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SUNY COBLESKILL’S EMILY SATTERDAY NAC WOMEN’S BASKETBALL ROOKIE-OF-THE-WEEK

Written By Editor on 11/25/22 | 11/25/22


Waterville, Maine: The North Atlantic Conference (NAC) announced today that for the second consecutive week SUNY Cobleskill first-year player Emily Satterday, Latham, N.Y., Shaker High School, has been named the league’s NAC Women’s Basketball Rookie-of-the-Week for the week ending November 19, 2022. 

The Fighting Tiger center/forward posted a pair of double/doubles averaging 11.5 points, 12.0 rebounds, 2.5 assists and 1.0 steals per game while shooting 90.0% from the floor during the week as Cobleskill a split in two non-league games losing on the road to the Red Dragons of SUNY Oneonta on Thursday 66-53 in Oneonta, N.Y. then returning home on Saturday to defeat the visiting Bearcats of Baruch College 83-54 to improve to 2-3 overall on the year.  

In five games this season the Shaker High School alumnus has posted five double/doubles in points and rebounds averaging 12.2 points, 14.0 rebounds, 1.4 assist, 0.8 steals and 0.6 blocked shots per game while shooting 62.5% from the field by connecting on 25-of-40 shots on the year. 

Cobleskill will next be in action on Tuesday November 22 when they travel to North Adams, Mass. to meet the host Trailblazers of Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts (MCLA) in non-league action with tip-off at 7:00 p.m.  


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ANDRE STARKS NAMED SUNY COBLESKILL FIGHTING TIGER ATHLETE-OF-THE-WEEK


Cobleskill, N.Y.: The SUNY Cobleskill Athletic Department announced today that junior Andre Starks, Rochester, N.Y., Fairport High School/Corning Community College, a member of the men’s basketball team has been named the athletic program’s Fighting Tiger Athlete-of-the-Week for the week ending on November 20, 2022. 




The Fairport, N.Y native averaged 20.5 points, 3.5 rebounds, 2.5 assists and 2.0 steals per game while shooting 46.7% from the field including 45.5% from three-point range and 75.0% from the free throw line during the week as the Fighting Tigers a pair of non-conference contests during the week posting a 57-53 road win over the host Blazers of Elms College in Chicopee, Mass. on Thursday prior to dropping an 88-86 decision in overtime at home on Saturday to the visiting Cardinals of Plattsburgh State to move their overall record to 4-2 on the season.  

For the season thru six games Starks is averaging 12.5 points, 2.3 rebounds, 2.3 assists and 1.5 steals per game while shooting 35.3% from the field and 80.0% from the free throw line.  

Cobleskill will next be in action on Tuesday November 22 when they travel to New York, N.Y. to meet the Hawks of Hunter College for a pre-Thanksgiving meeting with tip-off at 6:00 p.m.  


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SUNY Proclaims Walkway as “Haudenosaunee Pathway of Pride” in Recognition of National Native American Heritage Month



COBLESKILL – SUNY Cobleskill President Marion Terenzio and Chief Diversity Officer Derwin Bennett today issued the below proclamation in recognition of Native American Heritage Month and the College’s physical placement on the ancestral lands of the Mohawk people. The proclamation officially names a main campus walkway as the “Haudenosaunee (ho-dee-no-SHOW-nee) Pathway of Pride,” a tribute to the member nations of the Iroquois/Haudenosaunee Confederacy.

The pathway from Vroman Hall to Frisbie Hall will be adorned with the flags of Native American nations and other markings and signage along the route. An unveiling event will be planned for the spring of 2023.



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SUNY COBLESKILL MEN’S BASKETBALL COMES BACK IN OVERTIME TO DEFEAT HUNTER COLLEGE 120-118

New York, N.Y.: The SUNY Cobleskill men’s basketball team came back from a nine-point deficit in overtime on Tuesday evening to post a 120-118 victory over the host Hawks of Hunter College in non-conference action. With the win Cobleskill is now 5-2 overall on the year to date while the Hawks fall to 1-4 overall on the season. 

Playing one of the top scoring offensive teams in the country the Fighting Tigers battled the high-flying up-tempo Hawk offense throughout the evening playing the home team to a 103-103 tie at the end of regulation. 

In the their second straight overtime contest, and third one this season, Cobleskill found themselves trailing Hunter 116-107 with 3:20 left when the Fighting Tigers finally stiffened defensively and outscoring their hosts 12-0 to take a 117-116 lead with 42 seconds left to play on a short jump shot by junior center Markel Jenkins, Elmira, N.Y., Elmira High School/Corning Community College, on an assist from junior guard Iziah Pigott, Brooklyn, N.Y., Urban Assembly High School/Dutchess Community College.  

