4-22-15 Syracuse New Times

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S Y R A C U S E SANITY FAIR

Diminishing our impact on global climate change Page 7

KRAMER

FREE

Kramer celebrates Earth Day with a dip in Onondaga Lake Page 9

W W W. S Y R A C U S E N E W T I M E S . C O M

STAGE

James MacKillop reviews Glengarry Glen Ross at CNY Playhouse

FILM

Syracuse International Film Festival’s Spring Fest

13

APRIL 22 - 28

12

ISSUE NUMBER 4491

MUSIC

Tony Bennett’s minimalist approach yields maximum results

READ! SHARE! RECYCLE!

11

HAPPY BIRTHDAY,

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TALK BACK

LUNE CHOCOLAT SET TO MOVE TO BIGGER DIGS IN MANLIUS

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POETIC LICENSE TO KILL Hiakramtha??? Really??! In very BAD TASTE. — Talia Shenandoah

love the e e lower case acknowledge— George Carlin ment of wwu. This is why CNY loves you, Kramer. You and peanut butter. — Caroline West

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Syracuse Chiefs opening day, April 16. Michael Davis photo

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NEWS & BLUES 5 SANITY FAIR 7 KRAMER 9 STAGE 11 MUSIC 12 FILM 13 FEATURE 14 EVENTS 16 FREE WILL ASTROLOGY 22 CLASSIFIED 22

This Week at SYRACUSENEWTIMES.COM

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Meet the Connective Corridor Public Art Call Semi-Finalists: 16 semi-finalists have been selected out of 276 applications. Learn more at syracusenewtimes.com.

The New Times celebrates the 45th anniversary of Earth Day with a delicious “Earthday” cake from Harrison Bakery. Photography by Michael Davis, design by Meaghan Arbital.

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NEWS BLUES

Aaron Anthony Doney, 19, an inmate at Montana’s Cascade County Detention Center, was charged with possession of a TAKE deadly weapon after he reportedly sharpened a plastic spork. (Great Falls Tribune)

QUICK

Compiled by Roland Sweet Jen Sorensen

Curses, Foiled Again

Tyler Lankford, 21, entered a bakery with a loaded and cocked revolver, pointed it at the 58-year-old clerk and demanded money, according to police in McKeesport, Pa. The clerk emptied the register, but when the robber picked up the money, he put the gun on the counter. The clerk grabbed it and chased away the robber, whom police identified from surveillance video. (Pittsburgh’s KDKA-TV)

Profit Center

The Transportation Security Administration last year collected almost $675,000 in loose change left behind by travelers at security checkpoints. According to TSA figures, that amount is up from $638,000 the year before. Travelers at New York City’s John F. Kennedy International Airport left the most change, $43,000. Overall, the agency has collected $3.5 million in loose change since 2008. (Time)

Firebuggery

Verlin Sexton, 48, told authorities investigating a fire that destroyed his garage and damaged his house in Fremont, Ohio, that it started while he was using spray paint and a lighter as a torch to kill a mouse. He also said he went to the garage to smoke, noticed black smoke filling the garage and saw flames in the corner, so he ran to get a pan of water; when he returned, the fire was out of control. Then he said he saw flames in boxes and tried to kick the fire out, but it spread. He was charged with intentionally setting the fire. (Fremont’s The News-Gazette)

Tourist Traps

Now that affluent Chinese have become big-spending travelers, the China National Tourist Administration announced it would document “uncivilized” behavior by travelers abroad who have “tarnished” China’s image and need to “learn a lesson.” Inappropriate behavior includes violating customs, destroying public infrastructure and historic sites, causing disturbances on public transport and participating in gambling and prostitution. The agency said it would compile reports from local tourism bureaus, media reports and the general public and keep records for up to two years. It didn’t specify the nature of any punishment. In February, Thai authorities issued thousands of Chinese-language etiquette manuals after Chinese tourists were caught

Always borrow money from a pessimist. He won’t expect it back. — Oscar Wilde

drying underwear at a temple, kicking a bell at a sacred shrine and washing their feet in a public restroom. (Reuters)

Orthographical Follies

When the Minnesota Department of Transportation replaced signs marking the town of Lindström, it removed the umlaut, twin dots over the “o.” It subsequently rejected town officials’ request to restore the umlaut, citing a rule that names in road signs contain only standard letters. The town said the umlaut honors its Swedish roots and had been on the signs until 2012, when the state removed them for road construction. Gov. Mark Dayton intervened, calling the rule “nonsensical” and ordering the umlauts restored immediately, “even if I have to drive to Lindström and paint the umlauts on the city limit signs myself.” (The New York Times)

Vehicular Follies

Investigators concluded that Elizabeth Rachel Dove, 23, was using her phone to record a video of her son in the backseat of her vehicle when she hit and injured three high-school students in a crosswalk in Gresham, Ore. “(Dove) is holding the phone with her left hand and was making gestures with her right hand,” then there is a six-second video of the phone bouncing on the front passenger seat and “a child crying in the background,” Deputy District Attorney Annamarie Shoen wrote in a court document, which added that when the teens entered the crosswalk, Dove “appears to have had no hands on the steering wheel.” A police officer determined that Dove hit the victims 1.42 seconds after the video ended. (Portland’s KATU-TV)

PROBLEM SOLVED

Authorities concerned with large numbers of boarded-up homes in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area because of widespread foreclosures launched a pilot program to disguise the vacant houses by installing vinyl siding with painted doors and windows over the plywood. The program aims to upgrade the aesthetic condition of the buildings to reduce vandalism and improve nearby property values. (Minneapolis Star Tribune)

New Report: Northern Onondaga Lake is suitable for swimming (Localsyr.com) There’s a “dirty” joke in there somewhere — Utica police arrest so-called beef jerky bandit (cnycentral.com) Then he snapped…into a Slim Jim — ‘Gone With The Wind’ dress sells for $137,000 at auction, last purchased for $20 (syracuse.com) That’s called a “second wind” — New Congress better at doing its job, study says (syracuse.com) There’s also a study that says you can swim in Onondaga Lake — Liverpool man’s Facebook threat leads to terror charge (cnycentral.com) Facebook is just like jail anyway: You sit around, waste time, have a profile and write on walls — A small victory for fliers: summer domestic fares fall $2.01 (cnycentral. com) Enough left over to buy your own peanuts — Heluva Good closes cheese plant in Wayne County; production moves to Wisconsin (syracuse.com) Heluva bad! (too cheesy?)

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SANITY FAIR

The Greatest Hoax: How the Global Warming Conspiracy Threatens Your Future is a 2012 book by James Inhofe, Oklahoma TAKE Republican, who is now chair of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works.

QUICK

By Ed Griffin-Nolan

CLIMATE CHANGES EARTH DAY PERSPECTIVE Global warming should have a YouTube account. It should threaten beheadings, claim religious justification for its actions, and recruit a handful of our young ones to its cause. Then maybe we would start to fear it as much as we should. Well, it worked for ISIS. The latest Middle Eastern terrorist boogey men, now in retreat across Iraq, certainly caught our attention. ISIS has managed to make us willing to expend all manner of national treasure, prestige and energy in the battle to exterminate them. Climate change that threatens our way of life? Not so much. While our behavior inexorably melts the glaciers, swamps our shorelines and multiplies the number of crazy weather events each year, it is the relatively remote but prominently publicized terrorist threat that has been the driving force for so many of our national policies. The terrorists have been able to harness the awesome power of fear, while the environmentalists cling tenaciously to a belief in the power of reason. No contest. If ISIS is Fox News, climate change is CNN. Or C-SPAN. Climate change moves too slowly, the science is too complicated, and there are too many parties too heavily invested in the status quo. It doesn’t help that the face most commonly associated with the cause is Al Gore, who seems too easy a target for mockery. Even when climate change occasionally rears its head in a nasty way, as was the case with Hurricane Sandy, deniers were quick to dispute the links between our impact on the climate and its revenge upon us. Think about it: There are no ISIS deniers, are there? In history’s rearview mirror, we will long have forgotten ISIS and Al Qaida, when we are trying to mop up from our failure to know which threats we should truly fear. But we hear no debate about whether ISIS is a threat. What do we do to try to diminish our impact on global climate change? We shout up the stairs for the kids to turn out

tumeyes/Getty Images photo

the lights, which is the modern equivalent of telling kids to clean their plates because children are starving in Africa. We recycle. We insulate. One weekend a year we strap on rubber gloves and stalk the shoulders of our highways filling plastic bags with crap that passing drivers have carelessly thrown out their windows. Spring cleanups are great for building community, but they only remedy the actions of bad neighbors, not the mega damage we’ve done to our planet’s atmosphere. Our newbie in Congress, John Katko, has made a high priority of fighting the terrorist threat. He is on a task force Congress created to keep us safe from the threat of homegrown fighters. All well and good. On his website, Katko has a list of 12 issues. Climate change is not one of them. President Obama, in his 2015 State of the Union address, finally decided to level with us, calling climate change (not terrorism) “the greatest threat to future generations.” Note that Obama’s epiphany came after

his party’s last electoral contest on his watch. Climate change is a real threat. But we don’t get warned about it, don’t get asked to stay up all night and fret about it. No one gets frisked on their way out of Walmart to determine the carbon footprint of their purchases. There’s no percentage in it for a politician, because the problem is us. No politician wants to face telling us the truth about our consumption and our propensity for waste. If you take an issue like a tax on carbon, even a revenue-neutral version that would distribute the proceeds to the people, there isn’t even a discussion. The operative response from the vast majority of Republicans is to reject environmental concerns as job killers and denounce regulation as assaults on freedom. We need to remind them how tough it will be to find work and celebrate freedom when our coastline is submerged. SNT

BY THE NUMBERS

8

Republicans in Congress on record agreeing with the scientific consensus that human-caused climate change was a grave problem.

278

Republicans in Congress when the survey was conducted. — Source: May 2014, Politifact

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JEFF KRAMER

As the health of Onondaga Lake has improved, species once rare to its waters have returned in droves. Recently spotted: TAKE Camilus Crudsucker, Cadmium-blotted Tumor Fish, Scharnglemunster, Spiked Congelungie, Mangled Buttocks Tarpon, Carpus Peeim and Joanie’s Frankeneel.

QUICK

By Jeff Kramer

Loch-nuts monster?

See the video SYRACUSENEWTIMES.COM

A DIP CELEBRATES EARTH DAY

C

ounty Executive Joanie Mahoney said she’d swim in Onondaga Lake. Joe Martens, state Department of Environmental Conservation commissioner, said he’d swim in Onondaga Lake.

Ryan McMahon, chairman of the County Legislature, said he’d swim in Onondaga Lake. Bully for them! Just be apprised of an extremely important distinction between those dignitaries and me: Jeff Kramer doesn’t just talk about swimming in Onondaga Lake. Last week, Jeff Kramer actually did swim in it. For real. See, there comes a time when you have to put up or throw up. If Onondaga Lake, long maligned as the nation’s most polluted urban lake, is finally safe for swimming, if it’s no longer a repository of feminine products and headless brown trout, let’s prove it to the world, not to mention to ourselves, which may be the toughest audience of all. “You didn’t go in there, did you?” a county parks worker asked as I trundled to the Willow Bay bathhouse after my frigid dip. “They say it’s safe for swimming!” I enthused. The worker shook his head and walked off, as if I were some kind of freak. “Come back!” I screamed through my new prehensile face pancreas. “Haven’t you heard about the updated fecal coliform numbers?” Obviously I’m kidding about the face pancreas.

There were no unusual growths (that I know of), no extra eyeball, no rashes or sores, no visible manifestations whatsoever of my swim other than a rosy glow of health. In fact, I’ve never felt better. A few days after the swim I experienced itchy eyeballs and the most horrific case of diarrhea imaginable, but it’s unlikely those maladies were caused by lake exposure. Almost a week after plunging into the butt of local jokes, I don’t feel a day over 65. (I’ll be 53 on Thursday.) The logistics of the swim were simple enough. First, I rented a wet suit. Despite the recent mild weather, the lake’s temperature remains “colder than a dead crappie in a Mother’s Day snowstorm,” according to the county Department of Water Environment Protection. The next task was to physically get inside the wet suit, which was more challenging than I would have hoped. Ty Marshal, my personal documentarian at the Syracuse New Times, aided in the process by yanking frantically on any neoprene he could grasp and dislocating both my shoulders. Even then he couldn’t zip up the back of my suit. No matter. It was

time to reclaim the sacred waters of Onondaga Lake for recreational swimming. Gazing to the west, I imagined how it would have been at the birthplace of the Iroquois Confederacy, when the Great Peacemaker brought together the warring tribes in the time before the marketplace of the Great Bamboozler, who sold tomtom cases and overpriced appetizers on the pretense that it would save Mother Earth. I thought about the curative baths on the lake that became popular in the 19th century, and whether those curative powers remained, despite the predations of the Industrial Age. I thought about anything I could to avoid jumping into those ancient waters-o-mystery, but with Ty’s camera rolling and a GoPro strapped to my right wrist, it was now or never. I ignored a dead fish at the bottom, and in I went. Splash! Brrrr! And then . . . exhilaration. Surely someone has entered the lake since it was officially closed for swimming in the 1970s. But they were drunk or insane. Or police divers searching for bodies. I was none of the above. I was simply a bather. I whooped and frolicked, and I was overcome by a powerful realization: Thank God I remembered to wear my custom-made earplugs. A few housekeeping notes amid the frivolity: Strictly speaking, swimming from shore is still not allowed because there is no official beach. No worries. That’s just a simple matter of various agencies receiving and/or granting the proper permits and negotiating a few other minor bureaucratic hurdles. It’s not a stretch to project an official beach opening as soon as Memorial Day weekend . . . 2040. Finally — and regrettably — the south end of the lake, which scientists refer to as “The Horrible Yucky End,” is still not safe for swimming. If you’re intent on having a poisonous, life-deadening experience in that zone, please, stick to Destiny USA. SNT

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TOPIC: STAGE

Glengarry Glen Ross continues with performances on Thursday, April 23, through Saturday, April 25, 8 p.m., and Sunday, April TAKE 26, 2 p.m., at the Central New York Playhouse in Shoppingtown Mall. The show closes May 2. For details, call 885-8960.

QUICK

By James MacKillop

Cast members in Glengarry Glen Ross. Amelia Beamish photo

MAMET’S PROVOCATIVE, PROFANE SALES PITCH

D

avid Mamet did not become America’s most imitated playwright by depicting well-spoken Galahads. His best and most characteristic work, Glengarry Glen Ross, is the rhetorical equivalent of Chuck Palahniuk’s Fight Club.

