Yearly Archives: 2024

Huntington High School. File photo

By Dylan Friedman

Huntington Union Free School District Board of Education held its latest meeting Sept. 30. A wide range of topics were addressed that highlighted the district’s commitment to strategic planning for the future, community engagement and student success. 

Superintendent updates

One notable announcement was the recent implementation of a new cell phone policy at Huntington High School, where students are now required to deposit their phones in pouches during instructional time. As Superintendent Beth McCoy explained, “This really is a step in the right direction to start getting our students acclimated to leaving those phones in a pouch throughout their instructional class time.”

McCoy also shared details about the district’s strategic planning process, which will unfold over the next six months. “We are going to be doing a strategic planning process throughout the next six months that will require a lot of stakeholder input from our teachers, our administrators, our staff, as well as our parents and community members,” she said, while emphasizing the importance of gathering diverse perspectives to shape the district’s future.

Celebrating student achievements

Celebrations of student accomplishments also marked the meeting. Board members took turns in highlighting the success of the Blue Devil marching band, which took home a third first-place prize in a row, and the football team. Isabella Careccia-Johnson recently received prestigious recognition as a National Merit “Commended Student” from the National Merit Scholarship Corp.

With many positives from the student body to highlight, the board also expressed its pride in the community for rallying around homecoming. As one board member said, “It was a proud moment and weekend to be a part of Huntington. I’d just like to piggyback on that weekend, starting off with the parade … then the bonfire and the making of the floats, and how it involves so many people within the community.”

Community engagement and advocacy

The district’s engagement with the broader community was also a focal point. McCoy discussed the recent round table session with state legislators, during which the need for a regional cost index for Long Island and the fair distribution of foundation aid were crucial topics of discussion.

Additionally, a community member, Helen Murdock-Prep, used the public commentary portion of the meeting to invite the board to visit her art installation at the Huntington Arts Council that addresses the sensitive issue of sexual abuse. As she explained, “This interactive installation is my attempt to embody all that followed, set in physical form.”

Looking ahead

As the meeting drew close, the board and superintendent expressed their enthusiasm for the strategic planning process and their commitment to continued collaboration with the community. McCoy emphasized, “We encourage you to share your insights on what we’re excelling at and where there’s room for growth, and we’re eager to hear thoughts on what we should prioritize for the future.”

The next board meeting is scheduled for Monday, Oct. 21, at 7:30 p.m. at Jack Abrams STEM Magnet School in Huntington Station.

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Do you recognize this man? Photo from SCPD
Do you recognize this man? Photo from SCPD

Suffolk County Crime Stoppers and Suffolk County Police Sixth Precinct Crime Section officers are seeking the public’s help to identify and locate a man who allegedly stole from a Medford store last month.

A man allegedly stole assorted merchandise from Target, located at 2975 Horseblock Road, at 12:21 p.m. on September 29. The merchandise was valued at approximately $660.

Suffolk County Crime Stoppers offers a cash reward for information that leads to an arrest. Anyone with information about these incidents can contact Suffolk County Crime Stoppers to submit an anonymous tip by calling 1-800-220-TIPS, utilizing a mobile app which can be downloaded through the App Store or Google Play by searching P3 Tips, or online at www.P3Tips.com. All calls, text messages and emails will be kept confidential.

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File photo

Suffolk County Police Fourth Squad detectives are investigating a motor vehicle crash that seriously injured a motorcyclist in Commack on Oct. 11.

Aaron Hall was operating a 2006 Kawasaki motorcycle westbound on Jericho Turnpike when the motorcycle collided with an eastbound 2019 Nissan Rogue making a left turn onto Morewood Drive at approximately 5 p.m.

Hall, 25, of East Northport, was transported to Stony Brook University Hospital for treatment of serious injuries. The driver of the Nissan, Susan Rothstein, 59, of Commack, was transported to Stony Brook University Hospital for treatment of minor injuries.

Detectives are asking anyone with information on the crash to call the Fourth Squad at 631-854-8452.

Steve Zaitz standing in front of his photo exhibition at the Trinity Episcopal Church in Northport. Photo by Craig Brown

By Craig Brown

Steve Zaitz is passionate about high school sports and community as can be seen by his photography, which is on display at Trinity Episcopal Church on Main Street in Northport. The exhibition started Sunday, Oct. 6, and will continue through Oct. 19. There are photos of young athletes playing football, baseball, lacrosse, basketball and so many other competitions. 

