Independent 3-1-17

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Mariners ‘A’ Title

Gallery Walk

Pot O’ Parades pg. 19

pg. 38

pg. 4

ICE & Police

pg. 11

THE INDEPENDENT 1993

Independent / Kitty Merrill

VOL. 24 NO. 27

Traveler Watchman 1826

March 1, 2017

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Gansett’s Grandest Marshal March: The Month Of St. Patrick’s Parades And Girl Power Galore. (See Pages 4 & 7)


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Pot O’ Parades Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day . . . Month

By Camila Tucci

Break out your bagpipe, wear that sweatshirt that says “Kiss me I’m Irish” and join in on the many St. Patrick’s Day festivities this month. The small in size but big in spirit annual Am O’ Gansett parade is set for Saturday, March 11, and kicks off at noon. Joan Tulp has been tapped for Grand Marshal duties and will lead “the world’s shortest parade,” running a single block from Mary’s Marvelous to the Mobil station. The North Fork Chamber of Commerce and Cutchogue Fire Department host their 13th annual parade in Cutchogue on March 11. Beginning at 2 PM, it runs from Cox Lane, down Route 25, ending in Cutchogue Village. That same day in Westhampton Beach, Jim Hulme will lead the parade as the 50th Grand Marshal during this year’s St. Patrick’s Day

celebration. Hulme was a unanimous choice by The Westhampton Beach St. Patrick’s Day Parade Committee due to his involvement in his community. A founding partner of the law firm Kelly and Hulme, he has served the community in a plethora of organizations including the Westhampton Cultural Consortium and Immaculate Conception Parish, Westhampton Performing Arts Center, Westhampton Rotary, Maureen’s Haven, Chamber of Commerce, Knights of Columbus, and PTA. He was a member of the Westhampton Beach School Board for 23 years. The WHB parade steps off at noon. First, second, and third place prizes will be awarded for the youth, commercial, and community divisions. The theme for this year’s parade is “Come Together.”

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for the 50-50 raffle will be held. Families, senior citizens, college kids, and everyone in between will pack the streets of Montauk for the Friends of Erin St. Patrick’s Day Parade on Sunday, March 26, at 11:30 AM. The parade will step-off at Edgemere Road and turn onto Main Street. Montauk Chamber of Commerce will be serving hot soup before the parade starting at 10 AM on the green. Buy your very own St. Patrick’s Day Parade souvenir mug and get a taste of the best soups Montauk has to offer. Do you know Eddie Ecker? You will by the end of the parade weekend. He’s the Grand Marshall. There’s a chance to roast the retired East Hampton Town Police Chief at the annual Grand Marshal luncheon, this year at Gurney’s on Friday, March 24, from noon to 3 PM. The next day, it’s back to Gurney’s for the gala cocktail party featuring music from Billy & The Barfights. The main fundraiser for the parade, the gala runs from 4 to 8 PM.

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A fundraiser for the parade will be held this Saturday at the Mill Road House from 7 to 11 PM. Tickets for raffles will be sold throughout the night but the $100 raffle tickets will limited; only 300 are sold. These tickets are often sold out before the fundraiser so call 631-506-1473 to reserve your ticket. Also on March 11, it’s the goofy, fun “March of the Leprechauns” pub crawl in Riverhead. Get a bracelet and visit a bounty of local establishments for special deals. Visit leprechaunriverhead.com to learn more. The Ancient Order of the Hiberians hosts a parade in Hampton Bays on March 18. It takes place at 11 AM. On Saturday, March 25, the East End Emerald Society presents its fourth annual Jamesport St. Patrick’s Parade at 1 PM. Grand Marshal Jim Wooten leads the way along North Railroad Avenue and Washington Avenue to the Jamesport Firehouse. A post-parade party takes place at Jason’s Vineyard, where a drawing

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Two Dead In Plane Crash

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March 1, 2017

The Ladies’ Village Improvement Society, Inc. invites you to

Our Gala Reopening of Bargain Box and Bargain Books Wednesday, March 1st, 10 am at the LVIS House, 95 Main Street, East Hampton

HERE’S WHAT’S NEW!!!

Spring Merchandise for Women & Men Designer Clothes, Accessories, Jewelry, Furniture & Art Linens, Home Goods & Knick Knacks New Fiction, Garden Books and Vintage LVIS Fair Posters

Independent/ James J. Mackin

Two men died and a third was injured in a plane crash at Gabreski Airport in Westhampton Sunday. According to information supplied by the Federal Aviation Administration, the plane had taken off from Republic Airport and was apparently practicing touch and go landings at about 11:40 AM when it crashed into a wooded area between runways.

New York State Police have identified the dead men as Arieh Narkunski, 64, of Brooklyn, a flight instructor and a passenger Robert A. Wilkie, 65, of Hempstead. R i c h a r d R o s e n t h a l , 61, o f Huntington Station, was rescued from the wreckage and taken to Stony Brook University Hospital for treatment. He was identified as the pilot.

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A MESSAGE TO THE IDIOTS WHO ARE SCREAMING IN OUR STREETS Donald Trump. He’s inarticulate to a point that is almost frightening. Take “really, really” out of his vocabulary and he will be down to less than a few dozen words. He has me terrified. God knows what he will do next. The amount of damage he is doing every day is incredible. Crimes against honest, hard-working immigrants . . . losing us our friends around the world with his insane tweets . . . swelling the ISIS armies with new recruits . . . going to war with the nation’s press. But he’s our president. 62,719,568 (a minority) people voted for him, but more important, they lived in states that gave him 304 electoral votes to Hillary Clinton’s 227. Check the Constitution of the United States. He’s our president. Do you know what scares me more than Trump? The idiots who are loose on our streets screaming, “He’s not my president.” He’s not? Check the Constitution of the United States. To those people I say : Did

your Mommy tell you that if you screamed loud and long enough you would always get your way? Your Mommy lied. Did your Mommy tell you that if you stood out in the street screaming at a building that has the name Trump on it you would get Trump to resign? Your Mommy lied. You can march every day. Scream at all the bricks and mortar he allegedly owns and you will achieve nothing but to keep him in office longer than he should be. Who are you going to write to push Trump out of the presidency? Chuck Schumer? Would you want to go with the Sarah Silverman solution and back a military coup and maybe hang Trump and Steve Bannon from a tree in Central Park? You’re bigger idiots than I thought. The only thing the “He’s not my president” idiots are achieving is they are turning off the good people who voted Trump into office because he promised them jobs, and they are sending a message to

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them that voting for Trump might not have been a mistake. Those idiots who hold up traffic because their candidate (and, I might add, my candidate) lost are sending the wrong message. What’s their solution? That old commie Bernie Sanders? He would make Trump look like Abraham Lincoln, George Washington and Teddy Roosevelt wrapped into one. Think Trump’s problems are new to the presidency? Read this from Ed Klein Confidential: “If you get most of your news from the mainstream media, you might come to the conclusion that the first month of Donald Trump’s administration is unique in the annals of presidential chaos and incompetence. Rather than the “well-oiled machine” touted by Trump, the press portrays his presidency as a jalopy full of circus clowns. But is that true? Are Donald Trump’s stumbles really unique? Have previous presidents been paragons of proficiency and professionalism who’ve gotten off to a smooth start during their first 100 days? For an answer, let’s go to the presidential videotape. Jimmy Carter: From day 1, Carter and his bungling crew in the West Wing displayed disdain for Congress, and the result was disaster. According to the Jimmy Carter Home Page of the Miller Center on the American President, “A pattern of mutual distrust and contempt had been set [and when] Congress transformed [Carter’s] tax plan into new favors for special interests, Carter called the taxing committees ‘a pack of ravenous wolves.’ Says Princeton University historian Fred Greenstein: “The impression was [Carter] didn’t know which end was up.” Ronald Reagan: Seventy days into his presidency, Ronald Reagan was shot by John Hinckley while Vice President George H. W. Bush was in a plane somewhere over Texas. In the chaotic aftermath of the assassination attempt, Secretary of State Al Haig famously declared, “I’m in charge here!” He wasn’t. No one was in charge of the nuclear football. A little over a year later, both Haig and National Security Adviser Richard Allen were fired. Haig compared Reagan’s White House to a “ghost ship” with a crew of rivals fighting for control of the helm. Bill Clinton: “Mr. Clinton’s first months were chaotic,” writes Peter Grier of the Christian Science Monitor. “His first two nominees for attorney general, Zoe Baird and Kimba Wood, both eventually withdrew due to revelations that they had employed undocumented

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immigrants as nannies. He became embroiled in controversy over his attempt to allow gays to serve in the military . . . His secretary of defense, Les Aspin, proved to be too disorganized and not decisive enough to run the enormous business of the Pentagon [and] lasted a year in the job.” And then, of course, there was the first lady’s disastrous HillaryCare, which cost Clinton control of the House of Representatives — the worst election loss for a president in 100 years. Barack Obama: Obama was forced to withdraw his choice for commerce secretary (former New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson), his backup choice for commerce secretary (former Senator Judd Gregg), his pick for Health and Human Services (former South Dakota Senator Tom Daschle), and his nominee to be chairman of the National Intelligence Council (Charles Freeman). As WorldNet Daily reported, this chaos was “compounded by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner’s admission of ‘tax goofs’ involving his failure to pay $43,000 in federal self-employment taxes for four separate years (until, that is, he was tapped for his Obama post). At least five other Treasury staff picks withdrew before the Obama administration had reached the 100-day mark.” And then, of course, there was ObamaCare, which resulted in the “shellacking” that Obama suffered in the 2010 midterm election, in which the Democrats lost a half dozen Senate seats and 60 House seats. The Takeaway: Donald Trump may be unique in many respects, but not when it comes to presidential chaos and confusion.” In the end Trump won’t make it to the end of his term as president. Why? Because he’s stupid and he’s a liar. He can’t stop lying. The day will come when he lies to the FBI or to a Congressional committee. Bingo. That’s when the good Republicans like John McCain and Lindsey Graham and hundreds more will come after him. Conservatives, independents, people who believe in and love this country more than any political party. Those people who voted for him, who will still be out of work, will turn on him. Trump has nothing to fear from the people who are marching the streets, screaming at buildings that will never answer them. The good people will wake up and eventually he will be impeached and pushed out of office. If you wish to comment on “Jerry’s Ink” please send your message to jerry@ dfjp.com.


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Girl Power: Celebrating East End Women

Joan’s Eyes Are Smiling By Kitty Merrill

Everybody loves Joan Tulp, and she loves them right back. And the only thing she loves more than meeting and helping people is Amagansett. So, it was no surprise that the Chamber of Commerce tapped the affectionately-monikered “Mayor of Amagansett” to lead this year’s Am O’Gansett parade. “Why not Joan?” chamber director Joi Jackson Perle asked rhetorically during the official announcement last Thursday morning at Goldberg’s in East Hampton. “Who is a better person to be grand marshal than Joan, who’s done so much?” “Why?” asked parade founder and organizer Patty Collins Sales. “Because we like her . . . She’s been at every parade, including the first one on the sidewalk.” Actually, Joan’s been at pretty much every event, if it’s related to her beloved Amagansett. Tulp’s love affair with East Hampton Town’s penultimate easternmost hamlet began in the 1950s. She arrived at the train station with her first husband in 1952. The couple walked to the Amagansett Bar (now the Stephen Talkhouse) and had a drink, she recalled. From there, she said, “We walked to his aunt’s house on Indian Wells, and I’ve been in love with Amagansett ever since. I knew I had to live here.” Tulp spent every subsequent summer on the East End, mostly in Amagansett. There was one summer she, her partner, and another couple rented a house on Gerard Drive in Springs – for just $600. “It was one of the best summers, waking up on the water,” she remembered. “But I knew what I wanted, and it was Amagansett.” Living up west Tulp worked as a model, a reporter for the Brooklyn Heights Press, and a receptionist for the Brooklyn Friends School. She was soon promoted to director of development. But, when she learned administrators worked year round, she said, “I quit. I wasn’t going to lose my summers in Amagansett.” She and her second husband Bob found a house in the village in 1964. By then she was already embracing the community, first and foremost the Amagansett Village Improvement Society, where she was in charge of the summer tennis program – a position she holds to this day. She served as AVIS president for decades and is currently the co-president. Tulp said she was a member of the AVIS board

“at least 45 years.” The list of committees and boards to which she belongs or belonged is extensive. Pick an association associated with Amagansett and Tulp has probably been a member, been an active volunteer, or held a leadership role. AVIS, the Amagansett Citizens Advisory Committee, the AFD Ladies Auxiliary, the Amagansett Beach Association, the LVIS of East Hampton, the Village Preservation Society, the Amagansett Food Pantry, and the local healthcare center are among the organizations Tulp’s volunteered for, continuing to this day with many of them. On March 11, find Tulp leading

the Am O’Gansett parade, riding in a convertible and bedecked with a crown of flowers crafted by Sales. Being selected Grand Marshal, she said, “Is a thrill and an honor. It’s a fun parade and is so Amagansett.”

Independent/Patty Collins Sales

“People joke the only reason I do all my volunteering and go to all the events is so I can get my picture in the paper,” Tulp said sheepishly, a big grin on her signature red lips. Why not? Her joyful smile is any photographer’s delight.

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OLA Welcomes Sandoval Emmy-nominated filmmaker Carlos Sandoval will be working directly with Organización Latino-Americana of Eastern Long Island on topics involving the current situation that immigrants on the East End face. His documentaries include the Emmy-nominated The State of Arizona and Farmingville. “We are humbled by Carlos’ absolute dedication to helping the most vulnerable members of our community during these unsettling and damaging times,” said Tony Hitchcock, OLA Treasurer. As a writer Sandoval’s work has been featured in The New York Times. A native to Southern California, Sandoval is of Mexican American and Puerto Rican descent. “We are hoping to put all his talents into action as we work to protect our safe and diverse community,” said Minerva Perez, Executive Director of OLA.

