The Public - November 28, 2018

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UPS & DOWNS: THE HAGIOGRAPHY OF LOU CIMINELLI, PT. 2

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LOOKING BACKWARD: THE 1919 MURDER OF CASIMIR MAZUREK

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CENTERFOLD: GUY RICHARD SMITS AT HALLWALLS

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FILM: REVIEWS: GREEN BOOK, THE FRONT RUNNER

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THIS WEEK

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LEARN THIS LANDSCAPE: A Niagara County tour of public art, restoration, and terror.

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SPOTLIGHT: A guide to this weekend’s Queen City Market.

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THEATER: A quick guide to what’s playing on area stages.

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CROSSWORD: Another devilish puzzle by Matt Jones.

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ART: What’s showing in local galleries and museums.

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ON THE COVER: CHUCK TINGLEY has a show of new paintings and prints opening Friday, December 7, 5-10pm, at GCR Audio Recording Studios (564 Franklin Street).

EVENTS: Wild Knights, Kerfuffle, the Sadies, Shakedown, and much more.

THE PUBLIC STAFF EDITOR-IN-CHIEF GEOFF KELLY

SPORT DAVID STABA PHOTOS JOHANNA C. DOMINGUEZ

MUSIC EDITOR CORY PERLA MANAGING EDITOR AARON LOWINGER FILM EDITOR M. FAUST CONTRIBUTING EDITORS AT-LARGE JAY BURNEY QUIXOTE PETER SMITH

ADVERTISING ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES CAITLIN CODER, BARB FISHER

COVER IMAGE CHUCK TINGLEY

COLUMNISTS ALAN BEDENKO, BRUCE FISHER, JACK FORAN, MICHAEL I. NIMAN, GEORGE SAX, CHRISTOPHER JOHN TREACY

CONTRIBUTORS PRODUCTION MANAGER GRAPHIC DESIGNER DEEDEE CLOHESSY KNUTSEN

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LOCAL NEWS

THIS WEEK’S UPS AND DOWNS BY THE PUBLIC STAFF

UPS: JOSEPH SCHUECKLER, the octogenarian owner of 200 acres of land in Allegany County, won his case in court against National Fuel and their plans to use eminent domain laws to build its Northern Access Pipeline from Pennsylvania to Lake Ontario, over, under, and through 190 different waterways and streams. The pipeline was nixed last year by the state Department of Environmental Conservation, but that wouldn’t stop National Fuel from chipping away at easements in the meantime, hoping for a change of heart (or politics) within the state bureaucracies. But this month’s appellate court decision in Rochester stopped all of that, creating a ripple effect for every other landowner along the pipeline’s proposed 97-mile path. Good on the Schuecklers for recognizing that clean air and clean water are precious and for taking on a powerful corporation and prevailing.

We’re hard-pressed to categorize this item as an “up” or a “down”: Let’s just call it the inevitable and continuing unfolding of a tragedy. This week ATTORNEY STEVE COHEN, who represents the family of Rafael “Pito” Rivera—shot dead while fleeing Buffalo police early in the morning of September 12 in a parking lot at the corner of Massachusetts and Rhode Island streets—served a notice of claim against the Buffalo Police Department and the City of Buffalo. The notice of claim is preliminary to filing a civil suit alleging wrongful death, which Cohen says, when filed, will also name the officer who shot and killed Rivera, Elnur Karadzhaev. Karadzhaev’s fatal shots were captured on a surveillance camera owned by PUSH Buffalo, in whose parking lot Rivera died. That footage has been closely guarded by PUSH Buffalo, Rivera’s family, and police, though Cohen showed it to a handful of journalists a few days after Rivera’s death. Painful as that footage may be to watch, a public analysis of how and why Rivera was killed—and a balanced assessment of police training and practices—is not only healthy but necessary. WE’RE STILL IN PRINT. And that’s still nice.

DOWNS: The latest installment in the HAGIOGRAPHY OF LOUIS CIMINELLI in the Buffalo News over the weekend was a real doozy. The man found guilty of rigging a lucrative government contract was the subject of a long profile focusing on all the good he has done in the community over the decades—as a donor to cultural institutions, mostly—from inside the Buffalo Club, with nary a single negative or dissenting opinion. (Developer Larry Quinn did take issue with Ciminelli’s intransigent refusal to provide Buffalo’s school board with a full accounting of the $1 billion Joint Schools Reconstruction Project, but balanced that criticism with plenty of praise.) Having already reported on the dozens of letters sent to US District Court Judge Valerie Caproni seeking leniency in Ciminelli’s upcoming sentencing, the Buffalo News decided to give one of its favorite sons the holiday gift of a 2,500-word love letter. Allow us to counter with a reminder about that Joint Schools Reconstruction Project: LP Ciminelli won that lucrative contract by submitting a proposal that went far beyond a bid on construction work. LP Ciminelli’s proposal suggested the company would act as a developer, helping to recruit and coordinate public and private investments in the neighborhoods surrounding the refurbished schools, so that the state’s massive investment would become a catalyst for community revitalization. Once LP Ciminelli won the contract, the company largely abandoned the more ambitious aspects of that proposal and treated the deal like a straightup construction gig, albeit with a developer’s more lucrative profit margins built into it. Lou Ciminelli may have spread around a lot of the profits thus derived to worthy cultural institutions, burnishing his name in the process, but never forget: A lot of that money was ours to begin with, and we didn’t always get what we were supposed to be paying for. Plus, you know, he was found guilty of—not duped by, not careless in, not an accessory to, but guilty of—bid-rigging a huge public contract. Here at The Public, we were thrilled to hear the PEGULAS HAVE HIRED A CONSULTANT to consider the future of both New Era Field and KeyBank Center, including proposals for refurbishment and (in the case of the football stadium) replacement. We look forward to several years of hare-brained schemes, proposed urban death stars, blood feuds between real estate moguls, astronomical demands for public subsidies—all the accoutrement of a Western New York planning debate in which most participants have no real voice, no real access to the decision-making machinery. Because it’s stuff like this that keeps a paper like ours in business. Do you have ups and downs to share? Email us at info@dailypublic.com.

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NEWS COMMENTARY

Detail from Jozef Slawinski’s murals at Stella Niagara Preserve.

LEARN THIS LANDSCAPE: JOZEF SLAWINSKI AND MORE BY BRUCE FISHER

A TOUR OF PUBLIC ART, RESTORATION, AND TERROR IN NIAGARA COUNTY

UPCOMING EVENTS David Cay Johnston, a Trump biographer and Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, gives his pointed take on Donald J.Trump.

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FIRST, DRIVE TO the village of Lewiston and pick up coffee and freshly baked Italian cookies at DiCamillo’s Bakery at 535 Center Street. Turn left on 4th Street and drive south a quarter mile to Artpark to see the restored Caroline Doherty installation The Place Where We Take the Canoe Out of the Water, a series of Tuscarora-language excerpts from the Thanksgiving Address. The kids will like the Beat Blossom, the pixie houses, and watching the bundled-up fishermen roaring up the Niagara River in their little speed boats, which then drift back downstream with the current because that’s how one catches steelhead and enormous Pacific salmon. Before leaving Lewiston, taken them to the 2009 waterfront sculpture Freedom Crossing, which is what that place was for the first six decades of the 19th century. Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass may have worked with locals like Josiah Tryon, a volunteer on the Underground Railroad, whose house is nearby.

Two and a half miles north along River Road is a new project of the Western New York Land Conservancy, the Stella Niagara Preserve. It is a subtle and extraordinary place in any season, either a 15-minute tromp over grassy paths (there’s never as much snow in Niagara County as there is in Buffalo or points south or west), or a site for deep contemplation. The property, formerly owned by the Sisters of Saint Francis who still operate the school in the old palace above, is 29 acres of riverfront meadow and forest. The Conservancy is restoring the native plant species, a project that is now three seasons along. The waterfront portion is at a very calm portion of the Niagara, a very wide part, barely disturbed by motorboats. A year after the United States invaded Canada in 1812, the British landed precisely here, then marched north about six miles to take Fort Niagara— again. Walk down to the river, then back up past the tiny locked-up white chapel, which has its own story: Before the ice boom was first installed, the lower Niagara River would occasionally flood this specific spot, which is a good 15 feet above the water. The religious experienced the chapel’s escape from the epochal 1952 flood as a miracle, and commissioned Polish sgraffito artist Jozef

THE PUBLIC / NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 4, 2018 / DAILYPUBLIC.COM

Slawinski to create the murals inside the chapel.

setting, that is accessible in the way that a Uphill from there is another Slawinski piece: European shrine is accessible. The most famous his homage to the two critical Catholic persons of those are similarly situated in a quiet places of the 1960s, John F. Kennedy and Pope John like this, hillside near flowing water, amidst XXIII, the pope identified with the great trees that in this season are bare yet still alive changes that are credited with empowering with chickadees, cardinals, jays, juncos, and an anti-communist revolutionaries in Poland as occasional bald eagle. If Slawinski’s celebration well as with (if one is devoted to the Latin mass) of Kennedy seems naive in light of what we’ve come to learn about what some regard as his disrupting centuries of traditional observance. predatory sexuality and his clumsiness during the Cuban missile crisis, contrast all that with Kennedy’s successes in civil rights, his creation THE KENNEDY STATEMENT of the Peace Corps, his advocacy for science, There are two quotations inscribed side by side arts, education, his hammering of both mobsters on the exterior of the structure, which is entirely and of Stalin clones. (The full text of his brief, unenclosed and open to the elements. One is uplifting inaugural address is here.) One might from Pope John XXIII, a nice prayer for peace ask, as one considers the image of this politician, that has no particular claim on our contemporary where is the contemporary counterpart to MESSAGE TO ADVERTISER consciousness. The other is from Kennedy’s Slawinski? Thank you for advertising with THEOr ask, do we lack either patrons inaugural address. Americans know that speech or artists of Slawinski’s ability, who can create PUBLIC. Please review your ad and from the ringing phrases he composed with Ted public displays check for any errors. The original layoutof aspiration and exemplar to Sorensen, especially Kennedy’s bold assertion supplement our very ample supply, thank you, instructions have been followed as closely that we would “pay any price, bear any burden, as possible. THE PUBLICof critiques? offers design meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose services with two proofs at no charge. any foe, ” in order to protect liberty. THE PUBLIC is not responsible for any

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if not notified 24 OWN hours HIERONYMUS BOSCH of OUR Americans also recall error Kennedy’s challengewithin receipt. mustnow that Christmas is near, is to Americans was “ask not what The yourproduction country department Three miles east, haveyou a signed proof to print. can do for you—ask what can do forin order the next Niagara place to go: the Fatima Shrine, Please sign and fax this back or approve your country.” where there’s a walkable display of lights—and a by responding to this email. What Kennedy said immediately afterward is monumental Slawinski mural that is Hieronymus � had CHECK COPYfought CONTENTBosch redux, but again, a slice of time. Inside what Slawinski, the Pole who himself the basilica, Slawinski create the most complete against the Nazis in his native Warsaw, the Pole DATES � CHECK IMPORTANT who had left his homeland because the Russian- depiction of a Cold War nightmare scenario you ever#,see. When we were actually threatened CHECK NAME, found ADDRESS,will PHONE dominated Communist �government it useful to periodically rid &itself of Catholic with global thermonuclear war, we reacted with WEBSITE panic attacks, religious fervor, fervent spirituality, artists, was what Slawinski carved in concrete: � PROOF OK (NO CHANGES) and, in Slawinski’s case, with commissioned “My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what sgraffiti depicting possible outcomes, including � PROOF OK (WITH CHANGES) America will do for you, but what together we global inclusive redemption (that would be the can do for the freedom of man…With a good portion of the mural depicting all races and conscience our only sure reward, with history creeds surviving) as well as incineration. Advertisers Signature the final judge of our deeds, let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and You won’t see it, but you’ll be quite near two ____________________________ His help, but knowing that here on earth God’s historic sites that shaped your world: the place where a pre-contact massacre of indigenous work must truly be our own.” Date _______________________ North Americans occurred at the hands of This 1964 memorial to Kennedy was one other indigenous North Americans, and the GEOFF / Y18W47 Issue: ______________________ of the earliest public commissioned works, place where the toxic nuclear debris from the if not the earliest, after his assassination in Manhattan Project is stored. Don’t go crawling IF YOU APPROVE ERRORS WHICH ARE ON November 1963. uninvited the Tuscarora reservation THIS PROOF, THE PUBLIC CANNOTaround BE The Cold War context makes it a social just south of the Fatima Shrine, but do please HELD PLEASE EXAMINE document, but the image of RESPONSIBLE. Kennedy itself head back THE into AD the village of Lewiston to see THOROUGHLY EVEN IF THE AD IS A PICK-UP. is elegant and heroic and compelling. It’s the Susan Geisler’s Tuscarora Heroes Monument, PROOF ONLY BE USED FOR kind of presentation thatTHIS would beMAY at home commemorating the deliverance of some on the National Mall in PUBLICATION Washington—but it’sPUBLIC. civilians by Tuscaroras when the British burned IN THE here, in a specific cultural setting, in a natural the village in 1813.