Steve Zaitz standing in front of his photo exhibition at the Trinity Episcopal Church in Northport. Photo by Craig Brown

Zaitz calls his work “Blue, Sweat, and Tears,” which is a Churchillian take on athletic life in Northport High School. Their school colors are blue. The photographer, who contributes to TBR News Media, shares his sense of joy in capturing the moments of competition in a young person’s life. 

He lived and worked in New York City for many years. When he relocated to Long Island he was moved by the sense of school spirit in the high schools in the area. It seemed like a throwback to a different time and place in America. 

An award-winning sports journalist, he dedicates himself to bringing the struggles of the young adult athlete to life. He is modest when talking about his success in journalism, and he constantly gives credit to coaches and community members. However, his professionalism and commitment shine through in his words and art.

Zaitz introduced this writer to lacrosse coach Carol Rose and her husband Al. She is a pioneer in women’s sports and brought girls lacrosse to Northport High School in 1990. Recently she earned her 500th win in a match against Northport’s strong rival, Commack. Some of the best pictures in Zaitz’s exhibit are of Rose and her outstanding lacrosse players.

The curators of this event, Bob and Nancy Hendrick, belong to the church and have a strong affinity for the arts. They met in the early 1980s when they were both bodybuilders in the Schwarzenegger era of “Pumping Iron.” The couple have converted a building that used to be a nursery school into Trinity Community Art Center for the people of Northport and all of Long Island to enjoy. The center has sponsored events such as the popular cigar and bourbon nights, speed painting and powerlifting. 

The Hendricks were enthusiastic as they explained what this Zaitz event has meant to the church and the village.

The rector of Trinity Episcopal, Father Andrew Garnett, was delighted with the attendance and the positive feedback he was getting for the exhibit. He described it as “Meet Main Street.” Garnett is a great conversationalist, who is well versed in church politics during the American Revolution, the theology of British writer C.S. Lewis and, above all, the needs of his Northport community.

One of the advantages of this exhibit is being able to savor Northport itself, a beautiful and lively village on the North Shore. It was heartwarming to see the place filled with people enjoying the restaurants and pubs. 

There were loud cheers from the local bars as the happy patrons cheered for the Mets as they played the Philadelphia Phillies; there were couples merrily walking their dogs on sidewalks and in the parks; there were families laughing and enjoying a refreshing ice cream cone. And there is always John W. Engeman Theater.

The village of Northport feels like a living Norman Rockwell painting, so full of life and laughter. Go see this excellent photography exhibit that Zaitz and Trinity Church have put together, and enjoy a wonderful time in Northport with all its charms. 

If you want to learn more about Zaitz, and high school sports in general, follow his podcast at the_xi.buzzsprout.com.

Time for witches, ghosts and toast!

By Heidi Sutton

It’s kooky and it’s spooky and it’s hauntingly good. Now in it’s 7th year, A Kooky Spooky Halloween returns to Theatre Three in Port Jefferson to celebrate one of the most popular holidays of the year. 

Written by Jeffrey Sanzel and Steve McCoy, the adorable musical tells the story of Abner the Ghost (Steven Uihlein) who has just graduated from Haunting High School and is assigned to be a spooksperson at Ma Aberdeen’s Boarding House, (known for being the most haunted house in Harrison Corner USA and for having the best toast!) as its last ghost, Baron Von Yost, has recently retired. Abner is given a diploma and a medallion of invisibility and is sent on his way with two rules: never haunt before sunset and never, ever lose your medallion.

But Abner has a shocker of a secret — he’s afraid of the dark! When he confides in his best friend Lavinda the Witch (Cassidy Rose O’Brien) she gifts him a nightlight and promises to help him get settled in. With Lavinda’s help, what could possibly go wrong?

It’s Halloween and Abner arrives at the boarding house  just as Ma Aberdeen (Ginger Dalton) and her boarders the Petersons — Paul the periodontist (Liam Marsigliano), Penelope the p.r. professional (Katy Snair) and their daughter Pip (Sarita Alvarado) — and Kit Garret (Julia Albino), a girl who “just came from a small town to a big city with a suitcase in her hand and hope in her heart,” are stuffing goodie bags for trick-or-treaters in the kitchen.

