The Village
Times Herald stony Brook • old field • strong’s neck • setauket • east setauket • south setauket • poquott • stony Brook university
Vol. 41, No. 31
September 29, 2016
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Apple Festival on Christian Avenue
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TVHS Spirits Tour celebrates the life of W.S. Mount Also: Paint Port Pink returns to Port Jefferson, ‘1776’ comes to Northport
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Ward Melville runs away with homecoming win — story on page A13 Photo by Desirée Keegan
Quarterback Wesley Manning throws a pass to Nick Messina — who catches it.
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PAGE A2 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • SEPTEMBER 29, 2016
Three Village school events Thursday, Sept. 29
• Schools closed for Rosh Hashanah — no sports practices.
• Mount Harvest Festival, noon-2 p.m.
• Schools closed for Rosh Hashanah — no sports practices.
Saturday, Oct. 1
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Emma S. Clark Library, grateful for the community’s continuing support, is pleased to announce the passage of its budget Sept. 21.
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• Gelinas Open House, 6:30 p.m. • Murphy Open House, 6:30 p.m.
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2nd Annual Community Volunteer Fair at Emma S. Clark Library If you’re looking for way to serve and better your community, look no further than Emma Clark Library’s 2nd Annual Volunteer Fair on Saturday, Oct. 8 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The Emma S. Clark Memorial Library is located at 120 Main Street in Setauket. There is no registration required, and all are welcome, teens and adults, residents and non-residents. Becoming a volunteer is a great way to get to know your neighbors and meet new friends. Volunteer work can enhance your resume or college application as well. The following organizations will be represented at the fair: Avalon Park & Preserve Citizens’ Climate Lobby, LI Chapter
Glynn Mercep and Purcell, LLP North Country Road P.O. Box 712 Stony Brook, NY 11790 631-751-5757 glymer@glymerlaw.com
Photo from Emma S. Clark Memorial Library
Visitors at Theatre Three’s table Dress for Success, Brookhaven Family Service League Greater Port Jefferson-Northern Brookhaven Arts Council Guide Dog Foundation for the Blind Host Family Program John T. Mather Memorial Hospital Maritime Explorium Open Door Exchange Patchogue Rotary Animal Assisted Therapy & Doggie Reading Club Response of Suffolk County Inc. Setauket Greenway Suffolk Long Island Mentor & Mentee Theatre Three Three Village Historical Society Three Village Meals on Wheels The Ward Melville Heritage Organization
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SEPTEMBER 29, 2016 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A3
Grassroots group continues to press for alternatives By Donna newman donna@tbrnewspapers.com Residents of the M-section of Strathmore houses in Stony Brook would like to know where things stand as far as their sycamore trees, are concerned. Will they be able to keep the trees, and get their roads paved? They said they have been told Brookhaven Highway Supervisor Dan Losquadro’s (R) office will only say that the project is “on hold” until the re-evaluation is completed. Councilwoman Valerie Cartright (D-Port Jefferson Station) said she has received no potential schedule date for a meeting she plans to hold after the review has taken place, to allow the highway department to explain their re-evaluation with the chance for residents to respond. A spokesperson for Losquadro’s office said Wednesday that the re-evaluation is ongoing and the office has received quite a few phone calls, some from residents who want the trees on their property taken down. She said they will be in touch with Cartright’s office and will work together moving forward once a plan is in place. The reassessment of the tree removal was announced in a letter to affected M-section residents sent from the supervisor’s office, dated Aug. 26, and reiterated by Deputy Supervisor Steve Tricarico at the Brookhaven Town Board meeting Sept. 1. Since then, there have been no updates as to the progress of the review.
M-section resident Patricia Woods described a telephone conversation she had with Losquadro in which she said, “He was very nice. He said he ‘just wants to do the job the right way. [He doesn’t want to be] repairing the streets if they’re not done correctly the first time.’ I said to him, ‘if your idea is to do it the right way, you have to look at the whole picture, because [cutting down all the trees], that’s not the right way to do it.’” Sunday morning at 10 a.m., homeowners gathered on Mariner Street, where Woods initiated another action to help call attention to their plight. At the suggestion of a friend, Deena Brando, who doesn’t reside in the M-section, but has empathy for the cause, Woods began tying green ribbons on the trees marked for removal on her street. Spools of green ribbon were distributed to neighbors who gathered on the dead-end street Sunday morning. Petitions were available for homeowners to sign, indicating their opposition to the proposed tree removal. And after signing, M-section residents fanned out to the affected streets to encircle all the marked trees with green ribbons. The organizers of this grass roots campaign have reached out over the last month to every official and organization they could think of to find help. They set up a Facebook page titled “Save the Stony Brook Street Trees” to facilitate communication to keep residents and others who are interested apprised of developments. Many residents contacted Assemblyman
Photos by Donna newman
Left, Jeff and Laura Long tie a ribbon on a tree marked for removal. Right, brothers Liam (3) and Tyler (6) Fink take spools of ribbon to adorn the trees. Steve Englebright’s office (D-Setauket), because of his well-known stance on environmental issues. In a letter to Losquadro dated Sept. 22, Englebright wrote, “Safe and well-maintained roads are vitally important to our communities and your department should be commended for striving to get the most out of the tax dollars spent on our roads. However, the need for road maintenance and repair must also be weighed against the quality and character of neighborhoods that would
be impacted by the loss of trees, including the ecological benefits, aesthetics, property values, and health aspects that these mature street trees provide.” Despite the fact that Brookhaven Town Supervisor Ed Romaine (R) informed the residents who attended the Sept. 1 board meeting that the highway superintendent is an autonomous, elected official who does not report to the supervisor, M-section homeowners plan to attend the Sept. 30 board meeting to continue to press for resolution of this issue.
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PAGE A4 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • SEPTEMBER 29, 2016
An eclectic festival with apples, music and fun for all By Donna newman donna@tbrnewspapers.com Beautiful weather and sweet treats brought a host of visitors to the Stony Brook Community Church grounds on Christian Avenue in Stony Brook for its annual Apple Festival, Saturday, Sept. 24. The child-friendly event had something for everyone. Attendees dined and shopped, played and listened to music, encountered old friends and made new ones. Of course there were apples: in bags and in fritters, in crisps and pies, pressed into cider and dipped in caramel. But there was more. A kids’ midway, overseen by members of the church’s Methodist Youth Fellowship, featured a bounce castle, face painting, pumpkin decorating and pony rides. Vendors offered toys, books and services for children; jewelry, art, kitchen items, soaps, oils, antiques, home decor and handcrafted one-of-a-kind items. “To have this festival go on so long and be such a part of the community … it’s wonderful,” said Donna Smith, a retired Three Village school teacher who has been a church member involved in the event for decades. She produced a slew of old programs and memorabilia dating back to the mid-1960s when her parents, Jane and Joe Dionisi, were the festival organizers. She calculated that the first festival was held in 1960. Over the years, there have been different themes, Smith said, as she remembered when it was a clambake and they shucked clams right in the field. But in the recent past, the focus has been on apples.
Photos by Donna newman
Left, congregant elizabeth Lunde and her granddaughter Brooke sell pies. Right, Ron Hausske operates the cider press. It has been and continues to be a family affair. The current organizing committee includes three pairs of mothers and daughters: Pat Martin and Kate Hausske, Donna and Kerri Smith, Sue and Megan Murphy — as well as Barbara Lynch and Mark Marino. Martin, chairperson of the event, called it “a family affair.” The leadership of the longrunning tradition, she said, is passed from generation to generation. And then there are the people who marry in. Hausske’s husband, Ron, conducted hourly demonstrations showing people how cider was made back when Stony Brook was
founded. He said he was eminently qualified, having come from the apple state — Washington — the only state in the union that produces more apples than New York does. For the demonstration he used an antique cider press, a gift that was presented 20 years ago to retired former pastor the Rev. John Paul Hankins by the congregation. Another colonial craft demonstrator, Stevie Morris, used her spinning wheel to show how various fibers can be spun to create yarns of different kinds. Morris said she has been spinning at the festival every year for the last five.
Throughout the day music filled the air, provided by members of Oompa: the Organization of Open Mic Performing Artists. Among the performers, Sugaree is comprised of Setauket Elementary School teacher Eileen Biamonte and Setauket CPA and guitar-player John Risotto. Pastor Chuck Van Houten wrote in his message in the event program: “It is such a joy to be able to be part of this historic community in such a fun, old-fashioned and yummy way. … We relish the ability to continue and enjoy traditional hometown community events like this one.”
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SEPTEMBER 29, 2016 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A5
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Honor Gracey Kopcienski bestowed Instead of retiring, Honor continued to grace and kindness on every person she met play the organ at many local churches includthroughout her 84 years. She left this world ing Mount Sinai Congregational, Setauket’s Sept. 17 at her Mount Sinai home with life- Presbyterian with director Mark Orton, Port long partner, Johnny (Alfred) Kopcienski by Jefferson’s First United Methodist and, most her side. recently, St. Louis de Montfort R.C. Church in Honor was born July 2, 1932, to Ruth Sound Beach. Jaynes Gracey, a much-loved Port Jefferson While busy raising children along with her high school teacher, and musical career, Honor Stuart Gracey, an interwas also active in nationally acclaimed community service. singer and conductor. She was instrumental Honor and her sisters, in organizing Polish Louise Hawley and Anne Fest at Infant Jesus Hedstrom, attended the Church, cooking kielone-room schoolhouse basa sausage side by on North Country Road side with Johnny; was in Mount Sinai. She and active in supporting her childhood friend, Port Jefferson Rotary Jane Carter, often remicharitable efforts innisced about their woncluding the Gift of derful early years freely Life; and was a conPhoto from Kopcienski family roaming the woods and tributing member beaches of Miller Place. of the Miller PlaceHonor Gracey Kopcienski Later, at Port JefferMount Sinai Historison High School, Honor met Johnny. Their cal Society. courting included a contest where they kissed When the new Infant Jesus Parish Center all the way from Patchogue to Port Jefferson was built, Honor and Johnny donated a piano in the rumble seat of a Ford Model A. One so that there would be music for all events particular Friday, after high school graduation there. They supported funding for a new and a semester at Mannes School of Music piano for Earl L. Vandermeulen High School. in New York, Honor went to Tinker National Honor and Johnny’s years of giving to Bank and withdrew $89 from Johnny’s bank the people and spirit of Infant Jesus Parish account. She had him drive her to Rose Jewel- were recognized by the Diocese of Rockville ers in Patchogue where she informed him that Centre with the St. Agnes Medal of Service he was buying her an engagement ring. They award. The couple were early advocates and were wed May 25, 1952, and their love pro- strong supporters of Father Frank Pizzarelli duced eight children, 24 grandchildren and in his efforts to minister to troubled youth in one great-grandchild. The values that defined the community. The mission of Hope House Honor as a person are seen in her family: com- Ministries matched Honor’s passion for perpassion, integrity and a love of music. sonal, ongoing and daily commitment to the Honor’s devotion to music began early. spirit of giving. At 12, she accompanied her father and his Honor and Johnny’s greatest gifts, and choruses. Early on she studied piano at a source of greatest pride, are their children, studio in the Old Field lighthouse. Later she grandchildren and great-grandchild: Charparticipated in the Juilliard preparatory pro- laine and Ira, Emma (Sean) and Abbie; Beth gram. She was an accomplished pianist, or- and Joseph, Kate (Dan), Caralyn (Johnny) ganist and accompanist. Her passion led her and David; Mark and Rebecca, Andrew, Juto Infant Jesus R.C. Church in Port Jefferson lia, Christian and Lauren; Therese and Clark, where she and Johnny were wed, and where John (Shannon and baby Clark), Christen she served as parish organist for more than (Ryan), Mary Liz (Adam) and Luke; Ann Ma50 years. Parishioners would often stand in rie and Chip, Sergei and Daniel; John Paul the pews, marveling at her playing until the and Martha, Jake and Mary Claire; Jennie final note. Honor’s gift was an integral part and Peter, Gracey (Jamie), Peter and Anof hundreds of weddings, funerals and mass- nie; Matthew and Becky, Gregory, Benjamin, es. She and her musical partner and dear Margaret and Sam. friend, Dolores Butera, were honored by The Their 24 grandchildren include five adPort Times on behalf of Infant Jesus Choir as dressed as doctor, an Olympian, teachers, muPeople of the Year for the Arts in 1991. sicians, business people and enthusiastic stuHonor taught and accompanied numerous dents. Honor was proud of the legacy of hard children and performers, her own children work, service and compassion she instilled in and grandchildren included. She played for her family. She will always be remembered by Manhasset Glee Club, Port Jefferson Choral both her name and key trait: Honor. Society, Southold Town Choral Society, ChoHonor’s final days were blessed to end in ral Society of Moriches, SUNY Stony Brook, peace, comfort and love through the assisand at master classes given by opera singer tance of the staff at Good Shepherd Hospice. Eleanor Steber in her Belle Terre home. Later Her family prefers that memorial donations she was accompanist and mentor for the New be sent to Good Shepherd Hospice or the Century Singers. Honor always maintained giver’s local hospice organization. her own musical studies and in 2000 studied Arrangements were entrusted to Bryand passed the rigorous test to attain the pres- ant Funeral Home of East Setauket. Please tigious Associateship of the American Guild of visit www.bryantfh.com to sign the online Organists. guestbook.
