Ithaca Times November 12, 2014

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Online @ ITH ACA .COM

Hipster Hotel

Hilton gets on the artisanal bandwagon with Canopy PAGE 3

robison resigns

county legislator to become the next undersheriff PAGE 5

Abstract

around town

McMahon and Sampson hang work everywhere PAGE 21

NOLa

Lover

George Winston’s romance with New Orleans PAGE 27

Drones Overhead

Cornell students and Cooperative Extension test non-military uses

Abstract

Nice new Bldgs

local architects beautify where their designs are built PAGE 15


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Triphammer Marketplace

607-319-0643

Shop us online: www.BevandCo.com

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Locally Owned Triphammer Marketplace Right off Rte 13 at N. Triphammer Road 607-319-4002


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VOL.X X XVI / NO. 12 / November 12, 2014

hotel’s location, and the Ithaca community as a whole. Whitham presented the latest proposal of the hotel to City of Ithaca Common Council during its Wednesday, Nov. 5 public meeting. “The brand itself is very much about neighborhood,” he said. “It’s very much about context, very much about ‘small’ and fitting in with the local culture. So, in terms of food [the hotel includes a restaurant open to the public], in terms of design, in terms of art, as a design team it’s been particularly fun. Because part of what we’re doing right now is reaching out to local artists, local food, local wine, beer, as we put this design together. So that’s been an exciting piece to it.” Whitham added that although the Canopy brand

Tompkins County

City of Ithaca

Old Library Redux Takes Next Step

Hilton Hipster Hotel Proposed

t its meeting last week, the Tompkins County Legislature’s Old Library Committee moved a tentative Request for Proposal (RFP) on to the full legislature. The committee, led by Chairman Mike Lane (D-14th), began meeting last April after the county received responses to their Request for Expressions of Interest (RFEI) from developers interested in the 0.88-acre property on North Cayuga Street. Over the intervening six months the committee has been formulating an RFP and reviewing responses to the RFEI to determine which proposals should be asked to move to the stage of the process. The resolution authorizing the release of the RFP includes the recommendation that all four remaining developers be invited to respond to the RFP. Although initially six developers responded to the RFEI, two dropped out and withdrew their proposals. The four remaining RFEI respondents include DPI Consultants; a group that includes STREAM Collaborative, Franklin Properties, MCK Building Associates, Taitem Engineering, and Dr. Marne O’Shae; and partnerships between Cornerstone Group and Cayuga Housing Development Corporation; and between Travis Hyde Properties and HOLT Architects. Before the committee passed its resolution, Planning Commissioner Ed Marx went through the RFP draft in detail, discussing each section with the fivemember committee. “The introduction is pretty similar to what was in the RFEI,” said Marx. He noted that the section on zoning and property description is very similar as well. Regarding the section on selection criteria, Marx said, “First we state that the county is interested in fair market value for the property.” The selection criteria section goes on to indicate that, unlike in the RFEI, the county is requesting that all proposals include mixed uses, and that green building proposals will be favored. Also, Marx noted that an added a requirement in the selection criteria was that all project proponents attend a special meeting of the Ithaca Landmarks Preservation Commissioner tentatively scheduled for January. Moving on to a seven-item list of criteria, Marx said, “They are proposed … in no particular order of relative

ne of the hotels considered to be part of the Ithaca’s “hotel boom” will remain on the fast track. City of Ithaca officially finalized the transfer of ownership of the 32-space parking lot located at 320-324 Martin Luther King Jr./E. State St. to the Ithaca Urban Renewal Agency (IURA). The transaction now allows Lighthouse Hotels, LLC to move forward with its negotiations with IURA for buying the lot for its proposed sevenstory, 123-room Canopy by Hilton hotel. The project, formerly known as a Hampton Inn & Suites, recently became part of Hilton’s (which owns Hampton Inn & Suites) new “Canopy” hotel franchise. According to Hilton’s website, the Canopy Hotel proposed for Seneca Way and East State Street. The “Canopy” hotels are meant to be hotel line part of a “positively yours” culture. (Photo provided) focuses on “great neighborhoods,” is a family of hotels, each hotel would be “market-driven approach,” “comfort “unique and singular.” and design,” “more included value” and Council unanimously voted to “our ‘positively yours’ culture.” There approve the transfer. However, there are currently 11 Canopy by Hiltons in was a lengthy discussion that largely the world. Ithaca would become the focused on the hotel’s staff ’s wages, and smallest city to have one. Other cities the ramifications the hotel would have include London, Portland (Ore.), Denver, on neighboring businesses—particularly Washington D.C. and Miami. those that depend on the parking lot the President of Whitham Planning & hotel would be built on top of. Lighthouse Design Scott Whitham, who is managing the project for Lighthouse Hotels, said continued on page 5 the Canopy branding is a good fit for the

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▶ Mental Illness Event, The National Alliance on Mental Illness, Finger Lakes will host a community discussion on mental illness and suicide on Sunday, Dec. 7 at 2 pm at The Space @ GreenStar (700 West Buffalo). Kathy Leichter will introduce her award-winning documentary film “Here One Day,” which tells the story of Kathy’s mother Nina. Nina lived with bipolar disorder for most of Kathy’s childhood. After Nina ended her life in 1995, Kathy found a collection of audio recordings Nina had stored in a closet. The tapes are the foundation of “Here One Day,” Kathy’s tribute to her mother.

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“Here One Day” has been selected for inclusion in regional, national, and international film festivals. Recently the film was named Best Feature Length Documentary and received the Jury Prize at the Scottish Mental Health Arts and Film Festival. For more information about the film, please go to: www.hereoneday.com. Following the film Kathy will be joined by Henry Gerson, M.D., medical director of the Cayuga Medical Center Behavioral Services Unit, and Lee-Ellen Marvin, director of Suicide Prevention and Crisis Services in a discussion of mental illness and suicide.

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A Future with Drones .............. 8 Developing drones with civilian uses

Paper Trail................................... 21 An ambitious exhibit, not in an art gallery

NE W S & OPINION

Newsline . ................................ 3-7, 13-14 Pet Corner . ........................................ 11 Sports ................................................... 12

SPECIAL SEC T IONS

Business Times . ............................ 15-20

ART S & E NTE RTAINME NT

Film ....................................................... 23 Stage ..................................................... 24 Books .................................................... 25 Music . ................................................... 26 Music . ................................................... 27 Art . ....................................................... 28 TimesTable .................................... 30-33 Encore .................................................. 33 Classifieds...................................... 34-35 Cover Image: CUAir Team with Helios. Photo: Bill Chaisson Cover Design: Julianna Truesdale.

ON THE W E B Visit our website at www.ithaca.com for more news, arts, sports and photos. B i l l C h a i s s o n , M a n a g i n g E d i t o r , 6 07-277-70 0 0 x 224 E d i t o r @ I t h a c a T i me s . c o m L o u i s D i P i e t r o, A s s o c i a t e E d i t o r , x 217 A r t s @I t h a c a T i me s . c o m M i c h a e l N o c e l l a , R e p o r t e r , x 225 r e p o r t e r @I t h a c a T i me s . c o m Tim Gera, Photographer p h o t o g r a p h e r @I t h a c a T i me s . c o m Steve Lawrence, Sports Editor, Ste vespo rt sd u d e@gmai l .co m C h r i s H o o k e r, F i n g e r L a k e s S p o r t s E d i t o r , x 236 Sp o rt s@Flcn .o rg J u l i a n n a Tr u e s d a l e , P r o d u c t i o n D i r e c t o r / D e s i g n e r , x 226 P r o d u c t i o n @I t h a c a T i me s . c o m G e o r g i a C o l i c c h i o, A c c o u n t R e p r e s e n t a t i v e , x 220 G e o r g i a @ I t h a c a T i me s . c o m J i m K i e r n a n , A c c o u n t R e p r e s e n t a t i v e , x 219 J k i e r n a n @ I t h a c a T i me s . c o m R i c k y C h a n , A c c o u n t R e p r e s e n t a t i v e , x 218 R i c k y @ I t h a c a T i me s . c o m C a t h y B u t t n e r, C l a s s i f i e d A d v e r t i s i n g , x 227 c b u t t n e r @ i t h a c a t i me s . c o m Cy n d i B r o n g , x 211; J u n e S e a n e y A d m i n i s t r a t i o n Rick Blaisdell, Chris Eaton, Les Jink s J i m B i l i n s k i , P u b l i s h e r , x 210 j b i l i n s k i @ I t h a c a T i me s . c o m C o n t r i b u t o r s : Barbara Adams,Deirdre Cunningham, Jane Dieckmann, Luke Z. Fenchel, J.F.K. Fisher, Karen Gadiel, Charley Githler, Linda B. Glaser, Warren Greenwood, Ross Haarstad, Peggy Haine, Cassandra Palmyra, Bryan VanCampen, and Arthur Whitman.

T he ent i re c o ntents o f the Ithaca T i mes are c o p y r i ght © 2 0 1 4 , b y newsk i i nc . All rights reserved. Events are listed free of charge in TimesTable. All copy must be received by Friday at noon. SUBSCRIPTIONS: $69 one year. Include check or money order and mail to the Ithaca Times, PO Box 27, Ithaca, NY 14851. ADVERTISING: Deadlines are Monday 5 p.m. for display, Tuesday at noon for classified. Advertisers should check their ad on publication. The Ithaca Times will not be liable for failure to publish an ad, for typographical error, or errors in publication except to the extent of the cost of the space in which the actual error appeared in the first insertion. The publisher reserves the right to refuse advertising for any reason and to alter advertising copy or graphics deemed unacceptable for publication. The Ithaca Times is published weekly Wednesday mornings. Offices are located at 109 N. Cayuga Street, Ithaca, NY 607-277-7000, FAX 607277-1012, MAILING ADDRESS is PO Box 27, Ithaca, NY 14851. The Ithaca Times was preceded by the Ithaca New Times (1972-1978) and The Good Times Gazette (1973-1978), combined in 1978. F o u n d e r G o o d T i me s G a z e t t e : Tom Newton

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INQUIRING PHOTOGRAPHER By Tim G e ra

What Developments in Technology concern You?

N City of Ithaca

City Leases Out West End Lot

T “I don’t like what Monsanto is doing with crops, locking them down with copyrights and patents.” —Aaron Schwid

“As long as it’s accessible even to those who can’t afford to pay for it.” —Candice Murray

“Technology which can improve the environment… like dealing with air.” pollution” —Fang Fang

he parking lot at North Fulton and West Court streets will no longer be a public parking lot. The City of Ithaca Board of Public Works (BPW), during its Monday, Nov. 10 public meeting, elected to modify the parking lot at the West End location to both permit and public parking while selling twothirds of the spaces to Wink’s Auto Body Shop on a yearly lease basis. According to the unanimously approved resolution, the lot, which contains 30 parking spots plus two handicap spaces, Wink’s Auto Body Shop—located next to the parking lot—will buy 20 spaces each month on a permit basis and complete all general maintenance for the entire parking lot, including snow removal, salting, sweeping, sidewalk, striping, and landscaping, which will reduce expenses for the lot approximately $4,800 for the city per year. The BPW noted that it could reassess the lot’s use on a yearly basis. Before Monday night’s meeting, the BPW was considering two options for the parking lot: leasing spaces to Wink’s Auto Body shop or putting the lot up for auction and giving it back to New York State. At the board’s Monday, Oct. 27 public meeting City Transportation Engineer Tim Logue explained the lot is currently being under utilized. “Most recently,” Logue said, “we got to the point with the most recent owner where we asked does this parking lot have any public purpose anymore or just private purpose? We struggled with charging people to park there. It seemed like if it was free, people would park there, but if they had to pay, no one was really

OldLibrary

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“Cellphones. Some people can’t live without it.” —Mauroice Perry

“I grew up with robots and artificial intelligence. The priority is to make all things humanistic to improve peoples’ lives.” ­—Youngkey Chung

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importance.” The listed criteria include: energy efficiency and carbon footprint, the quality of the overall project, the compatibility of the project with the surrounding neighborhood, the likelihood of a positive economic/tax base impact, the capability of the developer to finance and manage the project, the market feasibility, and the price or lease payments offered. In looking at the selection criteria, Legislator Kathy Luz-Herrera (D-2nd) said, “I think it encompasses well the different things that were brought up.” The section on submission requirements requests a project narrative; a site plan; a building design with floor plans; details about parking and traffic

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enough that we don’t know what the state would do with it. They might not just offer to sell it to the adjacent owner, so there’s really no control for the city in terms of what the state would do with it. It seems like a big enough lot that isn’t required to be parking under city zoning, but it is a pretty developable lot. It’s one of the busier streets in the county, I would think it would be very attractive to the private sector.” BPW Superintendent Michael Thorne said that the city might still ultimately go that direction in the future, but staff met with City Attorney Ari Lavine, who said he would prefer pursuing modifying the lot to permit-only parking with a one-year lease and that “we still need to get more information from the DOT [New York State Department of Transportation]” and that its going to take “a little bit of time” to obtain the necessary information needed to decide whether or not the city should revert ownership back to the state. Until then, he said, the yearly lease was a good option for the time being. Though board members unanimously approved the resolution to lease the parking lot to Wink’s Auto Body Shop, City Director of Parking Frank Nagy (Photo: Michael Nocella) Building Links Inc. President Cynthia Yahn offered some opposition. Yahn said she was responsible for the creation of the parking lot in the mid 1990s, and that maintenance for us.” its purpose was to provide parking for The second option would have been residential users. Nagy noted that when to discontinue using the parking lot and the city has offered the parking lot on invoke the “reverter” clause in the city’s a permit basis to the local neighbors, it agreement with New York State, which has been largely unused. He added that sends the property back to the state via there’s still 10 parking spots for residential an auction process. However much the who do wish to use parking in the lot lot would be sold for, would go to the during the day, and can do so for just $20 city. This, Logue, explained, would be a a month. The lot is also free to the public more complicated option than selling between 6 p.m. to 9 a.m. during the week, the lot directly to Wink’s, but would give and all day long during the weekend. • the city more immediate funds from the transaction. – Michael Nocella “The scary thing [about the second option],” Logue said, “is the lot is big all that interested in it. In my estimation, this lot doesn’t have much public purpose anymore. It has a private benefit sure, but it doesn’t serve the public in any way anymore, or a least a significant one. Certainly not one that out weighs our responsibilities to maintain it.” Director of Parking Frank Nagy said selling the lot to Wink’s Auto Body Shop is a pretty straightforward arrangement that would net the city some extra funds on an annual basis. “If [the city sells the parking lot to Wink’s Auto Body Shop],” he said, “the city would bring in a revenue of about $5,000 a year, and they take care of all the

strategies during and post construction; detailed explanation of measures to reduce carbon footprint; a utility plan including a consultation with NYSEG; an explanation of how the project incorporates design feedback from the City of Ithaca Landmark Preservation Commission; evidence of meeting with City of Ithaca staff regarding zoning requirements; copies of any memoranda of understanding the may exist with Lifelong; copies of memoranda of understanding with any parties committed to leasing or owning residential space; notice of any anticipated requests for tax abatements; demonstration of ability to obtain financing for the project; certification of ability to close by January 2016; project milestones; cost information; and a purchase or lease price offer. Also, the submission requirements request that the

applicants answer questions regarding their intention to use local contractors and the existence or absence of a diversity and inclusion plan in their organization or organizations. Regarding the proposed timeline for the county’s action on the project, Marx said, “We’d need to be committed to making a decision by July.” The State Environmental Quality Review, coordinated with the City of Ithaca, would occur between July and October; the negotiation of the terms of agreement of lease or sale would occur in November; and in December the legislature would adopt a resolution authorizing the lease or sale of the property. The final step would be a closing on the property sale or lease sometime in January 2016. • – Keri Blakinger


N Tompkins County

Robison Moves to Sheriff’s Dept.

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uring the public comment portion of the Tuesday, Nov. 4 meeting of the Tompkins County Legislature, about a dozen people spoke out against NYSEG’s proposed seven-mile gas pipeline along West Dryden Road in Freeville. Some of the primary concerns were the nature of the easement agreement. Sue Stein, a resident of Dryden Road, said, “I would like to make you aware of how NYSEG has been acting in bad faith on this project.” Stein read portions of the easement agreement NYSEG has presented to property owners, which she said gives NYSEG the right to remove existing structures on the property. Hugh Edwards, a Freeville resident, spoke about the same problems in the easement he’d been presented. Edwards noted that although the NYSEG representatives who visited his house said that the pipeline would be installed along the road, the easement agreement would give the company the right to install pipeline anywhere on the property, even removing structures in the process. He said, “I feel like I’m in NYSEG’s crosshairs.” During the privilege of the floor for legislators, Legislator Brian Robison (R-9th) said, “I’m here to announce that I’m getting out of politics. I am resigning my CanopyHotel contin u ed from page 3

Hotels Director of Development Neil Patel and its General Manager Lisa Sparks Sheremeta confirmed the hotel is expecting to create 44 full-time jobs, with at least 16 of them being living wage, or $12.62. The remaining positions, per negotiations with IURA, will be no less than 120 percent of the state’s minimum wage, which right now would be $9.75 an hour. Although some neighboring business owners such as Homespun Boutique’s Julie Schroeder have lamented losing the 320 E. State St. parking lot, Mayor Svante Myrick said there are “hundreds” of available parking spaces within walking distance from the site during the day, whether its

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position on the legislature effective the end of the month. I have been asked and have accepted the position of undersheriff for the county.” Since 2010, Robison has been one of few Republican representatives on the legislature, representing a district that includes Groton along with parts of Lansing and Dryden. Robison is a retired police investigator who worked for the Ithaca Police Department for 21 years and now runs his own private investigative and security company. As a result of Robison’s resignation,

Ups&Downs

budget, the solid waste fee will be $52 per unit, which is $4 lower than in 2014. The decrease in cost is largely the result of decreasing debt payments. Legislators unanimously passed a resolution in support of a statewide campaign to recover more textiles from the waste stream. It is estimated that 85 percent of unwanted textiles are not recycled or reused. In New York State alone, 1.4 billion pounds of textiles are thrown away every year. Without dissent, the legislature approved a resolution authorizing

▶ Tattler settlement, The Ithaca High School newspaper The Tattler sued the Ithaca City School District in 2005 for violating their First and Fourteenth Amendment rights when the school adminstration prohibited the publication of sexually explicit cartoon. In 2009 the District Court (Northern District) the students were awarded compensatory damages, but the school guidelines were not ruled unconstitutional. The school district issued new guidelines in 2009 and has stuck to them. The court has decided the issue is now moot. “Thumbs up” because this is finally over. If you care to respond to something in this column, or publish your own grievances or plaudits, e-mail editor@ithacatimes.com, with a subject head “Ups & Downs.”

Heard&Seen County Legislator Brian Robison (left) is the new undersheriff of Tompkins County. Kendal at Ithaca (above) will receive $60 million in bonds from the county development corporation. (Photos provided)

the county must hold a special election for the seat. The election must be held within 75 days of when the seat becomes vacant. • • • Among its actions from the first November meeting, with no discussion or dissent, the legislature passed a resolution appropriating $65,000 in contingency funding for the acquisition and installation of automated external defibrillator (AED) devices in the county’s facilities and vehicles. Also, the legislature set the solid waste fee for 2015. As per the tentative in one of the city’s parking garages, or on the street. Whitham added that “our understanding is there’s sufficient parking [nearby].” The biggest motivation for the city to move forward with the hotel is the financial impact it would have on the city’s tax base. According to Ithaca/Tompkins County Convention & Visitors Bureau (CVB) Director Bruce Stoff, the 123-room Canopy would generate approximately $1 million per year in sales tax revenue. Stoff, who also spoke to Council Wednesday night, greatly endorsed the project, adding that it would be an “ATM [machine] for [city] funding.” Stoff spoke at last month’s Planning and Economic Development Committee (PEDC) to layout the city’s hospitality landscape. His overall takeaway is that since the current market is producing

Tompkins County Development Corporation to issue $60 million in tax-exempt revenue bonds to Kendal of Ithaca. Although the bond issue must be approved by the legislature, the county is not the issuer and thus it will not result in any debt being owed to the county. The tax-exempt bonds allow non-profits organizations to obtain tax-free financing. Kendal will use the funds for an 84,000 square foot addition along with other renovations. • – Keri Blakinger record demand, it is essentially fact that more hotels are coming, and it’s just a matter of where the city wants to put them. He added that Board of Public Works Superintendent Michael Thorne told him that the city’s roads, water and sewer system and other large scale infrastructures are either due for, or soon will be due for, renovations and that the city needs to start generating more money to help pay for such projects. Stoff said something like the Canopy hotel, and its financial impact, can be part of that solution. While the Canopy Hotel is in the early stages of its site-plan review with city planning, Wednesday night’s transfer of property was a big step in moving the project forward.

▶ Truman Awards, Tompkins Cortland Community College has been awarded a $15,000 grant from the Owego-based Mildred Faulkner Truman Foundation. The money will be used to provide financial assistance to Tioga County residents attending TC3 during the 2014-15 academic year. Since awarding its first grant to the College in 1986, the Mildred Faulkner Truman Foundation has provided more than $470,000 to TC3 students. ▶ Top Stories on the Ithaca Times website for the week of Nov. 5-11 include: 1) Death in West State Street Building 2) Maguire Family Proposes New Car Dealership off Route 13 3) Purity Ice Cream Owner to Ithaca Board: Expansion Plans Were Not Smoke Screen 4) Members of Cornell Student Activist Groups to Return 5) Exchange Student Wins Art Contest For these stories and more, visit our website at www.ithaca.com.

question OF THE WEEK

Do you object to the use of drones for civilian purposes? Please respond at ithaca.com. L ast Week ’s Q uestion: Have you participated in a political protest ?

