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ONEONTA WORLD OF LEARNING AND DANDELION STAGE PRESENT THE FAMILY SUMMER INTERACTIVE THEATRE ADVENTURE DINOSAUR INVASION

Written By Editor on 6/22/22 | 6/22/22


ONEOTNA, NY — Families must help save the world from time-traveling dinosaurs in  Dandelion Stage’s interactive outdoor theatre performance, Dinosaur Invasion. In this mash-up  between a “choose your own adventure” and a giant game of pretend, audiences take on the  role of Time & Space agents who must save the world from Vortex’s dastardly plot to destroy  the whole of time and space. Performances are presented at OWL’s children’s museum,167  Youngs Road in Fortin Park, Saturdays and Sundays in July, at 11:00 am & 1:00 pm. Tickets for  all ages are $10. Children must be accompanied by an adult for this “free-range” theatre  adventure. Performance capacity is 10 children maximum with no adult attendance cap. Call  607-353-9502 for information. To purchase tickets, visit OWL’s Eventbrite page at: Dinosaur  Invasion.  

This imagination powered event, geared toward ages 5-12, includes a dino-themed  workshop at OWL and pre-adventure craft workshop for audiences build their very own  Time-Trap used in the performance. Coming to a Dandelion Stage outdoor summer  theatre performance is always an adventure, so audiences are advised to come  prepared for the changeability of Oneonta weather. 

Dinosaur Invasion is the result of an earlier creative collaboration between OWL and  Dandelion Stage founding Artistic Director and playwright, Malissa Kano-White.  “Several years ago, OWL and I collaborated to create a dinosaur themed imagination 

trail around the OWL museum and Fortin Park. Last year, when COVID closed all the  theatres I was inspired to reimagine that earlier project as an interactive outdoor theatre  adventure for families to enjoy playing and creating their own dinosaur adventure. Needless to say, I was thrilled when OWL board member Rachel Rissberger agreed this  latest creative partnership.” 

OWL is a museum dedicated to learning through play. Dandelion Stage creates innovative community-based theatre to enrich learning and empower creativity. 

Dinosaur Invasion will be performed at OWL, in Fortin Park, Saturdays and Sundays  in July, at 11:00 am & 1:00 pm. For more information contact Dandelion Stage at 607- 353-9503. 



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WALTON FARMERS’ MARKET SEASON OPENS


Cornell Cooperative Extension of Delaware County is sponsoring the Walton Farmers’ Market which has been established for the convenience of all local residents and participants in the Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program (FMNP) through WIC and Delaware County Office for the Aging. WIC clients and income eligible senior citizens may redeem their farmers’ market nutrition program coupons at the Walton Farmers’ Market. Participants in the Produce Prescription Program may also redeem their coupons at the market.


Walton Farmers’ Market

Veteran’s Plaza, 181 Delaware St, Walton, NY 13856

Every Friday, July 1-Sept 30, 11am-4pm


There will be music and events each week at the market this year and weekly Produce Spotlights with recipes. We will also have free Chobani yogurt for visitors every week. The full schedule of events can be found on our Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/WaltonFarmersMarket/.


This year we welcome back East Brook Community Farm, Brookside Maple & Farm, Butterfly Whispers Farm, Green Sun Orchard & Cidery, Olive Greene Naturals, Rock Rift Farm and introduce Moonwell Bake Shop. The market will feature fresh baked bread and pastries, fresh produce including beets, strawberries, blueberries, chard, herbs, kohlrabi, microgreens, melons, onions, peppers, spinach, cabbage, beans, squash, tomatoes and other fresh fruits and vegetables. Meat, poultry and eggs will also be available.


If you would like to be a vendor at the Walton Farmers’ Market contact Cornell Cooperative Extension of Delaware County at 607-865-6531 or e-mail Valerie at vsd22@cornell.edu.  We welcome customers, farmers, vendors, and musicians to our farmers’ market in Walton on Fridays July through September during the market season.


Cornell Cooperative Extension is an employer and educator recognized for valuing AA/EEO, Protected Veterans, and Individuals with Disabilities and provides equal program and employment opportunities.



