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REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-1 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT September 10, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
CALL FOR A FREE ESTIMATE OR STOP BY OUR DESIGN CENTER AT1668 SAG HARBOR TURNPIKE
631-725-3651
theawningcompany.com
Specializing in RetractableAwnings, Exterior Solar Screens& Storm Shutters
The season doesn’t end here. It’s only the beginning.
OUR 25TH YEAR
September 10, 2014Arts & EntErtAinmEnt
The IndependenT
Arthur B. Carles - Standing Nude At Vered Gallery - See Gallery Walk Page B-4
Independent/Courtesy Vered Gallery
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSSeptember 10, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-2 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
HAMPTON DAZEBy Jessica Mackin
Hampton DazeBy Jessica Mackin
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The "Snaps" issue of Hampton Daze is online at www.hamptondaze.com. Check out cover girl Betsey Johnson at the Hamptons Happening Benefit for the Samuel Waxman
Cancer Research Foundation.
Remembering Joan Rivers The Independent's James J. Mackin captured a photo of
Joan Rivers at the Broadway Cares benefit in Southampton in 1994.
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-3 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT September 10, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
Sweet CharitiesBy Jessica Mackin
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to [email protected].
Alternatives For ChildrenAlternatives For Children’s 18th
Annual Classic & Sports Car Road Rally takes place on Saturday in Aquebogue. Drivers and navigators will travel the wonderfully beautiful East End, ending with a lunch reception and awards ceremony at The Water’s Edge in East Moriches.
The event benefits the programs and services for the children with disabilities that Alternatives For Children serve. Visit www.alternatives4children.org/road-rally.html.
Round Table TheaterOn Saturday from 7 to 10 PM the
Round Table Company & Academy will host a fundraiser at Guild Hall in East Hampton to help underwrite their upcoming November production of Hamlet. The cost of entry is $20 cash or a $20 bottle of wine presented at the door. The evening includes food, wine, live entertainment, and a silent auction of experiential one-of-a kind packages, such as a season pass to the Met Opera HD series at Guild Hall. The highlight of the night is the 9 PM drawing for the unique opportunity to win an Instant Wine Cellar, featuring various vintages and varietals brought by patrons, including those donated by local wine stores and vineyards, with some bottles valued over $100.
For more information contact M o r g a n D u k e Va u g h n a t [email protected].
Color Me WildThe “Color Me Wild” color run/
walk, a 5K to benefit for the Evelyn Alexander Wildlife Rescue Center, starts at Tiana Beach in Hampton Bays on Saturday, September 20, at 9 AM, rain or shine. Admission is $50 per person and each runner will receive a T-shirt and dye packet. Runners wil l be covered with biodegradable corn starch-based dye of all different colors and the race will finish back at Tiana Beach where DJs will play music and have a dance party at the pavilion along the ocean. All proceeds go toward benefiting the Center’s mission to rehabilitate and return animals to the wild. Visit www.wildliferescuecenter.org.
Wines & CaninesSave homeless pets and enjoy
scenic vineyards during peak harvest season on the North Fork
at the Wines & Canines walk/run benefit. Take a leisurely dog walk/run at Baiting Hollow Farm to benefit Kent Animal Shelter on Sunday, September 21, at 10 AM. Chinese auction, raffles, low-cost canine vaccines and microchipping, caricature and photo portraits, wine and food sales, Kent’s pet boutique, and more will make this a great day out.
Registration and information a t w w w . c r o w d r i s e . c o m /KentWinesCanines or call 631-727-5731.
Golf TournamentA benefit Golf Tournament for
The Bridgehampton Child Care and Recreation Center takes place September 22, at a Bridgehampton course designed by Rees Jones. The
day starts at 10 AM with brunch, practice, 18 holes of golf, the 19th celebratory buffet dinner with awards plus a few surprises. Visit www.BHCCRC.com.
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Gallery WalkBy Jessica Mackin
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to [email protected].
Lawrence Fine ArtA Rolph Scarlett exhibition starts
tomorrow at Lawrence Fine Art in East Hampton. The show runs through September.
ONGOINGModernist Color
Vered Gallery in East Hampton presents “Modernist Color: The First 90 Years.” Artists include Man Ray, George Bellows, Milton Avery, Arthur B. Carles, Larry Rivers, and many others. The show runs through September 29. For more info visit www.veredart.com.
