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VOL. 20 NO. 45
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pg. B-19
Shark Attack A Dud pg.8 Fantasy Footballpg. 39
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Summertime And It Feels So Good By Kitty Merrill
Blue skies, at last. Beachworthy temperatures, at last. After a gloomy, grey and often cold spring, and despite early forecasts of more showers and overcast days, the Fourth of July weekend, a long one that started for many last Wednesday, didn’t break any weather records, but it didn’t break hearts either. Hardy beachgoers could be seen through a dense fog on Main Beach in East Hampton Wednesday morning. The next day, and for the following three, the weather more than cooperated for those with a desire for a dip in the ocean or sunbathing beside the Atlantic. “It was phenomenal,” enthused Paul Monte, president of the Montauk Chamber of Commerce and general manager of Gurney’s Inn. “We were filled to the brim, everyone was very busy. We couldn’t ask for better weather, which was long overdue after that June.” East Hampton Chamber executive director Marina Van dubbed the weekend “a normal Fourth of July, it was packed.” The beach weather was great for paddle boarders and kayakers, she noted. “Everybody was
out on the water.” More and more people, she said, are calling looking for outlets that feature water sports. And if your favorite “on the water” sport is fishing, that was booming, too. Out in Montauk the fishing was finest kind. For example, Grand Slam Charter’s Facebook page was loaded with pictures of anglers hoisting huge bass. At Ponquogue Beach in Hampton Bays Saturday, “I never saw so many people, so many umbrellas there in my life!” exclaimed one yearrounder. “This was the Hamptons at its best,” Southampton Town Supervisor Anna Throne-Holst observed. “Clearly the size of the crowds and all the activities going on reflect that.” People needed to be patient getting around, she noted. “We had our share of incidents, but all in all we got through.” East Hampton Village Mayor Paul Rickenbach echoed Throne-Host. Asked how the weekend went, he was succinct. “We survived. A lot of folks came and went. Those that enjoy this community had a great time. We’re happy to get back to a degree of normalcy, if there is
normalcy in July,” he said Monday morning. The mayor gave a shout out to the local ambulance corps, which was kept very busy. “They really did a yeoman’s job,” he said. Village beaches were at capacity, and “Finally, the weather married the holiday weekend,” the mayor said. Throne-Holst offered a report from the annual fireworks in Sag Harbor on Saturday night. “I’ve never seen a crowd like that. It took 20 minutes to get out of the village afterward, but everyone was in good spirits, the fireworks were beautiful and the weather was perfect.” On Thursday, the fireworks show in Montauk drew a tremendous crowd. “I bet there was more people than we’ve ever had at a (St. Patrick’s Day) parade,” offered East Hampton Town Police Chief Ed Ecker. “You couldn’t shoehorn any more people on the beach.” Many spectators reported driving over an hour to exit the fireworks. Chief Ecker, who is also a member of the fire department and wore his fire police hat that night, said that when they began to set up for the event at 6 PM traffic near the Old Montauk Highway merge was bumper to bumper going both east and west. At 8 PM, the situation was
Independent/Jessica Mackin
Fireworks over Sag Harbor signal summer’s start.
the same and he heard that by 1 AM, it still took between a half hour to 45 minutes to get through the area. Cops were “so busy” all weekend, the chief reported. There were a total of 40 arrests and 682 parking tickets issued townwide over the weekend. Returning to the topic of the ”perfect” summer weather, Monte called it “well deserved” after a rainy June, adding, “Hopefully it stays this way for the next 75 days.” The next 75 will be jam-packed with benefits and fairs, carnivals and catches of the day, and, if Monte’s wish comes true, plenty of sun to go with the fun. kmerrill@indyeastend.com
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MY FAVORITE FOOD If you spot the latest copy of “The Daily” magazine you’ll see an interview/ story about my food addiction. Along with the text there’s a giant picture of me (looking cute as hell, I might add). “The Daily” story was inspired by a column I wrote a few years ago: I once ate pressed duckling at a restaurant in France named La Tour d’Argent, and before the duck arrived, a haughty French captain handed each of us at the table a certificate with a number on it. The certificate was the official number of each person’s duck. Before they went to meet their maker, the ducks each had a little metal tag with a number on it tied around their tiny ankles near their cute little webbed feet. Apparently, each duck had a number to tell us all how special each individual duck they served was. The duck tasted like . . . well, it tasted like duck, although I remember while everyone at the table raved that it was the best duck
they had ever tasted, I kept thinking about the number and wondered if the ducks milled around and stared up at the duck press, and whether Donald told Daisy, “Here they come for me. I guess my number is up.” I remember having quite a lot to drink and asking my waiter if I could have a duck with an unlisted number. The waiter gave me his best “all Americans are fools” little smile and said, “Sir, every duck we serve at La Tour d’Argent has had a number since the first duck was served to Edward VII in 1890. We have served 1.2 million ducks.” God, the French are creepy when it comes to food. Is La Tour d’Argent a frightening word in the duck world? I believe so. On Bastille Day, go to the duck pond on David’s Lane in East Hampton, where all the ducks on the East End live, and announce out loud that you are a talent scout for La Tour d’Argent. Then watch those little suckers scatter. The most expensive meal I ever
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had was in Italy, when my host ordered a pasta dish with butter and olive oil and incredible grated cheese and the waiter started slicing two whole white truffles on my pasta. I remember thinking that a truffle is the only thing of its size that is more expensive than cocaine. Each paper-thin translucent slice of truffle hit my pasta and the sound I heard was a cash register. I once sat down alone at the counter of a Japanese restaurant in California, drank Sake and cold Japanese beer, and ordered everything in sight. When the bill arrived it was over $250, just for me. The chefs all shouted, “Arigato gozaimasu!” as I left, which in my Sake-soaked state I thought meant, “Dumb American bastard doesn’t know when to stop eating!” I think that Michael Rozzi, who was my chef at Della Femina Restaurant when it was open, is a genius – his Grilled-thenChilled Carolina Big-Eye Tuna Salad with cilantro, avocado, hearts of palm and ginger dressing, and his Roasted Montauk Striped Bass with sweet corn, mushroom and clam stew and fingerling potatoes, were two of the best dishes I have tasted anywhere in the world. When I am anywhere near Periyali, a Greek restaurant on West 20th Street in New York City, I have to get their famous octopus dish. It’s a dish I dream about. No one in Greece does octopus better than Periyali in New York. Then there’s the linguini with clams anywhere on Capri. Why am I saying all this? Because I want you all to know how much I love food, and I want you to know what my favorite food in the world is. There is nothing – not truffles,
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not lobster, not numbered duck – nothing in the world I enjoy more than a Sausage Egg McMuffin at McDonald’s. There is a ritual I follow with my Sausage Egg McMuffin. I take the part of the muffin that is closest to the egg and throw it away so that I get more of the full tasty treats inside, like sausage, egg and melted cheese. I take two of those annoying little pepper packages that spill everywhere but on the food and shake as much pepper as I can on to the egg. Then I take my treat to my car. I prefer the McDonald’s in Manorville because I like to sit in my car and stare at the traffic and listen to music on my car radio and sip my coffee and take little tiny bites of the Sausage Egg McMuffin so that it will last longer. I plan for my next Sausage Egg McMuffin the way Eisenhower planned the Normandy invasion, because this incredibly delicious dish is not available all day. No, some genius has said, “Let’s stop serving breakfast at 11 AM.” On weekdays, some places stop at serving breakfast at 10 or 10:30. Now, I read in Forbes that many McDonald’s around the United States have shown an incredible increase in profits by staying open 24 hours and serving breakfast all day. But apparently the managers of McDonald’s in Nassau and Suffolk don’t read Forbes. All they need is one extra worker to make breakfast and Sausage Egg McMuffins all day long. As I look at the Manorville McDonald’s staff, I think I’m only one or two workers away from getting my Sausage Egg McMuffin all day and night. I realize how much of an obsession this Sausage Egg McMuffin has become for me. Once I was traveling out to East Hampton on the Long Island Expressway when I realized I wasn’t going to make the 10:30 deadline in Manorville. A quick check of my GPS told me if I switched to the South Shore I could make it to the McDonald’s near Patchogue that served breakfast until 11. I looked at the speedometer. I was doing 80. My GPS told me I would arrive at my destination at 11:03. That wouldn’t do. Then I said to myself, “Jerry, are you ready to die for this frigging $2.63 piece of sausage that’s shaped like a hockey puck and has an overcooked egg on it?” Then I thought of the taste of that first bite and I stepped on the gas. I arrived at 10:55. By 10:57 I was sitting in my parked car taking my first tiny bite. You should have seen the blank-eating grin on my face. If you wish to comment on “Jerry’s Ink” please send your message to jerry@ dfjp.com.
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Shark Attack Lacked Teeth By Kitty Merrill
“I think it was a dud,” one patron at the Star Island Grill said last Friday night. For all the controversy leading up to it – East Hampton Town Board members clashed over the mass gathering permit seeking approval for a party expected to host close to 4000 people at the Montauk Yacht Club – the “Shark Attack Sounds” event didn’t fulfill dire expectations of traffic horror across the hamlet on the already busy July Fourth weekend. It was loud, all right, and the attendees were, for the most part, very young and by 11 PM very drunk. But a last minute parking scheme that applicants claimed would see 800 cars parked in Amagansett, then bussed to the site, was underutilized. No more than 100 cars at most
parked there. Parking along West Lake Drive was prohibited, a rule that from The Independent’s observation appeared to be obeyed. And, rather than draw business away from other clubs, as some feared, the party actually sent more (if sloshed) customers to other nightspots, thanks to a stipulation in the permit calling for the music to cease at 11 PM. The Independent arrived at Star Island at around 9 PM. Stopped at the entrance to Star Island Drive by a local police officer, this reporter convinced him the yacht club wasn’t the only business on the road, which had been closed to traffic. A security supervisor let us through, with a caution to be aware of pedestrians. And there were plenty of them, making the trek from the yacht club to the gates where
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busses waited to take them elsewhere. They didn’t feel the need to get out of the way of a car. One witness at Star Island Yacht Club said by 8 PM (the party started at 6), as many people were leaving as arriving. Inside the grill across the street from the party venue, the music was so loud, people had to yell to make themselves heard. Reportedly, many of the MYC’s clients crossed over to the grill for a measure of peace, one even stating that he planned to deduct the night from his $300 a day dockage bill. The din ended promptly at 11 PM, and a mass exodus began. Star Island Drive was clogged with tipsy 20-somethings and while staff from a private security firm attempted to persuade them to stay out of the road, they didn’t. At the gate the hordes crowded school busses, staggered down West Lake Drive or packed waiting limos. There were between four and six officers at the entrance to Star Island and easily twice as many security guards in the same spot, attempting to herd the revelers onto busses.
