Syracuse New Times 5-31-17

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KRAMER

Trump’s frenzied overseas trip left Jeff’s head spinning with futile ideas Page 8

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FOOD

Four albums in, Selwyn Birchwood has found his sound Page 10

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MUSIC

Blues artist Chris Thomas King explores what the genre means to him

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Hr eStory

WSYR-Channel 9 reporter and anchor Tammy Palmer reveals her battle with ulcerative colitis By Bill DeLapp

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Politicians assaulting reporters is becoming an unsettling trend

Map Inside!

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PARSNOW

MAY 31 - JUNE 6, 2017

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ISSUE NUMBER 2384

The Crunch are one step closer to Calder Cup glory

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

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SPORTS By Matt Michael

CRUNCH POSTSEASON AIMS FOR CALDER CUP GOAL

Syracuse Crunch hockey team on home ice at the Onondaga County War Memorial. Michael Davis photo

A quick Syracuse professional hockey lesson: On April 11, 1937, the Syracuse Stars of the American Hockey League won the first Calder Cup championship over the Philadelphia Ramblers. But the actual Calder Cup, arguably the most prized trophy in minor-league sports, was donated to what was then called the International-American Hockey League. And the Syracuse players never got to raise the actual cup nor did the team get its name engraved on it. Instead, the list on the cup starts with the Providence Reds, who won the title in 1938 by defeating — you guessed it — the Syracuse Stars. Flash ahead 90 years and the Syracuse Crunch is on a mission to formally right those wrongs. Syracuse, which returned to the AHL in 1994 as the Crunch, checked one box off the list as they defeated the Providence Bruins 4 games to 1 in the Eastern Conference semifinals. The Crunch dominated the franchise that prevented Syracuse from winning the Calder Cup in 1938 by outscoring the P-Bruins 22-12. In fact, Providence never skated with a lead in the series as its only win came in overtime. The Crunch will now face the Western Conference champion Grand Rapids Griffins in the Calder Cup finals starting Friday, June 2, in Grand Rapids, Mich. Since 1994, the Crunch has played in one

Calder Cup finals and lost to — you guessed it again — Grand Rapids in 2013. So, with four more wins Syracuse can avenge that loss as well as raise the Calder Cup for the first time in Syracuse professional hockey history. After playing Friday and Saturday, June 3, in Grand Rapids, the teams will play Games 3, 4 and 5 (if necessary) on Wednesday, June 7, Friday, June 9, and Saturday, June 10 at the Onondaga County War

Memorial Arena in Syracuse. Games 6 and 7, if necessary, will be played June 13 and June 14 in Grand Rapids. Led by second-year coach Ben Groulx, the Crunch advanced to the finals by defeating Providence 3-1 May 27 at the War Memorial Arena. Center Cory Conacher, who won the Calder Cup with Norfolk in 2015 and lost in the finals with Utica last year, scored the go-ahead goal with 5:06 remaining in the third period and then added an empty netter for the final margin. Conacher leads all AHL playoff scorers with 20 points (nine goals, 11 assists). Syracuse goaltender Mike McKenna made 27 saves in Game 5 against Providence as he and the Crunch improved to 9-0 at home in the playoffs. Grand Rapids was equally dominant in the Western Conference finals as it dispatched San Jose in five games and outscored the Barracuda 19-11. Grand Rapids is affiliated with the NHL’s Detroit Red Wings, while the Crunch is an affiliate of the Tampa Bay Lightning. Tickets for the home games can be purchased at the Crunch office inside the War Memorial Arena, 800 S. State St., by phone at (315) 473-4444, or through Ticketmaster. The Crunch office is open Wednesday and Thursday, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., and Friday and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Single-game ticket prices are $33, $35 and $37, increasing to $36, $38 and $40 on game day. Tickets for children 12 and under are priced at $33 and go to $36 on the game day. Discounted tickets are available for groups of 15 or more. Prices are subject to additional fees. For the latest Crunch news, visit syracusecrunch. com or follow the club on Facebook (facebook.com/ syracusecrunch), Twitter (@SyracuseCrunch) and Instagram (@syracusecrunch) using #SyrCrunch and #FIN15H. SNT

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NEWS

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Executive producer Gayle Anne Kelley began working on Spirit Game: Pride of A Nation with a clear motive. “I want to change history to correct what was left out and to create a counter-narrative about Native Americans,” she said in a telephone interview from Burbank, Calif. “Plus, I love sports.” Those messages come across loud and clear in the 102-minute documentary, which receives its East Coast premiere on Saturday, June 3, 2 p.m.. at Eastwood’s Palace Theatre, 2384 James St., in a red carpet event for citizens of the six Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) nations. A public screening is set for Saturday, June 24, 7 p.m., also at the Palace; admission will be $12. The film is produced by One Bowl Productions in partnership with the Haudenosaunee. The movie about lacrosse and its relationship to the Haudenosaunee “isn’t a standard sports documentary,” the Los Angeles Times wrote after its May 24 Hollywood premiere. “Its focus is on spiritual matters as well as the physical because it deals with a game its adherents believe is just about as old as time.” The film’s descriptions of “the creator’s game” and the success of the Iroquois Nationals serves as a powerful metaphor for the Haudenosaunee’s efforts to maintain dignity, identity and sovereignty. “By detailing the enormous pride in who they are and what they do that lacrosse instills in the Iroquois, it provides the kind of window into another culture’s belief system that sports films rarely attempt,” the LA Times wrote. The film features interviews with Native American and lacrosse leaders, including Oren Lyons, Onondaga Nation faithkeeper. Lyons, whose former teammates

include Jim Brown and Roy Simmons Jr., led the Syracuse University Orangemen to a perfect season in 1957. “I’ll never be able to replace what the game has given to me,” Lyons says early in the film, for which he served as executive producer. Al Gore, former U.S. vice president, and Bill Belichick, New England Patriots general manager, both have cameos. “I’m rooting for the Iroquois,” Gore said before the indigenous team took on USA. Spirit Game also highlights the Thompson brothers: Jeremy, Hiana, Miles and Lyle, all four of them Nationals team members. Lyle Thompson, two-time winner of the Tewaaraton Trophy for men’s lacrosse player of the year — the sport’s equivalent of the Heisman Trophy — described lacrosse’s spiritual dimension. “Once the ball goes up, we scream,” he said in the movie. “That lets the Creator know we’re starting the game and we’re playing for him.” Kelley and co-directors Peter Spirer and Peter Baxter planned to focus on the 2014 World Lacrosse Championships in Denver. The Iroquois Nationals team (which Oren Lyons founded in 1983) lost to Canada and the United States. They beat Australia, 16-5, and took home a bronze medal. That competition alone would have made a dramatic movie. It was the first time the Nationals medaled in the competition. And it followed the 2010 World Lacrosse Championships in Manchester, England. Despite high-level diplomatic efforts British officials would not allow the team to enter the country on Haudenosaunee passports. The team refused to use Canadian or American passports, instead withdrawing from the tournament.


The documentary’s production plans changed when the Onondaga Nation won the bid to host the 2015 Federation of International Lacrosse World Indoor Lacrosse Championship at the Onondaga Nation. The international box lacrosse tournament, held every four years, drew teams from 13 nations, including the United Kingdom, for matches and cultural events at the Onondaga County War Memorial Arena, the Onondaga Nation and the Carrier Dome. It was the first time the contest had been held on Native soil. The film features intense, close-up footage of the lacrosse players in practice and competition. “It’s a phenomenal sport not only because of the players’ physical prowess, but because of the genesis of the game,” Kelley said. “It was meant to heal and to bring people together and develop peaceful and productive relationships.” In a rare humorous, but pointed, scene, the film crew records a meeting with Haudenosaunee leaders and executives of Nike, which has sponsored the Native American team since 2006. “When we sign this contract, we get all our land back, right?” Lyons joked. The film focuses on the players’ pride and struggles on the field, even as the Haudenosaunee continued broader battles. Amid the 10-day competition, Pope Francis was embarking on his first visit to the United States. Haudenosaunee leaders saw an opportunity to press the Catholic Church’s leader to renounce the Doctrine of Discovery, a concept that emerged in 15th-century church documents to justify the colonization and oppression of indigenous peoples Haudenosaunee representatives left the international lacrosse event and headed to papal events in New York City and Philadelphia, only to face disappointment.

Onondaga Nation Tadodaho Sid Hill, the spiritual leader of the Haudenosaunee, was invited to speak on an interfaith panel but learned the panel would feature only representatives of religions the United Nations recognizes. At another event, officials would not allow Hill to wear his ceremonial headdress saying its animal horns were dangerous. The indignity Hill and his contingent met during papal events reflects the historic erasure that inspired Kelley to produce the film. “The lack of the real truth about the founding of this nation and the founding principles concern me most,” she said. “I see how the past informs the present. The Iroquois shared their governance with us and showed us how women and the Earth should be included. We see the results of leaving them out.” Spirit Games is “the first in a series of media projects correcting history and showing the influence of indigenous people,” Kelley said. “Film transforms minds. Film can change the world.” She will attend the June 3 premiere. The Haudenosaunee are “the statesmen of indigenous people,” she said. “Without the Iroquois and other nations, this country might not exist.” In the historic tournament hosted by the Haudenosaunee, the Iroquois meet Canada in the championship final. After an emotional, hard-fought game, Canada took the gold for the fourth time, beating the Iroquois, 12-8. Oren Lyons reminds viewers that lacrosse is much more than a game to the Haudenosaunee: “We’ve lost many games, but we’ve never been defeated.” SNT Renée K. Gadoua is a freelance writer and editor. Follow her on Twitter @ReneeKGadoua.

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Oren Lyons Takes On The UN

summer

In a recent address at the United Nations in New York City, Oren Lyons pushed the body to allow

indigenous peoples to participate more fully in UN meetings. “I must express to you our consternation, that on the 10th anniversary of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, we are presented with ‘enhanced participation’ purporting to ‘enable our participation and meetings with the UN bodies,’” he said April 25. Lyons’ comments came during the two-week UN General Assembly marking the 10th anniversary of the passage of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP). It was the 16th session of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFII). The UN’s General Assembly in September 2007 adopted the declaration, which established a universal framework of minimum standards for the survival, dignity, well-being and rights of the world’s indigenous peoples. The United Nations last July completed a draft on “Participation of Indigenous Peoples in the UN.” According to Lyons, who has participated in UN proceedings in New York and Geneva for 40 years, “The proposed procedures seem to violate most of the articles of the declaration. In particular, our rights to self-determination; free, prior, and informed consent; consultation; and many more.” The United States was one of four nations that did not sign on to UNDRIP in 2007. Canada has announced it plans to fully adopt and implement the declaration. In addition to the United States, Australia and New Zealand do not support the declaration. More than 1,000 members of indigenous communities all over the world attended the two-week Assembly in New York. Tadodaho Sid Hill delivered the ceremonial welcome at the Assembly April 24. Sessions addressed a wide range of topics, including ancestral land rights, empowerment of indigenous women and the health risks and environmental threats to indigenous peoples by mineral and gas extraction. In his brief address, Lyons renewed his warning that humans continue to abuse natural resources. “Our mandate is inclusive of all life, the welfare of future generations and the common good,” he said. “I remind you as we did in the year 2000, and again in the year 2014, that the ice continues to melt in the north. We squandered time.” — Renée K. Gadoua

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KRAMER By Jeff Kramer

POTUS TRIP YIELDS BUMPER CROP OF COMEDY

M

uch of my adult life has been spent wracking my brain for humorous column ideas. At times, the fruit hangs so low it hits me in the face, but too many other times — whether due to my own stalled imagination or a dark turn in the news cycle — nothing seems funny.

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That’s not a complaint. I’m used to the process, and I’m at peace with it. As President John F. Kennedy said, we choose to go to the moon and tackle other challenges “not because they are easy, but because they are hard.” But now the challenge comes from the other direction. In nearly four decades of writing humor, nothing has prepared me for the bounty of riches bestowed by our current president. There’s too much absurdity coming too fast: one perfect column idea eclipsed within hours by something even better. The Boston Molasses Disaster keeps coming to mind. In 1919 in Boston’s North End, a huge molasses tank collapsed, releasing a 25-foot-high wave of molasses that entombed everything in its path. Twenty-one people lost their lives in the tsunami of sweetness, proving yet again that too much of a good thing can be fatal. Much like those hapless Bostonians, I’m stuck in a flood of folly in which the more I struggle, the deeper I go. Consider the president’s just-concluded trip

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abroad. When I first saw the ridiculous image of Donald Trump, flanked by the king of Saudi Arabia and the president of Egypt, with his hands placed portentously on a weird glowing orb, I figured I had my column idea for the week. I would purchase not one but two spheroidal LED pool lights and walk around town asking people if they wanted to touch my balls. Pretty inspired, don’t you agree? But immediately after Trump left the warm embrace of the House of Saud and landed in Israel, he served up another gimme. Or, more accurately the first lady did. The Melania hand-slap became an internet sensation, but more importantly it captured the attention of every married man on the planet. I hatched a related column idea based on the concept: “250,000 Ways to Tell When Your Wife Is Unhappy With You. By Someone Who Knows.” Alas, that flame of comedic genius was extinguished within an hour by a geyser of geostupidity. “We just got back from the Middle East,” the leader of the free world announced while meeting with Israeli

President Reuven Rivlin in — and this detail is key — Israel. That gave me the idea for a World According to Trump column that would feature one of those exaggerated satirical maps. The North and South Poles would be minuscule, Washington, D.C., would be at Mar-a-Lago and Russia would be located in Nebraska. I even had the opening paragraph written: “I just got back from the Middle East, and by that I mean King David’s on Marshall Street.” But no, that couldn’t happen either, because then came the meeting with Pope Francis and a classic Newsweek headline: Did the Pope Fat-Shame Donald Trump? “What did you give him to eat: potizza?” the pope asked Melania in Italian. They laughed and laughed. Potizza (potica) is a heavy, nut-filled pastry from Slovenia, Melania’s home country. Bingo! I would prepare a giant potica and eat the whole thing and then, under its influence, write a column warning Pope Francis that if he doesn’t show our president more respect we’re sending over a certain congressman from Montana who will turn the pontiff into a pontizza. Here, also, was an opportunity to humorously reference past porcine presidents, including 340-pound William Howard Taft, who may have became stuck in a White House bathtub, and Fayetteville’s own Grover Cleveland, who definitely made a few too many trips to Sweet Frog. Except then came the icy, clenched-jaw mano-a-mano handshake between Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron, and the humiliating golf cart ride at the G-7 Summit and the shoving aside of the president of Montenegro to get into better position for a photo. Each incident was a column waiting to happen, but as they piled up, so did my sense of paralysis. Would readers care about any of it by the next week when the molasses tank of material would rupture all over again? Even before Air Coarse One had ferried the president home, the narrative was changing from diplomatic dissonance to domestic duplicity. Had the allegedly brilliant and cunning son-in-law, Jared, truly been so stupid as to ask the Russians to use their equipment to secretly communicate with the Kremlin? And shouldn’t I be writing about that? Or should I give up and write a column about June being National Accordion Month. Or just call in sick. I’m tired. So very tired. Life was so much easier when Obama was not born in the United States. SNT


THINGS THAT MATTER By Luke Parsnow

FREE PRESS UNDER LITERAL ASSAULT Anyone remember in 2010 when then-Republican candidate for New York governor Carl Paladino said to a New York Post columnist, “I’ll take you out, buddy”? It was a very hot moment during the heat of that campaign. The video of the encounter played on TV stations for weeks. Although intense, and out of line, the confrontation didn’t turn physical, as many feared. The same can’t be said for last week’s incident in Montana, when congressional candidate Greg Gianforte was charged with misdemeanor assault for allegedly grabbing The Guardian reporter Ben Jacobs by the neck and slamming him to the ground just one day before a special election. Just read the transcript of what was said, which was audio recorded. Jacobs: ... the CBO (Congressional Budget Office) score. Because, you know, you were waiting to make your decision about health care until you saw the bill and it just came out ... Gianforte: Yeah, we’ll talk to you about that later. Jacobs: Yeah, but there’s not going to be time. I’m just curious — Gianforte: OK, speak with Shane, please. (loud scuffling noises, an even louder crash, repeated thumping) Gianforte: (shouting) I’m sick and tired of you guys! Jacobs: Jesus Chri — ! Gianforte: The last guy that came in here, you did the same thing! Get the hell out of here! Jacobs: Jesus! Gianforte: Get the hell out of here! The last guy did the same thing! You with The Guardian? Jacobs: Yes! And you just broke my glasses.