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of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of NY, District 0200 Section: 514.00 Block: 07.00 Lot: 045.000. Approximate amount of judgment $389,440.74 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 12-32752.
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PAGE A6 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • SEPTEMBER 29, 2016
NATIONAL
Police Blotter Incidents and arrests, Sept. 21-26
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At Tara Inn restaurant and bar on Main Street in Port Jefferson at about 1 a.m. Sept. 24, a 31-year-old man from Port Jefferson punched another man in the face, police said. He was arrested and charged with third-degree assault.
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A 21-year-old man from Shoreham possessed cocaine on West Broadway in Port Jefferson between Barnum Avenue and Main Street at about 10:30 p.m. Sept. 21, according to police. He was arrested and charged with fifth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance. At the same time and place, a 20-year-old man from Wading River had marijuana in a clear jar in public view, police said. He was arrested and charged with fifth-degree criminal possession of marijuana.
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At Stony Brook Marine Service on Shore Road in Stony Brook, tools were stolen from a boat at about 2 p.m. Sept. 20, according to police.
One-stop shoplifting
Assorted merchandise was stolen from Walmart on Nesconset Highway in Setauket at about 3 p.m. Sept. 25, police said.
Clean getaway
Two Dyson vacuums were stolen from Walmart on Nesconset Highway in Setauket at about 2 p.m. Sept. 23, police said.
Serial mailbox smasher?
A mailbox at a home on Woodbine Avenue in Stony Brook was damaged at about 9:20 p.m. Sept. 22, according to police. About 30 minutes later, a mailbox was damaged at a home on Old Field Road in Old Field, police said. The two streets are less than three miles apart — CoMPileD By Alex Petroski
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Scientists, politicians to discuss opioids By Alex Petroski alex@tbrnewspapers.com Opioid addiction will be the topic of discussion at a community forum Oct. 1 at Stony Brook University. The event, titled The Opioid Epidemic, will be hosted by the group Scientists for Policy, Advocacy, Diplomacy and Education. The panel discussion begins at 4:30 p.m. at the Charles B. Wang Center Theatre. Speakers include state Sen. John Flanagan
(R-East Northport), state Sen. Ken LaValle (RPort Jefferson), Suffolk County Deputy Sheriff William Weick, Stony Brook Director of Adult Inpatient Services Constantine Ioannou and Columbia University Assistant Professor of Clinical Neurobiology Jermaine Jones. Attendees are encouraged to bring excess or expired medication for the “Shed the Meds” disposal program. Narcan training will take place after the event. Visit opioidepidemicforum.eventbrite.com for more information or to attend the event.
SEPTEMBER 29, 2016 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A7
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SPaDe officers from left, Treasurer ashleigh Lussenden, Secretary Kayla Gogarty, President Lyl Tomlinson and Vice President adrian Di antonio.
Young scientists spotlight a growing problem: death by opioid overdose By Donna newman Donna@tbrnewspapers.com
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Opioid addiction is the focus of a community forum to be held Saturday, Oct. 1 at Stony Brook University, thanks to an organization created by three of the school’s own. The event, entitled “The Opioid Epidemic,” will run from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. in the theatre at the Charles B. Wang Center. The forum is a product of Scientists for Policy, Advocacy, Diplomacy and Education, an entity created last winter by three doctoral candidates in the Department of Neurobiology. The story behind the organization’s inception can be traced back to conversations about the future between Adrian Di Antonio, Ashleigh Lussenden and Lyl Tomlinson as they worked toward their doctoral degrees, Di Antonio said in a telephone interview. In their individual labs, they were solving specific problems, but together they wondered about what they could do to learn more and broaden their impact, he said. The three found and presented articles to each other, and eventually invited other graduate students from other disciplines to join in discussions. The four SPADE leaders are looking to boost membership via their first major campuswide event. There will be speeches by elected officials, who will also participate in a panel discussion with a representative from the Suffolk County Sheriff’s office and medical professionals from Stony Brook and Columbia Universities. So far, SPADE has one recruit: Kayla Gogarty, a doctoral candidate in Stony Brook’s chemistry department. She grew up in Suffolk County and earned her undergraduate degree from Drexel University in Philadelphia. “As I’ve been immersed in science, I have realized that even if scientists provide concrete data, it is very difficult for this knowledge [e.g., climate change] to be translated into our laws,” she wrote in an email. “This has led me to my interest in science policy, because the data is not
useful unless people in the community understand it and lawmakers use it for policy change.” The members chose journalism professor Steven Reiner to be the moderator at their event. He has been at Stony Brook University for seven years and previously worked as a producer for 60 Minutes and National Public Radio. He currently hosts a web-series called Science on Tap, in which he helps distill complex information down to comprehensible language in the casual environment of a bar, according to Di Antonio. Tomlinson is a proponent of making science understandable. Two years ago, the Brooklyn native and CUNY Brooklyn graduate won a NASA-hosted National Science Communication competition called FameLab. “Think American Idol meets TED talks,” he wrote in an email. “I competed against almost 100 scientists from across the U.S. to deliver interesting science in bite-sized, three-minute chunks that were accessible and informative.” He did not add that he placed second, representing the U.S. in the international competition at The Times Cheltenham Science Festival in the United Kingdom, which brought together FameLab winners from more than 25 countries. Di Antonio hales from Philadelphia, where he earned his undergraduate degree at the University of Pennsylvania. After SPADE was founded, he said the group explored ways they might get involved on campus. “Some topic at the intersection of policy and people,” he said. As opioid drug overdoses currently cause more deaths than auto accidents or firearms, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Tomlinson said they want people to know that this is an important issue. Lussenden will speak on behalf of SPADE at the beginning of the program. A fourth year doctoral candidate, she received a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship. “I have always been interested in science and politics,” she wrote in an email, “and would like to work in science policy and diplomacy when I graduate.”
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STONY BROOK FIRE DISTRICT PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Board of Fire Commissioners of the STONY BROOK FIRE DISTRICT will change the regular monthly meeting of the Board of Fire Commissioners from Thursday, September 22, 2016 at 7:30 p.m. to Thursday, September 29, 2016 at 7:30 pm. Dated: Stony Brook, New York September 22, 2016 BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF THE STONY BROOK
FIRE DISTRICT Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, New York Carol Lee Simco District Secretary 424 9/29 1x vth NOTICE OF SPECIAL WORKSHOP BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS SETAUKET FIRE DISTRICT PLEASE TAKE NOTICE the Setauket Fire District Board of Fire Commissioners will hold a
special work shop on Wednesday October 5, 2016 at 12:00 PM at the Administration Building, 26 Hulse Road, East Setauket, N.Y. Dated: September 23, 2016 BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF FIRE COMMISSIONERS OF THE SETAUKET FIRE DISTRICT Town of Brookhaven, Suffolk County, New York CYNTHIA HUBBARD Fire District Secretary 421 9/29 1x vth
PAGE A8 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • SEPTEMBER 29, 2016
An inside look at the presidential debate on LI By Victoria Espinoza victoria@tbrnewspapers.com A historic political event, which carried what felt like an unprecedented level of uncertainty, took place close to home Sept. 26. Hofstra University was the place to be, as thousands of reporters, protestors, students and politicians flocked to the Hempstead campus to witness a debate featuring the first female presidential nominee of a major political party in United States history and one of the most powerful businessmen in the world. Hillary Clinton (D) and Donald Trump (R) were the main attraction, but there was so much more to be seen and heard on campus in the hours leading up to show time. Major news outlets from all over the world covered the event. The scene was already buzzing around 10 a.m. Businesses set up booths to hand out free debate gear, and MSNBC, Fox News and CNN were already warming up their outdoor stages for a full day of coverage. Some students carried signs with Clinton and Trump’s name, while others raised humorous, homemade signs with messages like “Mom, please come pick me up, I’m scared.” Freshmen to seniors visited the photo booths and interview stands set up, and seemed enthused and excited to be a part of the historic day. One of the more popular activities of the day was an inflatable, replica White House for students to jump around in. In the early morning it lit up the parking lot and seemed like a spot students would enjoy a carefree few minutes after the stations focused on national issues were seen. But soon enough, the inflatable White House became a backdrop for a serious scene. Dozens of #BlackLivesMatter supporters stood silently arm in arm, in front of the White House. Observers around the area were silent as well. It was a reminder early on that this debate was not just an exciting event, but also would spur a serious conversation about the state of America, and how it we will be led into the future. Bernard Coles, a senior at Hofstra, said he wasn’t confident the issues important to #BlackLivesMatter supporters would come
photos by Victoria Espinoza
clockwise from above, #BlackLivesMatter supporters silently stand with their hands up during a television broadcast on campus sept. 26; a student smiles while donning a ‘Make america Great again’ hat; students cheer and hold up clinton Kaine signs; a man dressed in a polar bear costume talks climate change in the free speech tent. up at the debate. “We’ve been talking nonstop about Brangelina for the past week so I’m not very optimistic about it coming up but I hope so,” he said in an interview. He also said he feels Clinton best represents the #BlackLivesMatter cause. “I feel a thousand times more confident in the direction Hillary Clinton would take the country. She’s been trying to listen to us and support us and represent us for decades and I don’t understand why people are forgetting that.” Although #BlackLivesMatter was not directly referenced Monday night, moderator Lester Holt asked a question entirely focused on race relations. Both candidates talked about solutions they have proposed to help improve the criminal justice system, while also touching on their personal relationships with ethnic communities. About a half-mile from the center point of campus was the free speech tent, an area heavily guarded by police where supporters of lesser-known presidential candidates Jill Stein (G) and Gary Jonhson (L) protested their exclusion from the event. Entrance to the free speech tent required passage through a metal detector and a search of belongings. Officers on horseback lined the street, and at the tent, a man dressed in a polar bear costume spoke out on global warming, and an “election frog” croaked “Rig it, rig it.” Chris Roy, a Stein supporter, said it was a disgrace that she was not allowed into the debate arena. “I’m thoroughly disgusted and disturbed and furious,” Roy said in an interview. He questioned why two parties are allowed to make the rules for other minor parties, and said Trump and Clinton should be speaking up to allow the other candidates in. “She [Stein] is the only one that is in the trenches fighting with the people,” he said. “They’re [Clinton and Trump] both just totally corrupt. They don’t speak out for open debates, which is awful. When you turn on the television all you see is Hillary and Trump.”
Stein has been the presidential nominee for the Green Party for the last two debates, and was escorted off the premises Monday after reportedly failing to present the necessary credentials. Like Stein, Johnson is not new to the presidential campaign circuit. He has been the Libertarian Party’s presidential candidate for the last two elections. Both candidates have been vocal about being denied the opportunity to debate. Neither reached the 15-percent polling threshold on national surveys needed by the Commission on Presidential Debates to qualify. Hofstra students throughout campus donned “Make America Great Again” hats and “I’m With Her” pins, and at the end of the night everyone argued over which candidate had the most success. After leaving the scene of the debate, and walking out of what felt like a bunker, it seemed like all issues discussed during the day had been forgotten and all that mattered was Clinton and Trump’s performances.
Hofstra’s campus gave a voice to more than just the typical election season rhetoric, and helped remind a reporter like me that this election season is about so much more than just the two candidates who stood on the stage for 90 minutes.
