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48
THE INDEPENDENT Ellen’s Run Helps Women Battle And Beat Breast Cancer. (See page 4) VOL. 21 NO. 51 AUGUST 13, 2014 www.indyeastend.com FREE Southampton Code Enforcement Rick And The Zombies NOW, FOR THE NORTH FORK, THE Traveler Watchman TRUTH WITHOUT FEAR SINCE 1826 Your # 1 resource for everything happening in the Hamptons this week! pg. B-3 RUN10 FEED10 pg. B-4 pg. 16 Sag Harbor Carnival Authors Night pg. 20 INDEPENDENT/JESSICA MACKIN THE GOOD FIGHT pg. 7

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Independent 8 13 14

Transcript of Independent 8 13 14

Page 1: Independent 8 13 14

THE INDEPENDENT

Ellen’s Run Helps Women Battle And Beat Breast Cancer. (See page 4)

VOL. 21 NO. 51 AUGUST 13, 2014 www.indyeastend.com FREE

SouthamptonCode Enforcement

Rick And TheZombies

NOW, FOR THE NORTH FORK, THE Traveler Watchman TRUTH WITHOUT FEAR SINCE 1826

Your # 1 resource

for everything

happening in the

Hamptons this

week!

pg. B-3

RUN10 FEED10pg. B-4 pg. 16

Sag Harbor CarnivalAuthors Nightpg. 20

INDEPENDENT/JESSICA MACKIN

THE GOOD FIGHT

pg. 7

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www.indyeastend.com ARTS & ENTERTAINMENTREAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSAugust 13, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT Q Traveler Watchman2

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www.indyeastend.com ARTS & ENTERTAINMENTREAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSAugust 13, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT Q Traveler Watchman4

By Rick Murphy

Sunday morning over a thousand runners will compete in the 19th annual Ellen’s Run, but it’s not about who runs the fastest – it’s about the joy of being there.

Ellen’s Run, the brainchild of Julie Ratner, is the poster child for a determined effort that will

Ellen’s Run Takes Off Sundaynever end – the effort to help cancer victims cope, survive, and ultimately, triumph over the disease.

Julie Ratner lost her sister, Ellen Hermanson, to breast cancer two decades ago. “I still miss her,” she said in a recent interview. “It’s always bittersweet,” she said about the race. “But now it’s more sweet

than bitter.”The race itself evolved from a

modest fundraiser to the largest footrace on the East End – but it is so much more. It’s a celebration of women who fight the good fight against breast cancer in an area that has one of the highest rates in the state.

Ellen Hermanson was by all accounts a remarkable woman, and her courageous fight is the inspiration for thousands of women and the race that bears her name. The Ellen Hermanson Foundation endures, and its crown jewel is the Breast Center at Southampton Hospital.

Ann Cronin can attest to what having the state of the art facility on the East End has meant to hundreds of women. “I was diagnosed last year after I went for a routine mammography . . . thank god for the #D machine at the Ellen Hermanson Breast Center.”

The Ellen Hermanson Foundation jumped in to help, no questions asked. “They sponsor a seminar, “Renewal & Hope” that was useful. They helped out with money -- I used it to take the ferry from my home on Shelter Island to get treatment. People just don’t believe how great they are.”

The cancer was in its early stages, and after a lumpectomy, ”all is good,” Cronin reported.

Rita Wasserman is another survivor who has worked raising money for the Foundation ever since.

“Ellen’s Run and Ellen’s Well were there for me from the beginning. They provided transportation to Riverhead five days a week. They paid expenses and for my counseling.”

Wasserman hasn’t forgotten. “I work my butt off for them. I’ll do anything. I’m eternally grateful.”

A beautiful woman and a gifted

writer, Hermanson’s personal battle began in February 1989 while still breastfeeding her six-month old daughter. She fought valiantly and courageously, undergoing surgery and aggressive chemotherapy.

In November 1994 , E l len delivered an important speech entitled “One Patient’s Pain” at the National Coalition of Cancer Survivorship annual conference. She was weak, barely able to walk, and facing hip replacement surgery that her doctors agreed to delay until after the conference. It was at this conference that Justice Sandra Day O’Connor spoke of her breast cancer.

She lost her hard-fought battle with breast cancer on April 11, 1995, at the age of 42.

“She loved the ocean, she loved the light out here,” Ratner recalled about her sister. “My niece is 26 now. She has a real sense of who her mother was.”

C o n s i d e r i n g i t s h u m b l e beginnings the Foundation has a staggering list of achievements, most noteworthy over $3 million in assorted grants to related programs and organizations.

“It’s a real local event. I’m so proud to have created this,” Ratner said of the race. “I’m really proud of what we have accomplished. It’s a privilege to do it.”

This year’s event starts at 9 AM sharp on Sunday at the Parrish Memorial Hall at Southampton Hospital.

“It’s day of hope and renewal,” Ratner said. The race itself is for serious and casual runners alike. Registration is $30 ($25 for seniors) now and $40 the day of the race. There are prizes for men, women, boys, and girls in every age category. Breakfast is provided after the race. For more information call 631-907-1952 or visit www.ellensrun.org.

“God forbid anything ever happens they are there,” Wasserman said about the Foundation.

Independent / Jack McCoy

The beginning of last year’s race.

Independent/Courtesy Ellens Run

Ellen Hermanson

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Little Weiner:Did you see that Anthony (“Do

you want to see a picture of my crotch?”) Weiner is going to open a restaurant in the Rockaways serving healthful food? I’m all for that, but I want Weiner to promise us all that before he touches the food he’s going to wash his hands.

Big Weiner:I’m happy to report that Barack

Obama reads The Independent.On June 18 I wrote a column titled

“Solving Obama’s Problems in Iraq.” In the column I said: “Let the Sunnis and the Shiites kill themselves in an

LITTLE WEINER AND THE BIGGEST WEINER OF THEM ALL

insane religious war that has gone on for centuries.

“Give up on the rest of Iraq except for the Kurdish region.

“Recognize and help establish the creation of a sovereign state called Iraqi Kurdistan with its own government and parliament.”

Naturally the “Obama can do no wrong” idiots jumped all over it. And on Facebook some moron “unfriended” me for suggesting something so stupid.

I can’t tell you how much that hurt my tender feelings.

Now just eight weeks later Obama, having read my column,

is helping the Kurds who are in danger of being massacred by the ISIS for not succumbing to demands to convert to Islam or else.

My favorite story in The New York Times was that the administration was afraid ISIS would roll over into the Kurdish capital of Erbil and kill some of the American diplomats stationed there.

The Times reported an unnamed source in the Obama administration said, “We don’t want another Benghazi.”

Can you see them meeting in the White House?

Obama: “This is terrible – we’ve lost another ambassador. What are we going to say to the American people?”

Biden: “How embarrassing. I was the one who said, ‘I am very optimistic about – about Iraq. I mean, this could be one of the great achievements of this administration.’”

Obama: “It’s a good thing no one listens to you because you’re a bumbling old fool. We need a cover story.”

Biden: “How about the old Benghazi lie? You know, we insist ISIS had nothing to do with this. We say our people were killed because some of the local Erbil people were

rioting because they were mad at an American movie that offended their religion.”

Obama: “Then I can go out and claim I didn’t know anything about it and we can blame John Kerry the same way we dropped Benghazi into Hillary’s lap.”

Biden: “Then we get that lightweight Susan Rice to go on all the Sunday morning shows and say it wasn’t ISIS – it was a local protest that got out of hand. But what movie can we blame?”

Obama: “I’ve got it. Let’s say they were rioting against the film Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.”

Biden: “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles?”

Obama: “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. You have to understand there are voters out there who will believe anything this administration says. Let’s tell them that they were offended because none of the female teenage mutant ninja turtles were wearing burqas and you could see their wrinkled green skin.”

Biden: “You’re a genius, boss! No wonder Democrat voters love you.”

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Page 7: Independent 8 13 14

www.indyeastend.comARTS & ENTERTAINMENT REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS August 13, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT Q Traveler Watchman 7

By Kitty Merrill

As of August, town officials have embarked on more enforcement act ions re lated to property management than they did in all of 2013, according to Southampton Town Deputy Supervisor Frank Zappone. That’s a “direct reflection” o f the r eo rgan i za t i on and restructuring of the town’s code enforcement department.

Officers are now assigned specific sectors in town, just like police. They’re able to become very familiar with a neighborhood while patrolling and, said Zappone, “be more proactive and preventative.”

Property management issues can relate to dumping, unattended lawns, places unoccupied for an extended period of time, broken windows, and other signs of abandonment and blight. In some cases, the deputy supervisor explained, it can become clear to an officer that abandoned properties are used at night by squatters or kids looking to party.

As The Independent went to press yesterday, the town board was poised to consider action against two area property owners, with another two on deck for September 9.

Two Flanders properties – on Long Neck Boulevard and Royal Avenue – were to be the focus of public hearings. Both are overgrown and have been the site of dumping, according to the hearing notice. The purpose of garnering pubic input is substantiating whether the property owners are in violation of the town code.

Two more properties -- in East Quogue and, again, Flanders – are on tap for similar consideration in September. The first, located on Old Quogue Road, is home to a vacant mobile home that’s open and “not secure,” the hearing notice states. The structure has been vacant for a while and there have been “continuing problems,” according to the notice, which adds, “The mere act of securing portions of the structure is not sufficient as new areas are being forced open leaving the structure accessible and creating a hazardous condition.”

In East Quogue a vacant commercial building on Montauk Highway is the focal point of an enforcement action. It’s open and has been the scene of trespass incidents in recent months, the hearing notice states. “Further, the grounds are littered with debris

A Filthy Five?including rugs, furniture and household garbage,” the resolution setting a public hearing declares.

The problems at some of the properties above have gone on for a while, Zappone reported. The issues at this next public hearing subject, which was due for discussion yesterday, have gone on for “quite a while,” he said.

In fact the town held a hearing

on potential enforcement action at the house at 42 Dune Road in Hampton Bays a year ago. It’s a vacant structure that was damaged during Hurricane Irene. That’s Irene, not Sandy.

A fire in 2012 resulted in debris and damaged decking around the building. The place has been left open, resulting in hazardous conditions, the hearing notice states. No fence has been erected to contain debris or prevent access.

Once the town has determined whether any of the properties have violated the Town Code, municipal workers will be deployed to handle the mess and the cost of the cleanup will be added to the

property owner’s tax bill. In some cases, owners will

promise to address the problems and they can linger for a substantial period of time before town officials step in.

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www.indyeastend.com ARTS & ENTERTAINMENTREAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSAugust 13, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT Q Traveler Watchman8

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generous people on Earth. But, you don’t know how very, very, generous you’re about to become.

First, let’s recap the U.S. economy.Unemployment is at Jimmy

Carter’s 1978 malaise levels. In Chicago, up to 92 percent of black male teenagers are unemployed. Recent college graduates are either unemployed or underemployed. Many live with their parents, half can’t use their degrees, most carry student loan debt.