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They didn’t go home. According to East Hampton Town Police Chief Ed Ecker, the partiers moved on to popular nightspots like the Sloppy Tuna, The Point, The Memory Motel, Ruschmeyers and the Surf Lodge. Traffic at the latter two was “all fetched up” due to the volume of people trying to gain entrance to the clubs. Earlier in the week, the town board held a special meeting to consider a revised application for the Shark Attack Party. Although officials complimented the applicant for submitting a comprehensive application, in proposing a parking scheme to accommodate the expected 800 cars, the applicant listed the use of Rita’s Stables down West Lake Drive. Trouble is, the town purchased development rights to the property in 2004 and the agreement permits no other uses beyond agriculture. The permit had to be revised with a new parking plan. Last Wednesday morning, board members complained about the idea of parking cars in Amagansett and bussing people to Montauk for the party. But, ultimately, the Republican majority outvoted Democrats Sylvia Overby and Peter Van Scoyoc allowing the show to go on.
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Film Festival Ready To Go By Emily Toy
The 18th Annual Stony Brook Film Festival, complete with its 2013 lineup, featuring a robust mix of independent films, comes to the Staller Center for the Arts, part of Stony Brook University, tomorrow. The festival will present new independent features, documentaries and shorts at the center and will continue through July 27. Alan Inkles, founder and director of the festival, highlighted news associated with this year’s occasion during an end of June media briefing at the Windmill on the Stony Brook Southampton campus. “In the most competitive season in our 18 year festival, I felt we left a second festival on the cutting room floor,” Inkles said. “The entries this year, both in the shorts and features categories, were challenging, entertaining and full of discoveries.” Opening and closing nights will include directors and cast members representing their films, fielding questions after screenings. Opening night starts tomorrow at 8 PM, with a screening of Zaytoun, directed by
Eran Riklis and starring Stephen Dorff. Of the 33 films selected for screening in the highly selective festival, one is a world premiere, four are U.S. premieres, 10 are East Coast premieres and nine are New York premieres. On July 26, legendary producer and indie film powerhouse, Christine Vachon, of Killer Films, will be honored by the Stony Brook Film Festival with a Career Achievement Award. It coincides with the screening of her newest film, Deep Powder, that same night. Vachon recently joined the Stony Brook Southampton Arts faculty to establish a cutting edge graduate program in film that will, she says, “reflect the reality of film today.” The festival will partner with Stony Brook Southampton this summer as Vachon leads the inaugural offering of Stony Brook Southampton’s new “20/20/20” scholarship program: 20 filmmakers, 20 days, 20 films. The lineup at this year’s festival is slated to include films from across the U.S., as well as Germany, Norway, Pakistan, Poland and
The Peconic Land Trust conserves Long Island’s working farms, natural lands, and heritage for our communities now and in the future. Since 1983, the Trust has worked with landowners, communities, partner organizations, and local government to protect nearly 11,000 acres, including more than 6,000 acres of farmland, miles of hiking trails, and over 4,000 acres of preserves and natural lands that protect watersheds, ocean fronts, wildlife habitats, and scenic vistas. The Peconic Land Trust, a non-profit charitable organization, raises funds for its conservation efforts primarily through donations from the public and is not the recipient of the Community Preservation Fund tax. To learn more about the Peconic Land Trust, please call us at 631.283.3195 or visit our website at www.PeconicLandTrust.org. 296 Hampton Road | PO Box 1776 Southampton, NY 11969
Turkey, to name a few. There will be an opening night reception starting at 10 PM. Dessert and drinks will be served. $20 for passholders, $25 for nonpassholders subject to availability. The closing night awards reception, sponsored by HBO, starts on July 27 at 10:30 PM. It will be complete with hors d’oeuvres and drinks to toast the winning filmmakers, and is hosted by film critic John Anderson. $20 for passholders, $25 for nonpassholders subject to availability. Film passes good for all films are available for $80 at www. stonybrookfilmfestival.com or by calling the Staller Center B o x O f f i c e a t 6 31 - 6 3 2 - A RT S (2787). Seating is guaranteed for
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passholders up to 15 minutes prior to screening time, with no box office lines to wait on. Festival reception tickets (opening and closing night) are discounted for passholders. Single tickets are on sale now. General admission is $9 and $7 for seniors and students. For up to date information visit www.stonybrookfilmfestival.com. Emily@indyeastend.com
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Casale Letter Conflicts With Testimony
By Rick Murphy
Embattled Springs School principal Eric Casale, in an impassioned letter to the Springs c o m m u n i t y, a s s u r e d r e a d e r s that although he was accused of
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covering up a cheating scandal at his last job, he notified his school superintendent as soon as he learned about it. “When I became aware of the allegation in 20O5 I contacted my Superintendent of Schools,” he wrote. “Of course I did report it, to my Superintendent of Schools,” he reiterated in his letter. The trouble is, though, he told investigators from the NYC Chancellor’s Office of Special Investigation another tale entirely. And the Region 1 superintendent, his direct superior, didn’t back up his claim either. His superintendent testified that higher-ups told her in early 2005 that there was allegations of a cheating scandal at Casale’s school, PS-91, in the Bronx, dating back to May 2004. In fact, she was ordered to get a statement from Casale, the principal, about the matter. Neither Casale nor the superintendent, Dorales Ruales, could get their stories straight while being grilled by OSI investigators. Ruales told investigators she “first became aware of allegations when the NY Post reported on them.” The
Post article was published on March 7, 2005. But according to a report issued by OSI in August 2005 “Casale stated in February 2005 Mrs. Ruales informed him of an anonymous letter alleging test cheating.” Insiders at PS-91 believed the probable reason for the conflicting statements was that Ruales possibly knew of the cheating scandal all along. According to the Post, administrators would benefit directly if standardized test scores rose under their watch. Springs officials, while turning a blind eye to the principal’s part indiscretions, are in strict lockdown mode at this point, refusing to return emailed requests for comment. Casale will not answer pointed questions about his involvement in the scandal, The school district mailed a letter to Springs residents last week. It read, in part, “Mr. Casale noted that he did report the matter to his Superintendent.” Springs school officials have obtained a copy of OSI findings. Superintendent Dominic Mucci has refused to explain why he has allowed Casale’s letter to
remain on the district website despite his erroneous explanation of events that transpired in the Bronx. The teacher accused of fixing a state mandated math test, Barbara Lee, was eventually stripped of her license to teach. Casale promoted Lee to the position of assistant principal at PS-91 in early 2005, and passed over a more qualified candidate to do so. “No charges of ‘cover-up’ or ‘destruction of evidence’ were alleged or substantiated against me,” Casale wrote. His interpretation of the results of the probe vary markedly from what the chief investigator wrote about Casale: “It seems clear he was aware of the cheating allegation, attempted to cover it up, and destroyed evidence,” Ness Matos wrote. In fact, Matos noted that Casale left the employ of the city before formal proceedings that would have possibly stripped him of his license could commence. The NYS State Department of Education has not answered queries for comment about Casale’s status or if an investigation is pending.
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Big Makos At MMB trophy fish; Pete Casale captained the boat. Still another Mako, this one tipping the scales at 292.2 pounds, was third place winner. It was landed on board the vessel Montrachet captained by Tony Froitzhein of Florida. Peter Pappas
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from Mattituck was the angler. The largest blue shark weighed in at 239 pounds. Captain Mike Epright’s Pension Plan was the boat and Randy Epright was the fisherman. Both hail from Connecticut. The second biggest blue, at 233.6 pounds, was landed aboard the Sea Wife, another Montauk charter boat, helmed by Captain Tom Cusimano. The largest thresher was taken by angler Joe Mole with Captain Peter Brancaleone helming the vessel Fish On. K.M.
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Montauk Marine Basin’s 43rd largest overall went to the vessel Joy annual shark tournament, held the Sea captained by Chuck Mallinson last weekend of June, boasted 43 of Montauk. Angler Rich Lipari boats and 160 anglers. Twenty-one from Katonah, New York, landed sharks were landed and qualified. the winning 377-pound Mako on Seventy-four sharks were tagged Saturday. The second largest shark, a 295-pound Mako, was taken by the and released. Montauk charter boat captains vessel My Mate, also a local Montauk Indpndt_13B_Layout 1 7/8/13 11:31 PM Page 1 boat. Ray Ristau caught the took four of the winning sharks. The charter
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Accabonac Film The seventh in the Accabonac Protection Committee’s Long Live
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Accabonac Film series, Grasslands, will make its debut on July 19 at the Springs Presbyterian Church. The showing is set for 7:30 PM and discussion and refreshments will follow. The church is at the corner of Old Stone and SpringsFireplace, opposite Ashawagh Hall. The discussion panel will include Richard Amper, noted Pine Barrens advocate, and “The Barefoot Gardener” Suzanne Ruggles, and other participants in the film. The film’s writer/producer, Cile Downs, has had “a great experience, talking to many of the most knowledgeable and committed devotees of grasslands on Long Island, and discovering what beautiful, complex and fascinating ecosystems they are.” APC, dedicated to protecting Accabonac Harbor and Creek and its watershed area since 1985, saw that a great deal of new attention was being focused on the scattered remnants of what once occupied vast stretches of our country. “We felt it important to emphasize that our grasslands and the many species of plants and wildlife that live in them are in danger of
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extinction.” For more information visit accabonac.org or email info@ accabonac.org.
Hampton Bays
San Gennaro Kickoff The Community Kick Off Celebration for the upcoming San Gennaro event will be held at Oakland’s Restaurant next Wednesday at 7 PM. Tickets are $60 per person. There will be live entertainment, food from various local restaurants, hors d’oeuvres, open bar and great Chinese auction prizes donated from local businesses, Steiner Sports Memorabilia silent auction plus more. Proceeds from this “Celebration” will help support local scholarships, Maureen’s Haven, and the Coalition for Women’s Cancers at Southampton Hospital. The San Gennaro Feast of the Hamptons will be held on October 5 and 6. Tickets for the kickoff celebration are available at Hampton Bays Chamber of Commerce, Scotto’s Pork Store, Skidmore’s Sports, GiGi’s Kids and Pooltastic Pool Works. Shed The Meds Suffolk County Sheriff Vincent DeMarco and County Legislator Jay Schneiderman will be on hand July 18 to “Shed The Meds,” a
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pharmaceutical take-back event. Needles, prescription pills and over-the-counter medications can be turned in at the Hampton Bays Nutrition Center at 25 Ponquogue Avenue from 10 AM until noon.