37 percent of respondents answered “yes” and 63 percent answered “no”

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Editorial

IthacaNotes

Hope Springs Eternal F or the first time in a long time there was a teach-in held at Cornell. Government professor Isaac Kramnick hosted the event and in his prefatory remarks noted that the second teach-in ever held took place at Cornell in May 1966, a month after the first of its kind at the University of Michigan. The occasion of Monday night’s teach-in at Uris Hall was the return to campus of 21 1960s-era activists, including members of the Cornell chapter of the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS; it started at the University of Michigan in 1960) and members of the African-American Society (AAS), which occupied Willard Straight Hall in April 1969. (See our Nov. 5 cover story.) The structure of a teach-in consists of various people present giving a short lecture to the whole assembly. Kramnick said that teach-ins used go on for 10 hours in the 1960s, which provoked laughter in the hall: no one, old or young, could in this day and age picture listening to other people speak for 10 hours. Indeed, there is a whole vein of criticism within academia that insists the lecture as a pedagogic technique is passé. The topic of the evening was “Why some of us protested the status quo and some of us did not.” Everyone was ostensibly given five minutes on the floor and virtually no one abided by this stricture. Some people spoke extemporaneously, some

had notes, and some nearly read from prepared remarks. After a series of speakers got through their allotted time slots, the floor was opened up to the crowd. Several other people got up to say something: some to respond to previous speakers and some to add to the overall narrative. As an information-providing seminar on what it was like to be on an Ivy League campus during the anti-war and civil-rights protest era, the event was a success. As a forum for any sort of dialogue between 21st century students and the generation of the 1960s, it was a non-event. There were several studentage people in the audience, representing perhaps a quarter of the gathering. Except for a senior who is doing his thesis on activism and helped Kramnick to organize the event, none of the current students spoke. Several of the ‘60s activists acknowledged—implicitly or explicitly— the difference between present and past political engagement. For the antiwar and civil-rights protesters it was personal: the injustice was happening to them. Young people were being sent to what even one of the former soldiers who spoke admitted was a brutal, insane war. And young people of color were being treated rudely at best on campus, and their subcultures’ contributions to Western society were being entirely continued on page 7

Cleaning House By St e ph e n P. Bu r k e

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ccasionally, writing a column like this, you get an idea you find interesting enough to note, but won’t quite make a 700-word subject, or even close. But you hate to waste anything, at least I do, so here are a few items that maybe can handle a couple hundred words apiece. (I’m surprised to note, compiling them, that they seem to fall into distinct, not random, categories: language, technology, and housecleaning.) A few weeks ago in the Ithaca Times, the Inquiring Photographer asked people to name an overused word. I was shocked no one cited “awesome.” Its predecessor, in the ‘70s and ‘80s, was “excellent,” which finally got buried by Wayne’s World after a normal-enough lifespan for a lazy slang cliche. “Awesome” emerged a generation ago and still prevails. Before 1992, I never did anything awesome, or nobody told me I did, but now I do every day. The other morning, I was checking out at Wegman’s, and the cashier told me my total, and I said, “Okay, I’m going to give you cash,” and the cashier said, “Awesome.” Wonderful me, and I still had the whole day to go. A question you never heard even a decade ago, but now hear all the time, is “Have you seen my phone?” It used to be you never saw anyone else’s phone, unless you were in their house and asked to use it. Conversely, I realized recently that I never hear (nor use) the word “stroontz” anymore. I sure did as a youthful youngster in Brooklyn. It was a way to address someone doing something stupid or wrong but not serious enough to warrant anything stronger. (“Hey, stroontz,” the newsstand guy might say to you if you picked up a newspaper and looked at it for more than ten seconds without making a move to pay for it. “Oh, sorry,” was usually the proper response in such situations. You didn’t like being called “stroontz,” but if you had it coming, okay. Here today in Ithaca I can’t

imagine such a pointed but essentially restrained exchange.) A question I might suggest for the Times’s Inquiring Photographer feature is, “Do you have a big-ass TV?” Somehow I think big-ass TV ownership in Ithaca is a pretty divided situation, much more so than other places. I’m not sure it is a divisive situation (no judgments: I am not strictly anti-TV, because of sports), but I wonder. (Do you have a friend you’d be surprised to learn has a big-ass TV? Or doesn’t?) Like anyone who works under deadlines, my home is never as clean as when I have a deadline approaching. You know: I should be writing the column, and I would like to be writing the column, but what about those dishes, this dust, the inimmaculate bathroom? I was cleaning the bathroom one Sunday (column due that night), and thought, why do we clean the dirtiest thing in the house, the toilet, in toilet water? Would you use toilet water to clean anything else? So I heated some water to lukewarm, poured it in the toilet, added Bon Ami, and scrubbed. I mentioned this enterprising effort later to my friend J., and she said, “Now I know you are really crazy.” Considering plumbing fixtures, I also wondered why the bathroom sink has a drainage slit at the top to prevent overflows, but the kitchen sink doesn’t, and neither does the tub? (A sensible question, to be sure, but I have not mentioned it to my friend J., lest she be further concerned.) Recently, with my head full of shortterm and long-term things to do, I wrote a To-Do list and put it on the refrigerator door. And I realized that anyone who does this will immediately take the list back down and add to it, “Clean top of refrigerator.” Finally, it occurred to me lately, you know who the brokest guy this century must be? A guy who had a business selling address books and ashtrays. •

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For many years, Ithaca has had a reputation for fairness; we seek high moral standards and are quick to protest ethical malfeasance, especially corporate attempts to steamroll long-standing local businesses. Wegmans has plans to construct a 15,700 square-foot building on South Meadow Street in front of their current location. Their spokesperson has said that a wine and liquor superstore is one of three possibilities. Chances of that are good, given that the corporation has recently 6 T

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opened wine and liquor stores in front of their Buffalo and Johnson City locations, in addition to four other liquor superstores in New York State. For Wegmans, being the biggest and best supermarket is not enough. Being one of Ithaca’s tourist attractions is not enough. Massive annual profits for the Wegman family is not enough. Enjoying good community relations is not enough. No, Wegmans is willing to tarnish their continued on page 13


CommunityConnections

A Helping Hand A By L i n da B . G l a se r

ndrew Lem is a serious young man, insurance companies didn’t have to pay claims for hurricane damage. “Something the kind of person you’d want by as simple as the name of a storm can ruin your side in a disaster. Which is someone’s life,” said Lem. exactly where he’s been for much of the That’s why, even though the houses last year: helping disaster victims reclaim Lem has worked on remain in flood planes their lives. or tornado zones, he is committed to Lem’s first encounter with the rebuilding them. “These people have no tragedies left behind by Nature’s fury choice,” he said. “Society has pushed poor was during his senior year at Lehman people to live in these areas, and either we Alternative Community School (LACS), rebuild their homes or they will have no when he participated in a service trip to Staten Island with Love Knows No Bounds homes.” One experience on Staten Island (LKNB), two weeks after Superstorm stands out for Lem. He was rebuilding Sandy devastated the coast. the home that he’d “There’s gutted the year nothing pretty before on his LACS about a natural trip. “I got to be disaster,” said there when the Lem.. “It was like a owner picked out nightmare.” Mold the colors for his starts to grow in house,” said Lem. 48 hours, and by “I got to see him the time he arrived light up when he it was several feet realized how close high in places. And he was to moving the smell wasn’t back in. And I got pretty, with raw to put him back in sewage mixed in his home before I the flood water. left.” But growing After Staten up in Ithaca isn’t Island, Lem like growing up in returned to Ithaca other places, Lem to regroup, but said. “The sense soon he was in of community Mississippi with All I’ve gotten living Hands, after nine in Ithaca and at tornadoes hit the Ecovillage for Andrew Lem (Photo: Tim Gera) state. His first day almost 17 years there he walked makes me want to fifty acres of wheat help other people. fields, gathering It doesn’t matter if the belongings that had been scattered by you know them or not.” the tornados and clearing debris. So after his return from Staten Island, “It’s somewhat tedious, boring work, Lem worked with an LACS teacher but it’s completely necessary,” said Lem. to organize another group to help out “Unless the fields are cleared the farmers Superstorm Sandy victims. Then for the can’t run their tractors and they’d have LACS end-of-year trip, Lem went to New no livelihood.” The gratitude of that Orleans with LKNB to rebuild a Katrinacommunity was palpable: the volunteers damaged home. were provided with lunch every day, as Lem didn’t head straight for college well as housing for the months they were after graduating high school in 2013: there. instead, he worked at Collegetown Bagels Mississippi was Lem’s first time as to earn enough to travel to another relief a team leader. He supervised anywhere project. This time he chose to work with from three to 24 people walking fields, All Hands Volunteers, and in February clearing fallen trees and doing demolitions 2014 he was back in Staten Island. of trailers and homes. After Missisippi “I learned a lot about myself he went to Detroit for another All Hands and my leadership abilities, and how flood-related project. As team leader there, much good a small group can do,” he had another challenge: telling people said Lem. He gradually assumed more that their possessions were now hazardous and more responsibilities, and by the waste due to the sewage in the flood and end of two months he was supervising that most of it would have to be thrown groups of college volunteers. His away. philosophy in working with volunteers is “There were a lot of elderly people straightforward: “I want them to have a with things they’d collected their entire good time, be safe, and do good work.” lives, some from deceased relatives,” said Lem learned a harsh truth in Staten Lem. “It was absolutely wrenching.” Island: since Superstorm Sandy wasn’t In the midst of such tragedy, the a big enough storm to be a hurricane,

appreciation from the people he’s helped keeps Lem going. “I volunteer because it makes me feel good to help someone else,” he said. He expects to keep doing disaster relief for some time to come – at least until he figures out what he wants to study in college. Lem’s only been home from Detroit a week, and already he’s considering his next project. Maybe it will be going Colorado to rebuild homes after last year’s floods and mud slides. Or maybe it will be an international project, which Lem would love. But wherever it is, Lem is more than ready for that next challenge, and another opportunity to help rebuild someone’s devastated life. • editorial

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ignored in the curriculum. Present-day gay-rights activists perhaps come closest to the ‘60s in that their cause is personal, but they represent a smaller percentage of the population than draft-age men or African-Americans and Latinos. Climate-change activists, on the other hand, are protesting a phenomenon that is very unlikely to kill them outright in the prime of their lives or relegate them to second-class citizenship. One of the ‘60s-era activists called the new causes “knottier.” A member of Generation X must listen to the whole of the proceedings with … bemusement. The original definition of “Generation X” laid out by Douglas Coupland in his eponymous book, referred to people born in the 1960s who grew up with the Vietnam War but came of age with only global nuclear war to worry about. It was an era when activists like Cornell professor Carl Sagan and others were predicting a “nuclear winter” as a consequence of an intercontinental ballistic missile exchange. You wouldn’t be playing Russian roulette in the jungle; you’d just be wiped out by Russian ordnance along with everyone and everything. The Boomer activists were outraged that the United States was going to get them killed and murder millions of Southeast Asians in order to feed natural resources to a multinational corporate machine (which Cornell activists saw— correctly—that their university was a part of). The modern activists are outraged that the United States is going to make their lives unpredictable and dangerous and murder millions of people in the developing world in order to feed natural resources to a multinational corporate machine (which Cornell activists see— correctly—that their university is a part of). Generation X was pretty sure they were all going to die, perhaps by accident, and maybe next week. So the surge of activism—however small and focused on the more abstract, compared to the 1960s—in our contemporary Millennial student population represents a potential return to some modicum of idealism and hope for the future. It may not be a freak flag flying, but it’s a standard. • T

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ithaca com The comment section from last week’s editorial, Average Ithacans Have No Room to Complain About Construction; Commons Biz Owners Do You seriously don’t get it, do you. Hope your life offers you no more challenges than to run down your neighbors. - Sadie The tendency of Ithacans to treat criticism as “running down your neighbors” is dangerous. When we don’t call each other on self-absorbed complaining, then the community just drifts into a state where every public act or comment—no matter how ordinary—is praised and nothing is really evaluated using criteria that acknowledges the existence of the rest of the world. Ithaca is an interesting place to live, even when compared to other college towns. But if too many people start thinking it is just fine to complain about their own inconvenience when they don’t really know or care what is causing it, then we are accepting a suburban mindset that is the road to banality. -Managing_Editor This editorial reminds me of the comments section under any given article “the Onion” posts on facebook: one person doesn’t like it, and then fifty people mock them for being “butthurt.” But your bitter complaint about our bitter complaining is duly noted. - Heath Dragovich Commenting on last week’s letter from the TC3 Provost in regard to adjunct professors: Dr. Conners asserts that “Left out of the piece is the fact that a long-time adjunct is paid $3,405 for a three-credit course and that our mean compensation for such an assignment is $3,015.” Please do not pretend that this is anything like a living wage, and it adds zero credibility to your argument. The Modern Language Association’s Best Practices for Adjuncts suggests a minimum of $7,000/3 credit course while our colleagues in Canada are making an average of $8500 per 3 credit course. To pretend that $3,405 is a reasonable sum for the amount of work any course involve is ludicrous and insulting. At that rate, adjuncts must teach a minimum of 7 courses to make a measly $25,000/year. Is that any kind of compensation for people who are teaching the future leaders of our country? -LeeKottner Charley Githler commenting on the headline to his online Surrounded By Reality column, Actung Gluten! Yeah...it’s supposed to be “Achtung”. - Githaca

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The Future With Drones Engineering students and crop specialists are developing commercial applications By Bill Chaisson

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t the end of last year the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) announced six sites around the country where they would allow testing of unpiloted aerial or unmanned aerial systems (UASs)—better known as “drones”—in order to integrate their use into commercial air space. It is presently illegal to use a drone for any commercial purpose because the government has no rules to regulate the activity. The FAA has promised that those rules will be ready as soon as spring 2015. NUAIR (Northeast UAS Airspace Integration Alliance) is just one group that is working on “detect and avoid” strategies and technologies that will allow UASs to share airspace with piloted aircraft. Griffiss International Airport in Rome, formerly Griffiss Air Force Base, was one of the sites chosen. NUAIR not yet begun testing drones. A small team from two Cornell Cooperative Extension (CCE) offices in western New York has begun training flights with their UAS, but is waiting until spring to begin their research program, which is focused on developing agricultural applications for UASs. But they have been building drones in 8 The Ithaca Times /Novem

Duffield Hall at Cornell and flying them over Cornell property for several years now. CUAir, a project of the engineering department, is an interdisciplinary effort that has engineering, business, and computer science students working together to design, build, and fly a drone for “search and rescue” work. Their focus is the Student Unmanned Air Systems I’m quite worried that hype around domestic drones will normalize the use of drones in our skies the way ‘Atoms for Peace’ played a role in normalizing nuclear weapons. Benign applications pale in comparison to the harmful applications. Commercial and military development goes hand in hand. – Ed Kinane, Upstate Drone Action in Al Jazeera, Jan. 21

(SUAS) Competition organized by the Association of Unmanned Vehicle Systems International (AUVSI), which is held every June at Patuxent Naval Base in Maryland. Three years ago CUAir began building their aircraft from scratch. Before that they were buying model airplanes “off b e r

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Th e 2 0 1 3 C Ua i r Te a m p o s e s w i t h H e l i o s , t h e U n p i l o t e d A e r i a l S s y s t e m ( UA S) o r D r o n e t h e y b u i lt f o r i n t e r n at i o n a l c o m p e t i t i o n . ( P h o t o P r ov i d e d) the shelf ” and retrofitting them with electronic and imaging systems of their own design. Each year the team is judged on the basis of a journal paper (25 percent), a flight readiness review (25 percent) and the performance of the mission (50 percent). According to the The application of drones in the insurance industry is not nearly as flashy as their use in blockbuster movie productions or delivering beer to ice-fishermen, but industry experts believe that the idea of using drones to inspect damage is as feasible as it is practical. – Andrew Amato at dronelife.com, Mar. 20

CUAir team leader, senior engineering student Derek Faust, the Cornell team has placed first in the mission performance contest for the past three years. “You fly around and find a target,” Faust said. “A ‘target’ can mean anything.

Most of the uses are some form of search and rescue.” The targets in the competition are three-by-three-foot pieces of plywood painted with alphanumerics. Although the competition is taking place at a military base, the students were aware of many civilian uses, including fighting forest fires. “You can accomplish the same thing as you can with a manned aircraft,” said Faust of the advantage of a drone, “but with fewer resources. If you lose it [the drone], it’s no big thing. At least it’s not as expensive as a plane, and there’s no pilot.” The technology, he said, is similar for both military and civilian uses. The general rule, said the team leader, is that you look for technologies that suit your purposes, and if they don’t exist, you design and manufacture them yourself. CUAir has modified an existing autopilot system, but has built other hardware from scratch and written all of their own software. The main “payload” of the CUAir unpiloted aerial system is a camera. The gimbaled system that allows the camera to remain focused on its target in spite of the movement of the plane was designed


by the Cornell students. The plastic parts were created using a three-dimension printer. The criteria for the competition demand that the UAS accomplish its goals autonomously, that is, by following a prescribed program. CUAir is divided into five subteams. While “Airframe” subteam (led by Nicholas Kok) works on the craft itself, the gimbal and propulsion systems, the “Autopilot” subteam (led by Samuel Rosenstein) is designing and building the hardware that controls the plane in flight. The “Electrical” subteam (led by Kevin Wang) is concerned with systems that communicate between the craft and the ground. The “Software” subteam (led by John Steidley) writes the code that animates all of this hardware. This year, for the first time, CUAir will be building two complete aircraft, one in the fall and one in the spring. The fall project will fly a trial run to enable all the subteams to see what does and does not work. They have two principal challenges in front of them: to get the UAV to take off and land autonomously and to develop a “sense and avoid” procedure. The latter is a new part of the AUVSI competition and is clearly serving to the purpose of meeting the FAA requirement that UAVs be able to share airspace with piloted aircraft. Last year’s aircraft, Helios, is sitting on a workbench in the middle of a shop that is filled with other benches, tools, and bits of hardware. Entire model planes hang from the ceiling, sit on the floor, and are shoved onto shelves under workbenches. The Airframe team is in the process of building the pieces of the new craft. Stryofoam pieces are carved into molds, coated, and then molten fiberglass is poured, cooled, and peeled off. After that there is a lot of sanding, getting down to an ultra-fine grit. Helios has an approximately nine-foot wingspan, its wings are long, straight, and narrow, like those of an albatross. The propeller is at the rear of the short fuselage and pushes the UAV. Faust said it was put there for safety reasons; a team member would sustain serious injury if any part of their body intersected the spinning blades. The engine is only a few horsepower, but he said that the students have difficulty holding the craft in place on the ground when the propeller is spinning. In the air Helios can reach 30 knots and stay aloft for 25 minutes, powered by lithium polymer batteries. The UAS weighs 30 pounds, but Faust said his team hopes to get this year’s craft down to 15 pounds. Cornell itself pays for half of CUAir’s expenses, but the other half is paid for through grants from corporations. These include some of the ones you would expect: Lockheed-Martin and Boeing, for example. But Faust was quick to point out that they get equipment and help from companies outside the military-industrial complex, like the one that supplies the cases they use to transport their UAV into the field.

a single-engine plane—and has begun training flights with the Canadian-built Precision Hawk UAV. The future of drone use will include pilot training. “Right now people who are just using a hobby license are on shaky ground,” Verbeten said. “It’s like driving a semi [truck] or having a [crop duster] applicator license.” Verbeten is from Wisconsin and grew up on the family dairy farm; he knows about trucks and aerial application of chemicals. He has been with CCE since 2012. “We are working in collaboration with the NUAIR Alliance, but we aren’t part of it,” Verbeten said of the CCE project. “We don’t operate out of Griffiss.” CCE has gotten authorization from the FAA to carry out flights in three locations in western New York, and they have seven applications pending for other sites that Verbeten and the other member of the team, Mike Stanyard of the Wayne County CCE office, will begin scouting in March 2015. Their project, like that of CUAir, is about image gathering, but rather than search and rescue, CCE is interested in evaluating the growth and health of field crops. Verbeten said that the camera on his UAV collects visual information, but also thermal and multi-spectral data. The last divides up the electromagnetic spectrum into discrete packages, including C UA i r Te a m m e m b e r s Te s t H e l i o s L a s t Wi n t e r the infrared frequencies. ( P h o t o P r ov i d e d) “At the early stage of insect infestation for a test flight at the Cornell golf course It is the job of the Business subteam or disease,” said Verbeten, “the crops in December, wondering—among other (led by Wesley Chow) to write the grant literally heat up in response, and we can questions—whether they should add skis proposals that bring in this money from detect that heat with the UAS.” to the landing gear, although a catapult the rest of the world. “It’s our job to get By combining what is gathered take-off strategy is also in the running. sponsorships,” said Chow, “and we have on multiple flyovers of the same area, also developed a visual data can be relationship with used to create threethe Boeing Mentor dimensional images. Group. They have These provide a been a lot of help.” measurement of the The latter has helped height and size of the the students with plants in the field. A marketing. Chow series of measurements and his subteam have over time can yield a made promotional record of plant growth, videos, designed which varies spatially graphics for posters, in a single field and put out a newsletter, over a wider area. The and worked with visual data can also computer sciences be analyzed simply to students to develop count the number of and maintain the plants per given area. CUAir website (cuair. Verbeten’s engineering.cornell. experimental approach edu). is to gather this It is also the electronic data with the Business subteam UAV and then collect that sets up the the same information relationships that in the conventional become community B i l l Ve r b e t e n ( L e f t) a n d M i k e S ta n ya r d w i t h t h e i r manner on the ground outreach. “We work P r e c i s i o n H aw k ( P h o t o : P r ov i d e d) in order to evaluate the as college mentors accuracy and precision for kids,” said Chow, of the UAV-gathered • • • “and we’ve made presentations at the data. Similar data sets have been gathered Bill Verbeten is a field-crop specialist Sciencenter and for the Boy Scouts and the by piloted aircraft and even by satellites, in Lockport at the Cooperative Extension Girl Scouts.” (Chow’s team includes three but the UAVs are capable of obtaining office for Niagara County. He has of the five women on the CUAir team.) completed pilot training—the same Right now the students of CUAir are continued on page 10 focused on getting their newest UAV ready training that anyone would get to fly The I thaca Times / November 1 2 - 1 8 , 2 0 1 4 9


