arts & lifestyles - june 30, 2016

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LEISURE • TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWSPAPERS • JUNE 30, 2016 ARTS & LIFESTYLES PAGES B2–B7 Also: Culper Spy Day exhibit in Setauket B13 Plum Island exhibit opens in Port Jeff B17 Comsewogue Library Pet Parade B28 MADE IN Shop Locally Buy American Made

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Page 1: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

L E I S U R E • T I M E S B E A C O N R E C O R D N E W S P A P E R S • J U N E 3 0 , 2 0 1 6

ARTS&LIFESTYLES

PAGES B2–B7

Also:Culper Spy Day exhibit in Setauket B13

Plum Island exhibit opens in Port Je� B17Comsewogue Library Pet Parade B28

MADE IN

Shop Locally Buy American Made

Page 2: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

PAGE B2 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • JUNE 30, 2016

Flowers... Flowers...

Fresh Long Island GrownCORN • PEACHES

& CHERRIES

Fresh Picked Long Island Grown Produce

All Kinds of Lettuce • Spinach • Kale • Beets Carrots • Tomatoes • Potatoes • Broccoli Peas • Summer Squash

10% OFFany purchase

of $100 or more(Must present coupon at time of purchase. Not to be combined with any other o� er.) All planting services and materials and plants used are excluded from this

coupon discount • Exp. 7/13/16

5% OFFany purchase

(Must present coupon at time of purchase. Not to be combined with any other o� er.) All planting services and materials and plants used are excluded from this

coupon discount • Exp. 7/13/16

PICKED FROM FRUIT TREES

IN YOUR OWN YARD!

Fresh Fruit All Summer Long ... PEACH TREES, FIG TREES, BLUEBERRY BUSHES ... IF IT GROWS ON LONG ISLAND WE CAN PROVIDE THE TREES OR BUSHES.DELIVERY & PLANTING SERVICE AVAILABLE. WE GUARANTEE IT IF WE PLANT IT.

FROM Pantaleons Farms

©148107

NOW IN!

WE DO:• Summer Pruning • Lawn Maintenance• Planting Design Services

Delivery & Planting Service AvailableMulch Delivered & Spread

WE GUARANTEE ALL TREES & SHRUBS WE PLANT FREE ESTIMATES • Licensed & Insured

We have a full line of annuals, all available in:Flats • 4” Pots • 6” Pots • Hanging Baskets

Decorative Pots and Beautiful Arrangements for Gifts Perennials • Indoor Plants • Cut Flowers

We Also Have: Fresh Baked Fruit Pies, Cream Pies, Cookies Largest selection of Long Island honey, jams, jellies, fruit spreads

and preserves available. ...and most fl avors also available “No Sugar Added” CANNED PEACHES • PEACH CIDER • CHERRY CIDER

SALSA • SALAD DRESSINGS • SANGRIA MIX

PANTALEONS FARM STAND 445 Route 25A, East Setauket(Corner of Ridgeway & 25A, across from the Post O� ce)

631–608–8331 OPEN 7 DAYS

Mon. - Sat. 8 am - 7 pm • Sun. 8 am - 6 pm

WE NOW HAVE OUR LONG ISLAND FARM FRESH

SANGRIA MIX AVAILABLE

Walk or jog down a sidewalk early in the morning anywhere in our communi-ties and the world of birds, chipmunks and squirrels darting from one yard to an-other in front of you feels fresh, new and full of potential. As you meander around the neighborhood, your mind might wan-der from the small thoughts that bounce around every day — do I have enough milk, when should I pick up the dry clean-ing, how will I get my four kids to 12 ac-tivities this weekend?

Given the imminent celebration of In-dependence Day, you might reflect on the brave people who lived in or near your home who became a part of the Setauket spy ring.

Thoughts of how hard freedom is to win and how important it is to maintain might fill you with that early-morning pride that comes from believing you and those peo-ple rousing themselves out of bed in the morning can accomplish anything when you believe in something, even something as fundamental to our country’s identity as the rights Thomas Jefferson specified

in the Declaration of Independence: the rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

As you pass stores whose lights flicker on, you might think about how proud Ben-jamin Franklin would be of the cutting-edge energy innovations at Stony Brook University, Brookhaven National Labora-tory and Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. You might think of the people who come to their jobs each morning, day after day for years, as teammates in our communi-ties, selling goods made or, in some cases, grown in America.

These people enrich our towns by keeping their stores stocked with desir-able goods — earrings for a recent high school graduate who will wear them when she stars in her first college play, flowers that help forge a connection with a roman-tic interest, or running shoes that helped a friend from the ground up as he changed his lifestyle and life for the better.

Their success, like those of the people we celebrate each Independence Day, is, directly and indirectly, our success. The

businesses, services and offerings in our midst coexist and occupy places that allow each business to thrive, hiring our brothers, sisters, fathers and mothers, and offering our sons and daughters internships and op-portunities that may become a springboard to their future achievements.

As the sun climbs into the sky and we get ready to lift our heads and our spirits amid fireworks, we have a chance to sup-port our neighbors and our communities with the money we spend.

We may find earrings or a necklace that might one day become a family heir-loom at Ecolin Jewelers, purchase flow-ers and plants made and grown at Pan-taleon’s Farms, buy a sign that we plant on our front lawn that says “Welcome Friends” from Lasting Treasures, or find a meaningful artisanal craft that reminds us of our college roommate’s summer home on a quiet lake from The Gallery Shop at Gallery North.

After we’ve done our shopping, we might visit the Long Island Museum, to see some of the early carriages that traversed

the same places where our walk or jog be-gan. As we prepare to celebrate a history our country never takes for granted, we have a chance to contribute to the success of our friends, neighbors and countrymen who enrich our communities and our lives.

We encourage our readers to raise the flag high this July 4th, and every day. The choices we make when we decide how to spend our hard-earned money can and will enable our towns to march forward, as the Fourth of July fireworks remind us of the distant but not forgotten echoes of Patriots marching to the tune of flutes and snare drums. — Daniel Dunaief

Spending here makes a difference for friends and neighbors MADE IN AMERICA

Shop Locally and Pay It Forward! Did You Know That a Local Purchase Can Benefit the Local Economy3 Times more Than the Same Purchase at a Chain Retailer?

Page 3: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

JUNE 30, 2016 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B3

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Patriotism is Alive and Flourishing at

Lasting treasures Country store

Lasting treasures Country store757 Bus. Rte 25A, Downtown Rocky Point

631-821-0808 Closed Mondays & Tuesdays

BeCoMe a Friend on FaCeBook, aT lasTing Treasures

We are proud to feature many American-Made products, including:➢ Wonderful sounding wind chimes➢ Amish-Made accent furniture➢ Country Prints➢ Word Signs and Welcome Slates➢ Super-scented candles➢ Bobbin and Berry lamps➢ Seasonal and patriotic flags➢ Beautiful pottery pieces; Crocks, yellow ware➢ Functional and unusual birdhouses

©14

4639

MADE IN AMERICA The Gallery Shop at Gallery North in Setauket offers beautifully crafted handmade items that can be admired as works of art and integrated into everyday life. Whether it’s a “well-turned bowl” hewn from sustainable Long Island hardwoods by Don Lindsley, beautifully crafted ceramics by Russell Spillmann, Denise Randall and Emily Brownawell, or stunning and affordable hand-blown glass by Justin Cavagnero, The Gallery Shop offers only the best of artisanal arts and crafts from these artists and others of Long Island and nearby regions.

Campus Bicycle

Campus Bicycle in Stony Brook carries Trek bicycles, which is the largest manufacturer of bicycles in the U.S. Their factory is located in Waterloo, Wisconsin. They make high-end carbon bicycles and Bontrager-brand wheels in the U.S. We stock these bicycles and wheels in our store. We also offer custom-made and painted Project One bikes that are made to order from Trek’s factory for our customers. Customers can come to our store, get measured for a bike, pick out the paint color and theme, select components, and we will have Trek make the bike for them. This can take as little as two weeks. Campus Bicycle stocks a full line of Saris bicycle carriers for cars, which are also made in Wisconsin. We also stock CycleOps brand indoor trainers that allow you to ride indoors, also made in the USA. We stock and sell Greenfield kickstands, which are made in Freeport. We sell bicycle lubricants made by Finish Line, a company based in Hauppauge. Most Park Tool tools we sell are made in the USA. Campus Bicycle also stocks Wald training wheels, which are made in Kentucky.

We at Christina’s Fashion Handbags in Port Jefferson are proud to be selling American-made products. For the last 25 years, Christina’s handbag collection of American products are the first line of decor in her store. We specialize in evening bags for all occasions. Our U.S. products are the best-quality products in the world and we are honored to have them in our store. We sell handmade leather handbags that large companies envy, always at the best discounted price possible. We carry products by a company called Whiting & Davis that started making handbags and accessories in Rhode Island in 1876. We welcome you always with a smile. Support your local businesses.

Christina’s Fashion Handbags

The Gallery Shop at Gallery North

Page 4: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

PAGE B4 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • JUNE 30, 2016

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MADE IN AMERICA The Long Island Museum

“Long Live the Mini!” exclaimed a Newsday headline from June 6, 1969, with anecdotal evidence offered that Long Island women would never go back to plunging hemlines. I wear mine (hem-lines) four to five inches above the knee, sometimes higher,” said Patchogue resi-dent Mona Johannessen. “As far as I am concerned, well, I’m not wearing longer skirts. They’re not comfortable.” A co-worker, Donna Kijowski, agreed. “Person-ally, I wear what is comfortable,” she said. “Longer lengths are not only uncomfort-able, they’re not good for morale.”

Another Newsday article from the same year indicated that “the beard and the miniskirt, two symbols of youth and rebellion ... finally have gained grudging acceptance on Long Island.”

The decade’s extremes hit the fashion world, from the runway to department store racks. And fashion customers had a growing variety of shopping choices.

Following the flow of population east-

ward, Long Island’s shopping possibili-ties expanded into Suffolk County, with the opening of Walt Whitman Mall in Huntington (1962), the South Shore Mall in Bay Shore (1963) and the Smith Haven Mall in Lake Grove (1969).

There was also a wide and growing variety of beloved department stores ex-panding into every major community, either satellites to flagship New York City emporiums or emerging locally owned operations: Martins of Garden City, Ar-nold Constable and Abraham & Strauss of Hempstead, Lord & Taylor of Manhasset and Bloomingdale’s in Fresh Meadows.

As Lois Sabatella of Plainview relates, “I remember going to Gimbels with my mother so she could shop for a dress for Saturday night because people went out on Saturday night. As a teenager, someone was always having a party in their base-ment, so we’d buy a new top or a piece of fake jewelry or new makeup. You always had a purpose for coming to the mall.”

Photo from the LIMThe “Love” minidress, c. 1968; polyester; designed by Joel Schumacher for Paraphernalia, New York; on display with other dresses from that era in the Long Island Museum’s Long Island in the Sixties exhibition. The exhibit runs through Dec. 31.

The Long Island Sixties Fashion Scene

Fetch Doggy Boutique, 301 E. Main St., Port Jefferson carries all USA gourmet foods, treats, supplements and shampoo along with toys, harnesses, collars, leashes and many more items. Many of our items are available for the smallest of small and the largest of large dogs. Our store is based on good old American values and our customers are family to us. We pride ourselves on finding USA products that operate in USA and employ Americans to work at their companies. We carry items from Mutt Nose and Planet Dog from Maine; West Paw Design based in Bozeman, Montana, and Wet Nose treats from Monroe, Waashington. Stop down and see many more USA products.

Fetch Doggy Boutique

At Elegant Affairs we take great pride in supporting American artists and artisans. Supporting “made in America” products keeps jobs at home, benefits communities financially, while giving dignity to our artisans. We carry jewelry made by various artists, wood boxes, paperweights, perfume bottles and hand-blown signature art glass. We also support the “fair trade” program. Visit us on Main Street in Port Jefferson, browse, be proud of America’s genius and buy American.

Elegant Affairs

Lasting TreasuresLasting Treasures, located at 757 Route 25A, in Rocky Point originally began with their handmade dollhouses and then added handmade furniture. They eventually expanded into gifts and Americana, with the majority of the products that they sell in their country store made in the USA, including wind chimes and wind-bells, word signs, painted welcome slates and candles. They also carry hand-knit scarves, birdhouses, Amish accent furniture, woven throws, pillows and pottery.

Page 5: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

JUNE 30, 2016 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B5

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MADE IN AMERICA Amish-made lighthouses, pier posts and windmills are among the Made In America products greeting you as you enter Home Kingdom in the Village of Port Jefferson. Inside you will find American-made pillows, towels and coasters, including those produced on Long Island by Mariash Studios of Lynbrook. Etched wine glasses are made in Western Pennsylvania by Rolf Glass, wind bells and chimes are manufactured in Maine, along with a selection of nautical tumblers, signs and wall art made in the USA. We also have a large selection of soy candles made in New York (Bluebird), New Jersey (Surfs Up) and Ohio (Swan Creek). Home Kingdom is also proud to be an authorized dealer of Wee Forest Folk, fine detailed, handmade miniatures created by the Petersen Family of Carlisle, Massachusetts. We make every effort to search for and choose Made In USA products, when purchasing for Home Kingdom.

Home Kingdom

Thomasville Furniture in Mount Sinai prides itself in selling furniture made in America. Custom upholstery is made in both Lenoir or Hickory, North Carolina, where Thomasville began making furniture in 1904. Our sofas, chairs and sectionals are made with coil base spring construction and premium cushion cores to provide long-lasting service. With our Simple Choices program you tell us how to make it yours. Like a particular frame and a certain cushion style? Love the back but would prefer a different arm? Simple Choices lets you design your own upholstery and leave the building to us. Don’t settle. Select the options you really want. There’s no better feeling than when you get to fill in the blanks. Choose an arm and cushion style, then a back and base. Pick your frame then add panache with our nail trim options. There’s nothing like the personal touches. Available pieces include sofas in three different sizes, loveseats, chairs, sectionals, sleepers, incliners and ottomans. Choose from over 800 designer fabrics. All Simple Choice products are made in America.

Thomasville Furniture

TAS Design & Craft Gallery in Huntington carries items in our gallery that are unique, original, handmade and functional works of art. All of the hand-painted furniture and accessories are created by the gallery owner, Trisha Anne, right in Northport. We also have artworks from local ceramicists, glassblowers and woodworkers, as well as from all over the United States. Please feel free to come in and ask questions about our talented artists and their work.

TAS Design & Craft Gallery

Page 6: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

PAGE B6 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • JUNE 30, 2016

EARLY DEADLINEfor

DISPLAY ADVERTISINGPLEASE NOTE that the

Display Advertising Deadline for the July 7 issue isThursday, June 30

for All Sections, Leisure and News

DUE TO THE JULY 4TH HOLIDAY

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©147011

MADE IN AMERICA

Sound Beach MusicSound Beach Music in Miller Place carries a wide array of musical instruments, products and accessories that are manufactured right here in America. We carry exceptional American-made electric guitars by Music Man, along with amplifiers made by Peavey, Rivera and Port Jefferson-based Supro. The D’Addario company’s line of strings and reeds as well as Pigtronix and Electro-Harmonix effect pedals are all made in New York. We also provide customers with a huge selection of brass and woodwind instruments available for sale or rent. The Conn-Selmer Corp., based in Indiana, encompasses brass instruments such as trumpets and trombones by Holton, clarinets, oboes, saxophones by Selmer, Leblanc, Armstrong and more. Sound Beach Music happily supplies all of these products to the community, so come on in and take pride in the USA!

Ecolin Saint James proudly offers products by American artists and craftsmen, jewelry designers, glassblowers, woodcarvers, potters, ceramists and others. The quality and creativity they exhibit embodies the best of American ingenuity. Our products are held to the highest standard, meeting all of our consumer protection requirements, they exhibit unparalleled workmanship. Ecolin carries handmade jewelry from designers in Hawaii, Oregon, Maine, Florida and many places in between. Ecolin also carries a wide variety of creative giftware, including one-of-a-kind art glass, as well as ceramic, metal and wood sculptures. We help to keep Americans working, we offer quality American-made products to our customers, and we contribute to keeping America at the forefront of design excellence. If you think you can’t buy American, think again! Stop by and see the best of our country’s creative talent.

Ecolin St. James

Cribs ‘n Bibs in Port Jefferson Village features hand-crafted items made in America, many from local artisans. Hand-designed christening gowns and custom bedding created by a local designer are our specialties. Our crocheted blankets are handmade and our children’s clothing is made by a lovely company down south. We also offer hand-crafted toys. Cribs ‘n Bibs is looking forward to carrying an even larger inventory of hand-crafted and designed clothing for children in the future.

Cribs ‘n BibsPattern Finders in Port Jefferson carries estate jewelry by Tiffany and other USA silver and gold designers. Our local artist costume jewelry joins our vintage costume jewelry by Triffari, Coro, Weiss etc., all USA creations. Our fur coats and jackets are made in the USA, as well as many of our vintage handbags by Coach, Dooney & Bourke and other makers. We carry new jewelry, glassware, dinnerware, giftware, figurines and clothing — much of which is made in America.

