at 4:20 a.m.” It is our understanding that
this potentially dangerous game may have already been introduced to some Port Jefferson students. Please speak with your child about the dangers of downloading any game that requires them to participate in risky or harmful behaviors. Thank you for your attention to this very important topic. If you have any further questions or concerns, or would like more information or support, please contact a member of our administrative or support team.
Paul Casciano Superintendent Port Jefferson School District
A poem from a Women’s Army Corps veteran Bravery. She stood there silently, hoping her tears wouldn’t show. Her firstborn son had been drafted And off to a new life he will go. That last hug, the kiss on the cheek. The words carefully chosen as she wished him well. Her smile to encourage almost frozen.
Shirley Leonard Port Jefferson
A 2014 Memorial Day event in Centereach.
File photo by Bob Savage
The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.
MAY 25, 2017 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A27
OpiniOn A tribute on the passing of my favorite James Bond
H
e survived all manner of close calls when he saved the world seven times but my favorite James Bond, Sir Roger Moore, succumbed to cancer earlier this week at the age of 89. Many of my friends and contemporaries thought Sean Connery’s suave and debonair flair for the super spy with all the right moves and the smooth delivery of his “vodka martini, shaken not stirred” line was hard to top. There was By Daniel Dunaief something, however, about my age when I saw the Bond films with Moore that put him at the top of my list in the 1970s and ’80s. The endless combination of gadgets and arched
D. None of the above
eyebrows made him a welcome distraction in the midst of the Cold War. I didn’t have any particular need to delve into his psychological profile or his family history, topics the more modern films have tackled. Moore’s Bond was a man of action, staving off disaster from wealthy, eccentric and egotistical villains who often had colorful, mercenary sidekicks. Watching Moore battle with Richard Kiel, who played the impossibly strong, metal-toothed Jaws in “The Spy Who Loved Me” and “Moonraker” was pure entertainment for me as an adolescent. The Bond movies, which started in 1962 with “Dr. No” and are still going strong 25 films later, have had many memorable opening scenes. Told to “pull out” of his mission in Austria, Bond skis away from Russians determined to kill him, but not before shooting several of them, including the lover of someone who would later become his partner in the movie. He escapes by skiing off a cliff, where he seems to fall for an impos-
sibly long time, kicking off his skis and flying through the air with a red backpack that seemed irrelevant until he pulls a string and a parachute with the British flag emerges, accompanied by the blaring Bond music. Moore tugs on the strings of his parachute, as he floats toward the screen. That’s when Carly Simon’s music takes over. I suspect we’ll hear “Nobody Does it Better” in the next week or so. Growing up surrounded by water on Long Island, I reveled in Moore’s journey into an undersea world in a car that turned into a submarine. Moore and Barbara Bach (who played Major Anya Amasova, aka Agent XXX) battled against Karl Stromberg (acted by Curd Jürgens), whose plan involved encouraging war between the United States and Soviet Union so life could begin again in the oceans after humans destroyed themselves. Enemies in “The Spy Who Loved Me” and for much of “Moonraker,” Moore and Kiel team up at the end of “Moonraker” after Bond convinces
Jaws that the villain Hugo Drax has no need for Jaws or his bespectacled girlfriend, Dolly, in his new colony of flawless humans. When Kiel speaks at the end of the movie, saying only, “Well, here’s to us” to Dolly (played by Blanche Ravalec), his voice is almost impossibly normal and tender, adding to the ongoing tongue-in-cheek nature of these high-action films. After Kiel died in 2014, Moore said how “totally distraught” he was at the death of “my dear friend.” While most of us never met Moore, many fans of the franchise felt a sense of loss to hear of Moore’s death. Through his seven Bond films, Moore delivered memorable lines, often with a self-confident smirk, such as when he pushed Drax out into space, encouraging him to “take a giant step for mankind.” While all of the seven films that starred Roger Moore weren’t equally good, there were times — especially in “The Spy Who Loved Me” — where nobody did it better.