REVIEW

The issue is not just winning, or what real estate men call “closing,” that is, getting the sucker to sign over his money and close the deal. Instead, Glengarry Glen Ross is about how verbal combat is played. We start with bullying and intimidation, shouting over the other speaker, refusing to listen to him, and, above all, interrupting him. Prestige flows toward the speaker with the greatest sense of style. Presiding over this cauldron of testosterone at the Central New York Playhouse might seem anomalous for still-new director Kasey McHale. As an actor she is often seen as a smiling young woman, like Marcy in I Love You Because. Yet in her program note she speaks of having studied Mamet since she was in college (not so long ago). Evidence of her command comes often, most spectacularly in the restaurant scene when bullish David Moss (Jim Uva) harangues the weaker salesman, George Aranow (Keith Arlington), into stealing valuable sales leads from the office to sell to a rival firm. It’s breathless and breathtaking.

We never see the Glengarry of the title, which, despite a name evocative of the Scottish Highlands, sounds like a swamp in Florida. Four salesmen are working out of a dingy office in 1983 Chicago. No computers. No cell phones. All talk is face to face. Bold writing on the chalkboard proclaims their rankings. Moss, ranked second, and Aaranow, third, might have a wide gap between them but not as deep as the two at either end of the list: high-flying No. 1, Rick Roma (Nathan Faudree), and Shelley Levene (Jack Sherman), at the bottom with a score of zero. Two other men in the office define the mood and the tone. In the opening scene, choleric martinet Blake (Dan Rowlands) gives the sales talk from hell, which tells the men if they can be the top closer there’s a gold Cadillac in the offing. Otherwise, their careers are over. Company regular Rowlands succeeds in scaring the bejesus out of the quartet, but because the character was written for the movie version, but added here, he has no further role to play on stage.

Cool-headed office manager John Williamson (Justin Polly) does not have to go into the field with prospects but uses the same number of expletives as the salesmen. His power comes from assigning the precious leads, which will go to top performers. The salesman losing these is reduced to cold calls, knocking on doors like a beggar. Faudree’s Roma, dressed in a cream-colored disco suit, arrives too late to listen to Blake’s dressing down. His rakish swagger contrasts sharply with Moss’ hard-bitten jealousy. It’s not that we’d actually like to buy a property from Roma, but as top dog he has a sense of irony and is rewarded by the playwright with many of Glengarry’s best lines. Roma also allows Faudree one of his best outings of recent years. At the far end of the sales and sartorial roster is hapless Shelly Levene, dressed in clashing blue jacket and brown trousers for his entrance. In the second act, when he thinks he has regained his sales mojo, he turns up in a bright polyester golf outfit guaranteed to deny him entrance to country clubs and many franchise restaurants. Jack Sherman, an actor long active in Auburn, underscores Levene’s contradictions and complexities. Our sympathy for his rude treatment, especially from Moss, is short-lived. When he thinks he has made one big closing, he oozes smarmy self-congratulation that Rick Roma never exhibits. His stumbling attempts to curse like the big boys are wince-making. Although the rhythm and authenticity of Mamet’s tough-guy language leaves some commentators swooning, Glengarry Glen Ross also includes, curiously, a scene-stealing role for a player who barely speaks a line. It’s red-faced, bald James Lingk (Simon Moody), who squirms in agony when he tries to wriggle out of a closing with the ultra-persuasive Roma. He fears his wife more than Roma. Perhaps it’s a female director’s joke on a stage awash with Y chromosomes. SNT

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TOPIC: MUSIC

12

For video footage from the April 12 Cross Creek concert with banjoist Tony Trischka, presented by the History of TAKE Syracuse Rock’n’Roll Then and Now series from producer Ron Wray and 95.3 The Dinosaur, visit syracusenewtimes.com.

QUICK

By Bill DeLapp

Tony Bennett, performing April 19 at the Turning Stone’s Event Center. Michael Davis photo

BENNETTS BOFFO AT VERONA VENUE

I

f Tony Bennett was entertaining any hints of retirement, it sure didn’t seem like such an announcement was in the cards any time soon, as the 88-year-old swingin’ singer ably demonstrated during his April 19 gig at the Turning Stone Resort and Casino’s Event Center. Bennett came on strong at the venue, which was slimmed down by about half from its usual 5,000seat capacity in order to present the main attraction and his four-piece band in a more intimate setting. (The Event Center held a major boxing bout televised by HBO just 24 hours earlier, which required a major teardown.) There was no doubt that his rich, resonant voice was still capable of blowing the roof off the joint, as Bennett took pleasure in vocalizing plenty of booming loooooong notes to climax most of the tracks on his setlist. At one point during his infrequent between-song patter he told the story about the guy who once asked “Why do you sing old songs?” Bennett replied, “Because they’re better than the new ones,” and he kept proving it all night with classics like “Boulevard of Broken Dreams,” the Harry Warren-Al Dubin hit from 1933, and the Gershwin brothers’ 1930 “I Got Rhythm” and 1937’s “They All Laughed.” Indeed, Bennett’s retro-reliance on enduring melodies since his career began more than 60 years ago can be

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summed up by the title of a 1942 Jerome Kern-Johnny Mercer ditty: “I’m Old-Fashioned.” Bennett’s comfort zone was enhanced by his talented backing quartet of percussionist Harold Jones (dubbed “Count Basie’s favorite drummer”), keyboardist Mike Renzi, upright bassist Marshall Wood and guitarist Gray Sargent. The singer would often warble part of a song, then exhort “Take it!” to his crack ensemble as they delivered the sonic goods during solo spotlights. Renzi, in particular, could underscore one song with a tinkly elegance, then come roaring back for some raucous piano-pounding for the next. Bennett’s minimalist approach to music has always yielded maximum results, while his can’t-go-wrong selections from the Great American Songbook have bolstered his coolness quotient during times when other artists in his league chose material that didn’t quite fit. (Does anyone remember Frank Sinatra’s take on Jim Croce’s “Bad, Bad Leroy Brown”?) Yet at the Turning Stone, where many standing

ovations dominated the evening, Bennett frequently ended songs with his clenched fist raised high into the air as a signal of triumph, as if to emphasize that he has always sung for his supper in his own unique style. Bennett breezed through 23 songs in 70 minutes, with jazz, blues and swing elements percolating underneath his careful phrasings and lyrical cadences. There were some laughs along the way, such as his tongue-in-cheek ad-libbing that he forgot the lyrics to “I Left My Heart in San Francisco,” a song that Bennett has delivered thousands of times since he recorded it in 1962. He also told the audience to buy the album Cheek to Cheek because his duet partner Lady Gaga “really needs the money.” There was the reminiscence about the fan letter from Charlie Chaplin that thanked Bennett for resurrecting the Little Tramp’s song “Smile.” Bennett also noted that he received an invitation to Pope Francis’ upcoming visit to Manhattan, then he segued into a rendition of “Sing You Sinners.” Opening the show was his jazz-singing daughter Antonia Bennett, 41, who looked slinky in a black sequined gown. She’s also a chip off the block who knows enough to likewise stick to a half-dozen classic oldies, such as Noel Coward’s nearly forgotten “Sail Away,” during her engaging 20-minute set. Early on during her dad’s show, Antonia was beckoned to retake the stage for a duet with Stephen Sondheim’s “Old Friends.” Proud papa Tony beamed throughout the song, and even gingerly performed a soft-shoe routine to accompany her. For Tony Bennett, maybe 88 is the new 58. SNT


TOPIC: FILM

Admission to separate Spring Fest programs will be $10, while tickets to King Lee will be $5. All-day passes for Saturday or Sunday will TAKE be $20, while a full festival pass for both days is $30. For details, visit filminsyracuse.com.

QUICK

By Bill DeLapp Mayor Lee Alexander, circa 1981. Michael Davis photo

Cynthia Slavens from Pixar Animation Studios hosts a program on April 24 at the MOST. Bill DeLapp photo

HIZZONER HIGHLIGHTS SPRING FILM FEST

T

wo features about the late Syracuse Mayor Lee Alexander, one a clipsfilled documentary, the other a hallucinogenic reimagined biopic, will be some of the main attractions at this weekend’s Spring Fest 2015.

The Syracuse International Film Festival’s second annual springtime blowout is dedicated to Salt City filmmakers, specifically those who are living in the area and others who have left the region yet still maintain ties to Central New York. The latter is emphatically represented by Cynthia Slavens, the director of post-production at Pixar Animation Studios, who returns to the festival with another program featuring cartoon segments and commentary. Slavens, a graduate of Fayetteville-Manlius High School, will surely have some details regarding Inside Out, the new Disney-Pixar flick slated for a June 19 release. Slavens will regale the crowd at Armory Square’s Museum of Science and Technology, 500 S. Franklin St., on Friday, April 24, 7:30 p.m. Adults pay $10 but admission is free for elementary, middle and high school students accompanied by an adult. The festival moves to Eastwood’s Palace Theatre, 2384 James St., for the rest of the weekend, with four separate programs on Saturday, April 25, and three

programs on Sunday, April 26. Saturday’s major event will be the 6:45 p.m. screening of Million Dollar Mayor, the documentary on Lee Alexander, who ran Syracuse’s City Hall from 1970 to 1985, then went to prison on racketeering charges. The film is directed by Roger Springfield, the former WSTM-Channel 3 sportscaster who certainly can relate to the concept of a public figure who has fallen from grace in such a spectacular fashion. A question-answer session will follow the movie. Incidentally, Alexander remains the only Central New York politician to merit a coveted Syracuse New Times endorsement — albeit after he announced he would not seek re-election. In stark contrast, the 5:30 p.m. Sunday screening of King Lee offers a fictitious take on Alexander’s rise and fall, keyed by a swaggering performance by Nathan Faudree in the title role. Director Jonathan Case plays the material for laughs, with a hyperkinetic, acid-trippy style reminiscent of Oliver Stone’s wilder works.

Also on Sunday is the 3:30 p.m. showing of Monster Mansion Memories, the affectionate documentary by Andy Wolf concerning the legacy of Monster Movie Matinee, the weekly program of old horror features that aired Saturday afternoons on Channel 3 from 1964 to 1980. Baby boomers still fondly recall the show’s hosts, played by the late Alan Milair and Bill Lape, and Wolf should be on hand to take fans down memory lane. Other screenings will include Mark Chervinsky’s professional wrestling documentary At What Cost (Saturday, 1:30 p.m.); Northside, Sam Avery’s documentary on the changing neighborhood (Saturday, 4:30 p.m.); the double bill of Sounds of Men, a merging of live performance and video from Leo Crandall, plus a Super 8 mini-festival (Saturday, 9 p.m.); and a selection of seven short subjects (Sunday, 1 p.m.). SNT

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GREYROCK

ON A ROLL

Writer Margaret McCormick visits Cazenovia’s Greyrock Farm, a year-round, full-diet operation. Photos by Michael Davis

A

s the CSA (community-supported agriculture) sign-up season kicked into gear in February, Matt Volz found himself in an unusual place: parked in a chair at the computer for two to three hours at a stretch, processing registration forms and payments and answering questions from customers.

“And that was enough for me,’’ Volz says with a laugh. “A big draw of farming for me has always been being outdoors. I just wanted to be outside.’’ Volz gets his fill of fresh air daily, in all seasons. He rises before dawn to milk the cows, then dives into the list of chores on his to-do list at Greyrock Farm, the diversified farm he established near Cazenovia in 2010. Greyrock is a year-round, full-diet CSA — the only CSA in Central New York to offer its own produce, pastured beef, pork and chicken, eggs from pastured laying hens and raw milk (from a small herd of Brown Swiss cows) 52 weeks a year. As if that weren’t ambitious enough, Volz and his crew rely on a team of strapping draft horses, Percherons named Pearl and Pat, to help them get their job(s) done. Tractors are used for some work, but horsepower cuts down on Greyrock’s dependence on fossil fuels (and expenses) and supplies the manure that is the farm’s primary fertilizer. A visit to Greyrock, now in its fifth season, is a reminder that food doesn’t just magically appear in the produce,

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meat and dairy departments. It’s produced by smart, thoughtful people who love the land and treat it with respect, raise animals humanely and labor from dawn to dark to bring us food to nourish our bodies. “I don’t know anyone (in Central New York) who’s doing what they’re doing at Greyrock,’’ says Neil B. Miller, of New Woodstock. Miller is the founder and owner of Farmshed CNY (which publishes an online and mobile directory of regional farms, farmers markets, CSAs and food producers) and the Farmshed Harvest Food Hub, which exists to connect farmers with restaurants and retail connections. “It’s extraordinary,” Miller adds, “and they’re making a go of it. They’re really doing something special there.’’ Miller applauds Greyrock’s judicious planting of storage crops like potatoes, carrots, onions, beets, turnips and other root vegetables, which allow an extended CSA share and vibrant farmstand all year long. “It’s hard work,’’ Volz says of farming, “but I really like what I do.’’


‘Everybody Needs to Eat’

Volz, 31, is the founding farmer and general manager of a small crew about to blossom as full-time employees come on board for the growing season. Also in lead roles are vegetable manager Gillian Goldberg, Volz’s partner, whose job is about to ramp up with the planting of dozens of varieties of produce over 12 acres of farm fields, and livestock manager Jon Mahoney, who oversees the daily care of beef, pigs, chickens and laying hens. Volz hopes to soon hire a “three-quarter time” dairy manager to oversee the 12 milkers and seven heifers and take charge of the milking and bottling of milk for sale, as well as a “teamster” for vegetable field work and a variety of chores with the horses. Employees eat lunch as a crew and share cooking and cleanup duties. On a recent Friday, the crew ate pasta and pesto and discussed a variety of topics, from setting up for that afternoon’s farmstand, to how fast the newborn piglets are growing, to seeding (delayed by cold weather), to putting up another hoophouse. Volz spent his early childhood years in Cazenovia and moved to suburban Philadelphia with his family at age 10. He studied philosophy at Middlebury College in Vermont, and got his introduction to diversified farming as a part-timer at Essex Farm, a year-round, full-diet, horse-powered farm in northern New York. The farm was founded by Mark and Kristin Kimball in 2003 and made famous by Kristin Kimball in her memoir, The Dirty Life, which chronicles the farm’s first year. Following graduation from Middlebury in 2007, Volz worked at Essex Farm for two more years and at a couple of farms in Vermont before beginning to search for his own farm. The search took him back to Cazenovia and to his roots. In spring 2010, he was introduced to Kaye Osborne, whose family has farmed on the land (270 acres) for more than a century. She needed someone to manage the property and he needed a place to farm. Greyrock was established in 2010. “I was lucky to find Kaye and find this place,’’ Volz says. “They took really good care of the land and the buildings.’’ Why farming as a profession? “I wanted to do something meaningful and relevant and necessary,’’ Volz says. “Farming fit that. Everybody needs to eat. That made farming even more meaningful for me.’’

