4-30-14 Syracuse New Times

Page 1

KALLET THEATER

The rebirth of the Kallet Theater in Pulaski has reinvigorated the village, too Page 26

S Y R A C U S E

FREE

PARTING SHOT

Make no mistake, what Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling said is not acceptable. Page 62

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

NEWS

The Spanish Action League gives sex offender a ‘fresh start.’

11

48

FACETIME

Le Moyne prof tweets that it’s time for the end of Dolphy Day.

60

SHARE!

A look at May’s races, including the Mountain Goat.

READ!

WEEKEND WARRIOR

A P R I L 3 0 TH - M A Y 7 TH

31

ISSUE NUMBER 3471

Guitarist Ben Mauro steps away from a world tour to come home.

RECYCLE!

MUSIC

SU SENIOR FASHION SHOW Page 47

THE LAST MUSKETEER Former Westcott Nation activist builds a career helping build nations abroad By Ed Griffin-Nolan


ON THE RECORD The concert Saturday night was magnificent. But I couldn’t tell my son, even as my eyes filled with tears of sheer joy at “Ode to Joy.” I didn’t want my opinion to influence his opinion. We heard Symphoria perform Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125, with the Syracuse University Oratorio Society providing the choral part. The concert was part of the non-school education for my son, Will. I love Beethoven’s Ninth, and “love” isn’t too strong a word. When I’ve had the chance, I’ve taken my children, willing or not, to hear the Ninth performed live. Now, it was Will’s turn. It’s not as though he was unfamiliar with it. He played the famous melodies on the recorder at the Montessori School of Syracuse. But it certainly wasn’t the same as hearing the whole symphony, live. And I had something else in mind, a twist to which his older sisters weren’t exposed. Rant and Rave in the New Times gives people a chance to voice opinions Cover design by Caitlin O’Donnell about … well, anything. I thought an essay by a newbie after the Ninth might be interesting. Of course, I had a secret hope: even if he was going more out of obligation than desire, that he would be touched by the music as the music touches me. That it would be a transformative and transcendent experience for him, too. What’s buzzing And the performance was magnificent. I the most. confess it was my first time to hear Symphoria, and I had some misgivings that it might fall short of the Syracuse Symphony Orchestra. Wrong. From early in the first piece on the program — of which I was not fond — it was clear that SymFollow us phoria had muscle. And the Oratorio @syracusenew Society sounded better than I remember times.com it in other performances of the Ninth. Quibbles? The soprano and mezzo seemed lost against the male soloists and orchestra. Unfortunate, but it didn’t stop my tears from falling while the music was rising. Magnificent. And still I couldn’t share any of that Write to us with Will. He needed to write whatever 1415 West he thought of it, good or bad, without Genesee St. regard to what I felt. So I kept my mouth Syracuse, NY 13204 shut. Until now. And what did Will think? You can turn to page 12 to find out.

An exhibition of multi-media paintings by Janet Culbertson from her “Industrial Park” and “Billboard” series opens Thursday, TAKE May 8, at the Stone Quarry Hill Art Gallery, near Cazenovia. There will be a reception for Culbertson, of Shelter Island, 6 to 8 p.m. May 8 at the gallery. The exhibit, Paradise Gone?, runs through June 5.

QUICK

C O N T E N T S

1-Cover

KALLET THEATER

S Y R A C U S E

The rebirth of the Kallet Theater in Pulaski has reinvigorated the village, too Page 26

FREE

PARTING SHOT

Make no mistake, what Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling said is not acceptable. Page 62

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

NEWS

The Spanish Action League gives sex offender a ‘fresh start.’ 11

FACETIME

2

SHARE! ISSUE NUMBER 3471

Le Moyne prof tweets that it’s time for the end of Dolphy Day. 60

READ!

WEEKEND WARRIOR

A look at May’s races, including the Mountain Goat. 48

A P R I L 3 0 TH - M A Y 7 TH

Guitarist Ben Mauro steps away from a world tour to come 31 home.

RECYCLE!

MUSIC

SU SENIOR FASHION SHOW

Page 47

THE LAST MUSKETEER Former Westcott Nation activist builds a career helping build nations abroad By Ed Griffin-Nolan

tell us about it

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04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com

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The Syracuse University Drama Department has mounted a rousing production of Spring Awakening. The musical adaptation of a German play that was often banned there won eight Tony Awards on Broadway.

32

This Week on

SYRACUSENEWTIMES.COM

Three young artists, all with Korean roots, have their ceramics on display in an exhibit at the Community Folk Art Center.Three in Harmony runs through May 13.

14

Dr. Sharon Brangman, who practices geriatric medicine at Upstate University Hospital, talks about treating the elderly and the shortage of doctors who do so in this week’s Campbell Conversation with Grant Reeher.

Larry Dietrich, Editor ldietrich@syracusenewtimes.com

Every Sunday, we tally the Top 5 Most Read Stories of the Week on syracusenewtimes.com Tune and see what everyone is reading!

CORRECTION

A headline in the issue of April 23-30 incorrectly reported that the American Red Cross is involved in the Rockin’ the Redhouse competition of eight bands representing Central New York companies. It is not.


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4.30

SNT

BUZZ 5.7

The South Buffalo Rugby Football Club (in black and green) defeated Lansdowne RFC, of The Bronx, 34-17 (above), to advance to the Empire Rugby Football Union Geographic Union Division III finals. There, the team lost to Old Blue RFC, of Manhattan, 42-10. The Empire RFU GU includes more than 100 men’s and women’s teams in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut.

Michael Davis Photo

NEWS & BLUES 7 SANITY FAIR 9 NEWS 11 RANT 12 INTERVIEW 14 STRAIGHT DOPE 17 TECH 18 FEATURE 19 KALLET THEATER 26 STAGE 29 MUSIC 31 ART 32 FILM 33 GALLERY CRAWL 40 CALENDAR 41 LIVING SPACE 46 STREET STYLE 47 WEEKEND WARRIOR 48 SYRACUSE SEEN 49 YOUR WHEELS 50 CLASSIFIED 51 Q&A 60 PARTING SHOT 62 syracusenewtimes.com | 04.30.14 - 05.07.14 5


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MAY 4th — FAMILY SUNDAY May the 4th be with you! Journey with us to a galaxy far, far away on Star Wars Day! Kids 12 & under are FREE and get to run the bases after the game. GAME TIME: 7pm vs. Toledo Mud Hens. Gates open at 6pm.

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&

NEWS BLUES

Immigration Reform Thomas J. Donahue, president and CEO of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, declared that the TAKE United States needs more low-skill immigrants because U.S. workers aren’t “qualified” or “willing” to do such jobs. (The Weekly Standard)

QUICK

Compiled by Roland Sweet

(flickr.com)

Jen Sorenson

Too Big to Care

Handicapable

HSBC bank has imposed restrictions on large cash withdrawals by some of its British customers who cannot prove why they want their money. Customer Stephen Cotton said that when he tried to withdraw £7,000 pounds ($11,695) from his local HSBC branch, the bank declined his request without “a satisfactory explanation for what the money was for” and refused to tell him how much he could have. “So I wrote out a few slips,” he explained. “I said, ‘Can I have £5,000?’ They said no. I said, ‘Can I have £4,000?’ They said no. And then I wrote out one for £3,000, and they said, ‘OK, we’ll give you that.’” When he complained, the bank said the new policy took effect in November but declared it “had no need to pre-notify customers of the change.” (BBC News)

Japanese composer Mamoru Samuragochi, whose deafness won him fame as a modern-day Beethoven, acknowledged that he paid a ghostwriter to compose some of his internationally acclaimed symphonies. The ghostwriter, Takashi Niigaki, revealed at a news conference not only that he had written more than 20 pieces for Samuragochi, but also that his employer only pretends to be deaf. “Samuragochi is deeply sorry as he has betrayed fans and disappointed others,” Kazushi Orimoto, Samuragochi’s lawyer, said while stating that his client wasn’t available to meet the press. Asked if Samuragochi had listened to Niigaki’s news conference, Orimoto insisted, “There’s no way. He can’t hear.” (The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal)

Flammability Issues

Authorities accused Kara Koriath, 44, of setting fire to her SUV while driving with her two teenage children in St. Louis County, Mo. Fire investigators found numerous packages of fireworks placed throughout the vehicle and tied together with fuses and pipe cleaners, and mortar shells attached to the head rests. Lighter fluid and more fireworks were found in the glove compartment, and the floorboard of the driver’s side appeared to be soaked in gasoline. Investigators said Koriath might have been trying to kill herself because her married boyfriend wouldn’t leave his wife. (Springfield’s KSDK-TV)

FOX NEWS Rich people paying Rich people to tell Middle Class people to blame Poor people — protest sign

Toy Hero

An Oregon firm introduced an action figure of former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden. ThatsMyFace. com, whose catalog also includes Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, said that the 12-inch Snowden figure comes dressed in a blue shirt, casual trousers and black high-top shoes, but wardrobe options include a gray-striped business suit, Indiana Jones outfit and a combat uniform. It sells for $99. ThatsMyFace. com promises that proceeds will go to the Freedom of the Press Foundation, although the foundation’s executive director, Trevor Timm, denied any association with the doll or ThatsMtFace. com. (Agence France-Presse)

Flammability Issues

German police blamed a fire at a dairy farm in Rasdorf on methane gas from 90 flatulent cows. High levels of the gas had built up in a farm shed, then a “static electric charge caused the gas to explode with flashes of flames,” the report stated, noting that one cow was treated for burns. (Reuters)

IN OTHER CRAZINESS: “Aquaman is making his big screen debut. He will be in the upcoming Justice League

movie. Unlike other superheroes, Aquaman doesn’t wear a mask. He hides his identity another way — by not being popular enough to need a secret identity.” — Craig Ferguson “A new study shows that teens who mix alcohol and marijuana are more likely to have a bad driving record. Also, you can take out the word “driving” and replace it with anything.” — Seth Meyers ”Beautiful day outside. I mean, 65 and sunny, like Katie Couric.” — David Letterman “Facebook has come out with a new feature that lets people see where their friends are at all times. It’s called, “Nearby Friends,” which is better than the original title, “Avoiding Relatives.” —Jimmy Fallon

Litter buggery

Hoping to reduce the estimated 50 tons of litter left by people climbing Mount Everest, Nepal ordered everyone descending to carry out 18 pounds of trash. The debris ranges from empty oxygen bottles, torn tents, discarded food containers and the bodies of climbers who died on the mountain. (The New York Times)

Tenants were moving out of Liverpool apartment that caught fire, police say. (Syracuse. com) Gotta believe that made ‘em move faster. — High-end mattress retailer opens at Destiny USA. (Syracuse.com) What? You believed the Destiny promise of aquariums, rooftop parks and Tuscan villages. — Traffic delays expected for duration of 690 ramp closure (TWC News) So, let’s get this straight. Ramp closure causes delays. And the delays will last right up until … the ramp is opened again. Makes sense. — Hundreds visit Syracuse for state tourism conference (CNYCentral.com) If the conference were more effective, it would have been thousands. — Concerns about ticks rise as warmer weather approaches (CNYCentral.com) Jeez, wasn’t it just yesterday we were finally convinced that spring was arriving after a long, long, long, long winter? Looks like those April showers are raining on our parade. — Minor flooding possible in Central New York from soaking rainstorm (Syracuse.com) Not so minor if it’s your basement. — Police search for Ithaca shooting suspect, may be armed and dangerous (TWC News) May be? He’s a shooting suspect.

syracusenewtimes.com | 04.30.14 - 05.07.14

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SANITY FAIR

“You’re actually rooting for the clothes.” — Jerry Seinfeld

QUICK TAKE

By Ed Griffin-Nolan

(thinkstock.com)

MOUNTAIN GOAT A COURSE IN SOCIAL DIVIDE A few weeks back I picked up the phone and got an earful from a friend, an African-American community leader on the South Side. He wanted to let me know about complaints from South Side neighbors about the Mountain Goat training runs. I directed his call to the other Ed Griffin (see below), who, as I frequently tell people, is not me. This great race is an annual rite of spring in Syracuse. It gives a lot of us reason to shake the last bit of winter from our bones. Just as those snowdrops pop up on the edge of the lawn where we’d forgotten they lived, the road race brings into the sunlight issues that get forgotten most of the year. I’m not talking potholes. The Mountain Goat race brings thousands of runners downtown for a series of training runs as well as the big race, which is this Sunday. Truth is that when the pack breaks from downtown, most of the runners will be going through South Side and West Side neighborhoods that they would not frequent on their own and are not familiar with. Along the miles leading up to Strathmore, and when we drop down from Onondaga Park and cross over into Kirk Park and continue on to Salina, and up Colvin, there is an undeniable line that divides most of the field from the lives of the people whose homes we run past. It is as if on this one day the enormous distance between rich and poor, between black and white, between city and suburb, is reduced from miles to mere yards, for just a couple of hours. You could get a degree in urban sociology just by walking that course and observing how quickly the neighborhoods change, block by block, hill after hill, step by step. It’s a great moment. And then everyone goes back to their separate lives. We don’t bridge the gap. Some experience it, feel overwhelmed,

Players overshadow uniform nonsense

Runners at the starting line of the 2012 Mountain Goat Run. Photo by Michael Davis

conflicted. Others choose to ignore it. Some runners can be heard making thinly veiled comments that show that mostly what they feel about poor neighborhoods is fear. Residents talk about the closed streets and packs of mostly white strangers running through their neighborhoods with an edge that suggests that what they are feeling is more than resentment at a temporary inconvenience. It’s not about the race. It’s about the increasingly divided society we’ve become, where rich and poor live cheek to jowl and rarely come into meaningful contact. It’s not about the race. I know for a fact that the Mountain Goat organizers have done a lot to reach out to the community to let them know when the runs will be taking place. The training runs and the race are organized to keep road closures to a minimum. On race day, neighborhood volunteers staff water stops and earn a stipend for their teams and neighborhood organizations. And the crowds on porches and street corners cheering on the runners include a lot of neighborhood people enjoying the spectacle. But I also know from running and working on those streets that there is still a quota of resentment from residents. It’s palpable along the route, and it goes way beyond what we can bridge in a single day. The Mountain Goat is a great event. The chafing that it provokes is a reminder of the widening divisions that exist between city and suburb, between black and white residents of our community. What we do about that is up to each of us — but those are facts we can’t run from. SNT

FOR THE RECORD: I am not the Ed Griffin who runs the Mountain Goat. Well, actually, I do run the Mountain

Goat, but I don’t run the Mountain Goat. The guy who has organized that race for the past decade and overseen its growth into one of Syracuse’s signature amateur athletic events is Ed Griffin, the owner of Fleet Feet Sports. We are both skinny white guys in our 50s married to women named Ellen. The other Ed and I are both runners, both fathers, we both drive Camrys. He writes a blog, I write a column. You can see why it gets confusing.

10

The number of miles on the full Mountain Goat course.

565 The elevation gain on the course, in feet.

1500 The prize money, in dollars, awarded to the first male and the first female runners to cross the finish line on Salina Street.

Watching the Syracuse University football players modeling their sleek new 21st century uniforms last week made me laugh. Not because the outfits were funny, but because they brought to mind an old Seinfeld stand-up routine poking fun at sports fans and uniforms. In 1995, Seinfeld was the No. 1 TV show in the nation. Fans settling in on Thursday night Jan. 19, 1995, saw an episode that opened, as most of them did, with Jerry on stage holding a microphone. “Loyalty to any one sports team,” said the young comedian, “is pretty hard to justify. The players are always changing, the team can move to another city. You’re actually rooting for the clothes, when you get right down to it. You are standing and cheering and yelling for your clothes to beat the clothes from another city.” When Seinfeld stepped to the mic, the Syracuse University football team, then known as the Orangemen, had just completed a respectable 7-4 season, a campaign that ended without a bowl-game bid. Donovan McNabb was on campus but didn’t wear a uniform that year. The man who would rewrite the SU record book for passers sat out the year, wore no blue and orange, but only a red shirt, the standard garb for a player who practices with the team but does not compete in games. The next year, McNabb traded the red shirt for blue and orange, and led his team through a 9-3 campaign that culminated Jan. 1, 1996, with a 41-0 trouncing of Clemson in the Gator Bowl . Does anyone who watched that game remember today what the team’s uniforms looked like that day? Does anyone care? (For a look at McNabb in this year’s uniform: tinyurl. com/luag6gv.) SNT

syracusenewtimes.com | 04.30.14 - 05.07.14

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TOPIC: NEWS

By Ed Griffin-Nolan

SPANISH ACTION LEAGUE HIRES SEX OFFENDER The Spanish Action League has hired Jesus Rolon, a former Syracuse City School District teacher who pled guilty in 2012 to a charge related to sexual conduct with a minor, as executive assistant to the agency’s director, Rita Paniagua. Rolon has been working as a housing specialist for the organization for the past year and assumed his new position on Friday, April 25. According to Paniagua, he has not had unsupervised contact with minors while working for the agency and will not be allowed to be alone with young people in his new position. According to the Onondaga County District Attorney’s Office, Rolon pleaded guilty in August 2012 to a misdemeanor charge of endangering the welfare of a child. Rolon was arrested in September 2011 after two underage inmates at the Syracuse Justice Center accused him of having engaged them in sexual activity. At the time, Rolon was 34 and was assigned by the school district to teach English as a second language to inmates. He was charged with a first-degree criminal sexual act, endangering the welfare of a child, first-degree unlawfully dealing with a child and patronizing a prostitute. In his plea, Rolon admitted to engaging in oral sex with one of the boys, who at the time was under 17, the legal age of consent in New York. Under the terms of the plea deal, Rolon agreed to surrender his teaching certification. His name was not placed on the state’s list of registered sex offenders, because endangering is not a reportable offense. He was sentenced to three years’ probation in October 2012. In March, he was released from probation by

County Court Judge Thomas Miller. The Spanish Action League — also known by its Spanish name, La Liga — is at 700 Oswego St., on the Near West Side. It provides services to the county’s Spanish-speaking community, including youth programs. The Nuestro Futuro (Our Future) program, is an after-school program for children aged 5 through 12. In a statement sent via email on Monday, April 21, Paniagua said that Rolon has been an “exemplary employee” who is “deserving of an opportunity for a fresh start in life.” She noted that in his decision to end Rolon’s probation, Miller had concluded that, among other issues, “termination of the sentence of probation is not adverse to the protection of the public.” According to the judge’s clerk, David Rothschild, the judge’s involvement in Rolon’s case was limited to approving the petition of the Probation Department. The petition indicated that Rolon was offered an opportunity for advancement at his place of employment and further mentioned that he had submitted to a sex offender evaluation, which determined that he was not in need for further treatment as a sex offender. Alvaro Garza, the president of the league’s board, La Liga staff contacted his probation officer when Rolon’s promotion was being considered and were told that there were no restrictions on his employment. Several local social workers with long experience in personnel matters find it troubling that a person with a conviction for such a crime is working in an agency serving youth. Mitchell Jaffe is a therapist in private practice who served from 2001 until 2011 as the executive director of Syracuse Jewish Family Service. He was asked if he would consider hiring someone with a conviction for a sexual crime involving a minor for a position with his

The “Tipping Point” In The Struggle Against Child Abuse “One in 10 children in Central New York will become a victim of sexual abuse before they turn 18.” That’s the frightening statistic offered up by a coalition of local agencies who are issuing a public challenge to all adults in Central New York. Here’s the good news, say advocates: “Child sexual abuse can be stopped before it starts. All it takes is one adult who knows the signs and is willing and able to

do the right thing.” Because 93 percent of sexual abuse cases are perpetrated by a family member or someone else who the child trusts, educating adults about how to recognize signs of abuse is key to the approach. To that end, the YMCA and McMahon Ryan Child Advocacy Center are launching an abuse prevention program called “Darkness to Light: Stewards of Chil-

agency. “Absolutely not,” Jaffe replied. An executive director at another large social service agency, who requested anonymity, said that agency policy is to deny employment to anyone convicted of a crime of a sexual nature because “the risks far outweigh any other considerations about hiring. As far as our obligation to protect children and vulnerable populations, I do not think we have any other option.” Other social service agency heads, speaking on background, said that their agencies do not have blanket policies prohibiting such a hire but would review the case based on the person’s history and would have a detailed “safety plan” in place to keep the employee away from contact with minors.” He declined further comment when asked for details of a safety plan. In an email, Garza wrote that “Mr. Rolon’s job responsibilities did not and will not place him in contact with minors.” Rick Trunfio is the first chief assistant district attorney in county district attorney’s office. He served as the first head of the Special Victims Bureau in the county prosecutor’s office. “Any time anybody had committed conduct that puts a minor or a child at risk, there is always a concern that the person

does not have access to children,” he said in a phone interview. Does that concern diminish once that term has been served? “No,” said Trunfio, “there is always a risk. You don’t have to be a prosecutor sitting in my chair to answer that.” “Endangering the welfare of a child is not a registrable offense,” said Trunfio, “but it is a conviction that speaks for itself.” Rolon, says Trunfio, was accused of a Class E felony. The misdemeanor plea deal was arranged because “we had an uncooperative victim, who did not want to get on the stand.” In New York, youths under the age of 17 cannot legally consent to sexually activity, even if they say they are willing, he said. In his email, Garza wrote, “The mission of the Spanish Action League is to build on the rich cultural heritage of the Latino community by advancing its independence and growth through advocacy, counseling and education. As such, we believe in giving people opportunities for rehabilitation and a fresh start in their lives, so that they can be fully productive members of society. As confirmed by the Onondaga County Court, Mr. Rolon is deserving of such an opportunity for a fresh start in life.” SNT

dren.” They have trained 1,100 people, but that is just the beginning. According to a YMCA news release, “the Central New York Darkness to Light Collaboration plans to ignite behavior change by training a critical mass of 18,000 adults — 5 percent of the adult population — in Onondaga County by 2020.” “If you’re an adult in Central New York, you need to take this course,” said Linda Cleary, executive director of the McMahon/Ryan Child Advocacy Center. You

have the power to save a child – maybe your own – from the lifetime of pain that child sexual abuse can cause.” To learn more, contact Janice Timmons, at McMahon/Ryan Child Advocacy Center, at 315-701-2985 or jtimmons@ mcmahonryan.org. Anyone who suspects that a child is being abused should immediately call the Child Abuse Hotline at 1-800-342-3720. SNT

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A BIG FINISH IN A START WITH BEETHOVEN’S NINTH

A PATH FORWARD FOR SYRACUSE

By William Eimas-Dietrich Editor’s Note: The writer attended the Symphoria performance Saturday with his father. These are his impressions of his first concert of classical music.

As a 14-year-old guy, when your dad comes to you and says you have to go to the Symphoria and listen to Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125 and a work called Inspiring Beethoven, how many guys would want to go? Maybe a few … let’s be real, it’s none. As the concert started, I was in disbelief. I actually liked it. Then the music of the first piece got extremely soft, and I started to doze off a little bit. When I started to doze off, the percussionist would hit the drum, and I would wake up. By intermission (after Inspiring Beethoven), I was not impressed at all. I was bored, and I was starting to became impatient. To my surprise, my overall bad start to my first symphony experience was about to change. Beethoven’s Ninth felt like I was at a real 21st-century concert, not including the screaming fans and cheering. As most of you might know, Beethoven’s Ninth has four parts to it. The first part was fun and just an overall good experience. The second and third parts were boring; again I started to doze off, even though my dad’s head was moving to the beat. My dad told me the fourth part had singing in it, with a huge chorus. So I was hoping for a big finish, and that is exactly what the Syracuse Symphoria gave me. The singing and the musical instruments together equaled something amazing. So let’s just say to all the teenage boys who are reading this — probably not that many — give it a chance if your dad wants to spend a little time with you at the symphony. SNT

By Bob Andrews Is it really news that the city of Syracuse is in dire financial distress? We hear about the woes of our city seemingly daily from Mayor (Stephanie) Miner as she explains why roads cannot get paved and pipes cannot get upgraded. Although the financial problems are not a surprise, the lack of leadership coming from City Hall is surprising. In the city, panhandling is an issue being addressed in Armory Square and along Interstate 690 offramps, but the worst offender seems to be the mayor around City Hall. Like a panhandler, the mayor seeks short-term fixes with an infusion of money, but what is her plan to solve the underlying problems?

William Eimas-Dietrich is a freshman at Jamesville-DeWitt High School and a fan of Coldplay and Imagine Dragons. His father is the New Times editor-in-chief.

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04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com

As a business person, I cannot simply put my hand out and ask for money. Instead, I need to research and write a plan of action for the money. I must show how the money will work to improve the long-term problems. Does Syracuse have a plan to resolve the aging water system? Does Syracuse have a plan to invest in road infrastructure beyond just fixing potholes? Does Syracuse have a plan to turn around upside-down finances? Emergency funding from the state or federal government is the mayor’s solution but really is only a temporary fix to a long-term problem. We can do better, Mrs. Mayor. The citizens of Syracuse deserve better.

Frank Cammuso

We need leadership from City Hall that is working with all of our partners from county, state and federal governments as well as our private-sector partners to develop comprehensive plans that will not only repair our infrastructure in the short term but will allow city streets and pipes to be maintained long into the future at a sustainable cost. Onondaga County Executive Joanie Mahoney and the county legislature have shown that good planning and advocacy for sustainable financial models work to cut the cost of government and improve the efficiency of services to taxpayers. Even our long-dysfunctional state government in Albany has begun to gain control of our out-of-control spending, thanks to leadership and planning from the governor and our own Sens. (John) DeFrancisco and (David) Valesky. In recent years, the county and region have shown a propensity to build real solutions through innovation, cooperation, strategic initiatives and sound financial planning. All of this while City Hall continues to beg for money for bailouts and short-term fixes. I know there are many of us in the city that are ready for real solutions and are hungry for a plan that we can rally behind. Mayor Miner, let’s work to build a legacy for a new, sustainable Syracuse poised for vibrancy and growth and built on a foundation of solid infrastructure and financial stability. SNT Bob Andrews, of Syracuse, is chairman of the Republican Committee in Syracuse and a former Onondaga County legislator.


TOPIC: NEWS

By Renée K. Gadoua

AGENCY HONORS 10 IMMIGRANTS AT FUNDRAISER InterFaith Works of Central New York will celebrate the diverse stories of newcomers to Syracuse by honoring 10 refugees during its annual dinner Tuesday, May 6. “They represent the broad spectrum of the experience of refugees in Syracuse,” said Nora Heaphy, director of development for InterFaith Works. “They come from different cultures, different countries, different circumstances, different political situations. Some lived in refugee camps for decades. Some took a very circuitous route to get here.” InterFaith works expects the dinner to draw nearly 500 people and raise more than $90,000 for the agency. The dinner will showcase InterFaith Works’ Center for New Americans Refugee Resettlement Program. The event aims to raise awareness about the struggles of refugees around the globe and showcase Syracuse as a model resettlement city, organizers said. The agency also runs the Community Wide Dialogue to End Racism, Senior Companions program, Spiritual Care program and educational programs. Its newest program, the Center for Dialogue, focuses on building understanding across races and faith traditions. The Center for Dialogue was established with a $275,000 gift from the El-Hindi family. That gift also started a campaign to buy a building that would house all of InterFaith Works’ programs. The agency aims to close on a property at 1010 James St., Syracuse, by June 1, Heaphy said. The agency hopes to hold a grand opening in the fall. The agency has so far raised about $780,000 of itsp $1.8 million goal, Heaphy said. 2014 INTERFAITH LEADERSHIP AWARD HONOREES Diana Alvarez, of Cuba. She lived in Ecuador for 10 years before coming to the U.S. as a refugee. She volunteers as an interpreter for Cubans new to Syracuse and works in the housekeeping department at the Courtyard Marriott. Hamad Haroon, of Sudan. Hamad is one of the 4,000 “Lost Boys” who settled in the U.S. In his first two years in

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Syracuse, he learned enough English to buy a car, acquire a driver’s license and land a job as an assembly worker with General Super Plating in Syracuse. Om Katel, of Bhutan. He came to the U.S. in 2011. He completed a phlebotomy training course at Bryant and Stratton College in Syracuse and graduated from Health Train. He works in the housekeeping department with St. Joseph’s Hospital and Health Center, where he also volunteers as a lab technician. Immaculee Kyondwa and Joseph Mpinga, of the Republic of Congo. The family was separated in 1984 then lived 19 years in refugee camps, raising five children before immigrating to the U.S. in 2004. Muyheyidin Shek Mohamoud, of Somalia. He spent 16 years in the Middle East after fleeing Somalia. After a circuitous journey, he arrived in the U.S. in 2009. He opened the African International Restaurant on North Salina Street in 2011, running the business until 2013. He works as a housekeeper for Embassy Suites. Hussein Musa, of Somalia. He and his six siblings were born in the Kakuma Refugee Camp in Kenya. The Musa family arrived in Syracuse in 2004, when Hussein was 11. He is a senior at Nottingham High School and has become a leader in his new community. Abdulbasit Salman, of Iraq. He and his family fled Iraq for Syria in 2006. From there they travelled to Jordan, where they lived for more than four years before coming to the U.S. in 2010. Abdulbasit has passed exams required to obtain a license to practice pharmacy here and is volunteering while he studies to pass an English test. Mirza Tihic, of Serbia. He and his parents escaped Bosnia, traveling first to Germany before settling in Syracuse in 1999. He has a doctorate in cultural foundations of education and is director of program support services with the Institute of Veterans and Military Families at Syracuse University and an adjunct professor at the Martin J. Whitman School of Management. Ismael Wedesso, of Ethiopia. He has worked at Stickley Audi and Co. since 2010. His wife and five children joined him in Syracuse in July 2013. SNT Renée K. Gadoua is a freelance writer and editor based in Manlius. Follow her on Twitter @ReneeKGadoua.

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13


INTERVIEW

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Dr. Sharon Brangman is the division chief of geriatrics at Upstate University Hospital, where she practices geriatric medicine. She also directs the Geriatric Medicine Fellowship Program and Central New York’s Alzheimer’s Disease Assistance Center. She has served as president of the American Geriatric Society.

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Grant Reeher (GR): Could you give me a couple important data markers or trends for the aging of the population in the United States?

