This week’s shelter pet is Betty, an 11-year old pitbull mix currently at the Smithtown Animal Shelter.
Betty is loving, friendly couch potato who needs a breed savvy, adult only home where she can enjoy being the only pet. She loves to be surrounded by people, and will cry out for them to come see her and for them to return to her if they leave. She is housebroken, has good manners and knows her commands.
Betty needs a home that can help her manage and navigate her significant arthritis. She is spayed, microchipped and is up to date on her vaccines.
If you are interested in meeting Betty, please call ahead to schedule an hour to properly interact with her in a domestic setting, which includes a Meet and Greet Room and a Dog Walk trail.
The Smithtown Animal & Adoption Shelter is located at 410 Middle Country Road, Smithtown. Shelter operating hours are currently Monday to Saturday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (Sundays and Wednesday evenings by appointment only). Call 631-360-7575 or visit www.smithtownanimalshelter.com
Stony Brook, NY; Stony Brook University: School of Medicine 2018 Convocation Photo by Arthur Fredericks
Stony Brook, NY; Stony Brook University Medical Center: The White Coat Ceremony in the Student Activities Center. (8/14/2016)
Stony Brook, NY; Stony Brook University MART & Children's Hospital Pavilion: MART ribbon cutting, November 1, 2018. Left to right: New York State Assemblyman Steve Englebright; SUNY Trustee and Stony Brook Foundation board member Cary Staller; Stony Brook University President Samuel L. Stanley Jr., MD; New York State Senator Kenneth P. LaValle; SUNY Chancellor Kristina Johnson; Jim and Marilyn Simons; New York State Senate Majority Leader John Flanagan; Kevin Law, President of the Long Island Association and Chair of the Stony Brook Council; Kenneth Kaushansky, MD, Senior Vice President for Health Sciences and Dean of the School of Medicine; Director of the Stony Brook University Cancer Center Yusuf Hannun, MD; representing Governor Andrew Cuomo, Marta Santiago-Jones, Consultant Nurse Hospital Services Administrator at the New York State Department of Health.
Stony Brook, NY; Stony Brook University Medical Center: Donors David and Cynthia Lippe and Dean, School of Medicine and Senior Vice President of Health Sciences Ken Kaushansky outside of the garden area of the MART/Hospital Pavilion
Stony Brook, NY; Stony Brook University Hospital: Stony Brook Medicine rolled out new Mobile Stroke Units on March 18, 2019, to treat people who are having a stroke.
Left to right: Kimberly Noel, MD, Director, Telehealth, Stony Brook Medicine, Michael Guido III, MD, Neurologist, Director, Stony Brook Neurology Stroke Program, Ken Kaushansky, MD, Dean, Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University, David Fiorella, MD, PhD, Neurointerventionalist, Director, Stony Brook Cerebrovascular Center, Trevor Marshall, MD and Eric Niegelberg, Associate Director, Operations, Emergency Services and Internal Medicine
Stony Brook, NY; Stony Brook University: Chancellor Jim Malatras and Stony Brook University President McInnis Announce Partnership with SUNY Upstate Medical University to Launch Pooled Surveillance Testing for COVID-19.
Stony Brook to Test 5200 Students Each Week. Testing Expansion Follows FDA Approval of Groundbreaking Saliva Swab Test Developed at Upstate Medical University
By Daniel Dunaief
Like so many others, Ken Kaushansky had to alter his plans when the pandemic hit last March. Kaushansky had expected to retire after over 10 years as Dean of the Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University and the Senior Vice President of Health Sciences, but the public health needs of the moment, particularly on Long Island which became an early epicenter for the disease, demanded his attention.
“Now that COVID hopefully is coming under control, it seems more logical” to retire this year, Kaushansky said in a wide-ranging interview about the pandemic, his career, and the medical school. In January, he stepped down as the dean, while he plans to retire as Senior Vice President of Health Sciences at the end of June.
Views on the Pandemic
Dr. Kenneth Kaushansky
Looking back at the immediate challenges in the first few months, Kaushansky said SBU did “extremely well” in caring for patients who were battling COVID-19 and was gratified by the school’s effort to catalog and understand the disease. “I’m very proud that we’ve been able to study this infection on all sorts of levels and make a real impact that has helped others,” he said.
