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THURSDAY, MAY 5, 2022
COVID wave surges over Columbia County By Natasha Vaughn-Holdridge Columbia-Greene Media
BRAD HORRIGAN/THE HARTFORD COURANT/TNS
Columbia’s COVID cases spiked this week.
HUDSON — A COVID-19 spike is hitting Columbia County, the biggest in at least four months. Columbia County is seeing some of its highest COVID case numbers since January.
The Department of Health reported 67 new cases Monday from over the weekend and 57 new cases Tuesday and 34 Wednesday. “It’s twice what we would have on a Wednesday two weeks ago,” Columbia County Department of Health director
Jack Mabb said. “So it’s way up there right now.” The daily numbers of cases reported by the Columbia County Department of Health do not include home test results. Mabb said the numbers in the reports are the cases people were concerned
enough about to get a test through a testing facility such as WellNow or a pharmacy. These numbers indicate the virus is in the community. “We have clusters everywhere right now,” Mabb said. See COVID A2
Olana gets $1M to build Frederic Church Center
By Noah Eckstein
Columbia-Greene Media
HUDSON — Assemblymember Didi Barrett, D-106, and New York State Commissioner of Parks, Recreation, and Historic Preservation Eric Kulleseid helped secure $1 million to support development plans at Olana State Historic Site. According to Olana’s website, this is the largest single grant from the Assembly to a New York State historic site. The money will be used to construct a new sustainably designed all-electric visitor center named The Frederic Church Center. Frederic Church, one of the major figures in the Hudson River School of landscape painting, designed Olana, a
Persian-inspired villa that sits on 250 acres overlooking the Hudson River near the Rip Van Winkle Bridge. The project is a part of the site’s larger capital development plan between the state Office of Parks, Recreation, and Historic Preservation and the Olana Partnership. The carbon-neutral construction of the new visitor center will help attract over 200,000 visitors annually, according to Olana’s website. The site hosts tours of the historic home and hundreds of acres of hiking trails. The new visitor center includes an entry lobby for ticketing and orientation, a cafe, restrooms and a See OLANA A2
NOAH ECKSTEIN/COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
Olana State Historic Site.
Chatham community mourns veteran village police officer By Bill Williams Columbia-Greene Media
CHATHAM — Family, community members and fellow police officers are mourning the death of a former Village of Chatham police officer. John J. Bell, 80, of East Chatham, served with the department for 40 years. He was Badge No. 3. Bell died peacefully Tuesday, surrounded by his loved ones, family members said Wednesday. PHOTO COURTESY OF CHATHAM POLICE He could often be found John Bell was a Chatham police officer for 40 years, before lending a helping hand to retiring around 2010. those in need no matter the time, police officials said. said. he was a cook at the Rigor Hill “Officer Bell will never be Bell was born on June 9, Chief Taconic Diner. Bell later forgotten, he was one of the 1941, in Andover, Massachu- worked at Blue Seal Feeds in best, a legend and will be setts. See MOURNS A2 After moving to New York, greatly missed by all,” police
Index
On the web
PHOTO COURTESY OF CHATHAM POLICE
John J. Bell, 80, of East Chatham, served with the department for 40 years.
Weather
Chatham Courier
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Region ........................A3
Obituaries .................A56
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Sports .........................B1
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Classified .............. B4-B5
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State/Nation ................A6
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TODAY TONIGHT
Warmer with Partly cloudy sunshine
HIGH 69
LOW 46
FRI
A touch of afternoon rain
70 46
SEE PAGE A8
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA • REGISTER-STAR
A2 Thursday, May 5, 2022
COVID
Weather
From A1
FORECAST FOR HUDSON/CATSKILL
TODAY TONIGHT
Warmer with Partly cloudy sunshine
HIGH 69
LOW 46
FRI
SAT
SUN
MON
A touch of afternoon rain
Cloudy
Plenty of sun
Pleasant with plenty of sun
70 46
62 37
68 37
71 41
Ottawa 62/39
Montreal 62/42
Massena 63/40
Bancroft 64/35
Ogdensburg 64/38
Peterborough 63/39
Plattsburgh 62/40
Malone Potsdam 60/40 62/40
Kingston 58/40
Watertown 62/39
Rochester 60/42
Utica 64/41
Batavia 61/44
Buffalo 63/45
Olana
Albany 69/45
Syracuse 64/42
From A1
Catskill 69/46
Binghamton 64/43
Hornell 66/44
Burlington 63/41
Lake Placid 59/35
Hudson 69/46
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
SUN AND MOON
ALMANAC Statistics through 1 p.m. yesterday
Temperature
Precipitation
Yesterday as of 1 p.m. 24 hrs. through 1 p.m. yest.
High
0.21”
Low
Today 5:46 a.m. 7:59 p.m. 8:43 a.m. 12:03 a.m.
Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
“It’s safe to say there are clusters everywhere. It’s not endemic to one segment of the population. It’s popping up all over and I think it’s because we’re out in public, we’re doing our thing, and I think people have moved on and said whatever it is going to be what it is.” In February the highest number reported was 53 cases. The highest daily number of cases reported in March was 15, and the highest daily number reported in April jumped to 62 cases. The county also saw a recent spike in its hospitalization numbers. Seventeen county residents are hospitalized because of the virus, with two of them in the intensive care unit, Mabb said. This is the highest
Fri. 5:45 a.m. 8:00 p.m. 9:36 a.m. 12:54 a.m.
multi-purpose room adjoining outdoor terraces and paths that connect to Olana’s historic carriage road network. “Frederic Church is a singular historic figure who made his home here in our beautiful Hudson Valley and whose
number of hospitalizations the department has reported since March 2. Until this week, the county had five or fewer hospitalizations from COVID since March 25. One of the individuals in the ICU is there because of a car accident, Mabb said. The person tested positive for COVID on the way to the hospital. “Its concerning that the hospital numbers are up, but at the same time were not getting a lot of people who are super sick in the hospital” Mabb said. Warmer weather is expected to bring a decrease in COVID cases as it has the last two years, Mabb said. A large portion of the county has had COVID at this point. “Last week they were saying 70% of children and 60% of adults have had it,” Mabb said. “I think it’s running pretty rapidly in the community and what we may see is warm weather come and numbers
start to drop because of that, but also because it’s made the rounds.” The county is continuing to monitor its COVID cases, Board of Supervisors Chairman Matt Murell said. “At this time were monitoring the situation,” Murell said. “We’re not prepared to take any action as of yet. Obviously, we’re hoping it is a spike and it will go back down. We are monitoring this on a daily basis.” Murell said he communicates with the Department of Health and with Emergency Management on a regular basis. County officials also look at hospitalization numbers and similar numbers in surrounding counties. “For a very long period of time our hospitalizations were very steady, and when I say steady I mean low,” Murell said. “And there were very few people in ICU, so we’re looking at that. We look at,
obviously, the positive cases, but at this time we’re going to stay status quo and continue to monitor it.” Murell encouraged residents to continue being careful. He said the county is not going to mandate masks but if individuals feel more comfortable wearing a mask, they can do so. The Columbia County Department of Health offers vaccinations and booster shots each Thursday at ColumbiaGreene Community College from 3-5:30 p.m. The department is also holding a vaccine clinic Saturday at the Hudson Firehouse from 9-11 a.m. All brands and all doses are available, including the pediatric Pfizer vaccine for ages 5-11. Transportation is being offered for the May 7 clinic in Hudson by the Columbia County Office for the Aging. Transportation can be scheduled by calling 518-828-4258, option 1 or extension 2129.
impact continues to be felt in the worlds of art, landscape design, architecture, agriculture, environmental conservation and beyond,” said Barrett, D-Hudson. “The Olana Partnership is grateful to Assemblymember Barrett for her extraordinary support for this critical project and for her deep commitment to enhance the cultural, educational, and economic welfare of our region,”
said Meredith Kane, chairman of the Olana Partnership’s Board of Trustees. “From breathtaking views, informative tours and educational programs, Olana is an incredible example of the amazing tourism opportunities right here in New York, and this funding will help expand those opportunities,” state Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, D-Bronx, said. A state environmental
review is underway and the project will be open for public comment this year. Construction is projected to begin in 2023. The Frederic Church Center will be the beginning of Olana’s expansion and help deepen the visitor experience. Olana State Historic Site is hosting an “I Love My Park Day” on Saturday to help get the park ready for the spring season. A free walking tour begins at noon.
Moon Phases 55
First
50 YEAR TO DATE NORMAL
May 8
12.78 11.51
Full
Last
New
May 16 May 22 May 30
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2022
CONDITIONS TODAY AccuWeather.com UV Index™ & AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature®
2
3
4
54
58
61
9
8
6
65
70
8
73
74
6
74
4
3
2
73
71
68
8 a.m. 9 a.m. 10 a.m. 11 a.m. Noon 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 3 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 6 p.m. The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature is an exclusive index of effective temperature based on eight weather factors.
NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY Winnipeg 69/47
Seattle 53/44 Billings 75/52
Toronto 59/44 Detroit 63/49
Los Angeles 83/57 Atlanta 87/69 El Paso 87/60
Houston 88/73
Chihuahua 89/55
Miami 88/76
Monterrey 99/75
ALASKA HAWAII
Anchorage 54/39
-10s
-0s
10s rain
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Hilo 78/70
Juneau 49/34
0s
showers t-storms
Honolulu 84/73
Fairbanks 58/36
20s flurries
30s
40s
snow
50s ice
60s
70s
cold front
80s
90s 100s 110s
warm front stationary front
NATIONAL CITIES City Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Billings Birmingham Boise Boston Charleston, SC Charleston, WV Charlotte Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus, OH Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit Hartford Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Knoxville Las Vegas
Today Hi/Lo W 79/52 s 54/39 pc 87/69 pc 62/53 s 73/55 pc 75/52 pc 88/70 pc 71/50 pc 65/50 s 90/70 pc 74/59 c 83/65 pc 64/43 s 57/49 r 68/58 c 60/52 s 67/57 pc 79/58 r 66/46 s 53/48 r 63/49 s 73/48 s 84/73 sh 88/73 t 65/57 r 63/52 r 82/65 pc 93/69 s
Bloomberg News
U.S. regulators are concerned about the safety of cannabis compounds taken by animals leaching into human foods like milk and eggs. The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday issued a batch of warnings to companies that sell CBD -- a non-psychoactive compound in marijuana -- and Delta-8 THC, a knockoff of the substance that does get you high, THC. One of the letters went to a Hendersonville, North Carolina-based company called Kingdom Harvest,
which markets “hemp extract” and CBD for livestock that can be slipped into the food bowls of horses, cows or alpacas -- or given to them via peanut butter. “In addition to raising potential concerns regarding safety for the animals themselves, CBD products for food-producing animals raise concerns regarding the safety of the human food (meat, milk, and eggs) derived from those animals,” the FDA said in its warning letter. The agency asked the company to immediately stop selling any unapproved CBD products for food-producing animals, while
noting there’s not much data on whether CBD given to animals winds up in the food they produce. Kingdom Harvest didn’t immediately return a message seeking comment. The U.S. Department of Agriculture awarded a grant to Kansas State University two years ago to study whether feeding hemp to livestock leads to unacceptable concentrations in food supply. The university recently published a study showing that giving industrial hemp to Holstein steers reduces their stress levels.
Mourns New York 72/54 Washington 71/58
Kansas City 63/52
Denver 66/46
Tiffany Kary
This isn’t the first time that the FDA has issued such warnings. The latest letters, sent to four other companies, are part of the agency’s ongoing struggle to deal with unregulated products derived from cannabis plants. Wednesday’s warnings mostly focused on Delta-8 THC, which can be made cheaply with things like battery acid and contains contaminants. Delta-8 has already been banned in many U.S. states. (C)2022 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Montreal 62/42
Minneapolis 63/48 Chicago 57/49
San Francisco 65/56
CBD may be getting into milk and eggs from animals, FDA says
Fri. Hi/Lo W 88/57 s 53/40 pc 77/62 t 59/52 r 64/52 r 71/46 pc 82/62 t 67/44 pc 62/48 c 89/67 c 72/55 t 85/62 t 71/44 c 54/47 r 71/56 r 60/53 r 66/57 r 86/66 s 79/49 pc 57/46 r 60/50 r 68/46 c 84/73 c 92/75 pc 66/53 r 63/49 c 74/58 t 95/71 s
City Little Rock Los Angeles Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Norfolk Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland Portland Providence Raleigh Richmond Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Francisco Savannah Seattle Tampa Washington, DC
Today Hi/Lo W 78/62 t 83/57 pc 88/76 pc 54/45 c 63/48 c 82/65 t 88/74 c 72/54 s 65/56 pc 70/48 sh 56/49 r 94/72 s 73/55 s 96/69 s 68/55 pc 64/42 s 57/50 r 69/47 s 79/62 pc 75/57 c 77/56 s 68/59 t 77/56 s 65/56 s 91/68 pc 53/44 r 91/76 s 71/58 pc
Fri. Hi/Lo W 77/59 pc 81/60 pc 89/76 pc 53/45 r 65/46 c 76/58 t 85/72 t 62/50 r 72/64 t 76/55 s 65/49 pc 92/73 pc 64/50 r 99/70 s 63/53 r 61/39 pc 56/48 r 64/46 c 81/62 t 73/61 r 76/51 pc 68/54 r 75/56 pc 67/54 pc 90/66 c 55/46 sh 88/77 pc 63/56 r
lost an icon. Officer John J. Bell will never be forgotten in Chatham. He was larger than life with a heart and soul that was even bigger.” Calling hours for Bell will be Monday from 12:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. at the Wenk Funeral Home, 21 Payn Ave., Chatham. Interment will be in the St. James Cemetery in Ghent. The family is requesting that in lieu of flowers, contributions can be made in Bell’s name to a local food pantry or local animal or rescue center.
From A1
Chatham as a mechanic and truck driver, delivering feed, and then worked in the mill, family members said. Bell worked for a time at the Columbia County Sheriff’s Department, but was most proud to be a Chatham police officer for 40 years, his family said. Bell is believed to have served on the Chatham police force from the mid-1970s until about 2010. “John knew that just arresting people was not what the job was about,” his family said. “He helped people in so many ways and we are proud of him for that.” Since Bell’s death, hundreds of tributes have been pouring into social media from residents who knew him as a police officer and from police officers who served with him. Among the tributes: “He was a wonderful, caring man and also had a great sense of humor”; “John was one of
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
PHOTO COURTESY OF CHATHAM POLICE
Police badge and identification for officer John Bell, who served with Chatham Police for 40 years.
the good guys who always had your back, rest easy, old friend”; “You will be remembered as a good caring man”; “This is such a huge loss. I
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am so sad.” Chatham Fire Department official posted this tribute: “The Village of Chatham and the greater Chatham area
HUDSON RIVER TIDES Low Tide: 12:21 a.m. 0.75 feet High Tide: 6:10 a.m. 4.03 feet Low Tide: 1:15 p.m. 0.61 feet High Tide: 7:18 p.m. 3.28 feet
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OUR VIEW
Changing times are challenging County officials fre-
quently talk about the serenity of growing up, living and working in our rural region. Relative to other locations in New York state, the Twin Counties is a quiet place to call home. But we can’t hold back the march of time. In recent months, we have seen the population reflect migration from New York City and an influx of second-home owners. This means social change as well as economic change. In practical terms, it means we lock our doors and install alarm systems. We’re certainly not indicting the New Yorkers getting away from the city’s problems.
We’re saying that these developments are part and parcel of changing times and attitudes. It is somewhat encouraging, then, to learn the Cairo Police Department, which employs a small staff of two full-time officers, is seeking to add a third. Sgt. Richard Bush said the department’s personnel budget would remain status quo at $170,114 per year if a third full-time officer were hired to replace the hours divided among nine part-timers. Bush said the town is struggling to fill all available shifts with the town’s current roster of parttime officers, but those
part-timers hold other jobs that often take first priority. All police departments are having difficulties finding available officers in the current pandemic climate. One part-time Cairo officer is a full-time construction worker in New York City who needs to be on his construction job six and sometimes seven days a week. Just as the economic impacts of the pandemic and shifting social patterns are forcing elected officials to think in new ways, the leaders we entrust to protect us must do the same. A sergeant, two officers and nine constables just aren’t enough anymore.
