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The Art Scene: 09.05.19

New exhibitions of Giard and Guild Hall volunteers, local artists travel to New York and Halifax, a new film series on Van Gogh, and more

Two Dogs Saved From House Fire

East Hampton firefighters saved two dogs from inside a house where a fire broke out on the deck, causing heavy smoke as it spread inside on Sunday afternoon, Chief Gerard Turza Jr. said. 

First Day of School Is Wednesday — Here’s What You Need to Know

Get your pencils and notebooks ready, kids — the first day of school for most South Fork students is Wednesday.

Roadwork Planned on Montauk Highway in Shinnecock Hills 

The New York State Department of Transportation will soon repair cracks on Montauk Highway from Knoll Road in Shinnecock Hills to Tuckahoe Lane in Southampton, Assemblyman Fred W. Thiele Jr. announced Friday.

Paradise Island

The off-season may be the best times to explore the more than 25 miles of trails in Shelter Island's Mashomack Preserve.

Enchanted by Nature and History in the Hudson Valley

In the Hudson Valley, the town of New Paltz and nearby places like Rosendale, High Falls, and Gardiner combine for a perfect weekend getaway. History, culture, and green spaces come together spectacularly here; this is home to some of the country's most beautiful rivers, mountain ranges, farmlands, and vistas.

Ask A Local: Reykjavik, Iceland

In Reykjavik we have 24 hours of daylight in June and about four hours in January. It's one of the cleanest, greenest, and safest cities in the world — a "greening up" that's urgent as temperatures across the Arctic rise faster than anywhere else in the world.

Elevated Entero Bacteria Levels Abound Here

Fort Pond and Big Reed Pond in Montauk were free of harmful blue-green algae, or cyanobacteria, blooms when Concerned Citizens of Montauk took water samples earlier this week, but a number of testing sites in Montauk, Amagansett, Springs, and East Hampton showed elevated levels of enterococcus bacteria, even before Wednesday's heavy rains.

Parks and Recreation

In 1861 -- only 10 years after Yosemite Valley had been "discovered" -- Carleton E. Watkins, perhaps the most famous early Western photographer, wandered this extraordinary natural wonder with heavy camera equipment strapped to mules and snapped images that inspired Abraham Lincoln to secure the world's first national park, in perpetuity, "for public use, resort, and recreation."

Beauty and the Beast

African elephants are in trouble. According to the Save the Elephant organization, their numbers have fallen from as many as 10 million a hundred years ago to as few as 400,000 today, and they could be nearly extinct by the end of the next decade.

Accident Shuts Down Montauk Highway by Amagansett I.G.A.

Amagansett firefighters extricated a man from a silver Toyota sport utility vehicle that had been struck by a delivery truck in front of Cirillo’s I.G.A. on Montauk Highway Thursday afternoon. 

, You’ve Got Mail

In the history of written correspondence, the usefulness of postcards, in my opinion, falls somewhere between “telegram” and “tweet.” The sender has room for maybe three or four sentences — not a whole lot of space. But with a postcard it’s the picture that says the most, taking its recipient on a quick little journey to another place, maybe far away, maybe not.

Post Labor Day Activities: Montauk Seafood Festival, HarborFest

The Montauk Seafood Festival will return for its seventh year under a tent at Gurney’s Star Island Resort and Marina on Sept. 7 and 8 from noon to 5 p.m.

Powwow Time

The 73rd annual Shinnecock Powwow, one of the largest powwows in the country, gets started tomorrow in Southampton and runs through Labor Day, featuring dancing and vendors. The grounds open at 3 p.m. tomorrow and at 10 a.m. Saturday through Monday. Dancers make their grand entry at 7 tomorrow night, and again at 12:30 and 7 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday, and at 12:30 p.m. on Monday.

Violence Low in Schools Here, State Safety Reports Show

A report released earlier this month by the New York State comptroller says schools in the state collectively reported more than 32,000 violent or disruptive incidents in the 2017-18 school year, but specific data show very few of those incidents taking place locally.

Long Wharf Revamp Begins Soon

“People can see the plans for Long Wharf, and the conceptual plans for Steinbeck Park, and tell us what they like, and what they don’t like,” Sag Harbor Mayor Kathleen Mulcahy said.

Firemen Answer a New Call

“A fireman is a fireman, and when somebody calls for help you try to help, and I feel like we got that call,” said Tom Bock, one of three new drivers with the East Hampton Village Ambulance Association, courtesy of the East Hampton Fire Department.

Bragman Bucks Board on Hunting

A majority of the East Hampton Town Board told members of the East Hampton Group for Wildlife last week that it was disinclined to entertain a one-weekend-day ban on hunting, for which the group has been agitating.

‘Mayor of Amagansett’ Turns 90

A model in Paris, a secretary in Belgium, a columnist and candidate in Brooklyn, and the long-serving, unofficial mayor of Amagansett. “I’ve had an interesting life,” Joan Tulp said on Monday.

New Faces, Rules, Classes, as School Year Begins

Michelle Taveras, Rob Rivera, and Alex Bates are East Hampton High School Bonackers in more than one way. They are East Hampton alumni, with Ms. Taveras and Mr. Rivera having graduated in 2011 and Ms. Bates in 2013 — and now, they have been hired as teachers in the school district.