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Culture Reviews - Prophet Song, our 1984

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 6/6/25 | 6/6/25

By Susan Yelavich, Professor Emerita, Parsons School of Design, The New School

Recently, Paul Lynch’s Prophet Song was highly, not to say forcefully, recommended to me both as an extraordinary work of fiction and as the 21st century’s successor to George Orwell’s 1984. My first reaction was that its premise—a mother’s dilemmas in an authoritarian state—was too obviously grabbed from the headlines. Yes, if you count all the headlines of the last decade—think just of Syria, Gaza, and Yemen. (The book was published in 2023 and won the Booker Prize that year.) But, no, once you recognize that none of what its protagonist Eilish Stack experiences has ever been the stuff of headlines. 

Paul Lynch’s dystopia is personal, not social.  Unlike George Orwell’s 1984, which shows the mechanisms of mind control, Lynch’s Prophet Song immerses us in the subjective terror of living in a state of exception invoked by a government’s imposition of “Emergency Powers.” Instead of situating the crisis within a fictitious super-state as Orwell does, Lynch rejects allegory for the recognizable streets and houses of Dublin, where Eilish lives with her four children and her husband, Larry, the story’s fulcrum.

Larry, arrested for leading a teachers’ union protest, effectively disappears. His extra-legal banishment gives Eilish both reason to stay—he might walk in the door any day and what if they weren’t there—and reason to leave, as she slowly realizes that his absence is part of a more pervasive and threatening pattern which will subsume what’s left of her life. First, there are inconveniences: the water in their faucets turns brown, but then there are the intrusions into her psyche. Eilish becomes invisible when her butcher ignores her while serving other customers. A wedding becomes an occasion for party fealty, effectively excommunicating her from her larger family of aunts and cousins. However, it would be missing the point to read the book as a litany of slights and insults.

Prophet Song is less a portrait of the workings of tyranny than it is a portrait of what being tyrannized feels like, smells like, looks like, sounds like, even tastes like. Looking for a paint scraper to remove the graffiti that has vandalized her house, Eilish “meets instead her humiliation as though it were on the shelf before her, the shame and pain and grief moving freely through her body.” Even more recognizable is the confusion of how to think and act under such conditions. Eilish drifts between feeling she has agency—that hope and survival remain possible—and feeling disoriented and powerless. Desperate for signs of continuity with the world as she knew it, Eilish observes that “trees keep counting the time by ringing the time in their wood.” And later, that there is “memory in the weather.” These things cannot be defeated. The disjuncture between the events that threaten to overwhelm her and the constancy of nature is not entirely unfamiliar, albeit in less fraught circumstances. It’s like having a bad flu and looking out the window at people going about their business on a sunny day, and being vaguely (and absurdly) astonished that life is moving on without you. 

Eilish’s circumstances are beyond fraught.  She is subject to relentless intrusions without defenses, only children who need defending. A professional woman, a scientist, she is not prone to paranoia and keeps a strong maternal front. She continues to send the children to school, stubbornly maintaining the importance of soon-to-be-obsolete rites of passage like playing hockey and getting into university. When her daughter Molly accuses her of doing nothing to get Larry back, Eilish says, “Sometimes not doing something is the best way to get what you want.” Yet, she does wear the white scarf that marks her as a dissident—and gets her fired. In her vacillations, Lynch captures that uncanny state of being simultaneously aware and in disbelief when reality is no longer solid. 

So, while Orwell has enjoyed a justly deserved revival since the first Trump presidency, Lynch’s is the book for this moment. His story operates with an immediacy that would have been foreign to readers in 1949, when Orwell’s book was published. Those readers would have recognized the allusions to Stalin’s regime and its bureaucracy of cruelty but they would have the distance of observers, of readers. Since Orwell set it thirty-five years in the future, 1984 would have been read as ‘not yet, perhaps never.’ That luxury is stripped away in the claustrophobic pages of Prophet Song. Its events happen in real time and from innocuous beginnings—a party wins an election. Lynch’s prose doesn’t leave any space to catch your breath. There are almost no paragraph breaks and sentences grow like panic, as when Eilish runs into Rory, an old acquaintance.

