AN HOUR COULD SAVE A LIFE PUBLIC HEALTH, Page 6
THE POWER OF AN EMPTY PLACE ART, Page 24
AUG. 2 2017, VOL. 46 NO. 48
SOLE REHAB, A 2-YEAR-OLD DJ COLLECTIVE, IS HELPING UNDERGROUND HOUSE CULTURE THRIVE IN ROCHESTER CULTURE FEATURE, PAGE 10
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Feedback We welcome your comments. Send them to themail@rochestercitynews.com, or post them on our website, rochestercitynewspaper.com, our Facebook page, or our Twitter feed, @roccitynews. For our print edition, we select comments from all three sources; those of fewer than 350 words have a greater chance of being published, and we do edit selections for publication in print. We don’t publish comments sent to other media.
Why build a new theater?
On our article on the challenges facing artists and arts institutions,
“Affording the Arts”: With so many great cultural organizations with such crucial fiscal demands, why does Mayor Lovely Warren support wasting $85 million dollars on a performing arts center downtown that the public has no great desire for and that will likely require annual ongoing subsidy from city tax dollars? This makes no sense at all and is clearly a misplaced priority. LARRY CHAMPOUX
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AUGUST 2 - 8, 2017
Praise for CDCR’s leader
On “Designing for a Better City,” our interview with Maria Furgiuele, the new director of Community Design Center Rochester: Love what you’re
doing! Keep it up. As a Millennial, one of the biggest draws to Rochester is that it has an affordable pre-war urban fabric, and the city appears to be heading in the right direction thanks to people like you. NATHAN POLSELLI
Fighting Trump
During the last election campaign, Donald Trump made it abundantly clear, on almost a daily basis, that he was a demagogue, a misogynist, a bully, emotionally unstable, a cheat, a fraud, and a borderline bigot. Yet he polled over 60 million votes. Even taking into account that Hillary wasn’t a very appealing candidate and that a high level of Russian disinformation dissemination appears likely, such a vote tally reveals an astonishingly
high level of selfishness and ignorance among the American electorate. As with a mindless wildfire that destroys everything it touches, we can try to battle Trumpism. But we have to be prepared to accept that ultimately we may have to simply wait for it to burn itself out. CHARLIE ADAMS
Trump’s world
Get rid of the poor, / the sick, the disabled, / and old people. No free speech. / Shut down the press. / Government TV. Arrest the protesters. / No dissenters. Welcome to Trump Soylent Green World. DON WILSON
Police need two-person units
In light of the recent shooting of RPD Officer Jeremy Nash, I implore Mayor Warren to mandate a two-man patrol policy. Had Officer Nash been a one-man unit, undoubtedly the outcome would have been more devastating. My personal experience as a patrol officer proved that twoman units provide maximum officer safety. Taxpayers would also benefit, because fewer vehicles are deployed and less fuel would be utilized. As a former patrol officer and current court officer, it is heartening to witness the outpouring of community support after an officer is victimized. However, we cannot abandon our officers upon their departure from the hospital. The citizenry must demand and hold accountable the politicians who refuse to provide the essential tools necessary to keep our officers safe. Any assault on the police who are sworn to serve and protect us should be deemed an attack on all of us. Rochester Police Locust Club President Mike Mazzeo will tirelessly pursue all avenues to insure that all RPD officers return home safely after their tour of duty, fulfilling his commitment to protect the police. WALT SIMONI
News. Music. Life. Greater Rochester’s Alternative Newsweekly August 2 - 8, 2017 Vol 46 No 48 250 North Goodman Street Rochester, New York 14607-1199 themail@rochester-citynews.com phone (585) 244-3329 fax (585) 244-1126 rochestercitynewspaper.com facebook.com/CityNewspaper twitter.com/roccitynews instagram.com/roccitynews On the cover: Photograph by Sara Czernikowski Publishers: William and Mary Anna Towler Editor: Mary Anna Towler Editorial department themail@rochester-citynews.com Arts & entertainment editor: Jake Clapp Staff writers: Tim Louis Macaluso, Jeremy Moule Arts & entertainment staff writer: Rebecca Rafferty Music writer: Frank De Blase Calendar editor: Kurt Indovina Contributing writers: Roman Divezur, Daniel J. Kushner, Kathy Laluk, Adam Lubitow, Amanda Fintak, Mark Hare, Alex Jones, Katie, Libby, Ron Netsky, David Raymond, Leah Stacy Editorial interns: Tori Martinez, Gracie Peters Art department artdept@rochester-citynews.com Art director/Production manager: Ryan Williamson Designers: Justyn Iannucci, Kevin Fuller Photographer: Kevin Fuller Graphic design intern: Marian Bona Advertising department ads@rochester-citynews.com New sales development: Betsy Matthews Account executives: Christine Kubarycz, William Towler, David White Classified sales representatives: Christine Kubarycz, Tracey Mykins Operations/Circulation kstathis@rochester-citynews.com Business manager: Angela Scardinale Circulation manager: Katherine Stathis Distribution: David Riccioni, Northstar Delivery City Newspaper is available free of charge. Additional copies of the current issue may be purchased for $1 each at the City Newspaper office. City Newspaper may be distributed only by authorized distributors. No person may, without prior written permission of City Newspaper, take more than one copy of each weekly issue. City (ISSN 1551-3262) is published weekly by WMT Publications, Inc. Periodical postage paid at Rochester, NY (USPS 022-138). Address changes: City, 250 North Goodman Street, Rochester, NY 14607. Member of the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies and the New York Press Association. Annual subscriptions: $35 ($30 senior citizens); add $10 for out-of-state subscriptions. Refunds for fewer than ten months cannot be issued. Copyright by WMT Publications Inc., 2017 - all rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, photocopying, recording or by any information storage retrieval system without permission of the copyright owner.
@ROCCITYNEWS
URBAN JOURNAL | BY MARY ANNA TOWLER
The big news out of Washington last week was the health-care vote. But that bit of positive news shouldn’t erase another big development: Trump’s decision to ban transgender people from military service. It’s not surprising that Trump has jettisoned yet another vulnerable group. He tosses aside anybody who gets in the way of something he wants – or can serve as a hate-magnet for his political base. I’m reminded again of the conclusion by the New York Times’ David Brooks, that Trump and his family are amoral. When Trump sent out his early-morning tweets, he cited concerns over “disruption” in the service and the “tremendous” cost of gender-transition services. But I don’t think he based his decision on cost or a belief that transgender service members cause disruption. I think he simply traded them for something he wanted. Some conservatives in Congress objected to having taxes pay for gender-transition medical services for people in the military. Those conservatives threatened to block funding for a wall on the Mexican border. Trump wants the wall. Transgender people in the military? Gone. And the next day, the House approved spending $1.6 billion to build Trump’s wall. Trump hadn’t given any indication that he cares about the costs of health care in the military. (Not that he would have read about it, but the Washington Post reported that the military spends $84 million on erectile dysfunction medicines every year: “10 times the cost of annual transition-related medical care for active-duty transgender servicemembers,” the Post said.) And it’s not that Trump is necessarily prejudiced against transgender people. If it were prejudice, there’d be some hope that he could change. But that involves principles, and Trump doesn’t seem to have any principles other than a belief in his right to get whatever he wants. I don’t think he cares about transgender people, one way or the other. He just wanted the wall. As David Brooks wrote, in the Trump family, “there is no attachment to any external moral truth or ethical code. There is just naked capitalism.” Trump’s action last week is incredibly harmful to the transgender community, of course. It’s harmful to everyone in the LGBTQ community, and to the fabric and collective conscience of the country. Trump may not bear any animosity toward transgender people, but plenty of Americans do. And Trump, as he has so
Trump may not bear any animosity toward transgender people, but plenty of Americans do. And Trump has fed their hate.” many times, has fed their hate, encouraged it, and made it respectable. So it was a relief, and provided a little encouragement, to see members of Congress lash out at Trump – not only Democrats, but a handful of Republicans. Iowa’s Joni Ernst. Utah’s Orrin Hatch. Alaska’s John Sullivan. John McCain said there is “no reason” to force out people who are able to serve, “regardless of their gender identity.” Alabama’s Richard Shelby: “You ought to treat everybody fairly and give everybody a chance to serve.” North Carolina’s Thom Tillis said he would have “significant objections” to singling out “a specific group of American patriots.” General Joe Dunford, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the military “will continue to treat all of our personnel with respect.” And, Politico reported, when Republican Representative Vicky Hartzler had tried earlier to prohibit gendertransition services for active-duty service members, 24 Republicans voted against her. Trump may still get his way. But meager though it is, the pushback from the few Republicans is encouraging. The country has moved – a long way – from where it was only a few years ago. We still have far to go, but in this terrible age of Trump, the Republicans’ reaction was both something to smile about, and something to strengthen our spine. “Their fight is our fight,” New York Senator Kirsten Gillibrand e-mailed to her constituents on Thursday night. What’s tweeting out of the White House is evil, and all of us need to start calling it by name.
CONGRATULATIONS! to these talented professionals, from a proud CITY staff!
FROM LEFT, IANNUCCI, WILLIAMSON, AND RAFFERTY
Trump’s transgender ban: another time to resist
At the 2017 Convention of the Association of Alternative Newsmedia, CIT Y staff won two top awards:
FIRST PLACE, ARTS FEATURE:
RRebecca e Rafferty, for “Lens Wide Open,” oon Rochester filmmaker Carvin Eison
FIRST PLACE, EDITORIAL LAYOUT:
Ryan Williamson, Justyn Iannucci, and former CITY photographer Mark Chamberlin, for “Black Teachers Matter”
SECOND PLACE, FILM CRITICISM: Adam Lubitow rochestercitynewspaper.com
CITY 3
[ NEWS FROM THE WEEK PAST ]
Investing in education tech
The Rochester City School District will receive nearly $27 million as part of the state’s Smart Schools Investment Plan. Most of the money will be used for classroom technology such as laptops, tablets, digital instruction boards, wireless access, and security cameras. The investment in classroom technology is the result of a state initiative to prepare students for a 21st-century work environment that is primarily technology driven.
RPO names new CEO
The Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra announced that Curtis Long, president of the Alabama Symphony Orchestra, will become the organization’s new president and CEO. Taking over September 1, Long will follow Ralph Craviso, the RPO’s interim president and CEO since October 2015. Craviso stepped in during a period of financial instability and helped the organization develop a new five-year financial plan. The RPO says it expects to see a balanced budget for the current fiscal year, its first in six years. Long
4 CITY
has been president of the Alabama Symphony since 2008. Previously, he was the executive director of the Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra for 14 years.
News
Preserving churches
Christ Church, located in downtown Rochester, and First United Congregational Church of Christ, located in Fairport, both received “sacred sites” grants from the New York Landmarks Conservancy. The churches will use the money for major structural repairs and restoration. The grants are in recognition of the important social and cultural roles religious institutions play in neighborhoods.
Tackling drugs in North Clinton neighborhood
The city announced a partnership with Rochester Regional Health to help reduce the buying and using of illegal drugs in the North Clinton Avenue neighborhood. The Street to Treatment program will use RGH’s Evelyn Brandon Center on Lake Avenue as a drop-off site, where police can take people who want to receive treatment for drug abuse. The opioid epidemic in the North Clinton Avenue area has been a huge problem for residents and business owners.
AUGUST 2 - 8, 2017
Zagster's bike rack in front of Village Gate on North Goodman Street. PHOTO BY RYAN WILLIAMSON TRANSPORTATION | BY KURT INDOVINA
On the road with Zagster A couple of weeks ago, bike racks appeared on what seemed to be every corner in downtown Rochester, with Zagster’s signature white bikes fixed with a basket in the front and rack in the back. And most important, they were being used. In the first day, says Zagster Bike Share Rebalancer Allen McAllister, somewhere between 250 and 300 rides had gone out. For $1 per half hour and the Zapster smartphone app, you can take any of the bikes from a Zagster rack to ride wherever your heart desires (as long as it’s in Rochester city limits). And you can return bikes at any Zagster station or any city-owned bike rack.
When I took a Zagster out for a spin, from the CITY offices on North Goodman to Abundance Food Co-op in the South Wedge, I found a lot of plusses. Renting, locking, and unlocking the bike was easy. The seat adjustment did just fine accommodating my 6’3 height. (Taller people might find the ride a little less comfortable.) Most apparent, though, is that Rochester is in desperate need of better bicycling infrastructure. The majority of the streets downtown have no bike lanes, making riding dangerous. Alexander Street was a bumpy and narrow ride, and most of East End took some skillful maneuvering.
Though Zagster is providing a service for people who don’t have a bike, its audience is still limited by one major factor: a smartphone. Bluetooth capabilities are required in order to unlock and lock the bikes, making a smartphone a necessity. And the bikes aren’t available everywhere. The heaviest concentration is downtown, with a few also available in some selected neighborhoods near downtown. Zagster has a map and other information online at www.zagster. com/ROC. (Want to watch our ride? Our video’s at www.rochestercitynewspaper.com.)
Bull’s Head, once a thriving part of the southwest section of the city, is suffering from decline. And some of its former uses have created formidable obstacles to redevelopment. But city officials say they see a chance to revitalize the area.
DEVELOPMENT | BY TIM LOUIS MACALUSO
Bringing back Bull’s Head Up until about the 1950’s, the Bull’s Head area was a thriving part of the southwest section of the city. Though it’s still remembered fondly by many people, particularly in Rochester’s African-American community, right now Bull’s Head is scarred by vacant lots and abandoned buildings. It’s often better known for the free public health clinic on West Main Street than for its large older homes and historic sites. But more than 100 people joined Mayor Lovely Warren and other city officials at St. Mary’s Campus recently for a meeting about the city’s plans to try to revitalize Bull’s Head. Warren, who opened the meeting, thanked residents and business owners for “sticking with the neighborhood.” The road to improving the area has been a long one, she said; planning has been underway for about a decade. Bull’s Head, one of the city’s oldest neighborhoods, is generally the area where West Main Street, Chili Avenue, West Avenue, Genesee Street, and Brown Street converge within a few hundred feet of each other. And it’s an area where its former uses – like many parts of Rochester’s industrial past – have created formidable obstacles to redevelopment.
Frank Armento, an environmentalservices consultant to the city with Fisher Associates, told those at the meeting that much of Bull’s Head was selected to be part of the New York State Brownfield Opportunity Areas Program because developers won’t even consider investing in contaminated sites. The land has been used for everything from gas stations and dry cleaners to factories, and it has to be cleaned and made shovel-ready for new construction, Armento said. A study of the Brownfield Opportunity Area for Bull’s Head involved collecting data on all of the properties and combing records for a history of how the property was used. The results are startling: Out of 618 parcels in the brownfield area, about 63 have been identified as possibly contaminated, says Norman Jones, the city’s commissioner of environmental services. A section referred to as a “subarea,” or core, of the BOA contains 126 parcels, and about 52 have been identified as possibly contaminated, Jones says. The number of sites may change as more information about each parcel is uncovered, says Rick Rynski, the city’s project manager for Bull’s Head.
The city purchased Bull’s Head Plaza to have better control over its redevelopment. PHOTO BY KEVIN FULLER
But Fisher Associate’s Armento stressed at the meeting that there are solid opportunities for Bull’s Head future, too. The area has some important anchors, including St. Mary’s Campus. Saints Peter and Paul Church is being eyed for historic preservation status. And Mayor Warren announced at the meeting that the city’s economic and development arm has purchased Bull’s Head Plaza, which gives the city control of the property and its rejuvenation. Another plus: There aren’t scads of owners of the vacant lots and buildings
in Bull’s Head, Armento said, and that should make redevelopment less complicated. Bull’s Head could be transformed into one of the most impressive gateway corridors into downtown, he said. (Information on the city’s plans for the area is available on the city’s website: cityofrochester.gov/ bullsheadrevitalization.)
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CITY 5
PUBLIC HEALTH | BY JEREMY MOULE
An hour could save a life Learn how to help overdose victims At this point, the opioid crisis is inescapable. Prescription painkiller abuse and the use of increasingly dangerous heroin-fentanyl mixtures is happening across social and economic lines. And the disease of addiction has some people so firmly in its grip that locally they’ve overdosed in parking lots, libraries, and other public places. Some have even overdosed behind the wheel, causing them to crash into other cars, utility poles, and people’s yards. Stacey Gray, a program nurse at the Villa of Hope, which provides addiction treatment services to youth, presents the situation as a blunt truth: Because the opioid epidemic is widespread, because of stigma and treatment resource shortages, a lot of people are going to see someone overdose, she says. This is where naloxone, a powerful opioid overdose reversal drug that’s saving countless lives, becomes important. It comes in a few forms, but practically any adult can get the nasal spray from a pharmacy without a prescription. The nasal spray kits – which are the simplest to administer – are also increasingly on hand at public places. But the access is good only if people know how to use the kits. “I believe everyone needs to learn,” Gray says. So Villa of Hope is one of several local government, non-profit, and health agencies that offer public naloxone training. The idea is to make sure that more and more people have at least some familiarity with the drug. That way, if they encounter someone who’s overdosed, they’re able to help, using their own kits or publicly accessible ones. Gray led the development of the agency’s training program and has organized sessions for her fellow staff members, for other agencies, and for people who know someone struggling with opioid addiction; she trained one group in a person’s living room. The free training sessions – which can be very short or can take around an hour – are done by appointment. Dr. Jeremy Cushman, Monroe County’s EMS medical director, says he’s responded to overdose calls where a community naloxone kit was available but wasn’t used. And overdoses can be traumatic for bystanders, and if they aren’t trained on using naloxone, administering it can be very stressful. For those reasons, Cushman believes naloxone trainings for the public – especially family and friends of people struggling with opioid addiction – are crucial. People should call 911 when they suspect an overdose, and they should follow 6 CITY
AUGUST 2 - 8, 2017
Getting training
A list of opioid overdose training programs in the Rochester region is available on the New York State Department of Health website: health.ny.gov/diseases/aids/ general/resources/oop_directory/docs/ rochester.pdf dispatchers’ instructions, since sometimes the person in crisis may need CPR in addition to naloxone. Still, the availability of naloxone in an emergency can mean the difference between life and death. “Friends, neighbors, family members, and so forth that have loved ones that are suffering with the disease of addiction – they want to do something, obviously, to help, given the dearth of treatment programs available,” Cushman says. “They are empowered to get trained and get this medication, so that if they do witness this in their loved one they can administer it right away.” Naloxone has become an essential tool for
local emergency responders, and they’ve been using a lot of it in recent years. The numbers that agencies have reported to Cushman offer a rough illustration of just how frequently overdoses happen. Monroe County fire, ambulance, and police staff administered naloxone 657 times from the start of the year through July 1, Cushman says. The numbers are on track to exceed the 748 administrations in 2016 and are well ahead of the 251 administrations in 2012. But the numbers also deserve a few caveats. Many professionals in the emergency medicine field have used naloxone for decades, though until a few years ago it was typically administered through an IV or an intramuscular injection. EMT’s weren’t permitted to administer it, which was a problem, since firefighters – many of whom are trained EMT’s – are often the first to respond to all kinds of emergencies, including overdoses. Cushman and a colleague in Albany, Dr. Michael Dailey, got state approval for a pilot project to equip EMT’s with a newer version of the drug, a nasal spray. Cushman worked with the Rochester Fire Department initially in 2012. And as the state saw the program’s successes, it loosened restrictions on who could administer naloxone at the scene of an overdose. Now, most emergency responders – right down to the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office’s police dogs – carry naloxone. The drug can effectively treat dogs that, for example, have
Dr. Jeremy Cushman, Monroe County’s EMS medical director, says programs that train community members to use the anti-overdose drug naloxone provide an important public health service. PHOTO BY KEVIN FULLER
accidentally sniffed fentanyl at a crime scene, says John Helfer, public information officer for the sheriff’s office. In short, far more first responders are carrying naloxone out into the field than there were five years ago. And Cushman says the growth shown in the numbers of naloxone administrations results both from the efforts to equip emergency responders with naloxone and from the worsening of the opioid epidemic. Responders are also up against stronger drugs than they were a few years ago. Painkillers and heroin have been displaced by fentanyl, which is much more potent than heroin and is much more dangerous, Cushman says. Now patients routinely require more than one dose of naloxone to reverse the effects of opioids. In 2015, responders used an average of 1.3 doses, but the number is now closer to 1.5 or 1.6 doses. “As I tell my responders out there, more often than not you’re going to have to give a second dose,” he says. Cushman’s guidance to emergency responders
shows one reason why it’s important for the public to get training. That dosing tip could be very useful in a crisis, and the naloxone nasal spray isn’t going to hurt anyone. For the most part, it just gives people wet noses, he says. But Cushman and Villa of Hope’s Gray say that the main focus of naloxone training
is hands-on experience with the drug’s administration. The drug’s nasal sprayer comes in three pieces that have to be assembled at the time of use. That may sound like a simple enough task, but when a person is watching a family member or friend overdose, they are under a lot of stress. The first time to try assembling a naloxone unit is not when your loved one isn’t breathing, Cushman says. Medical officials offer similar guidance for the epinephrine injectors used to treat severe allergic reactions. “I can’t tell you how many times I’ve administered epinephrine or naloxone in my career, but I’m pretty confident if I had to do it to either of my sons, I would probably be all thumbs,” Cushman says. As with a severe allergic reaction or a heart attack, time matters for overdoses. If people have naloxone on hand and can use it – whether it’s bystanders with kits in their vehicles or a family with the drug in its medicine cabinet – they may very well save lives. Familiarity makes people more likely to step up in a crisis, Cushman and Gray say. “I would just implore folks to make sure they get some hands-on training and some familiarity with it, that they are actually able to assemble it and so forth, so that if they ever actually have to do it they are at least a little bit more familiar and comfortable,” Cushman says. rochestercitynewspaper.com
CITY 7
CITY Newspaper presents
Mind Body Spirit TO ADVERTISE IN THE MIND BODY SPIRIT SECTION CALL CHRISTINE AT 244.3329 x23 OR EMAIL CHRISTINE@ROCHESTER-CITYNEWS.COM
For more Tom Tomorrow, including a political blog and cartoon archive, visit www.thismodernworld.com
URBAN ACTION
Come dance with us
Enjoy a free dance class, refreshments & fun.