Kevin TeareKevin Teare, a visual ar tist
and a musician, combines the two disciplines in his most recent work. The artist will be exhibiting both watercolor studies and oil on mylar paintings at the Art Gallery at the Quogue Library. Teare lives and works in Sag Harbor. The show runs through September 29.
Michael CombsParrish Road Show presents
Michael Combs at Hallockville
Museum Farm in Riverhead through September 28.
JoAnne DumasJoAnne Dumas is a photographer
inspired by the tantalizing qualities of water. “Resplendent Water” is on display at Suffolk County Community College’s Eastern Campus through October 24. A reception for the artist will be held on Thursday, September 18, from 4 to 6 PM.
Quiet RiotChristine Sciulli’s “Quiet Riot”
is on display at Duck Creek Farm in Springs. The show runs through September 20. Vis i t duckcreekfarmarts.blogspot.com.
For The Peoplekaryn mannix contemporary
presents “For The People: Beat of the Street” benefiting East End Hospice at Atlantic Terrace Motel in Montauk. The show runs through Sunday by appointment only. Visit www.karynmannixcontemporary.com.
Linda Fantuzzo Hagins & Mortimer Design in
Southampton hosts the Hamptons debut of Charleston painter Linda Fantuzzo at their recently opened design gallery. Works can be seen through September 30. Visit www.haginsmortimerdesign.com.
Silas Marder GalleryS i l a s Marde r Ga l l e r y i n
Bridgehampton presents Jason Middlebrook with “Every Tree is a Map,” a solo exhibition of recent painting and sculpture. The show is on view through Sunday.
Megan EuellThe 1708 House in Southampton
presents Megan Euell “Paintings and Drawings from The Hamptons and Europe.” The show runs throughout September.
Norma Jean PilatesNorma Jean Pilates in Sag
Harbor, in association with Aureus Contemporary Gallery, presents a group exhibition featuring three contemporary women artists, Claire Shegog, Sara Carter, and Elise Wehle. The exhibition is on view through Sunday.
SaboteursThe East Hampton Historical
Society presents “June 13, 1942: Saboteurs Land in Amagansett” at the Clinton Academy Museum. The show runs through October 13.
Amagansett ArtThe Amaganset t His tor ical
Association presents “Amagansett Art: Across the Years.” The exhibition presents the work of artists who have lived and worked in Amagansett or have used Amagansett as their inspiration.
A few of the many artists included are Scott Bluedorn, Ralph Carpentier, Elliott Erwitt, Sue Gussow, Toby Haynes, Elizabeth Levine, Claire Nivola, Joe Pintauro, Ken Robbins, Anne Seelbach, and Michelle Stuart. The four curators of the exhibit are
Elena Prohaska Glinn, Nina Gillman, Jeanie Trusty Stiles, and Isabel Carmichael.
The exhibition will remain open through Sunday.
William GlackensThe Parrish Art Museum in Water
Mill presents William Glackens, the first comprehensive survey of the artist’s work since 1966 through October 13. The exhibition spans Glackens’s career from the 1890s through the 1930s, with more than 70 important paintings and works on paper from some of America’s finest private and public collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, the National Gallery of Art, and the Cleveland Museum, among others. Several works in the exhibition are on view to the public for the first time since 1966.
and Research Center presents “Deconstructing the Sayre Barn: Photographs by Ulf Skogsbergh,” an exhibit of highly detailed oversize photographs featuring what Skogsbergh found to be the most fascinating phase of the reconstruction of the Southampton Historical Museum’s Sayre Barn, its deconstruction. The show runs through October 10. For more information call 631-283-2494 or visit www.southamptonhistoricalmuseum.org.
Past And PresentBridgehampton Past and Present,
an exhibition that takes place through September 18, is on display at the Bridgehampton Museum.
12 Years Experience
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Coming AttractionsBy Jessica Mackin
Night MovesBy Jessica Mackin
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to [email protected].
All Star Comedy ShowBay Street Theater & Sag Harbor
Center for the Arts presents the HarborFest All Star Comedy Show, hosted by Joseph Vecsey, on Saturday at 8 PM. Tickets are $25 in advance and at the door and
they are available online at www.baystreet.org.