SEPTEMBER 29, 2016 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A9
HISTORY CLOSE AT HAND
Farming on LI saw significant change in 350 years: part 2 By Beverly C. Tyler
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By the time the Erie Canal was completed between Rochester and Syracuse in 1819, farmers and farm families had begun streaming into western New York to grow wheat for the markets in those two rapidly expanding cities. In 1825, the Erie Canal was completed from Lake Erie to the Hudson River, and by 1837 about 500,000 bushels of wheat were being sent daily to New York City, augmented by grain from Ohio and the Midwest grain belt. The rich soils of western New York and the Midwest produced far greater yields than Long Island farms causing local farmers to switch to potatoes, cauliflower and other market crops to feed the rapidly increasing immigrant population of New York City, Brooklyn and Queens. In 2008 I drove, biked and boated along the Barge Canal and along the route of the original Erie Canal. Today boats can traverse the entire Barge Canal, the successor to the Erie and other canals, from the Hudson River to Lake Erie. The Canalway Trail for bikes and walkers is a network of about 300 miles of multiple-use trails across Upstate New York following the
towpaths of both active and historic sections of the New York State Canal System and abandoned rail corridors. At present about 75 percent of the trail is off road. I drove to each of the first six locks at the beginning of the Barge Canal from the village of Waterford along the Hudson River and watched a number of cruising boats locking through. Roads and railroads are now the major methods of moving goods from one place to another, and the slow pace of the Barge Canal is relegated to tourism and recreation. The Barge and Erie canals are not the engine of commercial transportation they were, but their history is a tribute to the can-do attitude of men like Gov. DeWitt Clinton, in office from 1817 to 1822, who shepherded the Erie Canal into existence. The Barge Canal and the paths along the canal that accommodate bikes and walkers are a delight. It is possible to travel through backyards, past village parks and through wooded and commercial areas. Around every corner is a new experience. I explored the area east of Rochester between the towns of Pittsford and Fair-
port, renting a bike and making a leisurely 6.6 mile ride along the canal. I had a delicious seafood chowder in an Irish pub in Fairview, explored the town and returned to Pittsford. I drove west as far as Lockport where I took a tour boat that traveled through the two locks that raise and lower vessels 50 feet. It’s a dramatic ride. Back in Rochester I took an underground tour of the canal that used to run through the city. The canal is now paved over and dry but there are plans to make it a dramatic part of a renewed city park with boat traffic. I also took a tour that included fascinating details about Rochester and the effect the canal system had on the city, which was called the Flour City due to the number of mills that turned the wheat grown in western New York into flour shipped down the canal and the Hudson to New York City. Syracuse, like Rochester, is located along the original Erie Canal, not the redirected Barge Canal. However, Syracuse has a wonderful canal museum that is definitely worth a stop. It tells the story of the Erie Canal and includes a number of wonderful exhibits.
Photo by Beverly Tyler
Along the original erie Canal at the Chittenango landing Canal Boat Museum. In 1845, disastrous crop yields throughout Europe, including blight of the Irish potato crop, led to starvation and death. Irish immigration to North America began the same year, and by 1850 millions of Irish immigrated to the United States and Australia. In 1846, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland repealed the Corn Laws permitting U.S. grains, now available because of the Erie Canal, to flood into Great Britain, enabling the country to take a leap forward in economic development. By 1847 the imports of corn tripled, and the coal-based industrial power of the
English Midlands and elsewhere grew. With better-paying jobs and lower prices for grain, an exodus of people from the farms to the factories accelerated, not only in Great Britain but in Europe and the United States. By the end of the 19th century, British agricultural workers shrank substantially to some 10 percent of the workforce. The same trend was true for the Northeast region here. To be continued: “Traveling the Erie Canal.” Beverly Tyler is the Three Village Historical Society historian and author of books available from Three Village Historical Society.
PAGE A10 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • SEPTEMBER 29, 2016
PEOPlE
Borrie sisters make music video Emma Rae and Leah Claire Borrie, graduates of Ward Melville High School and products of its wonderful music and arts programs, have collaborated to create a colorful, whimsical and cuttingedge music video. The not-quite-a-love song video, entitled, “Emma Rae’s – You and Me” was filmed in Stony Brook, under the direction of sister Leah, who is currently enrolled in the School of Cinematic Arts at The University of Southern California, and performed, written and arranged by Berklee College of Music graduate, Emma Rae. Emma Rae says the song is about challenging the idea that you always need to define a relationship, and that you can live in the moment, enjoy where you are
At left, Emma Rae and Leah Claire Borrie.
now, and not worry about where it is going. Leah agrees, saying she wanted to capture the essence as being about a woman claiming her emotions and setting her own romantic course. She also sought to capture her sister’s personality, showcasing her many musical talents, spunk, beauty and playful nature. Leah’s unique and creative direction tells the song/story of this independent woman with a human puppet show (but she won’t be tied down), a carnival setting (where she chooses the games and wins) and a park bench (where she’s more into puppies than love). All scenes are linked with a universal color palette and whimsical tone that bounces along with the song.
Photo from Roderick Borrie
Submission is easy and publication is free. Email: people@tbrnewspapers.com Include high-resolution pictures as JPEG attachments. Please note: Obituaries should be 250 words or fewer.
OBITUARIES Antoinette Vetere
Antoinette M. Vetere, 93, of South Setauket, died Sept. 6. She was born Aug. 24, 1923, in Brooklyn, the daughter of Angelo and Mary Scorzelli. Antoinette was a homemaker who enjoyed knitting and sewing. She was a great cook. Left to cherish her memory are her daughters, Lorraine and Vickie; sons, Bob and Patrick; six grandchildren; six great-grandchildren; and
John C. Lynott
John C. Lynott, 79, of East Setauket, died Sept. 3. He was born July 14, 1937, in Port Jefferson, the son of Arthur and Susie Lynott. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army who served in the Vietnam War. He was a retired landscape supervisor for CCM in Stony Brook, who enjoyed gardening, baseball (Yankees) and football (Giants) boxing and going
many other family members and friends. Arrangements were entrusted to the Bryant Funeral Home of Setauket. Services were held at St. James R.C. Church in Setauket and interment followed at Calverton National Cemetery. Contributions made to the Alzheimer’s Association, www.alz.org, in her memory would be appreciated. An online guest book is available at www.bryantfh.com. to his beach cottage. He is survived by his wife Joan; daughters, Tracy and Erin; granddaughter Brittany; brother Bill; and many other family members and friends. Arrangements were entrusted to Bryant Funeral Home of Setauket, where services were held. He was afforded full military honors at Calverton National Cemetery. An online guest book is available at www.bryantfh.com.
Photo from Three Village school district
Ward Melville High School’s National Merit Scholarship semifinalists are pictured here with Principal Alan Baum.
WMHS National Merit semifinalists In recognition of their academic performance, 15 Ward Melville High School seniors have been named semifinalists in the 2017 National Merit Scholarship Program. According to the program’s website, 1.6 million students entered this year’s competition by taking the PSAT/NMSQT and only about 16,000 students earned the status of semifinalists. With this honor, these students now have the chance to continue
in the competition and compete for some 7,500 National Merit Scholarships worth about $33 million. These accomplished seniors are: Sophia Abanov, Hugh Ferguson, Michelle Hu, Albert Liu, Kirti Nath, Henry Nelson, Sachin Patnaik, Nikita Podobedov, Isabelle Scott, Annabel Shewan, Michelle Sun, Kavya Tangella, Ray Wei, Edward Yan and Adora Zhang.
SEPTEMBER 29, 2016 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A11
Port Jeff company has lottery: No Roof Left Behind By ReBecca anzel Whenever Denise Pianforte saw one of her neighbors getting a new roof installed, she hoped to soon be able to afford one as well. The Port Jefferson Station home she lived in with her sister, Heather Richards, was 60 years old. Pianforte saw a flier on her church’s bulletin board for a program that advertised a free roof for a Suffolk County family in need. “I always pray to God to help me find a way to get the money [for a new roof],” she wrote in the online nomination form. She added that even with her and her sister each working two jobs at over 50 hours a week, it looked like the day would never come. “Seems like my only hope would be to win the lottery.” She did not win the lottery, but she did win the new roof. A-1 Roofing & Siding, a family owned and operated contractor in Port Jefferson Station, installed it Feb. 6.
Maria Malizia and her three brothers, who took over running the business after their father retired, became involved in the national No Roof Left Behind program last year. No Roof Left Behind provides contractors with the necessary tools and resources to construct a free roof for a local family in need. The program was founded in 2009 by Jay and Dena Elie, the owners of a Detroit roofing firm called Ridgecon Construction. Malizia said that they were immediately interested in the opportunity to help deserving families in Suffolk County. “We’ve been in the community for decades and were just happy that we were finally able to give back a little,” Malizia said. “When we heard about the program, we said to ourselves, how could we not do this.” After helping Denise Pianforte and Heather Richards, Malizia said the immediate gratification let them know they needed to continue their involvement with No Roof Left Behind. “They were really grateful, excited and relieved that they were safe under a new roof and didn’t have to worry about any leaks in the future,” Maria Malizia said. Councilwoman Valerie Cartright (D-Port Jefferson Station) said No Roof Left Behind is providing the community an important service. “We are fortunate to live in an area such as Port Jefferson Station where residents and local businesses strongly believe in giving back to their community,” she said. “I commend A-1 Roofing for their sponsorship of the program.” The importance of community support is not lost on the organization. “This is a nice way for contractors to engage the community,” said Dena Elie, who is
Photos from a-1 Roofing & Siding
above, a-1 Roofing & Siding is a family owned and operated business in Port Jefferson Station that helped Denise Pianforte and Heather Richards, left, win a free roof. a member development director for the program. “No Roof Left Behind helps the community to recognize you as a shareholder there, and someone who genuinely cares.” More than 247 roofs have been installed by 60 contractors in more than 27 states and provinces since the program’s founding. As a participating contractor, A-1 Roofing pays an annual subscription fee. That gives it access to outreach and promotional materials Elie created, and designates the firm as the sole participating contractor in Suffolk County. It is one of two in New York — the other, Marshall Exteriors, is located in Newark. Nominations for this year’s recipient are open until Oct. 31. Malizia said Suffolk County community members are invited to submit photos and a brief paragraph to the local No Roof Left Behind website. Then, the roofing contractor will narrow the list down to four finalists. Malizia said A-1 considers whose roof is least able to survive the winter months. When the finalists are revealed,
residents can vote from Nov. 14 to Dec. 16 for the winner, who will be announced on Dec. 23. Currently, there are four nominees — two from Sound Beach, one from Amityville and the other Nesconset. The day the new roof is installed is usually a huge celebration, Elie said. She encourages contractors to bring members of the community to meet the winning family. A-1 will be using materials donated by General Aniline & Film (GAF) and delivered to the home by Allied Building Products, both national sponsors. “Roofing contractors are a group of bighearted fellows,” Elie said. “They grow to care for the folks they’ve put rooves on for, and I think one of the most rewarding things to see is a sense of community develop.” Malizia said her family is looking forward to helping more Suffolk County families. “We all know how difficult it is to survive when you don’t have a safe roof — it’s a constant worry,” she said. “We’re going to keep participating as long as we’re able.”
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PAGE A12 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • SEPTEMBER 29, 2016
Surgery center coming to Port Jeff; doctor calls it ‘win-win-win’ By Alex Petroski alex@tbrnewspapers.com North Shore residents in need of a surgical procedure will soon have a new, more convenient option that eliminates the need for extended hospital stays, long searches for parking and unnecessary treks through vast buildings. The New York State Department of Health approved plans for the Port Jefferson Ambulatory Surgery Center to be located on Route 112 in Port Jefferson Station at a meeting of the State’s Public Health and Health Planning Council in August. The project, which is estimated to cost nearly $10.6 million, will establish a freestanding outpatient facility for surgical procedures with six operating rooms. John T. Mather Memorial Hospital will own about a quarter of the center, with 19 individual physicians making up 70 percent of the ownership structure. Doctors involved in the plans, which go as far back as five years, are excited for the possibilities the center will bring. “There’s a massive need because it’s more comfortable for the patients, they’re less expensive to run [than full hospitals] and it’s less expensive for the hospital,” Port Jefferson-based orthopedic surgeon Dr. Michael Fracchia said in a phone inter-
File photo from John T. Mather Memorial Hospital
An ambulatory surgery center in Port Jefferson station will allow Mather Hospital to open up space for patients in need of extended stays. view. He called the center a “win-win-win” because of the benefits it will create for patients, insurance companies and Mather Hospital. Sending patients with ailments treatable at another site out of the hospital will also allow Mather more space for
Ambulatory surgery centers provide patients with a more comfortable environment with less risk of infections.