He is quick to speak about old times and she watches his face hurrying him along with her eyes, a bus pulls away expelling hot diesel smoke and Rory steps back, his scarf stirring to reveal the party pin on the lapel of his jacket. She takes a step backwards, swallows and closes her eyes, Rory smiling with his teeth.

This is an early hint of ostracization that will ultimately turn violent. When vigilantes turn from neighborly scorn to lethal force, Eilish’s oldest son joins the rebels to fight the government. (He won’t be seen again.) Soon after, her twelve-year-old son is abducted from his school. After an agonizing search, she finds him in a state morgue bearing unmistakable marks of torture and murder. Utterly devastated, she has no time to mourn. She’s still caring for her father, daughter, and toddler amidst accelerating assaults.  

In setting Prophet Song in the Republic of Ireland (instead of Northern Ireland, where the violence of the Troubles is within living memory), Lynch makes real the truth that a domestic Armageddon can happen anywhere and at any time.  As he remarked in a PBS Interview, “the civilized world is a thin veneer, so fragile and easily lost.”  He claims, however, not to be writing a polemic of grievance—as tempting as it is to think he’s holding up a mirror to any number of authoritarian governments. Instead, he calls Prophet Song a story of grief. It is a story about the pain that follows when society segregates those it deems normal from those it condemns and terrorizes as abnormal.

Terror isn’t an abstraction when you’re tensed for the next assault, when it infiltrates the lives of your family and your colleagues. Just ask around. It’s hard to find someone unaffected, if only indirectly. In fact, it is the indirect affects that are the most insidious, spurring pre-emptive censorship and equivocations between compliance with and rejection of the new status quo. This is a tightrope act that Eilish ultimately refuses to perform.

Lynch’s novel does more than prophesize a tragedy brought on by authoritarian muzzle and muscle. It rehearses its execution. Its characters are as recognizable as our own kith and kin, as recognizable as us. This is its potency. Prophet Song makes terror intimate. 

Bio

Susan Yelavich is Professor Emerita, Design Studies, Parsons School of Design, The New School. A Fellow of the American Academy of Rome (2004) and the Bogliasco Foundation (2018), she is a member of Scientific Committee for Design at Politecnico di Milano and the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw’s FAIR Design conferences. Her contributions to design scholarship span over four decades, including 15 years at Parsons and 25 years at Cooper Hewitt Museum. She is the author of Thinking Design through Literature (2019), Design as Future-Making (Bloomsbury, 2014), and Contemporary World Interiors (Phaidon, 2007). Her writing is archived at www.susanyelavich.com

 

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Exploring Intimacy and Identity in Some Bodies at the Roxbury Arts Group

Curator Ursula Hudak, Creative Opportunities Coordinator at Roxbury Art Group receiving praise for an amazing group exhibition ‘Some Bodies’ comprised of 33 female artists. 


 


By Robert Brune

ROXBURY — The Roxbury Arts Group’s latest exhibition, Some Bodies, is an ambitious and poignant exploration of the human figure, intimacy, and identity. Bringing together thirty-three artists, this multidisciplinary show spans painting, photography, textiles, sculpture, and video, asking timely and timeless questions: What does it mean to be human? How do we connect with others emotionally and physically? What does it mean to be seen, or objectified? And what makes a body ‘somebody’?

At its heart, Some Bodies challenges conventional representations of the human form by focusing on the tension between subject and object, a conversation that has long shaped the history of art. The curatorial impulse of Ursula Hudak behind the show stems from research into the reclining nudes of Matisse and Modigliani, which highlighted a persistent problem in art: the tendency to objectify the body, especially women’s bodies, stripping subjects of their agency and interior life. In this exhibition, the curatorial framework seeks to re-center the figure as both seen and seeing, as both body and being.

