September 3-9, 2014 - City Newspaper

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Climate marchers assemble! ACTIVISM, PAGE 5

John Haldoupis takes his bow. THEATER, PAGE 18

Labor Film Series at 25 FILM, PAGE 30

VOTE NOW in the Best of Rochester 2014 primary! BEST OF, PAGE 21

PINNING DOWN

PROSTATE CANCER Local men share their battles and their confusion over recent research HEALTH, PAGE 6

SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014 • FREE • GREATER ROCHESTER’S ALTERNATIVE NEWSWEEKLY • VOL 43 NO 52 • NEWS. MUSIC. LIFE.


Feedback We welcome your comments. Send them to themail@rochester-citynews. 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.

Beauty’s eroding in Corbett’s Glen

As a child I played in Corbett’s Glen. As an adult I worked to help it become a public park. Now, 15 years later, I see heartbreakingly rapid soil erosion. Why? The park is a popular place for dogs and free swimming. People and unleashed dogs climb up and down the banks, to and from the water. No doubt some of the people coming to the glen are true nature lovers, yet bottles, food wrappers, and bags of dog excrement are left by careless, thoughtless park visitors. I still live on Glen Road. To keep the area around our homes attractive, nine mornings out of ten trash must be picked up on the street. With poorly maintained and badly faded parking signs and confusing, outdated, and poorly enforced parking regulations, illegal parking is rampant on our once quiet country road. This, too, is disheartening. It looks as though no one cares about Glen Road. My family, my neighbors, and I were all enthusiastic workers in the long effort to help Corbett’s Glen become a Town of Brighton nature park. I wish we had understood then the many ways in which the natural beauty of the glen would be impacted. ELLEN BEERS ADAMS

Ferguson’s just tip of the iceberg

In response to “The Ferguson Warning” (Urban Journal): The six-minute cellphone video of the August 19 police shooting in St. Louis, along with the running monologue by the videographer and the hundreds of subsequent viewer comments, should win a prize for Hip Pocket Photojournalism. The video, apparently intended to simply capture the 2 CITY

SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014

aimless wandering of Kajieme Powell, ultimately captures the before, during, and after of his deadly shooting by two white St. Louis cops. The 90 seconds of video preceding the shooting suggests that Powell has mental health or intoxication issues. He’s big; if he punched you, you’d go down. But he appears, in his state, virtually harmless. One viewer commented (I paraphrase), “How were the police supposed to know that?” Another viewer responded, “Maybe if they’d waited longer than 13 seconds before shooting him they might have figured it out.” The cops shoot him seven times. As he’s lying on the sidewalk one cop shoots him two more times. They then turn his lifeless body face down and cuff him. In her Urban Journal written after the similar, earlier shooting in Ferguson, Missouri, Mary Anna Towler wondered about progress made between blacks and whites in the 50 years since the Rochester riots. She might have asked about progress since the Emancipation. Or in the 400 years since we began herding blacks here from Africa like farm animals. Or in the 2000 years since the phenomenon of Christ. For many of those years, the Bible was the de facto operating manual for Christians. Whether or not one believed the Holy Bible, it was the guideline. American Indians were not mentioned in the Bible, nor blacks to any degree. That’s why when the Spaniards first landed here, they hit the ground raping and murdering. These darkerskinned folks weren’t in the Bible; therefore the Europeans had the right to define their position in life. We’ve faithfully passed the figurative torch, however subtly, for two millennia. The St. Louis cops may not have been well-enough trained in anger management, risk assessment, or mental health issues, but if Kajieme Powell were white, he’d surely be alive. The shooting is the tip of an iceberg, a three-second window into too many years of inert human social evolution. We put cops on the street, DA’s in office, and judges on the bench. Competent or not,

Southern or Northern, they’re our representatives. We’re supposed to be the highest form of life, yet it is we who have stalled evolution. “We,” being you, me, and those who represent us. RICH GARDNER

Our endorsement of Teachout

Or how about Cuomo dodging home improvement permits so that his assessment wouldn’t go up? The guy truly believes he’s above the law. I hope the US Attorney puts him in handcuffs. Shame on NY Democrats if Cuomo wins the primary. J

“If Democrats don’t lead the fight on issues like corruption, campaign finance reform, equitable taxation, wealth disparity, and aid to cities, who will?” The answer to this question is Howie Hawkins and the Green Party. TOM JANOWSKI

The sky is falling! The sky is falling! Oh wait, that’s rain. It comes and goes. That is the nature of the editorial comment of this paper. Politics is a roughand-tumble business. If you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen. People want results. Albany has been full of excuses for decades. I don’t like Cuomo’s methods and I despise him personally. What most people will care about is four on-time budgets, universal pre-K, the right to marry your partner of the same-sex and a slowly (MUCH too slowly) strengthening economy. That is why people will re-elect Cuomo. Of course he hasn’t laid out a vision for four more years. But neither has Astorino. All he’s done is yipped at Cuomo’s heels like the annoying little terrier he is. If the New York Republican Committee was serious about electing him, they would put more money in the race. They’re too busy struggling to retain their tentative toehold in the state Senate, courtesy of a corrupt backroom bargain by five socalled “Independent Democrats.” Go Cuomo! SEAN

News. Music. Life. Greater Rochester’s Alternative Newsweekly September 3-9, 2014 Vol 43 No 52 250 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 On the cover: Patrick Fisher. Photo by Mark Chamberlin Publishers: William and Mary Anna Towler Editor: Mary Anna Towler Asst. to the publishers: Matt Walsh Editorial department themail@rochester-citynews.com Arts & entertainment editor: Jake Clapp News editor: Christine Carrie Fien Staff writers: Tim Louis Macaluso, Jeremy Moule Arts & entertainment staff writer: Rebecca Rafferty Music writer: Frank De Blase Calendar editor: Antoinette Ena Johnson Contributing writers: Casey Carlsen, Roman Divezur, George Grella, Laura Rebecca Kenyon, Andy Klingenberger, Dave LaBarge, Kathy Laluk, Adam Lubitow, Nicole Milano, Ron Netsky, Suzan Pero, David Raymond, David Yockel Jr. Art department artdept@rochester-citynews.com Art director/production manager: Matt DeTurck Designers: Aubrey Berardini, Mark Chamberlin Photographers: Mark Chamberlin, Frank De Blase Advertising department ads@rochester-citynews.com Sales operations: Matt Walsh New sales development: Betsy Matthews Account executives: Nancy Burkhardt, Tom Decker, Christine Kubarycz, William Towler Classified sales representatives: Christine Kubarycz, Tracey Mykins Operations/Circulation kstathis@rochester-citynews.com Circulation manager: Katherine Stathis Distribution: Andy DiCiaccio, David Riccioni, Northstar Delivery, Wolfe News 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., 2014 - 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.


URBAN JOURNAL | BY MARY ANNA TOWLER

‘Fix’ the schools? Maybe we’re not up to the job Every year on the first day of school, I like to walk over to the elementary school a block from our house and watch the children as they arrive. I used to get a little lift – a feeling of freshness and new beginnings as the school year started. All that potential, and all that hope – theirs and mine. My worry about the Rochester school district has put a damper on things, though. I want to feel hopeful, and I don’t. This has just gone on too long. And we need to do so much. More pre-school programs are essential, but they have to be of the highest quality. We need to fund them fully – and permanently – and the money can’t come from the City of Rochester or its school district. They don’t have it. And more important, it’s not a city problem. We need adequate funding for quality day care. We need more funding for programs like the Nurse-Family Partnership, which helps low-income, first-time mothers from pregnancy through the baby’s first year. And we need to put muscle behind the commitment to have children reading competently by third grade. Right now, that’s true of only 3 percent of Rochester thirdgraders. It is no surprise, then, that so few of them do well in upper grades. And yet we pass them through the system, whether they’re ready or not. We’re expecting magic to happen in those upper grades, when what we need is to identify every single thing that keeps children from doing well in first, second, and third grade – and then remove those obstacles. We need screening and help to address health and family problems that get in the way of children’s education. We need to compensate for the educational deficiency that some parents have. We need nothing less than high-quality teachers in elementary schools. And we need high expectations – of everybody, from everybody. That will be expensive. And it will be hard. We also need to recognize that there are likely many paths to success. We need to embrace those paths – to try things like teacher-operated schools, magnet schools, and yes, charter schools, everything – and measure the outcome. And we need to do two more things. First: We need to recognize that it really will take the entire community – suburban taxpayers, suburban school districts as well as city residents and their government and school district – to solve this problem. It will take suburban political and community leaders gutsy enough to lead on this issue – gutsy enough, for instance,

I want to feel hopeful, and I don’t. This has just gone on too long. And we need to do so much.” to explain the threads that run between our community-imposed concentration of poverty, unemployment, poor education, and the culture of violence that is festering in some inner city areas. And gusty enough to insist that we all bear a responsibility for the creation of that concentrated poverty and for dealing with its consequences. Second: Everybody in the Rochester school district community needs to stop pointing fingers. Teachers, administrators, parents, and activists: everybody should declare a ceasefire, stop blaming everybody else, and pledge to first clean up their own act. I urged that several months ago, and the only positive response I got was from Rochester Superintendent Bolgen Vargas. From everybody else, there has been more finger pointing. And of course, from the larger community, from outside the city, there has been silence or, worse, more piling on: “the parents are bad,” “the teachers are bad,” “the school board members are idiots.” Thus my lack of hope in this schoolopening week. Hundreds of little children are starting kindergarten and first grade in Rochester. Far too few of them will end up with a good education and prospects for a good job and a strong future. It is our responsibility to deal with this. But given our mindset, collective and individual, I worry that the job is just bigger than the Greater Rochester community is willing to tackle. rochestercitynewspaper.com

CITY 3


[ NEWS FROM THE WEEK PAST ]

Teachout reaches out

Zephyr Teachout made a campaign stop at Village Gate plaza in Rochester. The Fordham University Law professor is challenging Governor Andrew Cuomo in a Democratic primary this month. Cuomo supports too many tax breaks for banks, corporations, and the wealthy at the expense of education, infrastructure, and investment in small business and agriculture, Teachout said.

Climate changed

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change sent a draft report to the world’s governments for review. According to major media outlets, the report warns that the global trend of rising average temperatures may be irreversible. The document warns that other climate impacts may also be nearing a point of no return.

Bridge project progresses

Approximately 50 people attended a public hearing on a draft federal environmental statement for the construction of a new railroad bridge across part of the gorge at Letchworth State Park. The existing Norfolk Southern Railway Company bridge was built in 1875 and can’t meet weight and speed stan-

dards for modern freight trains, the statement says.

News

More Medley debt

Monroe County purchased approximately $504,700 in tax liens against the former Medley Centre property in Irondequoit. The liens cover special district taxes owed by the dead mall’s owner, Bersin Properties. If Bersin doesn’t satisfy the liens, the county could eventually foreclose on the property.

UR collects Anthony letters

The University of Rochester has acquired a newly discovered collection of letters by Susan B. Anthony. The letters were written to Anthony associate Rachel Foster Avery and offer a more complete look at the strategies of the suffrage movement. Anthony was a resident of Rochester until her death in 1906.

Johns Hopkins wants out

Johns Hopkins University wants out of its partnership with two of Buffalo’s lowest-performing high schools, East and Lafayette. There have reportedly been differences between some Buffalo school board members and the university’s school improvement team.

Perch taken from the Great Lakes have been found to have plastic fragments in their gastrointestinal systems. FILE PHOTO

ENVIRONMENT | BY JEREMY MOULE

Plastics found in Great Lakes fish When researchers discovered that the Great Lakes are polluted with tiny plastic fragments, likely from consumer personal care products, they also suspected that birds and fish are ingesting the fragments. But they didn’t have hard evidence. Until now. Sam Mason, the SUNY Fredonia chemistry professor who has led the study of plastics pollution in the Great Lakes, is heading up ongoing research on the theory. And she’s found that fish and birds taken from a few of the lakes have plastic fragments in their gastrointestinal systems.

“Every day we’re getting more data,” she says. Most of the fish and birds that she’s studied have come from Lake Erie. Mason and her students began collecting fish in January by going to local ice fisherman; Mason wound up with a lot of perch, since that’s what they were catching. Through the spring, Mason and her student assistants examined 75 perch and 17 cormorants, a type of water bird. In both cases, a high percentage of the subjects had plastics in their gastrointestinal tracts, Mason says. Mason and her team are also looking at other species, including

shiners and lake trout, some of which have come from other Great Lakes. They plan to keep collecting specimens through the fall, and say that they hope to publish their results sometime between January and March. While the research may ultimately answer one set of questions, it could also lead to others. For example, researchers already know that some harmful chemicals stick to the surface of the plastic fragments, Mason says. While they suspect that fish and wildlife absorb those chemicals when they ingest the fragments, the issue needs study and confirmation, she says.

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“When you see your neighbor, or your friend, or your relative care about something enough to either go to New York City to participate in the march or help in some other way, it speaks to us at a deeper level.” [ LINDA ISSACSON-FEDELE ]

ACTIVISM | BY JEREMY MOULE

Coalition recruits climate marchers On September 21, hundreds of thousands of people will march through Manhattan to show leaders from around the world, particularly US politicians, that the American public supports and demands action on climate change. The People’s Climate March, which is being organized by 350.org, is timed to coincide with a UN climate summit in the city. World leaders will meet to begin laying the groundwork for climate treaty talks in Paris next year. Rochester-area climate activists are trying to get as many local people as possible to participate in the march and have formed the Rochester People’s Climate Coalition. The coalition is raising local awareness of the event, and will charter a bus to take marchers to Manhattan. “Climate change seems to be absent from our discourse on a whole lot of levels,” says coalition member Sue Hughes-Smith of Brighton. “We’re definitely hoping to bring that into people’s conversations.” Hughes-Smith says that she wants her children to have an “optimistic future.” Left unaddressed, human-driven shifts in climate will make food and water supplies more unpredictable, which will impact all regions of the world, she says.

Abigail McHugh-Grifa of Rochester says that she sees action on climate change as a matter of family and community values. Climate change will cause problems for both the current generation and future generations, she says. The US is a strong voice in the world — it’s also the leading economy Sue Hughes-Smith. PHOTO BY MARK CHAMBERLIN and one of the most populous countries — and needs to lead on climate York City to participate in the march or change, McHugh-Grifa says. And action help in some other way, it speaks to us at needs to include drastic reductions in a deeper level and it makes us think that greenhouse gases, she says. it’s something that maybe might affect “It feels very now or never for me,” us,” she says. she says. And that awareness is crucial to Linda Issacson-Fedele of Perinton convince the public to support political says that the march is about making action on climate change, which should encourage lawmakers to act, coalition climate change personal. There is a lot members say. of credible information available on More information on the Rochester climate change, she says, but it doesn’t People’s Climate Coalition, including seem to be swaying people. registration information or the bus trip “But when you see your neighbor, or to the New York City march: http:// your friend, or your relative care about peoplesclimate.org/westernny/. something enough to either go to New

BOOK FAIR! 4 2 N D A N N UA L

Rochester Antiquarian Book Fair Rare, Collectible & Scholarly Books • Prints, Ephemera, Maps & Photographica

EDUCATION | BY TIM LOUIS MACALUSO

Discrepancies in teacher evals The New York State Department of Education has released the final versions of its professional evaluations for teachers and principals throughout the state for the 2012-2013 school year. And for the first time, parents can contact their school district and find out how their child’s teacher performed. Parents and school officials in some Monroe County suburbs are going to be pleased with the reports. But it’s a different story in the City of Rochester. Children in Rochester city schools may not be receiving the same quality of instruction, according to the evaluations. About 58 percent of the district’s 2,368 educators — teachers and principals — received evaluations of “effective,” but about 40 percent received evaluations of “developing” or “ineffective.” The evaluations are almost the reverse of their colleagues in suburban schools. A similar pattern shows up in schools in the Syracuse area. According to state law, every teacher and principal in the state’s public school system must receive an evaluation. And those who receive ratings of developing and ineffective over a two-year period can be terminated when the evaluation system is fully implemented.

EVENING OF WINE, JAZZ & ART!

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CITY 5


pinning down Local men share their HEALTH | BY TIM LOUIS MACALUSO

major source of confusion for many men and doctors locally and nationally. “My doctor said my PSA test was up just a little bit,” Johnson says. “It didn’t seem to be a big concern.” But a biopsy later revealed that even though Johnson’s PSA level wasn’t alarmingly high, that he was in serious trouble. In 2010, he had the gland surgically removed

unobtrusive presence, the prostate plays a vital role in reproduction. Its job is to produce the fluid that nourishes sperm cells. Prostate cancer is the second leading cause of cancer deaths in men after lung cancer. The American Cancer Society estimates that about 233,000 new cases of prostate cancer will be diagnosed in 2014, and that nearly 30,000 men will die from the disease.

“The problem is we don’t have a test today that says ‘You have a really good cancer, and you have a really bad, aggressive cancer.” Dr. Edward Messing

It would be a mistake to stop giving men of a certain age the PSA test, which helps detect prostate cancer, says Dr. Edward Messing, chair of the University of Rochester Medical Center’s Department of Urology. PHOTO BY MARK CHAMBERLIN

t 65, Jim Johnson says he feels like a young boy again. He says that he has none of the sexual tension or drive that begins around puberty and accompanies men through most of their adult lives. “I don’t have any of the desire for sex,” he says. “Believe it or not, it’s quite liberating. I feel a sense of freedom.” Johnson is in the advanced stages of prostate cancer and is receiving hormone therapy to reduce his production of testosterone, which some researchers say promotes the growth of tumors. (Johnson, who lives in Rochester, asked that his real name not be used because his business associates do not know about his health.) 6 CITY

SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014

At the time of his diagnosis, Johnson was 60 years old and had a thriving consulting business, he says. His children were grown, and after more than 30 years of marriage, he says that he was looking forward to growing old with his wife. But a routine physical exam revealed some movement in Johnson’s PSA level. The prostate specific antigen blood test is given to men to screen for prostate cancer, usually beginning around age 50. High PSA readings are often associated with some degree of prostate cancer. Although early detection of prostate cancer increases the odds of survival, routine PSA screening has come under fire over the last few years. The controversy has become a

— a standard procedure for a man in his condition. But by then the cancer had spread to his lymph nodes, he says. “The prognosis was that it was incurable and I would have about eight years,” Johnson says. Since then, he’s had radiation therapy, as well as the hormone therapy. Johnson says that he remembers being in a daze after his doctor gave him the news. And he says that it’s hard for him not to think about whether having the PSA a few months earlier might have improved his outcome. “I was sitting there thinking, ‘What does this mean?’” he says. Despite everything he’s been through, including his current struggles with severe depression — a side effect of the hormones — Johnson says he’s grateful that he at least had the PSA test when he did because the aggressive treatment has extended his life. “But I wouldn’t be here today if I hadn’t had the test,” he says. “I would definitely recommend that it be given.”

The prostate is an odd little gland that

resembles a walnut; it’s located just below the bladder. Considering its small size and

Age is a major factor. The occurrence of prostate cancer increases dramatically in men over age 50, particularly if the man’s father or grandfather had the disease. And for some unknown reason, it occurs more frequently in black men. Men who have been exposed to Agent Orange, use some athletic enhancement drugs, and are going through transgender treatment may also be at heightened risk. The PSA test was developed at Buffalo’s Roswell Park Cancer Institute, and was a major discovery in cancer research. Up until about the mid 1970’s, prostate cancer was frequently detected in its advanced stages and a diagnosis meant about a 4 percent survival rate. The test was initially used in forensic cases such as rape to determine the presence of semen. It wasn’t until the mid 90’s that the test was used to screen for prostate cancer. And its role in early detection has been heralded as one of the great successes in the battle against cancer. But as critically important as the PSA test has become, several studies challenge its widespread use and reliability. Much of the concern stems from recent findings from the


prostate cancer battles and their confusion over recent research PHOTOS | BY MARK CHAMBERLIN

European Randomized Study for Screening Prostate Cancer, which monitored more than 160,000 men between the ages of 55 and 69. The extensive nine-year study shows that PSA screening resulted in at least a 20 percent drop in mortality rates from prostate cancer. But the researchers also said that the widespread general screening has increased

and radiation can be debilitating and greatly impact the quality of that life. “There are those people who are against getting the PSA because the cancer is so slow-growing, and I think that is a mistake,” Messing says. “People are suffering from some of the side effects, but there are also some men suffering from some very aggressive cancers with a capital C.”

“It’s a natural reaction for men to think that their manhood is Fisher, at stake.” Patrick program director for the Rochester chapter of Us Too

the risk of over diagnosis, and that some men may be treated for cancers and other prostate problems that may not be aggressive or life-threatening, says Dr. Edward Messing, chair of the University of Rochester Medical Center’s Urology Department. “The biggest problem is that many cancers are not likely to affect your life,” he says. “But so many men with small focuses of cancer, with encouragement from their doctors, decided to pursue treatment. Some of those treatments will turn the prostate into cardboard.” Almost all of the treatments and procedures, even the biopsy used to confirm the presence of cancer, pose physical and mental health risks, Messing says. That’s partly because of the location and makeup of the prostate. It’s close to the rectum wall and the bladder, and the urethra that allows urine to flow out of the body runs right through the middle of the gland. Treatments such as surgery to remove the prostate and radiation therapy to kill cancer cells often leave men incontinent. And the prostate gland harbors the nerves that provide sexual function. The treatments often damage those nerves, sometimes irreparably, though new surgical techniques can sometimes spare the nerves. While the treatments can extend the patient’s life, the combination of surgery

At the crux of the debate are the limitations of what researchers currently know about prostate cancer. “We don’t want to throw the baby out with the bath water [by not screening],” Messing says. “But the problem is we don’t have a test today that says ‘You have a really good cancer, and you have a really bad, aggressive cancer.’” Messing says that his research shows that if the PSA had been eliminated during the early 2000’s through 2009, for instance, the number of men with advanced prostate cancer would’ve tripled. He also doesn’t agree with research suggesting that elderly men shouldn’t be given a PSA or treated for prostate cancer because they’re likely to die from some other health problem. It all depends on their health, Messing says. “You could be robbing them of years of life,” he says. While there are extremely sophisticated diagnostic tools that are just starting to become available, as well as excellent treatments and promising new treatments in development, deciding what might work for each man is a complicated process. A lot depends on the stage that the cancer appears to be in, the age of the

Patrick Fisher, program manager for Us Too, says that wives and significant others are encouraged to come to the organization’s meetings. PHOTO BY MARK CHAMBERLIN

man, and a whole host of other factors. Some men who don’t appear to have an aggressive cancer are choosing what is called “watchful surveillance.” Others are taking heavy artillery approaches — robotic surgery, beam radiation, brachytherapy — even though there is no perfect way to know if they’re warranted, or if they will even work. Between 20 percent to 30 percent of men who have surgery to remove their prostate will have a cancer reoccurrence after five years, according to the Prostate Cancer Foundation. Hermann Vogelstein says that for him, it’s not

a matter of whether or not to take the PSA. He had a PSA test in August 2013 and waited until that October to have a biopsy, which

came back positive. The 63-year-old Brighton man says that he questioned whether or not he should have a biopsy, but that his father died of prostate-related bone cancer, which places him in a higher risk group. The real issue is what men should do with the information from the biopsy, he says. “What’s important is what you do next,” Vogelstein says. “Some people think, ‘I’ve got cancer. I’ve got to get rid of it,’” he says. Vogelstein has had several tests and he’s meticulously researched his options, including some of the newest procedures. And he says that he’s fully weighing the risks of each option. continues on page 8 rochestercitynewspaper.com

CITY 7


Prostate cancer

NEIGHBORHOODS | BY CHRISTINE CARRIE FIEN

continues from page 7

Seeking a cleaner Rochester It costs the United States more than $11.5 billion annually to clean up litter, says Keep Liberty Beautiful, an affiliate of the nonprofit Keep America Beautiful. Litter also jeopardizes investment, harms the environment, drives down property values, and poses a threat to public safety. Rochester is no better or worse than other cities when it comes to litter, officials say. And some neighborhoods and business districts have come up with innovative ways to fight litter. But for the most part, officials say, the public generally has a poor understanding of who is responsible for picking up litter and where. Many people want to point fingers, they say, without taking any personal responsibility for the problem. “People grew up not understanding that everybody has to just bend over and pick up,” says Moira Lemperle, president of the Monroe Avenue Merchants Association. If litter is on your property, it’s your responsibility to pick it up, officials say, even if you didn’t put it there. Of you can call your Neighborhood Service Center for help, says Nancy Johns-Price, administrator of the Southeast NSC. Johns-Price says that she can get the mess cleaned up and, if the litter is consistently coming from the same place, she’ll approach that place personally. The Rochester Police Department does issue tickets for littering, a spokesperson says, but doesn’t track the number of tickets it issues. Businesses are required by city code to keep their properties clean, as well as all areas within 100 feet of their property line, Johns-Price says. Those it’s clear that not all businesses follow the rules. “Even if it’s just their sidewalk and their own curbs, they just don’t do it,” says Lemperle about the businesses on Monroe. “Very few do it. They can’t be bothered. Then they wonder why some people in the community have a poor image of the area.” Lemperle says that she and her neighbors do cleanups a couple of times a year, but that the Monroe merchants don’t participate. “It’s not question of whether it’s your job or not, but it’s more a question of the perception you want [people] to have of your business,” she says.

The City of Rochester does regular street

cleaning and provides litter baskets in areas with high pedestrian traffic. The baskets are emptied at least once a week, according to the city’s website. The city also does a once a year citywide cleanup called Clean Sweep — though some neighborhood representatives say that the sweep is more of a feel-good event than anything else. “If it were truly to keep the neighborhoods clean, it would be every week, right?” says 8 CITY

SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014

Allen Krisiloff, secretary for the Monroe Village Task Force. The city’s Department of Environment Services cleans up the parks, and Regional Transit Services takes care of the bus shelters. Krisiloff says that the government should take a bigger role in keeping the city clean, but that he understands that city budgets all over the country are squeezed. “We live in an era where a lot of people think their taxes are too high, and we live in an era of greed,” he says. “And these things impact the city’s ability to provide services.” Downtown, the section of Main Street from Plymouth Avenue to Chestnut Street has been designated an enhancement district, which means it gets extra attention in terms of litter pickup and other services. Those extra services would be expanded if the Rochester Downtown Development Corporation is successful in getting its Business Improvement District passed. The district would substantially expand downtown’s boundaries, and the properties inside the BID would, for a fee, receive services beyond those provided by the City of Rochester. Examples include maintenance projects, holiday decorations, safety patrols, marketing, sidewalk cleaning, and litter and weed removal. RDDC President Heidi Zimmer-Myer often touts the district’s scene-setting ability when she presents the BID concept. (ZimmerMyer has been making the rounds, talking up the BID proposal to residents, businesses, and public officials.) “I think cleanliness — and that includes litter and cigarette butts and stuff like that — it’s very important,” she says. “If an environment feels untended, people are less likely to feel comfortable in it. And, of course, if you’re making significant investments — which a lot of people are down here — you want the environment to be clean and polished.” How often litter would be picked up under the BID depends on the street, Zimmer-Myer says, and how bad the litter problem is. On

PHOTO BY MARK CHAMBERLIN

streets with a lot of activity, she says, litter would be picked up multiple times each day. Less frequent passes would be made in areas with lighter activity, she says. Although the BID as currently proposed would cover about 25 percent of Monroe Village — from Averill Avenue to the Inner Loop — Lemperle says she isn’t so sure that it would make much of a difference in the appearance of the avenue. The portion of Monroe that would be included in the district is generally well-maintained, she says. The BID needs to go all the way up Monroe to have an impact, she says. BID aside, stricter enforcement of city code might force the merchants to work together to keep the area clean, Lemperle says. That’s what pushed the East End businesses to come together to hire someone to clean up after the big bar nights, she says. “Nobody has to worry about it,” says City Council member Elaine Spaull, who represents the East End entertainment district. “Basically, it takes all the burden off of those bar owners and landlords. By Saturday morning and Sunday morning you wouldn’t know that anybody had a party the night before.” But it all comes back to personal

responsibility, officials say. There are people in the city who make picking up trash a part of their routine, they say, but for the most part, everyone thinks it’s somebody else’s job. “To just blame it all on the bar traffic, or just to blame it on the residents or a particular merchant, I don’t think it solves the problem,” says Colleen McCarthy, of the Monroe Village Task Force. “I think people have to take shared responsibility and accept that it’s part of urban life and try to work on it.”