Early on, as the medical team at Stony Brook met, Kaushansky urged the hospital to study COVID “to the hilt” and to “extract every little bit of data we can. We must keep all that data on all these patients.”
Indeed, Stony Brook has created a database that continues to grow of close to 10,000 people, which includes 3,000 inpatients, 4,000 who weren’t sick enough for hospital admission, and around 3,000 who thought they had the disease, but had other illnesses. “We’ve learned a ton from that, and it’s not just learning for learning’s sake,” Kaushansky said. The demand for the use of the database is so high that a steering committee is reviewing proposals.
Stony Brook had heard from doctors in Italy that COVID patients were having problems with blood clotting. This symptom was particularly meaningful to Kaushansky, who is a hematologist.
SBU studied the symptoms and “did a trial to see if aggressive anticoagulants would produce better outcomes” than the standard of care at the time, he said. “Our [intensive care unit] patients who were on this more aggressive anticoagulation protocols had half the mortality” of other patients, so the hospital “quickly adopted all of our care” to the more effective approach.
The hospital preemptively used biomarkers to determine who should and should not get aggressive anticoagulation. A subsequent study using the database confirmed the school’s early conclusion. Stony Brook published over 150 papers on the structure of the virus, clinical observations, sociological interventions, and a host of other areas, according to Kaushansky.
Carol Gomes, Chief Executive Officer of Stony Brook University Hospital, appreciated Kaushansky’s hands on approach, which included participating in daily calls as part of the hospital incident command center.
She likened Kaushansky to an orchestra leader, coordinating the research and patient care, making sure there was “no duplication of effort.”
Kaushansky believes federal research funding agencies and policy makers will recognize the importance of gathering information about this pandemic to treat future patients who might battle against variants and to provide a playbook for other health threats. “We really do need to prepare for the next one” as this is the third and deadliest of three coronaviruses, including SARS and MERS, he said.
Vaccines
As for vaccines, Kaushansky said Stony Brook was making it as “convenient as we can” to get a vaccination for health care workers. As of about a month ago, over 80 percent of Stony Brook’s health care workers had been vaccinated.
The black and brown communities have benefited from seeing leaders and role models receiving the vaccine. “This is beginning to erode the mistrust,” said Kaushansky, which developed as a byproduct of the infamous Tuskegee experiment, in which black men with syphilis did not receive penicillin despite its availability as an effective treatment.
Kaushansky added that a concern he’s heard from a range of people is that the vaccine was developed too quickly and that the side effects could be problematic. He cited the simultaneous steps doctors, pharmaceutical companies and others took to accelerate a process that didn’t leave out any of those steps.
Kaushansky participates in a group email interaction with prominent European hematologists. Looking at the data for the Astrazeneca vaccine, these researchers have calculated that anywhere from one in 500,000 to one in a million have developed blood clots.
“Not a single person on this mass email believes that they should stop the Astrazeneca vaccines for that kind of incident,” he said.
What He Helped Build
Kaushansky has been such a supporter of expanding the facilities and expertise at Stony Brook that he said the campus developed a joke about him.
“What’s the dean’s favorite bird?” he asked. “A crane.”
Fixtures on the campus for years, those cranes — the construction vehicles, not the birds — have changed the university, adding new teaching, research and clinical space on the campus.
That includes the Medical and Research Translational building and Bed Tower, which started in 2013 and opened in 2018, and the Hospital Pavilion, which has an additional 150 beds. Those extra beds were especially important a year after the pavilion opened, providing much-needed space for patients battling against COVID.
Gomes appreciated what Kaushansky built physically, as well as the interactive collaborations among different parts of the university. “An active collaboration and communication between researchers, clinicians and academics is a very different model” from the typical separation among those groups, she said. The work “reaped great rewards on the front end with the ability to collaborate to bring new ideas forward.”
As for the type of care patients received at Stony Brook, Kaushansky recalled a discussion over six years ago about central line infections. The data came from a 12 month period, starting six months prior to the meeting and going back to 18 months earlier.
“How are we going to know why all those central line infections occurred by looking at data” from so much earlier, Kaushansky recalled asking. The hospital created real time dashboards, which is an effort that has “paid huge dividends.”
Kaushansky cited the hospitals’ top 100 health grade for three years running. These grades assess whether patients survive a procedure, have complications or need to be readmitted.