Breaking from the CSA Model

If “know your farmer, know your food’’ is your mantra and eating seasonally is a priority, Greyrock Farm should be on your radar — and in your GPS. Greyrock takes the opposite approach of today’s large and industrial farms by focusing on smaller-scale production, people power and low-tech equipment. Transparency is important to Volz: He invites people considering CSA membership to visit the farm, chat with the workers and meet the animals. “I don’t think many people visit a farm to take pictures of tractors,’’ Volz says. “But they do visit here to take pictures of the horses.’’ CSA pickup days and the Tuesday and Friday farmstands, open to the public, feature a host of bonus local and regional products to supplement the “full diet,” including grains, dried beans and flours from Gianforte Farm, meadow butter from Kriemhild Dairy Farms, tilapia from Main Street Farms, cheese and yogurt from North Country Creamery, and honey and maple syrup from Local Roots Farm. The list goes on. Some folks travel miles for the raw milk, which is thick, creamy and flavorful, with grassy notes in the spring and summer. In New York state, raw, unpasteurized milk can only be sold at the place of production. It’s spring on the calendar, and Greyrock is in a sort of transition season. Snow is melting and rain is falling, leaving mud, soggy fields and flashes of green. It will be a few weeks before the pasture is ready to receive cows, pigs and chickens for rotational grazing. But after a long, harsh winter, the new season is coming together and there is hope and anticipation in the air. NEXT PAGE

Matt Volz with draft horses Pearl and Pat.

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See more photos SYRACUSENEWTIMES.COM

The Greyrock farmstand is open Fridays, 2 to 6 p.m.

GREYROCK Spinach and arugula, planted in the fall, will soon be harvested from a hoophouse — an unheated greenhouse, covered with strong plastic sheeting, that lets the sun in, retains heat and extends the growing season. A second hoophouse is being set up to use as a brooder for 500 broiler chickens, arriving at the farm as baby chicks. Seeding has started. Customers have requested that cardoons, broccoli rabe, bok choy and fingerling potatoes, as well as more cauliflower and more greens, be added to the mix this year, Goldberg said in February. This season, Greyrock is going from a free-choice, “take as much as your family will eat’’ CSA share plan to a more flexible program that functions like a store account. CSA members are asked to put down a minimum deposit of $500 and come to the farm to “shop” on pickup days. Produce is weighed at “checkout,” and accounts are paid down and recharged again, as needed. CSA members get a 15 percent discount on their bill. “People are used to the grocery store and to shopping,’’ Volz says. “This way they can get more one week if they need it and less another week, depending on what they need and if they’re going away. We hope this makes things easier for people.’’ CSA memberships are still available. Making a commitment in advance and specifying things you are likely to pick up each visit helps Volz and his crew know things like how much to plant and how much milk to have on hand in the cooler. Greyrock stays in touch with its CSA members, farmstand customers and even potential new customers via an email newsletter and updates on its Facebook page. Who doesn’t “like” a picture of a baby calf getting a bottle or of a magnificent pair of horses pulling hay through the snow? “Facebook is huge for us,’’ Volz says. “People really respond to it. We like for people to see our animals. People like knowing where their food is coming from.”

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Emily Veator, of Auburn, learned about Greyrock Farm when she and her boyfriend went online to seek out a source for local raw milk to use for making fresh mozzarella cheese. “The milk is so tasty, so creamy and awesome,’’ Veator says. While there, she says, she picked up some snap peas and greens. Veator, who is a vegetarian, says she regularly goes to the Central New York Regional Market for produce. But now that she’s moving from Auburn to Pompey, Greyrock and its “fresh goodness” will be in easier reach.

Looking to the Future

In addition to a daily to-do list, Volz has a more “abstract” list of goals. He wants to produce enough food for sale and for use on the farm. He wants the farm to be efficient and grow — in increments and not too much. He wants to make sure he and Gillian and other staff members are paid a living wage — salary and benefits — and he wants his staff to have a proper balance of work and life. He wants to buy the farm this year or next year. “That’s a big goal,’’ Volz says. He wants Greyrock Farm to be a go-to spot, both for sustenance and social interaction and connections. “I want us to be a fixture in this community and to bring people together,’’ Volz says. Greyrock Farm is at 6100 East Lake Road, Cazenovia. Farmstand hours are Fridays, 2 to 6 p.m., and are open to the public. For more information about the CSA program, call Matt Volz at (484) 888-6254 or visit greyrockfarmcsa.com or facebook.com/GreyrockFarmCSA. Volunteers are welcome and invited to contact Volz. SNT Margaret McCormick is a freelance writer and editor in Syracuse. She blogs about food at eatfirst.typepad. com. Follow her on Twitter, connect on Facebook or email her at mmccormicksnt@gmail.com.

By the Numbers: Greyrock Farm ACRES 270 total; 150 leased STAFF Core crew of three grows to 10 to 12 during growing season, plus volunteers PRODUCE: 12 acres VEGETABLES/FRUITS About 50 varieties, including winter storage crops BEEF CATTLE 40 DAIRY COWS (Brown Swiss) 12 milkers; number fluctuates LAYING HENS 200 MEAT CHICKENS 2,500 (over season)

Community-Supported Agriculture CSA members purchase a “share” of produce from a local farmer in advance of the growing season to enjoy each week of the growing season, usually June to November. Shares typically include eight to 10 kinds of vegetables, enough for a family of three or four. Some farms offer half shares, and some offer the option of adding fruit, eggs or meat to your order. For more information on CSAs in Central New York, visit Local Harvest at localharvest.org.


PETER MULVEY Y FRIDAY, APRIL 24 SEAN ROWE

Y

SAT, MAY 9

LISTEN, ENJOY, RETURN. TICKETS & MORE INFO: NELSONODEON.COM

MUSIC

L I ST E D IN CH RONOLOGI C A L OR D ER:

W E D N E S DAY 4/ 22 Jazz at the Plaza. Wed. April 22, noon-2 p.m.

The lunchtime series continues with keyboardist Dave Solazzo at Le Moyne College Plaza, 1135 Salt Springs Road. Free. 479-JAZZ.

Civic Morning Musicals. Wed. April 22, 12:301:30 p.m. The Wednesday Recital Series featuring youthful classical musicians continues with flutist Rita George Simmons, pianist Willie La Favor and Debbie Grohman on clarinet at the Everson Museum of Art’s Hosmer Auditorium, 401 Harrison St. Free. 254-7136.

T H U R S DAY 4/ 23 Soft White Sixties. Thurs. 6 p.m. Working-class modern popsters at the Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. $10/advance, $12/door. 446-1934.

F R I DAY 4/ 24 ESP and Kirsten Tegtmeyer. Fri. 6-9 p.m.

Happy-hour cool vibes during the Jazz@Sitrus series at the Sheraton University Inn’s Sitrus Lounge, 801 University Ave., Syracuse University campus. Free. 479-5299.

Stone Soul Foundation and Chuck Scheile. Fri. 6-10 p.m. Two area acts highlight the

Final Friday monthly music series at the Theater Mack, Cayuga Museum of History and Art, 203 Genesee St., Auburn. $5. 253-8051.

Glenn Miller Orchestra. Fri. 7 p.m. Enjoy big-

band swing standards at the Capitol Theatre, 220 W. Dominick St., Rome. $22/adults, $16/ seniors, $8/ages 12 and under. 337-6453.

One Step From Falling. Fri. 7 p.m. CD release

party also features Fuquad, Super Killer Robots and Nails in the Pulpit at the Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. $6-$8. 446-1934.

Foam N Glow. Fri. 8 p.m. Suds it up at the

Westcott Theater, 524 Westcott St. $25. Thewestcotttheater.com.

S AT U R DAY 4/ 25 Crnkn. Sat. 7 p.m. Electronic-dance kingpin,

evening of music at H.W. Smith School, 1130 Salt Springs Road. $25/adults, $15/seniors, free/ students. 682-7720.

S U N DAY 4/ 26 Old-Time Music Jam. Every Sun. 1 p.m. Jam

session for all sorts of ramblers and pickers is open to both spectators and players, followed by a potluck dinner at 5 p.m. Kellish Hill Farm, 3192 Pompey Center Road, Manlius. $5/suggested donation. 682-1578.

T U E S DAY 4/ 28 Zestfest. Tues. 5 p.m. Student music artists perform at the Westcott Theater, 524 Westcott St. $8. Thewestcotttheater.com.

W E D N E S DAY 4/ 29 Jazz at the Plaza. Wed. April 29, noon-2 p.m. The lunchtime series continues with jazz trumpeter-vocalist Melissa Gardiner at Le Moyne College Plaza, 1135 Salt Springs Road. Free. 479-JAZZ. Civic Morning Musicals. Wed. April 29, 12:301:30 p.m. The Wednesday Recital Series featuring youthful classical musicians continues with duos for flute and percussion at the Everson Museum of Art’s Hosmer Auditorium, 401 Harrison St. Free. 254-7136.

Archnemesis. Wed. April 29, 9 p.m. Hip-hop

the night away, plus Kyero at the Westcott Theater, 524 Westcott St. $10. Thewestcotttheater. com.

W E D N E S DAY 4/ 22 Brian McCardell & Mark Westers. (Dinosaur

Bar-B-Que, 246 W. Willow St.), 8 p.m.

Brownskin Band. (Dolce Vita, 907 E. Genesee

St.), 8-11 p.m.

E.S.P.. (Syracuse Suds Factory, 320 S. Clinton St.), 6-9 p.m. Frank Rhodes. (Mohegan Manor, Route 48, Baldwinsville), 7-10 p.m.

Frenay & Lenin. (Sheraton University Inn, 801 University Ave.), 5-8 p.m.

Grupo Pagan Lite. (CC’s Tavern, 17 Columbus

St., Auburn), 6-9 p.m.

Incantation. Sat. 7 p.m. Death metal maniacs,

Open Mike w/ Tom Barnes. (Shifty’s, 1401

Robby Hecht. Sat. 7:30 p.m. The singer-song-

writer performs at the Oswego Music Hall, 41 Lake St., Oswego. $14/advance, $16/door, half price/children 5-12, free/under age 5. 342-1733.

John Dean and Dean’s List. Sat. 7:30 p.m.

Revamping of the Dean Brothers in concert at the Steeple Coffeehouse, United Church of Fayetteville’s Steeple Coffeehouse, 310 E. Genesee St., Fayetteville. $10. 663-7415.

Juilliard String Quartet. Sat. 7:30 p.m. Syracuse Friends of Chamber Music presents an

Anything Goes. Tues. & Wed. April 29,

7:30 p.m.; closes April 30. Famous Artists presents Cole Porter’s amusing shipboard musical at the Mulroy Civic Center’s CrouseHinds Concert Theater, 411 Montgomery St. $30, $45, $60. 475-7979.

Assisted Living: The Musical. Fri. 8 p.m. Senior-citizen amusement at the Kallet Theater, 4842 N. Jefferson St., Pulaski. $35, $45, $60. 298-0007.

York Playhouse troupe presents the corrosive David Mamet drama at the company’s Shoppingtown Mall venue, 3649 Erie Blvd. E. $34.95/6:30 p.m. dinner theater Sat.; $20/ show only Fri. & Sat., $17/Thurs. & Sun. 8858960.

Avenue Q. Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m.,

Other Desert Cities. Wed. April 22 &

Wed. April 29, 8 p.m.; closes May 9. The raunchy puppet musical, performed by students of the Syracuse University Drama Department at the Syracuse Stage complex, 820 E. Genesee St. $19/adults, $17/students and seniors. 443-3275.

Beauty and the Beast. Every Sat. 12:30 p.m.; through May 30. Interactive version of the children’s classic, as performed by Magic Circle Children’s Theatre. Spaghetti Warehouse, 689 N. Clinton St. $5. 449-3823. Chippendales Male Revue. Wed. April

22, 8 p.m. It ain’t the meat, it’s the emotion, when the beefcake parade visit’s the Turning Stone Resort and Casino Showroom, Thruway Exit 33, Verona. $20, $30. 361SHOW.

Glengarry Glen Ross. Thurs-Sat. 8 p.m.,

Sun. 2 p.m.; closes May 2. The Central New

Thurs. 7:30 p.m., Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 3 & 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m.; closes Sun. April 26. The Pulitzer-nominated comedy-drama closes the season at Syracuse Stage’s Archbold Theatre, 820 E. Genesee St. $43, $47/adults, $38/ age 40 and under, $18/under 18. 443-3275.

Swimming in the Shallows. Wed. April 29, 7:30 p.m.; closes May 17. Adam Bock’s domestic farce continues the season at the Kitchen Theatre Company, 417 W. State St., Ithaca. $15-$37. (607) 273-4497, (607) 2720570. A Wee Bit O’ Murder. Every Thurs. 6:45

p.m.; through April 30. Interactive dinner-theater comedy whodunit mixes with Gaelic guffaws; performed by Acme Mystery Company. Spaghetti Warehouse, 689 N. Clinton St. $27.95/plus tax and gratuity. 475-1807.

C LU B D AT E S

preceded by Turnup, Benny Yella, Rumpstep and Tweakn at the Westcott Theater, 524 Westcott St. $18. Thewestcotttheater.com. plus Spire, Ebony Sorrow and Inhumatus at the Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. $17. 446-1934.

Presented By

S TAG E

Just Joe. (Jake’s Grub & Grog, 7 East River

Road, Central Square), 6-9 p.m. Burnet Ave.), 9 p.m.

Sophistafunk w/ Suburban Plaza. (Funk n’ Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St.), 8 p.m.

T H U R S DAY 4/ 23 Arty Lenin. (Old City Hall, 159 Water St., Oswe-

go), 6-10 p.m.

Dean, Martin and Davie. (Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.), 8 p.m.

Dove Creek. (Bohemian Moon, 103 East Main St., Norwich), 6:30-8:30 p.m.

Edgar Pagan and Irv Lyons Jr.. (Tilted Kilt,

3019 Erie Blvd. East), 8-11 p.m.

Elove Ruckus. (Cato Hotel, 2517 West Main St.,

Dave Hanlon’s Cookbook. (UNC, 125 Wash-

Cato), 7-10 p.m.

ington St., Auburn), 8 p.m.

John Spillett Jazz Pop Duo. (TS Steakhouse,

Dave Machan. (Carnegie on 57, 7376 Oswego Road, Liverpool), 8-10:30 p.m.

Turning Stone Casino, Verona). 6-10 p.m.

Just Joe. (Flat Iron Grill, 1333 Buckley Road, Liverpool), 6-9 p.m. Nanni & The Intention. (Phoebe’s, 900 E. Genesee St.), 8-10 p.m.

Open Mike. (Kellish Hill Farm, 3191 Pompey Center Road, Manlius), 7 p.m.

Open Mike w/ Marc Caselle. (Vendetti’s Soft Rock Cafe, 2026 Teall Ave.), 7 p.m.

Open Mike w/ Velveeta Nightmare Band. (Mac’s Bad Art Bar, 1799 Brewerton Road, Mattydale), 9:30 p.m.

Sassafraz w/ I Am Fool. (Funk n’ Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St.), 8 p.m.

The Jodogs. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W. Wil-

FRIDAY, APRIL 24th

KAT TALE

SATURDAY, APRIL 25th

low St.), 8 p.m.

F R I DAY 4/ 24 Anthony Joseph Swingtet. 197 Bar & Bistro, 197 West 1st St., Oswego), 7-10 p.m. Black Water. (Bull and Bear Roadhouse, 8201 Oswego Road, Liverpool), 10 p.m.

Chris Taylor Unplugged. (Colonial Inn, 3071

Route 370, Meridian), 9 p.m.