The cancer doesn’t appear to have metastasized, he says, which means it hasn’t spread from the prostate and may not be terribly aggressive. If there had been slightly less cancer in his biopsy, he says that he would have gone with watchful surveillance. And he says that he may still take one of the less heavy-handed approaches to treatment. “Am I going to go for something that has the best chance of a cure with the most difficult side effects, or should I go for the least invasive and the less impact on my lifestyle?” he says. “I’m still working on that.” Patrick Fisher is program director for the Rochester chapter of Us Too, a nonprofit that’s part of an international network of support groups for men with prostate cancer. Fisher, a prostate cancer survivor, says that he helped found the local chapter because he discovered that some men, like Vogelstein, have pretreatment questions and others have questions after treatment. There weren’t many places locally where men could talk freely about their concerns and share information, he says. “I thought this was exactly what this community of men needed going forward,” Fisher says. “We didn’t know what to expect because we didn’t advertise, but lo and behold, we had 30 people at our first meeting just through word of mouth.” In addition to monthly meetings, the organization raises funds through events such as “Cars for Cancer,” a car show and men’s health screening day on Saturday, September 6. (More information: baytowncarshow.com) Getting used to the C word is the first challenge for most people, Fisher says. “Relating to the word ‘cancer’ is difficult for most of us under any circumstance,” he says. “And when you’re the one who’s been diagnosed, we tend to think it’s the end of life.” There’s some evidence that men in the US have also historically been less proactive about their general health, Fisher says, and prostate health can be particularly challenging because of the horror stories. “It’s a natural reaction for men to think that their manhood is at stake,” Fisher says. “There’s the problem with urinary incontinence, but then there’s the sexual dysfunction. If the man is married or in a relationship, their first thought is ‘What’s going to happen to that relationship?’” Fisher says that he schedules experts to come to Us Too’s meetings to


present on a wide range of topics, such as understanding treatment options, overcoming obstacles and setbacks, and learning the latest research. But one of the most important goals for Us Too is making sure that wives, same-sex partners, and significant others feel welcome and participate, Fisher says. “Prostate cancer impacts almost every aspect of a man’s life, including those important relationships,” he says. “It can be a test for some.” Johnson says that even though the cancer hasn’t been easy for him and has eliminated his desire for sex, that his relationship with his wife has never felt stronger. “My wife has stood by me and I feel closer to her than I ever have,” he says. Prostate cancer has forced him to re-examine what masculinity means and what it means to be a husband and a father, he says. “I feel sorry for some men who have defined themselves by their sexuality and macho type of thinking because this is going to be really hard for them,” Johnson says. For some men, the difficulty that

Johnson refers to may be a result of the culture’s ideal of manliness. But there’s another problem: How do you make the best decision possible knowing that the research on treatment isn’t clear and precise? What might work for one man may not work for another. And how do doctors help patients weigh the risk of possible side effects in their decision-making? Being comfortable with that decision could make a huge difference in how a patient feels about the outcome. As one man put it, “I desperately want there to be a best option.” Dr. James Dolan at URMC says that he wants to know if men newly diagnosed with low-risk prostate cancer could benefit from some type of interactive software program that aids in their decision-making. Dolan’s team has developed such a program. A study in conjunction with the Rochester chapter of Us Too should begin this fall, Dolan says. This type of consultation aid could take some of the angst out of decisionmaking, Dolan says, and help men better understand their choices. Relying solely on the advice of doctors and their explanation of the side effects of treatment has some drawbacks, he says. “Based on current evidence, there is no one best treatment for everyone,” Dolan says.

AJI Zoning & Land Use Advisory 50 Public Market | 208-2336 1115 East Main St. | 469-8217 Open Studios First Friday Every Month

Awaken: Qi gong, yoga, tai chi, fine art 8 Public Market | 261-5659 Black Button Distilling 85 Railroad St. | 730-4512 blackbuttondistilling.com Tastings • Tours • Private Functions Boulder Coffee Co. | 1 Public Market | 232-5282

MARKET DISTRICT

B US I NE S S A S S OC I AT I O N

Object Maker | 153 Railroad St. | 244-4933 Friends of Market marketfriends@rochester.rr.com | 325-5058

Carlson Metro Center YMCA 444 east Main St. | 325-2880 City Newspaper (WMT Publications) 250 N. Goodman St. | 244-3329

FOOD SERVICE DISTRIBUTOR

What you need is just a phone call away 20-22 Public Market | 423-0994

Deep Discount Storage 265 Haywood Ave. | 325-5000

Gourmet Waffler | catering | 461-0633

“Home of the highly addictive Spanish foods”

Paulas Essentials 415 Thurston Road and Public Market 737-9497 | paulasessentials.com

City of Rochester | Market Office | 428-6907

Juan & Maria’s Empanada Stop www.juanandmarias.com | 325-6650

Maguire Property 1115 East Main St. | 747-3839

Rochester Store Fixture 707 North St. | 546-6706

Greenovation | 1199 East Main St. | 288-7564

Tours • Tastings Private Parties 97 Railroad St. | 546-8020 | rohrbachs.com

Harman Hardwood Flooring Co. 29 Hebard St. | 546-1221

Tim Wilkes Photography 9 Public Market | 423-1966

rochestercitynewspaper.com

CITY 9


For more Tom Tomorrow, including a political blog and cartoon archive, visit www.thismodernworld.com

URBAN ACTION This week’s calls to action include the following events and activities. (All are free and open to the public, unless otherwise noted.)

Talk on the history of veganism

The Rochester Area Vegan Society will present a talk by Gary Francione on the history of veganism on Sunday, September 21. Francione is a law professor at Rutgers University and the author of “The

Animal Rights Debate: Abolition or Regulation?” Attendees are invited to a vegan potluck dinner. Please bring a dish to pass that does not include meat, fish, eggs, dairy, or honey products. The event is free to RAVS members and $3 for guests and nonmembers. The vegan dinner begins at 5:30 p.m. and the program begins at 7 p.m., at the Brighton Town Park lodge, 777 Westfall Road. Information: 234-8750.

Film documents impact of Walmart

The Eastman House’s Dryden Theatre will show the documentary film “Walmart: The High Cost of Low Price” at 2 p.m. on Sunday, September 7. The 2005 film shows how families in multiple continents have been adversely impacted by the store’s mission to drive down prices. Tickets: $8 general admission; $6 for Dryden members and students.

Correcting ourselves The August 27 story, “Needs no introduction(s),” improperly listed the authors of two plays. Michael Kramer wrote “Stage Kiss,” and Samara Suskind wrote “Blind Date.”

CITY NEWS BLOG

POLITICS, PEOPLE, EVENTS, & ISSUES

rochestercitynewspaper.com/BLOGS/NEWSBLOG COMMENTING ON THE STATE OF ROCHESTER & BEYOND 10 CITY SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014


Dining

Havana Cabana serves up its own take on Island drinks and cuisine, like (left) the Flan and (right) the Cabana Cuban Sandwich, a traditional sandwich with roasted pork, Carved Ham, Fontina Cheese, On Cuban Bread, Spread with Mojo Aioli, topped with sliced cucumbers served with plantains and salsa. PHOTOS BY MARK CHAMBERLIN

Havana nights Havana Cabana 289 ALEXANDER STREET TUESDAY-THURSDAY: 4 P.M. TO 12 A.M.; FRIDAY: 4 P.M. TO 1:30 A.M.; SATURDAY: 12 P.M. TO 1:30 A.M.; SUNDAY: 11:30 A.M. TO 12 A.M. 232-1333; HAVANACABANAROC.COM [ REVIEW ] BY CHRIS LINDSTROM

My experience at Havana Cabana — a restaurant serving a twist on Island Cuisine in a warm, inviting environment — has to be broken into two separate experiences to accurately describe how different they were. On the first visit, the whole night was colored by the unfortunate timing of the meal and some technical issues with the dishes that my dining partner and I were served. The meal started with the coconut shrimp appetizer ($13.95): four largish shrimp, deep-fried with coconut shavings in the batter. The shrimp were tender, juicy, and well-fried and decently presented, although for the price the quantity seemed a bit light. Accompanying the shrimp was an Island mango chutney that was sweet and tempered only by shards of fresh mint. It took two tries to get our “authentic Cuban” mojito ($8) correct — the first erring on the simple syrup and rum side at the expense

of the key elements: mint and lime. After commenting on the lack of balance, the bar remade the drink with a more appropriate level of mint and lime, resulting in a much more refreshing drink for the hot day that it was. It was at this point that we ended up waiting for around an hour for the Cabana Cuban Sandwich and the Jerky Chicken Island Toast to arrive to our table. The staff handled it as well as they could — the small kitchen was overwhelmed with an unannounced large party in the spacious upstairs dining area. In a nice touch, the staff did offer a complimentary duplicate of the shrimp appetizer to tide us over while the main dishes were getting ready. When the dishes finally arrived, the Cabana Cuban ($14.95) was visually impressive: a large sandwich cut in half with pile of sliced, fried plantains filling the rest of the plate. The wellseasoned pulled pork was the element that made the sandwich worth it while the cucumbers added some needed freshness. But a light pickle on the cukes or some more zing in the aioli would have made the dish really sing. The Jerky Chicken Island Toast ($13.95) — a pizza made from the same Cuban bread base but with less proofing — had a complete lack of balance. For the thickness of the crust, it was topped with way too much cheese which resulted in an undercooked, unappealing gummy layer of dough. The toppings weren’t

much better: dried out dry-rubbed chicken breast that didn’t exude any aspects of jerk flavor; crispy plantains that had no business on the pie; and a distribution that left slices blank. It seemed like the actual crust might have some merit if it were cooked correctly, but this wasn’t a dish that I would want to revisit. We finished with a one-dimensional bread pudding that brought only mild cinnamon and sweetness to the table. Topped with whipped cream and accompanied by a weak caramel sauce and a commercial-tasting chocolate syrup, there was little else worth noting. No contrast in texture or flavors on a dish that seemed like an afterthought. The first visit was not positive, but I hoped for the best when my partner and I walked through the doors for the second time. Thankfully, this time the service and timing of our meal was spot on and we were able to focus on the food instead of our rumbling stomachs. Upon getting seated in the main dining area, our waiter convinced us to get an order of the fish tacos ($3 each on Wednesdays) for an appetizer. I’m happy that he did; it was the best and most complete dish that we were served. The tender tilapia base was seasoned well with a dry rub and salt kick, and the Cole slaw topping added crunch, creaminess, and a welcomed touch of spice. Havana Cabana’s corn,

bean, and tomato mix was present here and made a good addition to the party. A lime slice was provided for each taco and when squeezed over it made for a really well balanced bite and a top notch taco. We moved on to the Cuban Harvest Paella ($28.95), an offering that could easily serve two people with its large portion of seafood, sausage, and chicken, all over a bed of saffron rice and a rich broth. Unlike the Spanish version that is served with a crispy layer of rice with all water boiled off, the Cuban style ends up with liquid remaining in the mix after cooking. The remaining broth had a mild peppery kick, but was overly heavy with butter giving a greasy feel to the dish as a whole. Some brightness would have livened up the melange of ingredients and tied everything together. Really, it was a lack of seasoning that was the issue on the Island Jerk Pork Loin entree ($21.95), with every element other than the sauce needing some character whether it be from spice, salt, or acid. A whole pork loin was slow cooked for 18 hours and then pulled, which left portions of dark meat that held up nicely. In a disappointing turn, though, the meat had a light generic Barbeque taste and none of the trademark spice, warmth, or smokiness that is expected when something is advertised as being “jerk” flavored. A powerfully sweet and tangy blackberry-tinged Barbeque sauce was served on the side and was OK in small tastes with the pork, but quite overpowering in any larger quantity. The flambéed flan left a strong positive final impression. In a pleasant service touch, a small shot of clear rum was poured over the slightly overcooked flan and was lit on fire at the table. Thankfully, the alcohol mostly cooked out leaving a pleasant warmness to go along with the darker, burnt sugar taste of caramel sauce. Even the little touches of toasted coconut in the sauce and the fresh fruit worked with the dessert as a whole. Following our last dining experience, I spoke to Havana Cabana’s head chef and owner, Trey Yager, about how the kitchen let flavors loose in dishes like the fish tacos and the flan and made the food shine. He explained that at the beginning, the menu was more traditionally oriented and over time had been altered to meet what the restaurant thought most people were looking for. In general this tended to cut some of the more potent flavors I like to see with this kind of food. I can’t strongly recommend the food overall, but Havana Cabana has a popular bar area, pleasant servers, and an environment worth checking out. To read more dining reviews from Chris Lindstrom, visit his blog, Food About Town, at foodabouttown. com. Follow Chris on Twitter: @stromie. rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 11


Upcoming [ PUNK ]

Music

Kill Matilda. Tuesday, October 7. Bug Jar, 219 Monroe Avenue. 9 p.m. $7-$9. Bugjar.com; Killmatilda.com. [ ROCK ]

Supersuckers. Sunday, November 16. The Montage

Music Hall, 50 Chestnut Street. 8 p.m. $12-$15. Themontagemusichall.com; supersuckers.com. [ FOLK ]

Dave Mallett. Saturday, December 6. Café Veritas, 220 Winton Road. 7 p.m. $10-$18. Cafeveritas.org; davidmallett.com.

Mobb Deep

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 THE CALIFORNIA BREW HAUS, 402 WEST RIDGE ROAD 7 P.M. | $25 | TICKETFLY.COM [ HIP-HOP ] Mobb Deep’s 1995 album “The Infamous," the duo’s second full-length, was launched into the world roughly a year behind Nas’ “Illmatic,” and Wu-Tang’s “Enter the WuTang (36 Chambers)," around the time that East Coast hiphop was well on its way to a grittier, darker tone. But Mobb Deep took it a step further. The album firmly established Mobb Deep, and the duo cemented its place with a string of successful albums through the 90’s and early 2000’s. In April, Mobb Deep released its 8th studio album, and first in eight years, “The Infamous Mobb Deep,” showing that Prodigy and Havoc can still reach the same level of quality as they always have. — BY JAKE CLAPP

A Day of Gospel SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. PARK AT MANHATTAN SQUARE, 353 COURT STREET | 11 A.M. $5 (CASH ONLY) | CITYOFROCHESTER.GOV/ROCTHEPARK [ GOSPEL ] ROC The Park, an extension of the city’s Party In The Park, wraps up its three-concert series with a joyful noise. A Day of Gospel will feature the large ensemble group Jason Wright & The Master’s Touch; Serena Young, who recently finished in the top-5 on BET’s “Sunday Best” competition; D-Will, a man who turned around from dealing to launch himself into Christian hip-hop; gospel quartet The Bright Clouds; and Paul Boutte leading The Zion Hill Mass Choir. — BY JAKE CLAPP

Type 2 Diabetes Patients Needed for Pharmaceutical Research Study of an Investigational Study Drug • Must be 18 to 70 years old and have Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus • Women must be of non-childbearing potential (not able to have children) • Study commitment involves a screening visit, two 2-night stays and up to 5 other clinic visits over about 8 to 11 weeks • Receive up to $1,680 for study completion • Get free study-related health and laboratory evaluations

Call the Buffalo Clinical Research Center at 885-3580 ext 205 for study #2232 or go to www.bcrc.us 12 CITY SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014

CITY

NEWSPAPER'S

Bar & Lounge

SUPER SHOWS!!!!! sept 4: DAVID

sept 7: BUDDY

MAYFIELD PARADE HOLLY BIRTHDAY BASH

hosted by BOBBY HENRIE & THE GONERS

with many special guest performers

sept 11:jazz fest fave! WOODY

THURSDAY, September

11

throughout Rochester's

5-8 p.m. SOUTH WEDGE

SEE PAGE 44 FOR DETAILS

PINES sept 12: THE FAR WEST with BRENNEN LEIGH

sept 13: DINOSAUR

TRUCKERS

with KALOB GRIFFIN BAND

sept 14:jazz fest fave! ROSIE

FLORES

www.abilenebarandlounge.com 153 LIBERTY POLE WAY•232-3230


WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3 [ ACOUSTIC/FOLK ] Brian Rath. Sticky Lips BBQ Juke Joint, 830 Jefferson Rd. 292-5544. stickylipsbbq.com. 6:308:30 p.m.

Erica Russo and the Good Sport. Abilene Bar

[ ALBUM REVIEW ]

Bobby Broom “My Shining Hour” ORIGIN RECORDS Bobbybroom.com

Bear Hands TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 MONTAGE MUSIC HALL, 50 CHESTNUT STREET 6:30 P.M. | $9.41-$15 | THEMONTAGEMUSICHALL.COM BEARHANDSBAND.COM [ ROCK ] When Bear Hands released its debut full-

length, ‘Burning Bush Supper Club,” in 2010, with a lot of indie-world buzz, the band received comparisons to MGMT — but come on, that’s too easy. Anyone who looked past the Wesleyan connection, would see Bear Hands as much more. The New York City-based band infuses a lot of humor and quirkiness into its music. Bear Hands is just unusual, in a good way. The band released its sophomore album, “Distraction,” back in February. Chappo, The Demos, Skirts, and Machine Gun English will also play. — BY JAKE CLAPP

The David Mayfield Parade THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 ABILENE BAR AND LOUNGE, 153 LIBERTY POLE WAY 8 P.M. | $15 | ABILENEBARANDLOUNGE.COM; DAVIDMAYFIELDPARADE.NET [ AMERICANA ] After watching some videos of David

Mayfield performing live, it instantly clicked that Mayfield is a virtuoso on an acoustic. That’s not all Grizzly Adams, er, I mean Mayfield, brings to the table, though. He writes and sings fantastic Americana — and the laughs he draws between songs may have him a career in stand-up. He’s performed alongside folk monsters Mumford and Sons and The Avett Brothers, so you know he’s good from the on-stage company he keeps. — BY TREVOR LEWIS

Over his three-and-a-half-decade career, guitarist extraordinaire Bobby Broom has played in the bands of Sonny Rollins, Dr. John, Art Blakey, and many others. He even did a short stint with Miles Davis’ band. But since 1991, Broom has carved out a distinctive solo career, putting out one great album after another. His latest, “My Shining Hour,” is no exception. Broom’s style is distinguished by the clear, ringing tone he employs on classics like “Sweet Georgia Brown” and the title tune. My favorite cut on the album is Broom’s arrangement of Fats Waller’s “The Jitterbug Waltz.” The opening vamp, the rhythm, and the lead are all played by Broom with no overdubs. He works a similar sort of magic on Cole Porter’s “Just One of Those Things” and the old standard “Tennessee Waltz.” If there is a particularly fresh sound to “My Shining Hour,” it’s probably due to the fact that Broom and his excellent band-mates, Dennis Carroll on bass, and Makaya McCraven on drums, recorded it the old fashioned way, live in a studio using 1/4inch tape. — BY RON NETSKY

& Lounge, 153 Liberty Pole Way. 232-3230. abilenebarandlounge.com. 8 p.m. $5. Rob & Gary Acoustic. Woodcliff Hotel & Spa, 199 Woodcliff Dr. 381-4000. woodcliffhotelspa.com. 5:30-8:30 p.m. [ BLUES ]

Upward Groove. Temple

Bar and Grille, 109 East Ave. 232-6000. templebarandgrille.com. 10 p.m. [ CLASSICAL ]

Eastman Faculty Artist Series: Nicholas Goluses, guitar. Eastman East Wing

Hatch Recital Hall, 26 Gibbs St. 274-1100. esm. rochester.edu. 8 p.m. $10. [ DJ/ELECTRONIC ]

National Teenset Outsider Party. Bug Jar, 219 Monroe

Ave. bugjar.com. 12-2 a.m. [ OPEN MIC ]

Open Mic Night. Stromboli Express, 130 East Ave. 546-2121. 6:30-8 p.m. [ R&B/ SOUL ]

CITY

Kat Wright, The Infomitable Soul Band, The Sound Organization, Ricky Richards, and The Straw House Uncertainty. Bug Jar, 219 Monroe Ave. 4542966. bugjar.com. 9 p.m.

MUSIC

[ REGGAE/JAM ]

FEATURES, REVIEWS, CHOICES, & CONCERTS

ROCHESTERCITYNEWSPAPER.COM/MUSIC

Monkey Scream Project. Village Rock Cafe, 213 Main St. East Rochester. 586-1640. reverbnation. com. 9 p.m. continues on page 15

rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 13


Music Rust never sleeps Admirers ADMIRERS.BANDCAMP.COM [ INTERVIEW ] BY FRANK DE BLASE

Mikey James is worn out, but not burned out. He’s jaded, but not cynical. He’s stripped his latest project, Admirers, down to those he can trust to handle the music the way he hears music and creates it. Admirers is a After some time spent with Rochester indie rock group The Mercies and recording under the name Mikey one–man band. It’s James solamente. Jukebox, Mikey James is now pumping out tracks as Admirers. PHOTO PROVIDED Though he hires sidemen for live shows, all the credit, blame, work, and glory everyone would have to know what they are became more and more clear that it was just falls on James. doing. The process has to be real natural in this weird little idea. But it was easy to fall into Having cut his teeth in New York Cityorder to be in a band at this point. But when self-parody with it. It felt forced, you know based Longwave in the 90’s, followed by you’re that young gang … you can’t get that at when you have to strive all the time. It just the indie rock effervescence of Rochester’s this age. didn’t want to be. Nobody cared. The Mercies, James’ true sound came to the fore when he recorded as Mikey Why don’t you hate Admirers? How’d you arrive at the name for this outing? Jukebox. All the quirk and pop, and sugar Because it’s just me. And I hire whoever I can, I’ve googled Mike James. There’re like eight that had been bubbling beneath finally I try to get the best guys. of us; what are we gonna do? I just like the erupted. It made sense. name Admirers; it’s lateral to whatever you But James soon buried the project, Do I detect a dash of disco in this project? want it to be. I hate band names. I mean I dismissing it as a one-time thing; bad news There’s a disco element. There’s certainly that love Arctic Monkeys, but really are you the if you dug it, good news if you dig Admirers. four on the floor thing about it. I love it. I have Arctic Monkeys? Admirers is soon releasing “Pussyfoot,” a a lot of Fairlight on there; it’s early digital. Kate swirling pop opus full of 80’s hooks, dreamy Bush used it, Peter Gabriel. Aren’t you afraid fans will find your crustiness synthetic atmosphere, disco (yes, disco), and a cliché? a touch of techno thump ‘n’ groove. It’s not Where does the human element come in? Yeah, but I try to keep a smile when I’m merely synth-pop; at times it’s rock. It’s more It’s me playing everything for the most part. playing. Live, you can tell I’m having a good Smiths than Ultravox. Its studio pop because I don’t have a band. time, but when I’m doing demo stuff… James is a wonderful musician who The bass and guitars are organic. That’s what has been hardened by the biz; bloody but I like about it, I’m bringing the organic to the Any joy in producing, like the awesome work unbowed. He’s gotten a little crusty in his newer electronic, the 80’s Paul Simon vibe into you did with The Demos? old age, but shows no signs of slowing down some of the disco synth. That’s where I think I They’re like your musical children. You can see or stopping. He continues to record and should head more with it. the thoughts form in their heads; thoughts that produce, and has had 11 placements of his you had. I didn’t have me back then. music on shows like “Gossip Girl” and “The How do you pull off working with a hired New Girl” in the last year. So chances are band? How does having you help? you’re already an admirer. They come in with the charts. It doesn’t sound I help quicken the stupid process. They’ve James stopped by CITY to discuss the like the recording, nor do I care. I’m over that still gotta go through it, but instead of living new album, the pros and cons of being whole thing. “Just come in and play the root inside a stupid idea for six months or a year, crusty, and why he hates bands. An edited note and be yourself over it. I’ll be myself and you can get them out of it in two months. The transcript follows. I’ll sound like me.” They’ll add syncopations crustiness is good in that sense. and I’ll be like, “No, no, no, play it straight.” CITY: Why do you hate bands? Mikey James: No, I love bands. But bands are

a young man’s game. But you’re 37.

Yeah, but once you’re 37, and you’ve been through all the shit, and you’ve done two or three decent bands … Now to start a band, it has to be with some sort of mutual respect, 14 CITY SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014

How did you come up with the concept for Admirers? Was it a way to distance yourself from Longwave and The Mercies?

Any touring with the new CD?

I think the Mikey Jukebox stuff was my break from bands and led to this.

Why do you stay in the game?

Then you killed Mikey. Was that hard?

Nah, I always knew it was a one-off thing. It

No.

I don’t chase it. I just do what I do. What else is there to do?


CITY Newspaper presents

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3

Mind Body Spirit & Workshops

Personal Blend. Temple Bar and Grille, 109 East Ave. 232-6000. reverbnation.com. 10 p.m. [ METAL ] Madball. California Brew Haus, 402 W. Ridge Rd. 621-1480. facebook.com/ thecaliforniabrewhaus. 7 p.m. $15-$17.

TO ADVERTISE IN THE MIND BODY SPIRIT SECTION CALL CHRISTINE AT 244.3329 x23 OR EMAIL CHRISTINE@ROCHESTER-CITYNEWS.COM

[ POP/ROCK ]

Dick Tosti. Gigi’s Italian

Kitchen, 2256 Hudson Ave. 544-5440. 5-9 p.m. Dick Tosti - finger picking guitarist and vocals. Italian music and 50s and 60s soft golden oldies. Free for customers. The Margaret Explosion. The Little Theater, 240 East Avenue. thelittle.org. 7:309:30 p.m. Mark Fantasia. TGI Fridays, 432 Greece Ridge Center Dr. reverbnation.com. 7 p.m TGI Fridays, 432 Greece Ridge Center Dr. reverbnation.com. 7 p.m.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 [ ACOUSTIC/FOLK ] Jim Lane. Murph’s Irondequoit Pub, 705 Titus Ave. Irondequoit. 342-6780. 8 p.m. Free.

Rochester Ukulele Support Group . Bernunzio Uptown Music, 122 East Ave. 4736140. bernunzio.com. 7-8:30 p.m.

Senior Strummers Dulcimer Group. Downtown Senior

Center, 25 Franklin St. 3818224. goldenlink.org. 1-2 p.m. Yairms and AlhhlA. Boulder Coffee Co., 100 Alexander St. 454-7140. bouldercoffee.info. 8-10 p.m. [ BLUES ]

Big Blue House. The Little

Theater, 240 East Avenue. thelittle.org. 7:30-9:30 p.m. David Mayfield Parade. Abilene Bar & Lounge, 153 Liberty Pole Way. 232-3230. abilenebarandlounge.com. 8 p.m. $15. [ CLASSICAL ]

Edoardo Bellotti, harpichord. Eastman East Wing Hatch Recital Hall, 26 Gibbs St. 274-1000. esm.rochester. edu. 8 p.m. $10. [ COUNTRY ]

Rascal Flatts w/ Sheryl Crow and Gloriana. Darien Lake PAC, 9993 Allegheny Rd. Darien. 1-800-745-3000. livenation.com. $30.50$65.50.

[ DJ/ELECTRONIC ] KhoMha. Pearl Nightclub,

JAZZ | MYRIAD3

“The Where” is the somewhat unconventional title of the new album by drummer Ernesto Cervini, pianist Chris Donnelly, and bassist Dan Fortin, collectively known as Myriad3. The title is indicative of the never-predictable music the trio explores. While the album is full of slightly off-kilter originals, Myriad3 has also been known to bring a new perspectives to the music of Thelonious Monk and other greats. Well known on the Toronto jazz scene, Myriad3 has embarked on a U.S. tour to celebrate the new release.

Drop In Dance Classes Argentine Tango Ballroom & Swing

No partner needed • $8 215 Tremont St. (Kee Lox Business Park) Door #8 • 585.473.8550

www.dancencounters.com

Myriad3 plays Tuesday, September 9, at Bop Shop Records, 1460 Monroe Avenue. 8 p.m. $10 Donation, $5 students. Bopshop.com; myriad3.com. — BY RON NETSKY 349 East Ave. 757-752-8370. reverbnation.com. 7 p.m. [ JAZZ ]

Bossa Nova Jazz Thursdays ft. The Charles Mitchell Group.

Espada Brazilian Steak, 274 N. Goodman St. Village Gate. 473-0050. espadasteak.com. 6 p.m. Free.

Jazz Weekends! ft. The David Detweiler Trio. Next

Door Bar & Grill, 3220 Monroe Ave. 249-4575. wegmansnextdoor.com. Thursday: 5 p.m., Friday: 8 p.m/. Free.

The Joe Santora Trio w/ Curtis Kendrick & Emily Kirchoff. Michael’s Valley

Grill, 1694 Penfield Rd. (585) 383-8260. michaelsvalleygrill. com. Free. Sonny Brown Band. The Lower Mill, 61 N. Main St. 582-1830. thelowermill. com The Rabbit Room, 61 N. Main St. Honeoye Falls. 582-1830. thelowermill.com. 6:30 p.m The Rabbit Room, 61 N. Main St. Honeoye Falls. 582-1830. thelowermill.com. 6:30 p.m. The Swooners. Woodcliff Hotel & Spa, 199 Woodcliff Dr. 381-4000. woodcliffhotelspa.com. 5:308:30 p.m. [ TRADITIONAL ]

Celtic Concert Series: Socks in the Frying Pan. Lovin’ Cup,

300 Park Point Dr. 292-9940. lovincup.com. 8 p.m. $20.

[ OPEN MIC ]

HOLLYWOOD ACTING COACH FRANK ROSSI

5 Alarm Open Jam.

Firehouse Saloon, 814 S. Clinton Ave. 319-3832. thefirehousesaloon.com. 9-11 p.m. All musicians/genres welcomed!. free.

Open Mic with Mark Herrmann. California Brew

Haus, 402 W. Ridge Rd. 621-1480. facebook.com/ thecaliforniabrewhaus. 9 p.m.

FALL acting classes begin

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[ R&B/ SOUL ] Meg Williams. BLU Bar & Grill, 250 Pixley Rd. 750-2980. reverbnation.com. 6 p.m. Uptown Groove. Richmond’s Tavern, 21 Richmond Street. 270-8570. richmondstavern. com. 9 p.m. [ HIP-HOP/RAP ] R K Society. California Brew Haus, 402 W. Ridge Rd. 621-1480. facebook.com/ thecaliforniabrewhaus. 5-10 p.m. [ POP/ROCK ] Blue Jimmy. Sticky Lips BBQ Juke Joint, 830 Jefferson Rd. 292-5544. stickylipsbbq.com. 9-11 p.m. Oscillation Station. Bug Jar, 219 Monroe Ave. 454-2966. bugjar.com. 8 p.m. $6-$8. continues on page 16

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PRACTICAL PHILOSOPHY Wednesday nights beginning Sept. 17, 2014

From 7-9:30p.m. at the AAUW Mansion, 494 East Ave. Rochester. • Free Parking

INTERACTIVE, EXPERIENTIAL and INFORMAL Tuition: $100, cash or check Mail to: School of Applied Philosophy, P.O. Box 525, Pittsford, NY 14534; or in person, from 6:15p.m.-6:50p.m. on Sept. 17th – your first night of attendance.