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Hixny and Healthy Alliance Partner to Integrate Clinical and Social Care

Written By Editor on 6/21/22 | 6/21/22

- Clinical providers can make social care referrals through EHR using HIN’s SMART on FHIR application. - 

ALBANY, N.Y.—To continue its work toward improving population health, Hixny has partnered with Healthy  Alliance (Alliance for Better Health and its affiliates) to offer clinical providers an easy way to get help for their  patients with social needs, such as benefits navigation or food insecurity. 
Hixny, a health information network (HIN), is leveraging its patient record snapshot application, which is available in many electronic health records (EHR) systems, to make referring patients to community-based organizations a simple—and efficient—process.  
“Eighty percent of a person’s overall health is the result of social, environmental, behavioral and lifestyle  factors,” said Mark McKinney, Hixny’s CEO, echoing thoughts he shared in a recent blog post. “And until now,  medical care providers addressing the other 20 percent haven’t had an easy way to help patients reach their  fullest health potential. Now they do.” 
Clinical providers can use Hixny’s application within their EHR to make referrals to Healthy Alliance and its  network of 500+ partners for help with everything from food insecurity to utility assistance to navigating  Medicaid benefits and much more. 
"Accessing and navigating social supports in the community needs to be easy for individuals who serve  community members. Our Referral Coordination Center is staffed with regional navigators who have a working  knowledge of programs and services in the communities we support and are dedicated to making sure  members get connected quickly and thoughtfully,” said Healthy Alliance’s CEO, Erica Coletti. 
Early results confirm that clinical providers need an easy way to access a referral tool and network of social and  behavioral services that doesn’t require them to navigate yet another technology application and allows them  to focus on providing great medical care and better supporting their patients. Since Hixny launched this  capability in March, 97 percent of referrals made through the platform were to the experts at Healthy Alliance’s  Referral Coordination Center, reinforcing that this collaboration takes away the guesswork around what social  resources are available within the community and assures clinicians that referrals are being robustly monitored  and managed. 
In the next phase of the project and collaborative effort, Hixny and Healthy Alliance are looking into ways to  make the process better for clinical providers that includes bringing together data from multiple sources for  outcomes measurement and looking toward interoperability options with other technology vendors. 
“The partnership between Hixny and Healthy Alliance is bringing together technology, services and data,” said  McKinney. “It’s making the right thing for patients, the easy thing for providers to do.”
About Hixny  
Hixny is the nonprofit electronic health information network (HIN) serving residents and the healthcare community in New  York’s 28 eastern counties north of New York City. Its secure technology allows people to contribute and use health records and the data they contain in real time, which improves consumers’ knowledge of their own records; ensures that providers  have the details they need to provide high-quality care; and forms the foundation of effective population- and community level health initiatives. Hixny is a nationally recognized leader in HIE technology innovation. 
About Healthy Alliance 
Healthy Alliance (Alliance for Better Health and its affiliates) connects the underserved to a growing network of  organizations – big and small – that provide services that are essential for a healthy life. Recognizing that health begins in  our communities, Healthy Alliance’s referral network and independent practice association (IPA) convene and collaborate  with community partners — from regional hospitals to local food pantries and everyone in between — to address social  needs (food insecurity, housing assistance, transportation needs, benefits navigation, and more) before they evolve into  serious and costly medical problems. With over 580 organizations spanning 22 counties in New York State, Healthy Alliance  works to provide all communities with consistent access to the resources they need to ensure every New Yorker has the  same opportunity to be healthy. 


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Bassett Research Institute Receives Grant to Investigate Telehealth in Rural Areas

This past January, Bassett Research Institute (BRI) launched an investigation surrounding health care access and the use of telemedicine within Bassett Healthcare Network. The project, funded by a $50,000 grant from the National Institute for Health Care Management (NIHCM) Foundation, is an extension of digital health research BRI started in 2021.

 

“When COVID hit, Bassett had to move all our Living Well programs online,” explains Kristin Pullyblank, nurse scientist, at Bassett’s Center for Rural Community Health, a part of BRI. “Then we saw a sudden shift in the participants’ demographics—they tended to be younger and more educated. That sets off alarm bells for us. Are we leaving those other people behind?”

 

Last year, Pullyblank and Wendy Brunner, director of the Center for Rural Community Health, surveyed hundreds of patients to learn more. They asked about their experiences with telehealth, as well as about related issues like home internet access and the challenges they faced during the pandemic.

 

The results gave them a rough outline of what they hope to learn, but also raised more questions for investigation. For example, their survey data found that over 40 percent of participants reported that it was difficult to pay for essentials like food, housing, or medicine during the pandemic. That seems significant—but why?