Dan Elliot Solo. (Black Olive, 250 S. Clinton

St.), 5-8 p.m.

SCARS ‘N STRIPES THURSDAYS

OPEN MIC NIGHT 1799 BREWERTON ROAD, MATTYDALE 455-7223 • MACSBADARTBAR.COM

syracusenewtimes.com | 04.22.15 - 04.28.15

17


Diana Jacobs Band. (Prison City Pub & Brew-

Morris & The Hepcats. (Limp Lizard, 201 1 st.

Dr. Killdean. (Pastas on the Green, 1 Village Blvd., Baldwinsville), 8-11 p.m.

Rhythm Method. (Buffalo’s, 2119 Downer Street Road, Baldwinsville), 9 p.m.

Liverpool), 8-11 p.m. Dirtroad Ruckus. (Timber Tavern, 7153 State Fair Blvd.), 9 p.m.

Elephant Shoes. (Old City Hall, 159 Water St.,

Ron Spencer Band. (The Village Tavern, 6 East

Dr. Killdean. (Buffalo’s, 2119 Downer St., Bald-

ery, 28 State St., Auburn), 9 p.m.

St., Liverpool), 9 p.m.

Dave Porter & Bob. (Limp Lizard, 201 1st. St.,

Steve Odum Band. (The Betty Blue, 1 West Cayuga St., Moravia), 8 p.m.

Tearz of Fire w/ The Redaction. (Lew’s

Sports Bar & Grill, 7356 Church St., N. Syracuse), 9 p.m.

Oswego), 6-10 p.m.

Main St., Marcellus), 7:30 p.m.

winsville), 9 p.m.

E.S.P. (Sitrus on the Hill, 801 University Ave.),

Ruddy Well Band w/ Butternut Creek Revival & The Old Main. (Funk n’ Waffles,

Dunes & The Del-Tunes. (Kallet Theater, 4842

N. Jefferson St., Pulaski), 8 p.m.

The Sugardaddy’s. (Valley American Legion,

Stone Soul Foundation. (Theater Mack, 203

Flatface & The Shemp-Dells. (Stampede Steakhouse, 5548 Highway 31, Verona), 9 p.m.

Two Hour Delay. (Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.),

6-9 p.m.

Frenay & Lenin. (Vendetti’s Soft Rock Cafe,

307 S. Clinton St.), 8 p.m.

Honky Tonk Hindooz. (Good Shepherds

W. Genesee St., Auburn), 6-10 p.m.

2026 Teall Ave.), 7:30-10:30 p.m.

The Ripcords. (Dublin’s, 7990 Oswego Road,

Frenay & Lenin. (Old City Hall, 159 Water St., Oswego), 6-10 p.m.

Brewing Co., 31 Loop Road, Auburn) 7 p.m.

Stroke. (Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.), 9 p.m.

Jamie Notarthomas. (Brae Loch Inn, 5 Albany

The Coachmen. (Beginning’s II, 6897 Manlius Center Road, East Syracuse), 7:30 p.m.

Isreal Hagan & Stroke. (Bull & Bear Roadhouse North, Route 57, Clay), 10 p.m.

Jesse Derringer. (Dilaj’s Motor Inn, 7430

YMCA Campaign Benefit Concert. (Kellish

Jesse Derringer. (Cicero American Legion,

St., Cazenovia), 7-11 p.m.

North Street Road, Auburn), 8-11 p.m.

John Spillett Jazz Pop Duo. (Bistro Elephant, 238 W Jefferson St.), 7-10 p.m.

Kat Tale w/ Monkey Wrench. (Mac’s Bad Art

Bar, 1799 Brewerton Road, Mattydale), 9:30 p.m.

Lisa Lee Trio. (Dublin’s, 7990 Oswego Road,

Hill Farm, 3191 Pompey Center Road, Manlius), 7-10 p.m.

5575 Legionnaire Dr., Cicero), 7 p.m.

Zelltones Duo. (Flat Iron Grill, 1333 Buckley

Road, Central Square), 8 p.m.

Road, Liverpool), 8-11 p.m.

S AT U R DAY 4/ 25

John Lerner. (Jake’s Grub & Grog, 7 East River Lonesome Crow. (Marshalls Valley View, 2440 Route 5, Chittenango), 9 p.m.

Los Blancos. (World of Beer, Destiny USA),

Liverpool), 9 p.m.

110 Academy St.), 6-10 p.m.

9 p.m.

S U N DAY 4/ 26 Anthony Joseph Swingtet. (Oswego-American Foundry, 246 West Seneca St., Oswego), 10 a.m. - 1 p.m.

Frank Rhodes Solo. (Limp Lizard, 4628 Onon-

daga Blvd.), 2-6 p.m.

John Spillett Jazz Pop Duo. (Blue Water Grill, 11 W. Genesee St., Skaneateles), 5-8 p.m. Lisa Lee Band. (Colonial Inn, 3071 Route 370,

Big D3. (Flat Iron Grill, 1333 Buckley Road, Liv-

8-11 p.m.

Meridian), 4 p.m.

ery, 6475 Collamer Road, East Syracuse), 6:30 p.m.

Boots N Shorts. (Good Nature Brewing, 37

Michael Crissan. (Ithaca Ale House, 111 Aurora St., Ithaca), 10 p.m.

7-10 p.m.

Mark Zane. (Eskapes Lounge, 6257 Route 31,

Brian McCardell & Mark Westers. (Pastas on

Liverpool), 6-10 p.m.

Longwood Jazz Project. (Greenwood Win-

erpool), 8-11 p.m.

Milford St., Hamilton), 9 p.m.

Cicero), 7-9 p.m.

the Green, 1 Village Blvd. Baldwinsville), 8 p.m.

Michael Crissan. (Limp Lizard, 4628 Ononda-

Civil Servants. (Knoxie’s Pub, Route 20,

ga Blvd.), 5:30 - 9:30 p.m.

Pompey), 9 p.m.

Mike Estep Band. (JP’s Tavern, 109 Syracuse

Cousin Jake. (V.F.W., 2000 LeMoyne Ave.), 5-9

St., Baldwinsville), 7 p.m.

p.m.

Miss E Band. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W. Wil-

Custom Taylor Band. (Toby Keith’s, Destiny

low St.), 10 p.m.

USA), 9:30 p.m.

Modern Mudd. (Western Ranch Motor Inn,

Dan Elliot & The Monterays. (Vernon

1255 State Fair Blvd.), 7:30 p.m.

Downs, Vernon), 9 p.m.

Mike & Charlie. (Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.),

Native Wells w/ DJ Rob Low. (Funk n’ Waf-

Music Jam. (Kellish Hill Farm, 3191 Pompey Center Road, Manlius), 1 p.m.

Normal Instruments w/ Solaris. (Funk n’

Open Mike. (Bridge Street Tavern, 109 Bridge

O’Hara & Halloran. (Limp Lizard, 4628 Onon-

Ron Spencer Band. (Vendetti’s Soft Rock Cafe, 2026 Teall Ave.), 2-5 p.m.

fles, 727 South Crouse Ave.), 8 p.m. Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St.), 8 p.m. daga Blvd.), 8 p.m.

Phil Petroff & Natural Fact. (Dinosaur Bar-BQue, 246 W. Willow St.), 10 p.m.

Robby Hecht. (Oswego Music Hall, 41 Lake St., Oswego), 7:30-9:30 p.m. Scars N Stripes. (Mac’s Bad Art Bar, 1799 Brewerton Road, Marcellus), 9: 30 p.m.

St., Solvay), 7:30 p.m.

The Barndogs Plus. (Westcott Theater, 524

Westcott St.), 7-9 p.m.

The Noisy Boys. (Lakehouse Pub, 6 W. Genesee St., Skaneateles), 6-9 p.m. The Rug Burns. (Frank’s Moondance Tavern, 2512 Cherry Valley Tnpk., Marcellus), 5-9 p.m.

JAKE’S

MONIRAE’S Friday, April 24

Vagabond Station Saturday, April 25

(formerly castaways) Dinner Wed-Sat 4pm • Sun - noon

Friday April 24 • 7-10pm

Tom Gilbo

7 E. River Road, Brewerton

WEDNESDAY

Burgers, Beer & Wings FRIDAY

Reserve now for

Damon Strange

Max Scialdone

MOTHER’S DAY Prime Rib Buffet Tiki Bar opening soon!

Loose Cannon

(paintnite.com to purchase tickets!)

Thursday 7-9pm

Trivia Night

Jon Lerner

Friday & Saturday

NOW OPEN!

Call 668-1248 for reservations

18

Paint Nite Syracuse

SATURDAY

Mother’s Day Buffet Extravaganza! moniraes.com

Wednesday 7-9pm

668-3434

Saturday, May 2

688 County Rte 10, Pennellville

Social Hour

with Just Joe

“Elvis” show! Cry to the blind, Bound for the f loor, far from over & shotline Friday, May 1

7 Days/Week 5-7pm

916 County Rte 37 • Brewerton 916riverside.com

04.22.15 - 04.28.15 | syracusenewtimes.com

(formerly castaways)

Wed-Sat - 4pm Sunday - noon

jakesgrubandgrog.com | 668-3905

Call for events listings Open 7 Days • Lunch/Dinner Available for Banquets 505 Westcott St. • 425-0366

munjeds.net


Upstate Heat. (Funk n’ Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St.), 8 p.m.

M O N DAY 4/ 27

Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery. Onondaga Community College, 4585

ture Court: “Grounding Sky,” Tadashi Hashimoto’s new work made from hand-hewn wood and enamel paint.

W. Seneca Turnpike. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. 498-2787.

Dead Night. (Funk n’ Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St.), ArtRage Gallery. 505 Hawley Ave. Wed.-Fri.

Central Arts Gallery. SUNY Empire State College, 6333 Route 298, East Syracuse. Mon.Thurs. 9 a.m.-6 p.m., Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. 460-3142.

John McConnell. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W.

Central Library. Galleries of Syracuse, 447 S.

8 p.m.

Willow St.), 8 p.m.

Stone River Band. (Volney Fire House, 3002

2-7 p.m., Sat. noon-4 p.m. 218-5711. Through May 23: Capillary Reaction, paintings of hydrofracking issues by Ron Throop.

Arts in the HeART Gallery. 47 S. First St,

Fulton. Tues. 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Wed. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Thurs. & Fri. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 592-3373. Through Sun. April 26: 42 Miles of T U E S DAY 4/ 28 Wonder, a photographic essay of the Oswego Edgar Pagan & Irv Lyons, Jr.. (Limp Lizard, 201 Canal. 1st St., Liverpool), 7:30 p.m. Route 3, Fulton), 6-9 p.m.

Michael Crissan. (Margaritaville, Destiny USA),

Art Store Gallery (Commercial Art Supply). 935 Erie Blvd. E. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-7 p.m.,

6-9 p.m.

Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 474-1000.

Nasty Habit Duo. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W.

Auburn Unitarian Universalist Society.

Willow St.), 9 p.m.

Open Mike w/ Chris James & Mama G. (Funk

n’ Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St.), 8 p.m.

W E D N E S DAY 4/ 29 Acoustic Justice. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W.

Willow St.), 9 p.m.

Bradshaw Blues. (Eskapes Lounge, 6257 Route

31, Cicero), 7-9 p.m.

Frank Rhodes. (Mohegan Manor, Route 48, Baldwinsville), 7-10 p.m.

Frenay & Lenin. (Sheraton University Inn, 801 University Ave.), 5-8 p.m.

Just Joe. (Jake’s Grub & Grog, 7 East River Road,

Central Square), 6-9 p.m.

Miss E & The Resonator. (Dolce Vita, 907 E.

Genesee St.), 8-11 p.m.

Open Mike w/ Tom Barnes. (Shifty’s, 1401 Bur-

net Ave.), 9 p.m.

Sophistafunk w/ Swift Techniques. (Funk n’ Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St.), 8 p.m.

The Higgs. (The Brick Bar, 35 West Bridge St., Oswego), 8 p.m.

CO M E DY

Chicks Are Funny. Wed. April 22, 7:30 p.m.

Emma Willmann and Pamela Werts co-headline the stand-up action at Funny Bone Comedy Club, Destiny USA, off Hiawatha Boulevard. $10. 4238669.

Mark Curry. Thurs. 7:30 p.m., Fri. 7:30 & 9:45

p.m., Sat. 7 & 9:45 p.m., Sun. 7:30 p.m. Popular touring comic performs at the Funny Bone Comedy Club, Destiny USA, off Hiawatha Boulevard. $20. 423-8669.

Ralphie May. Thurs. 8 p.m. The hefty humorist takes on the Turning Stone Resort and Casino Showroom, Thruway Exit 33, Verona. $22, $27. 361-SHOW.

Comedy for a Cause. Fri. 7 p.m. Comedians in a fundraiser for the American Diabetes Association at the Palace Theatre, 2384 James St. $15/ advance, $20/door. (804) 482-0537.

LI ST E D ALPH ABE TI C A LLY: 914 Works. 914 E. Genesee St. Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-

4 p.m. 443-8072.

PHIL PETROFF & NATURAL FACT

SATURDAY, APRIL 25TH, 10PM  NO COVER

Earlville Opera House Galleries. 20 E. Main

Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 6731350. Through April 26: A Sense of Peace, nature photography of the center by Tom Dwyer.

St., Earlville. Tues.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat. noon-3 p.m. 691-3550. Through May 9: Cloud Physics, street art and more by Tony Thompson; TeensART 2015, the annual show from teenagers; Changing Landscapes, works by seven upstate women artists.

Barrett Art Gallery. Library Concourse, Utica College, Utica. Mon.-Fri. 1-5 p.m., Sat. noon-3 p.m. 792-3057.

Beauchamp Branch Library. 2111 S. Salina

Echo (formerly Craft Chemistry). 745 N. Salina St. www.echomakes.com.424-1474.

Betts Branch Library. 4862 S. Salina St. Mon.

Edgewood Gallery. 216 Tecumseh Road. Tues.-Fri. 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 445-8111.

St. Mon., Wed., Fri. & Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Tues. & Thurs. 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m. 435-3395.

& Wed. 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m., Tues. & Thurs.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sun. 1-5 p.m. 435-1940. Through April: works from students of the Syracuse Academy of Science.

Pets of the Week

Broad Street Gallery. 20 Broad St., Hamilton. Wed.-Sat.: 11 a.m.-6 p.m. 368-4453. Sat. April 11, 4-9 p.m.: grand reopening celebration.

THU 4/23

DOORS 6:00 PM

Meet Remie!

Cayuga Museum of History and Art/ Case Research Lab Museum. 203 Genesee

St., Auburn. Tues.-Sun. noon-5 p.m. 253-8051. Through May 24: People Helping People, celebrating 50 years of community action in Seneca and Cayuga counties. Ongoing: Both Sides of the Wall, a salute to Auburn Prison, plus A Child’s World. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Fri. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. 655-2225.