Bridgehampton
Gong Ho A free Qi Gong Class will be held Sunday at noon at the UU Meetinghouse, Bridge-Sag Harbor Turnpike. Renew and restore with these simple ancient Chinese movements and self-massages. All are welcome. For more info, call Tina Curran at 631-723-1923. Special Dinner The Bridgehampton Senior Center invites all senior citizens to a special twilight dinner on July 26, from 3 to 7 PM at the center at 585 Bridgehampton/Sag Harbor Turnpike. Japanese food will be served. The center is seeking more members and everyone over 60 is invited to join. Come see the center and its members and enjoy a festive dinner. The suggested donation is $3 per person. In addition, the monthly birthday party for July birthday people takes place as well. For questions, or to reserve a spot for the dinner call Lorri Schneider at 631-537-3027.
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Greenport
Get The Buzz On Friday the North Fork Audubon Society will present “My Life with Bees” at the Floyd Memorial Library. Master Beekeeper Chris Kelly will talk about his lifetime of experiences
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as a professional beekeeper. He has pursued beekeeping as both a profession and a hobby for 42 years. Chris has managed hives in Hawaii, Montana, South Dakota, Florida and now, back on Long Island, where he grew up. Chris has a degree in Entomology from Cornell University and is the proprietor of Promised Land Apiaries. He is also the General Manager of The Plantage, a perennial farm located in Mattituck, which is celebrating its 40th year of business in 2013. For info, contact: Diana Van Buren 917623-5373 or northforkaudubon@ mac.com
Bridge Bank Dividend Bridgehampton National Bank announced the declaration of a quarterly dividend of $0.23 per share. The dividend will be payable on July 31, 2013 to shareholders of record as of July 17, 2013. The Company continues its trend of uninterrupted dividends. Bridge Bancorp, Inc. is a bank holding company engaged in commercial banking and financial services through its wholly owned subsidiary, The Bridgehampton National Bank. Established in
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1910, the Bank, with assets of approximately $1.6 billion and a primary market area in Suffolk County, Long Island, operates 23 retail branch locations, including our newest branches in Shelter Island, Hauppauge, and Rocky Point. The Bridgehampton National Bank continues a rich tradition of involvement in the community by supporting programs and initiatives that promote local business, the environment, education, healthcare, social services and the arts.
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www.thebodyshopNY.com Bill Rich Your car is the second largest investment you’re likely to make. Preserve it’s value and your safety by having it repaired professionally.
You have the right to go to the shop of your choice. Your insurance company can not require you to go to a particular shop.
Some insurance companies may want you to visit their drive in claims center before having your car repaired. You can do this or you may leave your car at our shop and ask that the insurance company inspect the car here.
Differences in repair estimates are common. A lower estimate may not include all necessary work. If you’re not sure why one estimate is different from another you’ve recieved, please ask us.
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Phone Fees And Taxes Among Country’s Highest By Kitty Merrill
According to a study by Tax Foundation, an independent, nonpartisan organization that provides research and analysis on federal and state tax policy, the number of cellphone users has grown in the United States from 48.7 million users in 1997 to over 320 million in 2012. Thirty four percent of households in the country have given up their landlines and now use only wireless phones. This trend toward cell phones has not gone unnoticed by state and local governments, many of which have targeted wireless services for higher taxes. No kidding. New York has the dubious honor of placing high among the states with the highest rates and fees. This week, Tax Foundation’s Monday Map detailed the state and local tax and fee rates on wireless service. The average state and local rate is 11.36 percent. New York’s is 17.85 percent, making it the state with the third highest rate. Nebraska has the highest rate at 18.67 percent, and is followed closely by Washington at 18.62 percent.
Oregon has the lowest rate at 1.8 percent, and is tailed closely by Nevada at 2.13 percent and Idaho at 2.28 percent. It is interesting to note that Nebraska, Washington, and New York have rates nearly ten times that of Oregon, and that Washington actually borders the states with the first and second lowest rates. These rates do not include the additional federal rate of 5.9 percent, which brings Nebraska’s rate to 24.49 percent and Oregon’s rate to 7.67 percent. The average combined federal, state, and local rate is 17.18 percent. States favor cell phone taxes because they can raise revenue in a relatively hidden way, the study points out. “Texas even sued Sprint because the company listed a state tax as a line-item on its bill rather than hiding it from customers. Utah uses what they call a wireless “fee” to fund its poison control centers, but the levy is really a tax because the government service benefits the general public regardless of cell phone ownership or usage,” according to the study. Seven states, including New
MEDICARE ELIGIBLE? What does it cover? What supplements are available? Finding it confusing?
Independent / Courtesy Tax Foundation
The map above depicts cellphone fee and taxes per state. Guess where we are?
York, impose sales taxes on wireless customers as well as gross receipts taxes on wireless service providers. Both taxes are ultimately borne by customers. The study concludes, “Making cell phone calls and using wireless services for additional purposes may be getting easier, but paying cell phone taxes is not. State and local governments should not single out one product for stealth tax increases as they are doing with wireless services. Such actions distort market decisions and risk slowing investment that contributes to economic growth.
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Cell phone users are overtaxed relative to consumers of other goods and at risk of double taxation. Finally, the wide number of taxing authorities and the wide variety in rates makes tracking problematic and burdensome.” Anyone checking their wireless bill probably wouldn’t be surprised to learn New York’s rates are the third-highest. But, hey, here on the East End, users fork over the dough, but can’t reliably send text messages or accept calls, the coverage is so poor in pockets throughout the region. kmerrill@indyeastend.com
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She was airlifted to Stony Brook University Hospital and later joined by her son, Thaddeus – both are in serious condition. Hurley was taken to Southampton Hospital and is also listed in serious condition.
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Paddle Battle Comes To Riverhead Stand up paddle boarders, kayakers, and canoeists from Long Island are set to paddle in downtown Riverhead July 20. In a waterfront event that is the first of its kind in the area, the goal is to raise money for two East End not-for-profits, the Riverhead Foundation for Marine Research and Preservation and the East End Tourism Alliance. Racers can participate in up to eight events in the Paddle Battle LI event, with age categories beginning at 13 and ranging to 60 plus. “ We a r e o n a n i s l a n d surrounded by water, this is an event that will not only showcase the natural resources we have right here in our backyard,” said Bryan DeLuca, “but is also meant to highlight the mission of, and direct funds to, both the Foundation and the Tourism Alliance.” Registration starts at 7:30 AM on the Peconic Waterfront. Check PaddleBattleLI.com for various race times. Entry fees are $50 per person, $65 on race day. Rental canoes and kayaks are available for $40. Life vests are required (all participants must wear their won personal flotation device during the race). Complete pre-registration details are at PaddleBattleLI.com. Rain date is July 21. E.T.
Village Violators East Hampton Village Police were also a busy bunch over the long holiday weekend, recording 20 accidents, most of the fenderbender variety.
Visit ndyea stend .co Situation for mo Win Win m Cops Earn Their Keep r On July 1 EHVP said a man e chaoglorious ItSwas July Fourth o an weekend – but lnot ford27 people complained to them that he had Policegiven a local merchant money to arrested by Southampton Town Newlottery Police. There were six DWI charges purchase s. tickets and that www.i
Bad Accident On Route 114 Police, ambulance corps and firefighters responded en masse to reports of a serious accident on Route 114 near Deer Haven Court Saturday evening shortly after 6 PM. Elizabeth Krimendahl, 53, was headed south in her 2006 BMW when her vehicle was struck by a Toyota pick-up truck being driven by William Hurley of Sag Harbor, age 60. Eyewitnesses said Hurley’s vehicle apparently crossed over the center line. He was charged with driving while intoxicated. Krimendahl and her son, six, had to be extricated from the vehicle.
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filed, and seven drug-related arrests ranging from cocaine to ecstasy, the usual batch of public urinators, and that ever present public lewdness violator.
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the merchant had kept the money and not forked over any tickets. Upon interviewing the merchant police were told the man in question kept putting money on the counter demanding tickets, then pulling the money off the counter and putting it back into his pocket when the tickets materialized. He left the store voluntarily — with his money but no lottery tickets.
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Crossroads Music Hosts Master Classes Crossroads Music in Amagansett will be holding weekly Master Class Workshops at its 160 Main Street location starting on Sunday. Classes will include everything from classical, blues and electric guitar to drumming lessons and tips on songwriting. The first session is on Sunday, “Harmonica for All Levels,” instructed by Ken “The Rocket” Korb, who played recently with the Kerry Kearney Band at Guild Hall. “We want the classes to be intimate yet have the benefit of group interaction,” said Michael Clark, owner of Crossroads Music. “It will also personalized instruction from top notch players and instructors and provide the energy of playing together as well.” All master classes are $60 and will last a minimum of one hour (most will be more). Call Crossroads Music at 631-907-4838 to reserve a seat. For more information on classes, go to www.crossroadsmusicstore.com or “Like” them on Facebook. E.T.
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HT2FF Announces Submission Deadline Hamptons Take 2 Documentary Film Festival Founder and Executive Director Jacqui Lofaro announced last week the final film submission deadline of July 15 for filmmakers from Montauk to Manhattan to submit their entries. The festival is slated for December 6 through December 8 at Sag Harbor’s Bay Street Theatre. Submission forms and further details are available on the festival website at www.ht2ff.com. Entries can be submitted in one of three categories: short documentary (up to 40 minutes), feature length (41 to 180 minutes), and student film (15 minutes maximum). The festival also announced the creation of its first industry advisory board, consisting of six highly accomplished members of the documentary filim community, most of whom have homes on the South Fork. They include Julie Anderson, Susan Lacy, Don Lenzer, Nigel Noble, Roger Sherman, and Ron Simon. The HT2FF is also planning a pre-festival event for September 22 at 4 PM, with a screening of The Loving Story at Bay Street Theatre. E.T.
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Heard Around The Hamptons Visitors and locals alike can come up with some doozeys as the summer season wears on, tempers flare and IQ points dip. Let’s hear what you hear around town, in line at the farmstand, or at a local restaurant. Send the dopey quotes to kmerrill@ indyeastend.com This week’s gem: “You have blowfish on the menu. Isn’t that poisonous?” No, buddy, but when you get the check you’ll wish you were dead.
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July 10, 2013
Sightings
The celebs were getting their exercise on around town this week. Matthew Broderick and Naomi Watts were seen stopping by B-East Studio in Amagansett for a private workout. We had a report of Jennifer Lawrence jogging in East Hampton Village. Matthew’s main squeeze Sarah Jessica Parker was shopping at Citarella on Sunday and, of course, Alec Baldwin stopped by Mary’s Marvelous in Amagansett. Ethan Hawke was perusing the produce at the Amagansett Farmer’s Market on Saturday. Have you sighted celebs? Grab a shot and send to kmerrill@indyeastend.com and we’ll publish your paparazzi pic. Include the who, when, and where, plus your phone number, with your jpeg photo attachment.