LEGALS
NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Plaintiff AGAINST Frank Trujillo, Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated 6-10-2016 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738, County of Suffolk on 1014-2016 at 11:00AM, premises known as 2 Brook Drive, Stony Brook, NY 11790-1504. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, at Stony Brook, Suffolk County, New York, SECTION: 153.00, BLOCK: 06.00, LOT: 034.000 DISTRICT 0200. Approximate amount of judgment $638,824.01 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index#: 062163/2013. Richard P. Casey, Esq., Referee Frenkel Lambert Weiss Weisman & Gordon, LLP 53 Gibson Street Bay Shore, NY 11706 01-063839F00 336 9/15 4x vth NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT SUFFOLK COUNTY BAYVIEW LOAN SERVICING, LLC, Plaintiff against LARS HJELMQUIST INDIVIDUALLY AND AS ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF DONNA L. LUBOW A/K/A DONNA LYNN LUBOW A/K/A DONNA LUBOW, DECEASED ,et al Defendants Attorney for Plaintiff(s) Fein, Such & Crane LLP, 1400 Old
Country Road, Suite C103, Westbury, New York 11590, Attorney(s) for Plaintiff(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale Entered APRIL 29, 2016 I will sell at Public Auction to the highest bidder at the BROOKHAVEN TOWN HALL, 1 INDEPENDENCE HILL, FARMINGVILLE, NY 11738 on OCTOBER 13, 2016 at 2:00 P.M.. Premises known as 8 CUB ROAD, SOUTH SETAUKET, NY 11720. District 0200 Sec 334.00 Block 03.00 Lot 049.000. ALL that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk, State of New York. Approximate Amount of Judgment is $108,522.71 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index No 070512/2014 . CRAIG A. PURCELL, ESQ. , Referee 342 9/8 4x vth NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF SUFFOLK Nationstar Mortgage LLC, Plaintiff AGAINST Mary O’Neill, Linda O’Neill, et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated 5-132016 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY, 11738, County of Suffolk on 10-26-2016 at 9:00AM, premises known as 21 Clubhouse Drive, Rocky Point, NY 11778. 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 Suf-
folk, State of New York, SECTION: 055.00, BLOCK: 06.00, LOT: 022.000 District 0200. Approximate amount of judgment $487,882.81 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index#: 032021/2012. Francine H. Moss, Esq., Referee Frenkel Lambert Weiss Weisman & Gordon, LLP 53 Gibson Street Bay Shore, NY 11706 01-046193F00 355 9/22 4x vth NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT: SUFFOLK COUNTY NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE, LLC; Plaintiff(s) vs. MELINDA ALVIRA A/K/A MELINDA A. ALVIRA; MICHAEL A. SOTO; et al; Defendant(s) Attorney (s) for Plaintiff (s): ROSICKI, ROSICKI & ASSOCIATES, P.C., 2 Summit Court, Suite 301, Fishkill, New York, 12524, 845.897.1600 Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure and sale granted herein on or about April 7, 2016, I will sell at Public Auction to the highest bidder at Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY 11738. On October 19, 2016 at 12:00 pm. Premises known as 17 EAGLE STREET, SELDEN, NY 11784 District: 0200 Section: 492.00 Block: 06.00 Lot: 030.000 ALL THAT CERTAIN PLOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Brookhaven, County of Suffolk and State of New York, known and designated as and by the
those who require a hospital stay. Fracchia is serving as a treasurer for the project as well. The Port Jefferson Station center will handle procedures in ophthalmology, orthopedics, pain management, general surgery, neurosurgery and otolaryngology. “It’s a more comfortable, homey type of facility,” orthopedic surgeon Dr. Brian McGinley said in an interview. McGinley is the president of the Port Jefferson Station proj-
Lot Number 39, as shown on a certain map entitled, “Map of Selden Oaks, Section 1”, and filed in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Suffolk on August 28, 1964 as Map Number 4137. As more particularly described in the judgment of foreclosure and sale. Sold subject to all of the terms and conditions contained in said judgment and terms of sale. Approximate amount of judgment $465,772.15 plus interest and costs. INDEX NO. 27294-13 John Joseph Breen, Esq.; REFEREE 357 9/15 4x vth NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF NASSAU Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for Long Beach Mortgage Loan Trust 2006-3, Plaintiff AGAINST Cedric Moss a/k/a Cedric Moss Jr. a/k/a Cedric L. Moss a/k/a Cedric Llewellyn Moss Jr.; et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated June 30, 2016 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction Calandar Control Part (CCP) 100 Supreme Court Drive, Mineola, New York, 11501. on October 18, 2016 at 11:30AM, premises known as 48 Opal Street, Elmont, NY 11003. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau and State of NY, Sec-
ect. Both McGinley and Fracchia stressed the improvement the facility will make in convenience and cost savings for patients. McGinley added that the center will be held to the same high standards that are associated with Mather Hospital. He said the centers tend to be cleaner than hospitals with a far lower risk of infections like MRSA. Pinnacle III, a company based in Colorado that specializes in establishing ambulatory surgery centers nationwide, has assisted in developing more than 40 centers across the United States and will play a role in creating the Port Jefferson Station site. It will be the first Pinnacle III center in New York, and according to Pinnacle III President and CEO Robert Carrera, New York is one of the states with the greatest need for more surgery centers. Lisa Austin, the company’s vice president, estimated that the cost of procedures at surgery centers is about 33 percent less than at traditional hospitals. Carrera, Austin, Fracchia and McGinley all speculated that ambulatory surgery centers could be a wave of the future in health care, especially in New York. “Things have changed — you don’t see anyone building new hospitals,” Fracchia said. New York currently has 116 ambulatory surgery centers, though plans for more are popping up in addition to the Port Jefferson Station location. Fracchia said in a telephone interview Monday that ground is being broken on the site this week, and the goal is for the doors to open by the winter of 2017.
tion: 32 Block: 667 Lot: 3. Approximate amount of judgment $700,775.82 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 13-007054. Zelda Jonas, Esq., Referee Shapiro, DiCaro & Barak, LLC Attorney(s) for the Plaintiff 175 Mile Crossing Boulevard Rochester, New York 14624 (877) 759-1835 Dated: August 11, 2016 363 9/15 4x vth NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT: SUFFOLK COUNTY. THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS CWABS, INC., ASSET-BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 200514, Pltf. vs. MICHAELANGELO ACCARDO, et al, Defts. Index #12361/2012. Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure and sale dated April 19, 2016, I will sell at public auction at Brookhaven Town Hall, 1 Independence Hill, Farmingville, NY on Oct. 17, 2016 at 8:45 a.m. prem. k/a 43 Mercury Avenue, East Patchogue, NY a/k/a Section 898.00, Block 02.00, Lot 098.000, District 0200. Approx. amt. of judgment is $597,830.91 plus costs and interest. Sold subject to terms and conditions of filed judgment and terms of sale. DAVID HOWARD BESSO, Referee. FRENKEL LAMBERT WEISS WEISMAN & GORDON, LLP, Attys. for Pltf., 53 Gibson St., Bay Shore, NY. File No. 34674 - #89299 377 9/15 4x vth
BOARD OF TRUSTEES INCORPORATED VILLAGE OF POQUOTT NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON A PROPOSED LOCAL LAW OF 2016 AMENDING CHAPTER 169 OF THE POQUOTT VILLAGE CODE VEHICLES AND TRAFFIC PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the Board of Trustees of the Incorporated Village of Poquott will conduct a public hearing on October 13, 2016 at 7:00 p.m. at the Poquott Village Hall, located at 43 Birchwood Avenue, Poquott, New York, on a proposed local law of 20156 amending Chapter 169 of the Poquott Village Code, Vehicles and Traffic. The purpose and intent of the proposed local law is to amend the sections related to fines and also parking and stop sign regulations in the Village of Poquott. The title of the proposed local laws is Local Law No. of 2016 a local law amending Chapter 169 Vehicles and Traffic, of the Poquott Village Code. Dated: September 22, 2016 Joseph Newfield Poquott Village Clerk Incorporated Village of Poquott Suffolk County, New York 416 9/29 2x vth
SEPTEMBER 29, 2016 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A13
SportS
Photos by Desirée Keegan
Clockwise from left, nick Messina rushes downfield; Wesley Manning avoids a sack as he moves the ball; Dominic Pryor leads the pack; and Joe Larosa scores on an extra-point kick attempt.
Ward Melville wows with homecoming win By Desirée Keegan Desiree@tbrnewspapers.com John Corpac wasted no time taking one to the house on homecoming game day. The Ward Melville football team’s senior wide receiver, defensive back and kick returner knew if his team’s homecoming opponent, Patchogue-Medford, watched any film of his Patriots, they weren’t going to let him get his hands on the opening kickoff during their Sept. 24 contest. “I was expecting a squib kick,” he said. “And that’s what I got.” As the two teams collided on the opening play, Corpac picked up the ball, which the Raiders were trying to keep away from the dangerous return man, on the far right side of the field, jolted left to avoid a tackle, and, like
Ward Melville 35 Pat-Med 22
running down an open highway, cruised all the way to the end zone for an 85-yard kickoff return for a touchdown. “I scooped the ball up, the hole was there and I only had to beat one guy,” Corpac said. “Kick returns are my favorite thing to do. It was the best feeling.” The Ward Melville football team benefitted from a fast start during its homecoming matchup, but a strong finish proved the Patriots are ready to put up a fight this season. The team bested the Raiders 35-22 to avenge its 2015 homecoming loss. “Last year Northport came in here and beat up a little bit on us — we lost — so for these seniors, this was big for them,” Ward Melville head coach Chris Boltrek said. “There were definitely some things that we have to clean up for the next game, but when we really needed them to step up, the kids did a nice job.” Patchogue-Medford mounted a charge up the field on its first drive following Corpac’s return touchdown, and bulled into the end zone on a 1-yard run to even the score. Ward Melville responded by moving the ball on its next possession, but a fumble recovered by Patchogue-Medford changed the tide. The Patriots’ defense made up for its offense’s mistake, and forced Patchogue-Medford to settle for a field goal attempt, which was missed. To open the second quarter, Ward Melville wide receiver and strong safety Eddie Munoz, who also recorded an interception, received a 29-yard touchdown pass from senior quarterback Wesley Manning. Munoz helped set up the score with gains of 28 yards and four yards earlier in the drive. Manning tossed his next touchdown pass to junior running back Nick Messina. The play wouldn’t have been possible without senior cornerback and wide receiver Andrew McKenna’s second interception of the game. He also chipped in 35 yards on the ensuing drive. Messina’s 13-yard catch and senior kicker Joe LaRosa’s point-after brought the score to 21-7 before halftime.
“Our special teams was excellent, our defense really came up big, causing a lot of turnovers in key moments,” Boltrek said. “And offensively we did some nice things. When we got nice blocks and we scored, we threw the ball well, so there was some good and some bad, but we have to improve.” Patchogue-Medford added seven points following another 1-yard run with 20 seconds to go in the third to pull closer, but Messina rushed the ball 52 yards for a touchdown with 6.5 seconds on the clock to reextend the Patriots’ advantage. Shortly into the final stanza, Messina rushed home another touchdown, this time taking the ball 22 yards to help his team jump out in front, 35-14. “On those few plays, the line did exactly what they needed to do,” Messina said. “If we could do that more often, we could go far and score more touchdowns.” Boltrek said his team needs to clean up the blocking up front going forward, though
he was impressed with his running back’s performance. “Nick is a kid we all depend on because of his speed and his athleticism, and it’s warranted,” Boltrek said. “He had two breakaway touchdowns, he did a nice job catching along the backfield, so he did really well for us.” Manning completed 15 of 22 passes for 240 yards, including two touchdowns. He said all the players were confident coming into the homecoming game after a strong week of practice. He said he enjoyed showing the team could get the job done through the air, and in the second half, on the ground, too. “The feeling kept getting better and better as the game went on,” he said. “It’s great to win on your senior homecoming. There’s really nothing better. I think we’re really going to carry on momentum. We had a tough loss against Longwood and now we just have to keep the momentum going next week against Floyd.” Ward Melville travels to William Floyd Oct. 1 for a 2 p.m. kickoff.