Pattern Finders

Kunz Greenhouses & Nursery of Port Jefferson Station offers many American-made products including handmade birdhouses created from all recycled wood products as well as hand-painted clay Barley birdbaths and pots. Some of the Barley products are signed by the artisans. Their stone owls, mushrooms, hedgehogs, frogs and turtles are created by nature and crafted by American artisans. Kunz’s plants are grown as close to home as possible, many right here in Port Jefferson and some in the houseplant area from as far away as Hawaii. The vegetables, herbs and flowering outdoor plants are locally grown on Long Island and many in Kunz’s greenhouses. Their shrubbery plants are mostly grown in the tristate area.

Kunz Greenhouses & Nursery

Page 7: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

JUNE 30, 2016 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B7

A treasure trove of eclectic jewelry thrives in Northport Village! The Window Shop Jewelers has fulfilled customers’ dreams with American-made objects of consummate beauty and lasting value since 1976.   Come see the eco-sustainable Wind & Fire jewelry collection featuring a broad selection of beautiful bangles. Born in the USA and conceived with environmental responsibility, W&F bangles are crafted from recycled brass, finished with antique gold or  silver. Designed with meaningful icons that symbolize the wearer’s personality and values. At The Window Shop Jewelers:  Eclectically original.

MADE IN AMERICA Window Shop Jewelers

Susan Rodgers is a self-taught silversmith. After working in various art forms she finally found her true expressive medium — creating jewelry. Susan’s entrancing jewelry expresses her deep love of nature and its many treasures. Inspired by the nature preserve behind her home, each sterling silver design is her interpretation of the botanical beauty. This secret haven is a constant fountain of inspiration, with each season a new gift from nature presenting itself for Susan’s designs. Her complete collection, along with the work of over 20 other artisans, can be seen at her new gallery on East Main Street in Port Jefferson.

Susan Rodgers Designs

Rhino LiningsWe are an old-fashioned family-owned and operated Long Island business in Mount Sinai that treats our customers the way they should be treated, with respect. We keep our prices low and affordable and we go the extra mile to help you find what you are looking for. We offer many USA-manufactured products such as WeatherTech, Luverne, EGR, McGard, Access, Advantage, B&W Hitches, Flowmaster, Skyjacker, Pro Comp, AVS and much more. Keep the pride in America. Buy American made!

On the cover:Clockwise from top left, Cribs ‘n Bibs; Home Kingdom; Gallery Shop at Gallery North; Ecolin at St. James; Elegant Affairs; Lasting Treasures; Kunz Nursery; Thomasville Furniture; and Christina’s Fashion Handbags

MADE IN AMERICAShop Locally • Buy American Made

AppArel H H

christina’s fashion handbags144 East Main Street, Port Jefferson 631-403-4934 ElEgant affairs202 Main Street, Port Jefferson 631-331-5199

PattErn findErs128 East Main Street, Port Jefferson631-928-5158 www.stacysfinds.com

AUTOMOTIVe H H

rhino linings400 Route 25A, Mt. Sinai631-331-1765www.RhinoLiningsNorthShore.com

HOMe H H

cribs `n bibs116 East Main Street, Port Jefferson 631-331-3064homE kingdom25 Mill Creek Road, Port Jefferson 631-473-6614

lasting trEasurEs gift shoP757 Route 25A, Rocky Point631-821-0808 thomasvillE furniturE271 Route 25A #1, Mt. Sinai631-736-9258www.thomasville.com

JeWelrY & ArT GAllerIeS H H

Ecolin464 North Country Rd., St. James631-686-585814 East Broadway, Port Jefferson631-473-1117www.ecolin.com

thE gallEry shoP at gallEry north90 North Country Rd., Setauket631-751-2676www.gallerynorth.org

susan rodgErs dEsigns116 East Main Street, Port Jefferson631-239-6041www.susanrodgersdesigns.com

tas dEsign and craft372 New York Avenue, Huntington631-239-6041www.tasdesignandcraft.com

thE WindoW shoP104 Main Street, Northport631-239-5450www.thewindowshopjewelers.com

lANDSCApe & GArDeN H H

kunz grEEnhousE & nursEry117 Hallock Ave., Port Jefferson Station631-473-3720

MUSeUM H H

thE long island musEum1200 Route 25A, Stony Brook631-751-0066www.longislandmuseum.org

MUSIC H H

sound bEach music66 Echo Avenue, Miller Place631-476-3850www.soundbeachmusic.com

peT SUpplIeS H H

fEtch doggy boutiquE301 East Main Street, Port Jefferson631-331-0965www.fetchdoggies.com

SpOrTS & FITNeSS H H

camPus bicyclE1077 Route 25A, Stony Brook631-689-1200www.campusbicycle.com

©138659

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PAGE B8 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • JUNE 30, 2016©

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90

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David M. Dunaief, M.D. is an internist specializing

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“I feel awesome after eating the diet, especially in the morning. I can’t believe how much has improved with such small changes. My cholesterol is normal, and my triglycerides dropped dramatically - almost 200 points! My blood pressure medication was stopped, yet my blood pressure is the best it has ever been.” ~ E.M., age 44

“My cardiologist was so impressed with my results. By following Dr. Dunaief ’s advice, I’ve been able to stop all three of my blood pressure medications. My heart palpitations, which were limiting my activities, have dramatically reduced in frequency, my energy levels have increased and I have lost 15 pounds in two months.”

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David M. Dunaief, M.D.Clinician, Author

and Speaker

The results I have achieved working with Dr. Dunaief have been quite remarkable. My primary goal was to reduce average blood pressure to acceptable levels. This was accomplished in a little over 3 months. Coincidentally I was able to reduce my overall cholesterol from 250 to 177 with a much improved LDL/HDL ratio in 4 months. In addition I lost over 30 lbs and went from 24% body fat to 17.7%. I have some good days but mostly great days and I’m very happy with the results and look forward to even more improvement in the future.—D.L., age 64

Page 9: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

JUNE 30, 2016 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B9

medical compass

Cataracts’ effects extend far beyond the eyePrevention and treatment improve outcome

David Dunaief, M.D.

Cataracts are incredibly common; about 50 percent of Americans will have a cata-ract or have had cataract surgery by age 80 (1). Cataracts, the nuclear type, reduce visual acuity in an insidious process. Cata-

ract surgery can resolve this, reducing the risk of falls and hip fracture. At the same time, it can reduce pressure in the eye.

Interestingly, re-search suggests that a diet rich in carot-enoids may prevent the occurrence of cataracts. However, statins may have the reverse effect by in-creasing risk.

Let’s look at the evidence.

Cataract surgery and hip fractureIn one study, elderly cataract patients

who underwent surgery were significant-ly less likely to experience a hip fracture during a year of follow-up than those who did not have surgery (2). This was a ret-rospective (backward-looking) observa-tional study, and its size was considerable, with over one million patients ages 65 and older. The results showed a 16 percent re-duction in the risk of hip fractures overall. Those who were older, between ages 80 and 84, had the most to gain, with a 28 percent reduction in hip fracture risk.

The increased fall risk and subsequent hip fracture risk among those with cata-racts result from decreases in visual acuity and depth perception and a reduction in visual field that accompany cataracts (3). Hip fractures have a tremendous impact on the ability of elderly patients to remain in-dependent. Many of these patients do not regain their prior mobility. Thus, avoiding hip fractures is the best strategy.

Cataract surgery and intraocular pressure

Yet another benefit of cataract surgery is the potential reduction in intraocular pressure (IOP). Why is intraocular pres-sure (pressure within the eye) important? High IOP has been associated with an in-creased risk of glaucoma.

A comparative case series (looking at those with and without cataract surgery) utilizing data from the Ocular Hyperten-sion Treatment Study showed that those cataract patients with ocular hyperten-sion (higher than normal pressure in the eye) who underwent cataract surgery saw an immediate reduction in IOP (4). This effect lasted at least three years. The re-moval of the cataract lowered the IOP by 16.5 percent from 23.9 mm Hg to 19.8 mm

Hg. This is close to the low end of glau-coma treatments’ pressure reduction goals, which are 20 to 40 percent. Therefore, cataract surgery may be synergistic with traditional glaucoma treatment.

Cataract surgery and macular degeneration risk

There has been conflicting information in recent years about whether cataract surgery increases the risk of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) progression. A 2009 study suggested that, rather than increasing AMD risk, cataract surgery may uncover underlying AMD pathology that is hidden because the cataract obfuscates the view of the retina (back of the eye) (5). The study’s strengths were the use color retinal photographs and fluorescein angi-ography (dye in blood vessels of eye), both very thorough approaches.

Cataract prevention with dietary carotenoids

Diet may play a significant role in prevention of cataracts. In the Women’s Health Initiative Observa-tional Study, carotenoids, specifically lutein and zea-xanthin, seem to decrease cataract risk by 23 percent in women with high blood lev-els of carotenoids, compared to those with low blood lev-els (6). In fact, those in the highest quintile (the top 20 percent) had an even more dramatic 32 percent risk re-duction when compared to those in the bottom quintile (the lowest 20 percent).

As the authors comment-ed, it may not have been just lutein and zeaxanthin. There are more than 600 carotenoids, but these were the ones measured in the study. Some of the foods that are high in carotenoids include carrots, spinach, kale, apricots and mango, according to the USDA. Interestingly, half a cup of one of the first three on a daily basis will far exceed the recommended daily allowance. Thus, it takes a modest consistency in dietary carotenoids to see a reduction in risk.

Vitamin C effectThe impact of vitamin C on cataract risk

may depend on the duration of daily con-sumption. In other words, 10 years seems to be the critical duration needed to see an effect. According to one study, those participants who took 500 mg of vitamin C supplements for 10 or more years saw a 77 percent reduction in risk (7). However, only very few women achieved this goal in the study, demonstrating how difficult it is

to maintain supplementation for a 10-year period.

Those who took vitamin C for fewer than 10 years saw no effect in prevention of cata-racts. In the well-designed Age-Related Eye Disease Study, a randomized controlled tri-al, the gold standard of studies, those who received 500 mg of vitamin C supplements along with other supplements did not show any cataract risk reduction, compared to those who did not receive these supple-ments (1). There were 4,629 patients in-volved in the cataract study with a duration of 6.3 years of daily supplement consump-tion. Therefore, I would not rush to take vi-tamin C as a cataract preventative.

Statin useStatins have both positive and negative

effects, and the effect on the eyes accord-ing to one sizable study is negative. In the Waterloo Eye Study with over 6,000 partic-ipants, those patients taking statins were at a 57 percent increased risk of cataracts (8). Diabetes patients saw an increased risk of cataracts as well. And in diabetes patients, statins seem to increase the rate at which cataracts occurred.

The authors surmise that this is because higher lev-els of cholesterol may be needed for the development of epithelial (outer layer) cells and transparency of the lens. This process may be blocked with the use of statins. Before considering discontinuing statins, it is important to weigh the risks with the benefits.

Thus, if you have dimin-ished vision, it may be due to cataracts. It is important to consult an ophthalmolo-

gist for diagnosis and, perhaps, cataract surgery, which can reduce your risks of falls, hip fractures and intraocular pressure. For those who do not have cataracts, a diet rich in carotenoids may significantly reduce their risk of occurrence.

References: (1) nei.nih.gov. (2) JAMA.

2012;308:493-501. (3) J Am Geriatr Soc. 2009 Oct;57(10):1825-1832. (4) Ophthal-mology. 2012;119:1826-1831. (5) Arch Ophthalmol. 2009;127:1412-1419. (6) Arch Ophthalmol. 2008;126(3):354-364. (7) Am J Clin Nutr. 1997 Oct;66(4):911-916. (8) Optom Vis Sci 2012;89:1165-1171.

Dr. Dunaief is a speaker, author and local lifestyle medicine physician focusing on the integration of medicine, nutrition, fitness and stress management. For further infor-mation, visit www.medicalcompassmd.com or consult your personal physician.

Cataracts are a natural result of aging.

Calling all women artists and entrepreneurs!

Middle Country Public Li-brary, 101 Eastwood Blvd., Cen-tereach, is looking for talented women who live on Long Island to apply to the 16th Annual Women’s EXPO to be held at the library on Oct. 6, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. For more information, please visit www.womensEXPOli.org or call 631-585-9393, ext. 296.

Health screenings on wheels

The St. Francis Hospital Out-reach Department will provide free health screenings at Cold Spring Harbor Library, 95 Harbor Road, Cold Spring Harbor, on Thurs-day, July 7, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Screenings include a brief cardiac history, blood pressure, body mass index, waist circumference and a simple blood test for cholesterol and diabetes. Free and open to all. Advance registration appreciated by calling 631-692-6820.

Blood DriveThe Sound Beach Fire Depart-

ment, 152 Sound Beach Blvd., Sound Beach, will hold a Blood Drive in memory of John Drews Jr. on Friday, July 8, from 3 to 9 p.m. All donors will receive a pair of Mets tickets. Walk-ins welcome. For more information, call John at 631-336-0626.

Save the dateThe Smithtown Historical So-

ciety, 239 Middle Country Road, Smithtown, will present its 3rd annual Smithtown Blues Festival on Saturday, July 9, from 1 to 10 p.m. Two stages will welcome per-formances from Zen Brock, Karen Bella, The Johnny Mac Band, Route 111, The Sweet Suzi Blues Band, Allman Brothers tribute band Sev-en Turns and many more. F e a t u r i n g food, arts and crafts v e n d o r s . Bring a blan-ket or lawn chair. Tickets are $20, $15 members. For more information, call 631-265-6768.

Prostate Cancer Support GroupJohn T. Mather Memorial Hos-

pital, 75 North Country Road, Port Jefferson, will host a Prostate Cancer Support Group on Tuesday, July 5, from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in Conference Room 1. Guest speak-er will be Dr. Joseph Cirrone of North Shore Radiation Oncology. Light refreshments will be served. For more information, call Craig at 631-846-4377.To SubScribe: PleaSe call 631.751.7744

or SubScribe online aTwww.TbrnewSmedia.com

Page 10: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

PAGE B10 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • JUNE 30, 2016

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1. Mowgli to Raksha in “The Jungle Book”2. Nanjing nanny3. North Atlantic Alliance, acr.4. Gives off5. Tiny antelope6. Heidi’s “Magic Wooden Shoe”7. TV variety show “Hee ____”8. Icy hut9. One of three square ones10. Opposed to11. Frosts a cake12. Office furniture15. ____ red, pH indicator20. On the rocks22. Baby’s apron24. Lemonade cousin25. *Guthrie of “This Land Is Your Land”26. Lock horns27. “Private Parts” author29. *”...star-spangled banner yet ____”31. Sodium32. The Three Musketeers and Destiny’s Child33. Not hidden34. Highly unpleasant36. “As ____ on TV”38. Gaelic42. Gossipmonger45. Say it differently49. Indian restaurant staple51. *”The Independence Day: Resurgence,” e.g.54. Grind teeth56. Post-rain ditch57. Mount Vesuvius output58. Mosque V.I.P.59. Nay, to a baby60. Prompter’s comments61. Lawyers’ charge62. Too much ____63. *What you hope it doesn’t do on July 4th?66. Poe’s Morgue68. Lt.’s subordinate

*Theme related clue.

Answers to this week’s puzzle will appear in next week’s newspaper and online on

Friday afternoon at www.tbrnewsmedia.com, Arts and Lifestyles

THEME:

Independence Day

ACROSS

1. Beaten as punishment in some countries6. Tai’s partner9. Suite cleaner13. Savory taste sensation14. Time delay15. *Colonial money: pounds, shillings and ____16. Dyed fabric17. Pooh’s wise friend18. Can’t stand19. *Grilled July 4th favorite21. *Washington Monument, e.g.23. Confession subject24. Under a fig leaf?25. Talking Heads’ “And She ____”28. New Zealand fruit30. *At center of the American Revolution35. Crumbs37. Before “saw” and “conquered”39. Butterfly, pre-metamorphosis40. Curved molding41. Each and all43. Pinocchio’s claims44. Albrecht ____, Renaissance artist46. Alleviate47. Legal wrong48. Pined50. Hibernation stations52. Pig’s digs53. Worker’s reward55. Two-year-old sheep57. *Washington and Jefferson’s Mt. Rush-more neighbor61. Holy Hindu64. Foreign Language Oscar winner, 201265. *”All men ____ created equal”67. Arm bones69. Equipped with feathers70. Famous T-Rex71. Spritelike72. Famous cookie brand73. “For ____ a jolly...”74. City in France

s u d o k u p u z z l e

Answers to this week’s puzzle

will appear in next week’s newspaper.

