Yearly Archives: 2024

Fall has arrived! Be sure to check out some of the Town of Brookhaven’s recreation centers’ upcoming fun and educational programs:

Robert E. Reid, Sr. Recreation Center
Defense Hill Road & Route 25A, Shoreham, NY 11786
Call 631-451-5306 for more information or help registering online.

Yoga
This is a slow-flow yoga class for all levels, moving at a slower pace and holding poses a little longer.  Breathing and relaxation exercises are incorporated to help de-stress. Please bring a yoga mat.
Dates: Mondays, October 21, November 4, 18, 25, December 2, 9
Time: 7:00pm – 8:00pm
Fee: $42.00 per 6-week session
To register online, click HERE.

Jump Bunch Jr. (Ages 3-5)
Learn a new sport each week. Includes sports such as soccer, football, lacrosse, volleyball and basketball. No equipment necessary. Just bring water.
Dates: Thursdays, November 7, 14, 21, December 5, 12, 19
Time: 4:00pm – 5:00pm
Fee: $62.00 per 6-week session
To register online, click HERE.

Jump Bunch Kids (Ages 6-9)
Learn a new sport each week. Includes sports such as soccer, football, lacrosse, volleyball and basketball. No equipment necessary. Just bring water.
Dates: Thursdays, November 7, 14, 21, December 5, 12, 19
Time: 5:15pm – 6:00pm
Fee: $62.00 per 6-week session
To register online, click HERE.

Henrietta Acampora Recreation Center
39 Montauk Highway, Blue Point, NY 11715
Call 631-451-6163 for more information or help registering online.

Sprouts & Friends: Babies & Non-Walkers (Ages 6 months – 12 months)
Join Sprouts & Friends for a fun, safe and creative way to learn to move through music and release energy. Our mission is to create joy while helping your little ones grow, learn, develop and explore through playful activities.
Dates: Fridays, November 8, 15, 22, December 6, 13, 20
Time: 1:00pm – 1:45pm
Fee: $42.00 per 6-week session
To register online, click HERE.

Country Line Dancing – Improver
These classes welcome advanced beginners and intermediate dancers.
Dates: Mondays, November 25, December 2, 9, 16, 23, 30
Time: 2:30pm – 4:00pm
Fee: $47.00 per 6-week session
To register online, click HERE.

Parks Administration Building
286 Hawkins Road, Centereach, NY 11720
Call 631-451-6112 for more information or help registering online.

Indoor Bocce
Meet and play with different people each week. 2 games per week.
Individual sign up.
Dates: Tuesdays, November 12, 19, 26, December 3, 10, 17
Time: 10:00am – 12:00pm
Fee: $32.00 per 6-week session
To register online, click HERE.

Centereach Sports Complex
286 Hawkins Road, Centereach, NY 11720
Call 631 451-6131 for more information or help registering online.

Pickleball
Check out our upcoming one day clinics.
Visit www.brookhavenny.gov/reconline under the Sports tab to register.

 

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Suffolk County Police arrested a man on Oct. 15 for driving with 31 license suspensions in Holbrook. A Highway Patrol officer observed Wayne Lowe texting and not wearing a seatbelt while driving a 2002 Ford F-350 on eastbound Long Island Expressway off-ramp at exit 60 at 11:08 a.m.

Upon further investigation, it was determined that Lowe had 31 license suspensions over 13 dates.

Lowe, 29, of Center Moriches, was issued multiple summonses and charged with one count of Aggravated Unlicensed Operation of a Motor Vehicle 1st Degree, an E felony.

The vehicle was impounded. Lowe will be held overnight at the Sixth Precinct and is scheduled for arraignment at First District Court in Central Islip on October 16.

Photo from St. Charles Hospital

Catholic Health’s St. Charles Hospital in Port Jefferson has been awarded prestigious accreditation from the Surgical Review Corporation (SRC) as a Center of Excellence in Robotic and Hernia Surgery. The two accreditations recognize St. Charles Hospital’s commitment to the delivery of high quality, safe patient care. Achieving the status of an accredited Center of Excellence means that St. Charles Hospital has met both nationally and internationally recognized standards. 

“This distinguished recognition is a true testament to St. Charles’ highly-skilled surgeons trained in both minimally-invasive robotic surgery and laparoscopic hernia repair surgery, allowing for much smaller incisions, shorter hospital stay, minimal blood loss and less need for pain medication,” said St. Charles Hospital President James O’Connor. “Using the da Vinci® and Xi™ systems, we offer robotic-assisted surgeries across various specialties including bariatric, colorectal, general, gynecological, thoracic and urologic surgery. With SRC accreditation, residents of Port Jefferson and surrounding areas can have confidence in receiving top-notch care, enabling them to regain their quality of life.”