ANOTHER VIEW
Abortion case leak shows that the Supreme Court is broken The second is that a leak like this is unheard of. It’s a The leaked draft of a ma- terrible blow to the court’s jority Supreme Court deci- morale and process and sion by Justice Samuel Ali- legitimacy. It hardly matto overturning Roe v. Wade ters whether it was leaked means several things. by liberals trying to shock First, it indicates that the nation’s conscience, in the justices’ private by conservatives trying conference, at least five to bolster the confidence members of the court of potentially wavering voted to reverse the 1973 justices, or by some disabortion precedent. They gruntled employee lookaren’t bound by that vote, ing for a thrill or money or which they can change up something else. Whatever to the day the final opinion the leaker’s motive, the reis released. Almost all first sult is very bad. drafts undergo significant Leaks are damaging for revision based on discusthe court because the rule sion and debate among of law should speak with a the justices. So the secfinal voice, not a tentative ond point to make is that one. A draft opinion is a Roe isn’t yet overturned, tentative thing, a work unthough it very likely will be. der development. It isn’t Could anything change the law. that result? Only if two Negotiations about or more justices decide opinions follow an internal to flip the court the other logic - and a private one. way. That would probably If this draft can be leaked, mean Justice Brett Kavaanything can be. That naugh and Chief Justice changes the game, probJohn Roberts would have ably forever. Justices won’t to end up joining forces be able to make suggeswith the court’s three libtions or proposals without erals. The draft opinion worrying about them beis sufficiently strident in coming public. The whole the way it rejects Roe that way the court reaches it remains possible that it decisions is now poised to will lose their votes. Kava- change. naugh could file a concurThen there is the loss rence that would become of trust. All the justices the controlling opinion. will surely blame other And it is not utterly out of chambers for the leak. Susthe question that he could picion, doubt and distrust discover an unwillingwill follow. ness to vote to overturn What’s more, the chief Roe - although that seems justice will have to run an especially unlikely at this internal investigation to juncture. see what happened and to So the first thing to unsanction the leaker. Such derstand about the draft an internal inquiry will be that was leaked to Politico destructive and debilitatis that it’s a draft - not the ing for the court’s staff, not final opinion. It can and to mention the justices. will change. The justices can’t be fired
Noah Feldman
(c) 2022, Bloomberg Opinion ·
for leaking. They have life tenure. Anyone else can. Then there is the way the rest of the process in this case will now be tainted. Internal debate will proceed against the backdrop of public analysis and criticism of every line of the opinion. If the justices change Alito’s language, it will look like they were responding to public criticism. They hate that. The process they’ve always relied on is now broken. Abortion rights are poised to fall. That’s a constitutional tragedy. But the collapse of the court’s orderly process is calamitous in its own right, albeit in a different way. It means the court will have a harder time doing the rest of its business. Judicial legitimacy is a delicate thing. As of Monday night, it is substantially reduced. Revoking the right to abortion would harm women and undermine basic liberty rights. It would also be bad for the Constitution and the rule of law. The leak just makes it all worse. This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners. Noah Feldman is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist and host of the podcast “Deep Background.” He is a professor of law at Harvard University and was a clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter. His books include “The Three Lives of James Madison: Genius, Partisan, President.”
The leaked draft Roe opinion is a disaster for the Supreme Court WASHINGTON — “Disaster” is not too strong a word to describe the leak of a draft Supreme Court opinion that would overrule Roe v. Wade. A disaster, most clearly, for the court itself, whose secrecy has been breached in a way that is unprecedented. In my view, overruling Roe would be a disaster — for a court reversing itself after repeatedly reaffirming the right to abortion over half a century, and even more for American women who have come to rely on the right to abortion. But I say “most clearly” because we cannot be certain whether that disaster will in fact ensue — if what was labeled “1st draft” of a majority opinion by Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. that was circulated Feb. 10 will remain the majority opinion of the court. Keep in mind: Majorities, particularly in high-stakes cases such as the Mississippi abortion law at issue, can fall apart. We don’t know how Politico, which broke the story, obtained the draft. One theory — my leading theory — is that the leak came from the conservative side, possibly from a clerk for a conservative justice concerned that the seeming majority, ready to do away with the constitutional right to abortion, might be unraveling. There was a hint of this last week in a Wall Street Journal editorial warning that Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. might be trying to dissuade Justices Brett M. Kavanaugh or Amy Coney Barrett from voting to overrule Roe outright. Roberts famously changed his mind after initially voting to strike down the Affordable Care Act in 2012 and “may be trying to turn another Justice now,” the Journal warned. “We hope he doesn’t succeed — for the good of the Court and the country.” The Journal said its “guess” was that Alito was writing the majority opinion. Is it a coincidence that the Alito draft then leaked to Politico — or is it part of the same campaign to stave off a Kavanaugh or Barrett defection? Of course, there are other possible culprits: a liberal clerk furious over the loss of abortion rights, perhaps? That makes less sense. Not much would be gained by leaking the draft of an outcome that has been expected since December’s oral argument in the Mississippi case, which involves a ban on most abortions after 15 weeks. Does anybody really think the reaction would change
WASHINGTON POST
RUTH
MARCUS the conservative justices’ minds? Not that this stopped liberal Twitter from hailing the disclosure. “Is a brave clerk taking this unprecedented step of leaking a draft opinion to warn the country what’s coming in a lastditch Hail Mary attempt to see if the public response might cause the Court to reconsider?” asked Brian Fallon of Demand Justice, a progressive group that has been pushing for court expansion and other measures to rein in the conservative majority. And not that it stopped conservative Twitter from naming a particular clerk who had been quoted in a 2017 Politico article by Josh Gerstein, one of the reporters who broke the draft story along with Alexander Ward. Sorry, but whoever the source, leaking a draft opinion isn’t bravery — it’s betrayal. I love a leak as much as the next reporter, and kudos to Politico for its scoop, but unlike Congress and the White House, the court can’t function this way. It’s one thing for information to dribble out after the fact about switched votes, but something else entirely for a draft judicial work product to make its way into breaking-news alerts. And as much as I fear the consequences of the current six-justice conservative supermajority, I’m not prepared to believe the institution should be destroyed, which would be the consequence of a culture of preemptive leaking. Now to the impending disaster of the opinion itself, assuming it stands as written. On one level, we knew this was coming, certainly after the questioning in the oral argument showed the other conservative justices seemingly uninterested in following Roberts’s efforts to forge a compromise short of outright overruling. But anticipating a calamity, bracing for its impact, is different from experiencing it. Reading the draft Monday night was chilling. “Roe and Casey must be overruled, and the authority to regulate abortion
must be returned to the people and their elected representatives,” the draft reads, referring to the 1992 ruling that reaffirmed the core right to abortion. It might as well have said: The authority to decide whether to continue a pregnancy must be removed from the woman who will have to bear the child and returned to a majority free to impose its moral choices on her. The court has overruled decisions before, but it has never removed an existing, established constitutional right. Now, we have every reason to believe it is prepared to do so, and in a way that would give states maximum leeway. If the draft becomes the law of the land, state legislatures will be free to restrict all abortion, in almost all circumstances. The only restraint will be whether the law survives the most minimal scrutiny of all: whether it has a rational basis. This means almost nothing. The state’s “legitimate interests,” Alito wrote in the draft, “include respect for and preservation of prenatal life at all stages of development.” A law that barred abortions necessary to save the life of the mother would probably not survive rational-basis scrutiny. That’s about it. Imagine the 13-year-old raped by her father and forced to give birth to his child. Imagine the desperate mother already unable to provide for her existing children. Imagine the loss of personal autonomy. There is one possible sliver of a silver lining in this calamity of a ruling. Alito went out of his way to distinguish abortion from other rights, similarly unstated in the Constitution, such as access to contraception, homosexual sex and same-sex marriage. Abortion, he argued, is “a unique act” because it, unlike the others, implicates potential human life. “We emphasize that our decision concerns the constitutional right to abortion and no other right,” Alito wrote. “Nothing in this opinion should be understood to cast doubt on precedents that do not concern abortion.” You can, perhaps, take some solace in this. Or you could remember that Alito dissented vigorously in the same-sex marriage ruling, arguing that “the Constitution leaves that question to be decided by the people of each State.” If that sounds alarmingly familiar, it should. Ruth Marcus’ email address is ruthmarcus@washpost.com.
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY ‘Women’s history is the primary tool for women’s emancipation.’ GERDA LERNER
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Thursday, May 5 n Austerlitz Planning Board 7 p.m. Town Hall, 812 Route 203, Spencertown 518-392-3260 n Chatham Town Board Workshop 7 p.m. Town Hall, 488 Route 295, Chatham 518-392-3262 n Claverack Republicans Club 7 p.m. Town Hall, Route 217, Philmont 518-8517570 n Columbia County Climate Smart Communities Task Force (CCCSCTF) 10 a.m.-noon via Zoom Public Link: https:// youtu.be/-Lrapkbb0gM n Copake Planning Board 7 p.m. Town Hall, 230 Mountain View Road, Copake 518-329-1234 n Kinderhook Town Zoning Board of Appeals 7 p.m. Town Hall, 3211 Church St., Valatie 518-758-9882 n Kinderhook Village Planning Board 7 p.m. Village Hall, 6 Chatham St., Kinderhook 518-758-9882 n Rhinebeck Zoning Board of Appeals 7:30 p.m. Town Hall, 80 East Market St., Rhinebeck 845-876-1922 n Stockport Town Board Workshop 7 p.m. Town Hall, 2787 Atlantic Ave., Hudson 518-828-9389
Chatham recognized for its music program By Natasha Vaughn-Holdridge Columbia-Greene Media
CHATHAM — The Chatham Central School District has been recognized nationally as one of the best communities for music education. The National Association of Music Merchants Foundation announced that 738 school districts received the designation. “We are grateful to once again receive this recognition here in Chatham,” Chatham School District Superintendent Sal DeAngelo said. “This award provides an excellent indicator of the value our community places on the arts and the great work our staff and students put forth as a result.” This is the seventh year Chatham has received recognition from the foundation. The award program
recognizes outstanding efforts from teachers, administrators, parents, students and community leaders who have made music education part of a well-rounded education, according to the foundation web page. To qualify for the award, Chatham had to answer questions about funding, graduation requirements, music class participation, instruction time, facilities, support for the music program and community music-making programs, according to the district’s announcement. The responses are then verified with school officials and reviewed by the Music Research Institute at the University of Kansas. Chatham offers band, orchestra, chorus and musical theater programs from elementary school through
high school, according to the district’s announcement. The music program also has a high level of student participation and support from parent and community groups such as the Chatham Fine Arts Booster Club, Chatham Alumni Association and Chatham Education Foundation and others, according to the district. “I’m tremendously proud of our district’s commitment to music education,” Chatham orchestra teacher and music department chairman Christopher Goodwin said. “Thanks to the hard work and dedication of our teachers, students, parents, administration and community, our school’s hallways are filled with music daily,” Goodwin said. “We’re ecstatic to return to hosting our annual music performances again and see our students blossom on stage
to celebrate their continued hard work.” This is the 23rd year the National Association of Music Merchants has awarded the Best Communities for Music Education designation to districts that demonstrate outstanding achievements in efforts to provide music access to all students. “Music educators, administrators and communities truly rallied to support and sustain music education through a period of intense change and adaptation,” said Mary Luehrsen, the foundation’s executive director. “These districts and schools persevered in serving their students and communities and ensured that music education was part of curriculum offerings. We applaud the commitment and efforts of all music educators, school administrators and
community members in providing students the opportunity to explore their creativity through music.” This year’s awards program was designed to celebrate schools and districts adapting, innovating and persevering in the face of change according to the foundation. Researchers at the Music Research Institute at the University of Kansas, in conjunction with the foundation, created a new way for districts and schools to address the inroads and setbacks impacted by the pandemic, and goals for equity and access to music education for students and national standards for music education in a short, qualitative survey. Since its inception more than 2,000 schools and school districts have submitted a survey for evaluation.
Saturday, May 7 n Germantown History Department 9
a.m. to noon 1767 Parsonage, 52 Maple Ave., Germantown 518-537-6687 n Stuyvesant Recreation Commission 9 a.m. Town Hall, 5 Sunset Drive, Stuyvesant 518-758-6248
Columbia County launches food scrap drop-off By Noah Eckstein Columbia-Greene Media
Monday, May 9 n Canaan Town Board 7 p.m. Upstairs
Town Hall, 1647 Route 5, Canaan 518781-3144 n Citizens’ Climate Lobby Columbia County Chapter 6 p.m. location varies (either Hudson or Chatham) 518-672-7901 n Copake Parks and Recreation Commission 7 p.m. Park Building, Mountain View Road, Copake. 518-329-1234 n Hillsdale Planning Board 7:30 p.m. Town Hall, Main Street, Hillsdale 518-3255073 n Hudson Common Council 7 p.m. at City Hall, 520 Warren St., Hudson, 518828-1030 n Kinderhook Village Recreation Commission 7 p.m. Village Hall, 6 Chatham St., Kinderhook 518-758-9882 n Milan Town Board 7:30 p.m. Wilcox Memorial Town Hall, 20 Wilcox Circle, Milan 845-758-5133 n New Lebanon Town Board 7 p.m. Town Hall, 14755 Route 22, New Lebanon 518-794-8888 n Philmont Village Board 7 p.m. Village Hall, 124 Main St., Philmont 518672-7032 n Rhinebeck Town Board 6:45 p.m. Town Hall, 80 East Market St., Rhinebeck n Taghkanic Town Board 7 p.m. Town Hall, Route 82, West Taghkanic 518851-7638 n Tivoli Planning Board Workshop 7 p.m. Historic Watts dePeyster Hall, 1 Tivoli Commons, Tivoli 845-757-2021
Tuesday, May 10 n Chatham Central School District
Board of Education 6 p.m. High School Library, Chatham 518-392-2400 n Chatham Planning Board 7 p.m. Town Hall, 488 Route 295, Chatham 518392-3262 n Columbia Economic Development Corporation governance and nomination committee 8:30 a.m. One Hudson City Centre, Suite 301, Hudson Check Website for details n Copake Land Use Review Committee 7 p.m. Town Hall, 230 Mountain View Road, Copake 518-329-1234 n Copake Republican Club 7 p.m. at the Copake Town Hall, 230 Mountain View Road, Copake n Hillsdale Town Board 7 p.m. Town Hall, Main Street, Hillsdale 518-325-5073 n Germantown Town Board 7 p.m. via Zoom All meeting and Zoom access information can be found on the Town website at https://germantownny.org/calendarevents/ n Hudson Planning Board 6 p.m. Hudson Hall, 327 Warren St., Hudson n Kinderhook Village Climate Smart Community Task Force 7 p.m. Village Hall, 6 Chatham St., Kinderhook 518-758-9882 n Red Hook Town Board 7:30 p.m. Town Hall, 7340 South Broadway, Red Hook 845-758-4606 n Rhinebeck Central School District Board of Education 7 p.m. High/Middle School Library, North Park Road, Rhinebeck 845-871-5500 n Rhinebeck Village Board 7 p.m. Village Hall, 76 East Market St., Rhinebeck 845-876-7015 n Taghkanic Planning Board 7 p.m. Town Hall, Route 82, West Taghkanic 518851-7638, ext. 7 n Valatie Village Board 7:30 p.m. Village Office, Martin H. Glynn Building, 3211 Church St., Valatie 518-758-9806
Wednesday, May 11
HUDSON — In response to public feedback, the Columbia County Solid Waste Department has started a food scrap drop-off program. Residents of Columbia County can dispose of fruits, vegetables, coffee grounds and eggshells at any of the nine transfer stations located in New Lebanon, Germantown, Kinderhook, Gallatin, Copake, Hillsdale, Greenport,
Livingston and Chatham. “Collecting food scraps is a way to ensure biodegradable material is recycled and doesn’t end up in landfills,” said Wendy Madsen, deputy director of the Solid Waste Department in Columbia County. The recycled food scraps collected by the county will be used by local farmers for their compost. According to the Natural Resource Defense Council, an
Department will not accept food-scraps in compostable bags. Instead, Madsen urged participants in the free program to dump their compost directly into the 35-gallon green bins available at the 9 transfer stations. If the drop-off works well, meaning if the collected food scraps do not contain meat, bones, pasta, grains, dairy or non-biodegradable waste, the Columbia County Waste Department plans to expand
the program to include local community gardens and programs operating in the county in an attempt to make this a closed loop system, so the county can have its own compost. “I’ve used it and it is great,” said Rich Volo, a member of Hudson’s Conservation Advisory Council. “Simple and easy to use.” The closest transfer station to Hudson is in Greenport at 51 Newman Road.
COLUMBIA COUNTY POLICE BLOTTER Editor’s note: A charge is not a conviction. All persons listed are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Charges can be amended or dismissed.
STATE POLICE n Sheyenne K. Rewatiraman, 29, of Hudson was arrested in Hudson on May 4 at 1:54 a.m. and charged with class U misdemeanor first offense operating a motor
vehicle with a blood alcohol content of .08 of 1 percent, and class U misdemeanor first offense driving while intoxicated. n Andre G. Lee, 45, of Mount Vernon was arrested in Livingston on May 4 at 4:14 a.m. and charged with class U misdemeanor first degree operating a motor vehicle impaired by drugs. He was issued an appearance ticket.
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n Clermont Planning Board 7:30 p.m.
