Sunday
Dec012013

Letter To Editor - Befriending Humanity

Befriending Humanity

      Simplistic as it may sound, uncomplicated as it should be, the ultimate answer to the solving of the many problems current in the world is for humanity to recognize that we are all members of the same one human family, and through this recognition, seeking to be in fellowship with one another.  Failure to recognize this fundamental truth has historically led to the problems that have plagued humanity and which continue to plague us today.

     Scientifically, there is only one species of man: Homo sapiens, a species comprised of a rich myriad of external differences, among them: skin color, religious belief, and ethnicity.  While these external differences are what beautifies our one human family, sadly, rather than being a cause for unity, people have tragically made these differences reasons to hate and distrust one another.

     Manmade barriers like racism, prejudice, fear, and bigotry have kept the people of humanity divided and at odds with one another, manifesting themselves in the problems to be found in the world, problems far too numerous to mention.

     While it is important that we recognize with our minds this truth of the oneness of humanity, more importantly, we need to recognize it with our hearts.  For such recognition is what will lead to the tearing down of these walls of separation, and to  replacing them with bridges of unity, the result of which will be the lessening of the problems existing today, not only here in the United Sates, but the whole world.

     If fish of different colors can swim together, and birds of different colors can fly together, why can’t we, with our rich myriad differences, yet boundless similarities, be in fellowship with one another?  After all, should we not be wiser and more noble than fish and birds? 

     This call for the recognition of the oneness of humanity does not equate to turning a blind eye to the many injustices and cruelties in the world today, nor pollyannaishly denying the existence of such.  This recognition, though, will lead to these injustices being addressed and being conducive to acts of injustice and cruelty from even occurring.

     As people come to recognize the essential oneness of humanity, and thus coming together in fellowship with their neighbors, near and far, the thought of hurting one another, let alone the commitment of such acts, will be abhorrent, and far less common.

     At the heart of this recognition is transformation: Transformation on a personal level; transformation on a societal level; and transformation on a global level.  It is a reciprocal relationship amongst these three levels, each one influencing the others.  Reciprocal in nature as it may be, while an individual can influence others, as well as society and the world at large, the only one one has control over is oneself.

     The sooner we come to recognize and appreciate how we are all members of the same one human family, and through this recognition, embracing the diversity that comprises and beautifies humanity, where these numerous social problems will be no more, the sooner this day will come to be.  While it may not be in our lifetime, let us start working on it today to make this most glorious day come about.

Respectfully submitted,

Marc Hensen

Public Information Officer

Baha’is of Smithtown

 

 

Saturday
Nov302013

What's Cookin'? Smithtown - Turkey's Encore Appearance

What’s Cookin’?  -  Smithtown

By Nancy Vallarella

Turkey’s Encore Appearance

That plump breasted Thanksgiving turkey with glistening crisp skin now sits in the refrigerator, a shell of its former self.  It is hard to find the passion for food so soon after Thanksgiving but meals must be prepared. People will once again resume eating. 

If you are just plum turkeyed out, the good news is many leftover turkey recipes lend well to freezing.  If you are concerned about refreezing a cooked frozen turkey… don’t be.  As long as the turkey was thawed and cooked properly, it is fine to refreeze that turkey.  Leftover turkey recipes that incorporate liquids work really well when frozen. Having a main course or homemade soup on hand for a cold rainy or snowy night is like having gold in your freezer.

Refrigerated leftover turkey is good for 3 – 4 day. Start reinventing now! 

Turkey Swiss PaniniRee Drummond a.k.a.”The Pioneer Women” lists leftover turkey recipes on her blog thepioneerwomen.com.  From old school Turkey Pot Pie and Turkey Tetrazzini to more current items like Turkey Swiss Panini and Turkey Spring Rolls, Ree walks you through. 

Turkey - Kale SoupThe leftover turkey recipe I am most excited about comes from Alice Waters’, The Art of Simple Food. Turkey Soup with Kale is a simple union of lean protein and this year’s super food.  The recipe can be found on Smithtown Matters Food Page. 

If you haven’t gotten on the kale train to date, jump on board. Kale is the reigning vegetable of 2013. This queen of cruciferous vegetable comes in many varieties. Green, blue white, rainbow, curly, Tuscan, Russian, the list continues.   Recipes in the cookbook, Fifty Shades of Kale include Kale Chocolate Chip Cookies and Kale Mojitos.  The author Drew Ramsey, a psychiatrist declares, “People who start incorporating kale into their life feel happier and healthier and lighter. There is nothing sexier than a sharp brain on top of a lean body. And kale really delivers that more than any other vegetable on the planet.” 