Lights Up On Washington Heights

An Octet With Vision

Join East End Young Arts Initiative for a weekend en el barrio as the students of East Hampton High School take on Lin Manuel-Miranda’s 2008 Tony Award winning musical, In The Heights. This spicy musical uses hip-hop, rap, jazz, pop, salsa and merengue to share the stories of a close knit Washington Heights community and what it really means to be home. Showtimes are Friday and Saturday at 7 PM, Sunday at 3 PM. Independent/Richard Lewin

On Friday evening at Clinton Academy, the East Hampton Historical Society held the second lecture of its Winter Lecture Series, hosted by Executive Director Richard Barons. Hugh King, Ken Collum, Bess Rattray, and Mary Foster Morgan spoke about eight women, "An Octet With Vision," whose individual wisdom and foresight had a huge impact on the cultural and social lives of East Hampton residents and visitors. Guests relived history through photos, drawings, post cards, and news clippings.

Obituary Dan Conway, 67

Dan Conway was born in Troy, New York, on February 8, 1950. He spent his formative years in Greenwich, Connecticut, and went to college in Boston where he lived for many years before settling on Long Island more than 25 years ago. After a long illness, Dan Conway, 67, of Northampton, New York, died

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Thursday, February 23, at Stony Brook University Hospital. Mr. Conway was the husband o f f o r m e r N e w s 12 r e p o r t e r and current Chief of Staff for Southampton Town Supervisor Jay Schneiderman Connie Conway. He worked in the transportation business but he will be “best remembered as a man who could tell a story, better than I ever could,” said his wife. “And he was funny! . . . He always had the best jokes!” It was those memories that comforted his family as they gathered for the Dan Conway “Celebration of Life” Funeral Mass on Tuesday at St. John’s the Evangelist Church in Riverhead. In lieu of flowers, the family has set up a scholarship fund for students in the School of Journalism at Stony Brook University, in memory of Dan. “He was an avid news junkie, probably because of me,” said his wife. “But he was always supportive of education and how that might help spark a creative mind.” To contribute, make checks payable to the “Stony Brook Foundation” and put in the memo line, “In honor of Dan Conway for the School of Journalism.” Checks can be mailed to the School of Journalism, Stony Brook University, Melville Library 4th Floor, Stony Brook, New York, 11790.


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Harborfrost 2017

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Save Energy At Home

Suffolk Country Legislator Bridget Fleming has joined forces with Long Island Green Homes and East Hampton YMCA to present “A Homeowners Guide to Energy Efficiency” on Friday from 1 to 2:30 PM. The presentation will help you identify any places in your home that may be wasting energy and money. All attendees will be able to sign up for a free home energy audit at the end of the presentation. “A Homeowners Guide to Energy Efficiency” will take place at the East Hampton YMCA RECenter. For more info visit longislandgreenhomes.org. Independent/Camila Tucci

Streets were packed last weekend thanks to the annual Harborfrost in Sag Harbor Village. Fresh food, fire juggling, the Frosty Plunge, and ice sculptures were fan favorites.

Library Unveiling The Good Ground Seed Library will be unveiled on Wednesday, March 8, at 6:30 PM at the Hampton Bays Public Library. The seed library is a place where community members can pick up free organic seeds and is solely for public benefit. After your seed has grown, the library asks that you collect some of the seeds that they produce so that they can be added back to the library. After the unveiling, at 7 PM, there will be a presentation by the Ecological Cultural Initiative titled, “Restoring Good Ground: Sowing Seeds of Change.” For more info visit eciny.com.

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In Depth NEWS March 1, 2017

Truth Without Fear

Volume 2 • Issue 5

Illustration by Karen Fredricks

Local Police Were Not Asked To Help ICE Rick Murphy

The recent pronouncement by elected officials that they would not enter into an agreement with the government to authorize local police to act as immigration officers was a bit of a red herring – no one asked them to. In fact, local municipalities have always cooperated fully

with Immigration and Custom Enforcement officers (ICE) and will continue to do so. The matter has come up at recent gatherings spurred by increased fears within the Latino community that deportation proceedings are going to raise dramatically under President Donald Trump. Larry Cantwell, the East Hampton

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Town Supervisor, drew cheers from a town hall gathering when he stated that the town would not agree to train its police officers as immigration agents. “No one told us to and no one asked us to train local police to serve as federal immigration agents,” acknowledged Alex Walter, East Hampton Town Deputy Supervisor

(Cantwell was on vacation last week). “We are doing the same thing we did six months ago.” “There is no new directive,” said Southampton Town Supervisor Jay Schneiderman. “It’s been around for a while. I don’t think it would happen on a local level.” Both town supervisors reaffirmed Continued on Page 13.


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Trump Not Calling Up National Guard By Rick Murphy

No, Donald Trump never said he would mobilize up to 100,000 National Guard soldiers to aid federal immigrations agents in their quest to track down illegal immigrants who are suspected of or guilty of committing serious crimes. The Associated Press broke the story, citing a “draft memo” it had obtained that it acknowledged was unsigned. The memo stated some within the new administration were contemplating the use of the National Guard to help stem the flow of illegal immigrants into the country. CBS not only went with the story but also spiced it up further by claiming “millions living nowhere near the Mexico border” would be deported. The Boston Globe put a name and a face to it – the President’s -- going with the headline “Trump Reportedly Weighing Use Of National Guard.” By the time the so-called Liberal Press was finished with the story, it was fodder for front pages all over the world. “Yet some people immediately sensed that something about the story seemed off,” David A. Graham

wrote in The Atlantic last week. Indeed, the Department of Homeland Security, The White House, and The Pentagon all denounced the reporting and denied any knowledge of the memo. The White House called it yet another example of Fake News. Yet, given the frantic pace and often indecipherable rhetoric coming out of the White House, no one could be quite sure – and that was enough to send the Latino population reeling. “The story is a classic Trump administration story: a sweeping, surprising move; a leaked memo substantiating the story, emerging from a very leaky administration;

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and a policy in keeping with the president’s campaign promise to deport illegal immigrants,” Graham wrote. The President does in fact feed into the media hysteria, creating a climate that fosters Fake News, oftentimes because his wording is unclear and the intent of written directives hard to interpret. For example, following a directive issued by Trump last week The New York Times, perhaps the poster child for this administration’s Fake News perpetrators, published an article that concluded, “Enforcement officials have been directed to seek the deportation of anyone in the country illegally.” But the presidential order, while seemingly expanding the authority of ICE agents, did not alter from Trump’s message that “the bad guys” – illegals guilty of serious crimes – are the target of his wrath. INS law has always allowed agents to start deportation proceedings against illegal immigrants whether they have committed serious crimes or not. The Times has insisted any and all immigrants will be deported under Trump, but he reaffirmed as recently as Thursday that his focus remains on hardened criminals within the ranks of the illegal immigrants.

An article in last week’s paper incorrectly stated that Julio V. Delgado, a school administrator who currently works for the Southampton School District, was “replaced” as principal of a Glen Cove elementary school last year after a relatively small amount of money he collected went missing. In fact Delgado was relieved of duties Deasy Elementary School in Glen Cove back in 2010 and district administrators called the move a “personnel matter.”

When Trump went out of his way to note that so-called Dreamers, who were brought to the United States as young children, “will be treated with “compassion” and not deported. The Times devoted a single sentence in the middle of the article but couldn’t resist an editorial comment: the Dreamers were safe, “for now,” Michael Shear and Ron Dixon wrote. The Times has egregiously, and apparently deliberately, played this game before according to the White House: reporters routinely change the phrase “Islamic Terrorists” to “Muslims” when discussing the proposed Trump travel ban, according to a number of White House sources. More egregious is the implication that Latinos are somehow discouraged from entering the country. Trump’s immigration order in January limited immigration from six Middle East countries known to have a significant ISIS presence. Citizens of Latin and South American countries can enter the US legally and do so by the thousands every day. One thing for certain: Trump is doubling down on illegal border crossings and those caught in the Border States will be deported, no questions asked, if he has his way. And yes, in the past Trump has not ruled out using the National Guard in the Border States – state authorities have also broached that possibility as well. The Obama administration put in place a solution that is already proving beneficial to Trump: “a blueprint on how to outsource immigration enforcement to local cops . . .” that was the 287(g) plan, a legal Memorandum Of Agreement between the department of Homeland Security and a policing agency or agencies. (See accompanying article.) Ironically, these agreements contain a clause prohibiting “racial profiling” of any kind and pointing out that it is illegal. An investigation by the Department of Justice concluded that the Maricopa County (Ariz.) Sheriff’s Office, for one, “engaged in a pattern and practice of constitutional violations, including racial profiling of Latinos, after entering a 287(g) agreement,” reported the American Immigration Council. In fact, the Council said the 287(g) agreements have resulted in a massive amount of illegal profiling cases.


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Local Police

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 11. the towns have always cooperated with ICE agents and will continue to do so. The idea of training local police officers to perform duties usually reserved for federal immigration agents - “Trump’s Order” as the press calls it - isn’t Trump’s at all.

Nothing New In fact, the idea of using local police to help identify illegal immigrants goes back more than 20 years. Its genesis can be traced back to The Immigration and Nationality Act, or INA, created in 1952. Before the INA, a variety of statutes governed immigration law but were not organized in one location. The McCarran-Walter bill of 1952, Public Law No. 82-414, collected and codified many existing provisions and reorganized the structure of immigration law. The Act has been amended many times over the years, but is still the basic body of immigration law. In 1996, Congress created Section 287(g) programs as an amendment to the INA. It is the provisions of Section 287(g) the media mistakenly refers to as Trump’s initiative. For six years after the passage of 287(g) ICE did not take advantage of the program, to in essence, deputize local law enforcement personnel to aid federal immigration agents. But in 2002 ICE started allowing state and local law enforcement agencies to enter into Memorandum of Agreement with local law enforcement entities, primarily because the federal detention centers were overflowing and more temporary jail cells were needed. It should be noted, though that ICE didn’t actively seek out every law enforcement agency and ask for cooperation. Agents were leery of what one anonymously and derisively called the “Barney Fife Syndrome” – small town police gumming up a federal operation like the bungling officer from the TV program, “The Andy Griffith Show.” Instead, ICE handpicked 1675 state and local police officers from 38 police agencies around the

REAL ESTATE

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country to handle immigration enforcement laws. A total of 402,079 “removable aliens” were processed from between 2006 and 2015 as a result. In 2009, under pressure from President Obama ICE revised the 287(g) delegated authority program, ostensibly to strengthen public safety and ensure consistency in immigration enforcement across the country, prioritizing the arrest and detention of criminal aliens. In reality, President Obama apparently wanted to rein in charges of racial profiling in Border States – nine of the deputized law enforcement agencies were in Arizona or Texas. ICE agents were charged with taking felons, gang members and drug dealers from the ranks of illegal immigrants but allowing the rest to go about their daily affairs. Trump’s recent pronouncements signal a return to more aggressive enforcement, especially on and near the border but do not alter the laws already on the books but simply reaffirms them.

Environment Of Fear “It’s an environment of fear, the fear of deportation,” Schneiderman said about the local Latino community. “Specifically immigrants are afraid the net will widen beyond violent felonies and lesser crimes like driving without a license may at some point become deportable offenses.” It was Obama’s change to 287(g) that Trump addressed in his recent executive order. Trump does indeed want to enlist the aid of some local police forces to achieve his goal of deporting what he contends are over a million criminal illegals. To do this, he wants to roll back Obama’s 2009 directive and take the handcuffs off law enforcement units who have already entered into 287(g) MOAs. He wants the extra clout, primarily to curtail illegal border crossings. “It hasn’t happened here and it’s not going to happen here,” Walter said. “It’s a voluntar y program. Everything is as it has always been,” Schneiderman said. Whatever the case the vagaries in Trump’s recent directive give

13

Independent / Rick Murphy

There have been several gatherings, including one in East Hampton Town Hall last week, to discuss President Trump’s focus on illegal immigrants and the negative effect it has on local communities.

the Latino population cause for concern (see related story). Trump reaffirmed that felons who are in the country remain the focus of his directive, but pointed out that under current INS guidelines illegal immigrants can be deported for any number of reasons.

No Sanctuary As aforesaid, ICE had 287(g) agreements with 38 law enforcement agencies in 16 states in place even before Trump was elected. It should be pointed out that not a single New York State law enforcement entity – village, town, county, or city – has ever signed or agreed to train their offices to do ICE duties, and most have never been asked. New York City is a Sanctuary City, but contrary to some locally published reports that does not prevent ICE from staging immigration raids there. Rosemary Boeglin, an aide to Mayor Bill de Blasio, was recently quoted as saying, “New Yorkers should rest assured that city officials, including the NYPD, will never ask about your immigration status, and the NYPD will never

become immigration enforcement agents.” As is the case everywhere, ICE agents can operate freely in NYC without the permission of local law enforcement departments. ICE arrested 40 individuals they said were on their list of illegal immigrants accused or convicted of felonies in a January raid without notifying the NYPD. If ICE asks a sanctuary city to cooperate in an arrest, that city may turn down the request. But if ICE puts a hold on an individual, then local law enforcement must notify the feds should they come across that individual and, as long as federal agents respond in a timely manner, hold the accused in detention.

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New Directive Shakes Latino Population New directives issued by President Donald Trump last week sent shock waves through the Latino community still reeling from tough new deportation threats. According to documents released by the Department of Homeland Security last week Trump has directed his administration to enforce the nation’s immigration laws even more aggressively. According to the Washington Post, which reviewed the documents, they reveal “the broad scope of the president’s ambitions: to publicize crimes by undocumented

immigrants; strip such immigrants of privacy protections; enlist local police officers as enforcers; erect new detention facilities; discourage asylum seekers; and, ultimately, speed up deportations.” Trump called his war on illegal immigrants “a military operation” during a speech he made in Washington DC Thursday. John Kelly, the Secretary of Homeland Security, said afterwards Trump did not use the word “military” literally and that no members of any Armed Forces are involved or will be involved in DHS operations.

