eedition The Daily Mail April 30-May 1 2022

Page 1

REGION

WORLD

SPORTS

May 6 march to honor missing and murdered indigenous women n Page A3

U.S. soldiers took her birthday cake in 1945. They finally replaced it n Page A6

H.S. SOFTBALL: Hudson walks is off i thrilling 13-12 slugfest over C-A n Page B1

The Daily Mail WEEKEND

Copyright 2022, Columbia-Greene Media Volume 230, No. 85

Serving Greene County since 1792

All Rights Reserved

Price $3.00

Saturday-Sunday, April 30-May 1, 2022

Police hunt for rape suspect By Bill Williams Columbia-Greene Media

FILE PHOTO

Police are looking for a Kingston man who allegedly failed to appear in court to answer charges in a Cairo rape case.

Luis D. Fernandez

CATSKILL — State police in Catskill are asking for the public’s assistance in finding an Ulster County man who allegedly failed to appear in court to answer rape charges, Steven Nevel, public information officer for state police Troop F, said Friday. Luis D. Fernandez, 46, of Kingston is accused of having sexual intercourse with a minor under 15 years of age in Cairo, Nevel said. Fernandez failed to appear

in Greene County Court after he was released on bail and is wanted on multiple charges including predatory sexual assault against a child, a class A felony, first-degree course of sexual conduct against a child, a class B felony, and four counts of first-degree rape, a class B felony, Nevel said. Authorities believe Fernandez may be attempting to flee to Puerto Rico, Nevel said. Fernandez is also wanted by the Greene County Sheriff’s Office. Police did not disclose the

relationship between Fernandez and the alleged victim. Fernandez man was held on rape charges in Greene County following his arrest by state police last Aug. 3. The arrest followed a fourmonth-long investigation into a reported sexual assault. Fernandez was arraigned in Cairo Town Court last August and was taken to the Greene County Jail, where he was held on $10,000 bail. Any information regarding See HUNT A2

Molinaro assails bail reform on Blue Friday

By Ted Remsnyder Columbia-Greene Media

TED REMSNYDER/COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

New York State Senate candidate Richard Amedure, Congressional candidate Marc Molinaro, J.C. Berzal of Lacy’s Ford dealership and Blue Friday NY President Pat Fox on April 29 at a Blue Friday event in Catskill.

CATSKILL — Republican congressional candidate and Dutchess County Executive Marc Molinaro joined local Greene County officials at the Lacy Ford dealership Friday morning to honor fallen officers in the annual Blue Friday observance. Molinaro, who is challenging U.S. Rep. Antonio Delgado, D-Rhinebeck, this November, visited Catskill to shine the spotlight on bail reform and potential changes to the bail package signed into law in New York in 2019. The legislation mandated

pretrial release for suspects without cash bail for most misdemeanor charges and nonviolent felonies in the state. “It has never been more challenging to be in law enforcement than it is today,” Molinaro said Friday. “Showing that support on behalf of those men and women who make the ultimate sacrifice is always important. Today in New York, we’re living in a much less safe community because of policies out of Albany and endorsed by Washington that have made us less safe. So I think it’s important that the community understands that See MOLINARO A2

Accused drug dealer pleads guilty to charges By Ted Remsnyder Columbia-Greene Media

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

CATSKILL — A planned trial in Greene County Court for an alleged drug dealer this week was forestalled when the suspect pleadedd guilty to all charges against him. James Faulkner, 52, whose last address was given as Columbia County, was arrested in October 2019 in room 12A of Pollace’s Resort on Landon Avenue in Catskill and charged with 13 felony and misdemeanor counts tied to selling drugs in the county. The Catskill resort has since been shuttered. Greene County District Attorney Joseph Stanzione said Faulkner’s case was delayed by the pandemic and that the suspect had been in and out of the hospital in recent years due to medical issues. The district attorney noted that Faulkner did not have a permanent residence and was most recently residing in a Columbia County hotel as he awaited trial. Stanzione said jury selection for Faulkner’s scheduled trial had taken place before Faulkner opted

James Faulkner was arrested in October 2019 at Pollace’s Resort on Landon Avenue in Catskill for drug charges.