PAGE A14 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • SEPTEMBER 29, 2016
TIMES BEACON RECORD 631.331.1154 or 631.751.7663
Classifieds
ON THE NORTH SHORE FROM HUNTINGTON TO WADING RIVER • tbrnewsmedia.com
Garage Sales ALL BRAND NEW OR LIKE NEW. Saturday, 10/1, 9:30-12:30PM. Elipitical machine, loveseat, HP printer. Ralph Lauren bag & king sheet set, signed Longaberger bag etc. 1 Fairmount St. Huntington. 631-766-7659 TEXT ONLY
Automobiles/Trucks/ Vans/Rec Vehicles DONATE YOUR CAR TO Wheels For Wishes Benefiting Make-A-Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call 631-317-2014 Today!
PORCH SALE SAT., OCT. 1ST, 9AM-4PM STONY BROOK 10 New York Ave. off Cedar. Furniture, household, etc. etc. etc.
SUBARU 2012, IMPREZZA LTD, Mint. Manufacturers extended warranty. 33K, leather, sporty, $14,990. 631-928-7204.
Auctions
Childcare
FINE ARTS, ANTIQUES & SPORTING AUCTION SAT. OCTOBER 1ST NOON Preview 10 am. EARLY PREVIEW: Friday, September 30th, 11am-4pm. Featuring properties from Various Estates and Collections. Paintings; Prints; Sculptures; Antique Furniture; Folk Art; Accessories; Silver; Clocks; Firearms; Decoys, etc. 300+ lots. Illustrated catalogue: www.southbayauctions.com. Online bidding now available through www.invaluable.com SOUTH BAY AUCTIONS, INC. 485 Montauk Hwy., East Moriches. 631-878-2909
CHILDCARE AVAILABLE in your home, M-F, energetic loving grandma, local long time resident of Three Village Area, references available, 516-553-0668.
Automobiles/Trucks/ Vans/Rec Vehicles 2003 CHEVY S10 EXTREME Reliable, runs good, 105K, great on gas. Asking $1700. 631-871-1720.
Hair Removal/ Electrolysis/Laser LASER/ELECTROLYSIS Medically approved, professional methods of removing unwanted (facial/body) hair. Privacy assured, complimentary consultation. Member S.C.M.H.R. & A.E.A. Phyllis 631-444-0103
Merchandise BUNK BEDS AND BUREAU “This End Up� solid wooden bunk beds and 5 drawer bureau. Beds disassembled and ready for pick up. $125 for all. Call 631-942-7916.
Merchandise MOVING SALE Natuzzi leather sectional, taupe, $500. Dining Room set, 8 piece, $750. Credenza; 2 pieces w/bar, $150. Kitchen set, dressers, TV, tables, pictures. By appointment only 631-732-5120, Selden.
Wanted to Buy WANTED! GUNS-STAMPS-COINS LIC.FFL dealer. We buy& sell Modern/antique rifles, pistols, Amo. Also military souvenirs. We do gun transfers & receive Amo. Also buying stamps & coins. B&C SPORTING 631-751-5662 $WANTED$ CASH PAID for Pre-1980 COMIC BOOKS & Star Wars Action Figures. Original Comic Art- Sports Cards & Autographed Memorabilia- 1990’s MagictheGathering Call WILL: 800-242-6130 buying@getcashforcomics.com
Pets/Pet Services ADOPT A CAT or kitten at Golden Paw Society!! Tons of friendly lap cats of all ages, sizes and colors. Adoption centers throughout Huntington & Commack. www.goldenpawsociety.org adoption@goldenpawsociety.org HELPING PAWS Daily walks, socialization, Pet Sitting and overnights. Custom plans available. Licensed/Insured Call Milinda, 631-428-1440.
Pets/Pet Services TENDER LOVING PET CARE, LLC. Pet Sitting Services. When you need to leave town, why disrupt your pet’s routine. Let your pets enjoy the comforts of home while receiving TLC from a PSI Certified professional Pet Sitter. Experienced, reliable. Ins/Bonded, 631-675-1938 tenderlovingpetcarellc.com
Professional Services PIANO LESSONS Certified Music Teacher. 10 years experience. My studio or your home. Three Village Area/Port Jefferson. First 3 lessons discounted. Brigette 631-790-7316.
Schools/Instruction/ Tutoring
SPANISH/FRENCH TUTOR N.Y.S Certified experienced classroom teacher. 30+ years classroom experience. Specializing in State Exams. Guaranteed results. Reasonable rate. 631-902-6688
Finds Under 50
WOMEN’S 21 SPEED BIKE helmet, in excellent condition $50.00 631-928-2459.
CLARINET In case, used, good condition, $50.00/best offer. 631-675-0919
WOOLRICH 100% wool pants, CARTARTT work outdoor jacket, $49. 631-473-0963
COLD WAR “FALL-OUT SHELTER� MEMORABILIA. Collection of original government publications promoting this historic program. $50 or best offer. 631-689-8398
*$5$*( 6$/(
DELUXE HUGO WALKER, rolling w/8� wheels, cup holder, cane holder, padded seat, storage compartment. New. $50. 631-751-4563
63(&,$/ $2900/ 20 Words
FREE CLEAN FILL, 500 yards. You pick up. Mt. Sinai. 631-474-9225
3OXV
HONDA LAWNMOWER Model HR214, $49. Call, 631-987-7004. HP 1020 laser jet printer. Works fine. $25. 631-929-0661
2 SiSigns FREE
LITTLE TIKES KITCHEN: Refrigerator, Sink, Stove Top, Oven and Side Grill. A few accessories. $35. 631-655-6397
TO SUBSCRIBE
with placement of AD.
MEN’S 3 SPEED English Racer, 26� new tires, $45.00. Call, 631-744-3722.
Š59419
Do you love animals? Do you have an hour or two to make their lives better? SAP desperately needs volunteers to come one morning a week and care for our cats. Recently retired? Looking for something to give a little more meaning to your life? Please help us help them.
J]k[m]\ 9faeYdk >gj 9\ghlagf .(0 Jgml] ))* Hgjl B]^^]jkgf KlYlagf .+)&,/+&.+++ Š94808
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TWIN LITTLE TIKES 4 in 1 tricycles, 1 pink, 1 blue. Parent push to kid pedal, $50 for two. 631-655-6397
FLOOR LAMP, $10. 631-751-3869
PIANO - GUITAR - BASS All levels and styles. Many local references. Recommended by area schools. Tony Mann, 631-473-3443
8kYn]Yh]lYfaeYdj]k[m]
SPERRY TOP SIDERS Women’s 7M Firefish core Linen/0at. Purchased in July hardly worn $49, Pic avail. 631-245-7107
EVENFLO single stroller, $25. Teddy 631-928-5392.
ACG Music Studio A+ Voice/Piano Lessons All Levels/Styles NYSSMA Prep/Recitals/ Auditions/Competitions & Performing Arts. Arleen 631-751-8684 www.arleengargiulo.com
CALL 751–7744
Finds Under 50
Schools/Instruction/ Tutoring
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SEPTEMBER 29, 2016 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A15
Who? What? Where? How? 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
GENERAL OFFICE 631–751–7744 Fax 631–751–4165
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• FIRST 20 WORDS
(40¢ each additional word)
1 Week 2 Weeks 3 Weeks 4 Weeks
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DISPLAY ADS Call for rates.
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*May change without notice FREE FREE FREE Merchandise under $50 15 words 1 item only. Fax•Mail•E-mail Drop Off Include Name, Address, Phone # ACTION AD 20 words $44 for 4 weeks for all your used merchandise
This Publication is Subject to All Fair Housing Acts
GARAGE SALE ADS $29.00 20 words Free 2 signs with placement of ad REAL ESTATE DISPLAY ADS Ask about our Contract Rates. EMPLOYMENT Buy 2 weeks of any size BOXED ad get 2 weeks free
OFFICE • IN-PERSON
INDEX The following are some of our available categories listed in the order in which they appear.
MAIL ADDRESS
TBR Newspapers 185 Route 25A (Bruce Street entrance) Setauket, NY 11733 Call: 331-1154 or 751-7663
TBR Newspapers Classifieds Department P.O. Box 707 Setauket, NY 11733
class@tbrnewspapers.com CONTACT CLASSIFIEDS:
Reach more than 169,000 readers weekly
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.
Commercial • Industrial • Professional Property •
93298
Single $189.00 4 weeks
Double $277.00 4 weeks
• 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
ADS
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DeaDline: TuesDay noon for ThursDay’s PaPer.
Call 631-751-7663 • 631-331-1154
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Your Ad Will Appear in All 6 of Our Newspapers Plus on our web site
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TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA DIA 185 Route 25A, Setauket, New York rk 11733
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PAGE A16 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD â&#x20AC;˘ SEPTEMBER 29, 2016
E M P L OY M E N T / C A R E E R S 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.
IMMEDIATE OPENING Harbor Country Day School FT First Grade Teaching Assistant. Bachelors degree in elementary education required. Please submit cover letter and resume to jcissel@hcdsny.org
CUSTOMER SERVICE REPS F/T & P/T. Days, evenings, midnights & weekends. Riverhead Call Center. Details on www.rccjobs.com MOUNT SINAI SCHOOL DISTRICT Registered Nurse Part-Time, 10 Month Position Send letter of interest/resume to Mr. Scott Reh, Director of Athletics, PE, Health, Nursing & Grounds at sreh@mtsinai.k12.ny.us
FT OFFICE SECRETARY Must be punctual and have a lot of computer skills. Helpful to have Real Estate Experience. Please email resume to aliano@optonline.net GRAPHIC/PRODUCTION DESIGNER wanted for award-winning news group. Looking for a creative person to work in a family friendly environment. Experience with Creative Suite software a plus. Minimum 2 years experience or degree in graphic arts. Pagination or prepress experience a plus. Email resume and link to portfolio to beth@ tbrnewspapers.com TRAVEL AGENT WANTED Experienced Leisure/Sabre professional, Northport location, full/part/flexible Call Linda or Karen 631-757-8500 or email burrtravel@aol.com
LAKE GROVE HIRING FAIR Wednesday. October. 12th 10am-12pm RSVP to NELGVHIRING @ wholefoods.com BRING YOUR RESUME! (Culinary background preferred.) Whole Foods Market P/T CUSTODIAN/ MAINTENANCE , 20-24 hours a week for a local nonprofit organization. The position includes light lifting(up to 30 pounds), cleaning restrooms, classrooms, hallways, snow removal,emptying garbage and general maintenance. Fax resume to 631-744-8611 or email to Awhite@sldmrc.org R.N., L.P.N., C.N.A. POSITIONS AVAILABLE, ALL SHIFTS. Please send your resume to: jfhr@jeffersonsferry.org,or to dcaccamo@ jeffersonsferry.org, via fax 631-675-5597 Jeffersonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Ferry, 1 Jeffersonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Ferry Drive, South Setauket, NY 11720, 631-650-2614, EOE
MOUNT SINAI SCHOOL DISTRICT
P/T MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST
Nursing Assistant
OB/GYN Office Days & evenings Flexibility a must
Looking for longevity, opportunity for growth? Then Jeffersonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Ferry is the company for you!
Send letter of interest/resume to Mr. Scott Reh Director of Athletics PE, Health, Nursing & Grounds at sreh@mtsinai.k12.ny.us
3$57 7,0( &8672',$1 0$,17(1$1&( 326,7,21
(20-24 hours a week) for a local non-profit organization. The successful candidate must be physically fit and demonstrate high energy and a can-do attitude and must have at least two professional job references. The position includes light lifting (up to 30 pounds), cleaning of restrooms, classrooms, hallways, snow removal, emptying garbage and general maintenance. Fax your resume to 631.744.8611 or email to Awhite@sldmrc.org
E. Setauket area. Full-time. Cardiac experience preferred.
resumes@ sbbusinessventures.org or apply sbadministrativeservicesllc. appone.com
resumes@ sbbusinessventures.org or apply sbadministrativeservicesllc. appone.com
THREE VILLAGE CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT Seeks Child Care Assistant, $13.40/hr. School Age Child Care Program. 2016-2017. M-F. For more info, please call, 631-730-4520. See Employment Display for full details.
MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST East Setauket area, full time, Cardiac experience preferred resumes@ sbbusinessventures.org or apply sbadministrativeservcesllc. appone.com
The CLASSIFIED DEADLINE
PART TIME POSITION; Clerical Assistant for Real Estate Professional 3 mornings a week (10 hours). Computer proficiency a must! Inquire: Andrea Kozlowsky, Coach Realtors, 631-928-5484 Andreak@coachrealtors.com P/T MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST OB/GYN-Stony Brook, prior experience preferred, M 7:30-1:00, T 1:30-8:00, W 8:30-1:00, TH 1:30-7:30, F 9:30-4:30 as needed Send resumes to resumes@ sbadministrativeservices.org or fax 631-675-2625.
is Tuesday at noon. If you want to advertise, do it soon! Call
751â&#x20AC;&#x201C;7663 or 331â&#x20AC;&#x201C;1154 +
+ +
+
+
Snack Bar Associates to work on-board The Port Jefferson Ferry. Full-time, part-time early morning & afternoon shifts available. Excellent pay, benefits package. Light cooking, good attitude & people skills a must. Call: 631.331.2167 between 10am â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 1pm or Fax: 631.331.2547
&'
PART TIME POSTITION
Secretary
Clerical Assistant For Real Estate Professional
PART-TIME Computer savvy. Must be proficient in Microsoft Word.
3 Mornings A Week (10 Hours) Computer proficiency a must!
Stony Brook Fax resume and cover letter to 631.751.8665 ()
AndreaK@coachrealtors.com (YL `V\ SVVRPUN [V ILNPU YLZ[HY[ VY JVU[PU\L `V\Y JHYLLY&
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Food Service Port Jefferson Ferry
SECRETARY P/T Computer Savvy, must be proficient in Word. Stony Brook. Fax resume and cover letter to: 631-751-8665.
Inquire: Andrea Kozlosky Coach Realtors 631-928-5484
+
+
FULL-TIME OFFICE SECRETARY Must be punctual & have a lot of computer skills. Helpful to have Real Estate Experience. Š94781
E. Setauket area. Full-time. Cardiac experience preferred.
Help Wanted
MEDICAL ASSISTANT East Setauket areas, full time, Cardiac experience preferred resumes@ sbbusinessventures.org or apply sbadministrativeservcesllc. appone.com
Š94282
MEDICAL ASSISTANT
Š94818
MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST
Bachelorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s degree in elementary education required.
Please submit cover letter and resume to: jcissel@hcdsny.org
NURSING ASSISTANT OB/GYN office days & evening, Flexibility a must. Call 631-474-4917 or fax resume to: 631-331-1048.
Š94836
Full-Time First Grade Teaching Assistant
Š94833
Jeffersonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Ferry 1 Jeffersonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Ferry Drive South Setauket, NY 11720 631-650-2614 EOE Š94678
IMMEDIATE OPENING Harbor Country Day School is seeking a
Part-time, 10 month position
Š94820
Please send your resume to: jfhr@jeffersonsferry.org or to dcaccamo@jeffersonsferry.org via fax 631-675-5597
Resumes to: resumes@ sbadministrativeservices.org Fax: 631.675.2625
Registered Nurse
Š94806
R.N., L.P.N., C.N.A. positions available, all shifts.
Š94774
OB/GYN-Stony Brook Prior experience preferred. M: 7:30-1, T: 1:30-8, W: 8:30-1, Th: 1:30-7:30, F: 9:30-4:30 as needed.
LITTLE FLOWER CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES OF NY SEEKS: BEHAVIOR INTERVENTION SPECIALIST SUPVR: CARE COORDINATOR SUPVR: MA Req; DAY HAB WORKERS: M-F DIRECT CARE WORKERS: P/T and Per Diem HR RECRUITER: F/T TEMP HUMAN RESOURCE ASST: F/T MEDICAID SERVICE COORDINATOR: P/T CHILD CARE WORKERS F/T, P/T and Per Diem RNâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S: Per diem HEALTH CARE INTEGRATORS: F/T WAIVER SERVICE PROVIDER: HEALTH CARE INTEGRATORS: F/T, Per Diem. (LMSW Req.) Valid NYS Driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s License required for most positions.â&#x20AC; 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
Help Wanted
Š94560
Š94606
Call (631) 474-4917 or fax resume to: (631) 331-1048
Help Wanted
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Help Wanted
DISTRICT CLERK, P/T 12 months stipend position, $14,500 pro-rated. Submit letter of intent and completed RPUFSD non-instructional Employment Application: Susan Y. Sullivan, President, Rocky Point Schools Board of Education, Rocky Point UFSD, 90 Rocky Point Yaphank Rd, Rocky Point, NY, 11778
Š87774
Help Wanted
Š94536
Help Wanted
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
Please email resume to aliano@optonline.net
SEPTEMBER 29, 2016 â&#x20AC;¢ THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD â&#x20AC;¢ PAGE A17
E M P L OY M E N T / C A R E E R S &86720(5 6(59,&( 5(35(6(17$7,9(6
Experienced Leisure/Sabre Professional. Northport Location. Full/Part/Flexible. ©94778
Call Linda or Karen
631.757.8500
burrtravel@aol.com
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Rocky Point Schools AVAILABLE POSITION
District Clerk Part-Time 12 Months Stipend Position $14,500, pro-rated
Please submit a letter of intent and completed RPUFSD non-instructional employment application (available at www.rockypointschools.org) to the attention of: Susan Y. Sullivan, President, Rocky Point Schools Board of Education, Rocky Point UFSD, 90 Rocky Point-Yaphank Road, Rocky Point NY 11778 For more information please call the Office of the District Clerk 631-849-7243. EOE
©94742
©94572
TRAVEL AGENT WANTED
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
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SCHOOL AGE CHILD CARE PROGRAM 2016-2017 School Year
Monday-Friday-Before & After School Hours Available Professional child care experience required Must be at least 18 years of age Fingerprinting required by NYS Education Department
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Little Flower Children and Family Services in Wading River, NY seeks
Valid NYS Driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s License required for most positions.Â
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Direct Care Workers for our Wading River Location Friday-Sunday-11 pm to 8 am (27 hours) Saturday 8 am to 4 pm and Sunday 8 am to 3 pm (15 hours) Thursday 4 pm to 8 pm; Friday 4 pm to 7 pm; Saturday 4 pm - 10 pm and Sunday 4 pm to 7 pm (16 hours) Friday 4 pm to 8 pm; Saturday and Sunday 4 pm to 10 pm (16 hours) Saturday and Sunday 11 am to 7 pm (16 hours) Saturday and Sunday 9 am to 3 pm (12 hours) Human Resource Assistant: F/T Wading River location. BA and Exp Req. Day Hab Workers: Mon-Fri-8:45 am to 2:45 pm.-Wading River-HS diploma Caseworker for RTC in Wading River-Req: MSW or MA in related field Behavior Intervention Specialist Supervisor: Must have 5 yrs providing supervision and training of behavioral plans with OPWDD population. Must be LCSW or Licensed Psychologist HR Recruiter â&#x20AC;&#x201C; F/T- TEMP-through March for our Hauppauge office Care Coordinator Supervisor â&#x20AC;&#x201C; MA Req; Min 2 yrs exp of case coordination and managed-care environment. Medicaid Service Coordinator â&#x20AC;&#x201C; P/T-New Life Program-BA and exp req. Child Care Workers -F/T, P/T and Per Diem; High School Diploma and NYS Driverâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s License RNâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S â&#x20AC;&#x201C;Per diem for our Infirmary working with our youth 9â&#x20AC;&#x201C;21 years. Waiver Service Providers â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Per Diem for our Bridges to Health Program-BA; MA preferred Health Care Integrators - F/T- for our Bridges to Health Program - MA req.
Send resume to Little Flower Children and Family Services in Wading River NY â&#x20AC;¢ Send resume to wadingriver-jobs@lfchild.org or fax to 631.929.6203 EOE
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for award-winning news group. Looking for a creative person to work in a family friendly environment. Experience with Creative Suite software a plus. Minimum 2 years experience or degree in Graphic Arts. Pagination or pre-press experience a plus. Email resume and link to portfolio to beth@tbrnewspapers.com
©93897
93708
PAGE A18 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD â&#x20AC;˘ SEPTEMBER 29, 2016
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S E R V IC E S Audio/Video
Electricians
CONVERT YOUR FILMS AND VIDEO TAPES TO DVDâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S. longislandfilmtransfers.com or call 631-591-3457
FARRELL ELECTRIC Serving Suffolk for over 40 years All types electrical work, service changes, landscape lighting, automatic standby generators. 631-928-0684
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
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.
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 GREENLITE ELECTRIC, INC. Repairs, installations, motor controls, PV systems. Piotr Dziadula, Master Electrician. Lic. #4694-ME/Ins. 631-331-3449
POWERPRO GENERATORS is a full service generator company specializing in Generator installations, service and monitoring for any Home or Business. Call 631-567-2700 www.powerprogenerators.com SOUNDVIEW ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING Prompt * Reliable * Professional. Residential/Commercial, Free Estimates. Ins/Lic#41579-ME. Owner Operator 631-828-4675 See our Display Ad in the Home Services Directory
Fences SMITHPOINT FENCE. Storm Damage Repairs. Wood, Chainlink, PVC, Stockade. Free Estimates. 70 Jayne Blvd., PJS Lic./Ins. 631-743-9797 www.smithpointfence.com.
Floor Services/Sales DREYFUS FLOOR CARE. Commercial/Residential. Polishing, stripping, sealing, vinyl, ceramic, wood, terracotta. Weekly, bi-weekly maintence. 20 years experience. 631-731-7779 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
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
Š94061
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154 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
Handyman Services JOHNâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;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 THE TOOLMAN HANDYMAN SERVICES Fix it! Build it! Change it! Repair it! Paint it! The big name in small jobs, lic#-454612-H & insured Call 928-1811.
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.
Home Improvement
Lawn & Landscaping
BUDGET BLINDS Thousands of window coverings Hunter-Douglas Showcase Dealer
LANDCRAFTERS Landscape & Lawn Service. Shrub Pruning, Weeding, Mulch, Dethatching, Aeration, Seeding, Weekly Maintenance. Free estimates. Lic/Ins. 631-751-3376. E-Mail landcrafters@optonline.net
www.BudgetBlinds.com /huntington
631-766-5758 Huntington 631-766-1276 Port Jefferson 631-329-8663 Hamptons Celebrating Our 10 Year Anniversary 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. THREE VILLAGE HOME IMPROVEMENT Serving the community for over 30 years. See ad in Home Service Directory. Rich Beresford, 631-689-3169
Home Repairs/ Construction
*BluStar Construction* The North Shoreâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Most Trusted Renovation Experts. 631-751-0751 Suffolk Lic. #48714-H, Ins. See Our Display Ad
FULL SERVICE HOME REMODELING serving Nassau and Suffolk Counties, kitchens, bathrooms, siding, roofing, commercial, extensions, decks, complete renovations, general contracting and much more. Wickman Constructions Inc. Call free estimate 631-846-8811.