Trump reiterated his intention of focusing on “criminal aliens who victimize American people.” The new enforcement policies put into practice language that Mr. Trump used on the campaign trail, vastly expanding the definition of “criminal aliens” and warning that such unauthorized immigrants “routinely victimize Americans,” disregard the “rule of law and pose a threat” to people in communities across the United States. Despite those assertions in the new documents, research

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shows lower levels of crime among immigrants than among nativeborn Americans.

Hampton Bays Assault Southampton Town Police arrested a Hampton Bays man they said beat up another man in a road rage incident on February 20. Police said the accused punched and kicked the other man after confronting him on Lynn Avenue before fleeing the scene. The accused, 19, is charged with Third Degree Assault, a Class A misdemeanor. Tracked Her Cell On February 21 an East Hampton man used a tracking device to locate his wife’s phone – and found her in a car with another man, according to East Hampton Village Police. The wife exited the vehicle she was in, but the accused smashed into it and almost struck a man walking his dog in the process. The spurned husband with charged with Second Degree Reckless Endangerment. Forged Instrument East Hampton Town Police picked up a local man Friday and charged him with Possession of a Forged Instrument second degree, a Class D felony. Police said Luis Eduardo IngaMorocho, 39, was confronted on Accabonac Road after they saw him operating a van with a phony inspection sticker which had allegedly been lifted from another vehicle. He was released after posting $250 bail.

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Janet Culbertson Company

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Long Island Winterfest Independent/Nicole Teitler

A kick off party for Long Island Winterfest was held at Hotel Indigo in Riverhead on Friday. For a schedule of Live On The Vine concerts and other events visit www.longislandwinterfest.com.

Bridgehampton Chamber Music Festival Marya Martin, Artistic Director

Fire & EMS Hero Comedy Night

Announcing BCMF Spring 2017

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Brahms’ Horn Trio

Saturday, March 11, 6:00 pm

Bridgehampton Presbyterian Church

Works by Quantz, Ewazen, & Brahms

Additional Concerts

Marya Martin, flute Stewart Rose, horn

Paul Huang, violin Orion Weiss, piano

Brentano String Quartet

Dvořák & Brahms

Sat, April 1, 6:00 pm

Sat, May 6, 6:00 pm

Quartets by Bach, Mendelssohn & Beethoven

Sextets by Dvořák & Brahms

Bridgehampton Presbyterian Church

Bridgehampton Presbyterian Church

Tickets: $50 / $40 / $10 (Student) 212.741.9403 | www.bcmf.org

Independent/Richard Lewin

On Saturday evening the meeting room at Montauk Fire House was once again transformed into a New York City style comedy club by LaughNYC, with the annual "Fire & EMS Hero Comedy Night." The evening of stand up comedy, food, and beverages provided a well-deserved, laugh-filled break from the normally serious and stressful work of protecting our communities. It was a cooperative effort of the Amagansett Fire Department (Chief Allen Bennett) and the Montauk Fire Department (Chief Vincent Franzone). Performing were Paul Corrigan, Gary Keshner, John Larocchia (former NYC Fire Fighter, turned Comedian), and headliner Jerrold Benford (soon to appear on Comedy Central).


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March 1, 2017

17

Endangered: A Janet Culbertson Exhibit the majestic forests, a family vacation to Sag Harbor left a lasting impression of vast ocean views and golden sands. After earning a degree from CarnegieMellon University, Culbertson obtained her masters at New York University. Eventually, her memories of Sag Harbor pulled her to Long Island where she remains constantly inspired by the seascapes and landscapes. With a resume to boast, this artist has featured her work across the globe. She had diplayed her work at The National Museum of Women in the

Arts in Washington, D.C., The Fogg Art Museum at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., The Telfair Museum in Savannah, Ga., and The National Museo de Los Ninos in San Jose, Costa Rica. In addition, she received the Pollock Krasner Grant in 2008 and two N.Y. State Council of Arts Grants in 2003. For more information and gallery hours call 631-548-2536. You can follow more stories from Nicole Teitler on Facebook, Snapchat, and Instagram as Nikki On The Daily.

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“Tortoise” by Janet Culbertson.

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From March 6 through April 8, at Suffolk County Community College’s Ly c e u m G a l l e r y i n R i v e r h e a d , experience Shelter Island artist Janet Culbertson’s exhibit “Endangered.” The public is welcome to attend a special opening reception that will be held on Thursday, March 9, from 4 to 6 PM. Por traits of animals like the Galapagos tortoise, African elephant, and grey wolf will be displayed in ink and charcoal, with all work sizeable, up to eight feet tall.

For more than 40 years Culbertson has raised awareness about the shrinking habitat of endangered animals. Her large scale drawings depict the devastation from worldwide pollution and human interference on the environment. Fueled by natural and manmade disasters, her work can be viewed as a silent call creating ecological awareness in a world of continuous threat. Growing up in a small town in Western Pennsylvania surrounded by

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Sweet Charities

By Jessica Mackin-Cipro

Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend. com. Eastern Long Island Hospital presents the ELIH Auxiliary Car Raffle, cosponsored by Mullen Motors. Tickets are $50 and participants can win a brand new Jeep Renegade or walk away with $15,000 cash. The drawing takes place May 12 at noon. For more info call 631-477-5463.

also register and will be put on a team. To register in advance send team name to citizensforaccessrights@gmail. com. There will be a cash prize for first place. Snacks and refreshments will be available. All proceeds will go to CfAR to protect beach access on the East End. Citizens for Access Right is a group of East End residents who support open access to local beaches. For further information on CfAR visit www. citizensforaccessrights.com.

Trivia Night

Celebration Of Life

ELIH Auxiliary Car Raffle

Citizens for Access Rights or CfAR, will host Trivia Night at the Amagansett American Legion Hall on Friday at 7 PM. Teams of four can register in advance for $25 per person ($20 for 2017 CfAR members), singles may

The Island Gift Of Life Foundation presents its 17th annual Cher yl Hannabury Memorial "Celebration of Life" Community Cocktail Party on Saturday from 6 to 9 PM at the Ram’s Head Inn on Shelter Island. The Island

Fundraiser For Jessica

A fundraiser for Jessica Coggins will be held at Digger’s in Riverhead on Wednesday, March 8, from 6 to 9 PM. Coggins, at age 27, was recently diagnosed with stage III cervical cancer. The fundraiser is to help with medical expenses. $20 includes an appetizer buffet and there will be music by DJ Phil, guest bartenders, a raffle, auction, and a special raffle for a 55” smart TV. For more information visit www.gofundme.com/jesscoggins.

Academy Of The Arts

Guild Hall's 32nd Annual Academy of the Arts Achievement Awards &

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Gift Of Life Foundation provides a wide range of services to people on the East End who are struggling both financially and emotionally with serious illnesses. Tickets are $50 and can be purchased in advance or at the door. For tickets and more info visit www. islandgiftoflife.org.

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Dinner will be held at The Rainbow Room in Rockefeller Plaza in New York City on Monday, March 13, from 6 to 10 PM. Celebrating artistic achievement, the evening honors Philip Schultz for Literary Arts presented by Alice Quinn; Susan Stroman for Performing Arts presented by John Weidman; Edwina von Gal for Visual Arts presented by Maya Lin; and Cheryl and Michael Minikes for Special Award for Leadership and Philanthropic Endeavors presented by Roy Furman. The evening is hosted by artist Eric Fischl, President of Guild Hall's Academy of the Arts, and honors both summer and year-round East End residents who have demonstrated excellence in the visual, literary, and performing arts. Visit www.guildhall.org.

Shamrock Shindig

Aid to the Developmentally Disabled will host its third annual "Shamrock Shindig" on March 16 from 6:30 to 10 PM at the Long Island Aquarium in Riverhead. This evening of family fun will feature hors d'oeuvres, Irish food, live music by Tommy Sullivan of The Brooklyn Bridge, a raffle, and a 140,000 Gallon Shark Tank Showdown. The Shark Tank Showdown is where daring participants are sponsored to dive into the shark tank. The sponsor who solicits the highest donation total will take the plunge. Tickets are $65 per person, $25 for children and are available for purchase at www.addny.net. All proceeds will fund programs, services, and community engagement efforts for over 160 of its differently-abled population at its residential and supported homes.

Denim and Diamonds

"Denim and Diamonds," a kick off party to celebrate 22 years of The Ellen Hermanson Foundation providing access to state-of-the-art quality breast health care on the East End, will be held on March 18 from 6:30 to 10 PM at 230 Elm in Southampton. The evening includes food, fun, and dancing. Tickets start at $125 and $75 for guests 29 and under. For more info visit www. ellensrun.org.

Perfect Earth Project

Join Perfect Earth Project for a celebration of public landscapes in Southampton that are managed without synthetic fertilizers or pesticides at the Southampton Arts Center on Sunday, March 19, from 2 to 3:30 PM. Locations without synthetic fertilizers or pesticides include Southampton Hospital, Parrish Art Museum, and Southampton Arts Center. Perfect Earth Project landscaping experts will be on hand to answer your questions about maintaining your own beautiful landscape without chemicals that are dangerous for your families' health and the environment. At 2:30 PM, children and parents are invited to make native bee hotels using upcycled and natural materials. For more info visit www. perfectearthproject.org/events.


IN THE NEWS

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

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Gallery Walk

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

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March 1, 2017

19

By Jessica Mackin-Cipro

Pamela Thomson, Petals, Oil on Canvas. Pride from Prejudice, photo by Steven Schreiber.

Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend. com.

Inside And Out

Art Gallery at the Quogue Library presents its March exhibit “Pamela Thomson: Inside and Out of the Studio.” An opening reception will be held on Saturday from 3 to 4:30 PM. Thomson is an artist who lives and works in Hampton Bays. She enjoys painting local landscapes, cottages, gardens and still lifes. The show will run through March 29.

Endangered

“Endangered,” an exhibit of drawings by Shelter Island’s Janet Culbertson is on display at Suffolk County Community College’s Lyceum Gallery on the Eastern Campus in Riverhead Monday through April 8. A reception will be held on Thursday, March 9, from 4 to 6 PM.

Student Arts Festival

The Guild Hall Student Arts Festival, Part II, Grades 9 to 12 will be on display through March 26. An opening reception will be held on Saturday from 2 to 4 PM. The festival celebrates the young artists of our region and salutes their art instructors, school administrators, and families who nurture their creative pursuits. Visit www.guildhall.org.

...As Humanly Possible

East End Arts presents “...As Humanly

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Possible,” a new art invitational exhibition at the Southampton Cultural Center featuring five regional photographers. This art show is for art and photography enthusiasts to experience the human condition around the world. Strong facial expressions, deplorable living conditions, as well as the more fortunate society are the subjects to expect in this exhibit. Photographers include Marilyn DiCarlo Ames, Jim Lennon, Steven Schreiber, Meryl Spiegel, and Joan Wozniak. The exhibition will be on display through May 21. This exhibition is curated by Steven Schreiber. An artists reception will be held on Friday from 5 to 7 PM where the public is invited to meet the artists and learn about their processes and inspirations.

Suffolk Historical Society

The Suffolk County Historical Society presents a closing reception for Fullerton’s Long Island: “The Lure of the Land” on Thursday at 6 PM. It’s the last chance to view this display of historic photographs of turn-of-the-century Long Island from legendary Hal B. Fullerton Collection in the Grand Staas Gallery. Suffolk County Historical Society presents “A Time Portal to the North Fork: Photographs of Riverhead to

Orient.” In the spirit of Long Island’s rural and maritime past, this exhibit features documentary and fine art photographs of the bucolic North Fork by local photographers Neil Scholl, Peter Dicke, and Wendy Polhemus-Annibell in the Weathervane Gallery. The photographs on exhibit are available for sale, and a portion of the proceeds benefits the Suffolk County Historical Society. Exhibit will run through March 31. The exhibit “Mapping Suffolk County” is also on display through Spring 2017. The exhibit Features a wide assortment of original and reproduction historic maps of Suffolk County locations, from the 1700s to the 1900s, in the Gish Gallery.

ONGOING

Halsey McKay Gallery

Halsey McKay Gallery in East Hampton presents “Beaumont sur Mer,” Ted Gahl’s fourth solo exhibition with the gallery. Inspired by the 1988 Frank Oz comedy, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, the title of the show is derived from the fictitious resort setting where the film takes place. In several large-scale works, Gahl continues to investigate the parameters of a signature painting practice and the fine line between abstraction and representation. The gallery also presents “Miss You”

with artwork by Joshua Abelow. His practice involves large and small-scale oil painting, printmaking, drawing, photography, poetry, and curating. A reception will be held on March 25 and the shows will run through April 8.

Waterlines

The White Room Gallery presents "Waterlines," a solo show of work by Michele Dragonetti. "Waterlines" will feature approximately 40 works by Dragonetti from her Boat Hulls photography series. Photos in the ongoing series transfor m often humble vessels into abstract portraits, celebrating their imperfect appeal. The series has been expanded beyond its East End origins to include images taken elsewhere in the U.S. as well as internationally. The show will run through March 5.

Black & White

Tripoli Gallery in Southampton presents "Black & White," a group exhibition featuring works by Katherine Bernhardt, Ross Bleckner, Quentin Curr y, Jamie dePasquale, Tracey Emin, Ryan Estep, Urs Fischer, April Gornik, Takesada Matsutani,

Continued on Page 27.

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Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend. com.

By Camila Tucci

Music

Benefit Concert

Songwriters Share Concert Series is set for Friday at 8 PM with singer/ songwriter Caroline Doctorow and special guest Walt Michael. The concert will take place at the Unitarian Universalist Meeting House in Sag Harbor and will benefit The Bridgehampton Childcare Center. Refreshments are included in the admission fee, $15.

Zach Brown Tribute

A Zach Brown Band Tribute Concert will be held at Bay Street Theater in Sag Harbor on Saturday at 8 PM. Visit www. baystreet.org.

Wednesday Night Live

Ray Red and Mike Rusinsky host “Wednesday Night Live,” a weekly open mic at MJ Dowling’s in Sag Harbor from 8 to 11 PM. Performers include musicians, poets, comedians, and singers. Sign up starts at 7 PM. Performers get a free soft drink or tap beverage. Every Friday, it’s karaoke beginning at 10 PM.