After the Hawks regained the lead at 118-117, sophomore guard JaNyve Smith, Albany, N.Y., Bishop Maginn High School, tied the game by hitting a free throw with 22 seconds left. But missed his second free throw attempt giving the Hunters the ball speeding towards the Cobleskill basket at full speed when first-year swingman Jeremy Rosario, Colonie, N.Y., Colonie High School, stripped the ball from the home team and passed ahead to Smith who canned a jumper with three seconds remaining to give Cobleskill the lead at 120-118.  

Off the basket, the Hawks fired a long pass down court to senior guard Cormac Reilly, Trinity Pawling High School, who let fly a potential game winning three-pointer. However, Fighting Tiger senior forward Justin Feldman, Chester, N.Y., Chester High School/Orange Community College, was in position to block the shot at the buzzer to preserve the visitor’s comeback victory. 

Many Fighting Tigers contributed to the victory as JaNyve Smith led the team in scoring with 26 points to go with seven rebounds and four assists while junior guard Andre Starks, Rochester, N.Y., Fairport High School/Corning Community College, hit for 24 points and Iziah Pigott registered 16 points to go with nine assists, seven rebounds and five steals on the evening.  

Markel Jenkins posted his first double/double of the year with 13 points and 14 rebounds to go with four steals with Jeremy Rosario adding 16 points and two steals in a reserve role. First-year point guard Quanire Green, Albany, N.Y., Bishop Maginn High School, was also a factor in the win with 13 points, five assists, five rebounds and three steals in his first career start.    

Cobleskill will return to action on Wednesday November 30 when they travel to Newburgh, N.Y. for a non-league meeting with the Blue Knights of Mount Saint Mary’s College with tip-off scheduled for 7:00 p.m.  


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Message of Hope by Sister Chirya: Spiritual Energy Does Wonders


 

   soul conscious 8.jpg    God is always there.jpg Angel No one knows (4).jpg God is with me (2).jpg 
Illustrations: Brahma Kumaris

 

Spirituality is not separate from daily life. It is a study of spiritual principles that give us the right way of thinking, working and living.  Spiritual knowledge shows the right way to make this life into a refreshing and successful journey full of exploration. Without sitting in the vehicle of spiritual knowledge, I cannot make the journey.

 

A myth exists that someone who practices spirituality gets disconnected from the world, separates the self from people, leaves responsibilities or meditates all day long.   Spirituality is not about doing something or being someone. It is about being the embodiment of what we truly originally are - peace, joy, love, bliss, purity, power, wisdom. These qualities are found in the soul, the most valuable resource in our possession,  located right behind the eyes within the brain.  Spirituality is about recovering these qualities, being with people, working towards our goals, but taking care that every thought, word and deed is through remembering our eternal identity of being souls, separate from the body and brain. Spirituality means I, the soul, an eternal being of light, use my original qualities of the soul when in action in daily practical life. 

Recognize, Use and Be this valuable resource.  In this spiritual consciousness, nurture the soul daily through meditation and spiritual study. Cook and eat in a meditative state of mind and have ethical ways of working that energize the soul.  Being spiritual means treasuring every moment you have. Time waits for no one. Yesterday is history. Tomorrow, a mystery. Today is a gift - it’s called the presentPeace and rest will flourish in the soul when we learn to slow down our thoughts and create moments of silence in the mind. 

Spirituality means to meditate or take one hour in the early morning to charge the soul with Godly wisdom and goodness, and then use that power in your professional and personal life.  God is the most complete and perfect personality that exists, but not a physical personality, a spiritual one. God is one personality without any weaknesses, and no one else is more specialty and virtue-filled than the Father.  This is the reason He is a living energy, a personality, who is remembered and loved the most by each and everyone all over the world.  

Spiritual energy is a dynamic force that does wonders.  Experience “Karankaravanhar, God is doing and getting everything done”.  Discover the relationship and language of the Supreme and see life with other eyes. Our task is to experience the impact of God’s company helping us to create a strong inner stage, colouring us with virtues and powers and taking us beyond concerns of this world. When we experience ourselves to be sustained by God, it is easy to keep a happy face and to share that light and might with others.  Spirituality brings mankind to a renewed and healthy position and takes us in a new direction to create a peaceful world.