Drones

contin u ed from page 9

much high-resolution images. “We can fly lower,” the researcher said, “and we’re using miniaturized sensors.” When people ask “Why are we seeing the advent of drone use now?” part of the answer is the new availability of small, lightweight electronics with which to outfit the UAVs and make them both useful and affordable. “Right now,” he said, “we’re lining up the legal pieces to do this right.” None of Verbeten’s data gathering has taken place yet. “Our authorization [from the FAA] begins next spring,” he said, “but I have to do three flights every 90 days in order to maintain my license.” The aviation

world, he said, is helping researchers to learn the protocols of flight so this new group of fliers can be part of the traditional aviation community. The fieldcrop specialist predicted that the advent of UAV use would be greatly enlarging the pilot license-holding population. (Faust, the CUAir team leader, also said that drone design and building was a growth area within the engineering community.) Like the CUAir UAS, Verbeten’s Precision Hawk makes autonomous flights. He programs the flight path before take off and then follows the progress from his laptop, which is attached to a ground station that monitors the position of the craft. “I pre-plan the missions,” he said, “ but I can change it on the fly, or I can take

over in an emergency.” He said he doesn’t watch an actual first-person view from the craft on his screen, but rather a computergenerated image rendered by software. His flight training included learning how to troubleshoot in the event of various emergency situations. Verbeten said that he has generally had a very positive response from the farming community. “New York has the reputation of being behind places like Illinois and Indiana in terms of innovation,” he said. “So the local farmers are happy to be out in front like this.” The farmers whose crops he plans to look at are members of the advisory panel of his extension office. “It is working well because we were working

together already,” Verbeten said. “They were selected to include a wide range of different crops over a wide geographical area.” Like the CUAir craft, Verbeten’s UAV is powered by lithium polymer batteries, but his Precision Hawk can stay aloft for nearly an hour. “Eventually we will be adding a transponder so that air traffic controllers can detect it,” he said. “But the biggest problem is what are called ‘uncooperative air men,’ which are people in small planes that are flying without

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instruments.” These are the planes that Verbeten anticipates he will be most likely have to detect and avoid. • • • Both CUAir and Verbeten’s crop research are out in front of the curve that is populated in the Northeast by the alliance of 40 public, private and academic organizations in New York and Massachusetts that are part of NUAIR. Flights have begun at some of the other five FAA-designated sites—University of Alaska working with Hawaii; Nevada; North Dakota; Texas A&M University; and Virginia Tech operating in Virginia and New Jersey—but the NUAIR is still looking for money. The FAA designation did not come with any federal funds. There have been plenty of predictions in the media about how many jobs will be created by UAS-based commercial uses, but for hyperbole not much can match Sen. Charles Schumer’s prediction: “Central and northern New York will become the Silicon Valley of unmanned systems advancements.” •


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being unloaded and assembled, I joked that he just might be living there. He laughed and said, “Yeah, maybe.” The Black Irish Athletic Club is on Cherry Street, and it clearly Patrick O’Connor updates Black Irish Gym conveys the vision of a man who has arrived By Ste ve L aw re nc e at a place in his life where local guy recently made a comment Four years ago, I met up doing anything that really made me think. He said, with Patrick at his quaint and half-assed is “Why don’t you write about my funky old gym on Taughannock not an option. kids? You write about the same people all Boulevard to interview an upA proud “Black the time.” and-coming MMA (mixed Irish” himself, My first response was, “Thanks for martial arts) fighter named O’Connor says, reading,” and then I decided to write about Bones Jones, and last year I “My father was Patrick O’Connor. For about the 10th time wrote about O’Connor’s many a dark-haired, over a 22-year span. weeks away from home, on the dark-eyed O’Connor’s road has been a long road as a part of Team Bones. Irishman, and and winding one indeed. I did not know With O’Connor as his boxing our family was him well 30 years ago, but I knew he was trainer, Jones kept winning and chased out of an intense, hard-livin’ sort of guy. He retaining his light-heavyweight Ireland by the liked to party, to be sure, but he was also title, and O’Connor got a taste Patrick O’Connor and Tim Wood IRA.” a disciplined athlete and took the art of of the packed venues, bright Patrick (Photo provided) boxing very seriously. lights, pay-per-view glitz and has trained O’Connor started taking much intense scrutiny of the MMA hundreds of better care of himself as he approached world. It is a different world to be sure, what we might call “regular folks” as well middle age, and his evolving skills as a and an exciting one, but a married man as world-class athletes, and he knows that trainer put him in the corner for some uses up a lot of spousal favors in such an there are many options for those seeking very good fighters, like Willie Monroe undertaking. Ten weeks away from home a pathway to better health, and he said, and Willie Monroe Junior. He also can seem like ten months. “Boxing is a great way to attain a high became an accomplished oil painter, and These days, Patrick is home every level of fitness, and since that is my area I recall running a goofy photo of him night, and as we stood in his new athletic of expertise, we have developed BoxFit, with a boxing glove onAdone and a T: 10 x club several 76749 Kendal Dancing for hand Ithaca Times 5.5 and watched Bleed: 1/8” all sideshundred 4C which combines boxing with fundamental paintbrush in the other. thousand dollars worth of equipment training.” sports

A Long and Winding Road A

The gym features all manner of new equipment, some of which I have never seen before, and I have been around gyms for four decades. There will be small group classes, team training, personal training, and what O’Connor calls “fundamental training,” such as heavy bags, barbells, dumbbells and the like. There is plenty of cardio equipment as well, and Patrick said, “We are not just a boxing facility, we are a training facility that will attract athletes and people looking for a way to take their fitness up a few levels.” Black Irish Boxing is located on Cherry Street (behind Wegmans). For more info, visit www.blackirishboxing. com. • • • Congratulations to Mike Welch and the Bombers of Ithaca College on another Empire 8 football title. The Bombers went on the road to play St. John Fisher, and by forcing five turnovers and dominating Fisher’s impressive offense, Ithaca won the conference’s automatic bid. Fisher was averaging 41 points. Ithaca held them to 8, and even if both teams finish at 7-2, Ithaca holds the tiebreaker and will move on. Winning a national title is always on the radar for Welch (who has done so as a Bomber player and assistant coach) and he knows that getting into the NCAA playoffs is the first step on that journey. The Bombers finish up the regular season on Saturday, and the Cortaca Jug game will be an intense one for sure, as the Red Dragons of Cortland have had a down year, and will perceive this game as their big game. •

A sunset dance in the gazebo is so much more than a perfect ending to the day. It’s also the perfect place for Bayonne, a competitive dancer, to practice the smooth steps of her newest routine. The 105-acre campus of Kendal at Ithaca provides the perfect backdrop for waltzing through retirement and staying connected to the care one may need someday. Until then, Bayonne takes it one graceful step at a time. And, from here, the story just keeps getting better. Come for a visit and tell us your story. Call

877-891-7709 or go to kai.kendal.org/IT4 to learn more.

2230 N. Triphammer Rd., Ithaca, NY 14850 A not-for-profit continuing care retirement community serving older adults in the Quaker tradition. ©2014 KENDAL

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reputation for corporate benevolence by crushing competition from local businesses such as Northside, Red Feet, Sparrow’s, and Pete’s, all of whom who have served our community well and all of whom will be steamrolled by the unlimited resources of Wegmans. What good is the exhortation to “buy local” if there is no local? According to Ithaca’s Director of Planning Joann Cornish and the city’s attorney, the granting of off-premise liquor licenses is entirely up to the State Liquor Authority (SLA). Mayor Svante Myrick and Common Council can send letters to the SLA to express their opinions on the matter, which the SLA takes into account when making their decision. Let the Mayor and Common Council representatives know that our community is already adequately supplied with wine and liquor stores and doesn’t need a massive Wegmans Liquor Superstore.

these employers are not subject to any government oversight or responsibility to provide a workplace that is safe. This is analogous to asking drivers to abide by the speed limit on certain roads by their own free will, freeing drivers from any form of enforcement with a law that applies elsewhere. Agriculture is one of the most dangerous industries in the United States with fatality rates higher than either mining or construction, and small farms should not be freed of this oversight and accountability. The New York State May 1Farmworkers Organizing Committee, along with advocates from the Worker Justice Center of New York, the Workers Center of Central New York and the Midstate Council for Occupational

Safety and Health, are working to reduce the dangers to dairy farmworkers. We urge OSHA to continue its LEP into a second or even third year as it did in New York’s sister dairy-production state of Wisconsin. We also ask our Congressional representatives to take into consideration the human right to work free of the fear of serious injury and death and eliminate the appropriations rider that exempts small farms from health and safety standards. The dangers on small farms are no different than large farms and they should not be exempt from safety and health enforcement. – Tom Joyce, Midstate Council for Occupational Safety and Health

Brooklyn Folks Sticking Together I love reading Steve Burke’s “Ithaca Notes”. Brooklyn is well represented in our town. Steve brings us back to Brooklyn in many ways and his writing is ”down to earth” and fun to read. Thanks! – Joel Abrams, Trumansburg Letters to the editor should be sent by email to editor@ithacatimes.com. In order to insure that they are printed in the next issue, please get them in by Friday the week before our Wednesday publishing date. Hard copies can be delivered by mail or by and to 109 N. Cayuga Street, Ithaca, New York 14850

– Ashley Miller, City of Ithaca

Is Where Your Food Comes From Safe?

On Monday, Sept. 29 Craig Schenk was killed on a small, organic dairy farm in Lansing. This is the most recent fatality in a surge of dairy deaths in central New York State in the last 21 months (Francisco Ortiz, Nathan Hoover). Dairy farmworkers and their advocates believe that these deaths could have been prevented by attainable changes in farm machine technology, training and personal protective equipment. Health and safety conditions on dairy farms have been deteriorating for years as the workforce becomes larger and as the diary farmers race to ramp up dairy production to meet the needs of a booming industry. In 2013 to address this situation dairy farmworkers and safety activists advocated that OSHA initiate a Local Emphasis Program (LEP) to increase its oversight over New York dairy farms. LEPs combine comprehensive education outreach to farm owners with enforcement of current OSHA regulations. LEP’s are used by OSHA to carry out random, surprise inspections in a high-risk industry where disproportionate numbers of accidents and fatalities are occurring. Over the last year OSHA carried out this program successfully. As a result dairy farmers increased their attentiveness to training, personal protective equipment, and hazard communication. And farmworkers are learning that they have a right to a safe and healthy workplace free from hazards. More must be done, however, to prevent the deaths of dairy farmworkers. Small farms in the United States (those with less than ten employees) are excluded from OSHA rules and regulations. Thus the LEP is only utilized on dairy farms with ten or more employees. This means that

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medicine is based on symptoms, and it’s very good for acute care, but it’s as if you have tree with rotted or diseased branches. In Western medicine, you cut off the branches. In Chinese medicine, you’re going to feed the roots of that tree to strengthen its immune system- that’s kind of the logic.” “Most often, I treat what are called deficiency conditions,” said Gellman. “Such as arthritis, kidney failure; a lot of the things I can do stimulate the immune system.” Older animals are affected more often by low energy and insufficiency: “Old cats, for instance, get very skinny and often will have renal failure. If you can combine

herbs and acupuncture, in old animals it can be very effective.” However, it would be a mistake to approach acupuncture for pets as if it’s going to bring about instant changes: “A lot of people are of the mentality that they want a pill that’s going to fix this, now,” said Kayser. For many acute diseases, a pill is the way to go, but for chronic conditions, or diseases caused by a lifetime of poor diet, excessive stress or toxins, the road to health can seem slow and arduous. Chinese medicine, however, since it aims to strengthen the immune system, offers the hope of preventing acute illness. Gellman gave the example of a patient that had a seizure. “Everything looking at this dog said something was not quite right; many things about the dog’s history

pointed to a particular diagnosis in TCM, but from a Western point of view, you can’t do anything, because the bloodwork didn’t show anything.” Acting on what she saw in TCM diagnosis, she used herbs and acupuncture to enhance the function of the liver, which is related to seizures in TCM. The dog, to date, has not had another one. To date, vets who practice acupuncture are still few and far between, but that is changing. Gellman and Kayser have more than enough work, and have been recently joined in this area by Sara Robinson, who has just opened a practice on Tioga Street in Ithaca. The NYS Holistic Medical Association maintains a database of practitioners, and the Chi Institute also has a searchable listing of its graduates on its website. •

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WRFI Community Radio Hires Manager

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Join us to ask, learn and understand at a free informational meeting: Date Place Time 11/17 Country Inn & Suites–Ithaca 10:00 am 12/03 Country Inn & Suites–Ithaca 10:00 am A sales person will be present with information and applications. For accommodation of persons with special needs at sales meetings call 1-888-280-6205.

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TCCOG to Host Frack Forum he Tompkins County Council of Governments is cosponsoring an upcoming day-long conference examining the issue of collateral damage from hydrofracking, and how communities can protect themselves. The conference, entitled Collateral Damage from Fracking: Coming together to protect communities, will take place from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 15 at Textor Hall on the Ithaca College campus. Conference registration is open through November 9. The conference will examine successful attempts to protect local communities, through presentations by local officials, activists, and lawyers who have been involved in successful efforts to protect their communities. Presentations will focus on practical protection strategies that can be employed if fracking is legalized in New York State, and also to minimize dangers related to gas storage and transport. Citing factors such as air pollution and radioactive waste, Ellen Harrison, of the Coalition to Protect Communities from Fracking (another conference sponsor) notes, “You don’t have to live next to a fracking project in order to be jeopardized by the dangers of fossil fuel extraction.” To register for the conference, visit www.stopfrackgasdamageny.org or call 607-539-7133.

Shopping

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RFI Community Radio’s (88.1 in Ithaca; wrfi.org) has nearly completed its second full year of local broadcasting, offering local, regional, national and international programming and news to the Schuyler and Tompkins County areas. Until September, the station operated with volunteer labor only. Given the strides the organization has made in a short time and the overwhelming support it has enjoyed from its listeners, the board of directors recently made a decision and hired one of WRFI’s most enthusiastic volunteers, Felix Teitelbaum, as the station’s first General Manager. In the past year, the station has successfully renewed its broadcasting license, secured grant funding, and made major improvements to its facilities to increase the quality, reliability and reach of its signal. Some of the station’s goals for the upcoming year include: improved outreach and recruitment, increased signal reliability, and even better local programming.


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A worker checks in on residents of Ithaca’s Old Hundred, which provides homes and assistance to local seniors.

How one local home health agency provides homes and assistance to our region’s aging population By Michael Nocella

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ccording to the Heritage Foundation, there are already 36 million Americans over the age of 65, the traditional age of retirement. Classen Home Health Associates has been easing that transition for Ithacans since 1987. Owner Pat Classen said throughout her 28 years in Ithaca and the homecare and senior services industry, the ongoing increase in senior population has been the biggest change. “We’re in a huge aging population,” Classen said. “So what are we going to do with all of our elderly people? The next ten years we have Baby Boomers on the way, so this country is going to be in a real

pickle. So what we want to do is, we want alternatives]. Also, people want to be to provide the option to stay home. home as long as possible.” “The cost of nursing homes and Classen Home Health Associates, assisted living is located at 222 Elmira “Let’s say the average Road in the Ithaca skyrocketing,” she said. “Let’s say the average Plaza, provides care nursing home is nursing home is eight to for people who want $8,000 to $9,000 nine thousand dollars to remain in their own a month. Could you a month. Could you home as opposed to imagine shelling out moving to a traditional imagine shelling out that much money for nursing home. They that much money for rent every month? also own facilities like rent every month?” For [less money than Evergreen House and —Pat Classen that] you can get a Old Hundred, which caregiver to come to provide homes and your own home, so we’re seeing a pattern supportive services to senior residents. . in Ithaca where people are staying home “We have several different options,” longer because of the high costs [of the Classen said. “We have the stay-home T

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option. We have the option of small retirement homes. The cookie-cutter approach to caring for seniors is something that isn’t going to work for everybody, so what we like to do is have different options. That way we can tailor our services to each client’s needs.” Classen’s staff provided at-home service from three to 24 hours per day. The caregivers teach clients skills that help them to overcome difficulties that they are having at home, from loneliness to getting domestic tasks done. At-home care also includes visits from nurses on a regular basis.

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Classen is a licensed Home Care Agency, and as such carries liability insurance that unlicensed agencies would likely not have. Since more senior residents in the area are needing care, Classen Home Health Associates is on the lookout for new faces to train in its Ithaca Caregivers Academy. Although the company currently has more than 100 employees, Classen said there’s room for more. Whether you are a younger person looking at being a caregiver as a lifelong profession, or a recent retiree who would still like to work in some capacity, Classen

said all are welcomed. She stressed, however, that she would love to see more retirees become caregivers. “We definitely want more retirees as caregivers in this field,” she said. “People who have retired who still want to do something and stay active in the community—we love those employees. “We focus on training,” she continued, “more than any agency [in the area] does. We go above and beyond the typical healthcare training.” November is National Home Care & Hospice Month, and is an important reminder of just how important this line of work is, Human Resources Director Mary Thompson said. She said that both the industry itself and the caregivers deserve more

recognition.“Because it’s not a line of work that everyone fits into—it’s hard,” Thompson said. “Those who do it are improving the lives of others. It’s a noble thing.” “I think [Tompkins County] is about on par [compared to the rest of the country],” Director of Nursing Tim Reynolds said. “We are in a unique demographic because there might be a little more affluence here because of the universities. I think there’s a trend: all the changes in healthcare [are to care for] the aging demographic. People are getting older, and remaining older longer. People are living longer. And so you don’t typically gain function as you age, you lose a little bit of function. So that’s where our services can come in and play the

supportive role, and augment individuals’ independence and keep them thriving longer.” Reynolds added that home healthcare is a vast industry, in terms of both employees and the potential clientele. “There’s versatility and flexibility

Pat Classen (Photo: Mike Nocella)

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for both [the client and the caregiver],” Reynolds said. “There’s a wide range of people who can provide the homecare service, but there’s also a wide range [available] from the clients’ perspective as well, because we have everything from basic domestic support to all the way through to ‘end-of-life’ care. When people are looking at their last days—we can provide that support as well. So there might not be a lot of awareness from the clients’ perspective. You don’t need to be in rough shape or terminal position. You might just need a little of support during the day to connect the dots and avert risk.” §

Community Foundation Funds Amenities

The City of Ithaca and Downtown Ithaca Alliance worked together to raise $161,500 to pay for amenities when the Commons project went over budget. The Community Foundation, a local non-profit dedicated to improving the quality of life in Tompkins County through enduring philanthropy, has enabled the funding of three major public amenities for the redesigned Ithaca Commons pedestrian mall. The Ridenour Family Fund of the Community Foundation in memory of Layel and Nan Ridenour provided funding for a planter and bench area. The Hartnett Fund of the Community Foundation provided funding for an outdoor reading room on the new Commons. The Community Foundation’s Myrtle Dee Nash Fund provided funding for animal tracks as well as an additional planter and bench area.§


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changes in the zoning eliminated parking n Sept. 23 Jagat Sharma presented to the City of Ithaca planning board requirements for the CS-4 zones. “They would like to see the parking elevations he had done for Nick in the back. It’s what they prefer from a Lambrou’s property on Catherine Street in planning point of view,” said Sharma. “You Collegetown. The members of the board want to see a row of buildings along the offered unanimous praise. The three-story apartment building will have a hipped roof, street.” Lambrou said he was impressed when broken up by two large dormers and having he first saw Sharma’s design. “I love the deep eaves. The windows are square and large and set into brick cladding on the first large corner windows,” he said. “Those students are going to have some amazing two floors and wood siding on the third. The details of the roof recall the Prairie views and a nice sunny living room.” The Lambrou family began Style made famous by Frank Lloyd Wright collaborating with Sharma 30 a century ago, which Sharma years ago when the architect said was quite intentional, designed a building for Gus but its overall shape makes Lambrou, Nick’s father. After it resemble a very large all these years the process is Foursquare house, which was hard for him to analyze. popular around the same time, “I chose to build three but is much more common stories because I felt it fit better in larger cities like Rochester. into the neighborhood,” said Sharma was also partly Lambrou. “You don’t have to inspired by a farmhouse near do it all because they say you Skaneateles owned by a friend can, and Jagat understands of his. Jagat Sharma that.” The architect said that Lambrou also values the combination of brick and Sharma’s thoroughness. “He wood siding was used to echo provides complete plans for the builders,” the combination used in nearby buildings, said the developer, “and the builders don’t including the one directly in back of the find mistakes. They love to find mistakes.” new one. All the members of the planning Lambrou talks with students to find board, Sharma, and even Lambrou agreed out what kind of a living space they want that the back building was not attractive and that the new building will hide it nicely. and he has found that up to their junior year many undergraduates like to live “That is what the site needed,” he said. with many other students. As seniors and “That is the context: the other houses on graduate students, they want more privacy. the street have porches and dormers.” The property owner said you need At present the site of the building is vision, money, and guts to be in his a parking lot fronting the street. Several business. Especially the last one, he of the planning board members praised laughed, because things don’t always work Lambrou and Sharma for eliminating as planned. § the lot and replacing it with a building, especially an attractive building. Recent

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Northeast Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine

On the Waterfront The post-zoning-reform era begins on Inlet Island By Bi l l Ch a i s s o n

Northeast Pediatrics has been caring for children since 1964, providing families with quality service and care for children from birth to twelve years of age, and adolescent care from twelve to twenty-one years of age. The women providers of Northeast Pediatrics are all board certified qithin their licensure and are experienced in pediatric and adolescent medicine. They understand your child’s wellness is about more than physical health, offering complete care, including emotional, developmental, and physical health. When your child does become sick, we will be there to offer care quickly; always offering same day sick visits. In fact, our Pediatrician’s are available 24 hours/day, 7 days/week, 365 days a year, including weekends and holidays. We are accepting new patients, and would happy to serve your family at one of our two convenient Ithaca locations. The hard working staff and pediatricians of Northeast Pediatrics looks forward caring for your family. Our passion for and commitment to our communities and your family’s wellness begins here.