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Dr. Sharon Brangman (SB): Well, we are right now in the midst of a big increase in the people who are 65 and older. So we have the oldest of the baby boomers who are turning 65, at the rate of about 10,000 a day, and that has been going on for a couple of years. But we also have an amazing increase of people who are 85 and older, and that is actually the fastest growing segment of our population right now. GR: Why are these trends so important for us to be thinking about? SB: Well, as the older adults become a larger segment of our population, they use more health care resources. … Older adults are about 12 percent of the population, but they are using a proportionately larger percentage of the health care resources. They are over-represented in emergency rooms, hospital admissions and use of pharmaceuticals. When we are dealing with people, especially 85 and older, they often need help getting through the day. So they need more help with cooking, cleaning, driving, getting to the toilet, getting dressed, so that we find that those older adults often are using more health care resources. GR: What are the differences between traditional medicine and geriatric medicine? SB: Well, in traditional medicine, care is usually based on one organ system. So you would go to a cardiologist or a heart specialist, then you might go to a GI doctor, a lung specialist or maybe an orthopedic surgeon. And that doctor would look at that organ system or whatever that specialty might be. In geriatrics, we tend to look at the whole individual. We take into account the different medical problems they might have, their role in the community, their functional status, their cognitive status. We often work as a team, so we have a nurse, a nurse practitioner, a social worker and other people who work with us, and they each have a perspective on the patient that is very important. And we are often not trying to cure a person. These are often people who have multiple medical problems and they are living with them over time. We always take care of people, so we always say care versus cure. We are helping people live with multiple medical problems; we assess all the medicines that they are on and we try to focus on what we can do to keep them independent and enjoy the highest quality of life for as long as possible.

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GR: At Upstate, you have worked a lot with medical students and with young doctors. What is the biggest thing that they don’t know that they need to learn when it comes to treating older adults? SB: Well, I guess it’s a matter of fighting a lot of stereotypes, because not everyone has had exposure to grandparents. A lot of the information that we get about old people is in the media, and they are often portrayed as cranky or over-sexualized, or something that is just not realistic. And for our many medical students who are in their 20s, they may have the perspective that 40 or 50 is old. … GR: (Laughs) SB: … So I think it’s important for medical students to realize that there is still a lot of vitality in life when you’re 60, 65, 70, 80 and even 90. And that we may not be able to cure someone, but we can always take care of them. Sometimes medicines can have a dual edge to them; sometimes they can help, but sometimes the side effects can be very detrimental to having a good quality of life. So I always help, or we help to teach, medical students to look at the whole person, to spend time and talk with them and to figure out what their medical problems are and help prioritize how we are going to approach them. GR: What’s the biggest thing that the patients themselves need to learn about their own health care and their health as they move into this elderly category? What are the adjustments that they need to make? SB: I think that it is important as middle-aged adults, young adults, to start thinking about how you would like to be when you’re older. I always say aging well starts with good pre-natal care, and I think we need to take some responsibility for our health. There is not a magic pill that makes everything go away, and many of the problems that happen as we age are based on our lifestyle choices that we have had throughout life. So I think taking a little responsibility, not going into a doctor’s office and expecting a prescription for every problem, and realizing that many things are not just going to disappear — that they need to be worked on and managed over time. GR: Are there particular trends in the number of geriatric physicians? SB: The numbers of geriatricians in this country are inadequate to meet the current needs, and it is only going to get worse with time. We train a little over 200 geriatricians a year in the whole country. And we probably need about 16,000. So that gives you an idea of how few we have.


FRESH

DR. BRANGMAN

CONTENT (A L M OS T )

DAILY

GR: What drives this problem? I imagine that at least for the choice of specialty, money is a factor. What are the other things that are driving this mismatch? SB: Well, it is really complex. Certainly the financing is probably a big piece of it because Medicare is the primary funder, and every year you hear in Congress about how they are cutting back on Medicare. They are reducing payment to physicians, and when you have a practice that is almost 100 percent Medicare, that has a big impact. So geriatricians are among the lowest paid. We have medical students who are graduating now with record amounts of debt. It is not unusual for a medical student to graduate owing $150,000 to $200,000 worth of debt. Geriatrics takes time. I can’t push 10 80- or 90-year-old patients through my office in an hour. And so the amount of time that I spend to take good care of my patients I can’t make it up in volume, as some specialties might. So that’s another piece. You can’t really cover your overhead. It’s very hard at times to pay all the bills and keep taking care of patients. And so if you are a medical student graduating with a lot of debt, you are not going to pick something that is not going to help you pay off your debt. We also have other issues, and these are more cultural. We are not a very age-oriented society; we are very youth-oriented. And people are very Grant Reeher hosts hesitant to deal with older people WRVO Public Media’s program because they think you are just going to The Campbell deal with people who are old and dying, Conversations at and that’s depressing. Everything is 6 p.m. Sundays at youth-related, and we want to make 89.9 and 90.3 FM. sure that we are dyeing our hair and To hear the full getting rid of wrinkles and doing all interview, go to these other things to deny that we are syracusenewtimes.com getting older. And I always say aging is or follow the New Times on not a disease, it is something we should Facebook. Follow all aspire to. But that message is just The Campbell not transmitted in our culture. So, there Conversations are some cultures that do put value in on Twitter @ aging, and unfortunately I don’t think campbellconvos. You can also access that we do well enough. So a lot of earlier interviews people don’t see geriatrics as a career.

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by going to tinyurl.com/mplxaex. Reeher is director of the Campbell Public Affairs Institute and a professor of political science at Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs. He is the creator and producer of “The Campbell Conversations.” You can reach him at gdreeher@maxwell. syr.edu.

GR: I would think that emotionally, this would be a very difficult medicine to practice. For one, as you already pointed out, a lot of the patients are just not going to get better, and I imagine you see a lot of suffering, too. So what brought you to this specialization and what sustains you in it? SB: Well I started to see that my older patients were being marginalized, and their needs were not being

Fresh NewTimes Content addressed. And I was working in a primary-care clinic as a general internist, and I found that my older patients wanted to maintain their independence. They uniformly said they didn’t want to be a burden to anyone, and at the same time I had a lot of younger people who were coming in who wanted a note to stay home from work. But I had older people with lots of medical problems who wanted to keep doing their own laundry and not bothering their daughter. So I started to think, “Wow, I really liked that dynamic.” They had great stories, small changes made huge differences in their quality of life. So I actually went back and did my training in geriatrics. I was only in the second group at my hospital because it is still a relatively new specialty in our country. It’s been in England and Europe and other places for many years, but it is still relatively new. So I would say in the late 1980s it kind of got established in the United States. Yes, it can be very difficult work, but I find it very rewarding because I can help people maintain a good quality of life. We can look and find out what is important to them and help them reach those goals, we can keep them comfortable and we can help them if they are suffering. Ironically, geriatricians are among the highest group of doctors in terms of job satisfaction in the country. We are usually either No. 1 or No. 2, sometimes changing off with neonatologists or dermatologists, but most geriatricians are very happy and very passionate about their job. SNT

tFREE H u R S D AYS 9.4.13 - 9.11.13 syracusenewtimes.com

FAIRWELL

A look back at the state fair: PAGE 21

READ! SHARE! RECYCLE!

Weekend Film openings (with trailers) Redhouse T.V. (video) Woman Times (blog) Tech News F R I D AYS

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Next week: Gov. Lincoln Chafee, of Rhode Island, talks about political polarization and political civility.

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THE STRAIGHT DOPE

“The latrines themselves were beyond description. I can truly say I have never seen a United States transport in such TAKE deplorable sanitary condition.” — Observations of a doctor who inspected the troop ship Argentina upon its arrival in Glasgow in 1943

QUICK

By Cecil Adams

Just read of yet another cruise liner affected by norovirus. I served in the U.S. Navy for four years, crammed cheek to jowl with 3,000 other sailors, and we never once had any such problems. I never heard of any other naval vessels so afflicted either. What’s the straight dope, Cecil? Does the Navy add some secret antiviral element to their coffee, or are those seagoing civilians just a bunch of pantywaists? Is there any record of any naval vessel being afflicted by norovirus? — A Cheshire County Shellback

1973

FIGHTING IGNORANCE SINCE

(IT’S TAKING LONGER THAN WE THOUGHT)

Is Disease Much of a Problem in the U.S. Navy? Any naval vessel? That gives us a lot of leeway, Shelly. Assuming you’ll also permit a little latitude in terms of gastrointestinal diagnosis, I give you the troop transport Argentina, which sailed from New York to Glasgow in the summer of 1943. Doctors never determined exactly what got into the men who embarked on that unfortunate voyage, but whatever it was, it lost no time getting out. Of more than 6,100 sailors and soldiers aboard, 3,000 reported sick with the trots (i.e., dysentery) and one died. Despite the lack of a definite ID, the conditions that enabled the bug to flourish were obvious. The ship was severely overcrowded and lacked adequate toilets, showers and bunk space — the men had to sleep in shifts. The galleys and mess areas were in constant use and didn’t have adequate equipment for washing and sterilizing dishes. Four days out, a dysentery epidemic began, and the Argentina descended into chaos. The port physician who inspected the vessel on its arrival in Glasgow described a hellish scene. Stoves, tables and nominally clean utensils were covered with rotting crud. Garbage was strewn everywhere and piled two or three inches deep around the filthy, overflowing trash cans. Troop quarters stank of vomit and diarrhea. OK, exceptional case, thank God. Only a handful of other major dysentery outbreaks aboard U.S. naval vessels were reported during World War II. In fact, despite the scale and duration of the conflict, the overall incidence of disease in the U.S. military during the war was remarkably low. Low compared to what? Why, all previous U.S. wars. World War II was the first armed conflict in U.S. history where deaths of military personnel in combat exceeded deaths due to disease. I make a point of this, Shelly, because you seem to think the Navy kept you and your fellow sailors out of sick bay with pixie dust. Not so — or anyway, not entirely. Sure, antibiotics and vaccination helped enormously. But an equally important factor was the brass finally getting it through their heads to embrace basic principles of public health: Avoid contaminated food.

Dispose of garbage. Keep the toilets clean. Some statistics, drawn from “Two Faces of Death: Fatalities from Disease and Combat in America’s Principal Wars, 1775 to Present,” a 2008 paper by Vincent Cirillo: — Revolutionary War. Disease deaths: 18,500. Combat deaths: 7,200. Ratio of disease to combat deaths: 2.6:1. Germs arguably were a factor in changing the course of U.S. history; the American invasion of Canada in 1775 was foiled by a smallpox outbreak. — War of 1812. Disease deaths: 17,000. Combat deaths: 2,300. Ratio: 7.5:1, the worst ever for the U.S. — Civil War. Disease deaths: 225,000. Combat deaths: 110,000. Ratio: 2:1. The ratio was low for the era, not because sanitation measures were particularly good but because battlefield slaughter was particularly bad. World War I. Disease deaths: 57,000. Combat deaths: 50,000. Ratio: 1.1:1. World War II. Disease deaths: 15,000. Combat deaths: 230,000. Ratio: 0.06:1. The tide turns. Indeed, since then, U.S. military disease deaths in wartime have been minimal. That’s not to say there’s been no disease. Malaria was a major problem in Vietnam that was brought under control only after rigorous efforts to protect the troops from mosquitoes. Which brings us back to the present, the U.S. Navy, and norovirus. Possibly up to this point, you’ve been thinking: Never mind the ancient history — today the Navy is the picture of healthy living. I call your attention to a medical journal article entitled “Epidemic Infectious Gastrointestinal Illness Aboard U.S. Navy Ships Deployed to the Middle East During Peacetime Operations — 2000-001.” From this we learn: — During the two-year survey period, researchers identified 11 outbreaks of infectious gastrointestinal disease (IGI) on 10 U.S. Navy vessels. “Our analyses indicate that IGI outbreaks are common occurrences aboard U.S. Navy ships in (the Persian Gulf),” they write. The most frequently encountered IGI: norovirus. — The overall incidence of IGI on the naval vessels studied was 33 outbreaks per 1,000 ship-weeks. — During roughly the same era, IGI incidence on the cruise ships you speak of so disparagingly was about four outbreaks per 1,000 ship-weeks. In other words, Mr. Not-No-Norovirus-in-My-Navy, outbreaks of this icky condition on U.S. naval vessels (and having suffered through a bout of norovirus myself, I can testify that IGIs don’t get much ickier) were about seven times worse. SNT Send questions to Cecil via straightdope.com or write him c/o Chicago Reader, 350 N. Orleans, Chicago 60654. Visit the Straight Dope archive at www.straightdope.com/ columns/archive.

Illustration by Slug Signorino

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TOPIC: TECH

By Joe Cunningham

(getty images)

GREAT TECH MOVIES COMING OUT Not Transcendence — Johnny Depp’s AI sci-fi “thriller” is notoriously “rotten” at 19 percent. That’s like record-breaking rotten. Don’t waste your time. Stick to Scissorhands, the first “Pirates” movie and Sweeny Todd. #fearandloathing X-Men: Days of Future Past. Bringing together the best of both worlds from the franchise in terms of actors, filmmakers and old and young characters, this flick has the potential to do some damage on a real mutant level. Release date is May 23. (What does this have to do with tech? Watch the films.) Star Wars VII. This is the J.J. Abrams “reboot” after Lucas signed the rights over to Disney. Looking forward to some fresh air after the disappointing Episodes I-III and after being awed by Abrams’s “Trek” prequel home runs. Set after the original series (of course), everyone’s favorite cast returns: Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher and (the great) Harrison Ford reunite for perhaps the most anticipated film coming up in 2015. #peeingmypants Superman II/Batman vs. Superman. Pushed back to a 2016 release, it’s the Zach Snyder (director) and Christopher Nolan (producer, of the “Dark Knight” trilogy fame) sequel to the Man of Steel re-release of the Superman franchise. Amid some Internet controversy, Ben Affleck is confirmed as the new caped crusader. Jessie Eisenberg (The Social Network, in a Best Actor Oscar-nominated role) is confirmed as the new Lex Luthor. What does that have to do with tech? Please? Batman is a rich ripped badass with amazing tech. #favoritesuperhero. SNT Joe Cunningham is a runner, screenwriter, and playwright. Email him at jcunninghamsnt@gmail.com. Follow him on Twitter at @IndianaJoe77.

SOCIAL Here’s Who to Follow MEDIA on Twitter AND Because Facebook is getting boring. Barney Stinson (@BarneyVETERANS StinsonHI) This is for all the

This is from Social Media Breakfast Syracuse on Thursday, April 24.

“Social media is a great tool to reach veterans and for veterans to reach each other.” — Lauren Jenkins, vice president, ScoutComms

“It’s important to understand the veterans community and how to talk to them, not at them. Listen as much as you engage.” — Jenkins

“We talk to veterans and tell them, ‘Well, there aren’t many jobs out there in the civilian world for sharpshoot expert. We help them find new opportunities and use direct feedback through Facebook, Twitter, and Google+.” — Aubrey Arcangel, Hirepurose

J.J. Abrams (Emily Berl/The New York Times)

Hitman The hit video game series turned everyone-knew-it-would-flopbecause-video-game-movies-always-do movie just became a board game. Well, not really. It’s a board game for your smartphone. In case you had to get the Dexter in you out during a long day at work. Or if your mom grounded you from your game system. And you’re 35 and living at home.

HEARTBLEED: “It is the most serious security issue the connected world has ever seen and we will be discussing

it for years to come,” says Thomas Hart, web application developer at Terakeet. If you haven’t heard, in 2012, a developer’s oversight into open-source security software used by almost everyone basically left a window open to hackers everywhere, and it’s just now being addressed. “It was interesting to hear that the NSA has known about the bug and has been using it to spy on people for two years now,” says Matt Wagner, programmer analyst at D&W Diesel, in Auburn. A full story from the Syracuse New Times tech column is under way.

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I tweet local movers and shakers (some might say local celebrities) to find out their favorite piece of tech: “My iPhone, because TAKE I can do anything and everything with it. It has replaced my laptop (for a lot of things), my iPod, my point-and-shoot camera. It keeps me connected and informed.”

QUICK

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“Social media is a brilliant tool for helping veteran service organizations reach their demographic, and vice versa.” — Andrew Miller, deputy director, Clear Path for Veterans.

It was the first social media breakfast held as a Google+ chat.

fans of the early How I Met Your Mother that miss their best character in his most hilarious “I’m an asshole” moments. It often makes my day. #TY whoever comes up with this stuff. Tweets are a welcome comic relief. Shout out to @Adillon626 for the tip on this one. Probably my favorite follow. Anne Messenger (@AnneMessenger) For everyone trying to get a job or advance in their career. Messenger is a career coach and named a favorite on Top 100 Twitter Accounts Job Seekers Must Follow. Tweets are free job coaching. Rotten Tomatoes (@RottenTomatoes) For all of you who didn’t know, RT is the popular website that pools both critic and fan reviews of movies and has been “protecting you from bad movies since 1999.” I’m a movie buff and always check out whether films are “fresh” or “rotten” before spending $10 and two hours going to see them. The reviews are usually spot on. Tweets are updates on new films. Modern Seinfeld (@SeinfeldToday) Everybody loves Seinfeld. But what if Seinfeld were still on the air? This fun Twitter handle explores that. From Internet woes to juice cleanses, these 140 character snippets capsulize plots of what we can imagine would be the hit show today. Marcus Luttrell (@ MarcusLuttrell) Because he’s a badass. US Navy SEAL. If you haven’t seen the film Lone Survivor, you have to. Original Gentleman (@HumbleGentlemen) For those guys that care about being a true classy #gentleman. There is also @ArtofManliness, but the site is richer than the Twitter feed. The Syracuse New Times (@SyrNewTimes) Because I would lose my job if I didn’t add that one. #LOL (Editor’s note: Damn straight.)


Deb Alexander with schoolchildren in Gadez, Afghanistan, in 2003. Much of her early work in Afghanistan was to build schools for boys and girls.

NATION BUILDER

A Former Westcott Nation activist builds a career promoting democracy from Europe to southern Asia. Writer Ed Griffin-Nolan tracked her down in Louisiana, where she was teaching U.S. soldiers how to do their jobs in a different culture. syracusenewtimes.com | 04.30.14 - 05.07.14

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wo weeks before she was scheduled to fly back to Afghanistan to observe that nation’s presidential elections, Deb Alexander found herself leaping out of a Blackhawk helicopter into the Louisiana night in the company of her newfound friends in an Army brigade. It wasn’t her first jump from an aircraft. That took

place over the burning city of Sarajevo in 1999. But Alexander, a 58-year-old former Syracusan, swore it would be her last … a pledge she has made and broken before. This parachute adventure over a peaceful bayou came as a thank you gift from the brigade commanders for the three weeks she had spent training them in her field: peacekeeping and development. It’s a specialty she has honed in work on three continents in a career that she began with graduate studies in the early 1980s at SU’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs and nurtured in years spent running political campaigns and elections in Onondaga County. “It was their way of saying, ‘We are so grateful,’ ” recalls Alexander from the quiet of her new home outside Lexington, Ky., a few days after the jump. “I’m thinking a nice bottle of white wine, a little certificate. But once they say, ‘We thought you’d really like to jump out of a helicopter,’ you can’t really say no.” What was it like? “It was like being scared to death,” says Alexander. But she took the gift as a challenge and found herself on a moonlit night strapped to a man she describes as “a very experienced colonel,” descending toward a field thick with wild horses. “All I could think of was one of us landing on and hurting one of these horses,” says Alexander.

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THE SYRACUSE ROOTS

Her enthusiasm for democracy-building began in Syracuse, where she cut her teeth on the election campaigns of women such as Elaine Lytel, a former Onondaga County Clerk, and Rosemary Pooler, a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and a former Congressional hopeful. Alexander recalls voter registration drives on the South and Near West sides of Syracuse, experiences not all that different from the sense of empowerment she later encountered in places like Serbia and, eventually, remote provinces of Afghanistan. “It was about expanding the franchise,” she says. She was also involved in political protests in Syracuse, some of them against the military and State Department she now serves. “I can remember standing arm-in-arm on East Genesee Street as right-to-life protesters tried to break into Planned Parenthood. That’s when I started paying attention to public policy and got interested in who got elected. I started to care about how our money got allocated,” she says.


Alexander participated in a demonstration at the first SU commencement in the Carrier Dome, in May 1981. Demonstrators who were dressed as bloody nuns and peasants interrupted the commencement address of then Secretary of State Alexander Haig, and their protest against the war in Central America was captured in a front-page photo in The New York Times. She opposed U.S. soldiers training Latin American human rights violators at the School of the Americas, in Georgia, and helped with a local solidarity campaign to market Nicaraguan coffee to Syracusans. Thirty-four years later, Alexander has worked for three secretaries of state (two of them women) and spends weeks at a time as a Defense Department contractor training U.S. troops. The irony is not lost on her. “There’s an odd consistency about how I’ve been working through my life,” she says. “Sometimes it’s about protest, and sometimes it’s about working in the biggest institutions in the world: Department of Defense, Department of State. In all those places, I try to find where I can effect change, how can I make my voice heard.”

STARTING IN THE BALKANS

It was the signing of the 1995 Dayton peace accords, which ended the Balkans conflict, that pulled Alexander away from Syracuse. She had recently completed her doctorate from the Maxwell School when the phone rang at her home on Kensington Avenue, where she considered herself a full-fledged citizen of the Westcott Nation. “I got a call from the State Department. They were looking for someone who understood something about elections,” she says. She ended up in Bosnia and Croatia working with the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe through much of 1997 and 1998 as those countries held their first elections after the Soviet grip on Yugoslavia loosened. Then it was Croatia and Estonia, Albania, and finally back to Washington in August 2001. “It was a wonderful time: I would spend four months in Albania, three months in Serbia, wherever the OSCE needed me,” she says. Then al-Qaida attacked Washington and New York in September 2001. NEXT PAGE

Cynthia Squillace, Wendy Kohli and other peace activists point bloodied fingers at Secretary of State Alexander Haig during his Carrier Dome address at Syracuse University commencement in May 1981.

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Deb Alexander (center) describes the photo: “Two very strong women that I worked with over a year in Zabul province. Zabul is considered the badlands of Afghanistan. The place where gun and opium runners, warlords, and Taliban cross paths and hide out. It’s where I survived my worst attack. These two women were on the provincial council, one was a midwife, and both were from a nomad tribe called the Kucchi.”

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MUSKETEER “My stuff hadn’t even arrived from Belgrade when 9/11 happened,” she says. “Operation Enduring Freedom began in October, and I knew a week later that I was going to Afghanistan.” When she arrived in Kabul in early 2002, Alexander harbored no illusions that the war would be quick. “If you asked on Sept. 12 what it would take to build a new Afghanistan, we knew it was going to be a bigger mission that what we talked about, but we didn’t want to scare off the public with talk of the costs in the billions,” she says. “Our objectives were to dismantle al-Qaida, but even in those early days it was about supporting self-government and reconstruction. Once you go down that road and talk about stability and reconstruction, you’re not just talking military operations, you’re talking about political change and institution building. I don’t think there was a full appreciation of the money or the effort that would take.” No one keeps statistics on things like this, but it is quite likely that Alexander has spent more time in the Afghan theater

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than any other U.S. civilian. Over the course of nine years, she held positions with the U.S. Agency for International Development and the State Department. Her focus was on building local democratic institutions in the midst of a war, battling the Taliban on the one side and the notoriously short attention span of the U.S. public on the other. That eventually led her to work as a contractor training the Army brigade in Louisiana.

expat hangout she knew well. One of the dead in that attack — Luis Maria Duarte, of Paraguay — had been a colleague and

No one keeps statistics on things like this, but it is quite likely that Alexander has spent more time in the Afghan theater than any other U.S. civilian.

VIOLENCE THWARTS RETURN

Just days after the night-time skydive, the Taliban crushed her plans to return to Kabul when they attacked the headquarters of the Afghan Election Commission for the second time in a week. Alexander spent many days in that building during nearly nine years in Afghanistan. Until the attack on March 29, she was determined to be in Afghanistan for the voting, in spite of an earlier assault on election observers at the Serena Hotel, a Kabul

roommate during an earlier election monitoring effort. A few days after the Serena attack, six Afghan police officers were killed by suicide bombers as campaigning leading to the voting on April 5 wound down. She wanted badly to be in country while Afghans chose from among eight candidates to succeed Hamid Karzai, the term-limited president who has held office since 2001. A runoff between the two candidates who receive the most votes is scheduled for May 28. If all goes well, as she thinks it will, later this year Afghans will see a peaceful presidential transition.


Afghan police and a security vehicle outside Cure International Hospital, after three Americans were killed Thursday morning in Kabul, Afghanistan, April 24, 2014. The three were killed when an Afghan police officer, recently assigned to a unit guarding the facility, turned his gun on them at a security vestibule at the entrance of the building. (Diego Ibarra Sanchez/The New York Times)

Afghan police officer Malalia Kakar and U.S. anthropologist Paula Loyd in Kandahar province in 2003. Deb Alexander worked closely with both women as part of an outreach team to rural Afghan women. Kakar was executed by the Taliban in September 2008. Two months later Loyd was attacked while serving as an anthropologist assisting the U.S. Army. She died in January 2009. Alexander has lost 32 friends and colleagues to violence in Afghanistan. — Ed Griffin-Nolan

That would be a first, and if it happens, Deb Alexander could be forgiven for taking a share of the credit for making history. But she won’t. In her soft Kentucky drawl, she regularly lapses into telling stories of those Afghans and internationalists who worked by her side and didn’t live to see this moment. “I’ve been there for all four elections, the presidential elections in 2004, the parliamentary and provincial in 2005, the 2009 presidential elections, and 2009 provincial and parliamentary. In 2004 and 2005, I trained and organized the first Afghan observer group. That was one of the proudest things I ever did. These were young people who never saw an election before. I was the lead person for the U.S. embassy for elections, coordinating aid for the elections commission.” Even after her election monitoring trip was canceled, she sounded hopeful about Afghanistan’s future. “Contrary to some myths,” she says, “Afghans do understand democracy and electing their own representatives and their own president. This will be their fifth election. There will be complaints. There will be recounts. The average Afghan will have voted and the next day will go to work. My hope is that they will have a new president in six months, and Afghanistan won’t fall apart. They will have passed the test.” While some view reports of car bombs and terrorists with weariness or indifference, Alexander scours press stories for the names and faces of people, she knows. Her memories of those years including meeting secretaries of state, British prime ministers, Prince Charles of Great Britain, generals and commanders of various rank, but she remains most impressed by the Afghan women who were the focus of her work. “Most of my time was spent out in the provinces, in

the villages and the towns. I made a point of people understanding that I was a political officer or development specialist.” Serving as a civilian officer working for the U.S. government while the U.S. military occupied Afghanistan was sometimes a hard line to walk. While she did her best not to be mistaken for someone working in covert operations, “you say to someone that you work for DOD or DOS or AID, and it all sounds very similar, like CIA. I’m not sure the average Afghan cared who was paying my paycheck.” Alexander survived three roadside bombings without serious injury. She’s lost count of the number of times she has exited or entered a building under fire. She has escaped physical harm and has been spared the trauma of serious post-traumatic stress disorder, suffering only from some disorientation as she adjusts to U.S. consumer culture. “The worst part is the guilt,” she says. “I ask, ‘Why them and not me?’ How did I survive rocketings, three attacks? There is no rhyme or reason it seems, as to who lives or dies in war.”

THE THREE MUSKETEERS

Though she sounds remarkably upbeat, it is clear that the years there have taken their toll. By her count, 32 friends and colleagues have been killed in the war and terrorist campaign, including one whose body parts she helped recover from the front gate of a building after a suicide bombing. “One of the downsides to the work that I’ve done is that, sadly, you become desensitized to the loss of people that you love. That’s one of the reasons that I wanted to come home, so I could pinch myself and feel the pain of the loss.” NEXT PAGE

Alexander Honored Deb Alexander was honored by Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs with its Spirit of Public Service Award, given to “individuals whose leadership in public life epitomizes the highest ideals” of the Maxwell School. In accepting the award April 2 in Washington, D.C., Alexander acknowledged her Syracuse roots. Wherever she goes, Alexander takes Syracuse with her. “There’s not a day goes by — whether in Sierra Leone, Macedonia, Afghanistan — that I have not thought of the work in Syracuse and my education at Maxwell. It has carried me day in and day out.” “Syracuse,” she said, “is in my bones and blood.” — Ed Griffin-Nolan

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captured on the spot and cuffed. A military contractor assigned to guard Loyd, Don Ayala, executed Salam with a single gunshot to the head. Ayala was later sentenced to five years’ probation by a federal district court judge in New Orleans and fined $12,500. Loyd’s gruesome death, the execution of Abdul Salam and the judge’s leniency toward Ayala offer a glimpse into the cycle of violence that makes outsiders feel hopeless about U.S. efforts in Afghanistan. But Alexander, the sole surviving musketeer, doesn’t give up hope. “The idea that you can’t help bring democracy to Afghanistan,” she says bluntly, “that’s a bunch of crap.”

THE QUESTION

A voter prepares to fill out her ballot at a school in Kabul, Afghanistan, April 5, 2014. Voting hours for the country’s general election were extended nationwide due to longer-than-expected lines, and though widespread fears of the Taliban kept roughly one in eight polling centers closed, no heavy attacks had taken place. (Bryan Denton/The New York Times)

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MUSKETEER In autumn 2008, Alexander worked with Paula Loyd, a former U.S. Army sergeant, as part of the Kandahar provincial reconstruction team. Loyd had finished her tour of active duty with the Army and had returned to Afghanistan as an anthropologist, working at times with the U.S. Agency for International Development alongside Alexander. In 2008, Loyd was working as an anthropologist with BAE Systems PLC, a multinational corporation based in Great Britain, as part of what the army referred to as a human terrain team (HRT). Anthropologists like Loyd were embedded with the troops to help them understand the cultural, religious and other human aspects of the society in which they were fighting.

came to power and forced women like her to stop working outside the home. Now Kakar, the mother of six, was eager to reclaim the right of Afghan women to participate in law enforcement. She was exactly the type of strong woman that Alexander sought to support. The threesome became tight. They referred to themselves as the Three Musketeers. “We spent most of our time out meeting as many Afghans as possible, particularly women,” Alexander says. “We were an awesome threesome: Afghan and American, civilian and military, police assistance.” One day in September 2008, Kakar was gunned down while walking to her car to be driven to work. The assailants, presumably Taliban, sped away on motorcycles. Two months later, Loyd was doused with gasoline by a suspected Taliban, who then set her on fire. Loyd was airlifted stateside for treatment but died in January 2009. “Paula had an enormous heart and great talent,” says Alexander. “Everyone who knew her — men and women, children — were drawn to her gentleness and kindness.” Loyd’s assailant, Abdul Salam, was

“The idea that you can’t help bring democracy to Afghanistan,” she says bluntly, “that’s a bunch of crap.” Working in Kandahar brought Loyd and Alexander into contact with an Afghan woman police officer, Malalia Kakar. Kakar, the daughter and sister of police officers, was in her second stint serving with the Afghan police. Her earlier police career was cut short when the Taliban

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People often ask her if it was worth it. “After 9/11, the question was, ‘Did we dismantle al-Qaida and displace the Taliban, did we get bin Laden?’ Yes. I think about Paula Loyd, the lives lost, the billions invested. Was it worth it? I don’t have the answer to that. Maybe I can speak to that in 25 years, if I’m still alive.” But when she looks at a picture of a group of Afghan children in a village where she once worked, she asks, “How can you not care about their future?” She laughs when she talks about being scared — “Walking late at night in D.C. is more dangerous than Afghanistan, most of the time,” she insists — then turns around and heads right back into places most of us associate with danger. Alexander plans to travel to Ukraine in mid-May as a human rights monitor for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe “to keep an eye on what Russian troops are doing on the eastern border.” Military observers by OSCE have since been taken hostage in Ukraine, putting that trip in jeopardy. She has her bags packed and is waiting for updates. If the Ukraine trip falls through, she might slip in a visit to Syracuse friends, then return to Kentucky to care for her Mother and Hooch, a cat she smuggled home from Kabul. With a hint of wistfulness, she adds, “Eventually, I will come back and put in a garden.” SNT For more on Paula Loyd, go to www.progressive.org/yee0609.html


, , e e r r u u t t l l u u C tss,, C rt Ar A ! ! l l l l o o R R & & k ck oc Ro R

KALLET THEATRE

The abandoned bijou in Pulaski receives a major makeover that now books top-shelf bands such as The Outlaws, set to perform Tuesday, May 6.