Thirty five percent of Americans now face collection agencies. The federal deficit keeps soaring. Cities lurch towards bankruptcy. We can’t talk about inflation because, offi-cially, there isn’t any, unless you buy groceries, gas, or visit the doctor.

Now, to your shrinking wallet.With Democrats worried about

midterm elections, the White House is about to announce a scheme to distract voters, divide Republicans and enroll millions of new Demo-crats. Their plan increases unem-ployment, reduces wages for work-ing Americans, and increases taxes.

Dress Rehearsal For ChaosIndependent Voices

Our President has an Executive Order that will trigger a tsunami of illegal immigration. He’ll claim his citizenship and working papers giveaway “only” covers six million illegals, but realistic estimates are 25 million or more. This will inun-date our country and cost you, your children, and your grandchildren, untold billions.

Dress rehearsal for the looming tidal wave is the fake “Humanitar-ian Crisis.” We’re told that 60,000 unaccompanied children -- many in diapers -- crawled 1,000 miles from their crime-infested Central American homes to the Mexican border. After a welcome by Customs and Border Protection, the Depart-ment of Health and Human Services dispersed these folks as far from the border as possible.

Reality check, please!Children? Half are adults. Escap-

ing drug violence? What about low income Americans, many of them black single mothers, longing to escape their own gang-infested neighborhoods?

$61,666 per illegal Central Ameri-can! That’s what the Administration

requested just for immediate needs, including free legal services, free housing centers complete with flat screen TV’s, gyms and on-site hair salons.

U.S. Border Patrol agents are supposed to serve as the front line of America’s defense. Instead, our agents are too busy filling out paperwork and running day care centers to protect us from disease, criminal aliens and foreign terror-ists.

As welcome as an Ebola out-break.

From California to Massachu-setts, citizens have protested the fed’s dumping of Central American illegals. Wary of unlimited costs for education, housing and health care, officials and citizens also worry about infectious disease and gang-related crime.

Nowhere is the outrage more evident than in America’s poor black neighborhoods where there is a sense of complete betrayal. An angry caller to a Talk Radio show who identified herself as a black woman said, “I’m living a night-mare. I have gangs everywhere here in Baltimore! Where can I get asylum?”

What’s wrong with helping the world’s poor?

Importing poverty isn’t a substi-tute for foreign aid or international relief. It might make a few wealthy or self-loathing Americans feel good, but charity starts at home. We’ve got to look after our own poor.

Importing poverty is the most expensive way of dealing with it. For what it costs to educate one student in America for a year, you could hire a teacher in Central America, then educate an entire classroom down there for a year. It’s the exact same with health care, and with housing.

The administration claimed that too many illegals were getting hurt while breaking into our country, so now Border Patrol Agents have been ordered not to defend themselves when attacked.

We no longer have a southern border.

How long would it have taken Teddy Roosevelt to secure the bor-der, one day? I don’t think it would take Teddy an entire day.

Ronald Reagan? When Mexican drug gangs murdered DEA Agent Enrique Camarena, Reagan virtually closed the southern border until the government down there finally cooperated with our investigation.

Any day now, get ready for the most extreme Executive Order ever issued. A blanket Amnesty, a dag-ger pointed at the heart of Middle Class America, the nullification of all federal immigration laws. The resulting chaos at the southern border will shock everyone, and the costs are beyond anything we could ever afford.

Amnesty was wrong when Presi-dent Bush promoted it, and it’s wrong now.

Putting aside partisan threats of impeachment, an Executive Or-der for immigration anarchy and chaos can be stopped. Congress, not the President, controls the budget process.

Tell Congress not to approve any funding associated with these reck-less actions, and for a change, try enforcing our immigration laws.

J.M. Staudenraus has been actively in-volved in immigration policy for over 20 years, starting as a volunteer for Califor-nia’s Prop-187. Working with 9/11 Family members and law enforcement groups, he has testified at the state and federal level in support of counter-terrorism poli-cies. He was plaintiff in “Staudenraus v. Spitzer” the landmark lawsuit that helped stop former Governor Spitzer’s Driver License giveaway. Staudenraus is a contributing author to the acclaimed book, War Footing: 10 Steps America Must Take to Prevail in the War for the Free World, published in 2005 by U.S. Naval Institute Press.

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By Kitty Merrill

Open space acquisitions were expected to be a top topic at yesterday’s regular meeting of the Southampton Town Board. As The Independent went to press, resolutions inviting community members to weigh in on a number of potential public purchases were on the agenda.

Town board members were also called to vote on the appropriation of $10 million from the Community Preservation Fund fund balance to use towards the purchase of more properties than originally expected when this year’s CPF plan was compiled. The Community Preservation Fund is a dedicated revenue stream that derives its revenue from a two percent transfer tax on most real estate

To Consider CPF Purchasestransactions. It’s to be used for the preservation of open space, farmland, and historic structures.

The $10 million infusion will increase the CPF budget to over $46 million. “The fund keeps growing at astronomical rates, the month-to-month increases are far exceeding expectations and the board wants to take full advantage of that,” Deputy Supervisor Frank Zappone explained. “The CPF is so healthy, we can address those needs in the community, and God bless us if we can.” Adding to the List

B y l a w , p r o p e r t i e s a municipality wants to acquire must be included in the town’s Community Preservation Project Plan. That addition is subject to public hearing. This week, the

board was expected to vote to hold hearings on two potential purchases. Voters will have a chance to opine on the buys on September 9.

Back in the 90s the Parrish Pond development in Shinnecock Hills was the subject of intense controversy, with opponents clamoring for the preservation of its Native American historical significance. Zappone pointed out that a 1.5-acre parcel under consideration for acquisition is “Sort of the eye of the storm with regard to that concern.”

The resolution scheduling the hearing describes the land on Parrish Pond Court West as “one of the last vestiges of the natural Shinnecock landscape.”

The corridor has significance not only as open space and a passive greenway, but also as a future critical linkage for the Paumanok Path, the resolution continues. A striking topography of glacial hil ls and rounded kettlehole depressions, as well as a medley of wildflowers, heaths and other interesting plants are included among its special features. The woodlands and shrublands are home to deer, quail, woodcock and fox.

The l o ca l c ommuni t y in

Shinnecock Hills is supportive o f the purchase , a s i s the town-appointed Community Preservation Fund Advisory Board, Zappone informed.

Moving east to Bridgehampton, town officials also have their eyes on close to four acres of land located on the Bridgehampton-S a g H a r b o r Tu r n p i k e . T h e resolution setting a September 9 public hearing, lauds the land as “perhaps one of the finest collections of inland freshwater wetlands remaining east of the Shinnecock Canal.”

Hosting pristine stretches of red maple-hardwood swamp amid pitch pine-oak and mixed mesophytic forests, this large wild area provides nesting and breeding grounds for abundant neotropical migrant songbirds and other forest interior wildlife, the resolution continues, listing sharp-shinned, coopers and red-tailed hawks, great horned owl, red fox, raccoon, muskrat and white-tailed deer among its inhabitants. Interior vernal ponds are home to a variety of amphibians including the state-endangered tiger salamander.

T h i s p u r c h a s e c o u l d b e characterized as one within the CPF’s ecological protection purview, Zappone said. It doesn’t have a l o t o f deve lopment potential, but the acquisition, he said, is a good way to protect the wetlands.

In Memory of Marianne Toy … we’ll miss you!

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Page 11: Independent 8 13 14

www.indyeastend.comARTS & ENTERTAINMENT REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS August 13, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT Q Traveler Watchman 11

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Your car is the second largest investment you’re likely to make. Preserve it’s value and your safety by having it repaired professionally.

Some insurance companies may want you to visit their drive in claims center before having your car repaired. You can do this or you may leave your car at our shop and ask that the insurance company inspect the car here.

There is no law requiring you to obtain more than one estimate or appraisal.

You have the right to go to the shop of your choice. Your insurance company can not require you to go to a particular shop.

Differences in repair estimates are common. A lower estimate may not include all necessary work. If you’re not sure why one estimate is different from another you’ve recieved, please ask us.

Let us help you negotiate your claim with the insurance company. Go to a name you can trust!

Marianne Toy, 60The first thing people noticed

about Marianne Toy was her smile. Definitely. “She was very pretty,” her eldest daughter Emily said this week. It didn’t take much time, though, before the beauty behind the pretty face was evident. Mrs. Toy, who died August 5 at Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York at the age of 60, was a nurturer.

“She was very caring and concerned about other people and whatever they were going through,” Emily Toy said. “But she was also very practical and honest. She’d tell you what you needed to know, even if you didn’t want to hear

it.” Testament to a lifetime spent thinking of others, Mrs. Toy took a moment in the throes of her illness to write her family – husband Jerome, and daughters Emily, Rachel and Megan – telling them how lucky she felt to have had such a wonderful family to spend her life loving.

Born in Newark, New Jersey, in 1954 to parents Ellis Faraday and Mary Burns Faraday, Mrs. Toy was proud to share a birthday, May 29, with President John F. Kennedy.

The family moved to Sag Harbor when she was just two and Mrs. Toy spent most of her life, growing up and for the last 15 years, in the

same house across the street from the school. She graduated from Pierson High School in 1972.

An array o f employment positions kept Mrs. Toy, described by family as a hard worker, busy during her younger years. She ran a cleaning service, worked as a florist and at area restaurants. In 1978 she met Jerome Toy in the Corner Bar.

The couple married in 1986 and lived for a time on Dering Road. They raised three daughters and Mrs. Toy worked for over 15 years at Hampton Dental Group.

Despite a full schedule of work, it was her family that was Mrs. Toy’s focus. She loved to cook and play host for family and friends. She was passionate about food and “had a great palate,” Emily Toy said. “Every food snob element I have comes from her.”

Her most cherished moments were spent relaxing and having a good time with loved ones filling her home. She enjoyed the beach and took pleasure in planting flowers in her yard.

Reading was a joy, and “She always had a book going.” Mrs. Toy was especially excited for her daughters when they expressed interest and began to follow career paths in the arts.

In addition to her immediate family, Mrs. Toy is survived by her brother Bill and sister-in-law Mary Faraday of Rockville Centre and their children Kate and Patrick; sister Ellen and her husband Steve Sowa, of Wareham, Massachusetts; and brother Robert and sister-in-law Laurie Faraday and their daughter Mary. Her parents predeceased her.

The family received friends Sunday at Yardley & Pino Funeral Home in Sag Harbor. A mass was celebrated Monday at St. Andrew’s Roman Catholic Church , and burial followed at St. Andrew’s cemetery. Memorial donations can be made to Coramaria Retreat House in Sag Harbor or the Lung Cancer Research Foundation.

K.M.

.

