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‘It’s going to be OK’: Life after losing a parent

‘It’s going to be OK’: Life after losing a parent

Three Long Islanders are carrying on their parents’ legacy with what they left behind.

To remember her mom, she’s tearing up their garden

Kathy Meyers reads a poem written by her mother in their garden.

To remember her mom, she’s tearing up their garden

By Rachel Weiss

Full, fat slugs

advance upon moonlit roses.

Sprinkle salt on them.

It makes them ooze and die.

Morning reveals

greenish blobs on pavement;

remnants of dead destroyers.

My daughter says

she’d rather let them live.

I prefer the roses.

A smile stretched across Kathy Meyers’ face as she read the last line. “The Solution” was written by her late mother, Barbara Reiher-Meyers. She recited it aloud sitting in the garden of her Ronkonkoma home, on a recent September afternoon.

It is in her garden that Meyers has found a space to grieve for her mother, who died in January at 83.

“I was brought home from the hospital to this house,” said Kathy, 55.

Growing up, Kathy was the only girl among five brothers. So when Barbara needed a hand in the garden, she reached for her daughter’s green thumb.

“I used to always go into the front garden and weed it and then I’d go inside and say, ‘Mom, how much will you give me if I weed the front garden?’ ” Kathy remembered.

“She’d be like, ‘I’ll give you $10’ and I’d be like, ‘OK good — because I did it already.’ ”

Kathy Meyers reads her mother’s poetry. (Credit: Shelby Knowles)

Barbara was a mother, a grandmother and a great-grandmother. She was a vibrant gardener, a quick-witted writer, and an avid antique collector. When her health began to fail in 2016, Kathy sold her own house in Ronkonkoma and moved back in to be with her.

Right away, Kathy got back to work on her mother’s garden. They would chat about the possibilities: Turning the entire front yard into an English garden, adding a water feature, creating a pathway. Barbara told her daughter she could do whatever she wanted with it.

Since she died, Kathy has been expanding their garden.

“My coping mechanism is to tear into things,” she said. “So rototilling this yard or just working hard and working up a sweat, it gets out my aggression. And now we can sit here and be in the space that that energy formed.

“It’s all for her, because this is her house. This is her energy that’s making me do this.”

In addition to the potted plants and blooming flowers popping up in the front yard, Kathy created a pathway with a chopped-up tree that her neighbor cut down and added a seating area in the corner with a couple white metal chairs and a little round table, covered by a tablecloth.

Kathy feels connected to her mother through the work she’s doing, and she hopes the revamped garden will soon be filled again with life.

“I’m going to have every plant that I can think of, every plant that I can remember my mother telling me the name of,” she said. “Everything here is something that I know because she taught me.”

Now, budding hibiscus, daylilies and assorted seashells live in the Meyers garden, along with a sign that reads: “If silence is a wall, let words be a wrecking ball.”

Barbara was also beloved in Long Island’s poetry community, her daughter says — she was a wordsmith with an affinity for puns. “If you didn’t have a sense of humor, she was like, ‘You poor, sad person. I feel bad for you.’ ”

Kathy Meyers talks about her mother. (Credit: Shelby Knowles)

Every third Friday of the month, Barbara would emcee poetry readings at The Conklin Farmhouse and Barn in Huntington. The Walt Whitman Birthplace Association named her the Long Island Poet of the Year in 2018 — an honor she accepted before she died — and she often volunteered at its historical site. She was also a board member of the Long Island Poetry Collective and coordinated events for Northport Arts Coalition and Smithtown Township Arts Council.

Her 2004 book, “Sounds Familiar,” is a collection of mostly short poems, some inspired by her surroundings. There are a couple that refer to Lake Ronkonkoma, and one called “Sunrise Highway at Night.”

Like a white-knuckled flyer

my hands grip the wheel.

Something gleaming from the woods

too fleeting to be named;

Those tiny plastic whistles

on the bumper of my Buick

will surely protect me

from the flash and crash

of meat that            leaps across

blackness of highway.

I pray that if a deer

flies to wreck a hood,

that it will not be mine.

Kathy has been making appearances all over Long Island in her mother’s place, including at the United Methodist Church auction in Lake Ronkonkoma. “She was their best customer, and I knew she was missed,” Kathy said. She also organized a memorial for her mother at the Sachem Public Library, where family and friends gathered to read Barbara’s work.

Kathy hopes that her community will also follow her into the garden, either to pick up a shovel and getting to work, or to hang out.

“All of these things I do because other people need me to, but I need to say, ‘This is how I can have her stay alive and share her with everyone,’ ” Kathy said. “I hope I come home and find people sitting here. I hope I come home and find a plant from someone.”

When she first started working on the garden, Kathy began in the area right outside her mother’s bedroom window. She realizes now that this may have been intentional.

“I feel like maybe consciously and unconsciously, I finished this area first because this is what she would see if she was in her bed,” she said. “She’d see this garden. She wouldn’t see all the ripped up parts, she’d see what I’m doing and she would like it.

“I feel her watching me doing it and saying, ‘OK, I did tell you you could do whatever you wanted.’ ”

You used to hear his voice on WALK-FM.
His son still hears it all the time.

Josh Shnayer remembers his dad by the sound of his voice.

You used to hear his voice on WALK-FM. His son still hears it all the time.

By Rachel Weiss

Josh Shnayer did not want to get into his dad’s car.

It was November 2007 and his dad, Dave Shnayer, had died a few weeks earlier after a three-year battle with non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. He was 49. Josh was 22, home from his last semester of college. It was around Thanksgiving — and just he and his mom were in their Island Park home.

He knew he couldn’t put it off any longer. “I got a car that’s practically brand new that dad had; I can drive his car,” he remembers thinking to himself. “It’s nicer than mine anyway.”

Josh started up the silver Volkswagen Jetta for a quick drive to his girlfriend’s house and noticed there was a CD in the player.

He turned up the volume, and there it was: his dad’s voice.

“It’s JD Howard, good morning,” the cheery yet cool voice says over the beginning of Marc Anthony’s 1999 hit “I Need To Know.” “Hello to the girls soccer team from Sachem East High School, washing cars at the Friday’s on North Ocean Avenue in Holtsville. Great day to get your car washed. Hey girls, I think you missed a spot!”

Dave Shnayer was known across Long Island as JD Howard — J for Josh, D for Dave, and his own middle name, Howard. Listeners could tune in every weekend to hear him on WALK-FM 97.5, where he lived out his dream of being a disc jockey. The CD contained some of Dave’s on-air highlights: bits of news, the weather, and chatter before and after hit songs from yesterday and today.

An excerpt of Dave Shnayer working as a DJ on WALK-FM. (Audio credit: Connoisseur Media; Photo credit: Danielle Silverman; Video credit: Shelby Knowles)

As Josh listened to his dad’s upbeat voice, he sped through a range of emotions. “I made it to the corner before I had to pull over and compose myself,” he said.

“I was almost mad at him, you know? I got mad. I’m like, ‘Why the hell — you know where you are right now, you leave that in the car planned?’ ”

But then he thought to himself, “Shut up, you idiot. Stop it.”

Josh, now 34 and living in Westbury, no longer believes his dad left the CD for him to find on purpose. “But if it was unintentionally or subconscious, maybe that was his way of saying, ‘I’m here, it’s OK.’ ”

He continued to listen to that CD “over and over on a loop” for the next few months, every time he drove his dad’s car. He says it helped him grieve.

Eventually, Josh traded in the Jetta for a five-speed stick shift. He had never driven a stick shift before, but was “adamant” about the purchase because he liked the car.