Index

On the web

See GUILTY A2

Weather Page A2 FOR HUDSON/CA FORECAST

Region ........................A3

Obituaries ...................A6

Opinion .......................A4

Sports .........................B1

Local ...........................A5

Classified .............. B4-B5

State/Nation ................A6

Comics/Advice ...... B7-B8

www.HudsonValley360.com

TODAY TONIGHT SUN

Twitter Follow: @CatskillDailyMail Mostly sunny A starry night Mostly sunny

Facebook www.facebook.com/ CatskillDailyMail/

HIGH 62

LOW 36

66 44

INSIDE TODAY!


A2 - Saturday - Sunday, April 30-May1, 2022

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA • THE DAILY MAIL

Hunt

Weather

From A1

FORECAST FOR HUDSON/CATSKILL

TODAY TONIGHT SUN

MON

66 44

LOW 36

WED

A couple of Warmer with Cloudy with a morning clouds and few showers showers sun

Mostly sunny A starry night Mostly sunny

HIGH 62

TUE

55 48 Massena 58/35

Bancroft 59/30

Ogdensburg 59/32

Peterborough 61/33

Rochester 56/36

Utica 58/33

this week to plead guilty to all the charges.

Albany 62/38

Syracuse 57/34

Catskill 62/36

Binghamton 54/33

Hornell 60/32

Montreal 58/39

Burlington 55/37

Lake Placid 51/32

Watertown 57/34

Batavia Buffalo 57/37 59/40

Guilty

Plattsburgh 56/37

Malone Potsdam 54/35 57/34

Kingston 55/35

69 45

70 51

Ottawa 58/36

Hudson 63/36

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

0.00”

Low

Today 5:53 a.m. 7:53 p.m. 5:53 a.m. 7:55 p.m.

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

Sun. 5:51 a.m. 7:55 p.m. 6:17 a.m. 9:00 p.m.

Moon Phases New

First

Apr 30

May 8

56

Full

Last

33 YEAR TO DATE NORMAL

12.4 10.97

May 16 May 22

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2022

CONDITIONS TODAY AccuWeather.com UV Index™ & AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature®

2

3

45

49

53

8

7

6

4

57

62

7

65

6

66

66

4

3

2

66

63

61

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 Montreal 58/39

Billings 57/39

Minneapolis 56/43

Toronto 58/41 Detroit 60/50

San Francisco 65/50

New York 66/48

Chicago 65/51 Denver 66/36

Los Angeles 76/54

Washington 69/51

Kansas City 66/47

child less than 13 years old. New York Penal Law defines first-degree rape as engaging in sexual intercourse with another person by forcible compulsion, or who is incapable of consent by reason of being physically helpless, or who is less than 11 years old, or who is less than 13 years old and the actor is eighteen years old or more.

“This is definitely a positive outcome to save a lot of time and expense,” Stanzione said of avoiding trial. “I think he (Faulkner) came to the realization that we were committed to prosecuting this case.”

Faulkner will be sentenced at a date to be determined, with Stanzione noting that the sentencing hearing will likely be held in July. Facing a maximum sentence of 12 years in state

prison, Faulkner has been released while he awaits his sentencing since court deputies would need to be stationed outside his hospital room during one of his intermittent stints in the hospital.

Molinaro From A1

and we continue to speak for the kinds of reforms that provide for public safety.” Molinaro said that if elected he can help craft federal laws that could benefit the local police community. “Antonio Delgado supports cashless bail in New York,” Molinaro said. “There’s been an effort to nationalize this policy by Washington, D.C. That’s a mistake. Cashless is failing law enforcement and victims and it’s failing our community. But it’s also failing those individuals who are caught up in the criminal justice system because it’s eliminated our ability to intervene with mental health and substance use services before severe crimes are committed. “That is undermining our public safety and the well-being of the individual. As a member of Congress, you can use your voice to at least advocate for state and local policies that keep us safe. There is no limit to the ability of a Congressman to be an advocate on behalf of the people she or he represents. I’m going to use those tools to advocate for smart policies that keep us safe.” In 2004, Albany police officer Pat Fox proposed the creation of a local chapter of the National Concerns of Police Survivors.