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THE INDEPENDENT Q Traveler Watchman
Independent / Jessica Mackin
It was a perfect day for a parade, and Southampton Village always knows how to do it up right. Town Supervisor Anna Throne-Holst, (right, second from top) and County legislator Jay Schneiderman (right, third from top) were on hand. The Saffron United Pipe Band earned the mayor’s trophy for most outstanding entry; the Bridgehampton Fire Department earned a trophy, as did the Kiwanis Club.
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E L A S R O F Accountability And Appearances Independent Viewpoints
By Carol Buda
The Independent presented a wellresearched and fact-based article detailing the events surrounding Springs School Principal Eric Casale’s suspension from the New York City School System. Reaction in the community has varied from the school board members’ 100 percent support of Mr. Casale’s ethics to those who feel he should not have been hired and those who feel he should be fired. I am in no position to judge Mr. Casale’s job performance. Whether or not Mr. Casale keeps his position as school principal is a decision for the school community and school board. However, as a citizen and taxpayer, I am dismayed by the manner in which both the school board and Mr. Casale have handled the situation. The issue is one of accountability versus the appearance of cover up. Accountability has not been forthcoming so we are left with the appearance of cover up. Clearly Mr. Casale left New York City under a cloud and clearly he was not forthcoming to the Springs School Board when he sought employment. The board only became aware of his troubled employment status when someone “outed” him with the New York Post article. The board claims to have then vetted him again before hiring him. People make mistakes. Mr. Casale’s integrity would be better served if he admitted past mistakes and asked to be judged on his current performance. At the least, Mr. Casale needs to acknowledge his past mistakes, apologize to the community for his deception when applying for his current position, and thank the community for the second chance he has been given. For our school board members to unequivocally state that they support Mr. Casale’s integrity 100 percent is reprehensible. The facts are that Mr. Casale left NYC under a cloud and has subsequently been barred from working in the NYC school system. By endorsing Mr. Casale’s questionable integrity, Board President Kathee Burke Gonzalez and the other board members have inexplicably painted themselves with the same brush. The school board could have acknowledged that serious issues were raised and then resolved to reexamine their vetting and hiring practices or explain to the public why they chose Mr. Casale, given his job history.
The answers that both Mr. Casale and the school board have given the public are simplistic and incomplete, but that’s their story and they’re sticking to it. Complicating the issue is the fact that the exiting School Board President, Kathee Burke Gonzalez, is running for the East Hampton Town Board. Is there
a political motive for trying to keep a lid on this matter? I certainly hope not. Whatever the reason, the appearance of a cover up leads to the erosion of public trust in people who hold leadership roles in the community. Carol Buda is a resident of Springs.
What Do You Think?
Opinions are like arteries, everybody’s got ‘em. And The Independent would love to see yours -- opinion, that is. The Independent invites you and your organization to share your opinion on this page. If you’d like to offer an op-ed, pick a topic, any topic topical to the East End, and send in an essay for publication. Let’s say about 500 words. Include a phone number and a short blurb about you or your organization and viola! You’re a star!! Email kmerrill@indyeastend. com with your copy. Call 631-324-2500 with questions.
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By Rick Murphy
RICK’S SPACE A Commercial Success For a commercial to be successful it must achieve its desired goal. How to achieve that goal is the purview of the great minds on Madison Avenue, like our own Jerry Della Femina. But you don’t have to be an expert to see some of this stuff is completely off the wall. You wonder who the lunatic was that conceived it and marvel that someone actually sold the idea. I bring this up after reading yet another apology from Hyundai, the car company that has drawn international rage after it released an ad showing a depressed man get in his car in an enclosed garage, turn on the engine, and shut his eyes as if he were committing suicide. Folks from National Suicide Prevention Hotline, already over whelmed with calls from Mets’ fans, where among the most outraged, considering the commercial was viewed in some
quarters as a “How To” video. The point of the commercial was that the car runs on a watercooled electric engine – no carbon monoxide. The commercial ends with the despondent man getting out of the car a couple hours later, presumably to head for the steak knife drawer. It reminded me of the sixties when all those anti-drug commercials were running. The problem was these things were being conceived by people in Washington who were so out of it they thought Spiro Agnew was cool. My favorite was when the one where the guy with an onerous voice held up a single egg and said, “This is your brain.” Then he would crack open the egg and drop it into a sizzling hot skillet. “This is your brain on drugs,” he would state. The idea, I guess, was to discourage kids from smoking pot.
REAL ESTATE
But I wanted my brain to look like a fried egg! In fact, I wanted my brain to be on drugs with buttered toast and home fries. Everyone I talked to loved that ad. That means it not only didn’t dissuade anyone from smoking pot, it made kids want to try it. Everyone wanted to dip the toast in the proverbial egg yolk. That wasn’t enough. The Coalition for Drug Free America, which at the time was probably the CIA, sponsored a commercial about the dangers of taking LSD. I forget the gist of it (hey, I was probably stoned) but it claimed LSD induced “flashbacks,” even 10 years later. Then they’d show a guy driving his kid to school when his mind goes all paisley and swirly-whirly. Let me state that no one I know ever experienced a “flashback” 10 years after taking LSD, though some of them experienced psychotic meltdowns – completely unrelated to the LSD I am sure. What the commercial did was actually encourage kids to try LSD. It was a forerunner to the “Buy One Get One Free” strategy so prevalent nowadays. Even using the word “trip” in the commercial was bad idea. That was because not all hippies were
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creative intellectuals like myself. Some were dumb, and smoking pot made them duh, duh, duh dumber. They heard the commercial and said stuff like, “Wow when I get my flashback I’m gonna take an LSD trip to Italy!” “Way to put the thinking cap on there, Sunshine,” I’d reply. “But his name is Timothy Leary, not Mario Perillo.” The Canadian government may have commissioned the worst commercial of all time. After the Rolling Stones were detained at the border some drugs were found in Keith Richards’ belongings (what a shocker!). He agreed to do a commercial, warning kids about the dangers of doing drugs, and in return the charges were dropped. So we had Keith, who looked like he had been dropped out of a clothes dryer even then, staring into the camera and urging kids not to use drugs. The comedian Denis Leary famously said, speaking for the Canadian youth, “We can’t do any drugs anymore, Keith. There’s none left. You took them all!” Football season is upon us. That means all those pathetic beer commercials. It used to be that guys were thought to be unmanly if we admitted we didn’t like them. But I’m outing myself – I can’t bear to watch another light beer commercial that flaunts a world of “cool” jocks and scantily clad bimbo blondes, where-in the secret of life is measured by how big the boobs are, how loud the bar is and how many TVs are tuned into the big game. It’s a bad trip, dude. OMG -- I hope it’s not a flashback.
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EDITORIAL
No one was surprised when the letters from our health insurance provider came in The Independent mail Friday. Oxford has petitioned the state to allow it to raise health insurance rates between 13 and 15 percent depending on the plan. Yes, we know it goes up every year, but this increase is a particularly bitter pill to swallow since the nation was sold a bill of goods by the White House a few short years ago. We all remember the fable: “Once upon a time the great Liberal president vowed to provide health care for all Americans, no matter how poor, even children, and decrease rates for everyone by implementing a brilliant new plan called Obamacare.” “But how can that be?” the skeptics asked. “Won’t hard working Americans end up paying for those who can’t afford their own insurance?” “Ah no, grasshopper. The money will come from the gold pot at the end of the great Rainbow Coalition and there will be plenty for all who wish to dip their beaks.” Yeah, right. The White House recently announced it is delaying the key element of Obamacare – that companies with over 50 employees must provide health benefits to its workers. The stated reason is that the government isn’t ready to implement it and many businesses aren’t ready to comply. What the government is not telling the people is that it was counting on millions of more policies being written to help defray the costs of the insurance being given away. So guess who ends up paying? We warned in these pages three years ago the Obamacare wouldn’t work. Companies with 60 or so employees would save money by cutting jobs to get under the threshold. Now, cheaper insurance plans are being offered to make them more affordable. That means hard working people logging 40 hour shifts will have health plans that are inferior to the ones being given to people who for whatever reason don’t work at all. A recent poll shows Americans on both sides of the political fence want Obamacare repealed – before they go broke. “Once upon a time there was a great Liberal president who said he would solve the nation’s illegal immigration problem . . . ” Uh oh. Does anyone out there think this is NOT going to turn out badly?
Independent VOICES
Running On My Record Dear Rick, Over the course of my nine-year tenure on the Springs School Board, I have: – Brought transparency to the business
of the Board and encouraged community participation at Board meetings and workshops. – Strengthened communications with parents, staff and community via press releases, a parent google group and postings of all Board presentations on the new, easy to navigate district website. – Developed, passed and established the tax levy for nine school budgets, this
Independent/Kitty Merrill
year with 77 percent voter approval, while building community support for public education in Springs. – Treated colleagues, staff, and community with civility and respect when dealing with the many personalities, perspectives and challenges facing the district. – Worked tirelessly to reduce the everincreasing costs for educating our high school students at EHHS, realizing $3.9 million in savings since 2011 alone.
– Under the first year of the tax levy cap, built consensus within the community to reduce, restructure and redesign programs and services thus eliminating $792,000 from the district’s budget. – Continued the tradition of delivering a quality education to Springs students while holding down costs for Springs taxpayers. (In fact we pride ourselves on doing more with less.) This was all despite a distressed Continued on Page 22.
22
July 10, 2013
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Aaron Andijar Tennis. I’m going to go to camp. It’s tennis camp and you play tennis all day. I don’t know if I’m really good at it but I know how to play and I’m going to get better.
Simon Andijar I like going to the beach. In a few weeks I’m going to go to camp. I really like my camp because you get to do things like drawing and art.
Nina De Lima I like the beach. But I like where we are staying too. We have things in our suitcases because we’re on vacation. I have shoes and toys and dresses in it. And I have a bikini!
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Augustine Jho Ice-cream. That’s my favorite thing. And going to the beach. I’m here with my family for one week. And then we’re going to go to Washington to visit my grandparents.