COMMENTARY NEWS Heading back home to Buffalo, do choose to drive the Niagara Scenic Parkway rather than Route 104 past the Robert Moses Power Project and NIagara University, and park at Devil’s Hole either for the half or the full hike. The fit can walk the 300 steps down to the floor of the Niagara Gorge, which is also receiving some attention from the WNY Land Conservancy in its efforts to restore native plant species, and climb 300 steps back up to the top of the gorge at Whirlpool State Park.

HEAVEN ON EARTH And then do please stop at Goat Island, which is the setting of Mark Twain’s 1906 wonder The Diaries of Adam and Eve. Adam notes that the place he calls the Garden of Eden is now a park with a sign instructing him to keep off the grass. On the way out of Niagara Falls, one can make a choice: Either continue along the river to Love Island and behold the fenced-off area that used to be home to unsuspecting working-class households that trusted local industry, or skip off to the Grand Island Bridge before facing all that. Take the first exit and go visit the brandnew West River Parkway bicycle path, which is almost seven miles of uninterrupted riverfront vistas before connecting to the roadways of Beaver Island State Park, which is a most

peaceful place for walks under gray skies. Shortly, one will have completed the loop. There is more Slawinski to visit: at Buffalo State College, at Erie County Medical Center, at Assumption Church on Amherst Street— but to understand why a Pole of the 1960s and 1970s would find his Catholicism so compelling that it infuses even his political art, stop in at Buffalo City Hall, and find that dark alcove where his Katyn Memorial hammeredcopper work is installed. Katyn is where Stalin massacred the Polish officer corps in World War II. Katyn is why Poles wonder what in the hell could possess an American president ever to trust the word of a Russian. Slawinski’s public art in Buffalo. It’s from a time when public art was unapologetically, explicitly, emphatically connected to the spirit, and to history. That was before our current renaissance, which so far is comparatively voiceless. Bruce Fisher teaches at SUNY Buffalo State and is director of the Center for Economic and Policy Studies. His latest book, Where the Streets Are Paved With Rust: Essays From America’s Broken Heartland (The Public Books/Foundling Press 2018) is available at Talking Leaves Books and P at foundlingspress.com.

LOOKING BACKWARD: CASIMIR MAZUREK, 1919 Casimir Mazurek, a 26-year-old decorated World War veteran, was shot dead by Lackawanna Steel Company police during the Great Steel Strike of 1919. The U.S. born citizen of Polish descent had been working at the steel plant for two months since his return from France, where had served throughout the war with the 2nd Division. On September 23, 3,000 strikers assembled at Three Gate. Exactly what followed was never officially determined, but accounts agree that after several strikers began to throw stones, company police fired shots into the crowd of men, women, and children, instantly killing Mazurek. His funeral procession of 10,000 mourners, the largest in Lackawanna history, extended more than a mile down Ridge Road to Holy Cross Cemetery. No serious investigation ever took place into the death of Mazurek, shown here in his only known surviving photograph, published by the Buffalo Times. His martyrdom for the failed strike is marked only by a cemetery stone.- THE PUBLIC STAFF DAILYPUBLIC.COM / NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 4, 2018 / THE PUBLIC

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THEATER ON STAGES

Hamilton continues through December 9 at Shea’s 710 Theatre. Photo by Joan Marcus.

PLAYBILL = OPENING SOON

IN AND AROUND BUFFALO:

NUNCRACKERS: THE NUNSENSE CHRISTMAS MUSICAL: In which the beloved sisters of Nunsense record a cable access TV special in the basement of their convent. Opens November 29 at O’Connell & Company, in residence at the Park School, 4625 Harlem Road, 848-0800, oconnellandcompany.com.

AUGUST WILSON’S KING HEDLEY II: In part nine of Wilson’s 10-part The Pittsburgh Cycle, an ex-con tries hopelessly to rebuild his life in Reagan-era America. Through December 2 at the Paul Robeson Theatre, 350 Masten Avenue, 884-2013, aaccbuffalo.org.

AT THE SHAW FESTIVAL:

A CHARLIE BROWN CHRISTMAS: The classic stage adaptation of the Peanuts holiday classic. This show sells out, so get tickets fast. Opens December 1 at Theatre of Youth, 8844400, theatreofyouth.org.

At the Shaw Festival, 10 Queen’s Parade, Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, 1-800-511-7429, shawfest.com.

CHRISTMAS OVER THE TAVERN: An all-new musical holiday story about the Pazinzki family by playwright Tom Dudzick, author of the much beloved Over the Tavern. Through December 16 at MusicalFare Theatre, in residence at Daemen College, 4380 Main Street, Amherst, 839-8540, musicalfare.com.

A CHRISTMAS CAROL: The stage adaptation of Charles Dickens’s holiday classic.

AT THE STRATFORD FESTIVAL: THE ROCKY HORROR SHOW: Dan Chameroy fills Frank-N-Furter’s fishnets. Drinks before, during, after the show. At the Stratford Festival, 55 Queen St., Stratford, ON 1-800-567-1600, stratfordfestival.ca.

COMEDYSPORTZ: Improvisational comedy presented by CSz Buffalo every Friday and Saturday at 4476 Main St., Lower Level, Amherst, 393-8669, cszbuffalo.com. CSZ AFTER HOURS: The late-night (9:30pm) Saturday show by the improvisational crew CSz Buffalo runs a little more blue than the early show. Ongoing at 4476 Main St., Lower Level, Amherst, 393-8669, cszbuffalo.com. HAMILTON: Holy moly, tickets are costly—but the show is that good. And you can enter a lottery each day to get tickets for a mere $10. Through December 9 at Shea’s 710 Theatre, 710 Main Street, 847-0850, sheas.org.

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ART GALLERIES

From Patrick Robideau's installation Hidden Room, on view at Jamestown Community College's Weeks Gallery through December 9.

IN GALLERIES NOW = ART OPENING

Albright-Knox Art Gallery (1285 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14222, 882-8700, albrightknox.org): Aria Dean, solo exhibition through Jan 13, 2019; Giant Steps: Artists and the 1960s, through Jan 6, 2019; We the People: New Art from the Collection, through Jun 30, 2019. Tue-Sun 10am-5pm, open late First Fridays (free) until 10pm. Anna Kaplan Contemporary (1250 Niagara Street, Buffalo, NY 14213, 604-6183, annakaplancontemporary.art): Upcoming: Gary Szcerbanewiecz and Sheila Barcki, opening Dec 7, reception 6-9pm, through Jan 4, 2019. Wed-Fri 11am-3pm or by appointment. Argus Gallery (1896 Niagara Street, Buffalo, NY 14207, 882-8100, eleventwentyprojects. com/argus-gallery): New Works in Black & White, group exhibit curated by Curtis A. Bell, through Dec 1. 12-3pm, or by appointment. Art Dialogue Gallery (5 Linwood Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14209 wnyag.com): Three Artist Friends: John Brach, Thomas Kegler, and Sean Witucki, on view through Dec 28. TueFri 11am-5pm, Sat 11am-3pm. Artists Group Gallery (Western New York Artists Group) (1 Linwood Ave, Buffalo, NY 14209, 716-885-2251, wnyag.com): 24th Annual Artful Gifts, artworks meant for giving or collecting; Pictures, Songs, and Words, art by writers and musicians, on view through Dec 28. Tue-Fri 11am-5pm, Sat 11am-3pm. Betty’s Restaurant (370 Virginia Street, Buffalo, NY 14201, 362-0633, bettysbuffalo.com): TueThu, 8am-9pm, Fri 8am-10pm, Sat 9am10pm, Sun 9am-2pm. Benjaman Gallery (419 Elmwood Avenue Buffalo, NY 14222, thebenjamangallery.com): Works from the collection. See Buffalo Center for Arts and Technology. Thu-Sat 11am-5pm. Big Orbit Project Space (30d Essex Street, Buffalo, NY 14222, cepagallery.org/about-big-orbit): Members’ show, through Dec 8. Sat 12-6pm.

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BOX Gallery (Buffalo Niagara Hostel, 667 Main St, Buffalo, NY 14203): Upcoming: Tutelary, an installation by Obsidian Bellis. Opens Dec 1 with a reception, 8pm-midnight. Every day 4-10pm. ¡Buen Vivir! Gallery (148 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14201, photolangelle.org): One World: Issues Across and Through Skins, photos from Buffalo to Africa by Johanna C. Dominguez. Tue-Fri 1:30-4:30pm, Fri 6-8pm, Sat 1-3pm. Buffalo Arts Studio (Tri Main Building 5th Floor, 2495 Main Street, Buffalo, NY 14214, 8334450, buffaloartsstudio.org): Annual Resident Artists Show and Sale, through Dec 22. Tue-Fri 10am-5pm, Sat 10am-2pm, Fourth Fridays till 8pm. Buffalo Big Print (78 Allen Street, Buffalo, NY 14202, 716-884-1777, buffalobigprint. com): Mon-Fri 9am-5:30pm. Buffalo & Erie County Central Library (1 Lafayette Square, Buffalo, NY 14203, 858-8900, buffalolib.org): Buffalo Never Fails: The Queen City & WWI, 100th Anniversary of America’s Entry into WWI, on second floor. Building Buffalo: Buildings from Books, Books from Buildings, in the Grosvenor Rare Book Room. Catalogue available for purchase. Mon-Sat 8:30am6pm, Sun 12-5pm. Tue-Fri 10am-5pm, Sat 10am-2pm, Fourth Fridays till 8pm. Burchfield Penney Art Center (1300 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14222, 878-6011, burchfieldpenney.org): Counting the Hours, through Feb 24, 2019; Square Route: Geometric Works from the Collection, through Mar 31; Charles Cary Rumsey: In Motion, through Apr 21. Salvaged: the Stitched Narrative of Jennifer Regan, Contradictions of Being: Composite Works by Harvey Breverman; Enough Killing, through Oct 28; The Complexity of Life, by Jonathan Rogers, through Jan 27; Burchfield’s Arboretum, through Dec 2. Under Cover: works from the collection with lids, through Dec 30. Where the Streets Are Paved With Rust, images from Bruce Fisher’s book of essays of the same title, through Jan 27, 2019. M & T Second Friday event (second Friday of every month). Mon-Sat 10am-

