Written by Dagmar Fors Karppi Friday, 14 September 2012 00:00
Georgia Cagney called to identify the mystery picture in the Sept. 6 issue of the Enterprise Pilot. She said, “It’s the parking lot across the street from the Life Enrichment Center (LEC). It is behind the houses on East Main Street.” When Ms. Cagney, a member of the LEC of Oyster Bay, was told she was correct, she said, “I never get the pictures. I’m so happy.” We’re happy for her. We were concerned that the photo would be too hard to identify.
Billy Minicozzi called and said, “It’s the parking lot behind Nino’s.” On a sports note he said the Jets would be playing Buffalo on Sunday, Sept. 9.
Belle Santora called last week, Aug. 6, after we had gone to press saying, “Good morning, this is Ma Belle calling to identify the picture of the volleyball court at Roosevelt Park. And, a friend and neighbor, Janet Aliparti, also recognized the picture.”
Belle said of the Aug. 16 mystery picture, “I’m only guessing at the picture. I’m pretty sure I could get it if I get in my car and go around. Then I’d find it. But it looks like the parking lot behind and next to the senior center. The front of that (LEC) building faces south.”
Chatting about life in East Norwich, and cooking and stoves, Belle said, “We bought a little Coleman stove and whenever our lights went out my neighbors would come to heat hot water for coffee and soup, and I always had people sitting here and eating.
“In that hurricane in the ’50s, that is what kept us going.”
For many years you could count on the lights going out in East Norwich during a storm. Somehow over the years the trouble spots must have been corrected because — knock on wood — we’ve been pretty lucky recently.
Belle (now 101) had another great story about life in Oyster Bay.
“My husband, even before you needed a license for clamming, got up at 5 a.m. and would come home with a big bushel of clams. And we had them all weekend. We had clams Casino, and baked clams, and clams with pasta with white sauce and red sauce, and then clams with a chili sauce dip. The whole weekend we’d be cooking and eating clams.
“Now you have to pay $5 for a license. That was when the Jakobson Shipyard was there. I have so many memories still with me,” said Belle Santora.
Carmela Baldino called and said, “I do know where the mystery picture was taken, the parking lot behind Nino’s Pizza. Sometimes I go to the senior center and I park there. I was happy to see the picture. I love to see them.” For readers, we want you to know, Ms. Baldino has a beautiful laugh. It was delightful to speak to her.
We received some emails, too.
“It’s the parking lot behind Nino’s Pizza,” said Emma Guevara.
Tony Pilla started with a greeting in his email, “Hope all is well with you. I think the picture this week is a rear view of the buildings along South Street. The picture was taken from the public parking lot to the rear of these buildings.” It is a good guess but we emailed him that he was not quite correct. He answered, “Better to have tried and failed than to have not have tried at all.
“Just kidding. I enjoy the mystery picture feature every week. Keep up the good work,” encouraged Mr. Pilla.
“It’s the alleyway behind Nino’s Pizza! It connects South Street to White Street over by the Life Enrichment Center,” said Christopher Benny.
And, he is correct. And agreeing with Mr. Pilla, the motto of the New York State Lottery is, “You’ve got to be in it to win it.”
That is good life advice.
Keep guessing.
— DFK
Thursday, 16 May 2013 00:00
Dodds and Eder will be hosting a wine and cheese reception on Saturday, May 18 from 5:30 – 7:30 p.m. at their Sag Harbor location to showcase the work of Plein Air Peconic, an artist group dedicated to helping the Peconic Land Trust conserve the natural beauty of the East End. The reception will showcase “At Home in the Natural World” an exhibition and sale of landscape paintings and photographs. The exhibition is on view at Dodds and Eder, which is open Thursday through Monday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Many of the paintings and photographs in the show are larger works composed in the studio from field studies of preserved sites. By painting and photographing images of conserved land and other spaces of the East End, the artists call attention to what has already been accomplished by land conservation and the continuing need to protect these vital resources from unchecked development.
Friday, 17 May 2013 00:00
A large crowd of almost 100 people gathered at 95 Shore Road in Cold Spring Harbor on Saturday, April 27 to celebrate the completion of the environmental clean up at the former Exxon Mobil site. The 8-acre waterfront parcel, where the oil tanks once stood, was donated to the North Shore Land Alliance for conservation purposes.
On a sunny picture-perfect spring afternoon, Land Alliance officers and staff were joined by elected officials, including State Senator Carl Marcellino, Huntington Town Councilmen Mark Cuthbertson and Mark Mayoka, Heather Amster, Region 1, New York Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) and community members to thank ExxonMobil for this valuable gift.
Thursday, 16 May 2013 00:00
According to the Alzheimer’s Foundation of America, more than five million Americans are suffering with Alzheimer’s disease, the sixth leading cause of death in the United States.
Troubled by these statistics and personally affected, Long Islander and NBA draftee Gordon Thomas founded the Alzheimer’s All-Star Basketball Classic Committee, a group of professionals dedicated to raising awareness of Alzheimer’s and dementia.
Thursday, 16 May 2013 00:00
Ronald Caronia, MD, a glaucoma and cataract surgeon and partner of Ophthalmic Consultants of Long Island (OCLI) with Tom Burke, CEO of OCLI, participated in the first annual American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery (ASCRS) Foundation’s “Run for Sight” 5K and 1-mile walk during the ASCRS/ASOA Annual Symposium and Congress in San Francisco. Dr. Caronia hails from Oyster Bay Cove and Mr. Burke is a resident of Islip.
The ASCRS partnered with TearLabs to host this first-ever “Run for Sight” event. It took place on Sunday, April 21 near the beautiful Japanese botanical gardens in Golden Gate Park. The event raised close to $25,000. All proceeds from the race will benefit the ASCRS Foundation’s cataract blindness treatment efforts.
Bluegrass Party at the Manor House
Friday, May 17
Learn Model Railroading
Saturday, May 18
Run for Literacy
Saturday, May 18
OB-EN Budget Vote
Tuesday, May 21
Building Better Legislators
Written by Michael A. Miller, Millercolumn@optimum.net
Quietly Vindicated
Written by Mike Barry, MFBarry@optonline.net
Health Insurance Crisis Still Here
Written by Michael A. Miller, Millercolumn@optimum.net