PG. 26

STAGE

Teens confront their sexual urges during 19th-century Germany in the alt-rock musical Spring Awakening, SU Drama’s season finale.

PG. 29

MUSIC

Ben Mauro, Lionel Richie’s touring lead guitarist, takes a sentimental journey to Shifty’s when he performs new songs on Wednesday, May 7.

PG. 31

ART SHOW

Community Folk Art hosts works by three Korean ceramicists, plus an up-close look at Gail Hoffman’s pieces at the Schweinfurth. The annual Free Comic Book Day takes place all day on Saturday, May 3, at area funny-book shops such as the Comix Zone, Play the Game Read the Story, Cloud City and Larger Than Life. Gratis copies of Archie, Donald Duck, Guardians of the Galaxy and more will be available until they’re gone, so get there early. Photo by Michael Davis.

PG. 32

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BACK TO THE FUTURE Eric Lyons profiles the transformation of Pulaski’s longtime Kallet Theater, from downtown eyesore to a Salmon River knockout. Photos by Michael Davis

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COMING SOON Upcoming at the Kallet Theater, 4842 N. Jefferson St., Pulaski (call 2980007 for details):

MAY 6, 8 P.M.

The Outlaws will bring their Southern-rock specialties. Tickets are $45 and $55, with $100 for meetand-greet ducats.

MAY 23, 7:30 P.M. Apologetix, a Christian parody band from Pittsburgh. Tickets are $15 in advance, $20 at the door.

JUNE 27, 8 P.M.

321 Improv, a faith-based interactive comedy show for the family. Tickets are $24.

JULY 26, 8 P.M.

Mark Cohn, the Grammy Awardwinning singer and songwriter. Tickets are $48, $68 and $88.

A 2010 photo shows the theater in a state of disrepair. Photo by Michael Davis

M

ake a right onto Jefferson Street in downtown Pulaski and the first thing that will catch your eye is the giant red-and-white marquee for the newly renovated Kallet Theater and Conference Center. The illuminated blinking “K,” bright lights and black-and-white tile will transport you back in time. The century-old venue was literally falling apart until Vince and Vinny Lobdell purchased what was left of the building for $65,000 in 2011. The Lobdells, the father-and-son owners of HealthWay, an air filtration systems manufacturer, originally looked at the space as a center to train employees and expand their Pulaski corporate offices. But after sensing the commercial potential of the space, the duo decided it was best to restore the theater to its former glory. “The more and more I got involved in the process,” Vince Lobdell says, “I made the decision that the facility is something that would be a long-term benefit to the community.” The theater has been a foundation of the small village since the late 1800s, although it has experienced many ups and downs. It originally opened in 1883 as the Betts Opera House, where it hosted plays and small musical performances. In 1934 the theater — renamed the Temple — was destroyed by a fire. In 1935 entrepreneur and Oneida resident Myron

Kallet bought the site and rebuilt the bijou, renaming it the New Temple. In January 1939 the theater once again burned to the ground, yet Kallet quickly rebuilt the property and unveiled the 558-seat Kallet Theater six months later. The movie house lasted more than 40 years (in August 1981 the venue screened the Chuck Norris potboiler An Eye for an Eye and Steven Spielberg’s Raiders of the Lost Ark) until its closure in 1982. A sporadic succession of businesses occupied the space, including a yoga studio, hardware shop and auto parts store, yet for most of the next three decades it remained vacant. After nearly three years of work, 14 months of construction, battles with the State Historical Preservation Office, and receiving grants from state organizations, the Lobdells completely rehabbed the theater. They had to reconstruct the back wall, build the stage, and make improvements such as a full bar and VIP lounge, a dressing room for NEXT PAGE

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performers, and a deck that overlooks the world-famous Salmon River. Talk about waterfront property! “We wanted a flexible space that created a next-level experience for concertgoers,” Vinny Lobdell says. Since its grand reopening last November, the theater has hosted acts ranging from former Poison front man Bret Michaels to the Marshall Tucker Band and the Little River Band. On Tuesday, May 6, the Kallet hosts the Outlaws. Tickets are $45 and $55. The Lobdells plan to host large events such as concerts, comedy shows and theatrical plays at least six dates a month, with rentals available for private parties, corporate events and weddings. A video projector and 20-foot screen will be installed in the next couple of months. So far the response from the community has been positive. Norma Gregory, from the Pulaski Historical Society, hails the renovation. “When it originally closed down, we all felt very bad,” Gregory says. “It was part of all our lives from the time we were very little. It only cost 20 cents and was our Saturday-night treat.” While the theater has sold out several shows, the biggest payback for the Lobdells is the chance to restore a slice of local history. “This is the one thing we knew: If we brought it back to life, it would create that momentum, and become a cornerstone of the community,” Vinny Lobdell says. “We have a passion for helping people and giving back to the community. We look at this project as music with a mission.” SNT KALLET

Top to bottom: Brightly lit marquee of the renovated Kallet Theater and Conference Center; concession stand; bar and VIP lounge; deck overlooking the Salmon River. Top right: Vinny and Vince Lobdell, son and father owners of the theater. Photos by Michael Davis 04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com


TOPIC: STAGE

By Bill DeLapp

SU Drama’s 2014-2015 slate opens and closes with musicals: Harold Prince’s Parade (Oct. 10-19) and the naughty Sesame Street TAKE puppets riff Avenue Q (April 24-May 9), plus the co-production of Hairspray (Nov. 28-Jan. 4) with Syracuse Stage.

QUICK

Cast members of SU Drama’s Spring Awakening. Photo by Michael Davis.

YOUTH IN REVOLT

D

irector Michael Barakiva started the Syracuse Stage season last September with his stylishly entertaining revival of Blithe Spirit at the Archbold Theater. Now he closes the season at next door’s Storch Theater with the Syracuse University Drama Department’s rousing production of Spring Awakening, running through May 11.

REVIEW

Barakiva has even more style to burn in this impressive mounting, flanked by a passel of talented students who give the director everything they’ve got. And they have to, because this alt-rock musical about troublesome teen-age sexual awakenings in 19th-century Germany isn’t exactly a Sunday drive through wine country. The winner of eight Tony Awards in 2007, Spring Awakening is composer Duncan Sheik and lyricist Steven Sater’s adaptation of Frank Wedekind’s 1891 German play, which was so overstuffed with social taboos (think suicide and masturbation) that the show was often banned in Deutschland. The musical opens with the song “Mama Who Bore Me,” as young Wendla (played by Delphi Borich) --so virginal, so innocent-- asks her mother (Celia Madeoy) about the facts of life. But the flustered mom cops out about copulation in a scene that draws laughs from the audience (“You have to love a man with all your heart” is the maternal wisdom), yet will later lead to dramatic repercussions.

Wendla will inevitably embark on a relationship with Melchior (Brady Richards), a hunky atheist who is more hip to hayloft humping, although he is still an emotional babe in the woods. Early on, Melchior, sometimes nicknamed Melky, assures his buddy Moritz (Ethan Butler) that wet dreams are part of an adolescent’s coming of age, yet that’s just the tip of an unraveling subplot that also entails scholastic skullduggery and contemplations about ending it all. Moritz’s woes dovetail with the plight of sultry Ilse (Ana Marcu), his former childhood pal and now a village outcast who hangs with a bohemian enclave. Remarking about how one artist employed her body as a canvas for his paintbrush, Ilse has one of the show’s best lines: “That’s men: If they can’t stick you with one thing, they’ll stick you with another.” SU Drama’s students are in the early 20-something range, close enough in years to incarnate their slightly younger characters, as they rail against the social oppression of that time. Sure, they wear 19th-century togs (designed by costumers Maria Marrero and

Simon Brett), but audiences will quickly relate to their plot situations, especially when the cast members whip out microphones and launch into belt-em-out mode to express their characters’ swelling angst, notably in the rocking manifesto “Totally Fucked.” Delphi Borich manages to transcend the sometimes jaw-dropping naivete of her Wendla, making her always believable -- even when she asks Melchior to whip her with a switch, so that she can fathom the unbearable pain that her girlfriend experienced at the hands of her abusive father. Brady Richards stresses Melchior’s guileless nature in that scene, which paves the way for the first act’s climax as the couple consummate their passion, a complex, disturbing scene that director Barakiva stages with careful nuances. Yet Spring Awakening is more than just a show about loins in overdrive, even as it boasts perhaps the first mimed circle jerk in local theater history. Aside from the students acting their hearts out, adult players Joseph Whelan and Celia Madeoy flesh out a roster of supporting characters. Whelan’s roles are mostly variations of meanies, from abusive dads to stern headmasters, yet he manages to find some defining moment for each part. Madeoy shows her considerable range through a half-dozen bits, from Wendla’s mom to a monocle-wearing school leader to, most memorably, a piano teacher who heaves her décolletage toward a student. In one dazzling segue that emphasizes this musical’s in-your-face theatricality, Whelan and Madeoy play grieving parents at a funeral, then shift gears and costumes just seconds later to portray a pair of scholastic scoundrels. It seems unlikely that other theater groups in the area would be capable of properly casting this show with the age-required performers without it resembling the Bowery Boys meet Grease. So catch SU Drama’s smashing Spring Awakening while you can: It’s the hottest ticket in town. SNT

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TOPIC: STAGE

Ithaca’s Hangar Theatre bestowed community honors at its April meeting. CFCU Community Credit Union won the Philanthropic TAKE Angel Award; Sally McConnell-Ginet won the Agda Osborn Award for her volunteer efforts; John Simon won the Tom Niederkorn Award; and middle school student Imri Leshed won the Erin Aljoe Schlather Award.

QUICK

By James MacKillop

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Anne Fitzgerald, Robb Sharpe and Joleene DesRosiers Moody in Appleseed’s On Golden Pond. Photo by Sean Walter

SENIOR MOMENTS FROM APPLESEED

F

orget Henry Fonda. The 1981 film version of On Golden Pond was the much-loved Fonda’s last appearance, for which he won an Oscar. No matter how the dialogue made him sound crusty or abrasive, Fonda--Young Man Lincoln, heroic Juror 8 in Twelve Angry Men--was still Fonda, and we were prepared to love him.

REVIEW

Two years before the movie, however, playwright Ernest Thompson, a talented one-hit wonder, produced a prize-winning play in which bitter but ironic protagonist Norman Thayer Jr. shrinks from facing up to the emptiness he feels. As the show mounted by Appleseed Productions (running through May 11) demonstrates, Norman’s humor is often mean. He’s not giving much love and not seeking it, either. The movie tended toward sentiment, in part because it was a unique reconciliation vehicle for Papa Fonda and his daughter Jane. On stage, however, the semi-estranged daughter Chelsea (Joleene DesRosiers Moody) takes a smaller if still critical role. Here the more important relationship is between sourpuss Norman (Tom Minion) and his rescuing wife Ethel (Anne Fitzgerald). Emotion, when it appears, is nuanced, coded and understated. Although neither religion nor church are ever mentioned, the Thayers are Protestant-like characters in an A.R. Gurney comedy. Their deep feelings are rarely so vulgar as to be displayed prominently.

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Early on Ethel announces that this is the couple’s 46th summer at a rustic camp named Golden Pond (portentous symbolism) in Maine, to which Norman snorts, “And probably my last.” He’s nearing his 80th birthday and bridles at being called “middle-aged.” In a monologue, Norman proudly tells us he is a professor of English emeritus from the Ivy League University of Pennsylvania. Significantly, he never displays his erudition with quotes from Shakespeare or Frost, nor does he appear to be at work on an uncompleted monograph. Instead, he dawdles over time-passers like Parcheesi or Monopoly. No diversion is too trifling to allow Norman to avoid facing the fact that his memory is slipping. Then the mail arrives. Mailman Charlie Martin (Robb Sharpe) not only delivers letters but good-naturedly churns up memories. His high spirits make him oblivious to Norman’s parries and allow him to shrug off the hopelessness of his unrequited love for absent daughter Chelsea. Through Charlie we also learn that Chelsea is divorced, childless and some-

what estranged from her father, whose birthday she’s coming to celebrate. Chelsea brings with her a new beau, Bill Ray (Nat Dunn), who expects to sleep with her without benefit of wedding bells, as well as Bill’s smart-aleck, reluctant son Billy (Jared Dunn). Not a promising weekend. On the surface little seems to be happening. Thompson’s strength as a playwright is to pack payloads of emotion into casual conversation. When Chelsea, trying to make nice, says, “It just seems like we’ve been mad at each other for so long,” Norman interrupts with, “I don’t think we were mad; I just thought we didn’t like each other.” Young Billy may be both eager and snotty, but Norman will rebuff either. Billy: “So, I heard you turned 80 today.” Norman: “Is that what you heard?” Billy, “Yeah, man, that’s really old.” Norman: “You should meet my father.” Billy: “Is he still alive?” Norman: “No, but you should meet him.” Except that we are all mortals, and Norman senses his coming end, so we would have little reason to pin any emotion on him if it were not for Ethel’s steadfast love. She slaps Chelsea when the daughter insults him with the ironic defense, “He’s my son of a bitch.” As with his revival of Mary Chase’s Harvey last year, director C.J. Young revisits a once-popular work, dismissed as sentimental, and proves it to be acerbic and bracing. Tom Minion fashions a Norman who refuses to be ingratiating. Always deft at abrasion, Minion lets us see where Norman really is. As Ethel, Fitzgerald, often cast opposite Minion, puts resoluteness into support. Joleene DesRosiers Moody brings a stylish cool to Chelsea, with some of the manner of her former calling as a TV news reporter. Playing the mailman, Robb Sharpe’s heavy Down East accent could be useful in a Pepperidge Farm commercial. SNT


TOPIC: MUSIC

By Jessica Novak

Ben Mauro has worked, recorded, toured and performed with a long line of A-listers, including John Fogerty, Prince, TAKE Peter Frampton, Toni Braxton, Christina Aguilera and Britney Spears.

QUICK

Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images

BEN MAURO COMES HOME Ben Mauro’s life is one of buses, planes and soundchecks as he bounces around the globe with Lionel Richie and his touring band. Before he played in 38 countries around the world, however, Mauro grew up in Camillus and graduated from West Genesee High School. He’ll return home for a release party featuring his solo EP Take Your Time at Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave., on Wednesday, May 7, 9 p.m. “It’s emotional and exciting,” he says during a tour stop in Johannesburg, South Africa. “Shifty’s is the first place I ever got up on stage as a solo artist. It’s also a place where I met the people that would become my first band in Syracuse. “I still remember the feeling of being there: You put your name on the list and then it’s almost your turn and you’re so nervous, but then you’re up there and it’s so exciting,” he recalls. “You’re really up there playing. It’s going to be a very emotional thing stepping back on that stage, remembering what it was like the first days, the energy. Plus, all of my family and friends and people from school will be there. A lot of them have never seen me play my own music.” Mauro attended Onondaga Community College in 1987, then moved to New York City at age 24. A guitarist since he was 15, Mauro took whatever work he could get to build his chops. He eventually landed a house band gig at the legendary Greenwich Village venue Café Wha? “Everyone in the house band had to front the band and perform their style that they were best at,” he says. “It meant I had to learn my music right because not only did I have to sing and play my songs, but I was also backing up everyone else in their respective style and it was all very authentic. It could be anything: funk, Latin, Jewish music, reggae, classical. It was very challenging.” But after three years, Mauro started freelancing all over New York City, at

one point playing in 10 different bands spread throughout the boroughs. A member in one of those groups had sung backup for Lionel Richie, who was in a jam for a guitar player, so he mentioned Mauro’s name, as did several other musicians. “It was pretty cool and it was because I had been working my ass off in all of those bands,” Mauro says. “People knew who I was.” But that wasn’t quite enough to get him the audition. “They didn’t want me because I hadn’t played with anyone famous,” he says. “So I was going to be in Los Angeles with a band that opened for Peter Frampton. I called Lionel’s musical director and asked if I could come to his house. He was pretty surprised, but we met up and I told him about our gig with Peter. I got the job because I pursued what I wanted and was persistent.” Mauro moved to LA in 2002 and performed with Richie on and off, but not enough to make a living. American Idol was big at the time, however, and Mauro got a surprise call from Idol judge Randy Jackson. “He said he had talked to his friend Chuckii Booker because he needed a guitar player for the American Idol tour,” Mauro says. “Their guy couldn’t learn the songs in time. Chuckii gave him my info and I went for the audition. I picked up all the songs and they asked, ‘Can you start tomorrow?” Since then, Mauro has also spent quality time on his own craft, with the releases of his EP Happily Ever After in 2012 and this year’s Take Your Time. “When you learn a bunch of different styles, they just come out naturally,” he says of his own music. “I don’t sit down and try to write a certain way.” Mauro will be traveling with Richie’s stateside tour through August, yet he hopes to finish his full-length album in the fall and come back to Syracuse to support it. SNT

Advice from the Artist: “Work hard and say yes to everything. Be open to learning new styles. You want to be able to work: That’s the main goal of a music career. You want to be able to take any opportunity that comes along, so learn how to play everything. Be well-versed in a lot of styles. Even if you don’t like them in particular, know how to play them. If you want to work, you have to be able to perform the style.”

BY THE NUMBERS

38

Number of countries Mauro has performed in

40

Number of states Mauro has performed in

FIRST BIG SHOW

“With Lionel Richie in Dubai. It was at some big racetrack. It was crazy. I remember thinking how weird it was to travel that far for a show. It was a little scary, but a lot of fun.”

JUST THE FACTS

Ben Mauro will perform with Phoenix 11, Wednesday, May 7, 9 p.m. atShifty’s Bar & Grill, 1401 Burnet Ave. Admission is free. For information, call 474-0048 (Shifty’s) or visit benmauro.com

Meet Phoenix 11 For the Shifty’s show Ben Mauro will perform with Phoenix 11, a once-local, now Nashville-based group composed of Max McKee, Greg “Goose” LaPoint and Joe Grosvent. “It’s another really cool story of how things just come together,” Mauro says. “Goose was the merch guy for John Fogerty, so we were friends then. We hadn’t seen each other in a long time and I was home last Christmas and ran into him. I was just starting to look for someone to work with on this EP and it all happened from there. They sent me some videos of Phoenix 11 and I thought they were great.” Poppy to the max, Ben Mauro’s EP Take Your Time is ultra-sweet and hook-oriented with Latin flavors sprinkled throughout. Tracks are full of tight arrangements with pure vocals to deliver his innocently charming lyrics. Mauro hasn’t just been playing with the best during his years on the road, he’s been learning from them, too. “I’m so excited about playing in my hometown, especially at Shifty’s,” he says. “It’s going to be a special night for me personally. I’m excited to be a part of the Syracuse scene and I know that coming from here really helped make me who I am. I’m proud of coming from Syracuse and being seen as an artist from here.” SNT

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TOPIC: ART

QUICK TAKE

Gail Hoffman’s “In the Bathroom” continues as part of the Made in New York exhibit at Auburn’s Schweinfurth Art Center, 205 Genesee St., through May 25. Call 255-1553 for details.

By Carl Mellor

Hoffman’s House

Photo by Michael Davis

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CULTURAL CONSIDERATIONS FROM KOREAN CERAMICISTS

T

he current exhibit at the Community Folk Art Center features work by three young artists, all of whom create ceramics and all of whom are of Korean heritage. After that, Three in Harmony completely spreads out, incorporating drastically different artworks. Jee Eun Lee’s “Temporal Reflection,” for example, portrays a mountain, with peaks and ridges in fine detail. The large sculpture isn’t intended to merely evoke a landscape. It suggests that mountain is majestic, beyond time, beyond human events and thoughts. In addition, the mountain serves as a tie-in to the realm of nature on our planet. Eunjung Shin Vargas, meanwhile, has created ceramic figures and installations reflecting on her experience as the mother of a 2-year-old child. Her daughter lives in the United States and is being raised by a mother of Korean heritage and a father whose ancestors come from Mexico. The sculptor, in various artworks, explores her child’s potential exposure to three cultures. There are nine figures on a pedestal, including a rockabilly musician and an Asian elder. Other figures depict a kimomo doll, an El Tigre doll popular in Mexico, and a baby who wears a red, white and blue hat and sits on a bowl decorated with red and green stripes.

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Vargas doesn’t use her artworks to deliver facile conclusions. In fact, the pieces mostly raise questions and invite viewers to consider cultural implications. Veronica Juyoun Byun has created “Memoirs of Lady,” with its display of 30 pairs of porcein shoes, and other works utilizing repetition. There’s a series of small ceramic pieces, each of which suggests a flower that’s opened. This isn’t repetition for the sake of repetition. Rather, it’s a technique inviting viewers to slow down, to consider the artworks at length. Three in Harmony gathers work by three artists, all of whom who have recently taken part in graduate studies in ceramics at Syracuse University. The exhibition both documents their current artistic interests and hints at further developments down the road. The show runs through May 13 at the Community Folk Art Center, 805 E. Genesee St. Hours are Tuesdays through Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturdays, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information, call 442-2230. SNT

Saying that Gail Hoffman works small is an understatement. In her bronze sculptures, she places tiny objects and figures into a space no bigger than a dollhouse. This isn’t a short-term project: Hoffman has made roughly 50 sculptures integrating small environments and diverse narratives. In the Made in New York show, through May 25 at Auburn’s Schweinfurth Art Center, 205 Genesee St., her piece “In the Bathroom” received a first-place award. The sculpture combines a bathroom, set in a small space, and a tiny portal through which one can view brief video segments. The video footage doesn’t directly reference a bathroom scene. Instead it helps communicate a mood. Hoffman seems to view the bathroom as a place of temporary refuge, a location where it’s possible to escape from the world for just a few minutes. That’s one perspective on the sculpture. Hoffman’s pieces are subject to interpretation, as she combines a stripped-down space with a sophisticated approach to narrative. In another sculpture, a family watches television in a living room while a military helicopter hovers above the house. Here the artist is touching on news reports about the Vietnam War or other conflicts. She’s also posing fundamental questions: What do we let into our lives? What do we exclude? A third piece shows a couple in bed under a movie camera’s gaze. This artwork isn’t documenting the making of a porno film. Rather, it seems to focus on intimacy in the time of the Internet and reality TV programs. Hoffman works with a flexibility that allows her to explore various ideas. One sculpture portrays what was once a magnificent structure and courtyard in ancient times. In the middle of the space, two tiny figures confront each other, evoking the movie High Noon. There’s discussion of past and present, of what was long ago and what remains today. The artist has shown her work at local venues including the Everson Museum and Le Moyne College’s Wilson Art Gallery and in galleries beyond Central New York. In 2008, her sculpture, “Entropy,” won first prize in the Texas National. —Carl Mellor


TOPIC: FILM

By Mark Bialczak

“I don’t believe in antiperspirant. It’s really bad for you. I haven’t used it for almost 20 years” (or since she starred in The Mask TAKE with Jim Carrey in 1994), Cameron Diaz said recently. “Let it go and just trim your armpit hair, so it doesn’t hold onto the scent.”

QUICK

(Koichi Kamosh/Getty Images)

LESLIE MANN STARS IN SATISFYING TALE OF VENGENCE There’s a red-headed actress out there who can make all eyes in the place focus on her, even when she’s sharing scenes with people who are better-looking, in the traditional sense. Leslie Mann, meet the legend of Lucille Ball. With the cock of an eyebrow, a twitch of the cheek or the unorthodox lift of a leg — or both legs — Mann is the pivot on which the comedy The Other Woman turns. Mann, like the centerpiece of the classic comedy TV series I Love Lucy, The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour and The Lucy Show, probably would bowl you over with her good looks if you met her on the street. She is a movie star. She’s the wife of producer Judd Apatow. She’s piled up credits from The Cable Guy to The 40-Year-Old Virgin to This Is 40 and beyond. Using the formula that worked so well in the 1950s, 1960s and right up until her death in 1989 for Ball, Mann’s most memorable moments come from her Gumby-like physicality and impeccable sense of comedic timing. Writer Melissa Stack and director Nick Cassavetes surrounded Mann’s character, Kate King, with beautiful people and gave her a story that’s as interesting as it is unlikely. In the beginning, we meet Cameron Diaz’s character, Carly Whitten, on a date with Mark King, played with equal parts charm and smugness by Nicolaj Coster-Waldau. Whitten is suitably smitten, as she shares in a quite funny scene with her ultra-wise assistant Lydia, given cocky New York City law firm street cred by hip-hop star Nicki Minaj.

(arinahabich/istock)

I Don’t Want To Hear A Peep Out Of You

Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images

But one important afternoon, Mark backs out of his date to meet Carly’s dad, a confident dude played by Don Johnson. Dad tells Carly to go out to the ’burbs of Connecticut to fix Mark’s plumbing, so to speak. With plunger and heels, she meets the wife at the door. The chemistry between Mann and Diaz sizzles as they become odd friends and discuss two-timer Mark. Lo and behold, their tail on the cad leads to the discovery of another other woman, Amber, played with beach blond bombshell innocence by Sports Illustrated magazine swimsuit model Kate Upton. They become a trio set on making the man miserable. The mystery and hijinks ramp up as they discover that using Kate’s opportunity and access as the wife, Carly’s cunning as the attorney-mistress and Amber’s allure as the young, body can help them steer this cheater into quite an unenviable corner. A Sunday matinee audience at Destiny USA, which tilted toward the female gender, cheered and laughed as the lead women worked together to settle the score, and they obviously liked it when Kate’s smart and good-looking brother Phil, played by Chicago Fire star Taylor Kinney, found his way into their avenging circle. The ending made the crowd — men, too — satisfied that good things happened to good people. SNT Mark Bialczak is a writer in Syracuse. Contact him at markbialczak@ gmail.com, follow him on Twitter at @mbialczak and read his blog at markbialczak.com.

H. Lee White Museum Holds Movie Night: In honor of the 80th anniversary of Oswego West

Pierhead Lighthouse, the H. Lee White Maritime Museum and the Oswego Film Group will screen the movie Lightkeepers 6:30 p.m. Thursday, May 1, at the Beacon Hotel, 75 W. Bridge St., Oswego. Lightkeepers was filmed in 2009 at Race Point Lighthouse in Cape Cod, Mass., and stars Richard Dreyfuss, Blythe Danner and Bruce Dern. It is a romantic comedy set in 1912 about a lighthouse keeper who has sworn off women. Some of the artifacts used in the movie belonged to Oswego resident Ted Panayotoff. There are 50 tickets available; seating is on a first-come-first-serve basis. You must have a ticket to view the movie. Tickets can be picked up at the H. Lee White Marine Museum, and River’s End bookstore, 19 W. Bridge St.

BY THE NUMBERS

1

Number of hands possessed by Nikolaj Coster-Waldau in Game of Thrones (his character, Jaime Lannister, lost his right hand in season 3 of that HBO cult favorite). But the Danish actor has the use of both hands in The Other Woman.

21

Age that it’s awful to be, according to Cameron Diaz, 41, who plays the girlfriend in The Other Woman. “I love being in my 40s,” she told E! Online at the film’s L.A. premiere. Who wants to be 21 again? That was horrible!”

The powers that be are planning a Marshmallow Peeps movie. Over at Cinema Blend, they’re blaming this news on the success of The Lego Movie. They expect lots of ties to merchandising, which would result in the appearance of characters from Transformers and Jurassic Park. Deadspin reports that Adam Rifkin will write a story set the night before a diorama contest, “when a wayward Peep gets misplaced and must adventure through the fantasy lands of different dioramas before the contest’s judging begins.” Cinema Blend points out that marshmallow Peeps, originated in 1952 and finding the way to every other Easter basket on the block since, is a $2-billion-a-year operation. Still. What a blow to the imagination. Talk about taking the fun out of having little Joey and Jamal turning their Peeps into an art-class project. All the good diorama ideas about dinosaurs and autobots will be hijacked by the movie-makers. Now they’ll just have to eat every single Peep, and that can’t be good for anybody. SNT

And Will They Give Out Earplugs? MTV reports that Disney has signed on with Jon Turteltaub, the director of National Treasure, to turn the theme ride “It’s a Small World” into a movie. Says mtv.com: “Leaning on little nostalgia, the movie, like the famous song, may prove irresistible to moviegoers in every language.” SNT

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Gallery crawl

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 TAKe April: woven works from students of the Serendipity Saori Studio. Through May: Mixed Media Medley, works by the North Syracuse Art Guild. Reception May 15, 5-8 p.m.

QUICK

Send Gallery Listings and art to BDeLapp@syracusenewtimes.com

ArtRage Gallery. 505 Hawley Ave. Wed.-Fri. 2-7 p.m., Sat. noon-4 p.m. 218-5711. Through May 24: The Realities of Our Times, 14 large-scale works from contemporary realist painter Max Ginsburg. Auburn Unitarian Universalist Society.

607 N. Seward Ave., Auburn. Sun. noon-2 p.m. 253-9029. Through May: photography by Bob Brower. Reception Sun. May 4, noon.

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

Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 6731350. Through May: Student Art Exhibit. Reception Sat. May 3, 2-4 p.m.

Central Library. Galleries of Syracuse, 447 S.

Salina St. Mon., Thurs.-Sat. 9 a.m-5 p.m., Tues.Wed. 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m. 435-1900. Through April: musician-artist John O’Neil Heard’s works mix acrylics with recycled materials. Through May: acrylics by Deborah Walsh. Sat. May 3, 2 p.m.: Jazz on Demand with local musicians strutting their stuff.