Gianforte: The last guy did the same damn thing. Jacobs: You just body-slammed me and broke my glasses. Gianforte: Get the hell out of here. Now, the candidate said the reporter was being aggressive and grabbed him by the wrist. Jacobs said he never touched Gianforte and a Fox News reporter who witnessed the incident said Jacobs was not physically aggressive. The reporter was physically attacked for asking a question. I wish that was an isolated incident. But it wasn’t. The free press has seen a lot of abuse lately. Donald Trump, both as a candidate and president, has attacked the media, calling everything “fake news” and labeling it as the “enemy of the people.” Reports now allege Trump suggested to former FBI Director James Comey that certain journalists should be thrown in prison. As grotesque as that is, for the most part, it’s verbal abuse. And journalists have thick skins. But over time, that verbal abuse has translated into physical altercations that have actually been quite frequent. Just in the last month, the editor of an Alaska newspaper said a state senator slapped one of his reporters when the person asked for the politician’s opinion on a recent article. A reporter from CQ Roll Call said he was pinned against a wall by security guards and forced to leave the Federal Communications Commission headquarters when he tried to ask the commissioner a question. Another journalist was arrested after asking Health Secretary Tom Price questions about opioids. We’re gotten to a point where beating journalists has become a solution for pub-

lic officials who don’t want to deal with the press, which is downright frightening. Yes, the media can, at times, appear too intrusive, but they are doing their job. Simply walking away and not saying anything, or saying “no comment,” is just as effective and much less likely to end in a fine or jail time for assault. But even more frightening is the slow, and even nonexistent, condemnation of actions like Gianforte’s from other public officials. “We all make mistakes,” Ohio GOP Rep. Steve Stivers, the chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, told NBC News. “From what I know of Greg Gianforte, this was totally out of character.” “We all make mistakes” is something we say to our children the first time they forget to do a homework assignment or lose a library book. It is not an excuse for someone vying to serve the people of Montana in Congress to body-slam a reporter. More frightening is that this repulsive behavior by elected officials or those who seek elective office is being channeled

down to average people, who sometimes see it as almost heroic. Indeed, the Gianforte campaign said they raised more than $100,000 online in the 24 hours following the incident with Jacobs. Last year, a photo went viral across the internet of a man at one Trump rally in a shirt that read, “Rope. Tree. Journalist. Some Assembly Required.” We’re passing the point of just a war on the media. Now it’s on those inside the media. We’re venturing further into an era where assaulting an individual and justifying it because he’s a “liberal journalist” isn’t only not frowned upon, but encouraged and rewarded. Gianforte eventually apologized to Jacobs and called his actions “a mistake.” But the apology came only after he won the special election, and it came when just hours earlier he had denied any wrongdoing. It seems like a long way from the days of Paladino threatening to take out a reporter. The only difference between him and Gianforte is Paladino lost. SNT

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MUSIC

By Jessica Novak

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Selwyn Birchwood

SELWYN BIRCHWOOD REVIVES OLD-SOUL BLUES Selwyn Birchwood first picked up the guitar at age 12, then was almost ready to put it down by age 16 — until blues and rock’n’roll saved his soul. “I got hold of a Jimi Hendrix record and I got blown away,” he says. “It was unlike anything I’d ever heard. I wanted to know where he got his influence and ideas to write what sounded like alien music to me. It was the old blues guys: Elmore James, Muddy Waters, Buddy Guy. I heard that and found the sound I’d been looking for.” In 2013 Birchwood was a Blues Foundation International Blues Challenge award-winner and also named the Albert King Guitarist of the Year. Currently on tour in support of his latest disc on Alligator Records, Pick Your Poison, Birchwood will stop at Pulaski’s Kallet Theater, 4842 N. Jefferson St., on Saturday, June 3, 8 p.m. Tickets range from $20 to $35. For more information, visit kallettheater.com. Birchwood grew up in Orlando but moved to

Tampa when he realized he was driving three or four hours every weekend to see different bands. “Tampa had a much more active blues scene,” he says. The guitar-slinger immersed himself in the music, buying records by Buddy Guy, John Lee Hooker, Albert Collins and other blues staples. “When I was learning, I didn’t have YouTube or other instruction,” says the 32-year-old musician. “I was forced to do it the old-school way and learn from records. I’m happy I learned that way rather than by watching people and taking lessons. It makes you sound more robotic, I think.” Birchwood and his band maintained a following throughout Florida, but weren’t known much beyond the Sunshine State until after their huge 2013 wins. “It’s still surreal to think about now,” he says. “People knew us in Florida and we did some festivals and touring outside of the state, but most didn’t know us outside of there very well. That (award) was like a

Advice from the Artist: “Just get ready to work. A lot of times people want things handed to them. I can’t think of any job where people just hand you things. Regardless of the talent you may or may not possess, you have to get out there and work to get it.” 5.31.17 - 6.6.17 | syracusenewtimes.com

catapult to get people’s eyes and ears on us. People were more willing to listen to us when it was Selwyn Birchwood, Blues Foundation International Blues Challenge award-winner, rather than Selwyn Birchwood, some guy from Florida.” Winning the competition was not an easy feat, however. “It’s another thing to actually see people with a pen and paper judging you,” he says. “It’s hard to put yourself on the chopping block.” The guitarist has released four albums to date, including 2014’s Don’t Call No Ambulance, also on Alligator. “I’m working on trying to find our own sound,” he says. “It (Pick Your Poison) really does that. It’s the older blues sound that I love so much, but it puts my own personality and story to it. That’s when music becomes relatable.” The CD’s 13 tracks were written and produced by Birchwood, showing his depth when it comes to musical understanding and production value. His gruff voice is all real and no show, while his guitar style varies from that front-porch old-blues vibe on “Guilty Pleasures” to absolute rippers like “Trial By Fire.” Grooves are deep on “Haunted” and funky on the title track. Coming in at 6-foot-3 with a huge Afro, Birchwood is known for pushing the boundaries of the blues, especially in his concerts. “There’s nothing else I’d rather be doing than playing and performing,” he says. “We try to convey that to the audience with every show. When you see us, you see a band that is just as happy to see you as you are to see us.” His old-soul perspective is apparent when he talks about the blues, his respect for tradition and the foundation laid by the forefathers of the genre. But Birchwood is also happy to see that love of the blues is far from dead. “I know there’s enthusiasm for it,” he says. “There are blues lovers all over the world. But personally, I feel I’d like to see more people writing music. It becomes a paint-by-numbers when you’re just covering the songs that Muddy Waters or Howlin’ Wolf did. It makes it a little disingenuous when you just play other people’s music. I want to hear people tell their stories. That’s what drew me to it all in the first place.” SNT


MUSIC

By Christopher Malone

BLUES FAVORITE CHRIS THOMAS KING VISITS EARLVILLE In a career spanning more than 30 years, Chris Thomas King is still keeping the blues alive. The songwriter, who is the son of the late musician Tabby Thomas, will perform Friday, June 2, 8 p.m., at the Earlville Opera House, 18 E. Main St. Tickets range from $18 to $40; for information, call (315) 691-3550 or visit earlvilleoperahouse.com. The blues music started in the Deep South during the 1800s, and there’s been a debate regarding whether Mississippi (Delta blues) or Louisiana (Swamp blues) owns the original blues. King expresses his confidence in the latter. King relocated his family to Prarieville, La., after Hurricane Katrina’s decimation of the southern region, but not even natural disasters can keep King and others dwelling on the negative. “We’re not even down and depressed at a funeral. A band plays, there’s a second line, we party and have a great time,” he said in a phone conversation. “I’m definitely going to bring a lot of the New Orleans spirit to the room, get people up and dancing.” How has performing changed for you in your career? I grew up performing in my father’s juke joint, Tabby’s Blues Box. I spent as much time there as I spent at home. It was a comfortable place to discover new music and develop my own style. Performing in the music business has changed so much. Back in the day, we’d put out a record and then toured. It was OK to break even, because the idea was to push the album. These days the tour is a means to itself. The recording process is something I really, really love. Writing and creating is my zone. Touring and playing live was something I’ve felt I had to do, but not begrudgingly. The band I’ve been playing with for almost 10 years features Jeff Mills on drums and Danny Infante on bass. Did you feel the need to follow in your father’s footsteps? No. My father was regionally wellknown and respected, pretty much a legend toward the end of his life here in Louisiana. One of his most popular recordings was the “Hoodo Party,” which came out in 1961 through Excello Records. He was

friends with Slim Harpo and that era of blues musicians. I was definitely under his shadow early on. Then I started to record with major companies, like Warner Brothers, which allowed me to do my thing and put me into the international light. The blues casts a shadow for all current recording artists. You’re compared to all these ghosts of the past, and it’s a challenge to create your own space and your own voice. I made the choice to be avant-garde, to incorporate hip-hop and not be limited by myopic blues purists. How did you move past negative criticism with blending genres? I was quote-unquote discovered as a folk blues artist, a coda of the whole folk revisionist blues movement. I was one of the last of the 20th century to be found by a folklorist, like Leadbelly and other musicians. The thing is folk musicians do not make music with a computer, they don’t sample or they don’t use digital technology. In the 1990s musicians would put stickers on their records saying it wasn’t digitally recorded. There were these throwback bands like the Black Crowes that blues and folk aficionados disdained. They shunned Bob Dylan for picking up the electric guitar. If you were going to play the blues and incorporate drum machines or sample, they thought it was blasphemy. It wasn’t just the fact I was doing hiphop, but the whole aesthetic: It was me giving the finger to the folk-blues community, and so they didn’t like that. You’ve stood by saying the blues isn’t solely solemn, but upbeat and about enjoying life. It’s essentially freedom of expression and pursuit of happiness. It’s a philosophy, and that’s why it’s great American music. What has gotten lost in translation is that the blues started down here in Louisiana. When we say we’re going to play the blues, it doesn’t mean we’re sad or depressed. That’s the English definition. We’re an old French colony, and the word comes from sacrebleu or sacre diem. Jelly Roll Morton, Sidney Bechet and a lot of black Creoles spoke French. The blues is a salacious type of music. Morton’s parents kicked him out of the house, because they didn’t want him playing music inside. He wasn’t singing about how his girlfriend wouldn’t go on a date with him, but the lyrics were really raunchy and appropriate for whorehouses or gambling dens. It was nothing fit for polite company.

Chris Thomas King

When Morton kind of started, it was a time where you’d go to jail if you were caught drinking a beer. There were blue laws everywhere, and you couldn’t buy alcohol. Women couldn’t go to a saloon and order a drink. Dancing was outlawed. The recording business hadn’t gotten started. Storyville (the red-light district of New Orleans) closed in 1917, and everyone outside of the district was conservative and superstitious. My parents didn’t put their hands on my ears or tell me this music was bad. The Louisiana musicians are very proud of their music. It is enlightened music, and we were of a different region when compared to the Delta blues in Mississippi. You don’t have to be sad to pursue happiness. Do you have any superstitions? I don’t think I’m superstitious. The blues makes fun of that sort of thing. We sing about how we got our mojo workin’. This blues period we’re in is similar to Europe’s classical or romantic periods. Music is inspiring and has encouraged people to pursue happiness. Blues is a soundtrack to progress. It was part of the soundtrack to Woodstock. It’s even part of the recent incident in England, where people were going out to the Ariana Grande concert just to have a good time, and people with old, myopic beliefs were blowing people up. Why? The victims are free and they’re having fun. We still live in a world where this music can’t be played in certain parts. Your last album, Bona Fide, came out in 2012. Do you have new material in the works? Yeah! We just finished recording, and the album is going off to be mastered. It’s going to be called Hotel Voodoo. This may sound cliché, but I think it’s my best work to date. It should be out late July. It’s about 40 minutes of music, which would fit on a vinyl album. The first side features a suite called “The Baron Suite.”

The Baron, this guy with a top hat, is the guardian of the crossroads in voodoo culture. It’s the naughty side. The other side is called “The Jelly Roll Suite,” which features second-line drum rhythms and I’m playing piano, too. Is songwriting difficult after all these years? Songwriting isn’t difficult, but it doesn’t come easy. Writing in itself is difficult. (Laughs.) I’ve been working on a memoir and a new history of the blues. The process has been more difficult than I thought it’d be. It’s been a number of years since the last album, and my plan was to record a long string of songs. After recording 60-plus songs, the toughest part is narrowing the list down. What can people expect at your show? I’m going to play a few new tunes, play a piano suite and I’ll rock out with an electric and acoustic guitar. And people will hear music from a couple of the movies I’ve been in, Ray and O Brother, Where Art Thou? How was working with that Coen brothers’ film? It was great. The thing about the Coen brothers is that they are craftsmen. They’re very nerdy, and they’re laughing after every scene. It was a great atmosphere. (George) Clooney at the time was just starting to really make a name for himself. This was a critical and successful film for him. He was very down to earth. Although he doesn’t in the film or on the record, he can sing. Look at Rosemary Clooney. It’s in his blood. We didn’t know that movie was going to do as well as it had. The same can be said about the soundtrack. The music was received so well for folk, soul and blues. I think the younger musicians discovered the blues through this film. It was really nice to have that opportunity, to play that role of a liaison. SNT

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Hr eStory WSYR-Channel 9 reporter and anchor Tammy Palmer reveals her battle with ulcerative colitis

T

By Bill DeLapp

he WSYR-Channel 9 morning newscast on Sunday, Jan. 3, 2016, looked pretty much the same as it always did. Weekend anchor Tammy Palmer started the broadcast at 7 a.m. with a rundown of the previous day’s local and national events, followed by segments devoted to sports, weather, financial planning and other topics to fill the hour.