 

“How does this financial hardship connect with telehealth?” wonders Brunner. “Is it a matter of not being able to afford the technology? Or maybe people who are emotionally drained by financial stress don’t have energy to figure out how to set up a telehealth visit in their home. Or maybe they are unrelated.”

 

The NIHCM grant allows them to dig deeper to hopefully tease out some of these whys. “With the grant, we’re following up the survey with key informant interviews,” says Brunner. “We are following up with patients who gave surprising answers and saying: ‘Tell us more about this answer. What does it really mean?’”

 

These concerns are not unique to Bassett. Telemedicine has grown common in many health systems during the pandemic. Researchers throughout the country are concerned with making sure patients don’t fall through the cracks. As a result, besides helping Bassett better serve its patients, BRI will be contributing to this growing body of research.

 

“NIHCM is interested in policy and practice implications,” says Pullyblank. “We hope, for the good of our patients, that our work has a null finding—that these differences in telehealth use are just preferences and no one is being underserved. But if we find that age, or broadband access, or finances, or concerns about data security, or any number of other factors is impacting access, it could have large implications for us and for rural health care as a whole.”

 

“We are really honored to be selected and to get this grant,” says Brunner. “This is what’s really satisfying about doing research. You observe a pattern and start to wonder what caused it. That turns into an idea about how to learn more. Then you find others at a funding agency who are just as interested. In the end you satisfy your curiosity, partner with others, and solve problems.”

 

To learn more about this and other studies happening at Bassett Research Institute, visit the BRI webpage. If you struggle with a chronic condition, visit our Living Well page to learn about that support program.


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Unmasking Venice Film Series Begins June 24 at Fenimore Art Museum with "The Comfort of Strangers"


  

The film is free to the public with a recommended donation of $5.00.

  

 

Film: The Comfort of Strangers

Friday, June 24, 7:00 p.m.

Fenimore Art Museum, Cooperstown, NY, Auditorium

Free admission. (Recommended donation: $5.00)

 

 

Cooperstown, New York – Fenimore Art Museum is thrilled to announce the "Unmasking Venice Film Series", a series of free film screenings showcasing the many sides of this uniquely cinematic 'city of water.' The series complements the Museum’s current exhibition Unmasking Venice: American Artists in the City of Water on view through September 5The introductory film, "The Comfort of Strangers," is a riveting, ravishing, darkly romantic tour-de-force, featuring sensational performances by Christopher Walken, Hellen Mirren, Rupert Everett, and Natasha Richardson. The film will be screened on Friday, June 24 at 7:00 p.m. and is free to the public, with a recommended donation of $5.00. Light concessions will be provided. This film is recommended for mature audiences only (rated R​). More films to be announced shortly.

 

Generous support for this project provided by Art Bridges.

 

Fenimore Art Museum is located at 5798 State Route 80, less than one mile from the center of Cooperstown. For more information visit FenimoreArt.org. 

 

Film Synopsis: A beautiful British couple (Rupert Everett and Natasha Richardson) are working on their relationship while on holiday in Venice when they fall under the spell of an older couple (Christopher Walken and Helen Mirren) who draw them into the sinister web of their opulent, old-world palazzo. Written by Nobel laureate Harold Pinter and directed by Paul Schrader (American Gigolo, First Reformed), this seductive, unsettling romantic thriller is imbued with an atmosphere of sumptuous dread by elegant gliding tracking shots filmed in location in Venice's most evocative locations.


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Fenimore Art Museum Presents a Three–Day Workshop: The Life and Landscapes of Susan Fenimore Cooper


Fenimore Art Museum Presents a Three–Day Workshop: The Life and Landscapes of Susan Fenimore Cooper

  

The workshop explores Susan Fenimore Cooper’s life and some of the specific landscapes around Cooperstown that informed her vision of landscape.

 

The program is led by noted researcher and professor Rochelle Johnson.

  

 

 

Three-Day Workshop: The Life and Landscapes of Susan Fenimore Cooper

Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday • June 28, 29, & 30 • 5:30–7:30 p.m.
Registration is required, visit FenimoreArt.org’s calendar or go directly to Eventbrite.com.
$160 Members; $185 Non-Members

 

 

Cooperstown, New York – Fenimore Art Museum in Cooperstown presents The Life and Landscapes of Susan Fenimore Cooper—a three-day workshop with noted scholar Rochelle L. Johnson on June 28, 29, and 30 from 5:30–7:30 p.m. The workshop explores Cooper’s life and some of the specific landscapes around Cooperstown that informed her vision of landscape. In each session, we will discuss aspects of her life experience, read selections from her writing, and discuss how her writing reflects her place-based understanding.