Josh momentarily regretted it on one sticky summer day while trying to get the car over a steep hill. He estimates that he stalled out eight or nine times.

“People were blaring their horns at me, and I’m losing my mind and I’m flustered,” he said. “I think I said at the time, ‘I should’ve kept dad’s car. I don’t know what the hell I was thinking.’ And I started reminiscing and thinking about the past, and then I played the CD. I remember listening to that to calm me down.”

There was a distinct difference between Dave’s “radio voice” and his “dad voice,” his son says. Josh can still hear the latter in his head: His dad’s soothing reassurances in the hospital when he broke his finger as a kid. “Listen to my voice. It’s going to be OK.” His contagious belly laugh that echoed through the house while he watched “The West Wing.” The way he scolded him when he cut corners, and his thoughtful fatherly advice.

Working in radio was always Dave’s ultimate goal. Over the years he lent his friendly voice to WALK-FM, B103 and Fresh 102.7. He was also a salesman for Skyline Displays, a Little League and college baseball umpire and a multi-sport athlete.

“I think he achieved everything he wanted to achieve in his life,” Josh said. “He had no regrets for anything, other than maybe being a Mets/Jets/Islanders fan.”

Josh and his dad always bonded over sports, whether they were discussing the draft, playing catch or hitting the links. Dave got his son into baseball early on, and Josh got his dad into golf.

Josh first took an interest in golf after finding some old clubs at his grandparents’ home. His dad signed him up for a golf camp and, eventually, he started taking lessons, too. Josh thinks as his dad got sick, he knew he wouldn’t be able to throw a baseball back and forth, so golf became their new game.

“We played golf regularly when I was in my late teens and early 20s before he got too sick to play,” Josh said. “And it became something that we would do together.”

When Dave died, per Jewish tradition family and friends helped bury him by taking turns shoveling soil onto the casket. Josh threw in some golf balls, “so that no matter where he was, he’d never lose those golf balls. As many as he’s lost, now he’s got a couple with him.”

And when Josh and his mother visit his grave in Lindenhurst, he always puts a golf tee in the ground next to the footstone.

Josh doesn’t consider himself spiritual. But his dad exists vividly in his memories — in an instant, he can be transported back in time to WALK-FM’s old studio in Patchogue.

“I would go down there on the weekends and they’d set me up in a conference room,” he said with a grin. “I’d have Disney movies, I’d have lunch from the deli and I’d watch afternoon hockey on FOX.”

And just down the hall, his dad would be accompanying Long Islanders on their afternoon drives, their weekend shifts, or their days at the beach. Like those listeners, Josh will always remember his dad by the sound of his voice.

“He touched a lot of people. In different little areas, he made his mark. I know in particular with radio, that attached to me because that’s what helped with my grieving process: listening to him.”

Her parents died unexpectedly.
Now she’s sending ‘blessings’ their way.

Winy Haryanto remembers her parents by memorizing the Quran and doing good deeds.

Her parents died unexpectedly. Now she’s sending ‘blessings’ their way.

By Rachel Weiss

Winy Haryanto lost both of her parents unexpectedly in 2008. They died on the same day — her mother, Enny, 58, had a stroke and went into a coma, and her father Haryanto, 63, had a heart attack. Winy wasn’t there when it happened and missed the funerals — according to Muslim tradition burials take place within 24 hours, and she was home in Valley Stream.

“In our faith, when you die, your deeds are not cut off,” said Winy, 42. “If you have a child who keeps praying for you, if you did charity in your life that people still benefit from, then you still get the blessings from it even after you die.”

“I wanted to do something huge.”

Winy decided she would memorize the entire Quran — more than 6,000 verses of Arabic text. She’s been taking lessons on and off for nine years, but started working at a consistent pace recently with a new teacher.

Muslims who memorize the Quran are called Hafiz or Hafiza, which translates to “guardian.” It’s believed that Quran reciters receive rewards and blessings for themselves and loved ones in the afterlife for this accomplishment.

“It’s very hard, but I found a teacher who is willing to go very slowly with me,” Winy said.

She practices three or four times a week, for one hour each day, and her teacher works with her over the phone. “When you want something bad enough and you try to find a way, I guess you’ll find something.”

Learning to listen

Growing up, Winy and her mother used to argue about clothes all the time. Winy’s favorite outfit consisted of a baggy T-shirt and tight jeans, much to mom’s disapproval.

Winy Haryanto talks about her mother. (Credit: Shelby Knowles)

“You know, like MC Hammer, that type of shirt,” Winy said with a laugh. “I didn’t like MC Hammer, I’m just saying, that’s how everybody dressed.”

Years later when Winy visited her mother back home in Indonesia, Enny gave her a red blouse with tiny floral stitching and a scarf to match.

“I hate red,” Winy said. “Not as a color, but I wouldn’t wear red. And I looked at it and I thought, ‘Oh my God, I’m 30 and we’re still talking about clothes.’

“I didn’t make a fuss. I just took it and I wore it.”

Winy and her mother spent the day visiting relatives. “At the end of the day, I literally had a headache. Maybe I was tense that it was on me and I don’t like it, I don’t know,” said Winy.

“At some point my mom turned to me — we were in the car — and she said, ‘Wow, you listen to me now.’”

After her mom died, Winy was going through her belongings and came across a business proposal. It caught her eye because of how formal it appeared. She figured out that it was typed up by a restaurant server Enny met, and it detailed his plan for a small business he wanted to start, including the merchandise he would sell and the amount of money needed to get going.

Winy laughs while imagining her mother dining out and having an in-depth conversation with her server, eventually telling him to “write something up” for her.

“She’s that kind of person who would just talk to anyone, and her demeanor is very open and people would just open up to her. When I saw that, I broke down because it was just this random thing.”

At her memorial, Winy said she was approached by two women she had never met, both widows, who said Enny helped them through difficult times.

“I mean, I’ve always known that she was really generous. But that was kind of surprising for me I guess,” she said.

Now, Winy contributes to crowdsourcing campaigns on Facebook whenever she can, and does good deeds for those in need, particularly single mothers and divorced women. She is also a part of a homeschool co-op, which includes her children, and they often band together to help each other.

“We heard about this lady, she had six boys and her husband just died and we made a care package for her,” Winy said. “I painted on this mug and just had some words of support for her and we raised some money and gave gifts to her boys.”

‘Work on your heart’

Winy’s father was a diplomat working for the Indonesian government, so growing up, she lived in various places, from Italy to Suriname to Malaysia. She got more in touch with her Muslim roots when she came to the United States to obtain her master’s degree in agricultural economics at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville.

She told her father, Haryanto, she wanted to start wearing the hijab. (Many Indonesians use only one name, and oftentimes a father’s first name also becomes the family surname.)

Winy says she had never really talked about whether she should wear the hijab with her parents before. She said her father was always “very devout and spiritual,” but “I had a very liberal upbringing, because of his personality,” she said. “He was kind of conservative for himself, but he wanted [my brother and me] to find our own way.”

When Winy put on the hijab for the first time, she said she “couldn’t step out the door.” She didn’t understand why she felt that way, so she called her dad and tried to talk it out with him.

“I thought, ‘Something’s wrong with me,’” she said. “Why can’t I wear this when I want to? Before this, I didn’t want to. Now I want to, but why can’t I do it? And I called him and I cried.”

Winy remembers her dad telling her three things: spend extra time praying, don’t get angry and “don’t let your thoughts be empty” when you could be thinking of God.