TED REMSNYDER/COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

Congressional candidate Marc Molinaro, J.C. Berzal of Lacy’s Ford dealership, Blue Friday NY President Pat Fox, Greene County Sheriff Pete Kusminsky and Assemblyman Chris Tague on April 29 at a Blue Friday event in Catskill.

The 18th annual Blue Friday was held Friday to honor all law enforcement officers who have given their lives in the line of duty. Blue Friday New York has partnered with Lacy’s Ford, Ninety Nine Restaurants and Albany radio station WGNA for the group’s fundraising efforts. “We assist the families of police officers killed in the line of duty,” Blue Friday NY President Pat Fox said on Friday. “Each year we do this annual event the last Friday of April and the New York State Senate honors us by doing a proclamation and the money raised helps take the families of the officers killed in the line of duty to Washington,

D.C. on May 15 each year when their names are unveiled on the (National Law Enforcement) Memorial.” The State Senate issued a resolution on Friday recognizing April 29 as Blue Friday. State Senate candidate Richard Amedure attended Friday’s event and called for reform to the new bail system in the state. “Probably the most crucial issue we’re facing in New York State right now is the bail and discovery reform laws that are making everyone less safe,” Amedure said. “I was a trooper in this county for 30 years, so I’m acutely aware of the situation and the needs. The police are supported by the people, even if

the government is not supporting them. That’s why I’m running. I’m running to help turn these laws around for the people of New York.” Lacy’s Ford Manager Jared Giordiano said the dealership was pleased to host the Blue Friday event celebrating local law enforcement. “We’ve been doing this now for five or six years,” he said. “It’s a great cause for the first responders and the families of the fallen. We just feel it’s a great cause.” Assemblyman Chris Tague, R-Schoharie, contended that the amendments to the state budget process allowing more discretion for judges do not go far enough to address the issues with the current bail system. “People are very concerned and they’re starting to find out that the measures that were put forth in the budget really aren’t even a Band-Aid,” he said. “You see in the newspapers every day where repeat criminals are let out. I think we all agreed that some sort of reform was needed. People were being left in jail that couldn’t afford bail for petty crimes and they shouldn’t be there. I think we all agree with that. “The problem is that the way they did this law, it pretty much lets anybody out and there’s not a danger issue where the judge can look at somebody’s history and the crimes that they’ve committed when they’re making a decision in court.”

Chihuahua 88/56

The Washington Post

Houston 85/71 Miami 81/73

Monterrey 91/70

ALASKA HAWAII

Anchorage 51/41

10s rain

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

Hilo 78/69

Juneau 54/41

0s

showers t-storms

Honolulu 84/72

Fairbanks 57/32

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 77/52 s 51/41 pc 80/64 t 61/44 s 70/44 s 57/39 c 81/66 t 57/41 sh 56/45 pc 81/62 pc 71/57 c 79/60 c 58/30 s 65/51 t 75/62 t 65/55 pc 68/58 c 85/64 pc 66/36 s 58/42 r 60/50 pc 63/39 pc 84/72 sh 85/71 pc 76/57 sh 66/47 pc 80/62 c 90/66 s

Sun. Hi/Lo W 83/54 pc 52/37 pc 80/64 t 60/51 pc 66/54 pc 49/38 sh 79/63 t 63/43 c 63/46 s 81/65 pc 75/54 t 82/60 t 57/31 pc 57/47 pc 73/50 t 69/52 sh 72/51 pc 84/70 c 68/37 pc 56/40 c 68/50 pc 70/44 s 84/71 sh 85/73 pc 72/46 pc 70/51 s 76/57 t 88/62 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

Second Oath Keepers member pleads guilty to seditious conspiracy Spencer S. Hsu

Atlanta 80/64

El Paso 87/58

-0s

From A1

First-degree course of sexual conduct against a child in is defined as, over a period of time not less than three months in duration he or she, being 18 years old or more, engages in two or more acts of sexual conduct, which include at least one act of sexual intercourse, oral sexual conduct, anal sexual conduct or aggravated sexual contact, with a

Winnipeg 44/36

Seattle 57/44

-10s

Fernandez’s location should be forwarded to state police at Catskill by calling 518-6228600. All information will be kept confidential if requested, Nevel said. According to New York

Penal Law, a person is guilty of predatory sexual assault against a child when, being 18 years old or more, he or she commits the crime of first-degree rape, first-degree criminal sexual act, first-degree aggravated sexual abuse, or first-degree course of sexual conduct against a child, and the victim is less than thirteen years old.