A Glimpse of the Artists

Jessica Farrell’s dreamlike paintings are a profound embodiment of this mission. Her work fuses the mythic with the rural, tapping into the interconnectedness of all living things. Through lush depictions of nature and myth-infused figures, Farrell’s pieces offer a vision of the human condition that is both grounded and spiritual. There is a quiet reverence for the body as both vessel and presence, echoing themes of vulnerability, strength, and communion with the natural world.

Cena Pohl Crane’s paintings, on the other hand, vibrate with emotional and chromatic intensity. Her bold, expressive brushwork reflects a restless dissonance with contemporary life. Her figures, often dissolving into their surroundings, articulate the internal fragmentation experienced in a digitally saturated society. The body, here, is both a site of resistance and collapse, especially under the pressures of modern womanhood. Through this tension, Crane invites viewers to reckon with their own dissociation and yearning for embodiment.

David De Lira’s photography brings a lens-based,  perspective to the conversation around intimacy. His portraits of lovers, friends, and chosen family exude emotional depth and a sense of sacred vulnerability. Each photograph is not merely a record of a body but a tender archive of connection. By consciously employing light, gesture, and gaze, De Lira transforms his subjects into co-authors of the image, subverting the typical dynamic of artist and model. His work resists objectification through radical empathy.

Susanne Ausnit’s self-portraits offer a deeply personal window into aging, maternity, and emotional states. Through watercolor and subtle compositional nods to Renaissance imagery, her work evokes both the maternal tenderness of the Madonna and Child and the sorrow of the Pietà. In one striking piece, a self-portrait with her dog, the emotional register is layered—there is devotion, fragility, and a profound sense of temporality. These images do not just depict a body, but the act of becoming, retreating, and reclaiming it over time.

Aurora Andrews, meanwhile, centers the maternal experience in her work, painting motherhood from the inside out. Her use of invented color and embodied brushwork asserts a mother’s voice often absent from visual discourse. Her paintings counter the cultural flattening of motherhood into symbol or stereotype, offering instead deeply subjective, visceral perspectives. They affirm motherhood as a valid, complex, and often unseen dimension of identity.

Michelle Silver’s emotional landscapes balance abstraction and figuration, memory and motion. Her work draws from personal experience trauma, mental health, and desire, yet speaks to broader human experiences of navigating inner worlds. In the space between the conscious and subconscious, Silver’s figures often appear as echoes or spirits—perhaps not fully present, but unmistakably real. Her pieces remind us that the body carries more than physical form; it bears memory, pain, joy, and resilience. 

Across the exhibition, viewers encounter bodies in transition, bodies in communion, bodies reclaimed. Whether in the fractured energy of a brushstroke, the tender line of a photograph, or the meditative stillness of a textile or sculpture, Some Bodies reclaims the figure from the gaze and returns it to a place of personhood. These are not bodies for consumption, they are bodies with agency, bodies in relationship, bodies that feel.

A full  list of the artists exhibiting: Aurora Andrews, Suzanne Ausnit, Elizabeth de Bethune, Harris Billeci, Lauren Blankstein, Lynne Breitfeller, Samantha Brinkley, Louis Chavez, Sue Collier, Cena Pohl Crane, Leah DeVun, Jessica Farrell, Tabitha Gilmore-Barnes, Isa Goico, Zena C Gurbo, Monica Hamilton, Jody Isaacson, Scott Keidong, Erin Kuhn, David De Lira, Mary Katherine McFerran, Lesley A. Powell, Joel Clifford Rhymer, Laura Wasson Schneider, Michelle Silver, Kathleen Sweeney, Mika Taga, Kate Taverna, Ella Tunis, Jane Westrick, Caitlin Winner, Lindsey A. Wolkowicz, and Simeon Youngmann. 

Some Bodies is a necessary exhibition in our current moment. It does not pretend to offer definitive answers but creates space for reflection and dialogue. In a world where bodily autonomy and identity are increasingly politicized, the act of representing, and witnessing the human form becomes revolutionary. The artists in this show remind us that a body is not just a thing to be looked at; it is a life to be seen, heard, and understood. In doing so, Some Bodies transforms the gallery into a space of empathy, intimacy, and radical visibility.