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SCHOOL OF APPLIED PHILOSOPHY Not for profit. Non Sectarian, Provisional Charter: NYS ED. Dept. Since 1989

rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 15


FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5

cafeveritas.com. 7:30 p.m. $10-$18. Sofrito. Havana Cabana, 289 Alexander St. 232-1333. havanacabanaroc.com. 10 p.m. Call for info.

[ ACOUSTIC/FOLK ] Pan de Oro. Havana Cabana, 289 Alexander St. 232-1333. havanacabanaroc.com. 10 p.m. Call for info. Ralph Louis. Rochester Plaza Hotel, 70 State St. 546-3450. rochesterplaza.com. 6 p.m. Free.

[ BLUES ]

Cold Sweat. The Beale,

693 South Ave. 271-4650. thebealegrille.com. 7:3011:30 p.m. Eggs Benedict. Abilene Bar & Lounge, 153 Liberty Pole Way. 232-3230. abilenebarandlounge.com. 9:30 p.m. $5.

[ BLUES ]

Eric and the Bluesbirds.

Abilene Bar & Lounge, 153 Liberty Pole Way. 232-3230. abilenebarandlounge.com. 6-9 p.m. $5. [ CLASSICAL ]

Pamela Kurau Soprano. Doty

Recital Hall SUNY Geneseo, 1 College Circle, Geneseo. 2455824. geneseo.edu/music. 8 p.m.

[ DJ/ELECTRONIC ] Baila Fridays. Tilt Nightclub & Ultralounge, 444 Central Ave. 232-8440. facebook. com/Tiltnightclu. 10 p.m. $5, 21+, $12,18+. [ JAZZ ]

Anthony Giannovola.

Lemoncello, 137 West Commercial St. East Rochester. 385-8565. lemoncello137.com. 6:309:30 p.m.

Faculty Artist Series: Jazz Faculty Showcase. Kilbourn

Hall, 26 Gibbs St. 274-1100. esm.rochester.edu. 8-10 p.m. $10, Free for UR students, faculty, staff. Greg Townson. Johnny’s Irish Pub, 1382 Culver Rd. 3343030. johnnyslivemusic.com. 5 p.m. Jazz Faculty Showcase. Kilbourn Hall, 26 Gibbs St. 274-1000. esm.rochester. edu. 8 p.m. $10, Free for UR students, faculty, staff.

Jazz Weekends! ft. The David Detweiler Trio. Next Door Bar

& Grill, 3220 Monroe Ave. 249-4575. wegmansnextdoor. com. Thursday: 5 p.m., Friday: 8 p.m/. Free. Matthew Sieber Ford Trio. Tapas 177 Lounge, 177 St. Paul St. 262-2090. tapas177. com. 4:30 p.m. Free.

The Joe Santora Trio w/ Curtis Kendrick & Emily Kirchoff. Michael’s Valley

Grill, 1694 Penfield Rd. (585) 383-8260. michaelsvalleygrill. com. Free. Special Blend. Woodcliff Hotel & Spa, 199 Woodcliff Dr. 381-4000. woodcliffhotelspa.com. 7:30 p.m.-midnight. [ OPEN MIC ] Open Mic. Bread & Water Theatre, 172 West Main St. 797-9086. breadandwatertheatre.org. 9:30 p.m.

POP ROCK | TWENTY ONE PILOTS

Typically, a band either stands out because it is good or it breaks from the norm. In Twenty One Pilots’ case, it’s both. The schizophrenic pop group — and yes, that is actually a real subgenre of pop — uses a combination of keyboards, synthesizers and drums along with lyrics written in a poetic fashion. It’s a treat to hear the singer — well, he’s more like spoken word — break into a rap since his style, much like the group itself, just drips with uniqueness. Combine it with electronica and it’s easy to see the wide appeal the schizoid-pop duo carries. Twenty One Pilots plays with MisterWives and Vinyl Theatre on Wednesday, September 10, at the Main Street Armory, 900 East Main Street. $23-$25. Mainstreetarmory. com; twentyonepilots.com. — BY TREVOR LEWIS [ HIP-HOP/RAP ]

Mobb Deep. California Brew

Haus, 402 W. Ridge Rd. 621-1480. facebook.com/ thecaliforniabrewhaus. 7 p.m. $25-$30.

Slap Weh Fridays ft. Blazin Fiyah. Eclipse Bar & Lounge, 372 Thurston Rd. 235-9409. Call for info.

[ REGGAE/JAM ] Going Green. Abilene Bar & Lounge, 153 Liberty Pole Way. 232-3230. abilenebarandlounge.com. 9:45 p.m. $5. Honey Badgers. The Beale, 1930 Empire Blvd. Webster. 216-1070. thebealegrille. com. 7:30-11:30 p.m.

334-3030. nashvillesny.com. 9 p.m.

Inner Planets CD Release Party w/ Strange Bird. Lovin’

Cup, 300 Park Point Dr. 2929940. lovincup.com. 8 p.m. $5. Old Hippies. Sticky Lips BBQ Juke Joint, 830 Jefferson Rd. 292-5544. stickylipsbbq.com. 9:30-11:30 p.m. True Blue. Bill Gray’s Brockport Tap Room, 4647 South Lake Road. Brockport. 637-5004. facebook.com/ truebluerochester. 9:30 p.m.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6 [ ACOUSTIC/FOLK ]

3rd Annual Barnfest.

[ POP/ROCK ]

“Ether” Album Release Party. Lovin’ Cup, 300

Park Point Dr. 2929940. facebook.com/ events/857238457621356/. 8 p.m. $5 -$10 presale (includes CD). Annie Wells. The Little Theater, 240 East Avenue. thelittle.org. 8:30-10:30 p.m.

Bowla Cheats and The Greener Grass Band.

Firehouse Saloon, 814 S. Clinton Ave. 319-3832. reverbnation.com. 7 p.m. 21+. $5. Dave Riccioni & Friends. Mastrella’s Irondequoit Steak House, 4300 Culver Road. 467-2750. 5-8 p.m. Hall Pass. Nashvilles, 4853 W Henrietta Rd. Henrietta.

16 CITY SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014

Hudson’s Big Red Barn, 6525 Rts 5 & 20, Bloomfield. 6241313. wbccucc.org. 5-10 p.m. $6-$8. Acoustic Saturdays. Rush Church, 6200 Rush Lima Rd. Rush. 568-2178. thecafearoma.com. First Saturday of every month, 7 p.m. Free. Jim Nelson. Lemoncello, 137 West Commercial St. East Rochester. 385-8565. lemoncello137.com. 7-10 p.m.

The Kennedys with Scott Regan and Maria Gillard Opening. Cafe Veritas at First

Unitarian Church, 220 Winton Road South. cafeveritas.org. 7:30 p.m. $10-$18. The Kennedys. Cafe Veritas at First Unitarian Church, 220 Winton Road South.

[ CLASSICAL ]

Faculty Artist Series - Eastman Virtuosi. Kilbourn Hall, 26

Gibbs St. 274-1100. esm. rochester.edu. 8 p.m. $10. [ DJ/ELECTRONIC ]

Supper Time with DJ Bizmuth. Lovin’ Cup, 300

Park Point Dr. 292-9940. lovincup.com. 5-8 p.m. [ JAZZ ]

7 Sense. Johnny’s Irish Pub,

1382 Culver Rd. 334-3030. johnnyslivemusic.com. 8:30 p.m. Gabe Condon Duo. Wegman’s Amore Restaurant, 1750 East Ave. 452-880. Call for info, Free. Live Jazz. ,. 585-427-0540. 6:30 p.m. Live Jazz Call for more Information.

The Joe Santora Trio w/ Curtis Kendrick & Emily Kirchoff. Michael’s Valley

Grill, 1694 Penfield Rd. (585) 383-8260. michaelsvalleygrill. com. Free. Special Blend. Woodcliff Hotel & Spa, 199 Woodcliff Dr. 381-4000. woodcliffhotelspa.com. 7:30 p.m.-midnight. [ R&B/ SOUL ]

Anonymous Willpower.

Sticky Lips BBQ Juke Joint, 830 Jefferson Rd. 292-5544. stickylipsbbq.com.10 a.m.-noon. A Day of Gospel. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Park, 1 Manhattan Square. 4285990. cityofrochester.gov/ ROCthepark. 12-6 p.m. $5. [ REGGAE/JAM ]

Jammin for Jamaica. Lovin’

Cup, 300 Park Point Dr. 292-9940. facebook.com/ events/275654129266621/. 5:30 p.m.-1 a.m. $5-$8. [ METAL ]

Fox 45. Firehouse Saloon,

814 S. Clinton Ave. 319-3832. reverbnation.com. 7 p.m. [ POP/ROCK ]

Big Grey Machine. House of

Guitars, 645 Titus Ave. 5443500. houseofguitars.com. 5 p.m.

Breakout Artist Music Competition ft.: All About

A Bubble. California Brew

Haus, 402 W. Ridge Rd. 621-1480. facebook.com/ thecaliforniabrewhaus. 5 p.m.-midnight. $10-$14. Connie Deming. The Little Theater, 240 East Avenue. thelittle.org. 8:30-10:30 p.m. Hall Pass. Pelican’s Nest, 566 River St. 663-5910. pelicansnestrestaurant.com. 10 p.m.

Poppa Chubby with Brian Lindsay Band.

Montage Music Hall, 50 Chestnut St. 232-1520. themontagemusichall.com. 8 p.m. $13-$15.

Trashwave Review No. 9, Pink Elephant, Handsome Jack, G. Bug Jar, 219 Monroe

Ave. 292-9940. bugjar.com. 9 p.m. $7-$9.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7 [ ACOUSTIC/FOLK ]

Haus, 402 W. Ridge Rd. 621-1480. facebook.com/ thecaliforniabrewhaus. 5 p.m.-midnight. $10-$14.

Broncko,. Low Litas, Buffalo Sex Change, and Dirty Pennies. Bug Jar, 219

Monroe Ave. 292-9940. bugjar.com. 8 p.m. $10-$12. Christopher Bell. Boulder Coffee Co., 739 Park Ave. 697-1944. bouldercoffee.info. 8-10 p.m.

Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers w/ Steve Winwood. Darien Lake PAC,

9993 Allegheny Rd. Darien. 1-800-745-3000. livenation. com. $37-$131.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 8 [ BLUES ]

Crusasis & Francie Moon (HOLD). Boulder Coffee Co.,

100 Alexander St. 454-7140. bouldercoffee.info. 8-10 p.m.

Bobby Henrie & The Goners.

Abilene Bar & Lounge, 153 Liberty Pole Way. 232-3230. abilenebarandlounge.com. 6 p.m. Celtic Music Sundays. Temple Bar and Grille, 109 East Ave. 232-6000. templebarandgrille.com. 7 p.m. Free. Fandango at the Tango. Tango Cafe, 35 South Washington St. 271-4930. tangocafedance. com. 7:30 p.m. Free, donations accepted.

Jar, 219 Monroe Ave. 2929940. bugjar.com. 9 p.m. $8.

[ CLASSICAL ]

[ JAZZ ]

Bill Slater Solo Piano (Brunch). Woodcliff Hotel &

Spa, 199 Woodcliff Dr. 3814000. woodcliffhotelspa.com.

Faculty Artist Series - David Liptak, composer. Kilbourn

Hall, 26 Gibbs St. 274-1100. esm.rochester.edu. 3 p.m. $10, Free for UR students, faculty, staff. Going for Baroque. Memorial Art Gallery, 500 University Ave. 276-8900. mag.rochester. edu. 1 & 3 p.m. Included w/ museum admission.

[ CLASSICAL ]

Faculty Artist Series - Don Hary. Eastman East Wing

Hatch Recital Hall, 26 Gibbs St. 274-1000. esm.rochester. edu. 8 p.m. $10, Free for UR students, faculty, staff. [ COUNTRY ]

Tail Light Rebellion and Midnight Ghost Train. Bug

Watkins & The Rapiers. The Little Theater, 240 East Avenue. thelittle.org. 7:309:30 p.m. [ POP/ROCK ]

Midnight Ghost Train. Bug Jar, 219 Monroe Ave. 4542966. bugjar.com. 9 p.m. $8.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 [ ACOUSTIC/FOLK ]

Roses & Revolutions. [ TRADITIONAL ] Alison and Zoe. Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St. 315-253-6669. auburnpublictheater.org. 4-6 p.m. $7.

Woodcliff Hotel & Spa, 199 Woodcliff Dr. 381-4000. woodcliffhotelspa.com. 5:308:30 p.m.

Music & Wine Series: The Galtee Mountain Boys.

The Blasters with Gas House Gorillas. Abilene

Keuka Spring Vineyards, 243 State Route 54 (East Lake Road). 315-536-3147. keukaspringwinery.com. noon.

[ BLUES ] Bar & Lounge, 153 Liberty Pole Way. 232-3230. abilenebarandlounge.com. 8:30 p.m. $25-$30.

Bluesday Tuesday Blues Jam.

[ METAL ]

Arsis w/ AllegaeonExmortus. Montage Music

Hall, 50 Chestnut St. 2321520. themontagemusichall. com. 7 p.m. $15-$18. [ POP/ROCK ]

Breakout Artist Music Competition ft.: All About A Bubble. California Brew

P.I.’s Lounge, 495 West Ave. 8 p.m. Call for info. The Landing Open Jam. The Landing Bar and Grille, 30 Fairport Village Landing. Fairport. 919-5548. thelandingbarandgrille.com. 9 p.m. Teagan Ward. The Beale, 693 South Ave. 271-4650. thebealegrille.com. 7:3011:30 p.m.


[ CLASSICAL ]

Faculty Artist Series -Michael Burritt, percussion.

Kilbourn Hall, 26 Gibbs St. 274-1000. esm.rochester. edu. 8 p.m. $10, Free for UR students, faculty, staff. [ JAZZ ]

Deborah Branch. Lemoncello, 137 West Commercial St. East Rochester. 385-8565. lemoncello137.com. 6:309:30 p.m. Ernesto Cervini and Myriad3. The Bop Shop, 1460 Monroe Ave. 271-335. bopshop. com. 8-10 p.m. $10 donation requested , $5 for students. String Theory. Johnny’s Irish Pub, 1382 Culver Rd. 2440990. johnnyslivemusic.com. 8 p.m.

L L ’ U YO

FLIP!

AG E S P R U (O

)

[ KARAOKE ]

Karaoke w/Cory Triest.

Richmond’s Tavern, 21 Richmond Street. 270-8570. richmondstavern.com. Free. [ OPEN MIC ]

Open Mic with jimmy-o.

Banzai Sushi & Cocktail Bar, 682 South Ave. 473-0345. banzairochester.com. 1011:45 p.m. free.

Stand Up & Sing Out: Open Mic Competition. Lovin’ Cup,

300 Park Point Dr. 292-9940. lovincup.com. 8-10:30 p.m. [ POP/ROCK ]

94.1 The Zone/After Dark presents: Bear Hands.

Montage Music Hall, 50 Chestnut St. 232-1520. themontagemusichall.com. 6:30 p.m. $9.41.

Don Christiano-The Beatles Unplugged. Abilene Bar

& Lounge, 153 Liberty Pole Way. 232-3230. abilenebarandlounge.com. Every other Tuesday, 8-10 p.m.

Laura Stevenson, The Hotelier, Somos, Del Paxton, and Hannah Weidner. Bug

Jar, 219 Monroe Ave. 2929940. bugjar.com. 8 p.m. $12.

Re ad C I T Y N e ws p a p e r o n any t a b le t , s m art p h on e or co mp ute r us i n g I S S U U.COM • R E A D T H E E N T I RE P U BLI CAT I O N , COVE R TO COVE R • L IN K TO SP ECI FI C PAG E S • B ROWSE BACK I S S U E S & OT H E R S P ECI A L SECT I O N S

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rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 17


FALL/SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE! September 5-14

Theater

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PITTSFORD PLAZA 387-0070 Following the 2014-15 season, John Haldoupis will retire from Blackfriars Theater after 35 years with the organization. PHOTO BY JOHN SCHLIA

Sharing the dream [ PROFILE ] BY DAVID RAYMOND

“I hate everything I do at first. That’s what motivates me,” John Haldoupis says. He’s talking — passionately — about his first tries at creating and painting a stage set, something he has done for more than three decades for Blackfriars Theater. “I’ll start doing the underpainting with a big brush and I’ll hate how it looks. Then I’ll try a smaller brush, then a smaller one. I’ll keep working, and the thing eventually gets richer-looking, more layered. But it’s all about the underpainting, the bones of what you’re creating. Nothing is instantaneous.” Haldoupis has done the underpainting — both literal and figurative — for 35 years of memorable productions and performances at Blackfriars Theatre. But he announced last spring that he would step down as Blackfriars’ artistic director; the 2014-15 season, which starts this weekend with “Shirley Valentine,” will be his last. A native of Webster, Haldoupis showed artistic talent while very young. His grammar school art teacher visited 18 CITY SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014

the Haldoupis family twice a week for dinner and to give John painting lessons. “He didn’t really know what to do with me,” Haldoupis says. “So he gave me the notes from his own college art classes. I was in grade school, learning about color theory and perspective.” His education after that included a summer at the Chautauqua Institution, a one-person show, a membership in the National Watercolor Society, and a Scholastic Art Award that entitled him to four years of study at any school in the country. He chose RIT … and was immediately, he says “incredibly bored.” “At 17 or 18, I really was reluctant to go to college, and I didn’t like it. I was taking all these beginning-level classes when I had been working on a professional level. I showed my portfolio to my professors and they agreed, I could skip to the graduate level painting program. But I didn’t want to be a teacher, so I dropped out of school.” Design eased Haldoupis into theater, he says. His set and costume designs for community theater led to an invitation to work for Blackfriars, starting with

“Man of La Mancha.” He added directing to his resume with “A Day in Hollywood/A Night in the Ukraine.” Within a couple of years, he was invited to be Artistic Director, and has since designed and directed hundreds of Blackfriars productions. “My approach to directing still comes from the visual aspect of a production,” he admits, but he shares this approach with one of his favorite Broadway directors, Hal Prince (of “Phantom of the Opera,” “Company,” “Sweeney Todd,” “Cabaret”), who searches for the “motor” of each show he directs. “That usually boils down to ‘What does the show look like?’” Haldoupis says. “‘What makes it move?’ This is why Prince’s shows are so visually arresting and polished” — a phrase that could well describe many of his Blackfriars productions, which have often made striking use of limited space (and limited budgets). Then there are the actors. When you’re a director, he says, “You’re part therapist, and part interpreter of the playwright — they are the true artists. It took me a continues on page 20


Art Exhibits [ OPENING ] 1570 Gallery at Valley Manor, 1570 East Ave. Painting Together. 546-8439 x 3102. episcopalseniorlife.org. Artisan Direct Art Space, 565 Blossom Road. Art Rochester International Art Show & Fair. Thru Sept 7. Fri. 5-10 p. m., Sat 10 a.m. - 10 p. m., and Sun. 11 a. m.-6 p. m. Over 150 nationallyrecognized artists, photographers, and sculptures. Featuring live music, pop-up performances, libations, demonstrations, and art marketing seminars. 586-3535. info@artisandirectrochester.net. artrochester.net/. Axom Gallery, 176 Anderson Ave., 2nd floor. Metropoliticonscious II. Thru Oct. 4. Artist reception Sept. 6, 5-9 p. m. Media Sculpture and painting by Francesca Lalanne. 232-6030 x23. axomgallery.com. Bertha V B Lederer Gallery, Brodie Hall, I College Dr. Landscape Today and Tomorrow. Thru Oct. 7. Opening reception Fri. Sept 5, 5-7 p. m. Gallery Hours: Tues.-Thurs. 12:30-3:30 p. m., Fri.-Sat. 1-5 p. m. A wideranging media and treatment in paint, photography traditional and digital, printmaking, and drawing. 245-5813. geneseo. edu.; Remnants: Peter B. Jones. Thru Oct. 9. Opening reception Fri. Sept. 5 at 5 p. m. Curators talk: Thurs. Sept 18 at 12 p. m. Sculptural instillation. 245-5813. geneseo.edu. Create Art 4 Good Studios, 1115 E Main Street- Suite #201 Door #5. Emancipation - Finding Light in the Darkness. Thru Sept 25. Opening reception Sept. 5 6-9 p. m. This photographic series is a visual exploration of body image, the meaning of beauty and loving self. 704-4270. Susan@createart4good.org. createart4good.org. Gallery R, 100 College Ave. The Alchemic Elegy. Thru Sept 27. Opening reception Fri. Sept 5, 6-9 p. m. Analog photography by Doug Manchee. 256-3312. galleryr.rit.edu/. Image City Photography Gallery, 722 University Ave. Granularity. Thru Oct. 5. Opening reception Fri. Sept. 12, 5-8:30 p. m. and closing reception Fri. Oct. 3 5-9 p. m. Photography by Steve Levinson. 482-1976. imagecityphotography.com. Lockhart Gallery at SUNY Geneseo, 28 Main St. Aligned Works. Thru Oct. 9. Opening reception Fri. Sept 6 5-7 p. m. 245-5813. geneseo.edu. MVP Health Care’s Wellness Center, 220 Alexander St. For the Love of Art. Thru Sept 10. Opening reception Fri. Sept 5, 3-8 p. m. 327-5752. cminchella@mvphealthcare.com. Nazareth College Colacino Gallery, 4245 East Ave. GALAPAGOS: Paintings by Michael Bogin. Thru Oct. 18. Opening reception Fri. Sept. 5, 5-7 p. m. 289-5073. naz. edu/art/colacino-art-gallery. Outside the Box Art Gallery, Bldg 9, The Canal Works, 1000 Turk Hill Rd. Bound To Come Apart!. Thru Sept 27. Opening reception Thurs. Sept. 4, 6-8 p. m. Wine and and hors d’oeuvres. The Altered Book Art Exhibit. 6452485. outsidetheboxartgallery.org. Steve Carpenter Gallery & Art Center, 176 Anderson Ave. New continues on page 21

ART | NEW EXHIBIT OPENINGS ROUNDUP

A fresh, new month means fresh, new exhibits hosted by artist studios, galleries, and alternative spaces. Here are a few key picks, but for a full list, visit firstfridayrochester.org and check out the art openings section of CITY’s calendar in this issue or at rochestercitynewspaper.com. The result of a call to the community for submissions, “Bound to Come Apart: The Altered Book Art Exhibit” (pictured) will open Wednesday, September 3, with a reception on Thursday, September 4, 6 to 8 p.m. at Outside the Box Gallery (1000 Turk Hill Road, Bldg. #9, Fairport). The exhibit continues through September 27. Gallery hours are Thursday to Saturday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. For more information, call 6452485 or visit outsidetheboxag.com. On Friday, September 5, 6 to 9 p.m., the Genesee Center for the Arts and Education (713 Monroe Avenue) will host a rare triple opening reception, one in each gallery the center features. The Firehouse Gallery will present “Domesticated Fire,” featuring utilitarian vessels by four potters. Julie Crosby of Trumansburg, Fred Herbst of Corning, and Liz Lurie of Cazenovia each wood-fire their work, while Randall Carson, from Illinois, prefers salt fires — the sculpted surfaces bear unique markings, textures, and sheens, characteristic of these processes. The show continues through September 27. The Genesee Center’s Community Darkroom Galleries will host “Five by Six,” a photography exhibit produced entirely by Community Darkroom’s “Exhibit Experience” class. Participating photographers include Jen Casasanta, Talmadge Krajowsky, Ron Reilley, Jessica Robb, Steve Spring, and Ron Valentine. The work will remain on view through November 17. Finally, Joe Brown Gallery at the Genesee Center’s Printing & Book Arts Center will host “Ink & Stitch,” a show of work by and website launch party for mixed media artist, printmaker, and sweater designer Kate Fisher. This mini show continues through September 12. Call 244-1730, or visit geneseearts.com, for information regarding each gallery’s hours. Gallery r (100 College Avenue) will host “The Alchemic Elegy,” an homage to the disappearance of analog photography and its processes by photographer Doug Manchee. The opening reception takes place Friday, September 5, 6 to 9 p.m. Gallery hours are Wednesday through Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m. For more information, call 242-9470 or visit galleryr.rit.edu. Right next door, Spectrum Gallery (Lumiere Photo, 100 College Avenue) will host “Between and Beyond,” featuring two series of photographs by Steve Malloy-Desormeaux. For the past eight years, Malloy-Desormeaux has photographed the local landscapes of Lake Ontario’s shoreline, represented in “Glimpsing Edgemere,” and the rural environment of upstate New York, represented in “Farmscapes.” The show will remain on view through September 30, and gallery hours are Tuesday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. For more information, call 461-4447, or visit spectrumgalleryroc.com. — BY REBECCA RAFFERTY rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 19


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Sharing the dream continues from page 18

while to learn how to work with actors, how to push the buttons they need. I try to show them respect, and give them a comfort zone to work in.” When he won CITY Newspaper’s Achievement Award in Theater in 2010, he recalls thinking to himself, “How odd that an individual person should get this. One person didn’t do all this. Theater is a shared dream, on both sides of the footlights. I work with a lot of incredibly talented people who execute my dreams.” “The key to a Blackfriars season is variety,” Haldoupis says. “My choices

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tend to be very eclectic and we sometimes push our subscribers. If everybody loves everything, you’re doing something wrong.” Haldoupis claims, “I despise elitist feelings about theater. You have to accept something for what it is, not what it isn’t. Lots of people say paintings on black velvet are horrible. No, you can have good painting on black velvet and bad painting on black velvet.” So along with Stephen Sondheim musicals and classic American plays, Blackfriars produces shows like “Boeing Boeing” and “Nunsense” — but with as much detail and artistry as any other show. Haldoupis’s choices for his last Blackfriars season are revealing. For his opening he wanted to be “nostalgic,” he says, so he chose the one-woman show “Shirley Valentine.” The show was a great success 15 years ago with Susan Hopkins. It is followed by Herb Gardner’s “I’m Not Rappaport,” which Haldoupis calls “a well-crafted American play that’s not overexposed.” (He puts last season production of Lanford Wilson’s “HOT L BALTIMORE” in this category — a title with just enough name recognition to get audiences interested in seeing it.) Holiday time brings a Las Vegas-style nightclub revue, “because I’ve always wanted to do showgirl costumes,” he says. This is followed by Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet,” directed by Fred Nuremberg. It’s obviously a familiar play, but Haldoupis thinks with Nuremberg’s direction and his design it will have “a Blackfriars twist.” “Fred and I agree that Shakespeare in modern dress doesn’t work, so we’re making it quasi-period, like a dreamscape.” Actors in white will perform in front of a backdrop of crumpled white paper and red roses (Haldoupis emphasizes that this “Romeo and Juliet” is still in the planning stages).

“Somebody wanted to make a tee-shirt saying, ‘It’s not a Blackfriars musical unless somebody dies!’” PHOTO BY JOHN SCHLIA

The season concludes with the Jeanine Tesori musical “Violet.” “When I tell people it’s about a young woman who’s been disfigured with an axe and who travels cross-country to find a TV evangelist who will cure her, the response is, ‘Oh yes — quintessentially John Haldoupis.’” “I like to do whatever floats my boat, even if it’s darker material,” he says, and Blackfriars’ musicals include such somber fare as Sondheim’s “Sweeney Todd” and “Passion,” Kander and Ebb’s “Zorba,” and Andrew Lloyd Webber’s “Sunset Boulevard”. “Somebody wanted to make a tee-shirt saying, ‘It’s not a Blackfriars musical unless somebody dies!” When asked about his decision to retire from Blackfriars, he says, “It’s been 35

years of Fridays at 8 p.m.,” he says. “It’s relentless. You know when Friday night comes around that there’s no turning back. Putting on theater is a job with an intensity like no other. “And it’s an intensity I think I can live without,” he says with a laugh. “I’ll be 55 in October and I’d like to go back to making art just for me. I want to go back to being my own playwright.” What does he consider his legacy? “A certain consistency”, he says. “By having my hands in a lot of things, I think there is something called ‘a Blackfriars show.’ It’s nice to think people get what I’ve been all about.”


Art Exhibits York Figure Study Guild Annual Art Exhibition. Thru Sept 13. Opening reception Fri Sept 5 from 6-9 p. m. Extended gallery hours during clothesline festival. Live art mentoring Saturday Sept, 13 2-5 p. m. 1 model, 3 hours. nyfigurestudyguild.com. Towpath Café, 6 N Main St Fairport. Retrospective Twenty Years. Thru Sept 29. The Photography and Digital Artwork of Marian Cameron, Beyond Photography. Presented by Outside the Box Gallery & Studio. 645-2485. outsidetheboxagallery.org. [ CONTINUING ] Bridge Art Gallery University of Rochester Medical Center, 300 Crittenden Blvd. “Play.” urmc. rochester.edu. Crossroads Coffeehouse, 752 S. Goodman St. Crossroads Spring Art Show. Work by Rachel Dow, Paolo Marino, Kristy Totter. 2446787. rdow81@yahoo.com. xroadscoffeehouse.com. Gallery Salon & Spa, 780 University Ave. The Empty Center. Debut artwork by Pam Howe and photographs by Catherine MacWilliams. 271-8340. erikagallerysalon@gmail.com. George Eastman House, 900 East Ave. Lewis Hine and Mickalene Thomas. Lewis Hine, thru Sept. 17. Mickalene Thomas: Happy Birthday to a beautiful woman. Thru Oct 19. 271-3361. eastmanhouse.org. Image City Photography Gallery, 722 University Ave. Portfolio Showcase 2014. Thru Sept 7. Award ceremony Sept 5, 5-9 p. m. Gallery Hours: Tues.-Sat. 12-6 p. m., Sun. 12-4 p. m. 482-1976. imagecityphotography.com. International Art Acquisitions, 3300 Monroe Ave. Indian Summer Sky. Thru Sept 30. Summer light fades away to the palette of Indian summer skies in Arno Arrak’s original watercolor landscapes. Gallery Hours: Mon-Fri. 10 a. m.- 9 p.m., Sat. 10 a. m. -6 p. m. and Sun 12-5 p. m. 264-1440. internationalartacquisitions.com. Link Gallery at City Hall, 30 Church St. Image City Photography. City Hall Link Gallery will feature a new exhibit by Image City Photography Gallery Partners. 428-7135. cityofrochester.gov. Lux Lounge, 666 South Ave. New Works by Shawnee Hill, Danny Cole, Joe Guy Allard and John Perry.. 232-9030. lux666.com. Memorial Art Gallery, 500 University Ave. 6th Rochester Biennial. Through Sep 21. Wed-Sun 11 a.m.–5 p.m., Thu 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Six regional artists working in a variety of media. 276-8900. mag. rochester.edu. MuCCC Gallery Space, 142 Atlantic Ave. Concentrated Aggregation: Works on Paper by David Werberig. Gallery open during regular performance schedules at MuCCC Theatre. muccc.org. My Sister’s Gallery at the Episcopal Church Home, 505 Mt. Hope Ave. ESLC Shining Stars. Thru Sept 14. A display of paintings, drawing, and mixed media from senior residents at four of the ESLC campuses. 546-8439 x 3716. episcopalseniorlife.org.