Town Hall, 1795 Route 9, Clermont 518537-6868 n Columbia County Board of Supervisors Full Board 7:30 p.m. 401 State St., Hudson. 518-828-1527 n Copake Hamlet Revitalization Task Force 7 p.m. Town Hall, 230 Mountain View Road, Copake 518-329-1234 n Ghent Zoning Board of Appeals 7 p.m. Town Hall, 2306 Route 66, Ghent 518-392-4644 n Kinderhook Village Board 7 p.m. Village Hall, 6 Chatham St., Kinderhook 518-758-9882
environmental organization, composting is the natural process of recycling organic matter to convert it into fertilizer that enriches the soil and plants. Madsen has started collecting food scraps in her own household and suggested participants in the food scrap drop-off program use a compost kitchen bin, a small odor repellent canister that can hold household compost. The Columbia County Solid Waste
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John Joseph Bell May 03, 2022 John Joseph Bell, 80 years old, of East Chatham passed away peacefully Tuesday, surrounded by his family. Born in Andover, MA, to Robert and Mary (Curtis) Bell. He leaves behind, wife Lynn, Sons Jim (Heather)), Tom (Dawn), and John (Sue). Daughters Bonnie (Matt) and Jean (David). John is survived by his brother Tommy (Diane) and Brad, his sisters Kathy, Sandy, Jane and Joanne (Richard) and many nieces and nephews Grandchildren Hannah (Jason), Austin, Casey, Rebecca, Mathew, Kevin and Steven. As well as Great grandchildren, Madison and Burke. He was predeceased by brothers, Robert and Dean and sisters Caroline, Mary Judith and Susan; as well as Granddaughter Linnea. Growing up he learned his work ethic and worked at many jobs. After moving to New York, he was a cook at the Rigor Hill Chief Taconic Diner. Later he worked at Blue Seal Feeds in Chatham as a mechanic, truck driver delivering feed and then in the mill. He worked for the Columbia County Sheriff’s Dept , but was most proud to be a Chatham Police Officer for 40 years. John knew that just arresting people was not what the job was about.He helped people in so many ways, and we are proud of him for that. Calling hours will be Monday May 9 form 12:30 to 3:00pm from the Wenk Funeral Home Chatham, Interment will be in the St James Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made in his name, to YOUR local Food Pantry and YOUR local Animal or Rescue Center. For on-line condolences, visit wenfuneralhome.com Love you and you will be missed, Jackie.
Joseph William Staunch September 11, 1955 - April 29, 2022 FREEHOLD - Joseph “Joe” William Staunch, 66, peacefully passed on Friday April 29, 2022 with his family at his side. Joe was born on September 11, 1955 in Catskill, NY and raised by his parents, the late Joseph and Muriel Staunch in Freehold, NY. Joe graduated from Greenville High School in 1973 and moved on to begin his career as a Union Carpenter for Local 370. Joe would enjoy spending his spare time outdoors either fishing, hunting, or just walking in the woods. Joe enjoyed spending time with his family including his dogs, and anybody who knew him, knew of his great sense of humor. In addition to his parents, Joe is predeceased by his sister, Bonnie Staunch. He is survived by his wife, Michelle Staunch of Freehold; children, Joseph Staunch of Freehold, Jesse Staunch of Troy, and Jaime (Christopher) Palazzo of Freehold; sisters Sally Staunch and Linda (Duncan) MacPherson of Freehold; and many nieces and nephews. Joe will be deeply missed by all who knew him. Joe has been privately cremated. Memorial calling hours will be held on Thursday May 12th from 5 to 7pm at the A.J. Cunningham Funeral Home, 4898 State Route 81, Greenville, followed by a memorial service at 7pm. In lieu of flowers, donations in memory of Joe may be made to Shriners Hospitals for Children, Attn: Processing Center, PO Box 947765, Atlanta, GA 30394. Condolences can be posted at ajcunninghamfh.com
Anthony C. Versace March 31, 1930 - May 2, 2022 Anthony C. Versace, 92, of Hudson, NY, passed away May 2, 2022. Born March 31, 1930 in White Plains, NY, he is the son of Giovanni and Biancadora (Crea) Versace. Anthony is a United States Navy Veteran, Honorably Discharged having served during the Korean War. He is retired from the US Postal Service as manager of employee and labor relations out of Albany, NY. Anthony was a Boy Scout Leader for many years in White Plains, NY, was a life member of Hudson Elks Lodge #787 serving as Exalted Ruler, and loved to play golf, accomplishing his first and only hole in one at 80 years old. Anthony leaves to cherish his memory, his daughter and son in law Cathy V. and Paul B. Robertson, his son John E. Versace, grandchildren Russell and Benjamin Robertson, Yaicha Versace, Larissa Versace Gaschel and William Menz. Anthony is also survived by his brothers Enrico and Pasquale Versace, and long time partner of 17 years Gloria Schum of Boynton Beach, FL. Visitation hours from the Bates & Anderson-Redmond & Keeler Funeral Home are Thursday May 5, from 5:00-7:00pm. A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated Friday at 10:30am from Holy Trinity Church St. Mary’s Parish in Hudson, NY. In lieu of flowers donations in memory of Anthony may be made to the Columbia-Greene Humane Society.
Norman Mineta, transportation secretary who helped create TSA, dies at 90 By Emma Brown The Washington Post
Norman Mineta, a son of Japanese immigrants who was held in an internment camp during World War II and later became one of the country’s highestprofile Asian American political leaders, as a big-city mayor, a 10-term congressman and a Cabinet secretary, died Tuesday at his home in Edgewater, Md. He was 90. The cause was a heart ailment, said John Flaherty, his former chief of staff. As a Democratic congressman and later as a Cabinet member under Democratic and Republican presidents, Mineta was widely regarded for his expertise in the byzantine policies governing the country’s highways, railroads and airports. In 1971, he was the first Asian American to lead a major U.S. city, his native San Jose, which was in the midst of a population boom. During his tenure in Congress representing Silicon Valley from 1975 to 1995, he championed civil liberties and played a key role in obtaining an official apology and compensation for Japanese Americans who were forced from their homes during World War II when their ancestry made them objects of government suspicion. Mineta had served briefly as commerce secretary toward the end of the Bill Clinton administration - becoming the first Asian American Cabinet member - and the incoming president, George W. Bush, tapped him as transportation secretary in January 2001. His career was most sharply defined by the terrorist attacks by al-Qaida on Sept. 11, 2001. After the second plane hit New York’s World Trade Center that day, Mineta, along with Vice President Dick Cheney, was taken to a secret bunker under the White House. There, Mineta made an unprecedented decision to ground all 4,638 planes in U.S. airspace. No emergency protocol had been established to bring them all down at once. An underling reported to Mineta that pilots would be told to land at their discretion. That wasn’t good enough. “I didn’t want a pilot who was over Kansas City thinking, ‘Well, I will fly on to L.A., sleep in my own bed tonight,’” Mineta later said. All planes were grounded within two hours and 20 minutes. In the months afterward, Mineta worked 100-hour weeks to plug security holes at seaports, airports and railroad stations, and those involving oil and gas lines. He headed the effort to start a new agency, the Transportation Security Administration. The TSA, established by Congress on Nov. 19, 2001, grew bigger than the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Border Patrol combined. Within a little more than a year, the TSA - which in 2003 shifted to the new Department of Homeland Security from the Transportation Department - had replaced a patchwork of private security companies. The agency hired and trained tens of thousands of federal baggage screeners and implemented a set of strict rules that transformed the American airport experience. “His calm hands at the reins after 9/11 is one of his principal legacies,” Michael P. Jackson, then-deputy homeland security secretary, told The Washington Post in 2006. “He just had the credibility to lead a team of people to do meaningful work at every nook and cranny in the Department of Transportation.” Months after Mineta’s resignation in 2006, George W. Bush awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor. San Jose’s airport had been named in his honor in 2001. Mineta entered politics in the late 1960s as a San Jose City Council member. When he became mayor, the city was in the midst of a decades-long
WASHINGTON POST PHOTO BY BILL O’LEARY
From left in 2006, Maryland Sen. Ben Cardin and Rep. Steny Hoyer, Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine and Norman Mineta.
population explosion fueled by the burgeoning aerospace and service industries. Demand for city services jumped, and Mineta became intimately familiar with the problems of traffic congestion and the limits of the city’s transportation network. He was frustrated that local officials didn’t have more say in how federal funds should be used to improve roads and railways, and he vowed to change that as a member of Congress. First elected to the House in 1974, he sat on the Committee on Public Works and Transportation, a perch that allowed him to help bring billions of dollars home to California for highway construction and maintenance. He played a key role in crafting and passing the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act, a 1991 law that redrew federal transportation policy, placing new emphasis on public transit and signaling the end of the government’s single-minded focus on interstate highways. “Expanding the role of transit and funding for transit - that was one of his signature contributions,” former congressman James Oberstar, D-Minn., Mineta’s longtime colleague on the transportation committee, said in an interview for this obituary in 2011. (Oberstar died in 2014.) “The pre-eminent emphasis on highways was not going to get us out of the congestion morass which we were confronting increasingly as we completed the interstate system.” In 1992, Mineta turned down the chance to become President Bill Clinton’s transportation secretary so that he could chair the House transportation committee, where he thought he could have a more direct impact on policy. Two years later, a GOP tide swept a Republican majority into both houses of Congress, and Mineta lost his chairmanship. Soon afterward, he resigned his seat. He spent several years as a Lockheed Martin executive before returning to public service as commerce secretary during the last six months of Clinton’s administration. When Bush won the disputed 2000 presidential election, he kept Mineta on as transportation secretary in a show of bipartisanship. “There is no such thing as a Democratic highway or a Republican bridge,” Mineta liked to say. Outside of his work on transportation policy, Mineta was best known for advocating on behalf of the approximately 120,000
Japanese Americans who were forced into internment camps during World War II. More than 40 years after the war ended, he urged his U.S. House colleagues to issue a formal apology and “close the books on one of the most shameful events in our history.” “We lost our homes, we lost our businesses, we lost our farms, but worst of all, we lost our most basic human rights,” he said on the House floor in 1987. “Our own government had branded us with the unwarranted stigma of disloyalty which clings to us still to this day.” The Civil Liberties Act of 1988 authorized $20,000 in reparations for each surviving internee; it passed with support from both parties and served as an official recognition that the incarceration of Japanese Americans was wrong, a result of “race prejudice, war hysteria, and a failure of political leadership,” as a presidential panel had concluded. In 1991, when the United States went to war with Iraq in the Persian Gulf, Mineta warned against targeting Arab Americans, saying he hoped the country could avoid sinking again into such racism and fear. “The U.S. Constitution must not become a casualty of our conflict with Saddam Hussein,” he said at the time. Later, as transportation secretary heading up security efforts after 9/11, Mineta fiercely resisted racial profiling in baggage screening lines. “I’ve been criticized for going after blue-haired grandmothers at airports, but I just felt very strongly about this,” he told a McClatchy reporter in 2006. Norman Yoshio Mineta was born to Japanese immigrants in San Jose on Nov. 12, 1931, and was the youngest of five children. He was 10 when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, drawing the United States into World War II. In February 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt issued an executive order branding West Coast residents of Japanese heritage a threat to national security. They were ordered from their homes to one of several camps around the interior West, taking only what they could carry. Norman was wearing his Boy Scout uniform and clutching a baseball mitt and bat when he and his siblings boarded a train in San Jose. He recalled a U.S. soldier confiscating the bat, calling it a deadly weapon. The Minetas eventually were taken to Heart Mountain, Wyo., a
In Loving Memory of
makeshift settlement surrounded by a tall fence and barbed wire. “Some say the internment was for our own good,” Mineta later recalled. “But even as a boy of 10, I could see the machine guns and the barbed wire faced inward.” In Wyoming, Mineta struck up a friendship with a local Boy Scout named Alan Simpson, who came to visit the camp and later became a U.S. senator. Decades later, when Mineta sought a reparations bill in the House, Simpson sponsored a companion bill in the Senate. “He came through all that with the camps by just rising above any kind of resentment or bitterness,” Simpson told The Post in 2000. “You look at the way he’s handled it and how hard he’s worked since then and you say, ‘There’s a person of depth.’” Mineta stayed at Heart Mountain for 18 months before moving to the Chicago area, where his father - an insurance agent by trade - had volunteered to teach Japanese language courses to U.S. Army soldiers. Norman Mineta was a teenager when his family was able to return to San Jose. Mineta graduated from the University of California at Berkeley in 1953 and then served for three years as an Army intelligence officer. He subsequently worked for his father’s insurance company in San Jose before being groomed by the city’s Japanese American community leaders for political office. His first marriage, to May Hinoki, ended in divorce. In 1991, he married Danealia “Deni” Brantner, a flight attendant. In addition to his wife, of Edgewater, survivors include two sons from his first marriage, David Mineta of San Jose and Stuart Mineta of Redwood City, Calif.; two stepsons, Robert Brantner of West River, Md., and Mark Brantner of Johnson City, Tenn.; and 11 grandchildren.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS Copake, N.Y. (518) 329-2121 Pine Plains, N.Y. (518) 398-7777
VITO LAWRENCE SACCO Sacco-McDonald-Valenti Funeral Home 700 Town Hall Drive Hudson, New York 12534 • 518-828-5000 e-mail: smvfh700@gmail.com
M. GRIMALDI FUNERAL HOME & CREMATION SERVICES 25 Railroad Ave., Chatham, N.Y. (518) 822-8332 Mario A. Grimaldi, Manager
ATTENTION FUNERAL DIRECTORS Obituaries, Death Notices or Funeral Accounts Should Be Submitted Before 2PM Daily For The Next Day’s Paper.
Cynthia Magyar
Notices should be emailed to:
July 12, 1944 to February 7, 2022
Call Patti to advertise your funeral home:
Join us for a celebration on May 7th from 1-4pm at the Hillsdale Fire House. Cynthia was a phenomenal lady. She touched so many people on her journey through life. From the 4H Kids she mentored in Hillsdale to her students she taught in Hudson, and all the personal and professional friends, customers, co-workers, and others that happened to become lifetime people in our lives. I am looking for funny or poignant stories regarding Cynthia. Please feel free to share your experiences with us at the Fire Hall or contact me. I would really appreciate it.
Call Ken Sabin at 518-325-4980 or email sabins@fairpoint.net
obits@columbiagreene media.com
(518) 828-1616 x2413
For
CURRENT OBITUARY LISTINGS be SURE to CHECK our WEBSITE: hudsonvalley360.com
The Scene
www.registerstar.com • www.thedailymail.net
To submit an event to The Scene, please send a press release and any artwork to scene@registerstar.com. Information should be sent 2 weeks prior to the publication date. Thursday, May 5, 2022 A7
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
Esmé’s Stories: A Magical Journey A Wish on Display TROY — The Arts Center of the Capital Region invites you to join us on May 7 at 2 p.m. to celebrate the exhibition opening of Esmé’s Stories: A Magical Journey. The show will run through June 4 in our Wallace & Foyer Galleries. When offered the chance for a Make-A-Wish, 11 year-old Esmé Savoie expressed her desire to create an “Esmé Museum” where she could share her stories and bring people together to experience them in new ways. Since its inception nearly 35 years ago, Make-AWish® Northeast New York has granted more than 2,000 wishes — each one conceived by a child’s imagination. And, as you will see, Esmé’s wish is certainly imaginative! The Arts Center agreed to transform our Wallace Gallery into a visual interpretation of Esmé’s most recent creative storytelling. Artists, Royal Brown, Toast Halasz, and Shanelle Carter-Maddox created the magical artwork that brought Esmé’s stories to life with contributions from, Jing Agunzo, Isabella Burnett, Cynthia Fiorini, Benj Gleeksman, Charlie Gleeksman, and Kim Tateo. In her own words, “My name is Esmé Ann Savoie. I was born on January 14 in Troy, New York. My mom and dad are always by my side, and I love it. They
Esmé Ann Savoie.
are supportive and kind. When I was younger, my mom taught me letters and numbers, but I learned to read myself. I have always been a *storyteller* mostly to myself. My stories were in my head without a way to tell them. I needed a change. Then finally Kayleigh and I started working together. I saw the new way could be good.” Esmé lives with significant medical complexity that inhibits her ability to speak, walk, and eat. She is also a storyteller who uses an Eyegaze-driven communication device to share her
knowledge, intelligence, and humor as well as her vision of the world. Esmé’s stories, and indeed her life, are filled with creative magic, inspired by her experiences visiting MASS MOCA, the Frida Kahlo exhibit in Brooklyn, and Disney Animation Studios, but also by the connections she has formed with the people (and the occasional Muppet) who she has pulled into her orbit. Wish mom Hillary Savoie, said, “When she wished for an ‘Esmé Museum,’ it was the first time Ez used communication
to share a creative vision of how she wanted something to be, and from there, with the support of her communication team, her creativity exploded. Esmé has a lot to teach this world about magic, love, jokes and fun – and why we must always presume the competency of individuals who communicate differently and support them in finding their own voices!” Make-A-Wish grants lifechanging wishes for children with critical illnesses. MakeA-Wish Northeast New York serves the 15 counties comprising the 518 and 838 area codes. The chapter normally grants 90100 wishes each year, and has granted more than 2,000 wishes since 1987. To donate, volunteer, refer a child or learn more about Make-A-Wish, visit wish. org/neny and discover how you can share the power of a wish. The May 7th celebration and opening includes a special live performance of one of Esmé’s stories by musical duo Jocelyn & Chris. Thank you to exhibit sponsors Jocelyn & Chris, Emily Petersen and The Sagamore Resort, Chantel Squires and Albany Broadcasting Co., and MakeA-Wish Northeast New York. Now prepare yourself for a magical journey!