A farewell letter to a beautiful Golden Retriever Dear Teddy, First I want to tell you how heartsick I am to have put you down. I know that is the final act of love for a responsible pet owner when a beloved animal is suffering and no longer functioning. Nonetheless I ask your forgiveness for this ultimate act that ended our 12-year relationship. Little consolation but just know I miss you every day. As I think back on your life with us, there are so By Leah S. Dunaief many vignettes that come to mind. We selected you from a litter of 11 fuzzy golden puppies because you suddenly stretched your neck and quickly licked the tip of my son’s chin with your tiny tongue. It was the winning gesture. You started life in our home in the kitchen, where we had a tile floor and a crate for you. In what seemed like
Between you and me
record time, you were housebroken and we decided that you were smart. On the advice of a neighboring dog owner, we hired a dog trainer for a short while, and he confirmed our judgment. “This is one of the smartest dogs I have ever trained,” he said to our delight, although it did cross my mind that he was probably telling us what we wanted to hear. As time went by, however, you showed yourself quick at understanding what was expected of you. Or was it you who trained us to do what you needed when you needed it done? Anyway, we have a lot to thank you for. Thank you for teething on the windowsills, the moldings, the bottoms of the kitchen cabinets and anything else you could fit your little mouth around. Thank you for grabbing the hem of a favorite cashmere sweater in your tiny teeth and giving it a good rip. Thank you for finding a sheepskin glove carelessly left on the chair and digesting the index finger. And throughout that first year and the years thereafter, you always delighted us with your puppylike curiosity. You were growing at a prodigious rate, and by the following year, you made clear your preference for the
TIMES BEacon rEcord nEWS MEdIa We welcome letters, photographs, comments and story ideas. Send your items to P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733 or email desiree@tbrnewspapers.com. Times Beacon Record Newspapers are published every Thursday. Subscription $49/year • 631-751-7744 www.tbrnewsmedia.com • Contents copyright 2017
beach. Because you were a retriever, we would throw a tennis ball along the sand and wait expectantly for you to fetch and bring it back. Proving that you were not simply one of the pack but to be appreciated for your individuality, you looked after the ball with a bored expression. “Give me a real challenge,” we read in your eyes. So we picked up a stone about the size of a squash ball and threw it half a block. You were after it like a shot, went directly to it among the thousands of rocks on the beach and carried it back to us. But you didn’t give it up. Instead you preferred to chew it, which eventually ground down your front teeth. That was not so smart, I will concede, but it seemed never to hamper you in any way. You also loved to chew sticks and went clamming for rocks with attached seaweed. These you pulled out and brought to the high-water line then tore off the seaweed. You had a mind of your own, we realized early on, as you ran into the water and would not come out when we wanted to return home. You would turn to face us, water up to your knees, and dare us to come in after you. That was acceptable in summer, but not so much
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel MANAGING EDITOR Desirée Keegan EDITOR Desirée Keegan
LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton SPORTS EDITOR Desirée Keegan ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathryn Mandracchia DIR. OF MEDIA PRODUCTIONS Michael Tessler
in the midst of winter. And you certainly had a mischievous streak, being selectively deaf when you disagreed with a command. So much for the trainer. You were interested in people, even more than you were in other dogs. And you were absolutely democratic, going up to each person in a room or on the road, skipping no one, and greeting him or her. Some were uncertain, since you were rather a large dog. “He just wants to say, ‘Hello!’” I would try to be reassuring, and you would wait patiently until each gave you at least a perfunctory pat. Satisfied, you would move on. You were like the neighborhood mayor. Our family members, friends and neighbors miss you. At least some of our neighbors do. The rest can probably manage just as well without your tearing across their lawns, looking for a “sweet” spot. Most especially, we miss you in the evenings, when you would wiggle and wag with pleasure at our homecoming. And you would flatten yourself across our knees seeking and giving affection, as we relaxed in the living room after dinner. Goodbye, my sweet dog. Thank you for filling our home and our lives with your love. The memory will not die.
ART AND PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Beth Heller Mason INTERNET STRATEGY DIRECTOR Rob Alfano CLASSIFIEDS DIRECTOR Ellen Segal
BUSINESS MANAGER Sandi Gross CREDIT MANAGER Diane Wattecamps CIRCULATION MANAGER Courtney Biondo
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PAGE A28 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • MAY 25, 2017