Health care facilities and surgeons seeking an SRC accreditation undergo an extensive assessment and inspection process to ensure the applicant meets SRC’s proven standards and requirements. These requirements include surgical volumes, facility equipment, clinical pathways and standardized operating procedures, and an emphasis on patient education and continuous quality assessment. 

“We’re proud to recognize St. Charles Hospital for its commitment to advancing and providing quality care for all patients,” said Gary M. Pratt, CEO of SRC. “This accreditation signals that this facility is among the best in this specialty and is dedicated to delivering the highest level of care possible.”

Pictured from right, Nicolette Fiore Lopez, PhD, RN, CENP, FAAN, St. Charles’ Chief Nursing Officer; Lynne Cassidy, RN, ANCC,  PACU; Jennifer Manuel, RN, ANCC, OR; Jamie Ribaudo, CST, Robotics Coordinator; Jim O’ Connor, President, St. Charles Hospital; Patti Williams, RN, St. Charles’ Director of Perioperative Services; Hesham Atwa, MD, St. Charles’ Chief of Robotic Surgery; Cindi Vanderhoff, SRC Surveyor; Sunil Dhuper, MD, St. Charles’ Chief Medical Officer; Lisa Farrell, OR Systems Coordinator; and Chukwuma Egbuziem, MS, RN, CPHQ, St. Charles’ Vice President, Quality Management. 

For more information about St. Charles’ robotic surgery and hernia repair program, call 631-474-6797.

Photo from Middle Country Chamber of Commerce
Collaboration to raise funds for Positively Pink During Breast Cancer Awareness Month

Paprocky Motorsports has teamed up with Middle Country Automotive of Selden to launch the “Racing For A Cure” initiative, joining the fight against breast cancer throughout October’s Breast Cancer Awareness Month. This collaboration aims to raise awareness and funds for Positively Pink, a nonprofit dedicated to supporting individuals impacted by breast cancer.

On-site at MCA of Selden, key partners came together to promote the campaign. Pictured are Suzanne & Troy Schmidt, Owners of MCA; Alyssa Paprocky, driver of the MCA-sponsored race car; mechanic and local Selden Firefighter Mathew Parrish; Lenore Paprocky, President of the Greater Middle Country Chamber; Councilman Neil Manzella and Legislator Nick Caracappa; and Maria McMullen, founder of Positively Pink. This powerful team is united by a shared mission to make a difference in the lives of those affected by breast cancer.

Throughout October, Middle Country Auto of Selden will run fundraising efforts and with proceeds benefiting Positively Pink’s life-changing programs.

“It’s about the community,” said Troy Schmidt. “We are proud to harness the excitement of motorsports to support such a vital cause. This initiative shows what we can accomplish when we combine passion with purpose. We encourage everyone to stop by MCA and support.”

Maria McMullen, founder of Positively Pink, expressed gratitude for the initiative, saying, “Partnerships like this help us continue our mission of providing vital services to those facing breast cancer. Every dollar raised has a meaningful impact.”

To participate, donate, or learn more about “Racing with a Cause,” visit Middle Country Automotive at 839 Middle Country Road in Selden. All money collected will be matched by MCA. For more information, call 631-698-4455.

 

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Police car

Suffolk County Police Homicide Squad and Arson Section detectives are investigating a house fire that killed a man in Nesconset on Oct. 15.

Fourth Precinct officers responded to 2 Highland Place after a 911 caller reported a fire at 5:25 p.m. Thomas Walz, a resident of the home, was taken out of the house by first responders prior to police arrival.

Walz, 62, was transported via ambulance to Stony Brook University Hospital where he was pronounced dead. There were no other people in the house at the time of the fire and no other injuries reported.

The cause of the fire is under investigation but does not appear to be criminal at this time.
Anyone with information on this incident is asked to call Homicide Squad detectives at 631-852-6392 or Arson Section detectives at 631-852-6024.

Shushan Toneyan and Peter Koo at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. Photo by Gina Motisi/CSHL

By Daniel Dunaief

The real and virtual world are filled with so-called “black boxes,” which are often impenetrable to light and contain mysteries, secrets, and information that is not available to the outside world.

Sometimes, people design these black boxes to keep concepts, ideas or tools outside the public realm. Other times, they are a part of a process, such as the thinking behind why we do certain things even when they cause us harm, that would benefit from an opening or a better understanding.

In the world of artificial intelligence, programs learn from a collection of information, often compiling and comparing enormous collections of data, to make a host of predictions.

Companies and programmers have written numerous types of code to analyze genetic data, trying to determine which specific mutations or genetic alterations might lead to conditions or diseases.

Left on their own, these programs develop associations and correlations in the data, without providing any insights into what they may have learned.

