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Long Island’s most popular amusement park adds more value through the new ‘Wave Twister’ ride, new games, and additional amenities—at last year’s prices 

Adventureland, 2245 Broadhollow Road, Farmingdale has announced it will be freezing its prices— without freezing the fun! Long Island’s most popular amusement park, offering family fun for everyone since 1962, is offering more value this year, and for the same ticket prices as last year. The park is freezing its admission rates, group rates, season pass rates, and birthday party rates at the same prices from the 2024 season. 

“At a time when everything around us is going up, we are proud and excited to be able to provide our guests this price freeze on admission,” said Jeanine Gentile, Adventureland Park Manager. “We are still making additions to the park, so you will definitely see some great changes for this upcoming season. But one thing that will not be changing is the admission prices for the 2025 season!”

The price freeze is not the only exciting news from Adventureland. For the first time, the amusement park is offering payment plans through FlexPay for online orders of $100 or more. This brand-new option will allow visitors to book tickets and purchase season passes online—now—and conveniently pay over time. Daily tickets and season passes are currently available for purchase online. For full details please visit https://adventureland.us/?keyword=Tickets

Last year, Adventureland announced plans for a multi-year, five-phase $15 million redevelopment. Now currently in phase 2, the amusement park promises a ‘Bigger and Better’ 2025 season, which includes two new outdoor games: ‘Wave Blaster’ and ‘Jungle Run.’  Additionally, plans are in place to install three new concession stands and a third restroom facility. Especially exciting is the highly-anticipated new family ride, ‘Wave Twister,’ scheduled to open this spring.

The opening weekend of the 2025 season will be March 22 and March 23. For further information, call 631-694-6868 or visit Adventureland.us. 

 

Stony Brook Medicine participates in the American Heart Association's "Go Red for Women" campaign to raise awareness about cardiovascular disease.(2/7/25)

On Friday, February 7,  National Wear Red Day®, staff from Stony Brook University Hospital wore red to help raise awareness of women’s No. 1 killer – cardiovascular disease. The annual #WearRedDay during American Heart Month honors those we have lost to heart disease and aims to raise awareness of the actions we can all take to prevent it.

Photo from SCPD
Suffolk County Police have arrested a man for allegedly driving while intoxicated following a tractor trailer crash on the westbound Long Island Expressway in Dix Hills on February 10.

Timothy Murray was driving a 2016 Freightliner tractor that was pulling a trailer westbound on the Long Island Expressway, when the vehicle left the roadway at the right shoulder, crashed into the guardrail, and came to a stop east of the Exit 50 off ramp, at 7:48 p.m. Several hundred feet of guardrail and two streetlamps came down in the crash. Another vehicle struck debris in the roadway and became disabled.

Two lanes of the westbound Long Island Expressway were closed for over six hours to remove the vehicles and clear the roadway, including clean-up of motor oil and approximately 50 gallons of spilled diesel fuel. Suffolk County Motor Carrier Safety Section responded and completed a post-crash inspection and NYDEC Hazmat Spill Response was on scene for the diesel fuel spill.

Murray, 64, of Mastic, was charged with Driving While Intoxicated. He was held overnight in the Third Precinct and is scheduled to be arraigned at First District Court in Central Islip on February 11.

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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 the man who allegedly stole merchandise from a South Setauket store in February.

A man allegedly stole home goods from Target, located at 265 Pond Path, on February 6 at approximately 8:20 p.m.

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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Do you recognize this couple? 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 the man and woman who allegedly stole merchandise from a South Setauket store in January.

A man and woman allegedly stole beauty products from Target, located at 255 Pond Path, on January 28 at approximately 7 p.m.

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.

Detectives from the Suffolk County SPCA have charged a Kings Park woman with alleged animal cruelty, possession of a controlled substance, and possession of drug paraphernalia after the execution of a search warrant on her residence on Feb. 8.

Roy Gross, Chief of the Suffolk SPCA, said that its detectives charged Cazandra Nucci, 42, with multiple misdemeanor animal cruelty charges, alleging that Nucci neglected eleven sugar gliders and nine cats in her care by failing to provide a safe and clean environment. Additionally there were 9 dead sugar gliders and 1 dead snake.

The operation was executed with assistance from the Suffolk County Police Department’s Emergency Services Unit, Homicide Section, 4th Precinct Patrol, Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office BEAST Unit, Town of Smithtown’s Fire Marshal’s Office, Code Enforcement and Animal Shelter.

Upon executing a search warrant in the afternoon of February 8, 2025, detectives found the home the animals were confined inside had noxious air and odor of feces, urine, and rot were so pungent it made personnel cough and gag upon entry and stung their eyes. The animals found indoors were in an overcrowded area of hoarded garbage over six feet high in some spaces. Dozens of apparent drug paraphernalia were strewn about the residence, crack cocaine and MDMA were recovered along with nine deceased sugar gliders. The conditions inside were so extreme that personnel had to crawl over the piles of debris inside. The residence has been placarded as unfit for human occupancy by the Town of Smithtown Code Enforcement.

