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Annual Car Show Seeking Vendors

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 7/3/24 | 7/3/24

STAMFORD –   The 45th annual Stamford Rotary Club Antique Auto and Craft Show set for July 7 at  Rexmere Park in Stamford is seeking vendors. Spaces are $20 if reserved by June 28. To reserve space contact Heidi at 518-577-4106 or Hpickett67@gmail.com of Richard Popp at 607-437-3155.

The annual car show is back at its original spot in Rexmere Park, located at 159 West Main St., Stamford. The show runs from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. and features music, entertainment, crafts and door prizes. Helen's Little Kitchen is the exclusive food vendor.

General admission is $3, with children under 12 free. 

There will be judging for a People's Choice Award, places l1-10, Rotarian Award, Longest Distance under your own power and the Oldest Vehicle. Entry fee at the gate is $12.


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Buffalo Resident Arrested for Driving on Suspended License

COLCHESTER – Today, Sheriff Craig S. DuMond announced the arrest of a Buffalo NY resident for driving with a suspended New York State Driver’s license.

On Friday night, June 7th, 2024, Sheriff’s Deputies observed a vehicle traveling on State Highway 17 in the Town of Colchester, at 87 mph in a posted 55 mph zone. Upon conducting a traffic stop, Deputies identified the driver of the vehicle as 42-year-old Alexy Ruiz of Buffalo, NY. A check of Ruiz’s driver’s license revealed that his driving privileges were suspended in the State of New York.   

Deputies subsequently arrested Ruiz for Aggravated Unlicensed Operation of a Motor Vehicle in the Third Degree, an unclassified misdemeanor, as well as Unlicensed Operator and Speed in 55 mph zone, all violations of the New York State vehicle and traffic law. 

Ruiz was released on an appearance ticket and Traffic Summonses and was directed to appear in the Town of Colchester Court at a later date to answer the charges.


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Art in the Catskills - Art Up Gallery Recurrent Exhibition


GG Stankiewicz, Denise Corley, and Tom Fitzgibbons at the ‘Recurrent’ opening reception at Art Up gallery 



By Robert Brune

MARGARETVILLE — As Art Up gallery passes their first year anniversary of opening in Margaretville, they continue to draw fascinating artists to their art space in the Catskills. With the growing number of opening receptions, the owners of Art Up have wisely chosen not to compete with the Saturday schedule and held their second Friday evening opening exhibition this season. A light sprinkle of rain didn’t stop patrons and supporters of the arts from attending in great numbers. GG Stankiewicz, Denise Corely, and Tom Fitzgibbons are the featured artists who all bring a lifetime of tremendous skill and character to this exhibition. 

GG Stankiewicz

GG Stankiewicz grew up in Rhode Island and moved to New York City to pursue her art career. She attended the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University in Boston, MA where she earned a combined degree, a Fine Arts and Bachelor of Science in Art Education. GG completed her art studies by achieving a Master of Fine Arts Degree at the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, Rhode Island. In addition to her art practice, she served as a high school art teacher for the NYC Department of Education for twenty-seven years. GG has co-founded artist-run organizations: SONYA (South of the Navy Yard Artists, Brooklyn, NY) and WBA (West Branch Artists, Walton, NY). In June 2022, GG established her art studio in Delhi, New York and began exhibiting her work in the Catskill Region. 

Stankiewicz found teaching very rewarding but has firmly decided to dedicate her time to creating artwork at this point in her life since moving up to Delaware County full-time in 2022. This transition to living upstate was a challenge for her, as she explains why she makes such a great effort to get out to as many art openings as possible, “Coming here two years ago was the hardest thing for me.” Not knowing many people, Stankiewicz wanted to support the galleries that she suggests are a vital economic driver for upstate NY and become familiar with the community. 

As far as the ‘Recurrent’ exhibition, Stankiewicz feels as though the commonality of the work between all three artists participating involves contour lines and light. Here she describes her work, “The outside environments of places where I have lived or journeyed have always influenced my work. Colors, lines, shapes, textures, and patterns experienced in these varied landscapes manifest themselves as gestural marks, pigment pools, and interwoven layers of old with new and forgotten with found. I collect organic and non-organic materials that behave as artifactual reminders forging a memory connection to specific times and places. They are the inspiration for imagery and content in my artwork that is a compilation of visual journaling, painting, papermaking, collaging, printmaking and sculpture. My process involves working with various media while referencing discovered objects, memory, photo documentation, field guides and global art stories.”