Cooper was a naturalist, author, artist, and the daughter of James Fenimore Cooper. Her 1850 book Rural Hours was the first major work of environmental nonfiction written by a woman. 

The three-day workshop takes place June 28, 29, & 30 (Tuesday–Thursday) from 5:30–7:30 p.m. The first class will be held on the Fenimore’s lake-view terrace and the other two days will be held at various locations around Cooperstown. Moderate walking required. Adults and teenagers are welcome. Registration is required: $160 Members; $185 Non-Members. To register, visit FenimoreArt.org’s calendar or go directly to Eventbrite.com. (Direct link: tinyurl.com/bdetz7h5)


About Rochelle L. Johnson

Rochelle L. Johnson is a leading scholar of Susan Fenimore Cooper and, with her co-editor, has made Cooper’s environmental writings available to today’s readers. The current president of the Thoreau Society and a past president of the Association for the Study of Literature and Environment, her work has been supported by grants from several organizations, including the National Endowment for the Humanities. She is professor of American literature and environmental humanities, and director of the honors program, at the College of Idaho. Her lecture is from a book in progress. Learn more at: https://www.rochelleljohnson.com.


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Musicians of Ma'alwyck Concert Thursday

SCHOHARIE - The Old Stone Fort, a Schoharie icon, was constructed in 1772 as a High Dutch Reformed Church. Throughout its 250-year history, the fort has acted as a place of worship, a Sunday school, an armory, a Revolutionary War fort, and finally, a museum dedicated to preserving and presenting the rich history of Schoharie County and its people.

On Thursday, June 23, at 7 p.m. the Musicians of Ma’alwyck will lead a celebration of the 250th anniversary of the stone church’s construction with a performance of “Buxtehude’s Daughter” cantat

Proceeding the performance, Schoharie County Historian Ted Shuart will present a brief history of the 18th-century church and give insights into its connections to the Schoharie Reformed Church, the host for the evening’s celebration.

Owned by Schoharie County, the Old Stone Fort Museum is a collaborative venture with the Schoharie County Historical Society. It has operated as a museum since 1889, after receiving its official charter from the state of New York.

Musicians of Ma’alwyck is a professional chamber music ensemble in residence at the Schuyler Mansion New York State Historic Site and at Schenectady County Community College. They were founded in 1999 by violinist Ann-Marie Barker Schwartz who is also the director of the ensemble.

Their June 23 performance of the comedic “Buxtehude’s Daughter” cantata helps show that although Johann Sebastian Bach was never much of a comedian, his legacy offers some chances for laughter.

In 1705, Bach took a 250-mile walk to meet one of his heroes, fellow organist-composer Dietrich Buxtehude. He wanted to hear the soon-to-retire Buxtehude’s music, and apply to fill his soon vacant position. One of the requirements for winning the post, however, was to marry Buxtehude’s daughter, Anna. After meeting Anna, Bach, along with many other would-be candidates for the position, withdrew his application. “Buxtehude’s Daughter,” with music by Thomas F. Savoy and lyrics by Byron Nilsson, turns this legendary meeting into a hilarious impasse, suggesting that Johann and Anna were too particular in their demands to be suited for one another.

This Musicians of Ma’alwyck production features Yvonne Trobe singing the role of Anna, Charles F. Schwartz as Bach, and lyricist Nilsson as a bemused Buxtehude. The accompanying ensemble comprises Ann-Marie Barker Schwartz, violin and leader; Norman Thibodeau, flute; and André Laurent O’Neil, cello, with guest artist Malcolm Kogut at the keyboard.

Admission to the concert is a suggested $10 donation. Space is limited, so you are encouraged to reserve your spot for the performance by calling the Old Stone Fort Museum at (518) 295-7192.

This project has been made possible with funds from the Statewide Community Regrants Program, a program of the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature and administered in Columbia County by the Greene County Council on the Arts d.b.a. CREATE Council for the Arts.