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Continued from page 21.
economy, unfunded State mandates, fluctuating State aid revenues, a rapidly growing student population, changing demographics, one of the highest high school tuition rate in NYS, four straight years of decreasing assessed valuations, and ever-increasing expectations for student performance. As of May 31, 2013, 86 percent of Springs students are at or above grade level in math. 73 percent are at or above gradelevel in reading. (The national average for math is 32 percent while reading is 55 percent.) There have been members of our community who have been frustrated that the nine Boards that I have served on didn’t see things their way. That is inevitable. It is not possible as a public servant to satisfy everyone. But there are many more folks in Springs who have gone out of their way to thank me for my nine years of community service, my dedication to the youth of our community, and for the fiscally responsible approach I took with their hard-earned money. These are the same folks who have thanked me for stepping up as I seek to serve the greater community of East Hampton as a member of the Town Board. Kathee Burke-Gonzalez Democratic and Working Families Candidate for East Hampton Town Board
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For Sale Castine 22’ Cruiser with trailer Very Low Hours - Uses 1 gallon per hour from reliable top of the line Yanmar Diesel Engine Sleeps two in cabin Porta-Head • Galley Fully equipped including Coast Guard Safety Package Perfect east end picnic boat or weekender Dual Battery system, many extras Offered at $17.5k Located in East Hampton 516-769-0992
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CALL: 631-324-2500 Email: Classifieds@indyeastend.com Articles For Sale 10 PIECE IRON outdoor furniture set, $995.00 631325-0274 ufn
HELP WANTED
SEARS KENMORE stackable washer and dryer with stand. Oak claw-foot table with 2 leaves and 6 chairs Oriental Rugs Outdoor umbrella. 702-3711 ufn
Has the following positions open: • Licensed Massage Therapist • Esthetician • Nail Tech • Deck Porter • Aerobics Instructor • Maitre D • Laundry Supervisor • Cashier • Spa Porter • Conference Porter • Handyman • Nurse • Retail Merchandising • Service Desk Clerk • Housekeeper • Spa Receptionist • Dishwasher • Cook
Articles Wanted
631-668-1743 Fax: 631-668-1881
MOTORIZED, RECHARGEABLE SCOOTER. Purchased from scooter store, four wheels, brand new never used asking $750.00 631728-3369 40-4-43
WANTED - for my collection: Old Guns, Powder Horns, Swords, Cannons, Indian Arrowheads too. Richard G. Hendrickson, 322 Lumber Lane Bridgehampton (631) 537-0893. ufn
Automotive
PLUMBERS WANTED $1000 Sign-On Bonus Expanding East End plumbing company looking for full-time service and new construction mechanics. Excellent Salary, benefits, 401K. Career opportunity. Southampton area. Call DONNA WILMA 631-283-9333 44-4-47
$200- $10,000 PAID FOR JUNK & RUNNING CARS Best Rates on Long Distance Towing BLAZER TOWING 631-399-5404 DMV# 7107372 Licensed & Insured 44-10-53
ALL VEHICLES WANTED $$$ Running or Not $50 to $5,000
631-474-3161 FREE PICKUP DMV #7099438 43-10-52
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IMMEDIATE OPENING VALET PARKERS needed, full time and part time, days, nights, weekday. Heavy weekends. Must have valid driver license must be at list 18 years of age please call 631-926-9123 Central Suffolk 631-603-8189 Eastern Suffolk Nassau County also available. 43-2-44 AUTOMOTIVE TECHNICIANS: Full time, includes benefits. GM preferred but not required. Clean driver’s license required. For information call Bruce at Buzz Chew Chevrolet-Cadillac, 2877272. Fax resumes to 287-2067 attn: Bruce. 43-
crosoft word and excel. Please email resume to hkouffman@aol.com 40-4-43 SALES ASSOCIATE- Local thrift store seeks part-time help, 2-3 days per week, with prior retail experience. Email resume to info@lvis.org or fax to 324-1597. No calls. 44-2-45
RESORT looking for house keeping/ front desk/ and pool attendant. Will train. Please contact Carolina or Luisa 631-329-12-33 44-1-44
TRUCK DRIVER- experienced class A or B CDL. Driving for excavation/ drainage company. 631-537-2424 or fax 631-537-2911 45-2-46
FISHERIES INTERVIEWERSMontauk area survey captains returning from off shore must ID big game fish in Montauk through October. Apply online at fishingsurvey.com or call 800-2295220 ext: 7819 45-4-48 WE ARE CURRENTLY SEEKING A BRIGHT AND ENTHUSIASTIC PERSON. Basic computer skills needed good with organization. We are ready to pay $735 per week interested person Should contact: hudgerald010@hotmail.com 45-2-46
JOB WANTED
3-45
ESTATE MANAGER with 32 years experience as construction supervisor, production coordinator, tree and plant health care and landscape design, general house sitting and security. Call 631-259-3419 Email robertkruckel@gmail.com references and resume upon request. UFN
ESTABLISHED EAST END CONSTRUCTION COMPANY seeks experienced FT construction estimator/scheduler, field experience a plus. Must be proficient in Mi-
NURSING AID-looking for live in or out, 25 years experience, excellent references. Work for one family for 7 years call 646-2595495 45-2-46
PERSONAL TRAINER
FOSTER HOMES desperately needed for cats. Expenses are paid for. Call 631-7283524 R.S.V.P UFN
2 bedrooms-queen beds in both, big closets 1 bath ufn
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
REAL ESTATE
Certified Personal Trainer 25 YEARS EXPERIENCE TONE UP FOR SUMMER • Strengthening • Shaping • Gravity Training • Massage • Stress Relief • Improve Circulation & Skin Tone BUY 3 SESSIONS, GET 4TH FREE!!!
Sessions start at $35 each (depending on location from Mattituck)
Call Joe-Home Visits 631-804-7300 25-26-51
PETS
MILLIE IS OUR BLACK BEAUTY! Millie is a female lab mix and is a few years old. Millie was rescued from the south after being neglected for 2 and a half years. She is so grateful and appreciates being given a second chance! Millie is wearing a gentle leader in the pictures. She had a collar embedded in her neck before she was rescued. Some people mistake it for a muzzle, but it’s not!!! Millie gets along with other dogs, walks well on a leash and loves to play with her toys. For more information about Millie, please call 631533-2PET .R.S.V.P. (631) 728-3524. Sponsored by ELLEN HOPKINS UFN
FOR RENT RESIDENTAL MAIDSTONE BEACH COTTAGE An adorable, cozy, fully furnished one bedroom cottage just steps from Maidstone Park and Beach. Indoor/Outdoor showers, a/c, queen sized bed in bedroom and a queen sized pullout couch in living room. Brand new linens and towels. Available from July 3 through the Hamptons International Film Festival. Call for details and to set up an appointment: 631-276-8110 or 631-324-5942.ufn FULLY RENOVATED HOME, under a half mile to Long Beach and 5 minute drive to Sag town. Walk to farmstand. Under 10 minutes to East Hampton, Bridgehampton. 1000 square feet on .34 acres. Oil heat. Hardwood floors throughout, chefs kitchen with granite counters. Pristine, light, airy. Living room with pull out queen couch and large flat screen TV. Large basement with washer/drier and attached full garage. French doors lead out to cedar deck and extra barbque patio great for entertaining-private backyard with grill. AC units cools house in minutes. Ten minutes to Bridgehampton, East Hampton, Noyac, Sagaponack... Easy to show call Laura @ 516 6600100. $16,000 -Memorial Day to Labor Day (very open and flexible to extend the season into mid-end of September) this reflects price with no real estate broker. Paul is open to year round but need to discuss price. *Utilities -renters obligation: water, cable/phone/wifigarbage-lawn-electric-heat (owner will coordinate oil delivery as bills in his name) House runs very efficiently.
KATHERINE R. McCROSSON REAL ESTATE PO BOX 1122 Sag Harbor NY 11963 PHONE/FAX: 631-725-3471 HOUSE FOR SALE NORTH HAVEN WATERFRONT-4Br, 4.5 Bth. Gourmet kitchen, 2 bay Garage, Heated Pool, steps to SAG HARBOR Village. $5,500,000 Exclusive: K.R. McCROSSON R.E 631-725-3471 LAND FOR SALE SAG HARBOR VILLAGEBldg Lot, 1/3 Acre Asking $350,000 Exclusive: K.R McCROSSON R.E 631725-3471 41-4-44
Services DELIVERY SERVICE– Need items, small furniture, publications, boxes, etc… delivered? North and South Fork area. Call Eric for firstrate service and reasonable rates. Excellent references. www.portlimotrans.com. Call 516-776-7074.ufn LAUREN’S HOUSE CLEANING SERVICES- We are honest, Reliable, Experienced and energetic cleaners! We have been in Business for over 10 years. We will clean your home, Apartment or office from top to bottom at a low flat rate. We are available to clean daily, weekly, Bi-weekly or monthly, whatever works for you and your schedule. We have references upon request. Call Lauren: 631495-7334 UFN PRIVATE SWIMMING LESSONS Professional Water Safety Instructor. 8 Years Experience, CPR / First Aid Certified. At your home in your
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Independent / James J. Mackin
Oh, sure. Go ahead. Block the entrance to the Amagansett Square so you can unload your stuff. Take your time, too. It’s not like anyone else wants to get in or out of the shopping center.
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pool, or at the bay! Flexible schedule, Hour or half hour lessons, all ages Please contact lizfarrell56@gmail.com to schedule your private swimming and water safety lesson. 43-3-45 RE-ROOFING, deterioration, restoration, flats, skylights, chimneys, leaks, re-guttering antiquearchitectural.org (631) 765-6200 (631) 283-7060 45-4-48
Miscellaneous PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Never known to fail) Oh, most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, splendor of heaven, Mother of the Son of God, Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. Oh, Star of the Sea, help me and show me herein you are my mother. Oh, Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth! I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in this necessity. There are none that can withstand your power. Oh show me herein, you are my mother. Oh, Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee(3x). Holy Mother, I place this cause in your hands (3x). Holy Spirit, you who solve all problems, light all roads so that I can attain my goals. You who gave me the divine gift to forgive
and forget all evil against me and that in all instances in my life you are with me, I want in this short prayer to thank you for all things as you confirm once again that I never want to be separated from you in eternal glory. Thank you for your mercy toward me and mine. The person, must say this prayer 3 consecutive days. after 3 days, the request will be granted. This prayer must be published after the favor is granted. My prayers were answered. Thank you so very much. As requested by J.L. 36-50-
Land FOR SALE WANTED-Scrub Oak Land, Pine Barrens Land, un-buildable land. Anywhere in the town of Southampton. 631287-0555. 09-52-08
THE INDEPENDENT ALL COLOR ALL THE TIME 631.324.2500
NORDIC TRACK TREADMILL$200 like new! STEEL LOCKABLE TOOLBOX for small pick up truckbed –new $100 CRAFTSMAN BAND SAW-$25 LANDSCAPING BLOCKS 60 for $30 TWO FREE TV’S
Located East Hampton 516-769-0992
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CENTRAL VACUUM Central Vacuum Systems • Expert Service - ALL BRANDS • Rebuilt tanks 631-283-4917 • Discount Attachments • Wholesale parts for self-installation
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329-7150
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www.kingsawnings.com
• New • Existing • Repairs • Design • Powerwashing • Fencing
• Custom Renovations & ConstRuCtion speCiaList • aLL CeDaR • mahogany • CumaRu + ipe DeCks DesigneD + BuiLt W/WiRe RaiLing • FinisheD Basements + BathRooms • siDing • painting • tiLe • masonRy • DRaFting & FuLL peRmits pRompt • ReLiaBLe • pRoFessionaL QuaLity DanWLeaCh@aoL.Com
ACES
CE King & Sons Inc.