Then at around 8 a.m. Palmer was rushed by her producer to the emergency room at St. Joseph’s Hospital. Unbeknownst to viewers, Palmer endured intense physical pain during that hour, as the effects of her weeks-long struggle with ulcerative colitis were finally taking their toll. And unbeknownst to Palmer, she would spend the next nine days at the hospital, with the first of her three procedures involving reconstructive surgery of her colon taking place Jan. 8. It would be several more months until Palmer would finally be free of her pain, her walking cane and her ostomy bag. Palmer was on and off the airwaves throughout the spring of 2016, as she seesawed between maintaining a work schedule at Channel 9 yet also taking some absences to undergo, and recover from, two more surgeries. She never revealed her illness during the news broadcasts, although she detailed her trials with ongoing Facebook posts, which caught the eyes of the organizers behind the annual Syracuse Take Steps for Crohn’s Disease and Colitis Walk. Both illnesses, which concern chronic inflamma5.31.17 - 6.6.17 | syracusenewtimes.com

tion of the gastrointestinal tract, affect more than 1.6 million people nationwide. So the walk organizers asked Palmer to captain a team and to share her experiences in order to raise awareness about a subject that many find difficult to discuss. The walk, which organizers hope will reach its $30,000 goal, will take place Saturday, June 17, 9 a.m., at Onondaga Lake Park in Liverpool. For information, call walk coordinator Eric Israel, (585) 967-0266, or email eisrael@crohnscolitisfoundation.org. “This is my way to pay it forward,” says Palmer, who often handles the Your Stories segments regarding viewer tips about possible local scofflaws. “I know how important it was for me to talk to someone when I really needed to. So I agreed to spread the word about this walk and this organization, where you can meet other people going through the same thing.” Palmer’s explanation of her colitis issue is not for the squeamish, however: “Your body’s immune system reacts to something and attacks the lining of your colon, and that creates ulcers


and they bleed. And you’re constantly using that part of your body and you’re constantly irritating those bleeding wounds, and the blood just becomes more and more intense.” Palmer was raised in Volney and attended Fulton schools, then went on to earn a mass communications degree from SUNY Oswego in 1998. She actually got her start in her chosen field while interning for Channel 9 during her senior year, but she took a few career detours along her early path, including a brief stint at the Nestle chocolate factory in Fulton. “I had no idea what to do with that degree,” she recalls, “so after graduation and with my college summer job with Sealright (now the Huhtamaki packaging firm) coming to an end, I was part of the last group hired at Nestle, where my father worked for many years. It was hard work, cleaning the boiler rooms. I mopped up hot butter spills, scrubbed milk dust off the walls, and cleaned out giant vats of chocolate. But the newbies were laid off very quickly within a few months.” Toiling at the fabled Nestle plant, which is currently undergoing demolition, did have some sweet benefits: “The co-workers would tell me to hold out my hands, then they would switch a belt and clumps of sugary ingredients would drop into my cupped palms. Another would pour a sample of freshly melted chocolate, meant for the lab, into a tiny cup for me. Those samples were. . . amazing!” Palmer’s next stop was Washington Dulles International Airport in Virginia,

where she worked at Northwest Airlines as a customer service agent. Channel 9 came calling in 1999, however, with an opportunity for Palmer to become an assistant to veteran investigative reporter Jean Kessner (now a Syracuse councilor-at-large and the director of public relations at ACR Health). Palmer cites Kessner and then-Channel 9 news director Ron Lombard as “the key players in hiring me for my first TV job.” And she worked alongside station stalwarts such as Rod Wood, Carrie Lazarus, Christie Casciano and Dan Cummings. “It’s really where I learned how to put a story together.” At age 23 Palmer first exhibited the symptoms of colitis: She noticed blood on her stool after using the bathroom. “When I mentioned it to my parents, they took it more seriously than I did,” she says, “but I knew that it was not a good thing. I was sent to a gastroenterologist and had my first colonoscopy, which people in their early 20s usually don’t have. Back then I was awake for the procedure. This was at the time when The Today Show host Katie Couric famously had one on camera, so I could see on a monitor what they were looking at. The man doing the colonoscopy said, ‘Do you want a picture?’ (laughs) and I said, ‘I do not consider this as a Kodak moment.’ After the surgery he gave me a picture of my colon, and it said, ‘Move over, Katie Couric.’” Palmer was diagnosed with proctitis, an irritation that isn’t quite to the stage of colitis. “The gastroenterologist tried

different creams to heal the inflammation, which is really hard to do when you’re constantly using that part of the body,” remembers Palmer. “How do you heal something that you can’t leave alone?” Palmer stayed a year in Syracuse, then moved to a smaller TV market in order to notch more experience with Channel 9’s sister station in Watertown, WWTI-Channel 50. She stuck around the North Country station for three years, first as an on-air reporter, then followed soon after with evening anchor duties, all while still dealing with her condition. She also became aware of the connection between her illness and her diet. “I would have a response with certain things: coffee, acidic foods, spaghetti too many days in a row, salad dressing,” Palmer says. “Between the medications I was taking, such as suppositories, and changing a few things that I eat, it eventually cleared up. I got another colonoscopy seven years later, and that doctor said, ‘I don’t see any signs of anything.’ So I had this false sense of confidence that maybe that was the only experience. But it was always in the back of my mind.” Palmer’s next career move was the result of former Channel 9 colleague Lombard, who was appointed news director to supervise the launch of Time Warner Cable’s News 10 Now operation. She returned to Central New York as a reporter-anchor; one of her news pieces was featured when the all-news channel premiered on Nov. 7, 2003. Yet a round of cost-cutting at News 10 Now in May

WSYR-Channel 9 meteorologist John DiPasquale and anchor Tammy Palmer share a laugh on the weekend news shift. Michael Davis photos

2005 led to an arrangement with the cable company’s Capital News 9 production studio in Albany, which is where Palmer relocated to handle anchor chores for the next six years. Palmer also made a decision not to divulge her health problems with station management. “A colleague had either ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s disease, and she worked the early-morning shift,” Palmer recalls. “She said, ‘I can’t do this. It’s killing my body,’ and a manager said, as an aside to me, ‘She wants to change shifts because she has a stomachache. Yeah, don’t we all?’ I took note of that because I realized that I would not get any sympathy; people are so unaware of this condition. So I never told my bosses over the years.” Following her News 10 Now stint, Palmer returned to Channel 9 in 2011. There were no clear signs of her colitis until its major return during her coverage of the 2013 summer flooding in Oneida. “I was in excruciating pain while trapped in a flood zone,” she remembers. “I had a flare-up, the first one in years, and it came back with a vengeance. And I worried that it was going to limit me in my job, so I didn’t tell anybody. The doctor put me on medication and it cleared up. But I made a huge error: After being in remission for so long, I thought, ‘It’s good, just needed to clear that up,’ so I didn’t complete the medication. And if you stop taking your medication, sometimes your body builds up a resistance to it, so if you have another flare-up, it doesn’t work. A colonoscopy later diagnosed that it was full-blown ulcerative colitis.” Palmer’s treatment reached an impasse in November 2015. “The steroids from my doctor weren’t working,” she says. “I was in the worst pain the whole time. I lost 25 to 30 pounds within a couple of months, because eating just became terrible. And every time the blood builds up, you have to release it, so I was just bleeding and bleeding and bleeding. That’s why you need to be near a bathroom: Your body is not processing food normally, so sometimes it’s just zipping through your body, and that’s sapping your body of the nutrients and energy that it needs. I was very anemic because I was losing so much blood. I couldn’t sleep at night because I was up and down all night. And it hurt a lot.” Palmer also began confiding to station personnel about what was going on inside her body, in case matters became worse. “One day I came out of the bathroom in the newsroom,” she recalls, “and I went into the conference room and just laid my hands and head on the table and just tried to get through the pain. I was trying to stick through it, man, I was trying! The receptionist walked by and said, ‘Are you OK?’ I don’t cry at work but the tears NEXT PAGE

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started to stream down my eyes as I mentioned to her about my health issue, and I was so upset that I wouldn’t be able to do my job. When you’re that young and your body betrays you, it’s devastating to start to feel that you’re losing your ability to function. And the receptionist said, ‘You’ve already proven yourself. You have to think about your health.’” And yet Palmer persisted, until that first weekend of 2016 when her colitis could not be ignored anymore. “I went in Saturday morning (Jan. 2), got the job done, came home, didn’t sleep all night,” she says. “My mother and father came by to visit, and I became inconsolable because I was so tired and sick. My mom was very worried and for the first time in years she stayed all night with me in my bed. “The next morning she helped straighten the back of my hair because I didn’t even have the energy to lift my arms. I went to work and got through the show but I kept losing my breath. I remember staring at the words on the Teleprompter and thinking, ‘Just read and get through it. It’s only an hour. You can do this.’ After the show I said to my producer, Tenesha Murphy, ‘Why don’t you take me to the emergency room?’ She dropped me at St. Joseph’s Hospital, and I didn’t leave for nine days.” Staying at the hospital meant receiving bigger doses of steroids through an IV to control the inflammation, but Palmer’s body was not responding to the treatment, and she needed plenty of blood transfusions to boost her system. Her surgeon soon recommended an emergency threestep J-pouch surgery, where they removed her colon and installed an ostomy bag in order to allow her body to heal. Palmer quickly became adept at changing and cleaning her ostomy bag, her traveling companion for the next several months. That was just the first step, as Palmer, ever the journalist, continued to record the week’s events in her diary, which she began when her final flare-up commenced on Nov. 29, 2015. “I’m not sure how all of this is going to pan out,” she prophetically wrote on that day. “Once I started managing the pain, I remember being able to enjoy my first meal without pain or bleeding,” Palmer continues. “It was a chicken pot pie and a chicken Caesar salad. Since I get only so many weeks of leave from the station, about six weeks after the first surgery I came back to work with a cane. It was difficult to get around. I was still struggling to walk a bit. But I could sit at my desk and write and I could sit at the news desk and deliver stories, until I had to get the second surgery.” Before that procedure, however, Palmer and fellow Channel 9 reporter Christie Casciano traveled to Manhattan, site of

the annual New York Emmy Awards on March 19, 2016. Both were nominated for their ongoing news segments on the heroin crisis in Central New York. “I remember putting on my gown,” she says now with a laugh, “and asking Christie, ‘Does the ostomy bag show?’” Palmer says, matter-of-factly, about the second surgery, “A couple months later they take out your rectum and build a pouch that functions similar to the rectum, and they let that heal. The pouch is built out of your smaller intestines that are left after they take out your colon. They make the pouch, chop it up, staple it together, and connect it to the anus so food travels through similarly, and they let that heal.” Meanwhile, Palmer began her series of Facebook messages that would explain her health situation and why she kept pulling her frequent disappearing act from the newscasts. “All of a sudden I got all of these messages back from people saying I have a relative or friend who suffers from that disease,” Palmer remembers, “and I realized how many people go through it but never really say anything about it because it’s not something anybody wants to talk about. The great thing is that when people ask me about having the surgery, I really love being able to answer those questions. I feel so grateful that I can help them through that stage.” For Palmer’s third surgery, they hooked up her small intestine to the new pouch and closed up the hole in her stomach where the ostomy bag was and let it start to work. “It’s weird because you’re going to feel that things inside are in different places,” Palmer notes. “When you stand up and things are adjusting inside of you, it’s an odd sensation. But it’s amazing that someone could take out parts of my body and just rebuild new parts with what I had left for a functioning system.” Palmer had to immediately adapt to her new plumbing. The loss of her colon meant that she can dehydrate much quicker, so her refrigerator is always stocked with energy drinks such as Gatorade. Food now processes differently within her, so sometimes dairy and salads don’t settle well; “I eat with consequences in mind,” she says. And solid bowel movements are part of her past. If there’s a silver lining to her struggle, however, “It just made me approach the future differently, what I want out of life and what’s important to me.” So she’ll be part of the Syracuse Take Steps for Crohn’s Disease and Colitis Walk on June 16, as Captain Tammy Palmer heads her Colon Crusaders team at Onondaga Lake Park. And regarding the pain, the blood and the other manifestations of her illness, that dark chapter of her life is hopefully all behind her now. SNT


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Saturday, June 3rd Doors: 7pm | Show: 8pm

MUSIC LISTED IN CHR ONOLOGIC AL ORDER:

W E D N E S DAY 5/31 Mushroomhead. Wed. May 31, 6 p.m. An

evening of metal and mayhem with the masked rockers, plus Sunflower Dead, The Browning, Relicseed, Terrorbyte and Murder in the Rue Morgue at Monirae’s, 688 Route 10, Pennellville. $25. (716) 893-2900, ticketfly.com, afterdarkpresents.com.

Tanksley. Wed. May 31, 8 p.m. The sing-

er-songwriter provides an intimate show of tunes at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. $10/ ages 21 and older, $15/ages 18 and older. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

T H U R S DAY 6/1 Showtime. Thurs. 6 p.m. Thurs. 5:30 p.m.

Saranac Thursday weekly concert series goes big with the brazen band at F.X. Matt Brewing Company, 830 Varick St., Utica. $5. (315) 6242400, saranac.com.

Larry Hoyt. Thurs. 7:30 p.m. An articulate

Americana concert graces the intimate CNY stage with originals and favorite covers, also featuring Judy and Jeff Stanton at CNY Jazz Central, 441 E. Washington St. $10. cnyjazz.org.

Mike DelGuidice and Big Shot. Thurs. 8 p.m. Billy Joel tribute band plays the singer’s hits and more at the Turning Stone Resort and Casino’s Showroom, Thruway Exit 33, Verona. $24. (877) 833-SHOW, turningstone.com.

Roxy Roca. Thurs. 9 p.m. Soulful rockers

return to sizzle in Syracuse, plus Dirty Blanket at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. $7/ages 21 and older, $12/ages 18 and older. funknwaffles. ticketfly.com.

Start Making Sense. Thurs. 9 p.m. The

Talking Heads tribute band and musical extravaganza returns to The Haunt, 702 Willow Ave., Ithaca. $12.50/advance, $15/door. (607) 2758588, dspshows.com.

F R I DAY 6/ 2 Johnny Azari. Fri. 6 p.m. Delta blues man with an edge at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. Free. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

Avett Brothers. Fri. 7 p.m. Folk rockers from

North Carolina perform at Brewery Ommegang, 656 Highway 33, Cooperstown. $50. (607) 5441800, dansmallspresents.com.

Ted Yoder. Fri. 7 p.m. Internet sensation hammered dulcimer player from Indiana will perform at Beaver Lake Nature Center, 8477 Mud Lake Road, Baldwinsville. $20. (315) 638-2519, events.onondagacountyparks.com.

Chris Thomas King. Fri. 8 p.m. Louisiana

blues man wails out with his trio at Earlville Opera House, 18 E. Main St., Earlville. $30/general, $15/students. (315) 691-3550, earlvilleoperahouse.com.

Powerslave. Fri. 8 p.m. The Iron Maiden trib-

ute band raises hell and hair as the headliner of this double-billed tribute show, plus Slayer tribute Altar of Sacrifice and opener Rip Open the Sky at Finger Lakes Event Center, 1579 Clark Street Road, Auburn. $5. (315) 255-1188.

Mondo Cozmo. Fri. 8 p.m. Singer-songwriter

headlines a chill evening, plus Mike Powell & the Black River and Ethernauts at the Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. $1/advance, $10/ door. (877) 987-6487, thelosthorizon.com.