In one of the funniest scenes in the show, Abner tries out a series of spells, making the group stuff the bags in double time, dance, do jumping jacks, sing, spin like a top, quack like a duck and stick to each other. Just as he is about to undo the last spell, fellow graduate ghost with a grudge Dora Pike (Josie McSwane) appears, steals his medallion of invisibility and nightlight and heads to the bottom of Black Ridge Gulch, the deepest, darkest gorge in the entire world (where it’s really, really dark). Now visible, Abner must convince the strangers who are still stuck to each other help him get his medallion back or it will “all fade to black.”

Director Colleen Britt has assembled a terrific cast to tell this hilarious story filled with singing and dancing, action and adventure and tons of Halloween jokes. Ginger Dalton as Ma who makes the toast is especially wonderful. “What kind of toast do you serve? Rye, whole wheat, sourdough, french?” she’s asked. “White. No butter, no jelly … and no jam!” she snaps. 

This year’s production has amped up the spookiness with floating ghosts, use of the trap door and more special effects, but don’t worry— it is not scary. The show also makes use of the screens on each end of the stage from the set of ‘Matilda The Musical’ to project images. A nice touch.

Costumes by Jason Allyn in shades of black, orange, purple and sparkly white for the ghosts are the icing on the haunted house cake. Don’t miss this one. You and your kids will have a spooktacular good time. Ghostly pumpkin souveniers will be sold during intermission and costumes are encouraged. Meet the cast in the lobby after the show for photos. 

Theatre Three, 412 Main St., Port Jefferson presents A Kooky Spooky Halloween through Oct. 19. Children’s theater continues with Barnaby Saves Christmas from Nov. 23 to Dec. 28 and Hansel and Gretel from Jan. 25 to Feb. 8. All seats are $12. To order, call 631-928-9100 or visit www.theatrethree.com.

Turnout in local elections and primaries, is historically low … find out if you are eligible to vote in a primary, and make your voice heard. Stock photo

By Karen Anderson

The General Election is almost here. New York State makes it convenient for all its citizens to vote and offers four options. You may choose to vote in person during early voting days, Oct. 26 to Nov. 3 (See chart below for locations, dates and times.) and on  Election Day, Nov. 5, from 6 a.m.  to 9 p.m. 

If you can’t get to a voting site, you can apply for an absentee ballot or an early mail ballot. Apply for either of these by October 26. They must be mailed and postmarked by Nov. 5. These ballots can also be hand delivered by close of polls. To apply for an absentee ballot, you must provide a reason for the request. No reason is needed for an early mail ballot. 

Each polling place has a voting machine designed for use by people with disabilities. The NYS Board of Elections website, elections.ny.gov, is helpful with online voter registration, absentee and early mail ballot applications. It can tell you if you are registered, where your polling place is and the national, state and local districts you are in. 

Our safe and secure elections are also private and a personal choice. No one needs to see your ballot. Everyone should mark their own ballot in a private booth. A privacy sleeve can be used to cover your ballot and keep it secret until you slide it into the ballot counting machine. Your name is not on the ballot. There is no way to see who or what you voted for. If you are registered with a political party, people may assume you support that party and its candidates but you are free to cast your ballot anyway you choose. 

This election, our rights and health are on the ballot. Voters in Suffolk County will be asked to flip the ballot and vote on the propositions on the back. New York State Proposition 1, if passed, will amend our state constitution which currently only protects us from government discrimination based on race and religion. 

The amendment will add protection from discrimination to include age, sex, gender identity, disability, national origin, and pregnancy, closing loopholes in the state Constitution. 

Since the Supreme Court overturned Roe vs. Wade, we have seen many legislatures pass laws outlawing abortion, criminalizing healthcare workers, and causing women to travel to other states for needed healthcare. Even life threatening complications have not been enough for some women to receive medical treatment. Doctors are afraid to treat their pregnant patients because they could be jailed and lose their licenses. Women are dying due to restrictive laws written by politicians who base the laws on religious, personal and political beliefs, not scientific or medical knowledge. Contraception drugs and IVF treatments have come under fire. Politicians want to deny women the right to choose how and when they should plan their families. 

New Yorkers have reproductive rights now, but this can change with changing political winds. We should all have the freedom to control our own bodies. Amending the constitution will enshrine these rights and make it difficult to remove them. Proposition 1 will protect all New Yorkers from government discrimination and maintain abortion rights.