Abba FabAbba Fab plays all of Abba’s
favorite hits ranging from “Dancing Queen” to “Fernando” to the Mamma Mia soundtrack at The Suffolk Theater on Friday at 8 PM. Visit www.suffolktheater.com. The dance floor will be open.
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to [email protected].
Book & BottleThe Suffolk County Historical
Society in Riverhead presents Book & Bottle, an author visit and book discussion with Howard Kroplick on Friday at 7 PM. President of the Long Island Motor Parkway Preservation Society, a member of the Society of Automotive Historians, and Hempstead Town Historian, Kroplick has written books including Vanderbilt Cup Races of Long Island, The Long Island Motor Parkway, and North Hempstead. Book discussion and signing includes wine and
cheese. SCHS members are admitted free and non-members pay $5. RSVP requested.
Viva Los BastarditosJohn Drew Theater Lab at Guild
Hall in East Hampton presents Viva Los Bastarditos: The New Musical by Jake Oliver on Tuesday at 7:30 PM. Visit www.guildhall.org.
Ambulance presents an under the stars feature of The Rocky Horror Picture Show on Saturday starting at 6 PM at 18C Ponquogue Avenue. $30 per person incudes dinner, soft drink, and the show. Bring blanket or chair.
Independent/Courtesy Bay Street Theatre
JosephVecsey hosts the HarborFest All Star Comedy Show at Bay Street.
The DriftersThe Drifters featuring original
Drifter Rick Sheppard will perform hits such as “Under the Boardwalk” and “This Magic Moment” at the Historic Suffolk Theater in Riverhead on Saturday at 8 PM. Visit www.suffolktheater.com.
The Jam SessionThe Jam Session takes place on
Thursdays from 7 to 9 PM at Bay Burger in Sag Harbor. Visit www.thejamsession.org.
Southampton Publick HouseStop by for Monday Night
Madness in the taproom featuring $5 pints, $5 burger platters, and more specials. Weekday happy hour runs from 4 to 7 PM. Wednesday is Ladies Night with drink specials and DJ Tony. Friday happy hour lasts all night and local legend DJ Dory spins at 10 PM. Saturday night, dance to Hamptons Classics served up by DJ Brian at 10 PM.
Buckley’s Inn BetweenHappy hour weekdays in
Hampton Bays run from 4 to 8 PM, with $3 pints of everything on tap, well drinks, and pouring wine. DJ Phil at 10 PM on Fridays and Saturdays. Sundays see two for one appetizers at the bar all day. On Thursdays, it’s Buckley’s famous wing night with $15 all you can eat wings and all you can drink Miller Lite from
10 PM to 1 AM. Music by DJ Pauly and beer pong.
WolfferTwilight Thursdays take place
at Wolffer Estate Vineyards in Sagaponack. Enjoy live music on the lawn of the main winery from 5 to 8 PM. Sunset Saturdays take place on the lawn at the wine stand at 5 PM. Visit www.wolffer.com.
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REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSSeptember 10, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-6 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
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Live Love Spa visits New York City! This summer spa directors from destinations all over New York spent two full days at the Guerlain Spa in The Waldorf Astoria on Park Avenue getting special spa pampering, learning about new products, and reconnecting with each other. Visit www.LiveLoveSpa.com.
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REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-7 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT September 10, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
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East End CalendarBy Kitty Merrill
EAST HAMpToN
SouTHAMpToN
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Fax them to 631-324-2544 or email to [email protected].
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WEDNESDAY 9•10•14• It’s integral yoga, open gym, and pickleball at
the Montauk Playhouse on Wednesdays. Other activities offered throughout the week include toddler exploration, and co-ed volleyball. Visit www.ehamptonny.gov for their complete schedule. THURSDAY 9•11•14
• The Montauk Chamber of Commerce summer farmers market is held each Thursday from 9 AM to 2 PM on the green.SATURDAY 9•13•14
• Frank Quevedo of The South Fork Natural History Museum leads a nature walk to view fall migration, part of his “Birding for Beginners” series. 7:45 AM. At 10 AM naturalist and author Mike Bottini presides over a Georgica Pond nature paddle in East Hampton. Quest for Monarch butterflies during the event, which starts at 10 AM. Call 631-537-9735 to sign up and for admission and location information.
