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The VILLAGE BEACON RECORD M O U N T S I N A I • M I L L E R P L AC E • S O U N D B E AC H • R O C K Y P O I N T • WA D I N G R I V E R • S H O R E H A M
Vol. 34, No. 52
July 18, 2019
Man walked on the moon 50 years ago July 20; a few locals helped make it happen
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‘One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind’
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PAGE A2 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 18, 2019
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JULY 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A3
Miller Place
Miller Place pond to get drainage and surrounding road repairs
Miller Place Duck Pond may soon see drainage improvements Brookhaven town hopes will reduce sediment flow into the small, water lily-filled pond right outside North Country Road Middle School. The town board unanimously agreed to shift money around in the capital budget to make room for the pond drainage improvements, allocating $135,285 for the project. At the same time, the highway department is planning to use $2.6 million in total from grants and town funds to complete road and sidewalk repair in tandem with the drainage renovations. “The new improvements should reduce the amount of sediment from the road, sanding and salting that washes into the pond,” said town Councilwoman Jane Bonner (R-Rocky Point). “It should reduce pollutants associated with road runoff.” Last year, TBR News Media reported both local environmental activists and town waterways management said there were problems with invasive and destructive plant species in the pond. The town applied for a grant from the Suffolk County Water Quality Protection and Restoration Program as well as the Stew-
ardship Initiative. The grant would have had a projected cost of $240,000 with a $120,000 town match; however, Bonner said the town failed to get the grant. Anthony Graves, Brookhaven’s chief environmental analyst, said they have not witnessed, just from viewing the water’s surface, that the pond is as dense with destructive plants as the previous year. Though he added the problem could be because of high rainfall this year compared to previous years, meaning it’s hard to gauge the plant density on the bottom of the pond. A big part of the reason for those invasive plants was the wash of sediment into the pond’s bottom from the road. Involved in this new drainage includes a “stormceptor unit,” a device placed in the ground used to intercept pollutants and sediments before they enter the pond. Such pollutants include oil and grease from passing cars. Graves added the town is trying to reduce nitrogen buildup in the roadside pond. In addition to renovating drainage of the pond, the town is expecting to go in and dredge the bottom of the pond. “The drainage improvements collect the sediment before it enters the pond,” Graves said. Meanwhile, the town’s highway department has set up to work in tandem and with those
Miller Place Duck Pond at the corner of North Country Road and Lower Rocky Point Road. Photo by Kyle Barr
drainage improvements, both in renovating the sidewalks around the pond and completing road resurfacing. North Country Road is a Suffolk County-owned road that is managed by the town. Superintendent of Highways Dan Losquadro (R) said his department received close to $1.25 million from grants, though the town is supplying the rest of its total $2.6 million cost. The project will include resurfacing and restriping of the road in addition to renovated sidewalks. Losquadro said the town has had to deal with other problems in and around the pond, such that a blocked pipe was restricting enough water from
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entering the pond toward the southern end. One of the biggest components of road resurfacing is drainage — getting that water off of the roadway,” he said. “So, as we’re doing this project, we want it to last as long as possible.” Renovations to the drainage should begin sometime in August, Bonner said, while the highway superintendent said they plan to do some sidewalk work in tandem. The rest of the roadwork will start after the new drainage is installed. While they intend to finish before classes start, he added they would have to finish that work during one of the early school recesses if they can’t finish before.
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PAGE A4 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 18, 2019
Mount Sinai
Milestones made at the fifth annual Hoops for Hope fundraiser The four-and-a-half hour event consisted of 28 teams of three to four players. Over a dozen volunteers helped with selling T-shirts, food and refreshments, along with a large raffle of donated items. Friday’s event raised roughly $12,000 and was the first year of the organization as a nonprofit. “This year’s tournament was really successful,” Geoff Engel, Jake’s brother, said. Four months ago, the family officially established the Jake Engel Hoops for Hope Foundation that looks to bring awareness, community and change to all people negatively affected by substance abuse in Suffolk County. “I want to thank the Engel family for taking such a horrible tragedy and turning it into something special,” Bonner said, “It takes a special person to do that.”
BY JULIANNE MOSHER DESK@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM For five years, the Engel family of Miller Place has been putting together a basketball tournament and barbecue in memory of their late son, Jake, who tragically lost his life in 2015 to a heroin overdose. But this year was special for the Jake Engel Hoops for Hope Barbecue – which sold out in just three days. On Friday, July 12, Brookhaven town Councilwoman Jane Bonner (R-Rocky Point) stood with Jake’s family at Cedar Beach in Mount Sinai to reveal the new name of the court that overlooks the harbor: The Jake Engel Memorial Basketball Court. Inscribed with the words “Shine On” and an image of a man fishing, the notion for the memorial was decided last year. “Basketball and fishing are what Jake loved to do,” Bonner said. “This sign is a reminder of why we are here today and why we play this game every year.” Shortly after Jake’s death, his brother and friends spontaneously organized a community basketball tournament in his name. Over the course of four years, the organization has
Above, Councilwoman Jane Bonner and Engel family unveil new sign for basketball court at Cedar Beach; right, participants play in annual tournament. Photos by Julianne Mosher
raised over $40,000 that has been donated to Hope House Ministries, a Port Jeffersonbased nonprofit organization that provides care and hope to individuals suffering from addiction. “Our main goal is to bring awareness of the
opioid crisis we have here on Long Island and to bring the community together,” Jake’s mother, Karen Engel, said.
Border detention facility conditions spark humanitarian concerns BY DONNA DEEDY DONNA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Local U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi (D–Glen Cove), after visiting detention centers along the southern United States border July 13 with 15 other House Democrats, has returned to his Huntington office alarmed. The situation, he said, is awful. “We need to make the humanitarian crisis at the border priority number one,” Suozzi said. “The system is broken.” The group toured and inspected facilities that are currently holding Central American migrants seeking asylum and met with several migrant families to hear, first-hand, their experiences and what can be done to help. “America is better than this,” he said. “I have worked on this issue since before I was elected mayor of Glen Cove in 1993 and I will continue to fight for solutions consistent with our American values.” During the visit, Suozzi learned that only 20 to 30 migrants seeking asylum are processed each day. This provides an incentive for people to cross in between ports of entry, he said, and once apprehended, they then turn themselves in to seek asylum. In turn, this leads to their detention. “My recent trip to the border makes it clear that this issue is incredibly complicated and has been for decades. The policies and rhetoric from this administration have exacerbated the problem, permeating a culture of fear that forces
The United States cages immigrants seeking asylum at the U.S./Mexico border. Children, sleeping on concrete floors, peer through chain link fence at personnel at a border detention site. Photo from Rep. Suozzi’s office
many immigrants further into the shadows.” The congressman is calling for action, insisting that all delegates work together to:
•Address the current humanitarian crisis at the border. •Secure borders in a smart and effective way.
•Create stability in the Northern Triangle countries of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras that account for almost 90 percent of current immigrants. •Protect the legal status of Dreamers and people with temporary protective status and their families with renewable temporary protection and a path to citizenship. The tour coincided with rallies held in Huntington village and across the country and the world in protest of the policies and inhumane practices at U.S. border with Mexico. Suozzi was a guest on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” on July 16, where he said that “the president has, once again, shifted the conversation away from important policy issues toward a racial divide in our country.” The Rev. Duncan Burns, of St. John’s Episcopal Church in Huntington, attended the Huntington rally “Lights for Liberty” and spoke to the crowd that gathered July 12. Suozzi’s trip to the border, the reverend said, has sparked greater concern. “We encourage people to raise their voices and to call their members of Congress to urge them to work together to find solutions,” he said. “The Episcopal Church is completely backing both parties to find a solution to this humanitarian crisis.” U.S. Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-Shirley) did not respond to phone and email requests for comment on his position on the issue.