 

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Catskilled Crafters ‘Taking Flight’ Opens at Pine Hill Community Center




By Robert Brune

PINE HILL — Once a year, the group of Catskilled Crafters kick off their themed project in January, meeting once a month for the purposes of skill sharing and building a cohesive art community. While many in upstate New York tend to hibernate through the winter months, these dedicated artists met up at the Pine Hill Community Center exchanging materials, learning new techniques, and leaning on each other through mutual support through this past winter. 

Gail Freund, one of the primary organizers of this group explains, “People make suggestions for the theme of the art project, back in October or November. There’s a four-person steering committee that reviews the suggestions for a theme. We come up with two themes from the meeting, and we send it to every crafter who’s participated since 2017 and we vote.” The ‘Taking Flight’ topic was my favorite over coats of arms, this year. Freund admits she doesn’t often get to do themes that she favors through the years, but she was very happy with this year’s project. Freund explains, “I’m not very good at sewing, but Wendy and Mary were wonderful, making time to help me.” 

This past Saturday, twenty-three uniquely crafted kites went on display at the Pine Hill Community Center.  Some of the kites would be able to be flown, but others not likely. This art project is an expression of personal subjectivity, inviting the community to connect with the individual crafters through their take on creative kite making. Each participant was invited to create their piece out of any material they chose. The only stipulation was that the design must incorporate at least one flying element, real or imagined. 

Brett Rollins, the PHCC art curator for the past three years said, “This was a different experience for me because I usually see the art before we hang it. For this exhibition, I didn’t see any of the work until the day prior to hanging it.” Rollins did a smashing job of delegating great spacing and creating flow of the individual narratives of kites which seemed to be fun for the artists and viewers. 

Wendy Brackman, one of the crafters participating, has a special gift for livening up an event. She crafted clever kite themed hats, adding to the taking flight atmosphere, handing them out at the opening reception.   

If you were unable to attend the opening reception this past weekend, here is what you can expect: A Dragonfly That Eats Butterflies, a Purple Dream, Broccoli Robins, a Box Kite, a Raven and a Pink Moon, an Airline That Lets Birds Fly Free, a Spiral Moth, and a Thunderbird! 

For more information on this event and others, see www.pinehillcommunitycenter.org

 

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Nickelodeon Presentation June 17 at Roxbury Library

ROXBURY — The Roxbury Library is pleased to present Dr. Joe Piasek speaking on Tuesday, June 17, from 10:00am to 12:00pm.  All are welcome to attend this free discussion.  Dr.  Piasek, SUNY Delhi communications professor and a member of the founding on-air team that created The First Kids Network, discusses Nickelodeon from its beginnings of caring for others to its unintentional yet subsequent role in the rise of Fox News as a divisive force in American culture in a talk entitled "How Fox Hacked Nick."

Nickelodeon established a structured, media-literate environment on cable television in 1980 in which a child could soak every day; a fantasy comfort zone that embraced a doctrine of diversity and global interdependence.  Nick's structure was the lesson even more than its program. It was a fan-based participatory realm:  "US vs THEM" (kids vs. adults) all in good absurdist fun.  Fox News produced a proximate structured environment on cable television for the same cohort some 30 years later.  Its "US vs THEM" position of was void of fair play where a fearful adult could feel secure, an absurdist realm of a different sort.

The target demographic of Nickelodeon's audience at its peak was 5-15 years old.  The target demographic of the Fox New audience some 30 years later is 35-50.  "How Fox Hacked Nick" is designed to be a provocative exploration of how Nickelodeon, a phenomenonally successful television network, dropped the ball and how Fox kept its eye on the ball to win the long game of cultural dominance in America.

 

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MUSINGS OF A LOCAL By Iris Mead - OUR NO SPRING SPRING

Comedian Robin Williams once said Spring is nature’s way of saying, “Let’s Party!” 