“And that’s all he said. I was like, OK, well I’m talking about hijab. He’s not talking about that at all.”

But she took all of his advice, and after a month, she began to wear hijab regularly.

“Looking back, I understand that he was trying to say, ‘You have the will to do it, but now you have to work on your heart.’”

Through the generations

Winy now goes to Masjid Hamza in Valley Stream with her husband and their three children. She admits she envisioned herself being “a bit stricter” with her children than her own father, but has come to understand his parenting method.

“We’ll pray together but as my kids have grown older — my oldest one is 13 now — I realized that our kids, they’re not something that you mold. They’re their own people,” she said. “And now I realize that my dad was right. That you can’t just force things into them.”

When Winy was considering wearing the hijab, she remembers something her father said in passing: “If you do it, maybe your mom will follow.” Winy laughed and said, “So you do want me to wear it!” though he never explicitly said it.

He was right, though — Enny began wearing the hijab after her daughter did.

Looking back on her visit a decade ago to see her mother, Winy is glad she didn’t protest wearing that scarf and blouse, although she didn’t like to wear red. That was her last time in Indonesia with her mother.

“She passed away a year after,” Winy said. “And I thought, ‘Thank God I didn’t say anything. I didn’t make a fuss.’ Because if that was my last visit and I argued about color, I would have regretted it.”

Holding the blouse, she said, “I don’t wear it, but I still keep it.”

‘It’s going to be OK’: Life after losing a parent

To gain the strength to move forward after their parents died, these Long Islanders found comfort in the things they left behind.

To remember her mom, she’s tearing up their garden

By Rachel Weiss

Full, fat slugs

advance upon moonlit roses.

Sprinkle salt on them.

It makes them ooze and die.

Morning reveals

greenish blobs on pavement;

remnants of dead destroyers.

My daughter says

she’d rather let them live.

I prefer the roses.

A smile stretched across Kathy Meyers’ face as she read the last line. “The Solution” was written by her late mother, Barbara Reiher-Meyers. She recited it aloud sitting in the garden of her Ronkonkoma home, on a recent September afternoon.

It is in her garden that Meyers has found a space to grieve for her mother, who died in January at 83.

“I was brought home from the hospital to this house,” said Kathy, 55.

Growing up, Kathy was the only girl among five brothers. So when Barbara needed a hand in the garden, she reached for her daughter’s green thumb.

“I used to always go into the front garden and weed it and then I’d go inside and say, ‘Mom, how much will you give me if I weed the front garden?’ ” Kathy remembered.

“She’d be like, ‘I’ll give you $10’ and I’d be like, ‘OK good — because I did it already.’ ”

Kathy Meyers reads her mother’s poetry. (Credit: Shelby Knowles)

Barbara was a mother, a grandmother and a great-grandmother. She was a vibrant gardener, a quick-witted writer, and an avid antique collector. When her health began to fail in 2016, Kathy sold her own house in Ronkonkoma and moved back in to be with her.

Right away, Kathy got back to work on her mother’s garden. They would chat about the possibilities: Turning the entire front yard into an English garden, adding a water feature, creating a pathway. Barbara told her daughter she could do whatever she wanted with it.

Since she died, Kathy has been expanding their garden.

“My coping mechanism is to tear into things,” she said. “So rototilling this yard or just working hard and working up a sweat, it gets out my aggression. And now we can sit here and be in the space that that energy formed.

“It’s all for her, because this is her house. This is her energy that’s making me do this.”

In addition to the potted plants and blooming flowers popping up in the front yard, Kathy created a pathway with a chopped-up tree that her neighbor cut down and added a seating area in the corner with a couple white metal chairs and a little round table, covered by a tablecloth.

Kathy feels connected to her mother through the work she’s doing, and she hopes the revamped garden will soon be filled again with life.

“I’m going to have every plant that I can think of, every plant that I can remember my mother telling me the name of,” she said. “Everything here is something that I know because she taught me.”

Now, budding hibiscus, daylilies and assorted seashells live in the Meyers garden, along with a sign that reads: “If silence is a wall, let words be a wrecking ball.”

Barbara was also beloved in Long Island’s poetry community, her daughter says — she was a wordsmith with an affinity for puns. “If you didn’t have a sense of humor, she was like, ‘You poor, sad person. I feel bad for you.’ ”

Kathy Meyers talks about her mother. (Credit: Shelby Knowles)

Every third Friday of the month, Barbara would emcee poetry readings at The Conklin Farmhouse and Barn in Huntington. The Walt Whitman Birthplace Association named her the Long Island Poet of the Year in 2018 — an honor she accepted before she died — and she often volunteered at its historical site. She was also a board member of the Long Island Poetry Collective and coordinated events for Northport Arts Coalition and Smithtown Township Arts Council.

Her 2004 book, “Sounds Familiar,” is a collection of mostly short poems, some inspired by her surroundings. There are a couple that refer to Lake Ronkonkoma, and one called “Sunrise Highway at Night.”

Like a white-knuckled flyer

my hands grip the wheel.

Something gleaming from the woods

too fleeting to be named;

Those tiny plastic whistles

on the bumper of my Buick

will surely protect me

from the flash and crash

of meat that            leaps across

blackness of highway.

I pray that if a deer

flies to wreck a hood,

that it will not be mine.

Kathy has been making appearances all over Long Island in her mother’s place, including at the United Methodist Church auction in Lake Ronkonkoma. “She was their best customer, and I knew she was missed,” Kathy said. She also organized a memorial for her mother at the Sachem Public Library, where family and friends gathered to read Barbara’s work.

Kathy hopes that her community will also follow her into the garden, either to pick up a shovel and getting to work, or to hang out.

“All of these things I do because other people need me to, but I need to say, ‘This is how I can have her stay alive and share her with everyone,’ ” Kathy said. “I hope I come home and find people sitting here. I hope I come home and find a plant from someone.”

When she first started working on the garden, Kathy began in the area right outside her mother’s bedroom window. She realizes now that this may have been intentional.

“I feel like maybe consciously and unconsciously, I finished this area first because this is what she would see if she was in her bed,” she said. “She’d see this garden. She wouldn’t see all the ripped up parts, she’d see what I’m doing and she would like it.

“I feel her watching me doing it and saying, ‘OK, I did tell you you could do whatever you wanted.’ ”

You used to hear his voice on WALK. His son still hears it all the time.

Josh Shnayer did not want to get into his dad’s car.

It was November 2007 and his dad, Dave Shnayer, had died a few weeks earlier after a three-year battle with non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. He was 49. Josh was 22, home from his last semester of college. It was around Thanksgiving — and just he and his mom were in their Island Park home.

He knew he couldn’t put it off any longer. “I got a car that’s practically brand new that dad had; I can drive his car,” he remembers thinking to himself. “It’s nicer than mine anyway.”

Josh started up the silver Volkswagen Jetta for a quick drive to his girlfriend’s house and noticed there was a CD in the player.

He turned up the volume, and there it was: his dad’s voice.

“It’s JD Howard, good morning,” the cheery yet cool voice says over the beginning of Marc Anthony’s 1999 hit “I Need To Know.” “Hello to the girls soccer team from Sachem East High School, washing cars at the Friday’s on North Ocean Avenue in Holtsville. Great day to get your car washed. Hey girls, I think you missed a spot!”

Dave Shnayer was known across Long Island as JD Howard — J for Josh, D for Dave, and his own middle name, Howard. Listeners could tune in every weekend to hear him on WALK FM 97.5, where he lived out his dream of being a disc jockey. The CD contained some of Dave’s on-air highlights: bits of news, the weather, and chatter before and after hit songs from yesterday and today.