JULY 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A5
Mount Sinai
MS residents ‘fed up’ with conditions of their streets BY DAVID LUCES DLUCES@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM “We just want our streets paved. We are not asking for much,” said Richard Colacino, who lives on Westcliff Drive in Mount Sinai. This past week, Colacino, along with several other Mount Sinai residents, sent a letter and petition signed by more than 160 other residents to Dan Losquadro, the Town of Brookhaven Highway Superintendent, stating that their streets are in dire need of repair and repaving and resurfacing. “It’s been 25+ years since our neighborhood streets have been repaved,” the letter reads. “In addition to being an embarrassing neighborhood eyesore, our streets have now deteriorated to the point of being a safety issue.” Two of those streets are Westcliff and Marcy Drive. Residents say many children in the neighborhood have gotten injured playing in the streets and riding down the slight hills due to uneven pothole repairs, loose asphalt pebbles, rough patch fixes and crumbling curbs. Residents also pointed out six other streets that have similar problems including Helen Street, Hartwell Drive, Rita Drive, Whitcomb Avenue, Walcott Court and Chestnut Street. Colacino said the conditions of their roads are laughable at this point. “The streets and the curbs are so bad,” he said. “It has gotten so bad that when it rains it just floods people’s driveways.” Violet Baker, a fellow resident on Westcliff Drive, said within the past couple of years there have been some minor patch work and repairs down on some streets but argues the need for full resurfacing and repaving. “They have patched some of the potholes but that only works for a little bit,” she said. “It doesn’t last long, and it is only putting a Bandaid on this thing.” In addition, Baker said residents have been waiting two years for the town to get rid of trees that have been troublesome and been breaking
Sections of roadway in Mount Sinai show heavy wear. Photos from Repave Mount Sinai Neighborhood Streets petition
done arbitrarily, and some roads are worse than others. “I can say this [neighborhood] will be part of our scope of work for next year,” he said. “Those streets have already been engineered and measured out.” Besides the letter and petition sent to Losquadro’s office, residents sent packets to other local officials including Supervisor Ed Romaine (R), County Executive Steve Bellone (D) and Councilwoman Jane Bonner (R-Rocky Point). Baker said it has been so long and all they want is a definite time frame of when the work on the streets will be done. The highway superintendent said with the town supervisor already promising to increase
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up curbs alongside their roads. During the winter months the roads have been prone to collapse and break up quicker from the adverse weather. “There are no sidewalks, so a lot of people use the streets to walk. Kids play here with their bikes and skateboards,” she said. “The [condition of] streets is devaluing the neighborhood.” Colacino and others said they have been trying to get their streets repaved and repaired for the past four years, adding that in 2015 the highway department had sent an inspector to the neighborhood to survey the condition of the streets. After the inspection, their streets were put on Brookhaven’s 100 worst streets list. Colacino was hopeful at the time that the streets would get fixed quickly, but a year went by without any significant repairs done. The Mount Sinai resident then sent a letter to Losquadro’s office the following year and again in 2018. On those two occasions, he was told that they weren’t on the department’s schedule for that year and that there was no need to continue to contact the office as they were already in the system. “They keep saying ‘next year, next year,’” the Mount Sinai resident said. “[It’s been] four years of not knowing when they are coming.” In response, Losquadro said he appreciates the residents for the petition and it is a neighborhood they know needs to get work done. “We are not ignoring the community of Mount Sinai,” the highway superintendent said. Losquadro mentioned that they had done work this year nearby on Mount Sinai Avenue. Asked about the reason for the delay in long-awaited repairs in the neighborhood, the highway superintendent said he works with a finite budget each year and they do work based on the condition of the streets, not age. Losquadro said the work is not
this budget for next year, he hopes he can get more work done. The department’s last year’s budget was $10 million, but in the previous State of the Town address by Romaine, Losquadro was told he will receive $12 million. “It is getting through that backlog of streets, there is far more work that needs to be done,” he said. “We ask people to continue to be patient as we continue to work on that backlog.” Baker was disappointed with the highway superintendent’s response. “I wish we had a more definitive answer. We have been waiting,” she said. “It’s not the best answer but not the worst [either]. I hope it is true this time and we’ll have to wait and hope for the best.” Colacino wasn’t surprised with what Losquadro had to say. “I think it’s more of the same. It’s always next year,” he said. “At least we got an answer and people are going to hold him to it. We are not giving up on this fight. This is something we believe in.”
PAGE A6 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 18, 2019
Obituary Donald Kane
Donald John Kane, of Wilmington NC, formerly of Mount Sinai passed away July 8 at the New Hanover Regional Medical Center in North Carolina. He was 87. The youngest of eight sons, Donald was born in Brooklyn Jan. 27, 1932, to Henry Vincent Kane and Anna Donahue Kane. Don was a career Marine serving his country all over the world as a Comms Chief. He was a veteran of both the Korean War and the Vietnam War and was a Purple Heart recipient. He retired from the Marine Corps after 22 and a half years of faithful service in 1971. He held true to the Marine Corps motto Semper Fidelis (Always Faithful), attending the Drill Instructor reunion and Marine Corps Ball every year with his wife Robin. Upon retirement from the U.S. Marine Corps, Don pursued a career with the U.S. Post Office in Mount Sinai York, where he retired after a 20-year commitment in 1994. Don’s zest for life was contagious, and he was always the life of the party. He was known as “Uncle Don” in Mount Sinai, and as “The Godfather” of his neighborhood. Don was happiest tending his garden and spending time with his family and friends. Don was renowned
LEGALS Supplemental Summons and Notice of Object of Action Supreme Court Of The State Of New York County Of Suffolk -----------------------------------------X Reverse Mortgage Solutions, INC. Plaintiff, vs Silvia Cellucci As Heir To The Estate Of Adelina Cellucci, Who Was The Surviving Joint Tenant Of Beatriz Otero, Unknown Heirs To The Estate Of Adelina Cellucci, Who Was The Surviving Joint Tenant Of Beatriz Otero If Living, And If He/She Be Dead, Any And All Persons Unknown To Plaintiff, Claiming, Or Who May Claim To Have An Interest In, Or General Or Specific Lien Upon The Real Property Described In This Action; Such Unknown Persons Being Herein Generally Described And Intended To Be Included In Wife, Widow, Husband, Widower, Heirs At Law, Next Of Kin, Descendants, Executors, Administrators, Devisees, Legatees, Creditors, Trustees, Committees, Lienors, And Assignees
Police
for his storytelling. Family said his big heart encompassed everyone he met, and he always made you feel loved, no matter what. In addition to his wife Robin, he is survived by his four daughters, Donna (Jonathan) Seely of Murfreesboro, TN, Dorine (Joe) Gallo of Wildwood, MO, Gloria (Jonathan) Deitsch of Marysville, MI, and Kasey (Bryan) Scanlon of Hubert, NC; daughter in law Nina Kane of San Antonio, TX; twelve grandchildren, Aimee Seely Hull, Christopher Sauer Seely, Stephanie Kane, Joseph Gallo, Elisa Gallo, Jordyn Deitsch, Taylor Deitsch, Jack Donald Deitsch, Bradyn Deitsch, Kaydince Scanlon, Brody Scanlon, Karter Scanlon; and his great grandchild, Kate Hull. Don was preceded in death by his son, Timothy J. Kane of San Antonio, TX. Family and friends are invited to a viewing on July 28 from 2 to 4 p.m. and from 7 to 9 p.m. at the O.B. Davis Funeral Home in Port Jefferson Station. A Celebration of Life and funeral service will be held July 29 at 10 a.m. at the same funeral home. Don will be laid to rest at Cedar Hill Cemetery in Port Jefferson. In lieu of flowers, the family asks people to support his fellow Marines with contributions to the Semper Fi Fund.
