Syracuse New Times 11-09-16

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SPORTS

Orange men and women hoops squads poised for more success in 2017 Page 4

S Y R A C U S E

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FOOD

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STAGE

SU Drama’s Laura and the Sea is a dark suicide comedy

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READ! SHARE! RECYCLE!

Beijing gets a taste of the Empire Brewing Company

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MUSIC

Baby Soda loves the casualness of street performing

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MUSIC

Symphoria’s Queen tribute will rock you at the Landmark

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ISSUE NUMBER 2355

Leiber and Stoller’s classic lyrics are showcased in Smokey Joe’s Café

NOVEMBER 9 - 15, 2016

STAGE

n o s a e S gs n i t e e r G

Cortland Repertory’s Kerby Thompson creates new artistic paths with CRT Downtown By James MacKillop

STAGE

Tell Me On a Sunday puts Erin Williamson’s vocals on display Page 11


SNT

BUZZ 11.15

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facebook.com/syracusenewtimes @SYRnewtimes PUBLISHER/OWNER William C. Brod (ext. 138) EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Bill DeLapp (ext. 126) PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR Michael Davis (ext. 127) ASSOCIATE EDITOR Reid Sullivan DIGITAL EDITOR David Armelino (ext. 144) EVENTS EDITOR Christopher Malone (ext. 139) FREQUENT CONTRIBUTORS Cheryl Costa, Renee K. Gadoua, Luke Parsnow, Jeff Kramer, James MacKillop, Margaret McCormick, Carl Mellor, Matt Michael, Jessica Novak, Walt Shepperd SALES MANAGER Tim Hudson (ext. 114) SENIOR SALES ASSOCIATE Lesli Mitchell (ext. 140) DISPLAY ADVERTISING CONSULTANTS Elizabeth Fortune (ext 116) Matt Merola (ext. 146) SALES AND MARKETING COORDINATOR Megan McCarthy (ext. 115) CLASSIFIED SALES/INSIDE SALES COORDINATOR Lija Spoor (ext. 111) CREATIVE SERVICES MANAGER Robin Turk (ext. 152) GRAPHIC DESIGNERS Natalie Davis Greg Minix GENERAL MANAGER/COMPTROLLER Deana Vigliotti (ext. 118) OFFICE MANAGER Christine Burrows

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Cortland Repertory’s Kerby Thompson. See the story on page 8. Photography by Michael Davis, design by Natalie Davis.

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SPORTS By Matt Michael

SU HOOPSTERS HOPE TO REPEAT FINAL FOUR GOALS Last March, the Syracuse University men’s and women’s basketball teams transformed Syracuse into the center of the college basketball universe as SU became just the ninth different school to have both of its teams in the Final Four in the same year. And what made it extra special was that no one — and we mean NO ONE — saw it coming. The Orange men’s team lost their first four and four of their last five Atlantic Coast Conference games last season, and then lost to Pittsburgh for the third time in their first ACC Tournament game. Despite a 9-9 ACC record and 19-13 overall record, and much to the chagrin of many “bracketologists” and college basketball analysts, the Orange received a bid to the NCAA Tournament as a No. 10 seed and defeated Dayton, Middle Tennessee, Gonzaga and No. 1 seed Virginia before losing to No. 1 overall seed North Carolina in the Final Four. After getting blown out in back-to-back games to national powers Notre Dame and Louisville in late January, the SU women appeared to be destined for another year of being good enough to make the NCAA Tournament but not nearly good enough to challenge for the national title. But after those losses, the Orange won 16 of their next 17 games and defeated four ranked teams, including Louisville in the ACC Tournament and No. 2 South Carolina in the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament. Playing in their first Final Four, Syracuse

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Jim Boheim. Michael Davis photo

reached the championship game before losing to Cicero-North Syracuse High School alumna Breanna Stewart and the juggernaut Connecticut Huskies. As the SU men and women prepare for Friday’s 2016-2017 season-opening doubleheader at the Carrier Dome (the women vs. Rhode Island at 3 p.m. and the men vs. Colgate at 7 p.m.), the prevailing question around here is this: What are the chances they can do it again? Considering that the men have reached the Final Four once a decade since the

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1970s, and considering that the women had never reached the Final Four before last season, it would appear the odds of a repeat are slim. But that hasn’t stopped local fans from dreaming big, although SU coach Jim Boeheim tried to tap the brakes on that thinking following SU’s first exhibition against Indiana University of Pennsylvania on Nov. 1. “The only place where people are picking us to be a Final Four team is in Syracuse. That’s fandom,” said Boeheim, who’s starting his 41st year at the Orange helm. “That’s a good thing; we like that. But I don’t think the rest of the country is picking us anywhere. Maybe they’re all wrong. We can hope that’s true. I hope they’re wrong. I hope the people who are thinking those crazy things around here are right. But we won’t know for a while, for sure.” Women’s 11th-year coach Quentin Hillsman, on the other hand, is embracing the talk of a return trip to the Final Four as he continues to engineer SU’s steady climb from a 9-20 record in his first season in 2006-2007 to the Orange’s first appearances in the Sweet 16, Elite 8 and Final Four last season. “Last year was a remarkable year; that’s our standard. We’re going to continue to strive for that,” Hillsman said at a media day in late October. “We’re not going to apologize for talking about championships around here, because it’s important to us.” It’s important to SU fans, too, so let’s look at both teams and the reasons why they should, at the very least, return to the NCAA Tournament this March: SU Men: Talented and Deep Following a 66-52 loss to Pitt on Feb. 20 at the Dome, Boeheim was asked about forward Tyler Roberson, who took one shot and had four rebounds in 25 minutes as SU was beaten by 20 on the boards. “If I had anyone else,” Boeheim said, “he wouldn’t play a minute.” We’re not bringing that up to pick on Roberson, who redeemed himself in the NCAA Tournament, but to emphasize a point: This season, Boeheim will have plenty of options as his roster will go nine or 10 deep. In the exhibition against IUP, Boeheim used 18 different lineup combinations and the tinkering will continue throughout the early part of this season as Boeheim learns more about the team’s six new scholarship players. “We can do everything, especially defensively since we are really long,” said freshman guard Tyus Battle, who shot

4-of-5 from 3-point range and scored a team-high 16 points against IUP. “We really get after it on offense since we have a lot of options. We have shooters. We have big men down low. Everyone on this team has the potential to get playing time.” The outlook wasn’t so rosy in the spring, with SU’s top three scorers either graduating (Michael Gbinije and Trevor Cooney) or leaving for the NBA (Malachi Richardson). And the transfers of Kaleb Joseph to Creighton and Chinonso Obokoh to St. Bonaventure left the Orange with four returning scholarship players (forward Tyler Lydon, center DaJuan Coleman, point guard Frank Howard and power forward Roberson) to team with incoming freshmen Battle and forward Matthew Moyer and redshirt sophomore center Paschal Chukwu, who sat out last season after transferring from Providence. But then 6-foot senior point guard John Gillon transferred from Colorado State, where he averaged 13.2 points and 3.8 assists per game and shot 33 percent (60for-180) from 3-point range. And then the Orange signed Taurean Thompson, a 6-10 power forward from Brewster Academy in New Hampshire who was rated by ESPN. com as the No. 75 recruit in the 2016 class and signed late after considering Michigan State, among other schools. And in another better-late-than-never addition, the Orange in late August added 6-7 wing player Andrew White, a fifth-year graduate transfer who averaged 16.6 points and 5.9 rebounds per game at Nebraska last season. White chose the Orange over Michigan State, Miami, VCU and several other schools that wanted him. And just like that, Boeheim had the kind of depth that will enable him to press more and perhaps even play some man-toman defense, although the 2-3 zone will remain SU’s primary defense. Depending on the opponent, Boeheim can go big or small, fast or half court, and he won’t have to worry as much if someone other than Lydon picks up a few early fouls. Now the disclaimer: It’ll take a little time for the new players to mix with the old ones, and some players must accept that they’re going to play and score less than they might have expected. But if it all comes together, the Orange will be a legitimate Final Four contender. “Growing up you want to win a national championship, and when you get there, it’s something you can’t even imagine,” Howard said. “When you get that feeling, you just want to get it back — how much fun you had and the stakes that went with it, and we just want to get back to that.”


SU Women: “It’s Not Talk Anymore” Before last season, Hillsman and the Orange always thought they could emerge as one the nation’s elite teams. Now, they know they are. “I think that until you get to a point where you start winning some of these big games, it’s just talk,” Hillsman said. “It’s not talk anymore, because we’re playing our style, we’ve been successful and we’re ready to move on to continue to do the same thing.” The Orange shocked its NCAA Tournament opponents by playing at a frenetic pace that included a barrage of 3-pointers. SU returns four starters from its first-ever 30-win team — 2017 Nancy Lieberman Award candidate Alexis Peterson, All-Final Four honoree Brittney Sykes, leading rebounder Brianna Day and forward Isabella Slim — and Hillsman said his players are “in the best shape right now than we’ve ever been in” and that will enable the Orange to continue to push tempo and play fast. “My expectations are for this to be the best team, as best as we know how,” Day said. “We know there are going to be bumps in the road. People are going to make mistakes. It’s not going to be a perfect season, but we want to do what we know how to do, the best we can do it.” If the SU offense is a machine, Peterson is the engine as she ranks among SU’s all-time leaders in points (1,207) and assists (3.6

per game). She turned her game up a notch in the postseason, averaging 20.7 points per game in SU’s nine ACC and NCAA Tournament games. With Peterson leading the way and Connecticut diminished by the loss of Breanna Stewart, the Orange has one goal in mind and the players aren’t afraid to say it. “We are looking forward to playing our best, every game, every night,” said Orange senior center Bria Day, Brianna’s sister. “We are trying to make it back to where we went last year, get to the national championship game and win.” Poll Position: The SU men’s team is ranked No. 19 in the AP Preseason Poll and the SU women are ranked No. 14, but both teams will have trouble reaching their own league’s “Final Four,” according to the pollsters. SU is ranked fifth in the country among ACC teams (behind No. 1 Duke, No. 6 North Carolina, No. 8 Virginia and No. 13 Louisville), while the women are tied for fourth in the nation among ACC teams (behind No. 1 Notre Dame, No. 5 Louisville and No. 12 Florida State and tied with No. 14 Miami). SNT

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FOOD

By Margaret McCormick

EMPIRE EXPORTS BREWS TO BEIJING

Empire Brewing Company founder David Katleski. Michael Davis photo

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Empire Brewing Company celebrated a major milestone last week: Its first shipment of Slo Mo’ India Pale Ale and White Aphro, a Belgian-style wheat ale with hints of lavender, ginger and lemon peel, arrived at Panda Brew, in Beijing, China. Empire founder and owner David Katleski planted the seeds for international trade during a trip to China with Central New York business leaders in 2014. On that trip, he met the owner of Jingwei Fu Tea Company, which later resulted in Empire’s East-meets-West, black tea-infused beer called Two Dragons, created at the Empire brewery and brewpub, 120 Walton St., in Armory Square. Katleski has said that China is about 20 years behind the United States in terms of craft beer, so he saw an opportunity to do business and be one of the first breweries in the States to bring craft beer to China. He hired Jing Zhang, a native of China living in Syracuse, to help navigate and expedite the export process. She now serves as export specialist for Empire Brewing. The opening of the Empire Farmstead Brewery earlier this year made it possible for Empire to bottle its beers for the first time. In the United States, Empire’s beers are now distributed throughout New York and in New Jersey and Delaware. Meanwhile, in Cazenovia: If you want to get a firsthand look at the brewing process, the Empire Farmstead Brewery, 33 Rippleton Road (Route 13), has begun offering brewery tours on Saturdays and Sundays, 1 to 5 p.m. each hour. Reservations for same-day tours can be made in the retail area at the entrance of the tasting room. Sign up when you arrive and enjoy a pint while you wait. Tours are offered on a first-come, first-serve basis and tend to fill up quickly. They last about 30 minutes and end with a complimentary five-ounce beer sample. You must be 21 years old with a valid ID to participate in the sampling. Closed-toe shoes are required for the tour and no pets are allowed, including service animals. Children over age 5, accompanied by a parent or guardian, may participate. Empire reserves the right to cancel weekend tours, if needed, to accommodate brewing

operations. Empire Farmstead Brewery is open Fridays through Sundays, 11:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. For more information, call 655-2337 or visit empirebrew.com.

Vegan Dinner With A View

Farm to Fork 101, a dining series that connects local farmers and consumers, will host its first all-vegan dinner on Monday, Nov. 14, 6 to 9 p.m., at the Crowne Plaza Hotel, 701 E. Genesee St. The event will be held on the hotel’s top floor, so the view should be as stunning as the food is delicious. Crowne Plaza/Redfields chefs Michael Brown and Jacob Flanders are collaborating with Joel Capolongo of Strong Hearts Café and Dan Hudson of the Sherwood Inn, Skaneateles, to create and demonstrate five small-plate vegan dishes. Nutritionist Lela Niemitz, of FoodFeasible, will showcase vegan drinks. Tickets are $55. For more information, visit face book.com/farmtofork101. To purchase tickets, go to squareup.com/store/farm-to-fork-101/item/farm-tofork-redfields-at-crown-plaza.

Downtown Deutsch Brunch On Menu

If you’re downtown on a Saturday morning and find yourself ravenous, a new brunch option won’t leave you hungry. Liehs & Steigerwald Downtown, 117 E. Fayette St., is offering an all-you-can-eat buffet on Saturdays, 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. You’ll find eggs, home fries, pancakes and some of the things the German-style butcher shop-grocer-pub is best known for, like bacon and sausage. Price is $11.99 per person, with $6 mimosas available at the bar. Call 299-4799 or visit facebook. com/liehsandsteigerwalddowntown. SNT Margaret McCormick is a freelance writer and editor in Syracuse. She blogs about food at eatfirst.typepad.com. Follow her on twitter.com/mmccormickcny, connect on facebook.com/EatFirstCNY or email her at mmccormicksnt@ gmail.com.

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n o s a e S ings t e e r G

Cortland Repertory’s Kerby Thompson creates new artistic paths with CRT Downtown By James MacKillop Michael Davis photos Kerby Thompson, artistic director of Cortland Repertory Theatre.

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“I

don’t want to compete with myself.” Kerby Thompson, the lanky, youthful-looking artistic director of Cortland Repertory Theatre, is talking about the directions his company might take now that it is going to run year-round.

The company, sometimes called Cortland Rep or CRT, has been around for 45 years, some of them shaky. There has been steady growth since Thompson took over in fall 2000. A $2.5 million campaign led to the building of the chic CRT Downtown that opened last year. Whatever dramatic wonders appear on the new stage, they will not be continuations of, or in competition with, what we see in the summer. In the public mind Cortland Repertory has been identified with the circular Pavilion Theater on Little York Lake, which Syracusans reach via the Preble exit from Route 81. Altogether it’s one of the most beautiful venues in Central New York. The photogenic pavilion, built in the Teddy Roosevelt administration, offers an intimate stage where audiences sit a few feet away from performers, while generous exit balconies allow for spirited socializing before the curtain and at intermission. Despite the identity, the company does not own the building and can’t use it for anything but the performances. Thus CRT Downtown serves many needs. Before the opening of the downtown venue, company functions were scattered around the city: the business office in one place, set construction in another, and room to rehearse dance numbers wherever it could be found. All of that is now brought together in one capacious space, along with a stage for cold-weather productions. CRT Downtown is at 24 Port Watson St., the cross-street at the south end of the Cortland commercial hub. Main Street is a half-block away. There is abundant, well-lighted parking. The current edifice embraces what had been three attached buildings, including an auto dealership, a printing shop and a bowling alley. A weathered, decaying billboard of a giant bowling pin

11.9.16 - 11.15.16 | syracusenewtimes.com

at 24 Port Watson had been a prominent eyesore before Cortland Repertory tore it down. The company’s high artistic standards under Thompson made the company a source of community pride before the building started, but striking that bowling pin was a public relations plus. The first large room off the street offers enough space for, well, an automobile showroom. During business hours it’s a waiting room for the executive offices. When there’s a performance in the next space, it could serve as a schmooze-inducing recreation area at intermission, like the balconies at the Pavilion Theater. That performance area is a black box without a stationary stage or rows of seats. “Black box” is a familiar term for a room, painted in black, that can be adapted for anything, with the right sets and lighting. Both Syracuse Stage and the Redhouse Arts Center have designated black boxes, used for rehearsals and also for experimental shows likely to appeal to select audiences. Most are smallish. With the right configuration, CRT Downtown’s could seat more than 300. Because the room is bare, space can be configured to suit a director and producer’s expectations. Chairs could be ranked in rows, or they could be clustered around tables, cabaret style. The mobile stage might be flush against one wall, with the audience in the familiar position of looking in one direction. Or the stage could be put in the middle for theater-in-the-round shows. When walking in the empty black box, one immediately becomes aware of the rather spongy or spring floor. A prime use of the space will be for dance rehearsals for musicals. There were two big ones last summer at the Pavilion Theater, West Side Story and A Chorus Line, and one small, The Marvelous Wonderettes.