Annie in the Water. Fri. 10 p.m. Albany jam

rockers headline a dance party, plus the Blind Spots at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. $10/ ages 21 and older, $15/ages 18 and older. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

S AT U R DAY 6/3

S TAG E

Order tickets online at kallettheater.com or call (315)298-0007 4842 N. Jefferson St. Pulaski

Ring of Fire: The Music of Johnny Cash.

Bad Kitty. Sat. 11 a.m. & 2 p.m.; closes June 17. Gifford Family Theater mounts the family-geared production at Le Moyne College’s Coyne Center for the Performing Arts, 1419 Salt Springs Road. $15/adults, $10/children. (315) 445-4200.

Death Joins the Club. Every Thurs.

6:45 p.m.; through June 22. Interactive dinner-theater whodunit set at a snooty country club; performed by Acme Mystery Company. Spaghetti Warehouse, 689 N. Clinton St. $29.95/plus tax and gratuity. (315) 475-1807.

Guys and Dolls. Wed. June 7, 7:30 p.m.;

closes June 28. The fun Damon Runyon musical kicks off the season at the MerryGo-Round Playhouse, Emerson Park, 6877 East Lake Road (Route 38A), Auburn. $45$55/adults; $42-$52/seniors; $25/students and under age 22. (315) 255-1785, (800) 457-8897.

Little Red Riding Hood. Every Sat. 12:30

p.m.; through June 17. Interactive version of the children’s classic, as performed by Magic Circle Children’s Theatre. Spaghetti Warehouse, 689 N. Clinton St. $6. (315) 449-3823.

Wed. June 7, 7:30 p.m.; closes June 25. The Man in Black’s career is recalled in this jumpin’ jukebox musical, which caps the season at Syracuse Stage’s Archbold Theatre, 820 E. Genesee St. $20-$53. (315) 443-3275.

RIP 2016. Sat. 8 p.m. The cabaret pays

homage to local talent who passed away last year at Central New York Playhouse, Shoppingtown Mall, 3649 Erie Blvd. E. $10. (315) 885-8960, cnyplayhouse.org.

Romeo and Juliet. Fri. 10 a.m., Sat. 5:30

p.m., Sun. 2 p.m.; through June 11. Syracuse Shakespeare Festival’s outdoor production of the Bard’s romantic tragedy takes place at Thornden Park’s amphitheater, bounded by Ostrom and Ackerman avenues and Madison and South Beach streets, off the Syracuse University campus. Free; $5/suggested donation appreciated. (315) 476-1835, syrsf.org.

The 39 Steps. Wed. June 7, 7:30 p.m.; clos-

es June 17. A cast of four sprints through more than 150 characters in this breezy take on Alfred Hitchcock’s classic comedy-thriller, which commences the summer season at Cortland Repertory Theatre, 6799 Little York Lake Road, off Route 281, Preble. $29-$31/ evenings; $24-$26/matinees. Students and senior discounts available. (607) 756-2627, (607) 753-6161, (800) 427-6160.

Nail Creek Anniversary Party. Sat. noon.

Featuring Annie in the Water, The Old Main, Hafasass, Tyler Pearce Band, Substanance and Brian Mulkerne Band, plus grub and grog specials at Nail Creek Pub & Brewery, 720 Varick St., Utica. $10. (315) 793-7593, eventbrite.com.

Fly 92.3 Summer Jam. Sat. 3:30 p.m. The

amphitheatre concert season kicks off with an eclectic show featuring Flo Rida, Sabrina Carpenter, Bebe Rexha, Daniel Skye and more at Saratoga Performing Arts Center, 108 Avenue of the Pines. $20. (518) 584-9330, spac.org.

Vaughn Faison. Sat. 6 p.m. Singer-songwriter

at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. Free. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

Gorguts. Sat. 6:30 p.m. Quebec’s longtime

metalheads will shake the walls, plus Defeated Sanity and Exist at the Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. $20. (877) 987-6487, thelosthorizon.com.

Jay and the Americans. Sat. 8 p.m. Smooth

quartet of classic pop veterans visit the Turning Stone Resort and Casino’s Showroom, Thruway Exit 33, Verona. $25, $30, $50. (877) 833-SHOW, turningstone.com.

Lizards. Sat. 8 p.m. Phish tribute band hailing from Canada provides a jammy evening at the Westcott Theater, 524 Westcott St. $15. (315) 299-8886. thewestcotttheater.com.

Kenny Wayne Shepherd. Sat. 9 p.m. The

youthful electric blues man has grown up and returns for a free show to headline the main stage at Taste of Syracuse in downtown Syracuse. Free. tasteofsyracuse.com.

Only in Dreams. Sat. 10 p.m. Weezer quartet made up members of Jimkata, Aqueous and John Brown’s Body, plus Busted Subaru at The Haunt, 702 Willow Ave., Ithaca. $12/advance,

$15/door. (607) 275-8588, dspshows.com.

Pearly Baker’s Best. Sat. 10 p.m. Post-Taste of

Syracuse party features the local Grateful Dead tribute band at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. Free. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

S U N DAY 6/4 CNY Young Artists. Sun. 2 p.m. Civic Morning

Musicals presents this culminating concert featuring the winners of this year’s young artist competition will harmonize at Everson Museum of Art, 401 Harrison St. Free. (315) 638-0674, civicmorningmusicals.org.

Syracuse Chorale: Wayfaring Stranger.

Sun. 3 p.m. The vocal program features a repertoire of folk songs from around the world at DeWitt Community Church, 3600 Erie Blvd. E.





syracusenewtimes.com | 5.31.17 - 6.6.17

19


FootGolfis at lf West Hill Golf Course

FOR ALLinto AGES & ABILITIES Kick some “Fun” your 18 HOLES: fundraisingJuniors event forAdults – $16 – $13 9 HOLES: as little as $10 per player!

a soccer& allball into 21” cups! ay onKICK Friday afternoon day Saturday & Sunday Call us at 672-8677 or visit westhillgolfcourse.com $12/advance, $15/DOS, free/18 and under. (315)

Open PlayTurnpike on Friday Afternoon 2500 West Genesee & All Day Saturday & Sunday Camillus

Juniors & Adults – $11

played like only you kickIt’s a soccer ballgolf, intoonly 21you inch cups!

446-6333, syracusechorale.org.

Perform 4 Purpose. Sun. 4 p.m. The theater’s

local music program students take to the stage as a fundraiser for Cayuga Dog Rescue and Chemung Canal Trust Company at Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St., Auburn. $5. (315) (315) 253-6669, auburnpublictheater.org.

KMASE Storyteller Series. Sun. 6 p.m. The

music series features a variety of singer-songwriters at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. $10. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

Nonpoint. Sun. 6:30 p.m. Alt-metal plus A Kill-

er’s Confession and Nine Shrines at the Lost Horizon, 5863 Thompson Road. $20. (877) 987-6487, thelosthorizon.com.

Dave Matthews & Tim Reynolds. Sun. 7:30

MONIRAE’S wednesday may 31

Mushroomhead with Sunf lower Dead The Browning Relicseed TERRORBYTE & Murder In Rue Morgue

p.m. The dynamic guitar welding duo take to the big outdoor stage to kick off the seasonal concert series at Constellation Brands-Marvin Sands Performing Arts Center, 3355 Marvin Sands Dr., Canandiagua. $40.50/lawn, $85, $95. (585) 394-4400, cmacevents.com.

Skunk City Soul Food Sundays. Sun. 9 p.m.

Soulful and delicious sounds at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. Free. funknwaffles.ticketfly. com.

M O N DAY 6/5 Liverpool Central School Jazz Ensembles.

Mon. 7-9 p.m. The talented students kick off the Liverpool is the Place concert series at Johnson Park, corner of Route 57 and Vine Street, Liverpool. Free. (315) 457-3895.

Terrapin Flyer with Melvin Seals. Mon. 8 p.m. Keys player from Jerry Garcia Band accompanies the Grateful Dead tribute band, plus Pearly Baker’s Best at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. $20. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

Lake Street Dive. Tues. 6 p.m. Versatile and soulful quartet perform an outdoor show, plus Lawrence at Beak & Skiff Apple Orchards, 2708 Lords Hill Road, LaFayette. $32/advance, $40/ door. (315) 422-3511, creativeconcerts.com.

W E D N E S DAY 6/ 7 Butternut Creek Revival. Wed. June 7, 7-9

2500 WEST GENESEE TURNPIKE, CAMILLUS

Call us at 315-672-8677 or visit westhillgolfcourse.com Road, Central Square), 6 p.m.

Lefty Jones. (Abbott’s Village Tavern, 6 E. Main St., Marcellus), 6 p.m. Methodist Bells. (Al’s Whiskey & Wine Lounge, 321 S. Clinton St.), 9 p.m.

Mike Powell. (20|East, 4157 Midstate Ln.,

p.m. Enjoy acoustic Americana favorites during the Liverpool is the Place concert series at Johnson Park, corner of Route 57 and Vine Street, Liverpool. Free. (315) 457-3895.

Cazenovia), 6 p.m.

Funk Gives Back. Wed. June 7, 7 p.m. Music showcase and fundraiser series will benefit Art on the Porches at Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. $10/ages 21 and older, $15/ages 18 and older. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

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

Nate Michaels. (916 Riverside, 916 Route 37, Central Square), 6 p.m.

C LU B D AT E S

Paul Davie. (Kosta’s Bar & Grill, 105 Grant

W E D N E S DAY 5/31

Mark Nanni. (Empire Brewing Company, 120 Walton St.), 1-3 p.m.

Morris & the Hepcats. (Dinosaur Bar-B-

Novak Nanni. (Ridge Tavern, 1281 Salt Springs Road, Chittenango), 7 p.m. Ave., Auburn), 7 p.m.

Stevie Tombstones. (Oak & Vine at Spring-

Dave Porter. (Hullar’s Restaurant, 411 E. Gene-

side Inn, 6141 W. Lake Road, Auburn), 7:30 p.m.

Djug Django. (Lot 10, 106 S. Cayuga St., Itha-

Walrus. (Blue Spruce Lounge, 400 Seventh N. St., Liverpool), 6 p.m.

ca), 6 p.m.

Just Joe. (Vernon Downs Casino Terrace, Vernon), 5 p.m. Kaleb Dorr. (Jake’s Grub & Grog, 7 E. River

T H U R S DAY 6/1 Bruce Tetley & George Deveny. (Utica Brews Café, 809 Court St., Utica), 7 p.m. Chris Reiners, DJ Skeet. (Lava Nightclub, Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 10 p.m.

Cousin Jake. (Dominick’s Pub & Grub, 155

THE

RIDGE RI IDG E

Presents The 4th Annual

Route 414, Burdett), 6 p.m.

Grayak, Creatures. (Otro Cinco, 206 S. Warren St.), 10 p.m.

Jimmy Wolf Band. (Devaney’s Riverside

Join us for a day of bacon, bourbon & great music - all for a great cause!

Grill, 9347 Stickle Road, Weedsport), 6 p.m.

John Spillett Jazz-Pop Duo. (TS Steak-

house, Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 6 p.m.

Just Joe. (Limp Lizard, 4628 Onondaga Blvd.), 6 p.m.

A fundraiser for our non-profit neighbor, Clear Path for Veterans www.ClearPathForVets.com

Moonshine River Band

Alexis P Suter Band Tas Cru & His Tortured Souls The Ripcords Brownskin Band Jamie Notarthomas Band Veterans Salute Colin Aberdeen

Friday June 9

Blame Anchor

Lisa Lee Trio. (Kosta’s, 105 Grant Ave., Auburn), 7 p.m.

Lyncourt Community Band. (East Syracuse Free Library, 4990 James St.), 7 p.m.

Matt Lomeo. (Nail Creek Pub, 720 Varick St.,

Utica), 10 p.m.

$

25

Presale $

30

at the door

1281 Salt Springs Road, Chittenango

For more info: www.theridgerocks.com or call 315.687.6900

5.31.17 - 6.6.17 | syracusenewtimes.com

6 p.m.

Gerard Burke. (Two Goats Brewing, 5027

1-10PM

free outdoor show with

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

DJ Gary Dunes. (Asil’s Pub, 220 Chapel Dr.),

Pkwy., Cicero), 7 p.m.

JUNE 4

are Baaack!

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

Edgar Pagan. (Borio’s, 8891 McDonnell’s

TH

bike nights

Camic Road, Central Square), 6 p.m.

Dueling Pianos. (The Gig, Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 9 p.m.

SUNDAY

fridaY

20

notable blues musician and lap steel guitarist slides into Funk N Waffles, 307 S. Clinton St. $15/ advance, $20/door. funknwaffles.ticketfly.com.

see St., Fayetteville), 8 p.m.

T U E S DAY 6/6

Friday June 2

688 County Rte 10, Pennellville moniraes.com

Damon Fowler. Tues. 7:30 p.m. Florida’s

Kick some “Fun” into your fundraising event for as little as $10 per player!

Max Scialdone. (Lukin’s, 640 Varick St., Utica), 9 p.m.

Michael Crissan. (Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.) 8 p.m.

Novak Nanni Duo. (Copper City Brewing

Company, 1111 Oneida St., Rome), 7 p.m.

O-Ryon. (Moondog’s Lounge, 24 State St., Auburn), 7 p.m.

Tickets $25 Presale $30 At The Door

Scars N Stripes. (Sharkey’s Bar & Grill, 7240 Oswego Road, Liverpool), 6 p.m.


mily Gifford Fa

resents

Theatre p

May 26 - June 17

W. Carroll Coyne Center for the Performing Arts - Le Moyne College

(315) 445-4200 | www.giffordfamilytheatre.org Simple Props. (Celtic Harp, 805 Varick St., Utica), 7 p.m.

Sweet Soul Project. (Spencer’s Ali, 126 W. Second St., Oswego), 6 p.m.

Tommy Connors. (Kitty Hoynes Irish Pub, 301 W. Fayette St.), 8 p.m.

F R I DAY 6/ 2 5th Edition. (Delta Air Line Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 7:45 p.m.

Mark Doyle & the Maniacs. (Moondog’s Lounge, 24 State St. Auburn), 9 p.m.

Mark Zane. (Gance’s at Green Lakes, 7900 Green Lakes Road, Fayetteville), 5:30 p.m.

Mike DeLaney & the Delinquents. (Brae Loch Inn, 5 Albany St., Cazenovia), 7 p.m.

Mixed Tapes. (Spencer’s Ali, 126 W. Second St., Oswego), 6 p.m.

Modern Mudd. (Salt City Grille, 1333 Buckley Road, Liverpool), 7 p.m.

Annie in the Water. (AT&T Stage, Taste of Syr-

Moonshine River Band. (Monirae’s, 688

Barking Loungers. (AT&T Stage, Taste of Syr-

Paul Davie. (Oz-Stravaganza, Chittenango), 7

Barndogs Plus. (AT&T Stage, Taste of Syra-

Pinky. (Western Ranch Motor Inn, 1255 State

acuse), 8:10 p.m. acuse), 5 p.m.

cuse), 6:20 p.m.

Big Eyed Phish. (The Gig, Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 10 p.m.

Born to Run Band. (Main Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 5:30 p.m.

Brownskin. (Delta Air Line Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 6:30 p.m.

Bruce Tetley. (Lakeview Restaurant, Oneida

Golf Club, 1017 Golf Course Ln., Oneida), 5 p.m.