Tom Fitzgibbons

Upon meeting Fitzgibbons at the opening reception at Art Up, he lets people know up front that he doesn’t feel like he is an artist. While Fitzgibbons spent years as an electrical engineer, he shares his past with us that led him to participating in the ‘Redcurrants’ exhibition, “ After running a small business in NYC that created Information Systems for clinical laboratories in many states, I was happy to retire and continued making my odd light art.” Fitzgibbons grew up surrounded by members of his family emersed in the arts in NYC. So, while he might be considered an outsider artist with no formal education in the arts, he and his wife (Denise Corely, also in this exhibition) own the Icebox gallery in Williamsburg Brooklyn. Fitzgibbons shares a bit about the Icebox Gallery, “For several years now we have opened the Icebox4 Salon and made it available to mostly underrepresented NYC artists. Icebox4 does not charge commissions or hanging fees. 100% goes to the artist. Curating has been work but also a joy to see up close the top-quality art produced around NYC and to talk with the artists and gallerists who attend our shows. Icebox4 provides a place to see and discuss art without traditional gallery pressures.” Fitzgibbon is clearly very knowledgeable in his work as he combines his skills for electrical manufacturing and passion for the arts. He may refer to his pieces as ‘odd light art,” but they are so carefully crafted with elegant shapes and tempered light weaving through each work of art with the most trained eye for positive and negative spacing. 

Denise Corely

The connection of Corely finding her way to show at Art Up goes back to the 1970’s when she and Gary Mayer (co-owner of Art Up) went to art school together at Wayne State University in Detroit. Last year, they were reunited because Corely had a solo exhibition at Diamond Hollow Bookstore in Andes.   “Many of the Detroit artists moved to New York in the early 1980's. There was a little cluster of former Detroiters in Williamsburg in the late 1970's and 80's. We were considered "pioneers" of the Williamsburg "Artist in Residence" art community. Everyone eked out a living doing odd jobs, construction, restaurant work or being an artist assistant- it was tough times in a tough neighborhood.” Williamsburg nowadays is a mecca for artists which has evolved beyond all expectations. It is a great privilege to have such a magnificent abstract artist take time away from her life in the city to share her amazing work here in Delaware County. 

Borrowing a statement made by Corely about her exhibition here in upstate NY, last year best describes her art and motivation, “My sensibilities prefer physicality.
The press molded paper- packing materials could be thought of as the space between things. In some ways in my early explorations of these materials, I was thinking of them as curved surfaces of space-time. Energies that are stretching and shrinking space, matter and density and magnetism shaping space, like what we see isn’t really what is. I think about ideas of stacking of electrons and atoms geometrically like buildings and architecture made of repeating forms but then there is fractal geometry that creates seemingly organic shapes that are really just different scales just like nature.” For a most impressive glance at the life and career of Corely, see artwork archive: www.denisecorley.com 

Art Up is at 746 Main St, Binnekill Square, Margaretville, NY. Recurrent is on view through June 30 ~ Fri – Sun each weekend 11 am – 4 pm 


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A Conversation About: what a year for roses!

By Jean Thomas

I am by no means a successful rosarian. I am host to a reluctant gang of individualists. Once in a while I can nurse a special named variety along for a couple of years before it commits herbicide. I still mourn the yellow-flowering, licorice-scented “Julia Child” rose that hung in gamely for three years before failing to survive one winter. What remains is a rocky area I donated to the wild roses some people call “Dog Roses.” I love these little guys. They’re pink, with five petals, not those white clustery bandits you see colonizing pastures. They’re gentle, too. The thorns are politely sharp, and the rose hips are pretty in the fall. They want to spread, but are easily managed. They don’t make orderly shrubs, but sort of sprawl and drape themselves over things. Mine live between some big lichen covered rocks. And this year they are glorious.

I also have a white multiflora (domesticated) rose. It’s about eight feet tall and persists no matter what happens. It’s crowded with clusters of small white blooms that show a blush of pink as buds and again when they start to drop their petals. These have sharper thorns, but they’re so outstanding on their trellis that I brave the pain to tie them up and trim them when they get untidy. This rose has a name, and I hope to find the tag one day. I don’t think I’d dare try to duplicate the success, but I’d like to be on more of a first name basis.