The CRT Downtown black box has already been inaugurated. The company began to move in as different parts of 24 Port Watson were completed, and turn away crowds showed up for musical fundraisers. The first dramatic offering at the new location came at the end of March, Doug Wright’s Pulitzer Prize-winning I Am My Own Wife, a one-man show with Jason Guy. It’s the story of a masculine-appearing transvestite who somehow survived both the Nazi regime and the equally homophobic East German dictatorship. Irrepressible and morally ambiguous, the protagonist acquired an extensive collection of antiques and earned extra income by informing to the dreaded Stasi, the secret police. Wife would have been unimaginable on the summer calendar. The director, however, was Bill Kincaid, veteran of many summer shows. Back to Thompson’s quotation about not competing with his summer self, the company has nothing to gain by producing the same kind of fare in the winter months. Too much of good thing can lead to a sense of sameness. Further, a high percentage of summer audiences are “summer people,” residents of other regions with camps and cottages adjacent to Central New York’s many lakes. Local audiences already support the often adventurous offerings of the SUNY Cortland Drama Department, or they drive to Syracuse and Ithaca for theatrical fixes. They can be persuaded to cut driving time. In mid-October came two one-acts to better gauge what new audiences might respond to. The black comedy The Receptionist by hot young playwright Adam Bock, whose work often appears at Ithaca’s Kitchen Theatre, was paired with the psychological drama The Birds, based on the decades-old short story by Daphne du Maurier that Alfred Hitchcock reset in California for his landmark 1963 film. Although moved to New England, this version came from Irish playwright Conor McPherson (The Weir, This Lime Tree Bower), whose reputation is even higher than Bock’s. For these one-acts, a long, narrow stage was placed between two ranks of well-upholstered seats. Later fall offerings included a Halloween dance party and the parochial school send-up Late Nite Catechism. A concert featuring Todd Meredith, who has performed with the Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story jukebox musical, is slated for Saturday, Nov. 19, 7:30 p.m. The year ends with two yuletide productions, the children’s show The Story of Ebenezer Scrooge (Saturday, Dec. 10, 2 p.m.) and David Sedaris’ mordant contemporary classic, The Santaland Diaries (Friday, Dec. 16, and Saturday, Dec. 17, 7:30 p.m.; Sunday, Dec. 18, 2 p.m.). More stage works will be announced for the new year. Call (800) 427-6160 or visit cortlandrep. org for information.

CRT Downtown, 24 Port Watson St.: Built upon the former locations of an auto dealership, a printing shop and a bowling alley.

Thompson’s popularity within the community, as well as his ability to strengthen Cortland Repertory’s financial health to allow the move to the new facility, is based upon a string of assets. Audiences love his witty, self-effacing curtain speeches, usually wearing a surprise costume appropriate to the show. More important, of course, are his high artistic standards, assembling a crack corps of backstage people, and a sharp eye for the transient talent that comes up from New York City. Above these is Thompson’s singular ability to anticipate what his audiences will embrace, especially when the choice is counter-intuitive. John Cariani’s Almost, Maine, nine interconnected playlets about love, disappointment and madness, shows Thompson at his most astute. The 2006 New York City opening was trashed by leading voices in the press, and the show suffered a short run. In the 10 years since, Almost, Maine has become the test case for how the tastes of Gotham contrast with those in the hinterlands. But Thompson’s Almost, Maine opened in August 2007, putting him way ahead of the curve, and perhaps leading it. The Syracuse Stage production of Almost, Maine followed in 2010. Thompson, now in his early 50s, has spent nearly all of his adult life working in live theater. He was born in Chepachet, R.I., one of the last remaining rural plots in the state, and attended the University of New Hampshire in Durham, majoring in communications. Tall, thin and athletic, he was first in demand as a dancer. That talent is less often called for in Cortland, although one of his most popular roles was as the rough-talking, gold-wearing teacher in Richard Alfieri’s Six Dance Lessons in

Six Weeks (August 2010). His good looks and native comic ability took him off his hoofs into speaking roles. All the while he was Manhattan-based as he criss-crossed the country, taking roles where they arose. This was an apprenticeship in how theaters work.

One assignment landed him at Cortland Repertory at Little York Lake, where he was enthusiastically received. When the CRT Board’s unhappiness with Thompson’s predecessor peaked, the door opened for a longer stay in Central New York. Sixteen years later the trend is up. SNT

November 17 Showtime (Cover/Pop Rock) December 15

The Jason Wicks Band (Country)

January 19

Tom Townsley & The Backsliders (Blues)

February 16

Classified (Hot Brass Big Band)

March 16

The Blarney Rebel Band (Celtic/Irish)

April 20

The Old Main & Rabbit in the Rye (Folk/Americana)

7:00 - 9:00 PM * FREE ADMISSION CASH BAR * CONCESSIONS * DOORS OPEN AT 6:00 PM Things are heating up at the Kallet Civic Center 159 Main Street, Oneida The Winter Warm Up Concert Series was made possible in part by a grant from The Gorman Foundation

syracusenewtimes.com | 11.9.16 - 11.15.16

9


STAGE

By James MacKillop Adam Coy and Adele Fish in SU Drama’s Laura and the Sea. Michael Davis photo

DARK COMEDY PROBES BLOGGING AND THE AFTERLIFE

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t first we acted out stories from the Gospels, soon joined by the love stories of the troubadours. Later dramatic action was drawn from fables, folktales, tales of wonder and eventually history, and then on to novels, news stories and movies.

What we see for the first time in the Syracuse University Drama Department world premiere of Kate Tarker’s Laura and the Sea (through Sunday, Nov. 13) is the blog as the default raw material. When Laura, a top travel agent, unexpectedly kills herself, her colleagues piece together a memorial blog. As we all know now, bloggers speak in their own voices and usually focus on themselves. There is some question of how much of reality the blogger even perceives or can connect with. Laura is billed only as “a new play,” rather than a world premiere, but it has been seen only in workshop before this production. New SU Drama instructor Katherine McGerr brings this “new play” in many senses to us. Playgoers steeped in Arthur Miller or even Sarah Ruhl are likely to find it disorienting. Action switches between three simultaneously represented locales presented on Roslyn Palmer’s unchanging set. Pay attention to lighting and sound cues to see when we have moved on from the chic offices of J. Travel, somewhere in Manhattan. Next is a pleasure boat docked somewhere near Manhattan; we can tell when office manager Annie (Jesse O’Brien) hoists a huge sail. And third is the memorial blog itself, with characters speaking in their own voices and often projected in a lighted crawl up above. Time moves fluidly back and forth. A character may speak of

Laura’s loss, and shortly she will appear on stage speaking in her own voice. In cyberspace we lose that orientation to the actual world we inherited from our ancestors. As with messages in blogs or tweets, the context of the internet becomes part of what is communicated. Credit not only Roslyn Palmer’s set, Greg Folsom’s lighting design and Kevin O’Connor’s sound design but also Rasean Davonte Johnson’s projection design (a new title for us) for helping the audience stay with the action. Because characters do not address each other by name, we could not be sure what to call them without seeing their utterances identified. Director McGerr has conveniently cast the six players as distinct physical types. Audiences know who they are and what they’re like before we link persons with words. The CEO is a tall guy usually in a dark suit, Jack (Pascal Portney), whose power over his employees extends to sleight-of-hand magic. Brunette Annie (Jesse O’Brien) asserts her authority in lengthy speeches. There is some question how well people pay attention to her. Jack and Annie are closed off in a glass-walled office upstage. At a flick of the wrist, blinds close into an opaque screen, and we can no longer see authority. Downstage are four desks or work stations. Bearded, earthy Stan (Adam Coy) sits at stage right. He speaks candidly, as one

Central New York’s Off-Broadway Theater 417 W. State St, Ithaca, NY • (607) 272-0570 • kitchentheatre.org 10

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would in a blog rather than conversation with another human, of his wish to see his co-worker Mary naked. Tall and redhaired, Mary (Adele Fish) remembers that the deceased Laura used to apply sunscreen to her bare back. Toward stage left, Joe (Dominic Martello), the shortest character, was unmistakably drawn to Laura. When an attempt is made to clear her desk, he retrieves her calendar from the waste basket. Laura’s desk at far stage left is ominously unattended. But Laura herself (Sabrina Fosse) interacts with everybody, twice throwing drinks into CEO Jack’s face. In a play where every word and gesture can have meaning beyond itself, we can see that travel is a metaphor for experience. “Where would you go?” also means what would you do? Significantly, the employees of J. Travel never go anywhere and show no interest in doing so. They only know what they see online. In 2016 America, however, travel agents have been damaged by consumers finding their ways on sites like kayak.com and priceline.com. It’s like what Napster did to music stores but does not fit Tarker’s viewpoint. Kevin O’Connor’s sound design makes an unusual contribution to the sense of disconnection in the office, with abundant white noise. Along with assorted bells and ringers, many unheeded, is the oppressive roar of air conditioning, drowning out other sounds and discouraging conversation. Laura and the Sea is billed as a “black comedy,” but Tarker’s tone has little in common with such grim contemporary practitioners as Martin McDonagh or Tracy Letts. There’s often a lighter and frivolous humor one would not expect in a play that includes a suicide. But then again, disconnection is much of what Laura is about. Playwright Kate Tarker has won a passel of fellowships and awards. She attended Oregon’s Reed College, where Steve Jobs learned calligraphy, has an M.F.A. from Yale, and now lives in Brooklyn. SNT

WRITTEN AND PERFORMED BY DARIAN DAUCHAN* A hip hop musical with upright bass and violin accompaniment! *Member AEA


STAGE

By James MacKillop Erin Williamson in Rarely Done’s Tell Me On a Sunday. C.J. Young photo

ERIN WILLIAMSON SHINES IN OFFBEAT ONE-WOMAN MUSICAL

A song cycle is a black swan of musical theater. We see one so rarely we could easily mistake it for something else. Shortly after completing Evita in the 1970s, Andrew Lloyd Webber composed a series of songs with different tones and themes to be sung by one woman. The 19 heard during Rarely Done Productions’ Tell Me On a Sunday (running through Nov. 19 at Jazz Central, 441 E. Washington St.) present a subtle narrative of travel, romance and disappointment. The most poignant is “Tell Me on a Sunday,” sung by an unnamed British girl coming to the United States, which provides a splendid showcase for much-loved local performer Erin Williamson. Getting Sunday on the boards has been an eight-year labor of love for director Dan Tursi, who first saw it on television. In the meantime Sunday has gone through constant transmutations, and getting one’s hands on it has been like trying to capture a cloud in a bag. The first version appeared at the Sydmonton Festival in 1979. Since then the

songlist has swollen past 30 for a while, with the title changed to Song and Dance, then changed back. New words were added by Richard Maltby Jr., and later rejected. One revised narrative had the girl staying in Britain and having different adventures. Bernadette Peters won a Tony for a 1985 Broadway production. The current version, the only one produced in North America this year, has lyrics by Englishman Don Black (Academy Award winner for “Born Free”), and the singer lands in New York City to get started. Remembering again that this came right after Evita, a big, brassy show, we can see Tell Me On a Sunday is a decided contrast, an intimate chamber piece ideally suited for Jazz Central. There are phrasings and chords that evoke other Lloyd Webber items, especially Cats, only here done in miniature. Williamson is all understatement and restraint here, not only in vocal delivery but in hundreds of cues and subtle gestures. For an hour and a half, with intermission, Williamson is on every minute. Although Lloyd Webber is a master of

popular idiom, his artistic ambitions in Sunday parallel those of classical composers like Franz Schubert and Gustav Mahler. The music seeks to achieve more feeling with less volume. Each of the 19 songs could stand by itself, regardless of its place in the narrative. That’s why different directors, including Lloyd Webber himself, have been able to shift them around. Williamson has clearly established a good working relationship with music director Abel Searor, who also directed her in last summer’s Evita at Central New York Playhouse. Searor’s keyboard is augmented by the combo of Erich and Zach Moser. They know each other’s tempos like a well-established team. They move easily within different emotions, from exuberance through loneliness to regret. One of the most interesting numbers celebrates and spoofs the chic affluence of Los Angeles, “Capped Teeth with Caesar Salad.”

Saucy in a red curly wig, like a younger Samantha Eggar, Williamson coos in a defined British accent throughout, with fronted vowels and softened r’s. She’s middle class and suburban, not Eliza Doolittle, but we do see the Union Jack overhead. The singer wants to embrace America, but she is a stranger in the land familiar to us. Eventually Debbie Ritchie’s costumes allow her to don Yankee clothes, like college sweatshirts. Moving to America primarily means seeking a green card (work permit) and secondarily meeting men, even though the singer tells friends back in England she does not want to become a career woman or a user of men. Most Brits are aware that we are easily charmed by their accents, and she snags a fellow right away. But disappointment also comes early when she learns that he has been cheating on her. A second male interest is Sheldon Bloom, a Hollywood producer who takes her to California, but she soon realizes that Sheldon is more devoted to his career and favors her only as a trophy. “Tell Me on a Sunday,” placed here, is the most wrenching number in the cycle. Then it’s back east for an entanglement with a faithless salesman before an accommodation with a married man, although she ultimately refuses to become a homewrecker. As well as anyone can remember, Tell Me On a Sunday is the first non-cabaret, one-woman musical production. Erin Williamson has been preparing for this through dozens of lesser roles and leads. It’s a tour de force. She can break your heart. SNT

ARTS & CRAFTS SHOW Sunday, Nov. 13 | 10 am – 5 pm Monday, Nov. 14 | 8 am – 8 pm

Art, jewelry, crafts, sculptures and more!

FREE ADMISSION OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

JCC of Syracuse

5655 Thompson Rd., DeWitt, NY 315.445.2360 | www.jccsyr.org syracusenewtimes.com | 11.9.16 - 11.15.16

11


STAGE

By James MacKillop

Michael Hunsaker, Chris White, Denzel Edmondson, Cornelius Davis and Gabriel Mudd in Merry-Go-Round Playhouse’s Smokey Joe’s Café. Ron Heerkens Jr. photo

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MERRY-GO-ROUND OFFERS A ROCKIN’ FINALE

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udiences old enough to have listened to music on a transistor radio can be expected to know every song in Smokey Joe’s Café, the season closer that runs through Nov. 19 at Auburn’s Merry-Go-Round Playhouse. In fact, some may be surprised to learn that “On Broadway,” “Hound Dog” and “Stand By Me” were all written by the same two people. Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller were two white guys from Baltimore and Long Island who embraced black musical idiom without telling the public what they were doing or much about themselves. They were one of the most successful musical teams of all time, yet most people don’t know their names. Smokey Joe’s Café helps you fill in those blanks and figure out who they were. Conceived by Stephen Helper, Jack Viertel and Otis Sallif in 1994, Smokey Joe’s had the longest run of any jukebox musical on Broadway, closing in 2000. It has no book or small talk, and in fact the actual song “Smokey’s Joe’s Café” is one Leiber-Stoller item missing from the songlist of 39 hits. A 2002 production at the Merry-Go-Round Playhouse did turnaway business during the regular season, and here it is again as a November treat. Most post-Labor Day shows at MGR are smaller in scale, like last month’s Rosemary Clooney tribute Tenderly. Not this time. Hot as the 2002 production was, this version is much bigger, with clever choreography by D.J.

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Salisbury, a director with extensive national credits who is well-known for his staging of Les Misérables. Indeed, this mostly urban music, composed for the likes of The Coasters, The Drifters and the young Elvis, takes on a kind of grandeur when there are costume changes by Tiffany Howard for every number, and an onstage musical ensemble of seven. Although Leiber and Stoller have been inducted into the Rock’n’Roll Hall of Fame, their output, some of it in collaboration with other writers like Phil Spector, Ben E. King, and others, is not so easy to categorize. Their first big hit, “Kansas City,” came in 1952, when the duo was barely 20, before the advent of Bill Haley and the Comets, when disc jockey Alan Freed was still calling the phenomenon “Moondog.” Many numbers are linked to the young Elvis, of course, such as Michael Hunsaker leading the company for “Jailhouse Rock.” Yet the producers of the show and director Salisbury significantly stage “Hound Dog” for a woman’s voice, as it was originally written for Big Mama Thornton. The role

here goes to Rheaume Crenshaw, a classic, sassy song belter, who also delivers strongly with “Fools Fall in Love” and “Saved.” This is an ensemble company in which every singer has a solo in the spotlight, but Rheaume (always cited by first name in the program) sets herself apart with more than her powerhouse delivery. She’s the only one of the four women without a pencil-thin model/dancer’s silhouette. Our eye often goes to her first. She and director Salisbury use this to comic effect in “Dance with Me,” when the boys play at turning away from her. Physical difference also marks the most reliable comic player, Cornelius Davis, who is also the shortest person on stage. With the possible exception of the novelty numbers like “Charlie Brown” and “Yakety Yak,” Leiber and Stoller weren’t much for humor, favoring emotion and romance. Which is all well and good when Smokey Joe’s Café is putting audiences of a certain age in a deeply mellow mood, but comic relief is always welcome in a two-and-ahalf-hour show. Cornelius can play straight when the number calls for it, but he is also a gifted natural comedian who can generate laughter with the right shrug of a shoulder, as in “Shoppin’ for Clothes” and “Searchin’.” The earnestness of deeply felt emotion is closer to Leiber and Stoller’s hearts, and many of those numbers go to Gabriel Mudd, especially in the showstopping “Stand By Me.” Although Smokey Joe’s lacks a book, and Leiber and Stoller never take stands on social or political questions, the show is unmistakably still “about” something, and that’s the integration and acceptance of black idiom in white America. When young baby boomers first heard LeiberStoller hits during the Eisenhower age, they not only were unaware of the composers, they seem not to have perceived that the music might sound black. In this staging D.J. Salisbury has put white and black singers side by side most inconspicuously. Yes, Summerisa Bell Stevens is a blonde, but her duet “Trouble” with Candice Marie Woods is a perfect, harmonic blend. White America learned before it could admit it that it loved African American cool and flair. We see it in “On Broadway,” one of the show’s more entrancing numbers, where Gabriel Mudd, Chris White, Denzel Edmondson and Cornelius Davis demonstrate how well they know how to walk as well as to sing. SNT


FILM

By Bill DeLapp

Has this process gotten easier with digital cameras? They can actually shoot more and more, so you’re skiing more and more, but now they can check their shots in the field during the playback. Plus they don’t have to change the film in the camera anymore. For 95 percent of my career the cameraman only had three minutes in the film camera and he had to be super-efficient. Then he had to build a darkroom in the field, download the film into a canister and not let any light hit it, then store it into a backpack, then reload another reel, so it took forever. Now they have memory chips so they can shoot hours and hours.