That’s where Peter Koo, Assistant Professor at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, and his former graduate student Shushan Toneyan come in.

The duo recently published a paper in Nature Genetics in which they explain a new AI-powered tool they designed called CREME, which explored the genetic analysis tool Enformer.

A collaboration between Deep Mind and Calico, which is a unit of Google owner Alphabet, Enformer takes DNA sequences and predicts gene expression, without explaining what and how it’s learning.

CREME is “a tool that performs like large-scale experiments in silico [through computer modeling] on a neural network model that’s already been trained,” said Koo. 

“There are a lot of these models already in existence, but it’s a mystery why they are making their predictions. CREME is bridging that gap.”

Award winning research

Indeed, for her work in Koo’s lab, including developing CREME, Toneyan recently was named a recipient of the International Birnstiel Award for Doctoral Research in Molecular Life Sciences.

“I was genuinely surprised and happy that they selected my thesis and I would get to represent CSHL and the Koo lab at the ceremony in Vienna,” Toneyan, who graduated from the School of Biological Sciences, explained. 

Toneyan, who grew up in Yerevan, Armenia, is currently a researcher in The Roche Postdoctoral Fellowship Programme in Zurich, Switzerland.

She said that the most challenging parts of designing this tool was to focus on the “interesting and impactful experiments and not getting sidetracked by more minor points more likely to lead to a dead end.”

She credits Koo with providing insights into the bigger picture.

New knowledge

Without taking DNA, running samples in a wet lab, or looking at the combination of base pairs that make up a genetic code from a live sample, CREME can serve as a way to uncover new biological knowledge.

CREME interrogates AI models that predict gene expression levels from DNA sequences.

“It essentially replicates biological or genetic experiments in silico through the lens of the model to answer targeted questions about genetic mechanisms,” Toneyan explained. “We mainly focused on analyzing the changes in models outputs depending on various perturbations to the input.”

By using computers, scientists can save considerable time and effort in the lab, enabling those who conduct these experiments to focus on the areas of the genome that are involved in various processes and, when corrupted, diseases.

If scientists conducted these experiments one mutation at a time, even a smaller length sequence would require many experiments to analyze.

The tool Koo and Toneyan created can deduce precise claims of what the model has learned.

CREME perturbs large chunks of input sequence to see how model predictions change. It interrogates the model by measuring how changes in the input affect model outputs.

“We need to interpret AI models to trust their deployment,” Toneyan said. “In the context of biological applications, we are also very interested in why they make a certain prediction so that we learn about the underlying biology.”

Using ineffective and untested predictive models will cause “more harm than good,” added Koo.  “You need to interpret [the AI model’s] programs to trust them for their reliable deployment” in the context of genetic studies

Enhancers

Named for Cis Regulatory Element Model Explanations, CREME can find on and off switches near genetic codes called enhancers or silencers, respectively.

It is not clear where these switches are, how many there are per gene and how they interact. CREME can help explore these questions, Toneyan suggested.

Cis regulatory elements are parts of non-coding DNA that regulate the transcription of nearby genes, altering whether these genes manufacture or stop producing proteins.

By combining an AI powered model such as Enformer with CREME, researchers can narrow down the possible list of enhancers that might play an important genetic role.

Additionally, a series of enhancers can sometimes contribute to transcription. A wet lab experiment that only knocked one out might not reveal the potential role of this genetic code if other nearby areas can rescue the genetic behavior.

Ideally, these models would mimic the processes in a cell. At this point, they are still going through improvements and are not in perfect agreement with each other or with live cells, Toneyan added.

Scientists can use the AI model to aid in the search for enhancers, but they can’t blindly trust them because of their black box nature.

Still, tools like CREME help design genetic perturbation experiments for more efficient discovery.

At this point, the program doesn’t have a graphical user interface. Researchers could use python scripts released as packages for different models.

In the longer term, Koo is hoping to build on the work he and Toneyan did to develop CREME.

“This is just opening the initial doors,” he said. “One could do it more efficiently in the future. We’re working on those methods.”

Koo is pleased with the contribution Toneyan made to his lab. The first graduate student who worked with him after he came to Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Koo suggested that Toneyan “shaped my lab into what it is.”

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Police car
Suffolk County Police arrested a man on Oct. 13 for Grand Larceny and DWI after he stole an Uber driver’s vehicle in Commack.

An Uber driver left the motor running in his 2012 Honda Accord in the parking lot of 88 Veterans Memorial Highway as he was picking up a food order to be delivered, when a man got into the vehicle and drove away at approximately 8:55 p.m.

The vehicle crashed into a curb and a fire hydrant a short distance away. The man exited the vehicle and fled on foot into a heavily wooded area. A Canine Unit officer and his dog located the man lying down in the woods. He was placed under arrest.