THE PUBLIC / NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 4, 2018 / DAILYPUBLIC.COM

5pm & Sun 1-5pm. Admission $5-$10, children 10 and under free. Caffeology Buffalo (23 Allen Street, Buffalo, NY, 14201): Lo-Fi Memories, a ”Found Game Boy Camera” photography project curated by Stevie Boyar. Carnegie Art Center (240 Goundry Street, North Tonawanda, NY 14120): 4th Annual Art Off the Wall Exhibition and Fundraiser to benefit the Carnegie Art Center, Thu, Nov 29, 6-9pm. Canvas Salon & Gallery (9520 Main Street STE 400, Clarence, NY 14031, 716-3205867): Cloud Burst, artwork by Kathleen Sherin. Castellani Art Museum (5795 Lewiston Road, Niagara University, NY 14109, 286-8200, castellaniartmuseum.org): Think Big: The Artists of Autism Services, through Jan 14, 2019. The Higner Maritime Collection: 25 Yerars of Shipbuilding, through Mar 17, 2019; Of Their Time: Hudson River School to Postwar Modernism, through Dec 31, 2019. Tue-Sat 11am5pm, Sun 1-5pm. CEPA (617 Main Street, Buffalo, NY 14203, 856-2717, cepagallery.org): Fast, Cheap and Easy: the Copy Art Revolution, through Dec 15. Mon-Fri 9am-5pm, Sat 12-4pm. Dana Tillou Fine Arts (1478 Hertel Avenue Buffalo, NY 14216, 716-854-5285, danatilloufinearts.com): Wed-Fri 10:30am5pm, Sat 10:30am-4pm. Eleven Twenty Projects (1120 Main Street, Buffalo, NY 14209, 882-8100, eleventwentyprojects.com): Figment, W. C. Maggio, through Dec 15. Gallery talk with Scott Propeack: Thu, Nov 29, 2018, 6-8pm (the talk begins at 6:30). Tue-Fri, 10am-4pm, or by appointment. El Museo (91 Allen Street, Buffalo, NY 14202, 464-4692, elmuseobuffalo.org): Stephanie Rothenberg: Trading Systems: Bio-economic Fairy Tales. Wed-Fri 12-6pm, Sat 1-5pm. Hallwalls (341 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14202, 854-1694, hallwalls.org): Guy Richards Smit: Guilty of Everything. Tue-Fri 11am6pm, Sat 11am-2pm.

The Harold L. Olmsted Gallery, Springville Center for the Arts (37 N. Buffalo Street, Springville, NY 14141, 716-592-9038). Wed & Fri, noon5pm, Thu noon-8pm, Sat 10am-3pm. Indigo Art Gallery (47 Allen Street, Buffalo, NY 14202, 984-9572, indigoartbuffalo.com): Indigo Celebrates 10 Years. Wed 12-6pm, Thu 127pm, Fri, 6-9pm Sat 12-3pm, and by appointment Sundays and Mondays. Jewish Community Center of Buffalo, Holland Family Building (787 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, NY, 14209, 886-3172, Hours: jccbuffalo. org): Thoughts Along the Way, Daniel Rodgers, through Dec 28. Mon-Thu 5:30am-10pm, Fri 5:30am-6pm, Sat-Sun 8am-6pm. Karpeles Manuscript Library (North Hall) (220 North St., Buffalo, NY 14201): The Young Abraham Lincoln, the drawings of Lloyd Ostendorf. Tue-Sun 11am-4pm. Karpeles Manuscript Museum (Porter Hall) (453 Porter Ave, Buffalo, NY 14201): Maps of the United States. Tue-Sun 11am-4pm. Main Street Gallery (515 Main Street, Buffalo, NY 14203): Online gallery: BSAonline.org. Meibohm Fine Arts (478 Main Street, East Aurora, NY 14052, 652-0940, meibohmfinearts.com): Tanya Zabinski: Around the Seasons, through Dec 22. Tue-Sat 9:30-5:30pm. Niagara Arts and Cultural Center (1201 Pine Avenue, Niagara Falls, NY 14301, 282-7530, thenacc.org): Mon-Fri 9am5pm, Sat & Sun 12-4pm. Nichols School Gallery at the Glenn & Audrey Flickinger Performing Arts Center (1250 Amherst Street, Buffalo, NY 14216, 332-6300, nicholsschool.org/artshows): Work from the collection. Mon-Fri 8am-4pm, Closed Sat & Sun. Nina Freudenheim Gallery (140 North Street, Lenox Hotel, Buffalo, NY 14201, 716-8825777, ninafreudenheimgallery.com): TueFri 10am–5pm. Norberg’s Art & Frame Shop (37 South Grove Street, East Aurora, NY 14052, 716-6523270, norbergsartandframe.com): Regional artists from the gallery collection. TueSat 10am–5pm.


GALLERIES ART Parables Gallery & Gifts (1027 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo, NY, parablesgalleryandgifts. com): City Scapes, a group exhibit, through Nov 30. Wed-Sat,12-5pm, Sun 1-5pm. Pausa Art House (19 Wadsworth Street, Buffalo, NY 14201, 697-9069 pausaarthouse. com): The Group 263 Art Exhibition, through Dec 29. Thu, Fri & Sat 6-11pm. Live Music ThuSat. Pine Apple Company (65 Allen Street, Buffalo, NY 14201, 716-275-3648, squareup.com/ store/pine-apple-company): Wed & Thu 11am6pm, Fri & Sat 11am-11pm, Sun 10am-5pm. Project 308 Gallery (308 Oliver Street, North Tonawanda, NY 14120, 523-0068, project308gallery.com): Tue & Thu 7-9pm and by appointment. Queen City Gallery (617 Main Street, Buffalo, NY 14203, 868-8183, queencitygallery.tripod. com): Art collective, including Neil Mahar, David Pierro, Candace Keegan, Chris McGee, Eileen Pleasure, Eric Evinczik, Barbara Crocker, Thomas Bittner, Susan Liebel, Barbara Lynch Johnt, John Farallo, Thomas Busch, Sherry Anne Preziuso, Michael Shiver, Madalyn Fliesler, Michael Mulley, et alia. Tue-Fri 11am4pm and by appointment. Revolution Gallery (1419 Hertel Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14216, revolutionartgallery.com): Joe Vollan: On Behalf of the Under Enthusiastic. Thu 12-6pm, Fri and Sat 12-8pm. River Gallery and Gifts (83 Webster Street, North Tonawanda, 14051, riverartgalleryandgifts.com): Wed-Fri 11am-4pm Sat 11am- 5pm. The Roger Tory Peterson Institute of Natural History (311 Curtis Street, Jamestown, NY 14701, 716-665-2473, rtpi.org): The Extinct Birds Project by Alberto Rey, featured through Jan 12. Squeaky Wheel (617 Main Street, Buffalo, NY 14203, squeaky.org): The North Is a Lie: Nitasha Dhillon, Rhys Hall, and Elisa Peebles. On view through Dec 8. Tue-Sat, 12pm5pm. Tue-Sat, 12pm-5pm. Stangler Fine Art (6429 West Quaker Street, Orchard Park, NY 14127, 870-1129, stanglerart.com): Mon-Fri 11am-5pm, Sat 11am3pm. Closed Sundays. Starlight Studio and Art Gallery (340 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, NY 14202, starlightstudio. org) Starlight Holiday Open House, Sat Dec1, 11am-2pm. On view through Dec 31. MonFri 9-4pm. Sugar City (1239 Niagara Street, Buffalo, NY 14213, buffalosugarcity.org): Dylan England: Lawn Order through Nov 30. Open by event and Fri 5:30-7:30. UB Anderson Gallery (1 Martha Jackson Place, Buffalo, NY 14214, 829-3754, ubartgalleries. org): Ernesto Burgos: Implications; Collected Views: I Am Here; Kambui Olujimi, Zulu Time, on view through Dec 2. Cravens World: The Human Aesthetic; Electric Avenue (In Blue). Wed-Sat 11am-5pm, Sun 1-5pm. UB Art Gallery (North Campus, Lower Art Gallery) (103 Center for the Arts, First Floor, Buffalo, NY, 14260, 645-6913, ubartgalleries.org): Hot Spots: Radioactivity and the Landscape, multimedia exhibition of 18 artists, guest curated by Jennie Lamensdorf and UB’s Joan Linder. Tue-Fri 11am-5pm, Sat 1-5pm. Undergrounds Coffee House and Roastery (590 South Park Avenue, Buffalo NY 14210, undergroundscoffeebuffalo.com): Oil Portraits by Tara Steck, on view through Jan 15, 2019. Mon-Fri 6am-5pm, Sat & Sun 7am-5pm. Villa Maria College Paul William Beltz Family Art Gallery (240 Pine Ridge Terrace, Cheektowaga, NY 14225, 961-1833): Mon-Fri 9am6pm, Sat 10am-5pm. Weeks Gallery (Jamestown Community College, 525 Falconer Street, Jamestown, NY 14702, 338-1301): Patrick Robideau: Hidden Room, installation on view through Dec 9. Mon-Fri 11am-4pm, Sat 11am-1pm. Western New York Book Arts Center (468 Washington Street, Buffalo, NY 14203, 3481430, wnybookarts.org): Stupid Suburban Guy and Other Drawings, an exhibition by Daniel Galas. On view through Dec 8. WedSat 12-6pm

To add your gallery’s information to the list, please contact us at info@dailypublic.com P DAILYPUBLIC.COM / NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 4, 2018 / THE PUBLIC

9


THE PUBLIC CENTERFOLD IS SPONSORED BY

10 THE PUBLIC / NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 4, 2018 / DAILYPUBLIC.COM


GUY RICHARD SMITS’s I Don’t Want All My Power is part of the artist’s exhibition at Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center (341 Delaware Avenue) through December 21. The show is called Guilty of Everything. DAILYPUBLIC.COM / NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 4, 2018 / THE PUBLIC

11


EVENTS CALENDAR

ASBURY HALL

PUBLIC APPROVED

PLEASE EXAMINETHURSDAY NOVEMBER 29 Big D and the Kids Table THIS PROOF CAREFULLY

7pm Mohawk Place, 47 E Mohawk St. $15-$17

[PUNK] Boston-based ska-punk band Big D and the Kids Table are still rocking, led by founding member, vocalist and guitarist David McWane. The 42-year-old ska-punker MESSAGE TO ADVERTISER leads his 11-piece band, which includes a trio Thank you for advertising THE singers, during the band’s highof with backup PUBLIC. Please review your ad and energy live shows. Catch Big D and the Kids check for any errors. TheTable original livelayout at Mohawk Place this Thursday, instructions have been followed as closely November 29 with support from The as possible. THE PUBLICAbruptors offers design and the Barksdales. -CP services with two proofs at no charge. THE PUBLIC is not responsible for any error if Jabber, Ramona, Slinky X, and Venus not notified within 24 hours of receipt. The Vacation production department must have a signed 9pm Electric Avenue, 300 Ellicott St $7 proof in order to print. Please sign and fax [PUNK] A few and a couple of this back or approve by responding to out-of-towners this locals form this pretty tight lineup of punk email. and indie at Electric Avenue this Thursday, � CHECK COPY CONTENTNovember 29. Catch Oakland, Californiabased pop-punk band, Jabber along with � CHECK IMPORTANT DATES Philly’s Ramona, and Buffalo’s Slinky X, and Vacation. � CHECK NAME, ADDRESS,Venus PHONE #, & WEBSITE-CP