Godfrey Reggio
An Afternoon with Godfrey Reggio CLOSE UP series Few filmmakers have altered the landscape of modern media as profoundly as Godfrey Reggio. Reggio’s body of work, created during the past 40+ years, consists of four features and numerous shorts combining painstakingly composed imagery (including brilliant time-based manipulations) and found footage, including
discarded odds and ends from our commodity culture. His moving, often disturbing and deeply thought-provoking works include the landmark Qatsi trilogy—KOYAANASQATSI (1982), POWAQQATSI (1988) and NAQOYQATSI (2002). Inspired by Hopi philosophy and made in deep collaboration with composer Phillip Glass, the wordless, intricately
constructed Qatsi films, as with all of Reggio’s works, serve as meditations and interrogations of humanity’s complex, often troubling relationship to nature. Though they forgo the typical cinematic structures, Reggio’s works remain indelible expressions decades after their creation, reflecting his intense commitment, sense of purpose and purity of vision. We’ll show
a selection of excerpts and short films and engage in conversation in what promises to be an unforgettable program. Saturday, May 7 at 3:30 p.m. At The Orpheum Theatre Buy Tickets: https://ticketing.useast.veezi.com/purchase /2199?siteToken=na3v1gjrn7ys s5nkcfsbzazwqg
Roots and Shoots Concert with The Lucky 5
The Lucky 5
SPENCERTOWN — The Lucky 5, Saturday, May 28, 8 p.m. Tickets now available: $15 members, $20 general admission The Lucky 5 is a hardswinging jazz band that blends swing and gypsy jazz to
create a unique, foot-stomping blend of music. Included with your ticket is an optional swing dance lesson by Jason Fenton at 7pm prior to the concert. Visit spencertownacademy. org for more information on the Lucky 5
Note: This concert was originally scheduled to be held outdoors, but due to technical issues beyond our control, it will be will be held indoors at the Spencertown Academy. The Academy has installed multiple Blueair HealthProtect 7470 air purifiers, and we
will have limited seating in the auditorium. Currently, masks are recommended but not required. However, we will continue to monitor the situation in Columbia County closely and make any adjustments accordingly.
CALENDAR LISTINGS TSL * COVID 19 Guidelines * TSL will require you to provide proof of vaccination for entry to the theater. You may view the complete monthly calendar at the link above. Movie tickets available for purchase at the door only. Cash, credit card, and check accepted. On Fridays in May, buy a movie ticket and bring a friend for free! Friday & Weekend Admission: $12.50 general / $10 membersand students. Monday Admission: $7 general / $5 members and students. n Jacques Audiard’s, PARIS, 13th DISTRICT (2022) — Émilie meets Camille who is attracted to Nora, who crosses paths with Amber. Three girls and a boy. Four young people fall in and out of love (and sex) with each other while figuring out their lives in Paris. They’re friends, sometimes lovers and often both. From acclaimed director Jacques Audiard, based on stories by Adrian Tomine, from a screenplay by Audiard, Céline Sciamma, and Léa Mysius. French, Mandarin, English with English Subtitles. 2022.1h46m. Friday, May 6 at 7:30 p.m., Saturday, May 7 at 7 p.m., Sunday, May 8 at 6 p.m., Monday, May 9 at 7:30 p.m. n David Lynch’s, INLAND EMPIRE (2006) — An experimental film written and directed by Lynch and co-produced by Lynch and his longtime collaborator and wife Mary Sweeney, the film follows the fragmented and nightmarish events surrounding a Hollywood actress (Laura Dern) who begins to take on the personality of a character she plays in a supposedly cursed film production. An international co-production between the US, France, and Poland, the film was completed over a three-year period and shot primarily in Los Angeles and Poland. The process marked several firsts for Lynch: it was shot and developed on a scene-by-scene basis and entirely in low-resolution digital video by Lynch himself using a handheld Sony camcorder – not film stock. Remastered in 2022. B/W & color. 2006. 3h. Saturday, May 7 at 6:15 p.m., Sunday, May 8 at 5:15 p.m. n Daniel Kwan & Scheinert’s, EVERYTHING EVERYWHERE ALL AT ONCE (2022) — Directed by Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, collectively known as Daniels, the film is a hilarious big-hearted sci-fi action adventure about an exhausted Chinese American woman (Michelle Yeoh) who can’t seem to finish her taxes. “Yes, the movie is a metaphysical multiverse galaxy-brain head trip, but deep down – and also right on the surface – it’s a bittersweet domestic drama, a marital comedy, a story of immigrant striving, and a hurt-filled ballad of mother-daughter love” – A.O. Scott, The New York Times. 2022. 2h20m Friday, May 6 at 7 p.m., Monday, May 9 at 7 p.m. n Frank Hurley’s, SOUTH: Ernest Shackleton and the Endurance Expedition (1919) — When Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton set sail into the Antarctic on August 8, 1914, he was already considered an explorer extraordinaire around the globe. With an eye for profit down south, Shackleton hired experienced cameraman Frank Hurley to join him on a brave journey across the South Pole, but within 80 miles of land, they found themselves and their ship trapped amongst heavily packed ice. What followed this dire moment is one of the greatest adventure stories ever told and an unbelievable tale of survival. B/W. 1919. 1h28m. Saturday, May 7 at 2:30 p.m., Sunday, May 8 at 1:30 p.m. n Charline Bourgeois-Tacquet’s, ANAÏS IN LOVE (2021) — This buoyant French comedy from director Charline Bourgeois-Tacquet follows spirited and romantic thirty-something Anaïs (Anaïs Demoustier) in her manic search for stability. Behind on her rent, contemplating breaking up with her boyfriend, and struggling to complete her thesis, Anaïs searches for inspiration while hurtling through lovers with abandon. When her affair with an older book publisher Daniel (Denis Podalydès) leads to her falling for his live-in partner Emilie (Valeria Bruni Tedeschi), a brilliant and luminescent novelist, things get especially messy. This cliché-shattering feature debut weaves a tale of self-discovery as literate and delightful as it is unexpected. French with English subtitles. 2021. 1h38m. Friday, May 6 at 5:30 p.m., Saturday, May 7 at 5 p.m., Sunday, May 8 at 2 p.m., Monday, May 9 at 5 p.m. n Righi & Zoppis’s, THE TALE OF KING CRAB (2021) — Luciano is a wandering outcast in a remote, late 19th-century Italian village. His life becomes undone by alcohol, forbidden love, and a bitter conflict
with the prince of the region over passage through an ancient gateway. When the quarrel escalates, Luciano is exiled to the distant Argentine province of Tierra del Fuego where, with the help of ruthless gold-diggers, he searches for a mythical treasure, paving his way toward redemption. Written and directed by Alessio Rigo de Righi and Matteo Zoppis. Italian and Spanish with subtitles. 2021.1h45m. Friday, May 6 at 5:15 p.m., Saturday, May 7 at 4:15 p.m., Sunday, May 8 at 3:15 p.m., Monday, May 9 at 5:30 p.m. n Marie Amiguet & Vincent Munier’s, THE VELVET QUEEN (2021) — Back by popular demand. High up on the Tibetan plateau, among unexplored and inaccessible valleys, lies one of the last sanctuaries of the wild world where rare and undiscovered fauna lives. In the heart of these highlands, multiaward-winning nature photographer Vincent Munier guides writer Sylvain Tesson on his quest to document the infamously elusive snow leopard. Munier introduces Tesson to the subtle art of waiting from a blind spot, tracking animals, and finding the patience to catch sight of the beasts. Through their journey in the Tibetan peaks, inhabited by invisible presences, the two men ponder humankind’s place among the magnificent creatures and glorious landscapes they encounter along the way. French with English subtitles. 2021.1h32m. Sunday, May 8 at 4p.m. TIME & SPACE LIMITED 434 COLUMBIA STREET, HUDSON, NY | (518) 822-8100 | FYI@TIMEANDSPACE.ORG
MAY 5 TRIVIA NIGHT Thursday, May 5, 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. Come out and join us for a fun night of TRIVIA!! Thursday, May 5, 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., https://www.facebook.com/events /728971354953087/7289713582 86420 Hudson Brewing Company, 99 South 3rd Street, Hudson, 518-6975400
MAY 6 CINCO DE MAYO WITH DJ CRUZ Friday, May 6, 7 p.m. - 10 p.m. Music and drink specials and music with DJ Cruz Friday, May 6, 7:00 pm - 10:00 pm, https://www.facebook.com/ events/352720423544998 Hudson Brewing Company, 99 South 3rd Street, Hudson, 518-6975400
MAY 7 Free Genealogy Workshop, Open to the Public Speaker: Gretchen Maresco, MS, Registrar at Hendrick Hudson Chapter, NSDAR What: Learn how to discover if your ancestor came over on the Mayflower or fought in the Revolutionary War or the Civil War. Or any other thing you’ve been puzzling over about your family’s history When: Saturday May 7, 1pm Where: Historic Robert Jenkins House, 113 Warren St, Hudson, NY Pre-registration: Not needed. Questions? (518) 755-4917 AMERICAN KENNEL CLUB SCENT TRIALS AT THE MUSEUM Saturday, May 7, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Join us for: The American Kennel Club Scent Trials at the Museum! After the tragic events of 9/11, there was a push in this country, due to the increased demand for detection and search and rescue dogs, to increase focus on scent training and breeding programs domestically. Scent work is a sport that helps nurture and develop scent skills in dogs. Breeders can ‘prove’ their line’s ability to do scent work by earning titles. It is a seriously popular and exciting sport for everyone who trains and competes with their dog. It is also super fun to watch! So join us and the event’s sponsor, Albany Obedience Club, as we host American Kennel Club Scent Trials at the Museum. The scent work sport will take place inside and outside of the Museum building, with as many as 80-90 teams competing during the event! Also during this event, there will be a canine-inspired Scavenger Hunt in the Museum for kids. PLEASE NOTE: ONLY CANINES REGISTERED FOR THIS EVENT WILL BE ALLOWED ON THE GROUNDS. Free admission to the Museum and the scavenger hunt activity were made possible by a generous grant award from the Museum’s Super Saturdays sponsor: Hudson River Bank and Trust Co. Foundation Saturday, May 7, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., https://fasnyfiremuseum.com/ museum-events/ FASNY Museum of Firefighting, 117 Harry Howard Avenue, Hudson, 518-822-1875
Chatham Courier
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
THURSDAY, MAY 5, 2022
Fundraiser to be held for the Chatham High School announces Students of the Quarter Morris Memorial CHATHAM — A ‘time machine’ was found recently in the basement of the Morris Memorial in Chatham in the form of film from the 1990s depicting Chatham’s basketball domination of the ‘90s. Three sets of games will be shown at the Crandell Theatre as a fundraiser for the Morris Memorial with all proceeds going to pay the fuel bill for Morris Memorial.
First up at 10 a.m. May 9, an early bird special, The United Papermakers play against arch rival Irish Builders. Several great players from the past Ron Legere, ‘Sweetness’ Baccalio, Lenny Hughes, Walt Michaud, Greg Ernst, Jack Buchan, Elmo Flood, ‘Big Al’ Meier and more will be featured. Admission is $20 with all proceeds going to the Morris. At 10 a.m. May 15, see the
Chatham Panthers, featuring Todd Wegit, Eddie Bemis, Jason Summers, Guy Johnson and more. Filmed by Butch JHefner, with commentary by Don Krapf and Dave Flood. Admission is $20. The United Papermakers versus Seal-Rite wraps up the series at 10 a.m. May 22 with Gary Stever, Lon Suranno and more. Also behind the scene footage. Admission is $20.
North Chatham Free Library presents ‘At Wit’s End’ for Mother’s Day NORTH CHATHAM — The North Chatham Free Library will host a special treat for moms of all ages at 3 p.m. on Mother’s Day, May 8. Actor and educator Nancy Rothman will perform as columnist and Queen of domestic humor, Erma Bombeck, in excerpts from the play “At Wit’s End” by sisters Alison and Margaret Engel. This event will take place outdoors in the garden behind the library, or in case of inclement weather, at the North Chatham United Methodist Church a few doors down the street. Erma Bombeck’s
thirty years’ experience performing regionally, in New York City, as well as internationally. Pre-register by email for limited seating at registernorthchathamlibrary@gmail. com. This project is made possible with funds from the Restart NY Regrants, a regrant program of the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature and administered in Columbia County by CREATE Council on the Arts.
observations, popular in the ‘70s and ‘80s, took familiar but trying situations like childcare, checkout lines and house cleaning, and made them funny. For example, “Never go to a doctor whose plants have died.” “Seize the moment. Remember all those women on the Titanic who waved away the dessert cart.” “Cats invented self-esteem.” Rothman is well known in the area through her many performances as actor and storyteller and leader of workshops for public schools and arts organizations, and as a private coach. She has over
Chatham High School announces third quarter Excellence in Effort CHATHAM — Chatham High School announces the students named to Excellence in Effort for Quarter 3 of the 2021-2022 school year. Hayden Bennett Academic Initiative - Grade 9; Tyler Shufelt Academic Initiative - Grade 10; Jonah Howard Academic Initiative - Grade 11; Jayson McKay Academic Initiative - Grade 12; Emily Rose Academic Initiative - Life Skills; Miguel Casarrubias Academic Initiative - ENL; Joselin Castellanos Global History & Geography I; Brianna Reyome AP World History I; Isabella Wiseman AP World History II; John Miles AP U.S. History; Eudora Brennan Human Identity; Kendall Hayes Global History & Geography I; Taylor Van Wie AP World History I; Timothy Jeralds Financial Literacy; Samantha Jimenez Morales Theater Production; Abigail Garrison CEIP; Dayton Harvey Sports Marketing; Austin Laurange Band; Mateo Medina Band; Jordin Radley Band; Kendall Hayes Band; Jeremy Deane Studio in Art; Kaiya Brooks Studio in Art; Morgan Van Wie Ceramics; Emily Mesick Physics; Joselin Castellanos Living Environment; Alex Bevens Living Environment; Olive Mountain Environmental Science; Alexis Berry Earth Science; Eudora Brennan AP Biology; Stacy Garza Project Based Science; Isabella Tarbox Chemistry; Normando Mason
Algebra 1B; Timothy Jeralds Algebra 2; Tallulah O’ConnorBrockway College Bound Math; Tessa Wallace Geometry; Patrick Brown Geometry Accelerated; Owen Zaik Algebra 2 Accelerated; Zachary Casivant Pre-Calculus Accelerated; Daniel Baneni AP Calculus; Jade Moore Consumer Math; Austin Laurange Computer Programming I; Jordan Fisher Computer Programming II; Meghan Hay AP Computer Science; Aidan MacDonald Algebra 2 Prep.
Health; Jayden Jones Spanish I; Abby Prevratil Spanish V; Mason Levy Spanish II; Sarah Harrison Spanish III; Eudora Brennan Spanish IV; Lauren Bruck Spanish V; Joshua Herbest English 9; Steven Goodrich English 9 Concepts; Renn Nelson Study Skills; Owen Zaik English 10; Kamryn Hanson English 10 Pre-AP; Meghan Distin English 11; Tatum Shea English 12 AP; Gabrielle Morse English 12; Jason Baneni Algebra; Steven Goodrich Algebra 1A; Tyler Shufelt
CHATHAM — Chatham High School announces the Student of the 3rd Quarter 2022. Emily Rose Adaptive Art; Sasha Langley Algebra; Cameron Myers Algebra 1A; Elizabeth Morse Algebra 1B; Ian Freiermuth Algebra 2; Jenna Palubeckis Algebra 2 Accelerated; Ben Halpin AP Biology; Meghan Hay AP Calculus; Gabriel Rippel AP Computer Science; Eudora Brennan AP U.S. History; Addison Perry AP World History I; Jenna Palubeckis AP World History II; Isabella Wiseman Band ~ grade 10; Amelia Scheriff Band ~ grade 11; Hannah Shufelt Band ~ grade 12; Brianna Reyome Band ~ grade 9; Abigail Garrison CEIP; Tallulah O’Connor Brockway Ceramics; Alaina Graziano Chemistry; Lily Strattman Chorus ~ grade 10; Amelia Scheriff Chorus ~ grade 11; Lauren Bruck Chorus ~ grade 12; Brianna Reyome Chorus ~ grade 9; Willow Visconti College Bound Math; Gabriel Bennett Computer Programming I; Ewan Ferrier Computer Programming II; Gabrielle Fisher Consumer Math; Mateo Medina Design & Drawing for Production; Michael Pierro Digital Electronics; Milo Fisch Earth Science; Alexis Reichardt English 10; Gabriel Bennett English 11; Isabella Spencer English 11 Pre-AP; Nathaniel Loomis English 12 AP; Tatum Shea English 12 AP; Sasha Langley English 9; Jesse KosnickOrdway English 9 Concepts; Luca Spencer English 9 Pre-AP; Emily Mesick Environmental Science; Brianna Reyome Financial Literacy; Abby Taylor Fine Arts Workshop; Helen Tassinari Geometry; Taylor Van Wie Geometry Accelerated; Gianni Macagnone Global History & Geography I; Waylon Sotherden Global History & Geography II; Daniel Baneni Health; Chloe Werner Human Identity; Anthony Reyome Jazz Band; Jahnyah Armstrong Living Environment; Eion Henchey Living Environment; Lauren Uhlar
! e r e H s i g n i r p S Make Your Reservations Now Visit lovely, historic Old Chatham and stop by Jackson’s Old Chatham House to join us for a bite!