631-287-631-287-631-287-631-287-631-287-TOTSTOTSTOTSTOTSTOTS

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SoFoNaturally

South Fork Natural History Museumwww.sofo.org

By SoFo Staff

The field behind the South Fork Natural History Museum (SoFo) is known as an Old Field habitat. At this field, there is currently a management program led by the Friends of the Long Pond Greenbelt Organization. In effect, this program is designed to maintain the health of this Old Field by removing two extremely aggressive, non-native plants, Autumn Olive and Japanese Knotweed.

Introduced species, such as these two plants, become invasive -- that is, they grow uncontrollably because the environment in which they are placed lacks the biological controls from their native environments to keep them from rampant growth.

Our nat ive plants l ive in equilibrium with our native insects and animals. For these insects and animals, they are source of sustenance and shelter. Our native plants also have an important relationship with our soils and water supply. When alien plants become invasive, as they often do, they crowd out these important native plants and thus may jeopardize the health of the entire habitat.

Why is it important to maintain the health of Old Field habitats? Old Fields are one of the most productive areas in our region, providing homes for much of our native wildlife. Old Fields are formed when forests are cut down to create farmland. When these parcels of land are not farmed, the land becomes what is commonly known as an Old Field.

These fields, part of the natural succession from forest, to field, to shrub land and back to forest, are an intrinsic element in the natural rhythms of our lives. Due to the tremendous increase in development on the East End these Old Field habitats are quickly disappearing.

For this reason it is essential that we maintain the health of these areas so that they can, once again, take their part in the rhythms of our lives.

With this thought in mind, we would like to list some of the most common alien plant invaders. Even if you do not live in an Old Field

The Importance Of Old Field Habitats

habitat there are other introduced species of plants that could wreak havoc with habitats such as forests and wetlands.

Some of the following non-native plants may be suggested to you for landscaping or may already exist on your property. We hope you will learn to recognize them, not choose them for landscaping purposes

and, if they already exist, take the appropriate action to keep them from becoming invasive.

Here are some of our most destructive alien invaders: Autumn Olive (Elaeagnaus umbellate), Japanese Knotweed (Polygorum

reynoutria) and Asiatic Bittersweet (Celastrus orbiculatis). Please contact us to learn more about non-native and native plants or visit the Old Field habitat behind SoFo. We are open every day from 9 AM to 4 PM.

Independent/Courtesy SoFo

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D.J. HART34 Main Street

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• Women’s Clothing • Jewelry • Accessories

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Independent / Mike Gaynor

Hillary Clinton, Kerry Gaynor and former President Bill Clinton pose on an East Hampton bay beach recently.

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5K (3.1 mile) Race/Walksanctioned by USA Track & Field

CREATING A LEGACY FOR WOMEN’S HEALTH

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Jewelry Designer At RoseThe noted jewelry designer Glenn

Bradford is right at home in The Hamptons. After all, his creations adorn some of the elite shakers and movers who make this their summer home. In fact, Bradford has been dubbed “the spiritual jewelry guru” by his style conscience celebrity and couture clientele.

One of Bradford’s specialties is to re-imagine family jewels and repurpose them. He and his wife and partner Sharyn are currently scheduling private appointments for special jewelry makeovers and re-settings.

Toward that end the pair will be at Rose Jewelers at 57 Main Street in Southampton on Friday and again Saturday, from 11 AM to 5 PM. Their collection of fine jewelry will

Independent / Courtesy of Glenn Bradford

“Buddha of Wisdom” by Glenn and Sharyn Bradford.

be available at the Southampton Village landmark through Labor Day.

The Bradfords spend part of every summer in Montauk. Their flagship store is located at 279 Main Street in Southampton. To find out more about the event at Rose Jewelers call 631-283-5757. The Bradfords can be reached at 516-767-1600.

12 Years Experience

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Glenn Bradford Fine Jewelry, 279 Main Street Port Washington, NY~516-767-1600

Jewelry Makeover EventSchedule your appointment 631-283-5757.

Friday August 15th, 11:00–5:00 Saturday August 16th, 11:00–5:00

At Rose Jewelers 57 Main Street SouthamptonShop the Collections through Labor Day at Rose Jewelers.

Custom ~ Collections ~ Repurpose Diamonds & Exotic Gemstones

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Independent / Stefany Restrepo

Carnival time: The Sag Harbor Fire Department hosted its annual array of rides, games, and goodies at Havens Beach last week.

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SoutholdCAST Donation

EventPower presented a $10,000 donation to CAST -- Community Action Southold Town -- as a result of the CAST Mighty North Fork Triathlon. CAST thanked “all of the athletes who participated in the 2014 Mighty North Fork Triathlon and made this donation possible. And a special thank you to all of the volunteers and staff who worked very hard to create a successful and safe event for our athletes.”

For more information contact: CAST Director Sarah Benjamin at

631-477-1717 or [email protected]

Greenport Harbor Pet Reopening

Tail wagging excitement will fill the air in Greenport Village this weekend beginning Friday at the Grand Re-Opening of Harbor Pet at 10 AM. The pet boutique, now

Traveler WatchmanFTruth without fear since 1826

North Fork News www.indyeastend.com

owned by Kimberly Loper, an ex-perienced pet professional that is active in the pet community and also owns Life is Grruff all natural gourmet dog treats.

Loper has completely revamped the store with new merchandise and a bigger selection of items for pet owners to choose from.

A furbulous ‘Yappy Hour’ at 3 PM (and at the same time Saturday)is where parents can have their pup’s portrait drawn by the very talented pet portrait artist Linda Ozelis, $15 per portrait. Refreshments will be served for the humans and canines alike. Dogs and their owners can mix and mingle during the event.

On Saturday between noon and 2 PM, owners can consult with a trainer from North Fork School of Dogs and at 3 PM professional pet photographer Judy McCleery will be available.

Harbor Pet is on 25 Front Street. For more information call 631-477-1518.

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Moms For Israel Event Raises FundsMoms For Israel co-chairs

Sarah Sternklar and Meredith Berkman did an amazing job galvanizing support for the rally in support of the State of Israel which has been under Hamas attack since July 8, 2014. Hundreds of Hamptonites attended this past Friday.

Silent auction items, Israeli food and music graced the beautiful lawn of the Jewish Center of the Hamptons on Woods Lane.

There were 60 donated lots including jewelry, art, beauty and medical consultations - and spiritual consultations offered by Rabbi Sheldon Zimmerman, Cantor Debra Stein and Associate Rabbi/Educator Hanniel Levenson.

A l l o f t h e l o t s w e r e sold raising over $50,000 including $30,250 at the auction itself, and $20,000 in promised gifts. Recipients included Mogen David Adom (Israel’s Ambulance Corp.), Sheba Hospital, Hadassah Hospital and Israel Trauma Coalition.

Janet Lehr

Independent / Marvin Davis

(Above, Right) Back row from left: Rabbi Sheldon Zimmerman, unidentified, Michael Salzhauer, Meredith Berkman, Co-Chair Moms for Israel, Sarah Sternklar, Co-Chair Moms for Israel, Sabina Sternklar- Davis, Amanda Salzhauer, Unidentified Israeli Tzofim, Unidentified Israeli Tzofim (Israeli Scouts) Front row: Unidentified, Avital Mintz.

(Above) Moms For Israel Hanniel Levenson-Zev Labins-Marvin Davis.

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260 Hampton Road, Southampton631-283-8217

Our Villages & HamletsPlease call us at 631-324-2500 to Report News from Your Community

Westhampton BeachRick And The Zombies

Indy Editor Rick Murphy will host a Q&A with Colin Blunstone and Rod Argent, two founding members of The Zombies, Saturday at 6:30 PM at the Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center. Admission is free for ticket holders.

The band will perform at 8 PM and a limited amount of tickets are still available.

The legendary UK group infiltrated the airwaves with its sophisticated harmonies and jazz-tinged melodies, scoring smash hits with “She’s Not

There” and “Time of the Season.” They were the second UK group fol-lowing the Beatles to score a #1 hit in America. The Zombies were 2014 nominees to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Murphy will discuss, among other topics, Odessey & Oracle, the band’s memorable album which is listed on Rolling Stone Magazine’s list of the top rock albums ever made. The Q&A will be held in the courtyard.

AmagansettBBQ This Sunday

You know you want it. Succulent

barbecue chicken, fresh corn bursting with flavor, zesty cole slaw, roasted potatoes that explode in your mouth and juicy red watermelon.

It’s time again for that high water mark of the summer -- the Amagansett Fire Department’s annual chicken barbecue. In 1960 AFD companies two and four got together to try their hands at hosting a chicken barbecue. By 1964, it became an annual event, according to AFD’s 100th anniversary journal.

For the recent barbecues, volunteers prepare 1200 chickens, a ton each of potatoes and corn, and a half-ton each of watermelon and cabbage. They serve about 2000 diners each summer, and often sell their tickets out.

So, hurry up and get yours. Tickets are $20 for adults, $10 for kids. Take out available, too.

The BBQ will be held Sunday from 2 to 6 PM at the firehouse on Main Street.

East Hampton VillageDeer Forum Tomorrow

Tomorrow at 5:30 PM at the Emergency Services Building on Cedar Street the Village Preservation Society of East Hampton will host a deer control forum.

Tom Rawinski of the US Forest Service will present his findings and observations from a recent field trip he took assessing forested areas of East Hampton for deer browsing

impacts. Dr. Tony DeNicola, of White Buffalo, will also be on hand to discuss the deer spaying program the Village Board will be launching in January 2015.

FlandersTraffic Signals Coming

Assemblyman Fred Thiele announced state DOT plans to install two new traffic lights on State Route 24, also known as Flanders Road. They’ll be placed at SR 24’s intersections with Long Neck Boulevard and Oak Avenue. Also, expect to see lots of DOT trucks on Flanders Road this fall. They’ll be paving between the traffic circle in Riverside and Bellows Pond Road in Hampton Bays.

Hampton BaysOn The Hunt For A License?

Town Clerk Sundy Schermeyer has scheduled additional office hours for the town clerk’s annex on Ponquogue Avenue to accommodate the public in anticipation of the upcoming DEC hunting season. It’s open Mondays and Tuesdays 8:30 AM to 4 PM and Thursdays from 10 AM to 4 PM. The additional hours will give hunters a chance to get their licenses without travelling to Southampton Town Hall from western areas of town. Other documents like marriage licenses, handicap parking permits and most vital statistic certificates will also be available.

By Rick Murphy

RICK’S SPACE

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Sign-Up For A Free Home Energy Audit: www.southamptontownny.gov/energy-audit

(631) 702-1751

Only in The HamptonsEast Hampton Village received

a call about two trespassers in the backyard of Barnes Lane on August 4. When they arrived police found the pair lounging on the deck. “Don’t worry,” one guy said. “I bought the house yesterday,” further stating he was just looking around. Police spoke to the real owner. Not true — the man had merely put a bid in that hadn’t been accepted. The owner didn’t want to press charges, so the pair was sent packing.