RUBBLEBUCKET W/ AND THE KIDS

WED 12/5 $20 GA STANDING

A JOHN WATERS CHRISTMAS

FRI 12/7 $40 ADV. / $45 DAY OF RESERVED SEATING

THE KERFUFFLE BEFORE CHRISTMAS � PROOF OK (NO CHANGES) WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 28 Pauly D � PROOF OK (WITH CHANGES)

10pm Venu, 75 West Chippewa $25-$35

[ELECTRONIC/DANCE] Pauly D, maybe the only likeable star of the show MTV show Advertisers Signature Jersey Shore, returns to Buffalo for a DJ [ROCK] The Kerfuffle Before Christmas, Alternative Buffalo’s annual holiday concert shindig, set this Thursday, November 29 at Venu ____________________________ on Chippewa. His last two appearances here returns this year with a loaded lineup for a two-day celebration at Buffalo RiverWorks. Night sold out, so don't sleep on tickets. -TPS Y18W47 Dateas CAITLIN _______________________ one, Wednesday, November 28, features Canadian indie rock band, Metric, headliners. /The

6:30PM / BUFFALO RIVERWORKS, 359 GANSON ST. / $30-$100

BELA FLECK & ABIGAIL WASHBURN WED 4/3 $45 ADVANCE RESERVED SEATING

9TH WARD

band are on tour of their latest album, Art of Doubt, which was released earlier this ______________________ fall. They’ll be Issue: joined by LA-based alt rock band The Moth & The Flame, as well as singer/songwriter Mondo

FRIDAY NOVEMBER 30

IF YOU APPROVE ERRORS WHICH ARE ON

Cozmo, who will deliver an acoustic set. Night two comes one week later, Wednesday, THISon PROOF, THE PUBLIC CANNOT BE Michael Niman: HELD RESPONSIBLE. PLEASE EXAMINEI.THE AD December 5 with headliners Blue October, the Houston, Texas-based alternative rock band led

Weaponized Social

and the War on Verifiable Reality THOROUGHLY IF THE Media AD IS A PICK-UP. by brothers Justin and Jeremy Furstenfeld. The band released their ninth full-length record,EVEN I Hope 7pm Center THIS PROOF MAY ONLY BE USED FOR for Inquiry, 1310 Sweet Home Road Free You’re Happy earlier this year. They’ll be joined by indie-pop artist Alice Merton, who broke out PUBLICATION IN THE PUBLIC. [LECTURE] Turn off your phone for this:

CAVE MON 12/3 $8 ADV. / $10 DAY OF SHOW

this year with her radio single “No Roots,” as well as singer/songwriter Max Frost. Tickets for individual nights are available and a limited number of Two Night Combo Tickets are also still available. -CORY PERLA

PUBLIC APPROVED

SABRINA BENAIM

W/CLEMENTINE VON RADICS SUN 12/9 $20 GA SEATED

Michael I. Niman—SUNY Buffalo State professor of journalism and media studies, columnist for The Public, nationally syndicated media critic, winner of two Project Censored awards—gives a talk on Friday, November 30 at the Center for Inquiry titled “Weaponized Social Media and the War on Verifiable Reality.” Niman will argue that social media “has emerged as one of the most dangerous and destructive cultural forces, just beneath organized religion and capitalism.” Addictive both physically and psychologically, Niman argues, social media has become a tool for propaganda and the commodification of people and ideas. -TPS

Wild Knights 7pm Town Ballroom, 681 Main St. $15-$20

BAYSIDE THURSDAY NOVEMBER 29

[ROCK] Now here's something that doesn’t happen all too often: a (mostly) cover band from Williamsville that had a solid regional following in the late 1980s and early 1990s books a reunion show at Sportsmen's Tavern and it sells out so quickly, they move it to Town Ballroom. Wild Knights is Mike Bellman, Joe Bellanti, Corey Kertzie, Mark Marsack, and Dave Ruch, all of whom have continued making music since the celebrated quintet faded from view about 20 years ago. But folks remember the band's penchant for delivering tunes by the Grateful Dead and the Allman Brothers fondly enough that their gig at Sportmen's, originally scheduled for late October, will now happen at Town Ballroom on Friday, November 30. -CJT

8PM / TRALF MUSIC HALL, 622 MAIN ST. / $21-$25

Jason Mewes

GABBY’S WORLD & YOWLER W/HONEY COMA

THU 1/10 $12 ADVANCE

WILD RIVERS TUE 1/15 $10 ADVANCE

DOORS 7PM / SHOW TIME 8PM VISIT BABEVILLEBUFFALO.COM FOR COMPLETE EVENT LISTINGS

TICKETS: BABEVILLEBUFFALO.COM / BABEVILLE BOX OFFICE (M-F 11AM-5PM) OR CHARGE BY PHONE 866.777.8932

341 DELAWARE AVE (AT W. TUPPER) BUFFALO, NY 14202 716.852.3835

[PUNK] Whether or not bands that consider themselves to be punk should engage in making unplugged music is debatable. But since punk is as much attitude and viewpoint as it is a sound, albeit an increasingly splintered sound, then there’s something to be said for turning expectations upside-down and doing something unconventional…like being a punk band and making an acoustic album. Bayside, named after the band's home-turf in Queens, has a fairly long history and a devoted fan base, and the acoustic EP the quartet released a dozen years ago in the wake of a tragic van accident that claimed the life of drummer John Holohan quickly became a fan favorite. An acoustic sequel, released this past September, seems a tad overproduced and fails to capture the same wounded spirit. But when Bayside plays a full-on acoustic show at the Tralf Music Hall on Thursday, November 29, they will surely come with both barrels loaded, mixing material from both EPs with pared-down, re-imagined versions of their edgier material that will retain an impressive level of bite. Or so we would hope. Find out for yourself—doors are at 8pm and music starts at 9pm with openers. GOLDS. -CHRISTOPHER JOHN TREACY.

12 THE PUBLIC / NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 4, 2018 / DAILYPUBLIC.COM

7:30pm Helium Comedy Club, 30 Mississippi St. $25-$45

[COMEDY] Half of the iconic duo, Jay and Silent Bob, comedian Jason Mewes comes to Buffalo to deliver his standup at Helium Comedy Club this Friday, November 30 and Saturday, December 3 for four shows. With a Jay and Silent Bob reboot set in motion (actual title: Jay and Silent Bob Get a Reboot), the actor, will hit the stage to talk about his “a-Mewes-ing” stories. -TPS

CONTINUED ON PAGE 14


CALENDAR EVENTS PUBLIC APPROVED

LIVEMUSICEVERYNIGHTFOROVER30YEARS! WEDNESDAY

NOV 28

esmay’s 28th with sentinel 6 & Dusty bits 9PM $5

THURSDAY

NOV 29

THE SADIES FRIDAY NOVEMBER 30 7PM / REC ROOM, 79 W. CHIPPEWA ST. / $15

8PM $5

FRIDAY

happy hour: the fibs

NOV 30

6PM FREE

paxtor, the observers, shoot ya string band

[COUNTRY] The Sadies have maintained a steady presence through 25 years of alt-country shape-shifting, allowing to the genre to morph and gather moss around them. But the Toronto-

10PM $5

based quartet hasn’t wavered much from its cow-punk-noir origins, which has garnered nearuniversal praise from critics and has landed the band a mind-blowing list of collaborations and associations along the way. (They have longstanding relationships with Neko Case, the Mekons,

SATURDAY

DEC 1

backed by

Gord Downie, and on and on.) Their latest, last year’s Northern Passages (Yep Roc), brought the

the Donny Frauenhofer Band, Blaise Mercedes &The Crew, Saranaide Duo

band full-circle: It was recorded in the basement of the house in which Travis and Dallas Good grew up, which is also where the pair first started making music. Taking a familiar, garage-spiked

10PM $5

approach to country with tinges of rockabilly sprinkled along the way, Northern Passages manages that there’s no shortage of worthwhile musical ideas among these four talented men, who’ll grace the stage at the new Rec Room on Friday, November 30. -CHRISTOPHER JOHN TREACY

WEDNESDAY

DEC 5

THURSDAY

DEC 6

FRIDAY

PUBLIC APPROVED

Aretha Franklin Tribute w/ Alex McArthur

Jon Spencer, and Robyn Hitchcock; they’ve backed Neil Young and made an album with the late

to sound fresh despite mainly mining the band’s standard territory…consider that proof enough

grosh, tortoise forest

DEC 7

tba

10PM $5

rob falgiano 9PM $5

happy hour: a band named sue 6PM FREE

Cymbop & Bebophone PHISH Tribute w/ Jumpship 10PM $7

SATURDAY

DEC 8

1039 presents:

8PM . DR JAZZ & THE JAZZ BUGS

(EXCEPTFIRSTSUNDAYS IT’STHE JAZZ CACHE)

EVERY MONDAY FREE

8PM. SONGWRITER SHOWCASE 9PM. OPEN MIC W. JOSH GAGE

EVERY TUESDAY 6PM. FREE HAPPY HOUR W/

[DANCE] Western New York dance forces unite on Saturday at the Alt Theatre to perform

THE STEAM DONKEYS 8PM. RUSTBELT COMEDY 10PM. JOE DONOHUE 11PM. THE STRIPTEASERS $3

five unique pieces using choreography and dance talents from local companies and institutions

EVERY WEDNESDAY FREE

dance styles and choreography, exploring themes of comedy, self-discover, and loss. There’ll be a little something for everyone—experimental ensemble pieces set to Steve Reich music, solo pieces accompanied by musicians. Ticket sales and basket raffle proceeds from (un)Doing Balance will go to offset the costs of the annual Mission Improvable Dance Series, making the five-day workshop affordable for dancers to participate. -AARON LOWINGER

Nydge, Siena Liggins

7PM DOORS/8PM SHOW ◆ $12 ADV./$14 DAY OF

cleveland gutter pop

ricky hell & the void boys science man, grain assault 9PM ◆ $7

◆ THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29 ◆

after dark presents brings you: boston ska-punk

big D & the kids table

the abruptors, the barksdales ◆

7PM DOORS $15 ADVANCE/$17 DAY OF SHOW

melodic punk from oakland, ca/portland, me

jabber

from seattle

ramona

slinky x, venus vacation 9PM ◆ $7

◆ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30 ◆

happy hour: tyler westcott 5PM ◆ FREE

inertia release show ish kabibble, allegiant grizzly run ◆ 8PM $5 ADVANCE/$8 DAY OF SHOW

◆ SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1 ◆

iron fist

ftmp events presents

EVERY SUNDAY FREE

Contact Improvisation Community, the range of works in the program include modern

flint eastwood

10PM $10 ADVANCE (BROWNPAPERTICKETS.COM)

6PM. ANN PHILIPPONE

like SUNY at Buffalo and SUNY at Brockport. Presented by Nancy Hughes and the Buffalo

after dark presents brings you: from detroit

matka, chloroform, wendigo

WEEKLY EVENTS

7:30PM / ALT THEATER, 255 GREAT ARROW AVE FL 3 / $15

◆ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28 ◆

goose

w/special guest cold lazarus

(UN)DOING BALANCE SATURDAY DECEMBER 1

Buffalo’s Premier Live Music Club

6PM. TYLER WESTCOTT & DR. JAZZ

EVERY THURSDAY FREE

5PM. BARTENDER BILL PLAYS THE ACCORDION

EVERY SATURDAY FREE

4:30-7:30PM. CELTIC SEISIUNS

248 ALLEN STREET 716.886.8539

NIETZSCHES.COM

8PM◆ $5

◆ SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2 ◆

astrabula release show among the wolves, vintage pretty, maxwell doldan, milo duhn from erie pa james jackson 6PM ◆ $8 ADVANCE/$12 DAY OF SHOW