Main Office: 10 Graham Rd. West 607-257-2188 Trumansburg Road Office: 1290 Trumansburg Rd - 607-319-5211 www.northeastpeds.com

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This 17-unit building at 323 Taughannock Blvd. will include 15 one-bedroom and two two-bedroom apartments. (Illustration courtesy of Noah Demarest)

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ccording to architect Noah Demarest of STREAM Collaborative, Steve Flash was working with another architect when he started planning to develop the parcel on the water where Old Taughannock Blvd. branches off Route 89. He was looking at a taller building, but a combination of bad soil conditions and the cost of foundation systems defeated that approach. “I was doing the site design, the rendering and producing the marketing material for Belle Sherman Cottages on Mitchell Street,” said Demarest. “Steve knows the builder.” Demarest went at the waterfront project with a different approach. He decided to build something with fewer stories, but with more parking underneath, and with a more historically evocative appearance. “I have a reverence for what came before us,” he said, “but I incorporate modern elements like energy efficiency and make sure it’s a project that fits a site. I also select the best [historical designs] of what’s here.” He made sure to incorporate components of the nearby Lehigh Valley House (an Italianate commercial building) and the old train station (an Arts & Crafts era building that is now Chemung Canal Trust) into his design. But the overall appearance of his building is meant to recall the warehouses that stood along the inlet in the 19th century. These building now exist only in photographs. “I think of it as ‘industrial grunge,’” said Demarest. “It is very simple.” As an example of quoting the past but using modern materials, Demarest will cover some the exterior walls in clapboard, but they will be made of a wood-based composite rather than wood.

The waterfront’s industrial past will also be remembered in the towers that emerge from the building and produce a “lantern-like” effect. In a nod to the future, Demarest is leaving room to mount photovoltaic panels on the roof. Although the axis of the building is oriented north to south, he has twisted the roof lines so that they face south. The residents of the new building will also be able to enjoy living on the water by looking down on it from a roof deck. The building will have 21 units, but only 17 parking spaces. There are three four stories and then a penthouse that forms a partial fourth story. “If we added another story that would be another 10 units, but there isn’t room for more parking,” said Demarest, “How do you market that?” The new zoning regulations do not require parking spaces for all tenants, but Demarest is convinced that such requirement are unnecessary because developers will chose whether or not they want to build parking based on the demographic they want to attract. Demarest is looking into an arrangement with Ithaca Carshare or perhaps having a shared car that comes with the building and is available to the tenants. It is his understanding that the city is encouraging the development of the neighborhood as a “destination” but also for mixed-used development, including restaurants, small shops, and residences. He hopes to break ground in January or February. Building will be rapid, he said, because they are using new methods. “The success of the rest of the island,” he said, “is hinging on this project.” §


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Beverage Palace All the beer that’s fit to drink By Mi k e No c e l l a

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eer lovers in Ithaca should have no trouble finding what they’re looking for in Finger Lakes Beverage Center. With a stock that includes over 1,000 types of different beers, the options are vast. However, in recent years, that inventory became almost too overwhelming, said Finger Lakes Beverage Center owner Pat Moe. Moe opened his business in 2003, but bought the 605 W. State St. building in 2007. Expanding the building, Moe said, has been on his mind since he bought it. Over the last year his idea came to fruition, and the store’s expansion is nearly complete. The additions include a new room for product and shopping behind the original store, a loading dock, and a can and bottle redemption room. The new look will be entirely complete by the end of November, but the majority of expansion is done—and usable—to both workers and customers alike. Though Finger Lakes Beverage Center is double its old size, its inventory will stay about the same, but it is now easier to

navigate. “Really, the whole reason for [the expansion],” Moe said, “was to basically work smarter instead of harder. We had to take a look at [the store’s layout]. Everything was getting tight. The store was getting congested, which made bringing stock in hard for us. All of the product had to come through one door, and we had all the deliveries back-to-back, so we have to bust everything down, get everything on the floor. The next truck would come, and we’d have to do the same thing over again. The expansion allows us to have the loading docks and gives us the space we need to better present the product to our customers. It also makes it easier for us because everything flows now. “It’s really about the same amount of beer,” he continued, “It wasn’t really about trying to bring in more product, it was more about the product that we have and displaying it better. Making it a better shoppable store for us.” One aspect of the store that will also flow better is its popular growler system,

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The warehouse of the former Snow Lion publishing house is now a large retail space for the Finger Lakes Beverage Center with a mural by Danny Burgevin. (Illustration provided)

which also received a makeover. “We remodeled our growler system,” Moe said. “We went from 12 beer lines to nine beer lines, have a full-time cider line, and a full-time root beer line.” Another change, and perhaps most noticeable, is a painted mural that runs along the top of the stores newest facility. The painting, done by artist Dan Burgevin from Trumansburg, creates a microbrewery feel, as it depicts the process of how beer is made, and eventually sold. “He did a fantastic job,” Moe said. “We gave him a concept of what we wanted and he ran with it. We were looking for a ‘farm-to-market’ theme. We wanted something to represent the process that starts right from the grains, the hops to the brewery to the delivery truck to the consumer holding a six-pack.” The farm-to-market feel is something Moe preaches in all phases of his business. Most customers don’t go to Finger Lakes Beverage Center to pick up a sixpack of Bud Light. They go to pick out something from a selection that includes many craft beer lines that can’t be found anywhere else in the area. Moe explained his qualifications allow him to bring in products that are more exotic than you’ll find in Wegmans or Tops. “What makes us different is licensing,” he said. “I’m able to pick things up. I can go to other markets and buy beer legally and bring it back to Ithaca and put it out for sale, whereas Wegmans can’t do that. None of the grocery chains can do that. And without the proper licensing, no one else in the area can.” Moe added his store aims to give an

unrivaled customer service. “We’re more hands-on here [than a big chain store],” he said. “If a customer needs a certain kind of beer or has a style of beer they like, or maybe want to try a different beer before buying it, we try to make sure we’re knowledgeable about the product so that we can direct you to what you’re looking for, whether it’s an IPA or a Belgian beer—whatever it may be.” That same customer base is plays a large role in creating such a dynamic beer selection. Between that and doing his own research with his staff, that is how new product lines find their way into Finger Lakes Beverage Center, Moe said. “Believe it or not,” Moe said, “the customer base is a very knowledgeable customer base. A lot of times and they already know that a certain brewery is releasing a particular beer in California and wants to know when it’s going to be here and when can they get it. So that automatically gets us searching for certain beers. We also do a lot of searching, whether it’s studying BeerAdvocate [online resource] or something else, we’re constantly looking for beers that are highly rated but are unavailable in this market. That’s pretty much our system. It’s really about staying involved in the beer world.” So far, customers have enjoyed the changes, Moe said. “They definitely have noticed,” he said, “and the feedback has been extremely positive. Everyone likes what they’re seeing. Without everyone’s support, without our customer base, none of this would be possible.” § homeowner insurance

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Arts&Entertainment

You won’t find this ambitious exhibit in a formal art gallery

by A rt h u r Wh itm a n

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ost art exhibits in Ithaca are very small. In particular, oneor two-person shows featuring local artists typically consist of fewer than twenty works—a matter of space limitations and the need (or desire) to emphasize the latest. Although there is much to be said for a tightly edited grouping of intelligent pieces, those of us familiar with big city art-viewing will long for the senses working overtime exuberance of the big, sprawling show. Right now (and I stress right now), Ithacans have the rare opportunity to see the work of two ambitious abstract painters in greater than usual depth. But they are not in a museum—or even in a formal white-box gallery. Rather, the work of long-time local artists Elizabeth McMahon and Michael Sampson can be seen scattered throughout an offbeat range of downtown venues. Although both artists are working in a broadly abstract expressionist vein, their sensibilities differ considerably. McMahon’s works on paper combine acrylic paint, crayon, and collage. Her acrylics and oils on canvas have a similar liveliness but often lean more towards still life, with nods to Matisse and to the Cubists. (More recent artists as diverse as the collage illustrator Eric Carle and the narrative abstractionist painter Amy Sillman also come to mind.) Sampson is most at home working with oil on canvas. His work of the past few years has spun off in numerous directions and it is always a pleasure to see what he has been up to. A two-person exhibit at the Sola Gallery in the DeWitt Mall anchors what I like to think of as a single show in multiple parts. “Two Artists: Michael Sampson and Elizabeth McMahon” (Nov. 7 through 25) is a lovely, if unavoidably cramped exhibition of recent works on paper: Sampson’s pinpress monotypes and McMahon’s collagepaintings. McMahon’s work can also be seen (only through Nov. 15) at SewGreen, where it is the fabric store’s inaugural “fine art” exhibit. Sampson’s can be seen in two additional locations. A selection of richly colored canvases can be seen at the Cellar d’Or (through November) while four small panels can be seen at the Community School of Music and Arts (through Nov. 24). McMahon moved to Ithaca after earning an MFA in the visual arts from Syracuse University

in 1974. She showed her work in local galleries here—and, in the mid-‘80s, at the Adam Gimbel Gallery in New York City. But she is better known around here for her career as Elizabeth McPuppet, a popular children’s entertainer. As she puts it in a written statement, she “diverted a career in fine art for nearly 25 years, to raise a family and entertain the community.”

Sewgreen features work from Elizabeth McMahon (photo provided)

She has retired her alter ego and has been concentrating on painting again over the past couple of years or so. She was part of a memorable pop-up exhibit during the summer of last year at 123 Cayuga St. (on the corner of South Cayuga and North Green), where she currently has a studio. Sampson is a prolific and well-known painter, a graduate of the Montserrat College of Art in Beverly, Mass. and an Ithaca resident since 1998. In addition to showing elsewhere

in upstate New York, he has had local solo shows in 2014 and 2010: at the CSMA and CAP ArtSpace, respectively. He has also shown his work at Contemporary Trends and has been in various local group shows. A long-time fixture in the DeWitt Mall, the Sola Gallery specializes in Japanese prints as well as selling a range of decorative work. It is not a white box and formal exhibits of local artists are somewhat rare. Gallery owner Daphne Sola is a poet and visual artist in her own right and travels extensively to help maintain her diverse stock. Sola, who said she knew McMahon socially, put on a show of her work last year. As for Sampson, he brought in some of his recent print experiments for consideration earlier this year. “It was impressive enough,” she recalled. “I said, you know, if you want to fill this out, this is the direction you should go in. He went home, and he did it.” The two abstractionists seemed like a natural pairing. Sampson’s monotypes have been created with a pin-press—essentially a metal rolling pin. The technique allows the temperamentally reclusive artist to work at home without the need for an expensive and bulky press. Printmaking is a recent departure for this committed painter. His small, upright prints have been hung near the entrance to the gallery. Although not his major work, they nicely compress expressionist brushwork— reminiscent of such artists as Willem De Kooning, Franz Kline, and (in a figurative vein) Chaim Soutine—into a miniature scale. Their suggestion of calligraphy is reinforced by a heavy use of black, which in most of these pieces forms a kind of armature for strokes and spots of generally muted color. Typically the inked areas do not fully cover the white of the paper, creating a translucent layered effect that gives these pieces their evocative density. McMahon is particularly well represented at Sola, with abstractions that are as exultant as Sampson’s are brooding. Square in shape, Poolside is a particularly compelling patchwork of colors. A square of thinly painted orange fills the center, bordered continued on page 29

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film

Junior Justice League

going to san fransokyo; keanu with unlimited ammo By Br yan VanC ampe n

One coupon per person per semester

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isney’s animated Big Hero 6, very loosely adapted from a Marvel comic title, isn’t quite the kind of family classic like Toy Story, where bringing a kid is optional. But it does have tons of style, a thrilling sense of scope, action sequences of pure flight and fancy, mass and movement. It also has a key central performance by Scott Adsit (30 Rock) of considerable charm, humor and warmth. Your kids will zip out of the theater humming the superhero skirmishes, while you will be surprised at how emotional you got watching a walking balloon animal. The doughy white bubble boy in question is Baymax, a healthcare project invented by Tadashi, a bright college kid. When he gets killed in a lab explosion, his kid brother Hiro (Ryan Potter) discovers that one of his inventions has been stolen, re-programs Baymax and forms a sort of Junior Justice League with the other young lab rats at the school. Comedian T.J. Miller has made a career of stealing these ‘toons, and he does it again here as Fred, a Jay Mewes-stoner type who just happens to live the life of Bruce Wayne and has the best man cave since Billy Bob Thornton’s “urologist to the stars” on a recent episode of The Big Bang Theory. The action-packed story takes place in a futuristic metropolis called San Fransokyo (a portmanteau of San Francisco and Tokyo); I’d describe it as Blade Runner in sunshine. Thus, even though the characters’ voices are as Anglo as a loaf of Wonder

Bread, the Asian design and flavor feel fresh, friendly and inviting. And it all wraps nicely around Adsit, who is able to wrap many subtle emotional shadings into his robotic, yet caring tones. • • • John Wick is the kind of macho gunfest where Keanu Reeves kills so many people that you lose count of the stuntman corpses. If there is an unwritten movie law that you never leave Mel Gibson for dead, John Wick inspires another: Never shoot a puppy and expect to get away with it. Reeves plays the title character, a mythical hit man who’s mythical because the filmmakers want us to believe that he’s mythical. Wick’s wife dies of some unknown disease, and then three idiot Russian gangsters kill his dog for no other reason than to spur Reeves to start killing guys. John Wick is the kind of empty, superficial pinball machine that I might have recommended if it weren’t so ugly, empty and dumb at its core. I know that this is all fake stuff, and that John Wick’s dead dog will go on to a great career in doggie performances, but killing a dog has to be one of the cheapest shots ever, if not the cheapest. Willem Dafoe and John Leguizamo are here for atmosphere and local color, but there’s not much to do aside from watch Reeves take people out. Keep in mind: this is one of those movies where every chop shop boss, cheap hood and bartender knows this John Wick guy; they all call him “John Wick” the way people call Black Dynamite “Black Dynamite.” And yet the only three guys who don’t know him are the three guys who should know him. As Harlan Ellison would say, “Such a dumb.” • One coupon per person per semester

Big Hero 6, directed by Don Hall and Chris Williams; John Wick, directed by David Leitch and Chad Stahelski; both playing at Ithaca Stadium 14.

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readers’ theatre presents solo ‘wrecks’ By War re n Gre e nwood All the lovers … and all the love that was between them …was not a mistake. – Garrison Keillor

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Prime Pinot Noirs from California Northside Staff Tasters: Dave Pohl, ed., Dana Malley, Jason Wentworth, Mark Britten, & Robert Bradley While France’s Burgundy region is the home of the world’s finest Pinot Noir wines, it is sadly increasingly difficult to find truly compelling bottles of red Burgundy for under $30. More and more, Pinot Noir aficionados must look to the New World for characterful Pinot Noir in the $20-$30 price range. The cooler regions of California, Oregon, and New Zealand are the places to which many now turn in their search for Pinot Noir value. Recently, the staff at Northside Wine & Spirits blind tasted 26 Pinot Noirs from California, Oregon, the Finger Lakes region, and New Zealand, all priced under $30. While there were fine examples from each locale, the top two wines of the tasting hailed from California. In fact each of the staff ’s top picks come from regions in California that have become associated with the production of quality Pinot. The top wine of the tasting was the Roth Estate 2012 Sonoma Coast Pinot Noir ($25). The Sonoma Coast, as the name implies, runs along Sonoma

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County’s Pacific coast. Many of its vineyards are covered by maritime fog in the morning and late afternoon. The cooling effect of the fog helps to create an ideal environment for growing quality Pinot Noir. The Roth Pinot displays a lovely intermingling of raspberry, cherry, and vanilla underscored by a hint of the beetroot character so typical of many classic red Burgundies. Aged for 11 months in French oak, it’s light on its feet and does not come across particularly oaky. The tasters’ second pick was the Lincourt 2012 “Lindsay’s” Pinot Noir ($20), produced from grapes grown in the Sta. Rita Hills located in Santa Barbara county. The hills run from east to west and are nicely cooled by the breezes that roll in from the ocean. The Lincourt Pinot is full of red fruit aromas and flavors aided and abetted by hints of pepper, cedar, and fennel. Both it and the Roth, while delicious on their own, will partner remarkably with dishes such as roasted turkey, root vegetables, and mushroom dishes — yes, think Thanksgiving! Northside Wine & Spirits is at the Ithaca Shopping Plaza on the Elmira Road. Phone: 273-7500. www.northsidewine.com

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a surprise ending—perhaps shocking to some. A reviewer for The New York Times wrote of the play: “Whether you gasp or merely sigh wearily will depend on your familiarity with, and fondness for, the prolific Mr. LaBute’s bleak moral vision of humankind (Gasp or sigh, you’re still likely to think, ‘Well, he’s done it again.’)” I’m not entirely sure about that “bleak moral vision of humankind” stuff, though. I found Wrecks an exhilarating first person storytelling account of the divine madness of love.

here is an astonishing amount of theatre here in Ithaca, for such a small city: the Hangar Theatre, the Kitchen Theatre, the Ithaca College Theatre Arts Department, the Cornell Department of Performing and Media Arts, the Cornell Melodramatics Theatre Company, the Wolf ’s Mouth Theatre Company, the Civic Ensemble, the Homecoming Players, the Ithaca Shakespeare Company … and, for the last five years, The Readers’ Theatre of Ithaca. The Readers’ Theatre will be presenting the one-person play Wrecks (off-book) at Cinemapolis with music by Hank Roberts and Phonetix, and a 15-minute on-screen Skype interview with the playwright Neil LaBute. Wrecks stars Chris Nickerson, and is directed by The Readers’ Theatre Artistic Director Anne Marie Cummings. Chris Nickerson of Wrecks, which opens Friday at Cinemapolis. I attended a press (photo provided) preview of the play on a full moon November night at the West Hill Indeed, a critic named Linda Winer home of the director. for Newsday wrote: “Wrecks is bound Steven Spielberg once said that one to and identified by its shock value, should be able to tell the story of a film in but it must also be cherished for the 25 words. Assuming this holds true for a moment-by-moment pleasure of its play, the 25-word scenario for Wrecks is: A man tells the story of the big wild love of his masterly portraiture.” She also called it an “enormously moving love story.” I think she life—that of his recently departed wife. is dead-on in both cases. The playwright, Neil LaBute, uses a Chris Nickerson, a very accomplished wondrous, strange technique to do this. actor in theatre, television and film, The man, a successful businessman named Edward Carr, talks directly to the audience, portrays the character Edward Carr. He is marvelous in the role. He is required to while somehow observing the funeral single-handedly carry the 80-minute play. proceedings for his wife … including And he pulls it off. I was riveted the entire observing himself. I liked this odd structure very much. It hour and 20 minutes. And it is fascinating that the play is seemed like something Neil Gaiman would do in a fantasy story, a sort of Rod Serling— so engrossing when one considers how stripped down and minimalist it is – one magic realism touch. actor and a handful of props. It is a tribute Carr’s story is given an added to the power of human storytelling. valedictory poignancy in that he has lung And so, in conclusion, if the Reader cancer, and is going to die himself in loves the art of theatre, I think it would be about eight months. Carr tells the story worth catching this engaging, one-person of how he met his wife Mary Josephine, minimalist production. • how they created a successful business together (Carr’s Cars), raised a family, and The Readers Theatre of Ithaca will stage maintained a transcendent life-long love Wrecks at Cinemapolis, 120 E. Green St., affair. Ithaca, Friday to Sunday, Nov. 21 to 23. They also kept secrets. Both husband Friday and Saturday performances at 8 p.m., and wife maintained two extraordinary Sunday at 6:30 p.m. Tickets are available at secrets. www.thereaderstheatre.com. And I might mention that the play has


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t least since the advent of Harry Potter, young adult (YA) fiction has become something that adults read too. If you are interested in American history, don’t let the YA designation prevent you from picking up this book. Visions of Teaoga, Jim Remsen’s historical YA novel takes place in Athens, Pa., in the early years of the recent natural-gas drilling boom. The father of the protagonist, Maddy Winter, is a drilling engineer, and a summer visit to his latest job site is what brings the middle-schooler from Houston to the Northeast, making her the perfect fishout-of-water heroine, able to see herself more clearly than she could in her normal surroundings. One of the features of YA literature is its telegraphing of its message. In the early chapters the author makes Russ Winter a history buff, and we are told that he has passed this proclivity onto his daughter. So we are very conveniently going to get a lot of useful information dropped in our laps. When Maddy arrives in Athens, she becomes a counselor-in-training at a history-themed summer camp and spends a lot of time with Mrs. Tulowitsky, a local history buff. YA literature is also told from the point of view of very young people. If you can’t figure out your own kid or you are teacher who doesn’t have your own children, then Remsen’s perceptive rendering of the emotional life of a “tweener” should be pretty useful. Maddy, for example, is a handful and she knows it. She is prone to tantrums at her worst and has a flair for the dramatic the rest of the time. Remsen renders her inner life as a hyperbolic monologue that documents a perpetual emotional tightrope walk. Remsen tells his story with parallel timelines. In some chapters we are brought back to 1790 and told the story of Queen Esther, the Shawnee matriarch (sakima), who was an important leader among the Lenape (Delaware), Tutelo, and Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) during the Revolutionary War and the early post-independence years. She returned to “Teaoga” (present-day Athens at the junction of the Chemung and Susquehanna

rivers) for a council after living in exile for many years in Ganogeh (Canoga in Seneca County) among the Onondaga. And so Remsen puts Esther and Maddy in the same place, separated only by time. He invents a 12-year-old Tutelo girl, who is as moody as Maddy, to give the story some symmetry. In the 18th century chapters Remsen is documenting the twilight years of tribal life in the eastern states. It was time of remnant groups of tribes living together, of growing hostility from the yengwe (Yankee) settlers, and a steady loss of tribal folkways. The author would seem to have done an enormous amount of research on the period. He represents the tribal people not as innocents, but proud people who are fiercely fighting a losing battle. A practice that the European settlers found abhorrent, the kidnapping of women and children, Remsen describes as a normal practice among tribes long before the arrival of white Americans. The historical exposition in Visions of Teaoga is done in the time-honored fashion: people stop their lives and suddenly tell long stories full of exposition. This technique was satirized to hilarious effect in Wayne’s World, wherein Alice Cooper unexpectedly holds forth on the etymology of the word “Milwaukee” and the region’s early history during Wayne and Garth’s visit to his hotel room after a concert. Remsen makes it work in Visions of Teaoga by creating believable social situations in which little boys can go on and on about Indian life, a family can picnic at a historical monument, and after-dinner conversations can turn to the religious practices of the Munsee Delawares. There is a element of magic threaded through the story, albeit more low-key than anything in Harry Potter. Remsen is not afraid to present these experiences as actually spiritual rather than passing them off as the over-active imagination of his protagonist. In the end Maddy learns some good lessons and grows up quite a bit. And Remsen throws as much light as he can on the shadowy existence of Queen Esther, who disappears as abruptly from the narrative as she did from history. •