Contact: Yvonne Chirya Risely   bkchirya@gmail.com   chirya.risely@peacevillageretreat.org

PV Bookshop link:  https://www.peacevillageretreat.org/all-books.html 


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A Historic View of Vintage Sharon Springs, NY Postcards (November 28th)

Written By Editor on 11/22/22 | 11/22/22

Join us on Zoom - November 28th at 7PM

A Historic View of Vintage Sharon Springs, NY Postcards

Though little more than an afterthought these days, from the 1890s through the 1920s, postcards were by far the most popular means of communication.  Many of the postcards produced during this "golden age" can be considered works of art, when postcard photographers traveled the nation - coast to coast - snapping photographs of busy street scenes, documenting local landmarks, and taking photographic portraits of locals only too happy to pose for the camera. This fascinating history of Sharon Springs, New York showcases more than 200 of the best vintage postcards available; these images, printed as postcards and sold in general stores across the State, can teach us important aspects of yesteryear that we may not find in history books.


As we take a tour of Sharon Springs by looking through vintage postcards, you will get a glimpse of its picturesque surroundings, unrivaled Springs, baths, Sanatoriums, hotels, rooming and boarding houses, and the proximity to the large cities, offered the public a summer and winter health resort, unsurpassed in the United States.


By the mid-1800s the Springs had become world famous. Sharon Springs reached its peak as a health spa in the 1920s when it boasted some 60 hotels and boarding houses which accommodated over 10,000 guests.  Sharon Springs has hosted many of the rich and famous including U.S. Presidents Martin Van Buren, the Vanderbilts, Ulysses S. Grant, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D Roosevelt, the Van Rensselaer family, Charles Dickens, James Fennimore Cooper, Oscar Wilde, the Macys of NYC, movie producer Steven Spielberg, and Martha Stewart.


Collected and interpreted by Ron Ketelsen, historian and President of the Sharon Springs Historical Society, the images will be a delightful trip down memory lane to those who recall the historic scenes and will bring an important period of the village's history to life for visitors and members of the younger generation.


Afterward, we'll have a Q&A with Ron — any and all questions about Sharon Springs are welcomed and encouraged!



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Fatal UTV Accident in Delaware County

Written By Editor on 11/21/22 | 11/21/22

On Sunday, November 20, 2022, Delaware County Sheriff’s Deputies investigated a fatal UTV accident that occurred on Carcass Brook Road in the Town of Tompkins. 

Initial investigation showed that 45-year-old William Youhas, of New Jersey was operating a side-by-side Utility Vehicle on Carcass Brook Road when he lost control of the vehicle, causing the UTV to overturn.  William Youhas was partially ejected from the vehicle during the crash, resulting in the UTV overturning and pinning Mr. Youhas between the vehicle and the roadway.   

Unfortunately, lifesaving efforts of the first responders were not successful and William Youhas was pronounced deceased at the scene.  

The following agencies assisted with and responded to this incident:  Trout Creek Fire Department, Walton Fire and EMS, Lifenet Helicopter Service and the New York City Department of Environmental Protection Police.  


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Legal Notice of Shoveling Bids - Windham Fire District


Notice is hereby given that the Windham Fire District. #1 of the Town of Windham, State of New York, seeks bids for the shoveling of snow from the walkways and area around and about the Windham Fire House for the 2022-2023 Winter Season. Sealed bids will be opened on Wednesday December 21, 2022, at 6:00 PM at the Windham Town Hall, 371 St Rt 296, Hensonville, NY 12439, in the Town of Windham, State of New York. 

Sealed bids can be submitted at the meeting or mailed before December 16, 2022, to Windham Fire District #1 PO Box 91 Hensonville, NY 12439

By order of the Board of Fire Commissioners of the Windham Fire District #1.


Dated: November 16, 2022

Board of Fire Commissioners

Windham Fire Dist.#1

371 St Rt 296

            Hensonville, NY  12439






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LEGAL NOTICE - Windham Fire District


NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Annual Election of the Windham Fire District No. 1 will be held at the Windham Town Hall, 371 State Route 296, Hensonville, New York, on the 13th day of December, 2022, from 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM on said day, during which time the polls will be open for the receipt of ballots for the election of a Fire District Commissioner for the term of five years commencing January 1, 2023 and expiring December 31, 2027. 


Dated: November 16, 2022  


Board of Fire Commissioners

Windham Fire Dist.#1

371 St Rt 296

                                            Hensonville, NY  12439



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Legal Notice of Snowplow Bids - Windham Fire District



Notice is hereby given that the Windham Fire District. #1 of the Town of Windham, State of New York, seeks bids for the plowing of snow from the parking areas around and about the Windham Fire House and the Hensonville Fire House for the 2022-2023 Winter Season. Sanding and/or salting will also be required. A Qualified Contractor must be fully insured. Sealed bids will be opened on Monday, December 21, 2022, at 6:00 PM at the Windham Town Hall, 371 St Rt 296, Hensonville, NY 12439, in the Town of Windham, State of New York. 