Today Hi/Lo W 78/59 t 76/54 s 81/73 t 55/50 sh 56/43 r 82/65 t 86/71 pc 66/48 s 64/53 pc 79/50 s 55/44 r 83/68 t 68/43 s 96/66 s 67/51 s 55/40 c 57/46 r 59/41 pc 73/59 sh 69/52 pc 81/47 s 76/57 t 69/49 c 65/50 s 82/61 pc 57/44 r 85/70 t 69/51 s

Sun. Hi/Lo W 83/64 pc 75/56 pc 83/74 t 57/46 c 48/39 r 81/58 t 85/71 t 68/52 s 73/60 pc 79/61 c 64/43 c 83/67 t 70/52 pc 94/65 s 67/54 t 60/41 pc 65/49 c 66/44 s 83/62 t 77/60 sh 82/49 s 75/51 s 59/48 sh 65/51 pc 84/64 pc 61/46 c 85/72 t 69/58 sh

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

A second member of the extremist group Oath Keepers pleaded guilty Friday to seditious conspiracy in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol and will cooperate with federal prosecutors to avoid a possible multiyear prison term. Brian Ulrich, 44, of Guyton, Ga., was arrested in August on charges of joining a group of right-wing Oath Keepers members who planned and organized travel to Washington, stashed firearms in an Arlington, Va. hotel, then sent several individuals with tactical gear, helmets and radios into the Capitol. The group’s leader, Stewart Rhodes, was arrested in January and charged with seditious conspiracy in a superseding indictment with Ulrich and nine others accused of plotting to impede President Joe Biden’s January 2021 inauguration by force. Ulrich pleaded guilty to two of five felony counts, seditious conspiracy and obstructing an official proceeding (Congress’s certification of the 2020 election results on Jan. 6). Each count is punishable by up to 20 years in prison. Prosecutors agreed in a plea deal to drop the three other counts - conspiring to prevent

an officer from discharging his or her duties, aiding and abetting, and evidence tampering. Prosecutors could also request leniency for Ulrich, who otherwise could face 63 to 78 months in prison under federal guidelines. Ulrich admitted agreeing to a plan with Rhodes to stop the peaceful transfer of power by force and to attempting to influence or affect and to retaliate against the conduct of the U.S. government. Rhodes has pleaded not guilty. At a plea hearing held by videoconference, Ulrich briefly grew emotional as U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta read the penalties aloud but declined when the judge asked if he needed a short break. “No your honor. ... It’s only going to get harder,” Ulrich said. Ulrich was recorded in Washington providing security to longtime Donald Trump political adviser Roger Stone in January 2021. Ulrich is the third bodyguard who was seen with Stone on Jan. 5 or 6 to plead guilty in the Capitol rioting and the second in the seditious conspiracy case to do so. One of them, Joshua James, 34, of Arab, Ala., became the first to plead guilty on March 2 to seditious conspiracy. The Army veteran who was injured in Iraq

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agreed to cooperate in hopes of reducing a recommended sentence of 87 to 108 months in prison. The other, Mark Grods, earlier admitted in a plea deal that he traveled to the D.C. area from Alabama with two guns and joined fellow members in the Capitol riot. Stone has denied involvement in the riot, calling any claim or implication that he knew about or condoned illegal acts at the Capitol as “categorically false.” In charging papers, U.S. prosecutors alleged that Ulrich participated in an encrypted Signal planning chat with other members and discussed bringing firearms including an AR-15 style rifle and ammunition. “I will be the guy running around with the budget AR,” he wrote, according to the indictment. “The more patriots the merrier ‘gonna be wild,’” Ulrich said, referring to Trump’s Dec.