THEATER | “MARX IN SOHO”

In “Marx in Soho,” the Marx is definitely Karl, but Soho is not the one in London (where Marx actually lived in the mid1800’s), it’s the one in late 20th-century New York City, where the great political philosopher has materialized, but still finds plenty of economic and social injustice to rail against, while also recalling the tendentious women in his life: his wife Jenny and daughter Eleanore. This weekend, Greater Rochester Repertory Company produces this 1999 play by the revisionist American historian Howard Zinn, with veteran local actor Jack Simel playing Karl Marx. The Los Angeles Times summed up Zinn’s message as “Capitalism without conscience is a recipe for revolution” — which suggests that “Marx in Soho” might have been written this morning. “Marx in Soho,” presented by Greater Rochester Repertory Company, is Thursday, September 4, through Sunday, September 7, at RAPA, 727 East Main Street. 7:30 p.m. on September 4, 5, and 6; 2 p.m. on September 7. $15-$20. Grrctheatre.org. — BY DAVID RAYMOND Nan Miller Gallery, 3450 Winton Place. Albert Paley on Park Avenue.. Tue-Sat 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 292-1430. nanmillergallery.com. Nazareth College Arts Center Gallery, 4245 East Ave. Nazareth College Department of Art Faculty Show. Thru Sept. 20. Opening reception Fri. Sept. 5, 5-7 p. m. Featuring ceramics, illustrations, metalwork, paintings, photos, prints, and sculpture. 389-5073. naz.edu. Ock Hee’s Gallery, 2 Lehigh St. Ukiyo-e: Images of the Floating World. Thru. Oct. 18. Japanese prints and Katagami stencils by Merlin C. Dailey Gallery hours: Mon.-Sat. 11 a. m. -5 p. m. 6244730. ockheesgallery.com. Outside the Box Art Gallery, Bldg 9, The Canal Works, 1000 Turk Hill Rd. Flea Market Vignettes. Gallery hours: Wed. -Sat 11 a. m.-4 p. m. Thurs. till 6 p. m. and Sun. 1 -3 p. m. 654-2485. outsidetheboxag.com. The Owl House, 75 Marshall St. Chad Grohman. 360-2920. owlhouserochester.com. Record Archive, 33 1/3 Rockwood St. The Vinyl Countdown: A Dudes Night Out Production. An art collective of talented dude artists from in and around the Rochester area. From 2D to 3D, from pencils sketches to oil paintings!. recordarchive.com. Rochester Contemporary Art Center, 137 East Ave. State of the City: Lost and Found. Thru Sept. 27. Ft. monumental installations from Ron Klein, Laura Quattrocchi and SHUA Group, each considering and discussing consumption and waste in a contemporary environment. 461-2222. info@ rochestercontemporary.org. rochestercontemporary.org.

Schweinfurth Art Center, 205 Genesee St. Explorations. Thru Oct. 19. Opening reception Sept 5, 5-8 p. m. and will include live music. Paintings by Archimore. 315-255-1553. mtraudt@ schweinfurthartcenter.org. schweinfurtharcenter.org. Steadfast Tattoo, 635 Monroe Ave. Mr. Prvrt. Known for his work in Rochester’s Wall Therapy, Mr. Prvrt’s new work is on display here at Steadfast Tattoo. 3194901. tattoosteadfast.com. Tower Fine Arts Center, SUNY Brockport, 180 Holley St. Department of Art Alumni Exhibition. Thru Oct 10. Photography, sculpture, and ceramics. 395-2805. brockport. edu/finearts. Wayne County Council for the Arts, 108 W Miller St Newark. Richard W. Ware Watercolors Exhibit & Sale. Thru Sept 26. Opening reception Sat. Sept. 13, 3-6 p. m. Quiet watercolors of familiar scenes. 315-331-4593. waynearts.wordpress.com/. Williams-Insalaco Gallery at FLCC, 3325 Marvin Sands Dr. Alumni Biennial Exhibition: The Art, Music, and Poetry of Rand Darrow. 785-1369. flcc.edu.

Art Events [ WED., SEPTEMBER 3 ] Art Night With Ken Karnage. 6 p.m. Triumph Tattoo Studio, 127 Railroad St. Bring your art supplies and an open mind Free 270-4772. KenKarnage@ gmail.com. triumphtattoostudio. com. Genesee Valley Calligraphy Guild Gathering. First Wednesday of every month, 7 p.m. Barnes & Noble, 3349 Monroe Ave. Free continues on page 22 rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 21


Art Events

to sign up Free 697-0235. bouldercoffeeco.com.

396-2487. gvcalligraphy@gmail. com. gvcalligraphy.org. Sign Language Garden Tour. 3 p.m. George Eastman House, 900 East Ave. 271-3361. eastmanhouse.org. [ FRI., SEPTEMBER 5 ] Celebrate the Opening of the Coco Room!. 5-9 p.m. Hungerford Building, 1115 E. Main St. 4780159. nereidafromtheroc@gmail. com. nereidavazquez.com. Chamada. 5-10 p.m. Rochester Capoeira Center, 34 Elton St rochestercapoeira.com. Coming to America. 5-9 p.m. Bug Jar, 219 Monroe Ave. Free. 4542966. bugjar.com. Domesticated Fire, Five By Six, and Ink & Stitch. 6-9 p.m. Genesee Center for the Arts and Education, 713 Monroe Ave. Four potters, student photography, and mixed media arts, printmaker and sweater designer Kate Fisher. 244-1730. geneseearts.org. Hungerford Open Studios. First Friday of every month, 6-9 p.m. Hungerford Building, 1115 E. Main St. Enter Door #2 Free. thehungerford@thehungerford. com. Ikebana @ First Friday. 6-9 p.m. Kuma Gama Studio, Hungerford Bldg, 1115 E. Main St., Door 2, Suite 228 Ikebana International Chapter 53 will exhibit flower arrangements created by our members using vessels showcasing the work of local artist Cody Kroll ikebanarochester.org/. Waiting for the World to Change. 5-10 p.m. Colleen Buzzard’s Studio, 250 North Goodman Street, Anderson Arts Building Art created by thirteen artists, using vintage globes as a starting point. Presented by Nancy Topolski & Colleen Buzzard. 507-3216. [ SAT., SEPTEMBER 6 ] The Opposite of Concrete. 4-7 p.m. Main Street Arts, 20 W. Main St., Clifton Springs This exhibition examines abstract imagery from

[ THU., SEPTEMBER 4 ] Seward House Museum to Host Mark Russell. 7 p.m. Auburn High School, 250 lake Ace $15-$75. 315-252-1283. sewardhouse.org. Rob Little. 7:30 p.m. Comedy Club, 2235 Empire Blvd Webster $12-$15. 671-9080. thecomedyclub.us. [ FRI., SEPTEMBER 5 ] Steve Marshall. Sep. 5-6, 9 p.m. Joke Factory Comedy Club, 911 Brooks Avenue $10. 328-6000. rocjokefactory.com.

THEATER | “THE PHILANDERER”

Two women want to marry the same man, who really isn’t interested in getting married at all but would rather spout jokes and paradoxes: this must be a Bernard Shaw play. “The Philanderer” is one of his earliest, written in 1893 and displaying many of the political concerns and character types that preoccupied him throughout his career. As one of Shaw’s “Plays Unpleasant,” along with “Widower’s Houses” and “Mrs. Warren’s Profession,” “The Philanderer” was so controversial that it wasn’t performed until 1902. When Classics Theater of Rochester presents “The Philanderer” at MuCCC it will be using Shaw’s rarely performed original ending. We won’t spoil it, but we can tell you that it is definitely … Shavian. Shaw’s “The Philanderer,” presented by Classics Theater of Rochester will be performed Thursday, September 4, through Sunday, September 7, at MuCCC, 137 Atlantic Avenue. 8 p.m. on September 4, 5, and 6; 2 p.m. on September 7. $12-$15. Muccc.org. — BY DAVID RAYMOND 5 different points of view through paintings and photographs 315462-0210. mstreetarts@gmail. com. mainstreetartsgallery.com. People’s Climate March Art Build!. 1-3 p.m. Visual Studies Workshop, 31 Prince Street 7039230. gandhiearthkeepers.org.

Comedy [ WED., SEPTEMBER 3 ] Best Friends Comedy Showcase. 7:30 p.m. Boulder Coffee Co.,

739 Park Ave. A weekly comedy showcase of local Rochester comedians! Sign up the week before on the “Rochester Comedy” Facebook page. Hosted by Vasia Ivanov 697-0235. bouldercoffeeco.com. Comedy Improv. 8 p.m. Joke Factory Comedy Club, 911 Brooks Avenue (585( 328-6000. jokefactorycomedyclub.com. Open Mic: Comedy. 7:30 p.m. Boulder Coffee Co., 739 Park Ave. Arrive a little early

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[ MON., SEPTEMBER 8 ] Monday Night Raw. 10 p.m. Banzai Sushi & Cocktail Bar, 682 South Ave. Open mic comedy, hosted by Uncle Trent. Cash prize Free 473-0345. banzairochester. com. banzairochester.com.

Dance Events [ WED., SEPTEMBER 3 ] Lindy Jam: Weekly Swing Dance. 8:45 p.m. Lindy Jam is a weekly swing dance on Wednesday nights, 8:45-11pm, hosted by Groove Juice Swing. Friendly atmosphere. Beautiful ballroom. Free beginner dance lesson at 9pm. No partner or experience necessary. Admission is free if it’s your first time!. $4 (or free if it’s your first time!). lindyjam.com. [ THU., SEPTEMBER 4 ] The Duets Project. 7:30 p.m. Hartwell Dance Theatre, Hartwell Hall, SUNY Brockport, 180 Holley St., Brockport Works exploring the duet form. $8.50-$16. 3952797. brockport.edu/finearts. [ FRI., SEPTEMBER 5 ] Friday Night Salsa Party. 9 p.m.1 a.m. Tango Cafe, 35 South Washington St Introductory Lesson @9 p.m., open dancing with DJ Freddy C 10 p.m.-1 a.m $5 admission. 271-4930. tangocafedance.com.

[ SAT., SEPTEMBER 6 ] West African Drumming and Dance Classes with Fana Bongoura. 10:30 a.m.-noon. Baobab Cultural Center, 728 University Ave. Saturdays at Baobab, Sundays at DancEncounters, 215 Tremont St $10-$15 per session. 503-679-3372. kerfala.bangoura@gmail.com. mounafanyi.org. [ TUE., SEPTEMBER 9 ] Midnight Tango. 9 p.m.-midnight. Boulder Coffee Co., 960 Genesee St. Come learn new and old ways to tango, with a welcoming crowd and great atmosphere. If you’re building up the courage, feel free to stop by and enjoy the music. Cover fee $8 for dancers, free for future dancers $8. 287-5282. bouldercoffeeco.com.

Festivals [ WED., SEPTEMBER 3 ] Apples, Cider and Donuts! Welcome to the start of our season at the Apple Farm!. Through Nov. 1, 10 a.m.-7 p.m. The Apple Farm, 1640 State Rte. 444 . Victor 924-3420. thevictorapplefarm.com/visitingus/pick-your-own. [ SAT., SEPTEMBER 6 ] Homestead Festival. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Beaver Meadow Audubon Center, 1610 Welch Rd, North Java $5-$7. 457-3228. buffaloaudubon.org. Love’s Secret Domain Presents: The More Arts & Crafts Fair. Every other Saturday, 3-8 p.m Love’s Secret Domain, 2142 E. Main Street . Rochetser 585-474-6047. lovelovelovesecretdomain@ yahoo.com. facebook.com/ events/1613523605540418/. [ SUN., SEPTEMBER 7 ] Accordion Fest. 1-5 p.m. Medina Theatre Company, 603 Main St., Medina $5 donation, 18 & under free. 343-9313. goart.com. Chicken BBQ and Corn Roast. 1 p.m. National Warplane Museum, 3489 Big Tree Lane $6-$10.

243-2100. office@1941hag.org. nationalwarplanemuseum.org.

Kids Events [ WED., SEPTEMBER 3 ] Preschool Story Time. 11:30 a.m. Maplewood Community Library, 1111 Dewey Ave. Preschoolers and their caregivers, come enjoy stories, songs, crafts, and movement with children’s librarian Ms. Marcia!. Free. 585-428-8220. margaret.paige@libraryweb.org. maplewoodcommunitylibrary.org. Storytime with Mike. Barnes & Noble, 330 Greece Ridge Center Dr. 9:30 & 10:30 a.m Free. 2274020. bn.com. [ THU., SEPTEMBER 4 ] Story Time. 10:30-11 a.m. Seymour Library, 161 East Ave., Brockport 637-1050. seymourlibraryweb.org. Youth Parkour Class. 5:45 p.m. Rochester Parkour, 121 Lincoln Ave. Ages 11-15. Empower your teen with their own movement. With a curriculum that mixes drills and games, we teach youths how to challenge themselves and strive to be stronger, quicker, and more coordinated while still having tons of fun. Our emphasis on balance and holistic strength makes parkour one of the safest disciplines around $15.00 Drop In. (585) 204-7537. info@rochesterparkour. com. rocpk.com. [ FRI., SEPTEMBER 5 ] Storytelling with Mike. 10:30 a.m. Barnes & Noble, 330 Greece Ridge Center Dr. Free. 227-4020. bn.com. TGIF Java with the RochesterMommies. First Friday of every month, 10 a.m. Panara Bread, 1902 Monroe Ave. Come have coffee with the RochesterMommies on the 1st Friday of every month at Panera Bread on Monroe Ave from 1011am. We’re a community of over 300 moms in Rochester, NY and surrounding areas. We chat online in a private forum and meet-up regularly


and Beyond. 7-8:30 p.m. Greece Public Library, 2 Vince Tofany Blvd. 225-7221. greecehistoricalsociety@yahoo. com. greecehistoricalsociety. net.

at member-driven events around the area. This is a FREE resource and a chapter of The Mommies Network, a 501c(3) non-profit organization dedicated to helping moms find support and friendship in their local community. Check us out today - www.RochesterMommies.com. 442-2060. Toddler Storytime. 10:30 a.m. Lift Bridge Book Shop, 45 Main St Ages 1-4. Free. 637-2260. patkutz@liftbridgebooks.com. liftbridgebooks.com. [ SAT., SEPTEMBER 6 ] GGH Kids. Grossmans Garden & Home, 1801 Fairport Nine Mile Point Rd . Penfield 11 a.m. Ages 4-12. Different activities each week explore the joy of gardening 377-1982. grossmans.com. Monarch Tagging. 1 p.m. Hansen Nature Center, 1525 Calkins Rd. 359-7044. henrietta.org. [ SUN., SEPTEMBER 7 ] Trains at Twilight. New York Museum of Transportation, 6393 E. River Rd $8-$10. 533-1113. rochestertrainrides.com/.

Lectures [ WED., SEPTEMBER 3 ] The Last Days of Stonewall Jackson. 7 p.m. Genesee Community College, Conable Technology Building, 1 College Rd Batavia 343-0055 x6116. genesee.edu. [ THU., SEPTEMBER 4 ] Kriya Yoga, The Ancient Science of Meditation. 7-9 p.m. Old Pickle Factory, 1 Grove St. Pittsford Public Lecture on Kriya Yoga The Ancient Science of Meditation. 224-6230. kriya.org. Memories on the Route of the Black Department. 7:30 p.m. Mendon Community Center, 167 N. Main St. 624-5655. townofmendon.org. Myron Holley: Canal Builder/ Abolitionist/Unsung Hero. 7:30-9 p.m. St John’s Lutheran Church, 800 East Ridge Rd By Local

Literary Events

SPECIAL EVENT | CHAMADA

The term “Chamada” literally means call. And when the Rochester Capoeira Center opens its doors on Friday, September 5, the “Chamada” is to see Afro-Brazilian inspired pen and ink works by local artist Jeffery Smith, and to see performances and demonstrations by the Rochester Capoeira Center. Capoeira is a dance-like art form that grew out of a martial art. To elude their masters’ attention, African slaves in Brazil would disguise their fighting practices as a dance — leading to the creation of the fluid motions, flips, and kicks of Capoeira. Chamada: An Afro-Brazilian Art and Capeoira Performance will be Friday, September 5, at the Rochester Capoeira Center, 34 Elton Street. 6 to 9 p.m. Rochestercapoeira.com. — BY JAKE CLAPP author Richard Reisem. Society members free, guests $1. 3367269. ggw.org/~ihsociety/. Photographer Wayne Belger. 6 p.m. George Eastman House, 900 East Ave. $6 non-members or students. eastmanhouse.org. [ SAT., SEPTEMBER 6 ] Offering Our Best, and Why It Matters. 6-9 p.m. Rochester Baha’i Center, 693 East Avenue 461-3272. [ SUN., SEPTEMBER 7 ] 165 Years Young: The Friendly Home 1849-2014. 1:30 p.m. Friendly Home’s Memorial Gallery, 3165 East Ave. 381-1600. friendlyseniorliving.org.

Sunday Forum: The Social GospelThe Long Uphill Trek Back to the Light. 9:45-10:45 a.m. Downtown United Presbyterian Church, 121 N. Fitzhugh Street 325-4000. downtownpresbyterian.org. [ MON., SEPTEMBER 8 ] Historic Corn Hill and its Arts Festival. 7:30 p.m. Corn Hill District, 133 S Fitzhugh St. 4732170. [ TUE., SEPTEMBER 9 ] African World History Class. 7:30 p.m. Baobab Cultural Center, 728 University Ave. 563-2145. thebaobab.org. The War of 1812: Songs and Stories from New York

[ THU., SEPTEMBER 4 ] Poems for Lunch. 12-1 p.m Central Library, 115 South Ave. 428-8380. libraryweb.org. Pure Kona Open Mic Poetry Series. 7-10 p.m. The Greenhouse Café, 2271 E. Main St. 270-8603. ourcoffeeconnection.org. Rochester Veterans’ Writing Group. 6-8 p.m. Barnes & Noble, 100 Park Point Dr. 737-7501. rocvetwrtiers@gmail.com. [ FRI., SEPTEMBER 5 ] Wide Open Mic. First Friday of every month, 7-9 p.m. Writers and Books, 740 University Ave Rochester’s longest running open mic welcomes poets, performers, and writers of all kinds. wab.org. [ SAT., SEPTEMBER 6 ] 42nd Annual Rochester Antiquarian Book Fair. 10 a.m.5 p.m. Main Street Armory, 900 E. Main St. $5. 232-3221. rochestermainstreetarmory. com. [ MON., SEPTEMBER 8 ] Moving Beyond Racism Book Group. 7-8:30 p.m. Barnes & Noble, 3349 Monroe Ave. 2888644. mbrbookinfo@aol.com. Open Mike. Second Monday of every month, 6:30-8 p.m. Lift Bridge Book Shop, 45 Main St 637-2260. liftbridgebooks.com. [ TUE., SEPTEMBER 9 ] Just Books- September - This I Believe II. 6:30 p.m. Lift Bridge Book Shop, 45 Main St 6372260. liftbridgebooks.com. Lift Bridge Writers’ Group. 6:30 p.m. Lift Bridge Book Shop, 45 Main St Free. 637-2260. liftbridgebooks.com.

Museum Exhibit [ WED., SEPTEMBER 3 ] Oz-some Exhibit. Through Sep. 20. Fairport Historical Museum, 18 Perrin St Toys, bells, ornaments and books will be on display. 7038428. perintonhistoricalsociety.org/. Sodus Bay Lighthouse Museum. Through Oct. 1, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sodus Bay Lighthouse, 7606 N. Ontario St Sodus Point $2-$4. 315-483-4936. sodusbaylighthouse.org. [ SAT., SEPTEMBER 6 ] Top-to-Bottom Tours of Rose Hill Mansion. First Saturday of every month, 11 a.m., 12:30, 2 & 3:30 p.m Rose Hill Mansion, 3373 New York 96A, Geneva $4-$7. 315-789-5151. genevahistoricalsociety.com. [ SUN., SEPTEMBER 7 ] “Bring Your Own Train”. 11 a.m.4 p.m. New York Museum of Transportation, 6393 E. River Rd Road, rail, and trolley vehicles and artifacts; operating model railroad; gallery; gift shop. Bring your own train January-April $3 adults, $2 under 12 533-1113. nymtmuseum.org.

Recreation [ WED., SEPTEMBER 3 ] Fern Walk. 10 a.m.-noon. Letchworth State Park, 1 Letchworth State Park . Castile 493-3600. nysparks.com. Roc Cirque presents Whirly Wendsday. 7 p.m. Genesee Valley Park, Elmwood Ave. Join the fun at Rochester’s premier spin toy meet up. Hooping, poi, juggling, fire performances, and much more. Live DJ’s are playing during the session to help you stay moving. Extra hoops and poi are available free. (585) 683-5734. Wednesday Wanders. 10-11:30 a.m Genesee County Park and Forest, 11095 Bethany Center Road . East Bethany $5- $16, registration required. 344-1122. jspring.geneseeconsed@yahoo. com.

[ THU., SEPTEMBER 4 ] Approaching Full Moon Over the River. 6 p.m. Letchworth State Park, 1 Letchworth State Park . Castile 493-3600. nysparks.com. Shelf Island Hike: Scenic Loop. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Letchworth State Park, 1 Letchworth State Park . Castile 493-3600. nysparks.com. [ FRI., SEPTEMBER 5 ] Hosmer Dinner. Through Sep. 6, 6 p.m. Hosmer Winery, 7020 Route 89, Ovid 1836 Dining experience in this charming inn $75. 538.6822. info@ hosmerwinery.com. gcv.org. Terminator Over the Swamp. 7:30 p.m. The Thousand Acre Swamp Sanctuary, 1581 Jackson Road 773-8911. nature.org 7:30 p.m. The Thousand Acre Swamp Sanctuary, 1581 Jackson Road nature.org. [ SAT., SEPTEMBER 6 ] 13th Annual 5K, Kids Fun Run and Fitness Walk. 7:30 a.m.noon. YMCA, 797 Monroe Ave. $5-$20. 742-4940. rochesterymca.org/victor-5k. 19th Annual Glen Iris 5K Run. 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Letchworth State Park, 1 Letchworth State Park . Castile 493-3600. nysparks.com. The Civil War Tour. 1:30 p.m. Mount Hope Cemetery, North Gate, 791 Mt. Hope Ave. $7. 4613494. fomh.org. Flavors of Rochester. 10 a.m.noon. Rochester Public Market, 280 N. Union St. Outside the MArket Office. 428-6907. cityofrochester.gov/publicmarket. HIIT Classes In The Park. 9 & 10:15 a.m. Ellison Park, Blossom Rd. Real Life Food And Fitness HIIT Classes In The Park $15. 441-9441. reallifefoodandfitness. com. Returning Migratory Birds. 8 a.m. The Thousand Acre Swamp Sanctuary, 1581 Jackson Road nature.org. Rochester Bicycling Club. Check our online calendar for this continues on page 25

rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 23


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24 CITY SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014

Modern culture is chock full of short attention spans that are over-inundated with constantly-refreshing waves of images. A designer is tasked not only with capturing the essence of the article or product, says freelance graphic designer Adam Maida, but with engaging a potential audience, showing them why they should take the time out of their day to discover more. The 26-year-old Rochester native is a self-taught artist, and says he isn’t sure when his passion for drawing became a career in graphic design. Maida’s diverse range of clients includes music promoters, local businesses, The New York Times, and independent filmmakers. “I’ve always liked working with my hands,” Maida says. “Even now, I’d say I use the computer maybe 60 percent of the time. Mostly for tweaking, final editing, but I usually always start with my hands, sketching.” Maida mostly creates physical collages, scanned in either piece by piece, or arranged and then scanned. If he’s not sourcing material from his own photographs, paintings, or drawings, Maida cuts images from books, newspapers, magazines, and random ephemera he’s collected over the years. “I’m big on simplicity — I think most designers are,” Maida says. His style

is stark, and to-the-point, juxtaposing different combinations of boldly colorful shapes, continuous tone images, simple black graphics, color photographs, playful explorations of type, hand-drawn lines, or anxious, painterly handwriting. Maida says his style owes a lot to 1960’s Cuban posters and to the Polish Poster School, specifically artists Henryk Tomaszewski and Roman Cieślewicz. Maida is fascinated by imagery created in the Iron Curtain-era, “because they were facing so much censorship,” he says. “And so they would use visual metaphor, jokes or ideas to sneak their work past censorship bureaus.” Maida’s portfolio includes a lot of film-based work, both personal projects for movies he has enjoyed — such as a poster he created for Italian director and scriptwriter Federico Fellini’s “8 1/2” — and for independent filmmaker clients. He was commissioned by Seattle-based filmmaker Joshua Caldwell to create posters for three films based in Los Angeles. The simple design for “Layover” features a line drawing of a pair of heelclad legs which transform into two crossed arrows, signifying the two paths involved in a choice the main character must make. Other clients have included New York City-based advertising agencies, such as Sawyer, which provides promotion for documentaries, TV series, and film series. When he was commissioned to create a poster for the 2013 High Falls Film Festival, which historically features films about women or by female writers and directors, Maida took the

opportunity to create a work that addressed how much women filmmakers have been overlooked. His design was selected for inclusion in the upcoming Illustrators 56 book, which is put out annually by the Society of Illustrators. Maida has a fairly strong local client base. Among his favorite projects are a set of very pared-down images he designed for a David Lynch film series, shown at the Dryden Theatre, which was used in social media to promote the screenings. Two soon-to-open small businesses — a coffee house and bakery — will feature Maida’s handiwork. “I’m lucky to know some very creative individuals who are passionate about what they do, who are now starting their own businesses and reaching out to me” for logos and help branding their companies, he says. As anyone who owns their own business

knows, getting work is a constant hustle. Maida regularly sends “cold call” emails to art directors, which is how he began working for the New York Times last June. He was hired the same week that he contacted the art director of the oped page, tasked to created imagery for, “When Prisoners Protest,” a story on prison uprisings. Though he doesn’t want to specialize or be known as a political artist, Maida says he’s pleased that in the past year he’s been assigned some heavy, socialcommentary driven work. And as a personal project, he recently created a striking image featuring the Palestinian flag standing upright with hands grasping the stripes like prison bars, and lined up top by barbed wire. “I’m starting to become very interested in opening up and creating a dialogue about some things people don’t really want to talk about,” he says, “whether it’s the situation in Gaza, or here, with racial issues.” Maida rejects the idea that we live in a “post-race” America, and says “it’s very obvious that we don’t, with what’s happened in the last few months.” There is still an underlying racial issue within the judicial system and in how police handle their interactions with black civilians, he says. “At the end of the day,” Maida says, “I just want to create something that stops someone in their tracks, even for a second.”


Recreation week’s ride schedule or visit. Rochesterbicyclingclub.org. Susan B. Anthony & Women’s Rights. 10 a.m. Mount Hope Cemetery, North Gate, 791 Mt. Hope Ave. 461-3494. fomh.org. [ SUN., SEPTEMBER 7 ] Bike MS: ROC the Ride. Sep. 7. 1-800-344-4867. bikemsupstateny.org/. Community Garage Sale. 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Rochester Public Market, 280 N. Union St. 428-6907. cityofrochester.gov/publicmarket. Nature Walk: St. Helena Trail. 1-3 p.m. Letchworth State Park, 1 Letchworth State Park . Castile 493-3600. nysparks.com. Public Tour of North Section of Mount Hope Cemetery. 2 p.m Mount Hope Cemetery, 1133 Mt. Hope Avenue This tour consists of a two-hour leisurely walk on paved roads as well as uneven terrain $5. 461-3494. fomh.org. Rochester Orienteering Club Meet. 12-4 p.m. Mendon Ponds Park, Douglas Road . Mendon $10. roc. us.orienteering.org/.