To Place A Legal Notice
Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com Of Such Deceased, Any And All Persons Deriving Interest In Or Lien Upon, Or Title To Said Real Property By, Through Or Under Them, Or Either Of Them, And Their Respective Wives, Widows, Husbands, Widowers, Heirs At Law, Next Of Kin, Descendants, Executors, Administrators, Devisees, Legatees, Creditors, Trustees, Committees, Lienors, And Assigns, All Of Whom And Whose Names, Except As Stated, Are Unknown To Plaintiff, People Of The State Of New York, United States Of America Acting Through The IRS, AMC Financial Holdings, Inc. Successor By Merger To Cityscape Corp. Successor By Merger To Astrum Funding Corp., Alliance Funding Company Of Nevada, Inc., Sterling National Bank Successor By Merger To Astoria Bank FKA Astoria Federal Savings And Loan Association Successor By Merger To The Long Island Savings Bank, FSB FKA Long Island Savings Bank, United States Of America Acting Through The Secretary Of Housing And Urban Development, Clerk Of
The Suffolk County Traffic & Parking Violations Agency John Doe (Those unknown tenants, occupants, persons or corporations or their heirs, distributees, executors, administrators, trustees, guardians, assignees, creditors or successors claiming an interest in the mortgaged premises.) Defendant(s). -----------------------------------------X Action to Foreclose a Mortgage INDEX #: 621281/2018
Security footage of man and woman police said robbed the South Setauket Target. Photo from SCPD
A petit larceny in South Setauket Target steals LEGOs Suffolk County police are seeking the public’s help to identify and locate the people who stole merchandise from a South Setauket store in July. A man and woman entered Target, located
Police arrested a man and a woman in Rocky Point July 12 after they allegedly fled police with a stolen car and crashed into another vehicle. 7th Precinct officers responded to Estate Court in Sound Beach after a 911 caller reported a suspicious vehicle parked in the street at around 5:11 p.m. When officers arrived, the vehicle, a 2006 Hyundai Elantra driven by Adam Berry, 22, fled the scene. The Hyundai, which had been reported stolen June 28, drove south on Westchester Drive, then east on Route 25A before crashing into a 2015 Honda sedan at Fairway Drive in Rocky Point at around 5:40 p.m. Berry was transported to John T. Mather Memorial Hospital in Port Jefferson with minor
injuries. The driver of the Honda, a 29-yearold female, was transported to Stony Brook University Hospital with minor injuries. A passenger in the Hyundai, Veronica Johnson, 28, of Ronkonkoma, was not injured. Berry, who is undomiciled, was charged with criminal possession of stolen property fourth degree, reckless endangerment second degree and fleeing an officer in a motor vehicle third degree. He was arraigned at 1st District Court in Central Islip July 13. Johnson was charged with loitering and unlawful use of a controlled substance. She is scheduled to be arraigned at a later date.
— compiled by Kyle Barr
Missing Setauket woman found unharmed A Setauket woman who was reported missing in May has been found unharmed, police said. May Garwin was reported missing May 26; the 36-year-old had last been seen at her home in Setauket. Her car was previously impounded by the New York City Police Department May 6 after it was illegally parked on Schermerhorn Street in Brooklyn.
DSBL #: 0200 - 333.00 06.00 - 008.000
LEGALS con’t on pg. 8
— compiled by Kyle Barr
Police: Man and woman crash stolen vehicle in Rocky Point
Mortgaged Premises: 16 Lynhaven Place South Setauket, NY 11720
To the Above named Defendant: You are hereby summoned to answer the Complaint in this action, and to serve a copy of your answer, or, if the Complaint is not served with this Supplemental Summons, to
at 255 Pond Path, at around 8:20 p.m. on July 7 and stole several packs of LEGO toys. The merchandise was valued at approximately $550.
May Garwin of Setauket Photo from SCPD
— compiled by Kyle Barr
Suffolk County Crime Stoppers offers a cash reward of up to $5,000 for information that leads to an arrest. Anyone with information about these incidents can contact Suffolk County Crime Stoppers to submit an anonymous tip by calling 800-220-TIPS (8477) or texting “SCPD” and your message to “CRIMES” (274637). All calls and text messages will be kept confidential.
50th anniversary of Apollo 11
Memories of Apollo
Mankind walked on the moon, a few locals helped us get there Above, the Earth as seen by Apollo astronauts over the horizon of the moon; bottom, Pat Solan holds a photo of her with husband Mike; right, a model of the lunar module; Above photo from NASA; bottom photo by Kyle Barr; right photo by Rolin Tucker
Pat Solan — Port Jefferson Station BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Pat Solan of Port Jefferson Station can still remember her late husband, Mike, back when the U.S. wanted nothing more than to put boots far in the sky, on the rotating disk of the moon. Mike worked on the Apollo Lunar Module at Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation in Bethpage, where he was at the head of several projects including mock-ups of the pod and working on its landing gear. He can be seen in a movie presented by NASA as workers create a scale diorama of the surface of the moon, craters and all. “The space program was important — people don’t realize it was a huge endeavor,” she said. Pat met her husband in Maryland when she was only 21. Mike had worked with military aviation projects all over the country, but the couple originally thought they would end up moving to California. Instead, one of Mike’s friends invited him to come to Long Island to try an interview with Grumman. Needless to say, he got the job. The couple would live in Port Jefferson for two years before moving
to Setauket. Pat said her husband always had his eye on the sky. Aviation was his dream job, and she remembered how he was “thrilled to pieces” to step into the cockpit of a Grumman F-14
JULY 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A7
T
hey named it Apollo. Though the moniker has become synonymous with human achievement, a scientific milestone, the merging of a collective national conscience, the Greek god Apollo was known for many things, but the moon was not one of them. If scientists had to choose, there was the Titan Selene, or perhaps Artemis or Hecate, all Greek gods with connection to the great, gray orb in the night’s sky. Abe Silverstein, NASA’s director of Space Flight Programs, proposed the name, and he did so beyond the surface of using a well-known god of the pantheon. In myth, Apollo was the sky charioteer, dragging Helios, the Titan god of the sun, in an elliptical high over humanity’s head. If anything was going to bring humanity Tomcat. Mike would be constantly working, so much that during those years of development on the module she would hardly see him at home. “He was working double shifts and he was going in between Calverton and Bethpage,” she said. “I hardly saw him at all.” But there were a few perks. Solan and her husband would see many astronauts as Grumman brought them in to test on the simulators. She met several of the early astronauts, but perhaps the most memorable of them was Russell “Rusty” Schweickart, all due to his quick wit and his outgoing personality compared to the stauncher, military-minded fellow astronauts. Schweickart would be pilot on the Apollo 9 mission, the third crewed space mission that would showcase the effectiveness of the lunar module, testing systems that would be critical toward the future moon landing. She, along with Mike, would also go down to Cape Canaveral, Florida, and there she was allowed to walk in the silo. Standing underneath the massive girders, it was perhaps the most impressive thing she has ever seen in her life. “It was absolutely mind-boggling — it was very impressive,” she said. “I can still remember that. I was stricken.” On the day of the landing, July 20, 1969, Pat was hosting a party to watch the dramatic occasion at her home, then in Setauket. It could have barely been a more auspicious day, as she had just given birth to her daughter Rolin July 8. Eventually, Mike would have multiple strokes through the late 1970s and ’80s, and the
to the moon, it would be Apollo. Despite this, it wasn’t a myth that allowed man to take his first steps on the moon, it was humankind. Billions of dollars were spent by companies across the nation, working hand in hand with NASA to find a way to make it into space. Here on Long Island, the Bethpage-based Grumman Corporation worked to create the lunar module, the insect-looking pod that would be the first legs to test its footing on the moon’s surface. Thousands worked on the lunar module, from engineers to scientists to accountants to everyone in between. Half a century later some of these heroes of science, engineers and other staff, though some may have passed, are still around on the North Shore to continue their memories.
stress of it would cause him to retire in 1994. He died a few years later. “He really felt he was not capable of doing presentations to the government anymore,” she said. But being so close to the work tied to gettingAbove, Jose man into space has left an impression on her.test the LM. Herself being an artist, having sold paintings, both landscapes and impressionistic, along with photography and felt sculptures, the effort of the people who put a human on the moon showed her the extent of human and American achievement. “It was a time of such cooperation — I think it’s sad we don’t see that now,” she said. Despite current events, she said she still believes the U.S. can achieve great things, though it will take a concerted effort. “People have to move outside their own persona,” she added. “People are too wrapped up, everything is centered on oneself instead of a bigger picture, the whole.”