A North Main Street woman complained the police Friday that the Suffolk County Probation

Department continually sends officers over looking for her estranged husband. She keeps telling them he doesn’t live there, they keep coming back.

Must Be Good PizzaTwo men waiting on line to buy

pizza in Montauk Sunday afternoon engaged in fisticuffs, with each blaming the other for starting the fray. East Hampton Town Police said neither man wanted to press charges and they went their seper-ate ways.

Dee Wee Re-TwoSouthampton Town Police said

they charged two motorists with DWI after both allegedly failed sobriety tests. On Sunday Marc A. Marano, 49, of Southampton was pulled over on Tuckahoe Lane

about 8:15 PM after police said they spotted his vehicle swerving. He refused to submit to the Pre-Screen Breath Test and was held for morning arraignment.

On Saturday in East Quogue William P. Warner, 54, was similarly pulled over just before noon. Police said they ascertained he was intoxicated and charged him with Aggravated Driving While Intoxicated.

Drunk And LoadedSouthold Police said they charged

a man with driving drunk and afterwards, with having a loaded pistol. Tomas Vasquez-Ochoa, of Southold, was originally pulled over for having a defective light but when police found bullets on his person they investigated further.

The gun was found at his residence nearby.

Mans OverboardShortly before 2 PM Sunday

Southampton Town Police received a report of a capsized vessel near Ponquogue Bridge. Two individuals were rescued and taken to the Shinnecock Coast Guard Station. Neither was seriously injured.

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By Rick Murphy

RICK’S SPACE

Medicare?

Rx?

What’s notCovered?

EPIC?What is it?

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????Hospital?

“When I think of heavenI think of dyingLay me down in a field of flame

and heatherRender up my body into the

burning heart of God in the belly of a black-winged bird”

-- Adam Duritz

Yeah, right, that’s where I want to end up when I die – in the belly of a black-winged bird.

No thank you.Being Catholic, of course, I am

guaranteed a place in heaven and I don’t intend on using a bird to get up there. In fact, I’m thinking helicopter - a really noisy one.

Of course, the rest of you are probably doomed to spending an eternity with Beelze-bubby (a bayman from Springs), and his friend The Deceiver, who I think

Musing About Fun Things Like Death

is a professional wrestler.When you think about it, birth

and death are the only two things that really matter in life. All the rest is insignificant in comparison, so it really doesn’t matter I can’t remember what I did in the sixties because in the overall scheme of things no one cares.

It used to be death was a mystery, but now, of course, we have clarity thanks to the Internet: www.thetruthaboutdying.com. It asks the question, “What is the Valley Of Death?” The answer is, “Like, ummm, grody to the max?”

And how do people end up there? They die from being gagged with a spoon, of course.

“We believe there is a plan to overcome death, and we can learn about this plan from an absolutely authoritative source. The truth about death offers answers to

these questions and more. We invite you inside this website to check it out.”

Ins ide , Chuck Wooler y i s peddling mouthwash. It better be good, because it will have to last for eternity.

The thing about death is that it’s so damn final. It is the ultimate proof we lived our lives as nobodies. We are not going to make it on any of the “Famous Birthday” lists. We’re not getting monuments in Washington D.C. Kids won’t get a school day off in our honor. Crap, we won’t even be on Wikipedia.

(HINT: DO NOT TELL ANYONE THIS: of course, you can be on Wikipedia, just put yourself on it. You can read all about Rick Murphy the rock and roll legend, Rick Murphy the Pulitzer Prize winner, Even Rick “Schlong’ Murphy. This is the best part of Wikipedia — people think it’s a real encyclopedia.)

Sure, there will be a few tears when you die. Within five years though, your memory dims, and the light is snuffed out altogether in a decade or so. I know in my heart if I drop dead tomorrow my little nieces and nephews won’t remember me for very long. It will go from “My Uncle Rick was a great uncle” to “My creepy uncle who died five years ago” to “some old guy who smelled like urine.”

That’s why it is important for all of us to do something unforgettable before we die so our spouses and loved ones will fondly recall us after we are gone. For example, I’ve secretly taken out a second mortgage and I’m investing it at Saratoga Racetrack.

At first I thought that was a good idea but after I lost most of my dough I watched the horses during the post parade, one walking directly behind the other. One would poop, and the other would step right in it, and so on down the line. There’s a metaphor for life there: we are all in deep doo-doo – also, never bet on anything that can’t get out of the way of a big, steaming pile.

“ I don ’ t want to achieve immortality through my work; I want to achieve immortality through not dying,” Woody Allen said. To me, that means being a vampire and living off the blood of others. In this day and age that seems like a contradiction. People who eat red meat get high blood pressure and die of heart disease. How can you feast on blood every night and live forever? Shouldn’t all vampires be vegans?

The only other thing we can hope for is reincarnation, or to come back from the dead. The only person we’ve ever known to do this was Jesus Christ, and he had friends in high places. Seems Jesus died on a Friday, and realized on Sunday he didn’t get his Easter basket, so he whined and whined until God sent him back to earth.

Then there are ghosts. Ghosts hang out after they are dead, but they wear sheets instead of clothes. Some of us can see them, others can’t. Or maybe there are more subtle signs . . .

Forty years from now my niece will tell her little daughter, “Uncle Rick is still alive.”

“Can you see his sheet?” the little one will ask.

“No, but I smell urine.”

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Independent VOICES

EDITORIAL

CONTINUED ON PAGE 24.

That Darned Helicopter Noise

If it weren’t so sad it would be funny. It seems North Fork residents are fuming, complaining a 40 percent hike in the number of copters that take the north route over Long Island Sound in route to East Hampton airport is making their lives miserable. Eventually, of course, the copters have to cut across land, and as we all know by now, they make a hell of a racket.

Local officials there have enlisted Congressman Tim Bishop and U.S. Senator Charles Schumer, among others, to petition the FAA to change the flight patterns – altering the course so helicopters will continue east beyond Orient Point before cutting back to the airport. What’s wrong with this picture?

Well, the proposed flight plan would then route the helicopters over Springs and the Northwest Woods. Are the citizens there less important than those on the North Fork? Are they immune to noise? The latest proposal is of course, just another attempt to oil the squeaky wheel. Previously, North Sea residents, Bridgehampton residents, Sag Harbor residents and of course, East Hampton residents have launched campaigns to alleviate the noise.

Schumer and Bishop are particularly adroit at assuring complainants that they will do something about the noise. The FAA, probably tongue in cheek, feigns concern as well.

The reality of what’s happening is clear – wherever the pilots fly, there will be complaints. Moving them around from route to route just changes who is complaining:

sooner or later, whether coming in from the north, south, or west, the copters are going to rattle walls and shake the idyllic calm on the East End as they parade into East Hampton airport, with Friday evenings being the epicenter of the airborne delirium.

We understand there are reasons why flight plans are made. The obvious entry route into the airport, all other factors (like fog) aside, is for the helicopters to come in from the Atlantic, and head north at the shortest distance. The distance from Georgica Pond to the airport is only about 3000 feet.

Doesn’t logic dictate that the quickest way to the airport, and the shortest amount of time over land, would be the least intrusive for all concerned? Since the residents on Georgica Pond are among the wealthiest on the East End, might they also be the types that make use of the helicopters?

Could it be the folks in Springs, North Sea, and Mattituck, and everywhere else that are being drowned out by the noise are inconvenienced so that the wealthy and powerful aren’t?

One solution is to control the helicopters by limiting the hours they come in and stagger the approach routes so they come in from as may different angles as is plausible.

Another is the common sense way: take the shortest route over land so that the fewest residents are affected.

Lucky OnesDear Rick,

Alan and I wish to thank our local Sag Harbor ambulance crew, Southampton Hospital personnel and Southampton Police officer Eugene LaFurno. Living in this beautiful community and having had an emergency, we are delighted that we can put our trust and faith in such a wonderful and caring group of people. Their compassion and professionalism is exemplary and we commend each and every one. We are all lucky to call this community our home!

LYNN AND ALAN KAPLAN

Virus ContaminatedEditor Rick,

Totally lost in the environmental controversy; plastic garbage bags vs. reusable carry alls is the salient researched fact that most all the reusables become quickly germ virus contaminated! The leaky store wrapping on your meat, poultry and fish pollutes your carryall and defies your casual washing.

Wake up Jay Schneiderman -- your long-winded article in the Southampton Press is stone dumb. Our greatest non-nuke peril is having viruses.

CAPTAIN BRUCE ROBERTSON-DICK

Never PublishedDear Mr. Murphy,

In recent letters to The Independent, I’ve argued that The Southampton Press failed to report all of the news. To prove I’m not kidding, from here on everything

I write will be sent to the New York Press Association, with exhibits.

A r e c e n t d i s p u t e b e t w e e n Southampton’s Town Board and Highway Superintendent Alex Gregor went viral after the Town Board asked him to remove the street sign he installed to honor Sister Jackie Walsh, a Catholic nun who was killed by a hit-and-run driver in Water Mill. According to Gregor, as reported by News 12, “I’m in charge of the road system, and when people get hurt or especially killed, it deeply affects me.”

Unfortunately, a while ago in East Quogue, a Hampton Bays man was killed in an accident in which an East Quogue driver was involved while driving under the influence. According to The Southampton Press, the East Quogue driver had three prior DUIs. He was found guilty and he lost his license for a period of time.

The family of the Hampton Bays driver placed a private memorial at the scene of

the accident. The accident happened before Mr. Gregor took over the road system, but just recently Mr. Gregor surveyed the area adjacent to the accident . . . with the East Quogue driver.

I wrote a letter to The Press in which I asked why Gregor appeared to have enlisted a private citizen to help him with his highway responsibilities.

In my letter I never referred to the accident or the fatality but I did mention that Gregor and his buddy appeared to have ties to the Democratic Party. The letter was never published.

So with due respect to The Southampton Press and to Sister Jackie (who deserves a memorial at the scene), Mr. Gregor appears to have installed his street sign in Water Mill as little more than a political maneuver since it can be easily proven he doesn’t care about road safety.

SUSAN CERWINSKI

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Editor-In-Chief RICk MURPHy News Editor kITTy MeRRILL Arts Editor JeSSICA MACkIN Copy Editor kAReN FReDeRICkS Assistant Editor / Reporter eMILy TOy

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Independent VOICES

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 23.

CONTINUED ON PAGE 25.

We Are BrokeDear Rick,

In reading last week’s letters to the editor I tried to imagine the positions of the many view points taken by the people who surround us on the East End. Many good points, some bad points, and many personal opinions, by people from all walks of our society.

Typical of some of these viewpoints, it is so obvious that they are deeply politically motivated and many of the writers have such obvious agendas!

I fear the old expression, “Those who don’t study history, are destined to repeat it. “

I’m referring now to the many children who are crossing our borders as illegal aliens. It is, of course, very sad. However, it is also a huge potential problem for this country if it is not addressed now, and soon!