Castle Creek. (Delta Air Line Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 5 p.m.

Chief Big Way. (Whiskey Boots, 192 State St., Auburn), 9 p.m.

Coachmen w/Kia. (Greenwood Winery, 6475 Collamer Road, East Syracuse), 6 p.m.

Country Swagg. (Main Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 7:55 p.m.

Dave Hanlon’s Cookbook. (Turquoise Tiger, Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 9:30 p.m.

DJ Bill T. (The Gig, Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 7:30 p.m.

Djay 360. (Lava Nightclub, Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 10 p.m.

Exodus. (AT&T Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 9:30 p.m.

Faded Vinyl. (Buffalo’s, 2119 Downer St., Baldwinsville), 8 p.m.

Hard Promises. (Main Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 9:30 p.m.

Isreal Hagan & Stroke. (Delta Air Line Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 9:30 p.m.

Route 10, Pennellville), 6 p.m. p.m.

Fair Blvd.), 7:30 p.m.

Ripcords. (Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.), 9 p.m. Rock Doll. (Capt. Jack’s Goodtime Tavern, 8505 Greig St., Sodus Point), 9 p.m.

Scoundrels. (Relay for Life, Long Branch Park, 3813 Long Branch Road, Liverpool), 6 p.m.

Sound Barrier. (Ring Eyed Pete’s, Vernon Downs Casino, Vernon), 9 p.m.

Tim Herron. (AT&T Stage, Taste of Syracuse), noon.

TJ Sacco. (Minoa Field Days, 6187 Costello Parkway., Minoa), 8 p.m.

Todd Hobin. (Oz-Stravaganza, Chittenango), 6 p.m.

Tommy Connors. (Kitty Hoynes Irish Pub, 301 W. Fayette St.), 9 p.m.

Travis Rocco. (Heart & Courage Saloon, Yellow Brick Road Casino, Chittenango), 6 p.m.

Tribal Revival. (Boathouse Beer Garden, 6128 Route 89, Romulus), 7 p.m.

Tuff Luck. (Sharkey’s Bar & Grill, 7240 Oswego Road, Liverpool), 6 p.m.

Tumbleweed Jones. (LakeHouse Pub, 6 W. Genesee St., Skaneateles), 8 p.m.

Walrus. (JP’s Tavern, 109 Syracuse St., Baldwinsville), 8 p.m.

Wreckless Marci. (Sideshow Stage, Tioga Downs Casino, Nichols), 9 p.m.

S AT U R DAY 6/3 3 Finger Leroy. (Virgil’s, Tioga Downs Casino,

tral Square), 6 p.m.

tenango), 11:30 a.m.

Cait Devin & Triple Threat. (Oz-Stravaganza,

Measure. (Kitty Hoynes Irish Pub, 301 W. Fayette

Chad DeMarche. (Jake Hafner’s Restaurant,

Mike DeLaney & the Delinquents. (Main

5224 W. Taft Road, N. Syracuse), 7 p.m.

Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 3:50 p.m.

Chris Reiners. (Lava Nightclub, Turning Stone

Opus Black String Quartet. (Delta Air Line

Resort, Verona), 10 p.m.

Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 1:45 p.m.

Chris Taylor & Custom Taylor Band. (Delta

Our Friends Band. (Spencer’s Ali, 126 W. Sec-

Chittenango), 3:15 p.m.

Air Line Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 6:50 p.m. of Syracuse), 8:40 p.m.

cuse), 1:20 p.m.

CNY Songbirds. (Main Stage, Taste of Syra-

Pearly Baker’s Best. (AT&T Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 5:20 p.m.

cuse), 5:10 p.m.

Coachmen w/Kia. (Hullar’s, 411 E. Genesee St., Poker Face. (Irish Jack’s Beer Shack, 1706 Route 11, Hastings), 8 p.m.

Fayetteville), 9 p.m.

Cousin Jake. (Silckers Tavern, 3132 Route 28, Old Forge), 1 p.m.

Dave Hanlon’s Cookbook. (Turquoise Tiger, Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 9:30 p.m.

Denn Bunger. (Owera Vineyards, 5276 E. Lake Road, Cazenovia), 7 p.m.

Dennis Veator. (Aloft Inner Harbor, 310 W. Kirkpatrick St.), 1 p.m.

Ferguson & Rogers. (A.T. Walley, 119 Genesee St., Auburn), 8 p.m.

Flying Jojos. (Green Gate Inn, 2 Main St., Camillus), 8 p.m.

Formerly Un-Named. (AT&T Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 4 p.m.

Gary Dunes & Del-Tunes. (Delta Air Line Glacial Erotics. (Two Goats Brewing, 5027 Route 414, Burdett), 8 p.m.

Grit N Grace. (Richland Hotel, 243 Main St., Hendry. (Pizza Man Pub, 50 Oswego St., Baldwinsville), 9:30 p.m.

Hey Mabel. (Moondog’s Lounge, 24 State St., Auburn), 9 p.m.

Honky Tonk Hindooz. (O’Toole’s Tavern, 111 Osborne St., Auburn), 9 p.m.

JD & Rollin’ South. (Whiskey Boots, 192 State St., Auburn), 9 p.m.

Jes Sheldon & Friends. (Delta Air Line Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 5:40 p.m.

Jess Novak Band. (AT&T Stage, Taste of Syra-

tenango), 7:30 p.m.

Jess Novak Band. (Spencer’s Ali, 126 W. Sec-

tenango), 6:15 p.m.

Jimmy Wolf. (Lukin’s, 640 Varick St., Utica), 6

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

JPEG. (AT&T Stage, Taste of Syracuse), noon.

Bobby Green & A Cut Above. (Shifty’s, 1401

Just Joe. (Heart & Courage Saloon, Yellow Brick

John Spillett Jazz-Pop Duo. (Bistro Elephant,

Burnet Ave.), 9 p.m.

Road Casino, Chittenango), 7 p.m.

Bomb. (White Lake Inn, 12676 Route28, Wood-

Kenny Wayne Shepherd. (Main Stage, Taste

Just Joe. (Delta Air Line Stage, Taste of Syra-

gate), noon.

of Syracuse), 9 p.m.

Bombshell. (The Gig, Turning Stone Resort,

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

Leonard James. (Pizza Man Pub, 50 Oswego

Verona), 10 p.m.

Oswego), 7 p.m.

Bradshaw & the Nightbeat. (Limp Lizard, 4628 Onondaga Blvd.), 8 p.m.

Lori Ann. (Delta Air Line Stage, Taste of Syra-

Lisa Lee Duo. (Finger Lakes on Tap, 35 Fennell

Brass Inc. (Spencer’s Ali, 126 W. Second St.,

Louis Baldanza. (TS Steakhouse, Turning

Lori Ann. (Delta Air Line Stage, Taste of Syra-

Oswego), 6 p.m.

Bruce Tetley. (916 Riverside, 916 Route 37 Cen-

Mark Zane & Friends. (Oz-Stravaganza, Chit-

ond St., Oswego), 10 p.m. p.m.

238 W. Jefferson St.), 7 p.m. cuse), noon.

St., Baldwinsville), 9:30 p.m. St., Skaneateles), 8 p.m. cuse), 3:15 p.m.

Anthony Derrigo. (Oz-Stravaganza, ChitBeadle Brothers, DVDJ Biggie. (Tin Rooster,

DOORS 7:00 PM

Richland), 9:30 p.m.

Jamie Notarthomas. (TS Steakhouse, Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 6 p.m.

FRI 6/2

ALL AGES ONLY $5 ADMISSION

Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 3 p.m.

Nichols), 9 p.m.

All Poets & Heroes. (Oz-Stravaganza, Chit-

ond St., Oswego), 10 p.m.

CNY Rock of Ages. (Delta Air Line Stage, Taste Pale Green Stars. (AT&T Stage, Taste of Syra-

Jake Dodds. (Tin Rooster, Turning Stone Resort, Verona), 10 p.m.

St.), 9 p.m.

cuse), 2:40 p.m.

SAT 6/3

cuse), noon.

MIKE POWELL & THE BLACK RIVER ETHERNAUTS NONZEROSUM PRESENTS

GORGUTS

DEFEATED SANITY EXIST

SUN 6/4

NONZEROSUM PRESENTS

St.), 9 p.m.

yards, 2433 W. Lake Road, Skaneateles), 4 p.m.

MONDO COZMO

DOORS 6:00 PM

Jess Novak Band. (Maxwells, 122 E. Genesee John Spillett Jazz-Pop Duo. (Anyela’s, Vine-

95X FRESH SOUNDS CONCERT SERIES

DOORS 6:00 PM

NONPOINT A KILLER’S CONFESSION NINE SHRINES

THELOSTHORIZON.COM

Stone Resort, Verona), 6 p.m.

CORNER OF ERIE & THOMPSON, SYRACUSE NY

syracusenewtimes.com | 5.31.17 - 6.6.17

21


TUESDAY, JUNE 13 @ 6PM

FEATURING:

The Music of the Rolling Stones

A Collaboration of CNY’s Finest Musicians Poor Tim. (Main Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 2:30

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

Quickchange. (Dox Grill at Pirates Cove, 9170 Horseshoe Island Road, Clay), 6 p.m.

John Spillett Jazz-Pop Duo. (Blue Water Grill, 11 W. Genesee St., Skaneateles), 5 p.m.

Ripcords. (Main Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 7 p.m.

Just Joe. (Alex’s on the Water, 24 E. First St., Oswego), 6 p.m.

Root Shock. (AT&T Stage, Taste of Syracuse),

Lisa Lee Trio. (Winds of Cold Springs Harbor,

Salt City Chill. (Delta Air Line Stage, Taste of Syracuse), 4:20 p.m.

Mark Zane. (Suds Factory River Grill, 3 Syracuse St., Baldwinsville), 3 p.m.

Scoundrels. (Winds of Cold Springs Harbor,

Michael Crissan. (Limp Lizard, 4628 Ononda-

Shane Archer Reed & Harbingers.

Novak Nanni Duo. (Moondog’s Lounge, 24 State St., Auburn), 1 p.m.

p.m.

8 p.m.

3642 Hayes Road, Baldwinsville), 7 p.m.

(Oz-Stravaganza, Chittenango), 12:45 p.m.

Shazbot. (LakeHouse Pub, 6 W. Genesee St.,

3-5 p.m.

3642 Hayes Road, Baldwinsville), 4 p.m.

ga Blvd.), 2 p.m.

Open Bluegrass Jam. (Funk N Waffles, 307 S.

Skaneateles), 9:30 p.m.

Clinton St.), 6-8 p.m.

Sophistafunk. (AT&T Stage, Taste of Syracuse),

Other Guise. (916 Riverside, Route 37, Central

9:30 p.m.

Square), 3 p.m.

Soul Mine. (Ring Eyed Pete’s, Vernon Downs Casino, Vernon), 9 p.m.

PG Unplugged. (Borio’s, 8891 McDonnell’s Pkwy., Cicero), 4 p.m.

Spring Street Family. (AT&T Stage, Taste of

Ronnie Leigh & Marcus Curry. (Finger Lakes

Syracuse), 6:40 p.m.

on Tap, 35 Fennell St., Skaneateles), 2 p.m.

String of Pearls. (Sideshow Stage, Tioga

Timi Herron. (Shifty’s, 1401 Burnet Ave.), 4

Downs Casino, Nichols), 9 p.m.

p.m.

Swampy Acoustic Blues. (Boathouse Beer Garden, 6128 Route 89, Romulus), 6 p.m.

TJ Sacco Band. (Blue Spruce Lounge, 400 Seventh N. St., Liverpool), 8 p.m.

Tribal Heat. (Abbott’s Village Tavern, 6 E. Main

St., Marcellus), 5 p.m.

Wicked Awesome. (Oz-Stravaganza, Chit-

tenango), 1:30 p.m.

M O N DAY 6/5 Cazenovia Community Band. (Zem’s Ice

Cream, 124 W. Hickory St., Canastota), 6:30 p.m.

T U E S DAY 6/6

S U N DAY 6/4 Chief Big Way. (LakeHouse Pub, 6 W. Genesee

FabCats. (Dr. West Park, 227 Genesee St., Chit-

Cookie Coogan. (Pebble Hill Presbyterian

I-Town Jazz Jam. (The Dock, 415 Old Taughan-

St., Skaneateles), 6 p.m.

tenango), 6 p.m.

Church, 5299 Jamesville Road, DeWitt), 5 p.m.

nock Blvd., Ithaca), 9 p.m.

DJ Adam Simeon. (Otro Cinco, 206 S. Warren

Just Joe. (Borio’s, 8891 McDonnell’s Pkwy., Cicero), 5 p.m.

Gabe Stillman & the Billtown Giants. (Two Goats Brewing, 5027 Route 414, Burdett), 4 p.m.

Edgar Pagan, Irv Lyons Jr., Rick Melito. (Limp

St.), 11 a.m.

Lizard 201 First St., Liverpool), 7:30 p.m.

Available at The Ridge or Ish Guitars in Armory Square & TheRidgeRocks.com Montgomery St. $33-$40. (315) 473-4444.

CO M E DY

Taste of Oasis. Wed. May 31, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.

(The Dock, 415 Taughannock Blvd., Ithaca), 6 p.m.

SPECIALS

Learn about the venue for 50-plus adults, including programming and more at OASIS Center, 6333 Route 298, East Syracuse. Free. (315) 464-6555, oasisnet.org.

Laughing Vine Comedy Night. Thurs. 7 p.m.

Jiggy and Mike Charette take the stage at The Vine, del Lago Resort & Casino, 1133 Route 414, Waterloo. $5. (315) 946-1777, dellagoresort.com.

New York State Chinese Lantern Festival. Wed. May 31 & Thurs. 5-10 p.m., Fri. & Sat.

Tony Rock. Fri. 7:30 & 10 p.m., Sat. 7 & 9:45 p.m., Sun. 7:30 p.m. Chris Rock’s younger brother continues the family’s talent at Funny Bone Comedy Club, Destiny USA. $10/Thurs & Sun., $17/Fri. & Sat., $15/Sun. (315) 423-8669, syracuse. funnybone.com.

5-11 p.m. Sun., Tues. & Wed. June 7, 5-10 p.m.; through June 24. Colorful displays and more at the New York Experience Festival Grounds, New York State Fairgrounds, 581 State Fair Blvd. $15/ adults, $13/seniors, $12/ages 5 to 16, free/ages 5 and under, plus special group pricing. (800) 2185586, lanternfestnys.com.

Stand Up Comedy Open Mike. Every Thurs. 7:30 p.m. Seasoned, intermediate and new comedians looking to try out some material welcome for the sake of a good laugh, hosted by James Fedkiw at George O’Dea’s, 1333 W. Fayette St. Free. (315) 478-9398.

Adult Experienced Rowing Program. Wed.

May 31, 6-8 p.m. Four month long rowing sessions offered throughout the summer at Long Branch Park, 3813 Long Branch Road, Liverpool. $85/one day per week per session, $150/two days per week per session. (315) 453-6712, events.onondagacountyparks.com

Syracuse Improv Collective. Sat. 8 p.m.

Enjoy the show at Jazz Central, 331 E. Washington St. $5. (315) 430-9027, syracuseimprovcollective.com.