“You’re going to get the best care possible when you come to Stony Brook,” Kaushansky said, as the top 100 rating puts Stony Brook in the top 2 percent of hospitals in the country.
Apart from the buildings Kaushansky helped develop, he’s proud of the program he helped build for medical school students.
About six years ago, Stony Brook instituted a new medical school curriculum that had translational pillars. The school starts students in the clinical realm considerably earlier than the classic program that involves two years of basic studies, followed by two years of clinical work.
Stony Brook provides basic science, followed by earlier exposure to the clinic, with a return to basic science after that
“It’s much more effective if you teach the basic science after the student has witnessed the clinical manifestation,” Kaushansky said. These approaches are part of translational pillars in areas such as cancer, physiology and infectious diseases.
As for what he’ll miss after he leaves, Kaushansky particularly appreciated the opportunity to speak with students. He used to hold a monthly breakfast with four or five students, where he learned about each student, their career goals and their medical journey.
A former colleague at the University of California at San Diego, John Carethers, who is the Chair in the Department of Internal Medicine at the University of Michigan, visited Kaushansky as a speaker twice at Stony Brook.
Carethers saw “first hand the wonderful impact he had on students — knowing their names, and providing wonderful advice,” he wrote in an email.
The Next Steps
For a decade, Kaushansky said he wanted to create a course about the future of medicine.
“There are a lot of great innovations in medicine that are fascinating from a scientific and clinical perspective,” Kaushansky said.
He will work on a course for use at Stony Brook in the main campus, the medical campus and for whichever program is interested in sharing these innovative medical and scientific steps in medicine.
He also plans to continue to be the lead editor of the primary textbook in hematology, called Williams Hematology. The textbook has gone through 10 editions.
Kaushansky and his wife Lauren, who is an author and education professor at Stony Brook, aren’t likely to remain on Long Island in the longer term. The couple has a getaway home in Santa Fe and may go there.
Kaushansky’s hobbies include wood working and running. He made a sofa when he was an undergraduate at UCLA, while his second significant work was a 16-foot sailboat he made as a second-year resident. He estimates he has made 40 pieces of furniture.
Kaushansky runs four miles a day four to six times a week. In 1990, he ran the Seattle Marathon which was the Goodwill Games Marathon, finishing in a time of around three hours and twenty-five minutes.
Culturally, Kaushansky hopes the school continues to embrace his focus on generosity.
“You’ve got to be generous with your time,” he said.
“No more can you say that you are too busy to talk. You have to be of a personality that takes pride and that gets the endorphins going from seeing the people you have brought, the people you have entrusted in leadership roles, succeed.”
Centereach goalie Gianna Oliveri with one of her 8 saves on the day. Bill Landon photo
Smithtown East defender Angelina Lent (L) and Centereach senior Kelly Malheiro purse the ball April 14. Bill Landon photo
Centereach senior Nicole Fabris settles the ball in the opening round of Class AA playoffs April 14. Bill Landon photo
Centereach senior Nicole Fabris passes up-field in the opening round of Class AA playoffs April 14. Bill Landon photo
Smithtown East forward Addison Weiner and Kayla Giovingo battle for the ball in the opening round of the Class AA playoffs April 14. Bill Landon photo
Centereach freshman Madison Falkowski with a sliding kick in the opening round of the Suffolk Class AA playoffs April 14. Bill Landon photo
Centereach freshman Madison Falkowski (L) and Kaitlin Gengler collide midfield in the opening round of the Suffolk AA playoffs April 14. Photo by Bill Landon
Julia Ragone with a clearing shot for the Cougars in round 1 of the Suffolk Class AA playoffs. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East co-captain Erin Sutter presses up-field against Centereach in round 1 of the Suffolk AA championship April 14. Photo by Bill Landon
Senior Kelly Malheiro with a crossing pass for the Cougars at home against Smithtown East April 14. Photo by Bill Landon