J. MAKARIUS CONSTRUCTION Renovations, Kitchens, Windows/Doors, Bathrooms. Construction Management Services. Since 1980. 631-928-0483. Lic#8477-H. jmakariusconstruction.com
LONG HILL CARPENTRY 40 years experience All phases of home improvement. Old & Historic Restorations. Lic.#H22336/Ins. 631-751-1764 longhill7511764@aol.com
LANDSCAPES UNLIMITED FALL CLEAN-UPS Property Clean-ups, Tree Removal, Pruning, Landscape Construction, Maintenance, Thatching & Aeration. Free Estimates. Commercial/Residential Steven Long Lic.#36715-H/Ins. 631-675-6685 PRIVACY HEDGES, LIMITED SUPPLY, 6ft Arborvitae, Fast Growing, Reg $129 Now $69, Beautiful, Bushy, Nursery Grown. FREE Installation/FREE delivery. Other trees available! 844-592-3327 www.lowcosttreefarm.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 www.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
Landscape Materials LOCAL ORGANIC COMPOST Available to be picked up by the yard or in one cubic foot bags in St. James. www.sosforyoursoil.com 516-581-7882
Lawn Sprinklers ITâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S SPRINKLER TIME!! Repairs, upgrades, re-routes. Fast Dependable Service. Free Estimates, Best prices. â&#x20AC;&#x153;We do close-outs for the seasonâ&#x20AC;? Call for an appt. 10% Senior Discounts. AQUA-FLO SPRINKLERS 631-507-7005
Legal Services JANET Oâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;HANLON ATTORNEY AT LAW Offering â&#x20AC;&#x153;Estate Planning and Administration; Commercial and Residential Real Estateâ&#x20AC;? Over 23 years experience. 631-928-8000. E-mail, johanlon@winklerkurtz.com
Masonry ALL SUFFOLK PAVING & MASONRY Asphalt Paving, Cambridge Paving Stone, Belgium Block Supplied & fitted. All types of drainage work. Free written estimates. Lic#47247-H/Ins. 631-764-9098/631-365-6353 www.allsuffolkpaving.com Carl Bongiorno Landscape/Mason Contractor All phases masonry work: stone walls, patios, poolscapes. All phases of Landscaping Design. Theme Gardens. Residential & Commercial. Lic/Ins. 631-928-2110
SEPTEMBER 29, 2016 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE A19
PAGE C6 â&#x20AC;˘ CLASSIFIEDS â&#x20AC;˘ September 29, 2016
S E R V IC E S Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper
ALL PRO PAINTING Interior/Exterior. Powerwashing, Staining, Wallpaper Removal. Free estimates. Lic/Ins #19604HI. 631-696-8150, Nick
JAY A. SPILLMANN PAINTING CO. Over 30 years in business. Spackling/Taping, Wallpaper removal. Quality prep work. Interior/Exterior. Lic. #17856-H/Ins. 631-331-3712, 631-525-2206
BOBâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S PAINTING SERVICE 25 Years Experience Interior/Exterior Painting, Spackling, Staining, Wall-paper Removal, Powerwashing. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins. #17981, 631-744-8859
Painting/Spackling/ Wallpaper WORTH PAINTING â&#x20AC;&#x153;PAINTING WITH PRIDEâ&#x20AC;? Interiors/exteriors. Faux finishes, power-washing, wallpaper removal, sheetrock tape/spackling, carpentry/trimwork. Lead paint certified. References. Free estimates. Lic./Ins. SINCE 1989 Ryan Southworth, 631-331-5556
JOSEPH WALTZ PAINTING Interior/Exterior, Paper Removal, Powerwashing. Owner Operated since 1981. Comm/Res. Neat and Reliable. Lic/Ins. Lic# 26603-H. 631-473-2179
COUNTY-WIDE PAINTING INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Painting/Staining. Quality workmanship. Living/Serving 3 Village Area Over 25 Years. Lic#37153-H. 631-751-8280
Plumbing/Heating
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
YOUR AD HERE! Call 631.751.7663
Š71417
GREG TRINKLE PAINTING & GUTTER CLEANING Powerwashing, window washing, staining. Neat, reliable, 25 years experience. Free Estimates. Lic/Ins.#31398-H 631-331-0976
Place your ad today Call 631.751.7663 or 631.331.1154
DOUGLAS FERRI PLUMBING & HEATING Lic/Ins. All types of work, small repairs receive special attention. Free estimates, reasonable rates. 631-265-8517
Power Washing SUNLITE PRESSURE WASHING Roofs, Cedar Shakes, Vinyl Siding, Cedar Planks, Patios, Decks. Reasonable rates. 30 years in business Lic.27955-H/Ins. 631-281-1910
Power Washing
Tree Work
EXTERIOR CLEANING SPECIALISTS Roof cleaning, pressure washing/softwashing, deck restorations, gutter maintenance. Squeaky Clean Property Solutions 631-387-2156 www.SqueakyCleanli.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
Tree Work ABOVE ALL TREE SERVICE Will Beat ALL Competitors Rates Quality Work at Lowest Prices! *Removal, *Land Clearing. *Large Tree Specialists. Pruning, Topping, Stump Grinding $10 & Up. Bucket Truck, Emergency Service. Lic. #33122-H. & Insured. Located Exit 62 LIE. 631-928-4544 www.abovealltree.com 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
Tree Work
GOT BAMBOO? Bamboo Containment & Removal Services with Guaranteed Results! Free Estimate and Site Analysis Report. Serving All of Long Island. 631-316-4023, www.GotBamboo.com NORTHEAST TREE EXPERTS, INC. Expert Pruning, Stump Grinding, Careful Removals. Tree/Shrub Fertilization. Disease/Insect Management. Certified Arborists. Insured/Lic#24,512-HI. ALL WORK GUARANTEED. 631-751-7800 www.northeasttree.com
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SUNLITE WINDOW WASHING Residential. Interior/Exterior. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Done the old fashioned way.â&#x20AC;? Also powerwashing/gutters. Reasonable rates. 30 years in business Lic.27955-H/Ins. 631-281-1910
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Window Cleaning
RANDALL BROTHERS TREE SERVICE Planting, pruning, removals, stump grinding. Free Estimates. Fully insured. LIC# 50701-H. 631-862-9291
PROF E S SIONA L & B U SI N E S S Providing solutions to all your home or office computing needs. â&#x20AC;˘ Software and Hardware Installation â&#x20AC;˘ Wireless Home and Office Networking Reasonable â&#x20AC;˘ PC System Upgrades and Repairs Rates, â&#x20AC;˘ Internet, Web, and Email Systems Dependable â&#x20AC;˘ System Troubleshooting Service, â&#x20AC;˘ Software Configuration and Training â&#x20AC;˘ Computer System Tune-Up Plenty of â&#x20AC;˘ Network Design, Setup and Support References â&#x20AC;˘ Backup and Power Failure Safety Systems
SUNBURST TREE EXPERTS Since 1974, our history of customer satisfaction is second to none. Pruning/removals/planting, plant health care. Certified Arborist on every job guaranteed. Unsplit firewood For Sale by the truckload. Bonded employees. Lic/Ins. #8864HI 631-744-1577
or call
591-3457 PAGE G
TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIA Mailed to subscribers and available at over 350 newsstands and distribution points across the North Shore of Suffolk County on Long Island. 185 Route 25A (P.O. Box 707), Setauket, New York 11733 â&#x20AC;˘ (631) 751â&#x20AC;&#x201C;7744
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The Village TIMES HERALD
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Stony Brookk Strongâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Neck Setauket Old Field Poquott
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PAGE A20 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD â&#x20AC;˘ SEPTEMBER 29, 2016
H O M E S E R V IC E S
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SEPTEMBER 29, 2016 â&#x20AC;˘ THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD â&#x20AC;˘ PAGE A21
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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PAGE A22 â&#x20AC;¢ THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD â&#x20AC;¢ SEPTEMBER 29, 2016
H O M E S E R V IC E S 706;9 +A0(+<3( 4HZ[LY ,SLJ[YPJPHU
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PAGE A
PAGE A24 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • SEPTEMBER 29, 2016
R E A L E S TAT E 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.
CATSKILL MOUNTAIN LAKE LOT 14 acres WAS $79,900, NOW $69,900! Beautiful lake, 2 hrs NY City! Private gated community! Terms avail! Call 888-905-8847 FARM ESTATE LIQUIDATION! 7 hilltop tracts from 6 to 30 acres from $19,900! Gorgeous views, streams, ponds, woods, fields! Quiet country setting! Financing avail! 888-701-7509 NewYorkLandandLakes.com LAND BARGAINS! Rt. 20, Schoharie Co., 95.7 acres, $139,000. Rt. 7 Rensselaer Co., 26.4 acres, $79,000. Rt. 205 Otsego Co., 2.7 acres, $22,000. Owner Financing. www.helderbergrealty.com
Offices For Rent/Share 25A SETAUKET On way to supermarkets. Hi visibility office for rent on 25A in charming stand alone professional office building. 650 sq. ft. Private entrance, 2 private bathrooms, private A/C and heating controls. Built-in bookcases. Light and bright. Ample parking. Previous tenants included; an attorney, an accountant and a software developer. Call Ann:631-751-5454
Out of County LENDER ORDERED FARM SALE! 39 acres WAS $119,999, NOW $89,900! Catskill Mtn’s, stunning hilltop setting less than 3 hrs NY City! Woods,awesome views, great deer hunting! EZ financing. 888-479-3394
Rentals MILLER PLACE 1 bedroom, beautiful Garden Apartment, designated parking, laundry. No pets. $1400.+ utilities, +$395 move in fee. 516-376-9931, 631-834-4215
PORT JEFFERSON STA. New, bright, beautiful, large basement studio. Large closets. 1 car parking. No smoking, no dogs. $1,025/all. References/security. 631-806-5183
SATURDAY/SUNDAY Open House by Appointment PORT JEFFERSON VILLAGE 415 Liberty Ave. Office #6. Starting at $799,000. Village Vistas 55+ Condo Waterview MELVILLE 5 Lorien Pl, Gated. The Villages West, Townhouse, unfinished bsmt, $719,900 SETAUKET 25 Caroline Ave. Post Modern, winter water views, 3 Frpls, IGP, $999,000 VILLAGE OF OLD FIELD 165 Old Field Rd. Pri Dock, Boat Slip/Beach. $1,499,000. New Listing. VILLAGE OF OLD FIELD 159 Old Field Rd. Private Dock & ramp, Boat Slip. Custom Built Contemporary, $1,275,000. BELLE TERRE 147 Cliff Rd, Colonial, 1.27 Ac, Motivated Seller, 4 BRs, $699,00 SUNDAY 12:30PM-130PM MT. SINAI 100 Hamlet Dr. Gated. Full Fin Bsmt, large lot, Chef’s Kitchen, 5-BRs, $799,00 MT SINAI 171 Hamlet Dr. Gated Hamlet, Former Model, 5 BRs, $789,000, reduced. 1:30PM-3:00PM MOUNT SINAI 13 Parkland Ct. Briarwood w/Sunroom,F/Fin Bsmt w/OSE, 4 BRs, $699,000. New Listing Dennis Consalvo ALIANO REAL ESTATE 631-724- 1000 info@longisland-realesate.net www.longisland-realestate.net
ROCKY POINT 1 BEDROOM CO-OP FOR RENT, upper level, kitchen, living room,full bath, near shopping, no smoking/pets, references, credit check a must, $950 heat included, 1 month security 516-521-8306. SETAUKET Bright and sunny, 1 bedroom, full bath, private entrance. Close to university. $1300/all including cable. No smoking. References/security. 631-298-7532 SETAUKET House with waterviews. Tranquil setting. 3 BR, 2 bath, LR/DR, EIK, sunroom, W/D. No smoking. Background check. $2700 +utilities. 203-595-9410 STONY BROOK charming 4 bedroom, 2 bathhouse North of 25A, EIK, granite, hardwood floors, no pets,credit check, proof of income, $3000. Coach Realtors Michael Silano LSA, CBR 631-751-0303 (Ext.214). WADING RIVER Large 1 bedroom apartment, full bath, deck, off street parking, very private, quite location, $1500/all. 631-929-8281
Vacation Rentals OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND Best selection of affordable rentals. Full/partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Resort Services. 1-800-638-2102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com
Open Houses SATURDAY 10/1 12:00PM–2:00PM OLD FIELD 135 Old Field Rd. 9,000 Sq. Ft. Waterfront, 3 Level Dream Home. $2,800,000. HICKEY & SMITH 631-751-4488 SATURDAY 10/1 12pm-3pm SUNDAY 10/2 12pm-3pm $1,248,000 OLD FIELD 137 Old Field Road, waterfront, 4-BR, 4-Bath, Private dock, pool, totally renovated, MLS#2856638 Call 631-698-1020.
SUNDAY 10/2 1:00PM-3:00PM STONY BROOK 1 Woodfield Rd. 2/3 BR Cottage, Low taxes. 3VSD #1. MLS# 2880544. $369,000. 1:30PM-3:00 PM. STONY BROOK 22 Blinkerlight Rd Colonial, Stony Brook Village, 3VSD #1. MLS# 2857328. $459,000. 2:00PM-4:00PM PORT JEFF STATION 10 Stacy Dr. 4 BR, 2.5 Bath, EIK w/Granite, Den w/Fireplace. SD #3. MLS# 2869105. $499,000. 2:30PM-4:00PM STONY BROOK 12 Stockton Ln. Gladstone Colonial. 3VSD #1. MLS# 2881377. $409,000. DANIEL GALE SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY 631.689.6980
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SEPTEMBER 29, 2016 â&#x20AC;¢ THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD â&#x20AC;¢ PAGE A25
R E A L E S TAT E
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TIMES BEACON RECORD CLASSIFIEDS â&#x20AC;¢ 331â&#x20AC;&#x201C;1154 0R 751â&#x20AC;&#x201C;7663
PAGE A26 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • SEPTEMBER 29, 2016
OpiniOn Editorial
Letters to the editor
Something to do when you’re stuck in traffic.