Night Market. Wed. May 31, 6-9 p.m. An eve-

SPORTS

ning of arts and crafts, food from Shattuck’s Paddy Wagon and music from Mike Powell at 20/East, 4157 Midstate Lane, Cazenovia. Free admission. (315) 655-3985.

Syracuse Chiefs. Wed. May 31 & Thurs. 6:35

p.m., Fri. & Sat. 7:05 p.m., Sun. 1:05 p.m. The boys of summer battle Charleston (Wednesday-Thursday) and Columbus (Friday-Sunday) at NBT Bank Stadium, 1 Tex Simone Way. $8-$14/ adults, $6-$12/children and seniors. (315) 4747833.

Two Brothers’ Light. Every alternate Wed. &

Thurs. 6:30-8 p.m. Peer-based support group focuses on suicide and mental health awareness and support at Asil’s Pub, 220 Chapel Drive. Free. (315) 632-1996, twobrotherslight.org.

Vernon Downs Race Track. Fri. & Sat. 6:45

Prime Rib Buffet. Thurs. 6-8 p.m. Enjoy the eats at Highland Forest, 1254 Highland Park Road, Fabius. $18, $9/ages 5 to 11, free/ages 4 and under. (315) 677-3303, onondagacountyparks.com/parks/highland-forest.

Syracuse Crunch Hockey. Wed. June 7, 7 p.m.

Palace Poetry Group. Thurs. 7 p.m. Chen Chen talks about and reads his some of his work, plus open mike to follow at Fayetteville Free Library, 300 Orchard St., Fayetteville. Free. (315) 479-8157.

p.m.; closes November. Harness racing continues the 64th horsey season at Vernon Downs, 4229 Stuhlman Road, Vernon. Free. (877) 88-VERNON.

The puck-slappers continue their Calder Cup quest as they face off against the Grand Rapids Griffins in the third game of the final series at the Onondaga County War Memorial Arena, 515

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Taste of Syracuse. Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m.-11 p.m.

The annual two-day gorge-o-rama food and music festival returns to downtown Syracuse. Free admission, $1/samples. (315) 471-9597, tasteofsyracuse.com.

Spring into Summer Quarter Horse Show.

Fri. noon, Sat. & Sun. 7 a.m. Triumphant trotters compete in the annual competition held in Toyota Coliseum, New York State Fairgrounds, 581 State Fair Blvd. Free. (607) 546-7373, esqha.org.

First Friday Community Event. Fri. 5-8 p.m. Explore the dining and drawing rooms, plus a contemporary art exhibit by Dan Marquart at Seward House Museum, 33 South St., Auburn. Free. (315) 252-1283, sewardhouse.org.

Olde Home Days. Fri. 5-11:30 p.m., Sat. 7 a.m.-

11:30 p.m., Sun. 1-5:30 p.m. The annual threeday festival featuring amusement rides, games, music, parades, vendors and more family fun throughout the village of Marcellus and Marcellus Park, 2443 Platt Road, Marcellus. Free admission. marcellusny.com.

Paige’s Butterfly Run. Sat. 7:45 a.m. The

annual fundraiser to raise awareness and raise funds to fight pediatric cancer and blood disorders flutters in for its annual appearance with 5K, 3K fitness run, five-person centipede team race, caterpillar crawl begins and ends at the James M. Hanley Federal Building, 100 S. Clinton St. $45. pbrun.org.

Lots of Spots Pinto Horse Show. Sat. 7:30

a.m., Sun. 8:30 p.m. Enjoy the horses at the 4-H Rings & Stable Area, New York State Fairgrounds, 581 State Fair Blvd. Free. (315) 857-1952 or (315) 413-1033, nypinto.org.

Dairy Goat Breeders Show. Sat. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. The annual show features braying buddies in the Goat, Llama & Swine Barn, New York State Fairgrounds, 581 State Fair Blvd. Free. (631) 7669508, nysdgba.org.

National Trails Day. Sat. 9 a.m. Join naturalists for a history of trail awareness, a guided morning bird tour and afternoon beaver tour, plus other family activities at Beaver Lake Nature Center, 8477 Mud Lake Road, Baldwinsville. Free with admission. (315) 638-2519, events.onondagacountyparks.com.

Container Gardening Workshop. Sat. 10-11

syracusefoodtours.com

saltcitysockhop.

Woofstock 2017. Sat. noon-7 p.m. Annual

Birding in Northern Oswego County. Tues.

Finger Lakes Feather Club Poultry Show.

Food Literacy. Tues. 5:30-7 p.m. Learn what

four- and two-legged family-friendly fundraiser benefits local animal shelters, rescues and programming, held at Americana Vineyards Winery, 4367 E. Covert Road, Interlaken. Free admission. (607) 387-6801, woofstockflx.weebly.com/ Sun. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Turkeys, ducks, geese and more for this fowl event in the Poultry Building, New York State Fairgrounds, 581 State Fair Blvd. Free. (315) 492-1974, nyshba.com.

Birds of Prey. Sun. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Bring your

own shirt, bandana or other cotton-based item to Green Lakes State Park, 7900 Green Lakes Road, Fayetteville. Free with park admission. (315) 637-6111, parks.ny.gov/parks/172.

Mindfulness Meditation. Every Sun. 10 a.m.; through June 11. Focus on deep breathing and open up your mind at Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St., Auburn. $5. (315) 253-6669, auburnpublictheater.com.

National Cancer Survivors Day. Sun. 10:30

a.m. Family day focuses on cancer awareness with family activities, speakers and more at Long Branch Park, 3813 Long Branch Road, Liverpool. Free for survivors, family and guests, registration required. (315) 472-7504, Ext. 1312, events.onondagacountyparks.com.

Bacon & Bourbon Festival. Sun. 1 p.m. The

annual food, drink and music festival and benefit for Clear Path For Veterans returns, plus tunes by Tas Cru & His Tortured Souls, Brownskin Band, The Ripcords, Jamie Notarthomas, Colin Aberdeen and the Veterans Salute at The Ridge Tavern, 1281 Salt Springs Road, Chittenango. $25/advance, $30/door. (315) 687-6900, theridgerocks.com, clearpathforvets.com.

Creek Float. Sun. 3-5 p.m. Rescheduled rain

date for the annual floating art parade begins at 324 W. Water St and ends in Franklin Square, plus enjoy #overpassfest with artists and musicians along the creekwalk. Free. facebook.com/ events/1644234959218499.

Caribbean Hurato Dancers. Sun. 7-8 p.m.

Enjoy an evening of traditional dancing Oaks at Menorah Park, 18 Arbor Ln., DeWitt. Free. (315) 449-3309, menorahparkofcny.com.

a.m. Bring a 15-inch container or larger, gloves and trowel for hands-on fun with making a salad bowl garden at Baltimore Woods Nature Center, 4007 Bishop Hill Road, Marcellus. $30; registration required. (315) 73-1350, baltimorewoods. org.

Spring into Love. Sun. 1 p.m. Take part in the

National Learn How to Row Day. Sat. 10 a.m.

Sunny Point Studio Opening. Sun. 1-4 p.m.

Learn something new, or develop your rowing abilities at Long Branch Park, 3813 Long Branch Road, Liverpool. Free. (315) 453-6712, events. onondagacountyparks.com.

Westcott Art Trail. Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun.

noon-5 p.m. The annual local artisan arts and crafts festival returns this weekend, featuring over 10 artists throughout the Westcott Neighborhood. Free admission. (315) 478-8634, westcottcc.org.

third annual interactive and hands-on wedding experience at Wolf Oak Acres, 6470 Creek Road, Oneida. $5/person; benefits Upstate Golisano Children’s Hospital; registration required. (315) 762-3090, eventbrite.com Arts Center of Yates County invites all to the new summer studio for refreshments, vendors, music and exhibits at Sunny Point Studio, 896 E. Lake Road, Dundee. Free admission; pre-order dinner required. (315) 536-8226, artscenteryatescounty.org

World Oceans Day. Sat. 10 a.m. Check out the

Chicken Barbecue. Sat. noon. For more than

noon, 1-3 p.m.; through July 14. Hit pause in a busy day to enjoy some outdoor activities at Carpenter’s Brook Fish Hatchery, 1672 Route 321, Elbridge. $3/person, registration required. (315) 689-9367, events.onondagacountyparks.com.

50 years this foodie-friendly community event has generated delicious aromas coming from Grace Episcopal Church, 110 Oswego St., Baldwinsville. $9/half chicken meal, beverage and dessert included. (315) 635-3215, graceepiscopalbaldwinsville.org.

Sampling Syracuse Food Tours. Every Sat.

noon. The three-hour walking tour gives a perspective on the sights and history, a taste of food and beverages found in downtown Syracuse, rain or shine. $41/person. (315) 371-3050,

you need to know about supporting, buying and finding locally sourced products at the Cicero Library, 8686 Knowledge Lane. Free. (315) 699-2032, nopl.org.

JP Morgan Corporate Challenge. Tues. 6:25 p.m. The annual 3.5-mile race sprints back into town at Onondaga Lake Park, 106 Lake Drive, Liverpool. $25, registration required. (315) 446-6285, jpmorganchasecc.com/series/corporate-challenge.

Mythconceptions: American History. Tues. 6:30-8 p.m. Cheryl Pula presents an interesting lecture about common myths about American history at the Brewerton Library, 5437 Library St. Free, registration required. (315)676-7484, nopl.org.

Stage of Nations Fashion and Sound. Wed.

June 7, 7 p.m. Fashion show and concert to benefit the Stage of Nations festival in the upstairs room at Dinosaur Bar-B-Que, 246 W. Willow St. $10/general, $20/VIP. (315) 679-7387, facebook. com/events/1154539051357934.

FILM

L IS T ED A L P H A B E TI C A L LY: Free Fire. Wed. May 31 & Thurs. 7:30 p.m. Brie

Larson and Armie Hammer in a bullet-riddled, black-comedy free-for-all. Cinema Capitol Twin, 234 W. Dominick St., Rome. $7/adults, $5/students. (315) 337-6453.

Gifted. Fri. & Sat. 4 & 7:30 p.m., Sun. 1 & 4 p.m.,

Mon.-Wed. June 7, 7:30 p.m.; closes June 8. A child prodigy is the subject of a court battle in this drama with Chris Evans and Octavia Spencer. Cinema Capitol Twin, 234 W. Dominick St., Rome. $7/ adults, $5/students. (315) 337-6453.

How the West Was Won. Sat. 2 & 7 p.m. Jimmy

Stewart, John Wayne, Debbie Reynolds, George Peppard and more vintage stars in the 1963 widescreen western epic, presented in a 35mm print. Capitol Theater, 220 W. Dominick St., Rome. 90 cents/adults, 50 cents/children under age 12. (315) 337-6453.

Obit. Fri. 1 & 7 p.m., Sat. 3 & 7 p.m., Wed. June

7, 7 p.m. Unusual documentary about obituary writers on the New York Times staff at the Auburn Public Theater, 8 Exchange St., Auburn. $6. (315) 253-6669.

S TAR TS F RIDAY F IL M S, T H E AT E RS AN D T IM E S

A Quiet Passion. Wed. May 31 & Thurs. 5 p.m.

S U B JE C T TO C H AN G E. Beauty and the Beast. Emma Watson and

Dan Stevens take the title roles in Disney’s live-action version of the animated musical classic. Hollywood (Digital presentation). Daily: 4:30 & 7:15 p.m. Sat. & Sun. matinee: 11 a.m. & 1:45 p.m.

Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie.

Cartoon silliness; shown in 3-D in some theaters. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation/3-D). Fri. & Sat.: 9:20 p.m. Sun.-Thurs.: 4 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Fri. & Sat.: 1, 4 & 6:45 p.m. Sun.-Thurs.: 1 & 6:45 p.m.

Kong: Skull Island. The big ape returns to

smoosh Samuel L. Jackson, John Goodman and John Reilly in this special-effects thriller. Hollywood (Digital presentation). Daily: 10 p.m.

The Lovers. Debra Winger and Tracy Letts as

longtime marrieds experiencing some rough patches who somehow romantically rediscover themselves. Manlius (Digital presentation/stereo). Fri. & Sat.: 8 p.m. Sun.-Thurs.: 7:30 p.m. Sat. & Sun. matinee: 2:30 & 4:30 p.m.

Wonder Woman. The DC Comics super-her-

F IL M, OTH ERS

oine gets her own big-screen action epic; presented in 3-D in some theaters. Destiny USA/

Cynthia Nixon plays poet Emily Dickinson in this biopic. Cinema Capitol Twin, 234 W. Dominick St., Rome. $7/adults, $5/students. (315) 337-6453.

Saboteur. Mon. 7:30 p.m. Bob Cummings,

Norman Lloyd, Priscilla Lane and the Statue of Liberty collide in director Alfred Hitchcock’s 1942 wartime thriller about spies, gypsies and a young couple on the run, which continues the Syracuse Cinephile Society’s spring season at the Spaghetti Warehouse, 680 N. Clinton St. $3.50. (315) 4751807.

Slack Bay. Wed. May 31 & Thurs. 7:15 p.m. Juliette Binoche in an acclaimed absurdist farce. Cinema Capitol Twin, 234 W. Dominick St., Rome. $7/ adults, $5/students. (315) 337-6453.

Stalker. Sat. 10:30 p.m. Director Andrei Tarkovsky’s 1979 Russian sci-fi adventure into the mind. Cinema Capitol Twin, 234 W. Dominick St., Rome. $8/includes pizza and soda. 337-6453. Tommy’s Honour. Fri. & Sat. 3:45 & 7:15 p.m.,

Sun. 12:45 & 3:45 p.m., Mon.-Wed. June 7, 7:15 p.m.; closes June 8. Fact-based account of the Scottish father-and-son team who spurred the sport of golf. Cinema Capitol Twin, 234 W. Dominick St., Rome. $7/adults, $5/students. (315) 337-6453.

Beginner Fire Building. Mon. 10 a.m.-2 p.m.

Learn how to build a fire for warmth and to cook food at Green Lakes State Park, 7900 Green Lakes Road, Fayetteville. Free with park admission. (315) 637-6111, parks.ny.gov/parks/172.

aquatic exhibits and learn a thing or two from the zookeepers about the importance of water on our planet at Rosamond Gifford Zoo, 1 Conservation Place. Free with zoo admission. (315) 435-8511, rosamondgiffordzoo.org.

7 a.m.-noon. A day for a morning field trip to learn about our flying feathered friends; bus leaves from Beaver Lake Nature Center, 8477 Mud Lake Road, Baldwinsville. $25. (315) 6382519, events.onondagacountyparks.com.

Carousel 19 (Digital presentation/IMAX/3-D/Stadium). Daily: 11:50 a.m., 3:10, 6:30 & 9:50 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation/3-D). Fri. & Sat.: 10:15 p.m. Sun.-Thurs.: 3:45 p.m. Great Northern 10 (Digital presentation). Fri. & Sat.: 12:30, 3:45 & 7 p.m. Sun.-Thurs.: 12:30 & 7 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/3-D/Stadium). Daily: 3:40 & 10:20 p.m. Shoppingtown 14 (Digital presentation/Stadium). Screen 1: 12:20 & 7 p.m. Screen 2: 12:50, 4:10, 7:30 & 10:50 p.m.