• The Springs Farmers Market at Ashawagh Hall in Springs runs from 9 AM to 1 PM.
• The Duck Creek Farm Association hosts its annual meeting at Springs Presbyterian Church, beginning at 9 AM. Guest speaker: David Buda.
• Hike the Hither Hills Coastal Trail with Carol Andrews (631-668-5429) of the East Hampton Trails Preservation Society at 10 AM. Meet her at Navy Beach at the end of Navy Road in Montauk. Visit the EHTPS website for news of additional hikes.
WEDNESDAY 9•10•14• A bereavement support group is held each week
at Southampton Hospital from 5:30 to 7 PM. Call 631-283-6729 for additional information. THURSDAY 9•11•14
• AA meetings are held at Joshua’s Place in Southampton each Thursday morning at 7:30 AM.
• Duplicate Bridge Games are held at the Bridgehampton Senior Center every Thursday from 1:30 to 4:30 PM. Prior experience and partner required.
• Drop in for a guided meditation at the Vajravarahi Buddhist Meditation Center on Hampton Street in Sag Harbor from 12:15 to 12:45 PM. Also Friday.
• SAGE LI Hampton Bays mingle is held at the Hampton Bays Community Center on Ponquogue Avenue the second and fourth Thursday of each month. 3 to 5 PM. Call 631-728-1235.FRIDAY 9•12•14
• Country Line Dancing for seniors is offered free every Friday at 10:30 AM and Monday at 1 PM at the Flanders Senior Center. Call 631-725-1235 to learn more.
• It’s the annual Southampton Town Youth Bureau Battle of the Bands at Ponquogue Beach in Hampton Bays. 7 to 11 PM. Tickets are $5 at the door to see teens from all over Southampton Town perform on the stage, with prizes for first, second and third place winners. Call 631-702-2432 for further details.
• The Organización Latino-Americana of Eastern Long Island presents the 11th annual OLA Latino Film Festival, a dynamic weekend showcase of acclaimed and award-winning recent Latino cinema for a broad
audience. Screenings will take place in the Lichtenstein Theater in the Parrish Art Museum in Water Mill. Crowd favorite, Mambo Loco, will enliven the festival launch at 7 PM with their exuberant sound that blends classic Afro-Cuban and Puerto Rican music with “old school” Latin and Latin Jazz.SATURDAY 9•13•14
• Children aged eight to 12 can try their hands at Nature Song Writing at 1 PM at The South Fork Natural History Museum in Bridgehampton. Call 631-537-9735 to sign up and for admission information.
• The Sag Harbor Farmers Market is open each Saturday from 9 AM to 1 PM.
• The farmers market in Westhampton Beach runs every Saturday through November from 9 AM to 1 PM on Mill Road in Westhampton Beach.
• Glorian Berk of the Southampton Trails Preservation Society leads a Laurel Valley ramble at 10 AM. Meet at the kiosk on Deerfield Road across from Deerwood Path in Noyac. Call 631-974-2635 with question.SUNDAY 9•14•14
• It’s a passerine fall migration walk in Sag Harbor with expert birder Joe Giunta of The South Fork Natural History Museum in Bridgehampton. 8 AM. Call 631-537-9735 to sign up and for admission and location information.
• It’s Lizzie’s Parkland Adventure from 10 AM till noon. Meet Liz Karpin of the Southampton Trails Preservation Society at the parking lot of Munn’s County Park on Montauk Highway in Hampton Bays. 516-320-0761 is the number you call for additional information.
• An antique fair will be held on the grounds of Rogers Mansion on Meeting House Lane from 9 AM to 3 PM. Admission is free.
• This week’s garden lecture at Marders in Bridgehampton focuses on fall lawn care at 10 AM.
• The Southampton Farmer’s Market is open for the summer. 9 AM to 2 PM at the Southampton Center on Jobs Lane in Southampton Village.TUESDAY 9•16•14
• Calling all seniors who are interested in expanding their creative horizons. The Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center’s Nancy & Frederick DeMatteis Arts Education Program invites you to be part of its one-of-a-kind, original performing arts program, Melodies & Memories. Designed to foster the continuous development of skills and knowledge throughout the lives of older adults, this 10-week program meets from 9:30 AM to 12 PM on Tuesdays and Thursdays, beginning today and culminates in a public performance on Sunday, November 23. Registration is open to seniors ages 65 and up with an interest in music and theatre. Experience is NOT necessary. The fee for the program is $100.WEDNESDAY 9•17•14
• A support group for adult children of aging parents meets the third Wednesday of every month from 6 to 8 PM at the Hampton Bays Senior Center on Ponquogue Avenue. Call 631-728-1235.