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. Through May 13: Three in Harmony, a trio of artists display contemporary pieces inspired from the Korean ceramic tradition. 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. Through June 14: The Photography of J.R. Hughto, offbeat works from the filmmaker and photographer, in town this weekend for the Syracuse International Film Festival. 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. 474-6064. Through July 27: Video Vault: The 1970s Revisited, pioneering art videos from the museum’s collection; Rice is Life, Mary Giehl’s installation features sculptural bowls and maps to emphasize the world hunger dilemma. Through December: Enduring Gift, Chinese ceramics culled from the Cloud Wampler collection. Through May 31 and projected outside on the museum’s North facade: table of contents, video created by Ann Hamilton, co-presented by Urban Video Project and Light Work Gallery; Thurs.-Sun. 8-11 p.m. Fayetteville Free Library. 300 Orchard St.,

noon-5 p.m., and by appointment. 456-9540. Through May 24: Constructivism, 21 photographs by Robert Graham.

Gallery 54. 54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles.

Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. 685-5470. Through May: Wings Over Gallery 54, a show featuring flighty specimens in several mediums.

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Hazard Branch Library. 1620 W. Genesee St. Mon., Wed., Fri. & Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Tues. & Thurs. 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m. 484-1528. Through May: Nature, watercolors of people and animals by Anna Perun.

Onondaga Historical Association. 321 Montgomery St. Wed.-Fri. 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Sat. & Sun. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Donation requested. 4281864. Through June 15: Fashion After Five, cocktail dresses from the 1920s to 1990s; Culture of the Cocktail Hour, a look at Onondaga County’s speakeasies and cocktail lounges during the Prohibition era. Through Sept. 21: Ever a New Season, works by 19th-century photographer George Barnard.

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

443-4098. Through June 27: Learning to See, works by students from the El Punto Art Studio. Reception Sat. May 3, 1-3 p.m.

OPEN your eyes

Fayetteville. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 1-5 p.m. 637-6374. Through May: The Hobo in Me, photography by Steve Parker. Reception Sun. May 4, 1:30-4 p.m. Proceeds from photo sales benefit the library’s greenspace campaign.

Gallery 4040. 4040 New Court Ave. Fri.-Sun.

Paine Branch Library. 113 Nichols Ave. Mon. & Tues. 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m., Wed.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. 435-5442. Through April: watercolors from the Bradford Art Guild. Wed. May 7-June 30: In Full Bloom, floral paintings by Ute Oestreicher. Reception May 13, 5-7 p.m.

Imagine. 38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles.

Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-5:30 p.m. 685-6263. Through May: works by artist Christy Lemp. Reception Fri. May 2, 5-8 p.m.

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 May 30: 2014 Transmedia Photography annual show; Golden Dawn, pictures of Binghamton, N.Y.; Cleveland, Ohio; Flint, Mich.; and more by Dan Wetmore; New Geographics, Michael Buhler-Rose employs landscapes, portraits and still lifes to comment on political notions of Hindu and Indic aesthetics. Through Aug. 8: Legendary, Gerard H. Gaskin’s photographs of underground balls, where gays and transgenders fashionably flaunt themselves.

04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com

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 11: The Way Out, works from Masters of Fine Arts thesis candidates at Syracuse University; America’s Calling, 16 works of art by 15 foreign-born artists including Ben Shahn, Yasuo Kuniyoshi, and Josef Albers; Visions for Sale: Photographs of 19th Century Japan, 22 hand-colored albumen prints from the 19th century exploring the country’s people, land and environment that was quickly changing due to modernization; Ukiyo-e to Shin Hanga, more than 300 examples of Japanese woodcuts.

Whitney Applied Technology Center.

Onondaga Community College, 4941 Onondaga Road. Free. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-10 p.m., Sat. & Sun. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. 498-2787. Through May 18: Student Architecture and Interior Design Exhibition, OCC students showcase their works.


BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN

UPCOMING

7:30 p.m. May 13, Times Union Center, Albany 7:30 p.m. May 14, Hersheypark Stadium, Hershey, Pa. 7:30 p.m. May 17-18, Mohegan Sun Arena, Uncasville, Conn. You’re a Springsteen fan, or you’ve never seen him live

LORETTA LYNN

8 p.m. June 20, Turning Stone Self-taught guitarist and coal miner’s daughter

STYX AND FOREIGNER

7 p.m. June 23, Turning Stone A two-fer, twice nearby.

GEORGE THOROGOOD AND THE DESTROYERS

RINGO STARR

8 p.m. June 26, Turning Stone Blues covers and rock ‘n’ roll

8 p.m. June 25, Turning Stone The Beatle who reduced Pete Best to a trivia question

NEW YORK CITY BALLET

8 p.m. July 8, SPAC, Saratoga Springs Opening night: Balanchine’s Journey

MARTHA GRAHAM DANCE COMPANY

LIONEL RICHIE

8 p.m. June 12, SPAC, Saratoga Springs

7:30 p.m. July 25, SPAC, Saratoga Springs From the Commodores to Nichole’s dad

Appalachian Spring, The Rite of Spring

Facundo Gaisler Photo syracusenewtimes.com | 04.30.14 - 05.07.14

35


36

TICKETS ON SALE

NOW! U P CO M I N G CO N C E R T S

5/8: John Gorka and Mustard’s Retreat. Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St., Auburn. 253-6669.

5/8: Terrapin Flyer. Westcott Theater. thewestcotttheater.com. 5/8: Framing Hanley, Devour the Day, Starset, 3 Years Hollow. Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. 446-1934.

5/9: Get the Led Out (Led Zeppelin tribute). Turning Stone Resort and Casino Showroom, Verona. 361-SHOW.

5/9: The Tokens, The Chiffons, The Coasters, The Teenagers, Dan Elliott and the Monterays. Landmark Theatre, 362 S. Salina St. 475-7979.

5/9: Jimkata. Westcott Theater.

thewestcotttheater.com.

5/9: Kill Devil Hill, Crobot. Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. 446-1934.

5/10: Leo Crandall. Westcott Community Center, 826 Euclid Ave. 478-8634.

5/10: Jimmie Vaughan and the Tilt-A-Whirl Band. Westcott Theater. thewestcotttheater.com.

5/10: Joe Bonamassa. Landmark Theatre, 362 S. Salina St. 475-7979.

5/10: Symphoria. Palace Theatre, 2384 James St. 299-5598.

5/12: Alice in Chains. Landmark

Theatre, 362 S. Salina St. 475-7979.

5/14: Justin Hayward. Turning Stone Resort and Casino Showroom, Verona. 361-SHOW.

Journey w/ special guest

Cheap Trick

MUSIC LISTED IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER:

W E D N E S DAY 4/30 Civic Morning Musicals. Wed. April 30,

12:30-1:30 p.m. The Wednesday Recital Series featuring youthful classical musicians continues with Oberlin College student pianist Adrian Jewell performing Lizst’s Mephisto Waltz at the Everson Museum of Art’s Hosmer Auditorium, 401 Harrison St. Free. 254-7136.

Sound of the Incas. Wed. April 30, 7-9 p.m.

The New Inca Son ensemble offers pan flute and charango music plus traditional folk dancers in this benefit for the Daron Malik Jae Simpson Memorial Scholarship for Single Mothers at the Mohawk Valley Community College’s Schafer Theater, Information Technology Building, 1101 Sherman Drive, Utica. $10. 792-5400.

Dead Winter Carpenters. Wed. April 30, 8

Floodwood. Fri. 9 p.m. Utica’s own newgrassers in concert, plus Tumbleweed Highway at the Westcott Theater, 524 Westcott St. $20. Thewestcotttheater.com.

S AT U R DAY 5/3 Syracuse University Brass Ensemble and Holy Cross Academy Choir. Sat. 7-9 p.m. A special performance of classical, religious and Americana music takes place at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, 121 St. Joseph Place, Oneida. $10. 363-1669.

Djug Django. Sat. 8 p.m. The swing octet

inspired by gypsy guitarist Django Reinhardt 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.

Tom Paxton. Sat. 8 p.m. The eternal folk singer visits the Center for the Arts, 72 S. Main St., Homer. $30/adults, $25/seniors, $13/students, free/under age 18. (607) 749-4900.

Pigeons Playing Ping Pong. Sat. 9 p.m. Jam-

delight in his 25th anniversary tour, plus Mickey, Trigg, Miss Meina and Zero the Kamikaze at the Westcott Theater, 524 Westcott St. $20. Thewestcotttheater.com.

T H U R S DAY 5/1 Staind. Thurs. 8 p.m. The hard rockers begin a

two-night stint at the Turning Stone Resort and Casino Showroom, Thruway Exit 33, Verona. $50, $55, $60. 361-SHOW.

F R I DAY 5/ 2 95X Locals Only. Fri. 7 p.m. Bands include

DATE NIGHT  Jonathan Edwards. Fri. 8 p.m. Durable tenor brings his packed songbook to the Nelson Odeon, 4035 Nelson Road, Nelson. $28. 655-9193.

Theater. thewestcotttheater.com.

1-800-514-3849

Slick Rick. Wed. April 30, 8 p.m. Rapper

Bret Michaels. Wed. April 30, 8 p.m. Ex-Poison

5/15: Avenged Sevenfold. Onondaga 5/15: Kat Wright and the Indomitable Soul Band. Westcott

etix.com

lead singer and Donald Trump buddy rocks on at the Turning Stone Resort and Casino Showroom, Thruway Exit 33, Verona. $50, $55, $60. 361-SHOW.

p.m. Left Coast roots rockers visit the Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. $10-$12. 446-1934.

5/14: Devil You Know, Butcher Babies, Armed with Valor, Era.

County War Memorial. 435-8009.

BUY TICKETS @

WOW New York Flyers. Sat. 9 p.m. Local rock unit from the big hair era featuring Earl Hamilton, Chris Tso, Phil Dallesandro and Mike Marzullo (see photo on page 39) brings back the music memories at the former Poorhouse North site, preceded by Gary Haydu at the Stockyard Night Club, 500 Old Liverpool Road, Liverpool. $10. 451-BULL.

Amerikan Primitive, Justin Parker, House of Brian, Typewriter, Mouse House and Jeremiah’s Razor at the Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. $8. 446-1934.

Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. 446-1934.

NYS Fair Grandstand Thursday, Aug. 28th

Robben Ford. Fri. 8 p.m. Veteran blues rock

guitarist takes the stage at the Palace Theatre, 2384 James St. $30. 463-9240, upstateshows. com.

Rani Arbo and Daisy Mayhem. Fri. 8 p.m.

Enjoy seductive vocals, fab fiddling and more at May Memorial Unitarian Universalist Society, 3800 E. Genesee St. $18. folkus.org.

Staind. Fri. 8 p.m. The band wraps their

engagement at the Turning Stone Resort and Casino Showroom, Thruway Exit 33, Verona. $50, $55, $60. 361-SHOW.

04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com

ming Baltimore quartet in action, plus Strange Reflex at the Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. $10-$12. 446-1934.

S U N DAY 5/4 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.

Cayuga Vocal Ensemble. Sun. 4 p.m. “Spring

Writes: Poetry and Song,” featuring American choral music based on American poetry, will be presented at First Presbyterian Church, 315 N. Cayuga St., Ithaca. $15/advance, $17/door, $5/ students, free/ages 12 and under. cayuga-vocal. org. WOW Dave Mason’s Traffic Jam. Sun. 7:30 p.m. The veteran musician rocks, rolls and remembers regarding his classic band at the Smith Opera House, 82 Seneca St., Geneva. $28/advance, $35/door. 781-5483.

All Boy/All Girl. Sun. 8 p.m. Manhattan-based chamber ensemble septet offers an ethereal sonic experience, preceded by Ben Fiore at the Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. $8-$10. 446-1934.

T U E S DAY 5/6 WOW The Outlaws. Tues. 8 p.m. The longtime Southern rockers ride into the Kallet Theater, 4842 N. Jefferson St., Pulaski. $45, $55. 298-0007.

W E D N E S DAY 5/ 7 Civic Morning Musicals. Wed. May 7, 12:30-

1:30 p.m. The Wednesday Recital Series featuring youthful classical musicians continues with songs from the Broadway musical Working at the Everson Museum of Art’s Hosmer Auditorium, 401 Harrison St. Free. 254-7136.

C LU B D AT E S W E D N E S DAY 4/30 Frenay and Lenin. (Sheraton University Hotel, 801 University Ave.), 5-8 p.m. Jazz Appreciation Society of Syracuse (JASS) Jam Session. (Syracuse Suds Factory, 320 S. Clinton St.), 6-9 p.m.

Jess and the Beards. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W. Willow St.), 8 p.m.

Just Joe. (Jake’s Grub & Grog, 7 E. River Road, Brewerton), 6-9 p.m.

Los Blancos. (World of Beer, Destiny USA), 7-10 p.m.

Mick Fury. (Dolce Vita, 907 E. Genesee St.), 7:30 p.m.

Rick Pallatto and Matt Kerlin. (Eskapes Lounge, 6257 Route 31, Cicero), 7-9 p.m.

T H U R S DAY 5/1 Arty Lenin. (Old City Hall, 159 Water St., Oswego), 6-10 p.m.

Cosmic Wail. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W. Willow St.), 9-11 p.m.

El Kabong. (Limp Lizard Bar and Grill, Western Lights, 4628 Onondaga Blvd.), 7-11 p.m.

Freak Brothers. (Lew’s Sports Bar, 7356 Church St., North Syracuse), 8:30 p.m.

Jeffrey Pepper Rodgers Trio. (Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.), 8 p.m.

John Spillett Jazz Pop Duo. (TS Steakhouse, Turning Stone Tower, Verona), 6-10 p.m.

Mike Place. (Coleman’s Authentic Irish Pub, 100 S. Lowell Ave.), 9 p.m. Rick Pallatto and Matt Kerlin. (Café at 407, 407 Tulip St., Liverpool), 7-9 p.m.

Tiger. (LakeHouse Pub, 6 W. Genesee St., Skaneateles), 9 p.m.

TJ Sacco. (Knoxies Pub, 7088 Route 20, Pompey), 7-10 p.m.

F R I DAY 5/ 2 Backflash. (Frank Calameri Veterans Post, 46 Clark St., Auburn), 8 p.m.

Barking Loungers. (World of Beer, Destiny USA), 8-11 p.m.


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37


George Tortorelli presents: “SCARS

TO STARS”

Sat. May 17th

Dinner Buffet 6pm Show & Dance 7-11pm $15/person

SLUG FEST: Exciting films on the big screen of the world’s greatest boxers.

Louis, Marciano, Robinson, etc.! Plus local favorites De Johns, Basilio, Barone & more.

MUSIC & DANCING! Tommy Rozzano & The State Street Band,

Mickey Vendetti’s Good Time Banquet Hall • 526 Teall Ave

Tom Tortorelli, Daniella Rausa & Dancers!3.

Better Than Bowling. (Timber Tavern Bar and

Dirtroad Ruckus. (Jake’s Grub & Grog, 7 E.

Black Water. (DJs on the Boulevard, 3010 Erie

Frenay and Lenin. (bc Restaurant, 247 W. Fay-

Brian McArdell and Mark Westers. (Limp

Honky Tonk Hindooz. (O’Toole’s, 111

Grill, 7153 State Fair Blvd.), 9 p.m. Blvd. E., DeWitt), 8-11 p.m.

Lizard Bar and Grill, Western Lights, 4628 Onondaga Blvd.), 5:30-9:30 p.m.

Chad Bradshaw Blues. (Cafe at 407, 407 Tulip St., Liverpool), 7-9 p.m.

Coustic Pie. (Castaways, 916 County Route 37,

River Road, Brewerton), 9 p.m. ette St.), 8-11 p.m.

Rewired. (Bridge Street Tavern, 109 Bridge St.,

Jess and the Beards. (Ridge Tavern, 1281 Salt

The Dropouts. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W.

John Lerner. (Pasta’s on the Green, Foxfire

Tiger. (Coleman’s Authentic Irish Pub, 100 S.

Springs Road, Chittenango), 7-11 p.m.

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

Willow St.), 9:30 p.m. Lowell Ave.), 10 p.m.

TJ Sacco and the Urban Cowboys. (Stock-

yard Nightclub, 500 Old Liverpool Road, Liverpool), 9 p.m.

St., Solvay), 8 p.m.

Dave Hanlon’s Cookbook. (Shifty’s, 1401

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

Dave Hawthorn. (Arena’s Eis House, 144

Burnet Ave.), 9:30 p.m.

Dave Hawthorn and Tiger. (Lakeview Lanes, 723 W. Broadway, Fulton), 9 p.m.

Easy Ramblers. (Green Gate Inn, 2 Main St., Camillus), 7:30 p.m.

Electric Moonpies. (Buffalo’s, 2119 Downer St. Road, Baldwinsville), 9 p.m.

F5. (Dominick’s Sports Tavern, Route 51, Scriba), 10 p.m.

Last Call. (Buffalo’s, 2119 Downer St. Road,

Diana Jacobs Band. (Asil’s Pub, 220 Chapel

Black Water. (Bridge Street Tavern, 109 Bridge

Osbourne St., Auburn), 9 p.m.

Brewerton), 7-10:30 p.m.

Baldwinsville), 9 p.m.

Drive, Fairmount), 8:30 p.m.

NIGHT

(Western Ranch Motor Inn, 1255 State Fair Blvd.), 7:30-10:30 p.m. Solvay), 8 p.m.

Golf Course, 1 Village Blvd. N., Baldwinsville), 8-11 p.m.

Academy St., Mexico), 7-11 p.m.

S AT U R DAY 5/3

Midnight Mike Petroff’s Blues Band.

CLUB

Friday May 2 Doors 8PM

TJ SACCO Saturday May 3 Doors 7PM

5/10- 95X PRESENTS

THE MOTHER OF ALL PARTIES! FEATURING STRONGER THAN ALL ULTIMATE PANTERA TRIBUTE BAND

DOME - WITH JOE D & DXN FROM 95X & CIVIL SERVANTS

38

WITH JUST JOE

04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com

SATURDAY 5/2

BURGERS, BEERS & WINGS

FRIDAY 5/1

WEDNESDAY 4/30

500 old liverpool rd. Liverpool | 451.bull

JAKE’S

HENDRY

GRUB & GROG

7 e. river road brewerton • 668-3905

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JONATHAN EDWARDS Y FRI, MAY 2 @ 8PM LE VENT DU NORD

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SAT, MAY 17 @ 8PM

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

Fowls, I, Inclusive Or. (Dark Room, 19 E. Cayuga St., Oswego), 8 p.m.

Full Throttle. (Johnny Noles Bar and Grill, 16 Hopper St., Utica), 8:30 p.m.

Hendry. (Jake’s Grub & Grog, 7 E. River Road, Brewerton), 9 p.m.

Jeff Meloling. (Winds of Cols Spring Harbor, Hayes Road, Baldwinsville), 6-9 p.m.

Los Blancos. (Beginnings II, 6897 Manlius Center Road, East Syracuse), 9:30 p.m.

Master Thieves. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W. Willow St.), 10 p.m.

PEP (Proctor Entertainment Project).

(Thunder Road Bar and Grill, 234 E. Albany St., Oswego), 10 p.m.

The Bomb, Nine Ball. (12 North, 10125 Mulaney Road, Marcy), 9 p.m.

TJ Sacco and the Urban Cowboys. (Abott’s Village Tavern, 6 E. Main St., Marcellus), 9 p.m.

Tommy Connors. (White Water Pub, 110 S. Willow St., Liverpool), 9 p.m.

S U N DAY 5/4 Flyin’ Column. (Coleman’s Authentic Irish Pub, 100 S. Lowell Ave.), 4-7 p.m.

Frenay and Lenin. (Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.), 7-10 p.m.

Los Blancos. (Empire Brewing Company, 120 Walton St.), 12:30 p.m. Blues brunch.

Off the Reservation. (LakeHouse Pub, 6 W. Genesee St., Skaneateles), 6-9 p.m.

M O N DAY 5/5

Frenay and Lenin. (Sheraton University Hotel,

Big Ben. (Dinosaur-B-Que, 246 W. Willow St.), 8 p.m.

Ken Burkado. (Ironwood Restaurant, 145 E. Seneca St., Manlius), 5-8 p.m. Cinco De Mayo festival.

Stone River Band. (Volney Firehouse, 3002 State Route 3, Fulton), 6-9 p.m.

801 University Ave.), 5-8 p.m.

Los Blancos. (World of Beer, Destiny USA), 7-10 p.m.

Marcia Rutledge. (Dolce Vita, 907 E. Genesee St.), 7:30 p.m.

D J / K A R AO K E W E D N E S DAY 4/30

W E D N E S DAY 5/ 7 Ben Mauro. (Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.), 8 p.m. CD release party.

Count Blastula. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W. Willow St.), 9 p.m.

N E W Y O R K F LY E R S M AY 3 T H E S TO C K YA R D

Karaoke w/Mr Automatic. (Singers Karaoke Club, 1345 Milton Ave., Solvay), 9 p.m.

Latin Party. (Sophistication Jazz Café, 441 S. Salina St.), 7-10 p.m.

Open Mike w/Freak Brothers. (Lew’s Sports Bar, 7356 Church St., North Syracuse), 8 p.m.

Open Mike w/Sweet Lou. (JP’s Tavern, 109 Syracuse St., Baldwinsville), 6-9 p.m.

Open Mike w/Tom Barnes. (Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.), 9 p.m.

instruments/ equipments

T H U R S DAY 5/1 Karaoke w/DJ Chill. (Singers Karaoke Club, 1345 Milton Ave., Solvay), 9 p.m.

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

MUSIC BOX !!! Used Music Instruments Sale !!!

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THURSDAY - OUR FRIENDS BAND FRIDAY - WILD ADRIATIC SATURDAY - SPRING STREET BAND TUESDAY - OPEN MIC W/ JESS NOVAK & CHUCK DORGAN syracusenewtimes.com | 04.30.14 - 05.07.14

39


S TAG E

DATE NIGHT  Dirty Rotten Scoundrels. Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 3 p.m.; closes May 10. Musical version of the 1988 movie about lotharios attempting to win over a wealthy woman, mounted by the Baldwinsville Theatre Guild at the First Presbyterian Church Education Center, 64 Oswego St., Baldwinsville. $22/adults (advance), $25/ door, $20/seniors (Sun. only). 877-8465.

Laughter on the 23rd Floor. Thurs.-

Sat. 8 p.m.; closes Sat. May 3. The Central New York Playhouse troupe presents Neil Simon’s memoir about his salad days as a sketch-comedy writer for 1950s television at the company’s Shoppingtown Mall venue, 3649 Erie Blvd. E. $34.95/6:30 p.m. dinner theater Sat.; $20/show only Fri.; $15/show only Thurs. 885-8960.

Mandy Patinkin and Patti LuPone.

Tues. & Wed. May 7, 7:30 p.m.; closes May 8. Famous Artists presents an evening with the Broadway stars at the Mulroy Civic Center’s Crouse-Hinds Concert Theater, 411 Montgomery St. $30, $45, $60. 475-7979.

Metamorphoses. Thurs.-Sat. & Wed. May

7, 8 p.m.; closes May 17. Greek mythology comes to life in this production at the Redhouse Arts Center, 201 S. West St. $30. 3622785, 425-0405. WOW

Michele Lee: Lights, Broadway, Action. Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m.

Auburn Public Theater presents the musical star in concert, with America’s Most Wanted’s John Walsh as host and Loren Barrigar and Mark Mazengarb as openers in this benefit for the Thommie Walsh Scholarship Fund at Cayuga Community College’s Irene Bisgrove Theater, 197 Franklin St., Auburn. $50. 2536669.

My Dead Lady. Thurs. 6:45 p.m. Suspicious characters spoof the George Bernard Shaw musical in this interactive dinner-theater comedy whodunit; performed by Acme Mystery Company. Spaghetti Warehouse, 689 N. Clinton St. $27.95/plus tax and gratuity. 475-1807.

On Golden Pond. Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2

p.m.; closes May 11. Gentle comedy-drama about senior citizens overcoming the generation gap continues the Appleseed Productions season at the Atonement Lutheran Church, 116 W. Glen Ave. $18/adults; $15/ students and seniors. 492-9766.

Open Mike w/Sweet Lou. (JP’s Tavern, 109 Romeo and Juliet. Sun. 1:30 p.m.; closes

May 11. Theater Incognita presents Shakespeare’s romantic drama at the Hangar Theatre, 810 Taughannock Blvd., Ithaca. $14-$20. (607) 273-8588.

Seminar. Wed. April 30 & Thurs. 7:30 p.m.,

Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 4 p.m., Wed. May 7, 7:30 p.m.; closes May 18. Regional premiere of Theresa Rebeck’s comedy-drama about a quartet of budding authors and their classroom teacher continues the season at the Kitchen Theatre Company, 417 W. State St., Ithaca. $15-$37. (607) 273-4497. WOW Spring Awakening. Wed. April 30-Fri. 8 p.m., Sat. 2 & 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m., Wed. May 7, 8 p.m.; closes May 10. Tony Award-winning rock musical about social repression in 19th-century Germany, performed by students of the Syracuse University Drama Department in the season finale at the Syracuse Stage complex, 820 E. Genesee St. $19/adults, $17/students and seniors. 443-3275.

F R I DAY 5/ 2 Happy Hour Karaoke w/Holly. (Singers Karaoke Club, 1345 Milton Ave., Solvay), 6-9 p.m.

Karaoke w/DJ Mars and DJ Voltage. (Singers Karaoke Club, 1345 Milton Ave., Solvay), 9 p.m.

Karaoke w/Harf and Friends. (Village Lanes,

The Media Unit. Central New York teens

ages 13-17 are sought for the award-winning teen performance and production troupe guided by jet-set auteur Walt Shepperd; roles include singers, actors, dancers, writers and technical crew. Auditions by appointment: 478-UNIT.

James Joyce 2014 Creative Writing Contest. First prize is $2,000, to be award-

ed during the 20th annual Bloomsday marathon reading of Ulysses on June 16 at Le Moyne College, 1415 Salt Springs Road. Contest is limited to Central New York students (either high school or college) with the six contest adjudicators taking level of schooling of contestants into consideration for the grand prize. Each applicant should electronically submit either a critical essay relating to Joyce: his life, his work, his influence or a short story to be preceded by a brief description of its pertinence to Joyce’s characters, settings or techniques. Entry deadline: May 27. For information, contact Basil Dillon-Malone, Chair, James Joyce Contest 2014, 4083 Sweet Gum, Liverpool; 6221132; dillon-malone.basil@arcomlabs.com.

CO M E DY

Comedy Showcase. Wed. April 30, 7:30 p.m.

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

Ben Roy. Thurs. 7:30 p.m., Fri. 7:30 & 9:45

ette St.), 10 p.m.

p.m., Sat. 7 & 9:45 p.m., Sun. 7:30 p.m. Bronxbred veteran of Def Comedy Jam visits Funny Bone Comedy Club, Destiny USA, off Hiawatha Boulevard. $10/Thurs. & Sun., $12/Fri., $15/Sat. 423-8669.

Open Mike. (Oswego Music Hall, 41 Lake St.,

Lake Ontario Comedy Playhouse. Fri. 8:30

201 E. Manlius St., East Syracuse), 9 p.m.

1980s Dance Night. (The Penny, 321 W. Fay-

Oswego), 7-10 p.m.

S AT U R DAY 5/3 Karaoke w/DJ Streets and DJ Denny. (Singers Karaoke Club, 1345 Milton Ave., Solvay), 9 p.m.

Karaoke w/DJ Corey. (Western Ranch Motor Inn, 1255 State Fair Blvd.), 7-11 p.m.

Karaoke w/Harf and Friends. (Village Lanes, AUDITIONS AND REHEARSALS

Syracuse St., Baldwinsville), 6-9 p.m.

201 E. Manlius St., East Syracuse), 9 p.m.

S U N DAY 5/4 Karaoke w/DJ Chill. (Singers Karaoke Club, 1345 Milton Ave., Solvay), 9 p.m.

M O N DAY 5/5 Karaoke w/DJ Smegie. (Singers Karaoke Club, 1345 Milton Ave., Solvay), 9 p.m.

T U E S DAY 5/6 Karaoke w/DJ Streets. (Singers Karaoke Club, 1345 Milton Ave., Solvay), 9 p.m.

W E D N E S DAY 5/ 7 Karaoke w/Mr Automatic. (Singers Karaoke Club, 1345 Milton Ave., Solvay), 9 p.m.

p.m. Mike Stankiewicz and Tom Anzalone bring the funny in a benefit for 4-H Camp Wabaso. 103 W. Main St., Sackets Harbor. $15. 646-2305.

Unforgettable Comedy Challenge. Wed.

May 7, 7:30 p.m. Fun fundraiser for the Alzheimers Association at Funny Bone Comedy Club, Destiny USA, off Hiawatha Boulevard. $10. 423-8669.

EXHIBITS

ART GALLERIES, LISTED ALPHABETICALLY: Ann Felton Multicultural Center and Gallery. Onondaga Community College, 4585

W. Seneca Turnpike. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. 498-2787. Through Thurs. May 1: Feats of Clay, ceramic works by area high school students.

ArtRage Gallery. 505 Hawley Ave. Wed.-Fri.

2-7 p.m., Sat. noon-4 p.m. 218-5711. Through May 24: The Realities of Our Times, 14 large-scale works from contemporary realist painter Max Ginsburg.

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.

Auburn Unitarian Universalist Society.

607 N. Seward Ave., Auburn. Sun. noon-2 p.m. 253-9029. Through May: photography by Bob Brower. Reception Sun. May 4, noon.

Someone you know would

love a massage this Mother’s Day

Our Town. Sat. 7 p.m. & Sun. 6:30 p.m.;

closes May 11. Theater Incognita presents the ghostly Thornton Wilder classic at the Hangar Theatre, 810 Taughannock Blvd., Ithaca. $14-$20. (607) 273-8588.

Presented By

The Princess and the Pea. Every Sat.

12:30 p.m.; through June 28. Interactive version of the children’s classic; performed by Magic Circle Children’s Theatre. Spaghetti Warehouse, 689 N. Clinton St. $5. 449-3823.

40

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DAVE MASON’S “Traffic Jam”

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

Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 6731350. Through May: Student Art Exhibit. Reception Sat. May 3, 2-4 p.m.

Barrett Art Gallery. Library Concourse, Utica College, Utica. Mon.-Fri. 1-5 p.m., Sat. 12-3 p.m. 792-3057. Through Fri. May 2: The Landscape Revisited: Painting and Photography, works by Jonathan Beer, Sandra Gottlieb and Martin Weinstein.

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

& 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: Picturing America, an initiative from the National Endowment for the Humanities that brings masterpieces of American art to libraries. Through May: photos of Webster Pond from members of the Anglers Association of Onondaga. Sat. May 3, 2 p.m.: free screening of the Disney flick Saving Mr. Banks. Sun. May 4, 1:30 p.m.: free screening of the Bruce Dern movie Nebraska.