Stephen Talkhouse

Friday night it’s DJ Night with Curt

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Doogie at 10 PM. Top 40 party band JuiceBox will perform on Saturday at 10 PM with a cover of $10. Visit stephentalkhouse.com or call 631-2673117 to purchase tickets early or for more info.

Townline BBQ

Townline BBQ presents Karaoke Nights every Saturday from 8 PM to 12 AM with a special food and drink menu as guests sing their favorites. Come for free pool and pub quiz night at 7 PM every Thursday evening and hear some “smokin’ hot tunes” live alongside a happy hour menu every Friday from 5 to 8 PM. The Wailan Brothers will play on Friday from 5 to 8 PM. There will be live music every Friday throughout the month of March. For more info call 631-537-2271 or visit the Townline BBQ Facebook page.

Boogie Woogie

“That 70s Band” Winter Boogie Wonderland 2017 is set for Saturday at 8 PM at the Suffolk Theater in Riverhead. That 70’s Band plays all the top songs that came out during the groovy 70’s. To get tickets visit suffolktheater.com.

Water Mill Community House

Join in on the Traditional New England Contra Dance on Saturday at 8 PM. An introductory lesson will be held at 7:45 PM. No partner necessary

SEASONED PROFESSIONALS

Zach Brown Band Tribute Concert is held at Bay Street on Saturday.

and beginners are welcomed. Dave Harvey, the caller, will be accompanied with live music from the Huntingtones. Admission fee is $14 for adults, $7 for students, and children up to 16 with an adult are free.

Words

Writers Speak Wednesdays

Stony Brook Southampton MFA, with support by Harbor Books in Sag Harbor, has arranged a calendar of different author readings and discussions. Wednesday, March 8, numerous faculty members will read from their works. They will be speaking at Radio Lounge on the second floor of Chancellors Hall in Southampton. The reception begins at 6:30 PM and the readings and discussion will start at 7 PM. Visit stonybrook.edu/mfa or call 631-632-5028 to register or for any questions.

Rowdy Readers

BookHampton and Rowdy Hall have come together to present the Rowdy Readers book club. The first book to be discussed by the club during a lunch at Rowdy Hall in East Hampton is The Glorious Heresis by Lisa McInerney on Thursday at 12:30 PM. Visit BookHampton.com for more details, registration, and a book club purchasing discount.

Story Salon

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Story Salon, a live storytelling venue based in Los Angeles, is coming to the East Hampton Library with Story Salon East on Saturdays from 11 AM to noon. Each week seven people from the group will each tell a story of up to seven minutes long. Story Salon East will be hosted by Steve Sobel, a East Hampton resident. To register call 631324-0222, ext.3.

Potluck Players

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The Potluck Players present a free reading of When Suzanne and I Ate Dinner at the Bay Street Theater in Sag Harbor on Thursday at 7 PM. Visit www.baystreet.org.

Architecture Discussion

The Parrish Art Museum will host a forum to discuss design and building issues with a global context and East End focus on Friday at 6 PM. Inter-

Sections: The Architect in Conversation will kick off the discussion between architect Preston Scott Cohen and Parrish Director Terrie Sultan. For more info visit parrishart.org.

Theater

Goat On A Boat

Goat on a Boat presents 14 Carrots, an audience participation show for pre-schoolers, on Saturday at 11 AM at Bay Street in Sag Harbor. On Sunday it’s the Bambini Ball, Goat on a Boat’s annual family fundraiser, at 3 PM. For more info or to purchase tickets visit baystreet.org or call the box office at 631-725-9500.

Film

Wondrous Boccaccio

The East Hampton Library continues its International Film Festival of 2017 with the film The Wondrous Boccaccio on Sunday at 2 PM. The subtitled Italian film was created by Paolo and Vittorio Taviani. It’s set in 14th century, black plague stricken Florence, where ten people have escaped to a country estate and spend their time telling stories. For more info and to register for a seat visit easthamptonlibrary. org or call the circulation desk at 631324-0222.

Anniversary Screening

Guild Hall in East Hampton and the Hamptons International Film Festival present a 25th anniversary screening of I Am Not Your Negro on Friday at 6 PM. Tickets are $15 or $13 for members. On Saturday at 7 PM a National Live Theater screening of Amadeus will be broadcasted live from the National Theater. Tickets are $18 or $16 for members. To purchase tickets or for details visit GuildHall. org or call their box office at 631324-4050.

Turkish Film

A screening of The Eagle Huntress, a Turkish film with English subtitles, will be held at the East Hampton Library on Saturday from 1 to 3 PM. The documentary follows a 13-year-old nomadic Mongolian girl who is fighting to become the first female eagle hunter in her family. To register visit the Adult Reference Desk or call 631-3240222 ext.3.


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21

Broadway Reporting From

(& Sometimes Off)

By Isa Goldberg

Entering the soiree at the Signature Center off Broadway, we’re greeted with cocktails (colored water) and some sugary snacks. Indeed, Evening At The Talk House, written by Wallace Shawn, who also plays Dick, one of the central characters, is a gathering of theater’s most illustrious. We m e e t R o b e r t ( M a t t h e w Broderick), Annette (Claudia Shear), Tom (Larry Pine), Nellie (Jill Eikenberry), and Ted (John Epperson), among others. The occasion is the 10th anniversary of a show they had all worked on, and which had been a flop. Like the notorious Moose Murders, which opened and closed on Broadway on the same night, February 22, 1983, Shawn’s play is a mystery farce. The conversation about inexplicable violence evokes images as bizarre as those acted out in that one night of Moose Murders, where a mummified paraplegic rose from his wheelchair to kick a man dressed as a moose. Murder and a societal penchant for violence and abuse are the Zeitgeist in Shawn’s dark comedy. Described by one character as “an age of mercy,” the targets of these murders are often the elderly, along with other vulnerable people. When the ageing Dick enters in his pajamas, we notice the bruises on his face from “a short informal battering” by friends - “which he loved,” he says. Meanwhile, the cast of characters continues to opine about the theater, dismayed by its demise. They discuss politics, focusing on the multitude of elections – at least one every three months. Clearly, the absurdity of violence, and the rash of unexpected deaths, is paired with the demise of the theater. They talk about a leading politician, who is also a theater producer, for whom Robert and others in the room are currently working. It’s he, we’re told, who has put in place a program for murder. To confuse matters even more, ample hypocrisy abounds among these friends. Characters express great fondness for one another, then stab them figuratively and sometimes literally in the back. Some of the guests

approve of this behavior, while others appear uncertain. “How do we know we’re killing the right people?” one guest asks. There is no greater clarity to the whys and wherefores of these assassinations than there would be in a remake of Mission Impossible. One can never be sure who the murderers are, what their motives happen to be, or what side good or evil - they represent. In fact, the moral compass among these friends is so out of whack that the play becomes a kind of silly tragedy. “What if everyone just started throwing bombs at one another?” the hostess Nellie queries. It’s best not to address her particular fate -- lest we kill the surprise -- but her query is certainly a timely one for all Americans. In The Talk House, to boot, we hear about it with the kind of elitism and snobbery that keeps the proverbial ball rolling.

Fade

Set in “Trump’s America,” Tanya Saracho’s new play, Fade, produced by Primary Stages at the Cherry Lane Theatre, is a soulful, engrossing twoperson drama. Portraying the newcomer on a staff of television writers in LA, Lucia (Annie Dow) befriends the only person who will give her the time of day. That’s Abel (Edie Martinez), a janitor who wears his tough edge with noticeable tattoos. A Mexican American worker, Abel sticks to himself, until he gets swept up in Lucia’s overtures of friendship. Insisting that as Latinos they share a commonality, Lucia lures Abel with stories of the racism and sexism that dominate in the room of white male television writers. It seems odd, somehow, that Lucia, who was born and raised in Mexico, looks and talks more like a Gringo than the LA born Abel. Despite her complaints, she is the mirror image of a young successful American woman. And so the die is cast. As a playwright, Saracho has an easy honest feel for dialogue. In this story about race, gender, class and

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how they collide, her message is forthright and unambiguous. Truthfully, for a fair share of this 90-minute production, one might imagine that Fade is an all too obvious tale. That it is not, is a credit, both to the efficacy of the narrative and the adeptness of the actors. Similarly, director Jerr y Ruiz brings the inherent conflict to the fore, accentuating the hypocrisy that prevails and pervades in the work place, and among the people who exist in it. That Mariana Sanchez’s design of the office space transforms from borderline dingy to openly magnificent brings a nifty reveal. But overall, this small stage production is unpretentious. Mostly, it’s a really a feat for these two engaging actors, who pull off a simple tale with exceptional finesse. Seeing The Great Comet Of 1812 for the third time, and now with Josh Groban as Pierre at the Imperial Theatre on Broadway, I found the story itself so much clearer. Based on a segment of Tolstoy’s War And Peace, the musical’s plot is dense, and the relationships between the characters so tangled, that the story gets lost in the

epic scope of the show. While its impact lies in this sense of endearing mystery, the underlying human experience remains inexplicable and otherworldly. But Groban, an operatic pop singer, has the gift of a great storyteller. In his own soul-searching performances, he sings about intimate experiences, opening the door for the audience to see who he is. Often these songs are about the quest for love or failed love. In his Broadway debut, his silvery, well-balanced voice paints pictures so vividly, we don’t get lost in the onstage mania, which is nearly bacchanalian at times. In the Russia of 1812, after all, we’re on the threshold of Napoleon’s invasion and the Great War of 1812. Events are spiraling out of control. Enter Groban’s Pierre - an existential anti-hero, a brooding man, in an unhappy marriage. As in Tolstoy’s novel, it’s he who brings the human dimension to the story. His surprising transformation, inspired by the realization of his love for Natasha and his apocryphal vision of the Comet of 1812, speak to the restorative power of love and faith. Groban, an awesome romantic lead, pulls it off.


22

March 1, 2017

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astrology & all Week of March 1 - March 8,2017

Highlights of the week: Venus, the planet of love, beauty, and what we value starts to go retrograde from the sign of feisty Aries into the introspective sign of Pisces on Saturday until mid April. 
We may examine what we truly value in life. What is love? Where are your ambitions or illusions? Perhaps old friends, lovers, or situations return for healing to take place. As it is the start of a new eight-year cycle, we should use this period to think about how we can

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Joanne Wolff

improve communication and increase love in our daily lives. Extra money making opportunities can’t hurt either. ARIES (3/20 - 4/20) Time for a makeover from your hair to your diet routine to your home. You will be surprised how it lifts your spirits and brings some desired attention. TAURUS (4/20 - 5/20) Those career ambitions can no longer wait. Use your energy to come up with a workable plan to bring in more money. Love relationships can become permanent.

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GEMINI (5/21 - 6/20) Contracts and agreements can be important for you. See what works or what no longer suits your needs. Perhaps it is time to leave that friendship behind.

You may be very busy with your home whether buying, selling, or redecorating. Children can play a big part. Many will become parents during this time.

CANCER (6/20 - 7/20) Travel for business may be in the near future. Or perhaps someone from a very different background will suddenly catch your eye. Either way, it is time to grab those dreams and make them come true.

CAPRICORN (12/21 - 1/20) Your parents or your boss will be taking up much of your time. Only you can decide how much you are obligated. You may also decide to change your residence during the upcoming months.

LEO (7/21 - 8/21) The recent eclipse might have awakened a forgotten creative desire. Look for new opportunities to crop up at work and in love. It is time to go for what you want.

AQUARIUS (1/20 - 2/19) During this time you may decide to change jobs or finally make that relationship legal. These big decisions need your undivided attention and will bring you much happiness.

VIRGO (8/22 - 9/22) Go back to 2009 to see what you were dealing with at that time. Is something not finished? Your deepest thoughts and partners are involved. LIBRA (9/22 – 10/22) This time may be leading up to some life changing events. Pay close attention to all dealings with others from your spouse to your boss to your pals. Deal with all health issues no matter how small. SCORPIO (10/23 - 11/21) Is it time to reconcile or walk away? What changes do you want to make? The next few weeks will help you reveal the correct path to get what you want. SAGITTARIUS (11/22 - 12/21)

PISCES (2/19 - 3/20) A sudden opportunity may present itself. It might be around love or money, but either way, it is time for you to finally start to live. Others may not recognize this new approach. Time to live! JOANNE WOLFF is a Certified Astrologer who guides her clients in how to use the energies of the planets in their unique natal charts. She will teach you the language of the stars. Joanne is available for private readings, either in person or by phone, as well as parties and charitable events. Joanne can be reached at 516-9965354. (Text too!)

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East End Calendar Highlights Compiled By Kitty Merrill

Each week we’ll highlight local community events and library offerings presented by area institutions and organizations. It’s on you to send ‘em in, kids. Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email news@ indyeastend.com.

East Hampton WEDNESDAY 3•1•17 • AARP tax assistance is available at the East Hampton Library every Wednesday until April 12 from 10 AM to 1 PM. Call 631-324-0222 ext.3 to make an appointment. THURSDAY 3•2•17 • East Hampton Chamber of Commerce Executive Director, Steven Ringel, has announced the chamber’s first breakfast event of the year at Cozy Cottages’ “farmhouse” in Wainscott – which doubles as a small conference center. The breakfast will be held from 8:30 to 10 AM. On hand will be Eileen E. O’Brien, who is the Vice President of SBA Lending with Bridgehampton National Bank. She will discuss lending and other important information for small business owners. Coffee, bagels and other light breakfast fare will be served. A $10 fee will be collected at the door. All are welcome to attend. SATURDAY 3•4•17 • See the spellbinding Turkish documentary, The Huntress, at the East Hampton Library at 1 PM. It’s free, but you have to register. Call 631-324-0222 ext. 3. • Hike Point Woods with Larry Raymond of the East Hampton Trails Preservation Society at 10 AM. Meet on Camp Hero Road, a right turn off Rte. 27 in Montauk, about a mile east of Deep Hollow Ranch. Call 631-668-3432 or 646 675- 8513 with questions. •Montauk Observatory presents a fun and educational behind-the-scenes look at the adventures of co-authors Dr. Guy Consolmagno (Director of the Vatican Observatory) and Prof. Dan Davis (Geosciences

Chair, Stony Brook University) during the writing of their best-selling, classic guidebook to the stars, Turn Left at Orion. 7 PM at the Senior Thesis Center in the Ross School on Goodfriend Drive in East Hampton. • Andy Sabin, President, South Fork Natural History Museum (SoFo) Board of Directors leads a search for blue-spotted salamanders in Montauk at 7:30 PM. Please bring a flashlight and wear boots, as late winter rains will make the ground soggy. This walk will take place only if there have been heavy rains. Call SoFo for meeting place, registration, and admission information. 631-537-9735. WEDNESDAY 3•8•17 • East Hampton Clericus hosts its monthly Community Soup Dinner from 5 to 7 PM at Most Holy Trinity Parish Hall 77 Buell Lane in East Hampton. Free to Men, Women, and Children of all ages.