Mother’s Day Sunday, May 8 11am - 8pm
Dine In & Take Out Available 3rd Generation Owned & Operated
Open 7 Days A Week 646 Albany Turnpike Old Chatham, NY jacksonsoldchathamhouse.com (518) 794-7373
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Orchestra ~ grade 10; Diana Castellanos Orchestra ~ grade 11; Tobias Jeralds Orchestra ~ grade 12; Aiden Brennan Orchestra ~ grade 9; Logan Smalley Physical Education; Jayson McKay Physical Education; Destiny DeJesus Physical Education; Sasha Langley Physical Education; Hannah Pinto Physics; Ethan Narofsky Pre-Calculus; Olive Mountain Pre-Calculus Accelerated; Maxwell Friedman Principles of Engineering; Tessa Wallace Project Based Science; Zachary Casivant Residential Construction; Isabella Tarbox Sociology; Brendan Delyser Spanish I; Taylor Van Wie Spanish II; Joselin Castellanos Spanish II; Jenna Palubeckis Spanish
III; Jordan Fischer Spanish IV; Erin Madsen Spanish V; Gabriel Bennett Sports Marketing; Erin Madsen SS 12 - Economics; Benjamin Halpin SS 12 - Government; Maya Case SS 12 - Government; Amanda Roberts SS 12 - Government; Alexis Meyers Studio Drawing & Painting; Kira Ploof Studio Drawing & Painting; Olivia MacDonald Studio in Art; Fiona Phelps Studio in Art; Emily Gaylord Studio in Art; Amelia Scheriff Theater Production; Emma Braley U.S. History and Government; Gabriel Bennett U.S. History and Government; Anna Miles U.S. History and Government.
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Sports
SECTION
Yanks win again
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
& Classifieds
B
Yanks run streak to 11with 9-1 win over Blue Jays. Sports, B2
Thursday, May 5, 2022 B1
Tim Martin, Sports Editor: 1-518-828-1616 ext. 2538 / sports@registerstar.com or tmartin@registerstar.com
LOCAL ROUNDUP: Goldstien leads Hudson girls to victory Tim Martin Columbia-Greene Media
HUDSON — Tessa Goldstien won four events to lead the Hudson girls track team to a 77-26 win over Watervliet on Tuesday. The Watervliet boys defeated Hudson, 57-18. Goldstien won the triple jump (30-3), shot put (29-9), high jump (4-4) and was a part of the winning 4x100meter relay team. Results GIRLS 100m hurdles: Jepson (H) 20.8; 100m: York (W) :13.9; 4x100 relay: Hudson (L.Carr, Goldstien, Mann, T.Carr) :55.0; 400m: Johnson ( W) 1;12.0; 400m hurdles: Surgick (W) 1:26.4; 800m: York (W) 3:49; 200m: T.Carr (H) 28.3; 4x400 relay: Hudson (Medina, L.Carr, Holloway, T.Carr) 6:00; Long jump: Mann (H) 14-1; Triple jump: Goldstien (H) 30-3; Shot put: Goldstien (H)29-9; Discus: Medina (H) 54-2; High jump: Goldstein (H) & Mann (H) 4-4; Pole vault: Kudlack (H) 5-0. BOYS 110m hurdles: Johnson (W) :20.2; 100m Johnson (W) 11.5; 400m: Woodbury (W) :69.8; 400m hurdles: Wallas (W) 1:22.6; 1600m Ross (W) 9:05.0; 4x100 relay: Watervliet (Woodberry, Graham, Robles, Johnson) :48.0; 800m: Wallas (W) 3:46.0; 200m: Johnson (W) :24.1; Shot put: Perkins (W) 35-9; Discus: Perkins (W) 91-2; Long jump: Lewis (H) 16-6. BOYS Taconic Hills 97, Green tech 38 Taconic Hills 81, Catskill 54 Catskill 80, Green Tech 45 Results 4x800 relay: Taconic Hills 10:27; 110m hurdles: Howard (TH) :15.1; 100m: Bevs (GT) :11.6; 1600m: Russo (TH) 4:58; 4x100 relay: Catskill :49.0; 400m: Robles (TH) :56.4; 400m hurdles: Howard (TH): 54.7 (School Record); 800m: Russo (TH) 2:21; 200m: Garrity (TH) :24.6; 3200m: Bhagwandin (TH) 12:20; 4x400 relay: Catskill 4:03; Shot Put: Darling (CAT) 41-11; Discus: Burns (TH) 114-6; Long jump: Howard (TH) 22-4; Triple jump: Robles (TH) 36-6.5; high jump: Henry (CAT)5-6; Pole vault: Howard (TH)14-0. GIRLS Taconic Hills 103, Catskill 29 Taconic HIlls 113, ALC 19 Catskill 63, ALC 44 Results 4x800 relay: TH (Bosko, Arre, Nunez, Stalker) 13:39; 100m hurdles: Olson (TH) :18.9; 100m: Raycelle (ALC) :14.6; 1500m: Dixit (Cats) 6:29; 4x100 relay: TH (Beck, Poucher, McGlynn, Ryan) :59.0; 400m: Bosko (TH) :64.2; 400m hurdles: Olson (TH) 1:20.8; 800m: Bosko (TH) 3:02; 200m: - Ingram (TH) :28.3; 3000m: Arre (TH) 14:15; 4x400 relay: TH (Bosko, Nunez, Beck, Carasquillo) 5:09; Pole vault: Olson (TH) 7-0; Triple jump: Ingram (TH) 29-7; Long jump: Allen (Cats) 14-1; Shot put: L.Hargrove (ALC) 21O.75; Discus: Phillips (TH) 658; High jump: Allen (Cats) 4-6. GIRLS Chatham 68, Greenville 56 Maple Hill 96, Chatham 36 Results 4x800 relay: MH (Frazier, Deso, Noel, Pusateri) 11:29.1; 100m hurdles: Jacobs (MH) :17.4; 100m: Kosich (Gre) :13.5; 1500m: Fitzmaurice (Gre) 5:34.2; 4x100 relay: MH (Jacobs, Fletcher, Hirschoff, Hinsinger) :54.7; 400m: Uhlar (Chat) :65.2; 400m hurdles: Jacobs (MH) :78.7; 800m: Frazier (MH) 2:53.1;
200m: Mulholland (Gre) :28.6; 3000m: Pusateri (MH) 12:30.6; 4x400 relay: MH (Fletcher, Deso, Thomas, Noel) 4:43.7; Discus: Donahue (MH) 68-10.5; Shot put: Fletcher (MH) 28-9; Triple jump: Armstrong (Chat) 298.5; Long jump: Hayes (Chat) 14-7; High jump: Flannery (Gre) 4-4. BOYS Chatham 91, Greenville 39 Maple Hill 89, Chatham 50 Results 4x800 relay: Chatham (Ti. Jeralds, Sitzer, Haner, To. Jeralds) 9:25.3; 110m hurdles: Charlebois (MH) :17.3; 100m: Pomykaj (MH) :11.5; 1600m: Marra (MH) 4:41.0; 4x100 relay: MH (Tuttle, Brewer, Charlebois, Pomykaj) :46.4; 400: Sterantino (MH) :58.1; 400m hurdles: Charlebois (MH) 61.0; 800m: Marra (MH) 2:09.0; 200m: D. Baneni (Chat) :24.3; 3200m: Kosich (Green) 10:36.6; 4x400 relay: MH (Haller, Charlebois, Brewer, Sterantino) 3:48.2; Discus: Donnelly(MH) 10210.75; Shot put: Sturgis (MH) 38-11; Triple jump: Coyne (Chat) 38-8.25; Long jump: Barlow (Chat) 19-1.25; High jump: Barlow (Chat) 5-6; Pole vault: Pomykaj (MH) 10-0. COLONIAL GIRLS Ravena 81, Ichabod Crane 55 Ichabod Crane 76, Burgh 53 Ravena 82, Burgh 53 Results 4x800 relay: ICC; 100m hurdles: K. Brown (IC); 100m: A. Flint (IC); 1500m: Touraugeau (R); 4x100 relay: ICC; 400m: K. Melanson (IC); 400m hurdles: Dove (L); 800m: Touraugeau (R); 200m: Ortiz (R); 3000m: Ticer (R); 4x400 relay: Ravena; Pole vault: Ortiz (R); High jump: Napples (L); Triple jump: Planasdobe (L); Long jump: Johnson (L); Shot put: Uba (R); Discus: Uba (R). BOYS Ravena 75, ICC 55 Burgh 91, ICC 47 Burgh 93, Ravena 47 Results 4x800 relay: Ravena; 110m hurdles: Faraci (L); 100m: B. Seabury (IC); 1600m: N. Barkley (IC); 4x100 relay: Lansingburgh; 400m: Cruz (R); 400m hurdles: Deyoe (R); 800m: I. Wall (IC); 200m: B. Seabury (IC); 3200m: McIntyre (L); 4x400 relay: ICC; Pole vault: Mayo (R); High jump: McIntyre (L); Triple jump: Paljusaj (R); Long jump: Prince (L); Shot put: Aguiar (L); Discus: Aguiar (L). TENNIS COLONIAL Ichabod Crane 4, Mohonasen 3 SCHENECTADY — Ichabod Crane won four of five singles matches in posting a 4-3 Colonial Council tennis victory over Mohonasen on Tuesday. Results Singles: Ean Lantzy (Ichabod Crane) defeated Josiah Spivey, 6-0, 6-1; Brett Richards (Ichabod Crane) defeated Noah Spivey, 6-3, 6-1; Hasan Serville (MohonasenSchenectady) defeated Liam Curry, 6-0, 6-1; Simon Papas (Ichabod Crane) defeated Mohamed Shahabuddeen, 6-1, 6-2; Holden Reynolds (Ichabod Crane) defeated Vincenzo DiCastanzo, 6-3, 6-1. Doubles: Brian Schneider & Saeed Shahabuddeen (Mohonasen-Schenectady) defeated Anthony Doria & Joseph Meyer, 7-6(7-3), 6-1; Bilal Shohatee & Daniel Garcia (Mohonasen-Schenectady) defeated Ichabod Crane, 6-4, 6-2
H.S. BASEBALL:
Thorsen and Radley go yard, Chatham rolls at home Matt Fortunato/Columbia-Greene Media
Chatham’s Matt Thorsen (9) is greeted at home plate by his teammates after belting a home run in Tuesday’s Patroon Conference baseball game against Greenville.
Matt Fortunato/Columbia-Greene Media Matt Fortunato/Columbia-Greene Media
Chatham’s Cam Horton goes after a pitch during Tuesday’s Patroon Conference baseball game against Greenville.
Matt Fortunato Columbia-Greene Media
CHATHAM — The Chatham Panthers defeated the Greenville Spartans 10-1 in Patroon Conference baseball action on Tuesday afternoon to continue their impressive season. Matt Thorsen threw a full seven innings, allowed just the one run, and struck out
12 Spartans for the win. Cole Flannery took the loss after pitching four and two-thirds, giving up five runs, striking out eight, and leaving the bases loaded in the fifth as Sam Buquet came in to finish the game. Jack Motta reached first on a ground ball booted by the second baseman to lead off the game. Isaiah Edmonds
Chatham honored it seniors (from left), Jayson McKay, Gavin Tanner, Vinnie Marasco and Kyle Jackson, prior to Tuesday’s Patroon Conference baseball game against Greenville.
grounded into a fielder’s choice and reached safely on the force at second base. After issuing a walk to opposing pitcher Flannery, Thorsen struck out Joe Domermuth and Ryan Arp to end the inning. Tate Van Alstyne led off the bottom half for Chatham with a similar at-bat as Motta, as he also reached on a bobbled grounder by the
shortstop. Thorsen came up and cranked a two run shot to left field to give the Panthers an early 2-0 lead. Cam Horton worked a walk but was thrown out by Motta on a stolen base attempt. Tyler Kneller struck out, and then Michael Pierro singled to left but was picked See CHATHAM B3
H.S. SOFTBALL:
Sitcer hits for cycle as C-A tops Catskill Tim Martin Columbia-Greene Media
Tim Martin/Columbia-Greene Media
Riley Sitcer, shown here in an April 28 game against Hudson, hit for the cycle on Tuesday as Coxsackie-Athens defeated Catskill in Patroon Conference softball action.
CATSKILL — CoxsackieAthens scored 16 runs in the first inning and went on to defeat Catskill, 26-7, in Tuesday’s Patroon Conference softball game. Riley Sitcer had a monster game for C-A, hitting for the cycle with two home runs, a triple, double and single and four RBI. Leigha Wiley had a home run and double with six RBI for the Riverhawks (6-4). Julia Grounds added a double and single with two RBI, Abigail O’Dell had two singles and three RBI, Natalee Farrand contributed two singles and two RBI, Patience DeRose
singled and drove in three runs, Kasey Purdy singled and drove in two runs and Bella Bushane and Isabella Luvera each had a single and an RBI. Kaitlyn McGee led Catskill with a double and single and an RBI. Ava Edmond added two singles, Madison Jones had a single and two RBI and Alexandra Hallam and Gianna Jeune both singled. Wiley was the winning pitcher striking out seven, walking one and allowing seven runs and seven hits. Mairin Apjohn took the loss, surrendering 26 runs and 17 hits with 15 walks. Chatham 5, See CATSKILL B3
H.S. BASEBALL:
Fulling’s third straight one-hitter, Brantley’s slam lift Cats Tim Martin Columbia-Greene Media
CATSKILL — Cullen Fulling threw his third consecutive one-hitter and Azar Brantley blasted a grand slam to lead Catskill to a 10-0 victory over Coxsackie-Athens in Tuesday’s Patroon Conference baseball game. Fulling struck out five
walked three and allowed just a double to Dillon Hynes leading off the game. Fulling helped his own cause with a triple, single and an RBI for the Cats (9-2). Aiden Leipman added two singles and two RBI, Nate ShookTimot and Eddie Rogers both had two singles, Adam Carlson singled and drove in a
run, Carter Van Etten singled and Demetrio Morales drove in a run. Hynes pitched 5 1/3 innings for C-A, allowing eight runs and nine hits with eight strikeouts and three walks. Blaine Apa gave up two runs and two hits with two walks in 2/3 of an inning. Maple Hill 10,
Watervliet 0 CASTLETON — Gavin Van Kempen threw a five-inning perfect game with 15 strikeouts and no walks as Maple Hill defeated Watervliet, 10-0, in Tuesday’s Patroon Conference baseball game. Van Kempen has thrown See BRANTLEY B3
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
B2 Thursday, May 5, 2022
ML Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pct GB NY Yankees 18 6 .750 — Toronto 15 10 .600 3.5 Tampa Bay 13 10 .565 4.5 Boston 10 14 .417 8.0 Baltimore 8 16 .333 10.0 Central W L Pct GB Minnesota 15 9 .625 — Cleveland 10 12 .455 4.0 Chi. White Sox 10 13 .435 4.5 Kansas City 8 14 .364 6.0 Detroit 7 14 .333 6.5 West W L Pct GB LA Angels 15 10 .600 — Houston 13 11 .542 1.5 Seattle 12 12 .500 2.5 Oakland 10 13 .435 4.0 Texas 9 14 .391 5.0 Monday’s games Chi. White Sox 3, LA Angels 0 Minnesota 2, Baltimore 1 NY Yankees 3, Toronto 2 Houston 3, Seattle 0 Tampa Bay 6, Oakland 1 Tuesday’s games Minnesota 7, Baltimore 2 NY Yankees 9, Toronto 1 Boston 4, LA Angels 0 Houston 4, Seattle 0 Tampa Bay at Oakland, 9:40 p.m. Wednesday’s games Seattle (Brash 1-2) at Houston (Verlander 2-1), 2:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Kluber 1-1) at Oakland (Montas 2-2), 3:37 p.m. Minnesota (Bundy 3-1) at Baltimore (Bradish 0-1), 7:05 p.m. NY Yankees (Cortes Jr. 1-0) at Toronto (Kikuchi 0-1), 7:07 p.m. LA Angels at Boston (Whitlock 1-1), 7:10 p.m. National League
NATIONAL LEAGUE East W L Pct GB 18 8 .692 — 12 11 .522 4.5 11 13 .458 6.0 11 15 .423 7.0 9 16 .360 8.5 Central W L Pct GB Milwaukee 16 8 .667 — St. Louis 13 10 .565 2.5 Pittsburgh 9 13 .409 6.0 Chi. Cubs 9 14 .391 6.5 Cincinnati 3 20 .130 12.5 West W L Pct GB LA Dodgers 14 7 .667 — San Diego 15 8 .652 — San Francisco 14 8 .636 .5 Colorado 13 10 .565 2.0 Arizona 12 13 .480 4.0 Tuesday’s games NY Mets 5, Atlanta 4 NY Mets 3, Atlanta 0 Arizona 5, Miami 4 Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 3 Washington 10, Colorado 2 San Francisco at LA Dodgers, 10:10 p.m. Wednesday’s games Arizona (Bumgarner 1-1) at Miami (Hernandez 2-1), 12:40 p.m. Atlanta (Anderson 2-1) at NY Mets (Megill 4-0), 1:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Mahle 1-3) at Milwaukee (Peralta 0-1), 7:40 p.m. Washington (Corbin 0-4) at Colorado (Gomber 1-2), 8:40 p.m. San Francisco (Wood 2-1) at LA Dodgers (TBD), 10:10 p.m. Interleague Monday’s game St. Louis 1, Kansas City 0 Tuesday’s games San Diego at Cleveland, PPD Texas 6, Philadelphia 4 Pittsburgh at Detroit, PPD Chi. White Sox 3, Chi. Cubs 1 Kansas City 7, St. Louis 1 Wednesday’s games Pittsburgh (Quintana 0-1) at Detroit (Pineda 1-1), 1:10 p.m. San Diego (Gore 2-0) at Cleveland (Quantrill 1-1), 1:10 p.m. St. Louis (Wainwright 2-3) at Kansas City (Bubic 0-2), 1:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Quintana 0-1) at Detroit (Faedo 0-0), 4:10 p.m. San Diego (TBD) at Cleveland (TBD), 4:10 p.m. Texas (Perez 0-2) at Philadelphia (Wheeler 1-3), 6:45 p.m. Chi. White Sox (Giolito 0-1) at Chi. Cubs (Hendricks 1-2), 7:40 p.m. NY Mets Miami Philadelphia Atlanta Washington
Pro basketball NBA PLAYOFFS Sunday’s games Milwaukee 101, Boston 89 Golden State 117, Memphis 116, Golden State leads series 1Monday’s games Miami 106, Philadelphia 92 Phoenix 121, Dallas 114 Tuesday’s games Boston 109, Milwaukee 86, Series tied 1-1 Memphis 106, Golden State 101, Series tied 1-1 Wednesday’s games Philadelphia at Miami, 7:30 p.m. Dallas at Phoenix, 10 p.m.