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Kinsella’s Classic Revival

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12- 18,

2014

hen you listen to the first track of Kevin Kinsella’s new album Rising Higher Still, your first reaction might be: “Hey, that sounds a lot like John Brown’s Body. “Yeah, some people were missing that classic sound, and this record is a return to that,” said Kinsella. “In the record before this [Great Design (2011) on ROIR] I Kevin Kinsella performs at the Chapter House on Saturday. (Photo by Jesse Winter) delved into folk and the singer/songwriter thing, but the He said that his song writing has response to this has been great.” slowed down in recent years, mostly By “great” Kinsella means that it has because he has other commitments—he is been #10 on the Billboard reggae charts an independent painting contractor and is for two weeks now. That means that lots raising a son—but he already has six songs of people are actually buying the record, a ready for the next album. noteworthy phenomenon in this day and “The goal is to keep it universal,” said age. Kinsella, “and not get too preachy, and “Live performance is my number one, keep it on the positive side.” my strongest card,” he said. “I’m singing Kinsella’s attraction to reggae began better every year. You just have to apply before he was a teenager. He went down yourself every day.” Kinsella will perform to the Haunt with his parents to talk with the Analogue Sons at the Chapter to owner John Peterson, who allowed House on Saturday, Nov. 15 at 10 p.m. The Kinsella to get into the club to see reggae Analogue Sons will play the first set and performances as long as one of his parents then they will back Kinsella in the second. came with him. He recorded his latest album with “I grew up going to church,” he said, Thunderbody, a Rochester band. “Two “and reggae is like the Bible being sung. summers ago I approached them and I recognized the lyrics from church, but asked them if they wanted to play the music was a lot funkier.” Kinsella put Grassroots,” Kinsella said. “We did together a band called the Tribulations the whole festival run and then went while still a teenager, issuing their first into the studio.” Rising Higher Still was single in 1987. John Brown’s Body put recorded between May and June 2013 by out their first album in 1996. “I love that Jason “Jocko” Randall at More Sound in revival feel. I’m a disciple of Toots and Syracuse. The horns on the album were the Maytals,” he said. “He gave me strong arranged by Lee Hamilton, who like encouragement. When I was 15 or 16 he Randall used to work with Kinsella in John came out after a show to meet our parents Brown’s Body. “We have a distinct style and he was very kind.” when we get together,” said Kinsella. Kinsella-era JBB and Kinsella’ solo This show with the Analogue Sons work have focused on preserving what may lead to more regional shows with is now called “roots reggae,” which is the them, but Kinsella’s years on the reggae sound from the ‘60s and ‘70s developed tour circuit—with and without JBB— by people like Lee “Scratch” Perry and have insured that wherever he goes he Frederick “Toots” Hibbert. “Reggae is in a can get a backing band that knows his constant state of evolution,” said Kinsella. material. “There’s a band in New Jersey “Sublime broke it in the U.S. They are the that I play with, Sense of Motion, one in prime influence on most reggae bands Massachusetts, one in Colorado,” he said. instead of Jamaican reggae. The lyrical “It’s like doing the Chuck Berry thing. It’s content shows that. It’s all about a party got its pros and cons, but its economically on the beach with pretty girls. Jamaican and logistically feasible.” For this album he reggae is Afro-centric, and it’s about pride is doing the booking himself, setting up a and protest, and about the poor. The tour between Florida and New Jersey, and reggae singer is like a watchman around then going out to Colorado. the city walls.” •


music

Raised With the Seasons

SEARCH. FIND. COMMENT.

By Bil l Ch ai s son

NEWS, OPINION, MUSIC, MOVIES, RESTAURANTS, THEATRE, AND MORE!

hangar theatre welcomes george winston

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play like him it doesn’t sound right and if nyone who is only familiar with you don’t play like him it doesn’t sound George Winston through the right.’ quiet spare sound of his famous “He has a version of ‘Hey Now Baby’ “seasonal” trilogy issued between 1980 and from 1949,” 1982 might be Winston quite surprised continued, to hear him in “that I’ve just concert. Just been working to cite two on today. I influences that have to play contradict that piece, but the New Age I still can’t do image, he has it. You wonder a love of New how he could Orleans stride have gotten it piano and a so perfect. It’s fascination with like a photo the Doors. Both of a humming of these have bird with been preserved its beak in a in his recorded flower. You work and are know that the part of his live photographer presentations. took a lot of He will play the photographs Hangar Theatre George Winston performs Sunday at Hangar Theatre. (Photo provided) to get that on Sunday, Nov. one.” 16 at 8 p.m. To Winston tours half to two-thirds of the year and has counterpoint the rollicking stride and New Orleans sound, Winston developed his been doing so for 34 years. “It’s really like “folk piano” approach. “It’s simple,” he said. I live here,” he said. “After about six years I “You let the piano just ring out, like it does just locked into it.” When he is not on the naturally.” He has a “summer show” and a road he lives in Santa Cruz, Calif., a place “winter show.” He will move selections in with a climate that is a far cry from his and out of each seasonal appropriate show 1950s boyhood home in eastern Montana. from concert to concert. In a given night “There were huge seasonal changes,” listeners will hear stride and New Orleans he said, “and we didn’t have television in style numbers, tunes by Vince Guaraldi those days, so most of the entertainment (known to most as the sound of Peanuts was the seasons.” During the first 12 television specials), and Winston’s own years of his life he had little interest in “folk” compositions. music, but in 1961 he started to take an He prefers playing music on stage to interest in instrumental pop music that recording. “With the live show, it’s right he heard on the radio. “That year there there,” he said. “For me, it’s more real. The were 30 instrumentals that became hits,” live thing is what I thrive on, and I pay Winston said. “They just really took me somewhere. Vocals just didn’t do much for attention to who I’m playing for.” Winston acknowledges the me.” He decided he wanted to play music importance of recording though. “Most and between 12 and 18 years old he began people come to the show because they’ve practicing the organ. heard the recordings,” he said. “No one “In early 1967 I heard the Doors,” says, ‘Hey look, there’s a piano player in said Winston, “and I thought, ‘This is the town. Let’s go see him.’” greatest thing I’ve ever heard. I’ve got to Winston always gets in contact with get into a band.’” But four years after that a local food bank before he appears in a he heard Fats Waller. Waller was a great particular town. Audience members are organ player, but Winston heard his solo invited to bring cans of food to the show to piano playing first and the experience donate, but also all the money from sales of changed his trajectory. A couple of years CDs at a show is donated to the food bank. later he saw Teddy Wilson, another stride piano great, in a 1937 film, and his lifelong He has also recorded two albums to benefit the region, one for post-Katrina relief and goal to get better at jazz piano playing one after the Deep Horizon disaster. His became a fixed star. next album, Spring Carousel, due in 2015 is By 1979 he began wrestling with the a benefit for cancer research. • enigma that is Professor Longhair. “[His music] is just perfect,” said Winston, “and you think, ‘What do I do with this? If you

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11.12

An Eye for Textiles 1/16 pg Ithaca Times

dutch paintings at cornell’s johnson museum By Ar thur W hitm an

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utch art of the 17th century—the so-called Dutch Golden Age—has long been a specialty at Cornell’s Johnson Museum, with paintings and particularly prints strongly represented in the permanent collection and in frequent exhibitions of loans. “An Eye for Detail: Dutch Painting from the Leiden Collection” is a particular treat: a long-running show of fine works that will be up between September of this year and June 21, 2015. Selected from an important private holding in New York City, it was put together by Johnson curator Andrew Weislogel with the assistance of the collection’s curator Dominique Surh. The emphasis is on work from Leiden, then a center of the textile trade and the second largest city in the Dutch Republic. Against pale blue walls, twelve oil paintings on canvas and panel fill a room adjacent the second floor European galleries. A Rembrandt print from the museum’s own collection fills out the show. A mercantile economy characterized by a tension between materialistic indulgence and Calvinist-inspired selfrestraint, the Dutch Republic of the time inspires ready comparison with our own society. And this analogy applies to the nation’s burgeoning art market, unprecedented in its size and diversity. A sort of prelude appears in the form of circular tondo painting by the Flemish artist Pieter Brueghel the Younger. A Proverb: He who holds the sack of gold will always have flatterers (1592) follows in the Renaissance manner of his renowned father. But the combination of detailed realism, moralizing allegory, and bawdy humor has distinct echoes in the work of the Dutch Baroque. The marvelously rude piece portrays a seated man, his striking-red clothes pulled up and a cohort of tiny figures crawling into his naked backside. He holds a sack, which protrudes from his chest rather resembling a bodily organ—from it spill coins. Compositionally, all of this action forms a kind of circular loop, echoing the shape of the panel. Attributed to the Adriaen van Ostade, Peasants at an Inn (1635) is a typical subject for the artist: lumpy figures—caricatures of the lower class—drink and carouse in a shadowy brown-toned tavern. The combination of muted color and striking chiaroscuro (contrast of lights and darks) is typical of the work here. One of two paintings here by Gabriel Metsu, Self Portrait as a Hunter (1654-56) is an unusual scene. It shows the artist seated by a riverside, proudly nude. His

Lazarus and the Rich Man, by Jan Steen. (Photo via Johnson Museum)

shed clothes and gun—which resembles a leg—appear as extensions of his person. A dead rabbit, hanging upside-down towards the left of the painting connects the piece thematically to the other Metsu here: the oversize Women Selling Game from a Stall (1653-54). Metsu’s teacher Gerrit Dou is considered the first of the fijnschilders— “fine manner painters”—and a leading painter of the Leiden School. His Cat Crouching on the Ledge of an Artist’s Atelier (1657) is a standout piece here, a bravura display of intricate realism and elaborate narrative intrigue. Through an arched window, we see a shadowy studio with an indistinct painter at work at his easel. But the real emphasis of the piece is on the cat and on a red curtain that has been pulled to one side—both immaculately detailed and eerily luminous. Hung comparatively side-by-side, The Slaughtered Pig (1662) by Caspar Netscher joins Rembrandt’s The Hog (1643), a small, sketchy etching and drypoint print. Netscher’s, oddly quiet painting shows a young boy seated at a table next to the hanging corpse. He is inflating the pig’s bladder as a balloon—a disarming bit of playfulness. “Eye” also includes work by Quiringh van Brekelenkam, Pieter de Hooch, Cornelis de Man, Willem de Poorter, and Jan Steen–and a piece attributed to the “circle of Rembrandt.” This a superb and multi-faceted little show. • A lecture by National Gallery of Art curator Arthur Wheelock entitled “The Myth of the Leiden School: There Was No Such Thing” will be held on Thursday, Nov. 20, starting at 5:15 pm.


‘sola gallery’ contin u ed from page 21

by an area of pale pink and marked with vertical red crayon stripes. The integration of drawing and painting is particularly striking. The luridly colored scrappy-sloppy Combination incorporates cup shapes into the abstraction with rough grace. Equation is simply beautiful: a crisp cutout table-like form, dark border-lines, translucent washes of rich autumnal colors—pinks, orange, amber— offset by mellow blues and purples. Sola drew a link between McMahon’s work as a much-loved performer and her painting. “Of course she has such a lively persona, and it comes through in her [art] work,” she said. McMahon is showing a larger selection of pieces at SewGreen. They have been hung up high and are scattered throughout the two rooms of the store. The extroverted colors, patternings, and pieced-together sensibility—even when there is no actual collage—make a comfortable fit with the venue. Along with smaller works on paper similar to her work at Sola, she is showing numerous larger canvases. According to Wendy Skinner, director of the non-profit “fabric re-use center,” the idea of showing art there was McMahon’s. “So she came in, and I was here,” Skinner recalled. “She said ‘I’d like to put some paintings up in here.‘ And we had never had art.” Like Sola, she spoke about McMahon with great warmth. And both Skinner and the artist were intrigued by the compatibility between the fabric and the painting. “She’d been in the store, and she was inspired by the colors and the combinations of textures,” Skinner explained. “And when she said that, I thought well, we could do that. We could make room. It’s not your typical venue for art.” Indeed it is not, but it is a welcome and inviting one. I have a distinct preference for McMahon’s more abstract work—not because it is more abstract but because it submerges her propensity for chic elegance, offering something a bit more elusive and idiosyncratic. (Admittedly, this is difficult territory, as the question of modern art and decoration is a fraught one, all the more so when it comes to the work of a female artist. Still one must leap.) Lillies, Meet Me at the Café, and Still Life in Seville are longing gazes in the direction of Matisse. These celebrations of luxe, calme et volupté feature decoratively colored and multifariously patterned table-settings profuse with glasses, urns, vases, flowers, fabrics, railings. They can be a bit much. A “cake” series serves up goofy towers of colored boxes bedecked with stripes, waves, crown-shapes, and flowerlike motifs. Kevin’s Cake, a small oil canvas is the best of these, with the motif transmuted into a stack of abstract colorblocks: lime green, cyan, bright pink, dull purple—all against a wan blue-gray background. The turquoise “candles” at

the top could just as easily be smokestacks. A tall oil, Kings and Queens Cake, fills in its color areas with an eloquently scumbled texture and makes good use of a black background—still, it feels uneasily like a collage in paint. This writer prefers McMahon’s less literal work here, most of it on paper. Summer Silo, on paper with no collage, uses energetic scrawls of crayon to accent areas of translucent color: burnt orange, rosy pink, pale blue. Up and Away builds up a lattice-like structure of drawn and cutout forms. Porthole, though on canvas, makes good use of a collage feeling with a dense field of overlapping strips, circles, and loosely geometric forms with the grays and offwhite setting off the profusion of color. According to Skinner, Sew Green is looking to do more exhibitions. “I’m going to be soliciting artists for all next year,” she said. “I think it’s fabulous.” Sampson’s big solo is at the Cellar d’Or: a wine and cider boutique and a popular venue for showing often abstractleaning work since it opened last year. His oil on canvas Shadow Portraits there are all from 2012—a historical glimpse coming from this fast moving artist.

Elizabeth McMahon, in-studio. (Photo by Tim Gera)

Large and small, they fit in nicely with the ambience of the place: the dim lights and the rough walls. The style of these paintings is distinctive, reminiscent of the RussianFrench painter Nicolas de Staël but with even rougher impasto and with colors far less subdued. Working with a palette knife rather than brush, Sampson has built up

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thick blocks of tone that read as solid despite scraping effects that reveal the build up of layers. How Sampson gets away with packing in so many colors defies explanation. Perhaps it has something to do with areas of black and white, which seem to cut through the excess. A downtown art tour might conclude at the CSMA, where a row of four sparsely hung Sampsons provides a kind of breather amidst the hectic-eclectic activity of the arts center’s current “Arts For All Marathon” fundraiser. (More information about the benefit can be found at www. artsforallmarathon.com) Sampson had a solo show at the school earlier this year. The focus was on large canvases in which the influence of the figure drawing was quite apparent. His oil-onpanel pieces here continue in that vein, although these ones are tiny. Named after their female models, they recall some of his Sola monotypes with their fluid, calligraphic brushwork and restricted color—predominantly black and white. He is also showing an abstract figure drawing as part of a wall display devoted to drawing from the model. None of this work is “public art.” And yet this rare conjunction of private showings has the feeling of something public: an unusual injection of top-quality local art into the broader space of the city. It is a rare pleasure, walking around downtown and taking it all in. •

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violinist Pablo Gutierrez. A Travel through the Spanish and German Post-Baroque features sonatas of Jose de Herrando and C. P. E. Bach.

11/14 Friday

Music bars/clubs/cafés

11/12 Wednesday

Djug Django | 6:00 PM-9:00 PM | Lot 10 Lounge, 106 South Cayuga Street, Ithaca | live hot club jazz Jam Session | 7:00 PM-10:00 PM | Canaan Institute, Canaan Road, Brooktondale | The focus is instrumental contra dance tunes. www. cinst.org. Reggae Night with the Ithaca Allstars | 9:00 PM- | The Dock, 415 Taughannock Blvd, Ithaca | -

11/13 Thursday

Paul Kempkes ‘Dr.K’ | 6:00 PM-8:00 PM | The Dock, 415 Taughannock Blvd, Ithaca | solo guitar and vocals. Steve & Lorna | 6:00 PM-8:00 PM | Waterwheel Cafe, 2 Main St, Freeville |Professor Tuesday’s Jazz Quartet | 7:00 PM-9:00 PM | Lot 10 Lounge, 106 S. Cayuga St., Ithaca | Misses Bitches / Imperials / Puppy / Red Sled Choir (solo) | 8:00 PM- | Community School Of Music And Arts, 215 E State St, Ithaca | Pigeons Playing Ping Pong | 9:00 PM- | The Dock, 415 Taughannock Blvd, Ithaca | -

11/14 Friday

Driftwood | The Haunt, 702 Willow Ave., Ithaca | Time TBD Common Railers | 5:30 PM-8:30 PM | Felicia’s Atomic Lounge, 508 W State St, Ithaca | Common Railers is a mostly-acoustic four-piece band from Ithaca.

The Learning Web’s 4th Annual Music & Dance Spectacular | 6:00 PM-1:00 AM | Oasis Dance Club, 1230 Danby Rd, Ithaca | performances by: Caribe Jazz Allstars (6:00 pm - 8:45 pm); Radio London (9:00 pm - 10:15 pm); The Pelotones (10:30 pm - 11:45 pm); DJ JorgeVisions (11:45 pm - 1:00 am). Silent Auction Talk Crazy | 6:00 PM-8:00 PM | The Dock, 415 Taughannock Blvd, Ithaca | Happy Hour El Caminos | 6:00 PM-8:00 PM | Americana Vineyards Winery, 4367 East Covert Road, Interlaken | 100% Black / Lust / Green Dreams / BRIAN! / Obody | 8:00 PM- | Community School Of Music And Arts, 215 E State St, Ithaca | In conjunction with the Ithaca International Fantastic Film Festival Thousands of One with Stone Cold Miracle | 9:00 PM- | The Dock, 415 Taughannock Blvd, Ithaca | Steve Romer | 10:00 PM- | Agava , 381 Pine Tree Road, Ithaca | Acoustic Rock and 90’s Alternative

11/15 Saturday

Purple Valley | 6:00 PM-8:00 PM | The Haunt, 702 Willow Ave., Ithaca | happy hour Twilight Cafe: NEO Project Band | 6:00 PM-8:30 PM | Oasis Dance Club, 1230 Danby Road, Ithaca | Funked-up jazzy soul music. Community Open Mic | 7:00 PM-10:00 PM | Lansing Town Hall, 29 Auburn Road, Lansing | Presented by the East Shore Arts Council . All ages. All skill levels. Music, Poetry, Comedy and more. Hosted by Paul Kempkes Dr. K’. Snack to pass, bring your own beverage What Moon Things / Last Dot / San Williams / Jordon Morton | 8:00 PM- | Community School Of Music And Arts,

11/16 Sunday

Steve & Lorna from Under Construction | 12:00 PM- | Agava, 381 Pine Tree Road, Ithaca | Country, Rock & Blues Radio London | 4:00 PM-6:00 PM | Americana Vineyards Winery, 4367 East Covert Road, Interlaken | Sunnyside Combo | 6:00 PM-8:00 PM | Oasis Dance Club, 1230 Danby Rd, Ithaca | Live jazz and swing from the 20’s to the 40’s. Monkey Wrench Revolt | 7:00 PM-9:00 PM | Felicia’s Atomic Lounge, 508 W State St, Ithaca | A popular Americana string band from Cortland, NY Psychic Teens / JOHNS | 8:00 PM- | Community School of Music and Arts, 330 E MLK/State Street, Ithaca | Bound for Glory: Matt Watroba | 8:00 PM-11:00 PM | Bound for Glory, Cafe at Anabel Taylor Hall, Ithaca | Acoustic Open Mic Night | 9:00 PM-1:00 AM | The Nines, 311 College Ave, Ithaca | Hosted by Jerry Tanner and Lisa Gould of Technicolor Trailer Park

11/17 Monday

Open Mic Night | 8:30 PM- | Agava, 381 Pine Tree Road, Ithaca | Signups start at 7:30pm. Blue Mondays | 9:00 PM- | The Nines, 311 College Ave, Ithaca | with Pete Panek and the Blue Cats

TOMPKINS TRUST COMPANY AND C.S.P MANAGEMENT FAMILY SERIES PRESENTS:

11/18 Tuesday

Tuesday Bluesday | 5:00 PM-8:00 PM | The Dock, 415 Taughannock Blvd, Ithaca | Pete Panek and The Blue Cats and Blues Station are two regular hosts Professor Tuesday’s Jazz Quartet | 7:00 PM-9:00 PM | Corks and More, 708 West Buffalo Street, Ithaca | Traditional Irish Session | 8:00 PM-11:00 PM | Chapter House Brew Pub, 400 Stewart Ave., Ithaca | I-Town Community Jazz Jam | 8:30 PM-11:00 PM | The Dock, 415 Taughannock Blvd, Ithaca | Hosted by Professor Greg Evans Open Mic | 9:00 PM- | Lot 10 Lounge, 106 S. Cayuga St., Ithaca |

11/19 Wednesday

Djug Django | 6:00 PM-9:00 PM | Lot 10 Lounge, 106 South Cayuga Street, Ithaca | live hot club jazz Jam Session | 7:00 PM-10:00 PM | Canaan Institute, Canaan Road, Brooktondale | The focus is instrumental contra dance tunes. www.cinst. org. Reggae Night with the Ithaca Allstars | 9:00 PM- | The Dock, 415 Taughannock Blvd, Ithaca | concerts

11/12 Wednesday

Faculty/Guest Recital: Nicholas Walker, bass | 7:00 PM- | Hockett Family Recital Hall, Ithaca College, Ithaca | w/ Steve Brown, guitar. Professor Emeritus Steve Brown will join Nicholas Walker for an evening of jazz. Yago Mahago, fortepiano | 8:00 PM- | Barnes Hall Auditorium, Cornell University, Ithaca | Guest artists: Yago Mahago, fortepiano, with baroque

DAN SMALLS PRESENTS

11/15 Saturday

Choral Composition Festival | 7:00 PM- | Ford Hall, Ithaca College, Danby Road, Ithaca | The Klezmer Kings | 7:00 PM- | Morgan Opera House, Main, Aurora | Performing the rollicking, haunting, romantic folk music of Eastern Europe. This a benefit for the Morgan Opera House funded by Lifespan Therapy of Moravia and King Ferry. Crystal Bowersox | 8:00 PM- | Center for the Arts, 72 S. Main St., Homer | Gov’t Mule | 8:00 PM- | State Theatre Of Ithaca, 107 W State St, Ithaca | Southern

11/16 Sunday

Derek Bermel | 1:00 PM- | Johnson Museum of Art, North Central Ave, Ithaca | Concert by Composer and clarinetist Derek Bermel, who performs contemporary American music, including new works created by Cornell graduate composers. Bill Gregg | 3:00 PM- | Trumansburg Conservatory of Fine Arts, Congress at McLallen Street, Trumansburg | Concert to raise funds toward structural improvements at the Conservatory. Symphony Orchestra | 4:00 PM- | Ford Hall, Ithaca College, Danby Road, Ithaca | Jeffrey Meyer, conductor | Schuller: Tuba Concerto No 2 (2011) with Aaron Tindall, tuba | Brahms: Symphony No.3, op.90, F major. An Evening with George Winston | 8:00 PM- | Hangar Theatre, 801 Taughannock Blvd., Ithaca |

11/17 Monday

Dark Star Orchestra | 7:30 PM- | State Theatre of Ithaca, 105 West State Street, Ithaca | Cornell Chamber Singers | 8:00 PM- | Barnes Hall Auditorium, Cornell University, Ithaca | John Rowehl, conductor. Percussion Ensemble | 8:15 PM- | Ford Hall, Ithaca College, Danby Road, Ithaca | Gordon Stout, director. Webcast live at www.ithaca.edu/music/live, and available there the Thursday following the concert for on-demand viewing.