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SUNY Cobleskill Fighting Tigers Weekly Recap

The National Fastpitch Coaches Association (NFCA) announced that six members of the SUNY Cobleskill softball team have been named to the 2021-22 Easton/NFCA All-American Scholar-Athlete Team. Easton/NFCA All-American Scholar-Athletes must have earned a minimum grade point average of at least 3.50 on a 4.0 scale in order to receive recognition. The Fighting Tiger team members earning Easton/NFCA All-American Scholar-Athletes Team recognition were: senior Noelle Bisignano, Cranston, R.I., Cranston High School East High School, junior Ashley Covert, Castile, N.Y., Letchworth High School, senior Maya Davies, Binghamton, N.Y., Chenango Valley High School/Onondaga Community College, junior Emma Duarte, Dighton, Mass., senior Jillian Nitchman, Ballston Spa, N.Y., and sophomore Abigail Scheurich, Oxford, Conn., Nonnewaug High School. 

The Fighting Tiger Athletic Department will be hosting a full slate of youth summer camps this year beginning with the: Tiger Tails activity camp from Jun 27th thru July 1st, followed by the Boys & Gils Youth Summer Basketball Camp from July 11th thru July 14th, the Boys Varsity Basketball Skills Camp from July 25th thru July 28th and the Girls Youth Basketball Camp from August 5th thru August 7th. For more camp information regarding cost, registration information and contact information, interested parties can go on-line to the camp section of the Fighting Tiger website at: fightingtigers.cobleskill.edu/registrations/#!/camps/ 

 The American Baseball Coaches Association (ABCA) announced that three members of the SUNY Cobleskill baseball team have been named to the ABCA/Rawlings NCAA Division III Region 1 All-Region Team. Senior shortstop Eddy Garcia, Bronx, N.Y., World View High School, was named to the Division III Region 1 All-Region First Team while senior outfielder/designated hitter Samuel Gutierrez, Bayside, N.Y., Martin Van Buren High School/Queensborough Community College, and junior pitcher Wyatt Palmer, Camden, N.Y., Camden High School/Cayuga Community College, were both named to the Division III Region 1 All-Region Third Team. 

UPCOMING HOME CONTESTS 

Men’s Soccer vs. MCLA 9/1, Alfred State 9/10, Utica College 9/11, Paul Smith’s 9/27 

Women’s Soccer vs. SUNY Purchase 9/3, MCLA 9/10, SUNY Polytechnic Institute 10/1             

Volleyball vs. Utica University 9/7, SUNY Polytechnic Institute 10/13, SUNY Canton 10/15 

Men’s & Women’s Cross Country hosts Steven A. Warde Invitational 9/10  



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Ekphrasis Creative Writing Workshop In - Person at Bright Hill With Mark Blickley

Ekphrasis Creative Writing Workshop
In - Person
at Bright Hill
With Mark Blickley

June 24, 5pm-8pm
For Immediate Release
Contact: Beatrice Georgalidis, Executive Director
Treadwell, NY 

[Treadwell, NY] Bright Hill will offer the first ever Ekphrasis Creative Writing Workshop taught by master teaching artist Mark Blickley on Friday, June 24, 2022 from 5-8 pm in person at Bright Hill Literary Center, 94 Church Street, Treadwell NY 13846. A light supper will be served during break.

A few seats remain open; please email our administrative and production intern Maggie McCann at maggiemccann112800@gmail.com if you wish to register with your name, address and phone number. Registration will close Wednesday, June 22, 2022 at 5 PM.

Cost of the workshop is $50 - scholarships are available to those in need.
What is Ekphrasis creative writing? The word Ekphrasis translates to "description" in Greek and ekphrastic writing is a form of creative writing describing a work of art or visual image.

By imaginatively playing with a visual work of art, the writer can expand its meaning—not in terms of enlarging the original work, but in terms of offering more possibilities. By bringing two imaginations into conversation with one another—that of the visual artist and that of the writer—something new is born.
Unlike visual analysis, ekphrasis writing is interested in evoking or representing an image for its reader from outside of the framework or a mounted pedestal. The visual image can be a photograph, painting, collage, sculpture, drawing. By taking inspiration and source material from an image, the writer reconceives it through a written meditation that can be poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction or drama. Ekphrastic impulses can take a vast number of forms, as individual as each human being.
EACH WORKSHOP MEMBER SHOULD
 BRING ONE IMAGE...