Fill in the blank squares in the grid, making sure that every row, column and 3-by-3 box includes all digits 1 through 9

Answers to last week’s

SUDOKUpuzzle:

Page 11: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

JUNE 30, 2016 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B11

139947

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Dr. Adams, or “Dr. Jess”, was born and raised in Mt. Sinai, New York. Dr. Adams graduated from Mt. Sinai High School and continued her education at St. Joseph’s College in Patchogue. After graduating with Bachelor’s of Science in Biology, Dr. Adams was accepted to Tuskegee University School of Veterinary Medicine. Dr. Adams was awarded the Merck Academic Excellence Award as a 4th year veterinary student and graduated Cum Laude. She is an active member of the Phi Zeta Veterinary Honor Society and loves all aspects of veterinary medicine with a special interest in surgery and internal medicine. She is very excited to have joined Coun-tryside Animal Hospital. Dr. Adams enjoys cuddling with her Staffordshire Terrier, “Buster Brown”, hiking, reading, kayak-ing, running, swimming, horseback riding, and being in the company of her family and friends.

The Countryside Animal Hospital is Proud to WelcomeJessica Adams DVM

Jessica Adams DVM, “Dr. Jess”, is pictured here with her dog, Buster Brown

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In this edition

Attorney At Law .........................B14Calendar ................................. B20-21Community News ......................... B9Crossword Puzzle ......................B10Gardening ....................................B19Legally Speaking .........................B12Let’s Eat ..........................................B18

Medical Compass ........................ B9Parents and Kids ................. B28-31Plain Talk .......................................B26Power of Three ............................B27Religious Directory ............ B24-25SBU Sports ...................................B32Sudoku ...........................................B10

Email your lEisurE, hEalth, businEss and calEndar noticEs to: [email protected].

Photo by Julie DiamondDar Williams

Pop folk al frescoLast Thursday the Long Island Museum in

Stony Brook welcomed Dar Williams, called “one of America’s very best singer-songwrit-ers” by The New Yorker for an outdoor con-cert. More than 200 people set up blankets and chairs on the museum lawn. Though the forecast was questionable in days leading up to the event, the weather Gods were kind and it turned into an amazing evening.

Following her 90-minute perfor-mance, accompanied by New York jazz musician Brynn Roberts, Dar signed CDs and chatted with the fans. A se-lect group of VIPs and sponsors were surprised when Dar popped in to shake hands and greet the guests prior to go-ing on stage.

For more information on upcoming concerts and events, visit wwww.longis-landmuseum.org or call 631-751-0066.

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JUNE 30, 2016 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B13

By ErnEstinE Franco

History happens all around us every day, especially when no one is looking. Of course, it’s not history until someone remembers it, studies it and celebrates it.

In case you missed last year’s Culper Spy Day event, Emma S. Clark Memorial Library in Setauket will debut a photographic exhibit depicting the locations of that his-toric period in American history in July. Titled My Journey Through History, the display will showcase photographs of Culper Spy Day 2015 by local amateur photogra-pher Mimi Hodges of Sound Beach and highlights Setauket’s role in the Revolutionary War.

It was a love of history that at-tracted Hodges to the Culper Spy Day event organized by the Three Village Historical Society last June. But she did not go alone — she brought her camera and her “eye.” Like everyone else, she recognizes the names of George Washington, Benedict Arnold and Valley Forge when thinking of Revolutionary America. But how many people recognize the names of Abraham Woodhull, Ca-leb Brewster, Anna Smith Strong, Samuel Culper and Setauket?

Hodges considers herself an amateur photographer mostly because she has been rigorous in practicing her photography for a relatively short time. She was born in Manhattan and her family

had roots in Florida and on Long Island. Growing up, during trips to visit family, her father let her take pictures and then she received a Pentax as a college graduation gift. She spent a few years taking pictures and learning to develop her own prints.

Then life intervened and for a few decades she lost touch with photography. She started taking her Pentax camera on frequent trips to England; then in the 1990s she borrowed her brother’s digital camera — she swore she would get her own digital camera. It was not until Hodges retired after some 30 years as an academic ad-viser and an assistant dean at Pace University in New York City that she came back to photography.

“I did [get my own digital cam-era] a few years later but didn’t get into the digital production of photos until recently, when I start-ed taking classes in photography at the OLLI [Osher Lifelong Learn-ing Institute] program at Stony Brook,” she said. Her friend Jay Gammill encouraged her to join a photo group on Facebook that has a photo-a-day requirement.

Hodges was happy to discuss the kind of cameras she has had since the Pentax in a recent in-terview. “I have two cameras. My first digital camera, a Nikon ‘point and shoot’ that I loved, died on New Year’s Day 2014. I [then] bought an Olympus OM-D (DSLR) because it is light in the hand and has image stabiliza-tion.” This winter she had prob-lems with it and had to send it off for repairs. “I couldn’t bear to be without a camera, so I bought a Nikon D5300, relatively inexpen-sively. I use the Olympus most and I hope to get a macro lens for it, but because the Nikon has a better sensor, I hope to get a mid-range lens for it. No new camera on the horizon!”

Hodges credits her 10th-grade history teacher, Louis Brody, from the Garden School in Jackson Heights, with instilling in her a love of history. When asked what made her attend the event last year she said, “There was an arti-cle in the Times Beacon that men-tioned the event, and I thought it would be fun to go.” When ex-plaining why she took the photos she did, she said, “I take photos when something catches my eye. I am trying to learn why something catches my eye, and I am begin-ning to understand that better than I did.” The photographers at OLLI “have gone a long way in helping me see what I am seeing.”

The exhibit includes approxi-mately 13 photographs that de-pict many of the locations that were part of the activities of the Culper Spy Ring. When asked what she hopes people will take away from the exhibit, Hodges

said, “I hope they see the history that is in their backyards. I hope they see how hard it was for the folks living in this amazing part of the world in the 1700s, and I hope they see that it was also ex-citing and stimulating.”

Photography is now a large part of Hodges’ life. When asked where she would like to be with her photography in the future, she was very expansive. “I enjoy the visual emotions that photos generate. I hope [this exhibit] allows others to see what I am seeing and to understand the in-tentions and moods of my photos. Going forward, I hope to get a balance of intuitive and informed photography (for myself). I do know I want to continue to enjoy it for as long as I can.”

This is Hodges’ first exhibit and she admits she was some-what surprised when Nancy McCaffrey of the Emma Clark

Library got in touch with her and invited her to be part of the Culper Spy Day. Hodges credits Times Beacon Record Newspa-pers for printing a photo essay of some of her photos of the Brews-ter House (Dec. 17, 2015), which led to the invitation.

In any case, she manages to combine a love of history with a passion for photography. When asked which photo in the exhib-it is her favorite, Hodges chose “The Sitting Room,” because it has the same nuances as a paint-ing by her favorite artist, the Dutch painter Johannes Vermeer.

My Journey Through His-tory will be on display at Emma S. Clark Memorial Library, 120 Main St., Setauket, through the month of July and will be a part of the Culper Spy Day celebration on Saturday, July 23, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For more information call 631-941-4080.

HISTORY

Culper Spy Day 2015 exhibit opensSetauket Library hosts photographic display by Mimi Hodges

Photo by Florence McArdle Mimi Hodges

’The past is never dead. It’s not even past.’

— William Faulkner

Photos by Mimi Hodges clockwise from top left, ‘the church Docents’; ‘the spy Ferry’; ‘Welcome’; and ‘the sitting room’ will be on display at the Emma clark Library throughout July.

‘I hope [this exhibit] allows others to see what I am seeing and to understand the intentions and moods of my photos.’

— mimi Hodges

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140651

By NaNcy BurNer, eSQ.

While discussing an estate plan with a cli-ent, she stopped me and said “What is pro-bate.” Sometimes we forget to explain the simplest concepts. Probate is the process by which a last will and testament is given ef-fect. Under New York State Law, a will is admitted to probate after the executor files a Petition for Probate with the decedent’s will attached and gives proper notice to the individuals that would have inherited from the decedent had the decedent died without a will. The proceeding for the pro-bate of a will takes place in the Surrogate’s Court in the county where the decedent resided at the time of his or her death. The probate proceeding gives the in-terested parties (distributees) the right and opportunity to object to the probate of the will.

Typically, we advise that a cli-ent that creates a will consider if there are any circumstances that will make the probate proceeding an expen-sive one. For instance, is any distributee be-ing disinherited? If so, that disgruntled dis-tributee may come to Surrogates Court and object to the will. The litigation objecting to a will can be long and drawn out — and ex-

pensive as well. Are there missing heirs that must be found before the will can be probat-ed? If so, it could be very expensive and time-consuming to find all the individuals that are

required to be given notice and an opportunity to object. Is there real property owned by the de-cedent in different states? If so, then the will would have to be probated in each state. If any of these circumstances exist, you may want to avoid probate alto-gether.

We also suggest avoiding probate if you are the surviving spouse and your spouse is or has received Medicaid benefits. Medicaid has a lien against the spouse’s estate for any Medic-aid benefits paid for the other spouse within 10 years of the death of the surviving spouse.

Another reason to avoid pro-bate is if you have a disabled beneficiary as the Surrogate’s Court may appoint a guardian ad litem to protect that person’s interest. That could be another

delay and cost to the estate. The next question to consider is how do

you avoid probate? One way to avoid pro-bate is to name beneficiaries on all your accounts. But I rarely, if ever, suggest that a client resort to this solution without first

considering the consequences. First, it may not be possible to name beneficiaries on all your accounts. What if your beneficiaries are minor’s or disabled? If that is the case, the minor or disabled beneficiary would have to have a guardian appointed to collect the be-quest. This is also timely.

For minor’s, the guardian would have to put the money in a bank account, earn little or no interest and turn the money over to the beneficiary when he or she turned 18. If the account was a retirement account, the result is even harsher. The IRA or other retirement account would have to be liquidated, all income taxes paid and then put into a cus-todial account at a bank, earn little interest and then be paid to the beneficiary at age 18.

Most clients, when given the choice, would rather protect their heirs from divorc-ing spouses, Medicaid liens, creditors and taxes than avoid probate. We can protect beneficiaries by having their assets paid to trusts. This can be done in a will (and pro-

bate) or by avoiding probate altogether by using a revocable trust.

The important point here is that it is a mistake to make the avoidance of probate the overriding consideration when embark-ing upon an estate plan. Not everyone needs a revocable trust, but some people will be well served by using a trust, if the circum-stances make probate impractical.

One size does not fit all. A successful es-tate plan takes all factors into consideration. In a world where people are computer savvy and everything is available on the internet, it is easy to believe that you can just do it your-self. The fact is attorneys are called counsel-ors at law for a reason. The documents are only part of the problem and solution. The fact is, there is no substitute for competent legal advice.

Nancy Burner, Esq. practices elder law and estate planning from her East Setauket office.

Probate is the process by which a last will and testament is given effect.

attorney at law

To probate or not to probate

Page 15: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

JUNE 30, 2016 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B15

144642

Business news

Photo from Nicole Eliopoulos From left, Jason Eliopoulos, Blanca Reyes-Hardy (team member), Carmine Inserra (chamber member), Nicole Eliopoulos (owner), Emily Koutsoliontos (team member), Cathleen Darch (team member), Tony Ardise, Cheryl Fusari (chamber member), Olga Belleau (chamber member), Julia Eliopoulos and Ellenita Mattera. (Missing from photo — team member Jason Morena)

Ribbon CuttingThe Three Village Chamber of Commerce hosted a grand opening and ribbon cutting

ceremony on June 9 for the State Farm Insurance Office of agent Nicole Eliopoulos and her team to welcome them to the community. In addition to members of the chamber, friends,

family and customers joined the festivities. Former agent Tony Ardise, who recently retired, returned to wish Eliopoulos well. Ardise was presented with a Certificate of Appreciation from Councilwoman Valerie Cartright’s office for his years of service. The insurance office, located at 45 Route 25A in Setauket, is open Monday to Thursday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Page 16: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

PAGE B16 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • JUNE 30, 2016

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By AlecsA KAzenAs

The “Culper Spy Adventure,” a special presentation by TBR News Media, is an immersive digital attraction that will allow locals and tourists alike to be recruited into the ranks of General Washington’s secret Setauket spy ring. Accessed by scanning a special QR code on a panel of the Three Village map due out later this summer, you will begin an interactive 45-minute jour-ney that puts you into the starring role of your very own secret spy adventure!

Become a time traveler as you arrive in the year 1780, crossing paths with legends and heroes: Abraham Woodhull, Anna Smith Strong, Caleb Brewster, George Washington himself! Enjoy interactive games between each episode that are filled to the brim with intrigue, action and fun!

Created with the whole family in mind, the “Culper Spy Adventure” is great for all ages. We are also offering a special American Sign Language version as well a handicap-accessible edition! Join the revolution later this summer! I recently had the opportunity to sit down with George Overin who plays Caleb Brewster in this interactive journey.

Tell us a little bit about Caleb Brewster. Who was he?

Caleb was a former whaler who didn’t like a humdrum life. He was an adventure seeker! He was his own man. He wouldn’t wear a uniform while serving his country and would fire at the British whenever he could. Being a trained whale boat captain, he could pilot his boat out of reach of the British guns quickly and safely. Though they wanted to capture him, the British never could.

What is your favorite memory from filming the “Culper Spy Adventure”?

Working with this wonderful cast and crew has been a joy that I will always remem-ber! We all helped each other. Whether with

character development or with something technical. The whole filming process has been a treat! Every scene I was involved in, every cast member I worked with, every direction given, everything just seemed to come togeth-er perfectly. Like it was meant to be. I hope we’ll be filming more in the near future!

What was it like bringing a character back to life two centuries after his death?

This was an honor for me! Growing up, I never even heard of a Long Island spy ring during the Revolutionary War. When I was approached by Michael Tessler about film-ing the “Culper Spy Adventure,” I knew I had to find out who Caleb Brewster was. I had gotten three books about the spy ring to read,watched the first season of “Turn” and attended a lecture on the subject. While I still only feel like I’ve just scratched the surface, I was able to start to “feel” Caleb. I will be looking for information on him for as long as I play him.

What do you think Caleb Brewster would think of this project?

I truly think Caleb would be proud of the efforts made. I’m sure he’d take me aside to discuss how he did what he did. Wouldn’t THAT be a great class to sit in on! When the Revolutionary War ended, the Culper Spy Ring just kind of dis-solved. Everybody went their own way. Nobody really discussed what they did and the parts they played to help win the war. There were no parades or big hon-ors given. If Caleb Brewster and the rest of the group could be here and see their history, their lives being exalted today, I believe they would be pleased. They would be modest and maybe a little em-barrassed. After all, they were serving a Great Cause! And they all had the hearts to do what they did!

Your ‘Culper Spy Adventure’ awaits!An interactive historical experience

powered by TBR News Media

Production still from Circadian Studios and TBR News MediaGeorge Overin as caleb Brewster

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Page 17: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

JUNE 30, 2016 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B17

By EllEn BarcEl

The Port Jefferson Village Center will present a very special exhibit, The Natural Beauty of Plum Island, from July 2 through Aug. 30. Two artists, photographer Robert Lorenz and painter John H. Sargent, will be showcasing approximately 70 of their works.

Shown previously in Connecticut and the East End of Long Island (including Plum Island itself), this is the first time that the show will be presented so far west. Lorenz, who lives in Connecticut but works in New York City, said, “I’m looking forward to having the show getting clos-er to New York City.” He added that the PJVC is such a great venue for showing the work because of its large size.

Sue Orifici (head of Graphic, Archival & Special Projects at the PJVC) noted that while the exhibit touches on the fact that the animal disease research at Plum Island is being moved, and the island scheduled to be sold, “mostly [the exhibit] is about the art.” She added, “The artists wanted people to understand how much life there is on the island.”

“The bulk of the island is undevel-oped — about 85 percent — in its natural state,” said Lorenz.

Plum Island (technically part of South-old Township) is particularly important to the Long Island area, now, since the work on animal diseases research, carried out by the federal government, is scheduled to be moved to Kansas. Plans to sell the is-land for development have been met with much controversy. The Preserve Plum Is-land Coalition is working to keep the is-land undeveloped.

The island is currently under the control of the Department of Homeland Security. In 2009 Congress passed legislation that stipulated that if the animal disease center was moved off the island, the government could sell the island subject to government interests, to the highest bidder.

“The animal research facility on Plum Island is still very active,” said Lorenz. “It has a long list of wonderful accomplish-ments. It’s the premier lab of its type in the world.” He noted that one of the ma-jor research accomplishments of the lab has been the control of hoof and mouth disease. “There has not been an outbreak in this country since the 1920s.” But it is found in other countries that rely on the lab for assistance. Because of its research projects, access to the island has been very limited. But, said Lorenz, “the years of secrecy did them no good,” as far as public relations is concerned.

The island consists of 830 acres of both wildlife habitat and historically significant sites such as the Plum Gut lighthouse built in 1870 and the 1897 Fort Terry army bar-racks and weapons batteries. The island was originally home to Native Americans who sold the island to a colonist in the 1600s. It is also home to threatened and endangered species of plants and animals. Noted Sargent, “It is the largest seal haul out in southern New England.” Anywhere from 180 to 200 seals at a time can be seen on the rocky southern side of the is-land, he said.