Cazenovia College Art Gallery. Reisman

Hall, 6 Sullivan St. Fri. 4-6 p.m., Sat. & Sun. 1-4 p.m. 655-7261. Through April 2016 in the Sculp-

Firudo

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A R T G A LLE RIE S

3649 Erie Blvd. E., DeWitt. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. 391-5115. Art classes every Wed. 6:30-9 p.m., every Sat. 2-4:30 p.m. Sat. April 26, 8-11 p.m.: The Artsy, Fartsy, Schmartzy Party; $3/admission.

Dalton’s American Decorative Arts. 1931 James St. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. 463-1568.

Baltimore Woods Nature Center’s Weeks Art Gallery. 4007 Bishop Hill Road, Marcellus.

Clash of the Comics. Wed. April 29, 7:30 p.m.

EXHIBITS

CNY Artists Gallery. Shoppingtown Mall,

Community Folk Art Center. 805 E. Genesee St. Tues.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 442-2230.

Baldwinsville Public Library. 33 E. Genesee St., Baldwinsville. Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-9 p.m., Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Sun. 1-5 p.m. 635-5631.

Live Music every Saturday 8PM - Midnight

Local and regional stand-ups compete at Funny Bone Comedy Club, Destiny USA, off Hiawatha Boulevard. $7. 423-8669.

Clayscapes Pottery. 1003 W. Fayette St. Tues.Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. 424-6868.

CNY Arts Center. River Glen Plaza, Route 481S, Fulton. 592-3373, 598-ARTS.

607 N. Seward Ave., Auburn. Sun. noon-2 p.m. 253-9029. Through April: collages, watercolors and more by Ashley Bobbett.

Tommy Pope. Sat. 8 p.m. Traveling funnyman

in action, plus opener Tyler Rothrock at Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St., Auburn. $15. 2536669.

Salina St. Mon., Thurs.-Sat. 9 a.m-5 p.m., Tues.Wed. 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m. 435-1900.

INCANTATION SPIRE, EBONY SORROW, INHUMATUS ALL AGES

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DOORS 7:00 PM

KEPT, ONE LAST SHOT ALL AGES

THELOSTHORIZON.COM CORNER OF ERIE & THOMPSON, SYRACUSE NY

syracusenewtimes.com | 04.22.15 - 04.28.15

19


Erie Canal Museum. 318 Erie Blvd. E. Mon.-

Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sun. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Free. Donations accepted. 471-0593. Ongoing: Interactive experience where visitors use an interactive touch-screen to play the role of assistant weighmaster and learn to weigh boats, assess the correct tolls and virtually steer the boat into the Weighlock Building.

Eureka Crafts. 210 Walton St., Armory Square. Mon.-Wed. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Thurs. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. 471-4601.

Everson Museum of Art. 401 Harrison St. Wed. noon-5 p.m., Thurs. noon-8 p.m., Fri. noon-5 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. $5/suggested donation/general admission; special exhibits vary in admission price. 4746064. Through May 10: Prendergast to Pollock, examples of American Modernism from Utica’s Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute; Women’s Work, feminist art from the 1960s to 1970s from the Everson collection; Enduring Gift, Chinese ceramics culled from the Cloud Wampler collection. Through May 30 and projected outside on the museum’s North facade: multimedia artist Cauleen Smith’s video Crow Requiem, co-presented by Urban Video Project and Light Work Gallery; Thurs.-Sun. 8-11 p.m. Fayetteville Free Library. 300 Orchard St.,

Fayetteville. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 1-5 p.m. 637-6374.

Gallery 4040. 4040 New Court Ave. Wed.-Sat. noon-5 p.m., and by appointment. 456-9540. Through May 1: Manifestation and Ambiguity, works that examine the perception of identity.

George Eastman House International Museum of Photography. 900 East Ave.,

Rochester. Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. $14/adults, $12/seniors, $5/students, free/under age 12. (585) 271-3361. Through Dec. 31: Kodak Camera at 125.

H Lee White Marine Museum. West First

Street Pier, Oswego. Daily, 1-5 p.m. 342-0480. The complex consists of a main building of exhibits highlighting more than 400 years of maritime history, the national historic landmark World War II tug the LT-5, the New York state Derrick Boat 8 from the Erie Canal System and the Eleanor D, the last U.S. commercial fishing vessel to work Lake Ontario. $7/adults, $3/teen, free/preteen.

Herbert Johnson Museum of Art. 114 Cen-

tral Ave., Cornell University, Ithaca. Tues.-Sun. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. (607) 254-4563. Through June 7: the photo exhibit Staged, Performed, Manipulated; Margaret Bourke-White: From Cornell Student to Visionary Photojournalist.

Kirkland Art Center. 9½ East Park Row, off

Route 12B, Clinton. Tues.-Fri. 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 853-8871.

La Casita Cultural Center. Lincoln Building,

109 Otisco St. Mon.-Fri. noon-6 p.m. 443-8743.

Light Work Gallery/Community Darkrooms. Robert Menschel Media Center, 316

Waverly Ave., Syracuse University campus. Light Work: Sun.-Fri. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. or by appointment. Community Darkrooms: Sun. & Mon. 10 a.m.-10 p.m., Tues.-Fri. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. 443-1300. Through June 30: Quaking Aspen: A Lyric Complaint, landscape photography by the late Gary Metz. Through July 31: Perspective, selections from the gallery’s collection. Through July 18: Sight Specific, works by Letha Wilson.

SALT Quarters. 115 Otisco St. Daily, noon-4

Manlius Historical Museum. 101 Scoville

Genesee St., Auburn. Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 1-5 p.m. Suggested admission: $6/adults, free/under 12. 255-1553. Through June 7: Made in New York 2015, the annual exhibit from local artists.

10 a.m. Bring your own supplies and learn, exchange art knowledge, share fine art with others and work your media. VFW Post 7290, 105 Maxwell Ave., North Syracuse. Free. 6993965.

Soule Branch Library. 101 Springfield Road. Mon., Thurs.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Tues. & Wed. 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m., Sun. 1-5 p.m. 435-5320.

Improv Comedy Classes. Every Wed. 6-7:45

Ave., Manlius. Daily, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. 682-6660. Ongoing: an exhibit on women in the military and life in the community during both World Wars.

Manlius Public Library. 1 Arkie Albanese Drive, Manlius. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 1-5 p.m. 682-6400, 6995076. Through Sat. April 25: 50 Shades of Green, a themed exhibit by members of the Associated Artists of Central New York. Matilda Joslyn Gage Center. 210 E. Genesee St., Fayetteville. Call for hours: 637-9511.

Maxwell Memorial Library. 14 Genesee St.,

Camillus. Mon.-Wed. 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Thurs. & Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Sun. 2-4 p.m. 672-3661. Through April: paintings and photographs from the Camillus Artists.

Mundy Branch Library. 1204 S. Geddes St. Mon., Tues., Thurs.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Wed. 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m. 435-3797.

Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute.

310 Genesee St., Utica. Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sun. 1-5 p.m. 797-0000.

Museum of Science and Technology (MOST). 500 S. Franklin St. Tues.-Sun. 10 a.m.-5

p.m. $8/general; $7/ages 11 and younger, and 65 and older. 425-9068.

Northern Onondaga Public Library. 5437 Library St., Brewerton. 699-2534.

Onondaga Free Library. 4840 W. Seneca Turnpike. 492-1727.

Oneida Community Mansion House. 170

Kenwood Ave., Sherrill. 363-0745. Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sun. noon-4 p.m. Tours available Wed.-Sat. 10 a.m. & 2 p.m.; Sun. 2 p.m. $5/adults; $3/students, free/children under 12. Ongoing: Wartime at Oneida Ltd., bayonets, scalpels and other military equipment manufactured by the company during World War II; Oneida Game Traps, 1852-1925.

Onondaga Historical Association. 321

Montgomery St. Wed.-Fri. 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Sat. & Sun. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Donation requested. 428-1864. Through May 3: It’s in Our Very Name: The Italian Heritage of Syracuse, artifacts and images tell the story. Through June 14: Lodging Landmark: The Heritage of the Hotel Syracuse. Through July 12: With Open Arms, the story of the Armenian community in Syracuse. Through Aug. 23: Salt City Rocks: The History of Syracuse Rock’n’Roll.

Oswego State Downtown Tyler Gallery.

Stone Quarry Hill Art Park. 3883 Stone

Quarry Road, Cazenovia. Thurs.-Sun. noon-5 p.m. and by appointment. $5/suggested donation. 655-3196.

SUArt Galleries. Shaffer Art Building, Syracuse University. Tues. & Wed. 11 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Thurs. 11 a.m.-8 p.m., Fri.-Sun. 11 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 443-4097. Through May 10: Extraordinary Reflections, photography by Robert Infarinato; Neither Confirmed Nor Denied, annual show from Masters of Fine Arts candidates. SUNY Cortland Beard Gallery. 9 Main St.

(Beard Building), Cortland. Daily, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. (607) 753-1188.

SUNY Oswego Metro Center’s Tyler Art Gallery. The Atrium, 2 Clinton Square. Mon.

8 a.m.-10 p.m., Tues. & Thurs. 8 a.m.-9:30 p.m., Wed. 8 a.m.-10:30 p.m., Fri. 8 a.m.-7:30 p.m., Sat. call for hours. 312-2112.

Syracuse Technology Garden Art Gallery.

235 Harrison St. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m., and by appointment. 474-0910. Through June 26: Id, Ego, Superego, paintings, sculptures and more from 18 area artists. Reception April 30, 5-8 p.m.

Tyler Art Gallery. Tyler Hall, 201 Penfield Library, SUNY Oswego campus, Route 104, Oswego. Mon.-Thurs.: 7:45 a.m.-11 p.m. Fri.: 7:45 a.m.-9 p.m. Sat.: 10:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun.: 11:30 a.m.-11 p.m. 312-2112. Through Wed. April 29: rotating display of works by Bachelor of Fine Arts candidates. Through May 2: Peter Paul Piech and Walt Whitman, a collaboration of art and poetry. View Arts Center/Old Forge. 3273 State

Route 28, Old Forge. Thurs.-Sun. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. $6/adults, free/under age 12. 369-6411.

Warehouse Gallery/Point of Contact Gallery. 350 W. Fayette St. Mon.-Fri. 1-5 p.m.

443-4098. Through Sat. April 25: Darkness/Detritus/Illuminations, drawings, videos and photographs by Puerto Rican artist Eduardo Lalo.

Wellin Museum of Art. Hamilton College,

College Hill Road, Clinton. Tues.-Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 859-4396. Ongoing: Archive Hall: Art and Artifacts; Case Histories: The Hidden Meaning of Objects.

Paine Branch Library. 113 Nichols Ave. Mon.

White Branch Library. 763 Butternut St.

& Tues. 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m., Wed.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. 435-5442. Through April: photographs of the Landmark Theatre and James Street mansions by Robin Gross.

Petit Branch Library. 105 Victoria Place. Mon.

& Thurs. 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m.; Tues., Wed., Fri. & Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. 435-3636. Through April: Let’s Play, colorful collages from Kathleen Crinnin.

Picker Art Gallery. Dana Creative Art Center,

Longyear Museum of Anthropology.

Redhouse Arts Center. Joan Lukas Rothen-

20

Schweinfurth Memorial Art Center. 205

Westcott Community Center Art Gallery.

erpool. Tues. 10 a.m.-1 p.m., Wed. & Thurs. 10 a.m.-1 p.m., 4-8:30 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 10 a.m.-1 p.m., and by appointment. 234-9333.

Alumni Hall, Colgate University, 13 Oak Drive, Hamilton. Mon.-Fri. 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., or by appointment. 228-7184, 228-6643. Through

p.m.

186 W. First St., Oswego. Wed. noon-5 p.m., Thurs. & Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 312-2112.

Colgate University, Route 12B, Hamilton. Tues.Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. & Sun. noon-5 p.m. 2287634. Through May 17: The Phantom Museum: Wonder Workshop, more than 40 diverse works by artist-in-residence Mark Dion.

Liverpool Art Center. 101 Lake Drive, Liv-

LEARNING

May 9: African Art and Initiation, masks, sculptures and symbols from East, Central and West Africa.

berg Gallery, 201 S. West St. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.10 p.m. 425-0405.

04.22.15 - 04.28.15 | syracusenewtimes.com

826 Euclid Ave. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; also by appointment. 478-8634.

Mon., Tues., Fri. & Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Wed. & Thurs. 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m. 435-3519. Through April: mixed media featuring themes of “art, mental illness and persevering through” by Baldwinsville artist Vykky Abner.

Whitney Applied Technology Center.

Onondaga Community College, 4941 Onondaga Road. Free. Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-8 p.m., Sat. & Sun. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. 498-2787.

Wilhelmina’s Art Gallery and Sculpture Trail Center. 60 Cayuga St., Seneca Falls. Thurs.-Sun. 1-5 p.m. 568-8204, 670-0947.

Wilson Art Gallery. Noreen Reale Falcone

Library, Le Moyne College, 1419 Salt Springs Road. Mon.-Thurs. 8 a.m.-2 a.m.; Fri. 8 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sat. 9 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sun. noon-2 a.m. 4454153. Through May 7: the annual student art show.

North Syracuse Art Group. Every Wed.

p.m. Drop-in classes at Salt City Improv Theater, Shoppingtown Mall, 3649 Erie Blvd. E., DeWitt. $20/adults, $15/students with ID. 410-1962.

Open Figure Drawing. Every Wed. 7-10 p.m. All skill levels are welcome: if you can write your name, you can draw. Westcott Community Center, 826 Euclid Ave. $8. 453-5565. Art Classes. Every Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m., 4 & 6:30 p.m. Teens and adults delve into their artistic sides at the Liverpool Art Center, 101 Lake Drive, Liverpool. $60-$80/month. 234-9333.

L I T E R AT I

Paws and Books. Sat. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Ages 6

to 12 can read a story to a lovable, well-trained canine at Hazard Branch Library, 1620 W. Genesee St. Free. 435-5326.

Muslim Journeys Book Discussion. Sat.

11:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Religious scholar Rev. Dr. Allison Stokes discusses Minaret by Leila Aboulela. Petit Branch Library, 105 Victoria Place. Free. 435-3636.

George Saunders Reading. Tues. 5:30-6:30 p.m. The author and poet will also sign books after the reading at Grewen Auditorium, Le Moyne College, 1419 Salt Springs Road. Free. 445-6200.

Brewerton Library Book Discussion. Tues.

6:30-8 p.m. Members consider The Postmistress by Sarah Blake at Northern Onondaga Public Library at Brewerton, 5437 Library St. Free. 676-7463.

SPORTS

Syracuse Chiefs. Wed. April 22 & Thurs. 1:05

p.m. Baseball season begins as the boys of summer battle the Rochester RedWings at NBT Bank Stadium, 1 Tex Simone Way. $5-$12/adults, $4-$10/children and seniors. 474-7833.

Vernon Downs Race Track. Fri. & Sat. 6:45 p.m. Harness racing continues at Vernon Downs, 4229 Stuhlman Road, Vernon. Free. (877) 88-VERNON.