Jillian Garcia with the header for Smithtown East in the opening round of the Suffolk Class AA playoffs April 14. Bill Landon photo
Jillian Garcia takes flight for Smithtown East in the Class AA playoff game April 14. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East junior Jillian Garcia (R) pursues Kelly Malheiro in the opening round of the Suffolk Class AA playoffs April 14. Bill Landon photo
Smithtown East junior Jillian Garcia turns up-field in the opening round of the Suffolk Class AA playoffs April 14. Bill Landon photo
11th grader Hannah Wellinger passes upfield in round 1 off the Class AA playoffs April 14. Photo by Bill Landon
Centereach senior Kelly Malheiro and Smithtown East’s Angelina Lent in round 1 off the Class AA playoffs April 14. Photo by Bill Landon
Centereach senior Nicole Fabris #10 is congratulated by teammate Madison Falkowski after Fabris insurance goal April 14. Bill Landon photo
Smithtown East Co-Captain Kaitlin Gengler and Madison Falkowski battle midfield April 14. Bill Landon photo
Erin Sutter (L) and Julia Ragone battle in the opening round of the Suffolk Class AA playoffs April 14. Bill Landon photo
Smithtown East junior Jillian Garcia (R) is pursued by sophomore Hannah McNally in the opening round of the Suffolk Class AA playoffs April 14. Bill Landon photo
Centereach celebrates their 2-0 victory in round 1 off the Suffolk Class AA playoffs at home against Smithtown East April 14. Photo by Bill Landon
Centereach keeper Gianna Oliveri with one of her 8 saves on the day. Bill Landon photo
Addison Weiner (L) and Kayla Giovingo battle midfield in the opening round of the Suffolk Class AA playoffs April 14. Bill Landon photo
Addison Weiner (L) and Hannah McNally battle midfield in the opening round of the Suffolk Class AA playoffs April 14. Bill Landon photo
After a scoreless first half, Centereach senior Nicole Fabris broke the ice for the Cougars at the 24-minute mark to take the lead against Smithtown East in the opening round of the Suffolk Class AA playoffs April 14.
Smithtown East struggled to keep the ball upfield desperate to tie the game with 15 minutes left on the clock but Fabris found herself in front of an open net and tapped in the insurance goal for a 2-0 lead.
Ava Ruiz had an assist in Fabris’ first goal, and Kelly Malheiro assisted on the second. Centereach senior Gianna Oliveri had eight saves in the win.
Smithtown East concludes their COVID-abbreviated season at 6-4-1
The Cougars advance to the next round where they’re face the No. 1 seed Ward Melville on the road Friday,
The Three Village Chamber of Commerce welcomed Koeppel Dental Group (A Dental 365 Company), Druthers Coffee and Jersey Mike’s Subs to the community with a celebratory ribbon cutting on April 5. All three businesses are located in Stony Brook Square at 1113 North Country Road in Stony Brook.
The event was attended by New York State Assemblyman Steve Englebright, Kim Bryant from Suffolk County Legislator Kara Hahn’s office,Town of Brookhaven Councilman Jonathan Kornreich and members of the chamber.
“The Three Village Chamber of Commerce is working to beat back the economic impact of COVID-19 by helping new businesses open and existing businesses safely reopen. As someone who knows just how difficult it is to start a small business, I applaud the entrepreneurs behind Druthers Coffee, Koeppel Dental Group, and Jersey Mike’s Subs for opening their doors here in Three Village,” said Councilman Kornreich in a statement.
“Main Street America’s Small Business Day took place on April 13, and I’m optimistic that we will see more growth and opportunity across the First Council District,” he added.
Rafe Carner blocks for his cousin Rocco Stola. Stola would score a touchdown on this play. Photo by Steven Zaitz
Dan Lugo, 70 and Tom McDonagh, 73 gang-tackling against Copiague. Photo by Steven Zaitz
Rafe Carner looking for a hole. Photo by Steve Zaitz
Rocco Stola is tackled just short of the goal line. Photo by Steven Zaitz
Andrew Argyris fight his way into the end zone. Photo by Steven Zaitz
Andrew Argyris breaking tackles. Photo by Steven Zaitz
Owen Johansen stiff arms a would-be tackler. Photo by Steven Zaitz
Jackson Campbell makes a diving tackle against Copiague. Photo by Steven Zaitz
By Steven Zaitz
The game of football is many things. One thing it is never supposed to be, is easy.
But that is what the Northport Tigers made these spring games look like, when they iced their fourth and final cupcake on Saturday, April 10, creaming Copiague 41-6. They finished the season 4-0 and outscored their opponents 140-25.