How did this unique exhibit come about? Lorenz and Sargent met on a tour of Plum Island organized by Save the Sound, a bi-state project of the nonprofit, Connecticut Fund for the Environment. “I was the only person allowed to photo-graph the island,” said Lorenz, who had applied beforehand and gone through a vetting process.

While Lorenz was photographing the natural beautify of the island, Sargent was sketching. Said Sargent, “Because we had to be escorted it didn’t allow me time to paint [on the scene] … I did most of my work in the studio,” based on his sketches and photographs as well as some of Lorenz’ photos.

A representative from Save the Sound suggested producing a traveling exhibit together. “Because access to Plum Island was limited, I saw it as a challenge,” said Lorenz who was always interested in en-vironmental issues. “We went out 12 to 14 more times over a two-year period,” to photograph and sketch the island. “We were told when we could go out,” so the time of day and weather varied with each visit.

“In our shows we have some images that are similar,” a photo and a painting of the same scene said Sargent. These will be shown side by side. But many of their other works are very different and grouped by themes: night scenes, bluffs, winter scenes, etc. There are also scenes of the historic lighthouse.

Sargent was an art teacher for many years. Retired now, he is a professional, freelance artist who works in acrylics and pastels. “I have lived along the Con-necticut shore most of my life, along the waters of Long Island Sound. I have an appreciation of the beauty and a concern for the health of the Sound,” he noted.

Chris Cryder of the Preserve Plum Is-land Coalition will be making a presenta-tion at the opening reception. According to Laura McMillan, of the Connecticut Fund for the Environment, the coalition consists of 60 to 70 organizations and individuals working to prevent the de-velopment of the island. “Plum Island is not just a local, but a regional and even global area of concern,” she said.

Cryder noted that half of his presenta-tion will be a virtual tour of the island. There will also be a panel discussion with several legislators [as of this writing, NYS Assemblyman Steven Englebright (D-Setauket) and NYS Senator Kenneth LaValle (R-Port Jefferson) are scheduled to attend] discussing the current status of legislation pending in Congress. Cryder added that the Town of Southold created a conservation zone on the island.

If the legislation requiring the sale of the island is repealed, Cryder added that there are a number of possible uses for the island, “another research center? A renewable energy research lab? A marine research lab?” Possibly the island could be transferred to the National Parks Service.

Long-term goals include saving the jobs of many of the people who work on Plum Island, saving the endangered species and opening up the island to public access — ecotourism.

The Natural Beauty of Plum Island, featuring work by Robert Lorenz and John Sargent, will be on view at the Port Jefferson Village Center, 101A East Broadway from July 2 through Aug. 30. An opening reception, to which all are invited, will be held on Thursday, July 7, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Both artists will be in attendance.

For further information, call 631-802-2160 or visit www.portjeff.com/fa-cilities/village-center. The center is open daily from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. (10 p.m. on Thursday, Friday and Saturday).

Art exhibit

The Natural Beauty of Plum Island to open at the PJVC

Photos by Robert Lorenz; paintings by John H. Sargentclockwise from top left, ‘Plum Island northeast View’; ‘northeaster on South Side of Plum’; ‘Middle of Plum at Sunrise’; ‘The neck — Plum Island’

■ For more information on Pre-serve Plum Island Coalition visit www.preserveplumisland.org.

■ Further information on Save the Sound, a program of the Connecticut Fund for the Environment, can be found at www.ctenvironment.org.

■ The Southold Historical Society has published “A World Unto Itself, the Remarkable History of Plum Island,” by Ruth Ann Bramson, Geoffrey Fleming and Amy Kasuga Folk.

Page 18: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

PAGE B18 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • JUNE 30, 2016

SALE DATES WED. JUNE 29 - TUES. JULY 5, 2016

BOAR’S HEADIchiban

CHICKEN BREAST$5.99 lb.

BOAR’S HEADAmericanCHEESE

$4.99 lb.

BOAR’S HEADMaple Glazed

TURKEY BREAST$6.99 lb.

Buttercup’s Dairy Store!

Deli SalesBOAR’S HEAD

DeluxeHAM

$5.99 lb.

BUTTERCUP’S DAIRY STORE (Corner of Boyle Road & Old Town Road)

PORT JEFFERSON STATION, NY • 928–4607Check out our weekly sales at Buttercupdairy.com

OPEN MON–FRI 8AM–8PM • SAT 8AM–7PM • SUN 8AM–6PM

©144644

48 Oz. Varieties

Entenmann’sFULL LINE

SALE $2.99

Boar’s HeadNATURAL CASING

BEEF FRANKS

$4.99

Friendly’s

ICE CREAM$2.99

Tropicana PUNCHESOR ADES

99¢

Produce Sales

YELLOW OR REDPEPPERS$2.99 LB.

CALIFORNIAICEBERGLETTUCE

$1.29 EACH

SWEET RIPEEASTERNPEACHES$1.29 LB.

CALIFORNIAPLUMS, NECTARINES

OR APRICOTS$2.49 LB.

Pepperidge Farm

HAMBURGER OR HOT DOG

ROLLS$2.99

Assorted Varieties

WE WILL BE OPEN JULY 4TH

8 AM - 2 PMLocal Produce

Is In!

All Entenmann’s Varieties 59 Oz. Varieties

14 Oz. Varieties

Store SalesPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge FarmPepperidge Farm

4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.4.99 lb.White or Yellow

The Greater Port Jefferson Chamber of Commerce Presents...

‘The G�dens & Landscapesof P t Jeffs’

Sponsored by the Times Beacon Record News MediaIn Celebration of Our 40th Anniversary 1976-2016

The Secd Annual

For Tickets Call631-473-1414

Self-guided Tour of 8 Unique Home Gardens in the Village of Port Jefferson

Refreshments, garden experts, and at selected gardens there will be watercolorists from the Night Heron Artists.

Tickets can be purchased NOW-631-473-1414 or chamber website through Eventbrite.

www.portjeffchamber.com

Saturday July 9, 2016(Rain or Shine)

11:00 am. - 4:00 p.m.

147018

This Fourth of July take your backyard barbecue staples from basic to bold with knock-out burgers, grilled fruit “steaks” and festive red, white and blue-colored desserts.

Cowboy Burger with Grilled Pick-les and Crispy Onion Straws

YIELD: Serves 4INGREDIENTS:

BBQ Mayonnaise

• 1/4 cup mayonnaise • 2 tablespoons barbecue sauce

Crispy Onion Straws

• 1/2 cup flour • 1/4 teaspoon salt • 1/8 teaspoon ground black pepper • 1 medium onion, very thinly sliced and

separated into rings • vegetable oil, for frying

Cowboy Burgers

• 4 teaspoons steak seasoning • 1 tablespoon chili powder • 1 tablespoon packed brown sugar • 1 1/4 pounds ground beef • 4 slices mild cheddar cheese • 1 dill pickle, sliced lengthwise 1/4-inch thick • 4 kaiser rolls • 4 lettuce leaves

DIRECTIONS:

For the BBQ mayonnaise, mix mayon-naise and barbecue sauce in small bowl until well blended. Cover. Refrigerate until ready to serve.

For the onions, mix flour, salt and pep-per in large resealable plastic bag. Add onion; toss to coat well. Pour oil into deep fryer, large heavy skillet or saucepan, filling no more than 1/3 full. Heat oil on medi-um-high heat. Carefully add onion rings to hot oil. Fry 4 to 5 minutes, turning once to brown evenly, until onions rings are golden brown. Drain on paper towels. Set aside.

For the burgers, mix seasoning, chili powder and brown sugar in small bowl. Shape ground beef into 4 patties. Coat sur-face of each patty evenly with the rub mix-ture. Grill over medium heat 4 to 6 minutes per side or until burgers are cooked through

(internal temperature of 160 F). Add cheese slices to burgers 1 minute before cooking is completed. Grill pickle slices 2 to 3 minutes per side or until grill marks appear. Toast rolls on the grill, open-side down, about 30 seconds, if desired.

Serve burgers on rolls topped with grilled pickles, Crispy Onion Straws and lettuce. Serve with BBQ Mayonnaise.

Red, White and Blue Mousse Parfaits

YIELD: Serves 12INGREDIENTS:

• 3 1/2 cups heavy cream, divided • 1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder • 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar,

divided • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract • 2 teaspoons red food coloring • 1 teaspoon pure lemon extract • McCormick Assorted NEON! Food Colors

& Egg Dye • 2 tablespoons white chocolate chips

DIRECTIONS:

Beat 1 1/2 cups of the heavy cream, cocoa powder, 2 tablespoons of the sugar and vanilla in large bowl with electric mixer on medium speed until stiff peaks form. Add red food color; stir gently with spatula until evenly tinted.

Beat remaining 2 cups heavy cream, remaining 1/2 cup sugar and lemon ex-tract in large bowl with electric mixer on high speed until stiff peaks form. Remove 1 cup. Add 3/4 teaspoon NEON blue and 5 drops NEON purple food colors; stir gently with spatula until evenly tinted.

To assemble parfait, alternately layer red and white mousses in dessert glasses. Top with blue mousse and white chocolate chips. Refrigerate until ready to serve.

Fire Up a Bold Fourth of July BBQCowboy Burger with Grilled Pickles and Crispy Onion Straws

Let’s eat

Page 19: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

JUNE 30, 2016 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B19

Make Your Landscape Dreams A Reality In Any Season

R.J.K. GaR dens176 Third Street • St. James, NY 11780

www.rjkgardens.com

full Service creaTive l aNdScapiNg Design • ConstruCtion • MaintenanCe

Established 1960

©75021

631.862.7056

gardening

By EllEn BarcEl

Many times a plant appears in the garden that the gardener didn’t plant. A weed? Perhaps, but it really helps to know what seedlings and young plants look like so that you can see if a “volunteer” is a prize or a pain.

Among the not-really-wanted plants that easily volunteer in the garden include dandelions, onion grass, garlic mustard, wineberries, multiflora roses and oriental bittersweet. While onion grass is a mild nuisance, just mow over it, garlic mustard easily grows to a foot or more in height and is really unsightly.

Wineberries are an invasive plant, re-lated to raspberries, that can be spread by birds. The berries are definitely edible, but not nearly as tasty as raspberries. If you want raspberries, then plant them and pull out the wineberries — carefully because they have thorns.

Multiflora roses are attractive, with many (hence the term multiflora) blooms in early June borne on arching canes. Years ago, they were planted by many Long Island gardeners because of their rapid growth and dense habit. They were even sold as a living fence for cattle. But, and here’s the big but, they are extremely invasive. Like wineberries, be careful pull-ing them out because of the thorns.

Another volunteer that is extremely invasive is oriental bittersweet. It’s very pretty with its red berries that break open to reveal yellow seeds, but it’s definitely invasive. Lesser celandine has pretty yel-low flowers in the spring but, again, is very invasive.

Note that wineberries, multiflora roses and oriental bittersweet as well as lesser celandine are all on Suffolk County’s Do Not Sell List. However, there are so many here already and they are so easily spread, especially by birds, that it’s still a battle getting rid of these invasives.

On the other hand, there are a number of volunteers that are welcome in the gar-den. Reseeding plants that you’ve put in the garden are wonderful. They may not be perennials but they’re almost as good. In this category includes the money plant (Lunaria) with its purple flowers and sil-very seed pods.

Many years ago, a small tree planted it-self in my back yard. Curious as to what it was, I left it alone and it matured into a gorgeous tree covered in pink flowers in the spring. I never did figure out what it was — there were a number of possi-bilities. It could have been some variety of cherry, but it never bore fruit, so I never did find out. It was a welcome volunteer and sadly missed when one spring, it be-came obvious that it didn’t make it through the previous harsh winter.

Another volunteer that is most wel-come in my garden was also filled with pink flowers. Again, I couldn’t figure out exactly what it was until it started to pro-duce peaches. Unfortunately, the variety were small and bitter, so I don’t use them instead allowing the local critters to dine. But, I don’t take the trees out either, be-

cause they produce nice shade and those beautiful flowers.

I’ve had rose of Sharon and holly also seed themselves in the garden, both welcome plants. On the other hand, the thistle that seeded itself by my front door, while interesting, was a danger. Tiny ma-ple trees (Norway maple, Acer platanoi-des) try to take over my garden — they’re everywhere. Simply cutting them off at ground level with a pruning shears usu-ally works, and small ones can be easily pulled out especially after a rain.

Another beneficial volunteer is clover in the lawn. It’s a nitrogen fixing plant that takes nitrogen from the air and stores it in its roots. It attracts pollinators and is low maintenance. However, many broad- spectrum weed killers will kill it, so read the label carefully of any products you consider using.

When you find any of these volunteers, remove the nasty ones, but allow some of the questionable ones to grow a while and mature so that you can figure out whether you have a bonus in the garden or not. They may provide you with a beautiful to-morrow in your garden.

An excellent book to help you identify some unknown plants and decide wheth-er or not they’re keepers is “Weeds of the North East,” by Richard H. Uva, Joseph C.

Neal and Joseph M. DiTomaso. The vol-ume is published by Comstock Publishing, a division of Cornell University Press. It has color photos of the plant, closeups of the leaves, flowers and seeds. It’s a great resource.

Ellen Barcel is a freelance writer and master gardener. Send your gardening ques-tions to [email protected]. To reach Cornell Cooperative Extension and its Master Gardener program, call 631-727-7850.

Photos by Ellen BarcelUnwelcome volunteers, from top, wine-berry; multiflora roses and thistle; below, a holly bush, a welcome volunteer

Volunteers in the garden: Welcome or unwelcome?

File photoa welcome volunteer, rose of Sharon, pro-duces colorful, cup-shaped flowers in the summer and fall.

Page 20: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

PAGE B20 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • JUNE 30, 2016

* All numbers are in (631) area code unless otherwise noted.

Thursday 30Community Yard SaleHeritage Park, 633 Mount Sinai-Coram Road, Mount Sinai will host a Community Yard Sale with live entertainment every Thursday evening from 5 to 8 p.m., weather permitting, through Aug. 25. Musical guests this Thursday will be Vinnie Bonti Music (Eagles, Billy Joel, Jackson Browne). For further information, call 509-0882.

St. Anthony’s Family FestivalSt. Anthony of Padua Parish will hold its annual Family Feast and Festival today from 6 to 11 p.m., July 1 and 2 from 6 to 11:30 p.m. and July 3 from 3 to 9 p.m. at Trinity Regional School, 1025 Fifth Ave., E. Northport. Featuring rides, games, food, fireworks on June 29 and July 2 and much more. Free admission. Call 499-6824.

Mid-Summer Night DanceSuffolk County Vanderbilt Museum, 180 Little Neck Road, Centerport will host a Mid-Summer Night Dance from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. featuring the Bachata by Alfred Pena of Rhythmology with a performance by the Rhythmology Kids. Tickets are $25 in advance at www.vanderbilt-museum.org, $30 at the door, includes light dinner fare. Questions? Call 854-5579.

Summer SoundsCelebrating its 58th summer season, the North-port Community Band, under the direction of Don Sherman, will present a free concert, America the Musical, at the Robert W. Krueger Bandstand in Northport Village Park at 8:30 p.m. Featuring an Armed Forces Salute in collabora-tion with American Legion Post 694, patriotic fa-vorites and light classics. Rain location: Northport High School, 154 Laurel Road, Northport. For further information, call 261-6972.

Summer Arts FestivalThe 51st annual Huntington Summer Arts Festi-val at Heckscher Park, 2 Prime Ave., Huntington will continue with a performance by the Hunting-ton Men’s Chorus on the Chapin Rainbow Stage at 8:30 p.m. Featuring standards, jazz classics and originals. Free. For more information, call 271-8423 or visit www.huntingtonarts.org.

Friday 1St. Anthony’s Family FestivalSee June 30 listing.

Summer Kick-Off Concert at the LIM Kick off the summer at the Long Island Mu-seum, 1200 Route 25A, Stony Brook by visiting the museum’s new summer exhibitions and enjoying a free concert by the Stony Brook Chamber Ensemble from 5 to 6:30 p.m. Bring blankets or chairs for seating. Picnics welcome. Call 751-0066 for more information.

Rockin’ on the FarmEnjoy great music on an idyllic setting as Ben-ner’s Farm, 56 Gnarled Hollow Road, Setauket presents Soundswell in concert from 6 to 10 p.m. Bring a blanket or lawn chair. $10 each. Call 689-8172 for additional information.

Happenings on Main StreetThe Northport Arts Coalition will welcome Toby Tobias and See (world, folk, Americana) in concert at the Northport Village Park Patio on the Dock at 7 p.m. as part of its 18th annual Happenings on Main Street series. Free. Weather permitting. Bring a blanket or lawn chair. Dogs welcome. Visit www.northportarts.org.

Opera NightBethany Presbyterian Church, 425 Maplewood Road, Huntington Station will host an evening of opera starting at 8 p.m. $15 donation. For further information, visit www.operanight.org.

Live Jazz in Stony BrookThe Jazz Loft, 275 Christian Ave., Stony Brook will present the Eldad Tarmu Trio in concert at 7 p.m. Tickets are $20 adults,$15 seniors, $10 students, children 12 and under free. Tomake reservations, call 751-1895 or visit www.thejazzloft.org.