Photo by Desirée Keegan
A commute with a whimsical feature
Photo by Victoria Espinoza
Hofstra University hosts the first presidential debate, but factchecking of candidates’ claims should have gone on long before.
Real time fact-checking A growing trend this election season amongst newspapers, politics-centric websites, pollsters and even candidates is to factcheck claims made by presidential hopefuls or their litany of staffers during speeches, debates and other public forums in real time. In theory, that makes perfect sense. Candidates should be taken to task for false claims they make in public when attempting to appeal to voters. During the first presidential debate, Sept. 26 at Hofstra University in Hempstead, between Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and Republican nominee Donald Trump, each took turns making statements and accusations that were later proven false by the army of fact-checkers listening closely. Trump asserted that the stop-and-frisk policy did wonders for crime rates in New York City during its short-lived run. Fact-checks by the Associated Press, the Washington Post and CNN yielded no proof of stop-and-frisk impacting crime rates. Trump accused Clinton of “flip-flopping” her position on The Trans-Pacific Partnership, a global trade deal, which she initially supported and referred to as “the gold standard.” The same cast of fact-checking characters nabbed Clinton for switching positions in the debate aftermath. Fact-checking during and immediately following the first presidential debate was a useful tool for American voters. However, if checking facts were this important throughout the primary process, it’s possible Americans might be choosing from a different slate of candidates Nov. 8. Our editorial staff wonders how much of an effect fact-checking has on voters. How many Trump and Clinton supporters heard their candidate say something that was later proved false, and actually started reflecting on if that mattered to them? Fact-checking is important, and it’s great that so many media outlets are devoting resources to it. It’s part of what separates news organizations from the rest of the social media storm that ensues during and after major events. We hope the increase in fact-checking doesn’t fall on deaf-ears, and voters take notice of when their candidates are proven wrong.
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 donna@tbrnewspapers.com or mail them to The Village Times Herald, PO Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.
Who doesn’t like a creative bumper sticker? I for one have always admired the creativity and obvious wisdom in them. I have a 45-minute to one hour commute to work, which of course involves sitting in traffic for a bit. So my passion for finding the “perfect” bumper sticker was put to the challenge. I would like to share some of my greatest hits. All have been documented on my iPhone (while sitting in traffic, not while driving) from Sept. 5 to 22.
The cars with HILLARY supportive stickers also included: Hug a Tree, No Farms No Food, various school district Honor Student acknowledgments, past Obama supportive stickers but mainly just, “I’m with her.” (Hillary’s newest logo.) The cars with TRUMP supportive stickers also included: Horn broke — watch for finger, My child was inmate of the month at county jail, the official NRA sticker, the yellow “Don’t tread on me” sticker, the Star-
bucks logo with the mermaid toting guns and printed “Guns and Coffee” and … My son banged your honor student’s math teacher. My personal favorite was on a yellow convertible Volkswagen Beetle, complete with eyelashes on the headlights. It asked: Does this ass (with Trumps face displayed) make my car look fat??? Drive safely.
Susan Blake Setauket
ISIS? It’s really about orders of magnitude I am tired of answering letters from Tea Partiers who think ham-handed sarcasm and laid-on-thick condescension can substitute for facts and reason, and who in passing blithely blame Obama for everything Bush-Cheney saddled us with. Mr. George Altemose (Letters Sept. 22) thinks repetition of “professor” will conjure up the caricature loopy cross-eyed egghead that tickles fans of “Mallard Fillmore.” I taught and did chemistry at Stony Brook, so I know about orders of magnitude; Mr. Altemose either doesn’t, or chooses to avoid the issue. I did not “graciously acknowledge,” I angrily asserted that Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan were existential threats to the world, including us. They subjugated close to a billion people, killing at least 50 million, and the Nazis murdered six million Jews in cold blood, including my grandparents, aunts and cousins, and five to six million Poles, Russians and other Europeans. The Nazis came within an ace of defeating the USSR and linking with the Japanese; they could have conquered half the world. They would have gained major resources, space and time, and might well have developed
nuclear weapons — they already had the rockets. I did not say ISIS “is nothing to worry about.” I said that ISIS, however barbaric, is not an existential threat; it is not remotely capable of attacking Europe or the U.S. in force. Implicitly accepting that ISIS mobilizes paltry forces compared to the Axis Powers (by about 1 to 1,000), Mr. Altemose raises the bogeyman of a super 9/11: a lightweight atomic bomb easily smuggled into the U.S. Most alarmists propose a scenario where some A-Team of terrorists steals a bomb, say from Pakistan; military security at bomb depots (which are not random unprotected civilian sites) has been 100 percent effective. Mr. Altemose doesn’t say how 20,000 soldiers holed up in their Syrian enclave, or an “enterprising young terrorist” could get a bomb, but he seems to think they can build one with an easy-toget few hundred million dollars. He has no comprehension of the magnitude of such a project. The notion is beyond ludicrous. The issue is really ISIS-inspired homegrown terrorism by legal residents, the case in both the U.S. and France. Mr. Altemose seems to want zero deaths from terrorists, an impossible
task. We like to say that every life is precious, and so every premature death is a tragedy, but we tolerate tens of thousands of deaths, per year, in the name of freedom to own guns, drive and smoke; the total for terrorists since 9/11 (on Bush’s watch) is hundreds. Now, he has no confidence that ordinary law enforcement, which obviously doesn’t prevent all crime, can contain the threat, but he won’t say what extraordinary measures he would take. So what has Donald Trump proposed? Refusing entry into the U.S. to all Muslims (or anyone who looks like one). Police state surveillance of Muslim communities (then all communities — you never know). Using torture. Murdering families of known or suspected terrorists. Carpet bombing ISIS enclaves teeming with civilians. As with JapaneseAmericans in WWII, putting all American Muslims into concentration camps. Ultimately, total mobilization and martial law. Fight ISIS’ fire with fire, inflaming 1.5 billion peaceful Muslims against us and, incidentally, burning the Constitution.
Arnold Wishnia Setauket
The opinions of columnists and letter writers are their own. They do not speak for the newspaper.
SEPTEMBER 29, 2016 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • PAGE A27
opinion Urging teachers to sharpen their communication skills
I
t’s time to raise the bar on communication skills for teachers. I realize there are sensational educators who inspire a cadre of young minds each year. There are also plenty of teachers who are weak communicators, whose work wouldn’t stand up to their own liberal use of the red pen and who have their own rules of grammar that defy any style book. That seems especially problematic, particularly for language arts teachers who are, presumably, By Daniel Dunaief not only educating our sons and daughters about how to read and analyze text, but are also helping them develop their writing style and voice. The do-as-I-say-and-not-as-I-do ap-
D. None of the above
proach may, unwittingly, be preparing students for the unfair world where merit doesn’t count as much as other factors, like connections. I’m not sure that’s really the lesson we want to teach or the subtext we want to share during these formative years. I’d like to ask a favor of teachers: Please read your instructions before you give them to your students. You can shape the assignment the way you’d like: asking questions about identity, seeking to understand the perspective of the author, asking for an analysis of the tone of the piece. But please, please, please read over your directions before printing them out, sending them to students or sharing them with parents. It’s not OK for your writing to read like the assembly instructions for a child’s toy. I know it will take a few more moments and I know that you’re not particularly well paid, but please remember your mission and the difficulty of a double standard. Children can sense hypocrisy quicker than a shark can
smell blood in the water. I realize these missives filled with misdirections may provide a lesson unto themselves. Students may learn that nobody is perfect. While that may be true, are the teachers — who provide confusing directions, who send out assignments rife with poor grammar and misspellings, or who casually make the kinds of mistakes for which they would take major deductions — comfortable enough with themselves and their position to provide students with the opportunity to correct them? Ideally, learning isn’t just about hearing things, memorizing them, spitting them back out during a test and forgetting them within a week of an exam. As teachers say so often when they meet parents, they want their students to learn to think for themselves and to question the world around them. If that’s the case, then let’s not pay lip service to those missions. Let’s add a corollary to that and suggest that how teachers communicate is as important as what they communicate.
Let’s also encourage students to ask teachers why their instructions include particular words or employ specific phrases. I recall, many years ago, the first time one of my more self-assured teachers silenced a room when he said, in his booming baritone, “I stand corrected.” The rest of us didn’t know whether to cheer for the boy who challenged him or to duck, worried that a temper tantrum with flying chalk — remember chalk? — might follow. Maybe schools should hire an editor who can read the instructions to kids and emails to parents. Or, if the budget doesn’t allow a single extra employee, maybe they can engage in the same kind of peer review they utilize in their classrooms. Ideally, students and teachers can seize the opportunity to learn and improve every year. Teachers create an assignment and then reuse it the next year. If the assignment is unclear, or the directions flawed, the teacher should do his or her homework and revise it. All I ask is that teachers lead by example.
The best of the best of Broadway musicals for free
I
f you have had enough of politics and pundits this week, come with me for a nostalgic trip through the golden age of Broadway musicals. I was carried back to those heady days of the 1950s by a recent New York Times article about the lost art of sneaking in for the second act, impossible today due to post-9/11 security. Now I don’t know if you have ever By Leah S. Dunaief indulged in this type of larcenous activity, so I will explain how it worked — at least for me and my merry little band. I attended junior high and high school at 68th Street and Lexington Avenue in Manhattan. The subway was right at the corner of our Gothicstyle building. This is important
Between you and me
information for you to know in order to follow our exploits. The other bit of vital info is that our school day officially ended each afternoon at 2 p.m., rather than the usual 3 p.m. for the rest of the schools under the New York City Board of Education’s auspices. Shortly after I started in seventh grade, I fell in with a happy group of kids who lived across town, on the Upper West Side. While that was decades away from what we know today as the highly cultured and worldly UWS, nonetheless these kids were a lot more culturally savvy than I was. Every Wednesday, which is of course matinee day, they would slip out of our last class some 15 minutes early, slither quietly through the side door of the school and make a beeline for the subway stairs 20 feet away. Somehow I came to be included in this precocious group. We would ride the local to 59th Street, descend to the lowest level of the station, which in those days housed the BMT line, ride it through Midtown to 49th Street and Broadway and arrive at the predetermined show of our
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choice just as intermission was ending and the smokers were returning to their seats for the second act. No one ever checked the tickets for the second act in those days. And there were always empty seats sprinkled throughout the theater that we claimed for our own. If the real seat owner arrived, most often the usher would help us find another seat since it was fairly common practice for young people to move closer to the stage in those days if there was opportunity. I doubt the ushers realized they were helping scofflaws. In this way, I saw some of the most famous plays with their original casts during what turned out to be the most memorable period of American musical theater. Of course I didn’t know that then, I just knew I was having a fine old time and we didn’t even have to pay the subway fare because we had student passes. Of course I never told my parents what we were doing every Wednesday afternoon, and somehow we never got caught leaving school early. Perhaps the faculty understood
EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Leah S. Dunaief GENERAL MANAGER Johness Kuisel EDITOR Donna Newman LEISURE EDITOR Heidi Sutton
SPORTS EDITOR Desirée Keegan ASSOCIATE EDITOR Ellen Recker MANAGING EDITOR Desirée Keegan ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Kathryn Mandracchia
where we were going and thought it more important than the last 15 minutes of classes. But my parents may have wondered from time to time because I seemed too knowledgeable about the current musicals, their actors and composers. There were the Rodgers and Hammerstein classics: “Oklahoma!,” “Carousel,” “The King and I,” “South Pacific” and “The Sound of Music” (the latter two with Mary Martin); Frank Loesser and his “Guys and Dolls,” “The Music Man,” “West Side Story” and Chita Rivera; Ethel Merman, Gertrude Lawrence, Yul Brynner, Gene Kelly and Gwen Verdon; Irving Berlin and Cole Porter — they were all in my world. And then there was the best of the best, its eloquence, melody, intelligence and heart standing at the head of those magnificent musicals, Lerner and Loewe’s “My Fair Lady.” I can still hear the music, with its clever lyrics, playing in my head. Led by Rex Harrison and Julie Andrews, it was the longest running show on Broadway for years thereafter. And we saw them all — at least by half.
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
PAGE A28 • THE VILLAGE TIMES HERALD • SEPTEMBER 29, 2016
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