An excerpt of Dave Shnayer working as a DJ on WALK-FM. (Audio credit: Connoisseur Media; Photo credit: Danielle Silverman; Video credit: Shelby Knowles)

As Josh listened to his dad’s upbeat voice, he sped through a range of emotions. “I made it to the corner before I had to pull over and compose myself,” he said.

“I was almost mad at him, you know? I got mad. I’m like, ‘Why the hell — you know where you are right now, you leave that in the car planned?’ ”

But then he thought to himself, “Shut up, you idiot. Stop it.”

Josh, now 34 and living in Westbury, no longer believes his dad left the CD for him to find on purpose. “But if it was unintentionally or subconscious, maybe that was his way of saying, ‘I’m here, it’s OK.’ ”

He continued to listen to that CD “over and over on a loop” for the next few months, every time he drove his dad’s car. He says it helped him grieve.

Eventually, Josh traded in the Jetta for a five-speed stick shift. He had never driven a stick shift before, but was “adamant” about the purchase because he liked the car.

Josh momentarily regretted it on one sticky summer day while trying to get the car over a steep hill. He estimates that he stalled out eight or nine times.

“People were blaring their horns at me, and I’m losing my mind and I’m flustered,” he said. “I think I said at the time, ‘I should’ve kept dad’s car. I don’t know what the hell I was thinking.’ And I started reminiscing and thinking about the past, and then I played the CD. I remember listening to that to calm me down.”

There was a distinct difference between Dave’s “radio voice” and his “dad voice,” his son says. Josh can still hear the latter in his head: His dad’s soothing reassurances in the hospital when he broke his finger as a kid. “Listen to my voice. It’s going to be OK.” His contagious belly laugh that echoed through the house while he watched “The West Wing.” The way he scolded him when he cut corners, and his thoughtful fatherly advice.

Working in radio was always Dave’s ultimate goal. Over the years he lent his friendly voice to WALK-FM, B103 and Fresh 102.7. He was also a salesman for Skyline Displays, a Little League and college baseball umpire and a multi-sport athlete.

“I think he achieved everything he wanted to achieve in his life,” Josh said. “He had no regrets for anything, other than maybe being a Mets/Jets/Islanders fan.”

Josh and his dad always bonded over sports, whether they were discussing the draft, playing catch or hitting the links. Dave got his son into baseball early on, and Josh got his dad into golf.

Josh first took an interest in golf after finding some old clubs at his grandparents’ home. His dad signed him up for a golf camp and, eventually, he started taking lessons, too. Josh thinks as his dad got sick, he knew he wouldn’t be able to throw a baseball back and forth, so golf became their new game.

“We played golf regularly when I was in my late teens and early 20s before he got too sick to play,” Josh said. “And it became something that we would do together.”

When Dave died, per Jewish tradition family and friends helped bury him by taking turns shoveling soil onto the casket. Josh threw in some golf balls, “so that no matter where he was, he’d never lose those golf balls. As many as he’s lost, now he’s got a couple with him.”

And when Josh and his mother visit his grave in Lindenhurst, he always puts a golf tee in the ground next to the footstone.

Josh doesn’t consider himself spiritual. But his dad exists vividly in his memories — in an instant, he can be transported back in time to WALK’s old studio in Patchogue.

“I would go down there on the weekends and they’d set me up in a conference room,” he said with a grin. “I’d have Disney movies, I’d have lunch from the deli and I’d watch afternoon hockey on FOX.”

And just down the hall, his dad would be accompanying Long Islanders on their afternoon drives, their weekend shifts, or their days at the beach. Like those listeners, Josh will always remember his dad by the sound of his voice.

“He touched a lot of people. In different little areas, he made his mark. I know in particular with radio, that attached to me because that’s what helped with my grieving process: listening to him.”

Her parents died unexpectedly. Now she’s sending “blessings” their way.

Winy Haryanto lost both of her parents unexpectedly in 2008. They died on the same day — her mother, Enny, 58, had a stroke and went into a coma, and her father Haryanto, 63, had a heart attack. Winy wasn’t there when it happened and missed the funerals — according to Muslim tradition burials take place within 24 hours, and she was home in Valley Stream.

“In our faith, when you die, your deeds are not cut off,” said Winy, 42. “If you have a child who keeps praying for you, if you did charity in your life that people still benefit from, then you still get the blessings from it even after you die.”

“I wanted to do something huge.”

Winy decided she would memorize the entire Quran — more than 6,000 verses of Arabic text. She’s been taking lessons on and off for nine years, but started working at a consistent pace recently with a new teacher.

Muslims who memorize the Quran are called Hafiz or Hafiza, which translates to “guardian.” It’s believed that Quran reciters receive rewards and blessings for themselves and loved ones in the afterlife for this accomplishment.

“It’s very hard, but I found a teacher who is willing to go very slowly with me,” Winy said.

She practices three or four times a week, for one hour each day, and her teacher works with her over the phone. “When you want something bad enough and you try to find a way, I guess you’ll find something.”

Growing up, Winy and her mother used to argue about clothes all the time. Winy’s favorite outfit consisted of a baggy T-shirt and tight jeans, much to mom’s disapproval.

Winy Haryanto talks about her mother. (Credit: Shelby Knowles)

“You know, like MC Hammer, that type of shirt,” Winy said with a laugh. “I didn’t like MC Hammer, I’m just saying, that’s how everybody dressed.”

Years later when Winy visited her mother back home in Indonesia, Enny gave her a red blouse with tiny floral stitching and a scarf to match.

“I hate red,” Winy said. “Not as a color, but I wouldn’t wear red. And I looked at it and I thought, ‘Oh my God, I’m 30 and we’re still talking about clothes.’

“I didn’t make a fuss. I just took it and I wore it.”

Winy and her mother spent the day visiting relatives. “At the end of the day, I literally had a headache. Maybe I was tense that it was on me and I don’t like it, I don’t know,” said Winy.

“At some point my mom turned to me — we were in the car — and she said, ‘Wow, you listen to me now.’”

After her mom died, Winy was going through her belongings and came across a business proposal. It caught her eye because of how formal it appeared. She figured out that it was typed up by a restaurant server Enny met, and it detailed his plan for a small business he wanted to start, including the merchandise he would sell and the amount of money needed to get going.

Winy laughs while imagining her mother dining out and having an in-depth conversation with her server, eventually telling him to “write something up” for her.

“She’s that kind of person who would just talk to anyone, and her demeanor is very open and people would just open up to her. When I saw that, I broke down because it was just this random thing.”

At her memorial, Winy said she was approached by two women she had never met, both widows, who said Enny helped them through difficult times.

“I mean, I’ve always known that she was really generous. But that was kind of surprising for me I guess,” she said.

Now, Winy contributes to crowdsourcing campaigns on Facebook whenever she can, and does good deeds for those in need, particularly single mothers and divorced women. She is also a part of a homeschool co-op, which includes her children, and they often band together to help each other.

“We heard about this lady, she had six boys and her husband just died and we made a care package for her,” Winy said. “I painted on this mug and just had some words of support for her and we raised some money and gave gifts to her boys.”

‘Work on your heart’

Winy’s father was a diplomat working for the Indonesian government, so growing up, she lived in various places, from Italy to Suriname to Malaysia. She got more in touch with her Muslim roots when she came to the United States to obtain her master’s degree in agricultural economics at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville.