Sweet Potato Walnut Streusel Biscuits If you have turkey dinner sides to reinvent, take a look at Elegant Eating’s facebook page for wonderful Sweet Potato Walnut Streusel Biscuits.  Also on facebook, What’s Cookin’? Smithtown has a great solution for leftover mashed potatoes that can be frozen in portion controlled servings. 

Turkey Soup with Kale by Chef Alice Waters   Makes 3 quarts

Ingredients

1 roasted turkey carcass
1 bunch  kale, leaves torn from the stems and chopped coarse

For Stock:
1/2 onion, peeled
1/2 carrot, peeled
1/2 stalk celery
6 sprigs thyme
3 sprigs parsley
1 bay leaf
3 quarts water

For Soup:
2 tablespoons olive oil
Add and cook, over medium heat, until very tender:
1 1/2 onions, peeled and diced
1 1/2 carrots, peeled and diced
1 1/2 stalks celery, diced
1 teaspoon salt

Directions

Pick all the meat from 1 roasted turkey carcass
Coarsely chop and set aside. Break up the carcass and put in large stockpot with the Stock Ingredients .

Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, skim well, and cook for 2 hours. Meanwhile, heat,all of the Soup Ingredients in a large soup pot.

Bring a pot of salted water to a boil and add Kale.

Cook until tender, about 5 to 10 minutes. Drain and set aside. Place a colander over the pot of diced vegetables and strain the turkey stock directly into the soup pot. Add the turkey meat and kale, taste for seasoning and serve hot.

Variations:
• Sautéed mushrooms (porcini are my favorite) added just before serving give a luxurious flavor and texture to this humble soup.
• Some of the kale can be sautéed with garlic and hot pepper and floated atop the soup on a slice of toasted bread. 
• Add cooked rice or pasta just before serving.
• Fry a little diced pancetta in the soup pot before adding the diced vegetables

 

 

Thursday
Nov282013

News of Long Ago - "Stanford White's Burial In St. James"

News of Long Ago by Bradley Harris, Smithtown Historian

(I have been writing about the descendants of Judge John Lawrence Smith.  My most recent articles have been about Stanford White, Bessie Smith’s husband, and his affair with Evelyn Nesbit.  Last week’s article was about Evelyn Nesbit’s marriage to Harry Thaw and the events that led up to Stanford White’s murder on June 25, 1906. This article traces the aftermath of Stanford White’s murder.)   

“Stanford White’s burial in St. James….”

When Stanford White was murdered on June 25, 1906, the story made newspaper headlines around the world.  And when it became clear that a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania millionaire named Harry K. Thaw had shot him because, Thaw claimed, White had been responsible for the “ruination” of many young girls, the story became sensational.  The story of the murder became even more sensational when Harry Thaw revealed that his wife Evelyn Nesbit had been one of the young girls that White had seduced.  

There was never any question about Harry Thaw’s guilt, hundreds of people in the Madison Square Garden Casino Theater had witnessed the shooting, had seen Thaw’s arrest, and he gave statements to the press and police indicating that he shot Stanford White because the famous architect “deserved it” for ruining young girls.  Newspapers began calling the murder “The Crime of the Century” and coverage of the murder, the events that led up to it, the lengthy trials that followed with all their revelations, made sure that the murder did indeed become the Trial of the Century.

For Stanford White’s wife and son, his murder and the sensationalism surrounding it became an ordeal that they endured for the rest of their lives.  For Lawrence Grant White, Stanford’s only heir, the ordeal began the night his father was killed.  Lawrence had been with his father earlier in the evening when they had gone to dinner at the Café Martin.  Following their dinner, Lawrence and his Harvard classmate Leroy King had gone off to see a “George M. Cohan revue at the new Amsterdam” Theater.  Stanford White had decided to go watch the closing numbers of the musical “Mamzelle Champagne” that was playing at the Madison Square Garden Casino Theater.  So Lawrence was not with his father when he was shot that night.  Larry had just returned home to “his family’s townhouse on Gramercy Park at East Twenty-first Street,” when “near midnight” he received a phone call from Madison Square Garden” that “informed him of his father’s death.”  He immediately went to the Casino Theater.  (Michael MacDonald Mooney, Evelyn Nesbit and Stanford White, Love and Death in the Gilded Age, William Murrow and Company, Inc., New York, 1976, p. 231.)

Asked to identify his father’s body, Lawrence was escorted to the table where his father had been sitting and was now lying on the floor, “covered with a dressing gown soaked and stiffening with clotted gore.”  Nineteen-year-old Larry must have been “traumatized” by the experience and then mystified when he was asked about Harry Thaw, “a man he had never seen” and never “heard his father speak of.”  Sometime after seeing his father’s “unbearably still body” on the floor, Larry decided to retrieve his father’s electric hansom from his parking garage at Madison Square Garden and proceeded to drive home to Box Hill in St. James.  “He crossed the Brooklyn Bridge, went north to the Jericho Road, then east to Smithtown and to North Country Road.  It was about 2 A.M. when he finally arrived” at Box Hill in St. James.  (Michael MacDonald Mooney, op. cit., p. 231.)

