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Friday
Nov252016

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP - Nearing Extinction After 455 Million Years On Earth 

SUFFOLK CLOSEUP

By Karl Grossman

A world expert on horseshoe crabs, a Suffolk County resident, is worried about their extinction after 455 million years of life on Earth—largely because of the crab having become a delicacy in nations in Asia.

CERCOM - Molloy College:Center For Environmental Research and Coastal Oceans MonitoringDr. John T. Tanacredi first became familiar with horseshoe crabs as a boy from Brooklyn coming to Babylon in summers and learning to swim off a beach along the Great South Bay. In that period, the early 1960s, the beach was “filled” with horseshoe crabs. The shores of Long Island and the wetlands they embrace—including the Smithtown coastline—have been an active habitat for horseshoe crabs.

Back in Brooklyn, as a young man volunteering as a docent at the New York Aquarium in Coney Island, he began studying what he speaks of as this “alien-looking, strange-looking creature.” 

The aquarium had an exhibit featuring horseshoe crabs and Dr. Tanacredi speaks of the impact on him of the writings of the aquarium’s director, Dr. George Ruggieri, a Franciscan priest, he noted. Dr. Ruggieri’s writings told of how horseshoe crabs, beyond being an extraordinary life form in themselves—“living fossils,” said Dr. Tanacredi—have provided “pharmaceuticals from the sea.”

The blue blood of the horseshoe crab has been and remains indispensable in the detection of bacterial endotoxins in medical applications. Horseshoe crabs are widely harvested for this medical purpose. It’s a $300 million industry globally, he said.  The animals are bled, the blue blood collected and used for this medical purpose. Most of the crabs survive upon being returned to the sea.

But horseshoe crabs were killed on a massive scale for years to become fertilizer. And they are still taken to be used as bait, especially to catch eels and whelk or conch. Some states forbid or restrict the taking of horseshoe crabs. In New York, the Department of Environmental Conservation has been setting yearly quotas—allowing 150,000 to be taken this year.  Can that number be appreciably lowered?

“Habitat loss and habitat degradation,” says Dr. Tanacredi, have been impacting on horseshoe crabs. Shoreline development has had a major effect. “They go to the same beach every year to mate,” he notes. 

And now horseshoe crabs have become “an exotic food” in parts of Asia—eating them has become especially popular in Singapore, Vietnam and Cambodia—and this is exacerbating the survival of the horseshoe crab as never before.

“In a decade, they could be extinct,” says Dr. Tanacredi.

The number of horseshoe crabs in the world—there are four species of them—has been “dramatically decreasing,” he relates. “The next decade will be critically important.”

“Extinction,” he said, can “happen all of a sudden.” He speaks of the passenger pigeon of which there were an estimated three billion in the world in the 19th Century. They were heavily hunted, and in 1914, the last one, named Martha, died in her cage at the Cincinnati Zoo. 

Horseshoe crabs “survived the five mass extinction events” that have occurred on the Earth through their 455 million years of existence, said Dr. Tanacredi. “They are a wonderful organism. They are so important to human health—and this would be lost forever, too. It is sad testimony to how we treat other species on this planet.”

Dr. Tanacredi, a Melville resident, has since 2013 been director of the Center for Environmental Research and Coastal Oceans Monitoring (CERCOM) of Molloy College. The center is located at what had been the Blue Point Oyster Hatchery in West Sayville. At CERCOM, “about 10,000 juvenile horseshoe crabs” are produced each year. 

Dr. Tanacredi is a full professor at Molloy, teaching courses that include Ecology and Marine Biology. Before that, for 13 years, he was a professor and chairman of the Earth Marine Sciences Department at Dowling College in Oakdale—which this year closed. Dowling underwent extinction itself.

Earlier, for 24 years Dr. Tanacredi was a coastal research supervisory ecologist for the National Park Service. He also worked for the U.S. Coast Guard. And he served as a “hurricane hunter” for the U.S. Navy and in that job “cut my teeth on the impacts of hurricanes on coastal environments.” For 12 years he was deputy director of the Aquatic Research and Environmental Assessment Center at Brooklyn College. And he has been chairman of the New York Marine Sciences Consortium and also the Suffolk County Wetlands Management Work Group. 

He holds a doctorate in environmental health engineering from NYU-Polytechnic Institute. He has had 50 peer-reviewed scientific papers published and has authored five books.