◆ MONDAY, DECEMBER 3 ◆

after dark presents brings you: from calgary, alberta

preoccupations from detroit

protomartyr

rattle

8PM ◆ $14 ADVANCE/$17 DAY OF SHOW

◆ WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5 ◆

from nyc

ava luna

hop hop, welks mice

7PM DOORS/8PM SHOW ◆ $7 ADV./$10 DAY OF

◆ THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6 ◆

ftmp events presents

Rookie Of The Year, Skyward Story, Trevor Douglas, The Victory Drive, Dope City Kid, Eerie Shores, Michelle Lange 6P,M ◆ $10 ADVANCE/$12 DAY OF SHOW

47 East Mohawk St. 716.312.9279

BUFFALOSMOHAWKPLACE.COM FACEBOOK.COM/MOHAWKPLACE

DAILYPUBLIC.COM / NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 4, 2018 / THE PUBLIC 13


EVENTS CALENDAR

SHARE YO U R EVENT

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

The Observers, Paxtor, and Shoot Ya String Band

PUBLIC APPROVED

10pm Nietzsche’s, 248 Allen St. $5

[FOLK] A trio of folky string bands set up at Nietzsche’s this Friday, November 30 for a “stompin hootenanny” lead by five-piece folk band the Observers. They’ll be joined by poppy-folk band Paxtor, and the Shoot Ya String Band, led by Cody Barcroft. -TPS

SATURDAY DECEMBER 1 Starlight Studio and Art Gallery Holiday Open House 11am Starlight Studio & Art Gallery, 340 Delaware Avenue Free

[ART OPENING] Every holiday season, Starlight Studio & Art Gallery—which provides adults with disabilities opportunities to express themselves through artistic endeavors—hosts a holiday open house, featuring (and selling) work by the artists the organization serves. It's a terrific occasion to buy holiday gifts and support a worthy institution. The annual exhibit opens this Saturday, December 1, 11am-1pm, and that's the time to go and tour the place. The exhibit (and sale) will continue through the end of December. -TPS

CODY JINKS SUNDAY DECEMBER 2 7PM / TOWN BALLROOM, 681 MAIN ST. / $30-$39 [COUNTRY] Cody Jinks isn’t cut out for country’s mainstream…hopefully he’ll continue to avoid the production pitfalls that have come to characterize it over the last decade. A Texas-based artist now in his late 30s, Jinks got started in music as the lead singer of a Fort Worth thrash metal outfit called Unchecked Aggression, and while his recent music doesn’t resemble his teeth-gritting, aggro beginnings, it does carry just enough outlaw spirit to separate him from the herd. Lifers, his latest and also his debut for Rounder Records—a label which offered him a deal after his previous indie release, I’m Not the Devil, cracked the Billboard top 5 in his genre and sold 70,000 copies without any corporate push—grapples with growing older and the usual classic-country themes of loneliness and heartache, but it’s the built-in blue collar demographic that really allows him to shine. There’s no assumption of privilege in the universe that Jinks creates for his marginalized characters, so you can relax and just be yourself. His show at Town Ballroom on Sunday, December 2, will likely revel in a similarly natural spirit, with Nashville’s The Steel Woods and TN Jet in the opening slots. -CHRISTOPHER JOHN TREACY

PUBLIC APPROVED

Shakedown 7pm Varsity Theatre, 3165 Bailey Ave. $10-20

[FILM] The best works of art and media encapsulate their own universe with its own set of rules and norms, and if the reviews which all describe Shakedown as an immersive glimpse into a community are any indication, we’re in for a special night on Saturday, December 1. Filmmaker Leilah Weinraub is bringing her 2018 documentary about a since shuttered black lesbian strip club in Los Angeles to the Varsity Theatre on Bailey Avenue. The film has been described as a genuine representation of a marginalized community coming together, compromising a utopic vision of how communities form and are sustained. By turns bold, sexy, tender, and tragic, the film speaks to the moment in America and in Buffalo in particular, where spaces for LGBTQ+ community are ever rarer, more fleeting. The film has been previously screened at the Museum of Modern Art NY and the Whitney Biennial, and Weinraub and activist Elisa Peebles will take part in a Q&A afterwards. And there’s an after-party at the East Side gem of a lesbian bar (Buffalo’s only?): Sweet’s Lounge, featuring several DJs and a performance by burlesque troupe Femme Noire, benefiting the currently nomadic artist collective Dreamland. -TPS

Obsidian Bellis at BOX Gallery 8pm Box Gallery, 667 Main Street

[ART + MUSIC] If you've never been to an art opening for the tiny Main Street storefront gallery within the Hostel Buffalo-Niagara, well let's just say they're a lot of fun. And Friday, November 30's turn of the calendar brings out a multimedia exhibition called Tutelary from Obsidian Bellis, an emerging and self-taught illustrator and artist raised on Buffalo's East Side. Tutelary is a work that explores themes blackness and femininity thriving or simply surviving in a white man's world. In the larger gathering space in the back of the hostel, DJ Static Fire will be bringing the party for those just hanging around, chewing gum and what not all the way to midnight. -AL

CAVE MONDAY DECEMBER 3 7PM / THE 9TH WARD, 341 DELAWARE AVE / $10 [ROCK] The musical trajectory of Chicago’s Cave has taken on an increasing amount of groove

TUESDAY DECEMBER 4

over the years, and the latest chapter, Allways, out this October on Drag City, is no exception. After

Horton’s Holiday Hayride

some musical chairs (keyboardist Rotten Milk was replaced by Rob Frye with the band’s previous release, Threace, in 2013, after which they welcomed additional guitarist Jeremy Freeze), Cave has become more adept than ever at locking down a groove and exploring its every possibility, buoyed

EVENTS@DAILYPUBLIC.COM

by the lack of lyrics getting in the way. While continuing to combine elements of math-y krautrock, psych/prog, international textures and funky jazz, Allways is a six-song exercise in exploratory melding… explore, discover, meld, explore some more. Turn the volume up and get lost in the hypnotic flow when Cave comes to Babeville’s 9th Ward on Monday, December 3.

14 THE PUBLIC / NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 4, 2018 / DAILYPUBLIC.COM

P

7pm Tralf Music Hall, 622 Main St. $29

[HOLIDAY] For the second year in a row, Reverend Horton Heat will bring his holidaycentric show to Buffalo. Dubbed the Holiday Hayride, this show features the psychobillysuperstar in a celebration of the holiday season. Support comes from Arizona-based surfy, honky tonk act Junior Brown, for this show at the Tralf Music Hall on Tuesday, P December 4 -TPS


SPOTLIGHT GIFTS ALEXA JONES This local artist makes unique earrings she calls Fleathers: “light as a feather, made from leather,” jewelry decorated with highly detailed art patterns. You might also find funky phone cases, handbags, and/or mugs with the her unique, Africainspired designs.

BARNS AND GARDENS With a variety of gifts like soaps, lotions, lip balms, you can easily craft your own holiday gift basket with the stuff you’ll find at Barns and Gardens. Go straight here and check mom or grandma off your list.

CARLA’S CRUMBY CREATIONS Here is my plan: I’m going to buy a bunch of cookies or macaroons from Carla’s Crumby Creations and pass them off as my own Crumby Creations. Carla won’t care, because she’s getting my money, and my family will think I’ve actually put some effort into something for once in my life. Suckers.

The Queen City Market at Karpeles Manuscript Museum (453 Porter Avenue). Photo by Pat Sandora-Nastyn.

QUEEN CITY MARKET

WISE APPLE VINTAGE Know someone who would love a solid brass zebra or a vintage mug from Japan? Wise Apple Vintage is what you’re looking for. Your friends will think you stepped into a Wes Anderson movie to find this stuff, but only you will know how easy it really was.

BY CORY PERLA IT’S GO TIME. There’s no hiding from it; the holidays are here. Whether you like it or not, society expects certain things of you during this time of the year. Maybe this is the year you send a postcard to everyone you love stating that Christmas is just some capitalistic scheme, a deeply ingrained money grab poorly dressed up with “joy” and “festivity” designed only to separate you from your hard-earned cash and fill the pockets of Jeff Bezos or Sam Walton. This is the year you stick it to the man. But it doesn’t have to be this way. You can buy local, and it can be easy. There can be hundreds of gift ideas right in front of you, all laid out for you to choose from, and you can feel good about those choices because the money you spend will go into the pockets of a local artist, a young entrepreneur, or a Buffalobased vendor, and you’ll only have to go to one location, and you can eat tacos and drink coffee while you do it. This is not some wild, made-up fantasy, it’s the eighth annual Queen City Market at Karpeles Manuscript Library on Porter Ave (453 Porter Avenue). More than 50 local vendors, craftspeople, and curators will be selling vintage and handmade items all day long on Saturday, December 1. To make your shopping experience even easier, we’ve gone through this massive list of vendors and picked out a few that caught our eye. So, shop, eat tacos from Lloyd Taco Truck, which will be parked outside, drink some coffee from Public Espresso, which will be set up inside, and maybe wait until next year to send out your manifesto.

DADDY’S PLANTS I’ve got an aloe plant sitting in my dining room. It looks cool and sometimes I need some actual aloe, so I just snap off an arm and rub it all over. It makes me feel like an outdoorsman or some kind of survivalist. It’s the gift that keeps on giving. If the target of your gifting prefers a plant that is not to be touched, then a tall, spiky cactus might be your best bet. Either way, look for cacti, succulents, and other unique plants from this new pop-up plant shop.

MEALY MONSTER LAND Everyone has that person who is more Nightmare Before Christmas than It’s a Wonderful life person. Find something grotesque, weird, and cute for that person from Mealy Monster Land. Artist Nicole Johnson makes one-of-a-kind dolls and creatures that are perfect for the horror movie fan in your life.

IZA DOES IT Handmade gifts that say Buffalo on them are perfect for your expat friends who are home for the holidays. Find stuff like Buffalo-themed wooden coasters, signage, jewelry, cutting boards and all that jazz from Iza Does It.

RUST BELT THREADS Run by Amanda Ferreira, who founded and launched the Queen City Market eight years ago, Rust Belt Threads sells a collection of vintage clothing, barware, and fun stuff that you’ll want to buy and keep for yourself. Maybe buy something for someone else, too.

WEST SIDE STITCHERY Everyone loves a big warm, hand-knitted scarf. Buy an extra one and give it as a secret Santa gift or something.

One-of-a-kind cute creatures can be found at Mealy Monster Land.

PINE APPLE COMPANY

Hey, it’s Buffalo. A hand-knitted scarf from West Side Stitchery is a gift that will keep on giving for months and months. And months.

Launched by a collective of local artists, this awesome, fun gallery, which recently relocated from one end of Allen Street to the other (now located at 65 Allen Street), sells all sorts of locally made art. T-shirts, greeting cards, little pieces of art; these are all great thinks to stock up on for those gift emergencies.