HOT DOGGIN’ WITH CHRIS ANTHONY A sure sign that skiing season will soon be here is Here, There and Everywhere. The 67th annual ski feature from Warren Miller Entertainment will be screened Thursday, Nov. 10, 7:30 p.m., at the Landmark Theatre, 362 S. Salina St. Tickets are $17; call 475-7980 for details. The new globetrotting travelogue specializes in wild and crazy athletes schussing the slopes. Veteran skier Chris Anthony, 46, who has participated in 22 previous Warren Miller outings, spoke with the Syracuse New Times about the filmmaking process. He just returned from Italy, where he started research on a film project about the post-World War II story involving the 10th Mountain Division ski troopers. The red-haired Anthony also confided about how he earned the nickname Archie: “As a University of Colorado freshman in my first week I showed up at a party wearing this sweater that literally looked like the Archie Andrews comic character. The name stuck.” And interestingly, Anthony cites the 1941 Sonya Henie musical Sun Valley Serenade as his favorite ski flick: “It’s a collection of beautiful skiing footage and I appreciate it more than most people because now I know how hard it is to get it.” How long have you been part of the Warren Miller series? It’s my 27th year, and this year my segment will be a tribute to Stein Eriksen, the Olympic medalist (who died last December at age 88). He was definitely one of the first disciples of the sport: He was stylish, he was good-looking, he was Norwegian. He came to the United States and he exploded the modern ski industry with his ski schools. Did the Warren Miller company approach you about performing in the movies? I happened to be doing really well at a ski competition, there

were some people from Warren Miller Entertainment there, and they needed a skier to go on a shoot in France, so they invited me. I literally grew up watching the Warren Miller films and idolizing Warren, so it was a dream come true. Ironically, a year prior I actually went to his house in Vail, where I also live, and dropped off a resume with photos and some film footage with the idea that maybe he would let me be in one of his films. It was a total coincidence that the other part of his production company came across me, so I guess things were meant to happen. What is it like doing a location shoot? When you see a Warren Miller film, it’s very beautiful, it looks like a big budget, and everybody thinks, “Oh Hollywood, everyone has trailers, everything is glamorous.” That is not the case with a Warren Miller film. When you go on a shoot, you have a cameraman, if you’re lucky you have a sound guy, and you have the ski talent. You are also part of the production; you’re carrying things like the tripod, you’re helping out and then you also ski for it. We will show up at a location and figure out what will bring out the best from this environment for the big shot on the screen: Where’s the sun. Where’s the light? What angle will we shoot from? So we scout the lines (of snow) and then it’s up to the athlete to exactly nail (the stunt), and the cameraman to get the shot. There are times when our cameraman would say, “Hike up a half-hour (to a location) to ski this line,” and really what they are looking at is two seconds of that line that they have zoomed in on to nail it. If you’re five feet off, you might miss the shot, so it’s the synchronicity of the cameraman to communicate with the athlete over the radio or in person. It’s not easy; there’s a lot of work.

It’s a dawn-to-dusk shooting schedule, right? Yeah, you need the big establishing shot to show the location where we’re at, then you nail down the medium shots, then you really get into the detail when you shoot the super close-ups at a super high speed so it comes out in slow motion. You can have one (snow) line where you’ve shot from six different angles at different camera rates (of speed) with different lenses: zoomed in, pulled out, different movements. You can really get a ton of material for the editors to work with, but you’ll only see maybe less than 10 percent of what we shoot (in the finished film). How long does a segment take to film? My segment runs nine minutes for this film and it took seven days of shooting at a ski resort (in Deer Valley, Utah), which is tons easier than being out at an uncontrolled environment. A big exotic shooting location, like when I went to Kazakhstan or Iran or China, you need a minimum of 15 days. And a lot of luck. Your work as a youth mentor for Colorado Ski Country has snowballed into your own youth initiative project. As a Warren Miller athlete, I was asked to go into schools and talk to kids. Now 18 years later I have my own outreach program with mentoring, education and scholarshipping kids to opportunities, and it’s become a massive part of my life now. Last year I went to schools and spoke to 15,000 kids and I scholarshipped a bunch of kids into different experiences. Actually, a few years ago at the World Cup I walked up to Mikaela Shiffron, who is one of the top female ski racers in the world, and introduced myself. And she said, “I know who you are: You spoke to us in the fifth grade!” SNT

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MUSIC B y R u s s Ta r b y

Baby Soda

SUBWAY SENSATION BABY SODA SERENADES THE SALT CITY

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he idea was always to bring the music to the people. Over its nine years in existence, New York City’s Baby Soda Jazz Band has performed at big Big Apple venues such as the Rainbow Room and the Village Vanguard, but the band’s most satisfying gigs have been played on the streets and the subway.

“It feels like music on the street makes a city a real city,” says de facto bandleader Peter Ford, a dapper dude who often sports vests and fedoras and plays a unique and toneful one-string bass. “The street and the subway, that’s really where you can connect with people.” When the combo cooks on a sunny afternoon at Washington Square Park or a darkened platform at the Union Square subway station, passers-by are often stopped in their tracks by lively renditions of tunes ranging from “Weary Blues” to “Palm Court Strut.” Ford knows the combo’s connecting when he sees people looking up from their smartphones and pocketing those ubiquitous gizmos. He knows it’s happening when toddlers dance and old folks clap their hands. He knows it’s working when they gladly drop dollar bills into the open instrument case. “This music is full of joy, full of life,” Ford says, “and when we’re playing on the street we’re really being in a com-

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munity, reaching all aspects of human condition. We’re not recreationists. We don’t play note-for-note Bix Beiderbecke solos or that kind of thing. We’re like a lot of the other younger bands, playing this music because we love the music, but not as a museum piece, more as a part of the community.” Baby Soda, which also features trumpeter Simon Wettenhall, reedman Tom Abbott and trombonist Joe McDonough, will play a concert sponsored by the Jazz Appreciation Society of Syracuse on Sunday, Nov. 13, 4 to 7 p.m., at Pensabene’s Casa Grande, 135 State Fair Blvd. Admission is $15. Although climbing on a lower rung of the Big Apple jazz ladder, the Baby Soda Jazz Band routinely features some of the best musicians in the city. Trumpeter Bria Skonberg has often busked with them and appears on their 2012 disc, Baby Soda Live at Radegast. “The Baby Soda Jazz Band is like a big family,” says Skonberg,

11.9.16 - 11.15.16 | syracusenewtimes.com

one of the hemisphere’s most promising young jazz artists. “I was very fortunate to be invited in right when I got to New York thanks to my good friend, Emily Asher.” Asher, the Brooklyn-based trombonist and vocalist, played and recorded with Baby Soda circa 2009 to 2012 before launching Emily Asher’s Garden Party. When Skonberg arrived in Gotham from Canada, Asher immediately introduced her to the Baby Soda outfit. “My flight landed at 6 a.m. and by 11 a.m. I was making music in Washington Square Park with Baby Soda,” Skonberg remembers. “Around 1 p.m. Wynton Marsalis stopped to listen and gave us a thumbs up. I think we were playing ‘Whinin’ Boy Blues.’ Between finding a wonderful group of kindred spirits and seeing the Great Oz of the trumpet walk by, I had all the signs that I had made the right choice to move and haven’t looked back.” Another top trad brass player, cornetist Ed Polcer, the 79-year-old veteran of Benny Goodman’s small group and former co-owner of Eddie Condon’s Jazz Club, plays with Baby Soda at least twice a month. “The band is very people-friendly, producing a comfortable feeling between the players and the audience,” Polcer says. “They’ve welcomed me into the gang and introduced me to scores of younger musicians.” Ed Polcer’s brass-playing son, Ben, and

accordionist Patrick Harrison co-founded the band during the winter of 2007-2008 while the two shared a drafty loft in downtown Brooklyn. “We wanted to organize all the New York City guys that we had met during our time with our band, the Loose Marbles,” Ben Polcer recalls. “So we started a new project, recorded a CD and hit the streets and subways.” The new project needed a name. Ed Polcer’s rumored, but hotly denied, habit of brushing his teeth with baking soda seems to have inspired the combo’s unusual moniker. “Bass/sousaphone player Jason Jurzak was joking around one day when we were touring in Berlin,” Ben recalls. “He was acting as Ed Polcer doing a commercial for the made-up product ‘Baby Soda,’ a new toothpaste. Patrick Harrison thought it would be funny to name the band after that.” Ford allows that the name’s “a little goofy,” but it attracts attention and is easy to remember. “I think of Baby Soda as a kind of elixir,” Ford says. “This music is an elixir that keeps people happy.” In fact, the group named its 2010 sophomore recording Jazz Roots Elixir. Baby Soda’s personnel changes regularly, but the anchors are Ford and guitarist-banjoist Jared Engel. Over the years, they’ve been joined by drummer Kevin Dorn, trumpeter Kevin Louis, percussionist David Langlois, and guests such as clarinetist Will Anderson, trumpeters Satoro Ohashi and Michael Magro and jug player Rich Levinson. The band’s ever-shifting lineup poses no problems, Ford says. Although a relatively healthy trad-jazz scene now spices the Big Apple, Ford maintains that “no one has enough work for a musician to commit to one band. In most of the bands here, each musician may have four or five other projects they’re working on. But we’re all familiar with the repertoire, and we know each other and we’ve played together enough that you can and keep the quality very high.” From “Tiger Rag” to “Tennessee Waltz,” the band’s arrangements are universally melody-driven. “With this music, the road map inside every song is melody,” Ford observes. “Melody is the secret weapon. You don’t get lost.” SNT


MUSIC

By Christopher Malone Brody Dolyniuk (center), with his band Yellow Brick Road

QUEEN FOR A NIGHT WITH SYMPHORIA

On Nov. 24, 1991, flamboyant Queen frontman Freddie Mercury died from AIDS and pneumonia complications. Brody Dolyniuk, who formed the popular Las Vegas lounge act Yellow Brick Road in 1997, has made a career presenting musical salutes to the likes of Elton John, Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin. Dolyniuk and his band will pay homage to Mercury’s legend when they perform “The Music of Queen” with Symphoria at the Landmark Theatre, 362 S. Salina St., on Saturday, Nov. 12, 8 p.m. Tickets are $15, $35 and $55; call 475-7979 for information. The Syracuse New Times caught up with Dolyniuk during a tour stop at an Oklahoma hotel, where he was warned that the joint was allegedly haunted: “They informed me this hotel has a history. Last night I was in my bathroom and I heard this chain noise going up and down the hallway. I thought, who the hell brought their dog to a hotel? It was going on for a long time, and I was getting kind of irritated. I went outside to see who was in the hallway, and there was no one there.” So you made it big in Las Vegas. I don’t know if I made it big. (Laughs.) I got my feet wet there. My career started there, and it blossomed into other things. Were you a session musician before that? Honestly, no. Music was a background hobby for me. Until I moved to Vegas, I was destined to be an auto mechanic. I used to paint, build cars and race — crazy things like that. I’d sing karaoke once in a while to get my fix.

I looked around Vegas and saw a whole thriving entertainment scene at night. I thought, jeez, I could do that. One of the first places I applied was a piano bar at the New York, New York Casino. From the piano bar, I put together Yellow Brick Road, which turned into a popular local favorite. From that platform I was called to do session work for the “Guitar Hero” games. Then came the audition for Windborne Music and for their “Music of Queen” show in 2009. I’m still doing the symphony shows and traveling the globe. How long have you played instruments? I picked up piano when I was young, and then guitar, drums, bass and harmonica. I don’t gig as a musician. I would never be hired as a lead guitarist. I play rhythm guitar and to accompany myself. It’s the same with a piano. I get by, but I’m not a virtuoso. What sparked the Elton John tribute? When I did the piano bar gigs, I would throw in one of his songs to fill up the set. One night someone brought in big, plastic star-shaped glasses and said that since I sounded like him, I may as well look like him. There was an immediate reaction from the crowd and I hammed it up. There were other bands doing tributes, and I figured, why not Elton John? But you also played other covers? The problem was that they made us play four one-hour sets in those days, so we’d sneak in other songs to fill up the set. The more we played, the more people began showing up to hear songs of Pink

Floyd, Led Zeppelin and others. Soon we became an all-encompassing classic rock band. Do you travel with a band, or will you perform solo? It’s a band, and we fly in to play with the local symphony. It’s primarily an East Coast band. The keyboardist and I are the only West Coasters. The set list is pretty ordained when we develop the show. The orchestra can choose which show they’d like us to bring. There are about 13 different shows, and many are classic rock. We focus on the top-selling acts, including Pink Floyd, The Who, Whitney Houston and Michael Jackson. We wouldn’t do an AC/DC show, because it wouldn’t work musically with an orchestra. What can people expect if they haven’t seen a show like this? No matter how well you market this, there will always be someone who says that they didn’t know there was going to be a band or a singer. There is always a little confusion no matter what you do. The band will be up front, playing the songs as you remember or expect to hear them. Then you have the orchestra blended in. It’s a dynamic balance and an emotional thing. Sometimes the rock band becomes the focal point, and other times the orchestra comes to the forefront. Are you often mistaken for an impersonator? Not so much. Yellow Brick Road showed there was an element of having a vocal similarity to Elton John. By some strange default and while singing growing up, I’d shift my timbre to match the voice I was singing along with. I was getting comments in high school from people telling me, you sound just like so-and-so. It stuck with me. There was a period where I was wearing costumes, and we did whole productions with different costumes. The costume thing was always a bit for humor, an inthe-moment spontaneous thing. You could say I was doing impersonations then. I stopped doing that and relied on myself, my own persona and singing to sell the show. It’s me as a fan. There are moments in the show where I do engage with the audience. There is always a tip of the hat to the original performer. I don’t want to give it away. SNT

syracusenewtimes.com | 11.9.16 - 11.15.16

15


“TINI”

WINE DOWN

$5 MARTINIS

and Italian Night

TUESDAY WEDNESDAY & Bar

MUSIC

LISTED IN CHR ONOLOGIC AL ORDER:

W E D N E S DAY 11/9 Civic Morning Musicals. Wed. Nov. 9, 12:30

p.m. Pianists Elizabeth and Evangeline Canfield take to the ivories in this Wednesday Recital Series installment at the Everson Museum of Art, 401 Harrison St. Free. civicmorningmusicals.org.

Cold River City. Wed. Nov. 9, 9 p.m. Blues and

grooves to lift up your spirits, plus Ruha at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. $7. funknwaffles. ticketfly.com.

Kitchen Dwellers. Wed. Nov. 9, 9 p.m. Mon-

tana bluegrass band cooks up some good grooves, plus Upstate Rubdown at The Haunt, 702 Willow Ave., Ithaca. $10/advance, $12/door. (607) 275-3447, dansmallspresents.com.

T H U R S DAY 11/10 Society for New Music. Thurs. 7:30 p.m.

An evening featuring the late Steven Stucky’s “Classic Style” opera at the Mulroy Civic Center’s Carrier Theater, 411 Montgomery St. $15/ adults, $12/seniors and students, $30/family, free/ages 12 and under. Societyfornewmusic. org.

Dark Star Orchestra. Thurs. 8 p.m. Grateful Dead-inspired band continues its jammy celebration at the State Theatre, 107 W. State St, Ithaca. $34.50. (607) 277-8283, stateofithaca. com.

Hip Abduction. Thurs. 8 p.m. Worldly sounds and instruments accented with emphasized and dubbed bass, plus Madaila and The Easy at the Westcott Theater, 524 Westcott St., $12. 299-8886, thewestcotttheater.com.

Heather Maloney. Thurs. 8 p.m. New England singer-songwriter continues her multimedia tour at The Dock, 415 Old Taughannock Blvd., Ithaca. $12/advance, $15/door. (607) 319-4214, dansmallspresents.com. Root Shock. Thurs. 9 p.m. Central New York’s

reggae-rock outfit in action, plus Qwister at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. $10. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

F R I DAY 11/11 Lost Bungalitos. Fri. 7 p.m. Massachusetts punk rockers headline a loud evening, plus

MUSIC BOX

16

INSTRUMENTS

MAMA RITA

HAPPY HOUR!

$5 MARGARITAS

4:00PM - 7:00PM

Specially priced wine, apps, & italian entrees

THURSDAY

6523 E. SENECA TPKE. JAMESVILLE 315 • 870 • 9132

Neglected Foot, BastardBastardBastard, Snake Blood Drinker and Alienman at 306 Allen St. $5/ advance, $8/door. 706-5687, syracusevault.com.

Infinity Shred. Fri. 7:30 p.m. Manhattan heavy rockers come calling, plus Nullsleep, Dearheart and Dos RObotos at Funk N Waffles, 727 S. Crouse Ave. $10/advance, $12/door. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

Ceili Rain. Fri. 8 p.m. Bob Halligan’s longtime band performs at Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St., Auburn. $20/advance, $25/door, $10/students. 253-6669, auburnpublictheater. com.

Baby Soda Jazz Band. Sun. 4-7 p.m. Boppin’

Botnek. Sat. 9 p.m. Canadian duo pushes but-

Raven and the Wren. Sun. 6 p.m. Fill up with

8 p.m. The orchestra rocks alongside Freddie Mercury aficionado Brody Dolyniuk at the Landmark Theatre, 362 S. Salina St.. $15, $35, $55. 475-7979.

tons for bass and bouncing bodies, plus Dante Belmonte, Frankie Cormio, Jester, Resis, Roseville and Andy Polk at the Westcott Theater, 524 Westcott St., $20/advance, $25/door. 299-8886, thewestcotttheater.com.