Southampton THURSDAY 3•2•17 • The Rogers Memorial Library will offer a jam session for local musicians and fans from 7 to 8:30 PM. Participants may bring instruments and all styles of music and levels of experience are welcome. A piano and microphones are available. For details, call Evan Gottschalk at 631-283-0774 ext. 509. No registration or fee is required. FRIDAY 3•3•17 • The famed Harlem Wizards play at Westhampton Beach High School. Doors open at 6 PM, game time is 7 PM. Tickets will be $15 for students at the door, $20 for adults. You can buy them ahead of time online via harlemwizards.thundertix.com and search events. SATURDAY 3•4•17 • An exhibit entitled “Hunting the Whale: The Rise and Fall of a Southampton Industry” opens this week at the Rogers Mansion in Southampton. An opening reception will be held from 4 to 6 PM.

Friends. Family. Community. Dermot PJ Dolan, Agent 2228 Montauk Hwy Bridgehampton, NY 11932 Bus: 631-537-2622 Bus: 212-380-8318 dermot@dermotdolan.com

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• At 10 AM the Horticultural Alliance of the Hamptons hosts a round table discussion moderated by Pamela Harwood. Admission is free. Location: HAH Library at the Bridgehampton Community House, lower level. The public can obtain details on all events by

March 1, 2017

23

phoning the Alliance office, 631-537-2223, or by visiting www.hahgarden.org. • At noon, learn how to keep seniors safe at home at the Hampton Bays Library. Registration is required for this free class. Stop by the circulation desk.

Independent /Courtesy Lee Zeldin

On February 22, Congressman Lee Zeldin met with members of the League of Women Voters of the Hamptons in his Riverhead office to discuss various topics. Pictured above, from left to right, are Glorian Berk, Co-President of the chapter; Judi Roth, Chair of the Education Committee; Congressman Zeldin; Carol Mellor, Co-Chair of Voter Services; and Martha Potter; Member of the Board of Directors.

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24

March 1, 2017

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Independent Dining Poached Salmon With Saffron Scented Couscous And Roasted Vegetable Ingredients (serves 4) 1 ½ c couscous 1 ½ lb salmon fillet 1 lemon (sliced thin) 2 tbsp olive oil 2 tbsp butter ½ c white wine 1 shallot 1 tbsp capers 2 carrots (diced) 2 red peppers (diced) 1 c frozen peas 1 zucchini

1 red onion (diced) 2 parsnips (diced) 1 bay leaf 1 tbsp cumin 1tsp saffron salt and pepper

Method

Begin by portioning the salmon into four portions of about five or six ounces each. Now find a deep pan, one that can hold the liquid the salmon will be cooking in, and add the sliced lemon,

Weekly Specials at Cliffs Elbow Too!

white wine, capers, 1 cup of water, cover in tin foil and cook in a 400 degree oven for 20 minutes. Toss the cut vegetables in the olive oil and roast them in the 400 degree oven for 15 minutes. While this is happening add the shallot, saffron, bay leaf, and cumin to 2 ½ cups of water and bring to a boil. Once the mixture has been brought to a boil, remove the bay leaf and

pour the hot mixture over the couscous and cover with aluminum foil. Let the couscous steam in the liquid for five minutes, then fork in one tbsp of butter. When the vegetables are done mix them into the couscous and top them with salmon. The remaining poaching liquid can be reduced and you can add another tbsp of butter to the liquid to make a nice sauce to finish the dish.

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631-283-2800

www.publick.com


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Compiled By Jessica Mackin-Cipro lite bites, games, and cozy indoor fun at The Regent Cocktail Club at Gurney's Montauk. Afternoons at Regent are every Saturday from noon to 5 PM, with the complimentary mixology class from noon to 12:45 PM.

Service Station

Chef Matt Murphy.

Submit your specials! Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to jessica@indyeastend.com.

Ram’s Head Inn

The Ram’s Head Inn on Shelter Island has announced that Matt Murphy will be assuming the responsibilities of Executive Chef for the upcoming 2017 season. Owners James and Linda Eklund wish to express their thanks to former Executive Chef Joe Smith for his many years at the Ram’s Head Inn, and wish him the very best as he embarks on a new venture. Murphy brings to the Ram’s Head Inn a wealth of fine dining experience after holding sous chef positions at the Ritz Carlton, the Rainbow Room, and The Russian Tea Room, and executive chef positions at A.R.OC., Broadway Grill, and the famed La Colombe D’or. Murphy learned much of his art de cuisine when traveling in Europe and living in Italy. Murphy opened Antares Café in Greenport to great critical acclaim. It was named one of the ten best restaurants on Long Island by USA Today. Murphy also open The Kitchen at Greenport, and held the position of head chef at the Jedidiah Hawkins Inn. Murphy has made multiple appearances at the James Beard House. As is tradition at the Ram’s Head Inn, dishes will feature herbs, fruits, and vegetables plucked from the Ram’s Head own gardens, located steps from the kitchen door. Murphy has also created several new items for the bar menu for Ram’s Head’s cocktail and music lounge, Harbor Hall, to complement bar manager Harry Brigham’s inventive and seasonal cocktail menu. F o r m o r e i n f o v i s i t w w w. theramsheadinn.com.

ONGOING SPECIALS Afternoons At Regent

Savor one of the best ocean views on the East End while enjoying complimentar y mixology classes,

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favorites – Korean BBQ Berkshire ribs, lamb and chick pea curry, and chicken parmigiana-style; $9 house wine, red or white, by the glass; and a $5 house beer selection. From Sunday to Thursday, except holidays, complementing nightly menus in the dining room and downstairs Tavern, The 1770 House presents a $35 three-course prix fixe of popular a la carte dishes as well as $9 wine and $5 beer selections. For reservations call 631-324-1770.

Living Room

Prime Time at The Palm in East Hampton takes place Sunday through Friday from 5 to 7 PM with half off "Prime Bites" at the Palm Bar.

Phil's Waterfront Bar and Grill in Aquebogue presents Happy Hour Monday through Friday from 4 to 7 PM. They also feature live entertainment on Saturdays. Call for details.

Southampton Publick House

Almond Specials

The 1770 House

The 1770 House Restaurant & Inn in East Hampton, the premier year-round destination for authentic Hamptons fine dining and luxury accommodations, presents its best dining deals of the year by Chef Michael Rozzi. Each Thursday through March, in the casual downstairs Tavern of the 18th century colonial home, The 1770 House presents $17.70 dishes including its signature burger and meatloaf plus Chef Rozzi's new Tavern

Monday Night Paint

Phil's Waterfront

Prime Time

Indian Wells Tavern in Amagansett offers half-price bottles of wine every Thursday and Sunday night. On Thursdays diners may enjoy half-price bottles of wine alongside their prime rib promotion which includes a soup or salad to start, followed by prime rib served with baked potato and vegetables for $29. On Sunday, diners may enjoy half-price bottles of wine alongside a la carte Chef Specials that will change weekly.

night. For reservations contact Almond at 631-537-5665.

Sen in Sag Harbor presents Happy Hour Monday through Thursday from 5:30 to 7 PM. Enjoy $8 cocktails and $6 red and white wine.

Sen Happy Hour

Indian Wells Tavern

25

The Salty Canvas presents Monday Night Paint Parties at Townline BBQ in Sagaponack happening every Monday from 6:30 to 8:30 PM. Nikki Payne of the Salty Canvas will host a paint party complete with step-by-step instructions and all painting materials. Cost for the evening is $45 and includes one complimentary Happy Hour drink. The Happy Hour menu will be available for guests as well as the full Townline menu, so get there early to enjoy dinner before you paint. To participate guests must register at www.saltycanvashamptons. com within 24 hours of the event.

Service Station in East Hampton offers Happy Hour from 4 to 7 PM every day. Happy Hour includes $5 pizza, $5 cocktails, $5 wine, and $5 beer. For more info visit www. servicestationrestaurant.com.

Southampton Publick House presents Monday Night Madness specials. Enjoy $5 pints, $7 burger platters, and $6 wings. Tuesday is two-for-one entrees. Wednesday is Ladies Night with draft and drink specials along with DJ Tony in the taproom starting at 10 PM. Thursdays is Open Mic Night showcasing East End musicians hosted by David Kirshy starting at 8 PM. Enjoy $5 pints, $8 Tito's Cocktails, and 1/2 price appetizers. Friday is all night Happy Hour from 4 PM on with DJ Dory starting at 10 PM. Saturday night is DJ JetSet starting at 10 PM. Saturday and Sunday brunch takes place from noon to 3 PM for $18 per person. Don't miss the Brew Plate Special at the bar daily until 3 PM. The $12 deal includes one draft beer and the special of the day. Monday to Friday is happy hour from 4 to 7 PM with beer, wine, and drink specials. For further information visit www.publick.com or call 631283-2800.

March 1, 2017

Almond Restaurant in Bridgehampton presents daily specials. Meatless Mondays will continue offering a three course meatless menu for $35 all night. Tuesdays are steak frites night with a featured steak frites for $19.95. Thursday nights enjoy ½ dozen Montauk pearl oysters or ½ dozen shrimp cocktail for $10 at the bar or at tables. On Sundays grab a burger and a beer at the bar for $15. A $29 three-course prix fixe will be offered from 5:30 to 7 PM every

c/o The Maidstone in East Hampton offers a prix fixe that includes three courses for just $35 at the cozy Living Room restaurant, Sunday through Thursday, from 5:30 to 7 PM. Happy hour is Sunday to Thursday from 4 to 6 PM. Enjoy drinks and appetizers at 50 percent off.

Free Soup Days

Tuesday and Thursday are "Free Soup Days" at Clamman on North Sea Road in Southampton from 11 AM to 3 PM, with the purchase of a sandwich or entree. For more info call 631-283-6669.

Nick & Toni's

Nick & Toni’s in East Hampton

Continued on Page 26.

Japanese RestauRant and sushi BaR

Fine Dining Specializing in Japanese Cuisine & Sushi Offering Lunch & Dinner Menus and Exotic Cocktails We also have a Tatami Room

Open 7 Days for Lunch & Dinner

631-267-7600 40 Montauk Highway Amagansett, NY


26

March 1, 2017

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Food & Beverage CONTINUED FROM PAGE 25.

is introducing its own variation of “Nonna’s Sunday Sauce.” Ever y Sunday, diners may enjoy slow-cooked “Sunday sauce,” served over pasta. Cost for the dish is $20 per person. Spaghetti squash will be available as a gluten-free substitution for pasta. N i c k & To n i ' s o f f e r s t h e i r famous woodburning oven pizzas. The pizzas are available Sunday through Thursday all night. The Choice prix fixe has also returned. The menu is available Sunday through Friday (restaurant is closed Tuesdays) beginning at 6 PM. The restaurant also hosts happy hour every Monday through Friday from 5:30 to 6:30 PM and Sundays from 2:30 through 6:30 PM. During Happy

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Hour a sommelier selected glass of wine will be offered for $8, select cocktails are half price including the Meyer Lemon Cosmo, Seasonal 'Rita, and the Spanish G&T, and a rotating bottled brew is available for $6. A select bar menu of small plates are available including meatball sliders for $6, pizza margherita for $10, formaggi plate for $10, and seasonal bruschetta for $5. Call Nick & Toni's at 631-324-3550.

Buckley's Inn Between

Happy Hour weekdays at Buckley's Inn Between in Hampton Bays runs from 4 to 7 PM. On Thursdays, it's Buckley's famous wing night with $15 all you can eat wings and all you can drink Miller Lite from 10 PM to 1 AM and music by DJ Pauly.

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ASTPORT LIQUORS Monday 9-6, Tuesday-Thursday Friday• &•Closed Saturday 9-9, 12-6 Open 12pm 6pm onSunday Monday OpenSunday Sunday 12pm-9-8, - 6pm Monday 12-7pm

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Wholesale 725-9087 Retail 725-9004

Prime Meats • Groceries Produce • Take-Out Fried Chicken • BBQ Ribs Sandwiches • Salads Party Platters and 6ft. Heroes Beer, Ice, Soda

Wölffer Estate Vineyard

The Wine Stand has been winterproofed and is ready for guests. Enjoy Candlelight Saturdays from 5 to 8 PM each week. This week, Ludmilla plays at the Sagaponack vineyard. www.wolffer.com

Baiting Hollow Farm

Baiting Hollow Farm Vineyard presents 3EZ from 2 to 6 PM this Saturday. They will also host the Acoustic Soul from 2 to 6 PM on Sunday. www. baitinghollowfarmvineyard.com.

Lieb Cellars

Lieb Cellars Friday night music series continues with Points East from 6 to 9 PM. On Saturday there will be live music from 3 to 6 PM with Cassandra

Open 7 Days a Week

House. www.liebcellars.com.

Raphael

Chris Hurley & Friends performs from 1 to 4 PM on Saturday. Country and alternative band Points East are set for Sunday from 1 to 4 PM. www. raphaelwine.com.

Clovis Point Vineyard and Winery

Clovis Point Vineyard and Winery presents Firefly on Saturday from 1:30 to 5:30 PM. Sunday sees The Earthtones from the Band Full House from 1:30 to 5:30 PM. www.clovispointwines.com.