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

6064. Through Wed. April 30: Down to Earth, American landscape photography and ceramics through the 19th through 21st centuries. Through July 27: Video Vault: The 1970s Revisited, pioneering art videos from the museum’s collection; Rice is Life, Mary Giehl’s installation features sculptural bowls and maps to emphasize the world hunger dilemma. Through December: Enduring Gift, Chinese ceramics culled from the Cloud Wampler collection. Through May 31 and projected outside on the museum’s North facade: table of contents, video created by Ann Hamilton, 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. Through May: The Hobo in Me, photography by Steve Parker. Reception Sun. May 4, 1:30-4 p.m. Proceeds from photo sales benefit the library’s greenspace campaign.

Gallery 4040. 4040 New Court Ave. Fri.-Sun. noon-5 p.m., and by appointment. 456-9540. Through May 24: Constructivism, 21 photographs by Robert Graham.

St., Auburn. Tues.-Sun. noon-5 p.m. 253-8051. Through Sun. May 4: From Gilded Stage to Silver Screen, a history of Auburn theaters. Ongoing: Both Sides of the Wall, a salute to Auburn Prison, plus A Child’s World.

Gallery 54. 54 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles.

Community Folk Art Center. 805 E. Genesee

Hazard Branch Library. 1620 W. Genesee

Dalton’s American Decorative Arts. 1931

H Lee White Marine Museum. West First

St. Tues.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 442-2230. Through May 13: Three in Harmony, a trio of artists display contemporary pieces inspired from the Korean ceramic tradition.

James St. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. 463-1568. Through June 14: The Photography of J.R. Hughto, offbeat works from the filmmaker and photographer, in town this weekend for the Syracuse International Film Festival.

Earlville Opera House Galleries. 20 E. Main

St., Earlville. Tues.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat. noon-3 p.m. 691-3550. Through May 10: the 10th annual TeensArt show, featuring works created by sixth to 12th graders from around Central New York; Conscious Landscapes, plein aire works by Lisa Iannello; Pennies, Bandaids and Safety Pins: The Objects We Keep Hidden, Patricia Coyle’s installation of personal objects.

Echo (formerly Craft Chemistry). 745 N.

Salina St. www.echomakes.com.424-1474. Through Thurs. May 1: In Da Window 4, a paper installation by Theresa Barry.

Edgewood Gallery. 216 Tecumseh Road.

Tues.-Fri. 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 445-8111. Through Fri. May 2: the annual High School Seniors Exhibit. Awards reception Wed. April 30, 6-7 p.m.

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. 474-

Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. 685-5470. Through May: Wings Over Gallery 54, a show featuring flighty specimens in several mediums. St. Mon., Wed., Fri. & Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Tues. & Thurs. 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m. 484-1528. Through May: Nature, watercolors of people and animals by Anna Perun.

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 May 30: 2014 Transmedia Photography annual show; Golden Dawn, pictures of Binghamton, N.Y.; Cleveland, Ohio; Flint, Mich.; and more by Dan Wetmore; New Geographics, Michael Buhler-Rose employs landscapes, portraits and still lifes to comment on political notions of Hindu and Indic aesthetics. Through Aug. 8: Legendary, Gerard H. Gaskin’s photographs of underground balls, where gays and transgenders fashionably flaunt themselves.

Longyear Museum of Anthropology.

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 June 1: Layered Meanings, Kuna Indian Mola textiles from Panama.

Manlius Public Library. 1 Arkie Albanese

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. Through May: Dr. Entomo’s Amazing Arthropods, Nikon Small World Exhibit.

Onondaga Free Library. 4840 W. Seneca

Turnpike. 492-1727. Tues. May 6: People for Animal Rights sponsor a free screening of Minds in the Water, about surfers trying to protect dolphins from being killed by fishermen.

Onondaga Historical Association. 321

Montgomery St. Wed.-Fri. 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Sat. & Sun. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Donation requested. 4281864. Through June 15: Fashion After Five, cocktail dresses from the 1920s to 1990s; Culture of the Cocktail Hour, a look at Onondaga County’s speakeasies and cocktail lounges during the Prohibition era. Through Sept. 21: Ever a New Season, works by 19th-century photographer George Barnard.

Paine Branch Library. 113 Nichols Ave. Mon.

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, 699-5076. Through May 24: Illumination, photography by Karen Kozicki.

& Tues. 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m., Wed.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. 435-5442. Through April: watercolors from the Bradford Art Guild. Wed. May 7-June 30: In Full Bloom, floral paintings by Ute Oestreicher. Reception May 13, 5-7 p.m.

Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute.

Schweinfurth Memorial Art Center. 205

310 Genesee St., Utica. Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sun. 1-5 p.m. 797-0000. Through Sun. May 4: American Royalty, photographs of the Kennedys and other celebrities by Mark Shaw; $10/adults, $5/students.

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 May 25: Made in New York, the annual exhibit from statewide artists.

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 8: Beyond Earth Art, a flashback to a 1969 exhibit featuring artists and the environment; Food Water Life, drawings, sculptures and more by Lucy and Jorge Orta.

Imagine. 38 E. Genesee St., Skaneateles.

Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-5:30 p.m. 685-6263. Through May: works by artist Christy Lemp. Reception Fri. May 2, 5-8 p.m.

Kirkland Art Center. 9½ East Park Row, off

Route 12B, Clinton. Tues.-Fri. 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. 853-8871. Through May 31: Luminous Journeys Through the Abstract, works by Linda Bigness, Marna Bell, Margie Hughto, Michael Sickler, John Loy, Diana Godfrey, John Jacopelle and Bradley Hudson.

La Casita Cultural Center. Lincoln Building, 109 Otisco St. Mon.-Fri. noon-6 p.m. 443-8743. Through Wed. April 30: Mist, works by Abisay Puentes. Wed. April 30, 6 p.m.: artist talk with Puentes.

M A N D Y PAT I N K I N A N D PAT T I LU P O N E M AY 7,8 MULROY CIVIC CENTER syracusenewtimes.com | 04.30.14 - 05.07.14

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S Y R A C U S E

Visit syracusenewtimes.com and click the WIN tab

Win 2 TickeTs

to the Downtown Living Tour Saturday, May 17 noon-6pm Deadline for entries is 5/6/2014

SUArt Galleries. Shaffer Art Building, Syra-

cuse 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 11: The Way Out, works from Masters of Fine Arts thesis candidates at Syracuse University; America’s Calling, 16 works of art by 15 foreign-born artists including Ben Shahn, Yasuo Kuniyoshi, and Josef Albers; Visions for Sale: Photographs of 19th Century Japan, 22 hand-colored albumen prints from the 19th century exploring the country’s people, land and environment that was quickly changing due to modernization; Ukiyo-e to Shin Hanga, more than 300 examples of Japanese woodcuts.

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

443-4098. Through June 27: Learning to See, works by students from the El Punto Art Studio. Reception Sat. May 3, 1-3 p.m.

Wellin Museum of Art. Hamilton College,

College Hill Road, Clinton. Tues.-Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 859-4396. Through July 27: In Context: The Portrait in Contemporary Photographic Practice, works of 13 conceptual artists that balance aesthetic and political goals to frame important social issues in a contemporary manner. Ongoing: Archive Hall: Art and Artifacts; Case Histories: The Hidden Meaning of Objects.

Whitney Applied Technology Center.

Onondaga Community College, 4941 Onondaga Road. Free. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-10 p.m., Sat. & Sun. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. 498-2787. Through May 18: Student Architecture and Interior Design Exhibition, OCC students showcase their works.

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 Fri. May 2: Le Moyne Annual Student Art Show.

LEARNING

Art Group. Every Wed. 10 a.m. Bring your own

supplies and learn, exchange art knowledge, share fine art with others and work your media. VFW, 105 Maxwell Ave., North Syracuse. Free. 699-3965.

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

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.

how to control garden pests at this workshop sponsored by Edible Gardening CNY. Petit Branch Library, 105 Victoria Place. Free. 4353636.

DSLR Video Documentary Workshop.

Every Tues. 6-9 p.m.; through May 20. Beginners and intermediate-level photographers can learn how to shoot video, capture sound, and edit footage with Adobe Premiere. Light Work, 316 Waverly Ave. $110. 443-1300.

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. 243-9333.

L I T E R AT I

Penny H. Baron. Wed. April 30, 7 p.m. The

therapist discusses her spoken-word inspirational CD Crossing the Bridge: A Creative and Symbolic Journey to Health at Barnes & Noble, 3454 Erie Blvd. E., DeWitt. Free. 449-2948.

Judy Barrett. Thurs. 7 p.m. The author speaks

and signs copies of her book Bridgeport (Images of America) at Barnes & Noble, 3454 Erie Blvd. E., DeWitt. Free. 449-2948.

Palace Place Poetry. Thurs. 7-8:30 p.m. Poet John Bellinger reads selections from his published works at DeWitt Community Library, 3649 Erie Blvd. E., DeWitt. Free. 479-8157.

Writers’ Roundtable. Every Mon. 6:30 p.m.

Long-standing writers’ group invites new and seasoned scribes to share work or just sit back and listen. Denny’s, 103 Elwood Davis Road (off Seventh North Street). Free. 247-9645.

Bill Smullen. Tues. 7 p.m. The writer signs copies of his book Ways and Means for Managing Up at Barnes & Noble, 3454 Erie Blvd. E., DeWitt. Free. 449-2948.

OUTINGS

Flower Hike. Sat. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Enjoy fresh

spring flowers during this event presented by the Onondaga chapter of the Adirondack Mountain Club. Participants should bring snacks and water. Baltimore Woods Nature Center, 4007 Bishop Hill Road, Marcellus. Free. 414-0431.

Weekend Wildflowers. Sat. 2-3 p.m. Care-

All skill levels are welcome: if you can write your name, you can draw. Westcott Community Center, 826 Euclid Ave. $8. 453-5565.

taker Aubrey Loewer leads a trek through handicap-accessible wildflower gardens at Baltimore Woods Nature Center, 4007 Bishop Hill Road, Marcellus. Free; donations appreciated. 673-1350.

Onondaga Lake Open House. Every Fri.

Howland Island Hike. Sun. 9 a.m.-3 p.m.

Open Figure Drawing. Every Wed. 7-10 p.m.

noon-4:30 p.m. Experience Onondaga Lake’s cleanup firsthand at Onondaga Lake Visitors Center, 280 Restoration Way, Geddes. Free. 552-9751.

Photography Workshop. Sat. 9 a.m.-noon.

Learn how to properly handle a digital camera, compose captivating shots, and conceive striking lighting schemes. Oneida Community Mansion House, 170 Kenwood Ave., Oneida. $20-$30. 363-0745.

Quilting Group. Every Sat. 10 a.m. The Sankofa Piecemakers Quilting Group meets at Beauchamp Branch Library, 2111 S. Salina St. Free. 443-1757.

Improv Class. Sat. noon-2 p.m.; through May

17. Syracuse Improv Collective instructor Ken Keech offers “The Harold” technique for budding improvisational talents at the Central New York Playhouse, Shoppingtown mall, 3649 Erie Blvd. E. $75. 885-8960.

04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com

Gardening Workshop. Mon. 6:30 p.m. Learn

Ken Kaufman of the Onondaga chapter of the Adirondack Mountain Club leads a hike through the Howland Island Wildlife Management Area, Howland Island Road, Conquest. Free. 6855990. FAMIILY FRIENDLY  Rosamond Gifford Zoo. Daily, 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. The zoo, located at 1 Conservation Place, features some pretty nifty animals, including penguins, tigers, birds, primates and the ever-popular elephants. $8/ adults, $5/seniors, $4/youth, free/under age 2. 435-8511.

Onondaga Lake Skatepark. Daily, 10 a.m.-8

p.m. The park is open for anyone older than age 5. Helmets must be worn, and waivers (available at the park) must be signed by a parent. Onondaga Lake Park, 107 Lake Drive, Liverpool. $3/session; $29/monthly pass; $99/season pass. 453-6712.


SPORTS

Syracuse Chiefs. Thurs. & Fri. 7 p.m., Sat. &

Sun. 2 p.m., Mon.-Wed. May 7, 7 p.m. Baseball season continues as the boys of summer battle the Toledo Mud Hens (Thurs.-Sun.), then take on the Durham Bulls (Mon.-Wed.) at NBT Bank Stadium, 1 Tex Simone Way. $5-$12/adults, $4-$10/children and seniors. 474-7833. DATE NIGHT  Vernon Downs Race Track. Fri. & Sat. 6:45 p.m.; closes Nov. 1. Harness racing continues during the 61st anniversary season. 4229 Stuhlman Road, Vernon. Free admission. 829-6800.

SPECIALS

DATE NIGHT  Syracuse Irish Pub Culture Event. Wed. April 30, 4 p.m. Begin the

evening at Coleman’s Pub, 100 S. Lowell Ave., where Terry O’Hara discusses Irish road bowling, then visit the Landmark Theatre, 362 S. Salina St., for a refresher course (6-7 p.m.) on local Irish history (sponsored by the Onondaga Historical Association), an Irish art exhibition (sponsored by the Heritage Museum Albany), and a 7 p.m. screening of the documentary The Irish Pub. Director Alex Fegan closes out the night with a question-answer session (8:45 p.m.) at Nibsy’s Pub, 201 Ulster St. $10. 475-7979.

Rain Barrel Art Gala and Raffle. Wed. April

30, 5:30-7:30 p.m. The Onondaga County Save the Rain event features voting contests for barrels decorated by local students at Rosamond Gifford Zoo, 1 Conservation Place. Free. 4431757, 422-4818. WOW

Taste of Success Celebrity Chef Challenge. Thurs. 5:30-8:30 p.m. Carla

filled with homemade crafts, baked goods and gift items at this event for members of the local LGBTQ community and their allies. Westcott Community Center, 826 Euclid Ave. Free admission. 478-8634.

Kentucky Derby Fundraiser. Sat. 5-9 p.m.

Positively Pink Packages’ 10th annual benefit features enjoy food, beverages, a derby hat contest and more for the local nonprofit dedicated to serving breast cancer patients. Bar, 400 S. Clinton St. $75. 278-0645.

Pawcasso. Sat. 6:30-9:30 p.m. Spay and Neuter Syracuse’s eighth annual art show and silent auction takes place at Maple Downs, 7220 E. Genesee St., Fayetteville. $45-$50. (866) 9563921.

Amberations Bike Ride and Open House.

Sun. 8 a.m. The annual benefit for the small farm that offers people opportunities to interact with nature offer a 17-mile bike loop around Otisco Lake. Start at 2223 Amber Road, Marietta. $20/single, $40/family. 567-2900. and a tour of a wind farm during this fundraiser at the Fenner Renewable Energy Education Center, 3151 Fenner Road E., Cazenovia. $10/ adults, $5/children under 14, $25/family. Thefreecenter.org.

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

Team Trivia. Every Mon. 7 p.m. Drop some NYS Thruway Exit 34

Gather at Louie’s Family Restaurant, 425 N. State St. Free. 471-0363.

Updowntowners Meeting. Tues. 5-7:30 p.m. Canastota VFW

Salt Springs Neighborhood Watch Group. Tues. 6 p.m. Members meet at Soule Branch Library, 101 Springfield Road. Free. 435-5320.

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

John Brod 480-9410 - cell jbrod@store-america.com

FREE  Northeast Alpaca Expo. Sat. 8 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. The event, certified by the Alpaca Owners and Breeders Association, features a showcase and various seminars. Poultry Building, New York State Fairgrounds, 581 State Fair Blvd. Free. (607) 637-5201.

Maple Syrup Time. Every Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m.;

every Sun. 1-4 p.m. Celebrate the arrival of spring with syrup-harvesting demonstrations at Beaver Lake Nature Center, 8477 E. Mud Lake Road, Baldwinsville. Free admission; $4/parking. 638-2519.

Day Includes:  Coffee and donuts pre-ride  2-3 hour scenic ride  BBQ Lunch after ride  Free Commemorative Pin  Raffles  Merchandise for Sale  Ride Photographer on route Patch Sewing by Jim Skinner/Liz’s Leather

p.m. Enjoy some adult beverages and recreate Vincent van Gogh’s “Sunflower” with the help of a trained artist. Stein’s, 5600 Newport Road, Camillus. $38. 481-1638.

For more info Contact:

All proceeds to support the Canastota Crusaders Against Cancer - Relay For Life Team and the American Cancer Society

those with the answers to general knowledge questions. Lamont Tavern, 108 Lamont Ave. Free. 487-9890.

Canastota Crusaders Against Cancer is sponsoring our first annual “Ride for Life”!!

Saturday, May 17th

$25 per Rider $10 per Passenger $8 BBQ Only

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

FREE  Arabian Horse Spring Show. Fri. & Sat. 8 a.m.-10 p.m.; Sun. 8 a.m.-6 p.m. The Empire State Arabian Horse Association event features dressage, sport horse, and under saddle competitions. Toyota Coliseum, New York State Fairgrounds, 581 State Fair Blvd. Free. 626-6790.

Trivia Night. Every Fri. 7 p.m. Nightly prizes to

Submit as many locations as you wish, each one counts as a separate entry! Winners will be chosen at random from all submissions selected as a new location. Locations must be businesses open to the public. Please send the business name and address (phone number if possible) to CScheuerman@syracusenewtimes.com

Spring Pie Festival. Sun. 2-5 p.m. Enjoy pies

factoids at Phoebe’s Restaurant, 900 E. Genesee St. Free. 475-5154.

Fri. 6-10 p.m. The North Syracuse Education Foundation’s benefit features live music, food and a silent auction at Borio’s Restaurant, 8891 McDonnell’s Parkway, Cicero. $25. 638-1916.

Send us the Perfect new times pickup locations in central new York. if your entry is chosen as one, you will be entered to Win PrizeS!

Queer Mart. Sat. 4:30-7:30 p.m. Peruse tables

Peg Barnett receives this year’s honor at St Lucy’s Church, 432 Gifford St. $10/person, $25/ family. 422-2244.

Education Foundation Spring Mixer.

Send your ideas and Win!

downtown Syracuse and Armory Square to sample food from its many award-winning restaurants. $39. (800) 979-3370.

Registration begins at 8:30am Ride will start promply at 10:00am at:

Dorothy Day Award Dinner. Thurs. 6 p.m.

Where do YoU Want to find the SYracUSe neW timeS?

Walking Food Tour. Sat. noon-3 p.m. Tour

Canastota VFW—Post 600 3835 Canal Rd. Canastota, NY 13032

Hall, celebrity chef and co-host of The Chew, emcees the culinary and networking event for local youth participating in the Hillside Work-Scholarship Connection program. SRC Arena and Events Center, Onondaga Community College, 4585 W. Seneca Turnpike. $50. 498-2622.

DATE NIGHT  Crawfish Festival. Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Enjoy gumbo, shrimp, music by the Fabulous Ripcords, Los Blancos and more at downtown’s Clinton Square. Free admission. Operationnortherncomfort.org.

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

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

Team Trivia. Every Tues. 8 p.m. Join in the fun at Coleman’s Authentic Irish Pub, 100 S. Lowell Ave. Free. (215) 760-8312.

Girls’ Night Out. Wed. May 7, 5-8 p.m. The

fundraising event featuring shopping, hors d’oeuvres and wine at the Erie Canal Museum, 318 Erie Blvd. E. $25/single, $90/group of four. 471-0593.

FILM

STARTS FRIDAY. FILMS, THEATERS AND TIMES SUBJECT TO CHANGE. CHECK SYRACUSENEW TIMES.COM FOR UPDATES. The Amazing Spider-Man 2. The webslinger’s reboot gets a second stanza, plus Jamie Foxx as the villain; presented in 3-D in some

Canastota Crusaders Against Cancer is sponsoring ourCrusaders first Canastota Against Cancer Canastota Crusaders Against Cancer annual “Ride for Life”!! is sponsoring our first annual “Ride for Life”!!

is sponsoring our first annual “Ride for Life”!!

Saturday, May 17th Saturday, May 17th Saturday, May 17th

$25 per Rider $10 per Passenger $8 BBQ Only $25 per Rider $10 per Passenger $8 BBQ Only Registration begins at 8:30am

Day Includes:

Dayat: Includes: Registration begins  Coffee and donuts pre-ride will8:30am start promply at 10:00am Rideat  and 2-3 hour scenicpre-ride ride donuts Ride will start promply at 10:00am at:  Coffee  BBQ Lunch after ride Canastota VFW—Post 600  2-3 hour scenic ride  Free Commemorative Pin 3835 Canal Rd.  BBQ Lunch after ride Canastota VFW—Post 600  Raffles Canastota, NY 13032  Merchandise for Sale  Free Commemorative Pin 3835 Canal Rd.  Ride Photographer on route  Raffles Canastota, NY 13032  Patch Sewing by  Merchandise for SaleLeather Jim Skinner/Liz’s  Ride Photographer on route NYS Thruway Exit 34 For more info  Patch Sewing by Contact: Jim Skinner/Liz’s Leather Canastota VFW John Brod

NYS Thruway Exit 34

480-9410 - cell F o r mjbrod@store-america.com ore info Contact:

Canastota VFW

All proceeds to support the

Canastota Crusaders Against John Brod Cancer - Relay For Life Team and the 480-9410American - cell Cancer Society jbrod@store-america.com

All proceeds to support the Canastota Crusaders Against Cancer - Relay For Life Team and the American Cancer Society syracusenewtimes.com | 04.30.14 - 05.07.14

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theaters. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/IMAX/3-D/Stadium). Daily: 12, 3:30, 7 & 10:30 p.m. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/RPX/Stadium). Daily: 11:30 a.m., 3, 6:30 & 10 p.m. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/3-D/Stadium). Screen 1: 1, 4:30 & 8 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 11:15 p.m. Screen 2: 2, 5:30 & 9 p.m. Fri,-Sun, matinee: 10:30 a.m. Screen 3 (Fri.-Sun.): 2:45 & 9:45 p.m. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Screen 1: 12:30, 4, 7:30 & 11 p.m. Screen 2: 1:30, 5 & 8:30 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 11:45 p.m. Screen 3 (Fri.-Sun.): 11 a.m., 2:30, 6 & 9:30 p.m. Screen 4 (Fri.-Sun.): 6:45 & 10:15 p.m. Finger Lakes Drive-In (Auburn; 252-3969). Fri. & Sat.: 8:15 p.m. Great Northern 10. (Digital presentation/3-D/ Stadium). Screen 1: 11:30 a.m., 3 & 6:30 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 10 p.m. Screen 2 (Fri.-Sun.): 2:30 & 9 p.m. Great Northern 10. (Digital presentation/ Stadium). Screen 1: 12, 3:30 & 7 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 10:30 p.m. Screen 2 (Fri.-Sun.): 1 & 7:30 p.m. Screen 3 (Fri.-Sun.): 6 & 9:30 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/3-D/Stadium). Screen 1: 12:50, 4:10, 7:30 & 10:20 p.m. Screen 2 (Fri.-Sun.): 11:50 a.m., 3:10, 6:30 & 9:50 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Screen 1: 12:20 & 4:40 p.m. Screen 2: 1:20, 4:40 & 8 p.m. Screen 3 (Fri.-Sun.): 11:20 a.m., 2:40, 6 & 9:20 p.m. Screen 4 (Fri.-Sun.): 3:40 & 10:20 p.m.

Bears. Disney documentary about an Alaskan

bear family. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 11:45 a.m., 2:05 & 4:25 p.m. Late shows Mon.-Thurs. (5-8): 6:45 & 9:15 p.m. Great Northern 10. (Digital presentation/ Stadium). Daily: 11:50 a.m., 2 & 4 p.m. Late show Mon.-Thurs. (5-8): 6 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12, 2:30, 4:45, 7:15 & 9:30 p.m.

Ben Hur. Regal Cinema’s Classic Film Series

rolls on with the 1959 biblical spectacle with Charlton Heston. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Sun.: 2 p.m. Wed. (5-7): 2 & 7 p.m.

Brick Mansions. Action yarn with Paul Walker in one of his final yarns Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 11:40 a.m., 2:20, 4:50, 7:50 & 10:25 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 12:10 a.m. Great Northern 10. (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:05, 2:25, 4:50 & 7:35 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 10:20 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 2:20, 5, 7:25 & 9:55 p.m. Fri.-Sun. matinee: 11:40 a.m.

Captain America: The Winter Soldier. Chris Evans returns as the thawed-out star-spangled shield-slinger in this action-packed sequel. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/ Stadium). Daily: 12:20, 3:35, 6:50 & 10:05 p.m. Finger Lakes Drive-In (Auburn; 252-3969). Fri. & Sat.: 10:50 p.m. Great Northern 10. (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:15, 3:40 & 6:50 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 10:10 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:10, 3:30, 6:50 & 10 p.m.

Divergent. Screen adaptation of the teen-

geared sci-fi literary series storms the multiplexes. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:25, 3:45, 7:05 & 10:20 p.m. Great Northern 10. (Digital presentation/ Stadium). Fri.-Sun.: 4:20 & 10:35 p.m. Mon.Thurs. (5-8): 1, 4:20 & 7:30 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Fri.-Sun.: 3:50 & 9:40 p.m. Mon.-Thurs. (5-8): 12:25, 3:50, 6:45 & 9:40 p.m.

Draft Day. Kevin Costner as a general manager

in trading-players mode during the NFL draft in this sports flick. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 11:25 a.m. & 2:15 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 2:10, 4:50, 7:35 & 10:15 p.m. Fri.-Sun. matinee: 11:30 a.m.

Frozen. Hans Christian Andersen’s The Snow

Queen provides the source material for Disney’s

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cartoon musical; presented in 3-D in some theaters. Midway Drive-In (Fulton; 343-0211; digital presentation/stereo). Fri.-Sun.: 8:25 p.m.

The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug.

Round two for director Peter Jackson’s fantasy trilogy. Midway Drive-In (Fulton; 343-0211; digital presentation/stereo). Fri.-Sun: 10:20 p.m.

The Grand Budapest Hotel. Director Wes

Anderson’s all-star art-house comedy features Ralph Fiennes, F. Murray Abraham and Adrien Brody. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 1:15, 4:15, 7:15 & 9:55 p.m. No 7:15 & 9:15 p.m. shows Sat. No 1:15 & 4:15 p.m. shows Sun. Manlius (Digital presentation/ stereo). Daily: 7:30 p.m. Sat. & Sun. matinee: 2 & 4:30 p.m.

A Haunted House 2. Second helping of

ghosts and guffaws from Marlon Wayans. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/ Stadium). Fri.-Sun.: 4:45 & 9:50 p.m. Mon.-Thurs. (5-8): 2:10, 4:45, 7:20 & 9:50 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 12:15 a.m.

Heaven is for Real. Greg Kinnear stars in

this fact-based faith drama about a child’s near-death experience. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:50, 3:50, 6:40 & 9:20 p.m. Great Northern 10. (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 11:45 a.m., 2:10, 4:35 & 7:20 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 9:50 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 1:30, 4, 6:40 & 9:15 p.m. Fri.-Sun. matinee: 11 a.m.

Mr. Peabody and Sherman. Stephen Colbert lends his voice to this big-screen cartoon version of the wry Jay Ward 1960s-era TV cartoon about time travel. Hollywood (Digital presentation/stereo). Daily: 6:30 p.m. Sat. & Sun. matinee: 11:40 a.m. & 1:55 p.m.

Noah. Russell Crowe gets ark anxiety in this

biblical spectacle. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Fri. & Sun.: 3:20 & 9:10 p.m. Mon.-Thurs. (5-8): 12:05, 3:20, 6:25 & 9:10 p.m.

Non-Stop. Liam Neeson as an air marshal in

pursuit of a killer aboard a frenzied flight. Hollywood (Digital presentation/stereo). Daily: 8:45 p.m. Sat. & Sun. matinee: 4:10 p.m.

Oculus. The latest supernatural spook show.

Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/ Stadium). Fri.-Sun.: 11:35 a.m., 2:10 & 7:20 p.m. Mon.-Thurs. (5-8): 2:30, 5:05, 7:45 & 10:25 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 12:20 a.m.

The Other Woman. Cameron Diaz leads

the ladies who are angry at a philanderer in this revenge comedy. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Screen 1: 1:10, 4:10, 7:10 & 10:10 p.m. Screen 2: 1:50, 4:40, 7:40 & 10:40 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 11:55 a.m. Great Northern 10. (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:30, 3:50 & 6:40 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 9:40 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/ Stadium). Daily: 1:50, 4:30, 7:20 & 10:10 p.m. Fri.Sun. matinee: 11:05 a.m.

The Quiet Ones. New spook show with the

Hammer Films pedigree. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 4:55, 7:45 & 10:35 p.m. Great Northern 10. (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 11:55 a.m., 2:30 & 6:25 p.m. No 2:30 p.m. show Fri.-Sun. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Fri.-Sun.: 12:40 & 6:35 p.m. Mon.-Thurs. (5-8): 12:40, 3:25, 6:35 & 9:25 p.m.

Rio 2. Jesse Eisenberg, Anne Hathaway and

Andy Garcia lend their voices to this colorful cartoon sequel. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 1:20, 4:05, 6:55 & 9:35 p.m. Fri.-Sun. matinee: 10:40 a.m. Great Northern 10. (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 11:40 a.m., 2:05, 4:30 & 7:10 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 9:35 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 1:40, 4:20, 7:10 &

04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com

Photo by Michael Davis

9:45 p.m. Fri.-Sun. matinee: 11:10 a.m.

Transcendence. Cerebral yarn involving

Johnny Depp as a terminally ill scientist and computer mind games. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Fri.-Sun.: 11:50 a.m. & 6:35 p.m. Mon.-Thurs. (5-8): 11:50 a.m., 2:45, 6:35 & 9:45 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Fri.-Sun.: 12:30 & 6:55 p.m. Mon.-Thurs. (5-8): 12:30, 3:45, 6:55 & 9:55 p.m.

ALICE COOPER M AY 5 PA L A C E T H E AT E R adults, $8/children under 11 and seniors. Film and exhibit hall: $14/adults, $12/children under 11 and seniors. 425-9068.

The Living Sea. Wed. April 30-Fri. 1 p.m., Sat.

1 & 6 p.m., Sun. & Wed. May 7, 1 p.m. Large-format underwater thrills 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.

Red Hook Justice. Wed. April 30, 6:30 p.m.

F I L M , OT H E R S

LISTED ALPHABETICALLY:

Elaine Stritch: Shoot Me. Wed. May 7, 5:30

p.m.; closes May 11. The “Indie Films” series continues with this profile of the 87-year-old Broadway star. Hamilton Theater, 7 Lebanon St., Hamilton. $7.75. 824-2724, 824-8210.

Fat, Sick and Nearly Dead. Fri. 1 & 8 p.m.,

Sat. 8 p.m. Documentary about obese Australian filmmaker Joe Cross and his battle of the bulge. Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St., Auburn. $5/advance, $6/door. 253-6669.

The Girl from Mexico. Mon. 7:30 p.m. Lupe

Velez in the title role of the funny flick that started the Mexican Spitfire series, which continues the Syracuse Cinephile Society’s spring season at the Spaghetti Warehouse, 680 N. Clinton St. $3.50. 475-1807.