Monday, August 7th from 7pm-9pm 3450 WINTON PLACE ROCHESTER, NY 14623 585-292-1240
Perfect for couples, friends or the whole family.
Introductory package specials available for Child & Adult classes.
WWW.FREDASTAIRE.COM
Join us for our Summer Season June 30 – September 3, 2017 Weekly Schedule
Monday
Friday
Night Circle ($15): 7:00pm
Tuesday
Spiritualist Shorts Lectures (FREE): 3:30-4:00pm Voices of Mediumship ($10): 7:30pm
Wednesday
Hatha Yoga ($10): 7:30-8:30am Thought Exchange (FREE): 7:00pm Astrology Discovery ($10): 6:30-8:00pm Ghost Walks ($20): 8:30-10:30pm Special Ghost Walks ($30): July 14 & August 11
Thursday
Development Class with Patricia Price ($10): 8:30-10pm
Qi Gong ($10): 7:30-8:30am Friday Night Drumming ($5): July 7 to September 1, 6:30-8:00pm Conversations with Spirit ($10): 7:00pm
Saturday
Yoga for Psychic & Spiritual Development ($10): 7:30am-8:30am Walking Tour (FREE): 10:00am Thought Exchange (FREE): 7:00pm
Sunday
Worship Service (FREE): 10:30am All Message Service ($5): 4:00pm Evening Home Circle ($10): 8:30pm
Lily Dale Assembly 5 Melrose Park, PO Box 248, Lily Dale, NY 14752 Phone: (716) 595-8721, Fax: (716) 595-2442 For more details, please visit our website: lilydaleassembly@netsync.net
8 CITY
AUGUST 2 - 8, 2017
This week’s calls to action include the following events and activities. (All are free and open to the public, unless otherwise noted.)
Reading about racism
As part of a year-long series, the Moving Beyond Racism Book Group will hold a book discussion on “Racism: A Short History” by George Fredrickson on Monday, August 7. The nonfiction work analyzes the historical intersections and commonalities between the evolution of anti-Semitism leading up to Nazi Germany, South Africa under apartheid, and the Jim Crow American South. The event will take place from 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the
Pittsford Plaza Barnes & Noble, 3349 Monroe Avenue. It’s open to the public, and it’s not necessary to read the book beforehand. Information: 334-5971; or email mbrbookinfo@gmail.com.
City to hold forum on Erie Harbor
The city will host a public forum concerning the future of 51 Mt. Hope Avenue on Wednesday, August 2. The property, which is vacant, is located in the Erie Harbor area along the Genesee River south of downtown. The forum will include a presentation about waterfront development and planning for the site. The event will be held at Hamilton Tower, 185 Mt. Hope Avenue, at 6 p.m.
Remembering Hiroshima and Nagasaki
Genesee Valley Citizens for Peace will hold a candlelight vigil on Tuesday, August 8, to mark the 72nd anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The event is a reflection of GVCP’s dedication to nuclear disarmament. The vigil will take place at 7:30 p.m. at the Avon traffic circle, where Routes 5 and 20 intersect. The public is invited to join GVCP members before the vigil at Tom Wahl’s restaurant, at 283 East Main Street in Avon, at 6:30 p.m.
PSST. Want the scoop on local schools?
Check our education section for updates on the RCSD. / NEWS
Dining & Nightlife
A bean burrito at Mi Barrio Burrito Place, which opened in June. The restaurant is owned by the family behind Paola's Burrito Place, which was on South Avenue and then Culver Road in the mid-2000's. PHOTO BY KEVIN FULLER
Mexico comes to Corn Hill [ CHOW HOUND ] BY KATIE LIBBY
No matter where the owners of Paola’s Burrito Place end up, the Rochester public seems to find them. The family’s new venture, Mi Barrio Burrito Place (319 Exchange Boulevard), opened in June of this year. “It’s a different location with a different name, but the same owners and the same great food,” says Jesus Enriquez, son of current owner, Arturo Martinez. Martinez opened Paola’s at its original location at 1921 South Avenue in 2004. The family moved Paola’s from South Avenue to Culver Road and were at that location for about six years before deciding to move to Texas. But after spending time in Texas, they realized that Rochester was where they wanted to be and found a location for Mi Barrio in Corn Hill. Like, Paola was, Mi Barrio is a family affair. Jesus and his brothers, along with his mother and father, worked at Paola’s and now work at Mi Barrio. In fact, Jesus is in the process of taking ownership of Mi Barrio. Jesus is currently attending Monroe
Community College and plans to take over the business from his father. Everything is authentic and homemade at Mi Barrio, as it was at Paola’s. “My dad’s been in the kitchen for his whole life, cooking for over 35 years,” says Jesus. Every morning, the family comes to the restaurant hours before it opens to make everything fresh for the day, like their house-made chorizo sausage. You can add the chorizo to a taco ($3.49), enchilada ($3.49), tostada ($3.49), or on top of nachos ($8.99). Mi Barrio has a solid selection of vegetarian plates as well. The family came from Mexico at different times and sought out Rochester because of the city’s smaller size of the city; Arturo had always wanted to open his own business and thought he could do that successfully here. When scouting for a location for Mi Barrio, they were also looking for something small and well-trafficked, and Corn Hill fit the bill. They are currently working to obtain their liquor license and will begin to offer margaritas and other traditional Mexican
drinks as well as a selection of Mexican beers. Outdoor seating will soon be available as well. Mi Barrio Burrito Place is located at 319 Exchange Boulevard, and is open Monday through Saturday from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. and Sunday from 12 to 8 p.m. 271-3655; https://www.facebook.com/ mibarrioburritoplace/?ref=br_rs
Quick bites
Roux (688 Park Avenue) will host a Park
Ave Fest Block Party on Saturday, August 5, from 12 to 9 p.m. Admission is $5 and that gets you dollar oysters, $5 punch and fish bowls, $6 cocktails, and live music. Local tarot reader Fayebriel C. Barrette will be available to read your fortune. Find the event on Facebook. Boomtown Table and Rochester Brainery have collaborated on the Whistle Stop Series, progressive meal experiences that take place in a specific neighborhood. For the August 16 event, they will be featuring the East End in Rochester, with stops at Roc Brewing, Ox and Stone, 2 Vine, and Ugly
Duck Coffee. There are two seatings, each featuring a local food host. The tour will take place on foot and will take about three hours. Tickets are $65 and available at rochesterbrainery.com. Nosh (47 Russell Street) will host Not Your Father’s Milkshake Part 2 in collaboration with Normal Supper & Cocktail on Sunday, August 27, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. On the menu: adult milkshakes like the Grasshopper, featuring vodka, mint chip ice cream, Fee Brothers chocolate bitters, mint chocolate brownie, mint syrup, and whipped cream. Chef Joe Zolnierowski from Nosh will be creating high-end festival-style food.
Closings
Another business bites the dust in College Town. Bar 145 (171 Celebration Drive) has closed its doors. Chow Hound is a food and restaurant news column. Do you have a tip? Send it to food@ rochester-citynews.com. rochestercitynewspaper.com
CITY 9
NICK GIORDANO
PHOTO BY SARA CZERNIKOWSKI
10 CITY AUGUST 2 - 8, 2017
SOLE REHAB, A TWO-YEAR-OLD DJ COLLECTIVE, IS HELPING UNDERGROUND HOUSE CULTURE THRIVE IN ROCHESTER [ CULTURE FEATURE ] BY SUNNY H. ZAMAN
TOM DEBLASE
ETHAN LUSTIG
rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 11
SOLE REHAB KEEP TRACK OF SOLE REHAB AND ITS EVENTS AT FACEBOOK.COM/SOLEREHABROC
I
n September 2015, friends and DJs Tom DeBlase and Steve Kraft visited Nick Giordano, another Rochester DJ, at his piercing shop in the South Wedge. They had the ambition of getting together a group of house and techno DJs to put on queer-friendly and all-inclusive dance parties — an underground, social atmosphere they felt went largely understated in Rochester — and asked Giordano to be a part of that vision. Together they formed Sole Rehab, a group that deejays and puts on parties featuring predominantly underground house and techno music. The crew’s year-and-a-half-long residency at Skylark Lounge in the East End is indicative of a burgeoning culture that only seems to show itself in cities on the rise. In addition to spinning at their own events, the members of Sole Rehab invite out-of-town DJs to headline as well. Giordano had been a DJ in residence at Tilt Nightclub for seven years, and met DeBlase through the underground house scene in the 1990’s. Although DeBlase does DJ himself, he says he prefers putting on parties. Kraft is currently on an indefinite sojourn out-of-state. Aside from the residency held at Skylark, the crew collaborates with fellow, and slightly older Rochester DJ collective, Signal > Noise, bringing in regional and international DJs to headline parties. This leaves Giordano and Sole Rehab’s 12 CITY AUGUST 2 - 8, 2017
newest member, Ethan Lustig, spinning when the crew isn’t hosting touring DJs. Sole Rehab has also provided music for the Peppermint Sewn Seeds Fashion Showcase at the Culver Road Armory and Sassy’s Summer of Love Dance Party at the German House. Lustig, a native of British Columbia and a graduate student at the Eastman School of Music, met the Sole Rehab crew through a mutual friend and displayed an impressive knowledge of house music and culture. He was invited to hold down a four-hour set in February, and was formally asked to join the crew. The group is transparent and excited about their passion for house music and the culture surrounding it. House music is generally characterized as being soulful.
Its lyricism provides a backbone of positive messages, while compositionally featuring — relative to techno, its successor in genre — more instruments and arrangements. The Sole Rehab crew exalts contemporary underground house communities as being an alternative to the culture of exclusivity that’s found in more mainstream clubs — the “VIP culture of being seen,” as DeBlase puts it. The EDM (electronic dance music) played at bigger clubs tends toward higher fidelity in production value and reflects Top 40 chart toppers in its hooks and arrangements.
Crews like Sole Rehab and Signal > Noise find their roots in house, techno, and disco music, born and proliferated in America’s great industrial cities in the late-20th century, like Detroit, Chicago, and New York City. Giordano and DeBlase explain that the spirit of healing that arose in reaction to the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the 1980’s helped generate creativity and lull the communal pain in an era of grief and uncertainty. The density of working-class populations, people of color, and queer communities in those industrial cities (as well as the infrastructure of the cities themselves), provided the building blocks for a new subculture that came together in the 70’s and 80’s. “House culture is very blue-collar in that way,” Giordano says. Budding communities and collectives — like Detroit’s prolific Underground Resistance — bred explicitly “come as you are” environments, DeBlase says. The implied diversity championed marginalized peoples — especially queer, black, and Latinx communities — to attend and put on parties that were havens of self-acceptance, self-expression, and socializing. That is what makes underground dance culture distinct at its core; self-love is its prerogative. Giordano attests that, at underground parties, varied combinations of people can partner up and enjoy the dance floor without feeling out of place as they might at mainstream
“EXPECT PARTIES THAT ARE EXPERIENCES”
PHOTOS BY PIERCE MCCLEARY
clubs. The crew shares that a casual anonymity can be hard to find in these bigger places, where gay couples and people of color are often treated as novelties, be coddled, or patronized. Giordano gleefully remarks that the underground dance community is made up of several smaller ones: “rave kids, goth kids, and gay bears” are a few of the subcultures, he says, that give this scene the coherence and gusto to survive. The thing admittedly missing is a black and Latinx presence on par in size with the original parties decades ago in larger cities. Rochester has its own small history of underground house culture. Beginning in the early 90’s, the scene has hosted legends in the international DJ community, including Richie Hawtin, Moby, and Aphex Twin. Venues like Vertex (previously Freakazoid), Carpe Diem (currently Dinosaur BBQ), Heaven (which is now an actual church), and Dub Land Underground were all popular spots. Alex Weiser — a 29-year-old filmmaker, photographer, and regular at the Sole Rehab events — says that for him, the parties were “about transmuting a month’s worth of experiences into one beautiful release.” The first party he attended was last Christmas night; it was magic, he says, “a room full of people willing to dance like they were alone.”
Sole Rehab’s latest party, held on a Saturday night during
Pride Week at Photo City Improv on Atlantic Avenue, was a joint venture with Signal > Noise. The groups had been planning the event since April. Beyond burgeoning cigarettes and conversation in the scintillating late-night, a pulse pounded on the other side of Photo City’s front doors at 12:30 a.m. The club was full of Pride Week participants — most had bought tickets online ahead of time and presale sold-out. Inside the thudding chasm of the back performance room, the venue immediately resonated an aging, yet increasingly relevant zeitgeist, typically found in more cosmopolitan cities and largely enigmatic in Rochester. The sturdy and dependable thud — the sonic idiosyncrasy established decades ago in Chicago and refined in Europe — is a trademark of cities on the rise. It was a night to make out like you are, in fact, a debonair individual — also, to make out. Outfits are expressive, from fresh kicks to styled domes; user-interfaces glowing up cute visages. Applause and hollers erupted in the low-end-void between tracks, and a single bulb draped an ethereal glow upon DJ Minx at her decks. This party around, Sole Rehab and Signal > Noise invited DJ Minx (from Detroit) and Das Nasty (Toronto) to headline through 4 a.m. Glow sticks punctuated the canopy of the sold-out dance floor. The lighting design (by JWI and Gnosis — more friends
in the community) is responsive in its scatter above the forest of party goers. The walls on either side of the dancefloor are laden with paintings, serving like harbors for the inebriated and resting. The room vibrated with a self-generating vitality. At 1:16 a.m., golden light emerged in a cast across the top of the room, reflecting the palette of American industry from which this culture — and this city — arose. Photo City inadvertently becomes a call back — or a call forward — to cultural proceedings indicative of a budding metropolis. A statue of the Buddha (supplied by Signal > Noise; they bring it to every party), accessorized with pride bands around his wrists, idles at the back of the dance floor like a monolith of loving-kindness. It’s a space and people with nothing but intentions on unabashed tolerance, expression, and healing. Sole Rehab has opened a DIY warehouse space by the Genesee River — the group threw its first party last weekend spontaneously and discreetly — where they will host more events in the future. “We are here to bring the people together under one sweaty, inclusive roof,” Lustig says in an email. Not unlike the birthplace of techno — Detroit — Rochester shares the bold and lofty infrastructure to host underground parties. Commenting on future events, Lustig quips to “expect parties that are experiences.” rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 13
Upcoming [ AMERICANA ]
Music
The Avett Brothers. Saturday, September 2. CMAC, 3355 Marvin Sands Drive, Canandaigua. 8 p.m. $30-$60. cmacevents.com; theavettbrothers.com.
[ POST-HARDCORE ] Touche Amore. Wednesday, October 4. Bug Jar, 219 Monroe Avenue. 9 p.m. $13-$15. bugjar.com; toucheamore.com. [ JAM ]
Railroad Earth. Saturday, November 4. The Dome Arena,
2695 East Henrietta Road. 6:30 p.m. $32-$42. therocdome. com; railroad.earth.
Nathaniel Rateliff and The Night Sweats
PHOTO BY BRANTLEY GUTIERREZ
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2 DARIEN LAKE AMPHITHEATER, 9993 ALLEGHANY ROAD, DARIEN CENTER 7 P.M. | $20-$154 | LIVENATION.COM; NATHANIELRATELIFF.COM
[ ROOTS ROCK ] He’s got a hustler’s shuck ‘n’ jive and a jackleg
preacher’s rant ‘n’ rave — sonofabitch, it’s Nathaniel Rateliff. The man manages to take the dark side of Americana and mash with it the bright. Born in rural Mississippi, when Rateliff opens his mouth to sing, you know it’s from a real place. Soulful and genuine rock ‘n’ roll for your ass. Nathaniel Rateliff and The Night Sweats warm up the affair for Kings of Leon. — BY FRANK DE BLASE
The End of the Ocean WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9 PHOTO CITY, 543 ATLANTIC AVENUE 7 P.M. | $10-$12 | TECSHOWS.COM; THEENDOFTHEOCEAN.COM [ ROCK ] Next thing I know, I was asleep at my desk, my
elbows sloshing around in drool; I was hypnotized by the stuff I was listening to by Columbus, Ohio’s soundscape sculptors The End of the Ocean. It was huge, even though it had kicked off in an ultra-mellow exploration where the band built the road seconds before rolling over it toward bigger and louder things. It made me feel high … or higher? — BY FRANK DE BLASE
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[ ALBUM REVIEWS ]
WED., AUGUST 2
Joywave “Content” Hollywood Records joywavemusic.com
Tarbox Ramblers WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9 BOP SHOP RECORDS, 1460 MONROE AVENUE 8 P.M. | $15 ADVANCE, $20 DOOR | 271-3354; BOPSHOP.COM [ AMERICANA ] A host of ingredients, from early blues to
gospel, came together in the raw energy of Appalachian music. The Tarbox Ramblers not only keep those songs alive, the group continues the tradition with its own evocative contributions. The urgency of the sound of slide guitarist and singer Michael Tarbox, bassist Scott McEwen, and drummer Robby Cosenza has led the group to gigs opening for Robert Plant and backing Alison Krauss. — BY RON NETSKY
‘Dulcemelos’ THURSDAY, AUGUST 3 KILBOURN HALL, 26 GIBBS STREET 7:30 P.M. | $10 | 274-1000; SUMMER.ESM.ROCHESTER.EDU [ CLASSICAL ] As part of its “Summer @ Eastman”
program, the Eastman School of Music will present a rare concert on Thursday, highlighting Mexican music written for the salterio, or hammered dulcimer. The featured performers include the salterio group Duo Dulcemelos — Alejandra Barrientos and Hector Larios — along with their two sons, pianist Mitzie Collins, and the Striking Strings Hammered Dulcimer Ensemble. The majority of the compositions on the program were written during the 19th and 20th centuries. While the dulcimer is well-known as a mainstay in Appalachian folk music, its prominence in Mexican music may be less familiar to some — which makes this concert all the more special. — BY DANIEL J. KUSHNER
Joywave swings it like a velvet hammer on its new album, “Content.” This whole thing is a goddamn gem, with the band forging though a multi-colored collection of unique possibilities into a sonic land of its own. Dynamically it’s a thrill ride, from little room handclaps — where you can feel the size of the room — to the epic, arena rumble of the drum as it mimics the end times in your headphones. There is some organic anger in there as well as the fizz of the electronic chaos. But for the most part, it’s singer Daniel Armbruster’s casual, cool yet dramatic phrasing that drives the pop machine, propelling it forward without a shred of disingenuous posturing. “Content” is a pop record, but it’s never too sweet as to make your teeth hurt. The tenacious tug-o-war between Armbruster’s deadpan falsetto and the electric crush makes for an all-encompassing, all-engulfing 11-cut wave of joy and luxurious listening experience. It doesn’t leave you at the end, but will affix itself to your brain like a residual drug trip. — BY FRANK DE BLASE
Lost Wax Collective “Blue Spark” Self-released facebook.com/lostwaxcollective
To describe Lost Wax only in terms like jazz, soul, or Afro-beat would box the band into something it clearly can’t fit in. This new nine-piece, polyrhythmic, future-soul collective of talented musicians — from several Rochester bands, including Mosaic Foundation, Haewa, and Got Herb — takes advantage of each member’s experienced individualism without ever compromising the larger sound. Right from the opening notes of “Almost Pt. 1,” the first track on Lost Wax’s debut album, “Blue Spark,” there is a colorful sense of deep groove, with funky keys, a resounding brassy fanfare, and multidimensional jazz percussion. Each instrument ebbs and flows into one another, passing riffs back and forth seamlessly and building to an explosion of sound. “Deceit,” my favorite track, lured me in like an old sailor’s siren song. Alivia Ruiz’s vocals are rhythmic and intimate, and gave me the feeling that I was the only one in the room she was singing to. “Blue Spark” begs to be listened to with headphones. Each song melts into the next and complements the last. If this is what Lost Wax Collective can do for a debut album, it would be an understatement to say it is going anywhere but up. — BY AMANDA FINTAK
[ ACOUSTIC/FOLK ] Chris Wilson. Little Theatre Café, 240 East Ave. thelittle.org. 7-9 p.m. Sara Azriel. Boulder Coffee Co., 100 Alexander St. 454-7140. saraazriel.com. 8:30-10 p.m. [ BLUES ]
Upward Groove. Temple Bar
and Grille, 109 East Ave. 2326000. templebarandgrille.com. 10 p.m. [ POP/ROCK ] Bike Night. 585 Rockin Burger Bar, 250 Pixley Road. 5852470079. 6:30-11 p.m. $4. Brian Lindsay Band. Record Archive, 33 1/3 Rockwood St. recordarchive.com. 5-8 p.m. Concert in the Garden: Fatima. Central Library of Rochester and Monroe County, 115 South Avenue. 428-8380. libraryweb. org. 5:15-6:15 p.m. Jon Dretto Band. Dinosaur BarB-Que, 99 Court St. 325-7090. dinosaurbarbque.com. 9 p.m. Jumbo Shrimp. Marge’s Lakeside Inn, 4909 Culver Rd. 323-1020. margeslakesideinn. com. 6-9 p.m.