To an athlete, they know that while these four wins were nice, nothing worth fighting for is ever easy and the journey to greatness has only just begun.
“These kids never take a day off in their preparation,” said head coach Pat Campbell. “This is what these kids have been waiting for — this moment.”
The ‘moment’ that Campbell is referring to is a showdown with Suffolk County League IV champions West Islip on Saturday, April 17. The Lions beat Bellport 24-14 to earn that crown.
Northport is seeded second in League III and Half Hollow Hills East is first because the Thunderbirds won five games to the Tigers’ four.Hills East and Northport were supposed to play earlier this season, but the game was cancelled due to COVID-19 protocols.
Campbell is taking a “we play who is on our schedule approach” even though an argument could be made that Northport’s 4-0 Conference record should have been a factor in deciding the League champions. Hills East was 3-0 in league play and 5-0 overall.
“It is what it is,” Campbell said.
The Tiger defense, which allowed a microscopic 1.6 yards per rushing attempt this year, will have a stiff test against the Lions. They are led by breakout star quarterback Joe Constantino, who ran for 263 yards on Saturday and also threw for a touchdown.
“They run a lot of Read Option and Quarterback Power,” Campbell said. “Constantino is a really good player and probably the best runner we’ve faced.He’s got speed, he’s savvy and he’s quick.It’s going to be a challenge for us. They are a very good and well-coached team.”
West Islip also has a steam-rolling offensive line that will smash you in the mouth without hesitation, and a stingy defense that gave up about two touchdowns per game. The Lions’ storied program has a long tradition of winning and is coached by the highly respected Steve Mileti.They had a recent stretch of games that saw them win 22 out of 24 and they were undefeated this year.
“We all know the real challenges are coming up,” said running back, defensive back and co-captain Rocco Stola. “Our focus is on winning and we are super excited to play in this game against a top team.I remember playing this kid (Constantino) in junior varsity, and we know what to expect, we have a history with him, and I have full confidence in our defense that we will put a game plan together to stop him. This is the chance to prove ourselves.”
The Tigers are eager to erase both the memories of an injury-marred 2-6 season in 2019 and a bitter playoff loss the year before against North Babylon when they fumbled late in the fourth quarter, just as it looked like they were going in for a winning touchdown.
“I’ve been thinking about getting back to the playoffs ever since that loss against North Babylon,” said co-captain and leading tackler Anthony Canales. “I am really fired up for
this game.”
Another motivating factor for the Tigers is the apparent lack of respect from major regional media and social media power ranking sites, that have seemingly ignored Tiger Nation’s overwhelming success this year.Twitter prognosticator L.I. Sports Fanatic has already predicted that the Tigers will fall to the West Islip Lions in the first round of the playoffs.
“We don’t make it on to their power rankings, but we don’t care,” said Canales, who averaged more than 10 tackles a game despite sitting out large stretches due to lopsided scores. “They can have people ranked higher than us and predict whatever they want. We like being underdogs because we know that when we get out there, we have a good chance to win.”
Northport averaged more than seven and a half yards every time their offense snapped the ball. The defense very reluctantly allowed two and a half yards per play and gave up two touchdowns all year.These numbers are absolutely staggering but despite all of that, the attention around these parts has been given to teams like Floyd, Sayville, Bellport and Lindenhurst.
Rafe Carner, Stola’s first cousin, ran for 224 yards and three touchdowns this year.They have been playing sports together most of their lives and have always enjoyed pushing each other to excel athletically and academically. Like his cousin, Carner knows what is at stake in the coming days.
“Our expectations are to win a championship and that hasn’t changed since the beginning of the year,” Carner said. “This game is going to be tough, and if we win, the next one will be even tougher, but we’re going to do everything we can to make it happen.”
In other words — things are no longer easy, and the Tigers wouldn’t have it any other way.
Suffolk County Community College students Jason Saravia, Gabrielle Flores, Kecia McKoy and Brian Higgins all received COVID-19 vaccinations at NYS Governor Andrew Cuomo’s announcement at Suffolk’s Michael J. Grant Campus on April 12 that New York State is taking its battle to defeat COVID-19 to college campuses, offering vaccines for students with direct allocations to schools, colleges and universities.
The Governor greeted each of the students after they received their vaccinations.