Shinn Estate Vineyard

Shinn Estate Vineyards hosts self– guided vineyard walks on Friday. Reservations are required. On Saturday at 1:30 PM join Barbara Shinn leading a Vineyard Walk. www.shinnestatevineyard.com.

Castello di Borghese Vineyard

There will be a winemaker’s walk, vineyard tour, and wine tastings every Saturday at 1 PM. $20 entrance fee. Call to reserve your spot or sign up online. www. castellodiborghese.com.

18 Park Place East Hampton 324-5400 Breakfast - Lunch - Dinner Take Out Orders


IN THE NEWS

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Gallery Walk

REAL ESTATE

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

Angelbert Metoyer, Ned Smyth, Hiroshi Sugimoto, Igor Vishnyakov and Darius Yektai. The exhibition will be on view Saturday through April 16.

A Sense Of Place

The East End Winter Salon is an artist collaborative conceived by Robin Rice, Amy Pilkington, and Sixtina Friedrich. Located in an historic house on Main Street in Bridgehampton, the first exhibition, "What We Love About the East End," includes photography, crystal jewelry, and textiles, all inspired by and created in The Hamptons. The show will run through April 2.

THE INDEPENDENT Traveler Watchman 1826

CLASSIFIEDS PETS

FIREWOOD SEASONED.-fireplace and stove wood. stacking and kindling available. M. Clark 631-727-9272.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE/RENT

19-12-30

BUSINESS FOR SALE NAIL SALON FOR SALE Located in Wainscott. Staff wants to stay on. If interested please contact owner at 631-875-5178. Leave detailed message for call back if no answer. 24-4-27

CAR FOR SALE 1989 MERCEDES 300SE Blue with Grey interior. New brakes, 2 new tires. Runs great. $4,000 631-3291950.ufn

HELP WANTED MONTAUK YEAR ROUND. Market/Deli: Hiring experienced Assistant Manager, Head Cook/Chef, Line Cooks, Prep Cooks, Deli Staff and Cashiers. Professional, friendly and works well in a fast paced environment. The Montauk Market (formaly Gaviolas). 631-2385433. 27-4-30 www.indyeastend.com www.indyeastend.com www.indyeastend.com

27

East End Winter Salon

Southampton Arts Center presents its first exhibition of 2017. "A Sense Of Place," organized by Bastienne Schmidt. This exhibition is envisioned as a dialogue among artists reflecting their own concept of "a sense of place" in different ways, might it be in a physical manner or as a conceptual representation of what an environment can be. "A Sense Of Place" includes artists

ARTICLES FOR SALE

March 1, 2017

Philippe Cheng, Louise Eastman with Janis Stemmermann, Christopher French, Saskia Friedrich, Mar y Heilmann, Toni Ross, Bastienne Schmidt, Michelle Stuart, Edwina von Gal and the Perfect Earth Project, and Almond Zigmund. The show runs through April 9.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 19.

1993

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MICHELE WAS LIVING ON A CHAIN FOR 2 YEARS FROM THE TIME SHE WAS JUST A PUPPY!! RSVP outreach team visited Michele many times over the last year and finally got her surrendered to RSVP. She’s been in training/boarding for 2 months but is depressed and has lost 8 pounds due to stress. We desperately need to find her an adopter or foster so she can get the affection and attention she deserves. She is good with all people but an adult single dog home is preferred because we don’t know how she will be with other pets at this point. A home with older teen children will be considered too. Please contact RSVP Inc at 631-533-2738 or or fill out an adoption application. Please call 631-5332PET “Sponsored by Ellen Hopkins” .R.S.V.P. (631) 728-3524 UFN

GARAGE SALE

GREAT RATES CALL

631-324-2500

PRIMELINE MODULAR HOMES, INC. Builders of Customized Modular Floor Plans that Fit Within Your Budget. Licensed & Insured. Locally Owned Since 1993. Steve Graboski, Builder Amagansett, N.Y. 11930 Tel: 631-267-2150 Fax: 631-267-8923

email: primemod@aol.com www.primelinemodlarhomes.com

Independent / Courtesy Kiwanis

Bottom row, left to right: New members George Hear, Sean Murphy and Bob Weir Top row, l-r: Henry Uihlein, Tom Dolan, John Vincenzo, and Rick White. The Kiwanis Club of East Hampton inducted three new members at its February organizational meeting at Harbor Grill.

All classified ads only $1.00 per word (10 word min) No zone pricing. You get it all! No extra cost for the internet. Call The Independent for more info 324-2500 Fax: 631-324-2544

Classified deadline: Monday at noon

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE/RENT CHARMING COTTAGE STEPS TO MAIDSTONE PARK AND BEACH. Indoor and outdoor shower, I BR, fully air conditioned, clean, provate, and quiet. Can move in in April and stay until Thanksgiving -- a great deal at $14,900. Suitable for single or couple with baby. No groupers, no short-term rentals, no more than two cars on property. Complys with East Hampton Town Rental Code ( permit # 16-2325). Security plus full rent before moving in. Call for an appointment. See it at maidstonecottage.com or call for an appointment: 631-276-8110. ufn

23-26-47

GARAGE FOR RENT-East Hampton $250 per month. Call Eric 631-603-2823ufn LOCAL COUPLE LOOKING FOR-nice one/two bedroom apartment or cottage from Hampton Bays to Sag Harbor. Price range $1,000 -$1600. 631-903-2003. ufn EAST HAMPTON - FOR SALE BY OWNER -2 story, 3/4 bdrs, 2 baths, 1596 sq.ft. one acrezoned commerical - NB/RES., Lg. shop w/loft and much, much more. By appt. only. 1st reasonable offer.. 631-2047006. ufn

GREAT RATES

Help Wanted The East Hampton Independent News Co. Inc.               

THE INDEPENDENT

CALL

1993

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Traveler Watchman 1826

JOIN THE UNITED STATES COAST GUARD AUXILLARY

CALL DAVE HUBSCHMITT AT 1-973-650-0052

FOR MORE INFORMATION UFN


28

March 1, 2017

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THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

East End Business & Service

REAL ESTATE

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

IN THE NEWS

www.indyeastend.com

TO ADVERTISE IN THIS DIRECTORY, CALL THE INDEPENDENT @ 631-324-2500! • DIRECTORY 1

AIR COND. & HEATING

BOTTLED WATER

CONSTRUCTION

CONSTRUCTION

Dan W. Leach Custom Builder

• 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

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of Long Island Air and Surface Decontamination Specialists www.biosweep.com • 631-606-2690

AUTO BODY V.A.V. CLASSICS Fine Paint and Body

The Ultimate in BMW and Mercedes Bodywork Foreign and Domestic

Spray Booth and Unibody Repair Detailing and Waxing

283-9409 www.vavclassics.com

    

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PAYCHEX Payroll • HR Retirement Insurance Zachary Will

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East End

DECKS & PATIO INC.

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CARLOS SERNA SVE CORP.

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CHIMNEY

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Licensed & Insured Miguel Morales

   

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ALL TYPES OF CONSTRUCTION/ HOME IMPROVEMENT

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CARLOS SERNA SVE CORP.

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631-287-2300 DECKS

East End

DECKS

• New • Existing • Repairs • Design • Powerwashing • Fencing

329-7150

East Hampton & Southampton Licensed & Insured www.eastenddeck.net

FENCING EAST HAMPTON FENCE & GATE

Driveway Gate Specialists Cedar Fence • Aluminum Deer • PVC • Pool Picket • Gate Service Complete Design Installation and Service

631-324-5941

www.easthamptonfenceny.com ehfence@gmail.com


IN THE NEWS

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

REAL ESTATE

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

East End Business & Service FLOORING

E. Otto,Inc. CARPET ONE Robert Glass & Mirror Dust Free Sanding System Latest Technology “The Atomic DCS�

BUILDERS OF CUSTOM DRIVEWAY GATE SYSTEMS PROFESSIONAL FENCE INSTALLATION SCREENING TREES - POOL DEER CONTROL SPECIALISTS

631-EAST-END 327-8363

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Sanding & Refinishing Staining/Custom Staining Installation

Ser ving The East End Since 1960 350 Montauk Highway • Wainscott

537-1515

Glass, Mirrors, Shower Doors, Combination Storm/Screen Windows & Doors

Installations Sanding Refinishing Free Estimates

LANDSCAPING East End

DECKS

• New • Existing • Repairs • Design • Powerwashing • Fencing

East Hampton & Southampton Licensed & Insured www.eastenddeck.net

FINISH BASEMENTS • WINDOWS/DOORS • TILE • KITCHEN/BATHROOMS • CLOSETS • SIDING • DECKS TOTAL HOME REPAIR

LANDSCAPE DESIGN

631.387.7967 HEATING & FUEL OIL

Fuel Oil Delivery Plumbing, Heating & AC

Montauk

www.marshallandsons.com

GENERATORS

PEST CONTROL

Marshall & Sons

Ins’d

GENERATORS

THE LAMP HOSPITAL • 631-324-6363

Licensed & Insured Miguel Morales

30 Years Experience-Owner Operated

Cell: 631-599-2454 631-849-1973

Mon Thru Fri: 8AM-10AM • Sat: 12 Noon To 3PM 238 THREE MILE HARBOR ROAD H.C. EAST HAMPTON (Past Main Marina) Lamphospital@Hamptons.Com

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HANDYMAN

Residential Commercial Call for a free price quote

Lic’d

LAMP REPAIR

GLASS & MIRROR

Floor & Home

29

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DIRECTORY • 2

FENCING

March 1, 2017

www.indyeastend.com

631.668.9169

house cleaning

SALES-SERVICE-INSTALLATIONS

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Let The Independent get all up in your business for as little as

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WE KNOW THE HAMPTONS! Call The Independent to find out how our experienced Sales and Design Teams can create an advertising campaign tailored to suit your business.

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CLASSIFIED • SERVICE • PRINT • DISPLAY • WEB • CLASSIFIED • SERVICE • PRINT • DISPLAY • WEB

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Southampton

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30

March 1, 2017

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THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

East End Business & Service

REAL ESTATE

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

IN THE NEWS

www.indyeastend.com

DIRECTORY • 3

PEST CONTROL

POOL SERVICES

PROPANE

ROOFING Licensed

Tick Trauma! Ant Anxiety! Mosquito

Insured

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REMODELING/ REPAIRS

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repairs, solve many cracks, leak problems, in all kind of Stones/carving, creative, molding plaster, mosaic art, including historic houses for expertise.

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Frank Theiling Carpentry CompLete exteRioR

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WWW.CCWINDOWS.NET 31654


THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

By Rick Murphy

RICK’S SPACE This Is No Bull – she’ll eventually get hungry and go home.” And she did – very slowly -- and that’s no bull. Has any one of us ever seen a cow run? I know I never did. They did chew a lot, so much so I once asked my mom if they had bubble gum. She told me they chewed cud, which is partially digested food. Oh, I’m glad I asked. Over the next few years I would run into a stray cow in the backyard every now and then but paid them no mind, assuming they would sooner or later saunter away. One

day, I walked out on my way to baseball practice at Mashashimuet Park and there was what I thought was a cow standing there, yet something wasn’t right, something I couldn’t put my finger on. Then I noticed there were no udders and I became udderly paralyzed: the she was a he, and he was snorting menacingly and staring at me. Susie took one look and ran off, leaving me to fend for my life. Where was Mayor de Blasio when I needed him? I did what any red-blooded American boy would do – I started crying and screaming for my mommy. She was doing dishes and completely self-absorbed. Left unguarded by a cruel and self-centered mother, I had to rely on my own canny to still the beast. I took off, plowed through a wall of bushes, jumped a fence, ran all the

Automatic fuel deliveries 24 hour emergency service Oil and gas service and installs Oil and gas contracts Heating and AC new installations Duct Cleaning

nck Fuels sel che ls •S

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y

62 Newtown Lane, East Hampton

631-324-0142

31

way to Bobby Vacca’s house, ducked into the garage, locked the door and cowered in fear for hours. I snuck home in the pitch dark – no sign of the bull. I told the family at dinner – no one believed me. Even the dog played dumb. Apparently, a bull had never come into the yard before and never did again. I was strangely elated. Later in life, when I learned about The Running of the Bulls in Pamplona, I realized why. My adrenaline was pumping, my masculinity surging as I took my place among the young men in history who have the cajones to run with the bull! I was no different than Ernest Hemingway and the other would-be literary giants who were not afraid to test the limits of our manhood against any number of menacing beasts we might encounter as we stride proudly though this journey known as life.

a Ultr

If you really love your pets and you live in or visit New York City frequently, warn them to stay away from Mayor Bill de Blasio. Last week a bull died in Queens after the city botched his capture. You might recall just a year ago, to the delight of Harlem, a deer had taken up residency in Jackie Robinson Park but eventually decided to explore the neighborhood. De Blasio had it euthanized. A spokesman said, “Transporting deer causes them great stress and relocated deer have very low survival rates.” Folks, I submit death causes a lot more stress than relocation, and I’d rather have a low survival rate than no survival rate but maybe that’s just me. And of course, it is de Blasio who has been attempting to rid the city of the Central Park horse-driven carriages that have been a tradition for centuries. The poor bull escaped from a slaughterhouse and led police on a wild chase through the streets on Tuesday only to die on its way to a shelter. Police corralled the bull in a backyard in Queens after a two-hour chase during which they drilled him with tranquilizer darts. He finally dropped dead. City officials said, “the cause of death is unknown,” which was pretty funny – the poor thing had so many objects stuck in him he looked like he’d just come from a matador’s convention. We can only pray de Blasio doesn’t fall any further in the polls – he might get pissed off and take out the entire Bronx Zoo. As many of you know, I am no stranger to bull . . . err, I mean bulls. When I lived on Howard Street across the road from Cilli’s Farm, Mr. Cilli was the local milkman. His cows would meander about. One day when I was about six I walked out the back door and a huge cow was standing right there, doing what they do best: chewing, even though there appeared to be nothing in its mouth. I remember my dog Susie, a city dog, looked up at it quizzically. “If that’s a dog I hope he doesn’t try to have his way with me,” she was probably thinking. I ran in and told my mother, who grew up in that house. She wasn’t the least bit concerned. “Don’t worry

March 1, 2017

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A Sense Of Place Independent/Richard Lewin

Southampton Arts Center hosted an opening reception for “A Sense Of Place,” organized by Bastienne Schmidt. The show includes artists Philippe Cheng, Louise Eastman with Janis Stemmermann, Christopher French, Saskia Friedrich, Mary Heilmann, Toni Ross, Bastienne Schmidt, Michelle Stuart, Edwina von Gal and the Perfect Earth Project, and Almond Zigmund. The show runs through April 9.