Downtown Batavia Public Market. 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m 344-0900. downtownbataviany.com. International Sister Cities of Rochester to Host Puerto Plata Firefighters Assistance Project Reception. 6-9 p.m. City Hall, 30 Church St. $40 donation. rochestersistercities.org. Lincoln Tours. 1 & 3 p.m. Seward House Historic Museum, 33 South St., Auburn. 315-2521283. sewardhouse.org. Max at the Gallery Tapas Night. 5-8 p.m. Memorial Art Gallery, 500 University Ave. Live music, wine, beer, tapas for purchase Included in admission: $2.50-$6. 2768900. mag.rochester.edu. Networking Thursdays. 6 p.m. Captain’s Attic, 37 Charlotte St. A Night for Business Professionals & Entrepreneurs 25+. $5 with

business card; $7 without 5468885. Captainsattic@yahoo.com. 5pointentertainment.com. Zokkomon. 7 p.m. Brighton Memorial Library, 2300 Elmwood Ave. brightonlibrary.org. [ FRI., SEPTEMBER 5 ] Big Screen Adventure: Coral Reef Adventure. Rochester Museum and Science Center, 657 East Ave. Fri 4 p.m., sat 2:30 & 4:30 p.m., Sun 1, 2, & 4 p.m., also Mon Oct 8 2:30 & 4:30 p.m $3-$7. 2711880. rmsc.org. Carnegie Mellon University Alumni Clan Annual Steak-Chicken Roast. 6 p.m. Reservations Required. 544-7996. Rochester Woman Magazine September Launch Party. 5-8 p.m. Artisan Direct Art Space, 565 Blossom Road (585) 586-3535. kelly@

rochesterwomanmag.com. rochesterwomanmag.com. ZooBrew. 5:30-9 p.m. Seneca Park Zoo, 2222 St. Paul St Ticket price includes admission to the Zoo as well as live music $10. 336-7200. senecaparkzoo.org. [ SAT., SEPTEMBER 6 ] Adoption Event. noon. Pet Adoption Network, 4261 Culver Rd. (585) 338-9175. info@petadoptionnetwork.org. petadoptionnetwork.org. Annual Peddlers Market. 10 a.m.3 p.m. Morgan-Manning House, 151 Main St 637-3645. Cars for Cancer ~ It’s a Guy Thing!. 8 a.m.-2:30 p.m. BayTowne Plaza, 1900 Empire Blvd Webster $15. 787-4011. trissone@dimarcogroup.com. baytownecarshow.com.

CURE 5k and Fun Walk. 9:30 a.m. Genesee Valley Park, Elmwood Ave. $27.50. 473-0180. https://runsignup.com/race/ny/ rochester/CURE5k. Joyful Rescues - Doggie Adoption Day. 12-3 p.m. Record Archive, 33 1/3 Rockwood St. 244-1210. recordarchive.com/. Life Learners Toastmasters Club #4323 Open House. First Saturday of every month, 5 p.m. Legacy at Blossom, 100 McAuley Rd. Speaking and leadership club. Every first and third Saturday of the month. Life Learners Toastmasters Club #4323 Open House 5-6:30 p.m. January 18, 2014. Free 585-359-0459. Higherself1875@yahoo.com. People’s Climate March Art Build. 1-3 p.m. Visual Studies Workshop, 31 Prince Street 7039230. gandhiearthkeepers.org.

Rochester Fall Home Show. 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Rochester Riverside Convention Center, 123 E Main St 449-3719. RochesterHomeShow.com. Rochester Walk for Farm Animals. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Ontario Beach Park, 4799 Lake Ave $15$25, 18 and under are free. rochester@walkforfarmanimals. org. walkforfarmanimals.org/. Show & Shine. 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Canandaigua Chamber of Commerce, 113 South Main St., Canandaigua 396-0300. cdgabid@yahoo.com. Some Like It Hot. 1-5 p.m. Hosmer Winery, 7020 Route 89, Ovid 869-3393. info@hosmerwinery. com. hosmerwinery.com. Telescope Viewing. Rochester Museum and Science Center, continues on page 26

[ MON., SEPTEMBER 8 ] Yoga for Artistis. 6-7 p.m Rochester Public Market, 280 N. Union St. organicmechanicsroc@ gmail.com.

Special Events [ WED., SEPTEMBER 3 ] 2014 Locavore Challenge. Through Sep. 30, 12-11:45 p.m. Cornell Cooperative Extension of Monroe County, 249 Highland Ave 271-1979. nylocavorechallenge.com. Audrey Hepburn Film Series: Funny Face. 6:30 p.m. The Little Theater, 240 East Avenue $7. thelittle.org. Filmmaker Rolf De Heer to Speak. 8 p.m. Dryden Theatre, 900 East Ave $8. 271-4090. dryden. eastmanhouse.org. First Wednesdays of the Month with Chef Mikami San. First Wednesday of every month. Next Door Bar & Grill, 3220 Monroe Ave. Wegmans Chef Tadao Mikami makes April’s first Wednesday the most delicious evening of the month! He and Chef Brandt collaborate to bring you a spectacular 5-course dinner where you’ll savor Eastern & Western flavors, techniques and ingredients RSVP. 249-4575. nextdoorbarandgrill.com. Free Wine Tasting. First Wednesday of every month, 6-8 p.m. Lovin’ Cup, 300 Park Point Dr. 292-9940. lovincup.com. Geeks Who Drink Pub Quiz. 8 p.m. Scotland Yard Pub, 187 Saint Paul St Free. 730-5030. scotlandyardpub.com. Turning Points. 3:30-5 p.m. An information Center for families whose lives have been touched by Incarceration. Join us to share information, resources, and support Free. 328-0856. turningpoints4families@frontier. com. Wine Tasting Cruises. Through Oct. 1. $26. 662-5748. samandmary.org/. [ THU., SEPTEMBER 4 ] DO OVER! Pups and Pitchers Happy Hour. First Thursday of every month, 5-8 p.m. 140 Alex Bar & Grill, 140 Alexander St. To benefit Rochester Animal Services 2561000. 140alex.com. rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 25


is a good fit for you!. 586-1226. holisticmomsroc@gmail.com. christchurchpittsford.com. Thinkin’ & Drinkin’: The Bug Jar’s Trivia Night. 8:30-9:30 p.m. Bug Jar, 219 Monroe Ave. 21+. Prizes: $20 / $10 / $5 bar tabs for the first, second, and third place teams. Doors at 7:30 p.m Free. bugjar.com.

DANCE | “THE DUETS PROJECT”

The College at Brockport starts up the Rochester dance season this week with “The Duets Project,” a show that explores duets in dance with unique pairings of dancers, musicians, and artists. The pieces to be performed were chosen by distinguished New York City curators and created by choreographers with distinctly individual styles, and many of the dancers and choreographers will be familiar to Rochester dance aficionados. The pieces promise extremes of both style and emotional content. One of the pieces connects dance, photography, and cello music. Choreographer Richard Walters created this new work for Vanessa VanWormer (faculty, The College at Brockport), and was inspired by the photography of Altamash Urooj, specifically his “Taking Life” series which documents the artist’s encounter with a dying bird on a beach. Cellist Hilary Glen provides the music, and visual artist Brad Parquette contributes as well. Also, look for Daniel Gwirtzman’s “Together,” in which the dancers — Heather Roffe (faculty, Nazareth College) and Courtney World — are literally connected during the whole piece. Roffe is a striking dancer with a flair for sensual expressiveness, and has performed with World before. This is sure to be a complex and attention-grabbing work. An original score of electronic, instrumental music by Jeff Story will be performed.

JOIN CITY NEWSPAPER AT THE FIRST NIAGARA ROCHESTER FRINGE FESTIVAL FOR

Performances are Thursday, September 4, at 7:30 p.m., and Friday, September 5, at 4 p.m. and 10 p.m. at the Hartwell Dance Theater (180 Holley Street, Brockport) on the Brockport Campus. General public pays $16; seniors, alumni, faculty and staff tickets are $11; and student tickets are $8. Order your tickets online at fineartstix.brockport.edu or call 395-2787. — BY CASEY CARLSEN

Special Events

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 from 7:30-9PM in the SPIEGELGARDEN at ONE FRINGE PLACE (corner of Main and Gibbs Streets) MORE DETAILS AVAILABLE SOON AT ROCHESTERCITYNEWSPAPER.COM

FREE!

PRIZES!

657 East Ave. Clear skies providing. From Dark til about 10 p.m Admission is free 7039876. rmsc.org. Willkommen to German Day!. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Genesee Country Village & Museum, 1410 Flint Hill Rd Mumford 538-6822. gvc.org. Women’s Health Screening Fair. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Rochester Public Market, 280 N. Union St. The free screenings at the fair include: Asthma, AIDS/ HIV, Osteoporosis, Breast health, Cardiac Health, Colon Cancer, Dental, Diabetes, Glaucoma, Kidney function, Blood lead levels, Skin cancer screeing, Smoking cessation options, Stroke. 428-6907. cityofrochester.gov/ womenshealthfair. [ SUN., SEPTEMBER 7 ] #FlashBackFriday. 5-8 p.m. Stomping Grounds, 22 Castle

26 CITY SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014

Street, Geneva 315-789-5151. genevahistoricalsociety.com. Genetaska Club of Rochester Benefit Fashion Show. 11 a.m. Penfield Country Club, 1784 Jackson Rd . Penfield $25. 8724687. penfieldcc.org. Livingston-Backus Garden Lunch. 12-2 p.m. Genesee Country Village & Museum, 1410 Flint Hill Rd Mumford $25-$35. 2948218. gvc.org. Sunday Drag Brunch Hosted by Poison Waters. noon. 140 Alex Bar & Grill, 140 Alexander St. Food served at 1 p.m $14.95 buffet 256-1000. 140alex.com. A Taste of Indian Culture. 1:303 p.m. Brighton Memorial Library, 2300 Elmwood Ave. brightonlibrary.org. [ MON., SEPTEMBER 8 ] Holistic Moms Network of Rochester. Second Monday of every month, 6:30 p.m. Christ Episcopal Church, 36 S Main St . Pittsford Come check out two meetings to decide if HMN

[ TUE., SEPTEMBER 9 ] Classic Horror Movie Nights. 6:45-11 p.m. Rolling Hills Asylum, 11001 Bethany Center Rd., East Bethany $20. 250-0366. hauntedasylumproductions@ gmail.com. Free STD Screenings for Women ages 13+. 9 a.m.-7 p.m. Trillium Health, 259 Monroe Ave. Free. 545-7200. trilliumhealthny.org. Rohrbach’s Food & Beer Pairing. Second Tuesday of every month, 6 p.m. Rohrbach’s Brewpub, 3859 Buffalo Rd. $30, register. 594-9800. rohrbachs.com/RohrbachsBrewpub.html.

Sports [ SAT., SEPTEMBER 6 ] Community Car Care of Waterloo presents Sportsman Fall Shootout 50L $2,000-to-Win. 7 p.m. Canandaigua Motorsports Park, 2820 County Rd. 10 . Canandaigua $12-$27. 3940961. canandaiguamotorsportspark.com. Rochester Colonials Rugby Club Vs Syracuse Chargers. 1 p.m. Guardian Angels Church, 2061 E. Henrietta Rd rochestercolonials.com/. [ SUN., SEPTEMBER 7 ] Operation Ground Assault | 5k Obstacle Run. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Webster Park, Holt Rd. at Lake Rd. $45 - $75. 323-762-5530. groundassaultevents.com. Rochester Rhinos vs Wilmington Hammerheads. 4:05 p.m. Sahlen’s Stadium, 460 Oak St. $10-$40. ticketmaster.com.

Theater Classics Theater of Rochester Presents: The Philanderer Rochester Shaw Festival. Sep. 4-7. MuCCC, 142 Atlantic Ave Thru Sept. 7. Thurs. and Sat. Sept 4-6 at 8 p. m. Sat. and Sun. Sept 6 & 7 at 2 p. m $12$15. muccc.org. Finger Lakes Musical Theatre Festival. Through Oct. 18. A variety of regional premieres, Broadway classics, off-thewall comedies, and the next generation of musical theater at three different theaters 1-800-457-8897. fingerlakesmtf.com/tickets. I’ve Got the Music in Me. Sat., Sep. 6, 8 p.m. and Sun., Sep. 7, 3 p.m. Downstairs Cabaret at Winton Place, 3450 Winton Place $25. 325-4370. downstairscabaret.com. Marx in Soho. Sep. 4-7. RAPA’s East End Theatre, 727 East Main St Thru Sept 7. Thurs.Sat. Sept 4-6 at 7:30 p. m., Sun. Sept. 7 at 2 p. m. A play on history by Howard Zinn $15-$20. 325-3366. Play Reading: The Scavengers Daughter. Mon., Sep. 8, 7 p.m. Geva Theatre Center, 75 Woodbury Blvd 232-4382. gevatheatre.org.


Shirley Valentine. Sep. 5-14. Blackfriars Theatre, 795 E. Main St Thru Sept. 14. Fri. Sept 5 & 12 at 8 p. m. Thurs. Sept 11 at 7:30 p. m., Sat. Sept. 6 & 13 at 8 p. m. Sun. Sept 7 & 14 at 2 p. m. Middle aged Shirley Valentine is in a rut, Wwhen her best friend wins a trip-for-two to Greece, she packs her bags. she finds romance and adventure, but also the confidence to shape her life $28.50-$36.50. 4541260. blackfriars.org. Wait Until Dark. Sep. 9-Oct. 9. Geva Theatre Center, 75 Woodbury Blvd Thr Oct. 9. Previews: Tues.-Thur. Sept 9-11 at 7:30 p. m., Fri. Sept 12 at 8 p. m. and Sun. Sept. 13 at 2 p. m. Opening: Sat. Sept 13 at 8 p. m. Shows: Tues, Sept 16 at 6 p. m., Wed. & Thurs. Sept 17 & 18 at 7:30 p. m., Fri. Sept 19 at 8 p. m., Tues. Sept 23 & 30 at 7:30 p. m., Wed. Sept. 24 at 7:30 p.m. and Oct. 1 at 2 & 7:30 p. m. Thurs. Sept. 25 & OCt. 2 at 7:30 p. m., Fri. Sept 26 and Oct. 3 at 8 p. m. Sat. Sept 20, 27, & Oct. 4 at 4 & 8:30 p. m., Sun. Sept 14, 21, 28 & Oct 5 at 2 p. m. (sign interpreted) & 7 p. m $25+. 420-2059. gevatheatre.org.

Theater Audition [ WED., SEPTEMBER 3 ] Auditions for the 2014-2015 Season. Through Sep. 15, 6-8:30 p.m. Call for info 2302894. info@madrigalia.org. madrigalia.org. The Best Man. Through 7 p.m. Penfield Recreation Center, 1985 Baird Rd. 474-7264. dandgwood@aol.com. Eastman Rochester Chorus. Eastman School of Music, 26 Gibbs St 274-1444. erc@esm. rochester.edu. esm.rochester. edu. [ THU., SEPTEMBER 4 ] Auditions for Sweeney Todd. 6:30-9 p.m. The Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Reformation, 111 N Chestnut St. 454-3367. stageworksroc@ gmail.com. StageworksRoc.org. [ SAT., SEPTEMBER 6 ] Auditions for Hochstein Jazz Combos. 12-3 p.m. Hochstein School of Music & Dance, 50 N. Plymouth Ave. $10 registration fee, $450 yearly tuition. 4544596. hochstein.org.

Workshops [ WED., SEPTEMBER 3 ] Divination Tool Time. 12-2:45 & 5-5:45 p.m. The Purple Door Soul Source, 3259 Winton Road S $5. 427-8110. purpledoorsoulsource.com. Family Development Class: “Wise Choices”. Ongoing, 12:30-2:30 p.m. Mental Health Association, 320 N Goodman St. For parents of school-age children Free, RSVP 325-3145 x131. mharochester.org. Free LSF Mindercise Mindfulness Class. 7:30-9 p.m. The Assisi Institute, 1400 North Winton Rd. Free 451-1584. livingstressfree.org. Identifying and Knowing your Mushrooms. 5:308 p.m. $20. 690-1926. smugtownmushrooms.com. Knit Clique: Knitting/Crocheting Drop-In. noon. Brighton

Memorial Library, 2300 Elmwood Ave. Snacks are welcome free. 784-5300. brightonlibrary.org. [ THU., SEPTEMBER 4 ] Improving Parent-Child Relationships. 5-7 p.m. Mental Health Association, 320 N Goodman St. 325-3145 x131. mharochester.org. Meditation. 7-8 p.m. Grow2bu, 595 Blossom Rd $15. 9530503. grow2bu.com/. Message Class. First Thursday of every month, 7:30 p.m. Sufi Order of Rochester Center for Sufi Studies, 494 East Ave. Carriage House of AAUW No charge. 2480427. hecca@frontiernet.net. sufiorderofrochester.org. Preserved Dahlia Wreath Class. 2:30-4:30 p.m. Hurd Orchards, 17260 Ridge Rd. Call for info 638-8838. hurdorchards.com. Rochester Makerspace Open Nights. 6-10 p.m. Rochester Makerspace, 850 St. Paul St. #23 Bring a project to work on or something to show others, help work on the space, or just get to know the venue Free. 210--0075. rochestermakerspace.org. Yoga. Eastside Wellness Center, 625 Ayrault Rd. Monday Vinyasa Flow 4:30 p.m., Restorative 6 p.m. Thursday Vinyasa Flow 5:30 p.m $14 drop-in, $60 5 classes, register. cindy@relaxreleaserestore.com. [ FRI., SEPTEMBER 5 ] Spirit Tutoring. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. The Purple Door Soul Source, 3259 Winton Road S $1/ minute, $5 minimum. 427-8110. purpledoorsoulsource.com. [ SAT., SEPTEMBER 6 ] Back to Basics. 11 a.m.-noon & 1-2 p.m. The Refinement Studio, 55 Canterbury Rd. $10. 244-2228. Driver Improvement Course. 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Finger Lakes Community College, 3325 Marvin Sands Dr $40, registration required. 394-4400 x205. canandaiguachamber.com. Make your own Herbal Teas. 10 a.m. Hansen Nature Center, 1525 Calkins Rd. 359-7044. henrietta.org. The Practice of Zikr for Inner Transformation. 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Sufi Order of Rochester Center for Sufi Studies, 494 East Ave. Carriage House of AAUW $40-$60, sliding scale 248-0427. zaynab@frontiernet. net. sufiorderofrochester.org. Saturday Morning Meditation. 10 a.m. Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence, 929 S. Plymouth Ave. Join Gandhi Service Fellow Robert Massar for weekly morning mediation at the Gandhi Institute. Beginners welcome!. free. 463-3266. gandhiinstitute.org. The Self Defense Training Summit. Sep. 6-7. Rochester Personal Defense, LLC’s Training Center, 300 Buell Rd Call for info. 406-6758. awsda.org. [ SUN., SEPTEMBER 7 ] Designing a Multilayered Haven in the City. 6-7:30 p.m. 473-8136. rcgc.org. Meet and Greet you Spirit Guides. First Sunday of every month, 1-3 p.m. Plymouth Spiritualist Church, 29 Vick Park A $15.

585-271-1470. pastorrobin@ rochester.rr.com. Meet and Greet your Spirit Guides. 1-3 p.m. Plymouth Spiritualist Church, 29 Vick Park A $15. 271-1470. plymouthspiritualistchurch.org/ events/meet-greet-your-spiritguides-2014-09-07/. [ MON., SEPTEMBER 8 ] How to Sniff Out a Scam: Practical Tips for Giving Wisely. 7 p.m. Lifetree Cafe, 1301 Vintage Lane 723-4673. lifetreecafe.com. Journaling for Success. 1:30 p.m. Books Etc., 78 W. Main St Macedon 474-4116. booksetcofmacedonny.com. YOU Make a Difference. 10 a.m.-noon. Mental Health Association, 320 N Goodman St. 325-3145 x131. mharochester.org/. [ TUE., SEPTEMBER 9 ] Buddhist Book Discussion Group. 7 p.m. Amitabha Foundation, 11 South Goodman St. By donation. 451-7039. NY@ amitabhafoundation.us. amitabhafoundation.us. Comedy Classes. 6-8:30 p.m. Comedy Club, 2235 Empire Blvd Webster Sept 9 -Oct. 7 $150. 766-1155. thecomedyclub.us. Conversazione in Italiano. Second Tuesday of every month, 6 p.m. Italian American Community Center, 150 Frank Dimino Way No fee involved. For more information on where the meetings will be, please contact Marjorie at 749-5346 594-8882. iaccrochester.org. Guinean Drum Class with Mohamed Diaby. 6 p.m. Bush Mango Drum & Dance, 34 Elton St. Instruments available for student use. For all levels $15 drop in fee. 820-9213. colleen@ bushmangodrumdance.org. bushmangodrumdance.org. Health Insurance Open House for Rochester’s Uninsured. 2-5 p.m. Threshold at the Community Place, 135 Parsells Ave Fidelis Care representatives will be onsite at Threshold at the Community Place, 145 Parsells Avenue, Rochester, every Tuesday from 2 – 5 PM to answer questions about health insurance options, and to help eligible residents apply to enroll in Fidelis Care programs. Current Fidelis Care members may also receive assistance completing their annual recertification at these events 1-888-3433547. fideliscare.org. Winning at Parenting. 10 a.m.-noon. Mental Health Association, 320 N Goodman St. 325-3145 x131. mharochester.org.

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rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 27


Movie Theaters Searchable, up-to-the-minute movie times for all area theaters can be found at rochestercitynewspaper.com, and on City’s mobile website.

Film

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 Dryden Theatre

Spy vs. spy

900 East Ave., 271-3361, dryden.eastmanhouse.org

“The November Man”

Eastview 13

(R), DIRECTED BY ROGER DONALDSON NOW PLAYING

2255 Ridge Rd E, Irondequoit  544-1140, regmovies.com

Eastview Mall, Victor 425-0420, regmovies.com

Geneseo Theatres

[ REVIEW ] BY GEORGE GRELLA

Geneseo Square Mall, 243-2691, rochestertheatermanagement.com

Whatever else the contemporary thriller accomplishes, the form strongly establishes the Central Intelligence Agency as major villains in the world of espionage and counterespionage. Over the decades, films as different as “Gorky Park,” “Zero Dark Thirty,” and most recently, “A Most Wanted Man,” to cite only a few examples, paint the Agency as thugs, torturers, assassins, and even traitors. To its credit, “The November Man” continues that tradition.

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

The movie begins with an action scene that introduces the two major characters, their motivations, and in effect, the meaning of all the events that will follow. In one of those familiar pairings of the tutor and the tyro, a senior agent, Devereaux (Pierce Brosnan) instructs his younger assistant, Mason (Luke Bracey) in the procedures of finding and shooting a potential assassin. The plan works imperfectly, as Mason takes too long to identify his quarry, reacts too slowly, and causes what the military euphemistically calls collateral damage, an occurrence that shapes the rest of the plot. The picture opens again five years later, with Devereaux, now retired in Switzerland, called upon by an old friend and comrade, Hanley (Bill Smitrovich), to travel to Moscow. Hanley needs him to extract Natalia (Mediha Musliovic), a spy with vital information about the next Russian president. In Moscow, everything goes wrong — a puzzled and desperate Devereaux finds himself the target of both the Russians and

Pierce Brosnan in “The November Man.” PHOTO COURTESY RELATIVITY MEDIA

Film Previews on page 31

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the CIA, which leads to the usual car chase and shootouts, followed by a catastrophic explosion and a number of deaths. Although the story of Devereaux’s attempts to discover the source of the apparent plot against him dominates the action, a number of other initially unrelated threads run through his quest. A vicious, coldblooded Russian assassin, Alexa (Amila Terzimehic), journeys to Belgrade, Serbia, the movie’s central location, then proceeds to knock off a series of victims. Alice Fournier (Olga Kurylenko), a young woman who advises refugees from Russia, turns out to be Alexa’s prime quarry and a vital cog in the complicated mechanism of the plot. Adding more substance to those subjects, Mason and Devereaux engage in a running catand-mouse game, with Devereaux constantly outwitting the best efforts of a whole platoon of agents to capture or preferably, kill him. An internal battle within the Agency complicates matters further, as various individuals jockey for position and accuse each other of betrayal. The confusing layers of deception turn some portion of the action thriller into something of a mystery story, puzzling both the audience and Devereaux himself. The solution to the puzzle not only creates more surprises but also suggests a quite plausible scenario entirely relevant to the contemporary geopolitical situation. Although it never abdicates its mission as a thriller, “The November Man” adds more complexity to its relatively familiar action sequences


Three’s company [ REVIEW ] BY ADAM LUBITOW

of automobile pursuits and crashes, explosions and stunts, and numerous gun battles. In the process, Devereaux faces the loss of one woman and attempts to save another, while contending with his own former organization, a band of Russian security agents, and the relentless female assassin. Employing a mostly foreign cast and filmed beautifully in Eastern Europe, the movie displays a slick and not entirely implausible surface. Unusually for a slam-bang action thriller, the historical references and the surprising political motivation behind all the action and all the plots actually make a good deal of quite depressing sense. In light of recent developments in the Middle East, the arguments of the chief villain should strike a responsive chord in some sensibilities. One of those actors who achieved a smooth transition from television to the big screen — his first big hit was the TV series “Remington Steele” — Pierce Brosnan accounts for much of the picture’s success. In “The November Man” he departs from the character he’s played in the past, the suave, handsome, dashing leading man with a touch of irony in the James Bond pictures or the remake of “The Thomas Crown Affair.” In the role of Devereaux, perhaps drawing on his work as a nasty character in a forgotten little flick called “The Matador,” he displays a dark side — the charm turned into bitterness, the irony into cynicism, the chiseled good looks grizzled and lined by time, that subtle thief of youth: he makes a very good good/bad guy.

“Alive Inside”

“Starred Up”

“The One I Love”

(NR), DIRECTED BY MICHAEL ROSSATO-BENNETT SCREENS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 7 P.M. AT THE LITTLE

(NR), DIRECTED BY DAVID MACKENZIE AVAILABLE NOW ON VOD AND ITUNES

(R), DIRECTED BY CHARLIE MCDOWELL AVAILABLE NOW ON VOD AND ITUNES

Scottish director David Mackenzie’s searing prison drama begins with a sequence in which 19-year-old Eric (Jack O’Connell) arrives for processing at a maximum security prison. He moves through each step with the calm demeanor of someone who’s well-versed in the procedure — if there was any question the boy isn’t a veteran, it’s answered by the time he reaches his cell and immediately begins crafting a crudely constructed shiv from the melted remains of a toothbrush. Eric has been “starred up,” the term for a juvenile prisoner being prematurely moved up to an adult facility due to excessively violent behavior. He’s soon assigned anger management group therapy sessions led by dedicated, but troubled, volunteer counselor Oliver (Rupert Friend). Eric’s father, Neville (Ben Mendelsohn) is already on the inside, where he’s been (and likely will remain) for all his son’s life. At first, Neville is content to allow his son to make his way through the prison with little interference. But as Eric begins making connections through the group, he’s seized by the need to exert a guiding force and act as a father for the first time. Letting his son know exactly what he thinks of those he’s choosing to associate with, he acts as something like the jailhouse equivalent of a helicopter parent. O’Connell gives a ferocious, powerhouse performance, and Mendelsohn is equally good: the friction between the two functions as the raw, wounded heart of the film. Despite its often shocking brutality, “Starred Up” emerges as a surprisingly tender and deeply humane look at the ties that bind us.

In “The One I Love,” Elisabeth Moss (“Mad Men”) and Mark Duplass (“Tammy”) play Sophie and Ethan, a married couple whose relationship is on the rocks. In addition to the general ennui that can sometimes develop in certain long-term relationships, they’re also dealing with the fact that Ethan cheated and Sophie hasn’t entirely forgiven him yet. Taking the advice of their therapist (Ted Danson), the couple agrees to spend a weekend at a couples retreat and attempt to reconnect with one another. The site of the retreat is a spacious country house with an extra guest house on the property — seemingly an ideal location for them to rediscover what made them fall in love in the first place. To say much more about the plot would be a disservice to what director Charlie McDowell and writer Justin Lader have set out to accomplish. Suffice it to say that what starts out as a lowkey relationship drama morphs into something else entirely, adding a blend of dark comedy, mystery, and even sciencefiction to the mix. Moss and Duplass are both pitchperfect in their roles. As Ethan and Sophie rediscover one another, the actors are called upon to find subtle variations in shading and inflection to play within their characters, and they deliver performances that alternate delightfully between playful and prickly. McDowell and Lader keep finding surprising ways for the central mystery to play out, and though the answers they provide don’t entirely satisfy, the journey of getting there more than makes up for it.

First-time director Michael Rossato-Bennett’s deeply affecting documentary, “Alive Inside,” spotlights the crusade being waged by social worker Dan Cohen as he seeks to drastically alter the way our country cares for the elderly. As founder of the nonprofit organization Music & Memory, Cohen travels to nursing homes across the nation, demonstrating how playing meaningful music for patients with Alzheimer’s and dementia can allow them to reconnect with memories seemingly lost to them forever. It’s genuinely moving to see the effect Cohen’s methods have on certain patients, as the music reawakens something deep within them and the light returns to their eyes. The film is at its most compelling as it argues how a $50 iPod is infinitely more beneficial to a patient with dementia than the laundry list of pharmaceuticals they’re typically prescribed, though it loses focus and eventually settles for repeating itself as it expands further out to tackle the more generalized topic of elder care in our country. But as a poignant examination of aging in a society always looking toward the future, “Alive Inside” is a singularly emotional experience.