Nucci was booked at the Suffolk County Police Department 4th Precinct and released. She is scheduled to appear at First District Court in Central Islip, on February 28. The animals will soon be available for adoption at the Smithtown Animal Shelter.

The Suffolk County SPCA remains committed to ensuring the safety and well-being of all animals in the county. Animal cruelty will not be tolerated. If you witness any incident of animal cruelty or neglect in Suffolk County please contact the Suffolk County SPCA at (631) 382-7722.

2025 Rocky Point Civic Association

On February 4, Councilwoman Jane Bonner (right) was at the Fischer VFW Post 6249 in Rocky Point where she led the swearing-in of the new Rocky Point Civic Association board members.

Pictured left to right are Dean Gandley (Treasurer); Quentin Palifka (Trustee); Alicia Palifka (Trustee); Kathleen Weber (Membership Secretary); Jennifer Hald (President); Tina Bogart (Sergeant at Arms); Thomas Buttacavoli (Vice President); Leah Buttacavoli (Trustee) and Councilwoman Jane Bonner (right). 

“The Rocky Point Civic Association has worked for many years to help make the community a better place to live,” said Councilwoman Bonner. “I congratulate the incoming officers and look forward to working with them in the future.”

The Rocky Point Civic Association was founded to promote the welfare and quality of life in Rocky Point and the surrounding community. Regular meetings are on the first Tuesday of the month. For more information, go to www.RPCivic.org or email [email protected].

 

Arianna Maffei in her lab viewing a slice of brain that shows the mark of the infusion in the gustatory cortex (identified by the red and yellow). This is one of the images which helped the researchers confirm their study data. Photo courtesy of Stony Brook University

Study findings reveal a specific signal in one brain region that may hold the key

Researchers at Stony Brook University used genetic manipulation in a laboratory brain model to demonstrate that neurosteroids, signals involved in mood regulation and stress, can reduce the sensitivity and preference for sweet tastes when elevated within the gustatory cortex – a region in the brain most involved with taste. Their findings are published in Current Biology.

According to senior author Arianna Maffei, PhD, Professor in the Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, studies in humans suggest that the preference for certain foods influences how much we eat and that decreased sensitivity to taste is often associated with overconsumption, which may lead to obesity. Currently there is limited knowledge of how brain activity contributes to the differences in taste preference.

Determining the relationship between brain activity, taste and eating habits is difficult in humans because available technology for measuring changes in brain activity does not have sufficient resolution to identify biological mechanisms. However, scientists can accurately monitor brain activity in lab mice while measuring their taste preferences.

As the biology of taste is very similar in all mammals, this approach can shed light on the human brain and taste.

In their murine model, the research team investigated neural circuits regulating the preference for sweet taste in adult brains. Their work focused on the effect of the neurosteroid allopregnanolone, which is known to be elevated in people affected by obesity.

This neurosteroid modulates brain activity by increasing tonic inhibitory circuits mediated by a specific type of GABA receptor. The team demonstrated that these GABA receptors are present in excitatory and inhibitory neurons in the gustatory cortex.

They infused allopregnanolone locally into the gustatory cortex of the mice to activate neurosteroid-sensitive GABA receptors. This manipulation reduced the model’s sensitivity and preference for sweet taste. Then they used genetic tools to remove neurosteroid sensitive GABA receptors locally, only in the gustatory cortex. This manipulation eliminated the preference for sweet taste over water.

“This reduced sensitivity and preference for sweet taste was even more prominent if the receptors were selectively removed only from inhibitory gustatory cortex neurons. Indeed, in this case mice were practically unable to distinguish sugared water from water,” explains Maffei.

Their approach confirmed that a specific type of GABA receptor is the target of neurosteroid activity and is essential for fine-tuning sensitivity and preference for sweet taste.

Maffei says their findings illustrate the fascinating ways the mammalian brain contributes to the taste experience and reveals a specific signal in a specific brain region that is essential for sensitivity to sweet taste.

Ongoing research with the models is exploring whether neurosteroids only regulate sweet taste sensation or contribute to the perception of other tastes, and/or how changes in taste sensitivity influences eating.

The research was supported by several grants from the National Institute for Deafness and Communication Disorder (NIDCD) branch of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and was supported by NIH grants R01DC019827, R01DC013770, R01DC015234, F31 DC019518 and UF1NS115779.

The authors are members of Stony Brook University’s College of Arts and Science (Yevoo and Maffei) and of the Renaissance School of Medicine (Fontanini).

 

Photo courtesy of Stony Brook Athletics

Stony Brook men’s basketball earned an 80-75 victory over rival Hofstra in the Battle of Long Island on Feb. 8 at the Mack Complex in Hempstead. Andre Snoddy and CJ Luster II combined to score 53 points and delivered in clutch moments on both ends of the floor down the stretch to snap the Seawolves’ three-game losing streak.