Joseph Marino — Northport BY DONNA DEEDY DONNA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM Fifty years ago, on July 20, 1969, man walked on the surface of the moon. Northport resident Joseph Marino spent 10 years on the Apollo mission as a Grumman systems engineer, involved from the very beginning
of the project in 1962 to the last landing on the moon. He still finds the achievement remarkable. “It was the most exciting program — the peak of my career — no question,” he said. “I couldn’t have been more pleased with the results of such a successful project.” APOLLO CONTINUED ON A11
PAGE A8 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 18, 2019
LEGALS LEGALS con’t from pg. 6 serve a notice of appearance, on the Plaintiff(s) attorney(s) within twenty days after the service of this Supplemental Summons, exclusive of the day of service (or within 30 days after the service is complete if this Supplemental Summons is not personally delivered to you within the State of New York). In case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the Complaint. The Attorney for Plaintiff has an office for business in the County of Erie. Trial to be held in the County of Suffolk. The basis of the venue designated above is the location of the Mortgaged Premises. TO Defendant In this Action. The foregoing Supplemental Summons is served upon you by publication, pursuant to an order of HON. James C. Hudson of the Supreme Court Of The State Of New York, dated the Twenty-Sixth day of June, 2019 and filed with the Complaint in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Suffolk, in the City of Riverhead. The object of this action is to foreclose a mortgage upon the premises described below, dated October 4, 2012, executed by Beatriz Otero (who died on September 19, 2015, a resident of the county of Suffolk, State of New York) and Adelina Cellucci (who died on August 5, 2017, a resident of the county of Suffolk, State of New York) to secure the sum of $622,500.00. The Mortgage was recorded at Book 22289, Page 674 in the Office of the Suffolk County Clerk on January 7, 2013. The mortgage was subsequently assigned by an assignment executed October 12, 2017 and recorded on November 6, 2017, in the Office of the Suffolk County Clerk at Book 22871, Page 451.The property in question is described as follows: 16 LYNHAVEN PLACE, SOUTH SETAUKET, NY 11720 NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the an-
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Email: legals@tbrnewsmedia.com swer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to your mortgage company will not stop this foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. DATED: June 27, 2019 Gross Polowy, LLC Attorney(s) For Plaintiff(s) 1775 Wehrle Drive, Suite 100 Williamsville, NY 14221 The law firm of Gross Polowy, LLC and the attorneys whom it employs are debt collectors who are attempting to collect a debt. Any information obtained by them will be used for that purpose. 753 7/4 4x vbr NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON, F/K/A, THE BANK OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE FOR BEAR STEARNS ASSET BACKED SECURITIES 2006-4, ASSET-BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-4, Plaintiff AGAINST Donna Caston and Robert J. Caston AKA Robert Caston, et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated March 14, 2018 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738, on August 07, 2019 at 9:30AM, premises known as 8 LAUREL STREET, CENTERREACH, NY 11720. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York, DISTRICT 0200, SECTION 485.00, BLOCK 03.00, LOT 017.000. Approxi-
mate amount of judgment $447,605.36 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment for Index# 14034/13. Elsie Acevedo, Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC Attorney for Plaintiff 1775 Wehrle Drive, Suite 100 Williamsville, NY 14221 754 7/4 4x vbr PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the fiscal affairs of the Rocky Point Fire district for the period beginning on January 1, 2018 and ending on December 31, 2018, have been examined by an independent public accountant, and that the report of the external audit by the independent public accountant and the management letter prepared in conjunction therewith has been filed in my office where it is available as a public record for inspection by all interested persons. Dated: JuLY 3, 2019 BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF THE ROCKY POINT FIRE DISTRICT, Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, State of New York By: Edwin S. Brooks Fire District Secretary 766 7/18 1x vbr Invitation to Bidders BOARD OF EDUCATION Shoreham-Wading River Central School District PUBLIC NOTICE: is hereby given for separate and single prime contract sealed bids for: New Greenhouse at Albert G. Prodell Middle School. Bids will be received by the School District Purchasing Agent, by July 31, 2019, at 11:30 A.M. prevailing time at the District Office, 250B RT. 25A Shoreham, NY 11786. The District Office hours are 8AM to 4PM, Monday thru Friday. All bids will be publicly opened and read aloud in the standard fashion at said time and place pub-
licly opened and read aloud. The Contract Documents may be examined at the Office of the Architect, BBS Architects, Landscape Architects and Engineers, P.C., 244 East Main Street, Patchogue New York, (631-475-0349); however the Contract Documents may only be obtained thru the Office of REV, 330 Route 17A Suite #2, Goshen New York 10924 (877-2720216) beginning on July 12, 2019. Complete digital sets of Contract Documents shall be obtained online (with a free user account) as a download for a non-refundable fee of Forty-Nine ($49.00) Dollars at the following websites: www.bbsprojects. com or www.usinglesspaper. com under ‘public projects’. Optionally, in lieu of digital copies, hard copies may be obtained directly from REV upon a deposit of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars for each complete set. Checks for deposits shall be made payable to the DISTRICT, SHOREHAM-WADING RIVER CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT and may be uncertified. All bid addenda will be transmitted to registered plan holders via email and will be available at the above referenced websites. Any bidder requiring documents to be shipped shall make arrangements with the printer and pay for all packaging and shipping costs. Plan holders who have obtained hard copies of the bid documents will need to make the determination if hard copies of the addenda are required for their use, and coordinate directly with the printer for hard copies of addenda to be issued. There will be no charge for registered plan holders to obtain hard copies of the bid addenda. The bid deposit for hard copies will be returned upon receipt of plans and specifications, in good condition, within thirty days after bid date, except for the lowest responsible bidder, whose check will be forfeited upon the award of the contract. The Contract will be awarded to the lowest responsible bidder or the proposals will be rejected within 45 days of the date of opening proposals. Bids shall be subject, however, to the discretionary right reserved by the School District to waive any infor-
malities, accept or reject any alternatives, reject any proposals and to advertise for new proposals, if in its opinion the best interest of the School District will thereby be promoted. Each bidder may not withdraw his bid within 45 days after the formal opening thereof. A bidder may withdraw his bid only in writing and prior to the bid opening date. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION Shoreham-Wading River C.S.D. Janice M. Seus, District Clerk Dated: July 5, 2019 770 7/18 1x vbr Invitation to Bidders BOARD OF EDUCATION Shoreham-Wading River Central School District PUBLIC NOTICE: is hereby given for separate sealed bids for: Softball Field Renovations at Shoreham WadingRiver High School. Bids will be received by the School District Purchasing Agent, by July 31, 2019, at 11:00 A.M. prevailing time at the District Office, 250B RT. 25A Shoreham, NY 11786. The District Office hours are 8AM to 4PM, Monday thru Friday. All bids will be publicly opened and read aloud in the standard fashion at said time and place publicly opened and read aloud. The Contract Documents may be examined at the Office of the Architect, BBS Architects, Landscape Architects and Engineers, P.C., 244 East Main Street, Patchogue New York, (631-475-0349); however the Contract Documents may only be obtained thru the Office of REV, 330 Route 17A Suite #2, Goshen New York 10924 (877-2720216) beginning on July 12, 2019. Complete digital sets of Contract Documents shall be obtained online (with a free user account) as a download for a non-refundable fee of Forty-Nine ($49.00) Dollars at the following websites: www.bbsprojects. com or www.usinglesspaper. com under ‘public projects’. Optionally, in lieu of digital