Pro hockey STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS FIRST ROUND (Best-of-seven) Monday’s games Carolina 5, Boston 1, Carolina leads series 1-0 Toronto 5, Tampa Bay 0, Toronto leads series 1-0 St. Louis 4, Minnesota 0, St. Louis leads series 1-0 Los Angeles 4, Edmonton 3, Los Angeles leads series 1-0 Tuesday’s games Washington 4, Florida 2, Washington leads series 1-0 Pittsburgh 4, NY Rangers 3 3 OT, Pittsburgh leads series 1-0 Nashville at Colorado, 9:30 p.m. Dallas at Calgary, 10 p.m. Wednesday’s games Boston at Carolina, 7 p.m. Tampa Bay at Toronto, 7:30 p.m. St. Louis at Minnesota, 9:30 p.m. Los Angeles at Edmonton, 10 p.m.
Tennis
MLB roundup: Yanks run streak to 11; Mets sweep Braves Field Level Media
Aaron Judge hit a solo home run and finished with three RBIs as New York won for the 11th straight time, beating host Toronto, 9-1, in Tuesday. Giancarlo Stanton added a two-run home run for the Yankees, who scored six runs in the seventh inning. New York starter Jameson Taillon (2-1) surrendered one run, five hits and no walks in six innings. He struck out four. Toronto starter Alek Manoah allowed one run, three hits and one walk while striking out seven in six innings. The back-toback losses mean the Blue Jays have lost their first series of the season. They were 6-0-1 in their previous seven series. The split was in a four-game series with the Yankees. Mets 5, Braves 4 (Game 1) Pete Alonso had a pair of RBI singles for host New York, which never trailed en route to beating Atlanta in the opener of a doubleheader. Travis Jankowski had two hits and a stolen base, while David Peterson (1-0) allowed four hits and three walks while striking out six in five innings. Matt Olson hit a threerun homer in the fifth for the Braves. Charlie Morton (1-3) recovered from a slow start to throw 5 2/3 innings, allowing five runs (four earned) on six hits and three walks with three strikeouts. Mets 3, Braves 0 (Game 2) Carlos Carrasco became the first New York pitcher in more than nine months to complete eight innings in finishing off a doubleheader sweep of visiting Atlanta. Pete Alonso homered for the final run in the nightcap after delivering a pair of RBI singles in the opener. The sweep gives the Mets a chance to continue their franchise-record, seasonopening streak of series wins to eight. The Braves have lost four of five. Carrasco (2-1) allowed six hits and two walks while striking out five. Dominic Smith laced a two-run double in the first off losing pitcher Kyle Wright (3-1), who surrendered three runs on nine hits and one walk while striking out three over seven innings. Astros 4, Mariners 0 Yordan Alvarez and Jose Altuve slugged solo home runs, and Jeremy Pena singled in two runs as Dusty Baker earned his 2,000th managerial win in the Houston Astros’ 4-0 victory over the visiting Seattle Mariners on Tuesday. Baker is the 12th manager in the majors to reach the plateau, and 10 of the
John E. Sokolowski/USA TODAY
New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) hits a two run single against the Toronto Blue Jays during the seventh inning at Rogers Centre on Tuesday.
previous 11 are in the Hall of Fame. Bruce Bochy, who has 2,003 wins, is not yet eligible. Baker improved to 2,000-1,745 overall and 137109 in two-plus seasons with the Astros. Alvarez snapped a scoreless tie with a solo homer in the fourth inning for a second consecutive night, this time taking Mariners righthander Chris Flexen (1-4) out 435 feet to straightaway center field. Alvarez, who went 1-for-3 with two runs scored, has hit five homers over his last nine games. He has seven for the season. Flexen limited the Astros to just that run while allowing two hits and three walks over five innings. Dodgers 3, Giants 1 Julio Urias went six scoreless innings and Chris Taylor hit a two-run single as Los Angeles got the best of visiting San Francisco in the first game of the season between the National League West rivals. Craig Kimbrel recorded his fifth save in five chances as the Dodgers improved to 3-1 on a brief five-game homestand that ends with another meeting against the Giants on Wednesday. Carlos Rodon gave up just three hits in six innings but lost his first game in a Giants uniform in his fifth start. Thairo Estrada and Austin Slater each had two hits for San Francisco, which lost for the fourth time in its past five games. Rays 10, Athletics 7 (10) Mike Zunino’s pinch-hit two-run homer in the ninth inning set up Yandy Diaz’s go-ahead double in the 10th to lift visiting Tampa Bay over Oakland. Tampa Bay added four more runs in the 10th: a tworun single by Isaac Paredes, Manuel Margot’s triple to center and Zunino’s single.
The Rays won their second straight while sending the A’s to their fifth loss in a row. The A’s tried to rally in the bottom of the 10th off reliever Jason Adam, cutting the deficit to 10-7 on an RBI double by Sheldon Neuse (3-for-5) and a run-scoring single by Sean Murphy. Nationals 10, Rockies 2 Josh Bell smacked a three-run homer and Juan Soto launched a solo shot as Washington routed Colorado in Denver. Keibert Ruiz had three hits and three RBIs and Yadiel Hernandez had three hits and drove in two as Washington won for the third time in four games. Bell also had three hits and Maikel Franco and Alcides Escobar added two apiece as Washington racked up 16. C.J. Cron slugged his National League-leading ninth homer of the season for the Rockies. Cron went 3-for-3 with a walk, but Colorado had its three-game winning streak halted. Brewers 6, Reds 3 Willy Adames belted a three-run homer and Brandon Woodruff pitched effectively into the sixth inning to lift Brewers over struggling Cincinnati. Cincinnati, off to its worst start in franchise history at 3-20, has lost 18 of its last 19 games, including seven straight. Woodruff (3-1) allowed three runs on four hits in 5 2/3 innings to win his third straight decision. He matched his career high with 12 strikeouts and walked none. White Sox 3, Cubs 1 Tim Anderson homered and six Chicago White Sox pitchers combined on a sixhitter with 12 strikeouts to beat the host Chicago Cubs. Starter Michael Kopech recorded five of those
strikeouts, and he overcame four hits and two walks to keep the Cubs scoreless while pitching into the fifth inning with a 3-0 lead on a rainy and windy night on Chicago’s North Side. Reynaldo Lopez (3-0), Jose Ruiz, Aaron Bummer, Matt Foster and Liam Hendricks then finished off Chicago’s fourth straight victory at Wrigley Field, where the White Sox have taken eight of 10. Anderson extended his hitting streak to five games with his solo shot in the third, and Jake Burger had two hits with an RBI for the White Sox, who have won back-to-back games for the first time since April 15-16. Red Sox 4, Angels 0 Michael Wacha pitched 5 2/3 scoreless innings and Rafael Devers started a tworun fourth inning with a solo home run as host Boston went on to beat Los Angeles. Franchy Cordero, Jackie Bradley Jr. and J.D. Martinez all had multiple hits for the Red Sox, who added single runs in the seventh and eighth innings. Martinez homered over the Green Monster to cap the scoring. Boston had lost back-toback games and 10 of 14 entering the night. L.A. was held to just three hits against the combination of Wacha, Jake Diekman, Ryan Brasier and Hirokazu Sawamura. The relievers threw 3 1/3 hitless frames and struck out three to make Wacha (3-0) a winner. Royals 7, Cardinals 1 Brad Keller threw 6 1/3 shutout innings and Bobby Witt Jr. collected his first major league home run as host Kansas City defeated St. Louis. The Royals collected a season-high 15 hits, snapping a four-game losing streak. Witt had two hits, two RBIs and two runs
scored. M.J. Melendez collected his first major league hit in his debut and Edward Olivares had a career-high four hits for KC. Keller (1-2) allowed no runs on four hits through 6 1/3 innings. Dakota Hudson (2-2) allowed three runs on nine hits in six-plus innings for the Cardinals, getting out of multiple jams with minimal damage. D-backs 5, Marlins 4 Humberto Castellanos pitched 5 2/3 scoreless innings and Christian Walker drove in three runs, leading Arizona past host Miami for its sixth win in eight games. Castellanos (2-1) allowed four hits – all singles – and no walks, striking out four in his best and longest performance of the year. Walker went 2-for-5 with a tworun double and a 435-foot homer. Pavin Smith also hit a solo homer for the Dbacks. Joe Mantiply tossed a perfect ninth inning for his second save of the year. Trevor Rogers (1-4) took the loss, allowing six hits, two walks and five runs in 4 1/3 innings. Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Jesus Aguilar drove in two runs apiece for the Marlins, who scored all four of their runs in the seventh inning. Twins 7, Orioles 2 Ryan Jeffers smashed a three-run home run in the sixth inning to carry visiting Minnesota to its fourth straight victory, a decision against Baltimore. Another dominating performance from the Twins’ bullpen helped cap the outcome as Minnesota won for the 11th time in 12 games. Caleb Thielbar (1-0) was the winner in relief. Thielbar and Tyler Duffey combined to retire all 10 batters they faced before Cody Stashak worked a scoreless ninth. Rangers 6, Phillies 4 Mitch Garver and Jonah Heim each hit a home run as Texas defeated host Philadelphia. Garver drove in two runs, and Heim had two hits and scored twice. Zach Reks doubled in two runs and Marcus Semien added two hits for the Rangers, who have won three in a row. Starter Jon Gray lasted just three innings; he allowed five hits and three runs to go along with three strikeouts and one walk. The Phillies’ J.T. Realmuto homered and singled while Rhys Hoskins contributed a double and two RBIs. Alec Bohm, Didi Gregorius and Matt Vierling had two hits each for the Phillies, who have dropped two straight.
MUTUA MADRID OPEN At La Caja Magica Madrid Surface: Clay Men Singles First Round Hubert Hurkacz (12), Poland, def. Hugo Dellien, Bolivia, 7-5, 6-7 (11), 6-3. Botic Van de Zandschulp, Netherlands, def. Pablo Carreno-Busta (16), Spain, 6-7 (6), 7-6 (1), 6-3. Roberto Bautista-Agut (17), Spain, def. Jenson Brooksby, United States, 6-0, 6-2. Marin Cilic, Croatia, def. Albert Ramos-Vinolas, Spain, 6-3, 3-6, 6-4. Cristian Garin, Chile, def. Frances Tiafoe, United States, 6-1, 6-3. Miomir Kecmanovic, Serbia, def. Alexander Bublik, Kazakhstan, 6-4, 7-5. Second Round Novak Djokovic (1), Serbia, def. Gael Monfils, France, 6-3, 6-2. Andrey Rublev (6), Russia, def. Jack Draper, England, 2-6, 6-4, 7-5. Women Singles Third Round Jessica Pegula (12), United States, def. Bianca Andreescu, Canada, 7-5, 6-1. Jil Belen Teichmann, Switzerland, def. Elena Rybakina (16), Kazakhstan, 6-3, 6-1. Sara Sorribes Tormo, Spain, def. Daria Kasatkina, Russia, 6-4, 1-6, 6-3.
Sports Flashbacks 2010 — The Orlando Magic notch one of the largest victories in playoff history by routing the Atlanta Hawks 114-71 in Game 1 of a secondround series. The 43-point margin falls four short of the record. 2011 — Chicago Bulls guard Derrick Rose (age 22) becomes the youngest player in NBA history to be named MVP. 2016 — The Cleveland Cavaliers defeat the Atlanta Hawks 123-98 in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals and set an all-time NBA record for three-point makes in a game with 25.
Ja Morant scores 47, carries Grizzlies past Warriors to tie series Field Level Media Ja Morant exploded for 47 points, tying his postseason high, and scored Memphis’ final 15 points as the Grizzlies evened their Western Conference semifinal series against the visiting Golden State Warriors at a game apiece with a 106-101 victory on Tuesday night. In a game that featured the ejection of Grizzlies defensive ace Dillon Brooks and stitches to Warriors star Draymond Green’s face, Memphis avenged a 117-116 home loss in Game 1 as the best-of-seven travels to San Francisco for Games 3 and 4
on Saturday and Monday. Morant’s late flurry began after Stephen Curry nailed a 3-pointer that gave thirdseeded Golden State a 95-91 lead with 4:33 to go. The young standout’s stepback 3-pointer with 2:28 remaining put the Grizzlies on top 98-97. After Curry countered with a layup, Morant dropped in a 7-foot floater to give Memphis the lead for good with 1:42 to go. Golden State hung within 102-101 with 40.2 seconds remaining after Green dropped in a layup, but Morant countered with another floater with 30.7 seconds left to open a three-point advantage.
Following Klay Thompson’s traveling violation, Morant iced the win with two free throws with 13.2 seconds remaining. He equaled his point total in a loss to the Utah Jazz in the first round of last season’s playoffs. Morant shot 5-for-12 on 3-pointers, helping the Grizzlies outscore Golden State 42-21 from beyond the arc. He also added eight rebounds and eight assists, while Ziaire Williams chipped in 14 points, Jaren Jackson Jr. scored 12 before fouling out, and Brandon Clarke added 10. Despite hitting just 3 of 11 3-point attempts, Curry led
the Warriors with 27 points. Jordan Poole added 20, while Andrew Wiggins had 16 and Thompson, who went just 2-for-12 on treys, had 12. Green finished with a game-high 10 rebounds to go with seven assists and six points. Curry also had nine rebounds while tying Morant with eight assists. In a tight game from start to finish, the Grizzlies led 5651 at halftime, but two early incidents were much more significant than the fivepoint difference. Just 2:52 into the game, Brooks was ejected for a hard swipe at Gary Payton II’s head on a layup attempt. Brooks
was slapped with a flagrant foul-2, which includes an automatic ejection, while Payton was lost for the rest of the game with a left elbow injury incurred on his hard fall. Seconds later, Green took an inadvertent elbow to the right side of his face from Xavier Tillman, forcing him to leave the game and requiring stitches. He was able to return to start the second quarter. Morant had 23 of his 47 points in the first half, during which the Warriors missed 15 of 19 from long range. The Grizzlies missed 13 of 20 treys.