Kings of Leon, Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats.
Darien Lake PAC, 9993 Allegheny Rd. Darien. 1-800745-3000. LiveNation.com. 7 p.m. $29.50-$79.50.
THU., AUGUST 3 [ ACOUSTIC/FOLK ] Chrissy and Ken. 585 Rockin Burger Bar, 250 Pixley Road. 5852470079. 5-8 p.m. Jim Lane. Murph’s Irondequoit Pub, 705 Titus Ave. Irondequoit. 342-6780. 8 p.m. Steve West. Brown Hound Downtown, 500 University Ave. 506-9725. brownhoundbistro. com. 6-8 p.m. [ CLASSICAL ]
Eastman at Washington Square. ,. esm.rochester.edu/
community. 12:15-12:45 p.m. continues on page 18
rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 15
Music / MUSIC Tell us a little about the new album.
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Something old, something new, something borrowed, something bluegrass: Ryan Yarmel, Aaron Lipp and Jimmy Grillo are The Slack Tones. PHOTO PROVIDED
Slap, twang, and giddy-up [INTERVIEW] BY FRANK DE BLASE
Aaron Lipp is a talented young man with a talented old soul. And this unassuming multiinstrumentalist has been baring this soul on local, regional, and national stages for several years in various groups of assorted stylings. With his latest outfit, Aaron Lipp & The Slack Tones, Lipp is brandishing a guitar and leading the charge into an amalgam of splintered genres. Whether it’s bluegrass or oldschool folk or blues, The Slack Tones – Lipp, fiddle player Duncan Wickel, upright bassist Ryan Yarmel, and drummer Jimmy Grillo – harness a pervading, unexpected newness that sounds close to rockabilly – especially with Lipp’s mastery of finger-picked guitar like Travis and Moore – at its earlier inception. It’s new and it’s old. It’s the country blues moved downtown with a Sun Studios slap, twang, and giddy-up. It’s catchy, it’s exciting, and it’s gone… real, real gone. In a recent interview at CITY HQ, we shot a few questions at Lipp and Yarmel about their new eponymous release and other topics. They shot back. An edited transcript follows. CITY: How did you discover this sound you’re currently making? Lipp: The sound just naturally developed
from wanting to do something new with all the bluegrass flatpicking I was doing. About the same time, I fell back in love with the electric guitar and old-school rockabilly music, influenced by Bobby Henrie and The Goners. But all the new music as a whole can’t really be described, as it comes from all our influences. I think there’s something to that throwback slapback sound that hasn’t been explored yet. 16 CITY AUGUST 2 - 8, 2017
Yarmel: Through playing with Aaron in a variety of different arrangements, we’ve honed in on this rock ’n’ roll sound that is beautiful and simple. Aaron and I have really had the chance to develop our bass-player, guitar-player dynamic by playing tons of shows, from square dances to large festivals, and I think the result speaks for itself. Additionally, Jimmy Grillo and I have played together as a rhythm section for years and have immense telepathic abilities at this point. It sounds heavily steeped in rockabilly and country blues. Am I right? Lipp: As well as mid-20th century, old-time,
bluegrass flatpicking guitar and storytelling with some songwriting. Yarmel: Definitely. In these troubled times, we have to be concerned with positive music and energy, and rockabilly and country blues are genres that feel so good to play and hear. We owe a lot to groups like Bobby Henrie and the Goners. Brian Williams is generous with his knowledge and expertise in all things doghouse upright bass. What did you set out to do when you first started this band? Lipp: To satisfy a musical craving that I couldn’t
quite identify. To have fun, to rock out, to create something bigger than ourselves. How and when did the band start? Lipp: Hibernating in a cabin studio all winter,
pretty much, with some whiskey, eggs, and vegetables. This band really got together around middle of 2016 under a different name. We rehearsed for many months until our first show this past March, which was a packed house at Three Heads Brewing.
Lipp: There are some brand new songs we want everyone to hear. The new album mixes mostly new tunes with a few older cuts and one rearranged traditional – “Boll Weevil,” a traditional fiddle tune that we morphed into a dark and heavy electric deep cut. It comes out heavy and mellows out at a few points. Acoustic and electric. Mellow and rock ’n’ roll. Some very special guests, including Oliver Wood of the Wood Brothers, Chuck Campbell of the Campbell Brothers, and Rosie Newton of Richie & Rosie. Yarmel: The new album is a fantastic amalgamation of new rock ’n’ roll, a few traditional tunes thought of in a new way, and some pensive country songwriting. Aaron is a diverse songwriter. We were lucky to have a few special guests as well. Hearing the sweet sound of Chuck Campbell’s steel playing through my studio monitors was sonic bliss. How do you keep the antiquity in check, keep it from sounding old timey – or is that not a concern? Lipp: That is not a concern at all. Old-time
is one of my favorite styles of music, and if a song sounds old, well, that probably means it’s really good. Trying to stay on the edge of it all and reinvent a new sound while paying homage to traditional aesthetics is at the forefront of our minds. There’s a lot to learn from the past. Yarmel: We play organically and are concerned with the groove and feel. I’m fortunate because of the many different genres of music I play, and even more fortunate each time the group aims to play the genres authentically – especially when covering tunes. This past year Aaron and I have played everything from 30-minute versions of “Cumberland Gap” in square dances to “Rocky Mountain High” in theater productions to slow-dance versions of blues tunes like “Love in Vain” in hot bars. What’s something new the band brings to the genre? Lipp: Playing a Telecaster ultra-fast, bluegrass
flatpicking over a rockabilly rhythm, incorporating grooving blues harmonica over Merle Travis-style fingerpicking over a new drum beat. New, original songwriting. Duncan’s Leslie speaker fiddle sound and his triple stops; he makes people who can’t see him think he’s an organ player until he slides on the fretboard. Tell us a little about your previous bands. Lipp: The Cabin Killers was a band some
friends of mine and I started in Naples circa 2013. Starting as just getting together
and playing bluegrass with a drummer, it turned into writing in that style and playing old traditionals superfast. And electrified on a sound system. Pretty soon we were selling 250 tickets and throwing huge dance parties locally. Before all that, I played Hammond B3 organ in Giant Panda Guerilla Dub Squad for almost seven years and Robert Randolph for a year. Those experiences definitely gave me a taste of the music world for what it is, from the small cafe to 30,000-person festival to the David Letterman show. I wanted to make my own music, live locally, and build my own house. Yarmel: I cut my teeth as a folk bass player in the old-time, folk-rock group The Younger Gang, where I began playing with Jimmy Grillo and really learned to love traditional American folk music. I have played bass with many locals, from Roger Kuhn to Debbie Kendrick. As a songwriter and guitarist, I fronted the electronica-folk group Sparx & Yarms, and will be releasing my first fulllength Yarms solo album later this summer.
INDIE ROCK | PALE LUNGS
This Saturday at the Bug Jar is practically a holiday: it’s Tim Avery’s birthday show. The Rochester impresario will be celebrating in style with a full lineup featuring touring acts Charmer and Pale Lungs as well as local bands California Cousins and Barbarossa. For those of us who listened to emo growing up, Pale Lungs in particular offers up some atmospheric rock replete with sparkling, reverb-laden guitar melodies and expressive, vulnerable vocals that never devolve into the high-pitched whining that is the quintessential emo cliché. Pale Lungs will be playing in support of its new, four-song EP, “Strawberry.” Pale Lungs plays Saturday, August 5, at the Bug Jar, 219 Monroe Avenue. 9 p.m. $7. 454-2966; bugjar.com; palelungsband.bandcamp.com. — BY DANIEL J. KUSHNER
How has the band been received? Lipp: We have had nothing
but a great response lately, especially at the Grassroots Festival. We had a packed dance tent and sold a bunch of CDs. Making people dance, making people dance harder. There is nothing more rewarding. Yarmel: People are craving that feel-good sound. Do you fit in the Rochester regional scene, or do you transcend it? Lipp: Very funny question.
Our music is definitely fit to be enjoyed in Rochester and anywhere else in the world. We had a few people from Switzerland and France already order the record.
SOUL/JAZZ | RC & THE GRITZ
Known by many as Erykah Badu’s band, RC & The Gritz is an eclectic all-star group of nationally praised touring musicians in the jazz and hip-hop scenes. With avant-garde beats, atmospheric melodies, and rapping over New Orleans jazz and funk, the Texas supergroup is gaining hyper recognition. Both its albums, “Pay Your Tab” and “The Feel,” feature acclaimed artists like Snoop Dogg, Raheem DeVaughn, and the queen herself, Erykah Badu. RC & The Gritz plays with Danielle Ponder and the Tomorrow People and Lost Wax Collective on Thursday, August 3, at Flour City Station, 170 East Avenue. 9 p.m. $10. flourcitystation.com; rcandthegritz.com — BY AMANDA FINTAK
For more on Aaron Lipp & The Slack Tones, check out aaronlipp.com. rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 17
[ JAZZ ]
Mel Henderson & Joe Chiappone. Via Girasole Wine
Bar, 3 Schoen Place. Pittsford. 641-0340. viagirasole.com. 7-10 p.m. [ REGGAE/JAM ] The Reality. Boulder Coffee Co., 100 Alexander St. 4547140. bouldercoffeeco.com. 8-10 p.m. [ POP/ROCK ]
Hochstein at High Falls: DaVines. Granite Mills Park,
82 Browns Race. hochstein. org. 12:10 p.m. Jumbo Shrimp. Marge’s Lakeside Inn, 4909 Culver Rd. 323-1020. margeslakesideinn. com. 6-9 p.m.
Party in the Park: Matisyahu. Martin Luther
King Jr. Memorial Park, 1 Manhattan Square. 428-7541. cityofrochester.gov/mlkmp. 5 p.m.
Peaer, Slumbers, Boy Jr., Ribbons. Bug Jar, 219 Monroe Ave. 8 p.m. $7-$9. Rock-it-Science. B-Side, 5 Liftbridge Lane. Fairport. 585315-3003. fairportbside.com. 7-10 p.m.
Steve Grills and the Roadmasters. Little Theatre
Café, 240 East Ave. thelittle. org. 7-9 p.m.
FRI., AUGUST 4
CLASSICAL | GATEWAYS MUSIC FESTIVAL
In association with the Eastman School of Music, the 2017 Gateways Music Festival will begin Tuesday, August 8, and run through Sunday, August 13. More than 120 classical musicians of African descent will be featured in around 50 solo, chamber, and orchestral concerts throughout Rochester. Aside from concerts, the festival will also include a panel discussion by some of the musicians on opening night and a pre-concert conversation (on Saturday, August 12) by Paul Burgett, University of Rochester adjunct professor of music and a leading authority on African-American music. The Gateways Music Festival is free and open to the public. Performances will take place at various Rochester venues, such as Hochstein School of Music and Dance, Rochester City Hall, Rochester Public Library, and more. For a full schedule of activities, musicians, and other information, call 232-6106 or visit gatewaysmusicfestival.org. — BY TORI MARTINEZ Genesee Saw. Firehouse
[ ACOUSTIC/FOLK ] Chris Moore. 585 Rockin Burger Bar, 250 Pixley Road. 5852470079. 5-8 p.m. Joe LaMay & Sherri Reese. The Greenhouse Café, 2271 E. Main St. 270-8603. ourcoffeeconnection.org. 7-9 p.m. Kevin Fuller. B-Side, 5 Liftbridge Lane. Fairport. 585315-3003. fairportbside.com. 5-7 p.m. Whetherman. Boulder Coffee Co., 100 Alexander St. 4547140. bouldercoffeeco.com. 8-10 p.m.
Saloon, 814 S. Clinton Ave. 319-3832. thefirehousesaloon. com. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. $5. Jumbo Shrimp. 585 Rockin Burger Bar, 250 Pixley Road. 5852470079. 8:30-11:30 p.m. $5. PAXTOR. Little Theatre Café, 240 East Ave. thelittle.org. 8-10 p.m. Shades of Grey. Marge’s Lakeside Inn, 4909 Culver Rd. 323-1020. margeslakesideinn. com. 4-8 p.m. The Shakin’ Bones. Sticky Lips BBQ Juke Joint, 830 Jefferson Rd. 585-292-5544. stickylipsbbq.com. 9-11 p.m.
[ BLUES ]
SAT., AUGUST 5
Miller & The Other Sinners.
B-Side, 5 Liftbridge Lane. Fairport. 585-315-3003. fairportbside.com. 8-11 p.m. [ COUNTRY ]
Dierks Bentley, Cole Swindell, Jon Pardi. Darien Lake PAC, 9993 Allegheny Rd. Darien. 599-4641. megaticket.com. $150-$600.
[ ACOUSTIC/FOLK ] Charlie Ellis. Via Girasole Wine Bar, 3 Schoen Place. Pittsford. 641-0340. viagirasole.com. 7-10 p.m. Joe Lamay & John Fritsch. I-Square, 400 Bakers Park. Irondequoit. 266-1068. 2 p.m. Sam Nitsch. Little Theatre Café, 240 East Ave. thelittle. org. 8-10 p.m.
[ JAZZ ]
Fred Costello & Roger Eckers Jazz Duo. Charley Brown’s, 1675 Penfield Rd. 385-9202. charleybrownspenfield.com. POP/ROCK
Banned from the Tavern.
Milly’s HandleBar, 3120 Kittering Rd. 377-0711. 5 p.m. 18 CITY AUGUST 2 - 8, 2017
[ JAZZ ]
Fred Costello & Roger Eckers Jazz Duo. Charley Brown’s,
1675 Penfield Rd. 385-9202. charleybrownspenfield.com. Ott & Davis. Mendon 64, 1369 Pittsford Mendon Rd. Mendon. (585) 433-9464. 6-8 p.m.
[ REGGAE/JAM ] Buddhahood. Hogan’s Hideaway, 197 Park Ave. 4340511. hoganshideaway.com. 12-1 p.m. [ METAL ]
Raven Black. Pineapple
Jack’s, 485 Spencerport Rd. Gates. 247-5225. facebook. com/PineappleJacks. [ POP/ROCK ] Arthur Ward. Boulder Coffee Co., 100 Alexander St. 4547140. bouldercoffeeco.com. 8-10 p.m. Ball Cheeze Psychotics. I-Square, 400 Bakers Park. Irondequoit. 266-1068. 4 p.m.
Girls Rock! 2017 Camper Showcase. Anthology,
336 East Ave. 1:30-5 p.m. Featuring 8 bands. $5-$20. Guy Smiley. 585 Rockin Burger Bar, 250 Pixley Road. 5852470079. 8:30-11:30 p.m. $5. Hey Mabel. B-Side, 5 Liftbridge Lane. Fairport. 585315-3003. fairportbside.com. 8 p.m. Jamric. Milly’s HandleBar, 3120 Kittering Rd. 377-0711. noon. Last Exit. I-Square, 400 Bakers Park. Irondequoit. 2661068. noon. Skootaloos. Sticky Lips BBQ Juke Joint, 830 Jefferson Rd. 585-292-5544. stickylipsbbq. com. 9:30-11:30 p.m. continues on page 23
Todd Bradley. California Rollin’ II, 1000
N. River St. 585-271-8920. 7-9 p.m. Who’s That. I-Square, 400 Bakers Park. Irondequoit. 266-1068. 5:30 p.m.
SUN., AUGUST 6 [ ACOUSTIC/FOLK ] The Division Men. Boulder Coffee Co., 100 Alexander St. 454-7140. divisionmen.com. 8-10 p.m. [ CLASSICAL ]
Classical Guitar Night. Little Theatre
Café, 240 East Ave. thelittle.org. 7-9 p.m. [ COUNTRY ]
Uncle Rog & Tonk. I-Square, 400 Bakers Park. Irondequoit. 266-1068. 2 p.m. [ POP/ROCK ]
Teagan and the Tweeds. Marge’s
Lakeside Inn, 4909 Culver Rd. 323-1020. margeslakesideinn.com. 4-8 p.m.
MON., AUGUST 7 [ ACOUSTIC/FOLK ]
Warren Paul, Lisa Bigwood, Teagan Ward and Jerry Falzone. Little Theatre
Café, 240 East Ave. thelittle.org. 7-9 p.m. [ CLASSICAL ]
Summer @ Eastman. Kilbourn Hall, 26
Gibbs St. esm.rochester.edu. 7:30-9:30 p.m. Featuring Irina Lupines, piano.
TUE., AUGUST 8 [ CLASSICAL ]
Gateways Music Festival. 232-6106.
gatewaysmusicfestival.org. Feature nearly 120 musicians of African descent. Various venues, ranging from the Hochstein School of Music & Dance and Rochester City Hall to Kodak Hall at the Eastman Theatre. Tuesday Pipes. Christ Church, 141 East Ave. 454-3878. esm.rochester.edu. 12:10 p.m. [ JAZZ ]
Concert in the Garden: Doug Stone Quartet. Central Library of Rochester and
MARKET DISTRICT BUSINESS ASSOCIATION Black Button Distilling 85 Railroad St. | 730-4512 blackbuttondistilling.com Tastings • Tours • Private Functions
Fresh Juice Squeezed every Saturday at the Rochester Public Market in the new Winter Shed
City Newspaper (WMT Publications) 250 N. Goodman St. | 244-3329 rochestercitynewspaper.com
FOOD SERVICE DISTRIBUTOR
City of Rochester Market Office | 428-6907
What you need is just a phone call away 20-22 Public Market | 423-0994 Juan and Maria's
Redi Imports Automotive & Alignment Services | 235-3444 144 Railroad Street rediimports.com Full service auto repair • Foreign & Domestic 1115 East Main Street | 469-8217
Open Studios First Friday 6-9pm and Second Saturday 10am-3pm info at TheHungerford.com
Station 55
SoHo Style Lofts for Living & Working Station-55.com | 232-3600
"Home of the Highly Addictive Spanish Foods"
DELIVERY • CATERING up to 25% OFF 303-1290 | juanandmarias.com
John Greico: Lasting Art 153 Railroad St. 802-3652 | objectmaker.com
Harman Hardwood Flooring Co. "No one knows more about your hardwood floor."
29 Hebard Street | 546-1221 harmanfloors.com
Paulas Essentials “Essentials for the Soul” 415 Thurston Rd. & Public Market 737-9497 | paulasessentials.com
Rochester Self Storage 325-5000 | 14 Railroad St. Affordable storage solutions rochesternyselfstorage.com
Tours • Tastings Private Parties
97 Railroad St. | 546-8020 | rohrbachs.com
Type High Letterpress
1115 E. Main St. | Suite 252 The Hungerford Building 281-2510 | typehigh.com Letterpress Gift Shop Posters & Invitations
Tim Wilkes Photography 9 Public Market | 423-1966 "Fine Architectural and Yacht Racing Imagery"
Monroe County, 115 South Avenue. 4288380. libraryweb.org. 12-1 p.m. Grove Place Jazz Project. Downstairs Cabaret Theatre, 20 Windsor St. 3254370. downstairscabaret.com. 7 p.m. Featuring a different set of Eastman School of Music Students and other area jazz artisans every Tues. $10. [ METAL ]
God-Rot, Sunrot, The Highest Leviathan, Tuurd. Bug Jar, 219 Monroe Ave. 8 p.m. $8-$10.
Metal Meltdown Happy Hour. Record
Archive, 33 1/3 Rockwood St. 244-1210. recordarchive.com. Second Tuesday of every month, 6-8 p.m. Metal virtual reality games, metal beers, metal prizes, and thrashing movies. [ POP/ROCK ] Twiin Souls. Little Theatre Café, 240 East Ave. thelittle.org. 7-9 p.m.
rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 23
Art Give me CUPCAKES. Custom flavor cupcakes and cakes
319-4314
getcakedroc.com In the Village Gate
Additional positions posted at www.marycariola.com Mary Cariola Children’s Center is hiring staff to work in the residential, community and school programs. These opportunities are both Part Time and Full time.
• Direct Support Professional / Residential Aides • Teacher Aides • Special Education Teachers 1000 Elmwood Ave., Suite 100, Rochester, NY 14620 (585) 271-0761 Follow @CariolaCareers on social media
Lucinda Devlin’s photograph, “Electric Chair, Greensville Correctional Facility, Greensville, VA, 1991,” from the series “The Omega Suites,” is part of a survey of her work currently on view at Eastman Museum. PHOTO COURTESY THE ARTIST AND WEATHERSPOON ART MUSEUM
Portraits of places “Lucinda Devlin: Sightlines” THROUGH DECEMBER 31 GEORGE EASTMAN MUSEUM, 900 EAST AVENUE TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY, 10 A.M. TO 5 P.M.; SUNDAY, 11 A.M. TO 5 P.M. $5-$15 | 271-3361; EASTMAN.ORG [ REVIEW ] BY REBECCA RAFFERTY
I first viewed images from Lucinda Devlin’s daunting photographic series, “The Omega Suites,” in 2012, when the work was displayed at SUNY Brockport’s Tower Gallery. The photographs — sobering, meditative looks into execution chambers and other spaces 24 CITY AUGUST 2 - 8, 2017
where the condemned spend their final hours — have always stuck with me. Devlin’s work is being shown in Rochester once more, and this time selections from “The Omega Suites” are exhibited alongside pieces from two of her other series in the Eastman Museum’s Project Gallery. Organized by the Weatherspoon Art Museum (The University of North Carolina at Greensboro), “Sightlines” is the first major museum survey of Devlin’s work in America. Organized into three sections, “Sightlines” spotlights images that provide a privileged look at spaces few see, and which capture distinct moments in time. Works from the “Pleasure Ground” series, created between 1977 and 1990, reveal the luxurious and often eccentric interiors of spas, nightclubs, and hotel rooms.