SPECIALS

Trivia Night. Every Wed. 7-9 p.m. Head to

Hanover Square to test your knowledge. Bull & Bear Pub, 125 E. Water St. Free. 701-3064.

Trivia Night. Every Wed. 7-9 p.m. Come out

and test your brainpan against others. Stingers Pizza, 4500 Pewter Lane, Manlius. Free. 6928100.

Bird Walk. Thurs. 7-8:30 a.m. Environmental

educator Katie Mulverhill leads an early-morning bird trek at Green Lakes State Park, 7900 Green Lakes Road, Fayetteville. Free. 637-6111.

Paint, Drink and Be Merry. Thurs. 6:30-9:30

p.m. Enjoy a few drinks and paint a masterpiece with the help of a trained artist. Painting supplies will be provided. Drinks and food sold separately. Kenwood and Vine, 170 Kenwood Ave., Oneida. $38; reservations required. 4811638.

Trivia Night. Every Thurs. 7 p.m. Nightly prizes to those with the answers to general knowledge questions. Lamont Tavern, 108 Lamont Ave. Free. 487-9890.


Trivia Night. Every Thurs. 7-9 p.m. Prizes

for contestants, who needn’t be part of an established team. Sitrus Bar, Sheraton Syracuse University Hotel, 801 University Ave. Free. 3806206.

Trivia Night. Every Thurs. 7-9 p.m. Gray mat-

ters at this DJs-R-US contest at Spinning Wheel, 7384 Thompson Road, North Syracuse. Free. 458-3222.

Trivia Night. Every Thurs. 7-9 p.m. Brainstorm-

ing at Trappers II Pizza Pub, 101 N. Main St., Minoa. Free. 656-7777.

Trivia Night. Every Thurs. 7 p.m. Cranium

Trivia Night. Every Mon. 6:30 p.m. Knowledge

Woman in Gold. Art-house catnip with Helen

brainy fun with Steve Patrick at Nibsy’s Pub, 201 Ulster Ave. Free. 476-8423.

sequel. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:35, 3:25, 6:35 & 9:30 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Daily: 1, 4:15 & 7:20 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 10:10 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:55, 3:50, 6:45 & 9:50 p.m. No 12:55 & 3:50 p.m. shows Sat.

Team Trivia. Every Tues. 8 p.m. Drop some

Kingsman: The Secret Service. Stylish

F ILM, OTH ERS

is good at Marcella’s Restaurant, Clarion Hotel, 100 Farrell Road, Baldwinsville. Free. 457-8700.

Smartass Trivia. Every Tues. 7:15-11 pm. More

factoids at Coleman’s Authentic Irish Pub, 100 S. Lowell Ave. Free. (215) 760-8312.

FILM

S TA R TS FR I DAY

conundrums at RFH’s Hideaway, 1058 Route 57, Phoenix. Free. 695-2709.

F I L MS, T HEAT ER S A N D T IM E S S U B -

Smartass Trivia. Every Thurs. 7-10 p.m. Steve

N E W T I MES.COM FOR U P DAT E S.

Patrick hosts his quiz show at Pizza Man Pub, 50 Oswego St., Baldwinsville. Free.638-1234.

Trivia Night. Every Thurs. 7:30 p.m. Diamond

Dave knows the answers at Munjed’s Mediterranean Cafe and Metro Lounge, 505 Westcott St. Free. 425-0366.

Trivia Night. Every Thurs. 7:30 p.m. DJs-R-US handles the questions at Two Guys from Italy, Route 49, West Monroe. Free. 676-5777.

Trivia Night. Every Fri. 7 p.m. Nightly prizes to those with the answers to general knowledge questions. Lamont Tavern, 108 Lamont Ave. Free. 487-9890.

Cynthia Slavens. Fri. 7:30 p.m. The Pixar

post-production chief fields a question-answer session during this Spring Fest presentation at the MOST, 500 S. Franklin St. $10. 425-9068, filminsyracuse.com.

North Syracuse Education Foundation Spring Mixer. Fri. 6-10 p.m. Celebrate the 2015

grant winners and raise additional funds for NSEF programs during this event, which features a buffet, wine tastings, a Chinese auction, prize drawings and live music. Borio’s Restaurant, 8891 McDonnell’s Parkway, Cicero. $25. 638-1916.

Adirondack Photography Lecture and Workshops. Fri. 7:30 p.m. Sat. 7:45 a.m. & 4

p.m. Sun. 7:45 a.m. The Syracuse Camera Club hosts a weekend-long event featuring photographer Carl E. Heilman, who will lecture Friday evening at the University United Methodist Church, 1085 E. Genesee St., and host four-hour field workshops at: Labrador Hollow, Tully (Sat. 7:45 a.m.), Dave’s Diner at Common Ground, 35 Albany St., Cazenovia (Sat. 4 p.m.), Starbucks, 290 W. Jefferson St. (Sun. 7:45 a.m.). Lecture fee: $45/adults, $10/students. Workshop fee: $75. Syracusecameraclub.org.

Peter Mulkey. Fri. 8 p.m. The acclaimed singer-songwriter performs at the Nelson Odeon, 4035 Nelson Road, Nelson. $18. 655-9193.

Central New York Irish Feis. Sat. 8 a.m. More

than 1,000 step dancers compete at the 24th annual event featuring a four-stage dance competition. Horticulture Building, New York State Fairgrounds, 581 State Fair Blvd. Free. 715-2362.

Sampling Syracuse Food Tour. Sat. noon-3

J EC T TO CHA N GE. CHE C K S YR AC U S E The Age of Adeline. Blake Lively as an immortal woman who seeks romance in this tearjerker. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 1, 4, 6:50 & 9:40 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 11:40 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Daily: 12:50, 4:10 & 6:45 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 9:35 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 1:10, 4:10, 7 & 9:55 p.m. Child 44. Tom Hardy and Gary Oldman in a

police drama about child murders in Russia. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/ Stadium). Daily: 10:05 p.m.

Cinderella. Cate Blanchett as the wicked stepmom in director Kenneth Branagh’s live-action version of the Disney-branded fairy tale. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:55, 3:55 & 6:45 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:40, 3:40, 6:40 & 9:25 p.m. The Duff. The title means Designated Ugly Fat Friend in this high school comedy. Hollywood (Digital presentation/stereo). Daily: 6:30 p.m. Ex Machina. Acclaimed science-fiction thriller. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/ Stadium). Daily: 11:20 a.m., 2:10, 5, 7:45 & 10:35 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 12:20 a.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 1:20, 4:30, 7:20 & 10:05 p.m.

Furious 7. Paul Walker bids farewell to the hot-

rod franchise, with Jason Statham supplying some automotive menace. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Screen 1: 11:50 a.m., 3:10, 6:30 & 9:50 p.m. Screen 2: 12:20, 3:40, 7 & 10:20 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 11:50 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Daily: 12:40, 4 & 7 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 10 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Screen 1: 12:15, 3:20, 6:30 & 9:10 p.m. Screen 2: 12:50, 4, 7:10 & 9:40 p.m.

Get Hard. Raunchy comedy teams Kevin Hart

with Will Ferrell. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 11:45 a.m., 2:25, 5:05, 7:50 & 10:40 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Daily: 12:30, 2:50, 5:15 & 7:45 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 10:20 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12, 2:25, 4:50, 7:15 & 9:45 p.m.

p.m. Nosh on cuisine from several award-winning Syracuse restaurants during this threehour walking tour of Armory Square, at the corner of West Jefferson and Franklin streets. $39. (800) 979-3370.

Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amselam. Israe-

Latin Music Dance Night. Every Sat. 10 p.m. DJ Suave offers music and videos, plus a free dance lesson at 10 p.m. at Munjed’s Mediterranean Restaurant, 505 Westcott St. $5/21 and over, free/students with ID. 380-4135.

Home. Cartoon fantasy with voices from Jennifer Lopez, Rihanna, Steve Martin and Jim Parsons. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 11 a.m., 1:40, 4:25, 6:55 & 9:20 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Daily: 12:20, 2:35, 5 & 7:15 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 9:30 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:20, 2:40, 5, 7:25 & 10:10 p.m.

Doctor Who Class. Mon. 6 p.m. Newhouse School Professor Anthony Rotolo offers film clips, episodes, trivia and more in this ongoing crash course for the cultish British TV series at the Westcott Theater, 524 Westcott St. Free. Thewestcotttheater.com.

li-based tale of marriages and divorces gets a one-week-only run. Manlius (Digital presentation/stereo). Daily: 7:30 p.m. Sat. matinee: 4:30 p.m. Sun. matinee: 2:15 & 4:30 p.m.

Insurgent. Shailene Woodley and Ansel Elgort continue to fight the power in this futuristic

action epic with Colin Firth, Samuel L. Jackson and Michael Caine. Hollywood (Digital presentation/stereo). Daily: 8:45 p.m.

Little Boy. Emily Watson and Michael Rapoport in a World War II tale. Destiny USA/ Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 11:15 a.m., 1:55, 4:45, 7:25 & 10:05 p.m. The Longest Ride. Scott Eastwood, Britt

Anderson and Alan Alda in a romantic adaptation of a Nicholas Sparks novel. Destiny USA/ Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:25, 3:30, 6:40 & 9:55 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Daily: 12:45, 3:50 & 6:50 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 9:50 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:30, 3:30, 6:35 & 9:30 p.m.

Monkey Kingdom. Tina Fey narrates this Dis-

ney documentary. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 11:35 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7:10 & 9:25 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Daily: 12:25, 2:45, 5:10 & 7:35 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 9:55 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:10, 2:20, 4:40, 6:55 & 10:20 p.m.

Mirren and Ryan Reynolds. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:40, 3:35, 6:25 & 9:15 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Daily: 12:55, 4:05 & 6:55 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 9:40 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 1, 4:05, 6:50 & 9:35 p.m.

LIS T ED A L P H A B E TI C A L LY: Awake: The Life of Yogananda. Fri. 1 & 8

p.m., Sat. 8 p.m. Documentary on the Hindu swami who brought meditation to the western world in the 1920s. Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St., Auburn. $6. 253-6669.

Better Off Dead. Mon. 7:30 p.m. The “Flashback Movie Mondays” series continues with this 1985 John Cusack comedy. Palace Theatre, 2384 James St. $5. 436-4723. Charlie Chan at the Opera, Sherlock Holmes and the Spider Woman. Mon. 7:30

p.m. The super sleuths headline a double-barreled evening of mystery as the Syracuse Cinephile Society’s spring season rolls on at the Spaghetti Warehouse, 680 N. Clinton St. $3.50. 475-1807.

Dolphins. Sat. 5 p.m. Large-format showcase

of our finned friends at the Bristol IMAX at the MOST, 500 S. Franklin St. Film: $10/adults, $8/ children under 11 and seniors. Film and exhibit hall: $14/adults, $12/children under 11 and seniors. 425-9068.

Paddington. Julie Walters, Jim Broadbent and Colin Firth in the live action and animated comedy featuring the beloved British bear. Hollywood (Digital presentation/stereo). Sat. & Sun.: 2:15 p.m.

Dragnet. Wed. April 22, 7 p.m. The hard-boiled

Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2. Second go-round for

Grand Canyon Adventure. Wed. April 22-Fri. 12, 2 & 4 p.m., Sat. 12, 2, 4, 6 & 8 p.m., Sun. & Wed. April 29, 12, 2 & 4 p.m. Title tells all in large-format travelogue. Bristol IMAX at the MOST, 500 S. Franklin St. Film: $10/adults, $8/ children under 11 and seniors. Film and exhibit hall: $14/adults, $12/children under 11 and seniors. 425-9068.

Kevin James’ Segway-cruising buffoon in this family comedy. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Screen 1: 11:10 a.m., 1:45, 4:20, 7:05 & 9:45 p.m. Screen 2: 11:40 a.m., 2:15, 4:50, 7:35 & 10:15 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 11:55 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Daily: 12:15, 2:40, 5:05 & 7:30 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 10:05 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:05, 2:30, 4:55, 7:30 & 10 p.m.

The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water. Tom Kenny supplies the cartoon voice

for more nautical nuttiness. Hollywood (Digital presentation/stereo). Sat. & Sun. matinee: 12:10 & 4:25 p.m.

True Story. Fact-based thriller with James

Franco and Jonah Hill. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 11:25 a.m., 2:05, 4:55, 7:40 & 10:25 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 12:25 a.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 1:15, 4:20, 7:05 & 9:50 p.m.

Unfriended. Low-budget horror entry about teens confronting evil in a chat room. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Screen 1: 12, 2:20, 4:40, 7:30 & 10 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 12:10 a.m. Screen 2: 12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 8 & 10:30 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Daily: 12:35, 2:55, 5:20 & 7:40 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 10:15 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:25, 2:50, 5:10, 7:35 & 10:15 p.m. The Water Diviner. Actor-director Russell

Crowe’s drama about a man looking for his missing-in-action sons in Turkey following the battle at Gallipoli. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/IMAX/Stadium). Daily: 11:05 a.m., 1:50, 4:35, 7:20 & 10:10 p.m. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 4:05 & 9:35 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 12:15 a.m.

While We’re Young. Middle-age-crazy comedy with Ben Stiller and Naomi Watts. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 1:25 & 7:15 p.m.

1954 Jack Webb crime drama, presented by WRVO-FM and followed by a reception at the Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St., Auburn. Free. 253-6669.

Island of Lemurs: Madagascar. Wed. April

22-Fri. 3 p.m., Sat. 3 & 7 p.m., Sun. & Wed. April 29, 3 p.m. Large-format yarn with the cute critters. Bristol IMAX at the MOST, 500 S. Franklin St. Film: $10/adults, $8/children under 11 and seniors. Film and exhibit hall: $14/adults, $12/ children under 11 and seniors. 425-9068.

Syracuse International Film Festival Spring Fest. Sat. 1:30-11:30 p.m., Sun. 1:30-7:30 p.m. Second annual blowout of films and shorts from auteur with a Central New York connection includes the Lee Alexander documentary Million Dollar Mayor, the documentary Monster Mansion Memories and more, most followed by question-answer sessions. Palace Theatre, 2384 James St. $10/program, $20/Sat. or Sun., $30/ Sat. & Sun. 436-4723, filminsyracuse.com.

Swan Lake. Wed. April 22, 6:30 p.m. The Royal Opera House presentation of the Tchaikovsky ballet, which continues the series of digital opera presentations at the Cinema Capitol, 234 W. Dominick St., Rome. $17/adults, $15/students. 337-6453. Volcanoes of the Deep Sea. Wed. April

22-Sun. & Wed. April 29, 1 p.m. Hot times in this large-format documentary. Bristol IMAX at the MOST, 500 S. Franklin St. Film: $10/adults, $8/ children under 11 and seniors. Film and exhibit hall: $14/adults, $12/children under 11 and seniors. 425-9068.