copies, hard copies may be obtained directly from REV upon a deposit of One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars for each complete set. Checks for deposits shall be made payable to the DISTRICT, SHOREHAM-WADING RIVER CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT and may be uncertified. All bid addenda will be transmitted to registered plan holders via email and will be available at the above referenced websites. Any bidder requiring documents to be shipped shall make arrangements with the printer and pay for all packaging and shipping costs. Plan holders who have obtained hard copies of the bid documents will need to make the determination if hard copies of the addenda are required for their use, and coordinate directly with the printer for hard copies of addenda to be issued. There will be no charge for registered plan holders to obtain hard copies of the bid addenda. The bid deposit for hard copies will be returned upon receipt of plans and specifications, in good condition, within thirty days after bid date, except for the lowest responsible bidder, whose check will be forfeited upon the award of the contract. The Contract will be awarded to the lowest responsible bidder or the proposals will be rejected within 45 days of the date of opening proposals. Bids shall be subject, however, to the discretionary right reserved by the School District to waive any informalities, accept or reject any alternatives, reject any proposals and to advertise for new proposals, if in its opinion the best interest of the School District will thereby be promoted. Each bidder may not withdraw his bid within 45 days after the formal opening thereof. A bidder may withdraw his bid only in writing and prior to the bid opening date. BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION Shoreham-Wading River C.S.D. Janice M. Seus, District Clerk Dated: July 5, 2019 771 7/18 1x vbr
JULY 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A9
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PAGE A10 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 18, 2019
Shoreham
Tesla center birthday bash displays power in its many forms BY KYLE BARR KYLE@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM The Shoreham Tesla Science Center’s celebration of famed scientist Nikola Tesla’s 163rd birthday was an indicator of how much perspective matters. While participants watched demonstrations Saturday afternoon and evening of a number of Tesla-built devices from Tesla coils to the induction motor, behind them the world’s largest Tesla coil, a 40-foot monster of a device, loomed. The coil, designed by electrical engineer Greg Leyh, made its grand debut on Long Island, brought all the way from California by road. “It’s basically a hobby that’s gotten away from me,” Leyh said. The design is actually a one-third scale model of the electrical engineer’s intent to build a 120foot Tesla coil — two actually. And if set up side by side he said it can test to see how lightning is created in the atmosphere. “Being an empiricist, I thought the best way to get to the heart of the problem is to recreate the point inside the lightning storm where the lightning starts,” Leyh said. As large as the coil was, Leyh admitted it was only a fraction of the size of Tesla’s
The Tesla Science Center now enters its seventh year since originally purchasing the property, with plans continuing to turn the site into a museum about Tesla and science, as well as a science-based business incubator. Marc Alessi, the center’s executive director, said they are still looking to raise many millions of dollars more for the project. Current renovations to the main laboratory, used by Tesla back in the early 1900s, include the rooftop chimney and cupola surrounding it. Clockwise from above: a demonstrator shows the power of electric fields; Greg Leyh in front of his 40-foot Tesla coil; a demonstrator showcases a Tesla coil. The next stage for the Photos by Kyle Barr location is finalizing site plans, which could take original tower, which once sat in the middle of several months, on the visthe center’s property, behind the current statue itors center, to be located in the white house in of Nikola Tesla. That tower rose 187 feet in the the front of the property, and demolition of other air and was part of the famed inventor’s idea of nonhistorical buildings at the location. wireless transmission of power across a wide “I’m really excited things are starting to pick expanse. up pace,” Alessi said.
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JULY 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A11 Continued from A7 Marino oversaw the design of the systems for the Lunar Excursion Module (LEM), as it was originally known, and managed 300 engineers and also psychologists who were needed to work out the man/machine interface that dictated equipment design, such as visual display systems the crew relied upon during precarious moments of landing and docking. An error in timing, particularly during landing, he said, could be disastrous. “Astronauts are the coolest characters capable of handling any situation imaginable,” Marino said. “It’s crucial for the crew to know when you make contact with the surface, so they know when to shut off the engine.” The team ultimately created an alert system with red flashing lights wired to 3- to 4-foot-long probes positioned on the module’s landing gear. The most dramatic, awe-inspiring moment of all during the Apollo missions, Marino said, was when the astronauts witnessed the Earth rising above the horizon of the moon’s cratered landscape. The event was memorialized in what has
become an iconic photo that most people today have seen. Marino cherishes that shot. NASA’s moon mission has been an endless source of inspiration for mankind. In fact, people can thank the space program for popularizing inventions big and little. Computers, very primitive versions of what are popular today, were first used by NASA. Velcro, Marino said, was also invented during the Apollo program and later became broadly popular. Looking back, now that 50 years have passed, Marino said it’s disturbing to him that there’s been such a wide gap in time since the last moon landing and today. He recently spoke to his granddaughter’s high school class and told them, “Not only did man walk on the surface of the moon before you were born, likely it occurred before your parents were born.” The bond Marino has developed with his aerospace colleagues has lasted a lifetime. Each month, he still meets with a dozen co-workers for lunch at the Old Dock Inn in Kings Park. For the 50th anniversary, Marino says that he’s been enjoying the special programming on PBS. He recommends its three-part series called “Chasing the Moon.”
n 1994. He
e of doing e,” she said. to gettingAbove, Joseph Marino in front of the LM replica at the Cradle of Aviation Museum, Garden City; right, Grumman workers on on her.test the LM. Above photo from Marino; right photo from Cradle of Aviation Museum paintings, ic, along the effort the moon American
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D ON A11
Frank Rizzo — Melville BY RITA J. EGAN RITA@TBRNEWSMEDIA.COM
For Frank Rizzo, his experience of working on the Apollo program while a Grumman employee was more about dollars and cents. Rizzo, 85, was with the aerospace engineering company for 33 years. While he retired as a vice president, in the years leading up to the moon landing, he was an accounting manager with the Grumman lunar module program. The Melville resident said it was an exciting time at Grumman. Work, he said, began on the project a few years before Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin took the first steps on the moon. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration established a work package budgeting system with Grumman, and Rizzo, who lived in Dix Hills at the time, said he was responsible for giving the team in the Houston space center the monthly estimate to complete the actual expenditures from an external point of view and also determine profit and loss from an internal point of view. Rizzo and his co-workers traveled to Houston frequently to review the program with NASA to give the current status from the financial, engineering and manufacturing viewpoints, though sometimes the meetings took place on Long Island. The former accounting manager said many times stand-up meetings were held due to the theory that people become too comfortable when they sit, and stand-up meetings enable for more to get done in less time. Rizzo said he remembers the original contract, signed in the latter part of 1962, to be valued around $415 million at first. He likened the project to building a house, where it evolves over the years. Revisions come along, and just
like one might choose to move a door or window, the budget would need to change regularly. “When they discovered something from an engineering viewpoint, they had to change the manufacturing scope and materials,” he said. Rizzo said an example of a significant change was when Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger B. Chaffee were killed in a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test in 1967. The trio would have been the first crew to take part in the first low Earth orbital test. Due to the horrific incident, a change was made to ensure all material within the lunar module was fireproof. “That was a major change,” he said. “That entitled us to additional funds to put new materials in it. So those things happened quite frequently — a change to the contract.” When all was said and done, Rizzo said the contract value between NASA and Grumman totaled more than $2 billion. During the project, Rizzo said many members of the press would come to visit the Grumman office, including Walter Cronkite who anchored “CBS Evening News” at the time. “Here was a little place on Long Island being responsible for the actual vehicle that landed on the moon,” he said. Since the moon landing, Rizzo said seeing similar NASA activities like the Space Shuttle program haven’t been as exciting as the Apollo program. “A lot of people said it was a waste of money, but that money was spent here for jobs, and many of the things that we got out of the research and development, like cellphones or GPS, and so forth, the basic research and development came out of that NASA program back in the ’60s and ’70s,” he said.