Devlin’s approach to photography involves a sharp eye for perspective and lines that lead the eye where she wants it to go, bringing her viewer’s attention to humorous or baffling subtleties. Character and quirks abound within these dated spaces. A 1990 picture of the den-like seclusion room in Valley Forge’s Sheraton Hotel features stucco walls adorned with mock cave paintings. Thickly carpeted steps and seating neatly lined with faux fur pillows forms a rather paradoxically plush version of primitive man’s environments. Fancy hotels sure love silly themes, Devlin’s work seems to say. Her 1989 image of the Burnsville, Minnesota, FantaSuite Hotel’s Moby Dick Room centers on an
“Sauna, Paradise Stream, Mt. Pocono, PA, 1979,” from Lucinda Devlin’s series “Pleasure Ground.”
bodies and the various spaces constructed for specific purposes for those bodies. For her series, “The Omega Suites,” created between 1991 and 1997, Devlin exploits the emptiness of the spaces so that the viewer can more easily populate them. She says she wanted the viewers to imagine themselves inside the photographs — “To become the condemned, the executioner, the witness.” Devlin puts a lot of thought into the shifty wordplay of her series titles, but this one was borrowed from the assistant warden at the Territorial Correctional Facility in Cañon City, Colorado. “It was a perfect reference for a project depicting numerous execution chambers and holding cells, where the final event in a condemned person’s life takes place,” she says. “The Omega Suites” are bleak rooms of cold utility, barren of comforts and natural light, but not without their fascinating oddities. The wood-paneled and carpeted lethal injection chamber at Idaho State Penitentiary is anomalous amid so other images of rooms that read as clinical or definitely part of the clinker. One striking image that stands out from the rest depicts the blocky, bright yellow electric chair of Alabama’s Holman Unit. Prison staff told Devlin the chair had been built by an inmate using available materials, “but even more extraordinary is the fact that within the prison, the chair was referred to as ‘The Yellow Mama.’ How could an apparatus used to kill people be paired with a mother image — one which is nurturing and brings forth life?” She calls this particular photographic experience “the most horrendous of all” — shot on a sweltering day in the Deep South, she noted the irony of a fan sitting on the floor. She says: “What’s the fan’s purpose? To cool someone who is about to be executed?”
FRIDAY
opening in the wall that leads to a bathtub. The warmly lit space looks inviting enough, lined with tiles and teeth — the entrance to the little retreat is built out to resemble the white whale’s gaping maw, and you can just detect seascape murals on the wall around the mouth. There’s a certain low-brow glamor to the 1979 picture of the stage room of the Black Poodle Club — a topless strip joint in Nashville — with its three disco balls and tinsel curtains casting shimmery specks on the dramatically red-lighted floor. While “Pleasure Ground” focuses on spaces outfitted to indulge the body and the senses, Devlin’s “Corporal Arenas” series, created between 1982 and 1998, is concerned with environments in which “the body is required to maintain a level of passivity and loss of control,” she says. These are portraits of spaces where “the body is being acted upon and is in many ways passive, on display, and an object of careful scrutiny.” This series includes pastel-hued, Zen-fully empty massage rooms, the shrine-like alcove of a casket showroom, and a surgical operating room that is entirely dark except for the glare of the overhead spotlight — alluding to a sort of interrogation of the body. Unlike the heavy emptiness in the rest of the exhibited work, the 1986 image, “Dog Hysterectomy, NY State Fair, Syracuse, NY,” is populated with a flurry of movement. Longexposure captures bustle of surgeons and the stirring crowd from behind and reflected on the glass that separates spectators from the staged operation. The illusion of the medical environment is blown as Devlin’s scope panned out from the boxed-in procedure to include the rafters of the fairground shed that houses this temporary space. Ironically, by voiding environments of figures, Devlin can emphasize the relationship between
FIRST
PHOTO COURTESY THE ARTIST AND WEATHERSPOON ART MUSEUM
#FirstFridayROC
First Friday
Citywide Gallery Night
August 4 • 6-9pm FirstFridayRochester.org
Acrylic Acuity Geisel Gallery 1 Bausch and Lomb Place 2nd Floor Mezzanine 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM
Figure it Out by Courtney Gruttadauria Nu Movement 716 University Ave. 5:00 PM to 8:00 PM
Anderson Arts Building Open Studios Anderson Arts Building 250 N. Goodman St. 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM
Fur, Fins & Feathers Image City Photography Gallery 722 University Ave. 5:00 PM to 9:00 PM
At Cat Clay. Live Now and Prosper Cat Clay Studio #242, Hungerford Bldg. 5:00 PM to 9:00 PM
Illuminate “The Point” of Culver and Merchants Roads 1392 Culver Road 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM
Barriers The Hungerford 1115 East Main St. (at N. Goodman) 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM
In Neutral: Cory Fitzgerald and Nick Marshall + Interloper: Cecily Culver Gallery r 100 College Ave. 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM
Congruent. A collaborative installation by St.Monci & Lives Styled AXOM Gallery Exhibition Space 176 Anderson Ave., Suite #303 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM
Sponsored by
Infinite Charlotte Square 50 Charlotte St. 4:00 PM to 10:00 PM
Loosen up Main Street Artists Gallery & Studio 1115 E. Main St., Studio 452-458 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM
Studio 236 features the fine art of Constance Mauro. Constance Mauro Studio 1115 East Main St., Hungerford Building 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM
On a Lazy Summer Evening, Drift Over to the Anderson Allery Artist's Studios Anderson Alley Artists 250 N. Goodman St. 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM
StudioRAD Grand Opening Reception StudioRAD 46 Mount Hope Ave 5:00 PM to 9:00 PM
On the Side Rochester Contemporary Art Center 137 East Ave. 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM
The Architecture of Grief and Redemption by Rick Burnett Baker Montanus Gallery 250 North Goodman St. 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM
Paxtor makes Little debut on First Friday The Little Theatre 240 East Ave. - Little Cafe 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM Stephen King Night & Wide Open Mic Writers & Books 740 University Ave. 7:00 PM to 10:00 PM
rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 25
PSST. Is it worth a thousand words?
Check our art reviews from Rebecca Rafferty.
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A RT
Art Exhibits [ OPENING ] Create Art 4 Good, 1115 E. Main Street, Suite #201 Door #5. Barrier. Through Aug. 24. Opening reception Fri. Aug. 4, 6-9 p.m. Paintings by Marisa Bruno. 210-3161. Susan@CreateArt4Good.org. createart4good.org. Firehouse Gallery at Genesee Pottery, 713 Monroe Ave. Peripheral of the Periphery. Through Aug. 25. Opening reception Fri. Aug.4, 6-9 p.m. Works by artists-inresidence Marval A. Rex and Ryana Lawson. 271-5183. rochesterarts.org. Gallery r, 100 College Ave. Cecily Culver | Interloper. Through Aug. 20. Opening reception Fri. Aug. 4, 6-9 p.m. A window installation that combines taxidermy and robotics. 256-3312. galleryr. rit.edu.; In Neutral: Cory Fitzgerald & Nick Marshall. Through Aug. 20. Opening reception Aug. 4, 6-9 p.m. Collaborative installation using photography and video by Cory Fitzgerald & Nick Marshall. 256-3312. galleryr.rit. My Sister’s Gallery at the Episcopal Church Home, 505 Mt. Hope Ave. Loons and Landscapes. Through Sep. 17. Opening reception Aug. 11, 5-7 p.m. A display of photography by Peter Blackwood. 546-8400. EpiscopalSeniorLife.org. Rochester Contemporary Art Center, 137 East Ave. On the Side. Through Aug. 12. Opening reception Thurs. Aug. 3, 9-6 p.m. 461-2222. info@ rochestercontemporary.org. rochestercontemporary.org. Ugly Duck Coffee, 89 Charlotte St. Mexicali: Photo Opening. Through Aug. 31. Opening reception Thurs. Aug 3, 5-7 p.m. Photography by Louis Chavez. chavezlouis.com. Unity Church of Greater Rochester, 55 Prince Street. About Face. Through Sep. 17. Opening reception Fri. Aug. 4, 6-8 p.m. Artwork by Nancy P Hicks. 473-0910. unityrochester.org. [ CONTINUING ] ART EXHIBITS 1570 Gallery at Valley Manor, 1570 East Ave. Architectural Salvage. Through Aug. 20. A display of prints, etchings, and more by Katherine Baca-Bielinis. 546-8400. EpiscopalSeniorLife.org. Axom Gallery, 176 Anderson Ave., 2nd floor. Congruent. Through Aug. 26. Work by Lives Styled and St. Monci. 232-6030 x23. axomgallery.com. Cobblestone Arts Center, 1622 New York 332. The Work of Rahul Bakshi. Through Aug. 18. 389-0220. bestfootforwardkids.com. Gallery 384, 384 East Ave. A Mid-Summer’s Mélange. Through Sep. 24. Artists reception Wed. Aug. 30, 5:30-8:30 p.m. A variety of visual arts media by Mark McDermott, Elliot Luke, John Mariner, and more. Gallery 96, 604 PittsfordVictor Road. Point of View. Through Aug. 26. Photography from Pittsford
26 CITY AUGUST 2 - 8, 2017
ART | ‘ON THE SIDE’ What lies at the root of commercial artists’ work is still their original passion to create beautiful images. “On the Side” highlights that artwork created by local advertisers in their free time. The exhibit, presented by Rochester Contemporary and the Rochester Advertising Federation, will run from Thursday, August 3, through Saturday, August 12, at the Rochester Contemporary Art Center (137 East Avenue). An opening reception on Thursday at the gallery will take place from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. with cocktails and food from The Daily Refresher. Admission is $10 for the public and $5 for members of RoCo and RAF. Regular gallery hours are Wednesday through Sunday, 12 p.m. to 5 p.m., and Friday, 12 p.m. to 9 p.m. Admission is $2; free for members. For more information, visit rochestercontemporary. org or call 461-2222. — BY GRACIE PETERS
Mendon and Sutherland High School students. Geisel Gallery, Second Floor Rotunda, Legacy Tower, One Bausch & Lomb Place. Acrylic Acuity. Through Aug. 30. Opening reception Thurs. Aug. 3, 5-7 p.m.Work by Valerie Berner. thegeiselgallery.com. George Eastman Museum, 900 East Ave. Eugene Richards: The Run-On of Time. Through Oct. 22. Includes 146 photographs, 15 books, and a selection of moving image works by Richards. eastmanmuseum.org. GO ART, 201 E Main St. Batavia. Color Impressions. Through Sep. 10. Opening reception, Thurs. Aug. 24, 6-8 p.m. Fiber art by Mary Ann. goart.org.; A Nice View. Through Sep. 10. Closing reception Thurs. Sep. 7, 6-8 p.m. Paintings by Stacy Kirby. 343-9313. goart.org. Image City Photography Gallery, 722 University Ave. Fur, Fins & Feathers. Through Aug. 6. Work by Dick Beery, Chip Evra, and more. International Art Acquisitions, 3300 Monroe Ave. On The Edge. Through Aug. 31. Paintings by Virginia Wood. 264-1440. internationalartacquisitions.com. Livingston Arts Center, 4 Murray Hill Dr. Mt. Morris. Paintings from the Past. Through Aug. 31. Work by Jay Brooks & Dan Heale. 243-6785. Main Street Arts, 20 W. Main St., Clifton Springs. Multifaceted: Filling The Walls with Jewelry. Through Aug. 18. Jewelry from Erica Bapst, Juan Carlos Caballero-
Perez, Lynn Duggan, and more. 315-462-0210. mainstreetartsgallery.com. Makers Gallery and Studio, 34 Elton Street. Schemes: Poetry Inspired Paintings. Through Sep. 2. Poetry by J. Edward Moss. Paintings Virginia McDonald. 507-3569. Memorial Art Gallery, 500 University Ave. Charles Atlas: Here she is..v1. Through Sep. 17. A part of MAG’s “Media Arts Watch” program. A complex and provocative portrait of the renowned drag artist, Lady Bunny. 2768900. mag.rochester.edu. My Sister’s Gallery at the Episcopal Church Home, 505 Mt. Hope Ave. Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow. Through Aug. 6. A display of contemporary artwork and crafts. 546-8400. EpiscopalSeniorLife.org. Nu Movement, 716 University Ave. Figure it Out. Through Aug. 31. Opening reception Fri. Aug. 4, 5-8 p.m. Figurative and abstract work by Courtney Gruttadauria. 704-2889. numvmnt.com. Oxford Gallery, 267 Oxford St. Credences of Summer. Through Aug. 19. Paintings by Wallace Stevens. 2715885. oxfordgallery.com. St. John Fisher College, 3690 East Ave. Our Frame of Mind. Through Aug. 24. Opening reception Fri. Aug. 11, 4-7 p.m. Photography by Bonnie Gamache, Luann Pero, Loni Titus and Angela Possemato. 330-2379.
Art Events [ FRI., AUGUST 4 ]
The Architecture of Grief and Redemption. 6-9 p.m. Montanus Gallery, 250 N. Goodman Street Photography by Rick Burnett Baker jmontanus@hotmail.com. jmontanus@hotmail.com. montanusphotography.com. First Friday Gallery Night GalleryQ. First Friday of every month, 6-9 p.m. Gallery Q, 100 College Ave . Anderson Arts First Fridays. First Friday of every month, 6-9 p.m Anderson Arts Building, 250 N. Goodman St. 201-910-1603. andersonartsbuilding@gmail. com. andersonalleyartists.com. Hungerford Open Studios. First Friday of every month, 6-9 p.m. Hungerford Building, 1115 E. Main St. Enter Door #2 Free. Illuminate. 6-9 p.m. A Gallery Event celebrating the LGBTQ community in the Triangle and everywhere. Occur at “The Point” of Culver and Merchants. Open House. First Friday of every month, 6-9 p.m Metro Justice, 1115 E Main St Celebrate First Fridays Open House at the Hungerford Building with Metro Justice 397-3540. metrojustice.org. Studio Harpy: Grand Opening. 6-10 p.m. Hungerford Building, 1115 E. Main St. Shawnee Hill will be live painting with raffles and prizes $1. StudioRAD Opening Reception. 5-9 p.m. StudioRAD, 46 Mount Hope Ave Music by Firebrand 469-8512. lisanudo@ studiorad.org. studiorad.org. [ SAT., AUGUST 12 ] Anderson Alley Artists Open Studios. Second Saturday of every month, 12-4 p.m Anderson Arts Building, 250 N. Goodman St. 201-910-1603. andersonartsbuilding@gmail. com. andersonalleyartists.com. Second Saturday as Hungerford. Second Saturday of every month, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Hungerford Building, 1115 E. Main St. Meet 20+ artists in their studios. Enter at Door #2. Many studios will be giving demonstrations 469-8217. Second Saturdays. Second Saturday of every month, 3-6 p.m. Cornerstone Gallery, 8732 Main St., Honeoye. A variety of open venues in Honeoye Falls baierpottery.com.
Activism [ SAT., AUGUST 5 ] Food Not Bombs Sort/Cook/ Serve Food. 3-6 p.m. Flying Squirrel Community Space, 285 Clarissa St. [ FRI., AUGUST 11 ] Pints for Peace. 5-8 p.m. Swiftwater Brewing Company, 378 Mt. Hope Ave 585-7478478. gandhiinstitute.org.
GETLISTED get your event listed for free e-mail it to calendar@rochestercitynews.com. Or go online to rochestercitynewspaper.com and submit it yourself!
[ SAT., AUGUST 12 ] Food Not Bombs Sort/Cook/ Serve Food. 3-6 p.m. Flying Squirrel Community Space, 285 Clarissa St.
Are you looking for a grant to fund your next great project? Apply for a Genesee Valley Arts Grant. Grants are available to Individual Artists, Community Arts Programs and Arts in Education Programs. Seminars are available to familiarize applicants with the application process.
Call for Artwork [ WED., AUGUST 2 ] The Cup, The Mug: A National Juried Exhibition of Drinking Vessels. Through Oct. 2. Main Street Arts, 20 W. Main St., Clifton Springs A national juried exhibition, open to all U.S. artists 18 years and older, working in ceramics, glass, wood, or metal $30-$35. 315-4620210. mainstreetartsgallery. com. Small Works 2017. Through Oct. 2. Main Street Arts, 20 W. Main St., Clifton Springs Open to artists working in all media excluding video/ sound and installation art $30-$35. 315-462-0210. mstreetarts@gmail.com. mainstreetartsgallery.com.
Comedy [ WED., AUGUST 2 ] Buta Brawl Comedy Open Mic. 9 p.m.-midnight. ButaPub, 315 Gregory Street 9022010. evan@butapub.com. butapub.com. Comedy @ The Carlson Club Championship Round 4. 8-9:30 p.m. Comedy at the Carlson, 50 Carlson Rd $5. 426-6339. The Improv Plate. First Wednesday of every month, 7-9 p.m Johnny’s Pub & Grill, 1382 Culver Rd. Free. 607-760-0422. brokencouch.com. [ TUE., AUGUST 8 ] Backdraft II: Laughdraft. 8-11 p.m Firehouse Saloon, 814 S. Clinton Ave. 902-2010. thefirehousesaloon.com.
For more information on our grant program, and a listing of grant seminars, readers should visit our website: grants.livingstonarts.org
FILM | FREE OUR PEOPLE FILM FESTIVAL The first Free Our People Film Contest, developed by the Center for Disability Rights here in Rochester, called for video submissions that focused on institutional biases that keep people with disabilities in nursing homes instead of playing active roles in their communities. The winning submissions have been selected and will be shown at a festival on Monday, August 7, at The Little Theatre.
The Decentralization Regrant Program is made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with support from Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature.
The contest had some specific rules: each film needed to display a whole pineapple and at least a piece of pie; and every film submission was also required to include disabled actors and at least one person with a disability in a major crew role, like director, writer, editor, or cinematographer, which seems more applicable than the first two requirements. The first and second place prizes come with cash rewards, accommodations in Rochester to attend the festival, and a software bundle for videographers. The Free Our People Film Festival is Monday, August 7, at The Little Theatre (240 East Avenue) at 6 p.m. Admission is free. For more information, call 258-0400 or visit thelittle.org. — BY GRACIE PETERS
[ THU., AUGUST 10 ] Joe Torry. 7:30 p.m. Comedy Club, 2235 Empire Blvd Webster $15-$20. 671-9080. theitsjustcomedyclub.com.
Dance Events [ THU., AUGUST 3 ] Swing Dance lesson. 7:458:30 p.m. St. Thomas’ Episcopal Church, 2000 Highland Ave. 248-5196. [ SAT., AUGUST 5 ] Boyz Night Out. 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Firehouse Saloon, 814 S. Clinton Ave. $5. 319-3832. thefirehousesaloon.com. Vaude Vixens. 8:30 p.m.2 a.m. Abilene Bar & Lounge, 153 Liberty Pole Way $7. 397-7168. abilenebarandlounge.com. [ MON., AUGUST 7 ] Flower City Ballet - 2017 Summer Dance Intensive. Aug. 7-11, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. continues on page 28
GETLISTED get your event listed for free e-mail it to calendar@rochestercitynews.com. Or go online to rochestercitynewspaper.com and submit it yourself!
THEATER | ‘FIELDER’S CHOICE’ Hummingbird Theater Company will present “Fielder’s Choice,” written by the Democrat and Chronicle’s David Andreatta, is a drama about a strained father-son relationship that relies heavily on a mutual love for Major League baseball parks. Produced and directed by Donald B. Bartalo, the show is small with a three-person cast: Peter Doyle plays the role of Frank Fielder, the father; Danny Kincaid Kunz will portray a grown version of Owen Fielder, the son; and a young version of Owen Fielder is played by Andreatta’s own son, also named Owen. The play will run from Wednesday, August 2, through Sunday, August 6, at MuCCC (142 Atlantic Avenue). 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday through Saturday; 2 p.m. on Sunday. $12 advance; $15 at the door. muccc.org. — BY GRACIE PETERS rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 27
Flower City Ballet, 250 Cumberland St., Sute 250 $350. 325-2114. flowercityballet.org. [ SUN., AUGUST 13 ] USA Dance: Ballroom and Latin. 5:15-9 p.m. Arthur Murray Dance Studio, 3400 Monroe Avenue, #13 $7$12. 585-267-7725. info@ arthurmurrayrochester.com. flowercityballroom.org.
Festivals [ FRI., AUGUST 4 ] August Wine Stroll. 4-7 p.m. Main Street, Geneseo, Main Street . Geneseo $15-$20. 5852437116. geneseomainst@gmail.com. Polish Arts Festival. 5-10 p.m. St. Stanislaus Church, 1124 Hudson Ave Variety of Polish food, live music, and fun and games 381-5188. [ SAT., AUGUST 5 ] Garlic Festival. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Fox Run Vineyards, 670 State Rt. 14 . Penn Yan 315536-4616. foxrunvineyards. com. Polish Arts Festival. 3-10 p.m. St. Stanislaus Church, 1124 Hudson Ave Variety of Polish food, live music, and fun and games 381-5188. [ SUN., AUGUST 6 ] Garlic Festival. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Fox Run Vineyards, 670 State Rt. 14 . Penn Yan 315-536-4616. foxrunvineyards.com. [ WED., AUGUST 9 ] Rochester Black Pride Festival. Aug. 9-13. Edgerton Community Center, 41 Backus St 428-6769. facebook.com/rocblackpride. Walnut Hill Farm’s Carriage Driving Competition. 8 a.m.5 p.m. Walnut Hill Farm, 397 West Bloomfield Road . Pittsford $12. 746-1080. walnuthillfarmdc@aol.com.