QUEEN CITY MARKET SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1 • 11AM - 5PM KARPELES MANUSCRIPT LIBRARY 453 PORTER AVENUE, BUFFALO NY QCMBUFFALO.COM Please bring a non-perishable food item for donation

P

DAILYPUBLIC.COM / NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 4, 2018 / THE PUBLIC 15


FILM REVIEW

TURNING POINT THE FRONT RUNNER BY M. FAUST BY EVER-INCREASING PROPORTIONS, Americans claim

to be disgusted by politicians. Yet we spend more and more time preoccupied with them, seeking out news of their personal improprieties and endlessly arguing about them on social media. What would we do for entertainment if we didn’t have them to hate? You hardly need me to point out the wretched state of public involvement with our elected officials, as bad as it has ever been in living memory. The new film The Front Runner sets itself the historical task of locating the turning point when things started down this path. That would be in 1987, when Ronald Reagan was at the end of an eight-year presidency that had divided much of the country. The expectation was that the pendulum would swing to the opposite extreme, to a president who was young, forwardthinking, and a Democrat. And that man looked to be Gary Hart, former senator from Colorado. Hart very nearly beat out Walter Mondale, the Democratic establishment’s candidate for the presidency in 1984, and by the next election it looked like the nomination was his for the asking. The shorthand explanation for why George Bush and not Hart became the next POTUS boils down to one name: Donna Rice, a young woman not married to Hart who was observed entering—but not leaving—his DC townhouse. Hart insisted that she was simply a campaign aide, but when photos of her perched on his knee during an earlier yacht trip surfaced, he abandoned his candidacy. The Front Runner was adapted from Matt Bai’s book All the Truth Is Out, published in 2014. That was well before James Fallows’s recent report in The Atlantic that the incident on the boat was a set up by Republican political consultant Lee Atwater, who

Hugh Jackman in The Front Runner.

(working in conjunction with Hart’s associate Billy Broadhurst) went so far as to make sure that the boat originally chartered was unavailable so that they would be forced to take one with the joke-ready name Monkey Business.( Johnny Carson is seen taking that bait in the movie.)

used) that came in its wake. He borrows clearly from the great American film about political campaigns, Michael Ritchie’s The Candidate, with its perpetual hurly-burly of activity. (He almost certainly also prepped by watching Tanner, Robert Altman’s series about a political candidate.)

But of course it doesn’t matter how much meat there actually was to the story (neither Hart nor Hill has ever admitted to any sexual impropriety). The lesson of the Hart affair was that if you can get a scandalous charge into the media mill, the jury of public opinion is seldom willing to wait for all the evidence to come in before rendering its verdict.

Star Hugh Jackman initially looks uncomfortable under a hairpiece that does little to increase his resemblance to the real Hart. (Great hair was the one thing Hart had in common with Reagan.) But he captures the self-confidence bordering on arrogance that blinded Hart to the precariousness of his position: Wvery time he brushes off his aides’ attempts at damage control by remarking it will go away on its own—“The public won’t stand for it”—we marvel that there was a time when a political candidate actually thought so highly of the people he hoped P to represent.

As directed by Jason Reitman (Up in the Air), The Front Runner is largely content to lay out its story as factually as possible, without laboring its resonances to political scandals (and how they were

DRIVING DOCTOR DON GREEN BOOK BY GEORGE SAX PETER FARRELLY’S DRAMEDY, Green Book, doesn’t embrace the concept of subtlety; in fact, they’re just about perfect strangers. The movie is almost as broad and shallow as one of Donald Trump’s political promises, and sometimes about as realistic. Don’t get me wrong: The movie obviously enough seeks to espouse a spirit in opposition to the nastier, bigoted dynamics of our Trumpest era. Green Book is for goodwill and cooperation, in its own rather crude, and sometimes entertaining terms.

The title comes from a “negro” travel guide periodically issued over more than 30 years into the 1960s. Since African American travelers were decidedly unwelcome in many of America’s public establishments, particularly in the south, the guide saved blacks from embarrassment, and much worse.

Viggo Mortensen and Mahershala Ali in Green Book.

CULTURE > FILM

two or three advanced degrees from renowned American and British institutions) is a piss-elegant, stentorian queen. He’s also At its heart, Green Book is one of those mismatched buddies a didactic nag who corrects Tony’s English and manners. Ali’s movies. It’s DAILYPUBLIC.COM very loosely derived fromFOR actualMORE characters andLISTINGS & REVIEWS >> VISIT FILM performance is mostly a fussy failure, although it’s unclear that events. Viggo Mortensen (having a lot of fun as an amusing it’s all his fault. The humorously intended individual and social but competent slob) is Tony Vallelonga, a.k.a. Tony Lip, a disparities between these two are so overdrawn they make Neil temporarily unemployed and financially stressed night club Simon’s Oscar and Felix seem like blood brothers. bouncer who agrees to serve as a driver and factotum for a black pianist named Don Shirley (Mahershala Ali) who’s undertaking The movie tries to get a lot of mileage out of their mutually a tour of southern venues in November and December of 1962. incredulous reactions to each other’s habits and preferences. Shirley is a classically schooled jazzman (although what we hear VISIT DAILYPUBLIC.COM FOR & REVIEWS ButMORE Farrelly FILM also has aLISTINGS serious, inspirational purpose. It’s>>easy to him play in the movie isn’t really jazz.) Tony’s a goombah who score points off the bigoted violence-prone Jim Crow South. Yet can use his fists, a loving family man in New York who lacks the curiously, he provides anachronistic elements and scenes. A twopersonal and social issues you might expect from someone in cop team in ’62 Macon, Georgia is biracial, for example. his milieu.

CULTURE > FILM

As written and played, Dr. Shirley (he just happens to have

More fundamentally, he and writer Nick Vallelonga (Tony’s real-

CULTURE > FILM

life son) make Shirley simultaneously naïve and race-conscious. It’s hard to believe a black guy from the Florida panhandle would attempt to try on a suit in a white men’s shop in the Deep South, or try to get a drink in a white bar—with probable dire consequences. Farrelly and Vallelonga load all this with sentimental material. Farrelly’s best known movies—Dumb and Dumber, There’s Something About Mary—are noted for their in-your-face rudeness, but the comedic sentimentality here is of a different sort of crudeness. It’s virtually laid on with a trowel. There’s even a climactic Christmas scene. If you bring some holiday spirit and tolerance to Green Book, it may not be anything like the season’s worst time-killer. But it’s P not delivering a viable message for our troubled times.

VISIT DAILYPUBLIC.COM FOR MORE FILM LISTINGS & REVIEWS >>

16 THE PUBLIC / NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 4, 2018 / DAILYPUBLIC.COM


AT THE MOVIES FILM

AT THE MOVIES A selective guide to what’s opening and what’s playing in local moviehouses and other venues

OPENING THIS WEEK THE POSSESSION OF HANNAH GRACE—The watchman at a morgue has to deal with a demonically possessed corpse in a horror film that sounds awfully similar to last year’s indie release The Autopsy of Jane Doe. Starring Grey Damon, Shay Mitchell and Kirby Johnson. Directed by Diederik Van Rooijen. Dipson Flix, Regal Quaker, Regal Transit

ALTERNATIVE CINEMA AND THEN THERE WERE NONE (1945)—Classic adaptation of Agatha Christie’s Ten Little Indians, in which 10 people trapped in an island castle try to figure which one of them is plotting to kill off the others one by one. Starring Barry Fitzgerald, Walter Huston, Louis Hayward, Roland Young, June Duprez, Mischa Auer, C. Aubrey Smith, and Judith Anderson. Directed by Rene Clair (I Married a Witch). Wed Dec 5 12:30pm. Screening Room THE BIG COMBO (1955)—Poverty Row crime classic starring Cornel Wilde as a dogged cop trying to bring down a gangster by getting his girlfriend (Jean Wallace) to rat him out. Co-starring Richard Conte, and Brian Donlevy; look for Earl Holliman and Lee Van Cleef as a pair of gay hoods. Directed by B movie auteur Joseph H. Lewis (Gun Crazy). Thu 7:30pm. Screening Room DON’T LOOK IN THE BASEMENT (1973)—Not quite a cult classic, this no-budget Texas horror film is still effectively creepy. At a hospital for the criminally insane, the patients are allowed to act out their delusions. But just who is in charge? Starring no one you’ve ever heard of and directed by S. F. Brownrigg. Fri 9:15pm. Screening Room

LOCAL THEATERS AMHERST THEATRE (DIPSON) 3500 Main St., Buffalo / 834-7655 amherst.dipsontheatres.com AURORA THEATRE 673 Main St., East Aurora / 652-1660 theauroratheatre.com EASTERN HILLS CINEMA (DIPSON) 4545 Transit Rd., / Eastern Hills Mall Williamsville / 632-1080 easternhills.dipsontheatres.com FLIX STADIUM 10 (DIPSON) 4901 Transit Rd., Lancaster / 668-FLIX flix10.dipsontheatres.com FOUR SEASONS CINEMA 6 2429 Military Rd. (behind Big Lots), Niagara Falls / 297-1951 fourseasonscinema.com HALLWALLS 341 Delaware Ave., Buffalo / 854-1694 hallwalls.org HAMBURG PALACE 31 Buffalo St., Hamburg / 649-2295 hamburgpalace.com LOCKPORT PALACE 2 East Ave., Lockport / 438-1130 lockportpalacetheatre.org MAPLE RIDGE 8 (AMC) 4276 Maple Rd., Amherst / 833-9545 amctheatres.com

THE HOUSE THAT JACK BUILT—One-time only screening of the director’s cut of the new Lars Von Trier film, following a dozen years in the development of a highly intelligent serial killer (Matt Dillon). With Bruno Ganz, Uma Thurman, and Siobhan Fallon Hogan. Wed Nov 28, 7pm. Dipson Amherst KOLCHAK: THE NIGHT STALKER—Darren McGavin rules December as the star of A Christmas Story, but until then here he is in his favorite role as a monster-fighting reporter in the cult 1970s TV show. The program includes two recently restored episodes, “The Ripper” and “The Vampire.” Fri 7pm. Screening Room THE MAN WHO INVENTED CHRISTMAS (Great Britain, 2017)—Downton Abbey’s Dan Stevens as Charles Dickens, struggling to write A Christmas Carol. With Morfydd Clark, Jonathan Pryce, Simon Callow, Miriam Margolyes, Bill Paterson and Christopher Plummer as Scrooge. Directed by Bharat Nalluri (Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day). Free and open to the public. Sun 11am. Aurora THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING (1975)—John Huston’s rousing adaptation of Rudyard Kipling’s story about two British former soldiers (Sean Connery, Michael Caine) who set themselves up as kings in the remote Asian region of Kafiristan. With Christopher Plummer and Saeed Jaffrey. Concluding this season’s Buffalo Film Seminar. Tue 7pm. Dipson Amherst THE REST I MAKE UP—Director Michelle Memran presents, in person, her new documentary film about playwright María Irene Fornés, a Pulitzer Prize finalist whose work influenced such writers as Caryl Churchill, Paula Vogel, Lanford Wilson, and Edward Albee. Memran filmed Fornés over a period of years at the Amsterdam Nursing Home in New York City, where she recently died of complications from Alzheimer’s disease. Sat 8pm. Hallwalls THE SOUND OF MUSIC (1965)—Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer in the 1965 Academy Award winner for Best Picture. It beat out Darling, Doctor Zhivago, Ship of Fools, and A Thousand Clowns. Go figure. This special presentation includes dinner at 6:30 pm Saturday catered by Schnitzel & Co.; if you just want to see the movie, it starts at 7:30pm on Saturday and 7:30pm on TuesP day. Screening Room

AVAILABLE NOW FROM THE PUBLIC BOOKS AND FOUNDLINGS PRESS:

WHERE THE STREETS ARE PAVED WITH RUST Essays by Bruce Fisher about Rust Belt economies, environments, and politics.