I have another rose, this one pink, that survived the year when I tried several so-called “antique” roses. These have histories going back to the renaissance, and elaborate names of (usually) French nobility. Most of them crapped out in my lowbrow garden, but this pink one hung in grimly. I decided to give it some tough love and moved it from the formal bed to what I call the “tulies.” This is plant purgatory. Still tended, but with a more relaxed attitude.  Well, this rose has found its niche. It now thrives among runaway asparagus and guerilla spirea. It sends up pretty vertical stems that look furry, and the leaves have the same texture. It spreads itself into any spare space it thinks viable, and even has to be pushed back occasionally. Individual blooms look like scoops of cherry ice cream, and I call her “Madame,” until I find her name tag. She looks like she’s ready to decorate a prom all by herself.

The last, and once least, is my teenager rose. About fifteen years old, this started life as a supermarket miniature rose bought on impulse and planted in the “tulies” on the edge of a drainage ditch. It cheerfully came back for a dozen years, peeking out from the perimeter of the garden. A few years ago I decided to reward such a persistent attitude and moved it across the ditch to the former asparagus bed. The new inhabitants of the bed were miscellaneous bulbs and perennials. Are you familiar with the play “Little Shop of Horrors?” Well, I now call this plant Audrey and weed very carefully around her.  This miniature rose has chosen to relinquish its status as a miniature and is now over six feet tall, the foliage barely visible under the masses of bloom. What a year! If you want to learn more about roses from someone who actually knows, follow this link to a Master Gardener interview: https://data.wavefarm.org/20200116134644/DiggingInWithMasterGardeners_ErgonomicGardeningAndTheSubjectIsRoses_WGXC_WaveFarm_20200121.                                


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Dead Rock & Roll in Phoenicia


Phoenicia Rt 28 Skeleton Rock n’ Roll Summer of 2024 by Chris Huwer. Photos by Robert Brune.


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Whittling Away with Dick Brooks - Changes

I lost an old friend the other day.  It wasn’t human but we’d been together for a long time.  It was a pencil sharpener that I had bought when I first started teaching some fifty years ago.  Staring back through the mental fog of years past, I think I purchased it at the Woolworths store in Catskill for a princely sum somewhere around three bucks.  I originally purchased it for what laughingly was called my home office, an old desk in the corner of my bachelor bedroom.  It soon migrated to my classroom and was screwed to a small piece of board making it mobile which made it a handy addition.  It whirred merrily sharpening generations of pencils.  It gradually became so dull that the pencils it worked on looked as though they had been attacked by a herd of angry beavers.  No problem, I disassembled it, stuck the circular blades in my electric drill and ran them backwards on a piece of sandpaper and they were good for another twenty years or so.  After I retired, the pencil sharpener went to live in my shop where pencils were still used.  I broke the lead in a pencil I was using to mark boards for the shed I’m building and went to the sharpener, turned the handle as usual and my old friend fell to pieces.  It was a fatal case of metal fatigue and there was no fixing it.  Realizing that I could no longer run to Woolworths for a replacement, I went on line, typed in the company name and added a dot com and up popped their  screen.  Modern technology at its best, there was a little search panel so I typed in the model number of my fateful old friend.  What to my wondering eyes should appear but a round plastic battery powered sharpener probably made in China out of recycled water bottles.  My worst fears were realized, my old friend was now “New and Improved”.  Why do they do that?  It seems to be happening to me more and more.  I find a product that I like and as soon as I get used to it, they change it or stop production of it.  I had a  sneaker brand that I really liked. I wore them for years so of course they stopped making them.  I sort of won on that one because I had ordered a pair that I put in the bottom of my closet just in case they pulled their stunt on me so I’m set for a few more years.  It seems that some companies start out with good intentions, they produce a good well made product and stick with it for awhile then some managerial type wants to sell more and impress the stock holders.  They can either use cheaper materials to make the thing or they can raise the price.  They usually do both which does make the stockholders happy but it’s not so good for those of us that use the thing.  I drove a Honda Element.  I loved it.  It was a family member.  I even gave it a name, Babe the Big Blue Box.  It could do everything I needed a vehicle to do.  Sure, it looked like a toaster but I could live with that.  Every Element owner I’ve met loves their car so what does Honda do to keep these satisfied owners coming back?  They stop making the Element.  They have a new and improved small SUV.  It’s pretty but they never got Babe away from me until it had traveled almost two hundred thousand miles. Some things just don’t need improving.

Thought for the week—If everything is coming your       way, You’re in the wrong lane.  –Steven Wright 

Until next week, may you and yours be happy and well.