FESTIVAL | PARK AVE SUMMER ART FEST Each year, Rochester’s Park Ave Summer Art Fest blows out the first full weekend in August as the neighborhood showcases the area’s culture, art, and businesses. Park Avenue will be closed to vehicles, allowing ample room for a juried art show — featuring more than 350 artists in 13 different categories — vendors with varied arts such as ceramics, glass, and jewelry; five food courts and other food trucks; and three stages set up throughout the festival with performers from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. both days. The festival will also include children’s activities like bounce houses, obstacle courses, Gary the Happy Pirate, and YogaVibe “Yoga for Kids.” The Park Ave Summer Art Fest begins at 10 a.m. on Saturday, August 5, and Sunday, August 6, along Park Avenue from Alexander Street to Culver Road. Admission is free. rochesterevents.com for more information. — BY TORI MARTINEZ walnuthillfarm.org. [ THU., AUGUST 10 ] Rochester Black Pride Festival. Through Aug. 13. Edgerton Community Center, 41 Backus St 428-6769. facebook.com/rocblackpride. Walnut Hill Farm’s Carriage Driving Competition. 8 a.m.5 p.m. Walnut Hill Farm, 397 West Bloomfield Road . Pittsford $12. 746-1080. walnuthillfarmdc@aol.com. walnuthillfarm.org.
[ FRI., AUGUST 11 ] Rochester Black Pride Festival. Through Aug. 13. Edgerton Community Center, 41 Backus St 428-6769. facebook.com/rocblackpride. Walnut Hill Farm’s Carriage Driving Competition. 8 a.m.8:30 p.m. Walnut Hill Farm, 397 West Bloomfield Road . Pittsford $12. 746-1080. walnuthillfarmdc@aol.com. walnuthillfarm.org. [ SAT., AUGUST 12 ]
The Little Italy Festival. Aug. 12. Downtown Rochester, Rochester littleitalyfest.com. Mystical Gateways Psychic Faire. Second Saturday of every month, 10 a.m.-5 p.m Mythic Treasures, Village Gate Square 274 North Goodman Street Featuring readers, healers and vendors 266-8350. mythictreasures@ rochester.rr.com. mythictreasures.com. New York State Wine Festival. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. New York Wine & Culinary Center, 800 South Main St $10-$25. 3947070. nyswinefestival.com. Rochester Black Pride Festival. Through Aug. 13. Edgerton Community Center, 41 Backus St 428-6769. facebook.com/rocblackpride. Walnut Hill Farm’s Carriage Driving Competition. 8 a.m.5 p.m. Walnut Hill Farm, 397 West Bloomfield Road . Pittsford $12. 746-1080. walnuthillfarmdc@aol.com. walnuthillfarm.org. [ SUN., AUGUST 13 ] The Little Italy Festival. Aug. 13. Downtown Rochester, Rochester littleitalyfest.com. New York State Wine Festival. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. New York Wine & Culinary Center, 800 South Main St $10-$25. 3947070. nyswinefestival.com. Rochester Black Pride Festival. Through Aug. 13. Edgerton Community Center, 41 Backus St 428-6769. facebook.com/rocblackpride. Walnut Hill Farm’s Carriage Driving Competition. 9 a.m.4 p.m. Walnut Hill Farm, 397 West Bloomfield Road . Pittsford $12. 746-1080. walnuthillfarmdc@aol.com. walnuthillfarm.org.
Film [ SAT., AUGUST 5 ] Queer As Folk screening. 3-5:30 p.m. LGBTQ Resource
Center, 100 College Avenue, #100 5852448640. jeffreym@gayalliance.org. gayalliance.org. [ MON., AUGUST 7 ] Free Our People Film Festival. 6-8 p.m. The Little Theatre, 240 East Avenue Films that explore institutional bias, while highlighting the struggle disabled people live in their homes and communities 546-7510. thelittle.org. [ SAT., AUGUST 12 ] Queer As Folk screening. 3-5:30 p.m. LGBTQ Resource Center, 100 College Avenue, #100 5852448640. jeffreym@gayalliance.org. gayalliance.org.
Kids Events [ THU., AUGUST 3 ] Creativity Shell Grand Opening. 12-2 p.m. Creativity Shell, 1984 Monroe Avenue . Brighton 832-943-9767. sdaniel@creativityshell.org. creativityshell.org. [ SAT., AUGUST 5 ] Penguin Day. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Seneca Park Zoo, 2222 St. Paul St 336-7213. senecaparkzoo.org. [ THU., AUGUST 10 ] Summer Fun Days at Stokoe Farms. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Stokoe Farms, 656 South Rd, Scottsville $10. 889-0770. stokoefarms.com. [ SAT., AUGUST 12 ] A Step into Africa. 10 a.m.4 p.m. Seneca Park Zoo, 2222 St. Paul St 336-7200. senecaparkzoo.org. Tea In Wonderland: Tea with the Queen and Mad Hatter. 2-4 p.m. GO ART, 201 E Main St . Batavia $20-$25. 343-9313. goart.org. [ SUN., AUGUST 13 ] Sunday Summer Kids Fun
Fest. noon. Cobblestone Arts Center, 1622 New York 332 $10. 398-0220. cobblestoneartscenter.com.
Literary Events [ MON., AUGUST 7 ] Moving Beyond Racism Book Group. 7-8:30 p.m. Barnes & Noble, 3349 Monroe Ave. 334-5971.
Meetings [ SUN., AUGUST 6 ] Rachel for Mayor Open House. 3:30-5 p.m. Rachel for Mayor Campaign Office, 131 Gregory Street 5853102290. rachelformayor.com.
Museum Exhibit [ WED., AUGUST 2 ] Over the Top: Honoring Fairport’s World War I Veterans. Through Oct. 31. Fairport Historical Museum, 18 Perrin St
Recreation [ SAT., AUGUST 5 ] BBQ, Brews, & Blues with Steven Raichlen. 1-3:30 p.m. Frontier Field, 1 Morrie Silver Way $50. 258-0200. wxxi.org.
Special Events [ WED., AUGUST 2 ] Vegan Pastry Pop-Up. 3:306:30 p.m 540WMain, 540 W. Main Street 2-10. 1-855540-6246. 540westmain.org.
GETLISTED get your event listed for free e-mail it to calendar@rochestercitynews.com. Or go online to rochestercitynewspaper.com and submit it yourself!
“CITY Newspaper plays a vital role in our marketing campaign. Because it is such an integral part of the fabric of downtown living, we feel it is essential to our efforts to build brand recognition for our apartment communities. In addition, the special publications they produce (Summer Guide, Annual Manual, Jazz Festival Guide, etc) are excellent opportunities to increase our visibility not just within the city limits, but across the region as well.” Timothy B. Schmid Director of Residential Properties KONAR MANAGEMENT CORPORATION
28 CITY AUGUST 2 - 8, 2017
LuLaRoe Pop-Up Boutique Fundraiser. 4-7 p.m. Webster Library, 980 Ridge Rd 8727075. Reflections on Peace in this Nuclear Age. 7-8:30 p.m. Downtown United Presbyterian Church, 121 N. Fitzhugh Street Lecture by Paul K. Chapell 463-3267. gandhiinstitute.org/. Scams, Schemes and Fraud. 6-7:30 p.m. Legacy at Maiden Park, 749 Maiden Lane 546-7275. rjaffarian@ legacymaidenpark.com. Spirits Tasting Cruise. 6:30-8 p.m. Via Girasole Wine Bar, 3 Schoen Place . Pittsford $28. 641-0340. vgwinebar@gmail. com. sampatch.org. [ THU., AUGUST 3 ] Pittsford Food Tours. 11 a.m.-2 p.m Schoen Place, 10 Schoen Place Walking food tour in Pittsford Village/ Schoen Place $57. 3632340. pittsfordfoodtours.com. Taste of Science with Dr. Rob Rice. 6-7 p.m. Hogan’s Hideaway, 197 Park Ave. 4424293. hoganshideaway.com. [ FRI., AUGUST 4 ] FireFly Night at Stokoe Farms. 5-9 p.m. Stokoe Farms, 656 South Rd, Scottsville Music, wine, dinner, hayrides, and Iroquois storyteller $85-$95. 889-0770. stokoefarms.com. [ SAT., AUGUST 5 ] The Color Vibe 5k. 9 a.m. Monroe Community College, 1000 E. Henrietta Rd thecolorvibe.com/ rochester.php. Ease on Down, AGAIN!. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Thurston Brooks Merchants Association, 216 Thurston Road Sales, giveaways, special discounts, information, games for families, and more 201-1133. ccsatiables@yahoo.com. Get Out the Vote with Music and Comedy. 4-8 p.m. Record Archive, 33 1/3
Captain Jack’s Good Time Tavern, 8505 Greig St . Sodus A benefit to raise money for children born without eyes to help fund their cosmetic treatments 734-4644. captainjacksgoodtimetavern. com. Hiroshima Commemorative Shadows Project. 10 a.m.noon. Hungerford Building, 1115 E. Main St. 654-1970. ROC for Kidneys 5K. 8 a.m.-3 p.m. Stokoe Farms, 656 South Rd, Scottsville $30-$35. 993-3161. healthykidneys. donordrive.com.
ART | ‘ILLUMINATE’ As part of the August First Friday, Gallery Q, The Triangle neighborhood, and ImageOut are partnering to present “Illuminate,” a gallery event celebrating the LGBTQ community. “Illuminate” will feature artists Chen Wang, Citlali Fabián, and Katie Efstathiou, and puts a focus on projection and installation-based art. Wang will display animations that explore sexuality and gender norms. In a collection of Fabián’s own work, along with work from other Mexican photographers, Fabián creates an illustration of Mexican heritage, traditions, and culture. Efstathiou will showcase “Maybe Somewhere West,” a photographic installation of landscapes, used to question how the gender binary stereotypes affect and relate to the naming of a place. The event will also include live music by Starz, and an after party will take place at Johnny’s Irish Pub. “Illuminate” will be showcased at “The Point” of Culver and Merchants Road (1392 Culver Road) on Friday, August 4, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. For more information, search for “Illuminate: A Gallery Event” on Facebook, or call Gallery Q at 244-8640. — BY TORI MARTINEZ Rockwood St. Live music, comedy, an event pint glass for the first 40 attendees, and more $20-50 Suggested donation. 764-6579. brownpapertickets.com. Multi-Family Yard Sale and
BBQ Chicken Fundraiser. 12-5 p.m. Native American Cultural Center, 229 Empire Blvd $10-$20. 442-1100. [ SUN., AUGUST 6 ] The Eva Mae Benefit. 1-5 p.m.
[ THU., AUGUST 10 ] Run, Walk, and Roll! for Cobblestone Arts Center. 6:30 p.m. Nolan’s on Canandaigua Lake, 726 South Main St Canandaigua $20. 217-6430. cobblestoneartscenter.com. [ FRI., AUGUST 11 ] Wilmot Cancer Institute’s Survivors Night. 7-10 p.m. Frontier Field, 333 Plymouth Ave N. Admission includes a free T-shirt $4. 276-4715. Wine Tasting Cruise on Sam Patch Packet Boat. 6:308 p.m. Sam Patch Packet Boat, 12 Schoen Place . Pittsford $28. 662-5748. sampatch.org. Zoo Brew. 5:30-9 p.m. Seneca Park Zoo, 2222 St. Paul St Drink Beer, Save Elephants. A portion of every ZooBrew ticket goes to the International Elephant Foundation $8- $10. 3367200. senecaparkzoo.org. [ SAT., AUGUST 12 ] MEG’s Annual Charity Golf Tournament. Aug. 12. Shadow Lake Golf and Racquet Club, 1850 Five Mile Line Road . Penfield Proceeds benefit The Consortium on Trauma, Illness and Grief in Schools, and The American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (585) 234-4653. megsgift.org.
Theater Aging Ain’t a Laughing Matter. or is it?. Sun., Aug. 6, 2 p.m. Cobblestone Theatre, 1622 State Route 332 . Farmington $15. 398-0220. sarah. cobblestonearts@gmail.com. cobblestoneartscenter.com. The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas. Mondays-Saturdays, 7:30-10 p.m Merry-GoRound Playhouse, 6877 East Lake Rd $48-$50. 315-2551785. fingerlakesmtf.com. Dionysus in ‘17. Through Aug. 6. Bread & Water Theatre, 172 West Main St Through Aug. 6. Fri. & Sat. Aug. 4, 5, 7:30 p.m. & Aug. 6, 2 p.m 538-9684. BreadandWaterTheatre.org. The Eight: Reindeer Monologues. Thu., Aug. 10, 9 p.m., Fri., Aug. 11, 9 p.m. and Sat., Aug. 12, 9 p.m. Branch by Bellangelo, 226 Turk Road . Geneva A dark, dark Christmas comedy $13. (607)2438602. Info@Bellangelo.com. theatre444.com. Farce of Nature. Wed., Aug. 2, 7:30 p.m. Penfield Community Center, 1985 Baird Rd Penfield Directed by Christopher Woods Marlin 3408655. penfieldplayers.org. Fielder’s Choice. WednesdaysSaturdays, 7:30 p.m. and Sun., Aug. 6, 2 p.m MuCCC, 142 Atlantic Ave Written by David Andreatta Produced & Directed by Donald B. Bartalo $12-$15. muccc.org. The PiTCH Series. Wednesdays-Fridays, 7:3010 p.m Theater Mack, 203 Genesee Street . Auburn $20. 315-255-1785. theatermack@gmail.com. fingerlakesmtf.com. Rumpelstiltskin. Thu., Aug. 3, 7 p.m. and Sun., Aug. 6, 2 p.m. RAPA, Kodak Center, 200 W. Ridge Rd. Through Aug. 6. Sat. & Sun. Aug. 6, 2 p.m. Thurs. Aug. 3, 7 p.m $10-$20. 254-0073. kodakcenter.org.
Shake on the Lake: Romeo and Juliet. Wed., Aug. 2, 6 p.m. Centennial Park, Richmond Ave . Batavia Sponsored by GO ART!. 585 343 9313. Shakespeare’s The Tempest. Fri., Aug. 4, 2-4:30 p.m. and Sat., Aug. 5, 2-4:30 p.m. The Strong National Museum of Play, 1 Manhattan Square Through Aug. 5. Fri. & Sat. Aug. 4, 5, 2-4:30 p.m $5-$10. 716-4444509. modernsensibilities. wordpress.com. The Theban Plays of Sophocles. Thursdays-Sundays MuCCC, 142 Atlantic Ave Through Aug. 19. Thurs.-Sat. Aug. 10-12, 17-19, 8 p.m. Sun. Aug. 13, 2 p.m. Adapted and directed by James Landers $12-$18. muccc.org ThursdaysSaturdays, 8-10:30 p.m. and Sun., Aug. 13, 2-4:30 p.m MuCCC, 142 Atlantic Ave Through Aug. 19. Thurs-Sat. Aug. 10-12, 17-19, 8 p.m. Sun. Aug. 13, 2 p.m $12-$15. 315-6122. muccc.org.
Theater Audition [ SAT., AUGUST 5 ] Little Women Auditions. 1 p.m. Blackfriars Theatre, 795 E. Main St Casting 6 women, 4 men, ages 18-60s 454-1260. blackfriars.org.
Workshops [ THU., AUGUST 10 ] People’s Power & Direct Action. 5:30-7:30 p.m. Metro Justice, 1115 E Main St In part with Metro Justice’s Building Resistance Workshops 397-3540. metrojustice.org.
GETLISTED get your event listed for free e-mail it to calendar@rochestercitynews.com. Or go online to rochestercitynewspaper.com and submit it yourself!
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We do Clinical Trials of Investigational vaccine and pandemic flu vaccines. CITY Newspaper has been instrumental in helping us find people to participate in our clinical trials. Their Graphic Designers get copy back to us quickly and do a great job. Our ads look professional and sharp! Christine Kubarycz always stays in contact with us and makes sure that if we need an ad to go in it gets in even if it is right at the deadline or even beyond. The majority of people we get from newspaper ads come from CITY Newspaper and the cost is lower than other print ads available out there. Thank you CITY Newspaper! We couldn’t do it without you! Barbara Mahoney-Walker, Recruiter July, 2017
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Movie Theaters
Movies
Searchable, up-to-the-minute movie times for all area theaters can be found at rochestercitynewspaper.com, and on City’s mobile website.
Brockport Strand 93 Main St, Brockport, 637-3310, rochestertheatermanagement.com
Canandaigua Theatres 3181 Townline Road, Canandaigua, 396-0110, rochestertheatermanagement.com
Cinema Theater 957 S. Clinton St., 271-1785, cinemarochester.com
Culver Ridge 16 2255 Ridge Rd E, Irondequoit 544-1140, regmovies.com
Dryden Theatre 900 East Ave., 271-3361, dryden.eastmanhouse.org
Eastview 13 Eastview Mall, Victor 425-0420, regmovies.com
Geneseo Theatres Geneseo Square Mall, 243-2691, rochestertheatermanagement.com
Greece Ridge 12 176 Greece Ridge Center Drive 225-5810, regmovies.com
Henrietta 18 525 Marketplace Drive 424-3090, regmovies.com
The Little 240 East Ave., 258-0444 thelittle.org
Movies 10 2609 W. Henrietta Road 292-0303, cinemark.com
Pittsford Cinema 3349 Monroe Ave., 383-1310 pittsford.zurichcinemas.com
Tinseltown USA/IMAX 2291 Buffalo Road 247-2180, cinemark.com
Webster 12 2190 Empire Blvd., 888-262-4386, amctheatres.com
Vintage Drive In 1520 W Henrietta Rd., Avon 226-9290, vintagedrivein.com
Doing it for themselves [ REVIEW ] BY ADAM LUBITOW
“Landline” (R), DIRECTED BY GILLIAN ROBESPIERRE OPENS FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, AT THE LITTLE AND PITTSFORD CINEMA
Following up their daring and all-around extraordinary romantic comedy “Obvious Child,” writer-director Gillian Robespierre and actor Jenny Slate reteam for the authentic, heartfelt, and often very funny “Landline,” a melancholy comedy about a Manhattan family in crisis. Dana (Slate) is experiencing some insecurity in her relationship with her sweet, but not very exciting fiancé, Ben (Jay Duplass). She’s happy, but left wondering whether that’s all there is. She shares a generally combative relationship with her headstrong teenage sister, Ali (Abby Quinn, in a superb debut). Although Ali, for her part, is too busy sneaking out to experiment with sex and drugs, and sorting through her own questions about her “not really” boyfriend Jed (Marquis Rodriquez) to be overly concerned with the status of their sisterly bond. Their parents (the always great John Turturro and Edie Falco) have settled into their own routine, one which neither of them seems too content with. Then Ali stumbles across a floppy disk that appears to contain evidence of her father’s infidelity, a revelation which simultaneously brings the two
Florence Pugh in “Lady Macbeth.” PHOTO COURTESY ROADSIDE ATTRACTIONS
girls together, while sending them both into a collective tailspin. Dana embarks on her own affair with an old college flame (Finn Wittrock) and moves back into the family apartment to give herself some time to sort through these new developments. “Landline” is set in 1995, and while it never feels like it needs the period setting, it’s at least handled organically, while adding a nice sense of specificity to the story. Robespierre and Slate continue to make a great team, and the director gives her leading lady room to stretch as a dramatic actor. Her chemistry with Quinn is wonderful, and both are charming enough that we’re able to forgive their characters’ occasionally appalling behavior. As in “Obvious Child,” Robespierre’s script (with co-writer Elisabeth Holm) is almost ruthless in recognizing its characters’ faults. But crucially, this never lessens the filmmaker’s obvious affection for them. They’re people left disappointed by where they’ve ended up, but equally unsure about whether they’d find any more pleasure in being somewhere else. “I’m flailing,” Dana says. “I’m just trying to figure out if the life I’ve picked for myself is even
Jazz on the Lawn
Summer Concerts The Greece Jazz Band Tues. August 22nd DELICIOUS FOOD FOR SALE FROM MR. V’S STREET STYLE VENDING!
On the grounds of Greece Olympia High School • 1139 Maiden Lane Just outside of the Jazz 90.1 studios • 6:30pm
Free and open the public • ample parking Bring chairs or blankets and enjoy! 30 CITY AUGUST 2 - 8, 2017
the one that I want. And I don’t even know if I’m allowed to ask that question.” “Landline” allows each of its characters to ask that question. It keeps things messy, telling a story that takes place in that all too familiar space between the person we are and the one we’d like to be, and recognizing that happiness generally means making peace with living our lives somewhere in between.