Snoddy had things working offensively to start the game, helping Stony Brook overcome an early seven-point deficit. A jumper at the 11:19 mark pushed Snoddy’s point total to 12 and put the Seawolves ahead, 16-14.

Stony Brook led for a majority of the final 10 minutes of the second half, but the Pride scored twice in the final two minutes and carried a narrow 33-31 advantage into the break.

Hofstra held onto its lead for much of the second half, answering every Stony Brook attempt to whittle its deficit.

Cruz Davis connected on a trifecta at the 8:34 mark of the second half to make it a seven-point game, the largest margin between the two sides in the second half.

The Seawolves turned the tide at the 4:53 mark, ripping off eight straight points to turn their five-point deficit into a three-point lead, 66-63.

Stony Brook never trailed from that point on, though Hofstra cut the Seawolves’ advantage to one point on two occasions. The Seawolves made eight of their final nine free throws in the final minute of action, closing out a victory over Long Island rival Hofstra and snapping a three-game losing streak.

“I thought it was a hard-fought game and both teams played well. We’ve been playing well for, I think, five games in a row, and we’ve only won two of them. The schedule has flipped and we’ve caught a bunch of good teams, several of them on the road, and come up short. Today, we were able to make some plays. CJ made some big shots and Snoddy was elite. Dre was fantastic and willed us to the win,” head coach Geno Ford noted postgame.

“Collin, a freshman point guard on the road in a rivalry game, had six assists and no turnovers. There’s a lot that goes into winning and we needed all of it because it was a game that could’ve gone either way,” Ford added.

Up next, the team returns home to host Monmouth on Thursday, February 13 in the first nationally televised home game of the season. Tip-off is scheduled for 5 pm at Stony Brook Arena and will air nationally on the CBS Sports Network.

#21 Andre Snoddy secured his fourth double-double of the season during Thursday's game. Photo courtesy of Stony Brook Athletics

Stony Brook men’s basketball battled back and forth with Towson, ultimately falling to the CAA preseason favorites, 66-59, on Feb. 6 at Stony Brook Arena.

Andre Snoddy posted an 18-point, 10-rebound double-double and led a trio of double-digit scoring Seawolves in the setback.

Towson jumped out to an early 17-8 lead, using a 9-0 scoring run to create a cushion in the opening eight minutes of play. Sabry Philip cut through the lane and threw down a dunk through contact to end the run and flip the momentum in the favor of the Seawolves. After a Hicks triple, Stony Brook erased a 10-point deficit and fought back to even the contest at 24 with less than six minutes to play in the first half.

A CJ Luster II trifecta put the Seawolves ahead, 29-27, in the final four minutes of the opening stanza. It was Stony Brook’s first lead of the contest. Towson regained the lead momentarily, but Stony Brook carried an advantage in the scoring column into the intermission after a late bucket by Snoddy. Dylan Williamson scored eight of Towson’s first 10 second-half points in the first five minutes, putting the Tigers back in front, 42-37.

Stony Brook answered with a 10-0 scoring run, featuring a pair of and-one conversions inside by Ben Wight, to take hold of a five-point lead.

A 9-0 scoring run by Towson followed, seeing the lead change hands once again. The Tigers scored 14 of the next 16 points after the Seawolves took a five-point lead, turning Stony Brook’s five-point lead into a seven-point deficit.

The Seawolves eventually found themselves down 10 points, 63-53, with just over two minutes to play. Stony Brook closed the gap to five points on two occasions down the stretch, but could not complete the comeback.

STATS AND NOTES

  • Snoddy secured his fourth double-double of the season, and his second straight at home. He tallied 18 points (9-11 FG), his second best scoring output of the season. Snoddy added 10 rebounds, his sixth double-digit rebounding performance of his senior season.
  • Wight tallied 16 points, adding eight rebounds and a blocked shot. He finished 7-of-10 from the floor and half of his rebounds came on the offensive glass.
  • Luster rounded out Stony Brook’s double-digit scorers with 14 points. He pulled down five rebounds and handed out a season-high four assists.
  • Collin O’Connor logged all 40 minutes for the third straight contest, finishing with seven points, four rebounds, three assists and a steal.
  • The Seawolves limited Towson to a 35 percent mark from the floor (22-62) and out-rebounded the Tigers 45-32. Stony Brook’s 45 rebounds and plus-13 margin on the glass were season-best marks against a Division I opponent.
  • Stony Brook connected on just three shots from beyond the arc, matching its second-worst effort of the season. The Seawolves shot 14.3% (3-21) from three, their worst mark against a conference foe this year.
  • The Seawolves moved to 0-5 all-time against Towson and 0-2 at home against the Tigers.

Up next, the team heads across the Island to Nassau County to face Hofstra on Saturday, February 8. Tip-off is scheduled for 4 p.m. in the 36th iteration of the Battle of Long Island. The contest will air locally on MSG Networks and stream live on FloCollege.