Sealed bids can be submitted at the meeting or mailed before December 16, 2022, to Windham Fire District #1 PO Box 91 Hensonville, NY 12439

By order of the Board of Fire Commissioners of the Windham Fire District #1.


Dated: November 16, 2022

Board of Fire Commissioners

Windham Fire Dist.#1

371 St Rt 296

            Hensonville, NY  12439






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Light Shines Through the Snow at the Mountaintop Interfaith Community Thanksgiving Service

Written By Editor on 11/18/22 | 11/18/22


There was a beautiful light dusting of snow last Tuesday night as people from the mountaintop community entered the historic Hunter Synagogue. Faith leaders from around the mountaintop hosted the first indoor thanksgiving celebration in three years, reviving the beloved tradition of songs, inspirational readings, and wisdom from the ages.

The Thanksgiving service began with around sixty people braving the first snow of the year in the beautiful setting of the historic Hunter Synagogue. This pristine Queen Anne style synagogue with elaborate interior woodwork constructed between 1909 and 1914 is listed in the National Register of Historic Places



Thirty years ago, the Mountain Top Interfaith Community was formed to bring people of all faiths together on the mountaintop, striving to build an interfaith community on the values of trust, faith and the belief that together we can build a better world.

Eight Faith Groups were represented, each with a unique and an inspirational message.  Songs and hymns were sung.  Prayers, blessing and inspiring readings set the tone for a joyful reminder of what is possible when we come together in peace, love and common purpose.

The theme of gratitude and outreach defined the evening as each speaker brought us wisdom from their tradition. In a world filled with such discord and violence, there is a transformative way to heal.  Look to the light within and look to the light in your neighbor’s heart. Hold together and change will come when we have the courage to unlock our true natures though giving and compassion.  We are all part of and stewards of our larger community. 

We were pleased to welcome our newest member, Pastor Ivan Kaszczak of St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Church in Jewett.  He thanked the community for its strong support of the Ukrainian people here in the US and in Ukraine. He reminded us of how important it is to light the flame of hope and unity amongst all people of goodwill and what that means to those in peril. To know in the darkest hours that a light still shines. 

The Presenters:

Carol Slutzky-Tenerowicz, Hunter Synagogue, 

Father Jay Atherton/Father. Kyle, Sacred Heart-Immaculate Conception Parish

Cathy Farrell, Sacred Heart-Immaculate Conception Parish

Greg Lubow, Hunter Synagogue

Barbara Swanson, Church of All Angels

Rev. Peggy Fabrizio, Kaaterskill United Methodist Church

Sr. Irene Miller, Peace Village

Platte Clove Community

Janet Reale, Dharma Teacher Order/Vietnamese Zen

Pastor Ivan Kaszczak, St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Church

Service is the underlying principle that guides our actions.  Annual Offerings were collected and will go to a fund, administered by the Wellness Rx Charitable Foundation.  The money will be used to assist mountaintop folks with emergency heating needs throughout the long winter 

The generosity of the group far exceeded all expectations, with over $2,700 collected from those assembled!

The Wellness Rx Charitable Trust focuses on helping the poor, and anyone who is immediately in need of assistance.  The Rx Charitable Trust will administer the emergency heating fund.  Once a connection is made with a potential recipient, an evaluation of their needs and financial status is made and recorded confidentially.  Once approved, the Trust contacts the service provider, on behalf of the recipient.

If you were unable to attend but would like to participate, checks can also be made out to Mountaintop Interfaith Community and mailed to PO Box 139, Tannersville, NY 12485.

We would like to thank Jay and Joe at WPRX for their continued support of all good causes on the mountaintop and Matt, editor of this paper who is always ready to spread the word to the community he serves.

The Mountaintop Interfaith Community mission is to inspire the cooperation of all faith groups on the mountaintop by promoting harmony, understanding, and collaboration in the communities we serve. By working together while recognizing the common threads of all faiths, we will create a vibrant, engaged community of friends and neighbors.  https://mountaintopinterfaithcommunity.org/index.html



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Editorial: Happy Birthday Nick Juried

Written By Editor on 11/17/22 | 11/17/22



The date of the paper makes this message a day late (or if you're reading the digital edition-- on time!). Our team would like to extend our best wishes and say happy birthday to our area's guardian angel, Nick Juried! Last week we had the unveiling of the plaque at the Middleburgh Railroad Museum at the newly-christened Nicholas J. Juried Park. Mr. Juried played an essential role in the museum's opening last year. He also played the key role in Middleburgh's pandemic relief program that aided business during the darkest stage of the pandemic.