“He roused his mother and told her his father had been shot.”  Bessie Smith White “seemed to take the news calmly.  She did not ask for details.…  His mother lay on her bed, just staring.”  Early “the next morning, Lawrence drove her to the city” and to the house on Gramercy Park.  “By the time they arrived, there were crowds of newspaper reporters waiting” and “they demanded to see the woman ‘Harry Thaw had made a widow.’”  The media circus surrounding the murder had begun.  (Michael MacDonald Mooney, op. cit., p. 231.)

“On Tuesday afternoon Mrs. White announced through” her husband’s partner “Charles McKIm that funeral services would be held on Thursday at Saint Bartholomew’s at Madison and Forty-fourth Street and the Reverend Leighton I. Parks would officiate.”  But on Wednesday, “the family announced that plans had been changed” and the funeral services “would be held at the Episcopal church in St. James, Long Island, where Mrs. White’s family maintained pews.”  And so at 8 a.m. Thursday morning, “a hearse and two carriages drew up to the door” of the Smith family home at Gramercy Park, Stanford White’s casket was loaded into the hearse, and “Mrs. White’s relations” climbed into the carriages.  “Mr. James Clinch Smith, brother of Mrs. White; Charles S. Butler, nephew of Mrs. White; Mr. and Mrs. Connolly, cousins of Mrs. White; Mr. and Mrs. Barent Lefferts, a daughter of Mrs. Kate Wetherill, another sister of Mrs. White” rode in the carriages.  “The hearse and its two carriages were driven to the East Thirty-fourth Street ferry, then passed to the Long Island side, where a special train was waiting. The casket was placed aboard the train in a combination baggage-smoker, banked by floral tributes, and the car occupied by members of the family. Some 200 hundred friends” of the Whites “filled three day coaches, and when steam was up, the train departed Long Island City, at about 9:15 A.M.  Mrs. Stanford White was not aboard because her son Lawrence had driven her from the city by auto to avoid reporters.”  (Michael MacDonald Mooney, op. cit., pp. 233-234.)

The funeral train arrived at the St. James railroad station about 10:30 where it was met by “about fifty people from the village.”  Local Undertaker Clinton Darling “and six assistants lifted the casket from the train to a hearse, and the funeral cortege started for the” St. James Episcopal Church.  At the corner of Lake Avenue and North Country Road, Lawrence White, driving Mrs. White, wheeled the electric hansom into line at the head of the procession.  “Behind them the road was crowded with every kind of conveyance – hackneys and carriages and autos driven up from the summer colonies in Southampton, or Westbury, or Wheatley Hills.” (Michael MacDonald Mooney, op. cit., p. 234.)

In the Episcopal Church “more than two hundred fifty friends were crowded into straight-backed rows, six pressed into pews designed for five.  Flowers hung everywhere –wreaths of roses, orchids, sweet peas, and calla lilies.  They were set against the simple altar and hung along the plain painted walls and were even suspended from the organ loft at the rear.  From the loft a choir of fourteen voices from Saint Bartholomew’s led the hymns. The Reverend Park, assisted by the Reverend Holden, archdeacon of Saint James, read the services of the dead.  There was no sermon or eulogy.” (Michael MacDonald Mooney, op. cit., p. 234.)

Once the simple service was over, “the six undertaker’s men did their part as pallbearers, hoisting the casket to their shoulders, and the procession formed” for the march to the gravesite in the cemetery.  “The march led from the church down a vista shaded on both sides by rows of yew trees.”  The procession stopped at the freshly dug grave which “stood ready to receive the casket.  At Mrs. White’s request there was no pile of earth visible beside the six foot trench.  The gravediggers had carried it away, concealing the earth behind the privet at the graveyard’s edge.  They had placed evergreen boughs over the discolored soil beside the pit.  When the procession had assembled beside the grave, the coffin was let down into its place, ‘Dust to Dust, Ashes to Ashes’ was said, and a few handfuls of dirt were tossed to complete the ceremony.  The choir led the mourners away, singing ‘Abide with me.’”  (Michael MacDonald Mooney, op. cit., pp. 234-235.)

As the mourners departed, “Mrs. White and her son, Lawrence, lingered a while, as did James Breese and Charles McKIm.  They stood near the head of the open grave, beside a stripling Scotch pine that had been planted there.  Then they too turned back toward the church.  Three gravediggers appeared and bent to their spades.  Stanford White was fifty-two.”  (Michael MacDonald Mooney, op. cit., p. 235.)