Jack O’Connell in “Starred Up.” PHOTO COURTESY TRIBECA FILMS

rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 29


Film

Charlie Chaplin in “Modern Times.” PHOTO COURTESY THE CRITERION COLLECTION

Cinema celebrates the worker Rochester Labor Film Series FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, THROUGH SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2 DRYDEN THEATRE, GEORGE EASTMAN HOUSE, 900 EAST AVENUE FRIDAY SCREENINGS: 8 P.M.; SUNDAY SCREENINGS: 2 P.M. FOR THE FULL SCHEDULE, VISIT ROCHESTERLABOR.ORG/FILMSERIES.HTML [ FEATURE ] BY GEORGE GRELLA

In honor of its 25th anniversary, the organizers of the Rochester Labor Film Series will screen a dozen motion pictures culled from 250 titles, repeating the most popular of all those shown in the past. The selection, a kind of anthology of movies employing the theme of labor, includes works from several countries in addition to the United States, ranging from documentaries to comedies, some of them described below. The series kicks off with the slick Hollywood comedy “Nine to Five” (1980), which stars Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin, and Dolly Parton. Though most labor films address the subject of industrial work, this one shows at least something of the often neglected reality of white-collar servitude, the conditions of millions of overworked, underpaid secretaries, clerks, and low-level office workers of all kinds all over the country. (Screens Friday, September 5.) 30 CITY SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014

Another, darker film, “Glengarry Glen Ross” (1992), provides an appropriate bookend to close the series. With a brilliant ensemble cast that includes Al Pacino, Jack Lemmon, Alec Baldwin, and Kevin Spacey, the movie shows the wheeling and dealing of a boiler room full of desperate salesman making cold calls to pitch a questionable real estate development. The picture incidentally held the record for the most frequent use of what polite folks like to call “the f-word” until “The Wolf of Wall Street” achieved new heights of profanity (and I thought they were just speaking my language). (Screens Sunday, November 2.) Sandwiched between those two very different pictures, some documentaries and docudramas deal with a variety of labor issues. They include “Walmart: The High Cost of Low Price” (2005), a most successful and revelatory exposé of the practices of that company, its dominance of retail sales markets everywhere, and its effects on its workers. (Screens Sunday, September 7). An Austrian film, “Workingman’s Death,” (2005) confronts more traditional areas of labor movies — coal mines, sulfur mines, slaughterhouses, steel foundries — the industries that first ignited the labor movement in many countries and which still ruthlessly exploit their workers. (Screens Friday, September 12.) A couple of movies from Europe demonstrate the eclectic tastes of the organizers. They understandably chose the Italian “The Organizer” (1964), starring the incomparable Marcello Mastroianni as the title character, a

man attempting to help textile workers in Turin in the early years of the last century. (Screens Friday, October 3.) Oddly, they also picked Henri Clouzot’s “Wages of Fear” (1953), a terrific story of desperate men driving trucks full of nitroglycerin over South American mountains, expecting to be disintegrated at any moment, which really seems more a study in ironic existential despair. (Screens Sunday, October 26.) Two other familiar American films provide something like a commentary on their particular era. Charles Chaplin’s first sound picture, “Modern Times” (1936), displays his brilliant acrobatics along with his pervasive sentimentality in a story of an assembly line factory worker caught up in one disastrous event after another, all of them suggesting comically the victimization of the wage earner by bosses, government, and even technology. (Screens Sunday, September 21.) The only openly leftist film of its decade, “Salt of the Earth” (1954 — mistakenly dated in the Eastman House brochure), made in the shadows by blacklisted artists, uses a cast of ordinary people in its story of striking Mexican-American zinc miners fighting against the oppression of mine owners, law enforcement, and the American legal system, a testament to the courage of all concerned. (Screens Sunday, October 5.) Although the series remains a most important concept, a testament to the value of the George Eastman House to the community and the world, it also suggests a sad irony for our time. While corporate profits skyrocket, the average real wage of their employees stays flat or even decreases. The chief executives of almost every large business take home (let’s not say “earn”) something like four or five hundred times the annual income of their people. As the series demonstrates, once upon a time working men and women organized into unions, often in the face of violent reactions from employers and governments, when law enforcement served the powerful and state governors routinely called out the National Guard to defeat strikes. Now governors and legislatures simply pass laws that weaken unions of all kinds, with particular attention to public employees, routinely vilified in conservative circles. Sadly and ironically, ever since the triumph of Ronald Reagan, union members have voted in large numbers for those unionbusting lawmakers. The Rochester Labor Film Series reminds us of different times and attitudes, the continuing exploitation of workers in many places, and the brave fight for fairness and justice that may even inspire some sense of hope for a different view of working men and women.


Film Previews

473.0345

[ CONTINUING ] AS ABOVE, SO BELOW (R): A team of explorers make a horrific discovery when they descend into the underground catacombs that lie beneath Paris. Canandaigua, Culver, Eastview, Geneseo, Greece, Henrietta, Tinseltown BOYHOOD (R): This coming-ofage story from director Richard Linklater follows the life of a boy from age 6 through his high school graduation. With Ethan Hawke and Patricia Arquette. Little, Pittsford, Tinseltown CALVARY (R): After he’s threatened during a confession, a good-natured priest must battle the dark forces closing in around him. Starring Brendan Gleeson and Chris O’Dowd. Little, Pittsford continues on page 32

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[ OPENING ] ALIVE INSIDE (NR): This inspiring documentary follows the work of social worker Dan Cohen, whose work demonstrates how music can awaken the fading minds of those suffering from Alzheimer’s and dementia. Little (Tue, Sep 9, 7 p.m.) FUNNY FACE (1957): Audrey Hepburn and Fred Astaire star in Stanley Donen’s classic romantic comedy, about a shy bookstore clerk discovered by a fashion photographer and whisked away to Paris to become a model. Little (Wed, Sep 3, 6:30 p.m.) INSTRUMENT (2003): A collaboration between filmmaker Jem Cohen and the Washington D.C. band Fugazi, documenting the band’s creative process and performances from 1987-1998. Dryden (Sat, Sep 6, 8 p.m.) NINE TO FIVE (1980): Three working girls turn the tables on their sexist, egotistical boss in this classic comedy. Starring Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin, and Dolly Parton. Dryden (Fri, Sep 5, 8 p.m.) STAGE BEAUTY (2004): Set in the London theater of the 16th century, as a male actor is replaced by a female actress when the King allows women onstage for the first time. Starring Claire Danes and Billy Crudup. Dryden (Thu, Sep 4, 8 p.m.) THE THREE MUSKETEERS (1921): Douglas Fairbanks stars as D’Artagnan in this silent film adaptation of Alexandre Dumas’ classic swashbuckling tale. Dryden (Tue, Sep 9, 8 p.m.) THE TRACKER (2002): Three men are tasked with tracking down an Aboriginal man accused of murdering a white woman, in this acclaimed Australian drama. Dryden (Wed, Sep 3, 8 p.m.) WAL-MART: THE HIGH COST OF LOW PRICE (2005): This documentary takes a hard look at the devastating impact the retail giant has had on local communities. Dryden (Sun Sep 7, 2 p.m)

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rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 31


FIRST

FRIDAY

First Friday

Sponsored by

Citywide Gallery Night

September 5 • 6-9pm FirstFridayRochester.org

A.R.T.S Gallery at Aviv Cafe "The Treasures of My Art" By James Sturtevant Anderson Arts Building Indulge Your Creative Side AXOM Gallery Exhibition Space Metropoliticoncious Beth Brown Art & Design Studio Open Studio Constance Mauro Studio Closed due to Clothesline Festival

Spectrum Gallery Between and Beyond by Steve Malloy-Desormeaux The Shoe Factory Art Co-op House Artists Exhibit Zak's Avenue 'Visions and Imagery' by Dennis Furioso T H I S M O N T H O N LY: Rochester Greenovation Tossed and Found & Emerging Artists

Fine & Splendid Things Transitions

SEPTEMBER HIGHLIGHTS:

Gallery r The Alchemic Elegy

• Transitions at Fine and Splendid Things

Good MD New Memory Loss Hungerford Urban Artisans (HUA) Artist Studios

• State of the City 2014 at RoCo • Induldge Your Creative Side at Anderson Arts Building • New Memory Loss at Good MD • House Artists Exhibit at The Shoe Factory

Image City Photography Gallery Granularity

• "The Treasures of My Art" By James Sturtevant at A.R.T.S. Gallery at Aviv Cafe

Joy Gallery Luvon Sheppard's Paintings

• Open Studio at Beth Brown Art & Design Studio • Artist Studios at Hungerford Urban Artisans

Rochester Art Club RAC Members Exhibit

• “Between and Beyond” by Steve Malloy-Desormeaux at Spectrum Gallery

Rochester Contemporary Art Center (RoCo) State of the City

32 CITY SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014

DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES (PG-13): An army of genetically evolved apes battle against a small band of surviving humans, in this sequel to 2011’s “Rise of the Planet of the Apes.” Cinema, Culver, Movies 10 DELIVER US FROM EVIL (R): From the director of “Sinister” comes this story, based on true events, about a NYC cop investigating a possible case of demonic possession. Starring Eric Bana, Joel McHale, and Edgar Ramirez. Movies 10 EDGE OF TOMORROW (PG13): “Groundhog Day” meets “War of the Worlds” in this sci-fi action film about the fight to defeat an alien army. Starring Tom Cruise, Emily Blunt, and Bill Paxton. Movies 10 THE EXPENDABLES 3 (PG13): The elite mercenaries are back with some new additions to the team. Starring Sylvester Stallone, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jason Statham, Mel Gibson, Wesley Snipes, etc, etc. Brockport, Canandaigua, Culver, Greece, Henrietta, Tinseltown, Webster GET ON UP (PG-13): This biopic from director Tate Taylor (“The Help”) follows the life of the “Godfather of Soul,” music icon James Brown. Starring Chadwick Boseman (“42”), Octavia Spencer, and Viola Davis. Culver, Henrietta, Webster THE GIVER (PG-13): In a seemingly utopian society, a young boy is chosen to learn from an elderly man about the true pain and pleasure of the “real” world. Based on Lois Lowry’s classic novel. With Jeff Bridges and Meryl Streep. Canandaigua, Culver, Eastview, Greece, Henrietta, Tinseltown, Webster GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY (PG-13): In this latest entry in the Marvel cinematic universe, Chris Pratt plays galactic adventurer Peter Quill, forced to team up with a motley crew of interplanetary misfits after a bounty is placed on his head. With Zoe Saldana, Bradley Cooper, Vin Diesel, Lee Pace, Djimon Hounsou, and Dave Bautista. Canandaigua, Culver, Eastview, Geneseo, Greece, Henrietta, Pittsford, Tinseltown, Webster HERCULES (PG-13): In the second film this year to take on the mythological hero, Dwayne Johnson steps into the sandals of the famous Greek. Culver, Henrietta HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2 (PG): The adventures of a young viking named Hiccup and his dragon, Toothless, continue in this sequel to the hit animated film. Canandaigua, Cinema, Culver, Movies 10, Tinseltown THE HUNDRED-FOOT JOURNEY (PG): An Indian family moves to France and opens a

restaurant across the street from a Michelin-starred French restaurant. Starring Helen Mirren. Canandaigua, Culver, Eastview, Henrietta, Little, Pittsford, Tinseltown, Webster I ORIGINS (R): In this sci-fi drama from the director of “Another Earth,” a molecular biologist and his lab partner uncover evidence that complicates his scientific and spiritual beliefs. Starring Michael Pitt and Brit Marling. Cinema IF I STAY (PG-13): Chloë Grace Moretz stars as a gifted young classical musician who, after a car accident puts her in a coma, finds herself faced with a choice between life and death. Brockport, Canandaigua, Culver, Eastview, Geneseo, Greece, Henrietta, Pittsford, Tinseltown, Webster INTO THE STORM (PG-13): Over the course of a day, group of high school students document the onslaught of tornados that descends on their town. Canandaigua, Greece, Henrietta, Tinseltown, Webster ISLAND OF LEMURS: MADAGASCAR (G): Morgan Freeman narrates this IMAX 3D documentary exploring the wilds of Madagascar and its endangered lemur inhabitants. Tinseltown LAND HO! (R): A pair of aging friends and former brothers-in-law take a road trip through Iceland. Little, Pittsford LET’S BE COPS (R): Two friends impersonate police officers using rented uniforms, but soon run afoul of a dangerous Russian mobster. Canandaigua, Culver, Eastview, Geneseo, Greece, Henrietta, Tinseltown, Webster LUCY (R): Scarlett Johansson stars as a woman who accidentally gets caught up in dangerous dealings, and turns the tables on her captors when she transforms into a highly evolved, superhuman warrior. Culver, Greece, Henrietta, Tinseltown, Webster MAGIC IN THE MOONLIGHT (PG-13): An Englishman sets out to prove that a young woman claiming to be a psychic is actually a fraud, in this romantic-comedy from Woody Allen. Starring Colin Firth and Emma Stone. Henrietta, Little, Pittsford, MALEFICENT (PG): Angelina Jolie and Elle Fanning star in this lavish fairy tale adventure, which tells the previously untold story of Disney’s most iconic villain. Movies 10 A MOST WANTED MAN (R): Philip Seymour Hoffman stars as a German antiterrorist agent investigating a Chechen Muslim who illegally immigrates to Hamburg, where he gets

caught up in war on terror. With Rachel McAdams, Willem Dafoe, and Robin Wright. Pittsford THE NOVEMBER MAN (R): An ex-CIA operative finds himself pitted against his former pupil in a deadly game of spy vs. spy. Starring Pierce Brosnan. Canandaigua, Culver, Eastview, Geneseo, Greece, Henrietta, Pittsford, Tinseltown, Webster THE PURGE: ANARCHY (R): In this sequel to the horror film, “The Purge,: a young couple fights to survive on the annual Purge, when the government declares all crime legal. Movies 10 SIN CITY: A DAME TO KILL FOR (R): The longawaited followup to Robert Rodriguez’s adaptation of Frank Miller’s gritty series of graphic novels. Starring Josh Brolin, Mickey Rourke, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Eva Green, and Rosario Dawson. Canandaigua, Culver, Eastview, Greece, Henrietta, Tinseltown, Webster STEP UP: ALL IN (PG-13): The fifth installment of the popular film series sees various performers from the previous films head to Vegas for a dance competition. Henrietta, Tinseltown, Webster TAMMY (R): At a low point in her life, a down-on-her-luck woman decides to get her life back on track beginning with a cross-country road trip with her grandmother. Starring Melissa McCarthy, Susan Sarandon, Kathy Bates, and Mark Duplass. Movies 10 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES (PG-13): The Heroes in a Half-Shell get the reboot treatment courtesy of producer Michael Bay. Canandaigua, Culver, Eastview, Geneseo, Greece, Henrietta, Tinseltown, Webster TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION (PG-13): The fourth entry in the blockbuster series about giant robots from space, with Mark Wahlberg, Stanley Tucci, Kelsey Grammer, and Ken Watanabe. Movies 10 WHEN THE GAME STANDS TALL (PG): Inspired by the true story of a young coach who turns a losing high school football program around to go undefeated for 12 consecutive seasons. With Jim Caviezel and Laura Dern. Brockport, Canandaigua, Culver, Eastview, Geneseo, Greece, Pittsford, Tinseltown, Webster X-MEN: DAYS OF FUTURE PAST (PG-13): The X-Men band together across two different time periods to fight for the survival of the mutant species. With Hugh Jackman, Michael Fassbender, James McAvoy, Patrick Stewart, Ian McKellen, and Jennifer Lawrence. Canandaigua, Culver, Movies 10, Tinseltown


Classifieds For information: Call us (585) 244-3329 Fax us (585) 244-1126 Mail Us City Classifieds 250 N. Goodman Street Rochester, NY 14607 Email Us classifieds@ rochester-citynews.com EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

All real estate advertised in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act, which makes it unlawful, “to make, print, or publish, any notice, statement, or advertisement, with respect to the sale or rental of a dwelling that indicates any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under the age of 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertisement for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. Call the local Fair Housing Enforcement Project, FHEP at 325-2500 or 1-866-671-FAIR. Si usted sospecha una practica de vivienda injusta, por favor llame al servicio legal gratis. 585-325-2500 - TTY 585-325-2547.

Apartments for Rent

Find the perfect roommate to complement your personality and lifestyle at Roommates. com! (AAN CAN)

MONROE /ALEXANDER AREA Studio, 2nd floor, quiet building. Includes appliances, coin laundry, $425 includes all. 857-0602 or 671-3806

Houses for Sale

Shared Housing ALL AREAS ROOMMATES. COM. Lonely? Bored? Broke?

K-D Moving & Storage Inc.

11542 EAGLE RIDGE, FERRYVILLE, WI Executive water view retreat. Architecturally designed to maximize the scenic bluff &

Mississippi River views. Custom built ash cabinets & floors. A very special place with nature. River access minutes away. Peaceful & secluded. Call (608)385-8228

Real Estate Auctions CITY OF LOCKPORT ax Foreclosed Property Auction Tuesday September 9, 2014 at 6pm Bidder Registration at 5pm, City Hall, 1 Locks Plaza, Lockport, NY. View the sale catalogue at www. AuctionsInternational.com or call 800-536-1401 for more info. Printed catalogues available after 8/27 at City Hall

Land for Sale BANK ORDERED SALE. Up to 10 acres, from $59,900. Beautiful Bethel NY. Near Woodstock site. 85 miles from Manhattan. Assorted hardwoods, approved building site, underground utilities, across from lake. Walk to Performing Arts Center, Financing. Call (877)836-1820. CONTRACT FAILED! 6 acresStream- $26,900 Views, apple trees, pines, gorgeous stream, 3 hours from NY City! Terms avail! Discounts for cash! 888-905-8847 NewYorkLandandLakes.com

Vacation Property OCEAN CITY MARYLAND Best selection of affordable rentals. Full/ partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Real Estate. 1-800-

638-2102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com SEBASTIAN, FLORIDA Beautiful 55+ manufactured home community. 4.4 miles to the beach,closwe to the riverfront district. Pre-owned homes starting at $35,000. New models available. 772-5810080, www.beach-cove.com.

Home Services

the highest and fairest. Not affiliated with other companies. Call 585-305-5865 CASH FOR CARS Any Car/ Truck. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Call For Instant Offer: 1-888420-3808 www.cash4car.com (AAN CAN)

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

KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Complete Treatment Program/ Kit. (Harris Mattress Covers Add Extra Protection). Available: Hardware Stores, Buy Online: homedepot.com

Education AFRICA, BRAZIL WORK! STUDY! Change the lives of others and create a sustainable future. 1, 6, 9, 18 month programs available. Apply now! www.OneWorldCenter. org 269.591.0518 info@ OneWorldCenter.org (AAN CAN)

Adoption ADOPT: A loving, established couple with close family dream of a home filled with the sounds of a child. Please contact 855-884-6080; jennandjonadopt@gmail. com www.jennandjonadopt. info Expenses paid.

For Sale

PREGNANT? THINKING OF ADOPTION? Talk with caring agency specializing in matching Birthmothers with Families Nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Call 24/7 Abby’s One True Gift Adoptions. 866-413-6293. Void in Illinois/New Mexico/ Indiana (AAN CAN)

Automotive ALWAYS BETTER HIGHER CASH PAID for Junk Cars, Trucks and Vans. Any condition, running or not. Always free pick up and usually same day service. Call the rest first then call us last. We usually pay

COIN BOOKS ISRAEL (1973) also 1975, 1970, 1968, 2008(2) all $5 585-880-2903 EXERCISE BENCH With the weight rod. $15 -585-4905870 EXOTIC HOUSE PLANTS, indoor, 10 plants $3 - $5 each 585-490-5870 GERMAN SHEPHERD sign on chain. Carved head on real wood. (says, beware!) Nice gift $15.00 585-880-2903 HORSE BRIDLE (WESTERN) Leather with bit 1999 585880-2903

HORSE RIDING CHAPS child sized, black, suede, 28” long 13 x 14 wasit, zip $12 585880-2903 LADIES PINK SUITCASE handle, wheels and pocket. Great condition $15.00 585383-0405 SINGLE BED with mattress $45 585-490-5870

Garage and Yard Sales HUGE HOUSEHOLD SALE 99 Woodhaven Drive, Browncroft near Ellison Park Furniture, antiques, mirrors, jeans plus so much more. Sun & Sun Sept 6 & 7 10am - 5pm PENFIELD USED BOOK SALE sponsored by Friends of the Penfiield Public Library, 1985 Baird Road, Member of Friends only night Tues. Sept 9, 2-9pm. Join at door $5. Please bring own bags/boxes for your selections,. Open to public Sept 10-11 10am -9pm, Sept 12 10am-6pm, 1/2 prIce sale, and Sat. Sept. 13, 9am-2pm, , $3 per bag, BYO Wegmans Tops re-usable bags, Specials 1/2 price 85,000 books sorted in 50 categories, DVD’s, CD & much more. Hardcovers $1.00, paperbacks $.50.

Jam Section BRIAN S. MARVN Lead vocalist, looking for an audition to join band, cover tunes, originals and has experience with bands 585-473-5089 CALLING ALL MUSICIANS OF ALL GENRES the Rochester Music Coalition wants

continues on page 34

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> page 33 you! Please register on our website. For further info: www. rochestermusiccoalition.org info@rochestermusiccoalition. org 585-235-8412 EXP. DRUMMER WANTED to join (keyboard)/ (keyboard bass) who also sings lead. To form duo (Retro Pop/Dance/Jazz). Must make a total commitment and be professional 585-4267241 FIFERS&RUDIMENTAL DRUMMERS WANTED: C.A.Palmer Fife&Drum

seeking new members for Sr. & JR. Revolutionary, 1812, & Civil War Music. Info. @ AncientDrummer1776@aol.com Palmyra, NY

MEET OTHER MUSICIANS. Jam & Play out, call & say hello, any level & any age ok. I play keyboards - organ B3 Style Call 585-266-6337 Martino

LOOKING FOR KEYBOARDIST That sings plays. A second instr, willing to transpo, avail evenings & weekends. R&B, Funk, Classics, covers, originals Bobby 585-328-4121

PLEASE ANYONE Answering the ads of Bobby 585-328-4121. Understand that I am looking for commitment to band from vocalists, horns, musicians. Available evenings, trans and equip. One band only, need availability to gig

LOOKING FOR SAX To form Horn Line. Available Evenings and weekends. Horn and transportation a must. R&B, Funk, Classics, covers, originals Bobby 585-328-4121

Group/showband, funk , R&B, Classics, Covers & originals. Bobby 585-328-4121

Music Services BASS LESSONS Acoustic, electric, all styles. Music therory and composition for all instruments. Former Berklee and Eastman Teacher. For more information, call 585-260-9958 & 585-471-8473

SEEKING EXPERIENCED DRUMMER Available Eventings and weekends. Must have transportation & equipment.

PIANO LESSONS In your home or mine. Patient, experienced

in¬structor teaching all ages, levels and musical styles. Call Scott: 585- 465-0219. Visit www.scottwrightmusic.com

need to know that it’s NOT YOUR FAULT! To learn more call: (814)880-5191 or visit: rochesterguitarlessons.com

PLAY GUITAR WITH CONFIDENCE! Do you spend hours practicing a song, only to have it fall apart when you try to play it in front of others? Do you struggle switching between chords or playing leads? Are you starting to doubt whether your physically capable of playing guitar? I understand how you feel. Many of my students have felt the same way. You

STRUGGLING TO SING? GET SOLUTIONS! Need help effortlessly singing the songs you love? Do you find yourself fatigued, tense or in pain when you sing for too long? Are you frustrated by your lack of range, style or poor tone? Do you struggle being creative, writing melodies to lyrics and vice versa?

continues on page 36

Home and Garden Professionals

ROOFING

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ATTENTION

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Did you know that City Newspaper Readers spent OVER $90 MILLION DOLLARS on home improvements in the LAST 12 MONTHS? Call Christine today to advertise

585-244-3329 ext. 23

34 CITY SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014

Where Art and Fine Gardening Meet • Specialty Pruning • Design • Maintenance

Robert L. Wilcox • 474-6584 gardens9@rochester.rr.com


HomeWork Find your way home with

A cooperative effort of City Newspaper and RochesterCityLiving, a program of the Landmark Society.

TO ADVERTISE CONTACT CHRISTINE TODAY!

CALL 244-3329 X23 OR EMAIL CHRISTINE@ROCHESTER-CITYNEWS.COM PITTSFORD; 23 STUYVESANT RD, $179,900. Great Cape Cod in Pittsford Schools. This 3 bedroom 2.5 bath home has a 1st floor master suite for 1st floor living. Call Ryan @ 218-6802 or visit www.rochestersells.com for more info.

Ryan Smith

NYS Licensed Real Estate Salesperson

201-0724 RochesterSells.com ROCHESTER CITY: Great House for the $$$. Original Gum wood Trim and Hardwood Floors. Remodeled Kitchen and Bath, Large Walk-Up Finished Attic, Fully Fenced Yard, 2-Car Detached Garage with New Roof, Freshly Painted Exterior. Enjoy the Enclosed 2nd Floor Porch off the Master Bedroom Morning, Noon, and Night. Nice Yard, Off Street Parking, and All Appliances Included. Visit www.ScottSells4U.com and Schedule an Appointment Today!

Scott G. Tantalo

585-292-8500 #PC 14157 Nothnagle.com/R251563

A Home Fit for a King

916 South Avenue

If ever a house reflected the talent and tastes of its owner, 916 South Avenue does. The stately Victorian-era home in the South Wedge was built by William and Sarah Denny in 1879. It has been re-imagined over the past decade to incorporate a flamboyance, artistry and charm that complements the home’s more traditional aspects. One enters via the parlor expecting classic Victorian-era tall ceilings, deep moldings at floor and ceiling, narrow- plank oak floors, tall windows, two staircases, beveled glass doors. Those features are there, indeed, behind an extravaganza of royal purple and gold paint, shimmering ceilings, bejeweled woodwork, dramatic up-lighting, swags and medallions. All can be removed, of course, but what fun it would be to retain them. The star of the show is The Throne Room, a small powder room off the library. It features a literal throne, sconces that light with a handclap, elaborate rope pull that flushes the toilet, a mural, and draped ceiling. The long, narrow house feels larger than its 1,982 square feet: two parlors plus a library with a built-in bookcase along an entire wall; a large, bright dining room adjacent to the original pantry; a second floor featuring five (five!) good-sized bedrooms with neutral décor, and 1-3/4 baths. The kitchen is a neutral white with dark solid surface countertops and white subway tile. Ample storage and closet space abound, which is unusual in homes of this period.

Virtually hidden from busy South Avenue behind a fountain weeping beech tree dating back to 1885, the façade features two tones of fresh light green paint accented with rose and off-white details. The tall windows have shutters and lovely carvings under the pediments. The property is enormous – a full 0.6 acres stretching from South Avenue almost to Oakland Street, with fenced sections, lawn and mature trees. At the rear is a twocar barn with work/storage/escape space above. The driveway is accessed from quiet Oakland Street. While the lot might feel like a secluded escape, you’re right in the center of it all with some of the city’s best amenities at your fingertips. Highland Park and the heart of the South Wedge commercial corridor are just a few blocks away; downtown, the Genesee Riverway Trail, and the University of Rochester are a short bike ride away; and you can easily hop on I-490 for any trips outside the city limits. 916 South Ave. is listed for $169,900 through Jeff Schuetz of Mitchell Pierson Jr. Realtors (585) 586-6622. One final note to the ultimate buyer: Please retain the throne room! by Elizabeth M. Teall Elizabeth is a Landmark Society volunteer.

rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 35


I’m very pleased with the calls I got from our apartment rental ads, and will continue running them. Your readers respond — positively!” - M. Smith, Residential Management > page 34 Call: (814) 880-5191 or visit: rochestervoicelessons.net

Miscellaneous $50 WALMART GIFT CARD & 3 Free issues of your favorite magazines! Call 855-757-3486 (AAN CAN) HAS YOU BUILDING SHIFTED OR SETTLED? Contact Woodford Brothers Inc, for straightening, leveling, foundation and wood frame repairs at 1-800-OLDBARN. www.woodfordbros. com. “Not applicable in Queens county” 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 WANT TO SAVE $ on your electric bill? NRG Home Solar offers free installation if you qualify. Call 888-685-0860 or visit nrghomesolar.com

Lost and Found FOUND IN MYRTLE BEACH SC, a Nikon S8000 camera w/ case and battery. Call 843-4575750 LOST CAT all white short haired male. During Park Ave Festival. Very timid. May be anywhere now. Do not try to catch. Please call. 585-442-6631

STOLEN TREK CROSSRIPLTD. Metal finish with red trim and hubs, 58cm frame, disc brakes. Contact 716-435-6555. Thanks!

Looking For... CASH BUYER! Buying ALL Gold & Silver Coins, Stamps, Paper Money, Comic Books, Entire Collections, Estates. Travel to your home. Call Marc in NY: 1-800-959-3419

Mind Body Spirit VEDANTA. The world’s oldest philosophy made practical for today’s world. Ten evenings classes (7-9:30p.m.) Wednesday’s at the Perkin’s Mansion, 494 East Ave. beginning Sept. 17th. Cost $100 for the course. www. practical-philosophy.org. Or call 585-288-6430.

Professional Services BOB SNIHUR YOUR PERSONAL CHAUFFEUR. When driving yourself is not an option For any and all occasions. Personal, Company or Rental Vehicle. Call or Text BOB SNIHUR 585-737-2226

Religion “UNDERSTANDING GOD” Weekly seven month course. $65. Seeking to understand? Classroom + discussion groups will answer your questions. Open to people of all faiths. Begins 9/16/14, 7:30-9:15 Faith Temple Church, 1876 Elmwood Ave. Roc., NY www. faithtemple.net/catechismunderstanding-god

Check out CITY Newspaper’s

MIND BODY SPIRIT

EMPLOYMENT / CAREER TRAINING

Employment

Volunteers

BARISTA WANTED Village Gate area. Opening, closing, Friday & Saturdays a must. 2 yrs experience preferred. Send resume to bprindle@rochester. rr.com

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 585-6971948

FT MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN NEEDED. Duties include general maintenance repairs, janitorial, snow removal, & painting. Excellent customer service a must.Send resumes to: thehamilton@coniferllc.com or fax 585-546-2603. MASTER A-LEVEL TECHNICIAN We are a growing east side independent auto repair shop looking for an exceptional Master A Level Technician. High Pay. Great place to work. Contact elmjer@gmail.com PREP/COOK WANTED Village Gate area. Opening, closing, Friday & Saturdays a must. Experience preferred, Food safety certified a plus. Send resume to bprindle@rochester.rr.com

BRIGHTEN A LIFE. Lifespan’s The Senior Connection program needs people 55+ to volunteer to make 2 friendly phone calls / 2 visits each month to an older adult Call Katie 585-244-8400 x 152 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 FOSTER PARENTS WANTED! Monroe County is looking for adults age 21 and over to consider opening their homes to foster children. Call 334-9096

Start Your Career With ConServe!