11/18 Tuesday

Jazz Repertory Ensemble | 8:15 PM- | Ford Hall, Ithaca College, Danby Road, Ithaca | Greg Evans, director. Webcast

D A N S M A L L S P R E S E N T S •INGRID MICHAELSON NOVEMBER 22

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215 E State St, Ithaca | In conjunction with the Ithaca International Fantastic Film Festival Anna Coogan and Willie B. | 8:00 PM- | The Dock, 415 Taughannock Blvd, Ithaca | Preach Freedom & Connect / Harry Nichols Band | 10:00 PM- | The Nines, 311 College Ave., Ithaca | -

Composers’ Forum | 1:30 PM- | Barnes Hall Auditorium, Cornell University, Ithaca | Composers’ Forum: guest pianist Juan Carlos Garvayo presents a selection of contemporary piano music, including recently premiered compositions by Spanish composer Mauricio Sotelo and Roberto Sierra. Garvayo is considered to be Spains most prominent exponent of contemporary music. Nicholas Walker & Co | 7:00 PM- | Trumansburg Conservatory of Fine Arts, Congress at McLallen Street, Trumansburg | Concert to raise funds toward structural improvements at the Conservatory. Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra | 7:30 PM- | Smith Opera House For The Performing Arts, 82 Seneca St, Geneva | Parker Millsap | 8:00 PM- | White Springs Winery, 4200 Rte 14, Geneva | At only 21 years of age, Oklahoma native Millsap is quickly making a name for himself with his captivating live performances, soulful sound, and characterdriven narratives. Cornell Symphony Orchestra | 8:00 PM- | Bailey Hall, Cornell University, , Ithaca | Chris Younghoon Kim, conductor. Features the premiere of Christopher Starks Soldier Asleep at the Tomb. Contemporary Ensemble | 8:15 PM- | Hockett Family Recital Hall, Ithaca College, Ithaca | Jorge Grossmann, director

rock jam band, formed in 1994 as a side project of The Allman Brothers Band by guitarist Warren Haynes and bassist Allen Woody. Tafelmusik: The Galileo Project | 8:00 PM- | Bailey Hall, Cornell University, , Ithaca | Explore the fusion of arts, science and culture in this concert honoring Galileos first demonstration of the telescope. Tafelmusik will perform to a backdrop of images taken by the Hubble telescope and astronomers. Featuring narration, choreography and music by Monteverdi, Vivaldi, Bach and Handel.

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live at www.ithaca.edu/music/live, and available there the Thursday following the concert for on-demand viewing.

11/19 Wednesday

Midday Music for Organ: Jonathan Schakel | 12:30 PM- | Chapel, Anabel Taylor Hall, Cornell, Ithaca | presents Buxtehude and Bach in the Italian Mode. Guest ensemble: Horszowski Trio | 8:00 PM- | Barnes Hall Auditorium, Cornell University, Ithaca | Jesse Mills, violin; Raman Ramakrishnan, cello; Rieko Aizawa, piano. Funded in part by a grant from the Cornell Council for the Arts. Opera Workshop Performance | 8:15 PM- | Hockett Family Recital Hall, Ithaca College, Ithaca | Brian DeMaris, director

Film Ithaca International Fantastic Film Festival | 11/12 Wednesday through 11/16 Sunday| Multiple Locations | The Ithaca International Fantastic Film Festival (IIFFF) will present its 3rd edition from November 12 to November 16, offering a newly-expanded lineup to more fully represent fantastic film culture for not just genre fans, but for films lovers in general! Between our retrospective, fantastic film competition, miniseries, special concerts and parties, there is sure to be something for everyone. See Cornell Cinema’s listings for showings. For a full schedule, see www.ithacafilmfestival.com. The Memory Maker Project Kickoff Event | 2:00 PM-5:00 PM, 11/16 Sunday | Anthony Brunelli Fine Arts/ KAPOW! Art Now, 186 State Street, Binghamton | Join us for a screening of the documentary, I Remember Better When I Paint: Treating Alzheimer’s Through the Creative Arts, followed by a discussion, interactive demonstration, and light refreshments. Anime Film Club | 2:30 PM-4:30 PM, 11/19 Wednesday | Ford Edith B Memorial Library, PO Box 410, Ovid | Ages 13 refreshments provided. Sponsored by the Delavan Foundation. Call for more info: (607) 869-3031. cinemapolis Movie descriptions via rottentomatoes. com Birdman | BIRDMAN or The Unexpected Virtue Of Ignorance is a black comedy that tells the story of an actor (Michael Keaton) - famous for portraying an iconic superhero - as he struggles to mount a Broadway play. | 119 mins R | Fri - Wed: 4:30, 7:00, 9:30; Thu: 11:20

AM, 2:00, 4:30, 7:00, 9:30. Dear White People | Winner of the 2014 Sundance Film Festival’s Special Jury Award for Breakthrough Talent, Dear White People is a sly, provocative satire of race relations in the age of Obama. | 108 mins R | Fri: 7:10 PM; Sat: 4:50 PM; Sun & Mon: 4:50, 9:30; Tue - Thu: 4:50, 7:10, 9:30. Pride | It’s the summer of 1984, Margaret Thatcher is in power and the National Union of Mineworkers is on strike, prompting a London-based group of gay and lesbian activists to raise money to support the strikers’ families. | 120 mins R | Fri: 6:55 PM; Sat & Sun: 1:55 PM; Mon - Wed: 4:25, 6:55, 9:25; Thu: 11:20 AM, 1:55, 4:25, 6:55, 9:25. Rosewater | Rosewater follows the Tehran-born Bahari, a broadcast journalist with Canadian citizenship. In June 2009, Bahari returned to Iran to interview Mir-Hossein Mousavi, who was the prime challenger to president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. | 103 mins R | Fri: 4:50, 7:05, 9:20; Sat: 2:40, 4:50, 7:05, 9:20; Sun: 2:40, 7:05, 9:20; Mon - Wed: 4:50, 7:05, 9:20; Thu: 11:20 AM, 2:40, 4:50, 7:05, 9:20 Whiplash | Andrew Neyman is an ambitious young jazz drummer, singleminded in his pursuit to rise to the top of his elite east coast music conservatory. | 106 mins R | Fri: 4:45, 7:00, 9:15; Sat & Sun: 2:30, 4:45, 7:00, 9:15; Mon - Wed: 4:45, 7:00, 9:15; Thu: 11:20 AM, 2:30, 4:45, 7:00, 9:15. cornell cinema Magical Universe | Recluse. Artist. Friend. These three words are the defining characteristics of octogenarian outsider artist Al Carbee, whom filmmaker Jeremy Workman befriended and documented for over a decade in Carbee’s gigantic house in Maine, spurred on by the VHS tapes Carbee would send in between visits. | Wed 11/12 7:15 PM. w/ filmmaker Jeremy Workman via Skype Dumb and Dumber To | It’s been exactly 20 years since we left Lloyd and Harry playing tag, and everything but their idiocy has changed. | Wed 11/12 9:30 PM, free sneak preview; passes required. Robot & Frank | Winner of the Alfred P. Sloan Prize (awarded to a feature film that focuses on science or technology, or features a scientist, engineer or mathematician as a major character) at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival, Robot & Frank is a story about an isolated, former jewel thief set in the near future.

| Thu 11/13 7:15 PM; Introduced by Prof. Ashutosh Saxena. Witchfinder General | Matthew Hopkins is a self-proclaimed Witchfinder General, going from village to village to draw out confessions from accused witches. The story takes an even more sinister turn when Hopkins’ assistant assaults a war hero’s wife and kills her uncle. | Thu 11/13 9:30 PM,. Cold in July | An official selection of the Sundance Film Festival, Cold in July is a crime drama set in late-1980s Texas. Adapted from the Joe R. Lansdale of the same name, the story follows family man Richard Dane (Michael C. Hall), who is awakened in the middle of the night by an intruder burglarizing his home. He shoots and kills the intruder and is quickly the talk of the town. The dead man’s father—a recent parolee (portrayed by Sam Shepard)—surfaces with an appetite for revenge. | Fri 11/14 9:45 PM, with filmmaker Jim Mickle in person (if scheduling permits). Haxan: Witchcraft Through the Ages | with live accompaniment by Transit and introduction by Andrew Utterson. Prepare for a crash course in witchcraft. Swedish director Benjamin Christensen explores different notions of hell, witchcraft and superstition using narrative vignettes brought to life by stunning visuals, use of color, and animations. The film was banned in the United States for many years for its graphic content. | 7:00 PM-, 11/14 Friday | Sage Chapel, Cornell University, Ithaca | See the World with Animated Shorts! | A fabulous program of animated shorts from the Children’s Film Festival Seattle 2014. | Sat 11/15 2:00 PM. Black Sunday | In 15th century Eastern Europe, Asa Vajda and her lover are accused of sorcery, and subsequently sentenced to death by her brother. Two hundred years later, Dr. Kruvajan and his assistant find Asa’s tomb and she’s mistakenly brought back to life, with disastrous results. | Sat 11/15 5:00 PM. The Wicker Man | After the disappearance of a young girl, sergeant Howie is sent to the remote island of Summerisle to investigate. The apparently atheist community intrigues the devoutly Christian sergeant by completely denying the existence of the girl. | Sat 11/15 7:00 PM. The Exorcist | William Friedkin’s shocking and iconic take on possession has yet to be bested. | Sat 11/15 9:00 PM. White Zombie | Charles Beaumont’s secret crush on Madeleine, who has

newly arrived in Haiti with her fiancée, leads him to ask Murder Legendre for help. Murder, a voodoo master, prepares a potion to turn Madeleine into a zombie, and a willing creature ready to submit to Charles’s love. | Sun 11/16 2:00 PM. We Are What We Are | A man dies unexpectedly in Mexico City, leaving his widow and three children devastated and destitute, at a loss without their hunter father, who supplied the family’s food: human flesh, consumed in ritual ceremonies. | Sun 11/16 4:30 PM and 7:00 PM w/ filmmaker Jim Mickle (if scheduling permits).

Stage How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying | 8:00 PM-, 11/12 Wednesday; 8:00 PM-, 11/13 Thursday | Hoerner Theatre, Ithaca College, 953 Danby Road (Rt. 96B), Ithaca | How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying tells the story of young and ambitious J. Pierrepont Finch’s hilarious climb from window washer to board chairman of the World Wide Wicket Company with the help of the book “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying”. Groundhog Comedy Presents Stand-Up Open-Mic | 9:00 PM-, 11/12 Wednesday | Lot 10 Lounge, 106 South Cayuga Street, Ithaca | Held upstairs Michelle Courtney Berry & Friends | 6:30 PM-, 11/13 Thursday | Hilton Garden Inn, 130 E. Seneca Street, Ithaca | Michelle’s Stand-Up Comedy and Performance: You Can Get Over It - How to Manifest Your Dreams and Transform Your Life, with live musical guests and friends Trampoline Thursdays w/ Buffalo St. Books | 7:00 PM-, 11/13 Thursday | Lot 10 Lounge, 126 S. Cayuga St., Ithaca | Another Christmas with the Calamari Sisters: Feast of the Seven Fishes | 7:00 PM-, 11/13 Thursday; 8:00 PM-, 11/14 Friday; 2:00 PM-, 11/15 Saturday; 2:00 PM-, 11/16 Sunday | Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St, Auburn | It’s been a year since those crazy Italian sisters, Delphine and Carmela, were whisked away from public access cable and ushered into Food Network stardom, but this Christmas Eve they return to WFAT and you’re invited to their holiday mayhem. Women of Lockerbie | 7:30 PM-, 11/13 Thursday; 7:30 PM-, 11/14 Friday; 2:00 PM-, 7:30 PM- 11/15 Saturday; 7:30 PM-, 11/16 Sunday | Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts, Cornell University,

Ithaca | Directed by Claire Stack, in collaboration with choreographer Darah Barnes; Faculty Mentors: David Feldshuh, Beth Milles Ithaca Shakespeare Company: Julius Caesar | 7:30 PM-, 11/13 Thursday; 7:30 PM-, 11/14 Friday; 7:30 PM-, 11/15 Saturday; 4:00 PM-, 11/16 Sunday | Fall Creek Studio, 1201 North Tioga St., Ithaca | Ithaca Shakespeare will close out 2014 with a production of Julius Caesar performed by an all-female cast. Julius Caesar is often described as one of Shakespeare’s most overtly masculine and politicalplays. www.ithacashakespeare.org. One Slight Hitch | 7:30 PM-, 11/13 Thursday; 7:30 PM-, 11/14 Friday; 7:30 PM-, 11/15 Saturday; 7:30 PM-, 11/16 Sunday | Cider Mill Playhouse, 2 Nanticoke Ave, Endicott | written by comedian and playwright Lewis Black. It’s 1981, Reagan has just been elected and American life is full of promise. It’s daughter Courtney’s wedding day, and everything is perfect. And then, the doorbell rings and there stands the ex-boyfriend Ryan. So much for perfect. Open Mic Poetry | 6:00 PM-, 11/14 Friday | The Shop, 312 E Seneca St, Ithaca | Once on This Island, Jr. | 7:00 PM-, 11/14 Friday; 7:00 PM-, 11/15 Saturday | Newfield High School, Vince Aiosa Auditorium, Newfield | Over the River and Through the Woods | 7:30 PM-, 11/14 Friday; 7:30 PM-, 11/15 Saturday; 2:00 PM-, 11/16 Sunday | Samuel Clemens Performing Arts Center See Clemens Center, Maudeville Hal, Elmira | Nick has just been offered his dream job in Seattle, but there are four problems: Aida, Frank, Emma and Nunzio - his four Italian-American grandparents! They will go to any length, including a little matchmaking, to keep him from leaving New Jersey. Shotgun Wedding | 7:00 PM- | Goodwill Theatre Firehouse, 46 Willow St, Johnson City | tells the story of Clown, a raucously funny fool, and Student, an apprentice fool with idealistic and didactic aspirations. The musical takes place upon the night of Students graduation, a time honored ritual where these two fools must please their audience under penalty of death. Stand-Up Comedy Show | 9:00 PM-, 11/15 Saturday | The Haunt, 702 Willow Ave., Ithaca | Kristen Becker will be joined by Liz Pax (Host of The Whisky Tango Sideshow) and Samantha Ruddy (Women in Comedy Festival, Humor Whore and more).

Mentors Needed for 4-H Youth Development Program | 1 | Cornell Cooperative Extension Education Center, 615 Willow Avenue, Ithaca | For more info, call (607) 277-1236 or email student.mentor@yahoo.com.

Meetings Tompkins County Health and Human Services Committee | 3:30 PM-, 11/12 Wednesday | County Administrative Building - Heyman Conference Room, 125 E. Court St., Ithaca | Ithaca City Planning and Economic Development Committee | 6:00 PM-, 11/12 Wednesday | City Of Ithaca, 108 E Green St, Ithaca | Ithaca Sociable Singles | 6:00 PM-, 11/12 Wednesday | Mahogany Grill, 112 North Aurora Street, Ithaca | 607-273-4013 or lpd4@cornell.edu Tompkins County Facilities and Infrastructure Committee | 10:30 AM-, 11/17 Monday | County Administrative Building - Heyman Conference Room, 125 E. Court St., Ithaca | Tompkins County Legislature | 5:30 PM-, 11/18 Tuesday | County Of Tompkins - The Daniel D. Tompkins Building, 121 E. Court St., Ithaca | Public is welcome. Ithaca Town Planning Board | 7:00 PM-, 11/18 Tuesday | Ithaca Town Hall, 215 N Tioga St, Ithaca | Ithaca City School District Board of Education | 7:00 PM-, 11/18 Tuesday | Ithaca City School District Administration Building, Lake Street, Ithaca | Amnesty International Group 73 | 7:30 PM-, 11/18 Tuesday | Cornell University - Kahin Center, 640 Stewart Ave., Ithaca | For information please contact Gwyn Singer at 277-1762. Tompkins County Planning, Energy and Environmental Quality Committee | 12:30 PM-, 11/19 Wednesday | County Administrative Building - Heyman Conference Room, 125 E. Court St., Ithaca |

Fantastic Concerts

Beginning Wednesday, November 12

Beginning Wednesday, Nov. 12 – 8 p.m.

Film fans, here’s what you’re doing this week. The Ithaca International Fantastic Film Festival is bigger than even in its third go-around: more than 30 films and documentaries centered around this year’s witchcraft theme, three days of live music (more on that later) and an art show, all taking place around Ithaca. We’ve got you started with some of this year’s featured films – see Cornell Cinema’s listings above – and find a full schedule of events at www. ithacafilmfestival.com.

Notices

Held in conjunction with the Ithaca International Fantastic Film Festival, the Community School of Music and Arts hosts four consecutive evenings of live music. CSMA kicks off Wednesday with Misses Bitches, Imperials, Puppy and Red Sled Choir (solo). See our Music listings for additional CSMA shows this week.

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ImaginOcean | 2:00 PM-, 11/16 Sunday | The State Theatre of Ithaca, 105 W State St, Ithaca | A one-of-a-kind live black-light puppet show, John Tartaglia’s ImaginOcean is a magical undersea adventure for kids of all ages. Hannibal Buress | 8:00 PM-, 11/19 Wednesday | Statler Auditorium, Cornell University, Ithaca | -

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Ithaca City Administration Committee | 6:00 PM-, 11/19 Wednesday | Common Council Chambers - Ithaca City Hall, 108 E. Green St., Ithaca | Ithaca Sociable Singles | 6:00 PM-, 11/19 Wednesday | Buffalo Wild Wings, Rte 13, 410 Elmira Rd (Kohls shopping ctr), Ithaca | sam221@peoplepc.com

Learning

Lectures Film Forum: Lee Rosenthal | 11/13 Thursday | Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts, Cornell University, Ithaca | Lee Rosenthal, ‘87, producer at Paramount Pictures and Bob Clendenin. Time TBD Climate Change Forum | 7:00 PM-8:30 PM, 11/17 Monday | Tompkins County Public Library, 101 East Green Street, Ithaca | Hosted by the Tompkins County League of Women Voters, forum will explore the impacts as they relate to agriculture and storm water run-off. Two speakers are: Alison Chatrchyan, Director, Cornell Institute for Climate Change and Agriculture, and Scott Doyle, Senior Planner, Tompkins County Planning Department.

Nature & Science Cayuga Trails Club: MLK Freedom Walkway |11/15 Saturday | MLK Freedom Walkway | Join Leslyn McBeanClairborne and the Cayuga Trails Club for a two-hour historic tour along the MLK Freedom Walkway demonstrating the Southside’s African American Heritage. For more information, call 607-564-3396 or visit www.cayugatrailsclub.org. Time TBD Guided Beginner Bird Walks | 9:00 AM-, 11/15 Saturday and 11/16 Sunday | Cornell Lab of Ornithology, 159 Sapsucker Woods Road, Ithaca | Meet at the front of the building. Please contact Linda Orkin, wingmagic16@gmail.com for more information. Sierra Wings: Birds of the Mono Lake Basin | 7:30 PM-9:00 PM, 11/17 Monday | Cornell Lab of Ornithology,

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Art Classes for Adults | Community School Of Music And Arts, 330 E. State St, Ithaca | For more information, call (607) 272-1474 or email info@ csma-ithaca.org. www.csma-ithaca. org. Winter Writing Through The Rough Spots | See website for location and meeting dates | Writing Through The Rough Spots. Fall and Winter Classes in Ithaca. www. WritingRoomWorkshops.com Meet the Practitioner: Past Life Regression | 7:00 PM-8:15 PM, 11/12 Wednesday | GreenStar Cooperative Market, 700 W Buffalo St, Ithaca | Health Coach Deborah Allison will discuss conversational and regression therapy techniques that bring about dramatic emotional shifts by efficiently accessing unconscious trauma and eliminating it. This class is free and open to the public, and will be held in the Classrooms@GreenStar, 700 W. Buffalo St. Registration is required - sign up at GreenStar’s Customer Service Desk or call 273-9392. Soapmaking Class | 10:00 AM-1:00 PM, 11/15 Saturday | First Baptist Church of Ithaca, 309 N. Cayuga St., Ithaca | Learn how to make natural, vegetable-based soap using the cold-process method. Leave with 1 lb. of your own custom-crafted soap, instruction booklet, and soap mold. Registration required. Contact Sharon skaplan4@frontiernet.net or 607-5925575. International Folk Dancing | 7:30 PM-9:30 PM, 11/16 Sunday | Lifelong, 119 West Court Street, Ithaca | Teaching and request dancing. No partners needed. $5 donation suggested. Red Cross Training | 06:00 PM-10:00 PM, 11/18 Tuesday | American Red Cross, 2 Ascot Pl, Ithaca | Registration Required: 1-800-733-2767 (Option 3) or http://www.redcross.org/take-aclass; Tuesday, November 18, 6pm - 10pm Adult & Pediatric First Aid/ CPR/AED Part 1 of 2 Part Class (Part 2 November 19 6pm - 9pm)

Dinner with the Doctor: Reversing Chronic Diseases | 6:00 PM-7:30 PM, 11/18 Tuesday | GreenStar Cooperative Market, 700 W Buffalo St, Ithaca | Join Dr. Ammitai Worob and Erin Harner, MS, RDN, CHC for this talk and delicious dinner prepared by the GreenStar Deli. Fee: $15 for GreenStar members, $20 for non-members. This class and dinner is open to the public, and is held at the Classrooms@GreenStar, 700 W. Buffalo St. Registration is required - sign up at GreenStar’s Customer Service Desk or call 273-9392. Jesusians of Ithaca | 7:00 PM-8:30 PM, 11/18 Tuesday | Ithaca Friends Meeting House, 120 3rd St., Ithaca | For more info, email jesusianity@gmail.com or visit: www.facebook.com/groups/ JesusiansOfIthaca.