Horseshoe crabs, despite their name, are not crabs but more closely related to spiders and scorpions. Their smooth, hard shell is shaped like a horseshoe, thus their name. They predate the dinosaurs by more than 200 million years.

Tuesday
Nov222016

SCPD Investigating Home Invasion In Kings Park

Suffolk County Police Fourth Squad  is investigating a home invasion in Kings Park. According to police on November 18 at 4:45 p.m. four males entered a residence on Meadow Rd, assaulted two residents, stole a purse and two cell phones. This occurred on November 18 at 4:45 p.m. One victim was transported to St. Catherine’s for treatment of his injuries. The investigation is ongoing.

Monday
Nov212016

THEATER REVIEW - 'MARY POPPINS'

THEATER REVIEW - ‘Mary Poppins - Produced by: John W. Engeman Theater – Northport 

Reviewed by: Jeb Ladouceur 

Analisa Leaming, a fetching Mary Poppins, Arrives at Northport’s Engeman TheaterSooner or later, it seems, every theatrical organization gets a crack at ‘Mary Poppins’—and now through New Year’s Eve, it’s The Engeman’s turn. Actually the timing couldn’t be more fortuitous for locals, because with the exception of ‘A Christmas Carol,’ (currently playing it’s standard holiday gig forty minutes east in Port Jefferson) the whimsical story of the magical nanny created on film by Julie Andrews might be the perfect show for kids of all ages during the holiday season!

If that sounds like overstatement, theatergoers simply have to see the enchanting Analisa Leaming for themselves. If ever a stage actress was perfectly cast as the ultimate au pair, it’s Leaming! 

We all know the story immortalized by the 1964 Disney movie … governess-type Mary Poppins shows up at the privileged London home of little Jane and Michael Banks, where she wows the obstreperous children by introducing them to amazing chimneysweeps, mind boggling shopkeepers, dancing statues, and other unforgettable characters who quickly win the youngsters’ hearts. 

The film about kids largely denied affection by their father (a la ‘Sound of Music’) was a natural for the stage, thus it opened on Broadway in 2006 … and ran there for seven years!

Granted, ‘Mary Poppins’ is not a jolly holiday show in the manner of ‘White Christmas’ or Dickens’ classic story fashioned around old ‘Ebenezer Scrooge,’ but it’s an appealing tale of childhood whimsy nonetheless, and as such, the narrative qualifies as an appropriately festive offering at this celebratory time of year. 

Mary is named ‘Poppins’ because she just shows up magically from time to time—that is to say, she just ‘pops in’—get it? And though she’s the undisputed star of the show, ‘Bert,’ the wonderful singing, dancing Chimneysweep, who essentially is the musical’s narrator, complements the dazzling Mary expertly with clever and revealing dialogue. In fact ‘Bert’ (Luke Hawkins) delivers one of the most spot-on lines in the play when he tells Mary, “You’re a sight for sore eyes.” Because Leaming sure is, folks! The slender, statuesque woman is absolutely gorgeous, and it’s difficult to imagine any young lady looking better in an Edwardian outfit. Those stunning turn-of-the-20th century walking suits and high-button shoes seem to have been designed with Analisa Leaming in mind.

Striking, too, are all of the ensemble’s colorful pastel costumes designed by Kurt Alger. Mary stands out, of course, in her red, blue, white, or black outfits (she seems to change every ten minutes or so), and even the drab clothing of the dowdy ‘Bird Woman,’ (so poignantly interpreted by Suzanne Mason,) is appropriate in its dreary contrast to the leading lady’s finery.

The starring children in this play are ‘Jane and Michael Banks,’ played by Katherine LaFountain and Christopher McKenna. They are on stage virtually non-stop, and do a fine job in their taxing roles. One notable youngster, who appears less frequently, is Sophia Eleni Kekllas. She plays a come-to-life doll named ‘Valentine.’ Sophia exhibits all the tools necessary for future stardom; indeed her superb stage presence is obvious despite her brief role and tender years. Someone has guided the gifted child’s early career with first-rate insight.

There are two magnificent production numbers in this endearing musical, and they are entirely different in style and execution. One is the tongue-twisting ‘Super-cali-fragilistic-expiali-docious,’ (hyphens added here) which is skillfully sung, and cleverly choreographed with colorful alphabet blocks. The other is ‘Step In Time.” It’s a show-stopping piece wherein ‘Bert,’ ‘Mary,’ and the ‘Banks Children’ join fifteen ‘Chimneysweeps’ in a rousing, perfectly timed tap dance extravaganza.