Suffolk County Proposition 2 if approved will create a fund, financed by an 1/8 of a penny increase to the county sales tax (that’s 12 cents on $100), which will only be used to improve water quality in Suffolk County. Our water and way of life are at risk due to nitrogen pollution from untreated sewage. The Water Quality Restoration Act would expand sewers and provide tax-free grants to homeowners to replace old polluting septic systems with clean water technology. Clean water projects will create good jobs, increase property values, restore our bays and harbors and improve public health. 

The League of Women Voters is advocating for these propositions and urges you to vote “Yes” on both.

Karen Anderson is a member of the leadership team of the League of Women Voters of  Smithtown. For more information, visit https//my.lwv.org/news-york/suffolk-county.Visit vote411.org for comprehensive election information (available 4 weeks before election day).

By Bill Landon

Ward Melville at 8-1 hosted Walt Whitman (6-4) in a Division 1 field hockey contest that was never in question. The Patriots spread the scoring around to five different players in the 5-0 shutout Monday night, Oct. 7.

Peyton Phillips and Madison Toth got the momentum going in the opening quarter before Maddie Larsen made it a three-goal lead. Jadyn Stoecker and Nura Qasaimeh rocked the box in the fourth in the 5-0 win.

Senior goalie Olivia Zummo had a quiet day in net.

With five games remaining before postseason play begins, the Patriots look to bolster their seeding atop the division leaderboard, rubbing shoulders with Sachem East and Northport.           

— Photos by Bill Landon 

Suffolk County Police Major Case Unit detectives are investigating a bank robbery that occurred in Shirley on Oct. 12.

A man entered Chase Bank, located at 645 Northbound William Floyd Parkway, and handed the teller a note demanding cash at approximately 3:45 p.m. The teller complied and the suspect fled with cash.

The robber was described as a white man with brown hair, who appeared to be in his 40s. He was wearing a dark-hooded sweatshirt and dark pants.

Detectives are asking anyone with information on the robbery to call the Major Case Unit at 631-852- 6555 or anonymously to Crime Stoppers at 1-800-220-TIPS.

File photo

Suffolk County Police Second Squad detectives are investigating a motor vehicle crash that killed a motorcyclist in Elwood on Oct.12.

Alexis Ascencio Luna was operating a 2004 Yamaha motorcycle eastbound on Jericho Turnpike when he crashed into a 2014 Toyota Corolla traveling westbound as it was making a left turn into a driveway in front of 1500 East Jericho Turnpike, at approximately 3:40 p.m.

Ascencio Luna, 21, of Huntington, was pronounced dead at the scene. The driver of the Toyota, Elvin Vargas Hernandez, 34, of Central Islip, was transported to Huntington Hospital for evaluation and released.

Both vehicles were impounded for safety checks. Anyone with information on the crash is asked to call the Second Squad at 631-854-8252.

A view of the Seat of the Hon. Selah Strong Esq., St. George’s Manor, Suffolk County, Long Island. NOTE: This is the house built by William “Tangier” Smith. Photo from B. Tyler

By Beverly C. Tyler

She was baptized Martha Tunstall on July 2, 1652, daughter of Henry Tunstall of Putney, Surrey, England. She moved with her family to Tangier, Africa, where she married William Smith. From her marriage on Nov. 26, 1675, until her death in Setauket in 1709 at 57, Martha led a life dedicated to her husband, family, business interests and community. She gave birth to 13 children, buried seven, and journeyed from Tangier back to England, to Ireland for a birth, and finally to America. She raised her family in primitive conditions, assisted her husband in his business dealings, often during his long absences, and became respected as lady of the manor. Widowed at 52, Martha successfully managed her husband’s business interests, including offshore whaling, and became a well-regarded community leader.

Historian Kate Strong as a young girl with her dog on the steps of her home on Strong’s Neck. Photo from B. Tyler

Lady Martha Smith, as referred to in many documents, is not listed in The Encyclopedia of Women’s History in America or Long Island Women: Activists and Innovators, both excellent books on overlooked women. However, she was a woman of wealth and influence on Long Island, especially in Setauket and Mastic, where she and William “Tangier” Smith resided.