“Vaccinations are safe and effective and the best way to ensure that students don’t bring the virus home to family and friends. Vaccinations will also open the door to a return to campus and the college life students have been missing.” said Suffolk County Community College Interim President Louis Petrizzo.
Suffolk County Community College students who would like to be vaccinated can schedule a vaccination appointment by email at: [email protected]. The email must include contact information (cell phone number and college email address). A college representative will call to schedule an appointment.
Smithtown East sophomore Kayleigh Makarick sets up the play in a home game against Walt Whitman April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East junior Julia Ciminello with a return at home against Whitman. Photo by Bill Landon
Sophomore Ava Arceri and Jordynn Bozzo, a senior, battle at net against Whitman at home April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East senior captain Ariana Duffy puts the ball in play in a home game against Walt Whitman April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East sophomore Madison Berroyer hits in a League II matchup at home against Whitman April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East sophomore Madison Berroyer with the return in a League II matchup at home April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East libero Lauren Kaplan digs one out for the Bulls in a League II matchup at home April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Kathleen Wisnieski with a monster block for Smithtown East April 9 at home against Whitman. Photo by Bill Landon
Madison Berroyer the sophomore, from the service line for Smithtown East against Whitman April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East sophomore Kayleigh Makarick with a spike in a home game against Walt Whitman April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East’s Julia Ciminello at net in a home game against Walt Whitman April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Junior’s Ellie Cerullo and Kathleen Wisnieski at the ready for the Bulls April 9 at home against Whitman. Photo by Bill Landon
Outside hitter Paige Doherty from the service line for Smithtown East in a League II matchup at home April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East libero Lauren Kaplan sets up the play in a League II matchup at home April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East sophomore Kayleigh Makarick from the service line in a home game against Walt Whitman April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East junior Ellie Cerullo with a kill shot for the Bulls in a League II matchup at home April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East libero Lauren Kaplan sets the play in a League II matchup at home April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East sophomore Kayleigh Makarick sets the play in a home game against Walt Whitman April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East’s Julia Ciminello, Jordynn Bozzo and Ava Arceri at net in a home game against Walt Whitman April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East senior Ella Schwartz with a return for the Bulls at home against Walt Whitman April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East senior Ella Schwartz serves for the Bulls at home April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
Smithtown East junior Julia Ciminello with a return at home against Whitman April 9. Photo by Bill Landon
The Bulls of Smithtown East had their hands full with visiting Walt Whitman in a League II matchup April 9, where Whitman blanked the Bulls in three sets, 25-13, 25-13 and 25-20.
Smithtown East (9-3) in third place in their division, looked to gain ground on second place Bay Shore but Whitman with the win ties the Bulls for third. The Bulls are back in action with a road game against Huntington April 12 before returning home for Senior Night two days later. Game times are 4:15 and 5 p.m. respectively.
Ward Melville sophomore Jaedyn Scarlatos crosses in front of the cage against Sachem North April 8. Photo by Bill Landon
Ward Melville senior forward Jess Winslow turns baseline in a 4-0 victory at home against Sachem North April 8. Photo by Bill Landon
Ward Melville senior forward Jill Calaci with a shot on goal in a Div I victory at home against Sachem North April 8. Photo by Bill Landon
Ward Melville Sophomore Jaedyn Scarlatos sets up a shot on goal in a 4-0 victory at home against Sachem April 8. Photo by Bill Landon
Ward Melville senior Jordyn Vonnes air dribbles up-field in a 4-0 victory at home against Sachem North April 8. Photo by Bill Landon
Sophomore forward Jaedyn Scarlatos in front of the cage in a 4-0 victory at home against Sachem North April 8. Photo by Bill Landon
Ward Melville senior Amanda Lee fires at the cage in a home game against Sachem North Photo by Bill Landon
Jess Winslow with a shot on goal for the Patriots in a Div I matchup at home April 8. Photo by Bill Landon
Sophomore forward Jaedyn Scarlatos drives by a defender in a 4-0 victory at home against Sachem North April 8. Photo by Bill Landon
Ward Melville junior Izzy Paglia looks to pass inside against Sachem North in a Div I home game April 8. Photo by Bill Landon
Ward Melville senior Amanda Lee looks to pass at midfield for the Patriots in a home game against Sachem North. Photo by Bill Landon
Ward Melville junior Courtney Quinn pushes up-field against Sachem North April 8. Photo by Bill Landon
Courtney Quinn with a clearing shot for the Patriots against Sachem North April 8. Photo by Bill Landon
Ward Melville senior Emily Brown fires at the cage in a Div I matchup at home April 8. Photo by Bill Landon
Jaedyn Scarlatos a sophomore for the Patriots rocks the box with her second goal against Sachem No. April 8. Photo by Bill Landon
Ward Melville junior Izzy Paglia battles for possession against Sachem North in a Div I home game April 8. Photo by Bill Landon
Ward Melville senior Amanda Lee with a crossing pass midfield for the Patriots at home against Sachem North. Photo by Bill Landon
Ward Melville senior Amanda Lee breaks up-field for the Patriots in a home game against Sachem North. Photo by Bill Landon
The Ward Melville Patriots field hockey team showed why they sit atop the Division I leaderboard in a home game against Sachem North controlling the tempo of the game from the opening possession dowsing the Flaming Arrows, 4-0, April 8.