As amazing as it may seem it has already occurred here in our past history. Please do not accept my word for this -- LOOK IT UP. In the mid-1800s until the early 1900s many large cities were plagued with abandoned and orphaned children, as a result of immigrant people who did not have the ability to care for them.

Hey folks, lets forget the political fighting. This has all the potential of placing the nails in the coffin of America! We are broke folks -- $17 trillion of national debt is not chicken feed!

A lot of people are so well “insulated” from what is happening, that they don’t even see it! No one in 1929 saw what was going on, either. And back then we didn’t dole out billions of American dollars in foreign aid.

We are in trouble folks, and there are no wise moves, coming out of Washington, from either political party! They are on summer break.

RICHARD G. KRAUSE

Completely RidiculousTo the Editor,

If it isn’t exactly irritating, it’s certainly tiresome trying to get a Leftist to pay attention to facts. The attempt to do so reminds me of parents trying to get their seven year olds to eat their vegetables (“I don’t wanna!”).

In her criticism of my criticism of reader Nicholas Zizelis’ letter about the HL decision, reader (actually I wish she really was a reader. If she really was that, I wouldn’t have to do this again) Kimberley

Lee writes that my “irrelevant verbiage” was proof that I failed to understand Zizlelis’ ”indisputable facts and figures, names and numbers.”

In Ms. Lee’s world men are disqualified from any attempt to tell her what she “can or cannot do with (her) body” and that such attempts are “discriminating (the word Ms. Lee should use here is discriminatory) degrading and . . . downright insulting.”

Ms. Lee is defending Mr. Zizelis’ use of identity politics -- wherein he identifies which gender, religion and political persuasion the various Justices and other politicians are who dare support a company’s owner’s religious rights.

These are the decision-irrelevant facts and figures I was supposed to pay attention to while the person who recited them utterly failed to comment on the entire point of the decision. So does Ms. Lee completely fail to comment on the fact that this decision is highly circumscribed

in that it deals with HL only.Please pay attention here, Lee and

Zizelis: Blacks vote for their perceived interests. So do Hispanics, gays, Jews, women, labor unions, et al. So what is Zizelis supposedly accomplishing by telling us that Catholics (who happen to be men) or conservatives, who happen to be men, support the decision? Actually nothing, in my opinion.

Well, according to Ms. Lee, they aren’t qualified to say a thing (meaning neither is Zizelis, ironically--no wait, he’s a Lefty), because this is all about her body rights. Well, it ain’t, Ms. Lee. Not by a longshot.

Ms. Lee’s use of three-for-a-dollar sloganeering about her right to do what she wants with her body says nothing about the HL decision. What the HL decision says in plain English is that if a woman is hired to work for that company, she won’t get “free” abortifacients through

What on your summer reading list?

Stephanie Simpson-NairnI have two children. A one and a three year-old.And if I ever have two hands on a book, it’slikely to be something like, Big Bear On A Bikeor My 100 First Words. Otherwise I would bereading the latest Emily Giffin book.

Lorna LevyA book from Holland on the history of the Jews.It’s immense. Not a perfect summer read butvery interesting. A different perspective from abook written by an American or an Israeli. TheDutch have a history of a very vibrant Jewishcommunity. And my fiancé is Dutch.

Louisa DuttonI like reading books about different countriesand different cities. So I’m reading a bookabout Barcelona. Shadow In The Wind byCarlos Ruiz Zafón. I’m really enjoying it. And it’sa trilogy so I’ve got my summer reading list allfilled up.

Alison WolfGood Morning Beautiful Business by JudyWicks. She and her husband started FreePeople. It’s her story about being anentrepreneur while still keeping to her values.After that I’m on to Atlas Shrugged which isquite an undertaking considering it’s summer.

JUST ASKING By Karen Fredericks

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Independent VOICES

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 24.

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her health insurance plan. If she needs that kind of medication she

has to buy it using her own money (in the words of Brando--”the horror, the horror”) or, it seems, choose not work for Hobby Lobby to begin with!

If a Republican, or man or Catholic advocated that all abortifacients should be banned, then Lee might have a point.

However, no one has said that.If Ms. Lee would just for a moment put

down her megaphone and pay attention, she will realize that what she is really saying is this: If a woman cannot get an abortifacient for free, then a war on her body is being waged by various and sundry like me. This completely ridiculous notion is what it is: completely ridiculous.

O n e m o re t h i n g fo r M s . Le e : Conservatives dislike Obama about exactly as much as Leftists disliked George W. Bush. Howzzit feel, Kimberley?

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WAINSCOTT SCHOOL: BILINGUAL SOCIAL WORKER– must be licensed CSW; flu-ent in Spanish; hours to be determined (mostly afterschool day) 1:1 Aide – to as-sist adolescent female stu-dent with physical

limitations (at Ross School)- $20/hour Send résumé andcover letter to Dr. StuartRachlin, Superintendent ofSchools: [email protected] or (fax)631.537.6977

COOK –PT to potential FT-Every shift 24/7 facility inEast Hampton, NY *WeekendPosition* *Requiring Highschool diploma or GED To bea part of changing peoples’lives, visit: phoenixhouse.jobs or send Resume to: [email protected]

MAINTENANCE PERSON: Fulltime, landscaping involved.Experience preferred butnot required. Includes bene-fits. For information callStephanie at Buzz ChewChevrolet Cadillac  631-287-1000. 48-1

SALES ASSOCIATE- Localthrift store seeks year roundpart-time help, 2 days perweek (Friday & Saturday),with prior retail experiencepreferred. Heavy lifting andhigh energy required. Emailcover letter & resume [email protected] or fax to 324-1597. No calls.48-1

THE RIVERHEAD CENTRALSCHOOL DISTRICT seeks toemploy a proven securityleader to act as a seniorguard or security supervi-sor.  The successful candi-date will be a person with atleast twenty years of experi-ence in law enforcement orthe military and have atleast five of those years bein a supervisory capacity.The candidate must demon-strate how he or she hasused that extensive back-ground to the job and act asa professional role model forour existing guard staff.Thus, prior experience re-cruiting, training, evaluatingand disciplining subordinatestaff is required.  The Dis-trict is looking for an indi-vidual who is able to

deescalate tense situations,encourage calm andthoughtful interactions, andoffer training and develop-ment to guards, teachersand staff alike.  The candi-date must also have experi-ence working with studentsand demonstrate a work his-tory of positive interac-tions.   Resumes and lettersof interest via mail only toSecurity Job Search, RCSD,700 Osborn Avenue, River-head, NY 11901. 48-1

EAST HAMPTON 2BR 1BA$1,850.00 month walk tobeach. References. 516-795-6125 46-4-49

FULL TIME HOUSE KEEPER14 years of experience goodwith dogs, cats and kids rea-sonable rates flexible schedule. Reliable-trust wor-thy-references available Am-agansett to Southampton516-449-4236 UFN

EVENING CHILDCARE AVAIL-ABLE. Excellent referencesand experience with infants.Call 631-907-4568.

NANNY/ CHILD CARE PRO-FESSIONAL WITH 10 PLUSYEARS’ experience seeksposition as Nanny. Live in orout. Relocation possible. As-sociate and BS degrees in El-ementary Education. DayCare and Head Start experi-ence. Excellent references.Please call for 631-680-4486 for resume and/ormore information. Mail yourresponse to PO Box 2604,East Hampton, NY 11937

HEDGES LANE CAPITALBusiness financingarranged. All request con-sidered 631-599-347445-5-49

URGENT Please help. Can’tkeep Max at the Sheltermuch longerMax is a young poodle mixlooking for his fureverhome. Max has not had aneasy start in life so RSVP Inc.Animal Welfare and Rescuegave him a new one. He iscurrently with a wonderfulfoster family and lookingforward to a permanenthome in the very near fu-ture. Max has come a longway with love, training andlots of TLC. Max loves atten-tion from people he trusts.Once he forms a bond withyou, he will be your bestbuddy. Max needs a patientdog savvy owner, willing togive him the same attentionand commitment his fosterfamily has given him. Hewould probably thrive in anadult home with no other fursiblings to share but couldpossibly be placed in a homethat helps him adjust toother animals over time.RSVP Inc. is willing to pro-vide training and guidancewith the transition into hisnew home.For more information pleasecall 631-533-2738or fill out an application on-line! at www.rsvpinc.org!

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MOBILE HOME lovely area inEast Quogue 2BR living/din-ing area. $40,000 631-942-1982

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www.indyeastend.comARTS & ENTERTAINMENT REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS August 13, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT Q Traveler Watchman 31

MATURE PROFESSIONALWOMAN seeks same to shareSprings home with her andone sweet cat. Year-round orsummer. Share kitchen andbath. Washer, dryer, cable,Wi-Fi. Tons of storage spacecan be available in garageand full basement. Modesthome gym, patio, large yard.Walk to bay beach. $1100 permonth. Utilities included.Call 631-907-4568.EAST HAMPTON-OFFICECONDOS at 300 PantigoPlace. 1,500 square feet, 6private offices, conferenceroom, reception area,kitchen, basement. $4000monthly. Also have 800 sq.ft. to let in same building,$2000 monthly. Call Marc,631-329-1717.

ROOM WANTED: Femaleseeking room to rent. Col-lege graduate, new car, ex-cellent references. Pleasesend letter of interest to POBox 2604 East Hampton NY11937 or call 631-680-4486.

DELIVERY SERVICE – Need

items, small furniture, pub-lications, boxes, etc… deliv-ered? North and South Forkarea. Call Eric for first-rateservice and reasonablerates. Excellent references.www.portlimotrans.com.Call 516-776-7074.ufn

LAUREN’S HOUSE CLEANINGSERVICES- We are honest,Reliable, Experienced andenergetic cleaners! We havebeen in Business for over 10 years. We will clean yourhome, Apartment or officefrom top to bottom at a lowflat rate. We are available toclean daily, weekly, Bi-weekly or monthly, whatever worksfor you and your schedule.We have references upon re-quest. Call Lauren: 631-495-7334

WWW.HAMPTONSYALETU-TOR.COM Writing, communi-cations, sciences andlanguages. Youth andadults. [email protected].  45-4-48

Enjoy our vintage ICECREAM TRUCK at your nextchildren’s/ adult party. Spe-cial Labor Day – weekendrates. BEACH TREATS 631-256-6603 49-4-52

20 BON PINCK WAY,SPRINGS. Multi family. Sat-urday August 16, 9AM-4PM

Services

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Propane Club of America

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YARD SALE

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PETS

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BACKYARD BATTLEFIELD

HELP WANTED HOUSE FOR RENT

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PRAYER TO THEBLESSED VIRGIN (Neverknown to fail) Oh, mostbeautiful flower of Mt.Carmel, fruitful vine, splen-dor of heaven, Mother ofthe Son of God, Immacu-late Virgin, assist me in mynecessity. Oh, Star of theSea, help me and show meherein you are my mother.Oh, Holy Mary, Mother ofGod, Queen of Heaven andEarth! I humbly beseechyou from the bottom of myheart to succor me in thisnecessity. There are nonethat can withstand yourpower. Oh show me herein,you are my mother. Oh,Mary, conceived withoutsin, pray for us who haverecourse to thee(3x). HolyMother, I place this causein your hands (3x). HolySpirit, you who solve allproblems, light all roads sothat I can attain my goals.You who gave me the di-vine gift to forgive and for-get all evil against me andthat in all instances in mylife you are with me, I wantin this short prayer tothank you for all things asyou confirm once againthat I never want to beseparated from you ineternal glory. Thank youfor your mercy toward meand mine. The person,must say this prayer 3 con-secutive days. after 3 days,the request will begranted. This prayer mustbe published after thefavor is granted. Myprayers were answered.Thank you so very much.As requested by J.L. 36-50-

BOAT FOR SALE

CLASSIC PICNIC CRUISER24 FT 1972 LAYMAN “BISCAYNE”FIBERGLASS HULL, WOOD TRIM

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fi nd the right place to eat inT he Independent’s Dining Section!