Stanford White’s life had come to a shocking end.  It would take a long time for the shock and horror that young Lawrence Grant White experienced the night his father was killed to fade into painful suppressed memory.  In an autobiography that Lawrence White wrote for his children in 1932, he made this comment:  “My father’s tragic death at the end of my sophomore year [at Harvard] changed all our plans.”  That is the only reference he made to the tragedy of that night in his autobiography.  Clearly the memories of that night of June 25, 1906 were still painful and still being suppressed 26 years later.  But you will have to wait until next week to find out how Stanford White’s death “changed all our plans.” (Lawrence Grant White, Memoirs of Lawrence Grant White, 1932, Volume I, “Before the War, 1887-1914,” on file in the Long Island Room of the Smithtown Library.)

Wednesday
Nov272013

Smithtown Dish - Small Bites Of Foodie News

Smithtown Dish – small bites of foodie news

By Nancy Vallarella

Whisper Vineyards located at 485 Edgewood Avenue, Saint James will hold a Special Grand Opening on Saturday, November 30. They will be open 7 days a week from 11am – 6pm.

Feasting with Santa:

The Smithtown Children’s Foundation is hosting the 6th Annual Holiday Breakfast & Boutique sponsored by Maureen’s Kitchen on Saturday, December  7, from  9am -  1pm at Great Hollow Middle School, 150 Southern Blvd., Nesconset.  Raffles, boutique, arts & crafts, music, costumed characters, face painting and Santa photo ops.

Sunday, December 15, from 8am – 1pm, the Saint James Fire Department, 533 North Country Road, Saint James will host their annual Breakfast with Santa.  Pancakes, bring camera. Adults $7, Children 12 and under $3.  Fifth member of the family is free.

Brunch with Santa at Mirabelle at Three Village Inn, 150 Main Street, Stony Brook.  Visit with Santa and his elves and enjoy a brunch buffet, children’s buffet and chef’s dessert table and strolling carolers. Reservations are recommended 631-751-0555 – December 8, 14, 15, 21 & 22 from 10:30am – 2:00pm. $32.95 pp. + tax and gratuity. Children 10 and under are half price. 

Monday
Nov252013

Editorial - Say "NO" To Legislator's Double Dipping

It’s against the law. Enough said? 

Obviously not. Suffolk County Executive Bellone knew in advance that Monica Martinez if elected could not maintain two tax-payer funded positions. A law has existed in Suffolk County since 2011 prohibiting elected county officials from doing so. Bellone’s solution to the self-created mess of a newly elected official, holding two positions, is to change the law.

Bad idea on so many levels. 

On November 5th, Monica Martinez won a contested race against Legislator Ricardo Montano in the 9th LD. Martinez is an assistant principal at the East Middle School in Brentwood, a job that includes a salary of $117,000 a year. A legislator’s salary is $98,260. A conservative estimate of the cost of fringe benefits for such positions is roughly 30% and usually more depending on the contract.  This adds another $65,000 to the tax payer burden in the county and school district.  Both positions require a huge commitment of time and energy. Both positions pay a full-time salary with benefits and both positions deserve the full-time focus of the person earning those tax-payer dollars.

County legislators are asked to vote on a myriad of issues that are not directly related to a legislative district and impact all of the residents of Suffolk County. Votes are routinely taken on issues of land preservation, budgets, sewers, parks. taxes etc. These are issues that require and deserve the focus of the $98,260 salaried elected official. 

The argument being made by Bellone, that voters knew in advance of Martinez’s plan to maintain both positions when they elected her, disregards the fact that this is a county law. A Legislator’s salary does not come  exclusively from the people in an elected district. Unless I am mistaken there  is no separate pot for funds that come from a legislator’s district that go into salary and benefits for their representative. Taxes are collected throughout the county.  These are my taxpayer dollars as well as those from all over the county that are paying $98,260 + benefits. I think that all county voters should have a say in how their money is being spent not just the people in the 9th Legislative District. Voters get to elect the person of their choice. They do not get to unilaterally have the law changed to accomodate them.

The county law should remain intact. If amended make it stricter, no one should be double dipping. Ms. Martinez is obviously an intelligent woman and an asset to her school district, but she needs to make her choice: the Suffolk County Legislature or Brentwood School District. 

Republican Legislator Kennedy is out in front on this as is Working Family Kate Browning. It is time for the Democrats to speak up in opposition. Changing the double-dipping law is an awful idea. 

One more thought on the subject - if it is not a full time commitment, why are we paying $98,260 + benefits?

Pat