Thursday, May 5, 2022 B3
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
Chatham From B1
Donovan Gallagher worked a leadoff walk for the Spartans in the second. However, he was on the move to second during the next at-bat when Trey Smith lined out to short and Gallagher was tagged out for the double play. Sam Buquet struck out for out number three. Kyle Jackson led off for the Panthers in the bottom of the second with a base hit up the middle. Jackson stole second base as Jameson Balich struck out for the first out. Matt Radley stepped into the box and laced a two run homer to left-center to double the Panthers’ lead to 4-0. Van Alstyne later doubled and Thorsen was intentionally walked, but nothing came of it when Horton hit a soft liner to second that was dropped but gathered and thrown in time for the third out. Sam VanAuken got hit by a pitch in the third inning and stole two bases to move up to third with just one out. VanAuken then scored on an RBI groundout by Edmonds and Greenville cut the lead to 4-1. Unfortunately for the Spartans, this would be their only run. The Panthers had runners on the corners with one out in the bottom half when Flannery was called for a balk and Jackson scored from third to make it 5-1 Greenville. In the fifth, Horton doubled to center to lead off the inning, hitting it past the diving defender. After two walks loaded the bases, Buquet relieved Flannery on the bump for the Spartans. Radley worked a walk to force in a run, and then Vinnie Marasco ripped a three run double to left field to make it 9-1 Chatham. Marasco had advanced to third on the throw home as
Catskill From B1
Greenville 4 CHATHAM — Chatham turned a double play with the tying run aboard in the top of the seventh inning to end the game and preserve a 5-4 Patroon Conference softball victory over Greenville on Tuesday. Emily Mesick went the distance on the mound for the Panthers, striking out 12, walking one and allowing four runs and eight hits. Abby Taylor doubled and drove in two runs and Mesick had a double and single for Chatham (15-0). Addi Perry and Olive Mountain both had two singles and an RBI and
Brantley From B1
three consecutive no-hitters. Sam Gamello homered and singled for the Wildcats. Van Kempen added two singles and an RBI. CHVL Germantown 23, Doane Stuart 3 GERMANTOWN — Jonathan Mollo belted two home runs and drove in six runs and Evan Hoffman had a home run, double and single with three RBI as Germantown
Matt Fortunato/Columbia-Greene Media
Chatham’s Kyle Jackson connects with a pitch during Tuesday’s Patroon Conference baseball game against Greenville.
Matt Fortunato/Columbia-Greene Media
Chatham’s Cam Horton slides head first in to econd base ahead of the tag of Greenville second baseman Isaiah Edmonds during Tuesday’s Patroon Conference baseball game.
Matt Fortunato/Columbia-Greene Media
Greenville’s Trey Smith waits on a pitch during Tuesday’s Patroon Conference baseball game against Chatham.
Matt Fortunato/Columbia-Greene Media
Chatham pitcher Matt Thorsen throws during Tuesday’s Patroon Conference baseball game against Greenville.
he cleared the bases, and scored on a wild pitch to widen the lead to 10-1 before the inning ended. Thorsen got a groundout and two strikeouts to retire the Spartans in order in the top of the sixth. Buquet answered back in
the bottom half after pinch hitter Gavin Tanner hit a one out single, and got Anthony O’Dell to ground into a double play to end the frame. Thorsen stayed dominant on the mound in the final inning,
Emily Scheriff, Anna Friedman and Erin Madsen all singled. Maddy Prayto belted a home run and double with three RBI and turned in a complete game performance on the mound for Greenville, striking out eight and allowing five runs and 10 hits. Emma Haller doubled for the Spartans. Nuala Kappel singled and drove in a run and Camryn Childs and Shea Landversicht singled. Hudson 16, Taconic Hills 4 HUDSON — Aliyah Camacho went 4 for 5 with five RBI to power Hudson to a 16-4 victory over Taconic Hills in Tuesday’s Patroon Conference softball game. Hudson (9-3) has now won seven in a row and nine of its
last 10 games. Olivia Plaia had a double and two singles with two RBI for the Bluehawks. Lindsay Martin added a double and single with two RBI, Gabby Logue had three singles, Lily Kritzman collected two singles and an RBI, Arianna Camacho singled and Alyssa Harp had two RBI. Michaela Masten led Taconic Hills with a double and single and three RBI. Grace Alvarez added three singles and Skylar Waterhouse, Kailey Proper and Kylie Johnson all singled. Plaia was the winning pitcher, striking out 13, walking one and allowing four runs and eight hits. Masten took the loss, striking out five, walking five and allowing 16 runs and 15 hits.
defeated Doane Stuart, 23-3, in Tuesday’s Central Hudson Valley League game. Brandon Shook ripped a triple and double with three RBI for the Clippers (8-2). Mike Stagno doubled, Connor Benack collected three singles and three RBI, Owen Watson contributed two singles and two RBI, Brady Pasco singled and drove in a run, Shawn Lyons singled and Mason Ferrer, Carson Moore and Aidan Nedwick all had an RBI. Lyons (4k,4bb,1r,1h), Shook (3k,4bb,2r) and Moore (3k,1bb) all pitched for Germantown.
COLONIAL Mohonasen 8, Ichabod Crane 2 SCHNECTADY — Mohonasen built an eight-run lead after three innings and went on to defeat Ichabod Crane 8-2, in Tuesday’s Colonial Council baseball game. Nate Garafalo had a double and single with an RBI for the Riders (9-3). Jack Mullins and Alex Schmidt doubled and Brady Holzhauer singled. Topher Pelesz (4k,4bb,8r,8h) and Holzhauer (2k) shared pitching duties for the Riders.
starting off the top of the seventh with a groundout by Trey Smith. He then struck out Buquet and VanAuken to secure the home victory for the Chatham Panthers 10-1 over the Greenville Spartans.
Matt Fortunato/Columbia-Greene Media
Greenville starting pitcher Cole Flannery goes into his wind-up during Tuesday’s Patroon Conference baseball game against Chatham.
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Thursday, May 5, 2022 B5
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Heat’s Tyler Herro named NBA Sixth Man of Year Ira Winderman South Florrida Sun-Sentinel
Even before the regular season ended, even before the final media ballots were tabulated, it only stood as a matter of when, rather than if, with Tyler Herro and the NBA’s Sixth Man of the Year award. The time is now, with the third-year guard on Tuesday named the NBA’s top reserve in a vote that was completed after the final day of the regular season, becoming the first player to take the honor in the Miami Heat’s 34 seasons. Settling in as the sparkplug of the Heat’s second unit, Herro was a runaway winner, with Phoenix Suns forward Cam Johnson and Cleveland Cavaliers forward Kevin Love the two other previously announced finalists. “I accepted my role, and it’s worked out so far,” Herro said Tuesday night of his role and award-winning results. “I’m
on the best team in the East, as a young guy playing starter’s minutes. I take the most shots on the team. My teammates and coaches, they trust me with the ball, and I really couldn’t ask for much more. “And I’m in a great position for now and for the future. So I’m excited for what’s next, and just continue to keep going.” Herro was surprised by Heat captain Udonis Haslem earlier in the day when he was presented the award during the team’s practice at FTX Arena, as the Heat prepared for Wednesday’s Game 2 of their Eastern Conference playoff series against the Philadelphia 76ers. “It meant everything just to get the award from OG,” Herro said of Haslem, “and then the rest of my teammates. This couldn’t happen without them. They allow me to be myself, coming off the bench. My teammates, coaches, this wouldn’t happen without them.”
John McCall/South Florida Sun Sentinel
Miami Heat guard Tyler Herro has been named winner of the 2022 NBA Sixth Man of the Year Award, the first player in the team’s 34 seasons so honored.
Herro received 96 of the 100 first-place votes in the weighted balloting. Love received three and Johnson 1. In the tabulations that were weighted on a 5-3-1 basis, with each ballot requiring three names, Herro finished with 488 points to 214 for Love and 128 for Johnson. No other Heat player received a vote.
“He’s a great player. He’s so skilled,” coach Erik Spoelstra said. “He’s a worker. He’s relentless. “We view him as our sixth starter anyway.” Herro, 22, this season not only set a franchise record for points off the bench, but already moved to the top of the franchise’s alltime bench-scoring list.
Herro recorded eight 30-point games as a reserve during the regular season, tying for the third-most by an NBA reserve during a single season (since starts were tracked in 1970-71). Additionally, he recorded 20 25-point games as a reserve, the most in the NBA over the past 30 years, tying for the fourth most during a single season. The only Heat players to score 1,000 or more points off the bench in a season are Herro (1,162 this season), Dwyane Wade (1,028 in 2018-19) and Tyler Johnson (1,002 in 2016-17). Behind Herro’s efforts, the Heat led the NBA with 3,322 bench points, second-highest total in franchise history. “He’s become one of the top scorers,” center Bam Adebayo said. “You can see at that age, that size, doing what he does, he makes it look easy.” Herro’s 20.8 scoring average as a reserve led the NBA, followed by the 15.9 of the Utah
Jazz’s Jordan Clarkson, 14.7 of the Charlotte Hornets’ Kelly Oubre and 14.0 of the Indiana Pacers’ Buddy Hield. Herro’s best sustained bench scoring streak came when he scored 20 or more in seven consecutive games from Feb. 25 to March 7, the longest 20-point streak by a reserve in team history, surpassing the previous record of four consecutive such games by Chris Gatling in 1996. The seven games also was the longest 20-point game streak by an NBA reserve since Lou Williams had an eight-game such streak in 2017-18 with the Los Angeles Clippers. Heat forward Jimmy Butler was among those who lobbied for Herro to win the award. The Heat’s only other award finalist is Spoelstra, for Coach of the Year, with that award to be announced later this postseason, with the Phoenix Suns’ Monty Williaams considered the front-runner.
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
B6 Thursday, May 5, 2022
2022 NFL draft superlatives: Best pick, biggest reach, most disappointing class and more C.J. Doon Baltimore Sun
BALTIMORE — There were 262 picks in the 2022 NFL draft. It will take a few years to know which teams got the most bang for their buck, but we have enough information to make some early judgment calls. To help make sense of the annual three-day event, here’s a look at some of the superlatives from the weekend, starting with a surprising draftnight trade: Best pick: Lions trade up for Alabama wide receiver Jameson Williams When the Lions moved up to No. 12 at the price of a first(No. 32), second- (No. 34) and third-round pick (No. 66), most people assumed it was going to be for a quarterback. So when it was announced that Detroit had instead selected Williams, it was truly a shocking moment -- especially for a rebuilding team. The Lions entered the offseason with one of the least imposing groups of wide receivers in the league, but after free agency and the draft, it’s turned into a position of strength. The speedy Williams joins rookie sensation AmonRa St. Brown and underrated veterans D.J. Chark and Josh Reynolds, a collection of players with complementary strengths. The Alabama star was one of the few receivers to threaten Georgia’s dominant defense last season, catching seven passes for 184 yards and two touchdowns in the SEC Championship game and another four passes for 65 yards in the national title game before suffering a torn ACL. Were it not for that injury, Williams might have been the first receiver off the board. Jared Goff might not be the best quarterback to take advantage of Williams’ skill set, but there’s no doubt the Lions massively upgraded their offense with this one pick alone. This is a potentially franchisealtering move for Detroit, and general manager Brad Holmes deserves credit for making a bold move up the board to get it done. Biggest reach: Patriots trade up for Chattanooga guard Cole Strange The live reaction from Rams coach Sean McVay and general manager Les Snead says it all. They thought Strange might be available when they made their first pick at No. 104 overall in the third round, so imagine their surprise when they saw him come off the board at No. 29. On The Athletic’s media
consensus big board, which compiles rankings from more than 80 analysts, Strange was No. 76 overall. The Patriots were so confident in their evaluation of the 6-foot-5, 307-pound interior lineman that they even traded up with the Kansas City Chiefs to get him. It’s not that Strange is a bad player; he’s one of the most athletic linemen in the class and projects as an immediate starter at guard, a major position of need. But the Patriots grossly misjudged the rest of the league’s evaluation of Strange and ended up losing out on the chance to pick a better player. That’s the kind of move that comes back to bite a franchise. Most disappointing class: Bears give quarterback Justin Fields little help After trading a 2022 firstround pick to the New York Giants last year to move up and take Fields, the Bears entered the draft with one hand tied behind their backs. But when they did finally have a chance to pick in the second round, they went with Washington cornerback Kyler Gordon at No. 39 overall and Penn State safety Jaquan Brisker at No. 48. The frustration here is not with Gordon and Brisker, who project as above-average starters for a secondary that desperately needs help. It’s that the Bears have one of the worst offenses in the league and waited until pick No. 71 to take a receiver in Tennessee’s Velus Jones Jr., a soon-to-be 25-year-old who didn’t break out until his sixth college season and is known more for his ability as a return man. The offensive line remains a huge question mark, too, and the best the Bears could do was take the consensus 12thranked tackle, 22nd-ranked tackle, 19th-ranked guard and a center who did not even crack the top 300. Chicago only has four more years of team control with Fields, three of which his contract will be team-friendly. If the Bears don’t invest in more offensive playmakers, they’re going to waste the hugely advantageous team-building opportunity a rookie quarterback provides. Biggest headscratcher: 49ers take another Day 2 running back Did San Francisco forget what happened last year? In 2021, the 49ers took Ohio State running back Trey Sermon No. 88 overall in the third round, only for sixth-round
pick Elijah Mitchell to emerge as the team’s leading rusher. It should be clear to coach Kyle Shanahan and general manager John Lynch that good running backs can be found in the later rounds, so why did they pick LSU’s Tyrion DavisPrice at No. 93 overall? It’s understandable that the 49ers would want to find a replacement for Raheem Mostert, who left in free agency this offseason, but Mitchell proved he can carry the load and Sermon is still just two years removed from being one of the best running backs in college football. It’s not as if Davis-Price is a can’t-miss prospect, either. He averaged fewer than 3 yards per carry after contact and broke just 37 tackles on 211 carries last season, according to Pro Football Focus, and tested as a relatively average athlete. This pick doesn’t make any sense, especially for a team that had just two selections inside the top 100 and much bigger needs. Best value: Ravens stick to their board There’s a reason the Ravens have been one of the league’s model franchises since their first season in 1996. Through a combination of shrewd moves to acquire more picks and a fierce devotion to taking the best player available, the Ravens once again came away with a stellar class, highlighted by first-round picks Kyle Hamilton and Tyler Linderbaum. The Notre Dame safety and Iowa center entered the draft as the two clear top players at their respective positions, and they’re looking at long and fruitful careers in Baltimore if they can stay healthy. In the second round, the Ravens added Michigan edge rusher David Ojabo, a former top-20 prospect who slipped down boards after suffering a torn Achilles tendon at his pro day. Then they cleaned up late on Day 2 and Day 3, using a record six fourth-round picks to come away with highly ranked players such as Connecticut defensive tackle Travis Jones (No. 40 on the consensus big board), Minnesota offensive tackle Daniel Faalele (No. 60), Alabama cornerback Jalyn Armour-Davis (No. 110), Iowa State tight end Charlie Kolar (No. 117), Coastal Carolina tight end Isaiah Likely (No. 97) and Missouri running back Tyler Badie (No. 149). After adjusting for need and positional value, the Ravens’ return on investment when judged against The Athletic’s consensus big board ranked
fifth among all teams -- and it would have been higher if not for the pick of Penn State punter Jordan Stout, who was judged as a massive reach at No. 130 overall as the 276thranked player. For a team that needs to fill out its roster with young, cheap talent in preparation for quarterback Lamar Jackson’s looming megadeal, this was a home run. Most underrated class: Texans build a solid foundation Say what you want about the Texans’ commitment to quarterback Davis Mills, but there’s no doubt they got better this weekend. Starting with LSU cornerback Derek Stingley Jr. at No. 3 overall, Houston expertly navigated the board and came away with potential impact players in key areas of need. You could quibble with the selection of Texas A&M offensive lineman Kenyon Green at No. 15 overall since he was expected to go in the late 20s and will probably end up at guard, but the Texans simply needed to draft good players. Baylor defensive back Jalen Pitre (No. 37 overall), Alabama wide receiver John Metchie (No. 44), Alabama linebacker Christian Harris (No. 75) and Florida running back Dameon Pierce (No. 107) can be Day 1 starters and immediately raise the team’s floor. General manager Nick Caserio and coach Lovie Smith have a long rebuild ahead of them after trading quarterback Deshaun Watson, but this draft class is a big step in the right direction. Most misunderstood class: Packers solidify their defense When the Packers ignored wide receiver in the first round for the 20th straight year, the criticism of the front office and jokes at quarterback Aaron Rodgers’ expense flew fast and furious. But when you zoom out and see what Green Bay’s defense looks like with the addition of Georgia linebacker Quay Walker (No. 22 overall) and his college teammate, defensive tackle Devonte Wyatt (No. 28), it’s hard to argue with the results. With Walker and Wyatt bolstering the middle alongside All-Pro linebacker De’Vondre Campbell, Preston Smith and Rashan Gary setting the edge and cornerbacks Jaire Alexander and Eric Stokes patrolling the secondary with safeties Darnell Savage and Adrian Amos, it’s easy to envision Green Bay having one of the best defenses in the league
in 2022. Good luck trying to run the ball against this team. Second-round pick Christian Watson isn’t going to fill Davante Adams’ big shoes, but the North Dakota State receiver has the strength and speed to develop into an impact player. The Packers also added Nevada wideout Romeo Doubs, an underrated downfield separator, in the fourth round and beefed up their offensive line with UCLA’s Sean Rhyan, Wake Forest’s Zach Tom and Penn State’s Rasheed Walker. South Carolina’s Kingsley Enagbare, one of the most productive pass-rushers in the SEC, was a slam dunk at pick No. 179 for the consensus 75th-ranked player. It’s easy to pick on the Packers for not giving Rodgers more help, but general manager Brian Gutekunst deserves more credit for this smart bigpicture approach. Most bang for their buck: Panthers provide hope for the future In the end, after all the rumors about drafting quarterback Kenny Pickett, the Panthers took North Carolina State offensive tackle Ikem Ekwonu at No. 6 overall -- and are better off for it. Ekwonu is an elite prospect who can fill a huge hole at left tackle, and his dominance in the running game should help star running back Christian McCaffrey get back on track. But the real value came later in the draft, as the Panthers took Ole Miss quarterback Matt Corral in the third round at No. 94 overall. Corral is a good athlete with a quick release who can deliver the ball with accuracy, giving Carolina a much better long-term option than the disappointing Sam Darnold. If that wasn’t enough, the Panthers added three elite athletes in Penn State linebacker Brandon Smith (No. 120 overall), Virginia Tech defensive end Amare Barno (No. 189) and Baylor cornerback Kalon Barnes (No. 242), all players who ran the 40-yard dash in the 90th percentile or better for their respective positions. Those are the types of athletes worth betting on. This class won’t save coach Matt Rhule’s job this season, but it has the potential to be a franchise-altering group of players, especially if Corral hits. Biggest gamble: Titans prepare for a new era There was buzz before the draft that the Titans could be a surprise team to take a quarterback, but nobody expected
such a hard pivot from the AFC’s reigning No. 1 seed. After trading star wide receiver A.J. Brown to the Philadelphia Eagles, the Titans drafted his replacement in Arkansas’ Treylon Burks, a similarly sized prospect who can break tackles and pick up yards after the catch. The big surprise came in the third round, as the Titans ended Liberty quarterback Malik Willis’ fall at pick No. 86. Ryan Tannehill is still the clear starter, but the Titans have a potential out in his deal after the season. Willis, a rocket-armed athlete who might enter the league as the second-best running quarterback behind Lamar Jackson, can sit and develop before taking over in 2023. It’s hard to break up a good team that can’t get over the hump -- just look at coach Mike Vrabel’s pained reaction in the war room after the Titans traded away Brown. But for Tennessee to have any chance of getting past quarterbacks like Patrick Mahomes, Joe Burrow, Justin Herbert, Russell Wilson, Deshaun Watson and Jackson in the AFC, they need a signal-caller with more upside. Only time will tell if the bet on Willis and his physical tools will pay off, but the Titans deserve credit for recognizing their weaknesses and making a big change. Best Day 3 pick: Commanders stop North Carolina quarterback Sam Howell’s fall If someone told coach Ron Rivera and the Commanders front office that they could get one of the top-five quarterbacks in this class in the fifth round, would they have traded for Carson Wentz? It’s an interesting “what if,” but Washington should be happy with how things turned out. Howell is far from a perfect prospect, but if you polled analysts and executives around the league at this time last year, he would be considered a first-round lock. Does one relatively disappointing season -- after he lost all his best playmakers to the NFL draft -- really mean he can’t hang in the pros? Given Wentz’s struggles at the end of last season, there’s a real chance Howell gets some starting reps as a rookie. Even if he doesn’t, this is a worthy bet for a franchise that hasn’t been able to find a long-term option at quarterback for decades.