Debt Counselor & Bilingual Debt Counselor Openings

Uncapped Bonus • Competitive Wages Unbeatable Benefits • Flexible Scheduling • Growth Potential

[ See page 15 of this week’s issue ] THINK, MOVE, BREATHE, STRETCH, STENGHTHEN, RELAX

200 Cross Keys Office Park, Fairport 14450 For more information and to apply:

www.conserve-arm.com Click the “ConServe Careers” tab ConServe is an EOE & Drug-Free Workplace

Now Hiring Certified HHAs, CNAs & PCAs Consider a Career at HCR Home Care! Full-Time, Part-Time Evening and Weekend Evening and Weekend Premium pay rates of $12-15/hr. for working 20+ hours weekend (Sat/Sun) and/or evening-only (5pm-12am, Mon-Sun) schedules

Why Work for Us? A leader in Home HealthCare for 30+ years Competitive Pay/Benefits Continuing Education & Training.

Apply Online: www.hcrhealth.com EOE/AA Minority/Female/Disability/Veteran

36 CITY SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014


Rent your apartment special third week is

FREE

Place your ad by calling 244-3329 ext. 23 or rochestercitynewspaper.com Ad Deadlines: Friday 4pm for Display Ads Monday at noon for Line ads

EMPLOYMENT / CAREER TRAINING or visit www.MonroeFosterCare. org. Monroe County ISAIAH HOUSE, a home for the dying in Rochester, needs volunteers to provide care for residents who are terminally ill. Training is provided. Call 2325221 to request an application. LITERACY VOLUNTEERS OF ROCHESTER needs adult tutors to help adults who are waiting to improve their reading, writing, English speaking, or math skills. Call 473-3030, or check our website at www. literacyrochester.org MEALS ON WHEELS needs volunteers to deliver meals! • Delivering takes about an hour • Routes go out between 10:30 am and 12 pm Contact us at 787-8326 or at www.vnsnet. com. MORRIS ANIMAL FOUNDATION is looking for Golden Retrievers to take part in the Golden Retriever Lifetime Study. Observational data collected from these Goldens will help

us learn how to prevent cancer and other diseases. http://www. caninelifetimehealth.org/

Portfolio . One Week Course Details at: AwardMakeupSchool. com 818-980-2119 (AAN CAN)

ROCHESTER MUSEUM & SCIENCE CENTER Are you interested in sharing your interests in science,invention,and technology ? Call Terrie McKelvey (Volunteer Coordinator) 585.697.1948

AIRLINE CAREERS begin here – Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Housing and Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 800725-1563 (AAN CAN)

Business Opportunities

AIRLINE CAREERS begin here Get FAA approved Aviation Maintenance Technician training. Financial aid for qualified students – Housing available. Job placement assistance. Call AIM 866-2967093

WANT TO START YOUR OWN BUSINESS? Would you like to get free energy? Ask us How***Time is running out. Dave or Linda 585-820-4846 check it out www.energygerew. energy526.com

POST 9/11 G.I.-Bill -If qualified will pay tuition, fees & housing. Train with National Tractor Trailer School, Liverpool/Buffalo, NY (branch) full/part-time www.ntts.edu 1-800-243-9300 Consumer Information: www.ntts.edu/ programs/disclosures GI Bill® is a registered trademark

Career Training AIRBRUSH MAKEUP ARTIST COURSE For: Ads . TV . Film . Fashion 40% OFF TUITION SPECIAL $1990 - Train & Build

Hiring? GET THE RESULTS YOU NEED AT ABOUT HALF THE PRICE OF OTHER PAPERS!

Physical Therapists & Registered Nurses PTs: Accredited PT program graduate, NYS licensed, 1+ year experience preferred. RNs: with current NYS license • FT Weekends: F 5-9pm, S/S 7am-7pm & Weekend On Call Emergent Visits Only • FT Case Manager: Homecare experience preferred • FT RN Procedure Nurse

Call Christine at 244-3329 ext. 23 today!

CITY

Why Work for Us? • A leader in Home HealthCare for 30+ years • Local people taking care of local patients • Competitive Pay/Benefits •Continuing Education & Training.

Apply Online:

www.hcrhealth.com EOE/AA Minority/Female/ Disability/Veteran

The Friendly Home and Cloverwood combines a progressive approach to healthcare with a traditional sense of compassion. We pay for experience and offer an outstanding team-oriented environment. The following FULL-TIME positions are available: • Nurse Manager • Assistant Nurse Manager • LPN • CNA • RCA • Maintenance mechanic

The following PART-TIME/PER-DIEM positions are available: • LPN • CNA • RCA • Dining Wait Staff

Visit our website under “Careers” to view more information on these positions: Friendlyhome.org for Friendly Home • Cloverwood.org for Cloverwood

Friendly Home HR

3156 East Ave. • Rochester, NY 14618

Cloverwood HR

One Sinclair Drive • Pittsford, NY 14534

rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 37


Legal Ads [ LEGAL NOTICE ] Axelerated Precision LLC, a domestic LLC, Filed Arts. of Org. with the SSNY on 8/14/14. County: Monroe. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Jose Santini, 193 Duxbury Rd., Rochester, NY 14626. [ LEGAL NOTICE ] Shorewater VIII NY LLC (“LLC”) filed Arts. of Org. with Secy.of State of NY (SSNY) on August 1, 2014. Office Location: Monroe County. SSNY designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 1761 S.E. 7th Street, Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33316. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE OF SALE ] SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF MONROE U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE CWMBS REPERFORMING LOAN REMIC TRUST CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-R2, Plaintiff, against MARK L. CORNELL, et al., Defendant(s). Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated 4/29/2014 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Front Steps of

the Monroe County Office Building, 39 West Main Street, City of Rochester, State of New York on 09/16/2014 at 09:00AM, premises known as 610 BENNINGTON DRIVE, Rochester, NY 14616 All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Greece, County of Monroe and State of New York, SECTION 060.83, BLOCK 2, LOT 12. Approximate amount of judgment $51,691.38 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index# 2013-9010. Michael S. Schnittman, Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC, Attorney for Plaintiff, P.O. Box 540, Getzville, NY 14068 Dated: July 28, 2014 1105204 [ NOTICE ] 1986 Searay HIN# SERV1321F686PAC118322 Eric Stingler Date of Auction 09/11/14, 9 am @ David Oschmann 1893 Kendall Rd. Kendall, NY [ NOTICE ] 4389 RIDGE ROAD WEST LLC (LLC) filed Arts. of Org. with NY Secy. of State (SS) on 8/14/14. 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 4477 Ridge Road West, Rochester, NY 14626. LLC’s purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Bar Down LLC Arts of Org. filed NY Secy of State (SSNY) on 11/19/13. Office: Monroe Co. SSNY design. agent of LLC upon whom process may be served and shall mail copy to 36 Crosswinds Cir. Fairport, NY 14450. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Bird’s Eye View LLC, Arts of Org filed with SSNY on 07/03/14. Off. Loc.: Monroe County, SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: The LLC, 21 Floverton St., Rochester, NY 14610. Purpose: to engage in any lawful act. [ NOTICE ] Calkain Companies LLC Authority filed SSNY 4/25/14. Office: Monroe Co. LLC formed VA 11/8/11, exists, located 11150 Sunset Hills Rd. #300 Reston, VA 20190. SSNY design. agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served and shall mail copy to same address. Cert of Regis. Filed DE SOS, PO Box 898 Dover, DE

19903. Purpose: Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] City Residential Properties, LLC filed Art. Of Org. with SSNY on 4/7/14. Office Location: Monroe Cnty. SSNY designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 144 Village Landing #192, Fairport, NY 14450. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. [ NOTICE ] DeCoste & Rafi, PLLC Notice of the formation of DeCoste & Rafi, PLLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Department of State of NY on 7/18/2014. Office Location: County of Monroe. The Secretary of State of NY (“SSNY”) has been designated as agent of the PLLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any such process served to: The PLLC, 51 Parkridge Dr., Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: to practice law. [ NOTICE ] FamLanders LLC filed Arts. of Org. with Sec’y of State (SSNY) on July 17, 2014. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to 160 Penfield

A report of unclaimed amounts of money or other property has been made to the State Comptroller and that a listing of names of persons appearing to be entitled is on file and open to the public inspection at Community Bank, N.A. Such held amounts of money or other property will be paid or delivered to proven entitled parties by Community Bank, N.A through October 31. On or before November 10, any remaining unclaimed monies or other properties will be paid or delivered to the State Comptroller.

NOTICE OF NAMES OF PERSONS APPEARING AS OWNERS OF UNCERTAIN UNCLAIMED PROPERTY HELD BY COMMUNITY BANK, N.A. 45-49 COURT STREET CANTON NY 13617-0509 The persons whose names and last known addresses are set forth below from the records of the above named banking organization to be entitled to unclaimed property consisting of cash amounts of fifty dollars or more.

AMOUNTS HELD OR OWING FOR THE PAYMENT OF NEGOTIABLE INVESTMENTS, CERTIFIED CHECKS OR DEPOSITS GARY T O'DONNELL

233 BRIARWOOD LANE

SCOTTSVILLE

CLINTON J COOPER

20 AUTMN CHAPEL WAY

ROCHESTER

FLORENCE BOJINOFF

217 HELEDALE RD

ROCHESTER

CLINTON J COOPER

20 AUTUMN CHAPEL WAY

ROCHESTER

GARY R ODONNELL

233 BRIARWOOD LANE

SCOTTSVILLE

BARBARA J REIGLES

26 A NORWICH AVE

ROCHESTER

DOROTHY M MCCALLUM, STEPHEN J MCCALLUM

8 DREXEL DR

ROCHESTER

38 CITY SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014

Rd., Rochester, NY 14610. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Goodhand Properties LLC (LLC) filed Arts. of Org. with NY Secy. of State (SS) on July 15, 2014. 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 PO Box 30906, Rochester, NY 14603. LLC’s purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] JOINT EFFORT LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 7/15/14. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Thomas St. Denis, 37 Brookside Dr., Fairport, NY 14450. General Purposes. [ NOTICE ] LANDIA BOTANICALS, LLC. App. for Authority filed with the Dept. of State of NY on 5/9/2014. Jurisdiction: DE, the date of its organization is: 4/4/2014. Office location in New York State: 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: The LLC, 18 Winding Brook Dr., Fairport, NY 14450. Address maintained in its jurisdiction is: 2711 Centerville Rd, Ste. 400, Wilmington DE 19808. The authorized officer in its jurisdiction of organization where a copy of its Certificate of Formation can be obtained is: DE Secretary of State, 401 Federal St., STE 4, Dover DE 19901. The purpose of the company is: any lawful act. [ NOTICE ] MOLLERN PROPERTY MANAGEMENT LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 7/14/14. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may

be served. SSNY shall mail process to The LLC, 1490 Providence Dr., Webster, NY 14580-9485. General Purposes. [ NOTICE ] MONROE TOWNHOMES, LLC. Art. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 06/18/14. Amended to 937 MONROE TOWNHOMES, LLC on 06/20/14. Office location: 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, 30 N Union Street, Suite 202, Rochester, New York 14607. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. [ NOTICE ] Name of LLC: Love and Squalor LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with NY Dept. of State: 8/7/14. Office loc.: Monroe Co. Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: Business Filings Inc., 187 Wolf Rd., Ste. 101, Albany, NY 12205, regd. agt. upon whom process may be served. Purpose: any lawful act. [ NOTICE ] Notice is hereby given that an alcohol beverage license, pending, has been applied for by the undersigned to sell Beer, Wine, and Liquor a retail in a Restaurant under the Alcohol Beverage Control Law at: 610 Monroe Ave Rochester NY 14607 - On Premises Consumption Liquor License for JS Napier LLC / DBA - Art Museum of Rochester [ NOTICE ] Notice of Form. of SHAH CPA FIRM, PLLC (the “PLLC”), a domestic PLLC. Art. of Org. filed with Secretary of the State of NY (SSNY) on 8/12/14. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the PLLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the PLLC, 2041 Penfield Rd, Bldg C, Penfield, NY 14526. Purpose: Public Accountancy. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of AVANI BUSINESS

PARK LLC Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 06/25/2014. 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 SAMEER PENAKALAPATI, 45 CEDAR MILL DRIVE, ROCHESTER, NEW YORK, 14626. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of BUVA International LLC Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 7/16/2014. 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 44, Woodmont RD, Rochester NY-14620 . Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of CEIPAL, LLC Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 05/21/2014. 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 CEIPAL, LLC, 722 WEILAND ROAD, SUITE 205, ROCHESTER, NEW YORK, 14626. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of 139 Field St LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/19/14. 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, c/o Sammy Feldman, 3445 Winton Place, Ste. 228, Rochester, NY 14623. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of 1555 East Henrietta Ventures, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/19/14. 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, c/o Sammy

Feldman, 3445 Winton Place, Ste. 228, Rochester, NY 14623. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of 1615-1625 East Ave LLC, Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 7/11/14. 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 700 Crossroads Bldg., 2 State St., Rochester, NY 14614. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of 1744 NORTH ROAD, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/21/2014. 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, 2117 Buffalo Rd., #221, Rochester, NY 14624. Purpose: any lawful act. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of 180 Carousel Lane, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/30/14. 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 James F. Lieb, Canandaigua National Bank & Trust, 1150 Pittsford Victor Road, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of 30 Edgerton Street LLC, Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 7/11/14. 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 700 Crossroads Bldg., 2 State St., Rochester, NY 14614. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of 4000 West Ridge Road LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/28/14. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY


Legal Ads designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, c/o Tom J. Thomas, 55 Allied Way, Hilton, NY 14468. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of 4090 Pearsal St Ventures, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/19/14. 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, c/o Sammy Feldman, 3445 Winton Place, Ste. 228, Rochester, NY 14623. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of 50 Chestnut Ventures LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/19/14. 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, c/o Sammy Feldman, 3445 Winton Place, Ste. 228, Rochester, NY 14623. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of 691-695 Park Ave LLC, Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 7/11/14. 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 700 Crossroads Bldg., 2 State St., Rochester, NY 14614. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of 75 Meigs Street LLC, Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 7/11/14. 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 700 Crossroads Bldg., 2 State St., Rochester, NY 14614. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of 83-85 Meigs

Street LLC, Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 7/11/14. 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 700 Crossroads Bldg., 2 State St., Rochester, NY 14614. Purpose: any lawful activities.

[ NOTICE ] NOTICE OF FORMATION OF A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY (LLC), Name: Hamilton &

Riley LLC; Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 08/05/2014; 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 153 East 32ndStreet Apartment 14A New

York, NY 10016; Purpose: Any lawful purpose. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of a Limited

Liability Company. WHITESTONE FINE ARTS LLC filed articles of Organization with NYS on June 6,2014. (1) Its principal office

cont. on page 40

NOTICE OF NAMES OF PERSONS APPEARING AS OWNERS OF CERTAIN UNCLAIMED PROPERTY HELD BY THE CANANDAIGUA NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY THE FOLLOWING PERSON APPEARS FROM OUR RECORDS TO BE ENTITLED TO UNCLAIMED PROPERTY CONSISTING OF CASH AMOUNTS OF FIFTY DOLLARS OR MORE: ABDUS SAMAD, SABEERAH 97 GREENLEAF MDWS ROCHESTER NY 14612

COOK, RICHARD J. 88 TYRINGHAM RD ROCHESTER NY 14617

ESTATE OF JAMES T MEISENZAHL 829 CHEESE FACTORY RD HONEOYE FALLS NY 14472

HOLTZ, KYLEIGH E. 133 KILBOURN RD ROCHESTER NY 14618

ALL COUNTY CONSTRUCTION 4846 STATE ROUTE 104 WILLIAMSON NY 14589

COTTELEER, JOSEPH J. 64 ONTARIO ST HONEOYE FALLS NY 14472

ESTATE OF WILLIAM J. HEBERGER 29 W MAIN ST HONEOYE FALLS NY 14472

HUNT, EMILY M. 133 PARK ST CANANDIAGUA NY 14424

ANDERSON, BETTY M. 1555 HIGHLAND AVE ROCHESTER NY 14618

CUTTER, BENJAMIN J. 217 VALLEY RD ROCHESTER NY 14618

FAGAN, JONATHAN 2 PRIDE ST HONEOYE FALLS NY 14472

INFANTINO, COLLEEN A. 2978 RUSH MENDON RD HONEOYE FALLS NY 14472

BAKER, LILLIAN 4497 STATE ROUTE 64 CANANDAIGUA NY 14424

DAVID, ALAN W 509 STOUTENBURGH LN PITTSFORD NY 14534

FAGAN, MARY E. 2 PRIDE ST HONEOYE FALLS NY 14472

INFANTINO, MICHAEL T. 2978 RUSH MENDON RD HONEOYE FALLS NY 14472

BENULIS, MELISSA A. 785 DUCK HOLW VICTOR NY 14564

DAVID, SALLY L 44 BLACK SPRING RD POUND RIDGE NY 10576 DEBLASE, FRANK A. 518 THOMAS AVE ROCHESTER NY 14617

FEOLA, LAUREN 1600 MONROE AVE APT. 4 ROCHESTER NY 14618

JOHN R FEOLA SUPPLEMENTAL NEEDS TRUST 273 DORCHESTER RD ROCHESTER NY 14610

BLACK MEN LATINO MEN HEALTH CRISIS, INC. 87 CLINTON AVE N STE 4 ROCHESTER NY 14604 BLAZE, SCOTT A. 84 3RD ST FARMINGTON NY 14425 BRACH, KAITLYNN S. 690 CARTER ST ROCHESTER NY 14621 BRACH, MELINDA M. 358 BELMEADE RD ROCHESTER NY 14617 BRESOVSKA, DRAGI V. 4 REVERE DR. ROCHESTER NY 14624 BRESOVSKA, NIKOLINKA 4 REVERE DR. ROCHESTER NY 14624 BROOMFIELD, JORDAN T. 202 BROWNCROFT BLVD. ROCHESTER NY 14609 BUGGS, ODELL 601 WOODBINE AVE ROCHESTER NY 14619 BURGOS, J. ROBERTO 50 WINCHESTER DR FAIRPORT NY 14450 CARTER, CHRISTINA L. 8725 BELCHER RD BLOOMFIELD NY 14469 CELEBRATION OF LIFE COMMUNITY INC PO BOX 24039 ROCHESTER NY 14624 COLLINS, CAMERON W. 545 PLANK RD MACEDON NY 14502

DEBLASE-ORTEGA, BRIDGET A. 5 DELAND PARK A FAIRPORT NY 14450 DEBOERDERE, ALEXIS L. 76 2ND ST FARMINGTON NY 14425 DELFORTE, NICODEMO P. 1891 STATE ROUTE 21 SHORTSVILLE NY 14548 DERUE, DEVON M. 352 GIBSON ST CANANDAIGUA NY 14424 DERUE, JULIE A. 352 GIBSON ST CANANDAIGUA NY 14424 DERUE, NATHAN D. 352 GIBSON ST CANANDAIGUA NY 14424 DILLON, OLIVE P. 190PARRISH ST APT. 60 CANANDAIGUA NY 14424 DIRAIMO, MARIE E. 747 BEL ARBOR TRL WEBSTER NY 14580 DIRAIMO, VINCENT R. 1818 EDGEMERE DR ROCHESTER NY 14612 DISALVO, ERMINIO 220 THACKERY RD ROCHESTER NY 14610 DISALVO, JOSEPH C. 1036 HARVARD ST ROCHESTER NY 14610

CONVERSE, CLIFFORD H. 195 RIDGEWOOD RD PINEHURST NC 28374

DRUMM, WILLIAM H. 4010 CENTER GATE BLVD SARASOTA FL 34233 ELAM, HELEN V. 98 TALL OAK LN PITTSFORD NY 14534

CONVERSE, R SCOTT 142 W CHARLOTTE AVE PALMYRA NY 14522

ENRIGHT, LAURIE A. 217 VALLEY RD ROCHESTER NY 14618

FISCHER, ALLEN 21191 SILENT SPRING LN TRABUCO CANYON CA 92679 FOLEY, CHANDRA E. 121 GREGORY ST ROCHESTER NY 14620 FOLEY, CLAYTON M. 121 GREGORY ST ROCHESTER NY 14620 GALLO, ZAHIR 4716 DEWEY AVE APT 7 ROCHESTER NY 14612 GATES, E JEAN J. 4077 WALWORTH ONTARIO RD. WALWORTH NY 14568 GORDON, COLLEEN M. DDS 612 THURSTON RD. ROCHESTER NY 14619 GUTSCHOW, WILLIAM R. 52 MONTEZUMA ST LYONS NY 14489 HALLOCK, ETHAN M. 1898 SCOTTSVILLE CHILI RD SCOTTSVILLE NY 14546 HALLOCK, KERRY K. 1898 SCOTTSVILLE CHILI RD SCOTTSVILLE NY 14546 HANFORD, BENNETT C. 94 HAMLIN DR CANANDAIGUA NY 14424 HAYWOOD, DESIREE R. 467 STOCKBRIDGE AVE BUFFALO NY 14215 HEBERGER, PAUL W. 14 STRUSSENBURG DR HILTON NY 14468 HESS, HARLEIGH E. 216 BERKSHIRE DR ROCHESTER NY 14626 HESS, JANET L. 1479 HILTON PARMA RD SPENCERPORT NY 14559 HOLTZ, JOHN D. PO BOX 20340 ROCHESTER NY 14602

KOMMER, JANNELL 5748 EDDY RIDGE RD WILLIAMSON NY 14589 KUMF, KATHERINE J. 785 DUCK HOLW VICTOR NY 14564 LAMBRIX, ROBERT J. 988 BLVD OF THE ARTS APT 1617 SARASOTA FL 34236

76 TIMPAT DR. ROCHESTER NY 14624 MASHTARE, PENNY L. 3089 BAILEY RD BLOOMFIELD NY 14469 MASHTARE. DALE R. 3089 BAILEY RD BLOOMFIELD NY 14469 MAZZOCHI, LILY A. 33 CANFIELD PL APT 1 ROCHESTER NY 14607 MCCARTHY, ANN L. 615 PINNACLE RD PITTSFORD NY 14534 MCCOOEY, MOLLY A. 160 DREXMORE RD ROCHESTER NY 14610 MCCOOEY, RACHEL S. 160 DREXMORE RD ROCHESTER NY 14610 MCGORY, SHAYLYN E. PO BOX 761, NAPLES NY 14512

OCONNOR, BERNARD M. 214 HADDON RD ROCHESTER NY 14626

TAYMAN, MARC H. 205 WHISTLE STOP RD PITTSFORD NY 14534

PEZZIMENTI, MADELINE M. 799 MONT BLANC DRIVE WEBSTER NY 14580

THRASHER, WAYNE L. PO BOX 94 PORT GIBSON NY 14537

PEZZIMENTI, TRACY J. 799 MONT BLANC DRIVE WEBSTER NY 14580

TOWNLINE MACHINE INC 3151 HOPEWELL TOWNLINE RD CLIFTON SPRINGS NY 14432

PIGNATO AND MERKLEY PLLC 2086 FIVE MILE LINE RD PENFIELD NY 14526

ULTHE, VICTORIA A. 9009 ULTHE RD. SPRINGWATER NY 14560

QUICK, JOHN M. 2200 E HENRIETTA RD ROCHESTER NY 14623

VATTIMO, EMANUEL 7 HILLCREST DR. BLOOMFIELD NY 14469

ROBINSON, CORY S. 2200 E HENRIETTA RD ROCHESTER NY 14623

VIGGIANI, MICHAEL T. 9 RODNEY DR HONEOYE FALLS NY 14472 WALLENHORST, RICHARD J. II 294 SEVILLE DR ROCHESTER NY 14617

SANDHOLZER, ROBERT E. 3 MOUNT VIEW CRES WEBSTER NY 14580 SCHMIDLE, MARY ELLEN 74 WHELEHAN DR. ROCHESTER NY 14616

LATINI, SUSAN M. PO BOX 927 TRUMANSBURG NY 14886

MCMANIS, THOMAS P. 43 MEDOW DR. SPENCERPORT NY 14559 MCNABB, ELIZABETH M. 350 CLOVER HILLS DR. ROCHESTER NY 14618

LEBOO, BERTHA L. 2 SALEM CIR VICTOR NY 14564

MCNABB, MARIE W. 350 CLOVER HILLS DR. ROCHESTER NY 14618

LECESSE, MICHAEL 1111 COUNTY ROAD 8 FARMINGTON NY 14425

MEISENZAHL, STEPHEN M. 829 CHEESE FACTORY RD HONEOYE FALLS NY 14472

LEIBRING, JUNE M. 194 CHAMPION AVE WEBSTER NY 14580

MERKLEY, GREGORY A. 40 CHADWICK MANOR FAIRPORT NY 14450

LILL, J LLOYD JR 4588 MISTY HILL DR CANANDAIGUA NY 14424

MILLER, JAMES F. PO BOX 125, IONIA NY 14475

SMITH, ERIN N. 1277 KENSINGTON AVE APT 2 BUFFALO NY 14215

MONACO, LYNNE 383 TAYLOR RD. HONEOYE FALLS NY 14472

SMITH, RANSOM S. JR. 235 N MAIN ST APT 303 CANANDAIGUA NY 14424

MUEHLEISEN, SUZANNE M. 7273 KOBER DR LIMA NY 14485

SMITH, TYLER A. 133 PARK ST CANANDAIGUA NY 14424

NASCA, AIDEN 283 PECK RD HILTON NY 14468

STEKLOFF, JULIA 104 PENARROW RD ROCHESTER NY 14618

NASCA, JANINE M. 283 PECK RD HILTON NY 14468

STRATTON, BARBARA R. 8684 DRUMLIN HEIGHTS DR BALDWINSVILLE NY 13027

NEGLEY, IRA DOUGLAS 5070 TOWN LINE RD. RUSHVILLE NY 14544

STRATTON, MADELINE C. 2 SALEM CIR VICTOR NY 14564

NEWTON, DEBORAH L. 39 SUSAN DR. FARMINGTON NY 14425

SWEET, BRADLEY 5225 STATE ROUTE 89 WOLCOTT NY 14590

O'CONNELL, THOMAS W. 1309 SE 8TH ST APT 101 CAPE CORAL FL 33909

TALERICO, ANDREA L. 33 CANFIELD PL APT 2 ROCHESTER NY 14607

MANCERA, JUAN 7448 RIDGE RD LOT 38 SODUS NY 14551 MANION, MARY 288 SENECA RD ROCHESTER NY 14622 MANTEGNA, CAROLINE L. 1477 LONG POND RD. APT 445 ROCHESTER NY 14626 MANTEGNA, WILLIAM J. 220 HORSESHOE CIR LAS CRUCES NEW MEXICO 88007 MARTIN, JOSEPH R. 3881 RUSH MENDON RD MENDON NY 14506 MARTIN, NICOLE F. 3881 RUSH MENDON RD MENDON NY 14506 MARY P. GORDON ULW TR FBO OF STEPHEN W. GORDON

SHIH, ALEXANDER 108 ROSSITER RD ROCHESTER NY 14620 SHOVE, JULIE ANN 5748 EDDY RIDGE RD WILLIAMSON NY 14589 SHOVE, RAYMOND P. 5748 EDDY RIDGE RD WILLIAMSON NY 14589 SINGLETERRY, JAMES F. 11 E MAIN ST CLIFTON SPRINGS NY 14432

WARDEN, BONNIE T. 78 COVILLE ST, VICTOR NY 14564 WARDEN, ELLE J. 78 COVILLE ST VICTOR NY 14564 WARNER, RAND L. 58 PARK CIRCLE DR FAIRPORT NY 14450 WARREN, EVAN R. 8 SUDBURY DR ROCHESTER NY 14624 WAY, EUGENE M. 23 BULLARD ST GOUVERNEUR NY 13642 WHITNEY, ERIN L. 9 RODNEY DR HONEOYE FALLS NY 14472 WILDER, ANNE L. 79 COMMODORE PKWY ROCHESTER NY 14625 WILDER, HOPE 79 COMMODORE PKWY ROCHESTER NY 14625 WILLAIMS, SEBASTIAN M. 4497 STATE ROUTE 64 CANANDAIGUA NY 14424 WILLIAMS, MAXIMILLION L. 4497 STATE ROUTE 64 CANANDAIGUA NY 14424 ZALESKI, ADAM J. 4226 SAINT PAUL BLVD. ROCHESTER NY 14617 ZALESKI, EMILY A. 145 SACHEM WAY ROCHESTER NY 14617 ZIMMET, DAVID A. 700 CORWIN RD ROCHESTER NY 14610

A report of Unclaimed Property has been made to the Comptroller of State of New York, Pursuant to Section 301 of the Abandoned Property Law. A list of the names contained in such notice is on file and open to the public inspection at the principal office of the Bank, located at 72 South Main Street, Canandaigua NY 14424, where such abandoned property will be paid on or before October 31 next to persons establishing to its satisfaction their right to receive the same. In the succeeding November, and on or before the tenth day thereof, such unclaimed property will be paid to the Comptroller of the State of New York, and shall there-upon cease to be liable therefore. rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 39


Legal Ads > page 39

[ NOTICE ]

is in Monroe County, New York. (2) The Secretary of State has been designated as its agent and the post office address to which the Secretary of State shall mail a copy of any process against it is: the LLC, 112 Heatherstone Lane, Rochester, New York 14618. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. Latest date upon which the LLC is to dissolve: No specific date.