MCKINLEY 6 THEATRES (DIPSON) 3701 McKinley Pkwy. / McKinley Mall Hamburg / 824-3479 mckinley.dipsontheatres.com NORTH PARK THEATRE 1428 Hertel Ave., Buffalo / 836-7411 northparktheatre.org REGAL ELMWOOD CENTER 16 2001 Elmwood Ave., Buffalo / 871–0722 regmovies.com REGAL NIAGARA FALLS STADIUM 12 720 Builders Way, Niagara Falls /236–0146 regmovies.com

The financial decline of the middle class is the issue of our time. Bruce Fisher’s Where The Streets Are Paved With Rust is a must read for anyone seriously

trying to understand why it happened and how to fix it. —Ted Kaufman, former United States Senator and advisor to Vice President Joe Biden

REGAL QUAKER CROSSING 18 3450 Amelia Dr., Orchard Park / 827–1109 regmovies.com

To understand Rust Belt politics, you can’t do better than to read

REGAL TRANSIT CENTER 18 Transit and Wehrle, Lancaster / 633–0859 regmovies.com

—Catherine Tumber, Senior Research Associate with Northeastern University’s School of Public

REGAL WALDEN GALLERIA STADIUM 16 One Walden Galleria Dr., Cheektowaga 681-9414 / regmovies.com RIVIERA THEATRE 67 Webster St., North Tonawanda 692-2413 / rivieratheatre.org THE SCREENING ROOM in the Boulevard Mall, 880 Alberta Drive, Amherst 837-0376 /screeningroom.net SQUEAKY WHEEL 712 Main St., / 884-7172 / squeaky.org SUNSET DRIVE-IN 9950 Telegraph Rd., Middleport 735-7372 / sunset-drivein.com

Bruce Fisher’s excellent essay collection. Policy and Urban Affairs, Fellow with the Massachusetts Institute for a New Commonwealth’s Gateway Cities Innovation Institute, and author of Small, Green, and Gritty

Available at TALKING LEAVES BOOKS 951 Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo tleavesbooks.com Also available through https://gum.co/SCKj or foundlingszine@gmail.com

TJ’S THEATRE 72 North Main St., Angola / 549-4866 newangolatheater.com TRANSIT DRIVE-IN 6655 South Transit Rd., Lockport 625-8535 / transitdrivein.com

DAILYPUBLIC.COM / NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 4, 2018 / THE PUBLIC 17


CLASSIFIEDS TO PLACE AN AD EMAIL CLASSIFIEDS@DAILYPUBLIC.COM OR CALL (716)480.0723 / DAILYPUBLIC.COM/CLASSIFIEDS THE PUBLIC’S NOTICE The Public encourages you to use caution while participating in any transactions or acquiring services through our classified section of the newspaper. While we do approve the ads in this section, we do not guarantee the reliability of classified advertisers. If you have questions, email classifieds@dailypublic.com.

ROOM FOR RENT $400 Per Mo. Incl. util./kitchen privileges Commonwealth off Hertel, 390-7543.

TENOR SOLIST NEEDED: The Unitarian Universalist Church of Buffalo announces an immediate need for a Tenor Soloist to join our UUCB Choir. This Part-Time position fills a leadership role within our vibrant music program, which includes a half-time Music Director, quarter-time Accompanist, and parttime Soloist/Section Leaders for the four choral sections. Base pay is competitive, and our music season involves several opportunities for additional paid work. Availability for our Thursday evening rehearsals and Sunday morning services is a must, as is good vocal technique and music literacy, a background in choral singing, and a willingness to collaborate with volunteer singers in a wide variety of music for worship. Email inquiries should be sent to Dr. Daniel Bassin at danielbassin@ buffalouu.org.

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UB SOUTH ROOMS: Room for woman, renovated & spacious, incl. util + wifi, W/D, pkg, 2/10 mi. to campus. $495 & $595. 236-8600.

ORGANIST/ACCOMPANIST: The Unitarian Universalist Church of Buffalo announces an immediate need for an Organist/Accompanist to play at our services and work with our choir. This quarter-time position fills a leadership role within our vibrant music program which includes a half-time Music Director, and parttime Soloist/Section Leaders for the four choral sections. Base pay is competitive, and our music season involves several opportunities for additional paid work. The Organist/ Accompanist provides keyboard (organ, piano, harpsichord) solo music and accompaniment for congregational singing at worship services and accompaniment for the choir during rehearsals and worship services. Availability for our Thursday evening rehearsals and Sunday morning services is a must.

NORWOOD BTWN SUMMER & BRYANT: Freshly painted 1BR, carpets, appliances, mini-blinds, parking, coinop laundry, sec. sys. Includes water & elec. No pets, no smoking. $695+sec. 912-0175. --------------------------------------------------ELMWOOD VILLAGE: Lancaster, lg bright 2BD upper, hrdwd flrs, laundry, parking. $1200 incl all. 884-0353. ------------------------------------------------ELMWOOD VILLAGE: Norwood Ave.

FOR RENTBryant St: Spacious 1 BR very nice, class & charm. Hdwd floors, appliances & more. $1000 includes utilities. No pets or smokers. 548-6210. -------------------------------------------------ALLENTOWN: Main Street 3-room studio, Victorian, hardwood floors, near medical campus. Off-street parking, private entrance, 700 + sec, and reference. Electric included. No pets/smoking. 1 or 2 people, owner occupied. 883-1800. ----------------------------------------------------BAYNES/MANCHESTER PL Large 3BR upper, hdwd floors, with appliances incl. w/d and parking. $1050. Text 3169279. --------------------------------------------------

NORTH BUFFALO: 251 Hartwell, off Delaware, 2BR + den upper, living room, dining room, kitchen, parking pad, appliances, storage, porch, air conditioning. $895+utilities. 875-8890. ----------------------------------------------------LINWOOD: Large, bright 2 BR, entire floor of a brick mansion, 1,300 sq ft. Hardwood floors in BRs and LR. Offstreet parking, laundry. Convenient to UB, Canisius, Medical Campus. $975 includes all utilities. 1 month security, lease, no pets, no smoking. 886-1953. ---------------------------------------------------ROOM FOR RENT: $450/month, private bath, all utilities, kitchen, laundry, parking privileges, located off NF Blvd in Amherst, 440-0208. No smokers. ------------------------------------------------DELAWARE PARK: Beautiful 1BR. Appliances. Laundry. Hardwood. Granite. Porch, ceiling fan. $950 includes utilities. No pets/smoking. 866-0314. -------------------------------------------------UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS: Updated large 3BR. Off-street parking, appliances, semi-furnished, water, garbage. Laundromat across street. Bus stop in front, close to metro. 716-553-2570. -------------------------------------------------LOVEJOY AREA: Beautiful 2 BD with appl,carpet,porch,laundry,parking,no pets, 650 + deposit 406-2363, leave message -------------------------------------------------OXFORD/WEST FERRY: Private 3rd flr 2 BR, newly updated, w/appliances, off street parking. Convenient to medical corridor, Canisius College, bus routes. 875 + utilities. 716-254-4773. -------------------------------------------------HERTEL AVE/N. BUFFALO: 3 BR upper. $900+utilities & sec dep. No pets, off-street pkng. Call 716.308.6870 -------------------------------------------------ELMWOOD VILLAGE: Lancaster Ave. 3 BR upper w/2 porches, natural woodwork, w/d hookups. No pets, no smoking. $1100+utilities. Apartment of the week. 716-883-0455.

2 BR, study, porch, appliances, must see. No pets/smoking. $1,350+util. rsteam@roadrunner.com

or

716-886-5212.

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COMMERCIAL ELMWOOD VILLAGE: Storefront/office for rent. 600 sq ft, $800 electric included. 716-803-3046.

HELP WANTED NON-PROFIT SUPER-MARKETEER NEEDED: A major part of the fun involved will initially be helping to define the job. It is very unlikely that it will ever pay much, and so it is most likely that the person who gets it will have other sources of income. If this sounds at all interesting to you, please check out thiselectionmatters.org, and then write to Box 861, Buffalo 14203 to find out more. -------------------------------------------------EXPERIENCED COOK: Experienced cook wanted. Call Joe @ 716.308.6870 for more details. ------------------------------------------------BOOKKEEPER: Looking for an experienced man or woman bookkeeper/ payroll, needed urgently. Part-time 2-3 hrs, $40 per 2 hours. For more info kindly email: justin.smith3433@gmail.com. ------------------------------------------------INTERPRETER/TRANSLATOR: Do you enjoy helping others? Do you speak fluent English and at least one other language? Consider a job as an interpreter or translator. We are accepting applications for all languages, but currently are giving preference to individuals who speak Karen, Karenni, Burmese, Tigrinya, Farsi Dari (Afghan Persian), Nepali, Bengali, and Rohingya. Interpreters enable communication between two or more individuals who don’t speak the same language. If you are professional, punctual, self motivated, experienced, and communicative, consider applying today. Daytime availability, reliable transportation, and work authorization are required. Prior interpreter training is preferred. To apply please visit jersbuffalo.org/ index.php/employment or contact us at (716) 882-4963 extension 201 or 207 with any questions.

Email inquiries should be sent to Dr. Daniel Bassin at danielbassin@ buffalouu.org Applications can be sent to: Dr. Daniel Bassin Unitarian Universalist Church of Buffalo 695 Elmwood Ave. Buffalo, NY 14222

THE ARTS FREE YOUTH WRITING WORKSHOPS Tue and Thur 3:30-6pm. Open to writers between ages 12 and 18 at the Just Buffalo Writing Center. 468 Washington Street, 2nd floor, Buffalo 14203. Light snack provided. -------------------------------------------------CALL FOR WORK: Parables Gallery & Gifts, 1027 Elmwood Ave, Bflo. Artists & craftsmen all mediums welcome. For more info go to: parablesgalleryandgifts.com. -------------------------------------------------FESTIVAL SCHOOL OF BALLET Classes for adults and children at all levels. Try a class for free. 716-9841586 festivalschoolofballet.com.

SERVICES BLUE BRUSH STUDIOS PAINTING AND HANDYMAN SERVICES: Call 262-9181 or visit bluebrushstudios.

18 THE PUBLIC / NOVEMBER 28 - DECEMBER 4, 2018 / DAILYPUBLIC.COM

com. AGES 5-17 learn meditation, ESP games, healings. Williamsville. Begins 5/19. 807-5354 Marina Liaros Naples www.meeting-ike-series.weebly.com -----------------------------------------------RETIRED PSYCHOLOGIST available to assist adults in light daily living. Please call for details at 883-3216.

LEGAL NOTICES SUPPLEMENTAL SUMMONS: SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, COUNTY OF ERIE, INDEX NO. 807326/2017 NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC, Plaintiff, vs. JOSEPH HUNTZ, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF JUDITH A. HUNTZ A/K/A JUDITH A. DYSON; AUDREY HUNTZ, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF JUDITH A. HUNTZ A/K/A JUDITH A. DYSON; MICHAEL HUNTZ, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF JUDITH A. HUNTZ A/K/A JUDITH A. DYSON; JOANNA HUNTZ, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF JUDITH A. HUNTZ A/K/A JUDITH A. DYSON; JOHN HUNTZ, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF JUDITH A. HUNTZ A/K/A JUDITH A. DYSON; JEFFEREY HUNTZ A/K/A JEFF HUNTZ, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF JUDITH A. HUNTZ A/K/A JUDITH A. DYSON; MICHELLE SIMMONS, AS HEIR AND DISTRIBUTEE OF THE ESTATE OF JUDITH A. HUNTZ A/K/A JUDITH A. DYSON; any and all persons unknown to plaintiff, claiming, or who may claim to have an interest in, or general or specific lien upon the real property described in this action; such unknown persons being herein generally described and intended to be included in the following designation, namely: the wife, widow, husband, widower, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors, and assignees of such deceased, any and all persons deriving interest in or lien upon, or title to said real property by, through or under them, or either of them, and their respective wives, widows, husbands, widowers, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors and assigns, all of whom and whose names, except as stated, are unknown to plaintiff; MARY E. DYSON; NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; ‘’JOHN DOE #1’’ through ‘’JOHN DOE #12,’’ the last twelve names being fictitious and unknown to plaintiff, the persons or parties intended being the tenants, occupants, persons or corporations, if any, having or claiming an interest in or lien upon the premises, described in the complaint,

the sum of $45,838.00 and interest, recorded on September 9, 2009, in Record Book 13464 at Page 1059, of the Public Records of ERIE County, New York, covering premises known as 383 HOPKINS STREET, BUFFALO, NY 14220. The relief sought in the within action is a final judgment directing the sale of the premises described above to satisfy the debt secured by the Mortgage described above. ERIE County is designated as the place of trial because the real property affected by this action is located in said county. NOTICE: YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to the mortgage company will not stop the foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. RAS BORISKIN, LLC Attorney for Plaintiff BY: IRINA DULARIDZE, ESQ.