Heavy Pets. Sat. 9 p.m. Get down and gritty

Professor Louie and the Cromatix. Fri. 8

p.m. Special Veterans Day performance features the Grammy-nominated and Blues Hall of Fame inductees at the Center for the Arts, 72 S. Main St., Homer. $22/adults, $19/seniors, $16/ students, free/military, veterans and children under 18. (607) 749-4900, center4art.org.

4B. Fri. 9 p.m. Jersey-based deejay brings the relentless beats, plus Colors and DJ S-Dot at the Westcott Theater, 524 Westcott St., $18/ advance, $20/door. 299-8886, thewestcotttheater.com. Grace Stumberg. Fri. 9 p.m. Buffalo-based singer-songwriter takes to the stage, plus Beverly Stokes at The Dock, 415 Old Taughannock Blvd., Ithaca. $10/advance, $13/door. (607) 3194214, dansmallspresents.com. Big Sexy and the Scrambled Eggs. Fri. 9:30

p.m. Organic local rockers serve up a diverse plate of sounds at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. $10. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

S AT U R DAY 11/12 Ladies Night. Sat. 7 p.m. Several of Central

New York’s notable female vocalists, songwriters and musicans will be highlighted in a special evening of music at the Palace Theatre, 2384 James St. $15. 463-9240, ladiesnightcny. com.

Lauren Mettler. Sat. 7 p.m. Singer-songwriter

celebrates her latest release A Handful of Soil at Earlville Opera House, 18 E. Main St., Earlville. Free. 691-3550, earlvilleoperahouse.com.

Bongzilla. Sat. 7:30 p.m. Heavy stoner metal clouds up the evening with riffs and spliffs, plus Wizard Rifle, Blood Sun Circle, Bleak and Trash Burner at the Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. $15/advance, $18/door. (877) 987-6487, thelosthorizon.com.

Brass Transit. Sat. 8 p.m. Horn-heavy Chicago tribute ensemble from Canada blows into the Turning Stone Resort and Casino Showroom, Thruway Exit 33, Verona. $18. (800) 771-7711, turningstone.com.

Moss Back Mule Band. Sat. 8 p.m. The Sec-

ond Saturday music series features the Mohawk Valley’s Texas swing band at Westcott Community Center, 826 Euclid Ave. $10. 478-8634. 4788634, westcottcc.org.

11.9.16 - 11.15.16 | syracusenewtimes.com

SATURDAY & SUNDAY

Symphoria and the Music of Queen. Sat.

Old-Time Music Jam. Every Sun. 1 p.m. Jam

band comes fully equipped with a light show for the second night of tributes at the State Theatre, 107 W. State St, Ithaca. $25, $35, $30. (607) 277-8283, stateofithaca.com.

Brunch Weekend

Sik 1/2 OFF Selected Appetizers 8:00AM - 4:00PM $2.50 Domestic Pints Strings $5 BACON BLOODY MARYS $4.00 Well Drinks AFTER 10am SUNDAY $2.00 OFF Wine by the Glass 11/12 • 8PM—11PM

with these rockers, plus Primate Fiasco at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. $10/advance, $12/ door. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

7:30 p.m. The orchestra conducted by Julian Schwarz performs Haydn, Mozart and Prokofiev at Smith Opera House, 82 Seneca St. Geneva. $30/adults, $25/seniors, $10/students, free/ages 18 and under. 781-5483, thesmith.org.

Sat. Nov. 19th, 11am-5pm Buy - Sell - Trade $4 Admission Maplewood Inn, 400 7th North St. 13088 cnyguitar@gmail.com

SATURDAY

The Machine. Fri. 8 p.m. Pink Floyd-focused

Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra. Sat.

CNY GUITAR SHOW

FRIDAY

LIVE MUSIC

S U N DAY 11/13 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.

S TAG E

Big Apple buskers perform during this Jazz Appreciation of Syracuse (JASS) showcase at Pensebene’s Casa Grande, 135 State Fair Blvd. $15. 652-0547 (JASS), 466-0312 (Pensebene’s). a buffet of satisfying Americana, plus Tyler Smilo at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. $5. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

Sully Erna. Sun. 7 p.m. Godsmack frontman flies solo at the Turning Stone Resort and Casino Showroom, Thruway Exit 33, Verona. $24, $29. (800) 771-7711, turningstone.com. Sam Kogon. Sun. 9 p.m. Artistic psychedelic pop rocker and his band aim to glisten up Ithaca, plus Imperials and the Sunshine Group at The Haunt, 702 Willow Ave., Ithaca. $8/advance, $10/door. (607) 275-3447, dansmallspresents. com. Skunk City Presents: Soul Food Sundays. Sun. 9 p.m. Soulful and delicious sounds at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. Free. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

Beauty and the Beast. Every Sat. 12:30

My Dead Lady. Sun. 1 p.m. ACME Mystery Company’s multimedia murder-mystery comedy ports its dinner theater production to the WCNY Studios, 415 W. Fayette St. $65. wcny.org/murdermystery.

Death Boogie. Tues. 7 p.m., Wed. Nov. 16, 7:30 p.m.; closes Dec. 4. Darian Dauchan’s solo hip-hop musical continues the season at the Kitchen Theatre Company, 417 W. State St., Ithaca. $15-$37. (607) 273-4497, (607) 272-0570.

Play On! Thurs. & Sat. 7 p.m. Student musical comedy at Cicero-North Syracuse High School, Route 31, Cicero. $10/adults, $8/ students and seniors. 218-4100.

p.m.; through Dec. 31. Interactive version of the children’s classic, as performed by Magic Circle Children’s Theatre. Spaghetti Warehouse, 689 N. Clinton St. $6. 449-3823.

WSYR-Channel 9 news anchor Carrie Lazarus’ annual salute to talented Central New Yorkers at the Mulroy Civic Center’s Crouse-Hinds Concert Theater, 411 Montgomery St. Free. 435-8000.

Rent. Tues. & Wed. Nov. 16, 7:30 p.m.; closes Nov. 17. Famous Artists presents the acclaimed rock opera about the AIDS crisis amid Manhattan’s bohemians at the Mulroy Civic Center’s Crouse-Hinds Concert Theater, 411 Montgomery St. $33, $48, $63, $70. 475-7979.

Laura and the Sea. Wed. Nov. 9-Fri. 8

Smokey Joe’s Cafe. Wed. Nov. 9, 2 & 7:30

Extraordinary Live. Sat. 7 p.m.

p.m., Sat. 2 & 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m.; closes Sun. Nov. 13. Kate Tarker’s comedy-drama about a travel agent’s battles with depression, performed by students of the Syracuse University Drama Department at the Syracuse Stage complex, 820 E. Genesee St. $19/ adults, $17/students and seniors. 443-3275.

Magic Mike XXL. Fri. 8 p.m. The male revue bares almost all in this ladies’ night out at the Palace Theatre, 2384 James St. $20/advance, $25/door, $50/VIP. 463-9240, palaceonjames.com. Melegrana. Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m., Sun. 2 p.m.;

closes Nov. 19. The Central New York Playhouse troupe presents a new work by local playwright Len Fonte at the company’s Shoppingtown Mall venue, 3649 Erie Blvd. E. $20/Fri. & Sat., $17/Thurs. 885-8960.

Mickey and Minnie’s Doorway to Magic. Sun. 1, 4 & 7 p.m. Disney characters

cavort in this new family musical at the Mulroy Civic Center’s Crouse-Hinds Concert Theater, 411 Montgomery St. $15, $25, $55. 435-8000.

p.m., Thurs. 2 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m., Mon. 2 p.m., Tues. & Wed. Nov. 16, 2 & 7:30 p.m.; closes Nov. 19. The musical tribute to the Lieber and Stoller rock catalog of hits wraps the season at the Merry-Go-Round Playhouse, Emerson Park, 6877 East Lake Road (Route 38A), Auburn. $45-$55/adults; $42$52/seniors; $25/students and under age 22. 255-1785, (800) 457-8897.

The Sound of Murder, or How Do You Solve a Problem Like Maria. Every

Thurs. 6:45 p.m.; closes Nov. 10. Interactive dinner-theater comedy whodunit involving nuns and puns galore; performed by Acme Mystery Company. Spaghetti Warehouse, 689 N. Clinton St. $27.95/plus tax and gratuity. 475-1807.

Tell Me on a Sunday. Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m.; closes Nov. 19. A romantic one-act musical from Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice, presented by Rarely Done Productions at Jazz Central, 441 E. Washington St. $20. 546-3224.


BUTCH TRUCKS

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10 @ 8PM

Center for the Arts 72 S. Main St., Homer

Tickets: center4art.org or

AND THE FREIGHT THURSDAY, TRAIN BAND NOVEMBER 17 @ 8PM M O N DAY 11/14 Reel Big Fish. Mon. 7 p.m. Sarcastic and

non-serious third wave ska band returns, plus Masked Intruder at The Haunt, 702 Willow Ave., Ithaca. $20/advance, $23/door. (607) 275-3447, dansmallspresents.com.

Pearly Baker’s Best. Every Mon. 9 p.m. The

weekly Grateful Dead night jams on at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. $5. funknwaffles. ticketfly.com.

T U E S DAY 11/15 Arlo Guthrie. Tues. 8 p.m. Veteran folk sing-

er-songwriter takes the stage for music and storytelling at the Smith Opera House, 82 Seneca St. Geneva. $39.50, $49.50. 781-5483, thesmith. org.

Squirrel Nut Zippers. Sat. 8 p.m. The swing

revivalists celebrate the anniversary of their 1996 release Hot and performs other songs from their repertoire at The Haunt, 702 Willow Ave., Ithaca. $25/advance, $30/door. (607) 2753447, dansmallspresents.com.

W E D N E S DAY 11/16 Civic Morning Musicals. Wed. Nov. 16, 12:30 p.m. Wind quintet Lake Effect Winds performs Copland, Ligeti and Jacob during this Wednesday Recital Series installment at the Everson Museum of Art, 401 Harrison St. Free. civicmorningmusicals.org. Infamous Stringdusters. Wed. Nov. 16, 8 p.m. Roots and bluegrass outfit dances into The Haunt, 702 Willow Ave., Ithaca. $20/advance, $25/door. (607) 275-3447, dansmallspresents. com.

1-877-749-ARTS

Colin Aberdeen & the Barking Loungers.

Beadle Brothers. (Yellow Brick Road Casino,

Isreal Hagan & Stroke. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que,

Dirtroad Ruckus Trio. (Ferris Wheel, 6 Market

Bob Holz & Friends, Lawless Brothers, Dark Room. (Mac’s Bad Art Bar, 1799 Brewer-

Jax Taylor, Britney Cartwright, Chris Reiners, DVDJ Biggie. (Lava Nightclub, Turning

(Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.), 8 p.m. St., Oswego), 8:30 p.m.

Honky Tonk Hindooz. (AT Walley, 119 Genesee St. Auburn), 7 p.m.

800 W. Genesee St., Chittenango), 6 p.m.

ton Road, Mattydale), 9 p.m.

Stone Resort, Verona), 10 p.m.

Brass Inc. (Ferris Wheel, 6 Market St., Oswego),

Joe Sweet. (Lukin’s, 640 Varick St., Utica), 6

Chris Taylor & Custom Taylor Band. (Tin

John Lerner. (Pizza Man Pub, 50 Oswego St.,

Coachmen. (Mohegan Manor, 58 Oswego St.,

John Spillett Jazz-Pop Duo. (Bistro Ele-

Just Joe. (Notch 8 Café, 6523 E. Seneca Turn-

8 p.m.

LT Music. (Monirae’s, 688 Route 10, Pennellville), 7 p.m.

Rooster, Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 10 p.m.

pike, Jamesville), 7 p.m.

Mark Zane. (Eskapes Lounge, 6257 Route 31, Cicero), 7 p.m.

Baldwinsville), 8 p.m.

C LU B D AT E S W E D N E S DAY 11/9 Dave Solazzo. (Le Moyne Plaza, 1419 Salt Springs Road), noon.

Dirtroad Ruckus. (Muddy Waters, 2 Oswego

Lisa Lee Duo. (Bistro 197, 197 W. First St.,

St., Baldwinsville), 9 p.m.

Oswego), 7 p.m.

Mike Place. (Bistro 197, 197 W. First St., Oswe-

Dog Haus. (Moondog’s Lounge, 24 State St., Auburn), 9 p.m.

McArdell & Westers. (LakeHouse Pub, 6 W.

Genesee St., Skaneateles), 8 p.m.

Frenay & Lenin. (Brae Loch Inn, 5 Albany St.,

Michael Crissan. (Greenwood Winery, 6475

TJ Sacco. (Limp Lizard, 4628 Onondaga Blvd.),

Cazenovia), 7 p.m.

Collamer Road, East Syracuse), 7 p.m.

Grit N Grace. (Bull & Bear Roadhouse, 6402 Collamer Road, East Syracuse), 10 p.m.

No Label (Bull & Bear Roadhouse, 8201 Oswego St., Liverpool), 10 p.m.

Grupo Pagan Lite. (Owera Vineyards, 5276 E. Lake Road, Cazenovia), 6 p.m.

Paul Davie. (Kitty Hoynes, 301 W. Fayette St.),

Guise. (Vendetti’s Soft Rock Café, 2026 Teall

PG Unplugged. (Sharkey’s, 7240 Oswego

321 S. Clinton St.), 9 p.m.

Michael Crissan. (State Craft Tap House, 9461 Brewerton Road, Brewerton), 7 p.m. go), 7 p.m.

6 p.m.

Young Bombs, Chris Reiners, DJ Skeet.

(Lava Nightclub, Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 10 p.m.

F R I DAY 11/11 Alibi. (Uriah’s, 7990 Oswego Road, Liverpool),

9 p.m.

Road, Liverpool), 6 p.m.

Hendry. (Jake’s Grub & Grog, 7 E. River Road,

Primetime. (Turquoise Tiger, Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 9 p.m.

Central Square), 8 p.m.

MONIRAE’S

JAKE’S

thirsty thursday with LT MUSIC

40¢ Winglss!

7 E. River Road, Brewerton

THURSDAY

Drink Specia Friday nov 11

BEERS, BURGERS AND WINGS W/ JUST JOE

smart alec

ALL YOU CAN EAT HOMEMEADE!

University Ave.), 5 p.m.

Funky Blu Roots. (Al’s Wine & Whiskey Lounge, 321 S. Clinton St.), 9 p.m. Just Joe. (Jake’s Grub & Grog, 7 E. River Road, Central Square), 6 p.m.

FRIDAY

HENDRY

T H U R S DAY 11/10 Alex Becerra & Andy Rudy. (Kitty Hoynes, 301 W. Fayette St.), 8 p.m.

Arty Lenin. (Old City Hall, 159 Water St., Osweno, Verona), 9 p.m.

SATURDAY

SMOKIN

246 W. Willow St.), 8 p.m.

Canned Beats. (Coleman’s Irish Pub, 100 S.

Lowell Ave.), 10 p.m.

9 p.m.

Ave., Lyncourt), 7:30 p.m.

Frenay & Lenin. (Sheraton University Inn, 801

Big Ben & Mad Max. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que,

phant, 238 W. Jefferson St.), 7 p.m. 6 p.m.

W. Lake Road, Auburn), 8 p.m.

Bands & Brews. (The Gig, Turning Stone Casi-

Baldwinsville), 10 p.m.

Pete’s, Vernon Downs Casino, Vernon), 9 p.m.

Master Thieves. (Al’s Wine & Whiskey Lounge,

Edgy Folk. (Oak & Vine at Springside Inn, 6141

go), 6 p.m.

p.m.

Just Joe. (Limp Lizard, 201 First St., Liverpool),

Dan Elliot & the Monterays. (Ring Eyed

Easy. Wed. Nov. 16, 8:30 p.m. Local jazz-blues

fusion outfit ventures to the downtown stage, plus Joey Demon at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. $10/advance, $12/door. funknwaffles. ticketfly.com.

246 W. Willow St.), 9:30 p.m.

jakesgrubandgrog.com | 668-3905

Thanksgiving Buffet!

WITH ALL THE TRIMMINGS! Reservations Suggested - Call 668-1248 Accepting Orders for Homemade Pies and Kathy’s Exclusive PUMPKIN ROLLS! 688 County Rte 10, Pennellville

moniraes.com

syracusenewtimes.com | 11.9.16 - 11.15.16

17


THE CADLEYS WITH DAN DUGGAN & PEGGY LYNN Y FRI, NOV 11 CALEB CLAUDER

Y

SATURDAY, NOV 12

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

na), 10 p.m.

Rebound. (The Gig, 5218 Patrick Road, Vero-

p.m.

Red Spider. (Asil’s Pub, 220 Chapel Drive), 8

Honky Tonk Hindooz. (Oak & Vine at Spring-

Soul Risin’. (Coleman’s Irish Pub, 100 S. Lowell

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

Jeff Martin. (Le Moyne Plaza, 1419 Salt Springs

Ave.), 10 p.m.

Thunderchild. (Blue Spruce Lounge, 400 Seventh North St.), 9 p.m.

TJ Sacco Band. (Colonial Inn, 3071 Route 370, Meridian), 9 p.m.

Trumptight315. (Bridge Street Tavern, 109

Bridge St., Solvay), 8 p.m.

Two Hour Delay. (Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.), 9 p.m.

S AT U R DAY 11/12 Big Sky Country. (Tin Rooster, Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 10 p.m.

Bomb. (The Gig, 5218 Patrick Road, Verona), 10 p.m.

Salt City Chill. (Uriah’s, 7990 Oswego Road,

Liverpool), 9 p.m.

Solazzo, Cortini & Martin. (Bistro 197, 197 W. First St., Oswego), 7 p.m.