Musical Moments in Kings ParkThe New Yorkers (hits from the ’40s to today) will give a concert at Russ Savatt Park on Main Street in Kings Park at 7:30 p.m. as part of the summer concert series, Musical Moments. Bring a lawn chair. Weather permitting. Free. For additional information, call 269-6160.

Book signingBook Revue, 313 New York Ave., Huntington will welcome the co-host of “The Five” and FOX News contributor Eric Bolling will be speak-ing and signing copies of his new book, “Wake Up America: The Nine Virtues That Made Our Nation Great— And Why We Need Them More Than Ever,” at 8 p.m. Call 271-1442.

Summer Arts FestivalThe 51st annual Huntington Summer Arts Festi-val at Heckscher Park, 2 Prime Ave., Huntington will continue with a Spanish dance performance by Sol Y Sombra on the Chapin Rainbow Stage at 8:30 p.m. Free. For more information, call 271-8423 or visit www.huntingtonarts.org.

Saturday 2St. Anthony’s Family FestivalSee June 30 listing.

Historical Walking TourThe Three Village Historical Society will present a Walk through history with farmer and Revolution-ary War spy Abraham Woodhull from 2 to 3:30 p.m. Explore the nature sanctuary that was once Woodhull’s farm, the Setauket Village Green, Grist Mill, Patriot’s Rock and historic grave sites. Tour begins and ends at the parking lot at the front of the Caroline Episcopal Church, 1 Dyke Road, Se-tauket. $8 per person. No reservations necessary. For more information, call 751-3730.

Tribute to Billy JoelPat Farrell and The Cold Spring Harbor Band will perform a tribute performance to Billy Joel at the Cold Spring Harbor Library, 95 Harbor Road, Cold Spring Harbor at 2 p.m. Open to all, but tickets required. To register, call 692-6820 or visit www.cshlibrary.org.

Summer Arts FestivalThe 51st annual Huntington Summer Arts Festival at Heckscher Park, 2 Prime Ave., Huntington continues with a performance by the Samuel Torres Group (Latin jazz) on the Chapin Rainbow Stage at 8:30 p.m. Free. For more information, call 271-8423 or visit www.huntingtonarts.org.

Sunday 3St. Anthony’s Family FestivalSee June 30 listing.

Just a hikeCaumsett State Historic Park, 25 Lloyd Harbor Road, Huntington will host a six-mile adult hike through the park from 9:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. Bring drinking water. $4. Advance regis-tration required by calling 423-1770.

Book signingThe Three Village Historical Society, 93 North Country Road, Setauket will welcome Darlene Sells Treadwell, author of “The Bittersweet Taste of the American Dream” from 2 to 4 p.m. Meet the author as she shares a compelling heart-to-heart memoir of the life and interests of her grandmother Emma Calvin Sells of Se-tauket. For more information, call 751-3730.

Wind Down SundaysThe Wayne Hart Band (jazz, rock and soulful favorites) will perform in concert at the Frank Melville Memorial Park’s Red Barn, 101 Main Street, Setauket at 5:15 p.m. to kick off the park’s Wind Down Sundays Summer Music Se-ries. Bring a blanket, dinner, some great friends and enjoy. Free. Call 689-6146 or visit www.frankmelvillepark.org for more information.

Summer Arts FestivalThe 51st annual Huntington Summer Arts Festival at Heckscher Park, 2 Prime Ave., Huntington will continue with a performance by the Senior Pops Orchestra of Long Island on the Chapin Rainbow Stage at 8:30 p.m. Free. For more information, call 271-8423 or visit www.huntingtonarts.org.

Monday 4Independence Day ParadeThe Port Jefferson Fire Department will hold its annual Independence Day Parade with kick-off at 10 a.m. from Infant Jesus R.C. Church. The parade will travel north on Main Street, make a left onto West Broadway and then left onto Barnum Ave., ending at the firehouse on Maple Place. Neighboring roads will be closed at 8:15 a.m. Fireworks from West Beach start at 9:30 p.m. Questions? Call 473-8910.

Parade of American FlagsHeritage Park, 633 Mount Sinai-Coram Road, Mount Sinai will present its Parade of Flags from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. featuring 100 national, state, territory and local flags. Guided tour at 11 a.m. — meet at the bald eagle sign post. Event is weather permitting. Free. Call 509-0882.

Fourth of July CelebrationThe Pennysaver Amphitheater, 1 Ski Run Lane, Farmingville will host a free Fourth of July Celebration featuring live performances by Captain Jack and Backtrax (5:30 p.m.) with fireworks by Grucci (9:15 p.m.). Doors open at 5 p.m. Visit www.pennysaveramp.com for more information.

Smithtown Library concertEagles tribute band Desert Highway will kick off the Dennis Cannataro Family Summer Con-cert series at the Smithtown Library, 1 North Country Road, Smithtown at 8 p.m. Bring a blanket or lawn chair. Free. For more informa-tion, call 360-2480.

Tuesday 5Smithtown Summer ConcertThe Smithtown Historical Society will host a Summer Concert at the Frank Brush Barn, 211 E. Main St., Smithtown every Tuesday through the month of July at 8 p.m. Held rain or shine. Free. Call 265-6768 for further questions.

Wednesday 6Pianofest Noon Recital Brookhaven National Laboratory, 2 Center St., Upton will host a Piano Recital today and Aug. 3 in Berkner Hall at noon featuring participants in Pianofest, a summer workshop held in the Hamptons. Free and open to the public. Call 344-2345 for additional information.

Sunset ConcertThe Greater Port Jefferson Arts Council will welcome He-Bird, She-Bird (acoustic Amer-icna trio) in concert at 6:30 p.m. at the Mayor Jeanne Garant Harborfront Park, 101 W. Broad-way, Port Jefferson to kick off its Picnic Supper Concert series. Bring a blanket or lawn chair. Held rain or shine. Free. (Rain location: Village Center) For more information, call 473-5220.

Summer ConcertThe VA Medical Center, 79 Middleville Road, Northport will welcome Linda Ronstadt tribute band Blue Bayou in concert in the Vietnam Vets Memorial Garden at 6:30 p.m. Rain location: VA Auditorium, Building 5. Free. For additional information, call 261-4400.

TiMeS...and datesJune 30 t0 July 7, 2016

Sunset concert: He-Bird, She-Bird will kick off Port Jefferson’s Sunset Concert series at the Harborfront Park on July 6.

Page 21: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

JUNE 30, 2016 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B21

Jazz 101 LectureThe Jazz Loft, 275 Christian Ave., Stony Brook will present a lecture, “Sinatra — A Man and His Music,” at 7 p.m. Tickets are $10 adults, $7 seniors, $5 students, children 12 and under free. To make reservations, call 751-1895 or visit www.thejazzloft.org.

Summer Arts FestivalThe 51st annual Huntington Summer Arts Festival at Heckscher Park, 2 Prime Ave., Huntington will continue with a performance by the Huntington Community Band on the Chapin Rainbow Stage at 8:30 p.m. Free. For more information, call 271-8423 or visit www.huntingtonarts.org.

Thursday 7Tide Mill TourTake a tour of the Van Wyck-Lefferts Tide Mill at 1:15 p.m. Hosted by the Huntington Histori-cal Society. $15, $10 members. Advance regis-tration required by calling 427-7045, ext. 404.

Drumming CircleUnleash your groove at a Drumming Circle at the Northport Public Library, 151 Laurel Ave., Northport at 2 p.m. Experience the fun and group bonding of a hands-on drumming circle with professional drummer Mike Veny. Free but registration required by calling 261-6930.

Community Yard SaleHeritage Park, 633 Mount Sinai-Coram Road, Mount Sinai will host a Community Yard Sale with live entertainment every Thursday evening from 5 to 8 p.m., weather permitting, through Aug. 25. Stop by this Thursday for a performance by the Roseland School of Dance. For further information, call 509-0882.

Mid-Summer Night DanceThe Suffolk County Vanderbilt Museum, 180 Little Neck Road, Centerport will present a Mid-Summer Night Dance starting at 6:30 p.m. Featuring Swing Dance with “East Meets West” by Ed and Maria of SDLI and Ellen McCreery. $25 in advance at www.vander-biltmuseum.org/. $30 at the door includes light dinner fare. For more information, call 854-5579.

Smith Haven Mall ConcertBillboard Live (covers various artists) will kick off the Smith Haven Mall’s Summer Concert se-ries in the Lifestyle Village Courtyard at 7 p.m. Bring a lawn chair. Free. For more information, call 724-8066.

Book signingBook Revue, 313 New York Ave., Huntington will welcome president and CEO of Edgeworth Economics, professional economist and author John H. Johnson who will be speaking and signing copies of his new book, “Everydata: The Misinformation Hidden in the Little Data You Consume Every Day,” at 7 p.m. Call 271-1442.

Summer SoundsAs part of its 58th annual Summer Concert sea-son, Summer Sounds, the Northport Communi-ty Band will present a concert titled Under the Big Top at the Robert W. Krueger Bandstand in Northport Village Park at 8:30 p.m. Featuring a selection of circus favorites under the direction of guest conductor David Schecher. Preconcert performance by the Northport Community Jazz Orchestra at 7:45 p.m. Free. For more informa-tion, call 261-6972.

Summer Arts FestivalThe 51st annual Huntington Summer Arts Festi-val at Heckscher Park, 2 Prime Ave., Huntington will continue with a performance by the L.I. Dance Consortium 1 on the Chapin Rainbow Stage at 8:30 p.m. Free. The festival continues through Aug. 14. For more information, call 271-8423 or visit www.huntingtonarts.org.

Theater

‘Thoroughly Modern Millie’The John W. Engeman Theater, 250 Main St., Northport will present the Tony-award-winning musical “Thoroughly Modern Millie” through July 10. Tickets range from $69 to $74. To order, call 261-2900 or visit www.engemantheater.com.

Disney’s ‘The Little Mermaid’The Noel S. Ruiz Theatre at the CM Performing Arts Center, 931 Montauk Highway, Oakdale will present Disney’s “The Little Mermaid” through July 9. Tickets range from $18 to $29. To order, call 218-2810 or visit www.cmpac.com.

Summer Shakespeare FestivalArena Players Repertory Theater Company will present “Romeo and Juliet” in the Suffolk County Vanderbilt Museum Courtyard from July 1 to 31 and “Taming of the Shrew” from Aug. 3 to 31 on Wednesdays and Fridays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 7 p.m. Tickets are $15. To order, call 516-293-0674.

Long Island Shakespeare FestivalSuffolk County Community College, Ammer-man Campus, 533 College Road, Selden will present “The Three Musketeers” outdoors (bring a lawn chair) from July 7 to 9 and 14 to 16 at 8 p.m. and indoors on July 10 and 17 at 2 p.m. Free. Call 451-4163 or visit www.lishakes.org for more information.

‘Hairspray’Smithtown Center for the Performing Arts, 2 E. Main St., Smithtown will present the Tony-award-winning musical “Hairspray” from July 9 to Aug. 28. Tickets are $35. To order, call 724-3700 or visit www.smithtownpac.org.

‘Mamma Mia!’Fall in love with the songs of ABBA all over again as The John W. Engeman Theater, 250 Main St., Northport presents “Mamma Mia!” from July 21 to Sept. 11. Tickets range from $71 to $76. To order, call 261-2900.

‘Wait Until Dark’The Minstrel Players will present “Wait Until Dark” at Houghton Hall, Trinity Episcopal Church, 130 Main St., Northport on July 23 and 30 at 8 p.m. and July 24 and 31 at 3 p.m. Tickets are $20 adults, $15 seniors and chil-dren 12 and under. To order, call 516-557-1207 or visit www.minstrelplayersinc.org.

‘West Side Story’It’s the Montagues versus the Capulets all over again as the CM Performing Arts Center, 931 Montauk Highway, Oakdale will present “West Side Story” from July 30 to Aug. 28. Tickets range from $18 to $29. To order, call 218-2810 or visit www.cmpac.com.

‘The Sisters Rosensweig”From Aug. 12 to 28, Bare Bones Theater Com-pany, 57 Main St., Northport will present “The Sisters Rosensweig,” a play by Wendy Wasser-stein. Tickets are $25. To order, call 757-9616 or 1-800-838-3006.

‘Rent’The Smithtown Center for the Performing Arts, 2 E. Main St., Smithtown will present “Rent,” Jonathan Larson’s 1996 rock opera set in New York City’s East Village, from Sept. 10 to Oct. 2. Tickets are $35 adults, $28 seniors, $20 students. To order, call 724-3700 or visit www.smithtownpac.org.

Film‘Hello, My Name Is Doris’Comsewogue Public Library, 170 Terryville Road, Port Jefferson Station will screen “Hello, My Name Is Doris” on July 1 at 2 p.m. Rated R. Free and open to all. To register, call 928-1212.

‘Eddie the Eagle”The Northport Public Library, 151 Laurel Ave., Northport will screen “Eddie the Eagle” on July 1 at 2 p.m. Rated PG-13. Free and open to all. For more information, call 261-6930.

‘Red Dawn’As part of its Cult Cafe series, the Cinema Arts Centre, 423 Park Ave., Huntington will screen the 1984 film “Red Dawn” on July 2 at 10 p.m. Rated R. $5, $4 members. Call 423-7611 for further information.

CALENDAR DEADLINE is Wednesday at noon, one week before publication. Items may be mailed to: Times Beacon Record Newspapers, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733. Email your information about community events to [email protected]. Calendar listings are for not-for-profit organizations (nonsectarian, nonpartisan events) only, on a space-available basis. Please include a phone number that can be printed.

Photo by Fred DeFeisAh, dear Juliet, Why art thou yet so fair?: The 28th annual Summer Shakespeare Festival at the Vanderbilt Museum will kick off on July 1 with ‘Romeo and Juliet’.

Vendors wanted▶ Gallery North, 90 North Country Road, Se-tauket is seeking fine art and craft vendors for its 51st Annual Outdoor Art and Music Festival on Sept. 10 and 11 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. There is still time to enter this high-quality juried fair. The deadline has been extended until July 15. For an application, go to www.gallerynorth.org or email [email protected]. Call 751-2676 for additional information.

▶ Heritage Trust is seeking vendors for its Community Yard Sale to be held at Heritage Park, 633 Mount Sinai-Coram Road, Mount Sinai every Thursday from 5 to 8 p.m. through Aug. 25. $10 single week, $50 for 6 weeks, $90 for 12 weeks. Bring your own table. Visit www.msheritagetrust.org to register. Call 509-0882 for more information.

▶ Farmingville Residents Association is seek-ing vendors for its upcoming flea markets on July 17 and Sept. 18. Choose one or both dates. Call 880-7996 for more information.

▶ Heritage Trust is seeking vendors for its Sum-merFest on Aug. 20 from 1 to 8 p.m. at Heritage Park, 633 Mount Sinai-Coram Road, Mount Sinai. Visit www.msheritagetrust.org to register. Call 509-0882 for more information.

▶ Centereach Civic Association is seeking ven-dors for its 4th annual Street Fair to be held on Sept. 14 from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Mark Tree Road in Centereach. For an application, email [email protected].

▶ The Suffolk County Make-A-Wish Founda-tion is looking for craft vendors (handmade items only) for its Fall Family Festival fundraiser on Sept. 24 at 20 Ramsey Road in Shirley from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Rain date is Sept. 25. Also seeking a caricature artist, cartoonist, magician, fortune teller and psychic medium willing to donate their time in exchange for exposure at a large event with booking opportunities. For an application, email [email protected]. For more information, call Kathy at 924-9000.

▶ The Art League of Long Island, 107 E. Dear Park Road, Dix Hills is seeking fine artists and crafters for its 53rd annual Holiday Fine Art & Craft Fair to be held on Dec. 3 and 4 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Application deadline is Nov. 21. For more information, call 462-5400 .

Class reunionsWard Melville High School Class of 1986 will hold its 30th reunion on July 16 at Danfords Hotel in Port Jefferson at 7 p.m. Contact [email protected] for more information.

Smithtown Central High School Class of 1966 will hold its 50th reunion from Aug. 12 to 14. For more information, call Carol at 516-732-8267 or email [email protected].