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THE INDEPENDENTEast Hampton • Southampton • Riverhead • Southold • Shelter Island

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Page 33: Independent 8 13 14

www.indyeastend.comARTS & ENTERTAINMENT REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS August 13, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT Q Traveler Watchman 33

Real Estate DEEDSTHE INDEPENDENT Source: Suffolk Research Service, Inc., Hampton Bays, NY 11946 * -- Vacant Land

BUY SELL PRICE LOCATION

CONTINUED ON PAGE 34.

Min Date = 6/17/2014 Max Date = 6/23/2014

East Hampton TownZIPCODE 11930 - AMAGANSETT Edge Capital Mngmnt Raji, D 2,575,000* 2128 Montauk Hwy Khalil, A & Asch, M Slater, R & K 2,375,000 4 Katie Ln Town of East Hampton PutnamAmagansettFarm 10,150,000 551 & 561 Montauk Hwy 210 Bluff Road LLC Pesek, M by Trs 3,311,000* 210 Bluff Rd Pommier,M & Jensen,C Schrott, A & J Trust 1,550,000 83 Gardiner DrZIPCODE 11937 - EAST HAMPTON Bock II, T & Davis,M Hillick, P 400,000 136 Kings Point Rd Miller&Locke&Palla-K Rothkin, M & D 855,000 31 Milina Dr Chuya, D & P Morales, J & M 655,000 17 Washington Ave Calle, A Lockwood&Blake-Lockw 300,000 58 Fort Pond Blvd Tyler Hamptons LLC Bronchtein,A&Groom,P 3,160,000 60 Squaw Rd Sandberg,S &Mayesh,S Sarnoff, C 950,000 12 Northway 108 Neck Path LLC Hoffman, D 1,250,000 108 Neck Path Windwer,S &Romanello Morey, R & F 478,500 Treescape Dr, Unit A-3 Armijos, W Henao, L 365,000 126 Harrison Ave Snell, C & J Bernardini, N 880,000 63 Whooping Hollow Rd Guido,A &De Guzman,J Cooper, T 1,600,000 9 Cedar Ct Baron, R Principi&J.A.B.Group 299,000* 26 Blue Jay Way &lots 5&6 Burns, P & Parcher,J Lester Jr, S 1,350,000 390 Pantigo Rd & lot 12ZIPCODE 11954 - MONTAUK Vlasaty&Ruta-Vlasaty Keogh, M & K 405,000 23 Fort Pond Rd, Unit 57 Aloha Capital LLC Brisbane Beach LLC 985,000 21 Brisbane RdZIPCODE 11963 - SAG HARBOR Julane Properties-Gr Pharaoh, D by Exr 717,500 56 Grand StZIPCODE 11975 - WAINSCOTT Srour, M Viola, M 850,000 1 Knoll LnRiverhead TownZIPCODE 11792 - WADING RIVER Retained Realty Inc Luetje, C & I by Ref 327,721 87 Fire Ln RPNL & Akalika LLC Ferrari,S & J by Ref 526,050 4 Taconic CtZIPCODE 11933 - CALVERTON Aretz, J & N Fuller, J Trust 320,000 1823 Edwards Ave Nuzzo, A Aretz Jr, J & N 710,000 192 Landing LnShelter Island TownZIPCODE 11964 - SHELTER ISLAND 35 South Ferry Road Olink, J Properties 755,000 35 S Ferry RdSouthampton TownZIPCODE 11901 - RIVERHEAD Housing Trust Fund Kossman, W 210,000 154 Temple Ave Zambzryski, K Lange,M &R by Trs 245,000 249 & 220 Royal AveZIPCODE 11932 - BRIDGEHAMPTON Chmielewski, J & A JOK Partners LLC 925,000 375 Chase Dr Bley, L & P Bruce, J 2,595,000 142 Hildreth AveZIPCODE 11942 - EAST QUOGUE Echevarria, L & Y Brady, Toburen, etal 320,000 304 Aerie Way Streit, D & L Seidl, S 480,000 2976 Quogue Riverhead Rd US Bank, NA Septor, B by Ref 275,000 31 Central Ave Moran, T Conrad, J 180,000* 51 Old Country Rd Dawson, L & C Chomicki, E & C & J 375,000 109 Lewis Rd Christodoulou, C & G Nakamura, K & K 950,000 29 Marlin RdZIPCODE 11946 - HAMPTON BAYS Kohli,S &Ghosh-Kohli Balducci, AYY 775,000 8 Quail Run Mohr, G O’Connell, J 270,000 11 Oakhurst Rd Town of Southampton ShinnecockDevelopmnt 250,000* 59 West Tiana Rd Lohr, S & D Stevens, A & K 250,000 21 Nassau Rd Petroro, D Pena, F & W 455,000 16 Bay DrZIPCODE 11959 - QUOGUE Ghayalod,M & Singh,A Chirico, J & T 910,000 6 Midhampton Ct Moggio, P & J Craigmyle, M 2,450,000 5 Quogue StZIPCODE 11960 - REMSENBURG Rosenblatt&Goodstein County of Suffolk 30,000 Basket Neck LnZIPCODE 11962 - SAGAPONACK 285 Parsonage Lane ABL, L.P. 6,500,000 285 Parsonage Ln 287 Parsonage Lane ABL LP &Destefanis,A 7,000,000 287 Parsonage Ln 289 Parsonage Lane ABL, L.P. 8,000,000 289 Parsonage Ln

Janice HaydenLic. R.E. Assoc. Brokert: 631.702.7513 | c: 631.255.9160 | [email protected]

WATERFRONT INVESTMENT OR SUMMER GETAWAYExclusive | $999,000 | Web#48370

Great Waterfront property with views of Quantuck Bay on .86 of an acre and 150ft of water frontage. This 5 bedroom, 2 bath 1900s home is in need of work but has great potential to bring back the charm it once had. 2,241SF with kitchen, formal dining and living with fireplace. There are two accessory buildings and possible room for pool. New home could be 3,125SF, including attached garage, 7x32 front

porch, 20x40 swimming pool, and approx 1,200SF deck.

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BUY SELL PRICE LOCATIONDeedsCONTINUED FROM PAGE 33.

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ZIPCODE 11963 - SAG HARBOR Leitner, R & S Panza, W 812,500 15 Dogwood Ln Meltsner, W & R Ruggs Path LLC 2,950,000 20 Ruggs Path Robbins, J Rucci,M & P & C & M 417,000 16 Bay View Dr W Joyce, E Dent, E 700,000 78 Round Pond Ln Borris, J & C Collage, W & J 1,750,000 3 N Harbor Dr Twin Cedar Capital Angelo, J 560,000* 9 South Harbor DrZIPCODE 11968 - SOUTHAMPTON Spandorf, S Maron, L 990,000 79 Woodland Dr Martarona, C & R Flood, R 855,000 160 Warfield Way Mandel,V&Levieva,I&M Greenspan,E&DeSantis 1,350,000 44 Hidden Cove Ct Vigorelli, G Townsend, E & R 330,000 383 North Magee St Steinberg, S & F Beechwood Benedict S 2,103,380 202 High Pond Lane 175 Wooley Street Wooley 175, LLC 3,375,000 175 Wooley St Gosman, T Citibank, N.A. 483,089 166 Powell Ave Guest, J Harriss Family Trust 1,600,000 1 First Neck LnZIPCODE 11972 - SPEONK Tilman,T & Morgan, A Hampton Villas Prprt 223,000 220 Montauk Hwy Felix, M & M South Shore Devlpmnt 499,000* 40 Matthews DrZIPCODE 11976 - WATER MILL Rowe, N & M Gregorchuck, S & P 1,733,000 872 Millstone RdZIPCODE 11977 - WESTHAMPTON Town of Southampton Westhampton Cemetery 185,000* 14 Lakeside Ln Westhampton Cemetery Peconic Land Trust 450,000* Montauk Highway Peconic Land Trust 6 Pierrepont LLC 450,000* p/o 42 Montauk Highway Colman, B & M Perrotta, J & L 1,375,000 26 Baycrest Ave Kaplan, A & S 538 Dune HarborAssoc 1,280,100 538 Dune Rd, Unit 2ZIPCODE 11978 - WESTHAMPTON BEACH DiBiaso, N & A Nappi,D & Prylucki,K 450,000 460B Montauk Hwy Breiter, J Timber Ridge atWHB V 582,322 103 Gettysburg Dr &lot 48 Brogan, B & R Friedman, S & V 2,750,000 213 Dune Rd Green, A & J Cullen Sr, E & V 3,165,000 193 Dune Rd Sirena, E Craver, D 2,900,000 779 Dune RdSouthold TownZIPCODE 11935 - CUTCHOGUE Intorcia, C & K Foos, S & Biskup, J 385,000 1820 Little Neck RdZIPCODE 11944 - GREENPORT The Boatright Group Neiman, C 648,000 639 Second StZIPCODE 11952 - MATTITUCK Clemens,G & Waters,D Jaquillard, H & A 480,000 475 Alois LnZIPCODE 11957 - ORIENT Hossenlopp,G&L Trust Gerrity, Moore, etal 1,075,077 194 Willow Terrace LnZIPCODE 11971 - SOUTHOLD Stanonis, R & G & R Earley,C&Asset Trust 342,500 2555 Youngs Ave, Unit 16D Cheng, S & Vaden, M Harrison, G & C 1,700,000 380 Kimberly Ln Parker, B Hansen, E Trust 545,000 305 Williamsberg Rd

Source: Suffolk Research Service, Inc., Hampton Bays, NY 11946* -- Vacant Land

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Let’s Let’s Let’s Let’s Play Bridge

By George Aman

This hand was played several years ago in a World Championship game. The West hand opened with a preemptive 2H bid. North made a takeout double but his partner converted that bid into a penalty double by passing. The results were bad for West.