“Lady Macbeth” (R), DIRECTED BY WILLIAM OLDROYD OPENS FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, AT THE LITTLE AND PITTSFORD CINEMA
What starts off as a genteel period film, the chilling “Lady Macbeth” gradually reveals the irreparable rot at its core. Set in 1865 rural England, the film tells the story of 17-year-old Katherine (Florence Pugh), who as the story begins, has been sold into a loveless marriage to Alexander (Paul Hilton), a man more than twice her age. A cold and generally terrible man, he treats her with contempt, making it quite plain that he has little interest in Katherine outside
of her ability to bear him an heir. During the day she’s left to her own devices as lady of the house. At least partially out of sheer boredom, she begins an illicit affair with the manor’s brutish groomsman, Sebastian (Cosmo Jarvis) — and the decision leads her to indulge her desires with ever darker and more desperate actions. We have sympathy for Katherine early on, but those feelings gradually curdle into something else entirely as it becomes apparent the film is transitioning into a character study about the making of a psychopath. Contrary to the title, “Lady Macbeth” is not a Shakespearean adaptation, but takes inspiration instead from Nikolai Leskov’s Russian novella “Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District” (which later became a famous opera by Shostakovich). Underlying the story are ideas of race, gender, privilege, and power: white men control the world, but the only people Katherine has any power over are the ethnically ambiguous Sebastian and her black maid, Anna (Naomi Ackie, conveying much without the benefit of words). As the one whose duty it is to tend to Katherine, Anna faces the consequences of her mistress’s behavior. Made to be a silent witness, she sees Katherine for who she is, but is unable to do much of anything about it. At the film’s center is a captivatingly bold, fearless performance from Pugh. Her Katherine is capable of unimaginable cruelty, proving herself perfectly able to use anyone around her as a stepping stone to a better life. In his first feature, William Oldroyd, a British theater director, uses an unnerving stillness that belies the bitter emotions roiling beneath every scene. Cinematographer Ari Wegner casts the world in dreary grey tones, complementing the claustrophobic, chilly, and ultimately brutal tale carried out with a ruthless precision. Visit rochestercitynewspaper.com on Friday for additional film coverage, including a review of the documentary “Rumble: Indians Who Rocked the World.”
Climate conundrum [ INTERVIEW ] BY ADAM LUBITOW
Following former Vice President Al Gore’s campaign to educate the public about global warming, the documentary “An Inconvenient Truth” did a lot to move the climate change conversation into the popular consciousness when it was released back in 2006 (and picked up a couple Oscars along the way). Now comes “An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power,” from husband and wife filmmaking team Bonni Cohen and Jon Shenk. A sort of State of the Earth address, it’s a more challenging film than its predecessor, giving audiences an inside peak into Gore’s crusade and what’s changed for the planet over the last 10 years. While things have undeniably gotten worse in that time, the film argues there’s reason to remain hopeful. CITY spoke with Cohen and Shenk about the challenges of following up a landmark film, what the rise of Donald Trump means for climate change efforts, and the impressive stamina of Al Gore. “An Inconvenient Sequel” opens Friday, August 4. An edited transcript of that conversation follows. CITY: “An Inconvenient Truth” was such a cultural lightning rod when it was released; did you feel any pressure to deliver something that would feel like that kind of event? Or is that something you tried not to think about? Jon Shenk: No, we were intimated for sure.
[Laughs] “An Inconvenient Truth” was such a successful movie, on so many levels — not the least of which was just pure eyeballs and box office. It did so well, but more importantly, it educated people all around the world and sort of gave us a vocabulary about how to talk about the climate problem. And of course, it also brought Al Gore back to the foreground of our culture years after the 2000 election, so it had that going for it as well. We actually felt lucky in a way that we could
Al Gore gives a presentation in “An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power.” PHOTO COURTESY PARAMOUNT PICTURES AND PARTICIPANT MEDIA
stand on the shoulders of that film, and we asked ourselves, “Well, what can we do to add to this conversation?” We knew that we had this incredible drama around the energy Al Gore brings to the fight for sustainable energy and raising awareness about the problems, but also raising awareness about the hope and change that solar and wind can bring.
this incredible work that he does, often behind the scenes. And in order to do that, the camera would need to be present in a lot of meetings, on airplanes, at his trainings, when he’s having meetings with his staff, etc. He raised an eyebrow, but then as he started to think about it, really understood the value of the authenticity those scenes we would be able to capture.
The first film focused largely on Al Gore’s slideshow presentation. Your film includes it, but opens things up a bit more. How did you decide what form the new film should take and how much to maintain the format of the original? Bonni Cohen: Well, we wanted to respond to the
In that time, was there anything that surprised you about the work he’s been doing? Shenk: We were blown away by his energy. I
times, and “An Inconvenient Truth” was created at a time when there was much less known about global warming. The film served as kind of a lightning bolt that went around the world and awakened people to the idea of global warming and the climate crisis. And here we are 10 years later, we have a different assignment, which is to talk about how things are now, and talk about how the climate crisis is in fact a lot worse than it was then. But also, and perhaps even more importantly, to talk about the solutions that are now affordable, and alert the world to what those are and how quickly we need to move toward sustainable revolution.
You followed Al Gore for two years as he traveled around the globe doing work with climate change. What conversations did you have about the kind of access you would get during those travels? Cohen: We explained to him what we wanted in
terms of what we thought would be successful access-wise for a kind of intimate, vérité film. We wanted to really be able to show viewers
mean, he’s 20 years older than Bonni or me, and he runs around the planet like he’s a lot younger than us. We would often get to the end of the day, where we were totally exhausted and ready to hang it up, but he would be on to the next meeting. So of course we would have to follow. There’s a new title card at the end of the film about President Trump withdrawing the US from the Paris Climate Accord in June. How else has the film changed since it premiered at Sundance back in January? Shenk: Very little actually. We did change the
end title cards because we felt there’s probably not going to be a whole lot of films out there this year that have their climax at the Paris Climate Summit. So given that that’s where a lot of the drama of our film takes place, we really felt like we owed it to the integrity of the film to include the news that the US President has decided to initiate that withdrawal. On the other hand, we were blown away by the response to Trump, and all the mayors and governors of states like Hawaii, California, and New York that have stepped up and made public announcements to tell people that they were going to do everything they could to stay in the agreement.
rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 31
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private setting. Twn rd, utils! Terms avail. Call 888-905-8847 to register.
Commercial/ Office Space BUILDING 1150 sq.ft . Irondequoit near exit 490 Expway. Suitable office, business. Equipped lunch area.. Storage shed. Large, landscaped yard. Private parking 11 cars. $850 monthly. 266 7418
Lawn & Landscape DIATOMACEOUS EARTH-FOOD GRADE 100% Use to Protect Garden Plants. Use in Animal Feed & More. OMRI ListedMeets Organic Use Standards. BUY ONLINE ONLY: homedepot. com (AAN CAN)
Automotive #1 ALWAYS BETTER CASH PAID for most Junk Cars, Trucks and Vans. Any condition, running or not. Always free pick up and usually same day service. Call 585-305-5865 CASH 4 CARS TRUCKS AND VANS. Up to $500 running or not, more for newer models. We’ll be there in 30 minutes. 585-482-2140 www. cash4carsrochester.com DONATE YOUR CAR to Wheels For Wishes, benefiting MakeA-Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call 917-336-1254 Today!
The Emporium Binders-hard cover 1” 15, 2”3, Transparency film 24 sheets, Sheet Protectors heavy wt.-50; light wt.-230, Clip boards -3. Wrist support for keyboard 1, Index dividers w/clear tabs 110; w/alpha tabs 48; w/numbers 5, Manila folders 60, Expand folders 1” to 3”-30 Take all or part - free, 585.663.6983
For Sale 2 ROCKING CHAIRS 1 Bent Wood $35 / 1 Oak with cushioned seat VGC $15 585727-3174 BICENTENNIAL COIN SET Eisenhauer $, Kennedy 1/2$, quarter & bonus V nickel, 19 aughts, nice kid’s starter set $10, or 2 for $17 585-4892120 BLUE OYSTER CULT T-shirts (20 XL new $15 each, $25 for both. Nintendo DS Guitar Hero on tour, MIB $10 2585-2667398 BRAND NEW KEURIG Elite Gourmet, single cup coffee maker. Never used. Brand new in box $40 Tom 585-2663518 BREADMAN PLUS - Auto bread maker. TR700 $15 585-2255526 CHRISTMAS WINDOW / MIRROR. Use/w BonAmi or glass wax. 1957-NOS unopended $9. Diapers, unopened LUVS 16-28-lb w/ nightlock 104 count $10 585266-7398 DUKES OF HAZARD die-cast, “General Lee”, 1981 Ertl MOC ( Warner Bros ) $19, BSA Norman Rockwell 540 piece puzzle,
sealed MIB $10 585-266-7398
folds $15 VGC 585-880-2903
GERMAN SHEPHERD sign on chain. Carved head on real wood. (says, beware! x Welcome) Nice gift $15.00 585-880-2903
TIRE ON RIM P205-R70-14 . Tread is like new , 1/2” deep $40 Tom 585-266-3518
HAMILTON BEACH - food processor $12. 585-225-5526 HOPALONG CASSIDY - Topper Color “Life size stand-up w/copy of sales as $44 Hoppy med metal clothes hamper w/full decal $50, or both $80 585489-2120 HORSE HACKAMORE Western, braided leather, puts pressure on nose $45 585-880-2903 KID’S AQUARIUM PLUS all accessories. Four gallon starter tank, pump, heater, gravel, plants, vacuum, 7 months worth of filters, food. Phone Mary 585.210.5984 $50 cash. NATIONAL DRAGSTER MAGAZINE (3) 11/2001 Vol 42 #’s 9, 16 & 23 $11 or will sell separate 585-489-2120 NEARLY NEW BICYCLE Women’s Sun 21 speed, paid $460 sacrifice $300.00. Can see at Freewheelers 1757 Mt Hope Ave M-F 11am-6pm Sat12am-4pm 585473-3724 OFFICE SUPPLIES : Bindershard cover 1”- 15, 2”- 3, good condition Transparency film 24 sheets Sheet Protectors heavy wt.-50; light wt.-230 Clip boards -3 Wrist support for keyboard 1 Index dividers with clear tabs 110; with alpha tabs 48; with numbers 5 Manila folders 60 Expand folders 1” to 3”-30 Take all or part - free Please leave message: 585.663.6983
TRANSFORMERS BUMBLE BEE SPEAKER, lights up, dances. New MIB $21. ET collection $19 call for details on both 585-266-7398 WATER TREATMENT UNIT Brand new in box. (2) (NSA100s) NSA Bacteriosatatic $25 each 585-880-2903 WILSON NFL FOOTBALL $9, 1974 AAA Rochester / Monroe County full size map $6 585489-2120
Garage and Yard Sales MULTI FAMILY SALE Multi family 169 Orland Rd, Irondequoit, 14622. Furniture, bikes, toys, household,tools, books and more. Fri and Sat 9-2
Miscellaneous KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killers/ KIT Complete Treatment System. Available: Hardware Stores. The Home Depot, homedepot.com. Try Harris Guaranteed Roach Killers Too! SAWMILLS From only $4397.00- MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmillCut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info/ DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills. com 1-800-578-1363 Ext.300N
continues on page 35
ONE FOLDING CARD Chair, padded, black seat and back,
Thinking about peace & social justice? Looking for a quiet place? Try Quaker meeting. Sundays at 11:00 am Rochester Friends Meeting 84 Scio Street (downtown) Rochester NY 14607 325-7260 • rochesterquakers.org
312 STATE STREET
In the Historic High Falls District of Downtown Rochester
THIS IS WHERE YOU’LL WANT TO LIVE! Unique and Contemporary Floor plans | TOWNHOUSES AND FLATS Heat Included • Call 454-5710 for Application and Tour
32 CITY AUGUST 2 - 8, 2017
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TO ADVERTISE CONTACT CHRISTINE TODAY! CALL 244-3329 X23 OR EMAIL CHRISTINE@ROCHESTER-CITYNEWS.COM
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Fairport, $159,900: Charming Village Colonial. This home boasts; a large front porch, BIG Master Bedroom, deck, patio, an above ground pool, detailed foyer w/incredible wood staircase, etc... Some upgrades include; tear-off roof, maintenance-free exterior with therm windows, electrical panel.
The Hollister – Pettengill House 21 Atkinson Street If you’re in historic Corn Hill, the oldest residential neighborhood in the city, don’t
into the adjoining family room. Although this area incorporates modern amenities including
hesitate to stop at 21 Atkinson Street. The picturesque Greek Revival home was built circa 1833, and purchased in 1936 by George Hollister, a successful businessman who began the Hollister Lumber Company. Mr. Hollister enlarged the residence to its current size in 1851 and passed away shortly thereafter. In 1863, the property was sold for $7,500 to James O. Pettengill, an insurance agent and prominent Monroe County assemblymen from Ogden who lived there until his death in 1886.
access to the side patio for grilling and entertaining, the original brick and structural timber have been preserved and serve as a reminder of the home’s remarkable past. In addition, behind the family room is a mudroom with a back entrance as well as a first floor laundry with full bathroom! A back stairway leads to the rental units.
This extensive brick home, that includes two rental units, sits on a double lot, leaving ample room for parking while still enjoying a side deck and patio that overlook numerous fruit trees, an urban gardener’s paradise.
The second floor hall features beautifully handcrafted herringbone patterned hardwood floors decorated with an inlaid border. The large master bedroom with fireplace flows conveniently into an adjoining dressing room and closet. An updated full bath with soaker tub and separate shower finish off the second floor.
As you walk through the front entryway, you are greeted with an open airy feel with eleven foot ceilings adorned with original crown moldings, gleaming hardwood floors, and a curved staircase that leads to the second floor.
A wide stairway and bedroom with vaulted ceilings were added to the third floor attic area by the current owner who again kept the home’s historic attributes by exposing the impressive original structural timbers.
To the left is the formal living room that displays a stately Victorian-era marble fireplace, one of six functional fireplaces in this 4,750 square foot home. Elongated windows with shoulder moldings, also found in the spacious dining room, add to its charm. Pocket doors lead into the library which features floor to ceiling handcrafted built-in bookcases. Through the library and hidden under the staircase is a quaint powder room. Toward the back of the first floor, a renovated kitchen with tile counter tops and breakfast bar opens
Of special interest, the huge dry basement with abundant storage was the site of a hidden stone room said to be part of the Underground Railroad. Contact Richard Sarkis (585-455-4504) or Micheal Faucher (585-314-3801) of Nothnagle Realtors for more information about this exquisite home that is listed for $349,900. by Ann Marie Gorman Ann Marie is a Landmark Society volunteer.
Ryan Smith To Advertise Call Christine at 585.244.3329 x 23
NYS Licensed Real Estate Salesperson 201-0724
RochesterSells.com
rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 33
Employment AIRLINE CAREERS START Here –Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information 866-296-7094ELECTRICAL ENGINEER NEEDED Bachelor’s degree required PE license required NY PE License strongly preferred 10-15 yrs experience Contact Nick Nichols 1-800-825-5452 ORGANIST & CHOIR DIRECTOR WANTED for Memorial African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church, in the Corn Hill Area. Immediate opening. Please Call 576-9675 Part-Time Retail Merchandiser needed to merchandise Hallmark products at various retail stores in the Rochester area. To apply, please visit: http://hallmark.candidatecare. com EOE Women/Minorities/ Disabled/Veterans
a mentor to the youth in our community! Email Haley Catalano at hcatalano@ulr.org to get started. MEALS ON WHEELS needs YOU to deliver meals to YOUR neighbors in need. Available weekdays between 11:30 AM and 1:00 PM? Visit our website at www.vnsnet.com or call 274-4385 to get started!
Now Hiring
Teacher of the Deaf and Hard of Hearing
SENECA PARK ZOO Society seeking volunteers and docents for ongoing involvement or special events. Roles available for all interests. Contact Volunteers@ senecazoo.org to learn more.
Career Training AIRLINE CAREERS begin here – Get started by training as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 800-725-1563 (AAN CAN)
Volunteers
CA BOCES is seeking a Teacher of the Deaf & Hard of Hearing to join their team! NYS Certification required. For details log on to: www.caboces.org
OUR TEACHERS ARE MISSION-DRIVEN
BECOME A DOCENT at the Rochester Museum & Science Center Must be an enthusiastic communicator, Like working with children. Learn more at http://www. rmsc.org/Support/Volunteer Or call 585-697-1948
The Rochester City School District is hiring NOW for the 2017-2018 school year in the following certification areas:
CARING FOR CAREGIVERS Lifespan is looking for volunteers to offer respite to caregivers whose loved ones have been diagnosed with early stage Alzheimer’s Disease. For details call Eve at 244-8400 CATHOLIC FAMILY CENTER is seeking a volunteer with graphic design experience to help with fliers and signage for multiple events this summer and fall. Flexible schedule. Please contact cgill@cfcrochester.org or call 262-7044. Contact Urban League Of Rochester today to become
EOE
• Bilingual Teachers
CA BOCES Has a vacancy for a Teacher of the Visually Impaired NYS Certification required.
• Reading Teachers • English Language Arts Teachers • Science Teachers – Biology and Earth Science
Apply online at: www.caboces.org EOE
• Foreign Language Teachers – Spanish • School Guidance Counselors
JOIN AN EXCITING TEAM
Strong Staffing, at The University of Rochester, is currently looking for experienced individuals to fill temporary positions in: • Clerical & Secretarial support (Medical & Administrative) Requires strong customer service & computer skills. Prefer typing speed of at least 45 wpm. • Patient Care Technicians, and Ambulatory Technicians Requires recent, related experience in a patient care setting. • Food Service & Environmental Service Workers for positions on campus, and at our Medical Center. • Skilled Trade workers with prior experience in commercial painting and carpentry. • Mail Couriers with prior experience, a clean driving record, and the ability to lift heavy bags of mail (possibly up to 50lbs) . Apply online at www.rochester.edu/jobopp Use a Keyword search for Strong Staffing and apply to the appropriate job posting. EOE Minorities/Females/Protected Veterans/Disabled
• Program Coordinator, Career Pathways to Public Safety and Security (Teacher) • Paraprofessionals • Bus Driver Subs • Custodial Assistant Subs
Every student by face and name. Every school, every classroom. To and through graduation.
• School Sentry Subs (Security License)
Interested candidates seeking employment for the 2017-2018 school year must complete the RCSD online application. For employment information, apply now at: www.rcsdk12.org RCSD is an equal opportunity employer regardless of race, creed, color, gender, age, religion, disabilities, national origin or veteran status.
34 CITY AUGUST 2 - 8, 2017
Adoption 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
Groups Forming DIAMONDNIQUE HOUSE OF RUTH. Female Branch of GUOOF (Oddfellows).Founder:
Peter Ogden, an English sailor, 1843, New York City. Looking for committed Ruthites. Inquire: Redemerald@hotmail. com “It’s Good to Belong to Something”
Jam Section CALLING ALL MUSICIANS OF ALL GENRES the Rochester Music Coalition wants you! Please register on our website. For further info: www. rochestermusiccoalition.org info@rochestermusiccoalition. org 585-235-8412
CONGA PLAYER - / percussionist, looking for work in J jazz, Afro Cuban Jazz or any other musical group. Peter 585820-0586 WORKING BAND SEEKS LEAD GUITAR. High-energy classic/garage rock & power pop. Stones, Who, Ramones, Television, Kinks, Nirvana, Easybeats, T. Rex, Velvets, originals. Jack 585-967-5807 @roscoesbasement
Mind Body
Legal Ads [ LEGAL NOTICE ] Go-to Guys Services, LLC. Arts of Org. filed with Sec. of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/3/17. Cty: Monroe. SSNY desig as agent upon whom process against may be served & shall mail process to US Corp Agents Inc 7014 13th Ave., Ste 202, Brooklyn NY 11228. General Purpose. [ LEGAL NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Mars Bev. LLC. Articles of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/20/17. Office location Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 21 Ericsson St., Rochester, NY 14610. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. [ NOTICE ] 1110 Stone Road LLC (LLC) filed Arts. of Org. with NY Secy. of State (SS) on June 1, 2017. LLC’s office is in Monroe Co. SS is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SS will mail a copy of any process to 1271 Ridge Rd West, Rochester, NY 14615. LLC’s purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] 1271 Ridge Road LLC (LLC) filed Arts. of Org. with NY Secy. of State (SS) on June 1, 2017. LLC’s office is in Monroe Co. SS is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SS will mail a copy of any process to 1271 Ridge Rd West, Rochester, NY 14615. LLC’s purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] 128 Otis LLC Arts of Org. filed SSNY 6/1/17. Office: Monroe Co. SSNY design agent of LLC upon whom process may be served & mail to Po Box
Scottsville, NY 14546. LLC’s purpose: any lawful activity.
[ NOTICE ]
[ NOTICE ]
53-55 Main, LLC, Arts of Org. filed with Sec. of State of NY (SSNY) 7/21/2017. Cty: Monroe. SSNY desig. as agent upon whom process against may be served & shall mail process to 5355 Main St., Brockport, NY 14420. General Purpose.