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HIGH TIDE

Thursday ...... 30th 8:12 am 6.8 8:37 pm 7.9Friday ........... 1st 9:12 am 7.0 9:34 pm 8.1Saturday ...... 2nd 10:10 am 7.1 10:29 pm 8.2Sunday ......... 3rd 11:04 am 7.3 11:22 pm 8.2

Monday ........ 4th 11:57 am 7.4 -------Tuesday ........ 5th 12:13 am 8.1 12:47 pm 7.5Wednesday .. 6th 1:02 am 7.9 1:36 pm 7.4Thursday ...... 7th 1:51 am 7.7 2:24 pm 7.3

©14

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AT PORT JEFFERSON June 30th - July 2nd

June 301865: Eight alleged conspirators in as-sassination of Lincoln found guilty1936: 40-hour work week law approved1955: “Johnny Carson Show” debuts on CBS-TV

July 11963: U. S. Postal Service institutes ZIP code system — Zone Improvement Plan1966: Medicare goes into effect

July 21901: Butch Cassidy and Sundance Kid rob a train of $40,000 in Wagner, MT1937: Amelia Earhart and Fred Noonan disappear over the Pacific Ocean1979: Susan B. Anthony dollar is issued, first U.S. coin to honor a woman

July 31930: Veterans Administration created1991: Donald Trump gives Marla Maples a 7.45-karat diamond ring

July 41776: Declaration of Independence signed — independence from England1884: Stature of Liberty presented to U.S. in Paris1931: First fireworks held at Cleveland Stadium

July 51647: Isaac Newton’s “Principia” pub-lished by Royal Society in England1950: Law of Return passes – guarantees all Jews right to live in Israel

July 61928: First all-talking film shown in NYC — “Lights of New York”1942: Anne Frank’s family goes into hiding1957: John Lennon first meets Paul McCartney

— Compiled by ernestine FranCo

This week in hisTory

In terms of social prevalence, bigotry and sexism have decreased dramatically over the last century. However, many still remember a world where minorities and women were considered second-class citizens. Darlene Sells Treadwell is one of those people.

In her new book, “The Bittersweet Taste of the American Dream,” the 74-year Se-tauket native tells the true story of her grandmother — a Native American with African roots and a special knack for cook-ing who fell prey to a cutthroat corporate money game.

Treadwell, who currently resides in Georgia, will be traveling to Long Island this weekend to present copies of her book to the Emma S. Clark Memorial Library and the Three Village Historical Society. She will hold a book signing event where she will share her family story with the at-tendees. I recently had the pleasure of in-terviewing Ms. Treadwell by phone.

What can you tell me about your grandmother?

Her name was Ms. Emma Francis Calvin Sells of Old Field, Long Island, New York, and she was apart of the Se-tauket Indian Tribe. She was also of African American descent. She was the daughter of Clifford and Abby, and mar-ried Charles Augustus Sells of Setauket on Jan. 11, 1917, at the age of 18. She was my heroine in the kitchen. I always imagined her as a Black Native Ameri-can Julia Child. If she was around today

she would be on all these new cooking shows! Instead, she died heartbroken and disillusioned from her trust in the big buys and the industry… that they would do the right thing.

How did the cooking industry take advantage of Grandma Em?

They stole her recipe. They began the process slowly, never blatantly, but per-sistently eased knowledge of the recipe away. I have a letter from The National Biscuit Company asking her to bring in four bags and to identify the ingredients. She even tried to reach out to her hero, Jackie Robinson, to intervene when she realized she’d been had. This transgres-sion prevented her from accumulating her rightful place in history. I have all of the proof in the book: letters between attorneys and employees at the National Biscuit Company, names and signatures, her recipes.

When did she realize her recipe had been stolen?

1949. She was at the supermarket when she saw the first ever Ready-to-Use Corn Bread Mix on the shelf — with her recipe on the back of the box. She dropped to her knees crying in the middle of the aisle, realizing the last 12 years of working with the National Biscuit Company to make her dream a reality were nothing but a scam.

How was the story passed on to you?When Grandma Em died at the age of

74, we slowly went through her list of be-longings. We came across a blue hat box. And this was handed to me, that’s how I wrote the book. Upon opening, I unfolded years of sentimental holdings to her heri-tage, her recipes and her lost dreams. It was given to me to decipher what went wrong and slowly, piece by piece, I carefully, and tearfully, read her notes and recipes. And I could feel her frustration and pain and suffering as she waited patiently for news from patent attorneys and inventors. I read and wept as they lead her on and on, sent her to their New York offices in vain, to sit and wait and wait. From 1937 to 1949.

Why did you want to write this book?I want to make peace with this injus-

tice and I want to see if they want to right a wrong. No civil attorney can help me be-cause the companies can change one ingre-dient and it’s no longer litigable. Plus, it’s too late. That corporation (now called Nabisco) benefited from the free labor and ideas of my little old grandma. I wanted to give Grandma Em the power and the humanity that was denied to her that time in history. I just wanted to … publicly honor her in-genuity and entrepreneurial achievements.

I’m the last surviving member of the fam-ily. I’m 74. When I’m gone, that blue hat box is gone. I wanted to write the book so she could receive her accolades. I did not want to die with her story untold. I don’t want to publicize myself. I really just want to give honor to my Grandma.

Will you be holding any book signings in our area?

I’m doing a book signing at the Three Village Historical Society. They have an exhibit on the Setauket Indians now — the tribe my grandmother was apart of. I’ll be there on Sunday, July 3, from 2 to 4 p.m., but the reading starts at 3.

You can join the Times Beacon Re-cord at Darlene’s book signing as she recounts this tragic, yet hopeful story of a local Setauket legend who deserves her place in history. The Three Village Historical Society is located at 93 North Country Road in Setauket. For more in-formation, please call 631-751-3730.

book review

‘The Bittersweet Taste of the American Dream’

Reviewed by Colm Ashe

By Darlene Sells Treadwell

The bittersweet tale of Setauket’s unsung hero

Family Memoir

above, the cover of darlene sells treadwell’s new book

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Religious D irectory

To be listed in the Religious Directory, please call 751–7663

ASSEMBLIES OF GODSTONY BROOK CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY

Connecting to God, Each Other and the World400 Nicolls Road, E. Setauket

(631) 689–1127 • Fax (631) 689–1215www.stonybrookchristian.com

Pastor Troy Reid Weekly Schedule

Sunday Worship w/nursery 10 amKidmo Children’s Church • Ignited Youth

Fellowship and Food Always to FollowTuesday Evening Prayer: 7 pm

� ursday Morning Bible Study w/Co� ee & Bagels: 10 amFriday Night Experience “FNX” for Pre K-Middle School: 6:30 pm

Ignite Youth Ministry: 7:30 pmCheck out our website for other events and times

BYZANTINE CATHOLICRESURRECTION BYZANTINE

CATHOLIC CHURCH38 Mayfl ower Avenue, Smithtown NY 11787

631–759–[email protected]

Father Tyler A. Strand, Administrator, Joseph S. Durko, CantorDivine Liturgy: Sundays at 10:30 am

Holy Days: See website or phone for informationSunday School alternate Sundays at 9:15 am

Adult Faith Formation/Bible Study: Mondays at 7:00 pm. PrayerAnon Prayer Group for substance addictions,

Wednesdays at 7 pmA Catholic Church of the Eastern Rite under the Eparchy of Passaic.

CATHOLICCHURCH OF ST. GERARD MAJELLA300 Terryville Road, Port Jefferson Station

(631) 473–2900 • Fax (631) 473–0015www.stgmajella.org

Rev. Gennaro DiSpigno, PastorOffi ce of Christian Formation • 928–2550

We celebrate Eucharist Saturday evening 5 pm, Sunday 7:30, 9 and 11 am

Weekday Mass Monday–Friday 9 amWe celebrate Baptism

Th ird weekend of each month during any of our weekend MassesWe celebrate Marriage

Arrangements can be made at the church with our Pastor or DeaconWe celebrate Penance

Confession is celebrated on Saturdays from 4–5 pmWe celebrate You!

Visit Our � ri� Shop Mon. – Fri. 10 am–4 pm + Sat. 10 am–2 pm

INFANT JESUS ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH110 Myrtle Ave., Port Jefferson, NY 11777

(631) 473-0165 • Fax (631) 331-8094www.www.infantjesus.org

Reverend Patrick M. Riegger, PastorAssociates: Rev. Francis Lasrado & Rev. Rolando Ticllasuca

To schedule Baptisms and Weddings, Please call the RectoryConfessions: Saturdays 12:30-1:15 pm in the Lower Church

Religious Ed.: (631) 928-0447 • Parish Outreach: (631) 331-6145Weekly Masses:

6:50 and 9 am in the Church, 12 pm in the Chapel*Weekend Masses:

Saturday at 5 pm in the Church, 5:15 pm in the Chapel*Sunday at 7:30 am, 10:30 am, 12 pm, and 5 pm in the Church

and at 8:30 am, 10 am, and 11:30 am (Family Mass) in the Chapel*Spanish Masses:

Sunday at 8:45 am and Wednesday at 6 pm in the Church*Held at the Infant Jesus Chapel at St. Charles Hospital

Religious Education: (631) 928-0447Parish Outreach: (631) 331-6145

CATHOLICST. JAMES ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH

429 Rt. 25A, Setauket, NY 11733Phone/Fax: (631) 941–4141

Mission Statement: In faith we come together to celebrate the Eucharist as a Parish Family; and as a Catholic community of faith,

we are sent to be Christ to the world around us.Rev. James-Patrick Mannion, Pastor

Rev. Daniel Opoku-Mensah, AssociateRev. Jon Fitzgerald, In Residence

Weekday Masses: Monday – Saturday 8:00 amWeekend Masses: Saturday Vigil 5:00 pm

Sunday 8:00am, 9:30 am (family), 11:30 am (choir), 6:00 pm (Youth)O� ce Hours: Monday–Th ursday 9:00 am – 2:00 pm,

Friday 9:00 am – 12:00 pm, Saturday 9:00 am – 2:00 pm Baptisms: Sundays at 1:30 pm (except during Lent)

Reconciliation: Saturdays 4:00 – 4:45 pm or by appointmentAnointing Of Th e Sick: by request

Holy Matrimony: contact the o� ce at least 9 months before desired date

CONGREGATIONALMT. SINAI CONGREGATIONALUNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST

233 North Country Road, Mt. Sinai • (631) 473–1582www.mtsinaichurchli.org

“No matter who you are or where you are on life’s journey, you are welcome here”

Our Summer Schedule starts June 5thSunday Services at 10:00 am

Sunday School and Childcare off ered at 10:00 am open to all children (infants to 8th grade).

We are an Open and A� rming Congregation.

CONTEMPORARY CHRISTIAN CHURCH

CROSSOVER CHRISTIAN CHURCHFinding Faith As A Way of Life

Meeting at the Heritage Community Center633 Mt. Sinai Coram Rd., Mt. Sinai

(631)734-0204www.crossoverchristianchurch.com

Pastor Lesaya KellyWeekly Schedule:

Sunday Worship w/Children’s Church 9:30 - 11amWe off er weekly small groups and monthly meetings for men and women

We exist to love God with everything we have. We are a small, vibrantcommunity reaching out to our world with love in action.

EPISCOPALALL SOULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH

“Our little historic church on the hill” across from the Stony Brook Duck Pond

Main Street, Stony Brook • (631) 751–0034www.allsouls–stonybrook.org • [email protected]

Please come and welcome our new Priests:The Rev. Dr. Richard Visconti, Priest–In–Charge

The Rev. Farrell D. Graves, Priest AssociateSunday Holy Eucharist: 8 and 9:30 am

Religious instruction for children follows the 9:30 am Service� is is a small eclectic Episcopal congregation

that has a personal touch. We welcome all regardless of where you are on your spiritual journey. Walk with us.

EPISCOPALCAROLINE CHURCH OF BROOKHAVEN

The Rev. Cn. Dr. Richard D. Visconti, Rector1 Dyke Road on the Village Green, Setauket

Web site: www.carolinechurch.netParish Office email: [email protected]

(631) 941–4245Summer Sunday Services: 8:00 am, 10:00 am

Camp Caroline for chhildren at 10:00 amWeekday Holy Eucharist’s: Th ursday 12:00 pm

Youth, Music and Service Programs off eredLet God walk with you as part of our family–friendly community.

CHRIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH127 Barnum Ave., Port Jefferson

(631) 473–0273email: [email protected]

www.christchurchportjeff.orgFather Anthony DiLorenzo: Priest–In–Charge

Sunday Eucharist: 8 am and 10 am/Wednesday 10 in our chapel Sunday School and Nursery

Registration for Sunday School starting Sunday aft er the 10 am Eucharist

Our ministries: Welcome Inn on Mondays at 5:45 pmAA meetings on Tuesdays and Th ursdays at 7 pm/Prayer Group on

Wednesdays at 10:30 am/Bible Study on Th ursdays at 10 am.It is the mission of the people of Christ Church to grow in our

relationship with Jesus Christ and to make his love known to all through our lives and ministry.

We at Christ Church are a joyful, welcoming community. Wherever you are in your journey of life we want

to be part of it.

EVANGELICALTHREE VILLAGE CHURCH

Knowing Christ...Making Him Known322 Route 25A, East Setauket • (631) 941–3670

www.3vc.orgLead Pastor Josh Moody

Sunday Worship Schedule9:15 am:Worship Service Sunday School (Pre–K – Adult),

Nursery 10:30 am: Bagel/Coffee Fellowship11:00 am: Worship, Nursery, Pre–K, Cornerstone Kids (Gr. K–4)

We offer weekly Teen Programs, Small Groups,Women’s Bible Studies (day & evening) & Men’s Bible Study

Faith Nursery School for ages 3 & 4Join us as we celebrate 55 years of proclaiming

the good news of Jesus Christ!

GREEK ORTHODOXCHURCH OF THE ASSUMPTION

430 Sheep Pasture Rd., Port Jefferson 11777Tel: 631-473-0894 • Fax: 631-928-5131

www.kimisis.org • [email protected]. Demetrios N. Calogredes, Protopresbyter

Sunday ServicesOrthros 8:30 am - Devine Liturgy 10 am

Services conducted in both Greek & English*Books available to follow in English*

Sunday Catechism School, 10:15 am - 11:15 am*Greek Language School, Tuesdays 5 pm - 8 pm*

Bible Study & Adult Catechism Classes Available*Golden Age & Youth Groups* Thrift Store*

Banquet Hall available for Rental*For information please call Church offi ce*

©139

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JUNE 30, 2016 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B25

JEWISH CHABAD AT STONY BROOK

“Judaism with a smile”Future site: East side of Nicolls Rd, North of Rte 347 –Next to Fire Dept.

Current location: 821 Hawkins Ave., Lake Grove(631) 585–0521 • (800) My–Torah • www.ChabadSB.com

Rabbi Chaim & Rivkie GrossbaumRabbi Motti & Chaya GrossbaumRabbi Sholom B. & Chanie Cohen

Membership Free •Weekday, Shabbat & Holiday Services Highly acclaimed Torah Tots Preschool • Afternoon Hebrew School

Camp Gan Israel • Judaica Publishing Department • Lectures and Seminars • Living Legacy Holiday Programs

Jewish Learning InstituteFriendship Circle for Special Needs Children • The CTeen Network

N’shei Chabad Women’s Club • Cyberspace Library www.ChabadSB.com

Chabad at Stony Brook University – Rabbi Adam & Esther Stein

YOUNG ISRAEL OF CORAMCoram Jewish Center

981 Old Town Rd., Coram • (631) 698–3939 [email protected]

RABBI DR. MORDECAI GOLSHEVSKY“THE ETERNAL FLAME”

Channel #20 Sundays at 11:30 amServices Fri. night & Saturday morning followed by hot buffet

Learn about JudaismSunday Morning Hebrew School-Adult Education Classes

HEBREW SCHOOL REGISTRATION 2016-17Experienced teachers who make learning fun

Put Meaning in Your LifeMember, National Council of Young Israel

a world–wide organization.All welcome regardless of knowledge or observance level.

KEHILLAT CHOVEVEI TZIONKCT

764 Route 25A, just east of Nicolls Road P.O. Box 544, East Setauket, NY 11733

(631) 689-0257 • www.kct.orgHERMAN WERNER, PRESIDENT

We invite all those who are interested in experiencing traditional non-eglaitarian services in the conservative mode. We are run solely

by lay-people. Searching for your tradition? Daven with us at KCT, the little shul with tam!

NORTH SHORE JEWISH CENTER385 Old Town Rd., Port Jefferson Station

(631) 928–3737www.NorthShoreJewishCenter.org

Rabbi Aaron BensonCantor Daniel Kramer, Rabbi Emeritus Howard Hoffman

Executive Director Marcie PlatkinServices: Daily morning and evening minyan Friday at 8 pm;Saturday 8:45 am and one hour before sundown • Tot Shabbat

Family Kehillah • Sisterhood • Men’s Club • Seniors Club • Youth Group Award–winning Religious School • Teen Community Service Program

Nursery School • Mommy and Me • Preschool Summer Program Continuing Ed • Adult Bar/Bat Mitzvah • Judaica Shop

Th rift Shop • Kosher Catering PanelWe warmly welcome you to our Jewish home. Come worship,

study and enjoy being Jewish with our caring NSJC family. Member United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism.

JEWISH TEMPLE ISAIAH (REFORM)

1404 Stony Brook Road, Stony Brook • (631) 751–8518www.tisbny.org

A warm and caring intergenerational communitydedicated to learning, prayer, social action, and friendship.