Time Out to Fish. Every Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-

Adult Experienced Rowing Program. Every

Mon. & Wed., 6-8 p.m. Four-month-long rowing sessions offered throughout the summer at Long Branch Park, 3813 Long Branch Road, Liverpool. $85/one day per week per session, $150/ two days per week per session. (315) 453-6712, events.onondagacountyparks.com.

Salt City Sock Hop. Every Mon. 7-10 p.m.

Learn a lesson in swing dancing before an evening of dancing at Pulse Fitness Studio, 713 W. Fayette St. $5. (315) 436-3488, facebook.com/ syracusenewtimes.com | 5.31.17 - 6.6.17

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LEGAL NOTICE 432 NORTH FRANKLIN PROPERTIES, LLC: Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company. Articles of Organization for 432 NORTH FRANKLIN PROPERTIES, LLC (“LLC”) were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (“SSNY”) on September 26, 2002. Office Location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to the LLC, at c/o The LLC, 221 West Division Street, Syracuse, New York 13204. Purpose: To engage in any lawful activity. FRANKLIN FOUNDRY, LLC: Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company. Articles of Organization for FRANKLIN FOUNDRY, LLC (“LLC”) were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (“SSNY”) on May 1, 2003. Office Location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to the LLC, at c/o The LLC, 432 North Franklin Street, Syracuse, New York 13204. Purpose: To engage in any lawful activity. Megan Ward, LLC filed Articles of Organization on March 29, 2017 with the NY Dept. of State, pursuant to Section 203 of the NY

Limited Liability Company Law. The office of the LLC is located in Onondaga County, NY. The NY Secretary of State is designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served and is directed to forward service of process to 3971 Jordan Road, Skaneateles, NY which is also the principal business location. The purpose of the LLC is any lawful activity. NOTICE Name of LLC: DLH Carrington Park II, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with NY Dept. of State on 4/13/17. Office Location: Cortland County. Sec. of State designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served and shall mail process to principal business location: 41 Church St., Cortland, NY 13045. Purpose: any lawful activity. Notice of Formation – Downwind Properties, LLC (“LLC”) filed Articles of Organization with the NY Secretary of State on May 10, 2017. Office location: Onondaga County. The NY Secretary of State is the designated agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The NY Secretary of State shall mail process to: 430 East Genesee St. Suite 401, Syracuse, NY 13202. The purpose of the LLC is any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of 211 N. Wilbur Ave., LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 01/04/2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 7623 Wild Turkey, Liverpool, NY 13090. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of 234-244 West Genesee Street, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/18/2017. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: c/o Christopher J. Doshna, 238 West Genesee Street, Syracuse, NY 13202. Term: until 1/1/2068. Purpose: any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of 4 THE FAN PRODUC-

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TIONS, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on August 11, 2016. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to A.A. Castro C.L.A.N. PPLC, 60 Broad St., Suite 2422, New York, NY 10004. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of 40 N Main St., LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 03/28/2017. Office location: Cortland County, NY. SSNY is the designated agent of the LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 40 N Main St., LLC at 101 North Main Street, Homer, NY 13077 which is also the principal business location. The purpose is any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of 50 N Main St., LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 05/18/2017. Office location: Cortland County, NY. SSNY is the designated agent of the LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 50 N Main St., LLC at 101 North Main Street, Homer, NY 13077 which is also the principal business location. The purpose is any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of 65 N Main St., LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 05/18/2017. Office location: Cortland County, NY. SSNY is the designated agent of the LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 65 N Main St., LLC at 101 North Main Street, Homer, NY 13077 which is also the principal business location. The purpose is any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of 8761 ROUTE 9 LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 5/1/17. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: Gilberti Stinziano Heintz & Smith, PC, 555 East

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Genesee Street, Syracuse, NY 13202. Purpose: any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of a Limited Liability Company (LLC): Name: HUMDRAGON LLC, Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on April 4, 2017. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to HUMDRAGON LLC, 4660 Natures Circle, Syracuse NY, 13215. Purpose: Any Lawful Purpose. Notice of Formation of A.A. Castro C.L.A.N. PLLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on February 28, 2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process to may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 60 Broad Street, Suite 2422, New York, NY 10004. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Ahoy Comics, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 2/22/2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to Hart I. Seely III at 101 Enderberry Circle Dewitt, NY 13224. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of AJAX’S CONVENIENCE STORE, LLC— Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York on 4/13/17. Office location: Cortland County. Secretary of State of New York designated as agent of the limited liability company upon whom process against it may be served. Secretary of State of New York shall mail process to 80 Central Avenue, Cortland, New York 13045 which is the principal office of the limited liability company. The limited liability company was formed for any lawful business purpose. Notice of Formation of Allariz Properties LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with

the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 5/8/2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 234 Melbourne Ave., Syracuse, NY 13224. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of American Topographic Services LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 4/6/2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to Taran J. Pashow, 1651 Oak Hill Rd, Tully, NY 13159. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Arbor Home Inspections, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on April 11, 2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 1967 Wehrle Drive Ste 1 #806, Buffalo, NY 14221. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Bark Avenue Doggy Day Care and Grooming Spa LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 1/13/17. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy to: C/O Bark Avenue Doggy Day Care and Grooming Spa LLC, 111 Sunset Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13208. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of BEE Fit with Jules, LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 5/3/2017. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: LLC, 4313 Kelsey Drive, Syracuse, NY 13152. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Best Yet Travel LLC. Articles of Organiza-

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tion were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 4/17/17. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 7728 Seneca Beach Dr. Baldwinsville, NY 13027. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Cute Fashion of Us, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 3/31/17. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 3 Aspen Spring Drive Apt. #307, Syracuse NY 13027. Purpose is any lawful purpose. NOTICE OF FORMATION OF DOMESTIC LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY; Name of LLC: Harrison’s Farm, LLC; Date of Filing: 05/04/2017; Office of the LLC: Onondaga Co.; The NY Secretary of State (NYSS) has been designated as the agent upon whom process may be served. The NYSS may mail a copy of any process to the LLC at 241 Kenlyn Road, Palm Beach, FL 33480; Purpose of LLC: Any lawful purpose. NOTICE OF FORMATION OF DOMESTIC LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY; Name of LLC: Hill Country Farm Brewery, LLC; Date of Filing: 04/13/2017; Office of the LLC: Onondaga Co.; The NY Secretary of State (NYSS) has been designated as the agent upon whom process may be served. The NYSS may mail a copy of any process to the LLC at 3149 Sweet Road, Jamesville, NY 13078; Purpose of LLC: Any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of DWF Properties LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 5/18/17. Office location: Onondaga SSNY desg. as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY mail process to 7660 Farmington Rd., Manlius, NY, 13104. Any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Eastside Restorations LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 4/17/17. Office location: Onondaga SSNY desg. as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY mail process to 6929 Old

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Quarry Rd., Fayetteville, NY, 13066. Any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of EMLIZ UTICA PROPERTY, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 5/11/17. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: The LLC, 1665 S. Ivy Trail, Baldwinsville, NY 13027. Purpose: any lawful act or activity. Notice of Formation of F.C. Red & Blacks, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on April 10, 2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 303 Marilyn Ave. North Syracuse, NY 13212. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of FEN RIDGE, LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/13/17. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: William R. Bucci, 460 Swamp Road, Baldwinsville, NY 13207. Purpose: any lawful act or activity.

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Notice of Formation of Gabrielle Chocolates and Ice Cream LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 5/9/2017. Office location: County of Madison. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: Centolella Green Law, P.C., 6832 E. Genesee Street, Fayetteville, NY 13066. Purpose: any lawful purpose.

NY 13112. Purpose is any lawful purpose.

NY 13029. Purpose is any lawful purpose.

Notice of Formation of Homer Properties, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on April 17, 2017. Office is located in the County of Cortland. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to PO Box 342, Homer, NY 13077. Purpose is any lawful purpose.

Notice of Formation of Golden Meadow Home Development, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 02/16/2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 241 Lafayette Rd, APT 133, Syracuse, NY 13205. Purpose is any lawful purpose.

Notice of Formation of JCT Urology, PLLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on April 6, 2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of PLLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 6923 Woodchuck Hill Road, Fayetteville, NY 13066. Purpose is any lawful purpose.

Notice of Formation of KRUEGER, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 05/02/2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to Krueger LLC, c/o Jason Virkler, 134 Richmond Ave, Syracuse, NY 13204. Purpose is any lawful purpose.

Notice of Formation of Good Buddyz LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 5/3/2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to Good Buddyz LLC, 6626 Laird Road, Memphis,

Notice of Formation of KRH Properties, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 05/01/2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to KRG Properties LLC, c/o Michael Hanas, 5818 Miralago Ln, Brewerton,

Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC) Name: BEN-HOWD, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on April 26, 2017. Office Location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 2696 West Lake Road, Skaneateles, NY 13152. Purpose: to engage in any and all business for which LLCs may be formed under the New York LLC law. Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC) X-FACTOR LACROSSE, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on April 21, 2017. Office Location Onondaga Coun-


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ty. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 4243 Montezuma Course, Liverpool, NY 13090. Purpose: to engage in any and all business for which LLCs may be formed under the New York LLC law. Notice of Formation of Liv Temp, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 2/28/17. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to c/o United States Corporation Agents, 7014 13th Ave., Suite 202, Brooklyn, NY 11228. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of LLC. Major Skills, LLC (LLC) filed Arts. Of Org. with Secy. of State of NY (SSNY) on 3/28/17. Office location: Coun-

ty of Onondaga. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 4446 Chapman Road, Marcellus, NY 13108. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of MANGAN ENTERPRISES LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on MARCH 21, 2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 7459 WAXWOOD CIRCLE SYRACUSE, NY 13212. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Mitchell Auto Emporium, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on February 24, 2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is

designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 2228 Court St. Syracuse, NY 13208. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Nicholas Gilfus, LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 5/19/2017. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: LLC, 247 East Main Street, Elbridge, NY 13060. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of OG ROC, LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 4/24/2017. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of pro-

cess to: LLC, 302 South Salina Street, Syracuse, NY 13202. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Origin Story, LLC Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 4/25/2017. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: LLC, 913 Euclid Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13210. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Robert P. Doyle, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 3/30/2017. Office is located in County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 4495 Red Spruce Lane, Manlius, NY 13104. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of RPP Capital, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 5/3/2017. Office location: County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: LLC, 24 State Street, Skaneateles, NY 13152. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of ScoutUp, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 04/21/2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to ScoutUp, 109 Parsons Drive Syracuse, NY 13219. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Skaneateles Fund Management, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 03/28/2017. Office is located in the Country of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 2005 Pine Bluff, Skaneateles, NY 13152. Purpose is any lawful purpose.

Notice of Formation of Skaneateles Investment Fund, LP. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 3/22/2017. Office is located in the Country of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LP upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 700 Front Royal Cir, Fayetteville, NY 13066. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of SOUL A LA CARTE, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 08/25/2016. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to Soul a la Carte, 253 W Lafayette Ave, Syracuse, NY 13205. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Syracuse Doors, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on April 27, 2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to Philip Felice III, 4120 Griffin Road, Syracuse, NY 13215. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Talking Cursive Brewing Company LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on 5/12/17. Office location: Onondaga SSNY desg. as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY mail process to 4666 Post Rd., Manlius, NY, 13104. Any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Taskale Design, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on May 4, 2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to P.O. BOX 35242 Syracuse, NY 13235. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Taskale Studio LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on May 4, 2017. Office is

located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to P.O. Box 35242 Syracuse, NY 13235. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of TC Renovations, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on April 21, 2017. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to 305 Stanton Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13209. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of Words Rule, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of NY (SSNY) on 4/27/2017. Office location: Onondaga County. SSNY is designated as LLC agent upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 6 Orchard Rd, Skaneateles, NY 13152. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of: CNY Family Services, LLC. Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on 3/22/17. Office is located in the County of Onondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 7901 Sudley Way, Baldwinsville NY, 13027. Purpose is any lawful purpose. Notice of formation of: Dirt Track Digest Motorsports Media, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of the State of New York (SSNY) May, 3, 2017. Office Location: 9594 Clarecastle Path, Brewerton, NY 13029, county of Onondaga. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: Dirt Track Digest Motorsports Media, LLC, 9594 Clarecastle Path, Brewerton, NY 13029. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. Notice of Formation of: Goldilocks Express LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on: 05/10/2017. Office location: County of On-

ondaga. SSNY is designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 7833 Pegler Blvd, Bridgeport, NY 13030. Purpose: any lawful purpose. Notice of formation of: The Berg 302, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with the Secretary of the State of New York (SSNY) April 14, 2017. Office Location: P.O. Box 215, Camillus, NY 13031, county of Onondaga. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to: The Berg 302, LLC, P.O. Box 215, Camillus, NY 13031. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. NOTICE: Trove Engineering, PLLC, a civil engineering firm organized on Feb. 8, 2012 in New Hampshire, filed an Application for Authority with the NY Dept. of State on March 30, 2017 as a foreign professional service limited liability company. NY office to be in Onondaga County at 2616 Ridge Road, Manlius, NY 13104. NY-DOS is designated agent and process may be sent to principal office at 83 West Pleasant St., Claremont, NH 03743, attn: Kevin A. McCaffery, PE. SECOND SUPPLEMENTAL SUMMONS Index No. 2017-175 STATE OF NEW YORK SUPREME COURT – COUNTY OF ONONDAGA SUN WEST MORTGAGE COMPANY, INC., Plaintiff, -vsTHE HEIRS AT LARGE OF ANTHONY R. DONARDO, deceased, and all persons who are husbands, widows, grantees, mortgagees, lienors, heirs, devisees, distributees, successors in interest of such of them as may be dead, and their husbands and wives, heirs, devisees, distributees and successors of interest of all of whom and whose names and places are unknown to Plaintiff; LAURA M. JACOBS; CAROL ANN PERRIGO; GERALYN FARELLA; MARYBETH DICKSON; NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; SECRETARY OF HOUSING URBAN DEVELOPMENT; CITY COURT CLERK; “JOHN DOE” AND “JANE DOE” said names being fictitious, it being the intention of Plaintiff

to designate any and all occupants of premises being foreclosed herein, Defendants. Mortgaged Premises: 317 ROBINSON STREET, SYRACUSE, NY 13203 TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT(S): YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the Complaint in the above entitled action and to serve a copy of your Answer on the plaintiff’s attorney within twenty (20) days of the service of this Summons, exclusive of the day of service, or within thirty (30) days after service of the same is complete where service is made in any manner other than by personal delivery within the State. The United States of America, if designated as a defendant in this action, may answer or appear within sixty (60) days of service hereof. Your failure to appear or answer will result in a judgment against you by default for the relief demanded in the Complaint. In the event that a deficiency balance remains from the sale proceeds, a judgment may be entered against you, unless the Defendant obtained a bankruptcy discharge and such other or further relief as may be just and equitable. NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer to the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending payment to your mortgage company will not stop this foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. These pleadings are being amended in order to reflect the addition of CITY COURT CLERK as a necessary party in this action. These pleadings are being amended to include LAURA M. JACOBS, CAROL ANN