DECKS & PATIO INC.
Dan W. Leach
Serving the East End for 17 years
Canvas Awnings Marine Boat Covers
East End
Cinderella Cleaning
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631.377.2233 Housekeeping & Cleaning, The Way You Want It.
Custom Builder
631-345-9393
east enD sinCe 1982 sh & eh LiCenseD & insuReD
Expert Repairs to your Home or Business Cabinets • Doors • Windows • Floors Decks • Fences • Almost Anything
516.768.5974 Sag Harbor
www.bryandowneyrestorations.com
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PARENT ELECTRIC
Roofing Siding General Carpentry Painting Home Care 631-204-7797 www.sernahome.com
TANDY’S CONTRACTING, LLC
All Phases of Construction New Construction, Renovations, Roofing, Siding, Masonry From A to Z We make all your dreams come true
287-2310
GLASS & MIRROR
Electrician
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Driveway Gate Specialists Cedar Fence • Aluminum Deer • PVC • Pool Picket • Gate Service Complete Installation and Service
631-324-5941 ehfence@gmail.com
East Hampton & Southampton Licensed & Insured www.eastenddeck.net
John Andrade, Jr.
www.hamptondriveways.com johnandrade@hamptondrivewaysinc.com
631-707-1818
537-1515
Glass, Mirrors, Shower Doors, Combination Storm/Screen Windows & Doors
FINANCIAL SERVICES
Frank S. Marinace Second Vice President Wealth Management Investment Management Consultant Financial Advisor 611 East Main Street Riverhead, NY 11901 Tel 631 727 8100 Direct 631 548 4020 Fax 631 727 8172 Toll Free 800 233 9195 frank.s.marinace@morganstanley.com
BUILDERS OF CUSTOM DRIVEWAY GATE SYSTEMS PROFESSIONAL FENCE INSTALLATION SCREENING TREES - POOL DEER CONTROL SPECIALISTS
631-EAST -END 327-8363
eastend design@aol.com
GUTTERS
East End Gutters ❖ Visa - MC
728-8346
LIC
INS
HANDYMAN
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CARPET ONE
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Licensed & Insured Miguel Morales
631.387.7967
Sanding & Refinishing Staining/Custom Staining Installation
HEATING & FUEL OIL
Floor & Home
DRIVEWAYS HAMPTON DRIVEWAYS INC.
Free Estimates • Licensed • Insured
350 Montauk Highway • Wainscott
(631) 645-7400
EAST HAMPTON FENCE
Gravel Driveways Grading • Pot Holes Repaired Asphalt Seal Coating & Striping Bobcat Service Cobblestone & Steel Edging Installed
Ser ving The East End Since 1960
license insured
DECKS
329-7150
Robert E. Otto,Inc. Glass & Mirror
service upgrades renovations generator hook-ups. All types of electrical work done.
FENCING
• New • Existing • Repairs • Design • Powerwashing • Fencing
Installations Repairs POLYURETHANE, STAINING, BLEACHING FREE ESTIMATES
631-445-1644
DECKS
JEO FLOORSANDING & REFINISHING
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS SINCE LICENSED 1974 & INSURED 324-9649
andyshpi@optonline.net
East End
FLOORING CONTINUED
Residential Commercial Call for a free price quote
1.888.9DUSTFREE
Fuel Oil, Inc. 631-668-9169 Emergency: 631-668-2136 • Fax: 631-668-1021 www.marshallandsons.com 701 Montauk Hwy., P.O. Box 5039, Montauk, NY 11954
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•Decreased Pain •Move More Freely •Home Exercise Program •Deep Tissue Massage •Nutritional Counseling
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www.drjanetcirrone.com Southampton 631.283.1300 Speonk 631.325.3354
L.D.G. I R R I G AT I O N
Luis D. G onzalez POST OFFICE BOX 79 2 EAST Q UOGUE, NY 1194 2 Owner
KITCHEN & BATH
Mast Landscaping
Will Beat Any Competitor’s Pricing!
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Complete Kitchen & Bathroom Remodeling
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on
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• Granite • Zodiac •Cambria • Cesarstone • Silestone • Stainless Steel
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visit our website: www.RMKB.net Licensed & Insured SC #6772H SH #LOD1930
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R&R R E S T OR AT ION A N D R E F I N ISH I NG .C OM $0/4&37"5*0/t3 & 4503 "5*0/ t3 &'* / *4)* /( 41&$*" -*454 4 & 3 7 * / ( - 0 / ( * 4 - " / % / : $ " / % 5 ) & 5 3 * 4 5 " 5 & " 3 & "
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631-238-8116 600 Johnson Avenue, Suite C-3 Bohemia, NY 11716
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By Sue Hansen
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IN THE NEWS
T PE of the Week
“I’m just wild about Harry” and you will be too! This handsome fellow was brought to the Brookhaven Animal Shelter, which houses over 200 homeless pets, several months ago. Harry is nervous in the kennel, but once outside on a leash, he is calm, good with other dogs and well mannered. An adult shepherd/ lab mix, approximately 80 pounds, but a gentle soul. Come visit him in person. Call 631-286-4940 or go to www. brookhaven.org/animalshelter for more details.
KATHEE BURKE-GONZALEZ EAST HAMPTON
TOWN BOARD ENERGY EXPERIENCE COMMITMENT Visit us at www.easthamptondemocrats.org Paid for by Campaign 2013
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THE INDEPENDENT Min Date = 5/28/2013 Max Date = 6/3/2013 Source: Suffolk Research Service, Inc., Hampton Bays, NY 11946
BUY
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* -- Vacant Land
SELL
East Hampton Town ZIPCODE 11930 - AMAGANSETT Hummel, J & J Broderick, J Silverton, M 25 Sarah’sPath byRef Eshaghian, M Trust Goldberg, M ZIPCODE 11937 - EAST HAMPTON Sanders,S & Simon,M Landey, J St Regis Court LLC Feuer,D & Einhorn,S Settlement Court LLC Held, M & D Jones,S & Bronfman,C Bank of America NA Morrison, R Sislowitz, M Parsons, R McMahon,S &Bronstein Guryan,P & Daniel,L Praetorius, W & T Chadda, S Kidd Construction Co Glosserman, M & K Farrell Holding Co Barer, J Maniscalco, A & C Quay,K & Bradbury,L Russlend, M Trust Urbach, R Boschetto, L Franulovich,R&Kupsch Friedman, B Tarre deOliveira,L&F Milazzo, R Taylor, T 78 Toilsome LLC Fiore, C & T Callan,E &Montella,A Sklar, A & L Levy, S & Rich, L ZIPCODE 11954 - MONTAUK Deley, J & Holley, L Costa, A Trust Corin, C & J Messina, N Edwards,J & Adams,V Adams, A by Exr Goodhart,J&Cardoso,J Alaimo,J & Deal,A 26 Brisbane Rd LLC Rohrer, M Trust Berry, D Ostrander, A Riverhead Town ZIPCODE 11792 - WADING RIVER Hamlet Jr, I & V Titus, G & D Massimo, D Booth, W by Grdn ZIPCODE 11901 - RIVERHEAD De Art of Nature LLC Friar’s Head Farm Stoneleigh Woods RH EastportPropertyDvlp Marascia, F & B Northfield Bank Rossetti &Mustacchio Fragapane, J Waterfall Victoria J McCullough,A by Ref ZIPCODE 11931 - AQUEBOGUE King, C & S Riverhead Sound Asso ZIPCODE 11933 - CALVERTON DiLavore, R & J Singer, A by Exr ZIPCODE 11947 - JAMESPORT Sabatello, L Cybulski, A Shelter Island Town ZIPCODE 11964 - SHELTER ISLAND Tortorella, V & A Zwicky, H & H
July 10, 2013
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DEEDS
PRICE
LOCATION
970,125 1,500,000 2,000,000
53 Abrahams Landing Rd 25 Sarahs Path 26 Ocean Ln
2,200,000 560,000 5,650,000 930,000* 693,000 680,000 850,000 585,000 2,750,000 3,000,000 765,000 1,047,500* 1,850,000 804,000 949,100 1,270,000 3,750,000 4,567,000 4,300,000 11,200,000
247 Kings Point Rd 212 Waterhole Rd 3 St Regis Ct 1 Settlement Ct 30 Alewive Brook Rd 19 Pioneer Ln 5 Phoebe Scoys Rd 30 Captains Walk 3 Peach Farm Ln 8 Peach Farm Ln 94 Old Northwest Rd 201 Two Holes Of Water Rd 31 Cedar Trail 35 Diane Dr 68 Whooping Hollow Rd 78 Toilsome Ln 82 Woods Ln 62 Dunemere Ln 209 Georgica Rd 41 Apaquogue Rd
1,250,000 805,000 600,000 780,000 687,000 650,000
415 East Lake Dr & lot 21 23 Flanders Rd 205 S Essex St 8 Flagg Ave 32 Duval Pl 60 S Delrey Rd
319,300 239,500 310,000
9 Tide Court 58 Gerald St 24 Barnes Rd
1,775,000 496,000 110,000 160,000 285,374 210,000
2905 -2 Sound Ave 366 DoctorsPath DvlpmntRt 205 Horton Ave 1080 Northville Tpke 235 Sweezy Ave 424 Ostrander Ave
572,270
106 Foxglove Row
296,000
19 Donna Dr
220,000
20 N Railroad Ave
1,370,000
4 Sheep Pasture Ln
Continued ON page 33.
Bayview Oaks Bay Beach Best Buy Southampton - Renovated three bedroom, one and half bath Colonial. Lovely waterfront community with private bay beach. Taxes only $2,016 Exclusive $510,000 IN# 21238
Janice Hayden, SVP, Associate Broker 631-255-9160 Jhayden@hulserealty.com 91 Jobs Lane, Southampton Village
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SHELTER ISLAND MINKA
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8 7 5 - 2 1 6 1
S TA N K E V I C H
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Deeds
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Continued from page 31.