Fourth Squad detectives charged Joseph Ellis, 45, who is undomiciled, with two counts of Grand Larceny 3rd Degree. Patrol Officers determined that Ellis was allegedly impaired and charged him with Driving While Intoxicated and nine outstanding warrants.

Join Smithtown Historical Society for a free fall lecture, A Time Traveler’s Guide to Smithtown’s Roots, at the Frank Brush Barn, 211 East Main Street, Smithtown on Monday, Oct. 14 at 6 p.m.

Discover the rich tapestry of Smithtown’s early history in an enlightening lecture, presented by the new Town Historian, Mayor Richard Smith. Go on a journey through time and explore Smithtown’s diverse past. From the early Native American inhabitants, to the legendary arrival of Richard “Bull” Smith, the tumultuous times of British Occupation, and its rediscovery by NYC, this lecture promises a comprehensive view of the town’s foundation and transformation. Bring your questions and curiosity to delve deeper into the fascinating history of Smithtown.

This lecture is open to the public at no cost; light refreshments will be served. For more information, call 631-265-6768.

Driving Directions (Brush Barn)

Greg Fasolino with the exhibit. Photo from Huntington Public Library

Currently on view in the glass lobby cases at the Huntington Public Library’s main branch through Oct. 31 is an exhibit titled Paperbacks from Hell: Exploring the Wild, Weird World of the 70s and 80s Horror Pulp Fiction.

Greg Fasolino with the exhibit. Photo from Huntington Public Library

Inspired by Grady Hendrix’s 2017 bestseller Paperbacks from Hell: The Twisted History of ’70s and ’80s Horror Fiction, this spinetingling exhibit at Huntington Public Library highlights the wild and wacky retro cover artwork of that era’s beloved and highly collectible pulpy paperbacks. As Tor.com’s Theresa DeLucci said of Hendrix’s compendium, “It’s a gorgeous, lurid deep-dive into horror’s heyday and a must-read for any self-respecting horror fan.”

Sparked by the unexpected mania for William Peter Blatty’s iconic The Exorcist in 1971, followed in 1974 by the rise to fame of Stephen King with Carrie and the massive success of Peter Benchley’s Jaws, horror paperbacks in those two decades infested every mall bookstore as well as the spinner racks of candy stores, supermarkets and airports, touching on every and any possible nightmarish theme or creepy category. These “paperbacks from hell” sold in the millions, whether they were efforts by more mainstream authors like King, Peter Straub, Ramsey Campbell and Clive Barker, or works from more obscure cult-classic writers like James Herbert (The Rats), Graham Masterton (The Manitou), Guy N. Smith (Night of the Crabs), Gregory A. Douglas (The Nest), Ken Greenhall (Hell Hound), Shaun Hutson (Slugs), John Lutz (Bonegrinder), Nick Sharman (The Cats) and Eric C. Higgs (The Happy Man).

The display was curated by local horror lit fan Greg Fasolino, who has been a collector of these sinister softcovers for almost 50 years. All of the eerie items on display date from the 1970s through the end of the 1980s, and all but two are original copies purchased when they were new.

For more information, call 631-427-5165.

Legislator Bontempi with Suffolk County Small Business Appreciation Honoree John Pawluk, Owner of Twisted Cow Distillery in East Northport.
Suffolk County Small Business Appreciation Honoree John Pawluk, Owner of Twisted Cow Distillery in East Northport

Suffolk County Legislator Stephanie Bontempi (R – 18th L.D.) honored Twisted Cow Distillery as the 2024 Suffolk County Legislature’s Small Business Appreciation Honoree for the 18th Legislative District, during the Suffolk County Legislature’s General Meeting on Oct. 1. Twisted Cow Distillery crafts premium artisanal liquor in their local distillery and tasting room located in East Northport.

John Pawluk, a resident of East Northport, founded and opened Twisted Cow Distillery in November of 2022, so that he could be closer to his family and community, after many years working as a former CPA and CFO on Wall Street. At Twisted Cow Distillery, John and his team create the highest quality spirits, including whisky, rye, vodka, and bourbon, made from the finest ingredients and local grains grown in the salt air and sun-fed farms of Long Island’s East End.  In addition to distilling, John also hosts events and raises money for many organizations that support veterans, mental health disorders, animal shelters, first responders, and more. John’s pragmatic approach to the distilling process, combined with barrel aging and blending techniques, forms the foundation of Twisted Cow and reflects his own life experiences.

“Twisted Cow Distillery exemplifies the dedication and passion of small business owners who invest in our community,” said Legislator Bontempi. “John Pawluk’s commitment to crafting quality products and giving back to those in need makes Twisted Cow Distillery a true asset to East Northport and Suffolk County as a whole.”