White God. Thurs. & Fri. 7:30 p.m., Sat. 1, 4 & 7:30 p.m., Sun. 4:30 & 7:30 p.m. Adult Hungarian drama about a teen girl’s search for her halfbreed dog (and don’t bring the kids), which continues the digital presentations at the Cinema Capitol, 234 W. Dominick St., Rome. $7/ adults, $5/students. 337-6453.

syracusenewtimes.com | 04.22.15 - 04.28.15

21


FREE WILL ASTROLOGY

ARIES. (March 21-April 19) If you’re stumped

about what present to give someone for a special occasion, you might buy him or her a gift card. It’s a piece of plastic that can be used as cash to buy stuff at a store. The problem is, a lot of people neglect to redeem their gift cards. They leave them in drawers and forget about them. Financial experts say there are currently billions of dollars going to waste on unredeemed gift cards. This is your metaphor of the moment, Aries. Are there any resources you’re not using? Any advantages you’re not capitalizing on? Any assets you’re ignoring? If so, fix the problem.

by Rob Brezsny

who kisses first,” says Libra actress and activist Janeane Garofalo. I can think of other ways to measure bravery, but for your immediate future, her definition will serve just fine. Your ultimate test will be to freely give your tenderness and compassion and empathy — without any preconditions or expectations. For the sake of your own integrity and mental health, be steadfast in your intention to always strike the first blow for peace, love and understanding.

SCORPIO. (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) It will soon be that

no objection to your devoted concern (I won’t use the phrase “manic obsession”) with security and comfort. But there are rare phases in every Taurus’ life cycle when iron-clad stability becomes a liability. Cruising along in a smooth groove threatens to devolve into clunking along in a gutless rut. Now is such a phase. As of this moment, it is healthy for you to seek out splashes of unpredictability. Wisdom is most likely to grow from uncertainty. Joy will emerge from an eagerness to treasure the unknown.

time when you are halfway between your last birthday and your next birthday. I invite you to make this a special occasion. Maybe you can call it your anti-birthday or unbirthday. How to celebrate? Here are some ideas: 1. Imagine who you would be if you were the opposite of yourself. 2. Write a list of all the qualities you don’t possess and the things you don’t need and the life you don’t want to live. 3. Try to see the world through the eyes of people who are unlike you. 4. Extend a warm welcome to the shadowy, unripe, marginal parts of your psyche that you have a hard time accepting, let alone loving. 5. Any other ways you can think of to celebrate your anti-birthday?

GEMINI. (May 21-June 20) There may be a

SAGITTARIUS. (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) As I climb

TAURUS. (April 20-May 20) I usually have

flood-like event that will wash away worn-out stuff you don’t need any more. There might be an earthquake-type phenomenon that only you can feel, and it might demolish one of your rotten obstacles. There could be a lucky accident that will knock you off the wrong course (which you might have thought was the right course). All in all, I suspect it will be a very successful week for benevolent forces beyond your control. How much skill do you have in the holy art of surrender?

CANCER. (June 21-July 22) What is your biggest excuse? Or rather, what is your THICKEST, SICKEST, MOST DEBILITATING EXCUSE? We all have one: a reason we tell ourselves about why it’s difficult to live up to our potential; a presumed barrier that we regard as so deeply rooted that we will never be able to break its spell on us. Maybe it’s a traumatic memory. Maybe it’s a physical imperfection or a chronic fear. In accordance with the current astrological omens, Cancerian, you’d be wise to do an audit and reassessment of your own LAMEST EXCUSE. I suspect you now have insight about it that you’ve never had before. I also think you have more power than usual to at least partially dismantle it. LEO. (July 23-Aug. 22) If you were a supporting character in a popular TV drama, the producers would be cooking up a spin-off show with you in a starring role. If you were in an indie rock band, you’d be ready to move from performing at 300seat venues to clubs with an audience capacity of 2,000. If you have always been just an average egocentric romantic like the rest of us, you might be on the verge of becoming a legend in your own mind — in which case it would be time to start selling T-shirts, mugs and calendars with your image on them. And even if you are none of the above, Leo, I suspect you’re ready to rise to the next level. VIRGO. (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Free at last! Free at last! Thanks to the Lord of the Universe or the Flying Spaghetti Monster or a burst of crazy good luck, you are free at last! You are free from the burden that made you say things you didn’t mean! You are free from the seductive temptation to rent, lease, or even sell your soul! Best of all, you are free from the mean little voice in your head — you know, the superstitious perfectionist that whispers weird advice based on fearful delusions! So now what will you do, my dear? You have escaped from the cramped, constricted conditions. Maybe you can escape to wide-open spaces that will unleash the hidden powers of your imagination. LIBRA. (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) “To me, there is

no greater act of courage than being the one

22

the first hill along my regular hike, both sides of the path are dominated by a plant with glossy, three-lobed leaves. They’re so exuberant and cheerful, I’m tempted to caress them, even rub my face in their bright greenery. But I refrain, because they are poison oak. One touch would cause my skin to break out in an inflamed rash that would last for days. I encourage you, too, to forgo contact with any influence in your own sphere that is metaphorically equivalent to the alluring leaves of the poison oak.

CAPRICORN. (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today the

French Capricorn painter Henri Matisse (18691954) is regarded as a foremost pioneer of modern art. Some critics say his innovative influence on painting nearly matched Picasso’s. But during the first part of the 20th century, his work often provoked controversy. When a few of his paintings appeared at a major exhibition in Chicago, for example, local art students were shocked by what they called its freakishness. They held a mock trial, convicted Matisse of artistic crimes, and burned his painting “Blue Nude” in effigy. I don’t expect that you will face reactions quite as extreme as that in the coming weeks, Capricorn. But it will make sense to express yourself with such forceful creativity and originality that you risk inciting strong responses.

AQUARIUS. (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Leonardo da Vinci had skills in many fields, ranging from botany to engineering to cartography, but he is best known as a painter. And yet in his 67 years on the planet, he finished fewer than 40 paintings. He worked at a very gradual pace. The “Mona Lisa” took him 14 years! That’s the kind of deliberate approach I’d like to see you experiment with in the coming weeks, Aquarius. Just for a while, see what it’s like to turn down your levels of speed and intensity. Have you heard of the Slow Food Movement? Have you read Carl Honore’s book In Praise of Slowness? Do you know about Slow Travel, Slow Media and Slow Fashion? PISCES. (Feb. 19-March 20) Modern movies don’t scrimp on the use of the f-bomb. Actors in The Wolf of Wall Street spat it out 569 times. The word-that-rhymes-with-cluck was heard 326 times in End of Watch, while Brooklyn’s Finest racked up 270 and This Is the End erupted with an even 200. But this colorful word hasn’t always been so prominent a feature. Before 1967, no actor had ever uttered it on-screen. That year, Marianne Faithfull let it fly in the film I’ll Never Forget What’s ‘isname. In the coming weeks, Pisces, I invite you to break a taboo that’s maybe not as monumental as Faithfull’s quantum leap, but still fabulously fun and energizing. Be a liberator! End the repression! Release the blocked vitality!

04.22.15 - 04.28.15 | syracusenewtimes.com

CLASSIFIED

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Painting, Deck Construction, Power Wash, Staining,Gutters, Masonary, Siding. Also, Inside Work. Retired teacher Onondaga County only. 35yrs exp. Joe Ball 436-9008 REPLACEMENT WINDOWS, Double Hung, Tilt-ins, $199 Installed. Also, $100 rebate on all energy star rated windows. Lifetime Warranty. Call Bill @ 1-866-272-7533.

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LEGAL NOTICE Articles of Organization of SHELBYCO, LLC (“LLC”) were filed with Sec. of State of NY (“SSNY”) on 4/2/2015. Office Location: Onondaga

And the 5th FREE

County. SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to and the LLC’s principal business location is: 8817 Waterview Circle, Cicero, New York 13039. Purpose: Any lawful business purpose. Name: Workplace Interiors, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with sec. of state of NY(SOS) on 3/16/15. Office location: Onondaga County. SOS is designated as agent of LLC for service of process. SOS shall mail copy of process to 375 Erie Blvd West, Syracuse, NY 13202.

Purpose: Any lawful act or activity.

Notice is hereby given that a license, number pending, for beer and wine has been applied for by 401 South Clinton Street, Inc. to sell beer and wine at retail in a restaurant under the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law at 409 S. Clinton Street, Syracuse in Onondaga County for on premises consumption.

Notice of Formation of 538 Master Tenant LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 3/23/2015. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is

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PETS SECOND CHANCE THRIFT SHOPPE: Proceeds benefit local animals in need, 10am-4pm, Friday & Saturday. Route 20, 1/4 mile West of Morrisville, (formerly Buzzy’s Morrisville Diner), 6 miles East of Cazenovia. For More information or to Volunteer, email Gail Smith at rsmith@twcny.rr.com

syracusenewtimes.com | 04.22.15 - 04.28.15

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REAL E S TAT E

APTS/HOUSES FOR RENT

1 Bedroom, Large Living Room, Kitchen, Dining Room, all utilities, A/C, free parking. No pets. 915 James St. 472-3135 Near WEST-Side: 2BR-$560, 1BR-$460, Efficiency $385+util. Parking, Sec.Building, No Dep! 315-4782848.

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designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: LLC, 100 Madison Street, Suite 1905, Syracuse, NY 13202. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of B&M EXPRESS LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 2/10/15. Office location is in Onondaga County. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 416 Frederick St. East, East Syracuse, NY 13057. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Castle Creek Band, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 03/11/2015. Office location: is in County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: Kim Monroe, 110 Washington Blvd., Fayetteville, NY 13066.

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ABANDONED FARM! 34 acres- $169,900 Upstate NY farmhouse, barn, apple orchard, woods, long gated drive, incredible setting! Terms avail! 1-888-701-1864 newyorklandandlakes. com. RUSHING STREAMCHRISTMAS TREE FARM- 6 acres- $26,900 BUY BEFORE MAY 1ST AND TAKE $5,000 OFF! Gated drive, views, stunning upstate NY setting! Town rd, utils, terms! 888-701-7509. Spectacular 3 to 22 acre lots with deepwater accessLocated in an exclusive development on Virginia’s Eastern Shore. Amenities include community pier, boat ramp, paved roads and private sandy beach. May remind you of the Jersey Shore from days long past. Great climate, boating, fishing, clamming and National Seashore beaches nearby. Absolute buy of a lifetime, recent FDIC bank failure makes these 25 lots available at a fraction of their original price. Priced at only $55,000 to $124,000. For info call (757) 442-2171, e-mail: oceanlandtrust@

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Purpose is any lawful location: Onondaga purpose. County, New York. SSNY is designated as agent Notice of Formation of of the Company upon Castleberry, LLC. Arts. of whom process against it Org. filed with Secy. of may be served. The Post State of NY (SSNY) on Office address to which 3/4/15. Office location: the secretary of state shall Onondaga County. SSNY mail a copy of any process designated as agent of against the LLC is: DEN LLC upon whom process Wadsworth Real Estate, against it may be served. LLC, 3008 Oakwood Drive, SSNY shall mail process Plymouth Meeting, PA to: The LLC, 219 Wendell 19462. Purpose of LLC: to Ter, Syracuse, NY 13203. engage in any lawful act Purpose: any lawful or activity. activity. Notice of Formation of Notice of Formation of EJT Properties LLC. Art. CUSE Bounce Houses, Of Org. filed with the LLC. Art. Of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) on with the Sec’y of State 1/20/15. Office location: (SSNY) on 8/20/14. Office Onondaga County. SSNY location: Onondaga designated as agent of County. SSNY designated LLC upon whom process as agent of LLC upon against it may be served. whom process against it SSNY shall mail copy may be served. SSNY shall of process to 7742 Lisa mail copy of process to Ln., Syracuse, NY 13212. 7742 Lisa Ln., Syracuse, Purpose: any lawful NY 13212. Purpose: any activities. lawful activities. Notice of Formation NOTICE OF FORMATION of Eric apartments, LLC. OF DEN WADSWORTH Articles of Organization REAL ESTATE, LLC. The were filed with the Articles of Organization Secretary of State of New were filed with the York (SSNY) on 3/14/15. Secretary of State of State Office location: County of New York (SSNY) on of Onondaga. SSNY is March 23, 2015. Office designated as agent of

04.22.15 - 04.28.15 | syracusenewtimes.com

7 acres$59,900. 400 feet of pristine frontage on bass lake! All woods, ten rd, utils, gorgeous setting! EZ terms. 1-888-650-8166 newyorklandandlakes. com.

REAL ESTATE RUSHING STREAMCHRISTMAS TREE FARM- 6 acres-$26,900. BUY BEFORE MAY 1st AND TAKE $5,000 OFF! Gated drive, views, LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 6000 Haterleigh Drive, Alpharetta, GA 30005. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Hendrick Mechanical, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 3/3/15. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to United States Corporation Agents, Inc. &014 13th Ave., Suite 202, Brooklyn, NY 11228. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of JKS Products, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 3/4/2015. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 6201 Applecross Road, Jamesville, NY 13078.

stunning upstate NY setting. Twn rd, utils, terms! 1-888-7758114.

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lawful address to which the Secretary of State shall mail process is 3721 New Notice of Formation Court Avenue, Syracuse, of Kelly Brothers New York 13206. The Masonry LLC Articles purpose of the business of Organization filed of the Company includes with the Secretary any and all lawful of State of New York purposes. (SSNY) on 3/13/2015. Office location: County Notice of Formation of of Onondaga. SSNY is METALSTA Stamping & designated as agent of Manufacturing USA, LLC LLC upon whom process Articles of Organization may be served. SSNY shall filed with the Secretary mail copy of process to: of State of New York LLC, 5111 Kasson Road, (SSNY) on 3/13/2015. Syracuse, NY 13215. Office location: County Purpose: any lawful of Onondaga. SSNY is purpose. designated as agent of LLC upon whom process Notice of Formation of may be served. SSNY shall Limited Liability Company mail copy of process to: (LLC). The name of the LLC LLC, 100 Madison Street, is: Van Buren Rd., LLC. The Suite 1905, Syracuse, Articles of Organization NY 13202. Purpose: any of the company were lawful purpose. filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) Notice of Formation of on 03/26/2015. The office Orange Development of the company is located Group, LLC. Arts. of Org. in Onondaga County. filed with NY Dept. of The principal business State on 4/9/15. Office location is: 3721 New location: Onondaga Court Avenue, Syracuse, County. Princ. bus. addr.: New York 13206. The 125 Marangale Rd., Secretary of State has Manlius, NY 13104. Sec. of been designated as agent State designated agent of upon whom process LLC upon whom process against the Company against it may be served may be served. The and shall mail process

422-7011 ext.111 or email lijaspoor@ s y ra c u s e n e w t i m e s. com. OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND. Best selection of affordable to: c/o CT Corporation System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. Purpose: all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Smokey Hollow Nursery LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 3/2/2015. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: LLC, 8899 Smokey Hollow Road, Baldwinsville, NY 13027. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Teasel Creek Realty LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 3/12/2015. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: LLC, 36 Onondaga St., Skaneateles, NY 13152. Purpose: any lawful purpose.

rentals. Full/partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Resort Services. 1-800638-2102. Online reservations: www. holidayoc.com. Notice of Formation of The Hare & Style, LLC. Articles of organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 2/18/2015. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 4594 Widgeon Path, Manlius, NY 13104. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Wowdya, LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 4/9/2015. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: c/o LLC, 6041 Sewickley Drive, Jamesville, NY 13078. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of: BW&Powell Holdings LLC,. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 3/23/15. Office location: County


of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 300 Sherwood Ave, Syracuse, New York 13203. Purpose: any lawful purpose.

is the designated agent upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 7343 E. Sorrell Hill Road, Baldwinsville, NY 13027. Purpose ids any lawful business permitted by the LLC. Law of NY state.