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Levenson,P&Sweeney,P Galasso, J 4,300,000 Assouline&LichtenTrs Petry, R & E 437,500* Currie, D Perrin, C Trust 485,000 Southampton Town ZIPCODE 11901 - RIVERHEAD Mangotree RealEstate Morales, J by Ref 172,501 Mattson, K & E Wines, R 140,000 ZIPCODE 11932 - BRIDGEHAMPTON Town of Southampton Goldner Weiss, R 2,000,000* 8 Meadow Ct. LLC Troiano, J 725,000* Maharam, S Minkoff, M 3,600,000 Mance,K & Rost-Mance Sieger,T & Pierno,J 1,500,000 82 Beckys LLC Lieb, M & K 926,250 Stein, S Lewin, C Trust 1,234,650 825,000 Gelardin, J Wisner, C 2,000,000 Canetti,S & Grosse,J Burns, R 905,000 Paley, M & D Jarrett, E 4,125,000 ZIPCODE 11941 - EASTPORT 417,500 ZIPCODE 11942 - EAST QUOGUE Shapiro, G Cuker, E & N 2,882,500 ZIPCODE 11946 - HAMPTON BAYS Grimes, S & K Spinner, J 300,000 Haynes, D Grivas, M & M 339,900 Giangrande, C Feidner, M Trust 375,000 625,000 382,000 ZIPCODE 11959 - QUOGUE 4,750,000 ZIPCODE 11960 - REMSENBURG Epron, F & A Martinez,G &Madden,M 1,660,000 ZIPCODE 11963 - SAG HARBOR Howe, S Brosnan, A & T 480,000 599,000 Brentwood&6827Leland Adriatica RealEstate 6,850,000 Hayim, S Trust Glenn, R 6,100,000 Main At Sag, LLC Dienst, D & J 4,875,000 51 Palmer TerraceLLC Larson, E b y Exr 1,101,000 ZIPCODE 11968 - SOUTHAMPTON Chamadoira, C Flaherty, F 765,000 Shepardson, H Felcher, E 999,500 Chadha,D &Prabhakara Grande Design Rsdntl 2,052,125 Cohen, M & J KL Southampton LLC 1,365,000 Basnight, W Krasinski, A 737,500 Escobar, E Roessle, M 461,000 Lindley, A Majors Path Assocs 670,000 Hurteau, C McClean, R & J 825,000 Chivee&Leader-Chivee Fernan, A 1,200,000 Lewis, M & S Stephens, B & R 1,337,500 Herzog, M & E Provost, J & P 635,000 Silverman, P Nicolette Property 500,000* 34 West Prospect St Stubelek, T 620,000 Rueger, C & T Trucap Reo Corp 1,469,000 268 Realty Corp 268 Elm Real Estate 3,000,000 63 South Hill St LLC Platt III, W by Exrs 3,150,000 Leeds, J First Neck LLC 8,600,000 135 Little PlainsLLC Smith, D Trust 1,900,000 ZIPCODE 11976 - WATER MILL 100 Crescent LLC Halsey, R & M & W 4,250,000 ZIPCODE 11977 - WESTHAMPTON Sipahioglu, N Liebmann, S & S 615,000 Rubio PM, LLC 69 Montauk Highway 1,800,000 ZIPCODE 11978 - WESTHAMPTON BEACH 62 Oak Street LLC Costello Sul MarePrp 3,000,000 Sullivan, S & M Nagler, S by Exr 1,170,000 Southold Town ZIPCODE 11935 - CUTCHOGUE 400,000 ZIPCODE 11939 - EAST MARION Gomez, P & E Teich,A & Isacoff, M 495,000 ZIPCODE 11948 - LAUREL Lacovara, J & A Scaparro, C 870,000 ZIPCODE 11952 - MATTITUCK Piskunovs &Piskunova Romanowski Jr, H 298,151 Persevera Holdings 170 Love Lane, LLC 1,050,000 ZIPCODE 11971 - SOUTHOLD Cowley&Jordan-Cowley Burns, M by Exr 225,000 Chandler, J & N Gomez,P&Europe-Gomez 677,500 Source: Suffolk Research Service, Inc., Hampton Bays, NY 11946 * -- Vacant Land
July 10, 2013
LOCATION 23 Winthrop Rd 6 Serpentine Dr 8 Peppermill Ln 57 Nash Ave 38 Peconic Trail 141 Old Sag Harbor Rd 8 Meadow Ct 549 Mitchells Ln 570 Lumber Ln 82 Beckys Path 15 Woodruff Ln 44 Tansey Ln 15 Ranch Ct 81 Church Ln 35 Jack & Jill Dr 22 N Bay Ave 39 A Dune Rd 3 Florence Rd 13 Wauhope Rd 27 Lynn Ave 2 Cormorant Dr 160 Lynn Ave 5 Sandacres Ln 11 Godfrey Ln 11 99 18 44 56 51
Butcher Ln Highview Dr Bay View Ct Forest Rd Glover St Palmer Terrace
20 Scrimshaw Dr 1705 Noyack Rd 3 Ocean View Pky 1691 Majors Path 44 Straight Path 3 Alder Ave 33 Andrew Ct 6 Dovas Path 33 White Oak Ln 2 Spring Ln 77 Ridge Rd 24 Southway Dr 34 W Prospect St 47 Lewis St 268 Elm St 63 S Hill St 136 First Neck Lane 135 Little Plains Rd 100 Crescent Ave 21 North Quarter Rd 69 Montauk Hwy 62 Oak St 11 Meadow Ln 635 Strohson Rd 3645 Rocky Point Rd 455 Woodside Ln 935 Cottage Way 110 Love Ln 53610 Route 25 3800 Wells Ave
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July 10, 2013
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THE OVR Ocean Vista Resort AmAgAnsETT Coop sales * Investment Properties * Rentals EXCLUsIVE sTUDIO UnITs FOR sALE
studio Unit # 208 $175,000-Ref#s1017 studio Unit # 222 $185,000-Ref# s1050 Low monthly maintenance*1031 Exchange Property For more information please contact JAn mACKIn, LsA 631.871.1899 jan@mweinrealty.com • www.mweinrealty.com
M. Wein Realty, Inc. 34 N. Ferry Road Shelter Island, NY 11964
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ALMANAC June 2013 Our past month of June had but one day over 80 degrees -- 81 back on the 17th -- until the 24th when it was 88 for two days. Then back into the seventies for the end of June. Such is weather at the East End of Long Island. Lowest temperature in June was 48 on the 6th. It was
fo r e r s k He Loo t Place a Gre at ! to E
in the 50s on three nights during mid month. Rainfall for this June was mainly during the first half of the month. Heaviest was 3.25 inches on the 7th. The balances were four light showers counting to only 2.62 inches. Total for June’s showers was 5.87 inches. This amount, or more, is needed here for summer plant growth. Recorded were 15 clear, 4 partly cloudy and 11 cloudy days in June. Wind was from the southwest on 10 days. There were no squalls recorded this June. Richard G. Hendrickson Bridgehampton, LI, NY U.S. Cooperative Weather Observer
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The Picture of Success Starts Here.
We’re lending to local businesses. Experienced lenders. Local decision-making. Faster financing.
Emil Norsic and Son Inc., Southampton 23 Branches in Suffolk County I 631.537.1000 I www.bridgenb.com
Member FDIC
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35
Fire! Michael Heller/East Hampton Fire Department
On Sunday, the Amagansett Fire Department was dispatched to a reported working house fire at 163 Old Stone Highway. First-arriving units found the third floor/attic of the residence fully involved with fire. After safely removing a Golden Retriever from the home, firefighters from Springs, East Hampton and Sag Harbor assisted AFD firefighters with extinguishing the blaze in about 25 minutes. Several firefighters were treated for heat-related conditions, with two being transported to Southampton hospital for treatment for dehydration.
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July 10, 2013
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Naturally South Fork Natural History Museum www.sofo.org
SoFo
A Scallop’s Life By Frank Quevedo
During the summer when our bay waters begin to warm up to the perfect temperature, usually around 70 degrees Fahrenheit, the reproductive organ (gonad) of a mature Bay Scallop (Argopecten Irradians) begins to fill with both egg and sperm. Yes, the Bay Scallop is a true hermaphrodite, unlike clams and oysters which are protandric hermaphrodites, meaning they often mature as males then switch to females later in life. Once the temperature reaches optimal spawning conditions, it triggers mature scallops to release millions of eggs and sperm (gametes)
into the water column hoping to meet up with other scallop gametes to form a scallop larva. Once the larvae have formed they will float freely throughout the water column along with billions and billions of other microscopic plankton bits. At this stage about one in a million scallop larvae will survive. After several weeks and lucky enough not to be consumed by other filter feeding organisms, the scallop larvae will metamorphose and develop a calcium carbonate shell enabling it to sink to the bottom of the bay. At this stage of the scallop’s life, habitat plays a vital role in the
Independent/Courtesy SoFo
survival of this species. The young scallop will require a safe haven such as an eelgrass bed to shelter itself from predators such as crabs and sea stars. It is here the scallop will stay for the remainder of the season and into the fall, nourishing water through its gills, extracting both oxygen and nutrients in the form of plankton. The feeding rate of a bay scallop is astounding and enables the scallop to grow quite rapidly, reaching close to 40 millimeters by the winter. As spring approaches the following year, an abundance of phytoplankton blooms occur around March and April. These blooms allow these now reproductively mature scallops to filter in the necessary nutrients to properly
IN THE NEWS
develop their gonads for the release of the next generation of scallops into our waters. Once these year-old scallops have spawned in June, July, and August, they filter feed and accumulate the necessary energy reserves needed to sustain themselves during the cold winter months. This energy reserve is in the form of sugars such as glycogen and gives the bay scallop’s adductor muscle its sweet taste during the harvest season (November to March). At this time the scallops are 65 to 70 millimeters in size. Since the life cycle of a bay scallop is only 18 to 22 months, those scallops not harvested will expire by the following spring only spawning once in their lifetime. Visit the South Fork Natural History Museum (SoFo) and its marine touch-tank to learn more about these magnificent creatures. Call SoFo at 631-537-9735 for more information. Frank Quevedo is the executive director of the South Fork Natural History Museum. Located in Bridgehampton, SoFo is the only state-of-the-art natural history museum on the South Fork. Check it out at sofo.org.
Summer Piano Rental & Sales
Piano Barn
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Piano Sales & Rentals Since 1976 Visit Our Showroom in Watermill Yamaha • Steinway and More! Pianos starting at $995 • Live Entertainment
Shelter Tails!
MEET SAWYER! Sawyer is a 7 year old rescue from a kill shelter in Georgia. Sawyer came up with a few of his friends! Y’all come and visit Sawyer and the gang!
Please call 728-PETS(7387) or visit our website at www.southamptonanimalshelter.com and don’t forget to LIKE us on Facebook!