THURSDAY 9•11•14• The Sit and Sew Club meets ever Thursday from
10 AM till noon at the Riverhead Library. SATURDAY 9•13•14
• Meet at Paumanok Vineyard in Jamesport at 2 PM for a 20 to 25 mile bike ride that loops back to the vineyard for wine tasting. Helmets required. RSVP to Lois Peltz. 631-329-9414 or 212-689-3991.
• Don’t miss the 25th annual Merlot World Classic from 5:30 to 8 PM at the Lenz Winery in Peconic. Compare over 60 different merlots from five different continents, plus sample East End favorites. Call 631-734-6010.
• The annual fall festival at Hallockville Museum Farm in Riverhead runs today and Sunday from 10 AM to 5 PM. Admission is $8 for adults. Scores of
craft and folk art vendors, plus hayrides and a tractor pull are on tap.
• Every Saturday from 11 AM to 3 PM the Riverhead Farmers Market is open outdoors along the riverfront in Riverhead.
• The Greenport Farmers’ Market takes place from 9 AM to 1 PM at the United Methodist Church on Main Street Market Lot on 1st Street.
An asterisk (*) denotes an Indy Best Movie pick.
Coming SoonHoneymoon ( R) A young couple
decides to spend their honeymoon in a remote lake cottage and that, as always, is a recipe for disaster. In this case the bride, Rose Leslie (“Game Of Thrones”) begins wandering around at night, acting weird. Hubby, played by Harry Treadaway suspects something sinister lurks in the woods. After all, there is always something sinister in the woods
New To TheatersThe Longest Week (PG-13)
Justin Bateman stars as a rich thirty something who sponges off his parents and lives in their swanky
Independent / Courtesy Magnolia Pictures
hotel. In the course of a week he gets cut off by the parents, moves in with his buddy, and falls in love. The movie is something of a cross between a Wes Anderson and Woody Allen film, except director Peter Glantz doesn’t have the vision or technique those masters possess. As a result, we quickly become bored with these spoiled, pampered characters. Billy Crudup, Olivia Wilde, and Jenny Slate co-star.
New On DVDDraft Day No one is better than
Kevin Costner when it comes to mining sports-themed movies into box office gold, most memorably Field of Dreams, Bull Durham, and Tin Cup. You have to hand it to promoters – the film opened right before the NFL Draft and was released on DVD just in time for football season. The script is clichéd, and the supporting cast too often is mailing it in, most regretfully Jennifer Garner. Costner falls into a predictable, often overwrought, caricature of himself. Add a star if you wear oversized football jerseys half the year and drink Bud Light just because.
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSSeptember 10, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-8 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
East End LibrariesBy Kitty Merrill Horoscope
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Week of: September 10-16Read your rising sign if you know it; or any other
sign, as each of us has Aries, Taurus etc. someplace in our charts governing some aspect of our lives.
ARIES (March 21-April 21) – Coming off the Full Moon, which always brings some sense of relief, you have the Moon in your sign until tomorrow, Thursday night. Use the time to take the initiative as you are good at starting things. Mars your ruler changes signs and moves into Sagittarius Saturday around 6 PM. Your focus will shift; aim high and go for it. The money troubles should be over.
TAURUS (April 21-May 20) – Venus your ruler has moved opposite the planet of love and dreaminess Neptune today. Your sense of things can be cloudy or you are feeling in love with love? This can be inspiring though and sensitize your beauty and its effect in your body. The Moon is in your sign starting Thursday night through pre dawn Sunday. What do you want and need? The love gods are with you Sunday.
GEMINI (May 20-June 21) – Coming off the Full Moon this week, Mercury is busy meeting Pluto last night, Jupiter today, and Uranus Saturday. You are supposed to be thinking about having fun with or without the children, but you might have to do some mental gymnastics; going from some level of mistrust and feelings that someone is keeping a secret, to being able to communicate about it, to having a sudden illumination over the weekend. You will come back to this perspective again.