900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310 Westbury, NY 11590 516-280-7675

-------------------------------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF A DOMESTIC LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY: Diamond Concierge LLC. Articles of Organization filed with DOS on 09/14/2018. Office: Erie county. DOS designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against may he served. DOS shall mail copy of process to the LLC, 50 fountain plaza, buffalo, NY 14202. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. ------------------------------------------------NOTICE OF FORMATION OF A DOMESTIC LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY: Name of LLC: Knowledge Building Consultation LLC; Date of filing of Articles of Organization with the NY Dept of State: July 3, 2018; Office of the LLC: Erie County; The NY Secretary of State has been designated as the agent upon whom process may be served. NYSS may mail a copy of any process to the LLC at: Ebony McMillan; 239 Saranac Ave; Buffalo, NY 14216; Purpose of LLC: Educational Training.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY JONATHAN CASEY

DICK HIRSCH

COREY KELLEY

ROB SCHMARDER

EMILY HIRSCH

JOHN PENMAN

CHRISTINA GRESS SIR LORD AUGUSTUS VON GRAVY III

ALAN BEDENKO MICHAEL PIJANOWSKI

NICOLE CORSARO RYAN SCHWASS (LAZY D) BEN BRINDISE ANDREW GALARNEAU JACK QUINAN KAREN ECKERT BILL KOCH

ROBIN BROX JENNIFER SPARCINO

SUSAN ELIA MACNEAL

ANA MARIELLA BACIGALUPO

TOM REIGSTAD

JUDY GOLDSTEIN

RENEE BROWN

CHIP O’SHEA

Defendants. To the above-named Defendants YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer, or, if the complaint is not served with this summons, to serve a notice of appearance on the Plaintiff’s Attorney within 20 days after the service of this summons, exclusive of the day of service (or within 30 days after the service is complete if this summons is not personally delivered to you within the State of New York) in the event the United States of America is made a party defendant, the time to answer for the said United States of America shall not expire until (60) days after service of the Summons; and in case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint.

Meet Mickey e! i & Minn

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NOTICE OF NATURE OF ACTION AND RELIEF SOUGHT

who enjoy active Hi! We’re Mickey and Minnie and we’re two happy bunnies But at the same time, lifestyle s! We love playing with toys and eating treats!a curious duo to add to we’d appreci ate a quiet home. If you’re looking for at the SPCA! your family, we’d love to be yours! Meet us

THE OBJECT of the above caption action is to foreclose a Mortgage to secure

. YOURSPCA.ORG . 300 HARLEM RD. WEST SENECA 875.7360

Th wi re fo la be po de pr PU fo wi Th m or


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THANKS PATRONS BOB LAVALLEE BETTY & HAL LEADER OWEN O SUILLEABHAIN J. FELL ED & CHERYL CARDONI BOB GLASS BRIDGE RAUCH ALAN BEDENKO DEREK KING LYDIA FRECHETTE JAY BURNEY GLORIA WISE LESLIE MISENER SHAWN LEWIS LINDA BALL JOHN WHALEN ANJANA MALHOTRA COLLEEN CHAHAL DOT KELLY ROSS SCHULTZ BROOKE MECKLER SCOTT MECKLER JESSICA NEUBAUER BOB LAVALLEE FOUNDLINGS PRESS MINDYJO ROSSO JACQUELINE TRACE VILONA TRACHTENBERG KARA NAOMI LOWINGER DANIEL BRADY JEN KAMINSKY BRENDAN MCCAFFERTY ERIC ANDO SERGIO RODRIGUEZ JILLIAN FIELDS JESSICA SILVERSTEIN WILLIAM MARTIN ALEXANDER KIRST JORDAN HOXSIE ERIC RIZZI KEVIN HAYES CHRISTINE SLOCUM BARBARA HANNA DEKKER HARPER BISHOP, JENNIFER CONNOR NISSA MORIN PETER SMITH KEVIN PURDY PETER SMITH COLLEEN KENNEDY RACHEL CHROSTOWSKI TJ VITELLO ROB GALBRAITH MATTHEW NAGOWSKI USMAN HAQ CELIA WHITE STEVE HEATHER GRING JAMES LENKER CORY MUSCATO ALAN FELLER TRE MARSH BRETT PERLA ANTHONY PALUMBO NANCY HEIDINGER DOUG CROWELL ALEJANDRO GUTIERREZ KRISTEN BOJKO

KRISTEN BECKER CHRIS GALLANT EKREM SERDAR MOLLIE RYDZYSNKI SUZANNE STARR CHARLES VON SIMSON JOSHUA USEN HOLLY GRAHAM MARK GOLDEN JOSEPH VU STEPHANIE PERRY DAVID SHEFFIELD JOANNA EVAN JAMES MARCIE MCNALLIE KARA ROB MROWKA AMBER JOHN (EXTRA LOVE) RAY WOLF JOHN RICCIO PAT PIDGEON RYAN MCMULLEN AMBER HEALY TOM BURTLESS COLIN EAGER DAKOTA WOLF SEAN CONNORS PINE APPLE COMPNAY JOSHUA ROBINSON ALEXANDER KIRST SEAMUS GALLIVAN BRYAN OVERLAND CHRIS HAWLEY ELIZABERTH JENNEY KEVIN MCFADDEN BERNICE RADLER MOLLY F. YURCHAK CAILTIN CASS WOODY BROWN DANIELLE PELFREY THE RUSSO FAMILY ADAM BOJAK RICHARD MARTONE AMBER DIXON COLIN CARPENTER BRIANA POPEK LIN DETITTA MELISSA MOSKO DAVID HALL CECILLE BILTEKOFF ALEX MORRISON MICHAEL STARKS RACHELLE TOARMINO JOSEPH DIDOMIZIO AMBLERGEE PAT KEWLEY CYNTHIA VAN NESS TAMYE RIGGS BEN SIEGEL ROBIN CARMAN HEIDI I. JONES & DIANNE BRITAIN JENNIFER ANNA KAPLAN DANIEL SACK JEAN DOERR TIM CINSKI CASEY GORDON JINXIE TUCKER BILL BANAS

“SUIT YOURSELF” - ALL FOUR ARE REPRESENTED. EMMA PERCY CARIMA EL-BEHAIRY KEVIN HAYES MARY CHOCHRANE RUTH MACK JONATHAN MANES SHAWN ROCHE MOLLY JARBOE DANA BUSCH MAXWELL FRASER SMITH NICOLE FERGUSON SEAN ALLEN BURLEY JOEL BRENDEN CHRIS DEARING ANDREW GALARNEAU BRITTANY PEREZ EMILY SIMON STEVEN GEDRA JAMES HART JAMES WATKINS ANGIE M. CONTE ANDY ROSEVEAR SAMANTHA PIERCE VIROCODE ELISABETH SAMUELS SIMON G HUSTED MIKE GLUCK KATELIN GALLAGHER MARTHA MCCLUSKEY DIANE & DAVE CRESS MARIE SCHUSTER HANNAH QUAINTANCE ALLAN RINARD CAITLIN CODER BEN HILLIGAS JOAN LOCURTO EDWARD J HEALY AARON BACZKOWSKI THE ARMSTRONGS SHAYMA’A SALLAJ ROBERT FLEMING NICHOLAS GORDON SHERYL KARIN LOWENTHAL SUSAN BLACKLEY TIM AND CONNIE JOYCE VILONA TRACHTENBERG BRENT MARTONE ADRIANNE SALMONE ANN BECKLEY-FOREST QWEEN CITY LAURIE OUSLEY NATE PERACCINY RYAN SLOMIANY ANDREW STECKER MARSHA K GRAY MARK KUBUNIEC CHRISTOPHER MARCELLO KIRA YEROFEEV KEVIN RABENER CATHERINE CONNORS JOHN TOOHILL MARCHALL BERTRAM ABIGAILE COOKE CHRISTY CARDINALE TIMOTHY LENT JACQUELINE TRACE KATHLEEN MORRISSEY LIZ DIMITRU PHOTO BY TOM SICKLER

ACROSS 1 Swingin’ Fitzgerald 5 Senate spots 10 “It’s my turn!”

60 Pink Floyd classic from “The Wall”

14 Olympic skater/ commentator Johnny

64 Diva’s delivery

15 “Halcyon” singer Goulding

66 Fantasia, in 2004

34 Elliott of 2018’s “A Star Is Born” 35 Prefix for scope 36 “Spring ahead” time in D.C. 37 Alex, in “Madagascar”

67 Breed of tailless cat

38 “I Put a Spell On You” singer ___ Jay Hawkins

17 Cartoon detective played by Matthew Broderick and French Stewart

68 GE competitor

42 Credit report company with a notable 2017 breach

20 “Negatory” 21 Actress Emma 22 Ear irritation? 23 “This is reallllly wonderful ...” 25 Homer’s neighbor 26 Actresses West and Whitman 28 Comprehended 30 Beans that often get refried 32 Flip option 36 Golfer Ernie 39 “Aw gee, that’s peachy keen!”

Right now, locally and nationally, the independent, alternative press is more important than ever.

41 Prepared nuts used for baking and pastries, maybe

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65 Chili powder ingredient

33 Director Guillermo ___ Toro

16 Exploration org.

Welcome to The Public, Partner. Subscribe to The Public at PATREON.COM/THE PUBLIC

59 Hong Kong director Andrew (whose “Infernal Affairs” was remade as “The Departed”)

40 Dairy dweller

69 Father, in France

DOWN

44 Failing the white-glove test

1 “Dallas” dynasty

45 Dog trainer’s command

2 “The Raven” heroine

48 Dupe

3 Follow a podcast

49 Beguile

4 “Crumpled Papers” artist Jean

50 Bar order

5 Branch

52 “Paper Moon” Oscar winner O’Neal

6 “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road” singer John

53 Time’s 2008 and 2012 Person of the Year

7 Exclusively

54 Batmobile passenger

8 Worn out

58 Arm bone

9 Circle div.

60 GoPro, e.g.

10 State with a town called Speedway

61 Rita of 2018’s “The Girls Tour”

11 Like some poetry on the fridge

62 “His Master’s Voice” company

12 Operate

63 “___/Tuck” (medical drama)

46 Rotation-producing force

13 “Heartbreaker” singer Benatar

47 Like some missiles

18 Lauder of cosmetics

51 Number after acht

19 Let in

52 Canadian major league team, on scoreboards

24 Burnt stuff

55 Dictation expert

43 “No idea”

LAST WEEK’S ANSWERS

27 Song that’s tough to do in a group

56 “You Will Be My ___ True Love” (song from “Cold Mountain”)

29 Mother of Perseus

57 In the neighborhood of

31 180∞ from NNE

30 Plug point

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