Notice of Formation of: Dunmarq, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 04/02/2015. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 213 Rich St, Syracuse, New York 13204. Purpose: any lawful purpose.

Notice of Qualification of Strathmore Holdings, LLC. Fictitious Name in NY State: Strathmore Products Holdings, LLC. App. for Auth. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) 4/9/15. Office location: Onondaga County. LLC formed in Delaware (DE) on 3/30/15. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Capitol Services, Inc., 1218 Central Ave., Ste. 100, Albany, NY 12205. DE address of LLC: 1675 S. State St., Ste. B, Dover, DE 19901. Arts. of Org. filed with DE Secy. of State, 401 Federal St., Ste. 4, Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: any lawful act or activity.

Notice of Formation of: L2B Virtual Solutions, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 3/23/2015. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 6131 Crestview Dr., North Syracuse, New York 13212. Purpose: any lawful purpose.

Notice of Qualification of Strathmore Properties Holdings, LLC. App. for Auth. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) 4/9/15. Office location: Onondaga County. LLC formed in Delaware (DE) on 3/30/15. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Capitol Services, Inc., 1218 Central Ave., Ste. 100, Albany, NY 12205. DE address of LLC: 1675 S. State St., Ste. B, Dover, DE 19901. Arts. of Org. filed with DE Secy. of State, 401 Federal St., Ste. 4, Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: any lawful act or activity.

Notice of Formation of: Salt City Coffe LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: April, 1, 2015. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: Aaron Metthe, 214 Highland Ave, Syracuse, NY 13203. Purpose: any lawful purpose. NOTICE OF SALE Index No: 882/14. SUPREME Notice of Formation of: COURT COUNTY URIAH 1974, LLC. Articles OF ONONDAGA. of Organization were JPMORGAN CHASE filed with the Secretary BANK, NATIONAL of State of New York ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff(s), (SSNY) on March 20, Against YVONNE 2015. Office location is E. HARRELL A/K/A in Onondaga County. YVONNE ELIZABETH SSNY is designated as HARRELL A/K/A YVONNE agent of LLC upon whom HARRELL A/K/A YVONNE process may be served. E. LENHARD A/K/A SSNY shall mail copy of YVONNE LENHARD, process to 7 Syracuse St, Defendant(s). Pursuant Baldwinsville, NY 13027. to a Judgment of Purpose is any lawful Foreclosure and Sale duly purpose. entered in the Onondaga County Clerk’s Office Notice of Formation: on 1/2/2015, I, the B&B Solutions LLC. undersigned Referee Arts. of Org. filed with will sell at public auction SSNY 3/13/15. Office at the West Lobby, 2nd in Onondaga Co. SSNY Floor Courthouse, 401 designated as agent Montgomery Street, upon whom process may Syracuse, New York on be served. SSNY shall 5/4/2015 at 11:00 am mail copy to: c/o B&B premises known as 228 Solutions LLC, 1624 Coon Carbon Street, Syracuse, Hill Rd., Skaneateles, NY NY 13208, and described 13152. Purpose: Any as follows: lawful purpose. ALL that certain plot, Notice of Publication, piece or parcel of land, Notice of Formation of with the buildings and WAYNE’S WATER, LLC. improvements thereon Art. Of Org. Filed with erected, situate, lying the Sec . Of State of and being in the City NY (SSNY) on March of Syracuse, County Onondaga and 25,2015. Office location: of Onondaga County. SSNY State of New York, and

designated on the tax maps of the Onondaga County Treasurer as Section 9, Block 22 and Lot 36.00. The approximate amount of the current Judgment lien is $99,330.74 plus interest and costs. The premises will be sold subject to provisions of the aforesaid Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale; Index # 882/14. Catherine A. Scott, Esq., Referee. STIENE & ASSOCIATES, P.C. (Attorneys for Plaintiff), 187 East Main Street, Huntington, NY 11743. Dated: 2/27/2015. File Number: 201201849-02. APA NOTICE OF SALE Index No.: 391/14 SUPREME COURT - COUNTY OF ONONDAGA JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff, Against CHRISTOPHER P. DUNSTER A/K/A CHRISTOPHER DUNSTER, Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered in the Onondaga County Clerk’s Office on 1/23/2015, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Second Floor of the Onondaga County Courthouse, 401 Montgomery Street, Syracuse, New York on 5/11/2015 at 10:00 am premises known as 301 Tower Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13206, and described as follows: ALL that certain plot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Salina, County of Onondaga and State of New York and designated on the tax maps of the Onondaga County Treasurer as Section 068., Block 03 and Lot 11.0. The approximate amount of the current Judgment lien is $86,002.82 plus interest and costs. The premises will be sold subject to provisions of the aforesaid Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale; Index No.: 391/14. Michelle B. Schneider, Esq., Referee. STIENE & ASSOCIATES, P.C. (Attorneys for Plaintiff), 187 East Main Street, Huntington, NY 11743. Dated: 3/16/2015. File Number: 20140002. GR NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF ONONDAGA. JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff, Against Index No.: 764/14 STEVEN DAY, JR., SANDRA E. DAY A/K/A SANDRA DAY F/K/A SANDRA SYKES, et al., Defendants. Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly entered in the Onondaga County Clerk’s Office on 12/9/2014, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction

at the West Lobby, First Floor Courthouse, 401 Montgomery Street, Syracuse, New York on 5/19/2015 at 10:00 am premises known as 308 Greenpoint Avenue, Liverpool, NY 13088, described as follows: ALL that tract or parcel of land, situate in the Town of Salina, County of Onondaga and State of New York, and designated on the tax maps of the Onondaga Treasurer as Section 081., Block 10 and Lot 29.0. The approximate amount of the current Judgment lien is $92,990.89 plus interest and costs. The premises will be sold subject to provisions of the filed Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale; Index No.: 764/14. Ralph A. Mingolelli, Esq., Referee. STIENE & ASSOCIATES, P.C. (Attorneys for Plaintiff), 187 East Main Street, Huntington, NY 11743. Dated: 3/13/2015. File Number: 201400213. GR. STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF ONONDAGA ————AMERICU CREDIT UNION, INDEX NO. 14-1903.1916 Black River Boulevard, Rome, New York 13440, Plaintiff, SUMMONS -vsPHETH PHOMMAHAXAY and any unknown heirs at law of PHETH PHOMMAHAXAY, next of kin, distributes, executors, administrators, trustees, devisees, legatees, assignees, lienors, creditors and successors in interest, and generally all person having or claiming under, by or through said defendants who may be deceased, by purchase, inheritance, lien or otherwise, any right, title or interest in and to the subject premises, STATE OF NEW YORK; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; and JOHN DOE and/or JANE DOE, (said names being fictitious, it being the intention of the plaintiff to designate any and all other occupants of the premises being foreclosed herein), Defendants. ————— TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action, and to serve a copy of your answer, or, if the complaint is not served with this summons, to serve a notice of appearance, on the plaintiff’s attorney, within twenty (20) days after the service of this summons, exclusive of the day of service, where service is made by delivery upon you personally within the state, or within thirty (30) days after completion of service where service is made in any other manner. The United States of America, if designated as a defendant in this action, may answer or appear

within sixty (60) days of service hereof. In case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. Trial to be held in the County of Onondaga. The basis of the venue is based on the location of the mortgaged premises within the County of Onondaga. Plaintiff has its principal office in Oneida County. THIS IS AN ACTION TO FORECLOSE A MORTGAGE GIVEN BY PHETH PHOMMAHAXAY TO AMERICU CREDIT UNION REQUESTING A PUBLIC SALE OF REAL PROPERTY KNOWN AS 4749 HAVERTON LANE, LIVERPOOL, NY 13090. NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to your mortgage company will not stop this foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. DATED: March 20, 2015 /s/ John A. Nasto,___ JOHN A. NASTO, JR. Attorney for Plaintiff Office and Post Office Address: 4957 Commercial Drive Yorkville, NY 13495 (315) 738-1000 NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS. This is an action to foreclose a mortgage against real property known as 4749 Haverton Lane, Liverpool, NY 13090. If you fail to answer this summons your real property will be sold at a public sale and you may be subject to a money judgment of up to $61,000. The property which is the subject of this action is also described as follows: ALL THAT TRACT OR PARCEL OF LAND situate in the Town of Clay, County of Onondaga, and State of New York, being part of Farm Lot No. 63 in said Town and being more particularly described as Lot 31 of Pompton Knolls, Section No. 1 according to a final plan of said tract made by Alfred K. Ianuzi, Jr., LS and filed in the Onondaga County Clerk’s Office on

June 19, 1978 as Map No. 5669. Being the same premises as conveyed by Richard Murphy and Jane Murphy to Pheth Phommahaxay by Warranty Deed with Lien Covenant dated April 27, 2001 and recorded in the Onondaga County Clerk’s Office on April 30, 2001 in Book 4546 of Deeds at page 110. Sunvestment Group Management Company, LLC (the “LLC”) filed Articles of Organization with the NY Secretary of State (“SOS”) on March 4, 2015. LLC office is in Onondaga County. SOS was designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SOS shall mail copy of any process served to 216 Hoffman Road, Tully, New York 13159. The purpose of the LLC is any lawful act or activity. SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF ONONDAGA MidFirst Bank Plaintiff, -againstAlicia S. Calagiovanni, Public Administrator for Onondaga County, as Administrator for the estate of Queen Esther Shaw a/k/a Queen E. Shaw, and Queen Esther Shaw a/k/a Queen E. Shaw’s respective heirsat-law, next-of-kin, distributees, executors, administrators, trustees, devisees, legatees, assignees, lienors, creditors, and successors in interest and generally all persons having or claiming under, by or through said defendant who may be deceased, by purchase, inheritance, lien or otherwise, any right, title or interest in the real property described in the complaint herein, Deloris Wallace, Heir to The Estate of Queen E. Shaw a/k/a Queen Ether Shaw, Wallace Shaw, Heir to The Estate of Queen E. Shaw a/k/a Queen Ether Shaw, United States of America, New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, Elite Recovery Services, Inc., Helena L. Edwards aka Helena Edwards, City of Syracuse, Household Finance Realty Corporation of New York, Home Headquarters, Inc., New York State Affordable Housing Corporation, Existing as a Subsidiary of the New York State Housing Finance Agency, Mill Creek Servicing Corp., successor to Conseco Finance Servicing Corp., GE Money Bank, Jonitta Wallace, Thoetis Wallacy. Index#: 607/2014 Filed: 3/23/2015 SUPPLEMENT AL SUMMONS Plaintiff designates Onondaga County as the place of trial. Venue is based upon the County in which the mortgaged premises is situated. Defendants. TO THE ABOVE NAMED

DEFENDANT(S): YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the Complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your Answer or, if the Complaint is not served with this Summons, to serve a Notice of Appearance on the attorneys for the plaintiff within twenty (20) days after service of this Summons, exclusive of the day of service; or within thirty (30) days after service is complete if this Summons is not personally delivered to you within the State of New York; or within sixty (60) days if it is the United States of America. In case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the Complaint. NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to your mortgage company will not stop this foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. Dated: Bay Shore, New York October 24, 2014. FRENKEL, LAMBERT, WEISS WEISMAN & GORDON, LLP. Attorneys for Plaintiff 53 Gibson Street, Bay Shore, New York 11706 (631) 969-3100. Our File No.: 01-059421-FOO. TO: Alicia S. Calagiovanni, Public Administrator of Onondaga County, as Administrator of The Estate of Queen E. Shaw a/k/a Queen Ether Shaw 500 Plum Street Suite 300. Syracuse, NY 13204. Deloris Wallace, Heir to The Estate of Queen E. Shaw a/k/a Queen Ether Shaw 228 Amherst Avenue. Syracuse, NY 13205. Wallace Shaw, Heir to The Estate of Queen E. Shaw a/k/a Queen Ether Shaw 38 Bambi Lane. Rochester, NY 14624. United States of America 100 S Clinton Street. U S Attorney’s Office Syracuse, NY 13260. New York State Department of Taxation and Finance Harriman Campus Bldg 9. Albany, NY 12227. Elite Recovery Services, Inc. 701 Seneca Street Buffalo, NY. Helena L. Edwards aka Helena

Edwards 228 Amherst Avenue. Syracuse, NY 13205. City of Syracuse - 9/24/92, Bk 6491, Pg 158 20 l East Washington Street Syracuse, NY. Household Finance Realty Corporation of New York Widewaters (Hills Plaza). Dewitt, NY 13214. Home Headquarters, Inc. (2) 124 E. Jefferson Street Syracuse, NY 13202. New York State Affordable Housing Corporation, Existing as a Subsidiary of the New York State Housing Finance Agency 641 Lexington Avenue New York, NY 10022. Mill Creek Servicing Corp., successor to Conseco Finance Servicing Corp. 7360 South Kyrene Tempe, AZ GE Money Bank 5775 Glenridge Drive Atlanta, GA 30328 Jonitta Wallace 228 Amherst Avenue Syracuse, NY 13205 Thoetis Wallace 228 Amherst Avenue Syracuse, NY 13,205

STATE OF VERMONT RUTLAND COUNTY, SS. IN RE: K.W. )Superior Court of Vermont ) Rutland Family Division) Docket No. 82-6-13Rdjv. NOTICE OF HEARING TO: Eric, last name unknown, putative father of K.W. The State of Vermont has filed a petition to terminate your parental rights to K.W. You are hereby notified that a hearing to consider the termination of all parental rights to K.W. will be held on May 21, 2015 at 1:30 o’clock P.M., at the Superior Court of Vermont, Rutland Family Division, 9 Merchant’s Row, Rutland, Vermont. You are notified to appear in connection with this case. Failure to appear at this hearing will result in the termination of any rights you may have to K.W. The State is represented by the Attorney General’s Office, 103 South Main Street, Waterbury, Vermont 05671. Other parties are Tiffany Williams and K.W. The State of Vermont has petitioned the Superior Court to terminate any rights you might have to K.W. so that he can be freed for adoption. K.W. has been a ward of the State of Vermont since 2013. The State has alleged that there is no likelihood that you will be able to assume any parental duties for K.W. within a reasonable period of time and that K.W.’s best interests would be served by termination of your parental rights and allowing for his adoption. The State will present its evidence on these issues at the hearing on May 21, 2015. Dated at Rutland, Vermont this 8th day of April, 2015. \\Nancy Corsones Family Division Judge 4/8/15 .

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