CANCER (June 21-July 21) – As the week begins we are coming off the Full Moon (which must make all Cancers exhausted), and you might be feeling that your independence no longer serves you. Perhaps you are beginning to understand that your growth now comes from entering into a partnership, or at least the realization is dawning of the need to have someone to talk to. This might mean living with someone else for the first time, just changing housemates so the social aspect improves, or even going back home for a spell.
LEO (July 21-Aug. 20) – Leos are made for the sunshine. The Sun has peaked in the sky; the Full Moon has peaked and we are in the winding down part of the yearly cycle. But with Jupiter in your sign now expansion, luck and optimism are forthcoming for you. Expect some stability, confidence and a clear sense of purpose Thursday, tomorrow, and for a few days after.
VIRGO (Aug. 20-Sept. 21) – The Full Harvest Moon was Monday night and the after effects continue for a few days as this week begins. If you got worried last night or suspicious keep positive thoughts. The way things seem is not always the way things are. Do not be too quick to act on Thursday, or get upset by someone acting erratically Saturday or be tempted to say something outrageous. After the weekend find
an elder to talk to about it. With Venus in your sign you can be a peacemaker.
LIBRA (Sept. 21-Oct. 20) – Until the Sun apparently leaves Virgo and moves into your sign on the 22nd, you might feel unnecessarily burdened; that there is just too much criticism around for your comfort. Planet Mercury, which is in your sign already, and will stay here for the next few months (except for two weeks), will help you get a grip on anything out of balance in your life. Use the time to compare and contrast; watch any decision you make (not your strong suit). Perhaps what you decide this week will have to be recommitted to around October 25.
SCORPIO (Oct. 20-Nov. 22) – As the week begins and the Full Moon wanes, Mars your ruler will then change signs Saturday evening, moving out of intense Scorpio where it met Saturn, the Lord of Karma and into your 2nd house of earned income and values. The current very intense pressure will subside. Energy can now be focused on more practical matters. Be careful about getting into an argument Thursday evening and Sunday take the activity into a yoga class or outdoor sport.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) – Planet Mars moves into your sign around 6 PM Saturday evening. You will be full of get up and go. Impulsive, enthusiastic, exploratory, frank, spontaneous, restless, sporty, argumentative and fitful methods, energies and attitudes will accompany this time through October. Even more so as Jupiter also is in a fire sign. Be careful of getting burned or burning yourself out.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 21-Jan. 20) – With the Full Moon past you will feel more stable and secure tomorrow, Thursday as the Sun and your ruler Saturn connect. Anything started this week has a good chance of continuing into the future, important to you. No point in working hard if it all is going to dissolve quickly. This might concern a new promotional idea that will bring you residual income, something else important to you.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) – Saturn you ruler is at the top of your chart. Perhaps you feel at the end of a road, that you have achieved all that you can in your current role and that there is no place else to go. If you have any institutional memory left you might look back 29 to 30 years ago to the fall of 1984, when you were here before. This is one of the planetary cycles of life- or the wheel of fortune, going up and coming down which happens to all of us.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 21) – After the Full Moon has passed and all the hurts and feelings of abandonment it brought with it have subsided you can look forward. Mars will move into your 10th house of career and reputation around 6 PM on Saturday, stimulating this area of life. If you have a visible career, that is you are seen by the public, then you ought to be careful these next six weeks that you do not upset the apple cart too much. Or if you cannot help it, take it on faith that it was necessary and right. Principles, a moral code to live by, regardless of financial consequences, is sorely lacking in today’s world.
Kate Plumb, “cycles scientist,” is a certified NCGR counseling astrologer who teaches monthly at Joshua’s Place in Southampton and sees clients in her home office. She is also certified in Astro*Carto*Graphy-finding beneficial locations to live. website..www.kateplumbastrology.com,blog www.offtheplumbtree.com Kate can be reached at [email protected] or 631-725-9133.
Here’s a list of new programs at local libraries. Check in with your local branch for ongoing programs. Advance registration is required for most of the listed programs. Call for details.
East Hampton Library 631-324-0222
WEDNESDAY 9•10•14• Beginners English as a Second Language classes
are held each Wednesday from 5:30 to 6:45 PM. Those on the intermediate level meet on Thursdays, same time. SATURDAY 9•13•14
• William Taylor, recently nominated Solar System Ambassador, leads a discussion about the solar system. 1 to 2 PM.