I could write all day about Nick's accomplishments-- especially his skill at working with others. However, I do want to state that we'll be covering a series of future grant projects that Mr. Juried is involved with. Simply put, if there's something good happening in a local non-profit, there's a good chance that Nick Juried is playing a key role.

For 93, the man is using his skills and abilities to do good for his childhood home. For that, we hope to do an annual message for his next 93 birthdays!

***
A special reminder that we take the weeks of Thanksgiving and Christmas for our families! We do not have an edition next week due to Thanksgiving and we do not have an edition on December 30th. Our next edition is December 2nd! We all wish you and yours a happy, safe, and wonderful Thanksgiving as we consider all of the good of creation.

Thank you to everyone on our team and our growing list of loyal readers and partners that allow us to put out our paper each week!

-- Matthew Avitabile
Publisher

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Decorating with Native Greenery at Landis

Written By Editor on 11/16/22 | 11/16/22

Date: Nov 26, 2022

Time: 9:00 AM - noon





Nothing says the holidays like the look and smell of gorgeous greenery styled into wreaths and swags. If you’ve always wanted to learn the secrets of creating holiday decorations using native greenery, join us from 9:00 AM to noon for a make-and-take adventure. Registration fee includes greenery, ribbon and decorations; bring any additional decorative elements you’d like to place in your creations. Click here to register.



Instructor: Floral designer Donna Vincent

Location: Library (adjacent to the Greenhouse)

Registration: Members: $35/person; non-members: $45/person


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Bushel Presents “After the Fall Comes Love; or The Shadow Society,” a new exhibition curated by Haley Hughes

Written By Editor on 11/15/22 | 11/15/22


DELHI, NY— Bushel is pleased to present “After the Fall Comes Love; or The Shadow Society,” a multidisciplinary group exhibition, curated by artist Haley Hughes, that seeks to create, in common cause, a truthful space of love and reconciliation within our trepidatious era. The exhibition runs from November 19 through December 10, 2022, with an opening reception on Saturday, November 19, 5–8 pm. There will also be an open house with the artists on Sunday, November 20, 2–5 pm. The exhibition and events are free and open to the public. Bushel is located at 106 Main Street, ground floor, in Delhi, NY. 

This exhibition brings together thirty artists whom Hughes has collaborated with, or had the fortune to come to know through various arts communities over the last 20-plus years in New York City, California, and beyond: Dove Hays, Blanka Amezkua, Simon Lee, Angela Conant w/ text by Kendra Sullivan, J.Stoner Blackwell, Angel Favorite, Richie Adomako, Eugenia Chun, Monica Palma, William Powida, Julia Samuels, Zeljko McMullen, Kyp Malone, Tatiana Kronberg, Lilah Friedland, Holly Overton, Dan Wooldridge, Dominika Ksel, Eddy Segal, Tianna Kennedy, Muir Hughes, Hope Gangloff, Chris Fox, Alex Egan, Garrett Devoe, Erin O’Donnell, Jesse Karch, Julia Lee, and Haley Hughes. 

The artists in the exhibition address the existential questions of our time: What is a home? What is community? What responsibility do we have to the future, what kind of future? The curator Haley Hughes states, “There is a magic that lives in creating a place for people to feel held, grow, lighten, laugh, darken, and mourn collectively. In this show I wish to present a four-dimensional accounting of our time where art and care reside in LOVE and NOT capital!”

This exhibition is the third in a new series of Bushel-alumni-curated shows, proposed by Haley Hughes who had a solo exhibition in Bushel’s old space at 84 Main Street in Fall 2017. Bushel-alumni-curated shows are exhibitions and happenings proposed by artists who have exhibited at Bushel in the past, with a single constraint: to use the opportunity to invite or engage at least one other artist or maker who has not yet been part of a Bushel program. 

Born in Paradise, California, 1984, Haley Hughes is a self-taught artist whose paintings act as a psycho-historical archive as well as a call to action. The center of her philosophy and the aesthetic of her work is to address the crisis we face with immediacy, by assessing the state of our shared humanity by subjecting racial/social/economic and environmental injustice to humanist investigation. Hughes’ work has been exhibited in numerous venues including PS 122, Elizabeth Art Foundation Project Space, and Sunview Luncheonette, in New York City; Watermill Center on Long Island; and Scope Art Show in New York and Miami Beach, Florida. Her work has been reviewed in Art Forum and the Village Voice, and published in the NationWallpaper, and Huffington Post. Special commissions, acquisitions, and residencies have taken place at the Debt Collective, Public Bank, Oberlin College Allen Art Museum, and OverPass Projects.

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