If there’s anything not to like in this Drew Humphrey-directed show, I don’t know what it would be. Maybe a few encores could be added. That would have delighted the sold-out crowd who stood and cheered last weekend … as Mary Poppins flew down from the midnight London sky with her umbrella … and took her well-deserved bows.

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Award-winning writer, Jeb Ladouceur is the author of a dozen novels, and his theater and book reviews appear in several major L.I. publications. His newest book, THE GHOSTWRITERS, explores the bizarre relationship between the late Harper Lee and Truman Capote. Ladouceur’s recently completed thriller, THE SOUTHWICK INCIDENT, is due in December. It involves a radicalized Yale student and his CIA pursuers. Mr. Ladouceur’s revealing website is www.JebsBooks.com

Sunday
Nov202016

People In The News - Author Talia Carner Talks With Smithtown AAUW

 

Recently Talia Carner, author of Hotel Moscow: A Novel, was the guest speaker at the Smithtown Chapter of American Association of University Women’s (AAUW) author luncheon meeting at Voila in St. James. AAUW was founded in 1881, its mission is the empowerment of women.  

Author Talia Carner autographs copies of Hotel Moscow: A NovelMs. Carner is a native of Tel Aviv, Israel and currently has a home on Long Island. She has a B.A. in Psychology and Sociology from Hebrew University and a master’s degree from SUNY Stony Brook with a concentration in economics. She is an award winning author who has published four novels and many articles.  While living in Israel she served in the Israel Defense Force. Talia is married to Ron Carner and they have four grown children.

Patricia Huber was the winner of Lilli Ledbetter autographed AAUW BagThe author was a perfect fit for this group of educated and aware women. The luncheon took place prior to the November 8 election and there was an element of excitement amongst the attendees. Perhaps this election would be historical and a female would be elected as the next president of the United States.

Hotel Moscow is about a young woman in her late thirty’s who is the child of Russian Holocaust survivors. She visits Russia in 1993 during the Yeltsin uprising. The protagonist, Brooke Fielding, is in Russia as part of a mission to help Russian women as they transition from communism to a capitalistic society. Achieving the goals of the mission is complicated by societal norms where women are not respected, crimes against women are rampant and mafia style protection and payoffs are accepted as the norm. There is a character in the book who states matter of factly, that ‘Italians are lucky they have only one mafia”. Life is difficult for the women in Russia’s paternalistic society where alcholism has reduced the productivity and average life span for men, leaving women to fend for themselves and thier families. In Hotel Moscow, women face greed, abuse, rape and dispair with little support and many obstacles.

Hotel Moscow is disquieting. It is about conflict of many varieties. The conflict of an adult child visiting a country that had taken the very soul from her parents. The conflict of a nation where people are indoctrinated to a lifestyle of dependency on government and are unprepared to navigate a free-for-all world in which they find themselves. There is the conflict of women who are in a society that pits them against one another and who live with the philosophy of your gain is my loss. Lastly, there is the conflict of a woman working through issues of her lifestyle.

While the book does not come close to resolving the many issues set in the story, it does explose issues and offers an explainations for the many obstacles faced by the women of Russia. Hotel Moscow: A Novel is not for the faint of heart but it is for those who may want a glimpse of the life of Russian women. 

Click on the links for more information about Talia Carner and the AAUW.

Saturday
Nov192016

Hauppauge HS Student Joshua Torres Wins Local Voice Of Democracy Contest

Those in attendance at the Smithtown Veterans Day Ceremony got to hear Joshua Torres, a Hauppague High School student, read his winning essay “My responsibility to America”. Joshua, born in Mexico lives in Hauppauge with his family. Acording to Post Service Officer Tom Mooney, Joshua’s essay received the highest score receiving an overall grade of 389 out of a possible 400.

Joshua’s essay will advance in National competition to VFW County level judging.  Angela Musco and Rachel Black, also from Hauppague HS, won second and third place respectively.
 
Cash awards and Certificates will be awarded to the three winners and to other finalists from all participating schools at a post ceremony to be scheduled.
 
Tom Mooney, who administers the program, said that the participation and support from the schools is great. The competition is open to students in the Smithtown and Hauppauge School Districts. The Voice of Democracy is a VFW program dedicated to promoting patriotism and investing in future generations.