Blue Lilac Marketing Group Limited Liability Company Arts of Org. filed SSNY 5/24/17. Office: Monroe Co. SSNY design agent of LLC upon whom process may be served & mail to 16 Talbot Dr Penfield, NY 14526 General Purpose
831 Manitou Road, LLC, Arts of Org. filed with Sec. of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/29/17. Cty: Monroe. SSNY desig as agent upon whom process against may be served & shall mail process James N. Hushard, Jr., 831 Manitou Rd., Hilton, NY 14468. General Purpose. [ NOTICE ] 93 W 9 - 86 W 8 LLC Authority filed SSNY 7/12/17 Office: Monroe Co LLC formed OH 6/11/17 exists POB 15397 Columbus, OH 43215. SSNY design agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served & mail to POB 30071 Rochester, NY14603 Cert of Regis Filed OH SOS 180 E. Broad St #103 Columbus, OH 43215 General Purpose [ NOTICE ] Alevy-Ny LLC Arts of Org. filed SSNY 6/13/17. Office: Monroe Co. SSNY design agent of LLC upon whom process may be served & mail to POB 30071 Rochester, NY 14603 General Purpose [ NOTICE ] BGR HOPS LLC (LLC) filed Arts. of Org. with NY Secy. of State (SS) on 5/9/17. LLC’s office is in Monroe Co. SS is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SS will mail a copy of any process to 903 Scottsville-Chili Rd.,
MAKE THE CALL TO START GETTING CLEAN TODAY. Free 24/7 Helpline for alcohol & drug addiction treatment. Get help! It is time to take your life back! Call Now: 855-732-4139 (AAN CAN) STRUGGLING WITH DRUGS or ALCOHOL? Addicted to PILLS? Talk to someone who cares. Call The Addiction Hope & Help Line for a free assessment. 800-9786674 (AAN CAN)
To place your ad in the LEGAL section, contact Tracey Mykins by phone at (585) 244-3329 x10 or by email at legals@rochester-citynews.com
30071 Rochester, New York, 14603 General Purpose
[ NOTICE ]
Spirit
[ NOTICE ] Fast Cash Buys LLC Arts of Org. filed SSNY 5/30/17. Office: Monroe Co. SSNY design agent of LLC upon whom process may be served & mail to 38 Thorntree Cir Penfield, NY 14526 RA: NYSCorporation. com 1971 Western Ave #1121 Albany, NY 12203 General Purpose [ NOTICE ] Hushard’s Enterprises, LLC, Arts of Org. filed with Sec. of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/29/17. Cty: Monroe. SSNY desig as agent upon whom process against may be served & shall mail process James N. Hushard, Jr., 831 Manitou Rd., Hilton, NY 14468. General Purpose. [ NOTICE ] INNOVIA COLABS, LLC (LLC) filed Arts. of Org. with NY Secy. of State (SS) on 6/21/17. LLC’s office is in Monroe Co. SS is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SS will mail a copy of any process to 39 Oak Meadow Trail, Pittsford, NY 14534. LLC’s purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Irie Camp Jamaica, LLC Arts of Org. filed SSNY 5/30/17. Office: Monroe Co. SSNY design agent of LLC upon whom process may be served & mail to Lorraine Bryan 2 Hinkley Ln Gates, NY 14624 General Purpose
[ NOTICE ] J.E.M. PROPERTY RESTORATIONS LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 6/14/2017. Office in Monroe Co. SSNY desig. agent of LLC whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 27 Parkington Meadows, Rochester, NY 14625, which is also the principal business location. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. [ NOTICE ] Jc Craftsmanship LLC Arts of Org. filed SSNY 6/26/17. Office: Monroe Co. SSNY design agent of LLC upon whom process may be served & mail to 2 Calihan Pk Rochester, NY 14606 General Purpose [ NOTICE ] KDNY, LLC filed an Application for Authority with the Dept. of State of NY on 7/6/2017. Jurisdiction: TX; its organization date: 4/25/2006. Office location in NYS: Monroe County. The Secretary of the State of NY (“SSNY”) is designated as agent upon whom process against it may be served, the address to which the SSNY shall mail a copy of such process is: 324 Joshua Way, San Antonio, TX 78258. Address maintained in its jurisdiction is: 324 Joshua Way, San Antonio, TX 78258. The authorized officer in its jurisdiction of organization where a copy of its Certificate of Formation can be obtained is: Rolando B. Pablos, POB 13697, Austin, TX 78711. The purpose of the company is: any lawful act. [ NOTICE ] M-Squared Development Services LLC Arts of Org. filed SSNY 6/2/17. Office: Monroe Co. SSNY design agent of LLC upon whom process may be served & mail to 44 Pinewood Knoll Rochester, NY
14624 General Purpose [ NOTICE ] Miscellaneous No. 2059844 UNDER THE REGISTRATION OF TITLES LAW OFFICE OF TITLES P.O. BOX494 KINGSTON June 30, 2017 WHEREAS I have been satisfied by Statutory Declaration that the duplicate Certificate of Title for ALL THAT parcel of land part of BRIDGEWATER part of DISCOVERY HEIGHTS in the Parish of SAINT ANN being the Lot numbered TWENTYFOUR on the Plan of Discovery Heights deposited in the Office of Titles on the 7th day of July 1961 of the shape and dimensions and butting as appears by the Plan thereof hereunto annexed and being the land registered at Volume 1054 Folio 164 of the Register Book of Titles in the name of DOROTHY McLEAN - HAS BEEN LOST:I HEREBY GIVE NOTlCE that I intend at or after the expiration of fourteen days after the last appearance of this advertisement to DISPENSE with the production of the duplicate Certificate of Title and to endorse on the original Transmission No. 2059842 whereby BIBI HAMIL acquired the estate and interest of the above mentioned DOROTHY McLEAN and Transfer No. 2059843 from the above named BIBI HAMIL to JOELENE LATOYA GRIFFITH and BROD LEON GIBBS of all the land comprised in title Certificate of Title and thereafter cancel the said Certificate of Title and to register a new Certificate in duplicate in place thereof. L. Murray For Registrar of Titles
[ NOTICE ] Miscellaneous No. 2059846 UNDER TIIE REGISTRATION OF TITLES LAW OFFICE OF TITLES P.O. BOX494 June 30, 2017 WHEREAS I have been satisfied by Statutory Declaration that the duplicate Certificate of Title for ALL THAT parcel of land part of WHITE HALL and MEZGARS RUN part of FOUR MILES WOOD now called MEZGARS GARDENS in the parish of Saint THOMAS being the Lot numbered THREE HUNDRED AND FIFTEEN on the plan of part of White Hall and Mezgars Run now called Mezgar Garden aforesaid deposited in the Office of Titles on the 14th day of February, 1974 of the shape and dimensions and butting as appears by the said plan and being the land registered at Volume 1135 Folio 346 of the Register Book of Titles in the name of DOROTHY McLEAN HAS BEEN LOST:I HEREBY GIVE NOTICE that I intend at or after the expiration of fourteen days after the last appearance of this advertisement to DISPENSE with the production of the duplicate Certificate of Title and to endorse on the original Transmission No. 2059845 whereby BID! HAMlL acquired the estate and interest of the abovementioned DOROTHY McLEAN and Transfer No. 2068243 from the above named BIBI HAMIL to SHANIKE TAMARA DONNEGAN - BURKE and CHRISTOPHER CRAIG BURKE of all the land comprised in the Certificate of Title and thereafter cancel the said Certificate of Title and to register a new Certificate in duplicate in place thereof. L. Murray For Registrar of Titles [ NOTICE ]
Miscellaneous No. 2062663 UNDER TIIE REGISTRATION OF TITLES LAW OFFICE OF TITLES P.O. BOX494 June 28, 2017 WHEREAS I have been satisfied by Statutory Declaration that the duplicate Certificate of Title for ALL THAT parcel of land part of ROZELLE in the parish of SAINT THOMAS being the Lot numbered ONE on the plan of Rozelle aforesaid deposited in the Office of Titles on the 12th day of October, 1983 of the shape and dimensions and butting as appears by the Plan thereof hereunto annexed and being the land registered at Volume 1208 Folio 409 of the Register Book of Titles in the name of DOROTHY McLEAN -HAS BEEN LOST:I HEREBY GIVE NOTICE that I intend at or after the expiration of fourteen days after the last appearance of this advertisement to DISPENSE with the production of the duplicate Certificate of Title and to endorse on the original Transmission No. 2062661 whereby BIBI HAMrL acquired the estate and interest of the abovementioned DOROTHY McLEAN and Transfer No. 2062662 from the above named BIBI HAMIL to CIIURCII OF GOD OF PROPHECY OF JAMAICA of all the land comprised in the Certificate of Title and thereafter cancel the said Certificate of Title and to register a new Certificate in duplicate in place thereof. L. Murray For Registrar of Titles [ NOTICE ] MJkeys LLC Arts of Org. filed SSNY 6/15/17. Office: Monroe Co. SSNY design agent of LLC upon whom process may be served & mail to Legalinc Corporate Services Inc. 1967 Wehrle Dr #1086 Buffalo, NY 14221
General Purpose [ NOTICE ] Name of LLC: S4 Business Services, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with NY Dept. of State: 7/25/17. Office location: Monroe County. Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: The LLC, 115 Jewelberry Lane, Webster, NY 14580. Purpose: any lawful act. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Application for Authority of FreezeDry Foods LLC, filed with the New York Dept. of State on 06/01/17. The fictitious business name under which Freeze-Dry Foods LLC will do business in New York is Freeze Dry Foods of Wyoming, LLC. The jurisdiction of organization of the limited liability company is Wyoming. The date of organization is 04/18/17. The county within New York in which the principal office of the limited liability company is to be located is Orleans County. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent upon whom process against the limited liability company may be served; a copy of process shall be mailed to the address of the office maintained in the jurisdiction of formation at 148 S. Redmond Street, Jackson, Wyoming 83001. The limited liability company is in existence in Wyoming and a copy of its articles of organization is filed with the Wyoming Secretary of State. The address of the authorized officer is the Wyoming Secretary of State and is located at 2020 Carey Avenue, Suites 600 and 700 Cheyenne, WY 82002. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of LEGAL SUPREME
cont. on page 36 rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 35
Legal Ads > page 35 LLC . Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 3/3/2017. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC at 307 Meigs Street, Apt # 1, Roch, N.Y. 14607 . Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of 139 VASSAR STREET LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/5/2017. Office location, County of Monroe. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 100 Bluhm Rd., Fairport, NY 14450. Purpose: any lawful act. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of 149 CHERRY, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 06/28/17. Office location: Monroe County. Princ. office of LLC: 149 Cherry Rd., Rochester, NY 14624. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC at the addr. of its princ. office. Purpose: Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of ALEXANDRIA’S PROPERTIES, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/27/2006. Office location, County of Monroe. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 110 Fairview Rd., Scottsville, NY 14546. Purpose: any lawful act. [ NOTICE ]
Notice of Formation of AMAX Innovations LLC. Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) June 16, 2017. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC at 96 Woodgreen Drive Pittsford NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activities including leasing residential properties [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of ARIZONA AUTO TRIM, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 07/13/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to David Weems, 495 McCall Rd., Rochester, NY 14616. Purpose: Trim/Detail cars. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Bare Element Greece LLC. Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 02/01/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC at 1948 West Ridge Road, Rochester NY, 14626. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of BONHOEFFER ASSET MANAGEMENT L.P. Cert. of LP filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 06/19/17. Office location: Monroe County. Princ. office of LP: 1900 Empire Blvd., #252, Webster, NY 14580. Latest date on which the LP may dissolve is 12/31/2050. SSNY designated as agent of LP upon whom
To place your ad in the LEGAL section, contact Tracey Mykins by phone at (585) 244-3329 x10 or by email at legals@rochester-citynews.com process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Corporation Service Co., 80 State St., Albany, NY 122072543. Name and addr. of each general partner are available from SSNY. Purpose: Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of BONHOEFFER CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 06/08/17. Office location: Monroe County. Princ. office of LLC: 1900 Empire Blvd., #252, Webster, NY 14580. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Corporation Service Co., 80 State St., Albany, NY 12207, regd. agent upon whom and at which process may be served. Purpose: Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of BONHOEFFER FUND, L.P. Cert. of LP filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 06/20/17. Office location: Monroe County. Princ. office of LP: 1900 Empire Blvd., #252, Webster, NY 14580. Latest date on which the LP may dissolve is 12/31/2050. SSNY designated as agent of LP upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Corporation Service Co., 80 State St., Albany, NY 122072543. Name and addr. of each general partner are available from SSNY. Purpose: Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of BOSS DIESEL SERVICE, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 07/27/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of
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LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Corporation Service Co., 80 State St., Albany, NY 12207. Purpose: Any lawful activity [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Camp David at Sylvan Beach, LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 6/1/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 1483 East Ave., Rochester, NY 14610. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of CAVALIER PROPERTIES, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/14/2017. Office location, County of Monroe. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 1225 Drake Rd., Brockport, NY 1420. Purpose: any lawful act [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Clemenza’s Pizzeria of Lakeville, LLC, Art of Org filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) 07/12/2017. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 200 Hogan Point Road, Hilton, NY 14468. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of COOLIDGE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 06/08/17. Office location: Monroe County. Princ. office of LLC: 1900 Empire Blvd., #252, Webster, NY 14580. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Corporation Service Co., 80 State St., Albany, NY 12207, regd. agent upon whom and at which process may be served. Purpose: Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of CRLYN Foods, LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 6/27/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of
process to 2070 Lyell Ave., Rochester, NY 14606. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of DriveTime Auto, LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 5/25/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 20 Stone Rd., Rochester, NY 14616. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of DT Developers, LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 6/28/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 299 Jefferson Rd., Rochester, NY 14623. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of EDL Automotive, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 3/28/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Elton Lotta, 114 St. Mark Drive, Rochester, NY 14606. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Fullknot, LLC. Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) March 24, 2017. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC at 55 Alfonso Drive, Rochester, NY 14626 . Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of GARNSEY TECHNOLOGIES LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/20/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 408 Garnsey Road, Fairport, NY 14450. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of GATEWAY GS, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY
(SSNY) on 6/16/2017. Office location, County of Monroe. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 1890 S. Winton Rd., Ste. 100, Rochester, NY 14618. Purpose: any lawful act [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of GIRLS GONE GRUNT, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/7/2017. Office location, County of Monroe. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 6 Tallwood Dr., Hilton, NY 14468. Purpose: any lawful act [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Inkbleed LLC. Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 6/12/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC at 91 Kirkland Drive, Webster, NY 14580. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of LEICHT MARKETING, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/29/2017. Office location, County of Monroe. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 6800 Pittsford-Palmyra. #230, Fairport NY 14450. Purpose: any lawful act. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company Notice is hereby given that Lakewood Home Improvement, LLC, a limited liability company, filed Articles of Organization with the Secretary of State on June 28, 2017. The principal office is in the Town of Livonia, Livingston County, State of New York and the Secretary of State was designated as agent upon whom process against it may be served. The address to which the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of process is: Lakewood Home Improvement, LLC, 38 Old Meadow Ct. Livonia, NY 14487. The purpose of the company is to engage in any lawful activity for
which a company may be organized under �203 of the Limited Liability Company Law. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company Notice is hereby given that Lakewood Home Management, LLC, a limited liability company, filed Articles of Organization with the Secretary of State on April 21, 2017. The principal office is in the Rochester NY, Monroe County, State of New York and the Secretary of State was designated as agent upon whom process against it may be served. The address to which the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of process is: Lakewood Home Improvement, LLC, 119 Chili Avenue, Rochester NY 14611. The purpose of the company is to engage in any lawful activity for which a company may be organized under �203 of the Limited Liability Company Law. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of LMAO Enterprises, LLC, Art of Org filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) 06/23/2017. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 3501 Union Street, N. Chili, NY 14514. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of Lookfortech LLC. The Articles of Organization filed with the NY Dept of State on 5/19/17 LLC location: Monroe County. The NY Sec. of State has been designated as the agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. NYSS shall mail a copy of process to 31 Caitlin Tr., West Henrietta, NY 14586. Purpose: Any lawful business. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Masterblader LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 05/24/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Scott Moriarity, 13 B Marple Ln, Hilton, NY 14468, also the registered agent upon whom process may be served. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of
MC Hilltop Apartments LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 6/22/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 1080 Pittsford Victor Rd., Ste. 100, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of MC Milpine Apartments LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 6/22/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 1080 Pittsford Victor Rd., Ste. 100, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of MC MSH Realty LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 7/5/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 1080 Pittsford Victor Rd., Ste. 100, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of MC Springlake Apartments LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 6/22/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 1080 Pittsford Victor Rd., Ste. 100, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of MCCUE MANAGEMENT LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 07/03/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 131 Gregory St., Rochester, NY 14620. The regd. agent of the company upon whom and at which process against the company can be served is Thomas McCue, 131 Gregory St., Rochester, NY 14620. Purpose: Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ]
Legal Ads Notice of Formation of MCR Real Property LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 6/22/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 1080 Pittsford Victor Rd., Ste. 100, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Morgan 155 East Main LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 6/13/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 1080 Pittsford Victor Rd., Ste. 100, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Morgan 4181 Veterans Drive Holdings LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 6/27/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 1080 Pittsford Victor Rd., Ste. 100, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Morgan Stratford Management LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 6/15/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 1080 Pittsford Victor Rd., Ste. 100, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Morgan Stratford Realty LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 6/15/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 1080 Pittsford Victor Rd., Ste. 100, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of My Way Property Management of Rochester, LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 6/29/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon
To place your ad in the LEGAL section, contact Tracey Mykins by phone at (585) 244-3329 x10 or by email at legals@rochester-citynews.com
whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 43 Clearbrook Dr., Rochester, NY 14609. Purpose: any lawful activities.
to the LLC at Wedgepoint CTR, 390 South Avenue Suite C Rochester, NY 14620. Purpose: any lawful activities.
[ NOTICE ]
Notice of formation of RIKA Development LLC, Articles of Org. filed with Secretary of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/16/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against it may be served, SSNY shall mail service of process to: 22 Ryder Cup Circle, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: Any lawful purpose.
Notice of Formation of Naturally Kissed by LaTosha , LLC. Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 4/5/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to C/O United States Corporation Agents, Inc. 7014 13th Ave. Suite 202, Brooklyn, NY 11228. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of New York All Star Booster Inc. Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 04/3/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC at 39 Williams St.,Batavia, NY 14020 . Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Owens Road Self Storage LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 6/8/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 460 White Spruce Blvd., Rochester, NY 14623. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of PLANET HOME AQUISITIONS, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 07/13/17. Office location: Monroe County. Princ. office of LLC: 6 Bainbridge Ln., Webster, NY 14580. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Joseph M. Shur, Relin Goldstein & Crane LLP, 28 E. Main St., Ste. 1800, Rochester, NY 14614. Purpose: Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of PLEX Theater Productions LLC. Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 4/13/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process
[ NOTICE ]
[ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of RocBucha, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/11/2017. Office location, County of Monroe. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 305 Hollywood Ave., Rochester, NY 14618. Purpose: any lawful act [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of SIAM CAPITAL LLC Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/30/2017. Office location, County of Monroe. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: P.O. Box 823, Pittsford NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful act. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Skyward Revenue, LLC. Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 05/01/2017. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC at 35 Hawley Dr, Webster, NY 14580. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Statement Boutique LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State (SSNY) 06/09/2017. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The LLC, 168 Strathmore Lane, Rochester, NY 14609. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of SWC 5 LLC, Art. of Org. filed with Sec’y of
State (SSNY) on 7/6/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 6 Hedge Wood Ln., Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activities.
County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 240 Chelmsford Rd., Rochester, NY 14618. Purpose: any lawful activity.
[ NOTICE ]
Notice of FormationAshford Dance Company LLC. Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) on 07/10/17. Office: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC, Attn: Caitlyn Culotta, 376 Goodman Street N, Rochester NY, 14607. Purpose: Any lawful purpose.