Rogers Memorial Library 631-283-0774
SATURDAY 9•13•14• Chicken Little screens for tweens at 2 PM.
Hampton Bays Library 631-728-6241
FRIDAY 9•12•14• The “survival movies” series continues with a
showing of The Grey at 2 PM. SUNDAY 9•14•14
• Sensational songs of the 60s will be performed by Under the Influence at 2 PM. MONDAY 9•15•15
• A blood drive will be held from 1 to 7 PM.
Quogue Library 631-653-4224
SUNDAY 9•14•14• Art Deco New York: From the Chrysler Building
to the Grand Concourse, a lecture by Anthony W. Robins, takes place at 3 PM.
Westhampton Library 631-288-3335
FRIDAY 9•12•14• This week’s Lunch and Learn series reveals the
history of botanical art. Noon to 2 PM.
TUESDAY 9•16•14• The library offers a bus trip to NYC. The first
stop will be the 9/11 Memorial Museum, from there it’s the Chelsea Market, at the foot of the 16th Street stairs and elevator to the High Line. The bus departs Westhampton Beach Municipal parking lot at 8:30 AM. Admission to the museum is at 11:30 AM. Estimated arrival time at the Chelsea Market is 1:30 PM. The tour departs New York City/Chelsea Market at 4:30 PM. The cost is $48 per person and includes admittance to the 9/11 Memorial Museum and bus transportation.
Montauk Library 631-668-3377
SATURDAY 9•13•14• Classical pianist Drew Petersen performs from
7:30 to 9 PM.
Mattituck Laurel Library 631-298-4134
THURSDAY 9•11•14• Mangia! Celebrate Italian Heritage Month with
chef Rob Scott and some yummy dishes demonstrated. 6:30 PM.
Amagansett Library 631-267-3810
SUNDAY 9•14•14• Carol Stone will give a poetry reading and talk
from her book HURT, THE SHADOW The Josephine Hopper Poems. The reading will be accompanied by slides of the paintings and a discussion of how the paintings were used to create the poems. Stone will demonstrate how the Hoppers’ marriage shapes the narrative beneath all the poems, and to let people know Jo Hopper not only as wife and model, but as the artist she was. 2 PM.
Riverhead Library 631-727-3228
THURSDAY 9•11•14• Draft Day screens at 1 PM.
WEDNESDAY 9•17•14• Senior singles meet from 6:30 to 8 PM.
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-9 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT September 10, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
Independent Dining
CALL AHEAD FOR DELIVERY
Cases Personalized To Your Liking
15% Off Case Discount • 25 Rosé Selections
Celebratingour
1st AnniversaryThanks for making
us a success
524 Montauk Highway, East QuogueTake-out 653-4042 Delivery
NEW MOON CAFEwww.nmcafe.com Established 1978
Dig out and meet us at The Moon!
• Dinner served Tuesday to Sunday at 5:00 pm
• Saturday Lunch at Noon• Sunday Brunch at Noon• Happy Hours 5:00-7:00pm
salt, pepper, and olive oil. Grill for seven minutes on each side.
Place hot chicken into a metal bowl and cover with plastic wrap for 10 minutes. Dice the peppers
Grilled Chicken & Corn Salad
and mix the mustard, mayonnaise, and olive oil.
When the chicken is cool enough to handle, dice it into cubes. Mix together with the bell peppers, mayonnaise, mustard, olive oil, cilantro, cumin, and scallion.
Serve on a bed of arugula and top with the chiffonade radicchio.
OPEN 7 DAYS FOR D INNER AT 5PM
SERV ING BRUNCH SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
WEEKEND LATE N IGHT PAT IO SERV ICE
126 MAIN STREETSAG HARBOR
631.808.3444WWW.DOPP IORESTAURANTS.COM
3 COURSEPR IX F IXE
$29.95IN D IN ING ROOM
PASTA ENTREEPLUS GLASS OF WINE
$21.95AT THE BAR
REAL ESTATE IN THE NEWSSeptember 10, 2014 THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler WatchmanB-10 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Prime Meats • GroceriesProduce • Take-Out
Fried Chicken • BBQ RibsSandwiches • Salads
Party Plattersand 6ft. HeroesBeer, Ice, Soda
Open 7 Days a WeekWholesale 725-9087Retail 725-9004
324-1999 • 324-190866 Newtown Lane, East Hampton, NY 11937
www.chinatowneasthampton.comSUSHI AVAILABLE
Delicious Chinese Food Take-OutChinatown Restaurant
DELIVERY ($15 Minimum)
OPEN DAILY
When you’re tired of Chic...Go to the Greek!