She told her father, Haryanto, she wanted to start wearing the hijab. (Many Indonesians use only one name, and oftentimes a father’s first name also becomes the family surname.)

Winy says she had never really talked about whether she should wear the hijab with her parents before. She said her father was always “very devout and spiritual,” but “I had a very liberal upbringing, because of his personality,” she said. “He was kind of conservative for himself, but he wanted [my brother and me] to find our own way.”

When Winy put on the hijab for the first time, she said she “couldn’t step out the door.” She didn’t understand why she felt that way, so she called her dad and tried to talk it out with him.

“I thought, ‘Something’s wrong with me,’” she said. “Why can’t I wear this when I want to? Before this, I didn’t want to. Now I want to, but why can’t I do it? And I called him and I cried.”

Winy remembers her dad telling her three things: spend extra time praying, don’t get angry and “don’t let your thoughts be empty” when you could be thinking of God.

“And that’s all he said. I was like, OK, well I’m talking about hijab. He’s not talking about that at all.”

But she took all of his advice, and after a month, she began to wear hijab regularly.

“Looking back, I understand that he was trying to say, ‘You have the will to do it, but now you have to work on your heart.’”

Through the generations

Winy now goes to Masjid Hamza in Valley Stream with her husband and their three children. She admits she envisioned herself being “a bit stricter” with her children than her own father, but has come to understand his parenting method.

“We’ll pray together but as my kids have grown older — my oldest one is 13 now — I realized that our kids, they’re not something that you mold. They’re their own people,” she said. “And now I realize that my dad was right. That you can’t just force things into them.”

When Winy was considering wearing the hijab, she remembers something her father said in passing: “If you do it, maybe your mom will follow.” Winy laughed and said, “So you do want me to wear it!” though he never explicitly said it.

He was right, though — Enny began wearing the hijab after her daughter did.

Looking back on her visit a decade ago to see her mother, Winy is glad she didn’t protest wearing that scarf and blouse, although she didn’t like to wear red. That was her last time in Indonesia with her mother.

“She passed away a year after,” Winy said. “And I thought, ‘Thank God I didn’t say anything. I didn’t make a fuss.’ Because if that was my last visit and I argued about color, I would have regretted it.”

Holding the blouse, she said, “I don’t wear it, but I still keep it.”

Share your own memories of losing a loved one and how you keep their legacy alive.

Stories by Rachel Weiss

Video by Shelby Knowles

Photos by Shelby Knowles and Danielle Silverman

Produced by Anahita Pardiwalla and Heather Doyle

Design by Mitchel Severe

The Politics of Corruption: Frederick Ippolito

Ex-Oyster Bay Town Commissioner Frederick Ippolito

Frederick Ippolito

Federal charges: Attempt to evade or defeat tax (federal)

State charges: Money laundering; defrauding the government; official misconduct; bribe receiving; receiving reward for official misconduct; theft of services.

Frederick Ippolito, an Oyster Bay town official, pleaded guilty in January 2016 to a federal tax evasion charge in connection with $2 million in outside consulting fees he received while working as the town’s planning and development commissioner. He resigned two days after his plea. He was sentenced in September 2016 to 27 months in prison and ordered to pay $550,000 in restitution. Ippolito died in prison in June 2017. On Dec. 12, 2017, a federal appellate court vacated the conviction because he died while appealing his conviction. In June 2017, Ippolito was charged by Nassau County prosecutors; a judge ended that case in September 2017.

The latest on the Ippolito case

Dec. 12, 2017: Appeals court vacates Frederick Ippolito conviction, citing death Nov. 28, 2017: Oyster Bay Town seeks buyer for property in alleged bribery scheme Sept. 27, 2017: Judge abates corruption charges against the late Fred Ippolito Sept. 2, 2017: Oyster Bay ex-commissioner still influenced town, affidavit says July 12, 2017: Oyster Bay announces changes after corruption indictments July 6, 2017: Nassau to stop awarding contracts to indicted Old Bethpage firm July 1, 2017: Brown: Nassau district attorney steps into corruption fight June 29, 2017: Editorial: Public’s trust betrayed in Oyster Bay June 29, 2017: Ex-Oyster Bay supervisor Venditto, others charged with corruption June 29, 2017: Oyster Bay corruption indictments add to federal tax case June 27, 2017: Sources: Several indicted in Oyster Bay corruption probe June 5, 2017: Frederick Ippolito, ex-Oyster Bay official, dies, attorney says April 30, 2017: GOP bill would ban public corruption felons from county office March 6, 2017: Brown: The horse often escapes the ethics barn on LI Feb 22, 2017: Nassau DA wiretapped 3 former Oyster Bay officials, sources say Feb. 10, 2017: Nassau grand jury probing Oyster Bay corruption, sources say Jan. 4, 2017: Town of Oyster Bay faces a rough road to honest government Nov. 18, 2016: Ippolito reports to federal prison, official says Nov. 15, 2016: Ippolito ordered to prison after panel’s bail bid denial Nov. 8, 2016: Appeals panel suspends start of prison term for Ippolito Oct. 27, 2016: Ippolito prison sentence delayed by appeals judge Sept. 29, 2016: Ippolito reports to federal prison, official says Sept. 29, 2016: Frederick Ippolito, ex-Oyster Bay commish, sentenced to 27 months Sept. 29, 2016: Brown: Federal judge reveals what Oyster Bay officials haven’t Aug. 14, 2016: Oyster Bay’s Ippolito got $2M from developer, documents show July 11, 2016: Judge orders Oyster Bay to release documents to Newsday April 19, 2016: Oyster Bay has no plans to replace Frederick Ippolito January 28, 2016: Frederick Ippolito vacated post, Nassau DA Madeline Singas says Jan. 27, 2016: Brown: Why is Ippolito still on Oyster Bay payroll? Jan. 26, 2016: Oyster Bay’s Frederick Ippolito pleads guilty to tax evasion Aug. 9, 2015: Prominent restaurateur and government contractor arranged, paid for trips for Nassau Exec Edward Mangano, other officials, investigation finds Oct. 30, 2015: Newsday reporter seeking Oyster Bay public records escorted out by cop Aug. 25, 2015: Editorial: Oyster Bay leaders strain public trust July 14, 2015: Frederick Ippolito named in $146,130 warrant for back taxes May 18, 2015: Frederick Ippolito, Oyster Bay official facing tax evasion charges, returns to work April 29, 2015: Oyster Bay ethics board to investigate complaint against Frederick Ippolito April 18, 2015: Firm, big political donor, got $100M in work April 10, 2015: Frederick Ippolito takes indefinite leave from town post March 24, 2015: Oyster Bay residents call for town action on indicted commissioner March 23, 2015: Brown: Frederick Ippolito tax-evasion case raises conflict of interest questions March 20, 2015: Oyster Bay Commissioner Frederick Ippolito indicted on income tax evasion charges March 9, 2014: Oyster Bay denies allegations made in suit over restaurant
Other LI officials charged with abuse of power

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The Politics of Corruption: Edward Walsh

Ex-Suffolk County Conservative Party Leader Edward Walsh

Edward Walsh

Convicted of: Converts to own use property of another; fraud by wire, radio or television

Edward Walsh, then a lieutenant in the county sheriff’s office, golfed, gambled and politicked on the county’s dime, federal prosecutors said, while at the helm of Suffolk County’s Conservative Party. Walsh pleaded not guilty in March 2015 but was convicted in March 2016 for illegally collecting more than $200,000 in pay and overtime pay he didn’t earn. His conviction sparked a battle over leadership within the party he once led. In June 2017, Walsh was sentenced to 2 years in prison and was ordered to make $245,811.21 in restitution and forfeit an additional $245,811.21.