NHL roundup: Pens outlast Rangers 1-0 in triple OT Field Level Media Evgeni Malkin scored 5:58 into the third overtime as the visiting Pittsburgh Penguins outlasted the New York Rangers 4-3 on Tuesday night in the opener of their first-round Eastern Conference playoff series. In a game that had a combined 151 shots on goal, Malkin capped the four-hour, 38-minute marathon by scoring on a deflection. The winning play started when Kasperi Kapanen pressured New York’s Filip Chytil into a turnover behind the net. Kapanen moved the puck from behind
the net and found John Marino, whose wrist shot from the right point was tipped in over Igor Shesterkin’s left shoulder. Malkin’s dramatic goal capped the 54th game in Stanley Cup Playoffs history to require at least three overtimes. It also was Pittsburgh’s first triple-overtime playoff game since Game 5 of the 2010 first round against the Ottawa Senators. Adam Fox and Andrew Copp scored in the opening 23-plus minutes for the Rangers, who held a 2-0 lead early in the second. Chris Kreider netted a short-handed goal that gave the Rangers a short-lived
3-2 lead late in the second. Flames 1, Stars 0 Elias Lindholm’s goal early in the first period held up for the game-winner because of Jacob Markstrom’s shutout performance as host Calgary beat Dallas in the opener of their Western Conference first-round series. Markstrom made 16 saves to earn his second career playoff shutout. He collected nine shutouts in the regular season. Markstrom also had some good luck, as Miro Heiskanen’s shot late in the second period rang off the post, about as close as the Stars came to
beating him. In his first NHL playoff start, goalie Jake Oettinger stopped 25 shots for Dallas, which had claimed the first Western Conference wild-card spot. Capitals 4, Panthers 2 T.J. Oshie scored the goahead goal midway through the third period and Washington rallied for a victory against Florida in the opener of their Eastern Conference playoff series in Sunrise, Fla. Tom Wilson, Evgeny Kuznetsov and Lars Eller also scored for the Capitals – the latter an empty-netter with 49 seconds remaining.
Goaltender Vitek Vanecek made 30 saves. Sam Bennett and Claude Giroux scored for Florida, which blew a 2-1 lead entering the third period. The Presidents’ Trophy winners had been 390-1 in the regular season when leading after two periods. Sergei Bobrovsky stopped 34 of 37 shots. Avalanche 7, Predators 2 Nathan MacKinnon had two goals and an assist, Cale Makar had a goal and two assists, and Colorado beat Nashville in Game 1 of their firstround series in Denver. Gabriel Landeskog had a
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goal and an assist in his return to the lineup, Artturi Lehkonen and Devon Toews also scored, Mikko Rantanen had three assists and Darcy Kuemper stopped 23 shots for the Avalanche. Andrew Cogliano had a goal before leaving the game with an upper-body injury in the second period. Matt Duchene scored two goals for the Predators, and Mikael Granlund had two assists and Connor Ingram had 30 saves in relief of David Rittich. Nashville’s top goaltender, Juuse Saros, is out with an ankle sprain.
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Thursday, May 5, 2022 B7
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
Mom wonders how to reveal youngest son’s parentage Dear Abby, I have a wonderful 12-year-old son, “Oliver,” who was conceived during a date rape at a work party. I don’t remember much about that night. When I found out I was pregnant, I hoped my husband at the time was the father. When the baby came, it was obvious he wasn’t, DEAR ABBY because Oliver is a different race. (I am Caucasian, and I’m thinking Oliver may be Pacific Islander.) We divorced when Oliver was 2, and my ex had a DNA test, which, of course, proved he was not the father. Despite the findings, after I explained what happened, he offered to be Oliver’s “dad” because he had bonded with him — provided he would not have to pay child support. I agreed. I have two other older sons whom he fathered. There have been times when Oliver and his brothers have asked about his brown skin, and I have been able to dodge the question. He’s getting to an age where I don’t think I can hold off much longer. I always knew the time would come when he would have to know his dad is not his biological father, but I’m not sure what to tell him. I don’t think I want him to know he is a product of rape, nor do I want to throw myself under the bus and say I cheated on his dad. That would open up questions about who his bio dad is. Please help. Looking For Best Way In Washington
JEANNE PHILLIPS
I fail to understand why you would equate “rape” with “cheating.” What happened wasn’t your fault, and you should feel neither guilt nor shame that it happened. While I understand your desire to protect Oliver, you should tell him the truth. When you do, be sure to emphasize
Pickles
how much you and your ex love him and how proud you are that he is your son. Dear Abby, I’m in the process of building my first house down the street from my parents. (The lot was a good deal.) Recently, my mom told me she wants a key so she and Dad can have access to my house in case of severe weather (we live in tornado country). The layout and foundation of my house are sturdier than theirs. When I told her I didn’t want anyone to have a key, she got really offended. It made me feel awful, but Abby, this is my first house, and if I have to give a key to someone when I don’t want to, it defeats the purpose of having my own place. I have been living with my parents to save up, and Mom has used guilt trips against me before. My sister and brother-in-law agree I shouldn’t give in to her. I feel like a horrible daughter for refusing because she’s not the type to snoop, but there have been instances when I’ve been in my room and she has entered without knocking. Should I stick to my guns or am I wrong? Daughter In Dilemma It strikes me as somewhat pushy that your mother would ask for a key to your home before it is even completed. What have your parents done during previous tornadoes? Because the house symbolizes your independence, I don’t think you should hand the key over. It may make sense to have someone you trust be able to enter if you are traveling or have a pet that needs to be walked while you are working. In that event, you may change your mind and see the wisdom in offering her one.
Pearls Before Swine
Classic Peanuts
Garfield
Horoscope By Stella Wilder Born today, you are never more content than when you are working over some puzzle or other and applying your considerable brainpower, your almost unbeatable stamina, and your unmatched curiosity and originality to the genesis of a very real solution that can provide longterm relief for anyone plagued by the problem you are addressing. Though you are always thinking about what might be possible in the future, you are in no way negligent regarding the past. Though you may seem to most to be a serious, even dour individual, the truth is that you have quite a vivid imagination and a sense of humor to match — though you share that side of yourself only with those whom you are confident will appreciate it. After all, there is nothing worse than sharing a joke and having nobody laugh! Also born on this date are: Adele, singer; Karl Marx, political philosopher; Tammy Wynette, singer; Brian Williams, TV news anchor; John Rhys-Davies, actor; Tyrone Power, actor; Pat Carroll, actress; Michael Palin, actor, writer, comedian. To see what is in store for you tomorrow, find your birthday and read the corresponding paragraph. Let your birthday star be your daily guide. FRIDAY, MAY 6 TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — You can make some very timely course corrections today and maximize your own efficiency in the process. A bad habit should be broken. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — You are eager to take part in something that has attracted your attention over a long period of time. Have you made all necessary preparations? CANCER (June 21-July 22) — You can surely
make an impact today, but is it going to be as you imagine? There are likely a few surprises in store for you and others. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — You’re going to have to earn what comes to you today; nothing is likely to be handed to you free of charge. You’ll be in an advantageous position. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — That bad feeling you’ve had for a while is likely to disappear today — just in time for you to experience something that you’ve tried to avoid. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — You mustn’t let anyone take advantage of you today, and you’re going to have to have a somewhat more immovable presence in order to do so. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — You’ve been keeping some things under wraps lately, but it may be beneficial to let others in on these little secrets today. Share carefully. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — You’re going to have to come to terms with an inconvenient truth that is made plain to you today by someone you consider a close rival. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — You may be criticized today by someone whose depth of knowledge is in no way equal to your own. This is something you can shrug off. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — A close friend takes some surprising action today that makes things difficult for you — but only temporarily. Talk about this when there’s time. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — You cannot let a sudden change in circumstances blur your vision or cloud your judgment today. You must remain on high alert! ARIES (March 21-April 19) — You may be able to jockey for position and improve your overall chances today — without having to break or bend any rules at all.
Zits Dark Side of the Horse
Daily Maze
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Goren bridge WITH BOB JONES ©2022 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
SENSE OF SECURITY Both vulnerable, East deals NORTH ♠974 ♥ A62 ♦ K Q 10 4 ♣ Q 10 4 WEST ♠ 10 5 3 ♥ Q 10 7 3 ♦ J82 ♣975
EAST ♠AJ ♥ K94 ♦ 9753 ♣A862 SOUTH ♠KQ862 ♥ J85 ♦ A6 ♣KJ3
The bidding:
Opening lead: Seven of ♣ The late Tim Seres is widely considered the greatest Australian player in history. He was born in Hungary but relocated to Australia as a young man and made his life there. When he was not
(Bob Jones welcomes readers’ responses sent in care of this newspaper or to Tribune Content Agency, LLC., 16650 Westgrove Dr., Suite 175, Addison, TX 75001. E-mail: tcaeditors@tribpub.com)
Columbia-Greene
MEDIA
EAST SOUTH WEST NORTH 1♣ 1♠ Pass 2♣* Pass 4♠ All pass *Spade raise, at least invitational values
playing in a tournament, he split his time between the thriving rubber bridge club in Sydney and various horse racing tracks in the Sydney area. He was East in today’s deal. His play won the award as the Best Deal of the Year in 1975. Seres won the opening club lead with his ace. It was obvious to shift to a heart. The likely continuation after a low-heart shift would be for declarer to win with dummy’s ace and cash three high diamonds, discarding a heart loser from his hand. The fall of the jack would see declarer continue with the 10 of diamonds to discard his remaining heart. West would ruff, but the only other trick for the defense would be the ace of trumps. Rather than shifting to a low heart, Seres led the king of hearts! From declarer’s point of view, there was no need to discard a heart from his hand. The jack of hearts would surely be a winner later and playing diamonds might set up a trump problem for him. He led a spade from dummy instead. Seres hopped up with his ace and continued hearts to defeat the contract. Very nice play!
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COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
B8 Thursday, May 5, 2022 Close to Home
Free Range THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
Level 1
2
3
4
ARKPN SRUHC UCPLST PINANK Solution to Wednesday’s puzzle
5/5/22 Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit
Get Fuzzyy
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Yesterday’s
sudoku.org.uk © 2022 The Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. All rights reserved.
Heart of the City
Dilbert
B.C.
For Better or For Worse
Wizard of Id
FOR RELEASE MAY 5, 2022
THE Daily Commuter Puzzle
by Jacqueline E. Mathews
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS 1 British elephant’s color 5 Nest noise 10 Hunt for 14 Be gaga over 15 Water lily 16 Prefix for cast or vision 17 Actor Vigoda’s namesakes 18 At first 20 Lion’s lair 21 Hot cross __ 22 Deep pit 23 Head coverings 25 Squeak eliminator 26 Dilapidated 28 Baltimore team 31 Bowling alley divisions 32 Sign of a fire 34 Geologic period 36 Singer Williams 37 Pays attention to 38 Ring of light 39 Sock part 40 Poe & Whitman 41 On the __; near defeat 42 High principles 44 Remove from power 45 __ of; free from 46 __ T; early Ford 47 Allowed by law 50 Mason jar covers 51 “Where did __ wrong?” 54 Modest in manner 57 One-dish meal 58 Sculpting tool 59 Dorothy, to Em 60 British nobleman 61 Secondhand 62 More freakish 63 No ifs, __, or buts DOWN 1 Plastic trash bag brand 2 Evening wear 3 Fair
Andy Capp
Bound & Gagged
Created by Jacqueline E. Mathews
4 TV’s “__, Dear” 5 Weather forecast 6 Brass instruments 7 “__ what it is” 8 Floor covering 9 Fraternity letter 10 Unchanging 11 Long & slimy 12 Perpendicular annexes 13 Islets off Florida 19 Too trusting 21 Denver & Barker 24 Mind 25 National trees of the USA 26 Thin strip of wood 27 Vietnam’s capital 28 Stewart & Steiger 29 Ice cream choice 30 Shoe parts 32 Chocolate candy store 33 Bumped into 35 Snout 37 Wrestling maneuver 38 Optimistic feeling
5/5/22
Wednesday’s Puzzle Solved
Non Sequitur
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40 Sandbox toys 41 Team from Ohio 43 Cleared the slate 44 Artful __; “Oliver!” role 46 __ pie 47 Part of a Hawaiian tour 48 Concludes
5/5/22
49 Long look 50 Fibbed 52 Reason to take Mylanta 53 Nocturnal birds 55 __, dos, tres… 56 Prefix for stream or section 57 Lobster’s home
Rubes
Get the free JUST JUMBLE app • Follow us on Twitter @PlayJumble
By David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: RIVER SHOWN NATIVE FATHOM Answer: A tennis match begins when the first serve is — SET IN MOTION