It’s the first week in June and our normal spring season is officially over.  In meteorological terms, spring starts on March 1st and lasts through May 31st.  Astronomically, spring begins on the vernal equinox which, this year was March 20th.  But Spring didn’t seem to arrive in our part of the country then or throughout the rest of the “spring season.”  Yes, we had occasional days of sun, enough to tease us into thinking there were going to be more, but there never seemed to be enough “more.” In fact, one Albany weatherman recently noted that from November 18, 2024 through May 31, 2025 there had not been one weekend that was entirely free of rain or snow in our area.  That was shocking to hear even though we lived those weekends. How many times did we moan and groan about another weekend ruined by snow or rain!  But nature did start giving us signs that spring was coming; snowdrops, daffodils and crocus poked their heads up, sometimes through the snow, the days started to lengthen, buds appeared on trees and bushes, wildflowers started appearing, birds returned and the days gradually lengthened and the air was fresher.  We began to smile more, breathe deeper and spend more time outside.  As Memorial Day approached, we began planning our summer gardens and trying not to purchase the annuals and vegetables that were being put out for sale too early. As we all know, the warning in our area is don’t put in your flowers and gardens before Memorial Day because there still can be frost. And there was a frost warning in some higher elevations earlier this week. 

This year’s non-Spring has financially hurt local golf courses, ruined many family gatherings, picnics, bake sales, concerts and outdoor events since many have been cancelled or postponed.  Memorial Day weekend, our end-of-spring kickoff to summer, usually packed with numerous events, was partially ruined by rain.

It's now June – let’s look forward to more dry days than wet ones, warmer days and even hot days coming our way.  If you are a follower of the Farmer’s Almanac, it is predicting below-average precipitation (RAIN) in June for the whole Northeast.  But it is forecasting above-normal RAINfall in the north of the Northeast and below-normal RAINfall in the south of the Northeast.  So, where does that leave us, you figure it out. In all, the National Weather Service predicts a hotter-than-average summer in the Northeast.  

Through the years, many sayings have evolved about predicting the weather.  Here are a few:

If the goose honks high, fair weather. If the goose honks low, foul weather.   (How to tell if it’s high or low?)

A ring around the sun or moon means that rain will come real soon.

Evening gray and morning red, put on your hat or you’ll wet your head.

And finally, the one we all know and probably go by the most:

Red sky at night, sailor’s delight, Red sky in morning, sailors take warning.

Sunshine is delicious, rain is refreshing, wind braces us up, snow is exhilarating;  there is really no such thing as bad weather, only different kinds of good weather.

So, whatever the day may bring, make the most of it and be thankful you are able to be part of it.

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Shandaken Opts Out of Phoenicia School Purchase, County to Explore Housing - Wellington Hotel Grant Hopes Emerge

Staff Report

SHANDAKEN – The Shandaken Town Board announced at its June 2 meeting that it will not proceed with purchasing the former Phoenicia Elementary School, with Ulster County now exploring affordable housing and recreational options for the site. The board also heard promising news of a potential $1.5 million federal funding recommendation for the Pinehill Wellington Hotel project and discussed Ulster County's new EMS stabilization plan, which will significantly involve Shandaken's ambulance service.

Supervisor Peter Davant stated the town decided to move away from acquiring the Phoenicia School. The Ulster County Executive's office will now work on potentially developing affordable housing at the location, while also aiming to maintain a community recreation center aspect.

In other major announcements, Jan, an owner of the Pinehill Wellington Hotel, reported that Congressman Pat Riley has recommended a $1.5 million community-funded project grant for the historic hotel's restoration. While subject to congressional approval, the news was met with enthusiasm. The hotel was also recently named one of the nation's 11 most endangered historic places by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Davant also announced a $14,800 grant for flood studies at the Bridge Street Bridge and a $39,000 Natural Resources Inventory grant for the town's Conservation Advisory Council (CAC).