Hubble. Wed. April 30-Fri. 11 a.m. & 3 p.m., Sat. 3 & 7 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m. & 3 p.m., Wed. May 7, 3 p.m. Large-format space odyssey. 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. FREE  Inequality for All. Thurs. 7 p.m. Economist Robert Reich explains how the rich get richer in this rabble-rousing documentary at the Palace Theatre, 2384 James St. Free. 463-9240.

Island of Lemurs: Madagascar. Wed. April

30-Fri. 12, 2 & 4 p.m., Sat. 12, 2, 4 & 8 p.m., Sun. 12, 2 & 4 p.m., Wed. May 7, 12, 2 & 4 p.m. Large-format yarn with the cute critters. Bristol IMAX at the MOST, 500 S. Franklin St. Film: $10/

Documentary about the Brooklyn neighborhood that sparked the community justice movement which emphasizes rehabilitation over punishment, followed by a discussion. Part of the “What If” film series, a showcase of national community efforts to improve quality of life. ArtRage Gallery, 505 Hawley Ave. Free. 218-5711. WOW Small Wonders. Sat. 7 p.m. The 1995 documentary about Rome native Roberta Guasperi’s work as a violin teacher for underprivileged children in East Harlem, followed by a chat with Guasperi. Presented in 35mm. Capitol Theater, 362 W. Dominick St., Rome. $6/adults, $2/children under age 12. 337-6453. DATE NIGHT  Super Duper Alice Cooper. Sat. 8 p.m. Fresh documentary about the evergreen shock rocker at the Palace Theatre, 2384 James St. $10-$15. upstateshows.com.

Super Speedway. Sat. 5 p.m. Paul Newman

narrates this large-format profile of auto racers 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.

True Romance. Mon. 7:30 p.m. The “Flashback Movie Mondays” series continues with this 1993 action drama with Christian Slater and Dennis Hopper. Palace Theatre, 2384 James St. $5. 436-4723. The Unknown Known. Wed. April 30-Sun.

5:30 p.m.; through May 4. The “Indie Films” series continues with this documentary from Errol Morris about Bush Cabinet member Donald “Rummy” Rumsfeld. Hamilton Theater, 7 Lebanon St., Hamilton. $7.75. 824-2724, 8248210.


SO C I A L STU D I E S

Living Space Linda Henley and Russ Andrews don’t just live downtown. They bought the building.

PG. 46

Weekend Warrior The snow is gone — right? for good? — and the race schedule is picking up. Here’s what you need to know for May.

PG. 48

Syracuse Seen People gathered April 23 at the Turkish Cultural Center of Syracuse to mark Turkish Heritage Day. Photo by Michael Davis

PG. 49

PARTING SHOT Donald Sterling’s racist comments are beyond outrageous. PG. 62

syracusenewtimes.com | 04.30.14 - 05.07.14

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living space

Living Space is looking for interesting, unique apartments, lofts and residences in downtown to feature. If you would take like to nominate a Living Space, please send an email with a low-res photo or two to: gwright@ syracusenewtimes.com.

quick

By Gloria Wright

A

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fter giving up their large Sedgwick home and renting an apartment downtown for three years, Linda Henley and Russ Andrews decided to make an even bigger change. In 2005, they bought 311 Montgomery St. The five-story building, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, was built in 1895 for the CNY Telephone and Telegraph Co. In 1906, the phone company moved and gave the building to the Onondaga Historical Association, which used it for storage and research until 2005. “It worked out really well for us,” Henley said. “We thought, ‘OK, we’ll make the commitment.’ We’ve had no regrets.” The couple live in the building, which also has three apartments, ranging from 1,300 to 1,800 square feet, and two floors of office space. Rent ranges from $1,250 to $1,800, and each apartment has its own furnace. They kept as many details of the original building as possible, while rewiring and replumbing to bring it up to date. A door into the couple’s apartment still has the original Collections sign from the telephone company’s day. Photos in the shared central stairway, which has cast-steel stairs with slate treads, show operators busy at work. “We kept all the woodwork. We didn’t want to just gut everything,’’ she said. “I wanted to save as much as we could.”

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Rather than scrap original features, some were moved. Oak columns were moved from the adjoining space and flank the king-size bed in the couple’s bedroom. Linoleum put in by the OHA protected the oak floors, which have been refinished. The 13- and 14-foot ceilings were retained. The original fireplaces were fitted with electric inserts. Keeping the gas fireplaces would have meant replumbing the building, “which would have cost a fortune,” Henley said. “We had to put in kitchens, but we tried to keep with the character of the building,” she said. Four years ago, the couple helped start the Cathedral Square Neighborhood Association, which includes both residents and business owners. “A lot of people don’t think of us as a neighborhood, but this is a wonderful neighborhood. It’s very quiet. There’s so much stuff going on downtown, and often you just wander into it. It’s just a lot of fun,” she said. “I recommend living downtown to everybody. Do like we did: Rent first and check it out,” she said. “If it doesn’t work out, go back to the ’burbs again.” SNT

(Top) The kitchen retains the 1895 building’s original woodwork. (Bottom) The oak columns on either side of the bed were moved from another part of the apartment. Photos by Gloria Wright


Street Style

Syracuse University students showcase their designs at the SU Senior Collection Fashion Show at Goldstein Auditorium. The annual TAKe show presents the work of seniors in the College of Visual and Performing Arts fashion design program.

QUICK

Photography By Gloria Wright

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weekend warrior

By Jessica Novak

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The Socci Stiletto Stampede is named for Katie Socci, who was murdered by her ex-boyfriend in 2011. Some funds raised take from the race go to Vera House, in an effort to “stomp out domestic violence, one stiletto at a time,” as it says on soccistiletto.org.

quick

RACES FEATURE HILLS, HEELS, bands and a PARADE

W

ith spring in the air, it’s time to bag the excuses and hit the pavement, or trail, running. And with so many events throughout Central New York, there’s no shortage of opportunities to get out and get healthy.

The best part about the many races in CNY is the range of abilities they accommodate. You don’t have to be a professional runner to participate in many of these very manageable courses. And, if you are the wildly competitive type, there are also enormous races with world-class runners available for you to go toe to toe with the best. Here are just a few to consider in May. Keep an eye out monthly for our highlighted races, so you can plan your competitive calendar. May 4: The Mountain Goat — This massively popular Syracuse-centric race hosted 3,600 runners in 2013 and more than 400 volunteers. With a 10-mile run, 3K run/walk and kids half-mile run/walk, there are options for every participant. Costs for entry range from $8 (for the kids run) to $65 for both the 10 mile and 3K. For more information, visit mountaingoatrun.com. May 10: Socci Stiletto Stampede — Now in its third year, the Socci Stiletto Stampede is both a race and a party. Started in memory of Katie M. Socci, the event features a 5K through Onondaga Lake Park as well as a 50-yard Stiletto

04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com

dash (believe it — both men and women can run like the wind in 6-inch heels). Hunter Scott and Josh Grosvent from Hunter and Josh’s The Show on WKRL-FM 100.9 (K-Rock) will emcee the very loud and proud event that has raised close to $50,000 for the Katie M. Socci Memorial Scholarship. Advance registration is $35; sameday registration is $40, and includes chip-timing, T-shirt, water, snacks, live music and a free first beer at the after party at White Water Pub. For more information, visit soccistiletto.org. May 11: Cortland Mother’s Day 5K — For those with athletic mothers, the gift of racing could be the perfect start to her day. This mellow route around Cortland is also a fundraiser for the Kim Ryan Leonard Memorial Scholarship Fund. For more information, visit cortlandymca.org. May 24: Kettle Lakes 15K — This race is not for the timid! This trek around Song Mountain’s Kettle Lakes in Tully is scenic, bringing racers up a 250-foot ascent, reaching a max elevation of 1,287 feet. There will also be a 1.5 mile walk/ run. Registration is $30. For more information, visit crmcraces.com

May 26: The 23rd annual Veterans Memorial Day 5K — While parades are traditional on Memorial Day, this race mixes athletics with tradition. This point-to-point race starts before the annual Camillus Memorial Day Parade and goes right past the procession and spectators, finishing at the historic Sim’s Store at the Erie Canal. For more information, visit townof camillus.com. May 31: Runapalooza — All around the country, rock ’n’ run half and full marathons take place, making the distances a little less painful as bands perform along the course. Fleet Feet took this concept to Onondaga Community College, where its annual 5K and 1-mile fun run/walk take place. Bands pop up along the route, entertaining runners sweating their way through the course. Registration is $30 through May 29 and $35 the day of. For more information, visit fleetfeetsyracuse.com/runapalooza. SNT Follow Jessica Novak on Facebook at www.facebook. com/JessRockNovak, on Twitter at twitter.com/ JessRock87 and on Instagram at @JessRock87.


syracuse seen

April 23 — Turkish Heritage Day in Syracuse — is celebrated in Turkey as National Sovereignty Day. The holiday marks TAKe the day in 1920 when the Turkish Grand National Assembly was inaugurated, the first step toward the creation of the Republic of Turkey.

QUICK

On April 23, members of the Turkish community gathered on the steps of Syracuse City Hall on East Washington Street for a Turkish flag raising ceremony in honor of Turkish Heritage Day. The event was organized by the Turkish Cultural Center of Syracuse. Photography by Michael Davis

syracusenewtimes.com | 04.30.14 - 05.07.14

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your wheels

QUICK TAKe

The Left Coast wins in the race for numbers of eco-conscious drivers, according to an online search survey by Cars.com.

Great dates in U.S. auto history:

1928

Rearview mirrors became standard equipment on U.S. production cars.

1923

Automatic windshield wipers were introduced as standard equipment.

1902

Don’t stop washing your car just yet, but…

1898

A

First speeding ticket was issued in the U.S.

First woman driver in the U.S. — Antique Automobile Club of America

March’s top 10 bestselling vehicles in U.S.

car you don’t have to wash? Even if it’s a white car you just drove through the mud? Or got splattered with motor oil, bird droppings, tree sap?

It’s only in the testing stages now, but someday, if nano-paint technology succeeds, washing your car may become a thing of the past. Nissan has announced it’s testing the self-cleaning paint on its new European Note model over the next several months. The super-hydrophobic (water-repellent) and oleophobic (grease-repellent) paint is being put through a variety of messy road conditions. Nissan is the first carmaker to test the technology, called Ultra-Ever Dry, on an actual car body. By creating a protective layer of air between the paint and environment, the paint effectively stops standing water and road spray from creating dirty marks on the car’s surface. So far, the coating, which is being marketed and sold by UltraTech Inter-

Ford F-series trucks Dodge Ram pickup Chevrolet Silverado Toyota Camry Nissan Altima Honda Accord Ford Fusion Toyota Corolla/Matrix Ford Escape Honda CR-V

50

— Cars.com

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national Inc., has responded well to common use cases including rain, spray, frost, sleet and standing water, say Nissan researchers in Switzerland. Would this mean the end of charity car washes? Commercial car washes? The guy with a hose and a sponge in his driveway every weekend? While there are currently no plans for the technology to be applied to the Note or other models as standard, Nissan says it will continue to consider the coating technology as a future “aftermarket option.” In other words, it’s a ways off from your local dealer’s showroom, and even then, it looks like something you’d have to pay extra for. How long it would take other carmakers to adopt self-cleaning paint is another question, as is the biggest concern for Syracuse-area drivers: How well can it fend off road salt? No word on that yet. SNT

Get ready for another little SUV In case you’re looking for a small SUV, you’ll have one more to choose from by early 2015. Chevrolet will start selling its Trax mini sport utility vehicle in the United States, though it’s a familiar vehicle elsewhere. It was sold in 140 other countries as of last year, according to Car and Driver magazine. The Trax was among the vehicles Chevy trumpeted at the just-concluded New York International Auto Show. The New York Times called it “an attractive little hauler” and noted it has 48.4 cubic feet of cargo area, with the rear seat folded. It will be equipped with a 1.4-liter turbocharged 4-cylinder engine, which is offered in the Chevy Sonic, and Chevy expects it to be rated at 138 horsepower, also like the Sonic. An all-wheel drive system will be available on the Trax, which will have a six-speed automatic transmission; a six-speed manual transmission apparently won’t be offered in the U.S., the Times said. No word yet on whether a diesel version will be available in the U.S. Pricing information and an on-sale date are not yet available. The Trax debuted as a concept car in 2007, and the current vehicle was shown at the 2012 Paris auto show and in 2013 at the Detroit auto show. SNT


FXChevy.com

315-298-5181 FXChevy.com

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2013 GMC SLT 2014 Ford F250.Acadia Super Crew, Package. All wheel 4x4, XLT Package, Loadeddrive. with Leather, hot seats, Quads, 3rd Toys, 6.2 Engine, Trailer Tow, seat, 16,000 miles.Imperial Bright only only 23,000 miles. white finish. Sharp tack! Blue Finish. Ready asfora Work $33,988. F.X. CAPARA Chevyor Pleasure! $34,988. F.X. Buick CAPRARAWWW.FXCHEVY.COM Chevy-Buick WWW. 1-800-333-0530. FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2013 Chevy Equinox. Impala “LS” ìLTî 2011 Chevy Loaded toys, power Package, with All Wheel Drive, sunroof, alloys, spoiler, only Loaded with Power Equipment, 21,000 Alloys, miles. only Glossy 29,000 summit miles. white finish. WonítWon’t last Last the Jet Black Finish. weekend! the Weekend!$15,988. $18,988. F.X. F.X. CAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW. CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. FXCHEVY.COM FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 1-800-333-0530. 2011 3500 Cross crew 2012 Dodge HondaRam Accord cab SLTPackage, package. Loaded, Duelly, Tour.4x4 EX-L Leather, Hot Seats, Sunroof, Cummins diesel, loaded, only only 8,000 miles. Sterling Grey 46,000 miles. Cyber gray finish. Finish. So, Nice!or $23,988. F.X. Ready 4 So work pleasure! CAPRARA F.X. Chevy-Buick WWW. $36,988. CAPARA ChevyFXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2013 BMW X3. X Drive, New Body Style, Seats, 2012 GMCLeather, Sierra Hot 2500hd. Panel Cab Roof, 4x4. only SLT 12,000 miles. Crew Package, Tuxedo hot Black Finish. Make leather, seats, navigation, Yourwheels, Neighbors 20î only 12,000Jealous! miles. $34,988. F.X. CAPRARA Bright white finish. OhChevyBaby! Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM $38,988. F.X. CAPARA Chevy1-800-333-0530. Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2010 Ford F250. Super Cab, 4x4, XLT Package, Loaded, 2012 Dodge Avenger. SE Power Stroke, only package. Loaded Diesel, with power 42,000 miles. Silver Ice equipment, automatic, Finish. only Ready for Work! $31,988. F.X. 33,000 miles. Glossy Atomic CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. orange finish. Picture perfect! FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. $12,988. F.X. CAPARA ChevyBuick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 2013 GMC Acadia. SLT 1-800-333-0530. Package, All Wheel Drive, Leather, Hot Seats, Quad 2013 Nissan Frontier. Crew Seating, only 28,000 miles. cab 4x4 SU package. Loaded Summit White Finish. Picture with power equipment only Perfect! $31,988. F.X. CAPRARA 11,000 miles glossy jet black Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. finish. Sharp as a tack! $24,988. COM 1-800-333-0530. F.X. CAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 1-800333-0530.

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2011 Mercedes Benz E350 4 2013 cab pkg, 4x4 matic Ford Sdn, F150 A.M.G.Ext Sport XLT Eco boot Full package. Glass, Roof, Only engine, 38,000 factory black White wheel, Finish, only miles, Bright 16,000 mile.Neighbors Jet blackJealous! finish, Make Your just phat! $30,988. F.X. CAPARA $29,998. F.X. CAPRARA ChevyChevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM COM 1-800-333-0530. 1-800-333-0530. 2014 Chevy Toyota2500 Tundra Double 2009 HD Reg Cab Cab,Full 4X4, SR5equip, Loaded, New 4x4 power alloys, 8í Body Style, Trailer Tow, box, 8í Fisher Plow, only 68,000 Only Jet 12,000 miles,Ready Victory miles. black finish. for Red or Finish, Picture Perfect! work pleasure! $21,988. F.X. $31,988. F.X. CAPRARA ChevyCAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW. Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 1-800-333-0530. 2013 Dodge Ram 2500 Crew 2013 4x4Ford F150 Package Super Cab Big Horn Crew, 4X4, Package, loaded withXLT toys, trailer Fully tow, Loaded, Alloys, Trailer Tow, only 22,000 miles. Bright white Only 22,000 miles, Glossy finish. Sharp as a tack! $30,988. Space Gray Finish, So Sharp! F.X. CAPARA Chevy-Buick $28,988. F.X. CAPRARA ChevyWWW.FXCHEVY.COM 1-800Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 333-0530. 1-800-333-0530. 2013 ToyotaXC90, Avalon 2013 Volvo AWD,ìXLEî “R” package. body Sunroof, design, Design, New Leather, leather, hot seats, only rd Row, Navigation, Dual Duo, 316,000 miles. Tuxedo miles, black Tuxedo finish. Only 17,000 Ride Luxury! $26,988. F.X. Black in Finish, Make Your CAPARA WWW. NeighborsChevy-Buick Jealous! $38,988. FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. F.X. CAPRARA ChevyBuick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 2013 Toyota Tacona Ext 1-800-333-0530. cab 4x4. Loaded with power equipment, only 6,000 2014 Buickauto Verano Conmiles YES Pkg, 6,000 Loaded miles, Bright venience with white Wonít lastLeaththe Power finish. Equipment, er, Only 16,000 miles, Silver weekend! $25,988. F.X. Ice Finish,Chevy-Buick Ride In Luxury! CAPARA WWW. $21,988. F.X. CAPRARA ChevyFXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 2013 Chevy 2500HD crew 1-800-333-0530. cab 4x4 Lt package loaded 2012 toys, BMW Duramax 528xi Sedan, All with Diesel, The 8í Toys, Hot miles. Seats, Rare bed,Leather, only 17,000 Sunroof, Navigation, Silver Ice finish. Ready forOnly any 34,000 miles. $42,988. Glossy Space application! F.X. Gray Finish, A Real Looker! CAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW. $34,988. F.X. CAPRARA ChevyFXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2013 Ford TranSit connect cargo van XLT package full 2013 Mercedes Benz C300 power equipment, dual doors, 4matic, Leather, Hot Seats, only 2,000 miles. Bright white Sunroof, Navigation Only finish. are 7000 1 The ownerpossibilities miles, Imperial endless! $21,488. CAPARA Blue Finish, Save F.X. Thousands! Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. $31,988. F.X. CAPRARA ChevyCOM Buick1-800-333-0530. WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2011 Mercedes Benz GLK350 A-matic, seating, 2005 Chevyleather, Silverado 1500 Ext loaded, pampered cab 4X4,only W/T39,000 pkg, V8 Engine, miles. Tuxedo black finish. Trailer Tow, Custom Wheels & Hospital clean! $27,988. F.X. Tires, Only 66,000 miles, Sky CAPARA Chevy-Buick Blue Finish, Sharp As AWWW. Tack! FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. $13,988. F.X. CAPRARA ChevyBuick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 2007 Mercury Gr. Marquis OS 1-800-333-0530. Package Loaded with power 2012 Jeep Liberty Sport:miles. 4X4, equipment, only 58,000 Loadedstone with Power Equipment, Glossy silver finish. Wonít Alloys, 30,000 last the Sunroof, weekend!Only $8,988. F.X. miles, Jet Black WWW. Finish, CAPARA Chevy-Buick Won’t Last 1-800-333-0530. The Weekend! FXCHEVY.COM $18.988. F.X. CAPRARA Chevy-F.X. Chevy2011 NissanCAPRARA Titan Ring Cab Buick 4x4 SE WWW.FXCHEVY.COM Package. Loaded with 1-800-333-0530. equipment, auto, alloys, tow, only 35,000 miles. Silver Ice 2014 priced Dodge Ram 1500 Finish to sell! $21,488. Crew Cab, 4X4, Laramie Pkg, F.X. CAPARA Chevy-Buick Leather, Sunroof, Navigation, WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 1-800Hemi, 2 Tone Paint, Only 333-0530. 6,000 miles, Blue over Silver Finish,Chevy Save 2012 1500 Thousands! Crew Cab $40,988. F.X. Leather, CAPRARA 4x4 ìLTZî Package. hot Chevy-F.X. CAPRARA seats, 20î wheels, only Chevy29,000 Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM miles. Peach white finish. Oh 1-800-333-0530. Baby! $31,988. F.X. CAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. COM 1-800-333-0530.

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2013 Buick Enclave CXL. All Hamptons. black super Wheel Drive,JetEvery Available sharp! F.X. Sunroof, CAPARA Option,$43,888. Leather, Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. DVD, Navigation, Chromes, COM Only 1-800-333-0530. 7,000 miles. Pearl White Finish. Find Another One! 2013 Chevrolet Suburban LT $39,988. F.X. CAPRARA Chevy4x4 with all the goodies. Heated Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM leather, power moon roof, dual 1-800-333-0530. rear end DVD Entertainment systems, navigation, 2013 Dodge Dart. only “SE” 22,000 Bright Bronze Package,miles. Full Power Equipment, metallic finish, sharp! 5spd, Only 6,000real1 Owner $39,988. F.X.Victory CAPARA Miles. Glossy RedChevyFinish. Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM Sharp As A Tack! $15,488. F.X. 1-800-333-0530. CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2013 Chevrolet Equinox LT and loaded with 2011 Infiniti FX35. All power Wheel options, only 11,000 Jet Drive, Leather, Hotmiles. Seats, black exterior with matching Sunroof, Navigation, Only 36,000 black of all miles. interior, Imperialbalance Blue Finish. new car warranties, absolutely Hospital Clean! $32,988. F.X. gorgeous! $22,988. WWW. F.X. CAPRARA Chevy-Buick CAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW. FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2006 Chevy Corvette Cpe. All 2013 Cadillac SRX All wheel The Toys, Leather, Chromes, drive with luxury package. 6spd, Glass Top, Only 3,000 Only miles. 1 owner and miles,17,000 Yes 3,000 miles. Lemans loaded with power options, 3rd Blue Finish. Find Another seat, navigation system, etc, One! $30,988. F.X. CAPRARA etc. Bright grayWWW.FXCHEVY. metallic paint, a Chevy-Buick true winner! $37,488. F.X. COMprize 1-800-333-0530. CAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW. 2012 Chevy Impala. LT FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. Package, Loaded With Power 2013 Buick Lacrosse, Equip, Alloys, Spoiler, Power absolutely Seat Only loaded, 26,000 loaded, miles. all wheel driveFinish. Company Bright White PricedCar, to leather, chrome wheels, just too Sell! $14,988. F.X. CAPRARA much to mention, only 8,000 Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. miles. Yes, 8,000 miles. Bright COM 1-800-333-0530. white gray leather, 6cylengine. 2012real Buick Enclave CXL. F.X. All The deal! $30,988. Wheel Drive, Leather, HotWWW. Seats, CAPARA Chevy-Buick Dual Sunroofs, Navigation, Only FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 22,000 miles. Pearl White Finish. 2014 Sharp AsJeep A Tack!Patriot $32,988. 4x4 F.X. Automatic with lots of power CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. options. Only 4,000 miles, yes FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 4,000 miles. Bright blue metallic 2013 Jaguar XF Sedan. Loaded finish. Buy nearly new and With thousands! Toys, Leather, Hot Seats, save $19,988. F.X. Sunroof, Chevy-Buick Only 13,000 WWW. miles. CAPARA Glossy Jet Black Finish. Picture FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. Perfect! $39,988. F.X. CAPRARA 2013 Jeep WWW.FXCHEVY. Gr Cherokee. Chevy-Buick Limited 4x4 and absolutely COM 1-800-333-0530. stuffed with power options. 2012 Lincoln MKZ Sedan. All Only 2,000 miles 1 owner, Wheel Drive, Leather,moonroof, Hot Seats, leather, pano Sunroof, Chromes, Only 12,000 navigation, absolutely miles. Jet Black Finish. Ride In gorgeous in gun metal gray Luxury!$36,988. $22,988. F.X. finish! F.X. CAPRARA CAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. WWW.FXCHEVY. Chevy-Buick COM 1-800-333-0530. 1-800-333-0530. COM 2011 Mercedes Benz S550. 2013 Dodge Durango Crew4 Matic, Stuffedheated With Toys, 4x4 Leather, front Over and $107,000 New,seat, Only 42,000 rear seats, 3rd power lift miles.wheels, Imperial Blue 18,000 Finish. gate, XM radio, Make Your Neighbors Jealous! miles. Jet black/black leather. $45,988. CAPRARA ChevySo Pretty!F.X. $29,988. F.X. CAPARA Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. 1-800-333-0530. COM 1-800-333-0530.2013 Ford Transit Connect Van Auto, 2012 Nissan Frontier. Crew air, stereo, only 2,000 miles. Yes, Cab, 4x4, “Pro 4X” Pcg, Loaded, 2,000 miles. Bright white finish. Tool Box, Only 2,600 miles. Was sitting in another dealers Space Gray Finish. Sharp As A inventory awd never sold. His Tack! $26,988. F.X. CAPRARA loss is your gain! $20,888. F.X. Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. CAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW. COM 1-800-333-0530. FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2011 Nissan Titan. King Cab, 2012 Cadillac Escalade ext 4x4, SV Package, Loaded, AWD EVERY option but running Buckets, Console Shift, Only water. Only 12,000 miles. Yes, 38,000 miles. Silver Ice Finish. 12,000 miles. 1 owner, jet A Real Looker! $23,988. F.X. black leather, power moon, CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. navigations, 22in wheels, a FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. true head turner! $49,988. F.X. CAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW. FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530.

2012 Chevy Silverado. 2011 Audi4x4, A6 Z71 Quattro 4 dr Ext Cab, Package, leather, Loaded, heated Trailer seats, Tow, pano 5.3L moon roof, navigations, only Engine, 18” Wheels, Only 35,000 18,000 miles. miles.1 owner, Taupe garage Gray kept cream puff. Jet black Finish. Showroom New! with black leather interior. $26,988. F.X. CAPRARA ChevyAbsolutely sharp as a tack! Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM $34,988. F.X. CAPARA Chevy1-800-333-0530. Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2014 Ford Explorer Limited. Loaded,Volvo Leather, Heated, 2013 XC90 Platinum Sunroof, leather, Chromes, Only edition, power pano 13,000 miles. Glossy Sterling moon roof, navigation, rear Gray entertainment, Finish. Everyone DVD rearRides! end $34,988. F.X. CAPRARAfor ChevyDVD Entertainment the Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM children, 3rd seat, bright white 1-800-333-0530. finish, cashmere leather, a true one of a kind! $34,988. F.X. 2011 BWM 535I Sedan. CAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW. Leather, Hot 1-800-333-0530. Seats, Auto FXCHEVY.COM Sunroof, Only 50,000 miles. GlossySubaru GrayLegacy Finish. Save 2013 Premium Thousands! $30,988. all wheel drive AND full F.X. of CAPRARA Chevy-Buick power options. Only WWW. 7,000 miles. Yes, 7,000 miles. Gun FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. metal gray metallic finish. Was 2007 Nissan Subaru dealer 350Z demo, Grand their Touring. loss is your“Convertible” gain! $21,888.Auto, F.X. Leather, Heated, Only 26,000 CAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW. miles. Glossy 1-800-333-0530. Imperial Blue FXCHEVY.COM Finish. A Hand Picked Cherry! 2011 Nissan Armada ChevySE 7 $20,988. F.X. CAPRARA passenger V8 4x4 leather, Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM moonroof, trailer tow, and full 1-800-333-0530. of goodies, only 32,000 miles. 1 owner. graySuburban. metallic finish. 2014 Gun Chevy LT Wonít $29,988. F.X. Package,last 4x4,atLeather, Heated, CAPARA WWW. DVD, 20” Chevy-Buick Wheels, Former GM FXCHEVY.COM Company Car,1-800-333-0530. Only 11,000 FX Caprara GalleryFamily 315miles. Silver Auto Ice Finish. 298-0015 FXChevy.com Fun! $47,988. F.X. CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. 2013 Toyota Tundra 4x4 4dr COM 1-800-333-0530. crew cab p/u V8, with plenty

of powerKia options. Only 14,000 2009 Borrego. “LX” miles. YES, 14,000 miles bright Package, 4x4,red Leather, Loaded, fire engine finish. Save rd 3 Seat, Chrome Wheels, Only thousands from new! $29,988. 27,000CAPARA 1 Owner Chevy-Buick miles. Gray F.X. Stone Finish. Hospital 1-800Clean! WWW.FXCHEVY.COM $16,988. F.X. CAPRARA 333-0530. Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. 2013 Toyota Highlander 4x4 COM 1-800-333-0530. loaded with power options, AWD, just traded on a Crew new 2011 GMC Sierra 2500. one. miles 1 owner, Cab, Only 4x4,19,000 Loaded With Toys, balance of all warranties, Duramax Diesel, Factory gun 20” metal finish! miles. Real Wheels, metallic Only 43,000 Pretty! $27,888. F.X. Ready CAPARA4 Bright White Finish. Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. Work Or Pleasure! $37,988. F.X. COM 1-800-333-0530. CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2013 VW Touareg Loaded with right stuffTown including 2014all the Chrysler & all wheel drive, leather, moon, Country. Touring Package, hot seats,Quads, only 17,000 1 Leather, Powermiles. Doors owner in bright blue metallic & Liftgate, Only 18,000 miles. finish! Wonít last at $30,988. Crystal Red Finish. Family F.X. CAPARA Chevy-Buick Fun! $25,988. F.X. CAPRARA WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 1-800Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. 333-0530. COM 1-800-333-0530. 2013 VW Beetle Coupe 2013 Fordand F150. Automatic full SuperCab, of power 4x4, XLT Package, “Eco Boost” goodies. Only 9,000 miles., Loaded, Black Wheels, Yes, 9,00020” miles. 1 owner all Only 16,000 miles. Jet Black new body style bright white finish a whistle. Finish. and Just clean Phat! as $30,988. F.X. $17,888. CAPARA ChevyCAPRARA F.X. Chevy-Buick WWW. Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 1-800-333-0530. 2013 Dodge Ram 1500. Red 2012 Toyota 4x4 Cab, 4x4, Yea It’sTacoma Got A Hemi! automatic, air Wheels, conditioner, Short Box, 20” Only stereo liner, White only 22,000 cd, miles.bedBright 12,000 miles. Yes, 12,000 miles. Finish. It’s Got Eyes! $24,988. F.X. 1 owner, jet black finish. New CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. truck trade! Super Sharp! FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. $20,988. F.X. CAPARA ChevyBuick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530.