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INDEX The following are some of our available categories listed in the order in which they appear. • Garage Sales • Computer Services • Announcements • Electricians • Antiques & Collectibles • Financial Services • Automobiles/Trucks etc. • Furniture Repair • Finds under $50 • Handyman Services • Health/Fitness/Beauty • Home Improvement • Merchandise • Lawn & Landscaping • Personals • Painting/Wallpaper • Novenas • Plumbing/Heating • Pets/Pet Services • Power Washing • Professional Services • Roofing/Siding • Schools/Instruction/Tutoring • Tree Work • Wanted to Buy • Window Cleaning • Employment • Real Estate • Cleaning • Residential Property • Commercial Property • Out of State Property DEADLINE: Tuesday at Noon
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PAGE A14 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ JULY 18, 2019
E M PL OY M E N T / C A R E E R S Help Wanted
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Southampton Pediatrics is seeking a FT LPN. Experience preferred. Bi-lingual a plus. Benefits/PTO/401k.
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88 North Country Road Port Jefferson
THE U.S. CENSUS BUREAU Is now recruiting thousands of Census Takers in your area. Nobody knows your community better than you! Visit: 2020census.gov/jobs to learn more
SSIFIED DEADLINE A L is Tuesday at noon. C If you want to advertise, do it soon! 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
SEASONAL LABORER Mon-Fri 7 am - 3:30 pm
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JOB OPPORTUNITY: $18.50 P/H NYC $15 P/H LI $14.50 P/H Upstate NY If you currently care for your relatives or friends who have Medicaid or Medicare, you may be eligible to start working for them as a personal assistant. No Certificates needed. (347)462-2610 (347)565-6200
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PART-TIME CUSTOMER SERVICE REP needed for our award winning classified department. Monday 1-5 pm, Tuesday 10am-5pm, Friday, 9am-1pm. More hours possible. Flexibility a Plus, Computer Experience Helpful. Email resume to class@tbrnewsmedia.com or call Ellen at 631-331-1154
Excellent opportunity to build on an existing massage practice. Village Chiropractic Health Care Center
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EVENTS, PRINT & DIGITAL REPRESENTATIVE Looking for an energetic and persuasive person who is organized, detailed oriented and creative. Must have good planning, communication and people skills. Knowledge of the area and relationship with businesses is a plus. Responsible for getting sponsors, advertising, and developing partnerships. Email Resume to kjm@tbrnewsmedia.com
LICENSED NY STATE MASSAGE THERAPIST WANTED. Excellent opportunity to build on a existing massage practice, Village Chiropractic Heath Care Center Dr. Robert Berney 631-360-7733, Uncle Guiseppis Shopping Center next to Alpine Bakery, Smithtown
LICENSED NY STATE MASSAGE THERAPIST WANTED
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PUBLISHERâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;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 Govâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;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.
Help Wanted
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Help Wanted
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
TBR NEWSMEDIA
Email resume to: kjm@tbrnewsmedia.com
JULY 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A15
E M PL OY M E N T / C A R E E R S
FREELANCE
Do you like to talk to people?
SUPPLEMENTS EDITOR
PART-TIME CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE
Knowing InDesign a help but not a must.
Needed For Our Award-Winning Classifieds Department Become A Part of Our Great Team! More Hours Possible
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Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
PAGE A16 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 18, 2019
SERV ICES Appliance Repairs DRYER VENT CLEANING SERVICES Installations/repairs. Decrease drying time. Protect your appliance. Avoid a dryer fire. Call today for reliable service. 631-617-3327
Cleaning COME HOME TO A CLEAN HOUSE! Attention to detail is OUR PRIORITY. Excellent References. Serving the Three Village Area. Call Jacquie at 347-840-0890
Clean-Ups LET STEVE DO IT Clean-ups, yards, basements, whole house, painting, tree work, local moving and anything else. Totally overwhelmed? Call Steve @ 631-745-2598, leave message.
Computer Services/ Repairs COMPUTER ISSUES? FREE DIAGNOSIS BY GEEKS ON SITE! Virus Removal, Data Recovery! 24/7 EMERGENCY SERVICE, In-home repair/ On-line solutions. $20 OFF ANY SERVICE! 844-892-3990
Decks DECKS pre-season special Creative designs our speciality, composite decking available. Call for FREE estimate. Macco Construction Corp 1-800-528-2494 DECKS ONLY BUILDERS & DESIGNERS Of Outdoor Living By Northern Construction of LI. Decks, Patios/Hardscapes, Pergolas, Outdoor Kitchens and Lighting. Since 1995. Lic/Ins. 3rd Party Financing Available. 105 Broadway, Greenlawn. 631-651-8478. www.DecksOnly.com
Electricians ANTHEM ELECTRIC MASTER ELECTRICIAN Quality Light & Power since 2004. Commercial, Industrial, Residential. Port Jefferson. Please call 631-291-8754 Andrew@Anthem-Electric.net 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
Floor Services/Sales FINE SANDING & REFINISHING Wood Floor Installations Craig Aliperti, Wood Floors LLC. All work done by owner. 27 years experience. Lic.#47595-H/Insured. 631-875-5856
Furniture/Restoration/ Repairs REFINISHING & RESTORATION Antiques restored, repairing recane, reupholstery, touch-ups kitchen, front doors, 40 yrs exp, SAVE$$$, free estimates. Vincent Alfano 631-707-1228
Gardening/Design Architecture DOWN THE GARDEN PATH *Garden Rooms *Focal Point Gardens. Designed and Maintained JUST FOR YOU. Create a “splash” of color w/perennials or Patio Pots. Marsha, 631-689-8140 or cell# 516-314-1489
Gutters/Leaders 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 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
Interior Decorating/ Design TRISTATE CUSTOM WINDOW TREATMENTS. Blinds, Shades, Draperies, Shutters, Motorization, Measure and Installation. FREE SHOP AT HOME SERVICE 165 Middle Country Rd, Middle Island, NY 11953 Office: 631-448-8497 Mobile: 631-978-8158 Lic. #58820-H/Insured
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 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 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 CLIMATE CHANGE causing your roof and siding to leak? The time is now to Call ARIS Construction to fix this before winter sets in. 516-406-1842. ISLAND HARBOR HOME REMODELING All phases of remodeling. Specializing in Kitchens & Bathrooms. Over 40 years of experience. Owner always on the job. Lic/Ins. 631-972-7082, please leave message LAMPS FIXED, $65. In Home Service!! Handy Howard. My cell 646-996-7628 LONG HILL CARPENTRY 40 years experience All phases of home improvement. Old & Historic Restorations. Lic.#H22336/Ins. 631-751-1764 longhill7511764@aol.com 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
Lawn & Landscaping CAUTION! www.GotPoisonIvy.com 631-286-4600 Poison Ivy and Invasive Vines. Trained Horticulturist Summer Special $50 off code - BETTER SAFE CHRIS’ COMPLETE LANDSCAPING For Home or Business. Serving all of Suffolk County. Lic.#57593-H/Ins. www. chriscompletelandscaping.com 631-821-1479
Lawn & Landscaping 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, Clean-ups, Shrub/Tree Pruning, Removals. Landscape Design/Installation, Ponds/Waterfalls, Stone Walls. Firewood. Free estimates. Lic/Ins.631-689-8089
Landscape Materials CLC, LLC Landscape Material Delivery Service. MULCH, SOIL, STONE. Delivery 7 days a week. Prompt and courteous service. Office: 631-566-4627 SCREENED TOP SOIL Mulch, compost, decorative and driveway stone, concrete pavers, sand/block/portland. Fertilizer and seed. JOS. M. TROFFA MATERIALS CORP. 631-928-4665, www.troffa.com
Masonry 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
Miscellaneous DISH TV $59.99 FOR 190 channels + $14.95 high speed internet. Free installation, Smart HD DVR included, free voice remote. Some restrictions apply. Call 1-800-943-0838 GET DIRECTV! ONLY $35/month! 155 channels & 1000s of shows/movies on Demand. (w/SELECT All Included Package). PLUS Stream on Up to FIVE Screens Simultaneously at NO Additional Cost. Call DIRECTV, 1-888-534-6918