The latest on the Walsh case

July 12, 2019: Ex-Conservative Party chief finishes prison sentence May 3, 2019: Edward Walsh released from prison, record shows Sept. 25, 2018: Appeals court denies bail for ex-party chief Edward Walsh March 3, 2018: Editorial: Break up the game among Long Island political insiders Jan. 17, 2018: Ruling: Suffolk party illegally filled positions Oct. 18, 2017: Edward Walsh, ex-Suffolk party leader, surrenders to prison officials Sept. 13, 2017: Editorial: Race for sheriff a fight for decency in Suffolk politics Aug. 29, 2017: Edward Walsh denied bid for new trial, ordered to prison Aug. 21, 2017: Edward Walsh prison surrender delayed by federal judge June 21, 2017: Brown: Politics intrude on Walsh sentencing June 21, 2017: Brown: Politics intrude on Walsh sentencing June 20, 2017: Edward Walsh sentenced to 2 years in prison, ordered to make restitution June 1, 2017: Federal judge rules Ed Walsh doesn’t face increased sentence May 22, 2017: Edward Walsh hearing postponed from Monday, now set for June 1 April 28, 2017: Judge delays Conservative Party leader Edward Walsh’s sentencing April 24, 2017: Defense seeks to delay Walsh sentencing after new accusations Feb. 2, 2017: Ed Walsh wire fraud sentencing postponed until April Nov. 9, 2016: Judge denies request to overturn Edward Walsh fraud conviction Oct. 23, 2016: 2 Suffolk judges recuse themselves in Conservative Party fight Oct. 10, 2016: Faction sues over Suffolk Conservative party chairman election July 31, 2016: Walsh, ex-Suffolk Conservative chairman, to return $16.5G May 16, 2016: Edward Walsh fails to qualify for immediate pension April 2, 2016: Edward Walsh case jurors say no to government corruption April 2, 2016: Edward Walsh’s conviction raises questions about benefits March 31, 2016: Edward Walsh convicted on all counts in federal court March 31, 2016: Edward Walsh conviction sparks Conservative leadership fight March 30, 2016: Judge denies defense motion to find Ed Walsh not guilty March 30, 2016: Edward Walsh’s abuse victim criticizes party boss Jan. 8, 2015: Conservative Party head Edward Walsh golfed, gambled on government time, say prosecutors Jan. 7, 2015: Walsh seen as ‘bully’ as he ascended to party leadership spot Jan. 6, 2015: Conservative Party chief Edward Walsh to be charged with salary fraud, sources say Oct. 8, 2014: Editorial: Look deep into corrosive mix of politics and judges Sept. 24, 2014: Grand jury looking at Suffolk Sheriff Lt. Edward Walsh widens scope Dec. 10, 2014: Edward Walsh’s expense spending faulted in federal complaint filed by Brookhaven Conservatives Aug. 23, 2014: Clues emerge in direction of Walsh investigation Aug. 21, 2014: Editorial: Nothing routine about Walsh investigation Aug. 11, 2014: Edward Walsh probe turned over to FBI, Suffolk Sheriff DeMarco says July 25, 2014: Edward Walsh returns to Suffolk payroll as he fights firing July 15, 2014: Edward Walsh told that Suffolk sheriff’s department seeking his termination June 25, 2014: Edward Walsh, Suffolk Conservative leader, suspended from sheriff’s department job May 8, 2014: Editorial: Fire officer-party leader from both jobs May 3, 2014: Edward Walsh probe shows minor party can cause major complications April 30, 2014: Conservative Party’s Edward Walsh among sheriff employees in corrections wage probe
Other LI officials charged with abuse of power

The Silver Economy

Baby Boomers Boost Bottom Lines

Adults, age 50+, now number 1 in every 3 Americans, and their impact on social and economic landscapes are unlike any previous generation. 109 million strong, these smart, savvy shoppers control generational wealth by making purchase decisions for their aging parents, themselves and their adult children. Long Island businesses can’t afford to look past this “Sandwich Generation” that has control of nearly $240 billion in amassed wealth while still commanding median household incomes of over $77,000.

If you’re not targeting the grey market, you’re missing out on one of the largest, wealthiest and fastest-growing populations in the country – and especially on Long Island.

Long Island is a Mature Market

Over one million consumers aged 50+ call Long Island their home. AARP cites over a half a million members in Nassau and Suffolk counties alone. These active agers represent a $4.6 trillion-dollar spending market and are key to future growth for marketers on Long Island.

One of the best ways to reach active agers is through trusted sources they rely on for information and entertainment. Newspapers and magazines are good sources to reach and influence both in print and online, as are events. In fact, according to a survey of public participation in the arts, older Americans were the only demographic that increased its participation in live events. Social media is also effective, as 65 percent of 50-64-year olds are active on Facebook and 21 percent use Instagram regularly.


Noteable facts about the “Sandwich Generation” the largest, wealthiest and fastest-growing population on Long Island.





Primer for BTS
What’s Your Content Strategy?

The news and editorial staff of Newsday had no role in the creation of this content

Primer for BTS

If you are under the age of 18, BTS is a hugely popular Asian boy band. But any marketer worth his salt will recognize those three letters as the start of Q4 seasonal selling period: Back-to-School. Back-to-School spending in 2019 is forecast at over $80 billion between back-to-school and back-to-college spending. That’s close to $1,000 per household and the largest in history according to the National Retail Federation (NRF), who reports annually on seasonal purchases and plans to purchase.





The Silver Economy
What’s Your Content Strategy?

The news and editorial staff of Newsday had no role in the creation of this content

What’s Your Content Strategy?

Everyone knows that content is king. In fact, a recent survey found that 78% of consumers find that relevant content increases brand awareness and purchase intent. But, while most companies have forayed into content marketing, two-thirds of companies lack a strategy. This hit-or-miss approach can severely hamper your business now – and more importantly – in the future. How can you achieve your content goals if you are unclear as to your audience, voice, style and objectives? Today, not only should your company have documented goals for your own content strategy, but you should also set goals for every single client and content marketing program you create.




According to Newsday and Contently, anyone can create a reasonably successful strategy by focusing on 10 key components:













Primer for BTS
The Silver Economy

The news and editorial staff of Newsday had no role in the creation of this content

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A Message From Our Owner

You wake up in the morning and your phone chimes an alert: Newsday has a fresh video available on a cool new bistro just minutes from your home. Another tap on your screen, and you’re watching a live update on damage from last night’s wild weather, along with a steady stream of Newsday’s renowned, in-depth reporting on the issues that matter most to Long Islanders.

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Newsday has always served as the voice of Long Island with its tough, impartial reporting and its entertaining coverage of the personalities and places that make our Island unique. But Newsday is not your parents’ paper anymore.

Newsday is transforming itself from a traditional newspaper into a cutting-edge multi-media content generation machine. The idea is to deliver stream of engaging stories on subjects we know you’re personally interested in and passionate about.

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It’s a significant investment in the future of our company and Long Island.

Welcome To The New Newsday.

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In addition to expanded multi-media content, Newsday will also boost its popular lineup of live events. Food and wine tastings, conversations with authors, sports stars and thought leaders, health and travel expos, movie nights, car shows, even a series of concerts with rock, jazz, pop and classical performers. Some of the events will take place in a comfortable new multi-media space at Newsday’s new offices. Most will be heavily discounted for subscribers.