Whittle12124@yahoo.com      


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Obituary - Linda Leonard Hughes




Linda Leonard Hughes, 78, of Washington Avenue, Cobleskill, New York, passed peacefully Thursday, May 30, 2024.

She was born on May 25, 1946, in Springfield, Massachusetts, and was the daughter of Wilson and Phyllis (Sefton) Leonard, who both predeceased her.

In September 1973, Linda married John Bolton Hughes in Holyoke, MA. John and Linda remained married for over 50 years, enjoying travel and living in many parts of the United States.

Being raised in Massachusetts, she graduated from South Hadley High School. Linda continued her education at a cosmetology school in Springfield, Massachusetts where she became a Licensed Cosmetologist. She was the proprietor of Linda's Coiffeur Corner for several decades. After that, she followed her passion and became an independent artist, creating many beautiful works of art.

Linda was a member of the First Baptist Church of Cobleskill, as well as the Vermont Putney Painters and National Artist Association.

Linda is survived by her husband, John Bolton Hughes; her nieces and nephews: Cheri (Brian Maillard) Pitt of Cobleskill, NY, William C. Pitt of Holyoke MA, and Leslie (Patrick) Chehade of Charlotte, NC; and her lifelong friend, Christine Cronin of South Hadley, MA.

No formal services will be held as per the family's request.

Contributions in memory of Linda may be made to the First Baptist Church of Cobleskill, 492 W. Main St., Cobleskill, NY 12043

Arrangements have been entrusted to Mereness-Putnam Funeral Home, 171 Elm St., Cobleskill.


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Local Business Focus - Cherry Valley Bookstore


By David Avitabile

CHERRY VALLEY - The Cherry Valley Bookstore is much more than your normal, everyday neighborhood bookstore.

While you browse through thousands of books from dozens of subjects in the shop, you can feel the history of not only Cherry Valley. the state and the country.

The building at 81 Alden Street in the village was built in 1840 and was home to Amos Swan and his cabinet shop. He also made melodeons here. Sam Morse, then an itinerant artist/painter may have perfected the telegraph key and Morse code in the very room you are looking through a vintage children's book. (It is not certain whether Mr. Morse perfected his code in the front room of the book store or next door, but "I'll claim it," Mr. Compton said.  The building has been home to many businesses before it became a bookstore around 1995, said current owner Bill Compton.

Before Mr. Compton and his wife Lynne purchased the building and business five years ago, Franzen Clough owned the building since 1992 and ran it as a bookstore since 1995. From 1971 to 1991 it was home to Grammy Award-winning jazz pianist Paul Bley and Carol Goff. They bought the building, site unseen, through an ad in the Village Voice, and lived in the small two-story wooden building for 20 years, the only time it has been used as a residence, Mr. Compton said. In its other uses, the building has housed a butcher shop ("That might explain the hook in the front window," Mr. Compton said.), a women's dress shop. a bakery, and a tea room. Mr. Swan was also the village undertaker. "He'd make the last cabinet you'd ever buy," Mr. Compton joked.

Mr. Compton's daughter first spotted a story about the bookstore and Cherry Valley on the Internet in December 2018 and informed her parents. Mr. Compton, who had just retired as a city planner in Bristol, Rhode Island, drove to Cherry Valley on a frigid January day and peeked through the windows of the shop. They returned a few weeks later and the power and heat were off, but they decided to pursue a purchase and bought it that spring.

Since then, they have put on a new roof, repaired the siding (No mice this winter," Mr. Compton noted.), painted the front and side (it has been red since the mid-1950s and is now a bright, fresh, welcoming yellow), and on the inside, moved a large book case to showcase the fire place in the front room.

There are basically four rooms to the book store, the front  room, the hallway, the back room, and the upstairs, which houses the shop's fiction collection, two comfortable reading chairs, and some magazines.

For such a small shop, there is an amazing assortment of books and subjects. "If you want it, we have it," Mr. Compton said, though he did have to recently get someone a book on blacksmithing.

In the front room there are vintage children's books, and sections on New and Local history, do-it-yourself and how-to (a very popular area for Glimmerglass opera apprentices working on sets), cookbooks, natural history and science, art and architecture, sewing, knitting, fine arts, photography, as well as Allen Ginsberg-related books. Mr. Compton is amazed at the art and creativity that has happened in Cherry Valley. In other areas of the shop there are biographies, African-American studies, books on1960s, '70s. and '80 pop, New Age, history, religion, literature, travel, Eastern religions, mythology, military history, poetry, drama, music, and many more. 