Colonel William “Tangier” Smith was born in Feb. 1654. Tangier, a key port, was abandoned and burned by England in 1683. William arrived there at 20 and married Martha a year later. He became mayor on Nov. 11, 1682. The couple returned to England in 1683 and, in 1686, sailed from Ireland to America. They arrived in New York in the fall of 1686 with their two children, 7-year-old Henry and 5-year-old Martha. A third child, Hibernia, had died at sea, the couple’s fifth child to die. Three of their children, Elizabeth, John, and William Jr., died in Tangier. Their second William Jr. and Mary died in London.

In New York City, Martha gave birth to Jeane in Dec. 1687. William bought land in Setauket, “Ye Little Neck,” and the south shore. By 1689, the family had moved permanently to Setauket. Martha gave birth to William that March, followed by Gloryana the next year, then Theodocia, who died at 15 days old. Two years later, their last child, Charles Jeffery, was born.

In Setauket, William and Martha moved from their first house near the Woodhull homestead to the Neck, where they built St. George’s Manor. Martha managed the home while William expanded his land holdings. In Oct. 1693, he received a patent from Gov. Fletcher for land bordered by Carmen’s River and Forge River, between Middle Country Road and the Atlantic Ocean. This, combined with previous purchases, created the Manor of St. George. By 1697, he added land extending to Southampton and Southold. The family spent summers at a second manor house on Smith Point, returning to Setauket for the rest of the year. With the 1693 land acquisition, William and Martha became lord and lady of the manor.

As detailed by Kate Strong, “In 1675 (in Tangier), Colonel William Smith began entries in what is now called The First Pigskin Book. The first entry was his marriage. He then recorded baptisms and some deaths of his many children. Writing only on one side of the page, his wife, Martha, turned the book upside down and wrote in her recipes.”

Strong listed a few recipes, including: “To make pancakes—take the yolks of six eggs, add one white, one pint of cream, half a pint of sack, nutmeg, a little salt, and some sugar. Make the batter of a reasonable thickness, work in some flour, and fry them.” Martha also included medicinal recipes: “For a sore throat—take rue, pound it fine, make a poultice, about an inch thick, and lay it on the throat. It is a sure cure. You may sprinkle it with brandy.”

“She was not too busy to enjoy riding with her husband,” Strong related. “I imagine they had fine horses. Their saddles were covered with velvet, hers a side saddle of course.”

When William died in 1705, their children included Henry, later second lord of the manor, age 26; Mrs. Martha Heathcote, 23; Jeane, 17; William Henry, later to inherit the south shore manor, 15; Gloryana, 14, who later married the Rev. George Muirson; and Charles Jeffery, who died of smallpox in 1715 at 11. Lady Martha now had to raise her family and manage her late husband’s holdings and businesses.

Entries in the Pigskin Book recorded Indian whaling crews and whale oil and bone quantities. As noted by Dr. John Strong, “From 1696 until 1721, the Smiths used the book to track Native Americans working for their whaling company. Lady Martha Smith, for the 1706-07 season, made a net profit of 120 barrels of whale oil from 180 barrels—a sizable profit.”

“Offshore whaling was a fine business in those days, and Madam Martha had her own whaleboat,” Strong wrote. “The crew was mostly Indians. She kept records in a second pigskin book, which was almost lost in the San Francisco fire. A family member had taken it west. During the fire, a gentleman found it in a trunk, examined the contents, and returned the book to its owner.”

As noted in Bellport and Brookhaven (1968), “The Lady Martha was remarkable, managing both the vast estate and whaling business successfully.” Kate Strong observed, “Fifteen Indians, the whaling crew, are listed by name; their wages and the charges against them for shot, powder, rum, coats, britches, etc. She must have had trouble controlling them, as there are complaints, such as, ‘He [Will Bene] got nothing this season, stayed away 10 days to see his Shua. Was a great loss to me.’ But there were cheerful entries too: ‘I thank God, my company killed a yearling whale. Made 27 barrels ogle.’”

Early settlers recognized Martha’s prominence, noting that “at the table, no woman except Madam Martha Smith was to sit.” She died five years after her husband on Sept. 1, 1709, and was buried beside him on a spot overlooking the bay at St. George’s Manor.

Beverly Tyler is Three Village Historical Society historian and author of books available from the Three Village Historical Society, 93 North Country Rd., Setauket.