Notice of Formation of Tackling Group LLC. Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) November 10, 2016. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC at 76 Valley St, Rochester NY 14612 . Purpose: any lawful activities [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of The Lash and Brow Company LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the NY Secretary of State (“SOS”) on 7/5/17. The office of the LLC is in Monroe County. The SOS is designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The SOS shall mail a copy of such process to 888 Long Pond Road, Rochester, NY 14626. The LLC is formed to engage in any lawful activity for which an LLC may be formed under the NY LLC law. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of TVSherpa LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/28/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o The LLC, 5 Travis Grove, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Visionary Content, LLC. Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) on June 6th, 2017. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC at 54 University Avenue #5 Rochester, NY 14605. Purpose: Consulting, freelance writing, grant writing, capital funding, and business formation services. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Zaffuts Consulting, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/28/2017. Office location: Monroe
[ NOTICE ]
[ NOTICE ] Notice of FormationThe Mindful Leader LLC filed with SSNY on 24 April 2017 Office: Monroe Cty. SSNY designated as agent for Process and shall mail to: 40 Lakeview Park Rochester, N.Y. 14613. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION being held at Chester’s Self Storage 600 W Broad St. Rochester NY 14608 on Wednesday August 9th at 1:00 pm. The following customers’ accounts have become delinquent so their item (s) will be auctioned off to settle past due rents. NOTE: Owner reserves the right to bid at auction, reject any and all bids, and cancel or adjourn the sale. Name of tenant: Unit 3 Camesha Lowry owes $228, Unit 61 Robert Donaldson owes $192, Unit 69 Walter Morse owes $308.00,Unit 45 Virginia Goins owes $174, Unit 19 Caroline McIver owes $348 [ NOTICE ] Notice of Qualification of Ciber Global, LLC. App. for Auth. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/5/17. Office location: Monroe County. LLC formed in Michigan (MI) on 5/15/17. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Cogency Global Inc., 10 E. 40th St., 10th Fl., NY, NY 10016. MI address of LLC: 3270 West Big Beaver Road, Troy, MI 48084. Arts. of Org. filed with MI Director of Corporations, 2501 Woodlake Circle, 1st Fl., Okemos, MI 48864. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ]
Notice of Qualification of EX2 TECHNOLOGY LLC Appl. for Auth. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 07/25/17. Office location: Monroe County. LLC formed in Nebraska (NE) on 08/25/14. Princ. office and NE addr. of LLC is: 1044 N. 115th St., Ste. 200, Omaha, NE 65154. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to c/o Corporation Service Co., 80 State St., Albany, NY 12207-2543. Cert. of Form. filed with Secy. of State, State Capitol Bldg., Rm. 1301, Omaha, NE 68509. Purpose: Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Qualification of HARRIS INSIGHTS AND ANALYTICS LLC Appl. for Auth. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 02/28/17. Office location: Monroe County. LLC formed in Delaware (DE) on 12/21/16. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to c/o Corporation Service Co. (CSC), 80 State St., Albany, NY 12207-2543. DE addr. of LLC: c/o CSC, 2711 Centerville Rd., Ste. 400, Wilmington, DE 19808. Cert. of Form. filed with Secy. of State, Div. of Corps., John G. Townsend Bldg., 401 Federal St. - Ste. 4, Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Qualification of THE ENGLISHSPEAKING UNION OF THE UNITED STATES ROCHESTER BRANCH, LLC Appl. for Auth. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 06/27/17. Office location: Monroe County. LLC formed in Delaware (DE) on 03/16/17. Princ. office of LLC: c/o The EnglishSpeaking Union of the United States, 144 E. 39th St., NY, NY 10016. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC at the addr. of its princ. office. DE addr. of LLC: c/o Corporation Service Co., 2711 Centerville Rd., Ste. 400, Wilmington, DE 19808. Cert. of Form. filed with DE Secy. of State, Div. of Corps., John G. Townsend Bldg., 401 Federal St. - Ste. 4, Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] ROCHESTER AREA MUSIC PROJECT LLC
(LLC) filed Arts. of Org. with NY Secy. of State (SS) on 6/15/17. LLC’s office is in Monroe Co. SS is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SS shall mail a copy of any process to LLC’s principal business location at 31 W. Church St., Fairport, NY 14450, Attn: Member. LLC’s purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Roxal LLC (LLC) filed Arts. of Org. with NY Secy. of State (SS) on 6/6/2017. LLC’s office is in Monroe County. SS is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SS shall mail a copy of any process to LLC’s principal business location at 2401 Monroe Avenue, Rochester, NY 14618. LLC’s purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Scientics, LLC (LLC) filed Arts. of Org. with NY Secy. of State (SS) on 7/19/17. LLC’s office is in Monroe Co. SS is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SS will mail a copy of any process to 225 Mccall Rd., Rochester, NY 14616. LLC’s purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] SHADESTONE PROPERTIES LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 7/19/2017. Office in Monroe Co. SSNY desig. agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 137 Park Circle East, Rochester, NY 14623, which is also the principal business location. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. [ NOTICE ]
DESCRIBED IN THIS COMPLAINT, ADVERSE TO THE PLAINTIFF, WHETHER SUCH CLAIM OR POSSIBLE CLAIM BE VESTED OR CONTINGENT SUPERIOR COURT J.D. MIDDLESEX AT MIDDLETOWN JUNE 7, 2017 NOTICE TO: ANTHONY A. MASON, IF LIVING OR IF NOT LIVING, THE WIDOW, HEIRS, BENEFICIARIES, REPRESENTATIVES AND CREDITORS OF THE ESTATE OF ANTHONY A. MASON, AND ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS, CLAIMING OR WHO MAY CLAIM ANY RIGHTS, TITLE, INTEREST OR ESTATE IN OR LIEN OR ENCUMBRANCE UPON THE REAL PROPERTY DESCRIBED IN THIS COMPLAINT, ADVERSE TO THE PLAINTIFF, WHETHER SUCH CLAIM OR POSSIBLE CLAIM BE VESTED OR CONTINGENT. The Plaintiff has named The Widow, Heirs, Beneficiaries, Representatives and Creditors of the Estate of Anthony A. Mason, and All Unknown Persons, Claiming or Who May Claim Any Rights, Title, Interest or Estate in or Lien or Encumbrance Upon the Real Property Described in Its Complaint, Adverse to the Plaintiff, Whether Such Claim or Possible Claim be Vested or Contingent, as parties defendant in the complaint which it has brought to the above named court seeking a foreclosure of its lien upon premises known as Unit 617, Week 39 at Water’s Edge Resort, Westbrook, Connecticut 06498.
STATE OF CONNECTICUT
The Plaintiff represents to the court, by means of an affidavit annexed RETURN DATE: August to the Motion for Order 22, 2017 of Notice, and in its complaint, that despite WATER’S EDGE all reasonable efforts VACATION OWNERSHIP to ascertain such ASSOCIATION, INC. information, it has been unable to determine VS the current identity and residence of Anthony ANTHONY A. MASON, A. Mason or his Widow, IF LIVING, OR IF Heirs, Beneficiaries, NOT LIVING HIS Representatives and WIDOW, HEIRS, Creditors of the Estate of REPRESENTATIVES Anthony A. Mason, and AND/OR CREDITORS All Unknown Persons, OF THE ESTATE OF Claiming or Who May ANTHONY A. MASON Claim Any Rights, Title, AND ALL UNKNOWN Interest or Estate in or PERSONS, CLAIMING Lien or Encumbrance OR WHO MAY CLAIM upon the Real Property ANY RIGHTS, TITLE, Described in This INTEREST OR ESTATE Complaint, Adverse to the IN OR LIEN, OR Plaintiff, Whether Such ENCUMBRANCE UPON Claim or Possible Claim REAL PROPERTY cont. on page 38
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Legal Ads > page 37 be Vested or Contingent. Now, therefore, it is hereby ordered under C.G.S. Section 52-69 that notice of the institution of this action be given to each such defendant by some proper officer causing a true and attested copy of this order be published in the Rochester City Newspaper, a weekly newspaper published in Rochester, New York and circulated in Rochester, New York, once a week for 2 successive weeks, commencing on or before August 3, 2017 and that return of service be made to the Court on or before the second day following August 22, 2017, the return date. Judge Aurigemma, J. Superior Court Judicial District of Middlesex [ NOTICE ] Susquehanna Communications, LLC Arts of Org. filed SSNY 6/27/17. Office: Monroe Co. SSNY design agent of LLC upon whom process may be served & mail to Brian Mcglynn 7 Random Woods Pittsford, NY 14534 General Purpose [ NOTICE ] TIGER BUSINESS SERVICES, LLC Authority filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/23/16. Office location: Monroe Co. LLC formed in Virginia (VA) on 5/5/16. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Corporate Creations Network, Inc. 15 N Mill ST Nyack, NY 10960. VA address of LLC: 1716 Corporate Landing Pkwy Virginia Beach, VA 23454. Arts. Of Org. filed with VA Secy. of State, P.O. Box 1197, Richmond, VA 23218. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Time to Grow Enterprises, LLC, Arts of Org. filed with Sec. of State of NY (SSNY) 7/20/2017. Cty: Monroe. SSNY desig. as agent upon whom process against may be served & shall mail process to 47 Red Bud Rd., Rochester, NY 14624. General Purpose. [ NOTICE ] TWO AMIGOS 449 LLC (LLC) filed Arts. of Org. with NY Secy. of State (SS) on 7/3/17. LLC’s office is in Monroe Co. SS is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may
be served. SS shall mail a copy of any process to LLC’s principal business location at 425 Stone Rd., Pittsford, NY 14534. LLC’s purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Uttara Light LLC, Arts of Org. filed with Sec. of State of NY (SSNY) on 3/20/2017. Cty: Monroe. SSNY desig as agent upon whom process against may be served & shall mail process 18 Cedarwood Circle, Pittsford, NY 14534. General Purpose. [ NOTICE ] Verto Associates II, LLC, Arts of Org. filed with Sec. of State of NY (SSNY) 7/17/2017. Cty: Monroe. SSNY desig. as agent upon whom process against may be served & shall mail process to 21 Warwick Dr., Fairport, NY 14450. General Purpose. [ NOTICE ] VISUAL MARKETING IDEAS LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 06/15/17. Latest date to dissolve: 12/31/2100. Office: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC, c/o Robert Rose, 5 Creekside Drive, Honeoye Falls, NY 14472. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. [ NOTICE ] WHOLESALE PROPERTY STORE LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 07/11/17 Office in Monroe Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to The LLC 233 Leonard Rd Rochester, NY 14616. Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Wren’s Nest Nursery, LLC Arts of Org. filed SSNY 5/19/17. Office: Monroe Co. SSNY design agent of LLC upon whom process may be served & mail to 90 State St #70040 Albany, NY 12207 RA: Amy Jeary 240 San Gabriel Dr Rochester, NY 14610 General Purpose [ NOTICE OF FORMATION ] LC MILLER SERVICES LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 7/5/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served, SSNY shall mail process to LC MILLER SERVICES LLC, 129 Stafford Way,
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To place your ad in the LEGAL section, contact Tracey Mykins by phone at (585) 244-3329 x10 or by email at legals@rochester-citynews.com Rochester, NY 14626 General Purpose. [ NOTICE OF FORMATION ] Mariano Property Services LLC filed Articles of Organization with the New York Department of State on June 14, 2017. Its office is located in Monroe County. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent of the Company upon whom process against it may be served and a copy of any process shall be mailed to 19 Copper Woods, Pittsford, NY 14534. The purpose of the Company is property investments. [ Notice of Formation ] Name: ELI ESTATE JEWELERS LLC. Arts. Of Org. filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 06/06/2017. Office Location: Monroe County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: c/o ELI ESTATE JEWELERS LLC, 1492 Monroe Avenue, Rochester, New York 14618. Purpose: Any Lawful Purpose. [ NOTICE OF FORMATION ] Name: SYLVAN SEARCH PARTNERS LLC. Arts. Of Org. filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 06/13/2017. Office Location: Monroe County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: c/o SYLVAN SEARCH PARTNERS LLC, 57 Deer Creek Road, Pittsford, New York 14534. Purpose: Any Lawful Purpose. [ NOTICE OF FORMATION ] Notice of Formation of Cline’s Tile & Stone, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on June 13, 2017. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to principal business location: The LLC, 77 Bradford Road, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activity [ Notice of Formation ] Pittsford Place, LLC (the “LLC”) filed a Certificate of Conversion with the NY Dept. of State on 6/22/17. Office location: Monroe County.
The NY Secretary of State is designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served and is directed to forward service of process to 1001 Lexington Avenue, Rochester, NY 14606. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ Notice of Formation ] Rochester Sports Chiropractic, PLLC (“PLLC”) filed Articles of Organization with the NY Sec. of State (“SSNY”) on 6/22/17. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY is designated as agent of PLLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall forward service of process to 12 Summit Oaks, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: to practice the profession of chiropractic. [ Notice of Formation of 1092 MH, LLC ] Arts. Of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on June 29, 2017. Office location: Monroe Co., NY. Princ. Office of LLC: 1142 Mt. Hope Avenue, Rochester, NY 14620. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Princ. Office of LLC. Purpose: Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ] The name of the Limited Liability Company (LLC) is Village Square Management, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (“SSNY”) on June 23, 2017. Office location is Monroe County, New York. The SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to the LLC at 286 Gillett Road, Spencerport, NY 14559. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LA TASSE A THE, LLC ] LA TASSE A THE, LLC (the “LLC”) filed Articles of Organization with NY Secretary of State (SSNY) 7/20/17. Office location: Monroe County, NY. Principal business location: 49 East Park Road, Pittsford, NY 14534. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 49 East Park Road, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: Any lawful activity.
[ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LLC ] MAD Coast Clothing, LLC has filed articles of organization with the New York Secretary of State on July 24, 2017, with an effective date of formation of July 24, 2017. Its principal place of business is located in Monroe County. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent upon whom process may be served. A copy of any process shall be mailed to The LLC, 793 Laurelton Rd., Rochester, NY 14609. The purpose of the LLC is to engage in any lawful activity for which Limited Liability Companies may be organized under Section 203 of the New York Limited Liability Company Law. [ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LLC ] Oriskany Blvd Properties, LLC has filed articles of organization with the New York Secretary of State on May 24, 2017, with an effective date of formation of May 24, 2017. Its principal place of business is located in Monroe County. The Secretary of State has been designated as agent upon whom process may be served. A copy of any process shall be mailed to c/o Dunn, Pedro & Butler CPA’s, 2024 W. Henrietta Rd., Rochester, NY 14623. The purpose of the LLC is to engage in any lawful activity for which Limited Liability Companies may be organized under Section 203 of the New York Limited Liability Company Law. [ NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ] NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a public hearing pursuant to Article 18-A of the New York State General Municipal Law will be held by the County of Monroe Industrial Development Agency d/b/a Imagine Monroe Powered By COMIDA (the “Agency”) on the 14th day of August, 2017 at 10:00 a.m., local time, in the Conference Room at the Gates Town Hall, 1605 Buffalo Road, Rochester, New York 14624, in connection with the following matter: TECH PARK OWNER LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, or an entity formed or to be formed (collectively, the “Company”) has requested that the Agency assist with a certain Project (the
“Project”), consisting of: (A) the acquisition or retention of a leasehold interest in certain land known as 336 Initiative Drive, located in the Rochester Tech Park in the Town of Gates, New York [Tax Map No.: Part of 118.111-71] (the “Land”); (B) (i) the construction of approximately 150,000 square feet of office, training and laboratory space on the second floor of Building 5, (ii) the construction of approximately 22,000 square feet of testing and laboratory space in the basement of Building 5, and (iii) the construction of approximately 80,000 square feet of manufacturing, laboratory and warehousing space on the first floor of Building 2 (collectively, the “Improvements”), and (C) the acquisition and installation therein, thereon or thereabout of certain machinery, equipment and related personal property (the “Equipment” and, together with the Land and the Improvements, the “Facility”), to be subleased to Kodak Alaris Inc. for use in its business as a global technology company. The Facility will be initially operated and/or managed by the Company. The Agency will acquire a leasehold interest in the Facility and lease the Facility back to the Company. The Company will operate the Facility during the term of the lease. At the end of the lease term the Agency’s leasehold interest will be terminated. The Agency contemplates that it will provide financial assistance (the “Financial Assistance”) to the Company in the form of sales and use tax exemptions and a mortgage recording tax exemption, consistent with the policies of the Agency, and a partial real property tax abatement. The Agency will, at the above-stated time and place, present a copy of the Company’s Application (including the Benefit/Incentive analysis) and hear all persons with views in favor of or opposed to either the location or nature of the Facility, or the proposed financial assistance being contemplated by the Agency. In addition, at, or prior to, such hearing, interested parties may submit to the Agency written materials pertaining to such matters. Dated: August 3, 2017 COUNTY OF
MONROE INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AGENCY D/B/A IMAGINE MONROE POWERED BY COMIDA By: Jeffrey R. Adair, Executive Director [ NOTICE OF PUBLICATION ] Notice is hereby given that license number 3159422 for beer, wine, and liquor has been applied for by the undersigned to sell beer, wine, and liquor at retail in a hotel under the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law at 911 Brooks Avenue, Rochester, County of Monroe for on premises consumption. F.M. Butt Hotels Corp. d/b/a Ramada Plaza Rochester Airport and d/b/a Wheels Up Tavern F.M. Butt Hotels Corp. d/b/a Ramada Plaza Rochester Airport and d/b/a Wheels Up Tavern [ SUPPLEMENTAL SUMMONS ] STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF MONROE Index No. 2016-013494 WELLS FARGO BANK, NA, Plaintiff, v.DOROTHY M. COOPER, J.A.C., A MINOR, ANY UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVISEES, DISTRIBUTEES OR SUCCESSORS IN INTEREST OF THE LATE MICHAEL F. COOPER, IF LIVING, AND IF ANY BE DEAD, ANY AND ALL PERSONS WHO ARE SPOUSES, WIDOWS, GRANTEES, MORTGAGEES, LIENORS, HEIRS, DEVISEES, DISTRIBUTEES, EXECUTORS, ADMINISTRATORS OR SUCCESSORS IN INTEREST OF SUCH OF THEM AS MAY BE DEAD, AND THEIR SPOUSES, HEIRS, DEVISEES, DISTRIBUTEES AND SUCCESSORS IN INTEREST, ALL OF WHOM AND WHOSE NAMES AND PLACES OF RESIDENCE ARE UNKNOWN TO PLAINTIFF, NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE, THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, CREDIT ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION, THE SUMMIT FEDERAL CREDIT UNION, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, 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 attorneys within thirty days after the service of this summons, exclusive of the day of service, 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 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. This is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. The foregoing summons is served upon you by publication pursuant to an order of Honorable Daniel J. Doyle, Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, signed the 27th day of June,2017, at Rochester, New York. Tax I.D. No. 139.70-1-8 ALL that tract or parcel of land, situate in the Town and Village of East Rochester, County of Monroe and State of New York, known and distinguished as Lot No. 12 in Block 27, as the same are shown on a map of the lands of Vanderbilt Improvement Co. on file in Monroe County Clerk’s Office in Liber 10 Maps, page 35. Subject to easements, covenants, and restriction of record. These premises are also known as 318 Garfield Avenue, East Rochester, NY 14445. WOODS OVIATT GILMAN LLC Attorneys for Plaintiff 700 Crossroads Building 2 State Street Rochester, NY 14614
Fun [ NEWS OF THE WEIRD ] from the Editors at Andrews McMeel
Animal Attraction
Good fortune quickly turned to horror for a man in Allyn, Washington, who scored some raccoon roadkill to use as crab-trap bait on June 25. As the unidentified man walked toward home dragging the carcass behind him on a 15-foot rope (so he couldn’t smell it), two different vehicles stopped, and their occupants, mistakenly thinking he was dragging a dead dog, began berating the would-be fisherman. As the dispute heated up, someone produced a gun, shooting the man twice in the leg before he was struck by one of the vehicles as the assailants fled.
Bright Ideas
In New Hampshire on June 29, a state police officer stopped the 57-year-old driver of a Honda Odyssey minivan who had piled a Beverly Hillbillies-esque stack of belongings on top of his car. The collection, which was about as tall as the minivan, included a wooden chest, a bike, a floor lamp, a rake, a snow shovel, a moving dolly, and a folding ladder, along with blankets and towels and a shopping cart full of items hanging off the back. Police cited the driver for negligent driving, and the car was towed away.
Sorry I Missed It
A Canada Day parade in southern Ontario sparked a flood of typically mild protests over Dave Szusz’s float, which featured a 3-meter-tall blow-up Jesus (holding a baby sheep) and several real sheep. “I thought it was kind of sad to see sheep out with very loud blasting music, out in the heat in the city,” said animal rights activist Dan MacDonald. Others flooded Szusz with complaints on Facebook. Szusz
and MacDonald have since talked it out, although MacDonald still hopes Szusz will discontinue using sheep on his floats.
Least Competent Criminals
Six suspects in a June 25 Denver mugging counted among their spoils the victim’s brand-new iPhone. After using Ryan Coupens’ credit cards at a nearby Walgreens, the thieves used the phone to post a Snapchat story about their shenanigans to Coupens’ account, where his friends — and police — could clearly see some of their faces. A repeat offender came to the end of his career when he and an accomplice tried to burglarize a home in East Macon, Georgia, on June 19. As James Robert Young, 41, a 35-time resident in the Bibb County jail, and another man zeroed in on her television, the homeowner woke up and heard them. “When she yelled, the men ran out,” said Sheriff David Davis, and that was when the other suspect turned around and fired his weapon, striking Young in the head, killing him. The accomplice is still at large.
Family Values
Flower girls at weddings often steal the show, and Georgiana Arlt of Chaska, Minnesota, was no exception as she walked down the aisle on July 1. The 92-year-old grandmother of the bride, Abby Arlt, told her granddaughter the only other wedding she had been in was her own, when she was 20 years old. Abby had hoped to have her grandfather as the ring bearer, but he passed away last year.
[ LAST WEEK’S SOLUTION ON PAGE 34 ]
[ LOVESCOPE ] BY EUGENIA LAST ARIES (March 21-April 19): If you participate in activities that challenge you physically and events flavored with the beliefs and opinions you stand by, you will attract individuals who hold the same moral values and life goals as you. Discuss your thoughts openly, and someone who wants to collaborate with you will step up. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Disagreeing will not help you find somebody to love. Rely on your Taurus charm, not the raging bull inside of you at meetand-greet functions. Once you capture someone’s undivided attention and the chemistry starts to build, you can reveal your set goals and lifestyle.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): What you do, not what you say, will have the biggest impact on someone you are trying to attract. Take action and do your best to bring about change that will add to your popularity. Step into the spotlight, and you will entice the person you desire. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Project the image you want others to see with clarity and vision, and you will attract someone unusual, inviting and eager to find out more about your past and present, as well as your intentions and plans for the future.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Possessive characters will show interest in you. Proceed with caution or you may end up with someone who sets boundaries and limits what you can and cannot do. At the first sign of control issues, back away before it’s too late. Freedom and trust go hand-in-hand. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Keep an open mind when discussing matters you feel passionate about. Being flexible but intelligent about your opinions and choices will attract someone as pragmatic and forgiving as you are. Love is in the stars, and common sense and intuition will help you choose the right partner.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Go out have fun; don’t worry about whether you are single or not. Live in the moment and enjoy what life has to offer. Having the freedom to come and go as you please is a better option than being manipulated by someone who wants to control you. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Your mysterious ways will make others gravitate toward you. Don’t feel the need to share too much information. Find out whom you are dealing with before you share personal information. Be the questioner, not the one being grilled about your likes, dislikes, past and future intentions.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You are best to slow down and hold off trying to settle down too quickly. You may be mesmerized by someone’s playful, flirtatious ways, but once the chase is over, it’s not likely you’ll feel the same urgency to make a long-lasting commitment. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You’ll be thinking too big and wanting too much when it comes to love and romance. Give whomever it is you are pursuing a chance to make up his or her mind. Equality within any partnership you form will have a much better chance of survival.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Your desire to be a part of a team will push you to make a commitment with someone you find intriguing and who is able to keep up and match you every step of the way. Begin an experiment with someone you want to have a life experience with. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Your uniqueness will capture someone’s attention. Express your thoughts and share your feelings, and you’ll be offered not only interest but the desire that someone has to form a cozy future with you. Don’t question why or let your insecurities lead to misplaced energy. Choose affection over conflict.
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