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper ALL PRO PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Power Washing, Staining, Wallpaper Removal. Free estimates. Lic/Ins #19604HI 631-696-8150. Nick
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper BOB’S PAINTING SERVICE 25 Years Experience. Interior/Exterior Painting, Spackling, Staining, Wallpaper Removal, Staining and Deck Restoration Power Washing. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins. #17981. 631-744-8859 COUNTY-WIDE PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Painting/Staining. Quality workmanship. Living and Serving Three Village Area for over 30 years. Lic#37153-H. 631-751-8280 ED’S PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Wallpaper removal, spackling, sheetrock repair. Over 25 years experience. Commercial/Residential. Reasonable rates. 631-704-7547 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
Power Washing EXTERIOR CLEANING SPECIALISTS Roof cleaning, pressure washing/softwashing, deck restorations, gutter maintenance. Squeaky Clean Property Solutions 631-387-2156 www.SqueakyCleanli.com WORKING & LIVING IN THE THREE VILLAGES FOR 30 YEARS. Owner does the work, guarantees satisfaction. COUNTY-WIDE, Lic/Ins. 37153-H, 631-751-8280
Roofing/Siding JOSEPH BONVENTRE CONSTRUCTION Roofing, siding, windows, decks, repairs. Quality work, guaranteed. Owner operated. Over 25 years experience. Lic/Ins. #55301-H. Call or Text 631-428-6791
Senior Services A PLACE FOR MOM has helped over a million families find senior living. Our trusted, local advisors help find solutions to your unique needs at no cost to you. Call: 1-800-404-8852
Tree Work ARBOR-VISTA TREE CARE COMPLETE TREE CARE service devoted to the care of trees. Maintenance pruning, water-view work, sun-trimming, elevating, pool areas, storm thinning, large tree removal, stump grinding. Wood chips. Lic#18902HI. Free estimates. 631-246-5377 CLOVIS OUTDOOR SERVICES LTD. Expert Tree Removal AND Pruning. Landscape Design and maintenance, Edible Gardens, Plant Healthcare, Exterior Lighting. 631-751-4880 clovisoutdoors@gmail.com EASTWOOD TREE & LANDSCAPE, INC. Experts in tree care and landscaping. Serving Suffolk County for 25 years. Lic.#35866H/Ins. 631-928-4070 eastwoodtree.com RANDALL BROTHERS TREE SERVICE Planting, pruning, removals, stump grinding. Free Estimates. Fully insured. LIC# 50701-H. 631-862-9291 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 TREE AND LANDSCAPE CARE Serving all of Suffolk County, Fast emergency services, tree trimming, removal and maintenance, landscape design, plant and shrub design and installation. TREETASTIC 631-619-7222. See display ad for more information WHITNEY TREE ALL PHASES OF TREE WORK 631-744-1527 Free estimates, pruning, tree removal, stump grinding, land clearing. Lic.#63174H/Insured
TV Services/Sales SPECTRUM TRIPLE PLAY! TV, Internet & Voice for $99.97/mo. Fastest Internet. 100 MB per second speed. Free Primetime on Demand. Unlimited Voice. NO CONTRACTS. Call 1-855977-7198
JULY 18, 2019 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE A17
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R E A L ESTAT E CONSIDERING BUYING, SELLING OR RENTING A HOME? I have helped clients for the past 20 YEARS. I can help you too. Give me a call. Douglas Elliman Real Estate Charlie Pezzolla Associate Broker 631-476-6278
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PUBLISHERS’ NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
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PAGE A22 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 18, 2019
Editorial
Letters to the Editor
Noise and other pollution by landscapers Remembering LI’s contribution to Apollo 11
Long Islanders can be particularly proud on July 20, as Americans celebrate the 50th anniversary of the first human steps taken on the moon by Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin. Many of the men and women who once worked at the Grumman Corporation in Bethpage, right here on Long Island, played a significant part in the project. The aerospace engineering company, now known as Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems, was integral in the design, assembly, integration and testing of the lunar module used in the Apollo 11 mission. In fact, by 1969 approximately 9,000 people, according to the Cradle of Aviation Museum in Garden City, were working on the project. This team included 3,000 engineers, scientists, mathematicians and supporting technical personnel. We owe a lot to the men and women of Grumman who played a part in the Apollo 11 mission and all lunar landing missions that followed. One small step for man led to giant leaps in technology. Among the technological advances to emerge from the Apollo missions, according to NASA’s website, is the AID implantable automatic pulse generator. Using Apollo technology, it monitors the heart continuously, recognizes the onset of a heart attack and delivers a corrective electrical shock. Developed by the company Medrad, it consists of a microcomputer, a power source and two electrodes that sense heart activity. When medically necessary, the product is available as an implant today. Many Grumman employees still live on Long Island, and when our editors started asking friends and social media connections if they knew anyone who worked on the moon mission, we were surprised at how easy it was to find these people who worked on the lunar module or LM. One editor sat on the board of a nonprofit with one of the people we feature in this edition, and she never knew he played a role in such a historic event. During this milestone anniversary, we hope our readers will take the opportunity to ask around and find out if anyone knows a family member or friend who worked on the mission. Their stories are interesting, and, as they are now in their 70s and 80s, we hope their memories will be passed down to not only family and friends, but to everyone. Imagine, just a little more than 50 years ago it was unfathomable that humans could put a person on the moon, but Americans did. The mission reminds us of what a group of people working in various fields can collectively accomplish. If we can put a man on the moon, maybe one day we’ll be able to figure out how to put an end to hunger even with a food surplus, cure cancer and convert our fuel economy to alternative, clean forms of energy. Let’s remember that dreams do come true. What once seemed impossible was achieved. The spirit that captured our country enabled men and women to work together towards a common goal. With a common belief in ourselves as Americans, such a thing can happen again.
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 kyle@ tbrnewsmedia.com or mail them to The Village Beacon Record, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.
Once upon a time, life in the Three Village area was very pleasant. You could have a barbecue in the backyard in peace and quiet. You could enjoy a friendly conversation with a neighbor in the front yard. Sadly, that is no longer possible. Every day of the week, including Saturdays and Sundays, and at all times of the day the area is invaded by landscapers with their arsenals of tools: leaf blowers, lawnmowers, etc.
Even with all windows and doors in the house closed, the noise produced by these infernal machines is so piercing that it becomes impossible to even think. Considering the fact that the number of people working from home is growing and that many people work nights, the level of noise pollution we are subjected to is unconscionable. In addition, the machines produce unacceptable amounts of carbon dioxide and other noxious
gases as well as biological pollution (dust, pollen, fecal matter and pesticides are blown into the air). We are no longer dealing with an annoyance — we are facing a health issue. Several enlightened communities have banned gas-powered lawn mowers and leaf blowers. It is time for our community to follow suit. Albert Haim Setauket
Recent burning of LGBTQ flag intolerable act I recently heard on the news that a rainbow (LGBTQ) flag was intentionally set on fire outside of an establishment in New York City. The incident was immediately categorized as a “hate”
crime, and the authorities are examining surveillance videos to locate the perpetrator(s). Hopefully, they find and prosecute the person(s) to the fullest extent of the law. This behavior is intolerable.