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Editorial Girl Power!

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Insight

Women’s History Month, March, was designated in 1987. Its goal is to highlight the contributions of women in history and modern society. So, it is with pleasure that we launch our annual “Girl Power” series celebrating unusual and amazing women of the East End. It’s doubly gratifying to launch the series highlighting the contributions of Joan Tulp, the unofficial mayor of Amagansett. She’s been named Grand Marshal of the annual Am O’Gansett parade, so we’ve got a twofer in Joan, as we celebrate women and eagerly embrace March, the month of St. Patrick’s Day parades. Sláinte, Joan! Know any amazing women in our region? Give us a call, we’d love to give them props. Meanwhile, we’re on the lookout for contributors to our “Walk Down Memory Lane” series. Tell us about your recollections or share photos of your hamlet or village during “the good old days.” Call 631-324-2500, or email news@indyeastend.com.

Independent VOICES

The Diet Of Lent

Dear Editor, March 1st marks the beginning of Lent, the 40-day period preceding Easter, when many Christians abstain from animal foods in remembrance of Jesus’ 40 days of fasting in the wilderness before launching his ministry. The call to refrain from eating animals is as old as the Bible. In Genesis 1:29, God commands humans to eat only plants; then Prophet Isaiah predicts that “none will hurt or destroy on God’s holy mountain.” A number of Christian leaders have followed the call, including Methodist founder John Wesley, Salvation Army founders William and Catherine Booth, Seventh-day Adventist Church founder Ellen G. White, and prominent evangelical leader Franklin Graham. A meat-free diet is not just about Christian devotion. Dozens of medical studies have linked consumption of

animal products with elevated risk of heart failure, stroke, cancer, and other killer diseases. A United Nations report named meat production as the largest source of greenhouse gasses and water pollution. Undercover investigations have documented farm animals being caged, crowded, mutilated, beaten, and shocked. Lent offers a superb opportunity to honor Christ’s powerful message of compassion, but also to protect the health of our family and our planet Earth by adopting a meat-free diet. EDWIN HORATH

Moronic Comment Dear Editor, It just doesn’t get more moronic and disingenuous than one comment in the article “No License? That’s A Problem,” which appeared in the February 22 issue of The Independent. The article attempts to describe the fact that many, if not most, of the traffic offenses committed in the East End are perpetrated by Latinos who are unlicensed (and one would assume uninsured as well). My own, albeit unscientific observation

IS IT JUST ME?

Ed Gifford is that most of the drunk driving offenses are committed by Latinos who are, one would gather, in the USA illegally. Having said these things, let’s turn to the seemingly most addled lefty I have had occasion to hear, one Kathryn Szoka, a co-chair of the organization known as Progressive East End Reformers (nothing to see here folks, go on home. Just a bunch of lefties trying to make sense).

Let’s build a wall to keep Trump out!

© Karen Fredericks

Szoka, knowing full well that illegal aliens/immigrants/whatever today’s label is, is so marinated in her ideology, so pickled in her thinking, that the following phrase dropped out of her mouth as a quote for all to see: ‘How can you live on the East End and not drive? They are forced to break the law.’ Heretofore, I thought that I had read Continued on Page 34.

Yeah! And we’ll make him pay for it!

The first legislative meeting after New York and California seceded from the nation . . .

CALIYORK

NEWFORNIA


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the most clueless thing ever said by someone when, as the story goes, someone asked Yogi Berra what time it was and he responded by asking “Do you mean right now?” If there is such a thing as a chiropractor for one’s brain, then Szoka should hire one for hers. It’s so twisted in there, caused by all the self-contradictions of Left wing political philosophy as they might, now and then, hit her on her head. OK, I am going to try writing the rest of this without the snark. You come to this country illegally, end up in a place where driving is a must, face a system which quite naturally wants to know who you are via various forms of ID (because the driver’s license you seek is going to be the main form of ID for you in the USA for the rest of your life), find you cannot get a license, but that doesn’t stop you, so you get a car and drive anyway -- often drunk because you’re on a roll here, and then there’s Szoka standing there excusing your second egregious act of law breaking, by her criticism of authorities who wouldn’t give you a license because you’re illegal (!), so she pets you on the head. She pets you because that’s all you are to her really -- a pet, so that she can attach herself to you to show the world that she cares. Puhleeeze . . . NICK SARIDAKIS

No Bull Dear Editor, Were you rooting for the bull who recently escaped from a Queens slaughterhouse and ran for his life, only to die before being able to live in peace at a sanctuary? If so, please do something to help other charismatic cows: Go vegan. Cows form lifelong friendships and mourn when they lose a loved one. They feel pain every bit as much as humans do, and are afraid to die. Yet they are confined to filthy feedlots and fattened for slaughter. Then they’re crowded onto transport trucks and shipped to the slaughterhouse, where they’re hung upside-down, their throats are slit, and they are skinned and gutted. Some remain conscious through the entire process. It’s no wonder these gentle giants go to great lengths to escape from slaughterhouses. They value their lives, just as you and I value ours. It’s too late to save the poor bull who escaped from Aziz Slaughter House, but we can help other animals like him by choosing healthy

REAL ESTATE

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

JUST ASKING

IN THE NEWS

By Karen Fredericks

How did you enjoy that 70 degree day last week? Janet Hyatt We went to the beach and sat in the car looking out at the beautiful water and feeling the warmth of the sun.

Robert Moss I just got back from the British Virgin Islands so it’s hard to believe but that day felt cold to me.

Jesse Lien It was such a warm day. I had to do some things in the house but I tried to be outside as much as possible.

Trishia Cusimano I was in Chicago. And it was 70 degrees there too. It was a record high. It was such beautiful weather! So we took a walk and went down to the Pier and we went on a wonderful architectural boat tour.

Letters & Obit Policy

The Independent publishes all letters to the editor we receive provided they are not libelous and emailed to news@indyeastend.com. We strive to print all obituaries as well but in the event we can’t, they will be published online at www.indyeastend.com. Please try to keep copy under 400 words.

and humane vegan foods. See www.PETA. org for free vegan recipes and product suggestions. HEATHER MOORE PETA FOUNDATION

Overpriced Projects Dear Editor, As property owners in Hampton Bays since 1995, our family has watched public projects come with price tags that are easily twice those of similar construction in the private sector. Voters frequently approve bonds for these projects, without considering that the deleterious long-term financial effects on property owners and tenants can overwhelmingly outweigh the touted project benefits. As an example, the proposed (March 14 referendum) $9,877,000 bond for renovating the Hampton Bays Library is out of scale with the financial resources of average taxpayers and renters, many of whom are struggling financially in a tiny 13,600 resident hamlet. The further inefficiency of repaying

principal and interest on this long 30-year bond will create a significant burden, for decades to come, for all residents, who already pay high library taxes. As with many renovations “sold” to the voters, the portion of the project that is truly needed can generally be accomplished for a small fraction of the proposed total, while the bulk of the remaining budget is for non-essential items built at an inflated cost. The true pressing library need -additional and safer parking -- can be more frugally addressed by purchasing the adjoining property and significantly enlarging and improving the parking area - all feasible for around $1,000,000. The remaining proposed enhancements to the library, which is currently ADA compliant and was already heavily remodeled and expanded at great expense to us in 2003, are niceties, whose benefits to the community pale in comparison to the extreme added cost burden. After school activities sometimes cited Continued on Page 36.


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THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

THE INDEPENDENT Min Date = 1/21/2017 Max Date = 1/27/2017 Source: Suffolk Research Service, Inc., Hampton Bays, NY 11946

East Hampton Town ZIPCODE 11930 - AMAGANSETT ZIPCODE 11937 - EAST HAMPTON ZIPCODE 11954 - MONTAUK Riverhead Town ZIPCODE 11792 - WADING RIVER ZIPCODE 11901 - RIVERHEAD ZIPCODE 11931 - AQUEBOGUE ZIPCODE 11933 - CALVERTON Shelter Island Town ZIPCODE 11964 - SHELTER ISLAND Southampton Town ZIPCODE 11932 - BRIDGEHAMPTON ZIPCODE 11941 - EASTPORT ZIPCODE 11942 - EAST QUOGUE ZIPCODE 11946 - HAMPTON BAYS ZIPCODE 11963 - SAG HARBOR ZIPCODE 11968 - SOUTHAMPTON ZIPCODE 11972 - SPEONK ZIPCODE 11976 - WATER MILL ZIPCODE 11977 - WESTHAMPTON ZIPCODE 11978 - WESTHAMPTON BEACH Southold Town ZIPCODE 11939 - EAST MARION ZIPCODE 11948 - LAUREL ZIPCODE 11952 - MATTITUCK ZIPCODE 11956 - NEW SUFFOLK ZIPCODE 11971 - SOUTHOLD

BUY

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Real Estate

* -- Vacant Land

SELL

PRICE

March 1, 2017

DEEDS LOCATION

Maxie I, LLC Levin, J & M

Myers, M Edwards, B

1,325,000 4,850,000*

8 Cozzens Ln 102 Atlantic Ave

Asnes, J Boulevard Capital Co Equity 57 Holdings Trimble, S Setareh Family LP Walsh, G & R Wheelock, R & J De Lara, S Shiavoni, M & J 236 SpringsFireplace Discipio, W & M Madhavan, S

Asnes, R & B Zeichner, P Zeichner, P Ruehl, M Turlinski, D Dream Land Builders Simko, G Sterling,I &Pignitor Martin, A by Exrs Decastro&GreenParrot Eaves, C Pagani, S

400,000 155,000* 155,000* 1,200,000 4,700,000 2,040,000 1,599,000 757,500 675,000 455,000* 657,500 840,000

4 Kent Pl 292 Norfolk Dr 288 Norfolk Dr 85 Gerard Dr 534 Hands Creek Rd 8 West Way 68 Three Mile Harbor Hog 36 Cedar Ridge Dr 5 Whooping Hollow Rd 236 Springs Fireplace Rd 23 Town Ln 19 Town Ln

Iudicone, M & S Murphy, T & C McLaughlin, M Sarnataro, J & J 667 Franklin LLC La Ruffa, C Sokkar, A & A

184 Soundview LLC McKeige, D & C Kinney, S & K Schmitz, C Caldwell, D by Exr Stavola, C by Exrs Ablew, P & T

6,200,000 4,300,000 1,150,000 525,000 890,000 950,000 635,000

184 Soundview Dr & 1.004 257 E Lake Dr & lot 13 27 S Greenfield Dr 23 Fort Pond Rd, #143 17 Rehan Ave 20 Hoppin Ave 55 S Euclid Ave, #3

Troxell,D & Bugdin,D Trella Jr, D Citimortgage Inc

Stevens, L Hammesfahr, W & L Delgiudice,etalbyRef

250,000* 415,000 400,500

75 Crescent Ct 2785 N Wading River Rd 21 Grassy Knoll

Reitz, S Hughes,D & Griffin,J Rodriguez, A Cho, M & Forrest, M

Berenz, M Stoneleigh Woods RH Dresher, F Sabo,J &L by Exr

279,000 426,700 220,000 265,000

22 Midland St 192 Stoneleigh Dr, #3404 29 Hallock St 766 Gregory Pl

Pasculli, K Tetrault,J & Hanna,K Stasi, G & T

Doroski, JW by Admr Brigham, W & L Janlewicz, M

335,000 635,000 420,000

425 West Ln 81 Southfields Rd 183 Crystal Dr

Shortall,M &Christie

Merkle, C & M

455,000

16 North Woods Rd

Ferrer,S&Lava,M,etal Bailey Family Trust

Wilson, K & J Ferrer, S

1,230,000 684,000

2 Stearns Point R 4 Bowditch Rd

Oudghiri, H & A Whittier’s Estia LLC Bridge Land Corp Mecox 2 LLC Bridgecoast LLC

Wyche, J Bridge Land Corp Ford, W by Exr Barcohana,Y Trust Rothwell, G

650,000 100,000 359,539 4,400,000 4,300,000

70&62 Sunrise Av&50-2-50 286 Bridgehampton Sag Tpk 286 Bridgehampton Sag Tpk 851 Halsey Ln 58 Bridgefield Rd

Bangel, B & L

Pivirotto, J

425,000

41 East Pond Ln

Lee, C & B DiLandro, J & H East Quogue535Realty

Gluck, M & Soyka, L Meduski, T Mendenhall, T

950,000 225,000 950,000

16 Bennett Dr 496 Montauk Hwy 535 Montauk Hwy

Motia, A & A Contreras, R KDR Ventures LLC Donahue, P & W RK & RK LLC

Stimpson, S & C Rose, S McCormack & Spellman Chiaramonte, E Trust Savoia, R & D

415,000 310,000 378,000 575,000 625,000*

3 Holzman Dr 5 Pine View Ln 29 Maryland Blvd 7 Mill Pond Rd 17 Windermere Close

McCrum, M & Harden,C Husain, M Barylski, P & S & N Andrea, D & J Cielo Asset Holdings Kockenmeister,K&Peng Beckstedt, N

Finger Jr, F DeLuca, T De Pinto, A & L DiBiaggio, D Barnes Family Trust Sag DevelopmentPrtnr Evangelisti, J