Ambulance Chief Mike (Drake) detailed Ulster County's $4.7 million EMS stabilization and enhancement plan, confirming Shandaken qualifies for funding from both its $2 million pool for existing services and a $2.7 million pool for Advanced Life Support (ALS) anchor agencies. As an ALS anchor agency, Shandaken's paramedics may be contracted by the county to provide services to neighboring towns like Olive, Hardenburg, and Denning. The Shandaken ambulance squad also recently received a Unit Citation award for its response to a serious motor vehicle accident in January 2024.

The town is moving forward with electric vehicle (EV) initiatives, purchasing a Chevrolet Blazer EV using a $50,000 NYSERDA grant. Davant noted that while a proposed EV charging station at Glen Brook Park is estimated at $12,000, a $41,000 estimate for a Level 3 charger at the Pine Hill parking lot may require rebidding.

During public comment, resident Bill Fitchner inquired about the process for selling his mobile home park. Supervisor Davant clarified that while the sale itself doesn't need town approval, a new owner wishing to continue its operation as a mobile home park must obtain such approval due to its pre-existing, non-conforming status.

A significant portion of public comment focused on rumors surrounding the Pine Hill Veterans Memorial. Several residents expressed concern over misinformation suggesting the memorial might be moved or diminished for parking. Supervisor Davant emphatically stated there are no current plans to move or destroy the memorial. He explained that ongoing work in the park area relates to soil testing for an underground drainage system to mitigate local flooding, and that any discussion of moving the memorial was from years prior and is off the table if the community wishes it to remain.

Among numerous resolutions, the board:

- Approved participation in the New York City-funded flood buyout program for the Town Hall/Highway Garage complex.

- Expressed support for pursuing a consolidated municipal campus at a new parcel.

- Authorized a contract with MARK Project Inc. to administer the Pine Hill Main Street Revitalization Program grant application.

- Passed banking resolutions to close a high-fee Key Bank account, transferring funds to Community Bank, and to open new accounts with the Bank of Greene County, citing other local bank branch closures.

- Appointed Manuel Jeanpierre as Summer Recreation Director, Raven Ryan as Assistant Director, and Raya Hart as Recreation Specialist, and authorized related summer program contracts.

- Scheduled a public hearing for an environmental impact statement on the Glen Brook EV charger location for July 7th at 6:30 p.m.

- Committee reports highlighted the formation of a new housing nonprofit, the Catskill Alliance for Housing and Preservation (CAHP), which will work closely with the town’s housing committee and support the Pine Hill Main Street project. The housing committee is also nearing completion of a town-wide housing site inventory with assistance from Ulster County Planning. 

- The Parks and Recreation committee announced River Hoffman as the new dog park manager. The CAC will host a "Shandaken Prepares" flood assistance meeting on June 16th. The Comprehensive Plan committee has scheduled public engagement days for Sunday, July 20th, and is planning a second community survey.

The board also approved the prior month's minutes and the supervisor's financial report, which showed May revenues of $68,430.88. An executive session was held after the regular meeting to discuss personnel and water issues. 

 

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How Water Connects Upstate and Downstate Students Through Environmental Education





By Robert Brune

MARGARETVILLE — In New York State, the journey of clean drinking water is more than just a marvel of engineering, it’s also a powerful educational tool that brings together students from vastly different communities. More than 9.5 million residents of New York City depend on a vast network of 19 reservoirs and three lakes, stretching nearly 2,000 square miles across the Hudson Valley and the Catskills. This shared natural resource serves as the foundation for the Green Connections program, a unique initiative led by the Watershed Agricultural Council (WAC), which links students and teachers from upstate rural schools and downstate urban districts. Targeting grades 4 through 12, WAC trains educators and facilitates partnerships between schools that might otherwise have no interaction, encouraging students to engage with environmental science while also learning about one another’s way of life. These connections create opportunities for academic enrichment, emotional growth, and a deeper civic understanding, all rooted in the real-world importance of protecting and appreciating the natural environment. Through letter exchanges, virtual meetings, and hands-on workshops, students from both regions form lasting bonds, proving that while their day-to-day lives may differ, they are united by the waters that sustain them both.