Member Union for Reform JudaismRabbi Sharon L. Sobel Cantor Scott Harris

Rabbi Emeritus Stephen A. Karol Rabbi Emeritus Adam D. Fisher

Cantor Emeritus Michael F. Trachtenberg Sabbath Services Friday 7:30 pm and Saturday 10 am

Religious School • Monthly Family Service • Monthly Tot Shabbat Youth Groups • Senior Club • Adult EducationSisterhood • Brotherhood • Book Club-more

LUTHERAN–ELCAHOPE LUTHERAN CHURCH AND ANCHOR

NURSERY SCHOOL46 Dare Road, Selden

(631)732-2511 Emergency number (516)848-5386Rev. Dr. Richard O. Hill, Pastor

email: [email protected] • website: www.hopeluth.comHoly Communion

is celebrated every weekSaturdays 5 pm Sundays at 8:30 am and 10:30 am

Summer Children’s ProgramsCamp Hope (3 years old through 5th grade)

July 11-15 and/or July 18-22 from 9 am to 3 pmPVacation Bible School (3 years old through 5th grade)

August 15-19 from 9 am - 12 pmDrama Camp (4 years old through 5th grade)

August 22-26 from 9 am - 3 pm

ST. PAULS LUTHERAN CHURCH309 Patchogue Road, Port Jefferson Station

(631)473–2236Rev. Paul A. Downing, Pastor

email: [email protected] • pastors cell: 347–423–3623church website: wwwStPaulsLCPJS.org

Summer Schedule for July and AugustSunday Worship with Holy Communion 9:30 am

Wednesday evening 7:30 pm with Holy CommunionFriday-Hour of Prayer 10:30 am

Vacation Bible SchoolAugust 15-19 9 am - noon. Pre-K through grade 6

Call church to register

LUTHERAN–LCMSMESSIAH LUTHERAN CHURCH

PRESCHOOL & DAYCARE465 Pond Path, East Setauket

(631)751-1775www.messiahny.com

Rev. Charles Bell - PastorWe welcome all to join us for worship & fellowship

Current Sunday Worship Services8:15 am, 9:30 am & 11 am

Sunday School 9:30 amSummer Sunday Worship Services

Starting June 19th - 9:30 amNYS Certifi ed Preschool & Day Care Program

Please call for details

METHODISTBETHEL AFRICAN METHODIST

EPISCOPAL CHURCH33 Christian Ave/ PO2117

E. Setauket NY 11733    (631)941 3581Rev. Gregory L. Leonard–Pastor

Sunday Worship 10:30 amAdult Sunday School 9:30 am

Lectionary Reading and Prayer Wed. 12 noonGospel Choir Tues. 8 pm

Praise Choir and Youth Choir 3rd and 4th Fri. 6:30 pm 

COMMACK UNITED METHODIST CHURCH486 Townline Road, CommackChurch Office: (631)499–7310

Fax: (631) 858–0596www.commack–umc.org • mail@commack–umc.org

Rev. Linda Bates–Stepe, Pastor

SETAUKET UNITED METHODIST CHURCH160 Main Street, Corner of 25A and Main Street

East Setauket • (631) 941–4167Rev. Sandra B. Mantz, Pastor

www.setauketumc.org • [email protected] Worship Service & Church School 10 am

10 am Worship with Holy CommunionMary & Martha Circle (Women’s Ministry)

monthly on 2nd Tuesday at noonAdult Bible Study Sunday 8 am

Prayer Group and Bible Study at the Church Wednesdays 10 am

PRESBYTERIANSETAUKET PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH5 Caroline Avenue ~ On the Village Green

(631) 941-4271Making God’s community livable for all since 1660!!

www.setauketpresbyterian.orgEmail: [email protected]

REV. MARY BARRETT SPEERS, PASTORrev. dr. craig malbon, visiting minister

Join us Sundays in worship at 9:30 amChurch School (PreK-6th Grade) at 9:45 am

Adult Christian Education Classes and Service OpportunitiesOutreach Ministries:

Open Door Exchange Ministry: Furnishing homes...Finding hopewww.opendoorexchange.org

Welcome Inn Soup Kitchen Prep Site: [email protected]

All are welcome to join this vibrant community of worship, music (voice and bell choirs), mission (local, national and international),

and fellowship. Call the church o� ce or visit our website for current information on church activities. SPC is a More Light Presbyterian

Church and part of the Covenant Network of Presbyterians working toward a church as generous and just as God’s grace.

©139448

Religious D irectory

To be listed in the Religious Directory, please call 751–7663

RELIGIOUS DIRECTORY CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

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UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTUNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST

FELLOWSHIP AT STONY BROOK380 Nicolls Road • between Rte 347 & Rte 25A

(631) 751–0297 • www.uufsb.org • offi [email protected]. Margaret H. Allen

([email protected])Sunday Service: 10:30 am

Religious Education at UUFSB: Unitarian Universalism accepts wisdom from many sources and off ers non-dogmatic

religious education for children from 3-18 to foster ethical and spiritual development and knowledge of world religions.

Classes Sunday mornings at 10:30 am. Childcare for little ones under three. Senior High Youth Group meetings Sunday evenings.

Registration is ongoing. For more information: [email protected].

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTUNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST

FELLOWSHIP OF HUNTINGTON109 Brown’s Road, Huntington, NY 11743

631–427–9547www.uu� .org

Rev. G. Jude Geiger, Minister(minister@uufh .org)

Starr Austin, religious educator (dreuufh @gmail.com) Sunday Service 10:30 am, Children’s Religious Education 10:30 am

Whoever you are, whomever you love, wherever you are on your life’s journey, you are welcome here.

Our services o� er a progressive, non-creedal message with room for spiritual seekers.

Services and Religious Education each Sunday at 10:30 amYouth Group, Lifespan Religious Education for Adults,

Adult and Children’s ChoirsParticipants in the Huntington Interfaith Housing Initiative

Find us on Facebook and Twitter

UNITYUNITY CHURCH OF HEALING LIGHT

203 East Pulaski Rd., Huntington Sta. (631) 385–7180

www.unityhuntingtonny.orgRev. Saba Mchunguzi

Unity Church of Healing Light is committed to helping people unfold their Christ potential to transform their lives and build

spiritual community through worship, education, prayer and service.Sunday Worship & Church School 11:00 a.m.

Wednesday Night Prayer Service 7:30 p.m.Sign Language Interpreter at Sunday Service

Religious D irectory©

1404

82

To be listed in the Religious Directory, please call 751–7663

By Fr. Francis Pizzarelli

It’s hard to believe that another school year has ended and the high school class of 2016 is in the midst of moving on. This class, like all classes before them, has made a powerful impact upon all of our communities. There are a record number of seniors going off to Ivy League col-leges on scholarships. There are an exceptional number of young people going off to the service academies and enlist-ing in the military.

This year’s high school se-niors have made their mark scholastically as well as ath-letically. An impressive num-ber of sports teams have made it to the states with significant numbers bringing state titles home to their high schools in our local communities.

However, what is most im-pressive about the Class of 2016 is how many seniors, in addition to all their school ac-tivities, are involved in commu-nity service. Yes, many school districts have a mandatory requirement, but many don’t. More significant is the number of students who complete their obligatory number of hours and continue to give of themselves with-out expecting anything in return and the countless number of seniors who give of themselves with no compelling obligation.

This past year there have been so many different campaigns to help the sick, the poor and the terrorized, not to mention the various specialized needs of people who have suffered terrible trag-edies due to hate, violence and terror. So many of our seniors from the Class of 2016 gave from their hearts.

It is a commitment to community ser-vice in the spirit of inclusiveness that is refreshing, especially since we live in a world that seems more grounded in narcissism and self-centeredness, rather than thinking about others first, espe-cially those in need.

Seniors, as you continue your journey, do not let the social filters of our time

enable bigotry, exclusivity and social injustice. Showing compassion and understand-ing rooted in justice is more significant than a science for-mula. These are difficult les-sons to learn because they demand that you risk all that you are now for what you could become tomorrow.

Look around you! We are living in a very challeng-ing world. A new revolution is afoot. Your generation is moving away from the indif-ference and complacency of yesterday and moving toward a new idealism of freedom and responsibility. Despite the recent act of terrorism and hate in Orlando, Florida, where 50 innocent young people were gunned down because of hate, it still gives me hope that tomorrow can

and will be better.As you graduate from high school,

keep these simple thoughts in mind: May you discover enough goodness in oth-ers to believe in a world of peace and to work for peace grounded in justice.

May a kind word, a reassuring touch and a warm smile be yours every day of your life. Remember the sunshine when the storm seems unending. Teach love to those who know hate and let that love em-brace you as you continue in the world.

May the teachings of those you ad-mire become a part of you so that you may call upon them. It is the content and quality of who you are that is important, not merely the actions you take.

Don’t judge a book by its cover, or stop at the introduction. Read it through, seek the meaning and messages it offers for life, for everyone’s life is sacred, and even those who are different from you or whom you do not like.

Be more inclusive than exclusive. Don’t be blinded by those who tend to use shame, blame and guilt to shackle people down and divide them. Set people free with your respect and nonjudgmental way.

May your moral compass be grounded in respect for all human beings, no mat-ter what their color, their race, their creed or their sexual orientation. May this compass guide you on a path that is committed to working for peace and social justice. As Gandhi once said, “Be the change you hope for in the world.”

Congratulations graduates of the Class of 2016. Thanks for making the world a little richer, a little brighter and a better place to be!

Fr. Pizzarelli, SMM, LCSW-R, ACSW, DCSW, is the director of Hope House Ministries in Port Jefferson.

Teach love to those who know hate and let that love embrace you as you continue in the world.

Plain talk

File photo by Rachel Shapiro

A message of hope for the graduating Class of 2016

Page 27: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

JUNE 30, 2016 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B27

By Daniel Dunaief

Some day, people may be able to breathe easier because of a cancer researcher.

No, Ute Moll doesn’t work on respira-tion; and, no, she doesn’t study the lungs. What Moll, research scientist Alice Nema-jerova and several other collaborators did recently, however, was explain the role of an important gene, called p73, in the for-mation of multiciliated cells that remove pollutants like dust from the lungs.

Initially, scientists had studied a knock-out mouse, which lacked the p73 gene, to

see if the loss of this gene would cause mice to de-velop cancers, the way they did for p73’s well-studied cousin p53. Researchers were sur-prised that those mice without p73 didn’t get can-cer, but found

other problems in the development of their brains, which included abnormalities in the hippocampus.

While each of these mice had a respira-tory problem, researchers originally suspect-ed the breathing difficulties came from an immune response, said Moll, the vice chair for experimental pathology and professor of pathology at Stony Brook University.

A board-certified anatomical and clini-cal pathologist who does autopsies and trains residents at Stony Brook, Moll took a closer look and saw an important differ-ence between these mice and the so-called wild type, which has an intact p73 gene.

“Microscopic examinations of many types clearly showed that the multiciliated cells in the airways were severely defec-tive,” she explained. “Instead of a lawn of dense long broom-like motile cilia on their cell surface which created a strong directional fluid flow across the windpipe surface, the [knockout] cells had far fewer cilia, and the few cilia present were mostly short stumps that lost 100 percent of their clearance function.”

This finding, which was published in the journal Genes & Development, could have implications for lung diseases such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD, which affects more than 330 mil-lion people around the world and is the third leading cause of death.

The discovery provides “the long-await-ed explanation for the diverse phenotypes of the p73 knockout mice,” wrote Elsa Flores, a professor of molecular oncology at the UT MD Anderson Cancer Center, in a commentary of the work.

In an email, Flores said Moll is a “won-derful collaborator and colleague” whose “meticulous” work is “held in high regard.”

Carol Prives, Da Costa professor in bio-logical sciences at Columbia University, sug-gested this was a “very significant finding.”

Moll and her scientific team went be-yond showing that the loss of the p73 gene

caused the defective or missing cilia. They took stem cells from the trachea, which can grow on a culture dish into a range of other cells. With the proper nutrients and signals, these stem cells can grow back into a fully differentiated respiratory epithelium.

The organotypic culture had the same defects as the knockout mice. The scien-tists then used a lentivirus to insert a copy of the functioning p73 gene. The cells in the culture developed a complete set of long, motile cilia.

“It’s a complete rescue experiment,” Moll said. “This closes the circle of proof that” p73 is responsible for the development of these structures that clean the lungs.

In addition to the lungs, mammals also develop these cilia in two other areas, in the brain and in the fallopian tubes.

There could be a range of p73 deficien-cies and some of these could be indicative of vulnerability or susceptibility to lung-related problems that are connected to in-complete cilia. This could be particularly valuable to know in more polluted envi-ronments, where the concentration of dust or pollutants is high.

Moll plans to “find tissue banks from COPD patients” in which she might iden-tify candidate alleles, or genes, that have a partial loss of function that would contrib-ute to the reduction in the cilia cells.

While Moll will continue to work on respiration and p73 in mice, she described her broader research goals as “gene-cen-tric,” in which she studies the entire p53 family, which includes p53, p63 and p73.

Colleagues suggested that she has made important and unexpected discover-ies with p53.

“She was among the first to show that in some pathological states, p53 is seques-tered in the cytoplasm rather than in the nucleus,” Prives, who has known Moll for 25 years, explained in an email. “This led to her original and very unexpected discov-ery that p53 associates with mitochondria and plays a direct role in mitochondrial cell

death. She was very courageous in that re-gard since the common view was that p53 works only in the nucleus.”

Moll was raised in Germany and earned her undergraduate and medical degrees in Ulm, the same town where Albert Einstein grew up. She lives in Setauket with her husband, Martin Rocek, a professor of the-oretical physics at SBU. The couple has two sons, 26-year-old Thomas, who is involved in reforestation in Peru, and 29-year-old Julian, a documentary filmmaker focusing on environmental themes.

Moll is also focused on the environment.“If humankind doesn’t wake up soon, we are going to saw off the branch we’re sitting on,” she warns. One of Moll’s pet peeves is car idling. She walks up to the windows of people sitting in idling cars and asks if they could turn off the engine.

As for her work with p73, she feels as if she is “just at the beginning. This is a rich field.”

Knowledge seeKers

SBU’s Moll finds gene for airway cleaners

The power of

3Spotlighting discoveries at (1) Cold Spring Harbor Lab(2) Stony Brook University

(3) Brookhaven National Lab

Above photo by John Griffin, below from Ute Mollabove, ute Moll in her lab at Stony Brook university; below, Moll on a recent trip to africa says hello to Sylvester the cheetah who is the animal ambassador in Zimbabwe.

’If humankind doesn’t wake up soon, we are going to saw off the branch we’re sitting on.’

— Ute Moll

Farmers marketsEast Setauket A farmers market will be held in the field next to the Three Village Histori-cal Society, 93 N. Country Road, East Setauket every Friday from 4 to 7 p.m. through Oct. 29. Questions? Call 516-551-8461.

HolbrookThe Sunrise Craft & Farmers Market will be held in the Sunvet Mall parking lot, 5801 Sunrise Highway, Holbrook from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. every Saturday and Sunday through Nov. 6. For details, call 631-667-3976.

HoltsvilleA farmers market will be held at the Holtsville Ecology Site, 249 Buckley Road, Holtsville from 2 to 7 p.m. every Friday through Sept. 2. Call 516-551-8461 for more information.

HuntingtonThe Huntington Center Farmers Mar-ket will be held at 238 Main Street, Huntington every Sunday from 7 a.m. to noon through Nov. 20. Call 631-323-3653 for further information.

Kings ParkA farmers market will be held in the municipal lot at the corner of Route 25A and Main St., Kings Park every Sunday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. through Nov. 20. Questions? Call 516-543-6033 or visit www.ligreenmarket.org.

Mount SinaiThe Rose Caracappa Senior Center, 739 Route 25A, Mount Sinai will host a farm-ers market every Saturday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. through Oct. 29. Questions? Call 516-551-8461.

NesconsetThe Nesconset Plaza, 127 Smithtown Blvd., Nesconset will host a farmers mar-ket on Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. through Nov. 16. Call 516-543-6033 or visit www.ligreenmarket.org.

Northport A farmers market will be held in North-port in the Cow Harbor parking lot on the harbor every Saturday from 8 a.m. to noon through Nov. 19 (except Sept. 17, Cow Harbor Day), rain or shine. For ad-ditional information, call 631-754-3905.

Port JeffersonThe Village of Port Jefferson will host a farmers market in the parking lot next to The Frigate at the corner of Main Street and Broadway every Sunday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. through November. Call 516-551-8461. From July 14 to Sept. 29 a farmers market will be held on Thursdays in the Steam Room parking lot on the corner of Main Street and E. Broadway from 10 a.m. to 4:40 p.m. Questions? Call 631-323-3653.

Rocky PointThe Rocky Point Farmers & Artisans Market will be held at Old Depot Park, 115 Prince Road, Rocky Point every Sun-day from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. through Nov. 20. For more information, visit www.rockypointfarmersmarket.org.

Page 28: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

PAGE B28 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • JUNE 30, 2016

Attention All Young Performers...

Sign Up Today ... Limited Availability!For more information call (631) 928-9100 or visit theatrethree.com

©138768

CALL TODAY to enroll in THEATRE THREE’s

MUSICAL THEATRE FACTORY and ACTING WORKSHOPS begin the week of July 11.