Featuring New
House Cocktails
4 Course Prix FixeSunday to Thursday
$29.00Live Music
Friday & SaturdayOpen for Dinner 7 Days a Week at 5 p.m.
3516 Montauk Hwy., Sagaponack
631-537-3300
www.publick.com Open Year Round
40 Bowden Square631-283-2800
Brewery Grill TaproomOpen Year Round
Personal Lunch Combos 2-4-1 Tuesdays: Two for one entrees, 5-10pm
Weekend Brunch
Special Events Private Taproom Take-Away Menu & Party Trays
presentsTUMBLEWEED 2014
Saturday September 6 • 2pm$60 all you can eat/drink • Live Music by Jefferson Thomas...
“If we have it...so can you!”
288-5810540 Dune Rd., Westhampton Beach
Wed.,Sept 3
open forLunch &Dinner4-10pm
Thurs., Sept 4
open forLunch &Dinner
12-10pm
Fri., Sept 5
open forLunch &Dinner
12-10pm
Sat., Sept. 6TUMBLE-
WEED20142PM
Sun., Sept 7
open forLunch and
Dinner12-8pm
Thurs., Sept 11
Closed forPrivateParty
Fri., Sept 12open forLunch and
Dinner12-10pm
Sat., Sept 13open forLunch and
Dinner12-10pm
Sun., Sept 14open forLunch and
Dinner12-8pm
Fri., Sept 19open forLunch and
Dinner12-10pm
Sat., Sept 20open forLunch and
Dinner12-10pm
Sun., Sept 21open forLunch and
Dinner12-8pm
Thurs., Sept 25open forLunch &Dinner
12-10pm
Fri., Sept 26open forLunch and
Dinner12-10pm
Sat., Sept 27open forLunch and
Dinner12-10pm
Sun., Sept 28open forLunch and
Dinner12-8pm
Surf Shack 2x5.563 9-3-14:Layout 1 9/2/14 8:29 AM Page 1
REAL ESTATEIN THE NEWS B-11 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT September 10, 2014THE INDEPENDENT • Traveler Watchman
cken
No MSG
CHEN’S GARDENCHINESE RESTAURANT
Take-out & Free Delivery (Min. $15)
SZECHUAN & CANTONESE SPECIALTIES
PURCHASE OVER:$15.00 FREE Egg Roll$25.00 FREE Quart of Soup$35.00 FREE Order of Dumplings$50.00 FREE Order of Sesame Chicken
329-0333 • 329-3232478 Montauk Hwy. (Next To Dutch Motel) East Hampton
ASTPORT LIQUORSEETastings Every Sat.
3-7 pm
All Major Credit Cards& Debit Cards Accepted
Senior DiscountTuesday
Gift Wrapping
$1.00 Off$10.00 Purchase
$2.00 Off$20.00 Purchase
Not to be combined with other offers. Not to be combined with other offers.
15 Eastport Manor Road•Eastport • 325-1388• Open 9am(In the Eastport Shopping Center, next to King Kullen)
Deadline for submissions is Thursday at noon. Email to [email protected].
Old Stove PubThe Old Stove Pub in Sagaponack
offers a four course prix fixe from Sunday to Thursday for $29. For more info call 631-537-3300.
Tumbleweed 2014John Scott 's Sur f Shack in
Westhampton Beach is offering Tumbleweed 2014 specials now through September 28. For more info call 631-288-5810.
ZokkonZokkon in East Hampton offers
buy one get one free drinks and free sushi at the bar from 5 to 7 PM on Thursdays. Monday through Friday happy hour takes place from 5 to 7 PM. Call 631-604-5585.
DoppioDoppio Artisan Bistro in Sag
Harbor offers happy hour specials from 4 to 7 PM daily. For more info call 631-808-3444.
ining Guide
ining GuideThe Independent’s
DDFind Somewhere to Eat in one of The Independent’s