2014 Chevy Silverado Wagon 2013 AudiCrew All road 2500 HD. Cab, 4x4, LT Quattro wheel drive leather, Package,AllLoaded, Trailer Tow, moonroof, and 6,000 absolutely 6.0L Engine, Only miles. loaded with Finish. options. Only4 Summit White Ready 14,000 miles 1 owner, jet black/ Work! $65,988. F.X. CAPRARA silver tutone finish. Go ahead Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. COM 1-800-333-0530. make her happy! $38,988. F.X. CAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW. 2001 Ford 1-800-333-0530. Mustang “GT”. FXCHEVY.COM Convertible, V8, Automatic, 1 Owner PA Car Traverse with 90,000 2013 Chevrolet All miles, But Looks it Just wheel drive ìLTZîLikepackage. Came Off the Showroom. Jet Leather, moonroof, DVD Black. Won’t Last!wheels, $7,998.NAV, F.X. entertainment, CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. every option but running FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. water. Only 17,000 miles. Was a2012 ìGMMini Company Club over Man Cooper. Carî $46,000 a great buy at Edition, AnMSRP Absolute Nearly New $33,988. ChevyCar With F.X. OnlyCAPARA 200 miles, Yes Buick 200 miles.WWW.FXCHEVY.COM Glossy Gray Metallic Finish. Buy Nearly New And 1-800-333-0530. Save Thousands! $22,888. F.X. 2010 Dodge Challenger R/T CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. Hemi coupe, 1-800-333-0530. leather, moon, FXCHEVY.COM automatic, only 10,000 miles. Premium Plus, 201010,000 Audi A6. YES miles. 1 owner, All Wheel Drive, Leather, garage kept, a true movieMoon star. roof, Navigation, Hot Seats,Donít Only In hugger orange finish! 27,000$26,988. miles 1 Owner. Glossy F.X. CAPARA wait! Silver Finish. Won’t Last! F.X. Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. COM 1-800-333-0530. FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2010 All Wheel wheel 2011 Lexus BMW RX350 328xi. All drive, leather, Power moonroof, Drive, Automatic, Moon navigation, only 31,000 miles. 1 And Stuffed With Power owner, new Lexus1 Options,garage Only kept, 29,000 miles trade! F.X. Owner.Looks Jet new! Black$30,888. Finish And CAPARA WWW. Pretty As AChevy-Buick Picture! $25,888. F.X. FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2011 Mazda CX9 Touring all 2013 drive, Cadillac XTS. wheel loaded with 4dr, all Absolutely With Power the goodies,Loaded only 16,000 miles. Options, Only 10,000 miles YES 16,000 miles. 1 owner Yes 10,000 miles. Glossy gun metal metallic finish.Silver Get Finish.for Buy Nearly New And F.X. ready winter! $24,888. Save Thousands! $34,888. F.X. CAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW. CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2008 GMC Sierra 1500 Ext 2011 Nissan Armada SL. 4x4, Cab 4x4 W/t Package, trailer V8, And Full Of Factory Options, tow, 4.8Lengine. New Leather, Moon roof, Andtires, So only 48,000Only miles. Much More, 43,000Glossy miles blue granite Won’t last 1 Owner. Darkfinish. Mocha Finish. A the weekend! Real Head Turner!$18,988. $30,988. F.X. F.X. CAPARA Chevy-Buick WWW. CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530.

2011 Dodge Juke Durango S. All “Heat” Wheel 2014 Nissan Package. AllOnly wheel drive, power Drive, With 3,000 miles Yes 3,000 miles. Justwheels, Too Smallonly For sunroof, 20” Prior Owner. Gun Metal Finish 25,000 miles. Inferno red finish. And Loaded! Picture perfect! $21,888. $25,988. F.X. CAPRARA Chevy-Buick Chevy-Buick WWW. WWW. CAPARA FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 1-800-333-0530. FXCHEVY.COM S. 4DR, 2013 Nissan Sentra 2011 Ford F350 Crew Cab Loaded With4x4 Power “King Ranch” DieselGoodies, stuffed Only 8,000 miles navigation, Yes 8,000 leather, sunroof, miles. Glossy Silver Finish And only 28,000 miles. Glossy Clean As A Whistle! $15,988. F.X. Burnt orange finish. Just Phat! CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. $42,988. F.X. CAPARA ChevyFXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2013 Cadillac Escalade. It’s A Platinum Edition, All Wheel 2012 Nissan “SJ” Drive, With EveryArmada Power Option package. 4x4 loaded with But Running Water, Only 4,000 power equipment. 3rd row miles Yes 4,000 miles. Original seat, only 30,000 miles.A Glossy Sticker Over $95,000 Super jet finish. Everyone rides! Buyblack At $68,800. F.X. CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW.FXCHEVY. $26,988. F.X. CAPARA ChevyCOM 1-800-333-0530. Buick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. 2013 Toyota Tundra SRS. 4DR, Plus Double V8, With“LTZ” Lots 2013 ChevyCab, Traverse. Of PowerallOptions, Onlyleather, 4,000 Package wheel drive miles, sunroofs, Yes 4,000 miles. dual drop Glossy down Silver only Finish. $27,988. duo 15,000 miles. F.X. Jet CAPRARA Chevy-Buick WWW. black finish. Save thousands! FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530. $34,988. F.X. CAPARA ChevyBuick WWW.FXCHEVY.COM 1-800-333-0530.

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EARN $500 A DAY as Airbrush Media Makeup Artists For Ads, TV, Film, Fashion. One week course Train & Build Portfolio. 15% OFF TUITION. AwardMakeupSchool.com. 818-980-2119.

General Logistics Analyst/ Footwear (Syracuse, NY): Analyze/review logistical functions within PPF organization/with customers; Plan/coordinate logistical operations to minimize cost/improve performance; Min BS in Logistics Mgmt. or related field req’d. Resume to PPF Rochester Inc. 351 S. Salina St. Syracuse, NY 13202 (Attn: Eric)

Syracuse New Times Employment ads WORK!

Call to place your ad!

422-7011 x111

Would you like to work in a high quality manufacturing plant? We are looking for a Production Supervisor for our plant located in Middlebury, Vermont with a fast-paced, rewarding & professional culture. This role will have direct responsibility for production and to ensure that volume, cost standards, and quality parameters of the company are achieved. Bachelor’s Degree with dairy / cheese manufacturing experience preferred. 3-8+ years related experience and/or training; or equivalent combination of education and experience. Cabot offers a competitive starting wage and a comprehensive benefits package. Apply by email to Ashley LeBlanc, aleblanc@agrimark.net, or mail your resume with cover letter to: Agri-Mark/Cabot Attn: Human Resources 869 Exchange St Middlebury, VT 05753 E.O.E. M/F/D/V

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Medical

Job Fair Event If you are thinking about switching jobs or maybe picking up a second job, please feel free to visit our job fair. We are hiring LPNs, CNAs, RN Supervisor, RN Nurse Manager, CHHAs, HCSS, PCAs, & Home Care RNs. Job Fair Details: May 7, 2014 2:00 – 6:00 p.m. Building 3 To preview these and other positions, please visit www.st-camillus.org/careers.html Affirmative Action/EOE

Work From Home $1,000 WEEKLY!! MAILING BROCHURES From Home. Helping home workers since 2001. Genuine Opportunity. No Experience required. Start Immediately www.mailingmembers.com. $1000 WEEKLY PAID IN ADVANCE!!! MAILING BROCHURES or TYPING ADS for our company. FREE Supplies! PT/FT. No Experience Needed! www.HelpMailingBrochures.com. HELP WANTED Earn Extra income Assembling CD cases From Home. Call our Live Operators Now! No experience Necessary 1-800-405-7619 Ext 2605.www.easywork-greatpay.com. HELP WANTED!!! $575/weekly**Mailing Brochures/Assembling! Products At Home - Online DATA ENTRY Positions Available.! www.GenuineIncomeSource.com.

04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com

Adoption ADOPT - FUN LOVING MARRIED COUPLE will give your child a loving home. Home study certified. Expenses paid. Please call anytime. 1-888-57-ADOPT www. ourspecialwish.info. PREGNANT? THINKING OF ADOPTION? Talk with caring agency specializing in matching Birthmothers with Families Nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Call 24/7 Abby’s One True Gift Adoptions. 866-4136293. Void in Illinois/ New Mexico/Indiana.

Auctions Buy or sell at AARauctions.com. Contents of homes, businesses, vehicles and real estate. Bid NOW! AARauctions.com Lights, Camera, Auction. No longer the best kept secret.

MONTGOMERY COUNTY, NY REAL PROPERTY TAX FORECLOSURE AUCTION: May 13th @ 11AM, Horace Inman Senior Center, Amsterdam, NY. 800-292-7653. Free brochure: www. HAROFF.com.

Automotive Discount Auto Insurance - Instant Quote Save up to 70% in 5 Minutes - All Credit Types. Call 888-291-2920 now.

Autos for Sale 2008 CADILLAC DTS, heated & cooled seats, 55K, $15,990. 2008 CADILLAC STS, Diamond White, 53K, $17,990. 2010 CADILLAC SRX Prem., AWD, Sunroof, NAV, DVD, 46K, $28,990. DEN KELLY CHEVY, BUICK, GMC. 315-824-3610. 800-540-1227.

Now Hiring S Y R A C U S E

All Times Publishing LLC, the home of the Syracuse New Times and Family Times, is currently seeking a full time Office/Circulation Manager to handle the daily operations of a fast-paced office with a focus on managing circulation of its publications and concentrating on the growth of distribution. Qualified candidates need to be self-motivated, goal oriented, with strong written and verbal communication skills. Must be able to work under pressure within deadlines, be able to multi-task and have excellent organizational skills. Prior management experience is preferred but not required and training will be provided. Pay will be based on experience and All Times Publishing offers medical/dental insurance, 401K, paid vacation and holidays. The position requires some local travel and a valid driver’s license. This is an excellent opportunity to join an award winning team as we launch the redesign of our 45-Year-Old community newspaper. Please forward resume, cover letter and salary requirements to be considered for an interview to: cscheuerman@syracusenewtimes.com or mail: ATTN: Christine Scheuerman, Syracuse New Times, 1415 W. Genesee St. Syracuse, NY 13204

Autos Wanted

Cleaning

CARS/TRUCKS WANTED! Top $$$$$ PAID! Running or Not, All Years, Makes, Models. Free Towing! We’re Local! 7 Days/Week. Call Toll Free: 1-888-4162330. CASH FOR CARS AND TRUCKS. Get A Top Dollar INSTANT Offer! Running or Not! 1-888416-2208. CASH FOR CARS, Any Make or Model! Free Towing. Sell it TODAY. Instant offer: 1-800864-5784. CASH FOR CARS: All Cars/Trucks Wanted. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Any Make/ Model. Call For Instant Offer: 1-800-864-5960. CASH FOR CARS: Any Car/Truck. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Call For Instant Offer: 1-888-420-3808. www. cash4car.com. DONATE A CAR - HELP CHILDREN FIGHTING DIABETES. Fast, Free Towing. Call 7 days/ week. Non-runners OK. Tax Deductible. Call Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation 1-800-578-0408. Donate your car to Wheels For Wishes, benefiting Make-AWish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call 315-4000797 Today! GET CASH TODAY for any car/truck. I will buy your car today. Any Condition. Call 1-800864-5796 or www.carbuyguy.com. TOP CASH FOR CARS, Any Car/Truck, Running or Not. Call for INSTANT offer: 1-800454-6951.

Business Opportunities ADVERTISE to 10 Million Homes across the USA! Place your ad in over 140 community newspapers, with circulation totaling over 10 million homes. Contact Independent Free Papers of America IFPA at danielleburnett-ifpa@live.com or visit our website cadnetads.com for more information.

TORO Snowblower 7HP, 24” Blade Elec. Start, Chains. $150.00 383-9553.

General

Affordable Janitorial ** Cleaning Service** Comm., Residential, Carpet & Upholstery Fully Insured 315-416-1609

Events The Adventures of William Tell -TV series from 1958-1959. Watch it on Syracuse Cable Access, TW Ch: 98.  Sundays at 6 pm.

Finance ARE YOU IN BIG TROUBLE WITH THE IRS? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, & resolve tax debt FAST. Call 1-800-647-3031. GET CASH NOW for your Annuity or Structured Settlement. Top Dollars Paid. Fast, No Hassle Service! 1-855512-9227. Signature Financial pays cash for seller, Financed (private) mortgage notes on Residential/Commercial properties 1-855844-8771.

For Sale 3 piece sectionalnew! Raymor & Flan. burgundy,velvet soft! non smk residence! lv msg: 463-0494. must sell. $1600 firm. FREE PILLS NOW! Buy Viagra/Cialis 100mg/20mg 40 Pills + 4/free. $99.00! Save Big! 1-888-796-8878. KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Complete Treatment Program/ Kit. Effective results begin after spray dries. Available: Hardware Stores, Buy Online: homedepot. com.

DO YOU HAVE PRODUCTS OR SERVICES TO PROMOTE? Reach as many as 4.9 million households and 12 million potential buyers quickly and inexpensively! Only $490 for a 15-word ad. Place your ad online at fcpny.com or call 1-315-422-7400 ext. 111. Reader Advisory: The National Trade Association we belong to has purchased the above classifieds. Determining the value of their service or product is advised by this publication. In order to avoid misunderstandings, some advertisers do not offer employment but rather supply the readers with manuals, directories and other materials designed to help their clients establish mail order selling and other businesses at home. Under NO circumstance should you send any money in advance or give the client your checking, license ID, or credit card numbers. Also beware of ads that claim to guarantee loans regardless of credit and note that if a credit repair company does business only over the phone it is illegal to request any money before delivering its service. All funds are based in US dollars. Toll free numbers may or may not reach Canada.

Health & Wellness CANADA DRUG CENTER is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 75 percent on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-413-1940 for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. FREE PILLS WITH EVERY ORDER! VIAGRA 100mg, CIALIS 20mg 40 Pills + FREE Pills. Only $99.00 #1 Male Enhancement Pill! Discreet Shipping. 1-888-797-9029.


To place your ad call (315) 422-7011 or fax (315) 422-1721 or e-mail classified@syracusenewtimes.com IF YOU USED THE BLOOD THINNER PRADAXA and suffered internal bleeding, hemorrhaging, required hospitalization or a loved one died while taking Pradaxa between October 2010 and the Present. You may be entitled to compensation. Call Attorney Charles H. Johnson 1-800-535-5727. VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 40 Pills + 10 FREE. SPECIAL! $99.00 100% guaranteed. FREE Shipping! 24/7 CALL NOW! 1-888223-8818. VIAGRA 100mg and CIALIS 20mg! 40 Pills +4 FREE for only $99. #1 Male Enhancement! Discreet Shipping. Save $500! Buy The Blue Pill Now! 1-800213-6202. VIAGRA 100MG and CIALIS 20mg! 50 Pills $99.00 FREE. Shipping! 100% guaranteed CALL NOW! 1-866-3126061. VIAGRA 100mg or CIALIS 20mg 40 tabs + 10 FREE! All for $99 including Shipping! Discreet, Fast Shipping. 888-836-0780 or PremiumMeds.NET.

Home Improvement

Merchandise for Sale KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Complete Treatment Program or Kit. Available: Hardware Stores. Buy Online: homedepot.com. SAFE STEP WALK-IN TUB. Alert for Seniors. Bathroom falls can be fatal. Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic Jets. Less Than 4 Inch Step-In. Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors. American Made. Installation Included. Call 1-888720-2773 for $750 Off. SAWMILLS from only $4397.00- MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info/DVD: www. Nor woodSawmills. com. 1-800-578-1363 Ext.300N.

Miscellaneous AIRLINE CAREERS begin here-Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial Aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM 866-4536204. Discount Auto Insurance - Instant Quote - Save up to 70% in 5 Minutes - All Credit Types. Call 888-2872130 now.

Home Improvement Painting, roofing, siding, power wash, stain, & build decks. gutters, door & window installation, carpentry, masonry, & all inside work. Retired teacher, Joe Ball, 436-9008. INSULMAXX SPRAY FOAM INSULATION: Affordable, healthy, energy efficient. Quickest payback in energy savings. Serving all of NYS. Licensed and fully insured. Phone 1-315-310-3337 or email insulmaxx@ yahoo.com. REPLACEMENT WINDOWS $189 INSTALLED. White double hung, tilt-in. $50 rebate off all Energy Star windows. Lifetime Warranty. Credit cards accepted. Call Rich @1866-272-7533.

Medical Cash for unexpired DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! Free Shipping, Best Prices & 24 hr pay & Spanish www.TestStripSearch.com.

ROTARY INTERNATIONAL - A worldwide network of inspired individuals who improve communities. Find information or locate your local club at www.rotary.org. Brought to you by your free community paper and PaperChain. YOU AND NEARLY 4.7 MILLION NEW YORKERS are reading this ad. PROMOTE YOUR BUSINESS to 4.7 million readers with a 25-word classified ad. Call 1-315-422-7011 ext.111 TODAY!

Motorcycles WANTED JAPANESE MOTORCYCLE1967-1982 ONLY KAWASAKI Z1-900, KZ900, KZ1000, Z1R, KZ1000MKII, W1650, H1-500, H2-750, S1-250, S2-350, S3400 SUZUKI GS400, GT380, Honda CB750 (1969-1976) CASH. 1-800-772-1142, 1-310-721-0726 usa@ classicrunners.com.

WANTED: ALL MOTORCYCLES BEFORE 1980! Running or not. $$TopCash$ Paid! 1-315-569-8094.

month (where available). SAVE! Ask about SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1-800-826-4464.

On the Personal Side

DIVORCE $550* No Fault or Regular Divorce. Covers children, etc. Only One Signature Required! *Excludes govt. fees. Local $ In-State Phone No. 1-800-522-6000 Ext. 100. Baylor & Associates, Inc. Est. 1977.

Herpes but honest. Professional male seeks physcially fit, non-smoking woman. 44-57. Must be understanding or have gone thru the same unfortunate experience. Reply to: PO Box 181 Clay, NY 13041. Meet singles now! No paid operators, just people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages,connect live. FREE trial. Call 1-877-737-9447. Meet singles right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now 1-888-909-9905.

Services ATTENTION READERS: Always use caution and good common sense when purchasing goods or services by phone, online or by mail. Don’t send money, give out credit card info, social security numbers or any other personal financial information until you know for sure what you’re purchasing from. Most advertisers are perfectly legitimate but a few can give all a bad name. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is! BUNDLE AND SAVE! DIRECTV, INTERNET & PHONE From $69.99/ mo. Free 3 months of HBO, starz, SHOWTIME & CINEMAX. FREE GENIE 4-room Upgrade LOCK IN 2 YR Savings. Call 1-800782-3956. DIRECTV, Internet, & Phone From $69.99/ mo + Free 3 Months: HBO, Starz, SHOWTIME, CINEMAX+ FREE GENIE 4 Room Upgrade + NFL SUNDAY TICKET! Limited offer. Call Now 888-2485961. DISH TV Retailer. Starting at $19.99/ month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/ month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1-800-6154064 . DISH TV RETAILER. Starting at $19.99/ month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/

HAS YOUR BUILDING SHIFTED OR SETTLED? Contact Woodford Brothers Inc, for straightening, leveling, foundation and wood frame repairs at 1-800-OLD-BARN. www.woodfordbros. com. “Not applicable in Queens county”. Order Dish Network Satellite TV and Internet Starting at $19.99! Free Installation, Hopper DVR and 5 Free Premium Movie Channels! Call 800597-2464. Protect Your Home ADT Authorized Dealer: Burglary, Fire, and Emergency Alerts 24 hours a day, 7 days a week! CALL TODAY, INSTALLED TOMORROW! 888-641-3452. Reach as many as 5 MILLION POTENTIAL BUYERS in central and western New York with your classified ad for just $350 for a 15word ad. Call 1-315422-7011 ext. 111 for details or visit fcpny. com. REDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL!* Get a whole Satellite system installed at NO COST and programming starting at $19.99/mo. FREE HD/ DVR Upgrade to new callers, SO CALL NOW 1-800-492-1952. SunyCuse Landscaping & Property Maintenance. Weeding, mulching, mowing & more. Call for your free estimate 315-235-5736.

Wanted

WANTED: Lionel Toy Trains “One Piece or Entire Set” Also Buying: American Flyer Toy Trains, Marx Trains, Old Toys GET CA$H TODAY! CALL 254-8069

R e a l E s tat e Apts/Houses for Rent

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians; pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9277. The toll-free telephone number for hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

Near WEST-Side: 2BR-$560, 1BR-$460, Efficiency $385+util. Parking, Sec.Building, No Dep!315-478-2848. RETIREMENT APARTMENTS, ALL INCLUSIVE. Meals, transportation, activities daily. Short Leases. Monthly specials! Call (877) 210-4130.

Condos / Townhouses Village Green 2-BR Condo, NEWLY: remodeled & updated! !For Sale by Owner! $44,500!! 395-9004.

Houses for Sale Delaware’s Resort Living Without Resort Pricing! Low Taxes! Gated Community, Close to Beaches, Amazing Amenities, Olympic Pool. New Homes from $80’s! Brochures available 1-866629-0770 or www.coolbranch.com. Sebastian, Florida Beautiful 55+ manufactured home community. 4.4 miles to the beach, 2 miles to the riverfront district. Homes starting at $39,000. 772-5810080, www.beachcove.com.

Land For Sale CATSKILL MTN TIMBERLAND! 60 acres $89,900 Quality timber, great hunting, secluded setting, adjoins State Land! Less than 3 hrs NYC! Town rd, survey, EZ terms! Call 888701-7509. FARM SACRIFICE! 5 acres - $19,900 Great views, quiet country road, gorgeous hilltop setting! So Tier, NY. Guaranteed buildable! 5 tracts avail UNDER $20,000! Terms! Hurry! 888-905-8847. Newyorklandandlakes.com. FARM SACRIFICE! 5 acres - $19,900. Great views, quiet country road, gorgeous hilltop setting! So Tier, NY. G’teed buildable! 5 tracts avail UNDER $20,000! Terms! Hurry! 1-888-701-1864 www. N e w Yo r k L a n d a n dLakes.com. FORT PLAIN, NY: *20.7 acres, fields, panoramic views 1,080 feet on quiet paved road $55,000. *3.6 acres, field, $13,000. Owner fianancing. www.helderbergrealty.com CALL, Henry Whipple: 518861-6541.

WATERFRONT LOTSVirginia’s Eastern Shore. Was 325K Now from $65,000-Community Center Pool. 1acre+ lots, Bay & Ocean Access, Great Fishing, Crabbing, Kayaking. Custom Homes. www.oldemillpointe. com. 757-824-0808.

Real Estate CATSKILL MTN TIMBERLAND! 60 acres - $89,900. Quality timber, great hunting, secluded setting, adjoins State Land! Less than 3 hrs NYC! Town rd, survey, EZ terms! Call 1-888-775-8114. LAKE SALE: 6 acres Coan Lake $24,900. 2.5 acres West Bass Pond $18,900. (www. L a n d F i r s t N Y. c o m ) 1-888-683-2626. RARE FIND -15 acres Oneida Lake N.Shore. Rt 49 & Wanner Rd. Lakefront 300 +/ - ft $499K 315-796-7000.

Roommates Wanted Africa, Brazil Work/ Study! Change the lives of others while creating a sustainable future. 6, 9, 18 month programs available. Apply today! www.OneWorldCenter.org. (269) 591-0518. info@OneWorldCenter.org . ALL AREAS - ROOMMATES.COM. Browse hundreds of online listings with photos and maps. Find your roommate with a click of the mouse! Visit: h t t p : / / w w w. R o o m mates.com.

Vacation Rentals DO YOU HAVE VACATION PROPERTY FOR SALE OR RENT? With promotion to nearly 5 million households and over 12 million potential buyers, a statewide classified ad can’t be beat! Promote your property for just $490 for a 15word ad. Place your ad online at www.syracusenewtimes.com or call 1-315-422-7011 ext.111. OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND. Best selection of affordable rentals. Full/ partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Real Estate. 1-800638-2102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com.

syracusenewtimes.com | 04.30.14 - 05.07.14

53


classified HOODS-HOODS-HOODS-HOODS NOLL CUSTOM METAL, INC. Restaurant hoods, fans and fire suppression systems. New & used in stock. Installation available. FREE estimates. Preventative Maintenance 24 hr. service A B @ ya h o o .METALF .com KPN Call Kurt Noll (315) 422-3333 NCMHOODS.COM

Macular Degeneration? Choose To See Better. Telescope glasses make reading, writing, TV, seeing faces, even driving possible again!

Come see how I can help.

George S. Kornfeld, Optometrist Toll Free

1-866-446-2050

I specIalIze In gluten free baked goods breads, englIsh muffIns, pIzza crust, cakes & much more... “lIke” & vIew photos on facebook deborah’s sweet treats

store open at 52 oswego st., baldwInsvIlle!

635-2400

ONLINE-ONLY AUCTION

OUTSTANDING SPORTING GOODS CLOSING: Sunday, May 4, 2014 at 12:00 PM (EST) Hundreds of Firearms, Paint Ball Guns Accessories, ATV’s, Snowmobiles, Balance of Personal Collection of Zig Ziegler from Stony Point, NY, Over 50,000 +- Rounds of Assorted Ammo, Gunsmith Tooling and Equipment, Vehicles, Tools & Accessories. 1000+- Lots Sell To Highest Bidders! (See Terms and Lot Descriptions) Items Located at: The Auction Center, 9423 Western Tpke., (Route 20), Delanson, NY 12053-2105 Tax exempt purchaser’s: MUST complete a New York State ST-120 Form Available on the online auction and return to our office via fax: 518-895-8152 or email: mailto:reception@collarcityauctions.com PRIOR TO THE AUCTION ENDING or be subject to applicable sales taxes. We will not make any exceptions!”

www.collarcityauctions.com

www.kornfeldlowvision.com

American Used Guitars WantedMartin, Gibson, Fender, Gretsch, Guild, National, also Fender Tube Amps. 315-727-4979. CASH for Coins! Buying ALL Gold & Silver. Also Stamps & Paper Money, Entire Collections, Estates. Travel to your home. Call Marc in NY 1-800-959-3419. CASH PAID- up to $25/Box for unexpired, sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS. 1-DAY PAYMENT. 1-800-3711136. !!OLD GUITARS WANTED!! Gibson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch. 19301980. Top Dollar paid!! Call Toll Free 1-866433-8277.

SLOT CARS Aurora, Tyco, etc., HO scale Sets, cars, parts, equip., any condition. cash paid. call 315-439-4264.

TOP CASH PAID FOR OLD GUITARS! 1920’s thru 1980’s. Gibson, Martin, Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone, Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker, Prairie State, D’Angelico, Stromberg, and Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. 1-800-401-0440.

54

Wants to purchase minerals and other oil and gas interests. Send details to P.O. Box 13557 Denver, CO. 80201.

Legal Notice Articles Of Organization Of Reppi Real Estate, LLC Under Section 203 of the Limited Liability Company Law filed 9/29/2005 FIRST: The name o the limite liability companyis Reppi Real Estate, LLC. SECOND: County location is ONONDAGA. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: PO Box 22, North Syracuse, NY 13212. Purpose: any lawful purpose. ARTICLES OF ORGANIZATION. Castellinno, LLC. Under Section 203 of the Limited Liability Company Law The name of the limited liability company is: Castellino, LLC. The date of the filing of articles of organization with the Department of State is March 7, 2014. The county within this date in which the limited liability company is located is Onondaga. The street address of the principle business location is The LLC, 2790 Falls Road, Marcellus, New York 13108. The Secretary of State is designated as agent upon whom process against it may be served. The address within or without this state to which the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against the

limited liability company served upon him or her is: The LLC, 2790 Falls Road, Marcellus, New York 13108. The character purpose of the business of such limited liability company is all things allowed by law. Joseph Castellino, Organizer and member. Notice of Formation of 6850 East Genesee Street, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 3/31/14. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 6962 St. Andrews Circle, Fayetteville, NY 13066. Purpose: any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of Al Moussami BB, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 1/29/14. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 3186 Bush Rd.,Jamesville, NY 13078. Purpose: any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of Cutler Factoring, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 2/24/14. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served.

04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com

deborahssweettreats01@yahoo.com www.deborahssweettreats.com

(518) 895-8150 x103

SSNY shall mail copy of process to: PO Box 22, North Syracuse, NY 13212. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of formation of For the Health of it Foods, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 03/31/14, Office location: County of Onondaga, SSNY is dedicated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copies of process to: 109 Joel Ln, Camillus, NY 13031. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Giardina Properties, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 3/25/14. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o Curtin & DeJoseph, P.C., 42 Albany St., Cazenovia, NY 13035. Purpose: any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of GO-JPT, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 3/26/14. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: James Thurn, 8482 Persian Terrace, Cicero, NY 13039. Purpose: any lawful activity. NOTICE OF FORMATION OF HEATHCARE REIMBURSEMENT

SOLUTIONS, LLC Under Section 206 of the Limited Liability Company Law. 1. The name of the limited liability company (hereinaf ter referred to as the “Company”) is Heathcare Reimbursement Solutions, LLC. 2. The Articles of Organization of the Company were filed with the Secretary of State of the state of New York on March 17, 2014. 3. The county within New York State in which the office of the Company is to be located is Onondaga. 4. The Company does not have a specific date of dissolution in addition to the events of dissolution set forth by law. 5. The Secretary of State is designated as agent of the Company upon whom process against the company may be served. The Post Office address to which the secretary of state shall mail a copy of any process against the Company is: 4082 Rusty Pine Lane, Liverpool, NY 13090. 6. The company is to be managed by by one or more managers. 7. The character of the business to be transacted by the Limited Liability Company is any activity for which a limited liability company may be lawfully engaged under the laws of the State of New York. Notice of Formation of High Peaks Club, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 1/21/14. Office location:

Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o The LLC, 109 South Warren St., Ste. 1900, Syracuse, NY 13202. Purpose: any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of Integrity Home Inspections of CNY, LLC. The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 02/18/2014. The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is 5290 Burke Ln., Fayetteville, NY 13066. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The name of the LLC is CNY Cleaning Solutions LLC . The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 3/12/2014. The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal business location is: 479 Brattle Rd, Syracuse, NY 13203. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to

which the SSNY shall mail process is: (street address) 479 Brattle Rd, Syracuse, NY 13203. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The name of the LLC is: SRKT LLC. The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 02/25/2014. The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal business location is: 8400 Sugar Pine Circle, Liverpool, NY 13090. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is: 8400 Sugar Pine Circle, Liverpool, New York 13090. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The name of the LLC is: CTS Trucking, LLC. The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 4/2/2014. The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal business location is. Scott Harrison, 6060 Muskrat Bay Rd, Brewerton, NY 13029. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is: Scott Harrison, 6060 Muskrat Bay Rd., Brewerton, NY 13029.  The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The name of the LLC is: DAMBER EXPRESS, LLC. The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 4/9/2014. The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal business location is: Damber Powdyal, 818 Park St. Apt 3, Syracuse, NY 13208. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is: 818

Park St., Apt 3, Syracuse, NY 13208. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The name of the LLC is: EVEREST TRUCKING, LLC. The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 4/9/2014. The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal business location is: Indra Powdyal, 818 Park St., Apt 4, Syracuse, NY 13208. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is: Indra Powdyal, 818 Park St., Apt 4, Onondaga, NY 13208. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The name of the LLC is: Heather Kukowski Investigations LLC. The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 3/27/14. The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal business location is: 117 Croyden Lane, apt A, Syracuse, NY, 13224. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is: PO Box 273, Syracuse, NY, 13214. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The name of the LLC is: Momentum International, LLC. The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on:4/15/14. The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal business location is: 107 Whedon Rd, Apt 16, Syracuse, NY 13219. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is: 107 Whedon Rd, Apt 16, Syracuse, NY 13219. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes.