Musical Theatre FactoryMusical Theatre

Factory #1Ages 9-12

Mon-Thurs 9 am-12 pmPerformances:August 8, 2016

4 & 7 pm$575/pp

Musical Theatre Factory #2Ages 13-17

Mon-Thurs 1-4 pmPerformances:August 9, 2016

4 & 7 pm$575/pp

Summer Acting WorkshopsCreative Dramatics

(Ages 6-8) $150SESSION ONE:

Mon & Wed 9-10:30 amSESSION TWO:

Tues & Thurs 1-2:30 pm

Pre-Teen(Ages 8-11) $175

SESSION ONE:Mon & Wed 1-3 pm

SESSION TWO:Tues & Thurs 9-11 am

Teen(Ages 12-15) $175

Tues & Thurs 11 am-1 pm

Advanced Teen(Ages 12-17) $200

Mon & Wed10:30 am-1 pm

Only 10 spOts

AvAilAble

SOLDOUT Extremely limited

spots availableExtremely limited

spots available

Extremely limited spots

available

Only 10 spOts

AvAilAble

Comsewogue Public Library’s 16th annual Pet Parade!

Over 120 patrons and their pets took part in Comsewogue Public Library’s 16th annual Pet Parade in Port Jefferson Station on Monday, June 27. The front lawn of the library was full of dogs, cats, birds, hamsters, birds, rabbits and even chickens who made a truce to get along for a day. A wonderful time was had by all.

Photos by Bob Savage

Page 29: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

JUNE 30, 2016 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B29

BENNER’S FARM56 GNARLED HOLLOW RD, SETAUKET • 631.689.8172www.bennersfarm.comFarm the kids out this summer!  Be a farmer for a week and experience summer life on a real working farm.  Benner’s Farm dates back to the mid-1700s and as the children explore the farm, gardens, � elds and woods, they’ll hear stories of the farm’s history and how people lived on Long Island before cars, malls and electricity.  There are all kinds of new things to explore from tractors and tools to vegetables and herbs, collecting eggs from the hens, and picking a snack from the garden.   Camp groups start with Kinder camp for those 3 -6, and Explorers and Senior Campers for children from 7 to 17 years old.  Each day, campers are busy learning about animals, plants and nature, history, science, crafts and food.  Each week includes fun and games of all kinds, special guests, and creative endeavors. Registration is by the week for up to 8 weeks of summer fun. CIT programs and before and after care are available.  See our website Bennersfarm.com for more information!

KIDS COUNTRY DAY CAMP37 CRYSTAL BROOK HOLLOW RD • MOUNT SINAI • 631.331.5351www.KidsCountryDayCamp.comKids Country Day Camp is a 10 acre recreational children’s summer day camp � lled with indoor and outdoor adventure, sports, activities and special events. Children 3-12 yrs. take part in over 40 fun & exciting activities. Special events include a talent show, carnival, Olympics, and more. The Camp Program runs 8 weeks with various combinations of weeks & days available. Rates include lunch, snack, refreshments, towel service, arts & crafts and activity materials, sports equipment and 2 camp shirts.

THEATRE THREE412 MAIN ST., PORT JEFFERSON 631.928.9202Musical Theatre Factory! Presented by Theatre Three, Long Island’s year-round profes-sional regional theatre. Mornings (9:00-12:00) for ages 9-12 and afternoons (1:00-4:00) for ages 13-17. Monday through Thursday beginning July 11th. Students work with profes-sional director, musical director, and choreographer. Summer experience culminates in fully-staged performances of “Grease” School Version on August 8 & 9. Tuition $575. Acting Classes: Summer session of 10 acting classes for 6-18. Creative Dramatics (ages 6-8) $150. Pre-Teen Workshop (ages 8-11) $175. Teen Workshop (ages 12-15) $175. Advanced Teen Workshop (ages 13-17-previous experience and permission of instructor required) $200. Class sizes are very limited. Call Theatre Three at 631-928-9100 Mon. - Sat. from 10 am - 5 pm for information and registration. Theatre Three is a not-for-pro� t organiza-tion supported by the New York State Council on the Arts, as state agency and by Su� olk County under the auspices of the O� ce of Cultural A� airs, County Executive.

WORLD GYM’S CAMP SETAUKET AND GAME SET MATCH TENNIS ACADEMY CAMPS384 MARK TREE ROAD EAST SETAUKET 631.751.6100Camp Setauket: For over 27 years, creating memorable summer camp experiences: General Camp for ages 3–12 ; Theatre Arts Camp and Sports Camp for ages 7–12; and C.I.T. Program for ages 13 thru 15. Game Set Match Tennis Academy Camp for ages 4–18 and all skill levels. Our unique camps o� er indoor & outdoor pools, indoor & outdoor � elds and indoor & outdoor tennis courts. Activities include: arts & crafts, sports such as soccer, basketball, softball and volleyball, interactive games, drama and hands on science. Swimming is included in every camp and several indoor activity areas for rainy days.  Early enrollment, sibling, & member discounts available. Parisi Training Camps - focuses on speed and agility for all sports. Jump Start Camp - Ages 7-11, Total Perfor-mance Camp - ages 12-14 and Peak Training Camp - ages 15 & up.

©14

7027

Camp & School DIRECTORY

Benner's Farm

631-689-8172 - bennersfarm.com 56 Gnarled Hollow Rd. Setauket

Summer Farm CampLife long memories in a unique and wonder fi lled environment, Farm activities, crafts and games, Different Themes everyday!

Half or Full day sessions availableKinderKamp, Explorer and CIT camps

Ages: three to seventeen, Before and After Care available

139798

Page 30: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

PAGE B30 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • JUNE 30, 2016

384 Mark Tree Road • East Setauket631-751-6100

WorldGymSetauket.comC a l l f o r o u r n e w b r o c h u r e s

CAMP SETAUKET 27th Anniversary!

General CampAges 3–12• Arts & Crafts• Swimming• Interactive games• Hands on ScienceSports CampAges 7–12An opportunity to experience a variety of sports each week. Soccer, softball, basketball, volleyball, swimming & more

CIT CampAges 13–15• Assist counselors in your choice of camp• Learn while enjoying activities• Special reduced rate

CAMP SETAUKET

All camps include: Snacks, Drinks,

Lunch & a T-Shirt

Your child will

never be bored

this summer!

Swimmingincluded inevery camp!

4 EXCITING CAMPSto Choose From!

Large Outdoor and Indoor spaceset up for numerous sports

and activities.New Enormous Carnival Bouncer

(ADDITIONAL DISCOUNTS FOR SIBLINGS AND WORLD GYM MEMBERS)

Less than 5 minutes from SBU campus...

800 feet north of Rte 347 on Mark Tree Road

GAME SET MATCH TENNIS ACADEMY

1/2 Day, Full Day & Advanced Training Camp to choose from.

9 indoor & 7 outdoor Har Tru tennis courts.Our coaches are all U.S.P.T.R. certifi ed and are the

highest quality tennis pros in the industry.

SPECIALTY CAMPS!Theatre Camp Ages 6–12

• Acting • Singing • Dancing • Costume & Set design • Casting for performances

(8 shows to be performed this summer)

Receive 1 FREE Month of World Gym Family Fitness (when you sign up for 2 weeks or moreof camp)

©138762

Mt. Sinai 331–5351Miller Place 403–4790

©138967

Childhood Enrichment

Center

School Year& Year Round

Programs

Now Registering for Immediate, Summer & September Classes

Toddler/Preschool Ages 18 mos. - 5 years

A developmentally appropriate program that promotes learning in a safe, fun & caring environment.

Separate toddler, preschool, and pre-kindergarten classes are o� ered for 2-5 days – AM, PM or Full Day.

LANGUAGE/LITERACY • MUSIC/MOVEMENT • MATH/NUMBERS CREATIVE ARTS • SCIENCE/SENSORY

DRAMATIC PLAY • COMPUTER LAB • OUTDOOR LEARNING

Before/After School Care* Grades K-5

Whether your child wants to work on a creative art project, play outside, do homework, or just relax, we provide a safe,

fun environment where your school age child will love to be.HOMEWORK HELP • COMPUTER LAB • CREATIVE ARTS

OUTDOOR PLAYGROUND

Infant Care Ages 6 Weeks & Up - Mt. Sinai Only

In a safe, warm and stimulating home away from home environment your  baby’s every need will be cared for by our dedicated and loving nursery sta� . Through carefully

designed learning experiences which incorporate singing, talking, holding and playing, we will be nurturing your

child’s growth and development throughout each and every day

* District Busing: Mt. Sinai & Miller Place School Districts Available

Separate toddler, preschool, and pre-kindergarten classes

LANGUAGE/LITERACY • MUSIC/MOVEMENT • MATH/NUMBERS

Whether your child wants to work on a creative art project, play outside, do homework, or just relax, we provide a safe,

fun environment where your school age child will love to be.

designed learning experiences which incorporate singing,

fun environment where your school age child will love to be.

LocallyOwned &Operated

All Programs

Offer

Extended Care

Hours

Miller Place 43 Echo Avenue

kidsofmillerplace.com

Mount Sinai37 Crystal Brook Hollow Road

kidsofmountsinai.com

All Teachers

Certifi ed

Come inFor a Tour &Experience

What Makes Us Different!

Kids Calendar

All numbers are in (631) area code unless otherwise noted.

Programs

Tunes and Tales by Johnny CuomoFrank Melville Memorial Park, Main St., Se-tauket will welcome Johnny Cuomo to the Red Barn on June 30 at 11 a.m. Join Cuomo, musi-cian and storyteller, as he introduces children to tales from around the world and offers a unique cultural and musical experience. Free. Questions? Call 689-6146.

I Spy a DragonflyCaleb Smith State Park Preserve, 381 W. Jeri-cho Turnpike, Smithtown will hold a Tiny Tots program for ages 3 to 5, I Spot a Dragonfly, on June 30 from 10 to 11 a.m. This is a special time for both parent and child to discover the wonders of the natural world together. $3 per child. Advance registration required by calling 265-1054.

Make Firework ArtThe Maritime Explorium, 101 E. Broadway, Port Jefferson will present a Fourth of July themed drop-in program on July 2 and 3 from 1 to 5 p.m. Create a piece of colorful firework art and see how colors blend together on paper. Then cut out your designs to create a beautiful firework scene! $5 per person. Call 331-3277 for more information.

Animal Passport DayDo you like eels? Do you want to learn more about eels and how to protect them? Come to the Cold Spring Harbor Fish Hatchery, 1660 Route 25A, Cold Spring Harbor on July 2 and 3 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. to meet their American eels and learn what makes them so special. Children can make eel-themed crafts and play games! Admission is $6 adults, $4 seniors and children. Call 516-692-6768 for further information.

Summer Arts FestivalAmelia Robinson & Band (kid’s indie rock) will present a concert titled Mil’s Trills on July 5 at 7:30 p.m. on the Chapin Rainbow Stage at Heckscher Park, 2 Prime Ave., Huntington as part of the annual Summer Arts Festival Family Night series. Features interactive performances showcasing original tunes to promote healthy lifestyles for kids. Free. Bring a blanket or lawn chair. For more information, call 271-8423 or visit www.huntingtonarts.org.

Wacky Water WednesdayDrop by the Cold Spring Harbor Fish Hatchery, 1660 Route 25A, Cold Spring Harbor on July 6 between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. and have some fun with sprinklers, bubbles and fun activities! Admission is $6 adults, $4 seniors and children. Call 516-692-6768 for further information.

Film‘Finding Nemo’ First Presbyterian Church, 107 South St., Port Jefferson will hold a free Movie on the Lawn night on July 1 with a screening of “Finding Nemo” at 7:30 p.m. Join Nemo and Dorie and bring a lawn chair or blanket. Free popcorn will be served. Call 473-0147 for more information.

‘Max’As part of its Movies on the Lawn series, the Town of Huntington will screen “Max” at Crab Meadow Beach, 445 Waterside Ave., Northport on July 7 at dusk. Bring a blanket or lawn chair. Rain date July 14. Questions? Call 351-3112.

Theater‘Willy Wonka’CM Performing Arts Center, 931 Montauk Highway, Oakdale will present a production of “Willy Wonka” with Charlie Bucket and all the Oompa Loompas through July 22 with a sensory-friendly performance on July 9 at 11 a.m. Tickets are $12. To order, call 218-2810 or visit www.cmpac.com.

‘The Emperor’s New Clothes’Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson will present a hilarious musical retelling of “The Emperor’s New Clothes” from July 8 to Aug. 11. Tickets are $10. To order, call 928-9100 or visit www.theatrethree.com.

‘Curious George: The Golden Meatball’Join the inquisitive, lovable little monkey Curious George, star of books, movies and the award-winning PBS television show in this delightful new musical at the Smithtown Center for the Performing Arts, 2 E. Main St., Smithtown from July 16 to Aug. 28. Tickets are $15. To order, call 724-9700 or visit www.smithtownpac.org.

‘Rapunzel’“Rapunzel! Rapunzel! Let down your hair!” The John W. Engeman Theater, 250 Main St., Northport will present “Rapunzel, A Tangled Fairytale” from Aug. 6 to Sept. 11. Tickets are $15 each. To order, call 261-2900.

‘The Misadventures of Robin Hood’Join Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson for the world premiere of the musical comedy, “The Misadventures of Robin Hood,” from Aug. 5 to 13. Tickets are $10. To order, call 928-9100 or visit www.theatrethree.com.

Fish are friends, not food! Catch a free screening of ‘Finding Nemo’ under the stars at the First Presbyterian Church in Port Jefferson on July 1.

Page 31: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

JUNE 30, 2016 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • PAGE B31

Wanted: Kids’ poetry and artwork

Kids, send your poetry, artwork, jokes or pho-tographs to Kids Times, P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733 or email it to [email protected], and we’ll publish it as soon as we can. Please include your name, age and hometown.

‘the Big Oak tree’By Gianna Viviano

age 8, Oxhead elementary School, Centereach

Breeze in the trees and little bumblebees on the top of the big Oak tree

Birds soar and so much more on top of the big Oak tree

Leaves blow flowers grow on top of the big Oak tree

Acorns drop they don’t stop on the top of the big Oak tree

Squirrels run and have some fun on the top of the big Oak tree

Raccoons nest with their baby on their chest on the top of the big Oak tree

Branches swing birds sing on top of the big Oak tree,

A bunch of little creatures in the big Oak tree!

Photo of the week

Photo by Jay GammillA mother raccoon and her cub rest on a ‘big oak tree’ in a Setauket backyard.

Image from Eileen Hummell‘Sharing’ by Skyla of Imagination Pre-School in Stony Brook

Page 32: Arts & Lifestyles - June 30, 2016

PAGE B32 • ARTS & LIFESTYLES • JUNE 30, 2016

Warney to play for Dallas in Orlando pro league

Content for this page provided by SBU and printed as a service to our advertiser.

File photo from SBU

Jameel Warney fights for the ball in a previous game for Stony Brook.

SBU SportSweekJUne 30 – JUly 6, 2016 Tomorrow is Friday – wear red on Campus! Stony Brook UniverSity

Six Seawolves named to US Women’s National Team tryout pool

Jameel Warney will be suiting up for the Dallas Mavericks in the 2016 South-west Airlines Orlando Pro Summer League from July 2-8.

The 25-game, seven-day event will fea-ture two teams from the Orlando Magic, along with the Charlotte Hornets, Detroit Pistons, Indiana Pacers, Los Angeles Clip-pers, Miami Heat, New York Knicks and Oklahoma City Thunder.

The Mavericks open their schedule next Saturday against the Thunder. All games will be played at Amway Center, Orlando’s practice facility.

Warney wrapped up his illustrious career as Stony Brook’s all-time leader in points with 2,132, rebounds with 1,275, blocks with 276 and games played with 135.

The three-time America East Player of the Year averaged a career-best 19.8 points per game in 33 games last season, finish-ing with a school-record 655 points.

The 6-foot, 8-inch, 260-pound forward averaged 30.3 points and 15.3 during the playoffs and scored a career-high 43 points in the championship game against the Uni-versity of Vermont, as the Seawolves ad-vanced to the NCAA Tournament for the first time as a Division I program.

Six members of the 2016 Stony Brook women’s lacrosse team were named to the 105-player tryout pool for the 2017 U.S. Women’s National Team, with tryouts to be held from Aug. 5-7 at the national team training center at US Lacrosse headquar-ters in Sparks, Maryland.

Senior Alyssa Fleming, juniors Jessica Volpe and Kristin Yevoli, sophomores Sa-mantha DiSalvo and Kylie Ohlmiller, and freshman Anna Tesoriero will represent

the Seawolves during the three-day tryout camp for the National Team.

Following the tryout, approximately 36 players will be selected for the US team, which will train in the lead-up to the 2017 Federation of International Lacrosse Wom-en’s World Cup in Guildford, England. Ul-timately, 18 players will represent the U.S. as the team goes for a third consecutive and eighth overall world title.

File photos from SBU

Across from left, kylie ohlmiller, Jessica volpe and kristin yevoli will represent Stony Brook at the 2017 U.S. Women’s national team tryouts.