Now, what makes this any different than intentionally setting fire to the American flag? Chris Conrad Setauket
Leadership on clean groundwater is overdue Talk is cheap, especially when it comes to water pollution on Long Island. This issue impacts citizens across the Island, but especially in Suffolk County, some more than others — many in serious and enduring ways. Communities across the county face longstanding and adverse health effects from groundwater contamination. Congressional and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency leaders have long given lip service to the problem, but they must now act. Historically, letters have been written to those at EPA, sometimes with the effect of spurring action, more often none. Superfund sites have been established, some even resolved, but the problem is more persistent than resolving one or two sites. Needed is a full-on commitment, a comprehensive and concerted federal approach to resolving what has become a systemic, intergenerational and regional problem. Waiting decades to fix it only endangers more lives. The overriding goal should be permanently ending public health hazards associated with persistent groundwater pollution. The costs may range upwards into the hundreds of millions of dollars but forestalling or ignoring the enormity of this issue does no one any good and does local citizens only continued harm. That is why action is needed now. I would
propose, for starters, public hearings on safe drinking water and current contamination, focused tightly on what the federal government can do immediately — right now. Beyond this elevation of the issue, needed is leadership of a congressional task force to focus on groundwater contamination, both for Long Island and across the nation. While sources vary, one recent study found “the known extent of contamination of American communities with the highly toxic fluorinated compounds known as PFAS continues to grow at an alarming rate,” and that “as of March 2019, 610 locations in 43 states are now known to be affected, including drinking water systems serving an estimated 19 million people.” Long Island communities have been unusually vulnerable, which is why congressional leadership is needed. For example, last year, East Hampton was forced to declare a state of emergency in Wainscott due to chemical contamination of drinking water wells. Here and in other locations, costs of remediation and averting future harm are high. Other towns face similar challenges. Suffolk County officials continue to wrestle, for example, with potential carcinogenic contamination in wells near homes in Quogue and East Quogue, and near the southeastern and northeastern boundaries of Gabreski
Airport. And these are just a few of Suffolk’s examples near my home in East Hampton. Others abound throughout Long Island. These stories are neither isolated nor insignificant. They are local in nature but call for a national response. Congressional representatives have historically written letters asking for help, but leadership requires more than letters and hope. Needed is a sense of resolve, a determination to end this decades-old problem and set in motion provisions that prevent any recurrence. If every informed American knows about Flint, Michigan, they should know how everyday citizens in other parts of the country, including Suffolk County, wrestle with assuring clean water. If federal initiatives in other parts of the country and cleaning up other parts of the environment warrant attention — and they do — so does Suffolk County. Members of Congress have the ability to prioritize, fund remediation and combat the intergenerational degradation of groundwater in Suffolk County —and nationally. You seldom see the issue in national headlines, but it belongs there. If all politics are local, because that’s where we live, safe drinking water is a national necessity, and Congress should treat it that way. Perry Gershon Democratic primary candidate 1st Congressional District
The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.
JULY 18, 2019 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • PAGE A23
Opinion
Through losses, we learn to appreciate the people we’ve found
W
e spend our lives searching. We look for friends in elementary school with whom we can share a laugh or a meal. We seek the right clothing and supplies so that we fit in. As we age, the searches change. We hunt for fulfilling jobs, long-term romantic or career partners, places to live, cars that will D. None meet our needs, and homes in comof the above munities that will BY DANIEL DUNAIEF welcome us and our families. Through all of these searches, people wander into and out of our
lives. If we’re fortunate enough, we might know someone from the time we’re 3 years old with whom we continue to meet, laugh, and exchange work stories or ideas and challenges. Sitting in cars waiting for our children to emerge from their orchestra rehearsals or milling about in the entrance to an auditorium after a concert, we may see the same familiar faces, smile at the people next to us, and appreciate how they have supported all of our children with equal energy and commitment, congratulating our son or daughter on their solos or appreciating the remarkable live performance they just witnessed. As we age, we inevitably lose people. Some drift out of our lives when their interests diverge from ours, even though they remain in the same town. Others take jobs in a new state and follow a different schedule in a new time zone. When our friends or family members die, the losses are permanent. Except in photos, videos and in our imaginations, we won’t see their faces,
smell their perfume or hear their infectious and distinctive laugh echo around a room. We often say to family members and close friends, “So sorry for your loss.” While death is a loss, it’s also a reminder of what we found. The person who has left us may have attended the same school, lived on the same block or gone to the same conference many years ago. A blur of people enter and leave our lives, sometimes for as short as a few seconds because we give them change at a store or take their reservations when we’re working for a ferry company, or other times when we’re waiting with them at the DMV to get a new license in a new state. Other times, the people who will become an ongoing part of our lives find us, just as we found them. Their death brings sadness and a hole in the fabric of our lives. Some cultures tear a hole in their garments to tell the world about the missing piece that comes with mourning. These moments are also an opportunity to
celebrate the fact that we forged a connection and that we played an important role in each other’s lives. Connections begin when we reach out to strangers who become friends and to men and women who become life partners. Every day, we have the opportunity to appreciate what we’ve found in the people who populate our lives, the ones we choose to call to share the news about a promotion, those whose support and consideration remind us of who we are. When we stray from a path that works, these found friends can bring us back to the version of ourselves we strive to be. Each loss reminds us not only of who that person was in general, but also of what we discovered through our interactions. These important people provide common ground and experiences and are as much a part of who we are as the image staring back at us in the mirror. We didn’t just find them. Ideally, we found the best of ourselves through the experiences we shared with them.
home and rent a medical office might have overshadowed the miracle of the moon landing, but for me that event was high-voltage electric. Just before we left New York for Texas and my husband’s assignment, I had been working at Time-Life with Arthur C. Clarke, who had arrived from his Eden-like home in Ceylon — now Sri Lanka — to write a book called, “Man and Space.” Clarke, like the other writers of space discoveries and travel, had to write under the banner of science fiction in order to gain respectability. But the truth was that these authors believed what they wrote would come to pass, and fortunately for many of them they were alive to see it happen in the 1960s. And I was fortunate enough to be part of the excitement, a front row spectator of history, as we journalists are. I, too, was caught up in the fervor of the coming moon shot. When Clarke parted, he went on to join Stanley Kubrick to co-write the script of “2001: A Space Odyssey,” considered today one of the best films ever made, and I to become the wife of an Air Force officer and then mother of three. So we leave the incredible heights of American pride now and look at the other side of the
coin. Elsewhere in our news, we have the press release from U.S. Rep. Tom Suozzi (D-Glen Cove), who went to the southern border of the United States with a small group from the House to see first hand what was happening at the immigration centers. In his words, the situation is “awful” and the system is “broken.” The group toured and inspected facilities that are currently holding Central American migrants seeking asylum, speaking with several immigrant families as they went. According to first-hand reports, there is a humanitarian crisis at the border. Since only very few migrants are processed each day, many cross over the border illegally between points of entry, then turn themselves in to seek asylum. They come in such numbers that they greatly exceed capacity to house and care for them, and as such are living in deplorable conditions. These are our American concentration camps, where children have been separated from their parents. They are deserving of our shame. “America is better than this,” declared Suozzi, and we know that to be true. At one and the same time, we celebrate and rue our nation.
The two faces of America in 2019
T
oday we report on two diametrically opposite faces of our nation. Interspersed here are some personal recollections of my own. Fifty years ago we Americans stood proud and together, our faces turned upward to the heavens, as the United States sent Apollo 11 to the moon with astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins aboard. Armstrong and Aldrin were to land on the surface in the Lunar Excursion Module, or LEM, the creation of engineering wizardry by thousands of Grumman workers right here Between on Long Island. An estimated 650 milyou and me lion people around BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF the world watched spellbound on black-and-white television screens as the two
astronauts took the first steps for a man on July 20, 1969, and the unprecedented leap into the future of space travel for mankind. Until 1972, 24 people flew to the moon, none since then. But that was just the beginning of incredible discoveries and inventions, from miniaturizations to astrobiology. We have a satellite that has played host to other nations and enabled us to see around the world. Known as the International Space Station, we have used it to reach out into the solar system. And it will even become a regular destination for tourists shortly if entrepreneurs are to be believed. Meanwhile, as Armstrong and Aldrin were busy walking around on the moon, there was a tiny leap on Earth for our third son. He arrived from out of the womb at St. Charles Hospital in Port Jefferson and at this time is enjoying a 50th anniversary of his own. We had arrived on Long Island only three weeks earlier from Sheppard Air Force Base in Texas, where my husband had served for the preceding two years, and were busy working to establish our new lives here. Now you might think that the blessing of a new baby, along with the need to find a new
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PAGE A24 • THE VILLAGE BEACON RECORD • JULY 18, 2019
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