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Special Events First Annual Chilly Chase 5K and the Kids 1 Mile Penguin Shuffle | 9:45 AM-, 11/14 Friday | Downtown Owego, , Owego | Runners can find race details, sign up online, or download a registration form at www.runsignup. com. Pre-registrationends on Friday, November 14, 2014 at noon. Race day registration will be accepted from 8 a.m. to 8:45 a.m. at the starting line at the Academy Street entrance of the Tioga County Office Building. The Kids Penguin Shuffle will begin at 9 a.m. and the Chilly Chase 5K will begin at 9:45 a.m. The proceeds will benefit Owego Wrestling and future tourism events in Tioga County. Holiday Bazaar | 9:00 AM-3:00 PM, 11/15 Saturday | Enfield Valley Grange Hall, Enfield Main Road, | Wide variety of handmade crafts, and baked goods, including jewelry,scarves, hats, baby sweaters, baby blankets, baby toys, gifts in a jar, ornaments, and lots more for all your holiday needs. Lunch will be available at the Grange kitchen. Storybake and Silent Auction | 10:00 AM-2:00 PM, 11/15 Saturday | Ulysses Philomathic Library, 74 E Main St, Trumansburg | with live music, live art, face painting, popcorn, and slushies. This family-oriented, fun event is free to attend and open to the public. The Storybake is a contest to create a creative, literary-themed, and delicious cake. Ideas include representing a title, character, or theme from a favorite book. The contest features 2 age groups: 14 and under and 15 and older. Cortaca Jug Game | 12:00 PM-, 11/15 Saturday | SUNY Cortland Stadium Complex, 17 Lankler Drive, Cortland | SUNY Cortland vs. Ithaca College Cayuga Nordic Ski Club Fall Dinner | 6:00 PM-, 11/15 Saturday | Ellis Hollow Community Center, 111 Genung Rd, Ithaca | Open to anyone interested in cross country skiing, this dish-to-pass dinner is a great way to meet other skiers and learn about the club. See our website http://www.cayuganordicski.org or Facebook page for more information.

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Health Alcoholics Anonymous | Multiple Locations | This group meets several times per week at various locations. For more information, call 273-1541 or visit aacny.org/meetings/PDF/ IthacaMeetings.pdf Support Group for Invisible Disabilities | 1:00 PM-3:00 PM, 11/12 Wednesday | Finger Lakes Independence Center, 215 Fifth St., Ithaca | Facilitated by Liz Constable and Finger Lakes Independence Center Peer Counselor Amy Scott, and supported by Finger Lakes Independence Center Peer Counselor Emily Papperman. Call Amy or Emily at 607-272-2433. DSS in Ulysses | 1:00 PM-4:30 PM, 11/12 Wednesday | Ulysses Town Hall, 10 Elm St, Trumansburg | walk-ins welcome. For info on SNAP, Medicaid, Daycare and Emergency assistance. CALL (607) 274-5345 with any questions. Lyme Support Group | 6:30 PM-, 11/12 Wednesday | Multiple Locations | A free group providing information and support for people with Lyme or their care givers. We meet monthly at homes of group members. For information, or to be added to the email list, contact danny7t@lightlink.com or call Danny at 275-6441. Overeaters Anonymous | 6:30 PM-7:30 PM, 11/12 Wednesday | Dryden Village Hall, Dryden | 7:00 AM-8:00 AM, 11/13 Thursday | First Unitarian Church Annex, 306 N. Aurora Street, Ithaca | 11:00 AM-12:15 PM, 11/15 Saturday | Ithaca Free Clinic, 521 W Seneca St, Ithaca | 7:00 PM-8:00 PM, 11/17 Monday | Just Be Cause center, 1013 W. State St., Ithaca | Stress & Fatigue Workshop | 6:30 PM-7:30 PM, 11/12 Wednesday | Nutritional Wellness Center, 520 West

Green Street, Ithaca | Free & Open to the Public Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous (FA) | 7:00 PM-8:30 PM, 11/12 Wednesday | First Congregational Church of Ithaca , 309 Highland Rd, Ithaca | 7:00 PM-8:30 PM, 11/17 Monday | Ithaca Recovery Center, 518 West Seneca St., Ithaca | Adult Children of Alcoholics | 7:00 PM-8:00 PM, 11/12 Wednesday | Ithaca Community Recovery, 518 West Seneca Street, Ithaca | 12-Step Meeting. Enter through front entrance. Meeting on second floor. For more info, contact 229-4592. Sacred Chanting with Damodar Das and friends | 7:00 PM-9:00 PM, 11/12 Wednesday | Ithaca Yoga Center, AHIMSA Studio, 215 N. Cayuga St., Ithaca | Free every week. An easy, fun, uplifting spiritual practice open to all faiths. No prior experience necessary. More at www.DamodarDas.com. Walk-in Clinic | 4:00 PM-8:00 PM, 11/13 Thursday; 2:00 PM-6:00 PM, 11/17 Monday | Ithaca Health Alliance, 521 West Seneca St., Ithaca | Do not need to be a Tompkins County resident. First come, first served (no appointments). Ithaca Community Aphasia Network | 9:00 AM-10:30 AM, 11/14 Friday | Ithaca College, Call for Location, | Ithaca College is looking for stroke survivors who have aphasia (an acquired language disorder). The group will provide a casual and comfortable place for participants to talk, share experiences, and offer support to one another. For more information, please contact: Yvonne Rogalski Phone: (607) 274-3430 Email: yrogalski@ithaca.edu Recovery From Food Addition | 12:00 PM-, 11/14 Friday | Ithaca Community Recovery, 518 West Seneca Street, Ithaca | Successful recovery based on Dr. Kay Sheppard’s program The Listening Workshop | 9:00 AM-1:00 PM, 11/15 Saturday | Ithaca Community Childcare Center, 579 Warren Rd, Ithaca | Please register by emailing your name and phone number tothelisteningworkshop@gmail.com. Dance Church Ithaca | 12:00 PM-1:30 PM, 11/16 Sunday | Ithaca Yoga Center, AHIMSA Studio, 215 N. Cayuga St., Ithaca | Free movement for all ages with live and DJ’ed music. Free. Anonymous HIV Testing | 9:00 AM-11:30 AM, 11/18 Tuesday | Tompkins County Health Department, 55 Brown Road, Ithaca | Walk-in clinics are available every Tuesday from 9 to 11:30 a.m. Appointments are available on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 1:30

to 3:30 pm. Please call us to schedule an appointment or to ask for further information (607) 274-6604 Support Group for People Grieving the Loss of a Loved One by Suicide | 5:30 PM-, 11/18 Tuesday | 124 E. Court St., 124 E. Court St., Ithaca | Please call Sheila McCue, LMSW with any questions # 607-272-1505

Books Jim Remsen | 6:00 PM-, 11/12 Wednesday | Buffalo Street Books, 215 S. Cayuga Street, Ithaca | Author Jim Remsen discusses his new book, Visions of Teaoga, about the life of American Indians in the 1790’s. Laura Nelkin Talk | 7:00 PM-, 11/13 Thursday | Ulysses Philomathic Library, 74 E Main St, Trumansburg | The Ulysses Philomathic Library will host Laura Nelkin, a knitwear designer, educator, and author who recently published the book Knockout Knits. Writer and Storyteller Joseph Bruchac | 7:00 PM-, 11/13 Thursday | Groton Public Library , 112 E. Cortland St., Groton | For over thirty years Joseph Bruchac has been creating poetry, short stories, novels, anthologies, and music that reflect his Abenaki Indian heritage and Native American traditions. He has authored 120 books for children and adults. First-Year MFA Reading Series | 6:00 PM-, 11/14 Friday | Buffalo Street Books, 215 North Cayuga Street, Ithaca | Come out and support the MFA program’s new writers as they read fiction and poetry selections. w/ Aurora Masum-Javed & Lena Nguyen Gerald Cox | 2:00 PM-, 11/15 Saturday | Buffalo Street Books, DeWitt Bldg, East Buffalo Street, Ithaca | Author Gerald Cox discusses his new book, Blood on My Hands: An Ecology of Hunting. Young Adult Book Watch | 3:00 PM-4:00 PM, 11/18 Tuesday | Edith B Ford Memorial Library, PO Box 410, Ovid | Join Cady to discuss The Maze Runner After Dinner Book Club | 7:00 PM-8:00 PM, 11/18 Tuesday | Edith B. Ford Memorial Library, PO Box 410, Ovid | The Law of Kinship: Anthropology, Psychoanalysis and the Family in France | 4:30 PM-, 11/19 Wednesday | Room 107, Olin Library, Cornell University, Ithaca | Book Talk with Camille Robcis.

Learning Web fundraiser

Mahler in Tiny Town

Four acts come together at Oasis Dance Club for the fourth annual Music and Dance Fundraiser in support of the Learning Web, a youth apprenticeship program right here in Ithaca. On the bill are Caribe Jazz Allstars (picture), Radio London, The Pelotones, and DJ JorgeVisions. Come out and tap your toes for a good cause.

Under the direction of Conductor Chris Younghoon Kim, The Cornell Symphony Orchestra presents two works in Bailey Hall – Christopher Stark’s premier of Soldier Asleep at the Tomb, sung by Lucy Fitz Gibbon (pictured), and Symphony No. 5 by Gustav Mahler.

Friday, November 14 – 6 p.m.

I

39th Annual Hellenic Holiday Dinner and Dance | 06:00 PM-, 11/15 Saturday | Lakewatch Inn, Ithaca | Hosted by the St. Catherine Greek Orthodox Church. music by Nick Mouganis and the Aegeans Blood Drive | 1:30 PM-6:30 PM, 11/18 Tuesday | Enfield Fire Station, 172 Enfield Main Road, Enfield | You can call for an appointment on July 15’TH by calling the American Red Cross at 273-1900. Walk-ins are always welcome.

12- 18,

2014

Friday, November 14 – 8 p.m.


Teen Reads Group at TCPL | 4:45 PM-5:45 PM, 11/19 Wednesday | Tompkins County Public Library, 101 E Green St, Ithaca | (607) 272-4557 extension 274.

Arts Art History in a Nutshell: American Modernism | 3:00 PM-, 11/16 Sunday | Johnson Museum of Art, North Central Ave, Ithaca | Join Museum educator Carol Hockett for an art-history survey highlighting American modernism in our newly reinstalled first-floor galleries. Free. Johnson Museum of Art, 607-255-6464. museum.cornell.edu Elizabeth Bishop Project screening | 6:00 PM-, 11/18 Tuesday | Handwerker Gallery, Job Hall, Ithaca College, Ithaca | with IC faculty filmmaker John D. Scott ongoing Benjamin Peters | 120 The Commons, Ithaca | Monday-Saturday, 10:00 AM-6:00 PM; Thursday, 10:00-8:00 PM | 273-1371 | Carl Schofield: SchoPhoto, through November | www.benjaminpeters.com Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research | 533 Tower Road, Ithaca | Monday-Friday, 09:00 AM-5:00 PM | 607-227-6638 | From My Backyard, botanical portraits by David O. Watkins, Jr., up through October Buffalo Street Books | 215 N. Cayuga St., Ithaca | 10:00 AM-8:00 PM, daily | 273-8246 | The Fledgling, work from Margaret Reed, up through November | www.buffalostreetbooks.com CAP ArtSpace | Center Ithaca, The Commons, Ithaca | Mon-Thu 9:00 AM-7:00 PM, Fri-Sat 11:00 PM-7:30 PM; Sun 12:00-5:00 PM | Identity and Global Lens, Cornell University Student Show, opening 11/07 | CAP-a-Palooza Sale continues | www.artspartner.org Chemung Canal Trust | The Commons | photo series by Nancy Ridenour, up through 10/08; Finger Lake Landscapes, by John Whiting, opening 10/08 through 12/31 Collegetown Bagels | 203 North Aurora Street, Ithaca | Sun-Wed 6:30 PM-8:00 PM; Thurs-Sat 6:30 AM-10:00 PM | A Collaboration of Art, dual show with Dru Wheelin and Lois Barden, opening 11/07 | collegetownbagels.com Community School of Music and Arts | 330 E.State / MLK Street, Ithaca, NY 14850 | Arts for All Marathon, multiple artists present “Four Running Fee”, opening 11/07 through 11/24 | www.csma-ithaca.org Corners Gallery | 409 E. Upland Road (within the Community Corners Shopping Center), Ithaca | Tuesday-Thursday, 10:00

Encore birth of the stars by luke z. fenchel

F

or more than a decade Anna Coogan, a classically trained opera singer, has channeled her talent as a vocalist into soul-stirring rock and folk. Recently relocated to Ithaca after a long spell in Seattle, the songwriter has most recently been collaborating with fellow Bostonian Willie B. But Coogan has also collaborated with many indie greats: Laura Cantrell, Lambchop, and JD Foster from Calexico. Her songs structurally resemble the American vernacular, with an interpretation that tends toward the subversive. For instance, take the title track from Coogan’s recent record The Birth of the Stars (Saturday, Nov. 15 the Dock will host a release party). Part sea-shanty, part indie anthem, the song begins with an open chord refrain that could kick off any country jukebox. But it quickly shifts and cascades forward with interlocking verses about interstellar time and space,

AM-5:30 PM; Friday, 10:00 AM-5:00 PM; Saturday, 10:00 AM-2:00 PM. Closed Sun & Mon | Scratching the Surface, mixed media on paper, by Jane Sangerman, up through 11/08 | www.cornersgallery.com Crow’s Nest Café | 115 The Commons, Ithaca | Inner Space, works by Andrea Staffeld and Gerry Monaghan, opening 11/07 | (646) 306-0972 Elevator Music and and Art Gallery | New Roots Charter School, 116 North Cayuga Street, Ithaca | 882-9220 | From Burma to Buffalo: Picturing the Refugee Experience, photos by Tim Gera, opening 11/07 | newrootsschool.org Finger Lakes School of Massage | 1251 Trumansburg Road, Ithaca |Etosha Blank: Masks for Healing, through 11/07. The Frame Shop | 414 W. Buffalo St., Ithaca | Tuesday-Friday, 10:00 AM-6:00 PM; Saturday, 10:00 AM-2:00 PM | Loving Hands, photographs by Monroe Payne, through November | www. theframeshop.com Gimme! Coffee | 430 N. Cayuga St, Ithaca | 2015 Calendar, by Justyne Griffin, through November | www.gimmecoffee. com/ Handwork Coop | Commons, Ithaca | Monday throughSaturday, 10 AM to 6 PM; Thursday and Friday 10 AM to 8 PM; Sunday noon to 5 PM | Painting Demo

pivoting inward for an introspective turn in 2010. “My first record was done as a about a lover’s deceit. Midway through, client, and then he became a friend. And the vocalist deploys a soprano’s trill—to my collaborator,” Coogan said. Foster emphasize the word echo — an effect himself is a musician’s musician, having that underscores the loneliness of the performed and produced with Marc narrator. Ribot, Lucinda Williams, and T-Bone Much of The Birth of the Stars Burnett. But this is the first record that reflects a confident restlessness of an bears Foster’s name: and nine of the artist who sounds rooted in the music she makes. Born in Boston, Coogan grew up in rural Vermont before training in Salzburg, moving to Seattle, and ultimately decamping to Ithaca three years ago. “I saw Johnny Dowd the first week I was here,” Coogan said, Anna Coogan and Willie B. play a record release show at the Dock on Satur“and it was a day. (photo by Tim Gera) complete delight.” She continued: “You meet people quickly here, but tracks on The Birth of Stars are co-written what struck me most is the level of by him. musicianship—it is so high. Mary Lorson, Between 2009 and this recent Brian [Wilson], so many others.” release, Coogan released The Wasted Coogan began The Birth of the Stars Ocean (2011), which Coogan described with Foster, who had produced The as shanty songs, and The Nowhere, Nocturnal Among Us, which was released Rome Sessions (2012), a collaboration

by Jill Hoffman of Painted Lake Stones, 11/07 only | www.handwork.coop The Ink Shop | 330 E.State / MLK Street, Ithaca, NY 14850 | Tuesday to Friday 12 -6 PM, Sat 12-4 PM | The 18th Mini Print International, juried exhibition of prints, opening 11/07 | 607-277-3884 | www. ink-shop.org Kitchen Theatre Company | 417 W. State/MLK St., Ithaca | Branching Out: Paintings by Kent Goetz, ongoing | 272-0403 or www.kitchentheatre.org PADMA Center | 114 W. Buffalo St., Ithaca | Photographs by David Watkins, through November | 607-351-7145 | www.padmacenter.com Sacred Root Kava Lounge and Tea Bar | 139 W. State/MLK St., Ithaca | She is Everyone, canvas prints by Gaia Woolf-Nightingall, opening 11/07 | www.sacredrootkava.com Sarah’s Patisserie | 130 E. Seneca St., Ithaca | 9:00 AM-10:00 PM, daily | Painting and monoprints by Lydia K. Dolch, through November | www.sarahspatisserie.com/ SewGreen | 112 N. Cayuga St., Ithaca | Paintings by Elizabeth McMahon, opening 10/03 through 11/15 | www. sewgreen.org | The Shop | 312 East Seneca Street, Ithaca | Imagination: Recent Paintings by

David Jackier, through November | www. theshop.com Silky Jones | 214 The Commons (E. State St.), Ithaca | Daily, 4:00 PM-1:00 AM | small works by Annie Eller and Rose Gottlieb, through November | www. silkyjoneslounge.com Solá Gallery | Dewitt Mall, Ithaca | 10:30 AM-5:30 PM, Monday-Saturday | Color and Line, work by Michael Sampson and Elizabeth McMahon, up through November | www.solagallery.com State of the Art Gallery |120 West State Street, Ithaca | Wednesday-Friday, 12:00 PM-6:00 PM, Weekends, 12:00 PM-5:00 PM | Giving Thanks for 25 Years, all-member show, opening 11/07 | For information: 607-277-1626 or gallery@soag.org Sunny Days of Ithaca | 123 S. Cayuga St., Ithaca | Glass Beads by Laurie Ament, live torch demonstration, 11/07 only | 319-5260 Titus Gallery Art & Antiques | 222 E State St, Ithaca | Tuesday-Thursday, 10:30 AM-6:30 PM; Friday- Saturday, 10:30 AM-8:30 PM; Sunday, 11:00 AM-4:00 PM | Luminious Lakes, Glorious Glens: Recent Paintings by Brian Keeler, through 12/31. | www.titusgallery.com Uncorked Creations |102 N. Tioga Street, 2nd Floor, Ithaca| New Fall and

Winter Art Work and Open Paint Night, through November | www.uncorkedithaca.com or 222-6005

Kids Art Classes for Kids | Community School Of Music And Arts, 330 E State St, Ithaca | For more information, call (607) 272-1474 or email info@csma-ithaca.org. www.csma-ithaca.org Twinkle, Sparkle, Glitter & Glow | Hosted by Little Voices Music & Motion. Begins the week of December 8. www. LittleVoicesMusic.com Cuddle Up Storytime | 10:00 AM-, 11/12 Wednesday | Southworth Library Association, Main, Dryden | Tot Spot | 9:30 AM-11:30 AM, 11/13 Thursday, 11/15 Saturday, 11/17 Monday | City Of Ithaca Youth Bureau, 1 James L Gibbs Dr, Ithaca | A stay and play program for children 5 months to 5 years old and their parent/caregiver. Ulysses Philomathic Library: Story and Art | 10:30 AM-, 11/13 Thursday | Philomathic Library, 74 E. Main St., Trumansburg | Sleepover Storytime | 6:00 PM-7:30 PM, 11/13 Thursday | Edith B. Ford Memorial Library, 7169 North Main Street, Ovid | Children of all ages can

bring a stuffed animal for a special evening storytime with readers Cady & Ami. Awana Clubs | 6:30 PM-8:15 PM, 11/13 Thursday | Dryden Baptist Church, , | Every Thursday night for kids ages 3 to 8th grade. Any questions please call 607-898-4087. Preschool Storytime | 10:00 AM-, 11/14 Friday | Southworth Library , , Dryden | Story Time | 10:30 AM-11:30 AM, 11/14 Friday | Ford Edith B Memorial Library, PO Box 410, Ovid | Tales for Tots Storytime | 11:00 AM-, 2:00 PM- 11/15 Saturday | Barnes & Noble, 614 S Meadow St, Ithaca | Joseph Bruchac | 2:00 PM-, 11/15 Saturday | Southworth Library, Main Street, Dryden | The first 30 families attending will receive his book, The Girl Who Helped Thunder and Other American Folktales, intended for ages 8-12. Youth Basketball Clinic | Ithaca High School, 1401 N. Cayuga St., Ithaca | Open to boys and girls in grades 3-6. Five week clinic begins Sunday November 16th at Ithaca High School. For more information visit IYBrec.com or call 273.8364.

animal furnace

Saturday, November 15 – noon

Wednesday, November 19 – 8 p.m.