Smokin’ Worm. (Jake’s Grub & Grog, 7 E. River Road, Central Square), 8 p.m.

Thunderchild. (Paddock Club, 1 Public Square, Watertown), 9 p.m.

TJ Sacco. (LWB Grill, 72 Main St., Camillus), 9

p.m.

Todd Hobin Band. (Ring Eyed Pete’s, Vernon

Downs Casino, Vernon), 9 p.m.

Tommy Connors. (Beak & Skiff Apple

Orchards, 2708 Lords Hill Road, Lafayette), 1 p.m.

Chris Taylor & Custom Taylor Band. (Blue Spruce Lounge, 400 Seventh North St., Liverpool), 8 p.m.

Two Hour Delay. (Moondog’s Lounge, 24

Denn Bunger. (Owera Vineyards, 5276 E. Lake

Skaneateles), 9:30 p.m.

Road, Cazenovia), 6 p.m.

Dirtroad Ruckus Trio. (Sand Bar & Grill, 1067 Route 49, Bernhards Bay), 8 p.m.

Dr. Killdean. (Green Gate Inn, 2 Genesee St.,

Camillus), 8 p.m.

Funky Blu Roots. (Lukin’s, 640 Varick St.,

Utica), 10 p.m.

Gina Rose & the Thorns. (Lake Como Inn,

1307 E. Lake Road, Cortland), 9 p.m.

Grit N Grace. (Dominick’s Sports Tavern, 390

Route 51a, Oswego), 9:30 p.m.

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

Virgil Cain. (LakeHouse Pub, 6 W. Genesee St.,

S U N DAY 11/13 Arty Lenin. (Old City Hall, 159 Water St.), 1 p.m. Colin Aberdeen. (Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.), 7 p.m.

Donal O’Shaughnessy. (Coleman’s Irish Pub,

100 S. Lowell Ave.), 4 p.m.

Hospice Harmony Singers. (Cicero Library, 8686 Knowledge Lane), 6:30 p.m. Isreal Hagan & Stroke. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W. Willow St.), 8 p.m.

Isreal Hagan & Stroke. (Turquoise Tiger,

Jazz Jam. (Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St.),

Jesse Derringer. (Phoenix American Legion, 9

John Spillett Jazz-Pop Duo. (Blue Water

Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 9 p.m.

Oswego River Road), 7 p.m.

John Spillett Jazz-Pop Duo. (Wegmans,

6789 E. Genesee St., Fayetteville), noon.

Lightkeepers. (Muddy Waters, 2 Oswego St., Baldwinsville), 9 p.m.

Lisa Lee Duo. (Kitty Hoynes Irish Pub, 301 W. Fayette St.), 9 p.m.

Mark Zane. (Pascale’s Italian Bistro at Drumlin’s, 800 Nottingham Road), 7 p.m. Measure. (Pasta’s on the Green, 1 Village Blvd. N., Baldwinsville), 6 p.m.

Michael Crissan. (Pizza Man Pub, 50 Oswego St., Baldwinsville), 10 p.m.

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

low St.), 10 p.m.

Mobius Jones Band. (Knoxie’s Pub, 7088

Route 20, Pompey), 9 p.m.

My So-Called Band. (Coleman’s Irish Pub, 100

of laughs features comics Rob HaZe, Mike Vecchione and Erica Spera at the Center for the Arts, 72 S. Main St., Homer. $20/advance, $25/ door. (607) 749-4900, center4art.org.

Syracuse University Football. Sat. 12:30

Matt Bergman. Thurs. 7:30 p.m. Criminal

p.m. The Orange (4-5) play North Carolina State at the Carrier Dome, 900 Irving Ave. $10-$190. (888) DOME-TIX.

Carlos Mencia. Fri. 7:30 & 10 p.m., Sat. 7 & 10

Art Gone Wild! Art Exhibition. Wed. Nov.

justice major-turned comic subdues audiences with rhetoric and humor at Funny Bone Comedy Club, Destiny USA. $10. 423-8669, syracuse. funnybone.com. p.m. Outspoken comedian will surely offend some audiences at Funny Bone Comedy Club, Destiny USA. $25/general, $47/VIP. 423-8669, syracuse.funnybone.com.

Syracuse Improv Collective. Fri. 8 p.m. The improvisers move to a gymnasium, because the bigger the space means more can happen at Horn Companies Gym, 325 N. Clinton St. $5. 430-9027, syracuseimprovcollective.com.

Dan Ahdoot. Sat. 8 p.m. The comedian,

writer, actor and gabfest guest visits, plus Billy Whalen at Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St., Auburn. $15/advance, $17/door. 253-6669, auburnpublictheater.org.

Salt City Improv. Sat. 8 p.m. The local improv venue celebrates five years with short-form team Pork Pie Hat at Salt City Improv Theatre, Shoppingtown Mall, 3649 Erie Blvd. E. $10. 4101962, saltcityimprov.com.

SPECIALS

9-18. Enjoy art created by many of the zoo’s animals on display at Rosamond Gifford Zoo, 1 Conservation Place. Free with zoo admission. 435-8511, rosamondgiffordzoo.org.

Paint, Drink & Be Merry. Wed. Nov. 9, 6:30 p.m. Artists of all skill levels are welcome to paint poignant penguins at Applebees, 3189 Erie Blvd. E. $28. 481-1638, paintdrinkandbemerrysyracuse.com.

Social Media Breakfast. Thurs. 7:30 a.m.

The monthly networking group and discussion focuses on internal communication, plus free coffee and treats at OneGroup Center, 706 N. Clinton St. Free. smbsyracuse48.splashthat.com.

Scented Delights. Thurs. 10:30 a.m. Gather

herbs from the garden to make soaps and candles at Baltimore Woods Nature Center, 4007 Bishop Hill Road, Marcellus. $9. 673-1350, baltimorewoods.org.

Corey Marshall. Sun. 7:30 p.m. Comedian

Brent Glass. Thurs. 7 p.m. Director emeritus

Spring Street Family. (Al’s Wine & Whiskey Lounge, 321 S. Clinton St.), 9 p.m. TJ Sacco. (Beak & Skiff Apple Orchards, 2708 Lords Hill Road, Lafayette), 1 p.m.

Lumberjack-Off. Sun. noon. Syracuse Beard

headlines an evening of comedy at Funny Bone Comedy Club, Destiny USA. $10. 423-8669, syracuse.funnybone.com.

Jake “The Snake” Roberts. Wed. Nov. 16,

7:30 p.m. Former pro wrestler talks about his

of the Smithsonian National Museum of History talks about his latest book, which frequently mentions the history of the Finger Lakes region at Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St., Auburn. $35/lecture, $75/VIP. 253-6669, auburnpublictheater.org.

M O N DAY 11/14 Jason Vaughn. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W.

Genesee St.), 8 p.m.

T U E S DAY 11/15 Dove Creek. (Colgate Inn, 1 Payne St., Hamil-

ton), 7 p.m.

Los Blancos. (Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.), 2

Willow St.), 8 p.m.

W E D N E S DAY 11/16

Other Guise. (Vendetti’s Soft Rock Café, 2026

Ashley Cox. (Al’s Wine & Whiskey Lounge, 321

Party Sharks. (Mountain View Restaurant, 6662 Route 281, Preble), 8 p.m.

Frenay & Lenin. (Sheraton University Inn, 801

18

607 Comedy Show. Thurs. 7 p.m. An evening

The puck-slappers face off against the Bridgeport Sound Tigers (Friday) and the Rochester Americans (Saturday) at the Onondaga County War Memorial Arena, 515 Montgomery St. $16, $18, $20. 473-4444.

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

MoonRabbit. (Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W.

Teall Ave., Lyncourt), 8:30 p.m.

CO M E DY

SPORTS

Syracuse Crunch Hockey. Fri. & Sat. 7 p.m.

Kilgore McTrouts. (Coleman’s Irish Pub, 100 S.

Lowell Ave.), 4 p.m.

Neil Young Birthday Gig. (JP’s Tavern, 109

no, 800 W. Genesee St., Chittenango), 9:30 p.m.

Central Square), 6 p.m.

Council presents an afternoon of games, facial hair competition and more at Empire Farm Brewery, 33 Rippleton Road, Cazenovia. $10/ admission, $5/facial hair competition.

Grill, 11 W. Genesee St., Skaneateles), 5 p.m.

p.m.

Nicholas Bontempo. (Yellow Brick Road Casi-

Road), noon.

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

experience in the business and unseen locker-room antics at Funny Bone Comedy Club, Destiny USA. $20. 423-8669, syracuse.funnybone.com.

Field Guide Series: Autumn Leaves. Thurs. 1:30 p.m. The weekly program will focus on autumn foliage at Beaver Lake Nature Center, 8477 E. Mud Lake Road, Baldwinsville. $5/plus admission. 638-2519, onondagacountyparks. com.

3 p.m.

S. Lowell Ave.), 10 p.m.

Syracuse St., Baldwinsville), 8 p.m.

side Inn, 6141 W. Lake Road, Auburn), 8 p.m.

S. Clinton St.), 9 p.m.

University Ave.), 5 p.m.

11.9.16 - 11.15.16 | syracusenewtimes.com

THANKSGIVING BUFFET WITH ALL THE TRIMMINGS (Family Style Available) Call 668-3434 for reservations

Booking Holiday Parties on/off premise catering

916 County Rt 37, Brewerton | 916riverside.com


Psychic Fair

Alternative Minds presents the 2nd annual Fall

Admission: $8 (bring a non-perishable food item and receive $1 off admission!) Threads of Sound. Thurs. 7 p.m. Syracuse University women basketball’s Michelle Hope Van Dyke hosts a fashion show to benefit the Onondaga Athletic Club’s Indigenous Rowing Club, plus music by Irv Lyons Jr. and Anomalous People at Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W. Willow St. $10/advance, $20/VIP. indigocny.com. Trivia Night In Cortland. Thurs. 7-9 p.m.

Special night of brainpan fun at the brand-new Cortland Repertory Theater spinoff known as CRT Downtown, 24 Port Watson St., Cortland. $5. (800) 427-6160.

James Corner. Thurs. 7:30 p.m. Architect

behind Manhattan’s High Line, South Park Plaza at Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, Navy Pier and more will speak about his craft at Hendricks Chapel, Syracuse University. Free. lectures.syr. edu.

Madison Bouckville Holiday Open House.

Fri.-Sun. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Enjoy holiday specials with several participating shops and dealers along the Madison Bouckville Antique Corridor, Route 20, Bouckville. 893-1786, madison-bouckville.com.

Community Song Circle. Fri. 6:30 p.m. Musi-

cians, singers and music lovers welcome to participate at Westcott Community Center, 826 Euclid Ave. Free; donations appreciated. 4788634, westcottcc.org.

Inter-Play: Evening of Dynamic Art. Fri. 7

p.m. Enjoy an evening of meeting artists, beverages, performance art, music and more at 443 Burnet Ave. Free.

Wendy Ortiz. Fri. 7 p.m. The author talks about her recent works Bruja, Hollywood Notebook and Excavation: A Memoir and more at Downtown Writers Center, 340 Montgomery St. Free. 474-6851, syracuse.ymca.org/dwc.html. 5K Run/Walk for Hunger. Sat. 8:30 a.m. Baldwinsville Rotary hosts the annual fundraiser and race to benefit the local food pantry at C.W. Baker High School, 110 Oswego St., Baldwinsville. $30-$40/registration, $25/kids, $20/ students, baldwinsvillerotary.org/ Central New York Veterans Parade and Expo. Sat. 9 a.m. The annual parade and ven-

dor fair to thank all veterans features presentations, activities and more at Center of Progress Building, New York State Fairgrounds, 581 State Fair Blvd. Free. 428-9651, cnyveteransparade. org.

See What’s Happening. presents a Very Special VETERANS DAY concert with

Professor Louie & the Crowmatix

with the Rock of Ages Horns Special Guest: Kevin Barrigar

Cazenovia Farmer’s Market. Every Sat. 9 a.m. More than 30 farmers and artisans share and sell their locally produced goods at Memorial Park, Albany Street, Cazenovia. Free. cazenoviachamber.com.

Winter Farmers Market. Sat. 10 a.m. The second Saturday of every month features a variety of local growers and vendors at Baltimore Woods Nature Center, 4007 Bishop Hill Road, Marcellus. Free admission. 673-1350, baltimorewoods.org.

Kids’ Book Fest. Sat. 10 a.m. The annual pro-literacy book fair focuses on natural and environmental themes, favorite storybook characters and more at Boynton Middle School, 1601 N. Cayuga St., Ithaca. Free. (607) 277-8602, familyreading.org.

In Praise of Poison Ivy. Sat. 10 a.m. Author and environmental educator Anita Sanchez banters about botany, the plant’s natural history and how it affects humans at Kennedy Auditorium, Hamilton College, 198 College Hill Road, Clinton. Free. 859-4011, hamilton.edu.

Syracuse Food Tours. Every Sat. noon. Threehour walking tour gives a perspective on the sights and history, a taste of food and beverages found in downtown Syracuse. $41/person. 371-3050, syracusefoodtours.com.

Morning Bird Walks. Every Mon. & Tues. 8 a.m. Join a naturalist for a leisurely walk and learn about a variety of birds at Beaver Lake Nature Center, 8477 Mud Lake Road, Baldwinsville. $5/event and admission. 638-2519, onondagacountyparks.com. Lights on the Lake Stroll. Mon. 5 p.m. Preview the annual holiday show during the walk-through at Onondaga Lake Park, 106 Lake Drive, Liverpool. $2/suggested donation for Hillside Work-Scholarship Connection. 453-6712, lightsonthelake.com.

Lights on the Lake Dog Walk. Tues. 5 p.m. Pooch-friendly walk-through at Onondaga Lake Park, 106 Lake Drive, Liverpool. $2/suggested donation for Humane Association. 453-6712, lightsonthelake.com.

Healthy Pet Clinic. Tues. 6 p.m. The annual Cornell and Southside Community Health Center event offers student-run lab tests, vaccinations, exams and more at reduced rates at the State Theatre, 107 W. State St, Ithaca. $10, $20, $30. (607) 277-8283, stateofithaca.com.

SAT. NOV 12 (11AM-8PM) SUN. NOV 13 (11AM-6PM) Greystone Castle 201 N. Main St., Canastota alternativemindscny.com Lunch and Learn. Wed. Nov. 16, noon. Bring your lunch and listen to Tammie Whitson talk about the process of sheering sheep to create garments at Cortland County Historical Society, 25 Homer Ave., Cortland. Free. (607) 756-6071, cortlandhistory.com. Lights on the Lake. Wed. Nov. 16, 5 p.m. The annual light spectacular officially begins and runs through the beginning of January at Onondaga Lake Park, 106 Lake Drive, Liverpool. $6/Wegmans locations presale, $6/Mon.-Tues. with Shoppers Club, $10/ Mon.-Thurs., $15/Fri.-Sun. 453-6712, lightsonthelake.com. Black Holes and Gravitational Waves.

Wed. Nov. 16, 6 p.m. Damian Gregory Allis, Ph.D., talks about Galileo, the Hubble Space Telescope, Einstein’s Theory of Relativity and more at the Cicero Public Library, 8686 Knowledge Lane, Cicero. Free. 636-6533, cnyskeptics.org.

Paint, Drink and Be Merry. Wed. Nov. 16, 6:30 p.m. Artists of all skill levels are welcome to paint a generous, thoughtful snowman at Applebees, 3189 Erie Blvd. E. $28. 481-1638, paintdrinkandbemerrysyracuse.com.

Paint, Drink and Be Merry. Sat. 6 p.m. Artists of all skill levels are welcome to create a tree lighting painting at Owera Vineyards, 5276 E. Lake Road, Cazenovia. $45. 481-1638, paintdrinkandbemerrysyracuse.com.

Nightmare B4 Christmas. Sat. 6:30 p.m. Fashion show inspired by the Tim Burton film plus five-course dinner prepared by five local chefs in an effort to raise money for the hosting venue Barnes Hiscock Mansion, 930 James St. $60. 422-2445, grbarnes.org.

Full Moon Guided Walk. Sat. 7 p.m. Walk, talk and get the fever to learn more about the moon at Beaver Lake Nature Center, 8477 E. Mud Lake Road, Baldwinsville. Free with admission. 638-2519, onondagacountyparks.com.

Oren Lyons. Sat. 7 p.m. The Onondaga Nation faithkeeper will be featured in a special presentation for the last evening of the exhibit Americans Who Tell the Truth at ArtRage Gallery, 505 Hawley Ave. Free. 218-5711, artragegallery.org.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11TH DOORS: 7PM

Homer Center for the Arts 72 South Main Street, Homer

TICKETS: $20 VETERANS FREE! AVAILABLE: center4art.org, or 877.749.2787 syracusenewtimes.com | 11.9.16 - 11.15.16

19


FILM

EMPLOYEE OF THE MONTH: GREG MINIX

S TAR TS F RIDAY F IL M S, T H E AT E RS AN D T IM E S S U B JE C T TO C H AN G E. Almost Christmas. Kimberly Elise, Omar Epps and Danny Glover in a Thanksgiving dysfunctional family comedy. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Screen 1: 1:05, 4:15 & 7:15 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 10:05 p.m. Screen 2: 1:15, 4:35 & 7:35 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 10:20 p.m.

Greg Minix is a graphic designer for the Syracuse New Times and Family Times. Since joining the company seven months ago, Greg’s enthusiasm has been an ever-present feature of his work. When the office holds a celebration, Greg always dresses in an appropriate costume, whether it’s that of a tourist in Hawaii or a Roman centurion. He earned the Employee of the Month Award after demonstrating an abundance of passion and dedication, as well as taking on extra responsibilities whenever asked. Greg has designed seven covers so far for the New Times, including an illustrated still life for the Arts Issue, a spoof on Edvard Munch’s “The Scream” painting, and a somber and subtle photo illustration for a cover about suicide.