The defensive team took one spade, one diamond, two clubs, and three hearts for down two. North-South scored 300 points.

Why was the North-South team so successful? How did South know that he was better off passing than bidding 3 spades or 3 diamonds or 3 clubs? He made the judgment that his side could, at best, make

S- Q7 H- K10873 D- AK64 C- 42 S- J93 N S- K10852 H- 62 W E H- 5 D- 1083 S D- J97 C- K8753 C- J1096 S- A64 H- AQJ94 D- Q52 C- AQ Vul: Both Dlr: S Opening Lead: Two of Hearts S W N E 1H P 2N P 3H P 6H All Pass peddling mouthwash and te secret of eternal life.

NFAWL, Town Sign Lease Agreement

North Fork Animal Welfare League (NFAWL) announced Monday that plans to relocate the Riverhead Animal Shelter to the Henry Pfeifer Community Center building in Calverton have been finalized and the lease agreement with the Town of Riverhead has been signed.

The project is a strategic and collaborative effort between the NFAWL, the Town of Riverhead and Move the Animal Shelter (RMTAS), a non-profit directed by Denise Lucas.

“The new location will better meet the needs of the animals in our care,” said Gillian Pultz, Executive Director of the NFAWL. “It will also provide added support for our current mission in Riverhead by offering comprehensive animal care services, including medical assessment, temperament testing with behavior modification and enrichment for all needy domestic animals.”

The new location will serve the entire East End, providing outreach to both the North and South Forks.

“This is a great day for Riverhead now that we have entered into a lease agreement with the North Fork Animal Welfare League.” stated Riverhead Supervisor Sean Walter. “The entire town board is grateful to the NFAWL and MTAS for their dedication and perseverance. This move will make a significant and positive difference in the life of homeless pets on the East End and will improve the level of experience for adopters, volunteers, and all community visitors.”

Construction will take place in two parts: The Pfeifer Center renovation will be managed by MTAS and house such shelter services as dog training, medical isolation, and administration. NFAWL will use designated capital funds to build state-of-the art dog kennels in a new adjacent building.

A rigorous fundraising initiative will commence to support and complete the construction. NFAWL and RMTAS will reach out to all animal lovers, including corporate partners, on the East End.

The NFAWL operates shelters in both Southold and Riverhead. Its mission is to provide for the welfare of homeless animals by insuring rescue for the lost, care for the sick and placement in permanent loving homes.

a partial game, earning 100-170 points while on defense he could make 300 points. He used the “rule of nine” to make his decision.

In order to use this rule of nine, a player has to add three numbers. The first is the number of the opponent’s trumps that South holds, namely, 4. The second number is the number of trumps that South holds that are honors which includes the 10. This number is 3.

The final number is the level that East has promised, namely, 2. Since the result is 4+3+2 = 9, South knows that it is safe to pass and convert his partner’s takeout double to a penalty double.

Any comments or questions can be sent to [email protected]. If you know four or five dedicated people who would like to learn how to play the world’s most exciting and challenging card game, please call me at 631-766-6656 or email me at the above address.

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King Arthur’s QuestKing Arthur, of legend and song, strode across Medieval England

with courage and confidence - or did he? What if the troubles of his kingdom (including Camelot!) threaten to overwhelm him? Watch the Damsels in Distress sound the warning. Witness the Lady of the Lake as she produces the Sword in the Stone. Hide with the Camelotians when the Ghost of Arthur’s Father visits the castle. See the Giant tower over the questing Knights. Cheer for the King when he makes friends with the Terrible Dragon. Join the Knights and Squires of the Round Table as they try to do the right thing. Hope for the best as your favorite characters of Camelot - Guinevere, Merlin, Taleisin, the Raven, and the dashing Lancelot - wrestle with the challenges faced by their people. And follow the original twist on this familiar story as it weaves its way through a landscape full of surprises!

A performance of King Arthur’s Quest is the latest product of the Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center’s musical theater camp for kids. Starring 60 local campers and two adult actors, the show hits the stage Friday night at 7 PM. Tickets are $15. Visit the WHBPAC website to buy yours.

JusT For

Disney KaraokeLearn to “Let It Go,” and belt out the words to the popular Frozen

song as the Hampton Bays Library hosts A Disney Sing-a-Long karaoke contest for families. Noon to 1 PM tomorrow. Call to register 631-728-6241.

Loco-motionAnimals move in interesting, funny, and even crazy ways. South

Fork Natural History Museum Nature Educator Crystal Possehl leads and interactive family program at the Amagansett Library at 3:30 PM on August 20. Be prepared to hop and slither. Call 631-267-3810 for reservations.

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Junior Guards ExcelJunior lifeguards from the East Hampton-based Hampton

Lifeguard Association did their hometown proud last week at the Nautica United States Lifesaving Association National Lifeguard Championships in Virginia Beach. More than 300 youngsters between the ages of nine and 17 participated in eight events in four age categories.

Maggie Purcell won her division (ages 12 to 13) in the ”Run-Swim-Run” contest, which called for running a set distance on the beach, then swimming out and around two buoys and back to run the beach again.

Chasen Dubs took the title for guards aged 12 to 13 in the board race and won the “Ironguard” event. Ironguards must swim a designated course, run to a transition area, then paddle the designated course and finish with another run.

Four junior guards from the Hampton Lifeguard Association finished first in the beach flag race. From a prone position on the sand, they had to rise at the sound of a whistle, turn, and race to get a beach flag buried in the sand. Sophie Kolhoff, Max Mahi, Lila Ferraro, and Bella Tarbet all won their age divisions.

Over-shareTwo Montauk homeowners were charged last week with violations

of the East Hampton Town Code related to excessive turnover. Louis Scagnelli, the owner of 20 Foxboro Road, Montauk, was

charged with six counts of excessive turnover for renting his house to a rotating cast of tenants over successive weekends, town officials said. Scagnelli’s house has generated complaints each weekend about new tenants, excessive vehicles and noise.

John Templeman, the owner of 5 South Federal Street, Montauk, was charged with several code violations for excessive turnover and pumping pool water into the street. Also under investigation are Building Code violations, such as change of use within the house and converting rooms to bedrooms, and exceeding the Suffolk County Department of Health Services regulations.

The charges against the pair of homeowners are a result of Code Enforcement investigations conducted over the past two months. Both cases were reported on the town’s new online complaint form, which is accessible on the Ordinance Enforcement page of the Town’s website, www.ehamptonny.gov.

“Excessive turnover has been the focus of many of our online complaints and is being vigorously investigated to provide for the quality of life expected in our Town,” said Town Director of Public Safety David Betts.

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Independent / Reg Cornelia

Lee Zeldin, Republican candidate for Congress from the First District, with East Hampton Town Republican Chairman Tom Knobel at the Fisherman’s Fair Saturday.

Independent / Kitty Merrill, Merle Froschl

The Fishermen’s Fair in Springs last Saturday drew a crowd. Job Potter provided the tunes and a host of volunteers dished out delicious local fare as kids enjoyed rides, toured the ambulance and played games.

The Fishermen’s Fair

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I t f inal ly happened. After spending the past few months in this column hoping and begging for golf to move on from Tiger Woods, the game gave us everything it had to offer on Sunday. Rory McIlroy’s PGA Championship victory was an instrumental step to navigating the post-Tiger golf world.

The entire day was a perfect script of what the sport needed. A weather delay, along with a superstar leaderboard, plenty of birdies, a handful of eagles, combined with high drama, adrenaline, fist pumps and confusion put golf back in the spotlight like it hasn’t been since Tiger ruled the game.

The parallels have always existed between Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy. Rory was expected to eventually take the torch from Woods. Both were child prodigies; one in the United States, the other in Ireland.

Both men had close relationships with their fathers, who helped push them towards greatness. Rory even followed Tiger’s simplistic marketing lead, trading in the shirt and hat flashing multiple sponsors, for the quiet, cool look offered by Nike. But, while Rory’s game has shown flashes of “Tiger potential,” it was never as consistently great.

How ironic that while Tiger Woods’ physical demise may be playing out in front of us, McIlroy has stepped to the plate and put on Tiger-esque performances. He’s even surpassing Woods in some categories.

With the victory Sunday at Valhalla, McIlroy became the first player since Tiger in 2006 to win three straight events on the PGA Tour. Also, he is the fourth youngest to win his fourth career major, behind Young Tom Morris, Tiger Woods, and Jack Nicklaus.

But, there is something Rory was able to do last weekend, that Tiger never accomplished: come from behind to win a Major. Rory made the turn Sunday three strokes back of the leaders. In any sport, a team or individual’s ability to come from behind helps define greatness. Jack

Independent

MindedSportsBy Pete Mundo

Tiger, Who? Nicklaus came from behind eight times to win a Major. Gary Player did it four times, while Tom Watson did it twice. Yes, technically McIlroy was leading at the start of the day Sunday, but that makes his back nine accomplishments that much more impressive.

Sunday’s ride down the home stretch had all the ingredients to give the sport the spark it desperately needed. It included wily veteran Phil Mickelson, the world’s number one Rory McIlroy, American hopeful Rickie Fowler, and smooth swinging notable European Henrik Stenson.

Fowler couldn’t get over the hump, but finished in the top five

of every Major this season. As his game and personality continue to grow, fans will keep pulling for Fowler to break through, as he quickly becomes the next Mickelson pre-2004: “the best player to never win a Major.”

Mother Nature helped play a major storyline in the race to finish on Sunday. An hour and fifty minute weather delay had the leaders teeing off at 4:19 ET. With the sun setting around 8:30, the fans, CBS, and the players, didn’t want to have to come back Monday to await a winner (unless it were in a playoff). With darkness setting in on the 18th hole, McIlroy and playing partner Bernd Wiesberger teed off right after Mickelson and Fowler.

The group essentially played as a foursome, with McIlroy playing his shots soon after Mickelson and Fowler. It was more like something we’d see on our local municipal course. Two twosomes turned a foursome to beat the darkness.

It wasn’t a situation we’d ever expect to witness on a Sunday at a Major Championship. The development on the 72nd hole had Mickelson and Fowler startled. Rory was trying to play speed golf to try to complete his victory, and even Jim Nantz and his CBS Broadcast team were surprised to see the tournament end as it did.

But, it was a chance for golf to seem edgy and cool. It hasn’t felt that way since Tiger was in his prime. They bent some traditional rules in one of the most important moments of the year. Combine the weather, with the drama, clutch shots (McIlroy’s birdie on 17), near misses (Phil’s chips on 17 and 18), and golf became exciting, hip, and must-watch TV . . . all while Tiger Woods was nowhere to be found. That’s good stuff.

Pete is a lifelong Montauk resident and former sports talk host at 88.7FM WeeR. He’s currently a Sports Anchor at WCBS 880 and WFAN radio in NyC. He can be reached via email at [email protected].