At 7-2, Ithaca College played some damn good football this season, which makes this year’s Cortaca Jug rivalry game against Cortland even more exciting. Nevermind the pre- and post-game festivities, which, we hear, got a little wild last year. Keep those passions in check, and enjoy the game. (Pictured: defensive end Robert Barberi, courtesy of IC Athletics).

We’re giving you a solid week to add this event to your entertainment calendar. Featured on the likes of Comedy Central’s The Awkward Comedy Show, Louie and a co-star on the Eric André Show, stand-up comedian and writer Hannibal Burress performs in Cornell’s Statler Hall.

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with Italian guitarist Daniele Fiaschi, her touring partner in Europe. The Birth of Stars was recorded at Electric Wilburland in Newfield, with Grammy-winning engineer Will Russell, and produced and mixed by Foster in late-night sessions in Brooklyn, Long Island, Florida, and at Montrose Studios in Richmond, Va. “The record was me and JD and Brian,” said Coogan, “but JD has a lot of work, so we have moved towards playing as a duo. Brian plays the bass pedals, and it is a bit different on record. Performing live is a few steps beyond the CD, which is a fun way to root yourself and look forward at the same time.” • • • Mention the Rongovian Embassy to any longtime local music fan, and they will likely get the look of someone remembering a long-lost cousin who was a real character. The venue for live music functioned as a bright beacon in Trumansburg — and basically birthed many of the acts associated with Tompkins County for more than twenty years. A quick succession of owners prematurely aged the Embassy, and it has been shut down—some thought more or less for good—over the last five years. But it is back, as this paper has reported, and this Saturday, Nov. 15, the Sim Redmond Band will inaugurate the new stage. •

33


Town & Country

Classifieds

In Print

|

On Line |

10 Newspapers

277-7000 Phone: Mon.-Fri. 9am-5pm Fax: 277-1012 (24 Hrs Daily)

Special Rates:

Internet: www.ithacatimes.com Mail: Ithaca Times Classified Dept PO Box 27 Ithaca NY 14850 In Person: Mon.-Fri. 9am-5pm 109 North Cayuga Street

MERCHANDISE $100 - $500

Fax and Mail orders only

12 words / runs til sold

15 words / runs 2 insertions

10 25 words

automotive

buy sell

employment

employment

employment

Donate your car to Wheels For Wishes, benefiting Make-A-Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call 315-400-0797 Today! (NYSCAN)

Cash for OLD Comics! Buying 10c and 12c comic books or MASSIVE quantities of after 1970. Also buying toys, sports, music and more! Call Brian: 1-800-6173551 (NYSCAN)

Africa, Brazil Work/Study! Change the lives of others while creating a sustainable future. 1, 6, 9, 18 month programs available. Apply now! www.OneWorldCenter.org (269) 591-0518 info@ OneWorldCenter.org (AAN CAN)

DELIVERY PART-TIME Route Driver needed for delivery of newspapers every Wednesday. Must be available 9am-1pm, have reliable transportation, and a good driving record. Call 277-7000

435/Health Care

AIRLINE CAREERS begin here - Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 800-725-1563 (AAN CAN)

VETERANS - Thank you for your service. Start your new career. POST 9/11 G.I. Bill - If eligible; Paid tuition, fees & military housing allowance. Become a professional Tractor trailer driver with National Tractor Trailer School, Liverpool/ Buffalo, NY (branch) full/part-time with PTDI certified courses & job placement assistance with local, regional & nationwide employers! Tuition, transportation & housing packages available: ntts.edu/ veterans 1-800-243-9300 Consumer Information @ntts.edu/programs/disclosures (NYSCAN)

CASH FOR CARS: Any Car/Truck. Running or Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come To You! Call For Instant Offer. 1-888-4203808 www.cash4car.com (AAN CAN)

1994 GMC SUBURBAN, AUTOMATIC, ALL POWER, 4WH DR. READY FOR SNOW. 607.273.9315 2000 EXPLORER 4WD, 103K, 6 cylinder. A-1 Condition! Red, New Tires & Exhaust. Asking $2,200. 607-657-2566

215/Auctions PUBLIC SURPLUS AUCTION FOR NEW YORK POWER AUTHORITY -Late Model Year Vehicles & Heavy Equipment Saturday Nov. 15 at 10 AM- Registration starts at 8 AM Online Bidders Must Register 48 hrs In Advance. Inspection of Lots- 8am-4pm Thurs. Nov.13 & 8am-10am Fri. Nov. 14. To be held at L&L Storage, 2222 Oriskany St., Utica, NY 13502. www.AuctionsInternational. com for more info & full inventory or call 800-536-1401 (NYSCAN)

245/Garage Sales Garage/House/Yard Sale Nov. 15 (Sat.), 9-3pm, 132 Hillcrest Road, Ithaca, off Warren Road. Antiques, books, dishes, furniture, housewares, tools, knickknacks, bicycles. Much More!

250/Merchandise

2004 VOLVO

XC 70 Wagon 112K, New Tires, Alignment, All Options, 3rd Row Seating. Just Inspected. $8,000/obo. 607-216-2314

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$

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 (NYSCAN)

120/Autos Wanted

1993 Buick Road Master, Loaded all power, Must Be Seen! 607.273.9315

SERVICE DIRECTORY

AUTOMOBILES

automotive

140/Cars

Non-Commercial: $14.50 first 12 words (minimum), 20 cents each additional word. Rate applied to non-business ads and prepaid ads. Business Ads: $16.50 for first 12 words (minimum), 30 cents each additional word. If you charge for a service or goods you are a business. Inquire about contract rates. $24.00 Auto Guaranteed Ad - Ad runs 3 weeks or until sold. 12 words $24.00, each additional word 60¢. You must notify us to continue running ad. Non-commercial advertisers only 25% Discount - Run your non-commercial ad for 4 consecutive weeks, you only pay for 3 (Adoption, Merchandise or Housemates) Employment / Real Estate / Adoption: $38.00 first 15 words (minimum), 30 cents each additional word. Ads run weeks. Box Numbers: Times Box Numbers are $2.50 per week of publication. Write “Times Box______” at end of your ad. Readers address box replies to Times Box______, c/o Ithaca Times, P.O. Box 27, Ithaca, NY 14851. Headlines: 9-point headlines (use up to 16 characters) $2.00 per line. If bold type, centered or unusually spaced type, borders in ad, or logos in ads are requested, the ad will be charged at the display classified advertising rate. Call 277-7000 for rate information. Free Ads: Lost and Found and free items run at no charge for up to 3 weeks. Merchandise for Sale, private party only. Price must be under $50 and stated in ad Website/Email Links: On Line Links to a Web Site or Email Address $5.00 per insertion. Blank Lines: (no words) $2.00/Line - insertion. Border: 1 pt. rule around ad $5.00 - insertion.

MERCHANDISE UNDER $100

FREE

Truck Wanted Any Year or Condition. Call on All. CASH Paid! (607)273-9315

| 67,389 Readers

Ithaca Times Town & Country Classified Ad Rates

CASH for Coins! Buying ALL Gold & Silver. Also Stamps & Paper Money, Entire Collections, Estates. Travel to your home. Call Marc in NY: 1-800-959-3419 (NYSCAN)

410/Business Opportunity AIRBRUSH MAKEUP ARTIST COURSE For: Ads. TV. Film. Fashion 35% OFF TUITION - SPECIAL $1990 - Train & Build Portfolio. One Week Course Details at: AwardMakeupSchool.com 818-9802119 (AAN CAN)

430/General $1,000 WEEKLY!! MAILING BROCHURES From Home. Helping home workers since 2001. Genuine Opportunity. No Experience required. Start Immediately www.mailingmembers.com (AAN CAN)

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AIRLINE CAREERS begin here Get FAA approved Aviation Maintenance Technician training. Financial aid for qualified students - Housing available. Job placement assistance. Call AIM 866-296-7093 (NYSCAN)

GARAGE SALES

15

$

$

per week / 13 week minimum

CAREGivers Wanted If you enjoy working with seniors, we want you! Join our team and become a Home Instead CAREGiver, providing non-medical companion and home-helper services to seniors in your community. Training, support and flexible shifts provided. No medical degree necessary Join us for a job that nurtures the soul! Call Home Instead Senior Care today: 607-269-7165. Each Home Instead Senior Care office is independently owned and operated.

BlackCatAntiques.webs.com

We Buy & Sell

BLACK CAT ANTIQUES “We stock the unusual” 774 Peru Road, Rte. 38 • Groton, NY 13073 Hours: Friday & Saturday 10-4 or by App’t. BlackCatAntiques@CentralNY.twcbc.com 607.898.2048

DELIVERY PART-TIME Route Driver needed for delivery of newspapers every Wednesday. Must be available 9am-1pm, have reliable transportation, and a good driving record.

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adoptions

rentals

services

real estate

640/Houses

830/Home

Sebastian, Florida Beautiful 55+ manu-

Rent Your Home

Cornell Commencement 2015. Let

510/Adoption Services

us make the arrangements. info@

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

607-272-7344

commencementweekendrentals.com

A childless young married couple (she 30/he -37) seeks to adopt. Will be handson mom/devoted dad. Financial security. Expenses paid. Call/text. Mary & Adam. 1-800-790-5260 (NYSCAN)

700/Roommates ALL AREAS - ROOMMATES.COM. Lonely? Bored? Broke? Find the perfect roomate to complement your personality and lifestyle at Roommates .com! (AAN CAN)

Four Seasons Landscaping Inc. 607.272.1504 Lawn maintenance, spring + fall clean up + gutter cleaning, patios, retaining walls, + walkways, landscape design + installation. Drainage. Snow Removal. Dumpster rentals. Find us on Facebook!

825/Financial

LOVELY APTS

2 or 3 Bedrooms in Cayuga Heights or Northeast areas available November, December, or January. For additional Information please call SERVICE CONNECTION @ (607) 277.1929. Short or long term lease negotiable.

FREE BANKRUPTCY CONSULTATION

Real Estate, Uncontested Divorces. Child Custody. Law Office of Jeff Coleman and Anna J. Smith (607)277-1916

New models from $99,000. 772-581-

PIANOS

0080, www.beach-cove.com (NYSCAN)

1040/Land for Sale

• Rebuilt • Reconditioned • Bought• Sold • Moved • Tuned • Rented

BEAUTIFUL STREAM 10 acres $34,900 Woods, apple trees, views,1,000 ft of stream! Cooperstown Lakes Region! Peaceful country bldg site! Town road, utils! Terms avail! 888-905-8847 newy-

HOLISTIC Art Lessons Private and small group options (ages 8 - Adult). Have you ever, always, wanted to take art lessons? Do you want to be more creative? Students are signing up now. For Information: e-mail: lessonsandthings@gmail.com or Call: 564-7387

Rest. Relax. Transform Yourself. HYPNOSIS Peter Fortunato, 273-6637 www. peterfortunato.wordpress.com

CATSKILLS FARM- SHORT SALE! Spring, town rd, utils, survey, G’teed buildable! Priced 60% below Market!

& %

Quilting Needs

LandandLakes.com (NYSCAN)

BRING IN THIS AD FOR A

A Kaleidoscope of Quilts

6270 Little York Rd • Little York, NY 607.749.2628 Like us on Facebook

10

DISCOUNT

to 10 acres, from $49,900. Was in the $200’s. Beautiful country acreage in

IF YOU USED THE BLOOD THINNER XARELTO

the Catskills. 85 miles from Manhattan. Assorted hardwoods, approved build-

and suffered internal bleeding, hemorrhaging, required hospitalization or a loved one died while taking Xarelto between 2011 and the present time, you may be entitled to compensation. Call Attorney Charles H. Johnson 1-800-535-5727

(NYSCAN) Recreational Lands Beautiful for sale or lease, inexpensive, Central & Northern, NY. By Owner.

$19,900. Woods, awesome view, just off the NY Thruway! Quiet country setting! Town road, utils, Hurry! Financing avail!

1020/Houses

888-701-7509 (NYSCAN)

Discover Delaware’s Resort Living Without Resort Pricing! Milder winters & low taxes! Gated Community with amazing amenities! New Homes $80’s. Brochures available, 1-866-629-0770 or www.coolbranch.com (NYSCAN)

TUMBLING WATER 38 ACRES $89,900. Fields, woods, valley views, gorgeous stream! 1/2 hour west of

Notice of public AUCTION

Albany! Pristine setting on town road w/ utils! EZ terms! 888-479-3394 newyorklandandlakes.com (NYSCAN)

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT UNITED STORAGE will sell at public auction on November 23, 2014 at 12pm the personal property heretofore stored with United Storage by:

REPLACEMENT A FULL LINE OF VINYL Manufacture To InstallREPLACEMENT WINDOWS REPLACEMENT WINDOWS We Do Call It forAll Free Estimate &

D. Bennett 10U, J. Gladstone 10R, R. Bowersox 10M, L. Kenerson 20J, J. Nyschot 30S, K. Purser 30A, J. Mattias 30I and M. Butler 50G

WINDOWS

Professional Installation A FULL LINE OF Custom VINYL made & manufactured AREPLACEMENT FULL LINE OF VINYL WINDOWS by… REPLACEMENT WINDOWS Call for Free Estimate & Call for Free Estimate & Professional Installation 3/54( Professional Installation Custom made & manufactured Custom made & manufactured 3%.%#! by… by… 6).9,

6).9,

Romulus, NY 315-585-6050 or Toll Free at 866-585-6050

www.SouthSenecaWindows.com Romulus, NY Romulus, NY 315-585-6050 or 315-585-6050 Toll Free at 866-585-6050 or Toll Free at

BONUS ITEMS FOR SALE previously owned by OWNER OF THE FACILITY

Pre-Registration is PREFERRED, Walk ins welcome at 11:30am 484 RIDGE RD LANSING CASH ONLY OWNER RESERVES THE RIGHT TO BID AT AUCTION, REJECT ANY AND ALL BIDS AND Cancel OR ADJOURN THE SALE

greg01integrityhome@gmail.com

To resolve this claim please call United Storage 607-533-4300

DONATE YOUR CAR

Vintage, Antiques & Home Decor

Wheels For Wishes benefiting

866-585-6050

Ithaca’s only

hometown electrical distributor Your one Stop Shop

Since 1984 802 W. Seneca St. Ithaca 607-272-1711 fax: 607-272-3102 www.fingerlakeselectric.com

272-2602

www.guitarworks.com

LOVELY MEADOW AND FOREST up

REPOSSESSED LAND! 10 acres -

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

3/54( 3/54( 3%.%#! 3%.%#! 6).9,

DeWitt Mall

950 Danby Rd., Suite 26

South Hill Business Campus, Ithaca, NY

Center. Financing. Call (877)836-1820

Classes

New, Used & Vintage Guitars Layaway • Lessons • Repairs

(607) 272-6547

Terms! Hurry! 888-476-4569 NewYork-

(607)533-3553

FOR ALL YOUR

Uke and Banjo Packages too!

Ithaca Piano Rebuilders

58 acres - $95,000. Mtn views, woods,

from lake. Walk to Top Performing Arts

HAS YOUR BUILDING SHIFTED OR SETTLED? Contact Woodford Brothers Inc., for straightening, leveling, foundation and wood frame repairs at 1-800-OLD-BARN. www.woodfordbros. com (NYSCAN)

Fender Guitar Packages with everything you need to start playing today!

Complete rebuilding services. No job too big or too small. Call us.

orklandandlakes.com (NYSCAN)

ing site, underground utilities, across

855/Misc.

real estate Want to Play Guitar?

the beach. Close to riverfront district.

850/Mind Body & Spirit 610/Apartments

real estate

factured home community, 4.4 miles to

840/Lessons

520/Adoptions Wanted

Organically Grown Blueberries $1.60 lb. Open 7 days a week. Dawn-toDusk. Easy to pick high bush berries. Tons of quality fruit! 3455 Chubb Hollow road Pen n Yan. 607-368-7151

x % Ta 0 0 1 le uctib Ded

Central New York *Free Vehicle/Boat Pickup ANYWHERE *We Accept All Vehicles Running or Not *100% Tax Deductible

Wed-Sat 10-5, Sun 11-4

317 Taughannock Blvd, Ithaca

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Independence Cleaners Corp RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL Housekeeping*Windows*Awnings*Floors High Dusting*Carpets*Building Maintenance 24/7 EMERGENCY CLEANING Services 607-227-3025 or 607-220-8739

LIGHTLINK HOTSPOTS 4 Seasons Landscaping Inc.

* BUYING RECORDS *

607-272-1504 lawn maintenance spring + fall clean up + gutter cleaning patios, retaining walls, + walkways landscape design + installation drainage snow removal dumpster rentals Find us on Facebook!

LPs 45s 78s ROCK JAZZ BLUES PUNK REGGAE ETC Angry Mom Records (Autumn Leaves Basement) 319-4953 angrymomrecords@gmail.com Custom Made Vinyl Replacement Windows

We Manufacture & install Free Estimate

South Seneca Vinyl 315-585-6050, Toll Free at 866-585-6050

AAM ALL ABOUT MACS

DELIVERY PART-TIME Route Driver Needed for delivery of newspapers every Wednesday. Must be available 9am-1pm have reliable transportation and a good driving record

Macintosh Consulting http://www.allaboutmacs.com 280-4729

Affordable Acupuncture

Call 277-7000

Full range of effective care for a full range of human ailments

Deluxe Studio and One Bedroom Apartments Shop, Dine, Workout & Live close to Cornell

Peaceful Spirit Acupuncture Anthony Fazio, L.Ac., C.A. www.peacefulspiritacupuncture.com

607-272-0114

Men’s and Women’s Alterations for over 20 years Fur & Leather repair, zipper repair. Same Day Service Available

John’s Tailor Shop John Serferlis - Tailor 102 The Commons 273-3192

Saturday, November 15 1-3pm Preregistration suggested $30

MIGHTY YOGA www.mightyyoga.com, 272-0682

Rusty Rooster Mercantile

Black Cat Antiques

607-898-2048

OLD & GREEN

You Never Know What You’ll Find

Private Computer Classes

foundinithaca.com

Robotics1 - Ithaca Friendly low-cost Computer Services lcrombie@robotics1.com (607)220-3517

You’re Sure to Find

Window World Replacement Window Specialist Guaranteed Lowest Pricing Visit our Showroom

607-797-3234 HIP HOP DANCE CLASSES Mon: Kids Hip Hop 4-5pm, Teens 5-6pm Thurs: Breakdance 4-5 pm Adult Hip Hop 5-6pm Just Be Cause Center 1013 W. State St. e-mail: greatestcommonfactorcrew@gmail.com

Quality Residential Builder Integrity Home Builders

Greg Stelick 480-258-2327

www.greenstar.coop / N

DEVELOPING A HOME YOGA PRACTICE

We Buy, Sell, & Trade

607-351-0640, june@twcny.rr.com www.moonlightdancer.com

nstar.coop catering@gree

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Take your yoga home with you!

Professional Oriental Dancer Instructor & Choreographer

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Gift Certificates Avaialable Gift Certificates Available!! Gift Certificates Available!

317 Taughannock Blvd., Ithaca

607-273-5069

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www.thehouseofwellness.com Conveniently Located inDowntown Downtown Ithaca Conveniently Located in Conveniently Located in Downtown IthacaIthaca Gift Certificates Available! www.thehouseofwellness.com www.thehouseofwellness.com www.thehouseofwellness.com

JUNE

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• Postural Alignment

• Postural Alignment • Postural Alignment

Vintage, Antiques & Home Decor

Let us focus on the details so you can focus on your guests.

h e

L.Ac. L.Ac.

Middle Eastern (Belly Dance) & Romani Dances (Gypsy) Performance & Instruction

Real Catering. Real Food.

36 T

L.Ac.

Kristine Shaw Southern, Kristine Shaw Southern, Kristine Shaw Southern, L.Ac. Conveniently Located in Downtown Ithaca

Affordable house parts and furniture www.SignificantElements.org 212 Center St. A program of Historic Ithaca

VETERINARY ACUPUNCTURE SARA W. ROBINSON, D.V.M., C.V.A. 313 N. TIOGA ST. 882-1929

Mimi’s Attic

Adopt! Foster! Volunteer! Donate for vet care! www.cayugadogrescue.org www.facebook.com/CayugaDogRescue

• Relief of of Chronic Pain & • Relief Chronic • Relief of Chronic Pain &Pain & • ReliefTension ofTension Chronic Pain & Tension Tension • Injury •Rehabilitation Injury Rehabilitation • Injury Rehabilitation • Injury Rehabilitation • Promote Healing • Promote Healing • Postural Alignment Kristine Shaw Southern, • Promote Healing • Promote Healing

607-257-0313

Free in Home Estimates

430 W. State Street

Love dogs? Check out Cayuga Dog Rescue!

Traditional Chinese Medicine. Sports Traditional Chinese Medicine. Traditional Chinese Medicine. Sports Traditional Chinese Medicine. Sports Medicine Acupuncture. Myoskeletal Medicine Acupuncture. Myoskeletal Sports Medicine Acupuncture. Medicine Acupuncture. Myoskeletal Alignment Bodywork. Alignment Bodywork. Myoskeletal Alignment Bodywork. Alignment Bodywork.

Carriage House Apartments

BRIGHT SKY

Buy/Sell Second Hand Furniture & Home Decor

http://www.lightlink.com/hotspots hotspots@lighlink.com

House of Wellness House of Wellness House of Wellness House of Wellness

o v e m b e r

1 2- 18,

2014

Found Antiques * Unusual Objects 227 Cherry St. 607-319-5078

the place that’s right for you with Conifer Linderman Creek - 269-1000 Cayuga View - 269-1000 The Meadows - 257-1861 Poets Landing - 288-4165

www.coniferliving.com


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