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It’s been a steaming hot July, and Center Moriches has been on fire in the Hamptons Collegiate Baseball League. The Battlecats have surged to a three game lead by winning six in a row in as many days. The streak started on July 1, when CM held off the visiting Sag Harbor Whalers 3-2, scoring all the runs in the bottom of the eighth courtesy of a Paschal Petrongolo home run, his fourth of the season. Steve Sarcone earned the win. The next day Collin Orellano, a native of Ridge, hurled 6 1/3 innings of one hit ball as his team beat Shelter Island, 6-0. Stefan Trosclair had two hits and two ribbies for the winners and Orellano recorded 12 strikeouts. Last Wednesday Center Moriches drubbed the North Fork, 12-7. Charles Galiano (two homers this season), Mike Roehrig (2) and Nick Nunziato (2). Friday, the Battlecats prevailed in both ends of an epic doubleheader at home against Riverhead. The opener was filled with enough twists and turns to fill a detective novel. The Battlecats came up with four runs in the ninth to knot the score at 14 but the Tomcats scored in the top of the 10th to take the lead again. Center Moriches, playing at home, came back with two runs to win it. Dan Roland had the tying hit, a single, and then Galiano singled to push the winning run home. The game had been suspended earlier in the month and concluded Friday. Andre Jernigan launched his first homer of the season for the losers and knocked in five runs. Tyler Fox homered, his third, and totaled three ribbies. Zach Persky went 3-5 with three ribbies and a home run, his first, for the Battlecats. Center Moriches took the nightcap, 3-1. Mike O’Reilly gave up one run over six innings and struck out seven to earn the W. Petrongolo and Persky delivered critical hits for the winners. The Tomcats dropped to 14-12 on the season. In other action Friday Westhampton edged North Fork 8-6 on the loser’s field. Down early, the Aviators chipped away from a threerun deficit. Ryan Spaulding plated
July 10, 2013
37
SPORTS
Battlecats On A Roll By Rick Murphy
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two runs with an eighth inning double and Mitch Montaldo put it away with a homer in the ninth. Westhampton chipped away at a three-run deficit midway through the game and eventually broke through, plating two in the eighth and one in the ninth to defeat the host Ospreys. Darius Washington,
who has been on fire for the Ospreys, drilled three more hits. Tyler Bethune and Michael Fries also had three-hit games for the losers. Westhampton moved into second place with a 13-11 mark; North Fork is 10-16 after losing three straight. Riverhead’s Jerry Downs has gone deep five times and leads the league thus far. Galliano (24), Moore (23), and Petronogolo (21) are 1-2-3 in the ribbies race and three big reasons the Battlecats are on
a roll. Downs has scored 21 runs, one more than Jack Sundberg of the North Fork, who leads the league with 22 steals. Charlie Gould (.348) and Jake Farr 9.347), both of whom play for the Tomcats, are one-two in the batting race. Brendan Mulligan (3-0, 1,11 ERA) of Riverhead, who plays for Hofstra, and Jim Ploeger (3-0 1.28) are the pitching leaders. Sag Harbor’s Jacob Bodener has record nine saves and his teammate John Nicklas leads the HCBBL with 34 strikeouts.
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July 10, 2013
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Independent
MindedSports By Pete Mundo
October Is Yankee Pipe Dream The Yankees had a great week last week finishing 6-1 and ending up 5 1/2 games back of the first place Red Sox. After Boston, it was a crowded field including the Yankees, Orioles, and Rays all within a game of each other. As the summer wears on, Yankee fans are holding out hope that their motley team can make a run to the postseason. While a good week put them back in the hunt, it won’t change the inevitable for this team: an empty Yankee Stadium come October. The Yankees formula for success in recent seasons has centered on the offense. Last season, while reaching the ALCS, New York
was second in the majors in run scored, first in home runs, eighth in batting average, and first in slugging percentage. The Yankee offense this season has continued to sputter without the big bats of Mark Teixeira, Curtis Granderson, Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez. The team is 24th in the majors in batting average and on base percentage, 18th in home runs, 25th in slugging percentage, and 17th in runs scored. Robinson Cano has carried the team this season and raised his batting average nearly 20 points over the past two weeks. But how long can that last? Opponents will quickly realize there is no reason to pitch to him because he has no
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protection in the lineup. Travis Hafner, and his .224 batting average, has often been batting behind Cano, followed by Zoilo Almonte and Lyle Overbay. The group hardly evokes images of Murderer’s Row. In order for this offensively challenged Yankee team to make the post season, their pitching needs to be outstanding. So far this season it’s been far from it. The Yankees batting average against is 18th in the majors, while their ERA is 11th. These numbers are very similar to last season (when New York was 12th in ERA and 17th in batting average against), but likely not enough to guarantee success this year. The Yankee staff has only gotten shakier as the season has worn on. C.C. Sabathia has seen his ERA jump nearly a run, from 3.19 to 4.09, since mid-May. Last season Sabathia gave up 22 home runs; he’s already given up 18 this season. The Yankees most effective pitcher is 38-year old Hiroki Kuroda who is dealing with a hip flexor injury. Andy Pettitte has been inconsistent and seen his ERA jump half a run over the past month. David Phelps has been moved to
IN THE NEWS
the disabled list, and by now the majority of us have given up on Phil Hughes ever being anything more than a back of the rotation pitcher. Yankee fans continue to hold out hope for the post season. Why not keep enjoying their team being in contention? But even with the return of Derek Jeter and Alex Rodriguez, don’t expect the offense to turn it into high gear. Jeter, coming off a broken ankle at 39 years old may help the top of the order, but he can’t protect Cano. Alex Rodriguez’s name in the line up card may look good protecting Cano, but at 37 years old and after two hip surgeries, opponents will quickly realize his diminished threat. With all that being said, it’ll still be a more thrilling second half than Mets fans will have. Maybe the Yankees can borrow the Mets motto, “Ya Gotta Believe.” Pete is a lifelong Montauk resident and former sports talk host at 88.7FM WEER. He’s currently a Sports Anchor at WCBS 880 and WFAN radio in NYC. He can be reached via email at peterfmundo@gmail.com.
ELECT FOR TOWN BOARD
JOB POTTER
Phone: (631) 377-2881 E-Mail: amberly318@gmail.com
DAVE BETTS
DAVE
Please join
Friends of Dave Betts at the Campaign Kickoff Reception Honoring
DAVE BETTS Candidate for Southampton Superintendent of Highway Tuesday, July 16, 2013 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm Tide Runners Restaurant
✭
7 North Road, Hampton Bays Featuring music by Doug Dwyer For information, please call (631) 887-6884 Email: Bettsforhighway@gmail.com Paid for by Friends of Dave Betts
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FOR OUR TOWN AND OUR PEOPLE Visit us at www.easthamptondemocrats.org |
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By Skippy Brown
Be Proactive, NOT Reactive Remember LeSean McCoy? He was part of the Holy Trinity last season, the three running backs that went one, two, and three in most drafts. Remember the Gronk, Ron Gronkowski? He was the top rated tight end. Remember Larry Fitzgerald? Who? He finished as the 38th best wide receiver after being in everyone’s top five preseason rankings. What does all this tell you? The 2012 rankings were based on 2011 statistics. But history seldom repeats itself. A good Fantasy player should indeed look at what HAS happened, but to win must successfully predict what WILL happen. Flash to 2013 – here we go again. Adrian Peterson is everyone’s top pick. Arian Foster, Doug Martin, Jamal Charles and Marshawn Lynch are the other top-ranked running backs. Want to make a bet they won’t all be in the top 10 at the end of the year? I’m not saying pass on Peterson
if you have the first overall pick, but remember the next player you take will be with the last pick of the second round – number 24 in a 12 team draft. I think this year the smart players are going to look to pick later in the draft – ideally around number six or seven, so you get a middle pick every round. I think there is tremendous value in the second tier of running backs in 2013. Why? Look to the past. Last year Darren McFadden and Ryan Mathews were on a lot of Top 10 lists. This year McFadden is number 18 and Mathews 24 on the ESPN list. Did they get that much suckier in one season? Of course not. Both are still young, emerging backs. Both did get hurt, which raises a red flag with some prognosticators. But the same guys that downgrade a guy like Mathews will have Peterson and Jamal Charles on the top of their lists. Guess what? Both are only a season removed from year ending knee surgery.
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Let me suggest a new strategy: Take the top two stud wide receivers with your first two picks: you’ll end up with two monsters like Calvin Johnson and A.J. Green. Then take Jimmy Graham, the highestranking tight end. Begin to address your running back needs in round four. Guys like DeMarco Murray will be there, and he is sitting on a big year given Dallas’s explosive offense. Rashard Mendenhall, now with Arizona, will be there. Hell, Chris Johnson might even be there, and all he did was break the one-season NFL rushing yardage record a few years ago. If you’re wondering who is going to play quarterback for your team you’re not a regular reader.
July 10, 2013
In our previous column we forecasted that some big name QBs will be available in rounds six through eight – guys like Matt Ryan and Tony Romo. Let’s take a look at your starting team, assuming the draft goes as planned: Megatron and AJ at wide receiver, Graham at TE, Murray and maybe RUNDMC or a David Wilson at RB, and Matty Ice on QB. I say it’s a winning formula. Skippy Brown recently won the Draft King Spring Fling contest, besting over 1000 other professional fantasy baseball players. For comments, tips, advice, rants, or just to annoy him you can now contact the Skipper via email: skippybrown@ yahoo.com
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Porgies Around In The Bays Shinnecock Bay/Inlet/Ocean Striped bass bite is slowing and the sizes are decreasing in the inlet for the live baiters. The spots are still catching fish and the sandworms are working as well. The clam chum is a good choice if you’re looking for some action, the bridge, back of the inlet and the east cut all good choices. Fluke have been a bit tougher to find this past week. The
wind has not been cooperating at all. Most were stuck in the bay due to sea conditions. Fluke are taking the normal squid spearing combos but some live bait will do just fine. The small snappers in the bay are perfect or stop in for some killies. Seems the outgoing tides have been best.
Peconics The porgies are still around,
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Roger’s Rock, Jessup’s and Cow Neck all good spots to anchor up and chum. The size is on the decline but plenty of keepers for the cooler.
Shore Bound/ Canal/ Ocean Beaches /Jetties The triggerfish are at the inlet and hitting squid and clams on porgy rigs. A good bite of fluke from the inlet’s jetties too, squid, spearing and live baits all working. A few bass taking clam baits and bucktails at dawn and dusk. The canal still has a few triggerfish
July 10, 2013
around as well a few fluke and porgies at the north end from time to time. Capt. Scott Jeffrey East End Bait & Tackle Hampton Bays, NY 11946 631-728-1744
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