340,000* 100,000 650,000 1,350,000 760,000 1,300,000 990,000

68 Ridge Dr 9 Hillover Ln 79 Bay View Dr W 80 Crescent St 54 Hillside Ave 15 Church St, # 4 Sage St 43 Oakland Ave

Zucchero, M & S Smulian,D &Quitkin,R Top DirectInvestment Kahofer,K&Studenroth Lynch, A & A IKRO Properties LLC

D & B Hampton Group Dankner&KaufmanTrsts Wooleys Holdings 2 Lutz, W & N Lim, P Nelson, J & C

1,872,500 899,000 2,500,000 449,000 1,950,000 550,000

117 Bridies Path 706 Noyack Rd 26 Old Sag Harbor Rd 489 Great Hill Rd 84 Cedar Ave 65 Middle Pond Rd

Federal HomeLoanMrtg

Small, J & B by Ref

276,523

9 Laura Ct

Behar, C Lambert, S & S

Mergenthaler Estate Maddock, R & B

2,300,000 6,450,000

3 Wood Edge Ct 245 Olivers Cove Ln

Cavallaro, R & R

Shpizner,B & Russo,L

1,050,000

28 Quarter Court

Tosolini,N & Boden,B McElligott, T & P Epstein, A & R Greco, V Gordon, I & N

Quiogue WoodsCnstrcn Adelson,H &I by Exrs Krakowski, H & A Hampton SquareRealty Cohn, R & R

1,204,800 615,000 2,067,500 760,000 560,000

11 Lucy Ln 72 Oneck Ln 4 Bayfield Ct 180 Main St, Unit 1A 250 Dune Rd, #116

Joyce, T & J

Palumbo,N &Sotomayor

524,000

1245 Gillette Dr

Edwards, W & T

Williamson, K

375,000

870 Bray Ave

Frank, J & A Levy, D Londono,J & Kelso,C

Dream Acres LLC Usinger/Demasi, R Smith, R

1,940,000 615,000 1,525,000

1470 Manor Hill Ln &8.004 5765 Bergen Ave 505 Point Pleasant Rd

Eisenstat &Brautigan

Kapp, H by Heirs

525,000

1305 Third St

Barnard, J & A Sgueglia, A & K Leonardo, P & S Daley III, E & D Fetyani, A & M Stein Sea Farms LLC

Skeggs, H & F Hennessey,W &Fontana McCarthy, M Kolyer, S & A Sewell, M Pickerell Jr, H

950,000 1,261,000 530,000 3,250,000 250,000* 131,000

12990 Soundview Ave 6030 Youngs Ave 49925 Route 25 1350 Paradise Point Rd 180 Sunrise Way Peconic Bay

Source: Suffolk Research Service, Inc., Hampton Bays, NY 11946 * -- Vacant Land

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North Fork News

THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman

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Traveler Watchman Truth without fear since 1826

F

Independent / Courtesy Riverhead School District

Congratulations to Eric Cunha, Ryan Carrick, and Christina Yakaboski from Riverhead High School for their great work at the Long Island Elite Track & Field Meet. Long Island’s top runners competed at St. Anthony’s High School last Saturday.

Around The North Fork Compiled by Kitty Merrill

What’s happening in your North Fork village or downtown? Let us know! Email info to news@indyeastend.com

Best Fork Forward Eastern Long Island Hospital hosts a nutrition seminar on Friday from 11 AM to noon at the Southold Town Senior Center in Mattituck. Guest speaker: Barbara Solow, registered dietician and ELIH nutrition manager. The talk will be repeated at 1 PM at Floyd Library on First Street in Greenport, same day. In other ELIH news stop by the Opportunity Shop on Main Street in Greenport for a winter apparel sale. May items are just $1 or 50 percent off. Aw, GEE Join Group for the East End at Downs Farm Preserve in Cutchogue on Monday at 6:30 PM for an environmental movie night. Watch the Academy Award-nominated documentary Food Inc. directed by Robert Kenner. This 2008 documentary examines the

REAL ESTATE

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

S chool D ays Submitted By Local Schools

Independent / Courtesy Hampton Bays School District

The Hampton Bays Middle School Mathletes team, made up of mostly seventh-graders, recently completed its season. Under the direction of Ms. Samantha Renalds and Mr. John Roche, the team competed in a total of five meets this school year and is looking forward to the next season. “We are very proud of the team’s achievements and can’t wait to see them compete as eight-graders,” said Ms. Renalds.

harmful effects of corporate farming in the US. Refreshments will be available. On Tuesday from 11 AM to noon children, ages 2-5, are welcome to join Group for the East End staff at Downs Farm Preserve as they enjoy a nature-themed story, create a fun craft, and explore the nature center. For reservations or more information about both events, contact Jessica Kennelly at jkennelly@eastendenvironment. org or 631-765-6450 ext. 215.

Swipe Right For Seniors The Mattituck-Laurel Library launches a new program tomorrow morning at 11: Senior Singles Meet and Greet: Finding Friendship at Your Community Library. It’s an opportunity for seniors to meet some new friends and plan some fun activities in the comfortable space of their community library. Registration is required. Also at the library this week, the film Deepwater Horizon screens on Friday at 1:30 PM, and on Monday at 1:30 PM, see Singing In The Rain.

Aces

bsolutely

Cleaning Service 10 Years Experience

Reasonable Year Round & Seasonal Rates Weekly and Bi-Weekly Cleanings Home Openings & Closings

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Independent / Courtesy Eleanor Whitmore Early Childhood Center

Eleanor Whitmore Early Childhood Center director, Maureen Wikane, Program Director, Arlene Notel, and Erin Albanese, a Prekindergarten Teacher, at a staff breakfast on Friday kicking off the 20th anniversary year.

Independent VOICES

Continued from page 34.

as a reason for needing more space at the library need to be better absorbed at the schools, the most recently built (and very spacious) being just three blocks away. This type of resource sharing needs to be better coordinated at a community level before trying to impose an unnecessary new cost onto property owners. While efficiently executed library improvements can be an “investment

Springs School Springs School celebrated the 100th day of school last Thursday. Mrs. Goncalves’ kindergarten celebrated it by doing 100 seconds of activities. One example was 100 seconds of being quiet -- a teacher’s dream right there! Another example was doing 100 seconds of jumping jacks. Ms. Sullivan’s and Ms. Walecko’s new second grade classes made torn paper mosaic collages of how they’ll look in 100 years. They also did 10 different physical activities 10 times each to make 100 exercises. Several other classes brought in tiny snacks and the students made ten piles of ten to make 100 snacks. Other classes wrote about how they would spend $100. Also last week, the Functional Academics class harvested radishes from the school greenhouse. After harvesting the class roasted the radishes in the toaster oven. in the community,” grossly escalating property tax rates actually diminish real estate values in working class communities and, more importantly, routinely displace near-retirees and families and individuals of modest means. If this bond passes, it will increase the already high library tax portion of Hampton Bays property tax bills by about 30 percent. Property owners and tenants (to which the increase will indirectly rear its ugly head in the form of unrelenting rent increases) would do well to vote NO on this outrageously priced, and inefficiently financed, 30-year library bond. JOEL LIBOVE, PH.D.


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HISTORIC SPRINGS

NEW TO MARKET HISTORIC SPRINGS, EAST HAMPTON-Located in the Historic section of Springs, this 4 bedroom 3 bath home is situated on .83 of an acre on a very private lane. Light and airy with a European flair, the home has had recent upgrades to add to the open format. Open attic bonus room, three garages, full finished basement, pool and private bedroom with bath for nanny, mom or the adult child who can’t find in their heart to leave you. Asking $990,000. Co-Exclusive Contact Jan Mackin at 631-871-1899 or jan@mweinrealty.com.

M Wein Realty, Inc. 34 N. Perry Road Shelter Island, NY 11964 WWW.MWEINREALTY.COM


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Mariners Smother Wyandanch To Earn ‘A’ Title By Rick Murphy

It’s not that Southampton was moved up to Class A because the Mariners were too good for Class B, even though the locals have captured the Suffolk Class B title three straight years. You don’t get punished for being too good or rewarded for being really bad. The school’s classification is based strictly on enrollment. The Mariners didn’t pout. It took a few weeks to get their bearings, but the team is rolling now. Friday the locals beat down Wyandanch to earn the Suffolk County Class A Championship, 93-80. It was the ninth win in a row for Southampton and moved the team’s record to 20-2 for the season.

The game, played at Suffolk County Community College-Selden before a standing room crowd in a sweltering gym, was a barn burner. Wyandanch, which dominated Class B in the previous decade, has also successfully moved up to “A” and finished second to Southampton in League VI during the regular season. The two teams split two regular season encounters, setting up Friday’s rubber match. The locals had to cope with Kashawn Charles, the leading scorer in the county, and the slender guard is a handful to be sure. Charles bombs from the outer regions of the galaxy. His radar-driven jumper goes up like a missile and floats down like a parachute. Herm Lamison, the Mariners’

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veteran mentor, has been there and done that. Earlier in the season Charles scored 35 against the locals but also showed a penchant for hitting the open man when he is double-teamed. Lamison opened with what appeared to be a 2-1-2 defense, daring Charles to bomb away, and he did. His first quarter bomb gave the Warriors a 21-18 lead, and his steal and score put Wyandanch up by five. Another steal and score and another bomb put Wyandanch up by eight with two minutes left in the half. The poised Mariners, though, stayed focused. The strength of this team is the versatility of the key players: there are six who log regular minutes, and all of them can hit the three, hit the boards, and play defense. On this night the team MVP might well have been the sixth man, Andre Franklin. To say he gave the locals a lift would understate his contributions significantly. Southampton, down 49-40 at the half, came out determined. Lamison starting mixing things up on defense, giving Charles different looks to ponder. Elijah Wingfield fronted a box and one that proved effective, and Aaron Krzyzewski also had a hand in Charles’ face on occasion. Then Franklin went to work. He grabbed a defensive rebound, went the length of court, stopped and popped to cap off an 11-3 run. He scored on a drive in heavy traffic to put the Mariners up by three, and then the dagger – a three-pointer off a pass from Chad Pike that made it

a 60-54 affair. With 18 seconds left in the third he drew a charge to thwart another Warriors’ mini rally. The Mariners clung to a 62-56 lead after three stanzas. Southampton simply wore Wyandanch down in the fourth quarter. The Warriors fell into double-penalty territory, and the locals made their charity tosses. Franklin came up with a steal and made one of two to make it 74-69, and after two buckets by Tim Alejo and a critical three by Krzyzewski, the fouling became continual. A technical foul sent Alejo to the line for four shots and he made three of them to open a 12-point lead. The final was 93-80. Charles was impressive with a game high 34 points, and he made seven of his team’s nine threepointers. Mikah Snowden scored 26, and grabbed nine rebounds for Southampton. Wingfield had 20 including three bombs, and Krzyzewski also hit three treys, scored 16 and grabbed 11 boards. Franklin scored 16 and played pretty much a perfect game. He also hit three buckets from behind the arc. Alejo added 10 points. Chad Pike had an off night with three points but recorded six assists. The Mariners will continue on in the Suffolk County overall tourney; they were to defend the ABCD title yesterday. The New York State Class A tournament looms -- first step is the Long Island Championship game at Stony Brook University on March 12 against an opponent yet to be determined.


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Bees Look To States

By Rick Murphy

Bridgehampton’s quest for a record-shattering 10th state title may well be decided in a doctor’s office instead of on a basketball court. The Killer Bees fell to Center Moriches Friday night, 60-44, in the Suffolk BCD game at Suffolk County Community College in Selden. The game itself was strictly for bragging rights – The Bees are already the Long Island Class D champions and were to play in a New York State Class D Regional semifinal game Monday after The Independent’s deadline. Of greater concern is the condition of J.P. Harding, the Bees’ sophomore stalwart who is the team’s best rebounder and highest scorer. He’s out with a broken right hand, and yes, that’s his shooting hand. Without him, the Bees couldn’t compete against Center Moriches, the county Class B champion, and likely won’t be able to cope with what awaits upstate. The BCD featured a reunion of sorts: the Red Devils’ mentor, Nick Thomas, won two state titles two decades with the Killer Bees and his head coach then, Carl Johnson, is still the top man in Bridgehampton, though he is enjoying a farewell tour and the next loss will doubtless be his final game. Thomas has a team that’s fast,

plays relentless full court defense, and runs and guns from the opening tip off to the final buzzer. They also miss a lot of shots, but they made enough against Bridgehampton to squelch any upset hopes the Bees harbored. Elijah Jackson hit Nykell Dean for an open trey giving the Bees a onepoint lead early in the first stanza. The Red Devils opened a five-point lead but Jackson drilled a three and Dean came up with a steal and score to knot things up again. The pair combined for another score seconds later when Dean found Jackson alone beyond the arc for another three-pointer to pare the deficit to one point. And that was about it for the Bees’ highlight reel. The Red Devils scored the next seven points and led 19-11 after one quarter. The Bees committed 10 turnovers including four walking violations. It got worse. Center Moriches went on a 12-0 run and enjoyed a 32-16 half time lead. The Bees, with Harding on the bench, a soft cast on his hand, lolly-gagged through a listless second half. Jackson scored 13 in defeat; Elijah White added 12 and Dean had 11 for the losers. Tyiquon Nix and Nakia Durham each scored 15 for Center Moriches, which earned the enviable task of playing mighty Southampton, the Class A champion, for the ABCD title, also known as the Suffolk Small Schools Championship. That game was scheduled for yesterday. Either way the Red Devils are in the State B Tournament and were scheduled to play yesterday against an opponent yet to be determined. As for the Bees, if they survive the trip up to Newburgh they will return to SCCC-Selden for the Regional Finals against either the Section IV winner or the Section 1 champion. That game is scheduled for March 11.

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Lady Tuckers Alive

The Mattituck Lady Whalers, defending Long Island Class B champions, are looking to defend their title. The locals are scheduled to tip off Monday against the Section VIII champion, which has yet to be determined. The game will play at the State University of New York Old Westbury campus at 7:30 PM. Mattituck is also alive in the county overall tournament as of this writing, having beaten Port Jefferson in the BC game last week. The Lady Tuckers are 19-2 overall.

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March 1, 2017

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