Some of the most popular sections of the book store are local history and vintage children's books. "People love local history and it's hard to find." He said he would like to expand the children's section.

Some people come in and directly ask for a section to explore, others just wonder, Mr. Compton said.

"It's not unusual for someone to disappear for an hour, hour and a half and come back with a stack of books."

Most of his books are in the $6 to $8 range, though he does have some rare and older books at higher prices. 

Owning and running a book store is nothing like he has ever done.

"It's been a huge learning curve," he said. "Running a book store is a totally different thing."

He began to inventory the collection, but gave up. He estimates that there are between 12,000 and 15,000 books in the shop, "definitely more than 10,000."

More are added each winter after they get back from Florida and from library books sales and estates sale. They also get donations, but they have to be very selective because of space limitations. "Not to denigrate any writer, but we don't have any Danielle Steel (books)."

In addition to the physical shop, the shop finds buyers through Facebook, Twitter, and other social media.

The book store community is very tight, Mr. Compton said, as is the Cherry Valley community.

The community, he added, "is very happy that we are caretakers of a local institution."

The Cherry Valley Bookstore is closed January to April. It is open on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday from 11am to 6pm and on Sunday from 1 to 6pm.


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Becker Named to All-Star Team



Third baseman Brody Becker was named to the 2024 Section 2 - Colonial council Baseball All-Star Team. The Cobleskill-Richmondville junior stood out during the baseball season this year and is seen here with head coach Cody Lillich. The Section 2 Awards Banquet was held last Monday, June 3rd in Saratoga.


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Career Fair Connects Students with Employers

Jasen Kimball and Jacon Letko speaking to a representative from Callanan Industries during the career fair.


COBLESKILL - The final Capital Region BOCES career fair of the 2023-24 school year connected businesses in search of workers with students looking to expand their options and help their finances.

The Capital Region BOCES Career and Technical Education Center - Schoharie Campus Career Fair was held June 6 at SUNY Cobleskill. More than two dozen employers ranging from Milton CAT to Kenworth Northeast Group, Casella Waste Systems Inc. and the New York State Police.

“I am going to Lincoln Tech in the fall, but I am looking for a second job this summer, maybe in construction, that I can help pay for college with,” said Jacob Letko, a Building Trades senior from Cobleskill.

Classmate Jasen Kimball said he is exploring career options while awaiting the results of scheduled interviews. 

“I have a meeting with the laborers [union] tomorrow and I am just looking at what other options I have,” said the Schalmont teen.

Business representatives said they value the opportunities to build their workforce.

“We have to turn down jobs because we don’t have enough workers, so it’s important for us to work with BOCES to find new workers,” said Joshua Horton, a representative of Albany-based heating, ventilation, air conditioning and refrigeration firm CA Group.

Katie Carey, CEO of Carey Electric, was also recruiting BOCES students on Thursday.

“We are excited to work with BOCES and eager to cultivate our relationship and spread the word about the value of jobs in the trades,” she said.

Capital Region BOCES Managing Program Coordinator-Business & Community Partnerships Nancy Liddle said the event was a good opportunity for students and businesses.

“Our career fairs provide opportunities for students and businesses to network and formulate relationships that benefit both,” she said.

Capital Region BOCES hosts several career fairs throughout the school year while working with more than 300 business, union and education partners to fuel the regional and state economies. Through these partnerships, students can launch careers directly out of high school or land jobs that will help them pay for future educational opportunities. 


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Cobleskill Approves Water Improvements

By Joshua Walther

COBLESKILL - On Monday afternoon, the Cobleskill Village Board held a short special meeting to discuss the next phase in their water improvement project. 

The members heard the proposed scope from Brendon Becker of Lamont Engineers, who has been working closely with the Village on the matter. He said that the project mainly revolves around renovations for the water plant and the replacement of the original transmission main.

While the mentioned renovations were costly in their own right, such as maintenance work in the chlorine storage room and adding emergency power to the plant, eyes were drawn to the discussion of the transmission main, which has been plaguing the Village for as long as they could remember.

The ten-inch wooden pipe, which now rests underneath the golf course by Walmart, is wrapped in uncertainty. No one knows exactly when it was built, and as such, it proves to be a major health concern.