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It all adds up to a powerful package that informs you, saves you money, and helps you get even more from life on this beautiful Island we all share.

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The new Newsday experience builds on a tradition of journalistic excellence that is not going away. Newsday will retain and enhance its award winning investigative, feature and documentary units, as well as its cadre of experienced and locally knowledgeable beat reporters.

The newspaper you grew up reading will remain your trusted eye on Long Island. We are doubling down as a watchdog that protects you with deep investigations into government corruption and waste, environmental contamination and potential dangers to Long Island families and children

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And businesses will find plenty of opportunities in Newsday’s exciting transformation.

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Long Island is a great place to live. We have our great shopping and boutiques, outlets, and malls with quality restaurants. We have world-class healthcare and exciting sporting events. Newsday will use leading-edge technology to match user interests and opportunities to connect with local events and businesses.

Keeping What Makes Newsday Different

New York City, the center of global media, often focuses more attention on Manhattan and the world than on the concerns of almost three million residents of Nassau and Suffolk counties. Newsday will continue to offer incisive coverage of world events, but with a critical eye to how they affect us at home.

Our 19 Pulitzer Prizes didn’t happen by accident. No news organization covers Long Island like Newsday. And no other media can provide modern, all-purpose digital access with the soul of a beat reporter.

Of course, not everything that happens in Nassau County affects Suffolk County, or the East End, and vice versa. Now, with a multimedia, digital format, you will be able to precisely focus on the news and deep content most relevant to you.”

One thing will never change — our core values of journalistic excellence, integrity and commitment to improving the quality of life on Long Island.

State-Of-The-Art TV Studio

Our new 130,000-square-foot facility represents Newsday’s investment into Long Island’s future and will include a television studio.

Check Out Our New Building Being Built

See it. Hear it. Feel it.

We’re creating a world of live events, experiences, concerts and expos to match your interests with Newsday Live, from food and restaurants to sports, education and more.

Engaging Live Events

Newsday Live

We’re opening a world of live events, experiences, concerts and expos to match Long Islander’s interests. Topics such as food and restaurants, health and fitness, sports, music, education, the environment, your career and so much more!

Our Upcoming Events

  • 50 Plus – November 2019
  • MMA Meet & Greet – December 2019
  • Travel Show – February/March 2020

Visit newsday.com/newsday-live for more info.

Our Past Events

Islanders legends Clark Gillies and Butch Goring

On Monday, April 8, 2019, Islanders greats Butch Goring and Clark Gillies appeared at Newsday for a Q&A with fans as part of the ongoing Newsday Live series. The former players shared some stories from the Stanley Cup years in the 1980s and talked about the current team, which begins its playoff run Wednesday night against the Pittsburgh Penguins.

50th anniversary of Apollo 11 mission

Newsday Live hosted an event at the Cradle of Aviation on Wednesday, June 5, 2019, featuring a discussion about the Apollo missions with Apollo astronaut Walter Cunningham and Milton Windler, a NASA flight director for Apollo 13. The event was moderated by Newsday columnist Joye Brown and former Representative Steve Israel.

Former Mets Ed Kranepool and Art Shamsky

On Wednesday, Feb. 6, 2019, former Mets Ed Kranepool and Art Shamsky joined Newsday sports writers Erik Boland, Tim Healey and David Lennnon and told stories of the 1969 Mets and answered questions from guests at the inaugural event of the “Newsday Live” series.

Your eye on LI

We will continue to be your community watchdog with strong, local, independent journalism and protect your interests with daily coverage and in-depth investigations.

Immersive Journalism

Supporting Local Journalism

With support from our subscribers, Newsday invests in powerful, independent journalism that helps safeguard the environment as we continue our mission to make Long Island a better place to live.

Our investigation revealed an old Suffolk County law permitted outdated sewage treatment and disposal at dozens of commercial sites. A bill changing the standards was approved after the story was published.

Passionate storytelling

With support from our subscribers, Newsday invests in powerful, independent journalism with a passion for storytelling as we continue our mission to make Long Island a better place to live.

Four Brentwood families shared their stories with us for more than a year and showcased a strong sense of pride in their neighborhood.

Examples of Newsday’s investigative journalism

Hard Knocks

A seven-month Newsday investigation into the head safety of high school football which found that nearly 10 percent of helmets used on Long Island rated poorly at reducing the risk of concussion by researchers. The Newsday report prompted immediate change, with three school immediately replacing their entire helmet inventories and dozens of other schools removing the low rated helmets from circulation.

The Cost of Corruption

After two years of reporting on alleged corruption in the town of Oyster Bay and Nassau County involving Hicksville restaurateur Harendrah Singh and his relationship with then-County Executive Ed Mangano and his wife Linda, federal prosecutors brought charges against the Manganos for trading vacations and a no-show job for lucrative contracts and loans. In the ensuing trial, a jury found the Manganos guilty.

Award-Winning Staff

Newsday has been honored with 19 Pulitzer Prizes, 39 Emmy Awards (since 2012) and countless honors for outstanding journalism, including: Silurian Awards, Deadline Club Awards, New York and Long Island Press Club Awards, Associated Press Sports Editors Awards, , New York Press Photographers Association Awards, INMA Finalists.

Stories that matter

Our award-winning team of journalists, editors and producers create compelling, immersive stories about Long Island that matter to you.

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Satisfy your cravings

Feed Me is the essential source for Long Island food lovers. Find out where to go and what to eat; discover the latest dining trends and happenings; and follow the stories behind the best chefs, restaurants and dishes in town.

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nextLI

nextLI is a new initiative by Newsday funded by a grant from The Rauch Foundation. In 2018, nextLI was selected to be a successor to the Long Island Index, a project that compiled data about Long Island for the past 15 years. nextLI commissions high quality, non-partisan research and hosts a moderated forum where Long Islanders can discuss their ideas and critical public policy questions, with the goal of reaching an informed consensus on the best path forward.

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Newsday’s Brand 360 has done work across all industries, creating custom content for brands such as:

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In Your Community

We’re IN the community by sponsoring some of Long Island’s signature events including: Oyster Bay Oyster Festival, Huntington’s Fall Festival, The Bethpage Air Show at Jones Beach, Sterling National Bank July 4th Fireworks at Jones Beach, The Long Island Marathon, Great South Bay Music Festival, Long Island Ducks —

We’re INVOLVED in the community with programs that connect us to students and families such as Newsday Marching Band which began in 1963 as a one-day performance that featured 13 bands and has now expanded to a three-day celebration, featuring over 40 bands from across Nassau and Suffolk.

Plus the Scholar-Artist program that honors exceptionally accomplished high school seniors from Nassau and Suffolk in Dance, Media Arts, Music, Theater and Visual Arts. And the All-Long Island Sports Awards celebrating the best of the best in high school sports each season.

And we’re GIVING BACK to the community that we call home with Newsday Charities which is committed to improving the lives of disadvantaged Long Islanders. Newsday Charities gives grants to local nonprofit organizations that provide vital programs in the areas of hunger, housing, youth education and child abuse prevention/treatment. The money is raised through two public campaigns – Kids Campaign and Help-A-Family.

…because after all, we live here too!