Sophomore Jaedyn Scarlatos’ stick spoke first when her shot found the back of the box at the 4 minute, 21 second mark in the first quarter. Ward Melville senior forward Jill Calaci’s shot found its mark for the insurance goal as time expired in the third for a 2-0 lead.
With 5 minutes and 18 seconds left in the game, Scarlatos struck again to put the Patriots out front by three. Sachem threatened briefly in the final minutes but the Patriots pressure was too much when Olivia McCulloch rocked the box in the final seconds to put the game away.
Ward Melville senior Amanda Lee had an assist for the Patriots, and goalie Bella Ospitale, a junior, had three saves on the day.
The win lifts the Patriots to 11-1 with two road games remaining before post season play begins April 16, where Patriots seeding earns them a bye in the opening round. In this COVID-compressed season, venues and times have yet to be determined.
The Art League of Long Island in Dix Hills recently announced the winners of its 14th annual “Go APE” Advanced Placement Student Exhibition which features 2-D and 3-D works by 124 students from 37 Long Island High Schools. Award-winning artist, artist community organizer, and the Art League Program Manager Andrea Lawl Manning selected award of excellence winners and honorable mentions.
“The Go APE exhibition is one of our most exciting exhibitions every year,” said Manning. “The strength of the work in this exhibition made the jurying process incredibly difficult. The last year pokes its way into this show as a whole, and certainly into the pieces of our winners. Ideas about life, loneliness and isolation, cultural and social issues weave into these works. These evocative, thought provoking, and conceptually mature pieces are bolstered by achievement in technique, and skillful manipulation of medium. There is an authenticity, a boldness, and an honesty in the works of these young artists. Through these works we see a complicated world through their eyes,” she added.
The following students have been selected for awards:
Awards of Excellence:
◆ Kristine Zhou, Syosset High School, Caged, colored pencil and white tape on white paper
◆ Keren Dial, Valley Stream South High School, Cultivating the Mustard, colored pencil
◆ Jordan Brand, Baldwin HS, Illusion is Illumination, acrylic on watercolor paper
◆ Sarah Hauk, Sayville High School, White Wash, acrylic painting
◆ Emma Romano, Oceanside High School, Cultural Cleanse, photography
◆ Kathryn Yi, Jericho High School, Connection, pencil drawing
◆ Aleena Abraham, Hicksville High School, Tenderness, oil on canvas
Honorable Mentions:
◆ Angela Jang, Syosset High School, Dental Repair, colored pencil, foam core and rubber bands
◆ Kayla Timpanaro, Earl L. Vandermeulen High School, Things We Left Behind, acrylic and ink
◆ Ava Fama, Plainedge High School, The Curtains, acrylic on canvas
◆ Teddy Angelopoulos, Long Beach High School, Skulls, mixed media
◆ Ethan Koenig, Northport High School, Emptied, 3D computer modeling
◆ Alyssa Paino, H. Frank Carey High School, Too Much Pressure, oil pastel
◆ Eleanor Dexter, Mount Sinai High School, Summer’s Sanctuary, watercolor and fine liners
The virtual exhibit close date has been extended to April 9 and is on view at the Art League’s website at www.artleagueli.org.The virtual gallery format allows the viewer to “stroll the gallery” in the virtual rooms, or view the artworks online in an “at a glance” format.