However, the solutions to the problem are not without their cost. Mr. Becker suggested that the Village could abandon the main and a new line could be run down Mineral Springs Road instead, but the cost would come in at $300 per foot. 

Mr. Becker also showed concern for key properties that were serviced by the old main, as abandoning the pipeline would likely mean feeding their properties by new dead-end lines for a further cost projection.

He concluded by stating that the project would cost around five million dollars in construction alone, but with the necessary contingency of 30% and other fees to consider, the true total hovers at approximately eight million.

However, Cobleskill would not have to foot that bill alone. The Board is able to apply for a grant that would offset 70% of the cost, leaving them with just an annual loan payment of eighty thousand dollars, something that Mayor Rebecca Stanton-Terk describes as “totally doable.”

“A five million dollar water project will be hard on our own,” Mayor Stanton-Terk continued as she contemplated what might happen if the grant isn’t obtained, “but we won’t just ignore it. We can’t keep kicking the can down the road.”

With all members in agreement that they should try for the grant, the Board passed a motion to adopt the bond resolution and adjourned with no further business.


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CRCS Focuses Financial Reserves

By Joshua Walther

COBLESKILL - In the aftermath of the new budget passing, the CRCS Board of Education met on Monday to discuss their brand-new plans for their annual fund balance and reserves.

School Business Manager Tracy Fraleigh, who works with Superintendent Matthew Sickles on financial plans like the budget, noticed a worrying problem with sudden expenditures on their already tight , namely tax certiorari claims.

Tax certiorari refers to the proceedings by which a real property’s tax assessment is reviewed by an administrative agency, which can lead to potential payouts. 

With the advice of legal counsel, Mrs. Fraleigh put together a certiorari reserve proposal for the Board’s consideration. Intended to protect against the fiscal year it was established, the reserve offers to set aside 2% of the tax levy to guard for up to four years. 

Luckily, the creation of the reserve will not take away from the district’s finances, as once the time limit runs out or upon the Board’s decision, all of the funds will liquidate back into the general fund balance with little fuss.

Under Mrs. Fraleigh’s plan, the Board moved to create their first 2023-2024 reserve, and will look toward the future creation of a 2024-2025 reserve after July 1st. 

In addition to this, Mrs. Fraleigh urged the Board to approve specific transfers to designated reserves for general bookkeeping, which members agreed to with little resistance.

In other news, the Board also heard general updates from multiple different student groups, including the newly established trap team, the FBLA, and the latest senior trip to Costa Rica.

All three groups were keen on sharing their experiences with the Board, giving an overview of different sponsors, competitions, and the activities that they found the most memorable, respectively.

Once they each concluded their presentations, they thanked the Board for supporting their endeavors, saying that they’re looking forward to future meetings and trips that will leave a lasting memory.


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CVS Girls' B'ball Team to Lead Springfield Parade

CHERRY VALLEY - The 110th annual Springfield Fourth of July Parade will kick off its "Hometown Celebration" with the Cherry Valley-Springfield Central School Lady Patriots varsity basketball team leading the way as grand marshals.

The parade is scheduled for 11 a.m. Thursday, July 4 in Springfield Center, according to a news release from the Springfield Fourth of July Committee.

The team includes seniors Kailey Barnes, Erin Williams, Morgan Huff, Mia Dubben and Daphnee West, juniors Sara Cortese and Brin Whiteman and eighth grader Mackenzie McGovern, with Coach Kelly Taggart and assistant coaches BJ Whiteman and Carol McGovern.

The Lady Patriots became the first basketball team from CV-S to win regionals and sectional playoffs, going on to play in the state championship Final Four Tournament.

With a record of 20-4, the team amassed several championships and titles during the 2023-24 season, including the Hunter-Tannersville Tournament Champions, Schoharie Turkey Tournament Champions, Tri-Valley League Champions, Section IV Class D Champions, and Class D Regional Champions. The Otsego County Board of Representatives passed a resolution on April 3 in recognition of the team’s accomplishments.



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Former Tilson's Lunch Comes Down in Howes Cave

HOWES CAVE - The road past the Animal Shelter in Howes Cave was closed Friday morning. The former Tilson's Lunch structure below the quarry finally collapsed across the road in the wind. 

Jim Newton stopped there Thursday to take some pictures before it finally collapsed, not realizing it wouldn't last 24 hours more. 

He noted on Facebook, "I've watched the building gradually disintegrate for years. Once I saw the center beam of the roof collapse this spring I knew time was growing short."



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