Notice of Formation of Chestnut St Ventures, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/19/14. 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, c/o Sammy Feldman, 3445 Winton Place, Ste. 228, Rochester, NY 14623. Purpose: any lawful activity.

[ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Allison C Porray LLC Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 5/1/2014. 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 22 S Gate Trl, Fairport, NY 14450. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Apphia T LLC, Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 8/5/14. 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 960 Allens Creek Rd., Rochester, NY 14618. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of BODY VITAL SPA, LLC Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 7/21/2014. 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 1425 JEFFERSON ROAD, SUITE #7, ROCHESTER, NY 14623. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of CESERE PROPERTIES LLC Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 6/12/14. 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 CESERE PROPERTIES LLC, P.O. Box 1342, Pittsford, NY 14534 . Purpose: any lawful activities.

[ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Crossbow Holdings LLC. Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 08/07/14. 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: 21 Crossbow Dr., Penfield, NY 14526. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of EAGLE AUTO TRANSPORTATION, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 07/02/14. Office location: Monroe County. 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 East Henrietta Ventures, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/20/14. 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, c/o Sammy Feldman, 3445 Winton Place, Suite 228, Rochester, NY 14623. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Five Fold Industries, LLC Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 8-4-14. Office location:

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Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to PO Box 24954, Rochester, NY 14624 . Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Flint Ventures LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/28/14. 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, c/o Sammy Feldman, 3445 Winton Place, Ste. 228, Rochester, NY 14623. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Guardrail Technology LLC Art of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 7/31/14. 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 96 Empire Boulevard Suite 300 Rochester NY, 14609. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of HEROES HOME ADVANTAGE, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/11/2014. 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, 28 Willow Pond Way, Ste. 1, Penfield, NY 14526. Purpose: any lawful act. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Horizon Advisory Services, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 6/13/14. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: 5582 West Henrietta Rd., W. Henrietta, NY 14586. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Indus State Street

LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/18/14. 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, 1080 Pittsford-Victor Road, Ste. 201, Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Inn On Broadway, LLC, Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 3/17/04. 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 3137 Chili Ave., Ste. 300, Rochester, NY 14624. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. NAME: 3177 LATTA, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 06/10/14. 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 the LLC, 26 Norbrook Road, Fairport, New York 14450. Purpose: For any lawful purpose. [ NOTICE ] NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. NAME: TOM’S MOWING, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 06/13/14. 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 the LLC, 182 Lake Breeze Park, Rochester, New York 14622. Purpose: For any lawful purpose. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of LWM Assets, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/18/14. 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, c/o Sammy Feldman, 3445 Winton Place, Ste. 228, Rochester, NY 14623. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of McArdle Burkhardt LLC, Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 11/12/13. 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 693 East Ave., Rochester, NY 14607. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of MESKILL ASSOCIATES, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/12/2014. 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, 289 Cedar Creek Trail, Rochester, NY 14626. Purpose: any lawful act. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Morgan Brookwood I, LLC, Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 3/15/13. 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 1170 Pittsford-Victor Rd., Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Morgan Brookwood, LLC, Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 3/15/13. 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 1170 Pittsford-Victor Rd., Pittsford, NY 14534. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Morgan Peemm Holding LLC, Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 7/15/14.

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 NASH ENTERTAINMENT, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 08/11/14. Office location: Monroe County. Princ. office of LLC: 6 Lawrence St., Rochester, NY 14607. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to Mark Scialdone at the princ. office of the LLC. Purpose: Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Oakport Properties LLC Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 08/11/2014. 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 PO Box 93252, Rochester, NY 14692 . Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of PRECISION CUSTOM PAINTING LLC Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) DATE.4/14/2014 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 79 WILLOW BRIDGE TRAIL, PENFIELD NY 14526 . Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Prime Capital CP, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/12/14. 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, c/o Sammy Feldman, 3445 Winton Place, Ste. 228, Rochester, NY 14623. Purpose: any lawful activity.

[ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Proactive Representation LLC Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 7/30/2014. 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 4497 Carter Rd, Fairport, NY 14450 . Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Riddle Enterprises, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/14/14. 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, 555 North Winton Road, Rochester, NY 14610. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of Shultz Properties, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the New York Secretary of State on July 8, 2014. The office of the LLC is in Monroe County. The New York Secretary of State is designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The Secretary of State shall mail a copy of such process to 17 Foxboro Lane, Fairport, New York 14450. The LLC is organized to engage in any lawful activity for which an LLC may be formed under the NY LLC law. [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of SOUTHVALLEY OUTFITTERS AND WATERFOWL, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/17/2014. 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, 2368 Manitou Rd., Spencerport, NY 14559. Purpose: any lawful act. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of STEWSON TERRA FIRMA, LLC Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY)

on 07/24/14. Office location: Monroe County. Princ. office of LLC: 9 Ledgmont Dr., Fairport, NY 14450. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC at the princ. office of the LLC. Purpose: Any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Surviving Naturally, Sandra Miceli NP Family Health PLLC Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 4/30/14. Location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 75 W Main St. Webster, NY 14580. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of TEN CLEARVIEW NY LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 7/31/2014. 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: c/o Anthony A. Dinitto, L.L.C., 8 Silent Meadows Dr., Spencerport, NY 14559. Purpose: any lawful act. [ NOTICE ] Notice of formation of THE DBTS GROUP L.L.C.. Art. Of Org. filed with the Sect’y of State of NY (SSNY) on 07/07/14. Office in Monroe County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to the LLC, 414 Broadway Rochester, NY 14607. Purpose: Any lawful purpose [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of The Empty Hearts, LLC. Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) on March 26, 2014. 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 Andrew M. Babiuk, 26 Calvin Road, Rochester, NY 14612. Purpose: to engage in the entertainment, music, recording, digital media and publishing industries.


Legal Ads [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Tree of Hope Counseling, LCSW, PLLC, Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 7/16/14. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of PLLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 95 Allens Creek Rd, B-1, Ste. 110, Rochester NY 14618. Purpose: Mental Health Svcs. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Ugly Duck Coffee, LLC Art. of Org. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 6/11/14. 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 17 Fairfax Rd, Rochester NY 14609. Purpose: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Formation of Williamson Ventures, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 8/19/14. 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, c/o Sammy Feldman, 3445 Winton Place, Ste. 228, Rochester, NY 14623. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Qual. of Morgan Brookwood DE I, LLC, Auth. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 2/25/14. Office loc.: Monroe County. LLC org. in DE 1/31/14. SSNY desig. as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of proc. to 1080 PittsfordVictor Rd., Ste. 100, Pittsford, NY 14534. DE off. addr.: CTC, 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. on file: SSDE, Townsend Bldg., Dover, DE 19901. Purp.: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Qual. of Morgan Brookwood DE, LLC, Auth. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 2/25/14. Office loc.: Monroe County. LLC org. in DE 1/31/14. SSNY desig. as agent of LLC upon whom

process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of proc. to 1080 PittsfordVictor Rd., Ste. 100, Pittsford, NY 14534. DE off. addr.: CTC, 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. on file: SSDE, Townsend Bldg., Dover, DE 19901. Purp.: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Qual. of Morgan Clay Apartments II DE Holdings, LLC, Auth. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 7/7/14. Office loc.: Monroe County. LLC org. in DE 7/3/14. SSNY desig. as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of proc. to 1080 PittsfordVictor Rd., Ste. 100, Pittsford, NY 14534. DE off. addr.: CTC, 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. on file: SSDE, Townsend Bldg., Dover, DE 19901. Purp.: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Qual. of Morgan Clay Apartments II DE, LLC, Auth. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 7/7/14. Office loc.: Monroe County. LLC org. in DE 7/3/14. SSNY desig. as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of proc. to 1080 Pittsford-Victor Rd., Ste. 100, Pittsford, NY 14534. DE off. addr.: CTC, 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. on file: SSDE, Townsend Bldg., Dover, DE 19901. Purp.: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Qual. of Pots Acquisitions LLC, Auth. filed Sec’y of State (SSNY) 7/11/14. Office loc.: Monroe County. LLC org. in DE 6/12/14. SSNY desig. as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of proc. to 1080 Pittsford Victor Rd., Ste. 100, Pittsford, NY 14534. DE off. addr.: CTC, 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. on file: SSDE, Townsend Bldg., Dover, DE 19901. Purp.: any lawful activities. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Qualification of Aurora Holdings LLC. Authority filed

with NY Dept. of State on 8/15/14. NYS fictitious name: Aurora Brands Holdings LLC. Office location: Monroe County. Princ. bus. addr.: 100 Chestnut St., Rochester, NY 14604. LLC formed in DE on 7/3/14. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: c/o CT Corporation System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. DE addr. of LLC: 1209 Orange St., Wilmington, DE 19801. Cert. of Form. filed with DE Sec. of State, 401 Federal St., Dover, DE 19901. Purpose: all lawful purposes. [ NOTICE ] Notice of Qualification of Benjamin Foods L.L.C. Authority filed with NY Dept. of State on 7/21/14. Office location: Monroe County. LLC formed in PA on 10/14/03. NY Sec. of State designated agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to: c/o CT Corporation System, 111 8th Ave., NY, NY 10011, regd. agent upon whom process may be served. PA and principal business address: 1001 South York Rd., Hatboro, PA 19040. Cert. of Org. filed with PA Sec. of Commonwealth, 401 North St., Rm 206, Harrisburg, PA 17120. Purpose: all lawful purposes. [ NOTICE ] Outlines by Mochi, LLC Arts of Org. filed NY Secy of State (SSNY) on 7/15/14. Office: Monroe Co. SSNY design. agent of LLC upon whom process may be served and shall mail copy to 43 Evergreen Ave Rye, NY 10580. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] PLATINUM EXPRESS LOGISTICS LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 7/31/14. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served, SSNY shall mail process to ILLARION KIRIYAK, 7672 Ridge Rd., Brockport, NY 14420. General Purpose.

[ NOTICE ] S.A.F.E.- Safe Alternatives for Everyone, LLC Arts of Org. filed NY Secy of State (SSNY) on 6/2/14. Office: Monroe Co. SSNY design. agent of LLC upon whom process may be served and shall mail copy to 117 Wisconsin St. Rochester, NY 14609. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] SIMCO GENERAL CONSTRUCTION, PLUMBING, HEATING, AND AIR CONDITIONING, LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 6/12/14. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to The LLC, 94 Pickdale, Rochester, NY 14626. General Purposes. [ NOTICE ] SOUTHWEST HOUSES LLC (LLC) filed Arts. of Org. with NY Secy. of State (SS) on 7/30/14. 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 360 Cottage St., Rochester, NY 14611. LLC’s purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE ] Sybra Energy LLC filed Articles of Organization with SSNY on 08/01/14. Office: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail process to 376 Lexington Ave. #13546, Rochester, NY 14613. Purpose: any lawful activity [ NOTICE ] VIMEAN SERVICES, LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 4/8/14. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to The LLC, 1396 Clifford Ave., Rochester, NY 14621. General Purposes. [ NOTICE OF FORMATION ] Marsica Holdings LLC filed Arts. of Org. with Sec. of State of NY (SSNY) on

08/04/14. Off. Loc: Monroe County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY to mail copy of process to: U.S. Corp. Agents, Inc. 7014 13th Ave., Ste; 202, Brooklyn, NY 11228. Purpose of LLC: Any lawful act or activity. [ NOTICE OF FORMATION ] Schultz @ Bellille Entertainment LLC Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY 7/18/14. Off. Loc.: Monroe Cnty. SSNY designated as agent of LLC whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o The LLC, 24 Red Post Crescent, Fairport, NY 14450. Purpose: all lawful activities. [ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF BETTER WORLD HOUSING NO.2, LLC ]

The name of the Limited Liability Company is Better World Housing No.2, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the New York Secretary of State on 8/1/2014. The office of the LLC is in Monroe County. The New York Secretary of State is designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The Secretary of State shall mail a copy of such process to30 Hummingbird Way, W. Henrietta, NY 14586. The LLC is organized to engage in any lawful activity for which an LLC may be formed under the NY LLC Law. [ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ] DAMT, LLC (“LLC”), has filed Articles of Organization with the NY Secretary of State (“NYSS”) on July 22, 2014 pursuant to Section 203 of the NY Limited Liability Law. The office of the LLC shall be located in Monroe County, NY. The NYSS is designated as the agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served, and the address to which the NYSS shall mail a copy of any process served on him against the LLC is C/O Alexander Soto, 2100 Harris Road, Penfield, NY 14526. The purpose of the LLC is to engage in any lawful act or activity for

which limited liability companies may be formed under the law. [ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ] Notice of formation of limited liability company (“LLC”). Name: 120 Rossiter Road, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York (“SSNY”) on 5/7/14. New York office location: Monroe County. Principal business location: 18 Whitestone Lane, Rochester, NY. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any such process to: 18 Whitestone Lane, Rochester, NY 14618. LLC is organized to engage in any lawful act or activity for which limited liability companies may be organized under the Limited Liability Company Law. [ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ] The name of the Limited Liability Company (LLC) is Epic Property Firm, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (“SSNY”) on August 4, 2014. 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 16 E. Main St., Suite 420, Rochester, NY 14614. Purpose: any lawful activity. [ NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY ] The name of the Limited Liability Company (LLC) is CERC-SW Properties, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (“SSNY”) on August 14, 2014. 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 16 E. Main St., Suite 420, Rochester, NY 14614. Purpose: any lawful activity.

[ NOTICE OF POSTPONED SALE ] Index No. 201312768 SUPREME COURT STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF MONROE ESL Federal Credit Union, Plaintiff, vs. Esther Bills, Defendants. Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale dated July 1, 2014 and entered herein, I, the undersigned, the Referee in said Judgment named, will sell at public auction in the lobby of the Monroe County Clerk’s Office located at 39 West Main Street, Rochester, New York, County of Monroe on September 11, 2014 at 2:30 p.m., on that day, the premises directed by said Judgment to be sold and therein described as follows (original sale date was August 13, 2014): ALL THAT TRACT OR PARCEL OF LAND, situate in the Town of Perinton, County of Monroe and State of New York, known as 2121 Whitney Road East, Fairport, NY 14450; Tax Account No. 154.01-1-21 described in Deed recorded in Liber 5478 of Deeds, page 297; lot size .68 acres. Said premises are sold subject to any state of facts an accurate survey may show, zoning restrictions and any amendments thereto, covenants, restrictions, agreements, reservations, and easements of record and prior liens, if any, municipal departmental violations, and such other provisions as may be set forth in the Complaint and Judgment filed in this action. Judgment amount: $136,823.44 plus, but not limited to, costs, disbursements, attorney fees and additional allowance, if any, all with legal interest. DATED: August 18, 2014 Miguel A. Reyes, Esq., Referee LACY KATZEN LLP Attorneys for Plaintiff 130 East Main Street Rochester, New York 14604 Telephone: (585) 3245767 [ 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 (the “Agency”) on the 15th day of September, 2014 at 10:00 a.m., local time, at the Sweden Town Hall, 18 State Street, Brockport, New York 14420, in connection with the following matter: SOUTH POINTE LANDING, LLC, a New York limited liability company, for itself 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 the construction of an approximately 11,100 squarefoot addition (the “Facility”) to an existing approximately 18,633 squarefoot, single-story medical office building located at 6668 Fourth Section Road in the Town of Sweden, New York, to be subleased to The Unity Hospital of Rochester to provide OB/GYN, family practice, specialty outreach and physical therapy services to the community. The Facility will be initially operated and/ or managed by the Company. The Agency will acquire an interest in the Facility and lease the Facility to the Company. The financial assistance contemplated by the Agency will consist generally of the exemption from taxation expected to be claimed by the Company as a result of the Agency taking an interest in, possession or control (by lease, license or otherwise) of the Facility, or of the Company acting as an agent of the Agency, consisting of: (i) exemption from state and local sales and use tax with respect to the qualifying personal property portion of the Facility, (ii) exemption from mortgage recording tax with respect to any qualifying mortgage on the Facility, and (iii) exemption from general real property taxation with respect to the Facility, which exemption shall be offset, in whole or in part, by contractual payments in lieu of taxes by

cont. on page 42

rochestercitynewspaper.com CITY 41


Legal Ads > page 41 the Company for the benefit of affected tax jurisdictions. A copy of the Company’s application, containing the Benefit/Incentive analysis, is available for inspection at the Agency’s offices at 8100 CityPlace, 50 West Main Street, Rochester, New York 14614 during normal business hours, Monday through Friday, and will be available for inspection and review at the abovescheduled Public Hearing. The Agency will at the above-stated time and place 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: September 3, 2014 COUNTY OF MONROE INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AGENCY By: Judy A. Seil, Executive Director [ 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 (the “Agency”) on the 16th day of September, 2014 at 11:30 a.m., local time, at the Ebenezer Watts Conference Center, 49 S. Fitzhugh Street, Rochester, New York 14614, in connection with the following matter: 739 S. CLINTON LLC, a New York limited liability company, for itself 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 by lease, license or otherwise, of an interest in an existing approximately 37,000 square-foot warehouse (the “Existing

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rochestercitynewspaper.com 42 CITY SEPTEMBER 3-9, 2014

Improvements”) located at 739 South Clinton Avenue in the City of Rochester, New York (the “Land”); (B) the conversion and renovation of the Existing Improvements into mixed-use commercial space and market-rate residential apartments, 10% of which apartments would be reserved for individuals earning 120% or less of the area’s median gross income (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”). The Facility will be initially operated and/ or managed by the Company. The Agency will acquire an interest in the Facility and lease the Facility to the Company. The financial assistance contemplated by the Agency will consist generally of the exemption from taxation expected to be claimed by the Company as a result of the Agency taking an interest in, possession or control (by lease, license or otherwise) of the Facility, or of the Company acting as an agent of the Agency, consisting of: (i) exemption from state and local sales and use tax with respect to the qualifying personal property portion of the Facility, (ii) exemption from mortgage recording tax with respect to any qualifying mortgage on the Facility, and (iii) exemption from general real property taxation with respect to the Facility, which exemption shall be offset, in whole or in part, by contractual payments in lieu of taxes by the Company for the benefit of affected tax jurisdictions. A copy of the Company’s application, containing the Benefit/Incentive analysis, is available for inspection at the Agency’s offices at 8100 CityPlace, 50 West Main Street, Rochester, New York 14614 during normal business hours, Monday through Friday, and

will be available for inspection and review at the abovescheduled Public Hearing. The Agency will at the above-stated time and place 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: September 3, 2014 COUNTY OF MONROE INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AGENCY By: Judy A. Seil, Executive Director [ NOTICE OF SALE ] Index No. 201311371 SUPREME COURT STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF MONROE ESL Federal Credit Union, Plaintiff, vs. James R. Burroughs, II, a/k/a James R. Burroughs; Chandra D. Burroughs, Defendants. Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale dated August 18, 2014 and entered herein, I, the undersigned, the Referee in said Judgment named, will sell at public auction in the lobby of the Monroe County Clerk’s Office located at 39 West Main Street, Rochester, New York, County of Monroe on September 24, 2014 at 10:00 a.m., on that day, the premises directed by said Judgment to be sold and therein described as follows: ALL THAT TRACT OR PARCEL OF LAND, situate in the City of Rochester, County of Monroe and State of New York, known as 97 Glendale Park, Rochester, NY14613, Tax Account No. 105.34-2-18 described in Deed recorded in Liber 10863 of Deeds, page 84; lot size .14 acres. Said premises are sold subject to any state of facts an accurate survey may show, zoning restrictions and any amendments thereto, covenants, restrictions, agreements, reservations, and easements of record and prior liens, if any, municipal departmental violations, and such other provisions as may be set forth in

the Complaint and Judgment filed in this action. Judgment amount: $54,173.65 plus, but not limited to, costs, disbursements, attorney fees and additional allowance, if any, all with legal interest. DATED: August 2014 Robert W. Kessler, Esq., Referee LACY KATZEN LLP Attorneys for Plaintiff 130 East Main Street Rochester, New York 14604 Telephone: (585) 324-5767 [ NOTICE OF SALE ] Index No. 201311397 SUPREME COURT STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF MONROE ESL Federal Credit Union, Plaintiff, vs. Jane E. Adkins; Michael S. Adkins, Defendants. Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale dated July 29, 2014 and entered herein, I, the undersigned, the Referee in said Judgment named, will sell at public auction in the lobby of the Monroe County Clerk’s Office located at 39 West Main Street, Rochester, New York, County of Monroe on September 10, 2014 at 10:30 a.m., on that day, the premises directed by said Judgment to be sold and therein described as follows: ALL THAT TRACT OR PARCEL OF LAND, situate in the City of Rochester, County of Monroe and State of New York, known as 51 Yarker Avenue, Rochester, NY 14612, Tax Account No. 061.45-1-30 described in Deed recorded in Liber 9867 of Deeds, page 650 ; lot size 50 x 116. Said premises are sold subject to any state of facts an accurate survey may show, zoning restrictions and any amendments thereto, covenants, restrictions, agreements, reservations, and easements of record and prior liens, if any, municipal departmental violations, and such other provisions as may be set forth in the Complaint and Judgment filed in this action. Judgment amount: $67,608.84 plus, but not limited to, costs, disbursements, attorney fees and additional allowance, if any, all with legal interest. DATED: August 2014 Angelo Rose, Esq., Referee

LACY KATZEN LLP Attorneys for Plaintiff 130 East Main Street Rochester, New York 14604 Telephone: (585) 324-5767 [ NOTICES ] L & T MERCHANDISE, LLC, a domestic LLC, filed with the SSNY on 5/27/14. Office location: Monroe County. SSNY is designated as agent upon whom process against the LLC may be served. SSNY shall mail process to The LLC, Attn: Dorothy Raley, 526 Eaton Rd., Rochester, NY 14617. General Purposes. [ SUMMONS AND NOTICE ] Index No. 20143285 STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT MONROE COUNTY TOWER DBW II TRUST 2013-1, Plaintiff, vs. SAMUEL L. MONTGOMERY; PAMELA EVANS A/K/A PAMELA MONTGOMERY, if living, or if she be dead, her husband, heirs-at-law, next of kin, distributees, executors, administrators, assignees, lienors, creditors, successorsin-interest and generally all persons having or claiming under, by or through PAMELA EVANS A/K/A PAMELA MONTGOMERY, by purchase, inheritance, lien or otherwise of any right, title or interest in and to the premises described in the complaint herein, and all creditors thereof, and the respective husbands, or widowers of hers, if any, all of whose names and addresses are unknown to plaintiff ASSOCIATES FIRST CAPITAL CORPORATION S/B/M TO ASSOCIATES FINANCIAL SERVICES COMPANY, INC. S/B/M TO ASSOCIATES CONSUMER DISCOUNT COMPANY, INC.; HOUSEHOLD FINANCE REALTY CORPORATION OF NEW YORK; NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and “JOHN DOE #1” THROUGH “JOHN DOE #100,” Defendants. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint

in the above-entitled foreclosure action, and to serve a copy of your answer on Plaintiff’s attorney within thirty (30) days after the service of this summons, exclusive of the day of service or within thirty (30) days after completion of service where service is made in any other manner than by personal service within the State. The United States of America, if designated as a defendant in this action, may answer or appear within sixty (60) days of service hereof. In case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. Monroe County is designated as the place of trial. The basis of venue is the location of the subject premises. Dated: August 6, 2014 TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS The foregoing summons is served upon you by publication, pursuant to an Order of Honorable Francis A. Affronti, a Justice of the Supreme Court, dated August 18, 2014, and filed with supporting papers in the Monroe County Clerk’s Office. This is an action to foreclose a tax lien covering the property known as 175 Dorington Road, Town of Irondequoit, New York and identified as Tax Account No.: 092.15-2-87 (the “Tax Parcel”). The relief sought is the sale of the Tax Parcel at public auction in satisfaction of the tax lien. In case of your failure to appear, judgment may be taken against you in the sum of $25,710.42, together with interest, costs, disbursements and attorneys’ fees of this action, and directing the public sale of the Tax Parcel. Anthony J. Iacchetta, Esq. Phillips Lytle LLP Attorney for Plaintiff Office and Post Office Address 1400 First Federal Plaza Rochester, New York 14614 Tel. No. (585) 238-2000


Fun [ NEWS OF THE WEIRD ] BY CHUCK SHEPHERD

All War Is Weird, But This ISIS War ...

As summed up by a Vox.com writer: “The absurdity runs deep.” America uses American military equipment to bomb American military equipment that ISIS captured (from inept Iraqi soldiers, inept in part since America disbanded Iraq’s professional military in 2003). America’s Kurdish allies, fighting ISIS, use inferior Russian weapons they captured in the 1980’s. ISIS has a sofar-safer haven in Syria because America declined to arm moderate Syrian rebels, largely out of fear that radicals like the future ISIS would capture weapons America provided. “So now (America is) bombing the guns that (it) didn’t mean to give ISIS because (America) didn’t give guns to their enemies because then ISIS might get guns.”

Compelling Explanations

Thomas Clark, 28, of Crawley, England, beat one of society’s most foreboding charges in July when he was acquitted of voyeurism even after admitting that he had hidden that video camera in a workplace rest room, and even despite evidence that he formerly worked in the pornography industry. Clark persuaded a Horsham Magistrates Court judge that he suffered an extreme phobia of diarrhea and vomit and that, by hiding the camera, he was thinking only of ascertaining that the rest room was clean before he entered. — In America, We’re All Great Parents: (1) Kayla McKenzie, 22, was charged with DUI in Bismarck, North Dakota, a condition that led her to crash into five separate vehicles or structures on Aug. 12 — while, according to police,

three unsecured children were in her car, including a year-old infant riding in her lap. Nonetheless, said the 0.252 blood-alcohol driver, “I look like a bad mother, but I’m not. I’m actually a really good mom.” (2) Rayvon Campos, 22, pleaded guilty in San Antonio in August to first-degree felony assault of his 1-month-old daughter that resulted in brain hemorrhaging. Nonetheless, he reassured the judge, “This is the first time I’ve ever been in trouble. ... I’m a real good dude.”

Suspicions Confirmed

— A fire hydrant at 393 University Ave. has brought in more parking ticket revenue (since 2008) than any other hydrant in Toronto — $289,620 on 2,962 violations, according to an August Toronto Star report. While hydrants are usually located at curbside to facilitate fire-engine access, the one at 393 University Ave. was placed about 20 feet from the curb, in the middle of a sidewalk, and obscured by a tree in a planter about 8 feet long. (Nonetheless, the law’s wording treats the hydrant, for illegal-parking and revenue-earning purposes, as if it were curbside.) — A woman hiking in Down Valley Park near Placerville, Colorado, told Denver’s KUSA-TV in August of her narrow escape from a mountain lion that had stalked her for a half-hour (crouching menacingly each time she attempted to retreat). At the closest point, recalled Kyra Kopestonsky, it was about 8 feet away. At that point, she told the reporter, “I don’t know why,” but “I just started singing opera really loud.” The mountain lion “sort of put its ears down and ... backed away.” (Only then was she able to call a friend, who alerted rescuers.)

[ LAST WEEK’S SOLUTION ON PAGE 36 ]

[ LOVESCOPE ] BY EUGENIA LAST ARIES (March 21-April 19): Explore new interests. Network with colleagues, clients and people who work in your field, and someone will grab your attention. An instant attraction will take you by surprise. Slow down and get to know more about the object of your desire before you divulge personal secrets. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): The way you express what you want will capture the attention of someone dedicated, loyal and just as willing as you to make the first move. Keep your plans simple, practical and show restraint and moderation, and it will enhance your appeal.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Your fun-loving, outgoing nature will attract all sorts of interesting liaisons. Stick to the partners who share your values and aren’t overly possessive and jealous. The choice will be yours, and sending the wrong signal or leading someone on can result in a precarious situation. CANCER (June 21-July 22): You will meet your match if you attend a conference, trade show or company picnic. Drum up some confidence and make a point to talk to someone you’ve been eyeing from afar for some time. Share your vision with this special someone, and you will make an impression.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Your desire for variety and a change of scenery will result in travel, socializing or sharing emotional stories with someone you encounter throughout your journey. Keep in mind that not everyone will be as eager to share as you. Protect yourself from users and abusers. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You’ll find it difficult to resist an aggressive, flirtatious individual. Consult with a trusted friend or do your research and find out more about this pursuer before you take the bait and let intimacy develop. Chances are your love interest is attached to someone else.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): What you do for others will attract someone as unique, generous and passionate as you. Love at first sight is likely to take you by surprise and lead you down an adventurous path filled with all sorts of possibilities. Enjoy the moment as the rush of love kicks in. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Steer clear of anyone promising you the impossible. Spend time with people who share your unusual, creative or physical endeavors. It’s the person you can tell your deepest secrets to who will win your heart and offer the same loyalty in return. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.

21): Stay within your comfort zone. If you have to exaggerate or make your life sound bigger, bolder and more adventurous than it is, you are probably trying to impress the wrong person. Offer honesty and a what-you-see-is-what-you-get persona, and you will attract the right partner. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The way someone treats you will be confusing. Take a step back and let potential partners come to you. Observe the reaction and response you receive carefully, and you will be able to decipher if the person showing interest is into you or into what you have.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Relationship opportunities are apparent. Making changes to the way you live or getting in touch with people you haven’t seen for a long time will lead to an interesting encounter with someone who fits the criteria of a partner you think is a perfect fit. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Don’t let someone’s monetary position be the determining factor when it comes to developing a personal relationship. There are plenty of ways you can form an equal and loving connection. Measure the pros and cons and compatibility, and be honest regarding what means the most to you.

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