...in any genre, that intrigues them. It doesn’t have to be a famous work of art—it can be a child’s drawing, a family photograph—whatever visual image has drawn you in. Please don’t bring an artwork or photograph that you’ve created. Through a series of discussions, examples and visual prompts, we shall all become literary ventriloquists that will allow visual imagery to speak. We can give voice to the artist who created the piece, or the characters in an artwork, but I believe most ekphrasis creative writing is rooted in a sort of self-interrogation.

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ANGELINO BILL RENAMES BRIDGE TO HONOR DELAWARE COUNTY VIETNAM WAR HERO LT. DOANE


Lt. Stephen H. Doane who died in Vietnam while
protecting the young men he was commanding.

 

Assemblyman Joseph Angelino (R,C,I-Norwich) saw his bill (A,9068-B/S.7903-B, Martucci) to honor fallen Lt. Stephen H. Doane in the Town of Walton pass the Legislature unanimously in both houses in the final stretch of session last week. The bill allows for a portion of the state highway system, the bridge over the West Branch Delaware River on State Route 206 between Delaware Street and Stockton Avenue, to be designated the “Lt. Stephen H. Doane Memorial Bridge.”

 

“’Greater love has no one than this: that someone lay down his life for his friends.’ Lt. Stephen H. Doane exemplified this kind of sacrifice; his heroic acts saved the young men he led that day in Vietnam,” said Angelino. “I hope the naming of this bridge offers some comfort to the remaining family members that Stephen will never be forgotten. I encourage those in Walton and all who pass over this bridge to learn about the heroism of Lt. Doane.”

 

“This is a fitting tribute to a man who exemplified what selfless service is,” said Town of Walton Supervisor Joseph M. Cetta.

 

“I would like to thank you and Sen. Martucci for all your hard work in getting the bridge in Walton dedicated to Lt. Stephen Doane. It means so much not just to his family but to the community of Walton. It is a job well done by you and we appreciate it very much,” Village of Walton Mayor Ed Snow

 

Lt. Doane was a resident of Walton, NY and a graduate of Walton Central School. On March 12, 1968, he graduated from the U.S. Army Infantry Officers Class as a Second Lieutenant. In March 1969, while serving as the platoon leader with Company B, 1st Battalion, 5th Infantry Regiment, 25th Infantry Division in Hau Nghia Provence in Vietnam, his company faced enemy forces as they were carrying out tactical operations. Many of his men were wounded and trapped by enemy crossfire, so much so that it would be difficult for another team to rescue these men.

 

Lt. Doane, in the midst of this attack, managed to crawl to the nearest enemy bunker to silence it. While wounded, he then moved onto the second bunker while carrying a live grenade. He successfully delivered the grenade to the enemy bunker, but also sacrificed his life in the action. He was 21 years old.

 

Lt. Doane’s actions saved many lives that day. For this heroism, he was posthumously awarded the military’s highest honor, the Medal of Honor, for his actions in the Vietnam War. He is the only Medal of Honor recipient from Delaware County. The citation from the US Military ends saying,

 

“Lt. Doane's supreme act enabled his company to rescue the trapped men without further casualties. The extraordinary courage and selflessness displayed by this officer were an inspiration to his men and are in the highest traditions of the U.S. Army.”

 

Lt. Doane has also been awarded a Silver Star for gallantry in action against an enemy of the United States and a Bronze Star for heroic service in a combat zone. He is buried at rest at the Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.


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Farm-to-Plate Camp Returns at SUNY Cobleskill This July

Written By Editor on 6/15/22 | 6/15/22


 

Day camp open to children ages 5 to 8

 

COBLESKILL, N.Y. – SUNY Cobleskill’s popular Children’s Farm-to-Plate Camp returns July 18 through 22, providing a week-long educational experience that highlights all of the pieces and processes of the modern food system. The businesses and processes used to deliver food from the farm to the plate will be explored in-depth with a focus on the ways in which food system design touches every part of our lives.

 

Campers will learn hands-on in the College’s state-of-the-art farm and food facilities while they delve into everything from animal and plant science activities to exciting food science, marketing, and culinary arts experiences.

 

Camp will be held daily from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., July 18 through 22. All-inclusive cost per child is $215. Open to children 5 to 8 years of age. Please visit www.cobleskill.edu/summercamp to register.

 

This is a joint project between SUNY Cobleskill’s Early Childhood Studies and Agricultural Business Management programs.


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