Ice Cream Map

Our favorite Ice Cream Places

There is nothing like ice cream. It is festive when you are in the mood to celebrate something, even if it’s as simple as a perfect summer day. When you’re down, then ice cream is comforting and uplifting, all at the same time. And it is appealing to young and old alike. Happily, Long Islanders are never far away from rich, creamy homemade ice cream in myriad forms and seemingly endless flavors. Some people are content with the classics — vanilla, chocolate, strawberry — while others gravitate toward the fanciful — coconut-jalapeno, say, or even matcha green tea. Still, others like to indulge in old-times soda fountain conceptions such as sundaes, floats and banana splits. It’s all good — not to mention a great excuse for a drive. Here’s an array of Long Island’s scoop shops and sit-down ice cream parlors. Illustration by Neville Harvey

CoolMess

Each table has a personal ice cream maker. Pour in a chocolate or vanilla custard or dairy-free strawberry sorbet, add mix-ins and wait eight minutes. Also: ready-made ice cream, a cereal bar and hot food.

1512 Old Northern Blvd., Roslyn

516-801-2665 http://www.coolmess.com/

Five Pennies Creamery

Nods to the past include egg creams made with Fox’s U-Bet and seltzer from old-fashioned siphons, soft-serve Coney Island custard and Italian fruit ices that are used in the layered custard-and-ice Cyclone.

11 N. Park Ave., Rockville Centre

516-608-4344 https://www.fivepenniescreameryny.com/

Frozen Cow Ices & Cream

It took some serious scoops to open an ice cream store a block away from Marvel (see number 10), but try inventive flavors such as sea-salt caramel, and the breakfast special, made with maple syrup, bacon and Belgian waffle.

300 Lido Blvd., Lido Beach

516-665-3997 http://www.frozencowicesandcream.com/

Henry’s Confectionery

Since 1929, Henry’s has been serving Glen Cove residents classic luncheonette fare and homemade ice cream.

8 Glen St., Glen Cove

516-671-3222

Hicksville Sweet Shop

This shop harks back to a time when luncheonettes made their own ice cream, sauces and syrups as well as candies and molded chocolates. The malteds and sodas are outstanding.

75 Broadway, Hicksville

516-931-0130

Hildebrant’s

At this Long Island institution, flavors may include root-beer rock ’n’ roll and lemon-meringue pie. Try the Flatcar (ice cream on pound cake with chocolate fudge), or the Sundae Shot, served in a shot glass.

84 Hillside Ave., Williston Park

516-741-0608 https://www.hildebrandtsrestaurant.com/

Itgen’s

Here, what many consider to be Long Island’s best hot fudge is deep, dark and solidifies upon contact with ice cream. Another winner: the butterscotch sundae.

211 Rockaway Ave., Valley Stream

516-825-7444

Krisch’s Restaurant & Ice Cream Parlour

The recipes for toasted almond and coconut have hardly changed in 60 years. The chocolate is sweet and kid-friendly; newer flavors include pralines and cream and chocolate-covered strawberry.

11 Central Ave., Massapequa

516-797-3149

Marshall’s Ice Cream Bar

Marshall’s shares a parking lot with Massapequa’s All American Drive-In. The place, which started as a Carvel in 1952, is now independently owned and makes its own ice cream and a mean malted.

4276 Merrick Rd., Massapequa

516-798-9723

Marvel Frozen Dairy

This icon got new owners in 2014, but aside from a fresh coat of paint, they haven’t changed a thing. Folks still line up for the Brown Bonnet, a loaded cone or cup upended into a vat of melted chocolate that instantly hardens.

258 Lido Blvd., Lido Beach

516-889-4232

Sweet Treats on the Wharf

The frozen delights include hard ice cream, soft-serve, frozen yogurt, Italian ice, sorbet and Hawaiian shave ice.

405 Main St., Port Washington

516-708-1706

Bridgehampton Candy Kitchen

Little has changed since the place opened in 1925. The ice cream is still homemade and fruit flavors, often made with local fruit in season, are a specialty.

2391 Main St., Bridgehampton

631-537-9885

Coyle’s (Bay Shore)

The bestselling flavor is chocolate raspberry truffle: chocolate ice cream blended with raspberry sauce, laced with more raspberry sauce and punctuated with chocolate chunks.

75 Howell’s Rd., Bay Shore

631-666-2229 https://www.coylesicecream.com/

Coyle’s (Islip)

The bestselling flavor is chocolate raspberry truffle: chocolate ice cream blended with raspberry sauce, laced with more raspberry sauce and punctuated with chocolate chunks.

509 Main St., Islip

631-617-5014 https://www.coylesicecream.com/

Herrell’s Ice Cream

In addition to ice creams flavored with malt, there’s a refined malted sundae that includes warm homemade penuche sauce, made with brown sugar and butter.

46L Gerard St., Huntington

631-673-1100 http://www.herrellshuntington.com/

Ice Cream Cottage

The unparalleled variety of cones includes sugar, wafer, double wafer, waffle, chocolate waffle, chocolate chip, chocolate wafer, pretzel and m & m.

1590 Montauk Hwy., Mastic

631-395-3580 https://www.icecreamcottage.net/

McNulty’s

Flavors include vanilla–peanut butter and cherry vanilla. The little ones dig (sorry) the Sand Pail sundae, served in a plastic pail with a rake, shovel, scoop and spoon.

153 N. Country Rd., Miller Place

631-474-3543

Magic Fountain

This North Fork stalwart is famous for unexpected flavors, including kulfi (an Indian confection), chocolate-chili and goat cheese. Also available: dairy-free options such as vegan raspberry.

9825 Main Rd., Mattituck

631-298-4908 https://magicfountainlongisland.com/

Nitro Space

“Space-age” ice cream is made to order in minutes using super-cold blasts of liquid nitrogen. Two faves: Coffee Capacitor (with chocolate-covered espresso beans) and Little Green Man (matcha ice cream with Kit Kat bars).

22 Clinton Ave., Huntington

631-923-3056 https://www.thenitrospace.com/

Northport Sweet Shop

At this luncheonette, in business since before World War II, the homemade ice cream appears in Milk Frosts (milkshakes garnished with a scoop of ice cream) and other old-fashioned concoctions.

55 Main St., Northport

631-261-3748 http://www.northportsweetshop.com/

Old Fashioned Ice Cream Parlor

This neighborhood mainstay has hard and softice cream, ice cream cakes and more. The banana ice cream is a standout.

1025 Straight Path, West Babylon

631-669-3020

Roger’s Frigate

It’s all here: hard ice cream, soft-serve, frozen yogurt, candy, chocolates, gelato, popcorn, fudge, smoothies, cookies, chocolate-covered pretzels, popcorn. Don’t miss the Fruit Cream Blast, a blend of soft-serve vanilla and fruit sorbet.

99 Main St., Port Jefferson

631-474-8888 http://www.portjeffersonfrigate.com/

Sip ‘N Soda

At this Southampton fixture (since 1958), the Four Queens sundae features homemade chocolate syrup (a rarity) poured over four scoops of homemade ice cream, with whipped cream and a cherry.

40 Hampton Rd., Southampton

631-283-9752 http://sipnsoda.com/

Snowflake

Sundae flavors follow the North Fork’s fruit harvest, starting with strawberries and ending with peaches. Mix or match toppings with your favorite flavor ice cream or be a purist: strawberry ice cream with strawberry sauce, peach with peach.

1148 W. Main St., Riverhead

631-727-4394 http://snowflakeicecream.com/

Star Confectionery

The ice cream at this landmark is made either by third-generation owner Anthony Meras or his father (also Anthony), who makes his own chocolate flavoring base with Hershey’s cocoa powder. The result is clean and chocolaty, with a caramel undertone.

4 E. Main St., Riverhead

631-727-9873 https://www.star-confectionery.com/