Arrival. Alien invasion thriller with Amy Adams and Jeremy Renner. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Daily: 12:55, 4:25 & 7:25 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 10:15 p.m. Boo! A Madea Halloween. Tyler Perry’s new drag show has a creepshow theme. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Daily: 1:40, 4:40 & 7:45 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 10:25 p.m.

Michael Davis photo

We asked Greg a few questions about working at the Syracuse New Times and living in Central New York. How did you find out about the graphic design job at the New Times and why did you want to apply? I came across an ad on Indeed.com a month after graduating from OCC. I had done amateur freelance work in the past, but I was eager to land my first real graphic design job, and I applied for many jobs. The Syracuse New Times was in my “wishful thinking” pile because it seemed like a dream job — I love advertising design for print and cover design. When I got a call from THE Meaghan Arbital (I was familiar with her work for the New Times) to come in for an interview, I could hardly contain myself! Now that you’ve been here seven months, what have you learned about the New Times that you didn’t know before? I learned it consists of a close-knit, caring staff that treats each other like family. My prior assumptions about working for a newspaper made me think of a stressful, corporate environment full of overwhelming demands and angry management. It’s how Hollywood portrays the news business, ya know? However, from Day One I’ve felt more than welcome here, which is not the case at many other jobs. What’s your favorite part about working here as a graphic designer? My favorite part is having a platform to showcase my artistic ability. I’ve worked hard to be more than just another starving artist, and seeing my name on the inside page of such a respected publication makes me feel fulfilled. What’s the most difficult thing about your job? It’s probably the most difficult thing for any designer –– to correctly interpret the

20

message a client or sales representative wants to convey and communicate that visually, while maintaining artistic integrity. I’m trained to make effective ads. It gets a little difficult when non-designers tell me how to do my job, but I always try to find a compromise. Tell us about your life outside work. What are some things you like to do in CNY? Where do you like to go out? CNY is great for long-distance running, which I enjoy. I also like target shooting. I have an Onondaga County pistol license, and I’m a member of the Baldwinsville Rod and Gun Club. I love movies, too, so my close proximity to the IMAX at Destiny USA and to Movie Tavern is great. I’m quite a foodie as well, and I enjoy many of the local restaurants, including Twin Trees, Notch 8 and Ichiban. I especially love the New York State Fair, and I look forward to it every year. Oh, I’m also a rapper! People are always surprised to learn that. I even did a song with Best of Syracuse winner Ashley Cox — search my name on iTunes. What’s something you’d like to tell readers about the Syracuse New Times that they might not know? Well, even though we don’t cover a lot of politics, I think many people view the Syracuse New Times as quite liberal. They might be surprised to learn that we employ a number of politically conservative staffers, myself included. The periodic left-leaning content in our paper is normally provided by freelancers or outside contributors, and I often raise concerns about the perceived bias during editorial meetings. SNT

11.9.16 - 11.15.16 | syracusenewtimes.com

Doctor Strange. Benedict Cumberbatch plays the mysterioso superhero in this Marvel Comics blowout; presented in 3-D in some theaters. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/ IMAX/3-D/Stadium). Daily: 1, 4, 7 & 10 p.m. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/ RPX/3-D/Stadium). Daily: 4:30 & 10:30 p.m. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/RPX/ Stadium). Daily: 1:30 & 7:30 p.m. Destiny USA/ Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/3-D/Stadium). Daily: 11 a.m., 2, 5 & 8 p.m. Late show Fri. & Sat.: 11 a.m. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Daily: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 & 9:30 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation/3-D). Daily: 4:10 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 10:10 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Screen 1: 12:40, 3:40 & 6:40 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 9:40 p.m. Screen 2: 1:10 & 7:10 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/3-D/Stadium). Daily: 4:30, 7:30 & 10:30 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Screen 1: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 & 9:30 p.m. Screen 2: 1, 4, 7 & 10 p.m. Hacksaw Ridge. Director Mel Gibson’s graphic fact-based drama about a conscientious objector’s heroism during World War II. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Daily: 12:50, 3:50 & 6:50 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 9:50 p.m.

Keeping Up with the Joneses. Suburban spy comedy with Jon Hamm and Zach Galifianakis. Hollywood (Digital presentation). Daily: 8:45 p.m. Midway Drive-In (Fulton; 343-0211; digital presentation/stereo). Fri. & Sat.: 10:45 p.m.

A Man Called Ove. Swedish comedy-drama about the adventures of a grumpy old man. Manlius (Digital presentation/stereo). Fri. & Sat.: 8 p.m. Sun.-Thurs.: 7:30 p.m. Sat. & Sun. matinee: 2:30 & 4:45 p.m. Pete’s Dragon. Bryce Dallas Howard and Robert Redford in the remake of the 1977 Disney semi-cartoon. Hollywood (Digital presentation). Daily: 6:30 p.m. Fri.-Sun. & Tues.: 11:50 a.m. & 2:05 p.m.

The Secret Life of Pets. Louis CK and Kevin

Hart lend their voices to this pooch-flavored cartoon. Hollywood (Digital presentation). Fri.Sun. & Tues.: 4:25 p.m.

Shut In. New thriller with Naomi Watts. Great

Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Daily: 1:20, 4:45 & 7:50 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 10:30 p.m.

Storks. Andy Samberg and Jennifer Aniston lend their voices to this new cartoon. Midway Drive-In (Fulton; 343-0211; digital presentation/ stereo). Fri.: 7:30 p.m. Sat.: 5:15 & 9:10 p.m. Trolls. Justin Timberlake and Anna Kendrick

lend their voices to this cartoon musical; presented in 3-D in some theaters. Destiny USA/ Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/3-D/Stadium). Daily: 11:40 a.m., 2:10, 4:40, 7:10 & 9:40 p.m. Destiny USA/Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/ Stadium). Daily: 11:10 a.m., 1:40, 4:10, 6:40 & 9:10 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation/3-D). Daily: 4 p.m. Late show Fri.-Sun.: 10 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Screen 1: 1 & 7 p.m. Screen 2: 1:30, 3:30 & 7:30 p.m. Late show

Fri.-Sun.: 9:30 p.m. Midway Drive-In (Fulton; 3430211; digital presentation/stereo). Fri.: 5:15 & 9:10 p.m. Sat.: 7:30 p.m.

F IL M, OTH ERS L IS TED A L P H A B E TI C A L LY: The Deep Blue Sea. Fri. 2 p.m., Sat. 11 a.m.

The National Theatre Live production, presented digitally at the Manlius Art Cinema, 135 E. Seneca St., Manlius. $18/adults, $15/students and seniors. 682-9817.

Dragons. Wed. Nov. 9-Sun., Tues. & Wed. Nov. 16, 1 & 3 p.m. Explore the world’s fascination with these winged fantasy creatures in this large-format outing narrated by Max Von Sydow. Bristol IMAX at the MOST, 500 S. Franklin St. Film: $10/adults, $8/children under 11 and seniors. Film and exhibits: $20/adults, $18/ children under 11 and seniors. 425-9068. Harry and Snowman. Thurs. 7:30 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 4 & 7:30 p.m., Sun. 1 & 4 p.m., Mon.-Wed. Nov. 16, 7:30 p.m. Fact-based chronicle about a Dutch immigrant and the plow horse that changed his life, which continues the digital presentations at the Cinema Capitol, 234 W. Dominick St., Rome. $7/adults, $5/students. 337-6453. Here, There and Everywhere. Thurs. 7:30 p.m. Skiers and snowboarders perform wild action in the annual Warren Miller globetrotting travelogue at the Landmark Theatre, 362 S. Salina St. $17. 475-7979. Journey to Space. Wed. Nov. 9-Sun., Tues.

& Wed. Nov. 16, 12 & 2 p.m. Blast off with this large-format adventure. Bristol IMAX at the MOST, 500 S. Franklin St. Film: $10/adults, $8/children under 11 and seniors. Film and exhibits: $20/adults, $18/children under 11 and seniors. 425-9068.

The Lennon Report. Fri. 1 & 7 p.m., Sat. 3 & 7

p.m., Wed. Nov. 16, 7 p.m. True-life recreation of the last hours of Beatles legend John Lennon at the Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St., Auburn. $6. 253-6669.

Mia Madre. Wed. Nov. 9, 7 p.m. John Turturro’s new drama at the Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St., Auburn. $6. 253-6669. Operation Avalanche. Wed. Nov. 9, 7:30 p.m.

Amusing mockumentary about a lunar landing, the Cold War, secrets and spies, which continues the digital presentations at the Cinema Capitol, 234 W. Dominick St., Rome. $7/adults, $5/students. 337-6453.

Rocky Mountain Express. Sat. 4 p.m.

Chug along with choo-choo thrills down the Canadian Pacific Railway in this large-format travelogue landscape at the Bristol IMAX at the MOST, 500 S. Franklin St. Film: $10/adults, $8/children under 11 and seniors. Film and exhibits: $20/adults, $18/children under 11 and seniors. 425-9068.

Slade Collins: In and Out of Time. Fri. 8 p.m. World premiere of the time-traveling adventure filmed in the Utica area. Capitol Theatre, 220 W. Dominick St., Rome. $15. 337-6453.

So Proudly We Hail. Mon. 7:30 p.m. Paramount’s 1943 World War II flag-waving yarn with Claudette Colbert, Paulette Goddard, Veronica Lake and Sonny Tufts, which continues the Syracuse Cinephile Society’s fall season at the Spaghetti Warehouse, 680 N. Clinton St. $3.50. 475-1807. The Ultimate Wave: Tahiti. Wed. Nov. 9-Fri., Sun., Tues. & Wed. Nov. 16, 4 p.m. Surf’s up for this large-format adventure. Bristol IMAX at the MOST, 500 S. Franklin St. Film: $10/adults, $8/children under 11 and seniors. Film and exhibits: $20/adults, $18/children under 11 and seniors. 425-9068.


CLASSIFIED

To place your ad call (315) 422-7011 or fax (315) 422-1721 or e-mail classified@syracusenewtimes.com ADOPTION ADOPT: Caring married happy couple looking to adopt. Stable employment and a loving a loving and happy home awaits your child. Please call Blair and John at 1-888-753-9328. ADOPTION: Hopeful mom promises your baby a loving, secure & happy home. Expenses paid. Debbie, 1-877600-4973. PREGNANT? CONSIDERING ADOPTION? Call us first. Living expenses, housing, medical, and continued support afterwards. Choose adoptive family of your choice. Call 24/7. 877-362-2401.

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LEGAL NOTICE Articles of Organization of 200 RIGI AVE., LLC (“LLC”) were filed with Sec. of State of NY (“SSNY”) on 09/14/2016. Office Location: Onondaga County. SSNY has been designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to and the LLC’s principal business location is: 7623 Wild Turkey, Liverpool, NY 13090. Purpose: Any lawful business purpose. Filed: 4/15/2016. Index No. 0000399/2016. Plaintiff designates ONONDAGA County as place of trial Venue is based upon County in which premises are being situate. SUMMONS WITH NOTICE ACTION TO FORECLOSE A MORTGAGE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF ONONDAGA. CITIMORTGAGE, INC., Plaintiff, Against- CARMELITA STOKES A/K/A CAR-

MELITA HOLMES A/K/A LAWSUIT MAY RESULT of the County of OnLLC upon whom porondaga on April 1, cess may be served. CARMELITA HOMESIN YOUR EVICTION. 1999 in Liber 10107 at SSNY shall mail copy of STOKES; HOME HEADYOU MAY WISH TO process to 8505 EquesPage 298 covering the QUARTERS, INC.; CONTACT A LAWYER trian Ridge, Manlius, premises described as NEW YORK STATE TO DISCUSS ANY NY 13104. Purpose is follows:145 Herbst AvAFFORDABLE HOUSRIGHTS AND POSSIBLE enue, Syracuse, New any lawful purpose. ING CORPORATION, DEFENSES YOU MAY York 13203 a/k/a SecA PUBLIC BENEFIT HAVE TO THE ABOVE Notice is hereby given tion 019, Block 20, Lot CORPORATION CRENAMED DEFENDANTS: that an Order entered 13.0. The relief sought ATED AND EXISTING The foregoing Sumby the Supreme Court, in the within action AS A SUBSIDIARY OF mons is served upon Onondaga County, on is final judgment diTHE NEW YORK STATE you by publication the 27th day of Ocrecting the sale of the HOUSING FINANCE pursuant to Order the tober, 2016, bearing premises described AGENCY; “JOHN DOE Hon Kevin G. Young a Index Number 2016above to satisfy the #1” through “JOHN Justice of the Supreme 1072, a copy of which debt secured by the DOE #10” inclusive Court, Onondaga may be examined at mortgage described the names of the ten County, dated Sept. 7, the office of the clerk, above. The Plaintiff last name Defendants 2014 and filed with the located at the Ononmakes no personal being fictitious, real complaint and other daga County Courtclaim against any Denames unknown to papers in the Ononhouse, Syracuse, NY, fendants in this action. the Plaintiff, the pardaga County Clerk’s in room number 200, #89888. ties intended being Office, Syracuse, NY. grants me the right persons or corporaNOTICE OF OBJECT OF to assume the name Name of Formation tions having an interACTION AND RELIEF ofBrian Quintana. The of ACD Advising, LLC. est in, or tenants or SOUGHT THE OBJECT city and state of my Articles of Organizapersons in possession of the above-entitled tion were filed with present address are of, portions of the action is to foreclose the Secretary of State 210 Hartwell Av.m, mortgaged premises a mortgage to secure East Syracuse, New of New York (SSNY) described in the Com$50,358.00 plus interYork 13057; the date of on 8/15/2016. Office is plaint, D e f e n est, recorded in the my birth is October1, located in the County dants. TO THE ABOVE Office of the County 1998; the place of my of Onondaga. SSNY is NAMED DEFENDANTS: Clerk/City Register birth is Cienfuegos, designated as agent of YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the Complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your Answer or, if the Complaint is not served with this Summons, to serve a Notice of Appearance upon the Plaintiff’s attorney within twenty (20) days after the service of this Summons, exclusive of the date Benefiting of service or within thirty (30) days after ® the service is complete if this Summons is not personally delivered to you within the State of New York. If you fail to so appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you *Free Vehicle/Boat Pickup ANYWHERE by default for the relief demanded in the Com*We Accept All Vehicles Running or Not plaint. DATED: Elms*Fully Tax Deductible ford, New York, April 14, 2016. 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Stoneledge Lane, Manlius, NY, 13104. Any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of BIRCH LAND CONSULTING LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Sec’ty of State of NY (SSNY) on 10/14/2016. Office location: Onondaga Co. SSNY designated as entity upon which process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to BIRCH LAND CONSULTING LLC, 118 South Terry Road, Syracuse NY 13219. Purpose: any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of BKW 912, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 9/20/16. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 708 Seeley Rd., Syracuse, NY 13224. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Capwells, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 9/13/2016. Office is located in the Count of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy

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Notice of Formation of CNY Homestead Inspections LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on October 4th, 2016. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 3289 Stiles Road, Syracuse, NY 13209. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of CNY UPWARDS SPORTS, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on September 19, 2016. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 5869 Ladd Rd, Brewerton, NY 13029. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Custom Tile Solutions, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on September 21, 2016. Office is located in the Count of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy process to Tom Lau, 206 Gaston Ave, Syracuse, NY 13219. Purpose is any lawful purpose. NOTICE OF FORMATION OF DOMESTIC LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY; Name of LLC: 121 Washington Street LLC; Date of Filing: 10/28/2016; Office of the LLC: Onondaga Co.; The NY Secretary of State (NYSS) has been designated as the agent upon whom process may be served. The NYSS may mail a copy of any process to the LLC at 7000 Highfield Road, Fayetteville, NY 13066; Purpose of LLC: Any lawful purpose. NOTICE OF FORMATION OF DOMESTIC LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY; Name of LLC: MRM Property Holdings LLC; Date of Filing: 9/21/2016; Office of the LLC: Onondaga Co.; The NY Secretary of State (NYSS) has been designated as the agent upon whom process may be served. The NYSS may mail a copy of any process to the LLC at 1254 James Street, Syracuse, NY 13203; Purpose of LLC: Any lawful purpose.

NOTICE OF FORMATION OF DOMESTIC LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY; Name of LLC: Sherie R. Ramsgard, Nurse Practitioner in Family Health & Psychiatry, PLLC; Date of Filing: 9/22/2016; Office of the LLC: Onondaga Co.; The NY Secretary of State (NYSS) has been designated as the agent upon whom process may be served. The NYSS may mail a copy of any process to the LLC at 191 Intrepid Lane, Syracuse, NY 13205; Purpose of LLC: Any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of EJT Construction LLC. Art. Of Org. filed with the Secretary of State (SSNY) on 9/19/16. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 7742 Lisa Ln., Syracuse, NY 13212. Purpose: any lawful activities. Notice of Formation of FREYBURGER PROPERTIES, LLC Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York on 10/05/16. Office location: Cortland County. Secretary of State of New York designated as agent of the limited liability company upon whom process against it may be served. Secretary of State of New York shall mail process to 1552 Congdon Lane, Cortland, New York 13045 which is the principal office of the limited liability company. The limited liability company was formed for any lawful business purpose. Notice of Formation of I.C. Green, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 11/1/2016. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to IC Green, LLC, 10 Kane Ave, Skaneateles, NY 13152. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of J&R Tax and Business Consulting, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 10/31/16. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served, SSNY shall mail copy of process to 4736 Onondaga Blvd., Suite 183, Syracuse, NY 13219. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Jack Lykudis Auto Sales @ Detailing, LLC.

Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on August 18, 2016. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 32 Van Ness Rd. S Baldwinsville, NY 13027. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of JMS General Contracting, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on August 19, 2013. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to United States Corporation INC, 7014 13th Ave, suite 202, Brooklyn, NY 11228. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of K.L. KANE CONSULTING, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 9/20/2016. 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 Kevin L. Kane, 606 Charmouth Drive, Syracuse, NY 13207. Term: until 1/1/2067. Purpose: any lawful activity. Notice of formation of Limited Liability Company (“LLC”). Limited Liability Company Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (“SSNY”) on 10/12/2016. Office location: 58 Ely Drive, Fayetteville, New York 13066. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY may mail a copy of any process to the LLC, 58 Ely Drive, Fayetteville, New York 13066. Purpose: Any lawful act under New York LLC Law. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC). Name: AIM HIGH & LEAD, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 11/03/16. Office Location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 4861 Breckenridge Run, Syracuse, NY 13215. Purpose: to engage in any and all business for which LLCs may be formed under the New York LLC Law. Notice of Formation of Mike Dwyer Deliveries, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary

of State of New York (SSNY) on 8/3/2016. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy to Mike Dwyer, 414 Village Blvd. North, Baldwinsville, NY 13027. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of NORSTAR ASSOCIATES LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with NY Dept. of State on 10/17/16. Office location: Onondaga County. Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: CT Corporation System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. Purpose: all lawful purposes. Notice of Formation of OG Hospitality Group, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 10/4/2016. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: c/o LLC, 170 Plymouth Drive, Syracuse, NY 13206. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of PII Digital Marketing LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) 9/28/2016. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy to process to Mark Luffred, 201 West Genesee Street #159 Fayetteville, NY 13066. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of PRECISION ENGINE REBUILDERS, LLC — Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York on 9/29/16. Office location: Cortland County. Secretary of State of New York designated as agent of the limited liability company upon whom process against it may be served. Secretary of State of New York shall mail process to 27 Hickory Park Road, Cortland, New York 13045. The principal office of the limited liability company is located at 4339 N. Homer Ext., Cortland, New York 13045. The limited liability company was formed for any lawful business purpose. Notice of Formation of Reproduction Manufacturing, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on

September 19,2016. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to LLC, 5513 S. Salina Street, Syracuse, NY 13205. Notice of Formation of Sabrina Marra, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on July 15, 2016. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 110 Frederick St, East Syracuse, NY 13057. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Skoda Transportation LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) 3/23/2016. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 6170 Monitor Way, Cicero, NY 13039. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Skyline Golf Cart Services, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 10/11/16. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: James D. Kite, 4944 Guy Young Road, Brewerton, NY 13029. Purpose: any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of The Fingerless Kitchen, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 10/12/2016. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 1410 Oak Street, Syracuse, NY 13203. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of The Rise Softball, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 10/17/16. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 7683 Hunt Lane, Fayetteville, NY 13066. Purpose: any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of To Eat and To Love, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on October 11, 2016. Office is located in the


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315-400-0808 of New York (SSNY) on September 15th, 2016. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 2098 W Lake Rd., Skaneateles, NY 13152. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Wood-Fired CNY, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on June 19, 2016. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 225 Lockwood Rd, Syracuse, NY 13214. Purpose is any lawful purpose.

Evelyn V. Emerson

Notice of Formation of: Dang Properties, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on October 18, 2016. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy process to: Dang Properties, LLC, 1432 N. Salina St., Syracuse, NY 13208. Purpose:any lawful purpose. Notice of formation. Name: Pooley Family Limited Partnership (LP). Certificate of Limited Partnership filed with New York Secretary of State (SSNY) October 24, 2016. Office of LP is located in Onondaga County, NY at principal business location of 392 Spafford Landing Rd., Spafford, NY 13077.

FINGER LAKES LAND BARGAIN! 23 acres $39,900 Private lake access, woods, fields, apple trees, lots of wildlife! 3 hrs NY City! Paved rd, utils, terms avail! 1-888-701-1864 N e w Yo r k L a n d a n dLakes.com. LAKEFRONT LAND SALE! 5 acres - 343 feet water front - an amazing $99,900. Unspoiled lake, woods, views, perfect get away cabin! 3.5 hrs NY City! Wine Country! EZ terms! 1-888-6508166 NewYorkLandandLakes.com. SSNY designated agent of LP for service of process. SSNY shall mail a copy of process served against LP to John Moss Hinchcliff, Esq., Miller Mayer, LLP, 215 E. State. St., PO Box 6435, Ithaca, NY 14850-6435. The name and business address of each general part-

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c: 315-530-3053

LIC ASSOC R.E. BROKER HUNT REAL ESTATE ERA • 6849 E GENESEE ST, FAYETTEVILLE, NY 13066

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Notice of Formation of US Drone, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 9/23/2016. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: LLC, 7659 Great Muskrat, Liverpool, NY 13090. Purpose: any lawful purpose.

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Count of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 312 South St. Fayetteville, NY 13066. Purpose is any lawful purpose.

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1& 2 BedroomApartment Apartments 1 Bedroom Includes all utilities & A/C! Large Living Room, Kitchen, Dining Room, Free parking! No pets. 915 James St. 472-3135 syracusenewtimes.com | 11.9.16 - 11.15.16

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ner is available from the SSNY. The latest date upon which the LP is to dissolve is September 30, 2046. LP purpose is to engage in any activity authorized by NY law. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE. This notice of public sale is regarding a 2003 Chevrolet Envoy, black in color, and registered to Jason Collins formally of Beaver KY, and now residing in North Syracuse. The above named vehicle has been at Evans Wrecker and Salvage since 3/11/2016. Total charges need to be paid before release of vehicle. For the total amount the owner can call 606-587-1675 and get all details on tow and storage fees. If said vehicle is not picked up by November 16, 2016, said vehicle will be sold at public auction for cost of tow and storage fees. Notice of Qualification of AECOM Field Services, LLC. Authority filed with NY Dept. of State on 10/5/16. Office location: Onondaga County. Princ. bus. addr.: 1999 Ave. of the Stars, Suite 2600, Los Angeles, CA 90067. LLC formed in DE on 8/15/16. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: CT Corporation System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. DE addr. of LLC: 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 Kanaan Communications, LLC. Authority filed with NY Dept. of State on 9/29/16. Office location: Onondaga County. Princ. bus. addr.: 11780 US Hwy 1, Suite 600, Palm Beach Gardens, FL 33408. LLC formed in DE on 11/10/11. 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: c/o The Corporation Trust Co., 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. filed with DE Sec. of State, PO Box 898, Dover, DE 19903. Purpose: all lawful purposes. Notice of Qualification of LQD Beverages, LLC. Authority filed with NY Dept. of State on 10/31/16. Office location: Onondaga County. Princ. bus. addr.: One Busch

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Place, St. Louis, MO 63118. LLC formed in DE on 9/9/16. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: CT Corporation System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. DE addr. of LLC: 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 McKinley Syracuse, LLC. App. for Auth. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 10/28/16. Office location: Onondaga County. LLC formed in Delaware (DE) on 8/19/16. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 2970 Clairmont Road NE, Ste. 310, Atlanta, GA 30329, Attn: Jennifer Hill, Esq. DE address of LLC: 1675 South State St., Ste. B, Dover, DE 19901. Arts. of Org. filed with DE Secy. of State, 401 Federal St., Ste. 4, Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: any lawful act or activity. NOTICE. Name of LLC: ETCook, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with NY Dept. of State on 9/20/16. Office Location: Cortland County. Sec. of State designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to principal business location: P.O. Box 229, McGraw, NY 13101. Purpose: any lawful activity. NOTICE. Name of LLC: NYCalzone, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with NY Dept. of State on 10/7/16. Office Location: Cortland County. Sec. of State designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to principal business location: PO Box 229, McGraw, NY 13101. Purpose: any lawful activity. STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT : COUNTY OF ONONDAGA. SUMMONS WITH NOTICE. Index No. 2016-408. AMERICU CREDIT UNION, Plaintiff, -vs- RALPH M. JACKSON A/K/A RALPH M. JACKSON JR.; “JOHN DOE” AND “JANE DOE,” Defendants. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT, RALPH M. JACKSON: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to appear in this action by serving a notice of appearance on the plaintiff’s attorney within thirty days after service of this summons is complete and in case of your failure to appear,

judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. TO THE DEFENDANT, RALPH M. JACKSON: The foregoing summons is served upon you by publication pursuant to an Order of Honorable Anthony J. Paris, Supreme Court Justice of the State of New York, signed on September 29, 2016 and and filed on September 30, 2016, with the complaint, in the Onondaga County Clerk’s Office. This action is to foreclose a mortgage from Ralph M. Jackson to AmeriCU Credit Union, which mortgage was recorded in Onondaga County Clerk’s Office on January 22, 2014 in Liber 17416 of Mortgages at page 0212. The property which is the subject of this action is 756 Westmoreland Avenue, City of Syracuse, County of Onondaga, New York. Dated: October 5, 2016. s/ Amanda C. Shaw, Esq.RIEHLMAN, SHAFER & SHAW, LLC. Attorneys for Plaintiff. 7693 Route 281, P. O. Box 544, Tully, NY 13159-0544. (315) 6966347. STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF ONONDAGA. Index No. 2016-633. Filing Date: 09/08/2016. M A N U FA C T U R E R S AND TRADERS TRUST COMPANY, Plaintiff,vs-DALE SWANK, individually, and as surviving spouse of David P. Swank, deceased; STATE TAX COMMISSION; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA/ INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE; PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK; JOHN DOE and JANE DOE, the two defendants last named being possible tenants in possession of portions of premises under foreclosure, the names being fictitious, their true names being unknown to plaintiff, Defendants. TO THE ABOVE-NAMED DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the Complaint in the above action and to serve a copy of your Answer on the plaintiff’s attorney within twenty (20) days after the service of this Summons, exclusive of the day of service, or within thirty (30) days after completion of service where service is made in any other manner 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 hereof. In case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the Complaint. NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF

11.9.16 - 11.15.16 | syracusenewtimes.com

LOSING YOUR HOMEIf you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to your mortgage company will not stop this foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. Onondaga County is designated as the place of trial. The basis of venue is the location of the mortgaged premises. DATED: July 31, 2016. /s/Anthony R. Hanley Anthony R. Hanley, Esq. COSTELLO, COONEY & FEARON, PLLC Attorneys for the Plaintiff. Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company, Office and Post Office Address, 5701 West Genesee Street, Camillus, New York 13031-1274. Telephone: (315) 422-1152. THIS COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBT COLLECTOR AND IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. TO: DALE SWANK, INDIVIDUALLY, AND AS SURVIVING SPOUSE OF DAVID P. SWANK, DECEASED. The foregoing Summons is served upon you by publication pursuant to an Order of the Honorable Kevin G. Young, Justice of the Supreme Court, dated October 5, 2016 and filed with the Complaint in the office of the Clerk of the County of Onondaga at Syracuse, New York. The object of this action is to foreclose a mortgage dated March 22, 2004, executed by David P. Swank and Dale Swank to Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company to secure the sum of $21,400.00 and recorded in Liber 13949 of Mortgages at Page 323&c., in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Onondaga on May 5, 2004 at 3:23 o’clock in the afternoon; said mortgage having been modified by Home Equity Line of Credit Modification Agreement between David P. Swank and Dale Swank and Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company, dated November 19, 2007 and recorded December 17, 2007 in the Onondaga County Clerk’s Office in Liber

15402 of Mortgages at Page 437&c., increasing the line of credit from $21,400.00 to $50,000.00, an increase of $28,600.00. See Schedule “A” attached hereto and made a part hereof. DATED: October 10, 2016. /s/Anthony R. HanleY. Anthony R. Hanley, Esq. Costello, Cooney & Fearon, PLLC, Attorneys for Plaintiff, 5701 West Genesee Street, Camillus, New York 13031. SCHEDULE “A” NAMES(S): DAVID P. SWANK AND DALE SWANK. LONG LEGAL: LYING AND BEING LOCATED IN THE CITY OF SYRACUSE, COUNTY OF ONONDAGA, STATE OF NEW YORK; ALL THAT CERTAIN PARCEL OR TRACT OF LAND KNOWN AS: ON A MAP OF SAID CITY MADE BY J.M. TROWBRIDGE, AS BEING PART OF LOTS NOS. 1, 2 & 3 IN BLOCK NO. 29 (SALINA) IN THE SAID CITY OF SYRACUSE, AND BOUNDED AND DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT A POINT ON THE NORTHERLY LINE OF FIRST NORTH STREET, ONE HUNDRED AND ONE (101) FEET EASTERLY FROM THE EASTERLY LINE OF WOLF STREET, THENCE EASTERLY ON THE NORTHERLY LINE OF FIRST NORTH STREET THIRTY-ONE (31) FEET; THENCE NORTHERLY PARALLEL TO WOLF STREET EIGHTY TWO AND ONE-HALF (82 ½) FEET; THENCE WESTERLY PARALLEL TO FIRST NORTH STREET ON THE CENTER LINE OF SAID LOT NO. 3 THIRTY-ONE (31) FEET; THENCE SOUTHERLY PARALLEL TO WOLF STREET, TO THE PLACE OF BEGINNING. TAX MAP # 003.-13-30.0. HELP FOR HOMEOWNERS IN FORECLOSURE. New York State Law requires that we send you this notice about the foreclosure process. Please read it carefully. Summons and Complaint. You are in danger of losing your home. If you fail to respond to the summons and complaint in this foreclosure action, you may lose your home. Please read the summons and complaint carefully. You should immediately contact an attorney or your local legal aid office to obtain advice on how to protect yourself. Sources of Information and Assistance. The State encourages you to become informed about your options in foreclosure. In addition to seeking assistance from an attorney or legal aid office, there are government agencies and non-profit organizations that you may contact for information about possible options, including trying to work with your lender during this process. To locate an entity near you, you

may call the toll-free helpline maintained by the New York State Banking Department at 1-877-BANK NYS (1-877-226-5697) or visit the Department’s website at www.banking.state.ny.us. Foreclosure Rescue Scams. Be careful of people who approach you with offers to “save” your home. There are individuals who watch for notices of foreclosure actions in order to unfairly profit from a homeowner’s distress. You should be extremely careful about any such promises and any suggestions that you pay them a fee or sign over your deed. State law requires anyone offering such services for profit to enter into a contract which fully describes the services they will perform and fees they will charge, and which prohibits them from taking any money from you until they have completed all such promised services. THE ATTACHED NOTICE IS PROVIDED IN ACCORDANCE WITH AND IN SATISFACTION OF NEW YORK STATE REAL PROPERTY ACTIONS AND PROCEEDINGS LAW § 1303. THIS COMMUNICATION IS FROM A DEBTOR COLLECTOR AND IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED MAY BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Supplemental Summons and Notice of Object of Action Supreme Court Of The State Of New York County Of Onondaga Action to Foreclose a Mortgage Index #: 2016-568 Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. Plaintiff vs Cathy J. Dewane If Living, And If He/She Be Dead, Any And All Persons Unknown To Plaintiff, Claiming, Or Who May Claim To Have An Interest In, Or General Or Specific Lien Upon The Real Property Described In This Action; Such Unknown Persons Being Herein Generally Described And Intended To Be Included In Wife, Widow, Husband, Widower, Heirs At Law, Next Of Kin, Descendants, Executors, Administrators, Devisees, Legatees, Creditors, Trustees, Committees, Lienors, And Assignees Of Such Deceased, Any And All Persons Deriving Interest In Or Lien Upon, Or Title To Said Real Property By, Through Or Under Them, Or Either Of Them, And Their Respective Wives, Widows, Husbands, Widowers, Heirs At Law, Next Of Kin, Descendants, Executors, Administrators, Devisees, Legatees, Creditors, Trustees, Committees, Lienors, And Assigns, All Of Whom And Whose Names, Except As Stated, Are Unknown To Plaintiff,

People Of The State Of New York, United States Of America Acting Through The IRS, John Doe (being fictitious, the names unknown to Plaintiff intended to be tenants, occupants, persons or corporations having or claiming an interest in or lien upon the property described in the complaint or their heirs at law, distributees, executors, administrators, trustees, guardians, assignees, creditors or successors.) Defendant(s) Mortgaged Premises: 5463 Borgase Lane Clay, NY 13041 SBL #: 077.1-16-08.1 To the Above named Defendant: You are hereby summoned to answer the Complaint in this action, and to serve a copy of your answer, or, if the Complaint is not served with this Supplemental Summons, to serve a notice of appearance, on the Plaintiff(s) attorney(s) within twenty days after the service of this Supplemental Summons, exclusive of the day of service (or within 30 days after the service is complete if this Supplemental Summons is not personally delivered to you within the State of New York). In case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the Complaint. The Attorney for Plaintiff has an office for business in the County of Erie. Trial to be held in the County of Onondaga. The basis of the venue designated above is the location of the Mortgaged Premises. To: Cathy J. Dewane Defendant In this Action. The foregoing Supplemental Summons is served upon you by publication, pursuant to an order of Hon. Kevin G. Young of the Supreme Court Of The State Of New York, dated October 3, 2016 and to be filed with the Complaint in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Onondaga, in the City of Syracuse. The object of this action is to foreclose a mortgage upon the premises described below, dated June 15, 2007, executed by Cathy J. Dewane to secure the sum of $41,706.00 and recorded at Book 15245, Page 169 in the Office of the Onondaga County Clerk on July 13, 2007; The mortgage was subsequently assigned by an assignment executed October 4, 2006 and recorded on November 13, 2006, in the Office of the Onondaga County Clerk at Instrument Number 2006000627348. The property in question is described as follows: 5463 BORGASE LANE, CLAY, NY 13041 NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING

YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to your mortgage company will not stop this foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. DATED: October 20, 2016 Attorney(s) For Plaintiff(s) 1775 Wehrle Drive, Suite 100 Williamsville, NY 14221 The law firm of Gross Polowy, LLC and the attorneys whom it employs are debt collectors who are attempting to collect a debt. Any information obtained by them will be used for that purpose. SUPREME COURT - COUNTY OF ONONDAGA SPECIALIZED LOAN SERVICING, LLC, V. PAMELA TIERNEY, et al. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated May 21, 2015, and entered in the Office of the Clerk of the County of ONONDAGA, wherein SPECIALIZED LOAN SERVICING, LLC is the Plaintiff and PAMELA TIERNEY, ET AL. are the Defendant(s). I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the ONONDAGA COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 2ND FLOOR, WEST WING, 401 MONTGOMERY STREET SYRACUSE, NY 13202, on November 17, 2016 at 3:00 pm, premises known as 467 PLEASANTVEW AVE, SYRACUSE, NY 13208: Section 12, Block 9, Lot 2, 3: ALL THAT TRACT OR PARCEL OF LAND SITUATE IN THE CITY OF SYRACUSE, COUNTY OF ONONDAGA AND STATE OF NEW YORK Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 146/2014. Mark Bidwell, Esq. - Referee. RAS Boriskin, LLC 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 106, Westbury, New York 11590, Attorneys for Plaintiff. SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF ONONDAGA INDEX NO. 419/2016. Plaintiff designates ONONDAGA as the place of trial situs of the real property SUPPLE-


MENTAL SUMMONS Mortgaged Premises: 125 FOREST AVENUE SYRACUSE, NY 13205 Section: 77 Block: 21 Lot: 13 LIVE WELL FINANCIAL, INC., Plaintiff, vs. DANIEL BOYD, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF DORA C. BOYD A/K/A DORA CALDWELL BOYD, any and all persons unknown to plaintiff, claiming, or who may claim to have an interest in, or general or specific lien upon the real property described in this action; such unknown persons being herein generally described and intended to be included in the following designation, namely: the wife, widow, husband, widower, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors, and assignees of such deceased, any and all persons deriving interest in or lien upon, or title to said real property by, through or under them, or either of them, and their respective wives, widows, husbands, widowers, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors and assigns, all of whom and whose names, except as stated, are unknown to plaintiff; SECRETARY OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT; NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; CAPITAL HOMEOWNER SERVICES CORP.; ASSOCIATES CONSUMER DISCOUNT COMPANY OF N.Y., INC., “JOHN DOE #1” through “JOHN DOE #12,” the last twelve names being fictitious and unknown to plaintiff, the persons or parties intended being the tenants, occupants, persons or corporations, if any, having or claiming an interest in or lien upon the premises, described in the complaint, Defendants. To the above named Defendants YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer, or, if the complaint is not served with this summons, to serve a notice of appearance on the Plaintiff’s Attorney within 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) in the event the United States of America is made a party defendant, the time to answer for the said United States of America shall not ex-

pire until (60) days after service of the Summons; 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. NOTICE OF NATURE OF ACTION AND RELIEF SOUGHT THE OBJECT of the above caption action is to foreclose a Mortgage to secure the sum of $49,500.00 and interest, recorded on August 24, 2012, at Liber 16907 Page 365, of the Public Records of ONONDAGA County, New York, covering premises known as 125 FOREST AVENUE SYRACUSE, NY 13205. The relief sought in the within action is a final judgment directing the sale of the premises described above to satisfy the debt secured by the Mortgage described above. ONONDAGA County is designated as the place of trial because the real property affected by this action is located in said county. NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to the mortgage company will not stop the foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. Dated: October 17, 2016 RAS BORISKIN, LLC. Attorney for Plaintiff BY: DANIEL GREENBAUM, ESQ. 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 106 Westbury, NY 11590 516-280-7675. SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF ONONDAGA INDEX NO. 355/2016 WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO WELLS FARGO BANK MINNESOTA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE F/K/A NORWEST BANK MINNESOTA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR DELTA FUNDING HOME EQUITY LOAN TRUST 19993, Plaintiff, vs. DAVID J. SHATTUCK, HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF DEBORA K. PUZZULLO A/K/A DEB-

ORA SHATTUCK; JON PUZZULLO, HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF DEBORA K. PUZZULLO A/K/A DEBORA SHATTUCK; PAUL PUZZULLO, HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF DEBORA K. PUZZOLLO A/K/A DEBORA SHATTUCK, any and all persons unknown to plaintiff, claiming, or who may claim to have an interest in, or general or specific lien upon the real property described in this action; such unknown persons being herein generally described and intended to be included in the following designation, namely: the wife, widow, husband, widower, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors, and assignees of such deceased, any and all persons deriving interest in or lien upon, or title to said real property by, through or under them, or either of them, and their respective wives, widows, husbands, widowers, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors and assigns, all of whom and whose names, except as stated, are unknown to plaintiff; NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA û INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE; ST. JOSEPH’S HOSPITAL HEALTH CENTER; SANDRA SCHEPP, IN HER CAPACITY AS ONONDAGA COUNTY CLERK; “JOHN DOE #1” through “JOHN DOE #12,” the last twelve names being fictitious and unknown to plaintiff, the persons or parties intended being the tenants, occupants, persons or corporations, if any, having or claiming an interest in or lien upon the premises, described in the complaint, Defendants. To the above named Defendants YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer, or, if the complaint is not served with this summons, to serve a notice of appearance on the Plaintiff’s Attorney within 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) in the event the United States of America is made a party defendant, the time to answer for the

said United States of America shall not expire until (60) days after service of the Summons; 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. NOTICE OF NATURE OF ACTION AND RELIEF SOUGHT THE OBJECT of the above caption action is to foreclose a Mortgage to secure the sum of $58,800.00 and interest, recorded on September 10, 1999, at Liber 10383 Page 130, of the Public Records of ONONDAGA County, New York, covering premises known as 8169 SCOTIA LANE LIVERPOOL, NY 13090. The relief sought in the within action is a final judgment directing the sale of the premises described above to satisfy the debt secured by the Mortgage described above. ONONDAGA County is designated as the place of trial because the real property affected by this action is located in said county. NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to the mortgage company will not stop the foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. Dated: October 31, 2016 RAS BORISKIN, LLC. Attorney for Plaintiff BY: SAMANTHA FLORES, ESQ. 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 106, Westbury, NY 11590 516-280-7675. SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF ONONDAGA Plaintiff designates ONONDAGA as the place of trial situs of the real property INDEX NO. 76/2016 SUPPLEMENTAL SUMMONS Mortgaged Premises: 4 WOOD STREET BALDWINSVILLE, NY 13027 District: Section: 009. Block: 04 Lot: 08.0. WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO WELLS FARGO BANK MINNE-

SOTA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE F/K/A NORWEST BANK MINNESOTA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE REGISTERED HOLDERS OF RENAISSANCE HOME EQUITY LOAN ASSET-BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2003-3, Plaintiff, vs. HENRY PERKINS, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF FRANCIS BROWN; CHARLES BROWN, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF FRANCIS BROWN; RONALD PERKINS, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF FRANCIS BROWN, any and all persons unknown to plaintiff, claiming, or who may claim to have an interest in, or general or specific lien upon the real property described in this action; such unknown persons being herein generally described and intended to be included in the following designation, namely: the wife, widow, husband, widower, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors, and assignees of such deceased, any and all persons deriving interest in or lien upon, or title to said real property by, through or under them, or either of them, and their respective wives, widows, husbands, widowers, heirs at law, next of kin,descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors and assigns, all of whom and whose names, except as stated, are unknown to plaintiff CITIBANK, N.A.; COUNTY OF ONONDAGA; SYNCHRONY BANK F/K/A GE CAPITAL RETAIL BANK F/K/A GE MONEY BANK; NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; SANDRA SCHEPP, AS CLERK OF THE COUNTY OF ONONDAGA; “JOHN DOE #1” through “JOHN DOE #12,” the last twelve names being fictitious and unknown to plaintiff, the persons or parties intended being the tenants, occupants, persons or corporations, if any, having or claiming an interest in or lien upon the premises, described in the complaint, Defendants. To the above named Defendants YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer, or,

if the complaint is not served with this summons, to serve a notice of appearance on the Plaintiff’s Attorney within 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) in the event the United States of America is made a party defendant, the time to answer for the said United States of America shall not expire until (60) days after service of the Summons; 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. NOTICE OF NATURE OF ACTION AND RELIEF SOUGHT THE OBJECT of the above caption action is to foreclose a Mortgage to secure the sum of $55,920.00 and interest, recorded on September 22, 2003, at Liber 13628 Page 0471, of the Public Records of ONONDAGA County, New York, covering premises known as 4 WOOD STREET BALDWINSVILLE, NY 13027. The relief sought in the within action is a final judgment directing the sale of the premises described above to satisfy the debt secured by the Mortgage described above. ONONDAGA County is designated as the place of trial because the real property affected by this action is located in said county. NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to the mortgage company will not stop the foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. Dated: October 10, 2016 RAS BORISKIN, LLC Attorney for Plaintiff BY: Brandon M. Kopcienski, Esq. 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 106,Westbury, NY 11590 (516) 280-7675.

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF ONONDAGA Plaintiff designates ONONDAGA as the place of trial situs of the real property SUPPLEMENTAL SUMMONS Mortgaged Premises: 689 ALLEN STREET SYRACUSE, NY 13224 Section: 45 Block: 2 Lot: 22 INDEX NO. 917/2016 NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC, Plaintiff, vs. AMANDA WYNN AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF DAVID WYNN; AMANDA WYNN, AS GUARDIAN OF A.W., A MINOR AND HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF DAVID WYNN; HEIRS AND DISTRIBUTEES OF THE ESTATE OF DAVID WYNN, any and all persons unknown to plaintiff, claiming, or who may claim to have an interest in, or general or specific lien upon the real property described in this action; such unknown persons being herein generally described and intended to be included in the following designation, namely: the wife, widow, husband, widower, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors, and assignees of such deceased, any and all persons deriving interest in or lien upon, or title to said real property by, through or under them, or either of them, and their respective wives, widows, husbands, widowers, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors and assigns, all of whom and whose names, except as stated, are unknown to plaintiff ; NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA û INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, “JOHN DOE #1” through “JOHN DOE #12,” the last twelve names being fictitious and unknown to plaintiff, the persons or parties intended being the tenants, occupants, persons or corporations, if any, having or claiming an interest in or lien upon the premises, described in the complaint, Defendants. To the above named Defendants YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer, or, if the complaint is not served with this summons, to serve a notice of appearance on the Plaintiff’s At-

torney 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) in the event the United States of America is made a party defendant, the time to answer for the said United States of America shall not expire until (60) days after service of the Summons; 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. NOTICE OF NATURE OF ACTION AND RELIEF SOUGHT THE OBJECT of the above caption action is to foreclose a Mortgage to secure the sum of $80,500.00 and interest, recorded on June 13, 2005, at Liber 14415 Page 0860, of the Public Records of ONONDAGA County, New York, covering premises known as 689 ALLEN STREET SYRACUSE, NY 13224. The relief sought in the within action is a final judgment directing the sale of the premises described above to satisfy the debt secured by the Mortgage described above. ONONDAGA County is designated as the place of trial because the real property affected by this action is located in said county. NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to the mortgage company will not stop the foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. Dated: September 28th, 2016 RAS BORISKIN, LLC Attorney for Plaintiff BY: DANIEL GREENBAUM, ESQ. 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 106 Westbury, NY 11590 516-2807675.

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will have an excellent chance to shed some of that tendency, even as you build more of the healthy pride that attracts help and support. So be alert for a steady flow of intuitions that will instruct you on how to elude overconfidence and instead cultivate more of the warm, radiant charisma that is your birthright. You came here to planet Earth not just to show off your bright beauty, but also to wield it as a source of inspiration and motivation for those whose lives you touch.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) “How often I found where I should be going only by setting out for somewhere else,” said inventor Buckminster Fuller. I don’t fully endorse that perspective. For example, when I said goodbye to North Carolina with the intention to make Northern California my new home, Northern California is exactly where I ended up and stayed. Having said that, however, I suspect that the coming months could be one of those times when Fuller’s formula applies to you. Your ultimate destination may turn out to be different from your original plan. But here’s the tricky part: If you do want to eventually be led to the situation that’s right for you, you have to be specific about setting a goal that seems right for now. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) If you were an

obscenely rich plutocrat, you might have a pool table on your super yacht. And to ensure that you and your buddies could play pool even in a storm that rocked your boat, you would have a special gyroscopic instrument installed to keep your pool table steady and stable. But I doubt you have such luxury at your disposal. You’re just not that wealthy or decadent. You could have something even better, however: metaphorical gyroscopes that will keep you steady and stable as you navigate your way through unusual weather. Do you know what I’m referring to? If not, meditate on the three people or influences that might best help you stay grounded. Then make sure you snuggle up close to those people and influences during the next two weeks.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) The coming

weeks will be a good time to fill your bed with rose petals and sleep with their aroma caressing your dreams. You should also consider the following acts of intimate revolution: listening to sexy spiritual flute music while carrying on scintillating conversations with interesting allies; sharing gourmet meals in which you and your sensual companions use your fingers to slowly devour your delectable food; dancing naked in semi-darkness as you imagine your happiest possible future. Do you catch my drift, Cancerian? You’re due for a series of appointments with savvy bliss and wild splendor.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) “I have always wanted

my mouth full of strange sunlight,” writes Leo poet Michael Dickman in his poem “My Honeybee.” In another piece, while describing an outdoor scene from childhood, he innocently asks, “What kind of light is that?” Elsewhere he confesses, “What I want more than anything is to get down on paper what the shining looks like.” In accordance with the astrological omens, Leo, I suggest you follow Dickman’s lead in the coming weeks. You will receive soulful teachings if you pay special attention to both the qualities of the light you see with your eyes and the inner light that wells up in your heart.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) The Passage du Gois is a 2.8-mile causeway that runs between the western French town of Beauvoir-sur-Mer and the island of Noirmoutier in the Atlantic Ocean. It’s only usable twice a day when the tide goes out, and even then for just an hour or two. The rest of the time it’s under water. If you hope to walk or bike or drive across, you must accommodate yourself to nature’s rhythms. I suspect there’s a metaphorically similar phenomenon in your life, Virgo. To get to where

be open and available.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Modern toilet

paper appeared in 1901, when a company in Green Bay, Wisc., began to market “sanitary tissue” to the public. The product had a small problem, however. Since the manufacturing process wasn’t perfect, wood chips sometimes remained embedded in the paper. It was not until 1934 that the product was offered as officially “splinter-free.” I mention this, Libra, because I suspect that you are not yet in the splinter-free phase of the promising possibility you’re working on. Keep at it. Hold steady. Eventually you’ll purge the glitches.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) “Don’t be someone that searches, finds, and then runs away,” advises novelist Paulo Coelho. I’m tempted to add this caveat: “Don’t be someone that searches, finds, and then runs away -- unless you really do need to run away for a while to get better prepared for the reward you have summoned, and then return to fully embrace it.” After studying the astrological omens, Scorpio, I’m guessing you can benefit from hearing this information. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Go ahead and howl a celebratory “goodbye!” to any triviality that has distracted you from your worthy goals, to any mean little ghost that has shadowed your good intentions, and to any faded fantasy that has clogged up the flow of your psychic energy. I also recommend that you whisper “welcome!” to open secrets that have somehow remained hidden from you, to simple lessons you haven’t been simple enough to learn before now, and to breathtaking escapes you have only recently earned. P.S.: You are authorized to refer to the coming weeks as a watershed. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Musician and visual artist Brian Eno loves to dream up innovative products. In 2006, he published a DVD called 77 Million Paintings, which uses technological trickery to generate 77 million different series of images. To watch the entire thing would take 9,000 years. In my opinion, it’s an interesting but gimmicky novelty -- not particularly deep or meaningful. During the next nine months, Capricorn, I suggest that you attempt a far more impressive feat: a richly complex creation that will provide you with growth-inducing value for years to come. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Do you know

about the Lords of Shouting? According to Christian and Jewish mythology, they’re a gang of 15.5 million angels that greet each day with vigorous songs of praise and blessing. Most people are too preoccupied with their own mind chatter to pay attention to them, let alone hear their melodious offerings. But I suspect you may be an exception to that rule in the coming weeks. According to my reading of the astrological omens, you’ll be exceptionally alert for and receptive to glad tidings. You may be able to spot opportunities that others are blind to, including the chants of the Lords of Shouting and many other potential blessings. Take advantage of your aptitude!

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Greenland sharks

live a long time -- up to 400 years, according to researchers at the University of Copenhagen. The females of the species don’t reach sexual maturity until they’re 150. I wouldn’t normally compare you Pisceans to these creatures, but my reading of the astrological omens suggests that the coming months will be a time when at long last you will reach your full sexual ripeness. It’s true that you’ve been capable of generating new human beings for quite some time. But your erotic wisdom has lagged behind. Now that’s going to change. Your ability to harness your libidinous power will soon start to increase. As it does, you’ll gain new access to primal creativity.


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Friday Dinner Buffet - 5-8pm Prime Rib/Turkey/Chicken Seafood/Veggies Breads & Desserts! Saturday and Sunday Breakfast Buffet - 8am-1pm Saturday ‘Comfort Food’ Buffet 4:30-7pm - Turkey/Stuffing Mashed Potatoes/Chicken & Biscuits/Macaroni & Cheese & MORE!

24 Hour Drive Thru

469-1120 or 469-1121

Open 7 Days | 469-8159

ALL ARE WELCOME • EXIT 16 OFF RTE 81


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