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FANTASY SP RTSFANTASY SP RTSBy Skippy Brown

The fastest growing segment of the fantasy sports market is daily fantasy games. The concept is difficult for non-fans to grasp. Basically, games take place on one day and one day only. You enter a game, you pick a team that has to fit under a defined “salary cap,” and it’s over by day’s end.

The good news is daily fantasy adds an exciting new layer to the fantasy

The Gorilla In The Roomsports experience. Between baseball, football, basketball, hockey, and golf you can literally play every day of the year. You can also win – sometimes as much as $1 million in a single night.

The bad news is you’re going to get slaughtered, and you stand to lose a lot of money, unless you know what you are doing.

Take daily baseball. There are as

many as 16 games to choose from; that’s hundreds of players. Your job is to pick the best lineup – eight or nine players that will perform better than every other team.

If you’re a beginner you’re probably picking a lot of your home team players, guys you like, your cousin’s roommate, players who went to your school, and so on.

Here’s what you are up against: players who have developed computer models that can be tweaked on a daily basis. They take into account whether the batter is facing a right-handed or left-handed pitcher, the past history of the player against that pitcher, which ball park the game is in (some are hitter friendly, some are pitcher

friendly) and so on. The players know in which ballparks the wind is blowing out and have developed algorithms that project a player’s performance for that particular game.

Many of your opponents are professional daily fantasy players. They spend as much as $20,000 every single night! Let’s say there is a tournament that costs $100 to enter and the top prize is $100,000. It is not unusual for one of the Big Boys to buy $10,000 worth of tickets, giving him a one in 10 chance of winning the money.

You must understand the incredible advantage this gives the high roller. While players like of us are pondering which one of the 10 or 11 starting pitchers we want to play, the high roller can play all of them on different cards, and do that at every position. He is increasing the probability that he will submit the best lineup, because the best lineup comes from a finite universe – that is, the winning lineup can be defined because it exists in fixed parameters.

If this is difficult to grasp, consider the lottery. We know that every three digit number has a one in 1000 chance to come in. If we buy 10 tickets, we have a one percent chance of winning. If we buy 100 we have a 10 percent chance.

Now pretend those numbers represent baseball players. We know some of them have a better chance of “coming in” than others – they hit the pitcher they are facing well historically, the ballpark they are playing in has short fences, the wind is blowing out, and they love hitting against left-handed pitchers. The probability of their producing on any given night increases markedly over the other players in the pool. It’s the gambler’s edge.

The bottom line is this: play for a buck. Enter the tournament. Have fun. This writer won a $20,000 tournament that way. So have many others.

Don’t try and take on the big guys, though. If you’re playing a $10 head-to-head, be assured the other guy is a pro. If you’re in a tournament with a $25 entry fee, you can be sure some of the other players have entered 30 or 40 times.

If you want to have fun, you will. But if you want to make money you’ll need to do a minimum of 90 minutes of research every day you play. Make a list of all the players who have elevated chances of performing well by position.

Start with a buck or two a night in games that only allow one entry per person. The next day, look at the players on the teams that won the money. If they aren’t on your list, figure out why.

When you start winning, you’ll know you are getting better. Then it will be time to take the next step.

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By Vincent PicaCommodore, First District, Southern Region (D1SR) United States Coast Guard

Coast Guard Auxiliary News

Commodore, First District, Southern Region (D1SR) United States Coast Guard

As noted prior, each discipline has a language and that language conveys competency to the listener. This column is part of a series of maritime vocabulary words. So you can sound like the salty ol’ mari-ner you are… We’ll run enough of these to get the major concepts and phraseology from Alpha to Zulu in front of you!

G: International Meaning: I require a pilot.

Gaff - (1) A spar that holds the upper side of a four-sided gaff sail. (2) A pole with a sharp hook at the end used to get a fish on board.

Gaff Rig - Any sailboat with a four-sided mainsail, defined by two booms, one located on the bottom, perpendicular to the mast, and another, located on top, at an angle from the mast.

Gaff Sail - A four-sided sail used instead of a triangular main sail. Used on gaff-rigged boats.

Gaff Topsail - A light triangular or quadrilateral sail set over a gaff.

Gale - An unusually strong wind. In storm warning terminology, a wind of 34 to 47 knots (39 to 54 miles per hour or 62-87 kilometers per hour).

Galley - (1) The kitchen area of a boat. (2) Very old fighting ship propelled by oars.

Give-Way Vessel - A term, from the Navigational Rules, used to describe the vessel which must yield to the “Stand-on Vessel” in meeting, crossing, or overtaking situations. Also known as the Burdened Vessel.

Go About - To turn the boat head-to-wind so as to go about on the opposite tack.

Go Adrift - To break loose from a mooring, anchor or docking.

Going to Weather - To sail against the prevailing wind and seas.

Gone Aloft - Sailor’s phrase for a seaman who has died.

Great Circle - The largest circle which can be inscribed on a sphere by a plane that cuts through the center of the sphere. On the earth, the equator is a great circle, as are all the meridians of longitude which pass through both poles. The shortest distance between two points on the earth’s surface lies along the great circle which connects the two points.

Green Buoy/Can - A can buoy. A cylindrical buoy painted green and

“Sabby the Lingo?” Maritime Language – X

having an odd number used in the United States as a navigational aid. At night they may have a green light. Green buoys should be kept on the left side when returning from a larger body of water to a smaller one.

Green Daymark - A navigational aid used in the United States and Canada to mark a channel. Green triangular daymarks should be kept on the left when returning from a larger to smaller body of water.

Greenwich Mean Time - GMT for

short. Greenwich Meridian Time, also known as Universal Time or Zulu time. A time standard that is not affected by time zones or seasons. It is the time used by navigators in celestial navigation.

Gross Tonnage - A common measurement of the internal volume of a ship with certain spaces excluded. One ton equals 100 cubic feet; the total of all the enclosed spaces within a ship expressed in tons each of which is equivalent to 100 cubic feet.

Ground - To touch bottom. Ground Swells - Long wave

formations during calm or light air formed by waves running into shoaling water.

Ground Tackle - A collective term for the anchor, anchor rode (line or chain), and all the shackles and other gear used for attachment.

Gunkholing - Cruising in shallow water and spending the nights in

coves. Gunwale - The upper edge

of a boat’s side; the part of a vessel where hull and deck meet. (Pronounced “gunnel”)

Gybe - (Jibe) Turning the boat so that the stern crosses the wind, changing direction. To change direction before the wind onto another tack with the boom coming over by the force of the wind. Caution is needed in this maneuver, especially in heavy wind.

Gypsy - A windlass or capstan drum.

More in the weeks ahead!

BTW, if you are interested in being part of USCG Forces, email me at [email protected] or go directly to the D1SR Human Resources department, which is in charge of new members matters, at DSO-HR and we will help you “get in this thing . . .”

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home of the montauk/mercury grand slaminshore fishing tournament • august 16, 17 & 18

Independent / Courtesy YMCA

The yMCA held a swim meet be-tween its sum-mer campers and the kids from the Maidstone Club summer camp in east Hampton last Thursday.

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On The Water

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Shinnecock Bay/Inlet/Ocean The bite outside the inlet was

way off this week due to the heave from Bertha. Some guys were still able to grab a couple of fish out on the Shinnecock Reef. The fluke had definitely moved off to the deeper water, 85-90 feet. The seabassing has been slow, too. Conditions are great and should allow things to improve.

The bay bite on the fluke remains strong but you will need to weed through the mass amounts of shorts to go home with dinner. Most areas of the bay are producing and on both tides. Flats have a good amount of action but the few bigger fish seem to be in the deeper waters.

Blues come and go but a good place to start looking would be on the bunker pods outside the inlet. Bass bite over at the bridge has been a pick but better than in past weeks. The trigger fish have been hanging around the buoy chains inside the inlet. Peconics

Plenty of porgies out at the rock. Clam chum and clam baits are a must. Shorebound/Beaches/Canal

Over in the Shinnecock Canal the fishing has been pretty good with snappers, fluke, triggers, and porgies. Had one customer take five keeper fluke from the canal on Friday just after the locks closed. Try taking a live snapper and sending it out for a trophy fluke.

The Ponquogue Bridge has seen

a few bass taken on fresh chunks, a good amount of fluke, some porgies and snappers. The Shinnecock Inlet is producing fluke, triggers, bluefish and a few schoolie bass. The best bet on the open beaches is dunking some clam. Kayak Fishermen

The areas west of the Ponquogue Bridge have yielded a good amount of fluke during the daylight hours and bass on the dawn and dusk tides. Working the shallow water

south of the main channel. Another good spot to check out is east of the Ponquogue Bridge around the sand islands. Offshore

The sharking grounds continue to produce, but it has slowed from last month’s bite. Fish continue to be taken near the 100-foot area. Out around the Coimbra wreck, the bluefin tuna are still holding their ground. This bite has slowed somewhat and seems to have moved to an early morning bite. The larger fish are a bit deeper.

The Canyon waters are seeing small yellowfin, medium size longfin and some good size mahi.

The bigeyes are there in small numbers and being caught before or at first light. News

The town’s ocean beaches are once again accessible to town residents with 4x4 access permits now that the piping plover fencing has been removed. Driving is only permissible after 6 PM and before 9 AM.

Capt. Scott JeffreyEast End Bait & Tackle170 East Montauk Hwy.Hampton Bays, NY 631-728-1744

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See our Coupon and Drink Recipe on pg. B-3Hampton Bays Town Center (Next to King Kullen) • 46 East Montauk Highway

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Wine TastingFri & Sat • 4-7 PM

15% OFF MixedWine Case Discount

Mag.

$34.99

Famous Grouse

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$19.99

See our Coupon and Drink Recipe on pg. B-3

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1-$21.99

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ea.

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1-$21.99

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ea.

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1-$24.99

2-$42 3-$60

Not responsible for typographical errors.Subject to Inventory Depletion All Prices expire 8/20/2014

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$39.99

GeorgiVodka

Mag.$12.99

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Grey Goose

750 ML

$29.99

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$37.99

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Liter

$21.99

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$29.99

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Mag

$29.99

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Wolffer Rosé Still in Stock

Liter

$24.99

StolichnayaAll Flavors

Johnnie Walker

REDMag.

$34.99

Liter

$29.992 for$50

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Double Cross

Vodka

Please bring in ad or mention when calling for sale pricing. Please bring in ad or mention when calling for sale pricing. Please bring in ad or mention when calling for sale pricing.

750 ML

$32.99

PinnacleVodka

Mag.

$18.99

Knob Creek

Liter

$36.99

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Wines Hampton Bays

Saturday Delivery&

Glenlivet12 Year

750 ML

$39.99

Mag.

$23.99

SkyyVodka

ObanSingle Malt Whisky

750ML

$59.99

NEW SPECIALLY CRAFTED SPIRITSLimited Production • Small Batch

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Port Charlotte Islay

Single Malt James Oliver Rye

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750ML

$19.99750ML

$59.99750ML

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750ML

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Russell Henry Gin

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$12.99

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