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PERRIGO, GERALYN FARELLA, and MARYBETH DICKSON as possible heirs to the estate of ANTHONY R. DONARDO, deceased. ONONDAGA County is designated as the place of trial. The basis of venue is the location of the mortgaged premises. Dated: APRIL 13, 2017 Mark K. Broyles, Esq. FEIN SUCH & CRANE, LLP Attorneys for Plaintiff Office and P.O. Address 28 East Main Street, Suite 1800 Rochester, New York 14614 Telephone No. (585) 232-7400 Section: 019. Block: 24 Lot: 21.0 NATURE AND OBJECT OF ACTION The object of the above action is to foreclose a reverse mortgage held by the Plaintiff recorded in the County of ONONDAGA, State of New York as more particularly described in the Complaint herein. TO THE DEFENDANT, the plaintiff makes no personal claim against you in this action To the above named defendants: The foregoing summons is served upon you by publication pursuant to an order of HON. KEVIN G. YOUNG, a Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, dated APRIL 19, 2017 and filed along with the supporting papers in the ONONDAGA County Clerk’s Office. This is an action to foreclose a Mortgage. ALL THAT TRACT OR PARCEL OF LAND, situate in City of Syracuse, County of Onondaga, State of New York, more particularly bounded and described as follows: Lot No. 16 of Block No. 585 according to an amended map of the Ackerman Farm, filed in Onondaga County Clerk’s Office on February 3, 1890. ALSO CONVEYS ALL THAT TRACT OR PARCEL OF LAND, situate in the aforesaid City, County and State, known and distinguished as the East, 5 feet front and rear of Lot No. 17 of Block No. 585 according to an amended map of the Ackerman Farm made by R. Griffin C.E. and filed in Onondaga County Clerk’s Office February 3, 1890. The premises hereby conveyed by this parcel being 5 feet front on the north line Robinson Street, the same width in rear and 8 rods deep. Mortgaged Premises: 317 ROBINSON STREET, SYRACUSE, NY 13203. Tax Map/Parcel ID No.:

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Section: 019. Block: 24 Lot: 21.0 of the CITY of SYRACUSE, NY 13203. SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF ONONDAGA INDEX #2016-0649 FILED: 5/2/2017 SUPPLEMENTAL SUMMONS AND NOTICE. Plaintiff designates Onondaga County as the place of trial. Venue is based upon the County in which the mortgage premise is situated. U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE, FOR THE C-BASS MORTGAGE LOAN ASSET BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2007-RP1 Plaintiff(s), against, SHANNON BRANTLEY, SHAWN BRANTLEY, SHIRLEY SPANN AND ROBIN KEARSE Unknown Heirs At Law Of Dora J Kearse, And If They Be Dead, Any And All Persons Unknown TO plaintiff, claiming, or who may claim to have an interest in, or generally or specific lien upon the real property described in this action; such unknown persons being herein generally described and intended to be included in the following designation, namely: the wife, widow, husband, widower, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors, and assignees of such deceased, any and all persons deriving interest in or lien upon, or title to said real property by, through or under them, or either of them, and their respective wives, widows, husbands, widowers, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors and assigns, all of who and whose names, except as stated, are unknown to plaintiff, NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION & FINANCE, “JOHN DOE #1” through “JOHN DOE #12”, the last twelve names being fictitious and unknown to plaintiff, the persons or parties intended being the tenants, occupants, persons or corporations, if any, having or claiming an interest in or lien upon the premises, described in the complaint, Defendant(s). TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME IF YOU DO NOT RESPOND TO THIS SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT BY SERVING A

COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEYS FOR THE MORTGAGE COMPANY WHO FILED THIS FORECLOSURE P R O C E E D I N G AGAINST YOU AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT, A DEFAULT JUDGMENT MAY BE ENTERED AND YOU CAN LOSE YOUR HOME. SPEAK TO AN ATTORNEY OR GO TO THE COURT WHERE YOUR CASE IS PENDING FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ON HOW TO ANSWER THE SUMMONS AND PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY. SENDING A PAYMENT TO YOUR MORTGAGE COMPANY WILL NOT STOP THIS FORECLOSURE ACTION. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE, FOR THE C-BASS MORTGAGE LOAN ASSET BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2007RP1 AND FILING THE ANSWER WITHIN THE COURT. YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer, or, if the complaint is not serviced with this summons, to serve a notice of appearance on the Plaintiff`s attorney within 20 days after the service of this summons, exclusive of the day of service or within 30 days after the service is complete if this summons is not personally delivered to you within the State of New York; The United States of America, if designated as a Defendant in this action, may appear within (60) days of service thereof and in case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. NOTICE OF NATURE OF ACTION AND RELIEF SOUGHT: THE OJBECT of the above captioned action is to foreclose on a mortgage which was recorded on the office of the Clerk of the County of Onondaga where the property is located on June 28, 2001 recorded in Liber 11553 of Mortgages at page 0043, in the office of the Clerk of the County of Onondaga. Said mortgage was then assigned to U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE, FOR THE C-BASS MORTGAGE LOAN ASSET BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2007RP1, by assignment of mortgage which was dated November 2, 2015 and the assignment of which was recorded on November

5.31.17 - 6.6.17 | syracusenewtimes.com

30, 2015 at the Clerk`s office where the property is located covering premises known as 450 Tallman St, Syracuse, NY 13202 (Section: 094 Block: 01 Lot: 03.0). The relief sought in the within action is a final judgment directing the sale of the premises described above to satisfy the debt described above to the above named Defendants: The foregoing summons is served upon you by publication pursuant to an order of the Hon. Kevin G. Young, an Acting Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of New York dated April 5, 2017 and filed along with the supporting papers in the office of the Clerk of the County of Onondaga. This is an action to foreclose on a mortgage. ALL that certain plot, piece or parcel of land with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the County of Onondaga and State of New York. SECTION: 094 BLOCK: 01 LOT: 03.0 said premises known as 450 Tallman St, Syracuse, NY 13202. YOU ARE HEREBY PUT ON NOTICE THAT WE ARE ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. By reason of the default in the payment of the monthly installment of principal and interest, among other things, as hereinafter set forth, Plaintiff, the holder and owner of the aforementioned note and mortgage, or their agents have elected and hereby accelerate the mortgage and declare the entire mortgage indebtedness immediately due and payable. The following amounts are now due and owing on said mortgage, no part of any of which has been paid although duly demanded. Entire principal Balance in the amount of $48,083.42 with interest from September 28, 2014. UNLESS YOU DISPUTE THE VALDITY OF THE DEBT, OR ANY PORTION THEREOF, WITHIN THIRTY (30) DAYS AFTER YOUR RECEIPT HEREOF THAT THE DEBT, OR ANY PORTION THEREOF, IS DISPUTED, THE DEBT OR JUDGMENT AGAINST YOU AND A COPY OF SUCH VERIFICATION OR JUDGMENT WILL BE MAILED TO YOU BY THE HEREIN DEBT COLLECTOR. IF APPLICABLE, UPON YOUR WRITTEN REQUEST, WITHIN SAID THIRTY (30) DAY PERIOD, THE HEREIN DEBT COLLECTOR WILL PRO-

VIDE YOU WITH THE NAME, ADDRESS OF THE ORIGINAL CREDITOR. IF YOU HAVE RECEIVED A DISCHARGE FROM THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT, YOU ARE NOT PERSONALLY LIABLE FOR THE UNDERLYING INDEBTEDNESS OWED TO PLAINTIFF/CREDITOR AND THIS NOTICE/DISCLOSURE IS FOR COMPLIANCE AND INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. HELP FOR HOMEOWERS IN FORECLOSURE New York State requires that we send you this notice about the foreclosure process. Please read it carefully. SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT You are in danger of losing your home. If you fail to respond to the summons and complaint in this foreclosure action, you may lose your home. Please read the summons and complaint carefully. You should immediately contact an attorney or your local legal aid office to obtain advice on how to protect yourself. SOURCES OF INFORMATION AND ASSISTANCE. The State encourages you to become informed about your options in foreclosure. In addition to seeking assistance from an attorney or legal aid, there are government agencies, and non-profit organizations that you may contact for information about possible options, including trying to work with our lender during this process. To locate an entity near you, you may call the toll-free helpline maintained by New York State Banking Department at 1-877-Bank-NYS or visit the Department`s website at www.banking.state.ny.us FORECLOSURE RESCUE SCAMS Be careful of people who approach you with offers to “save” your home. There are individuals who watch for notices of foreclosure actions in order to unfairly profit from a homeowner’s distress. You should be extremely careful about any such promises and any suggestions that you pay them a fee or sign over your deed. State law requires anyone offering such services for profit to enter into a contract which fully describes the services they will perform and fees they will charge, and which prohibits them from taking any money from you until they have completed all such promised services. Section 1303 NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do

not respond to this summons and complaint by serving the copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you may lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to your

mortgage company will not stop this foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF MORTGAGE COMPANY AND FILING AN ANSWER WITH THE COURT. Leopold & Associates, PLLC, 80 Business Park Drive, Suite 110, Armonk, NY 10504. Our file #Kearse. SYRACUSE PARKING ASSOCIATES II, LLC: Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company. Articles of Organization for SYRACUSE PARKING

ASSOCIATES II, LLC (“LLC”) were filed with the Secretary of State of New York (“SSNY”) on April 25, 2017. Office Location: Onondaga County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of any process to the LLC, at c/o 224 Harrison Associates, LLC, The Atrium, 2 Clinton Square, Suite 120, Syracuse, New York 13202. Purpose: To engage in any lawful activity.

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LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) From my study of

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Your body is holy and magic and precious. I advise you not to sell it or rent it or compromise it in any way -- especially now, when you have an opening to upgrade your relationship with it. Yes, Taurus, it’s time to attend to your sweet flesh and blood with consummate care. Find out exactly what your amazing organism needs to feel its best. Lavish it with pleasure and healing. Treat it as you would a beloved child or animal. I also hope you will have intimate conversations with the cells that compose your body. Let them know you love and appreciate them. Tell them you’re ready to collaborate on a higher level.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) “On some hill of despair,” wrote poet Galway Kinnell, “the bonfire you kindle can light the great sky -though it’s true, of course, to make it burn you have to throw yourself in.” You may not exactly feel despair, Scorpio. But I suspect you are in the throes of an acute questioning that makes you feel close to the edge of forever. Please consider the possibility that it’s a favorable time to find out just how much light and heat are hidden inside you. Your ache for primal fun and your longing to accelerate your soul’s education are converging with your quest to summon a deeper, wilder brilliance.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) “The most intense moments the universe has ever known are the next 15 seconds,” said philosopher Terence McKenna. He was naming a central principle of reality: that every new NOW is a harvest of everything that has ever happened; every fresh moment is a blast of novelty that arises in response to the sum total of all history’s adventures. This is always true, of course. But I suspect the phenomenon will be especially pronounced for you in the near future. More than usual, you may find that every day is packed with interesting feelings and poignant fun and epic realizations. This could be pleasurable, but also overwhelming. Luckily, you have the personal power necessary to make good use of the intensity.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You’re in a phase when you have the power to find answers to questions that have stumped you for a while. Why? Because you’re more open-minded and curious than usual. You’re also ready to be brazenly honest with yourself. Congrats! In light of the fact that you’ll be lucky at solving riddles, I’ve got three good ones for you to wrestle with. 1. Which of your anxieties may actually be cover-ups for a lazy refusal to change a bad habit? 2. What resource will you use more efficiently when you stop trying to make it do things it’s not designed to do? 3. What blessing will you receive as soon as you give a clear signal that you are ready for it?

to communicate with you rather lyrically. Here are just a few of the signs and portents you may encounter, along with theories about their meaning. If you overhear a lullaby, it’s time to seek the influence of a tender, nurturing source. If you see a type of fruit or flower you don’t recognize, it means you have a buried potential you don’t know much about, and you’re ready to explore it further. If you spy a playing card in an unexpected place, trust serendipity to bring you what you need. If a loud noise arrives near a moment of decision: Traditionally it signifies caution, but these days it suggests you should be bold.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Nobody likes to

be scrutinized or critiqued or judged. But we Crabs (yes, I’m one of you) are probably touchier about that treatment than any other sign of the zodiac. (Hypersensitivity is a trait that many astrologers ascribe to Cancerians.) However, many of us do allow one particular faultfinder to deride us: the nagging voice in the back of our heads. Sometimes we even give free rein to its barbs. But I would like to propose a transformation of this situation. Maybe we could scold ourselves less, and be a bit more open to constructive feedback coming from other people. Starting now.

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ARIES (March 21-April 19) Life is in the mood

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LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) The lion’s potency,

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boldness and majesty are qualities you have a mandate to cultivate in the next three weeks. To get in the righteous mood, I suggest you gaze upon images and videos of lions. Come up with your own version of a lion’s roar -- I mean actually make that sound -- and unleash it regularly. You might also want to try the yoga posture known as the lion pose. If you’re unfamiliar with it, go here for tips: tinyurl.com/lionpose. What else might help you invoke and express the unfettered leonine spirit?

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) “What does it matter how many lovers you have if none of them gives you the universe?” French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan posed that question. I invite you to put it at the top of your list of hot topics to meditate on. In doing so, I trust you won’t use it as an excuse to disparage your companions for their inadequacies. Rather, I hope it will mobilize you to supercharge your intimate alliances; to deepen your awareness of the synergistic beauty you could create together; to heighten your ability to be given the universe by those whose fates are interwoven with yours.

the lost prophecies of Nostradamus, the hidden chambers beneath the Great Pyramid of Cheops, and the current astrological omens, I have determined that now is a favorable time for you to sing liberation songs with cheeky authority; to kiss the sky and dance with the wind on a beach or hilltop; to gather your most imaginative allies and brainstorm about what you really want to do in the next five years. Do you dare to slip away from business-as-usual so you can play in the enchanted land of what-if? If you’re smart, you will escape the grind and grime of the daily rhythm so you can expand your mind to the next largest size.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) A typical Capricorn cultivates fervent passions, even to the point of obsession. Almost no one knows their magnitude, though, because the members of your tribe often pursue their fulfillment with methodical, business-like focus. But I wonder if maybe it’s a good time to reveal more of the raw force of this driving energy than you usually do. It might humanize you in the eyes of potential helpers who see you as too strong to need help. And it could motivate your allies to provide the extra support and understanding you’ll need in the coming weeks. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) In accordance

with the astrological omens, I invite you to carry out a flashy flirtation with the color red. I dare you to wear red clothes and red jewelry. Buy yourself red roses. Sip red wine and savor strawberries under red lights. Sing Elvis Costello’s “The Angels Want to Wear My Red Shoes” and Prince’s “Little Red Corvette.” Tell everyone why 2017 is a red-letter year for you. For extra credit, murmur the following motto whenever a splash of red teases and pleases your imagination: “My red-hot passion is my version of high fashion.”

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) “If you want a

puppy, start by asking for a pony,” read the bumper sticker on the Lexus SUV I saw. That confused me. Would the owner of a Lexus SUV be the type of person who didn’t expect to get what she really wanted? In any case, Pisces, I’m conveying a version of this bumper-sticker wisdom to you. If you want your domestic scene to thrive even more than it already does, ask for a feng shui master to redesign your environment so it has a perfect flow of energy. If you want a community that activates the best in you, ask for a utopian village full of emotionally intelligent activists. If you want to be animated by a focused goal that motivates you to wake up excited each morning, ask for a glorious assignment that will help save the world.


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