Abstract art invites an audience to use its imagination and interpret meaning.
Gallery North’s newest exhibit, Laminar Rituals, celebrates the creation and explores the impact of mark making and non-objective art through the works of artists Sue Contessa of St. James and Anne Raymond of East Hampton. The show opens today, April 8.
Featuring Contessa’s acrylic paintings and Raymond’s monotypes and oil paintings, the title of the exhibit refers to their artistic styles, which incorporate transparent or translucent layers of paint that laminate, protect, and enhance their marks and brushstrokes.
“Both artists really work in a very intuitive manner … Sue’s work is really about the experience the viewer has in front of the [art]. Anne is much more interested in transient qualities we find around ourselves — things like change in weather patterns, changes in light over the course of the day … trying to capture those fleeting moments around us,” said Gallery North Executive Director Ned Puchner. “I think when put together, this exhibit is really presenting records of our experience out in the world.”
Rather than seeking inspiration from outside sources, Contessa finds meaning in the methodology of crafting her art. She uses acrylic paint and occasionally graphite pencil to build marks on the canvas. This technique creates a perceived visual depth to her paintings.
“The work is about repetition … The paintings are more about formal art issues, and the repetition allows for that form of meditation that I always hope will happen. I just have to trust my process. I tend to work rather thinly and transparently, so you are always seeing something from underneath, which impacts each layer,” said Contessa.
For Raymond, the development of her palette is an essential part of her creative process. “I work from a palette based on what I feel like at the time. If I don’t like it, I completely change it,” she said. “I float back and forth between doing monotypes and painting. I think this helps me stay fresh.”
Raymond uses plexiglass plates for her monotypes, making unique single prints with oil-based, pigment-rich, lithography inks. Unlike oil paint, the inks dry fairly quickly so Raymond is able to produce a few in a single session.
The process of working in these mediums is different, but its influences are largely the same. Her art, although abstract, is impacted by the natural world.
“Almost all of my work has reference to landscape, seascape, or sky. I feel really lucky. The beauty of Long Island is my muse,” Raymond said.
Classically trained, Contessa and Raymond each studied art in college and then attended the School of Visual Arts in New York City. They worked in traditional, realistic mediums like figure drawing and still life before becoming abstract artists.
After taking classes at the Art League of Long Island in Dix Hills, Contessa was asked to teach figure and basic drawing classes there.
“I have a background in realistic painting, but it wasn’t satisfying for me. It wasn’t what I wanted to paint. I wanted to paint something that didn’t exist before,” Contessa said. “When you create an [abstract] painting, it is something that you created. The reason for doing it in the first place is that I don’t know what it’s going to look like.”
Raymond worked as an illustrator, for a newspaper, and in the travel industry before fully transitioning to a career as an abstract artist. “When I was studying, I did a lot of live drawing … I appreciate the skill, but it was not exciting in the way that working abstractly is. While working as an illustrator, I was already doing abstracts … I think it is creatively engaging to invite surprise into your process,” she said.
Their complementary mindsets about composing abstract art is part of what initially inspired Puchner to pair their art for an exhibit. “I saw common features with both of them,” he said.
It is the first show that Contessa or Raymond have done since the pandemic began. The exhibit is part of Puchner and Gallery North’s ongoing effort to introduce patrons to the work of local artists and provide the local artists with additional exhibition possibilities.
“I’m really trying to present more artists and give more artists more opportunities to show. I have fun trying to create these pairings and expose our audience to more local artists,” Puchner added.
Gallery North, 90 North Country Road, Setauket presents Laminar Rituals through May 16. The exhibit will be open to the public during the gallery’s normal hours, Wednesdays to Saturdays from 11 a.m to 5 p.m., and Sundays from 1 to 5 p.m. All onsite events are socially distanced and masks are mandatory for entry.
In conjunction with the exhibit, Raymond will lead a monotype workshop for a class of up to six people at the Studio at Gallery North on April 10 from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. Contessa and Raymond will participate in a Virtual ArTalk on April 24, from 6 to 8 p.m.
For more information, to register for these programs, or to learn more about Laminar Rituals and other upcoming exhibits, visit www.gallerynorth.org or call 631-751-2676.