Over the past seven years, Margaretville Central School 5th grade teacher Linda Pesa has been partnered up with NYC PS 376 teacher Jeanne Salchi of Long Island. Throughout each year students participate in WAC Zoom meetings led by a forestry instructor Tyler Van Fleet, students also further develop bonds with their partner school students with three rounds of pen pal letters, and both schools visit each other on field trips to participate in environmental workshops. Both teachers Pesa and Salchi relate how meaningful this experience is for their students, as some children at both ends don’t otherwise have the opportunity to travel outside the area in which they live.

Last Friday the MCS students gathered at the Shavertown Trail Head Pepacton boat launch area with a 30’ colorful diagram created by students of how the reservoir water travels from the northern Catskills to their homes in the city.  It was a rare day free of rain with warmer temperatures and sun shining. The touring bus of the NYC students, teachers, and parents approached the MCS group with loud cheers and ‘WELCOME PS 376’! 

Within a few minutes of the teachers, students, and WAC instructors greeting each other, they broke out into workshop groups learning about how the forest filters rain water, making its way into the streams, rivers, lakes, and reservoirs winding up into the aqueduct tunnel system traveling 125 miles to NYC.  The buses loaded back up and headed to the Margaretville Fairgrounds for a hotdog and hamburger lunch after the first set of workshops. When the students finished eating, they broke up into three groups for another set of workshops planned by Van Fleet. One was a lesson on water filtration using leaves and sticks, a scavenger hunt, building small fairy huts out of found objects. Next Van Fleet guided students into the riverbed to find macro invertebrates such as snails, worms, larva, may flies, and cray fish. She explained to the students, “When we find signs of life in the water, it means the water is a healthy environment.” The students suited up in waders following their instructors into the shallows of the East Branch of the Delaware behind the fairgrounds. 

What began as an exchange rooted in environmental education has blossomed into something much deeper, lasting friendships, greater empathy, and a shared responsibility for the land and water that connect upstate and downstate communities. Through the Green Connections program, students who may never have met otherwise are given the opportunity to step into each other’s world, learn from diverse perspectives, and witness firsthand the vital role of nature in sustaining daily life. The day spent learning about forest filtration, writing pen pal letters, exploring riverbeds for aquatic life, and simply sharing a meal, becomes more than a field trip.  It becomes a formative experience. For many students, this is their first time outside their home region, and for all of them, it’s a rare chance to understand how interconnected we truly are. Programs like this don’t just educate, they inspire a new generation to become thoughtful stewards of their environment and compassionate citizens of their state. 

 

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Major Police Presence at Margaretville CSD Following ‘Threats’ - School Says Individual Has Been Identified

Staff Report

MARGARETVILLE — A late-breaking series of events unfolded shortly before press time. Our newspaper will follow up with more information in the coming weeks.

Margaretville Central School announced Friday that an individual allegedly made threats against the district on social media. There was a significant police presence at the school Wednesday following the alleged threat. 

The school stated that “After a thorough investigation that began in the early morning hours and continued into the afternoon, the individual responsible for making the threat has been located and identified. All necessary appropriate actions within the scope of the law have been addressed and the district is taking appropriate steps in accordance with the Student Code of Conduct to address the incident.”

The district thanked the New York State Police and that their “efforts played a critical role in resolving this matter and helping us return to a sense of safety and calm. We recognize that today’s events caused fear, frustration, and uncertainty for many in our school community.”

“We also understand that the limited information we were able to share during the investigation may have added to that stress. Please know that this was necessary to maintain the integrity of the investigation and to ensure everyone’s safety. We appreciate those who came forward to report their concerns. We encourage all students, staff, families, and community members to continue reporting any safety concerns directly to school officials or by using the anonymous Sandy Hook Say Something hotline. Phone: 1-844-5-SAYNOW (1-844-572-9669) Website: www.saysomething.net We thank our students, staff, and law enforcement for their cooperation in ensuring the continued safety of our school community. With appreciation, The Margaretville Central School District Administrative Team,” read the statement.

We will continue to report as we receive more information.

 

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