To place your ad call (315) 422-7011 or fax (315) 422-1721 or e-mail classified@syracusenewtimes.com

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476-5585 • kissit.us • 709 Erie Blvd. W., Syracuse Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The name of the LLC is: MY LUCKY TUMMY, LLC. The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 1/08/2014. The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal business location is: 262 Kensington Place, Syracuse, NY 13210. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is: 262 Kensington Place, Syracuse, NY 13210. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The name of the LLC is: Nuclear Quality & Procurement Engineering Consultants, LLC. The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the

Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 02/25/2014. The of fice of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal business location is: 3728 Dutchman Dr., Baldwinsville, NY 13027. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is: United States Corporation, agents,Inc., Suite 202, 7014 13th Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11228. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Supplier Oversight & Procurement Engineering. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The name of the LLC is: Oliva Career Consulting, LLC.  The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: March 19, 2014.  The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal

business location is: 6 Tremain Drive, Fayetteville, NY  13066.  The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is:  United States Corporation Agents, Inc., 7014 13th Avenue, Brooklyn, NY  11228. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The name of the LLC is: T S H Audio LLC. The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal business location is: 8099 Princess Path, Liverpool , NY 13090. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail

process is: 8099 Princess Path, Liverpool, NY 13090. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The name of the LLC is: ThirdGen Home Inspections LLC. The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 2/21/14. The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal business location is: 737 Schuyler St., Syracuse, NY 13204. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is: 737 Schuyler St., Syracuse, NY 13204. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The name of the LLC is: Vape N’ Puff LLC. The Articles of Organiza

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tion of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 2/20/2014. The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal business location is: 114 J Kings Park Drive, Liverpool, NY 13090. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is: 7014 13th Avenue, Suite 202, Brooklyn, NY 11228. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes.

Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). The name of the LLC is: Vestra Healthcare Technologies, LLC. The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 03/19/2014. The office of the company is located in Onondaga_ County. The principal business location is: 235 Harrison St., Syracuse, NY 13202. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is: 4192 Fireside Circle, Liver

315-952-5280

free estimates & fullY insured fivestarClutterremOval.COm pool, NY 13090. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (PLLC). The name of the PLLC is: Linda Sillars Nurse Practitioner in Psychiatry. The Articles of Or ganization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 1/31/14. The office of the company is located in Onondaga

County. The principal business location is: 169 East Genesee St, Skaneateles, NY 13152. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is: 169 East Genesee St, Skaneateles, NY 13152. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes.

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classified Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company. The name of the LLC is JETTY T R A N S P O R TAT I O N LLC. The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 4/1/2014. The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal business location is: 1205 GRAND AVENUE, SYRACUSE, NY 13219. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is: 1205 GRAND AVENUE, SYRACUSE, NY 13219. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company. The name of the LLC is: BLESSED T R A N S P O R TAT I O N , LLC. The Articles of Organization of the company were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 4/2/2014. The office of the company is located in Onondaga County. The principal business location is: 8571 WHITING RD, CICERO, NY 13039. The SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the SSNY shall mail process is: 8571 WHITING RD, CICERO, NY 13039. The purpose of the business of the Company includes: any and all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of Pompey Ridge LLC, Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on March 5, 2014. Office location: County of Onandaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to:  Pompey Ridge LLC, 10360 Pendery Drive, Cincinnati, Ohio 45242. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Rolling River – RE, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 11/8/13. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom pro\ cess against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Steve Hadley, 6706 East Seneca Turnpike, Jamesville, NY 13078. Purpose: any lawful activity.

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NOTICE OF FORMATION OF SAM’S CASH & CARRY, LLC. Under Section 206 of the Limited Liability Company Law. 1. The name of the limited liability company (hereinafter referred to as the “Company”) is Sam’s Cash & Carry, LLC. 2. The Articles of Organization of the Company were filed with the Secretary of State of the state of New York on March 20, 2014. 3. The county within New York State in which the office of the Company is to be located is Onondaga. 4.The Company does not have a specific date of dissolution in addition to the events of dissolution set forth by law. 5. The Secretary of State is designated as agent of the Company upon whom process against the company may be served. The Post Office address to which the secretary of state shall mail a copy of any process against the Company is: 344 North Salina St., Syr acuse, NY 13203. 6. The company is to be managed by one or more managers. 7. The character of the business to be transacted by the Limited Liability Company is any activity for which a limited liability company may be lawfully engaged under the laws of the State of New York. Notice of Formation of SHDJ, LLC amended to SHJD, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 11/4/13. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 6706 East Seneca Turnpike, Jamesville, NY 13078. Purpose: any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of Synergy Operations, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 11/4/13. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 4246 North Street, Jamesville, NY 13078. Purpose: any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of THE SHOP ON ERIE LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 1/2/14. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom pro

cess against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 3663 Cobb Hill Road, Cazenovia, NY 13035. Purpose: any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of United Capital Funding, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with NY Dept. of State on 4/10/14. Office location: Onondaga County. Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: c/o Benjamin L. Brimeyer, Reed Smith LLP, 10 S. Wacker Dr., 40th Fl., Chicago, IL 60606. Purpose: all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of UNY LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with NY Dept. of State on 4/16/14. Office location: Onondaga County. Principal business address: 5762 Celi Dr., East Syracuse, NY 13057. Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: c/o Terry J. Kirwan, Jr., Kirwan Law Firm, PC, Bridgewater Place, 500 Plum St., Suite 101, Syracuse, NY 13204, registered agent upon whom process may be served. Purpose: all lawful purposes. Notice of formation of Wholesale Merchant Solutions, LLC. Articles of Org. filed with the Secretary of the State of New York (SSNY) on 4/2/14. 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 2219 Cornflower Way, E. Syracuse, NY 13057. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of: Blue Tie Enterprises, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 2/29/14. 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: Klajdi Lika, 115 Dorchester Ave, Syracuse, NY 13203. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of: Charles R. Pidutti, Architect PLLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: March 31, 2014. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is

04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com

designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: United States Corporation Agents, Inc. 7014 13th Avenue, Suite 202, ] Brooklyn, NY 11228. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of: DEWITT PROPERTIES LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 2/20/14. 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:Marla Cohen 5201 Hoag Lane Fayetteville NY 13066. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of: FIRST CHOICE HOLDINGS LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 2/20/14. 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: Marla Cohen, 5201 Hoag Lane, Fayetteville, NY 13066. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Qualification of Frank Entertainment Group, LLC. Authority filed with NY Dept. of State on 3/24/14. Office location: Onondaga County. Princ. bus. addr.: 1003 W. Indiantown Rd., Jupiter, FL 33458. LLC formed in DE on 3/20/14. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: c/o CT Corporation System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. DE addr. of LLC: The Corporation Trust Co., 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. filed with DE Sec. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: all lawful purposes. Notice of Qualification of High Steel Service Center LLC. Authority filed with NY Dept. of State on 3/11/14. Office location: Onondaga County. LLC formed in PA on 8/31/06. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: c/o CT Corporation

System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. PA and principal business address: 1853 William Penn Way, Lancaster, PA 17605. Cert. of Org. filed with PA Sec. of the Commonwealth, Rm 206 North Office Bldg., Harrisburg, PA 17105. Purpose: all lawful purposes. NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT - COUNTY OF ONONDAGA JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association Plaintiff(s) Against Lourie A. Johnson a/k/a Lourie Johnson; et al, Defendant(s). Pursuant to a judgment of foreclosure and sale duly entered 2/24/2014, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the West Lobby, Second Floor Courthouse, 401 Montgomery Street, Syracuse, New York on 5/21/2014 at 10:30 am premises known as 215 Robinson Street, Syracuse, NY 13203. ALL that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the City of Syracuse, County of Onondaga and State of New York. Section 019 Block 23 Lot 09.0 Approximate amount of lien $76,822.61 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed judgment Index # 1490/13 Lawrence P. Brown, Esq., Referee. STIENE & ASSOCIATES, P.C. (Attorney’s for Plaintiff ), 187 East Main Street, Huntington, NY 11743 Dated: 3/6/2014 File Number: 201001475 GS. NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF ONONDAGA JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, plaintiff(s) Against JONATHAN R. SEVIGNY A/K/A JONATHAN SEVIGNY; et al, Defendant(s) Pursuant to a judgment of foreclosure and sale duly entered 3/3/2014, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the West Lobby, 2nd Floor Courthouse, 401 Montgomery Street, Syracuse, New York on 5/27/2014 at 12:00 pm premises known as 5259 Kingston Road, Elbridge, NY 13060. ALL that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Elbridge,

County of Onondaga and State of New York. Section 041 Block 02 Lot 15.1 Approximate amount of lien $106,446.97 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed judgment In dex # 39/13. David Martin, Esq., Referee. STIENE & ASSOCIATES, P.C. (Attorney’s for Plaintiff ), 187 East Main Street, Huntington, NY 11743. Dated: 3/18/2014. File Number: 201100497. GS. S U P P L E M E N TA L SUMMONS. Index No. 2013-4218. STATE OF NEW YORK. SUPREME COURT - COUNTY OF ONONDAGA. JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A., Plaintiff, -vs- KEITH M. MORGAN A/K/A KEITH M. MORGAN, JR., if living and if he be dead, and all persons who are wives, lienors, heirs, devisees, distributees, successors in interest of such of them as may be dead, and their husbands and wives, heirs, devisees, distributees, and successors in interest all of whom and whose names and places are unknown to Plaintiff; JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A.; NEW YORK STATE OF DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; “JOHN DOE” AND “JANE DOE” said names being fictitious, it being the intention of Plaintiff to designate any and all occupants of premises being foreclosed herein, Defendants. Mortgaged Premises: 203 PLEASANT STREET, MANLIUS, NY 13104. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT(S): YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the Complaint in the above entitled action and to serve a copy of your Answer on the plaintiff’s attorney within twenty (20) days of the service of this Summons, exclusive of the day of service, or within thirty (30) days after service of the same is complete where service is made in any manner other than by personal delivery within the State. The United States of America, if designated as a defendant in this action, may answer or appear within sixty (60) days of service. Your failure to appear or answer will result in a judgment against you by default for the relief demanded in the Complaint. In the event that a deficiency balance remains from the sale proceeds,

a judgment may be entered against you, unless the Defendant obtained a bankruptcy discharge and such other or further relief as may be just and equitable. 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 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. That this action is being amended to include the possible heirs of Keith M. Morgan a/k/a Keith M. Morgan, Jr., as said individual could not be located. That this action is also being amended to add New York State of Department of Taxation and Finance and United States of America as necessary parties to the action. ONONDAGA County is designated as the place of trial. The basis of venue is the location of the mortgaged premises. Dated: January 23, 2014. /s/_________ Mark K. Broyles, Esq. FEIN, SUCH & CRANE, LLP Attorneys for Plaintiff Office and P.O. Address 28 East Main Street, Suite 1800 Rochester, New York 14614 Telephone No. (585)232-7400 (SECTION: 025, BLOCK: 02, LOT: 12.0). NATURE AND OBJECT OF ACTION The object of the above action is to foreclose a mortgage held by the Plaintiff recorded in the County of ONONDAGA, State of New York as more particularly described in the Complaint herein. TO THE DEFENDANTS, except KEITH M. MORGAN A/K/A KEITH M. MORGAN, JR., the plaintiff makes no personal claim against you in this action. To the above named defendants: The foregoing summons is served upon you by publication pursuant

to an order of the Hon. DEBORAH H. KARALUNAS, a Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of N.Y., dated March 20, 2014 and filed along with the supporting papers in the Onondaga County Clerk’s Office. This is an action to foreclose a mortgage. The premises is described as follows: ALL THAT TRACT OR PARCEL OF LAND, situate in the Village of Manlius, County of Onondaga and State of New York, and being the same premises deeded by Nelson Caswall and Ruby C. Caswall, his wife, to Edward Cheney by deed dated November 1, 1871 and therein described as follows: Beginning at the southeast corner of land on which Jacob Baker resided in the center of Pleasant Street; thence northerly along said Baker’s east line 24 rods to a stake; thence easterly, at right angles, with said last named line to the west line of Daniel Thomas’ land; thence southerly along said Thomas’ (now or formerly) west line and the west line of Sophrona Chapman (now or formerly) land to the center of Pleasant Street; thence westerly along the center of Pleasant Street to the place of beginning, containing 96 square rods of land, be the same more or less. And being the same premises as conveyed by Elizabeth H. Bixby to Charles E. Fry and Cora J. Fry, his wife, by deed dated June 13, 1924, and recorded in the Onondaga County Clerk’s Office on June 14, 1924, in Book 540 of deeds, at page 2048c. EXCEPTING AND RESERVING from the above described premises all that piece or parcel of land situate in the Village of Manlius, County of Onondaga and State of New York, and bounded and described as follows: Beginning at the northwest corner of the parcel of land conveyed to Charles E. Fry and Cora J. Fry by Elizabeth H. Bixby by deed dated June 13, 1924, and recorded in the Onondaga County Clerk’s Office on June 14, 1924, in Liber 540 of Deeds, page 2048c; running thence easterly along the north line of said parcel to the northeast corner thereof; thence southerly on the east line of said parcel 120 feet to the post; thence westerly parallel with the


To place your ad call (315) 422-7011 or fax (315) 422-1721 or e-mail classified@syracusenewtimes.com north line to a point in the west line of said lot; thence northerly along the west line of said lot 120 feet to the place of beginning, be the quantity more or less. Premises known as 203 Pleasant Street, Manlius, NY 13104. SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF ONONDAGA. SUMMONS  Index No.: 2014EF394. Samuel L. McArthur Plaintiff,vs. Rayfield O. Taylor and Wanda L. Brown, Defendants. Plaintiff designates Onondaga County as the place of trial. The basis of the venue is plaintiff’s residence. Plaintiff resides at: To the above named Defendant: You are hereby summoned to answer the complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer on the Plaintiff’s Attorney within 20 days after the service of this summons, exclusive of the day of service (or within 30 days after the service is complete if this summons is not personally delivered to you within the State of New York); and in case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated: February 12, 2014.  JAMES B. FLECKENSTEIN, Attorney for Plaintiff 117 South State Street, Syracuse, New York 13202. (315) 475-3012. NOTICE OF THE NATURE OF THIS ACTION. This is an action for monetary damages for personal injury resulting from a motor vehicle collision which occurred on March 6, 2011 in Syracuse, New York. Plaintiff seeks damages in the amount of $500,000.00. NOTICE OF COMMENCEMENT OF ACTION SUBJECT TO MANDATORY ELECTRONIC FILING, PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the matter captioned above, which has been commenced by filing of the accompanying documents with the County Clerk, is subject to mandatory electronic filing pursuant to Section 202-5-bb of the Uniform Rules for the Trial Costs. This notice is being served as requires by Subdivision (b) (3) of that Service. The New York Courts Electronic Filing System (“NYSCEF”) is designed for the electronic filing of documents with the County Clerk and the court and for the electronic service of those documents, court

documents, and court notices upon counsel and self represented parties. Counsel and/ or parties who do not notify the court of a claimed exception (see below) as required by Section 202-5-bb(c ) must immediately record their representation within the e-filed matter on the Consent page in NYSCEF. Failure to do so may result in an inability to receive electronic notice of document filings. Exemptions from mandatory e-filing are limited to: 1) attorneys who certify in good faith that they lack the computer equipment and (along with all employees) the required knowledge to comply; and 2) self-represented parties who choose not to participate in e-filing. For additional information about electronic filing, including access to Section 202.5.bb, consult the NYSCEF website at www.nycourts. gov/efile or contact the NYSCEF Resource Center at 646-3863033 or efile@courts. state.ny.us. Dated 2/12/14. SYRACUSE DOWNTOWN DIRECT LLC has been formed under Section 203 of the Limited Liability Company Law. The Articles of Organization were filed with the New York Secretary of State on December 23, 2013. The county in which the office is located is Onondaga. The New York Secretary of State has been designated as the agent of the LLC upon whom process may be served. The New York Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process served to Patrick T. Baker, 2606 Pearl Street, P. O. Box 188, New Woodstock, NY 13122. The purpose of this LLC is any lawful business purpose. TKS Holdings, LLC, a domestic Limited Liability Company (LLC), filed with the Sec of State of NY on April 7, 2014.  NY Office location: Onondaga County.  SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served.  SSNY shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC served upon him/her to Davies Law Firm, P.C., 210 E. Fayette St., Syracuse, NY 13202.  General Purposes.

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Call 422-7011 x 111 bit more flush? Or would you rather dodge the spiritual tests you’d have to face if you became a money magnet? Would you prefer to go about your daily affairs without having to deal with the increased responsibilities and obligations that would come with a bigger income? I suspect you will soon receive fresh evidence about these matters. How you respond will determine whether or not you’ll be able to take advantage of new financial opportunities that are becoming available.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) “Dear Astrologer: We Aries people have an intense fire burning inside us. It’s an honor and a privilege. We’re lucky to be animated with such a generous share of the big energy that gives life to all of nature. But sometimes the fire gets too wild and strong for us. We can’t manage it. It gets out of our control. That’s how I’m feeling lately. These beloved flames that normally move me and excite me are now the very thing that’s making me crazy. What to do? Signed, Aries.” Dear Aries: Learn from what firefighters do to fight forest fires. They use digging tools to create wide strips of dirt around the fire, removing all the flammable brush and wood debris. When the fire reaches this path, it’s deprived of fuel. Close your eyes and visualize that scene.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) The U.S. military

budget this year is $633 billion. In comparison, the United Nations’ peacekeeping budget is $7.8 billion. So my country will spend 81 times more to wage war than the United Nations will spend to make peace. I would prefer it if the ratio were reversed, but my opinion carries no weight. It’s possible, though, that I might be able to convince you Scorpios, at least in the short run, to place a greater emphasis on cultivating cooperation and harmony than on being swept up in aggression and conflict. You might be tempted to get riled up over and over again in the coming weeks, but I think that would lead you astray from living the good life.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) “My personal

philosophy is not to undertake a project unless it is manifestly important and nearly impossible.” So said Taurus-born Edwin Land, the man who invented the Polaroid camera. I have a feeling these might be useful words for you to live by between your birthday in 2014 and your birthday in 2015. In the coming 12 months, you will have the potential of homing in on a dream that will fuel your passions for years. It may seem to be nearly impossible, but that’s exactly what will excite you about it so much — and keep you going for as long as it takes to actually accomplish.

Ar

i es

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SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Actor Matthew McConaughey prides himself on his willingness to learn from his mistakes and failures. A few years ago he collected and read all the negative reviews that critics had ever written about his work in films. It was “an interesting kind of experiment,” he told Yahoo News. “There was some really good constructive criticism.” According to my reading of the astrological omens, Sagittarius, now would be an excellent time for you to try an experiment comparable to McConaughey’s. Be

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) I wish there was a way you could

play around with construction equipment for a few hours. I’d love it if you could get behind the wheel of a bulldozer and flatten a small hill. It would be good for you to use an excavator to destroy a decrepit old shed or clear some land of stumps and dead trees. Metaphorically speaking, that’s the kind of work you need to do in your inner landscape: move around big, heavy stuff; demolish outworn structures; reshape the real estate to make way for new building projects.

CANCER (June 21-July 22)In the Transformers movies, Optimus Prime is a giant extraterrestrial

warrior robot. His body contains an array of weapons that he uses for righteous causes, like protecting Earth’s creatures. His character is voiced by actor Peter Cullen, who has also worked extensively for another entertainment franchise, Winnie the Pooh. He does the vocals for Eeyore, a gloomy donkey who writes poetry and has a pink ribbon tied in a bow on his tail. Let’s make Cullen your role model for now. I’m hoping this will inspire you to get the Eeyore side of your personality to work together with the Optimus Prime part of you. What’s that you say? You don’t have an Optimus Prime part of you? Well, that’s what Eeyore might say, but I say different.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Do you finally understand that you don’t have to imitate the stress-addled

workaholics and self-wounding overachievers in order to be as proficient as they are? Are you coming to see that if you want to fix, heal and change the world around you, you have to fix, heal and change yourself? Is it becoming clear that if you hope to gain more power to shape the institutions you’re part of, you’ve got to strengthen your power over yourself? Are you ready to see that if you’d like to reach the next level of success, you must dissolve some of your fears of success?

brave!

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)“Dear Oracle: I might be hallucinating, but recently I swear my pet iguana has been getting turned on whenever I disrobe in front of it. My naked body seems to incite it to strut around and make guttural hissing sounds and basically act like it’s doing a mating dance. Is it me, or is the planets? I think my iguana is a Capricorn like me. Signed, Captivating Capricorn.” Dear Capricorn: Only on rare occasions have I seen you Capricorns exude such high levels of animal magnetism as you are now. Be careful where you point that stuff! I won’t be shocked if a wide variety of creatures finds you extra alluring.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)

“Eat like you love yourself,” advises author Tara Stiles. “Move like you love yourself. Speak like you love yourself. Act like you love yourself.” Those four prescriptions should be top priorities for you, Aquarius. Right now, you can’t afford to treat your beautiful organism with even a hint of carelessness. You need to upgrade the respect and compassion and reverence you give yourself. So please breathe like you love yourself. Sleep and dream like you love yourself. Think like you love yourself. Make love like you love yourself.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) If blindfolded, most people can’t tell the difference between Pepsi

“Beauty is the purgation of superfluities,” said Michelangelo. Do you agree? Could you make your life more marvelous by giving up some of your trivial pursuits? Would you become more attractive if you got rid of one of your unimportant desires? Is it possible you’d experience more lyrical grace if you sloughed off your irrelevant worries? I suggest you meditate on questions like these, Virgo. According to my interpretation of the astrological omens, experiencing beauty is not a luxury right now, but rather a necessity. For the sake of your mental, physical and spiritual health, you need to be in its presence as much as possible.

and Coca-Cola. But I bet you could, at least this week. Odds are good that you will also be adept at distinguishing between genuine promises and fake ones. And you will always know when people are fooling themselves. No one will be able to trick you into believing in hype, lies or nonsense. Why? Because these days you are unusually perceptive and sensitive and discerning. This might on occasion be a problem, of course, since you won’t be able to enjoy the comfort and consolation that illusions can offer. But mostly it will be an asset, providing you with a huge tactical advantage and lots of good material for jokes.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

Homework: Think of the last person you cursed, if only with a hateful thought if not an actual spell. Now

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

I’m pretty sure God wants you to be rich. Or at least richer. And I know for a fact that I want you to be richer. What about you? Do you want to be wealthier? Or at least a

58

04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com

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face time

Matthew Loveland has taught sociology at Le Moyne College since 2005. He blogs at milieuxmorass.wordpress.com. His Twitter TAKe profile describes him as a “sociologist tweeting about sociology, and other stuff too. … I hate all the right things.” Follow him @mtloveland.

QUICK

By Renée K. Gadoua

Why did you start tweeting about Dolphy Day? I’ve long been a critic of Dolphy Day. I’m on Twitter all the time. I had these reactions and decided to tweet about it. What is your criticism? I find the day too disruptive. I prepare for my classes. I think carefully about my whole semester, and it makes it difficult to do my work. I care about Le Moyne. I love what I do and the day robs me of that.

Do students on campus even know Frank Zappa or Eric Dolphy?

Have you voiced that concern in the past? I’ve spoken to people on campus. The day is really well entrenched. A couple of meetings won’t change it.

How does Twitter change or affect interaction?

I drink. I like to party. I’m cool with it. I think the drinking age should be lowered. It bothers me that the college is looking the other way. The problem is Dolphy Day is more than one day. There are the scares, the whole night before. There’s this idea that students can choose not to participate, but that’s not realistic.

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I believe it was spontaneous to begin with. It’s like the Frank Zappa song from the ’60s with the jazz improvisation, the “Eric Dolphy Memorial Barbecue.” Eric Dolphy is a very important artist. If Dolphy Day were really about Eric Dolphy, it would be great.

No. But there’s no student who’s taken a class with me who doesn’t know about Eric Dolphy.

Is it the drinking that bothers you?

Le Moyne College’s first Dolphy Day took place in 1971, though its origins are subject to debate.“Through some sort of occult ritual whose details remain reserved to the privileged few, the student Wizard passed on his powers to underclassmen, who thereby gained the authority to select the date for the following year,” wrote John W. Langdon, Class of 1967, in the college’s official history, Against the Sky.

There are conflicting stories about the origin of Dolphy Day. What do you think happened?

Could the college plan this? Sure. Other schools do it. I’ve gone on the record saying if students had a truly spontaneous and rebellious Dolphy Day, I’d be all for it. I teach about power and dissenting from power. Do it. What was the response on Twitter to your comments? Some were upset, but I can’t hold them accountable since they were in the middle of celebrating the day. Students really value the day. One of the lessons of Twitter is I’m aware of how important it is. What is your approach to Twitter? Do you follow students? My whole thing on Twitter is to be a bit unique. Students follow me. I don’t follow them back. It’s their space. I let them know I’m there.

04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com

In this case, what was most striking was that it led to personal interaction. We’re here talking because of it. It led students I might not have met to talk to me. The problem with Twitter is it lasts just a few seconds. That’s why I tweeted about it. I wanted to start a conversation. What’s the benefit of Twitter? It allows you to connect with people you didn’t know shared your interests. You also connect with people who disagree with you. If people resist the urge to troll, it can be very valuable. The day after Dolphy Day, I was at a Chiefs game. I tweeted my seat number and a picture. A guy I follow came over and introduced himself. You tweeted that you are more comfortable on Twitter than in person. My wife always says Twitter is perfect for me. There’s something to that. I love interacting with people, but I’m not very good at it. That’s why I became a sociologist. I’m very interested in how people interact. SNT Renée K. Gadoua is a freelance writer and editor. She is a graduate of Le Moyne College and survived four Dolphy Days, pre-Twitter era. Follow her on Twitter @ReneeKGadoua.

Michael Davis Photo


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parting shot snt

Send letters to the editor to the Syracuse New Times, 1415 W. Genesee St., Syracuse, NY 13204 or email them to off editorial@syracusenewtimes.com. All letters must be signed. They may be edited for grammar and length before publication.

sound

Update: The NBA Tuesday banned Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling for life and fined him $2.5 million, the most allowed by NBA rules. The ban means Sterling may not attend NBA games or practices, be at Clippers facilities, participate in the team’s business and personnel decisions or attend meetings of the league’s board of governors. NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said he would urge the board to force Sterling to sell the team. Photo by Damon Winter/The New York Times

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SOMETIMES, TOLERANCE IS INAPPROPRIATE

T

his essay changed over the weekend. It was going mention Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), who was asked recently if he would ban abortion if he were president. He believes abortion is wrong, but he said that in a country that’s divided 50/50 about whether women should have access to abortion and under what circumstances, a ban wasn’t practical.

“I think where the country is, is somewhere in the middle, and we are not changing any of the laws until the country is persuaded otherwise,” Paul said. That, it should surprise no one, made the most conservative end of the Republican base unhappy. “Considering he wants to be known for being principled as opposed to pandering, he needs to reconsider his statements,” Mollie Hemingway wrote in The Federalist. Pandering? By observing that half the country wants abortion to be safe and available to women? We wonder how anyone who would put themselves forward to lead this nation could ever ignore the views of half its people. Do we want, with every election, for the new president to seek to ban or unban abortion? What’s not principled about trying to avoid that? And that was the point to be made here: It’s not

04.30.14 - 05.07.14 | syracusenewtimes.com

healthy when any deviation from acceptable doctrine is attacked, either from the right or the left. One side or another should not jam its views on divisive issues down the throats of the other side (and we observe here that pro-choice people don’t insist anyone get an abortion, only that those who wrestle with the decision have the option). Ed Griffin-Nolan made the point earlier this year, when he observed that both presumptive local congressional candidates are saddled with supporters who want to paint the opponents as extremists, regardless of their positions. And it’s the point Bob Herz, a conservative, made a few weeks ago in the Rant and Rave section when he observed that Mozilla CEO Brendan Eich was being pilloried from the left for taking a position in 2008 that was similar at the time to the views of relatively liberal politicians, like President Barack Obama.

It’s time to end the overreaction to people who stray from the dogma, this essay was going to say. It’s time to be more tolerant, to widen the range of what’s considered acceptable, on both the right and the left. Then along came Donald Sterling. Sterling, 80, is the owner of the Los Angeles Clippers, and he was caught on tape telling his former companion, Vanessa Stiviano, 31, that she shouldn’t post photos of herself with black people on Instagram (“It bothers me a lot that you want to broadcast that you’re associating with black people”) and that she shouldn’t bring people like, say, former NBA star Magic Johnson to see the Clippers play (“Don’t bring blacks to my games”). Sterling has said the audio tape doesn’t reflect his views and raised questions about whether it had been doctored by a former mistress seeking revenge. But the ironies abound. The obvious one: The vast majority of athletes in the NBA are black. The slightly less obvious one: A lot of black people buy tickets to see NBA games. The disturbing one: Stiviano is of mixed race; on the tape, she identifies herself as “black and Mexican, whether you like it or not.” And Sterling’s critics noticed. “Sterling basically articulated Plantation Politics ... Make money off the Bucks/Lay with the Women/No Association in Public good or bad,” tweeted David West, a forward for the Indiana pacers. Now, invoking “plantation politics” is usually as inappropriate and unwarranted as Nazi comparisons. But it’s hard to argue with it in this context. And so here we are, preparing to call for more tolerance and less punitive reactions to people’s opinions … and there’s the Sterling tape. We can’t legislate how people think or feel, but sitting quietly by without comment about such racism isn’t OK. We need to say that these sorts of views are unacceptable in a nation based on democratic ideals and basic civil rights. Donald Sterling will think what he will, but we need to let him and people like him know clearly and powerfully that the rest of us won’t be silent, for fear silence will be interpreted as acceptance. Cut some slack for Rand Paul and Brendan Eich. Not for Sterling. SNT


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