HUDSON RIVER TIDES High Tide: 3:08 a.m. 4.63 feet Low Tide: 9:50 a.m. -0.08 feet High Tide: 3:31 p.m. 4.1 feet Low Tide: 9:56 p.m. -0.03 feet

19, 2020 tweet that events Jan. 6 “will be wild,” according to the indictment. In Washington, Ulrich allegedly drove others in a golf cart to the Capitol after it was breached, “at times swerving around law enforcement vehicles,” according to court charging papers. He stayed in the building about 15 minutes, charging papers said. COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA The Register-Star/The Daily Mail are published Tuesday through Saturday mornings by Columbia-Greene Media (USPS253620), 364 Warren St., Unit 1, Hudson, N.Y. 12534, a subsidiary of Johnson Newspaper Corp. Periodicals postage paid at Hudson, N.Y., and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Register-Star, 364 Warren St., Unit 1, Hudson, N.Y. 12534. TO SUBSCRIBE To order a subscription, call our circulation department at 315-782-1012 or logon to www.hudsonvalley360.com SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Digital Pass is included with print subscription Daily (Newsstand) $2.00 Saturday (Newsstand) $3.00 Same Day Mail (3 months) $82.25 Same Day Mail (6 months) $157.00 Same Day Mail (1 Year) $286.00 EZ Pay Rates: 3 months $75.00 6 months $143.00 1 year $260.00 DIGITAL PASS ONLY RATES: Includes full access to HudsonValley360.com and the e-edition. 3 months $30.00 6 months $60.00 1 year $120.00 Delivery and Billing Inquiries Call 315-782-1012 abd reach us, live reps are available Mon.- Fri. 6 a.m. - 5 p.m., Sat. 6 a.m. - noon Sun. 8 a.m. - 11:30 a.m.

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Saturday - Sunday, April 30-May 1, 2022 - A3

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA • THE DAILY MAIL

CALENDAR EDITOR’S NOTE: Most events and meetings are cancelled or have been moved online due to the virus outbreak. Please call ahead to confirm.

Monday, May 2 n Athens Town Board 7 p.m. Athens

Volunteer Firehouse, 39 Third St., Athens 518-945-1052 Changes will be on the Town of Athens web page n Cairo Town Board 7 p.m. Town Hall, 512 Main St., Cairo n Coxsackie Village Zoning Board 6 p.m. Coxsackie-Athens High School Auditorium, 24 Sunset Blvd., Coxsackie 518-731-2718 n Greene County Board of Electrical Examiners 1 p.m. Greene County Office Building, 411 Main St., 4th Floor, Room 469, Catskill

Tuesday, May 3 n Catskill Town Board with public

hearing franchise agreement 6:30 p.m. Town Hall, 439 Main St., Catskill 518943-2141 n Coxsackie Village workshop meeting 6 p.m. Village Hall, 119 Mansion St., Coxsackie 518-731-2718 n Durham Town Board workshop meeting 7:30 p.m. Town Hall, 7309 Route 81, East Durham n Greenville CSD Annual Budget Hearing 6 p.m. MS/HS Library, 4982 Route 81, Greenville 518-966-5070

Wednesday, May 4 n Catskill Central School District

Board of Education public hearing on budget 6 p.m. CHS Library, 341 West Main St., Catskill 518-943-2300

Greene County Legislature public hearing No.1; special legislature meeting No.2; health services; county resources and public safety 6 p.m.Greene County n

Office Building, 411 Main St., Catskill

Thursday, May 5 n Ashland Town Planning Board 6

p.m. Town Hall, 12094 Route 23, Ashland

Monday, May 9 n Ashland Town Board 7:30 p.m.

Town Hall, 12094 Route 23, Ashland n Catskill Village Planning Board 6:30 p.m. Robert C. Antonelli Senior Center, 15 Academy St., Catskill 518943-3830 n Coxsackie Village Board 7 p.m. Village Hall, 119 Mansion St., Coxsackie 518-731-2718 n Greene County Legislature county services and public works 6 p.m. Greene County Office Building, 411 Main St., Catskill

GlaxoSmithKline keeps solar site under wraps By Maura Rosner Columbia Greene Media

EAST DURHAM — GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Health Care is located in East Durham, but its large solar power generator field was built 90 miles away from the plant that produces toothpaste and other goods for the United States and Canadian markets, a company spokeswoman said Friday. Little is known about the GSK Consumer Healthcare site. Greene County Administrator Shaun Groden said Thursday he does not believe it

was constructed in Greene County. While the manufacturing plant, formerly known as Stiefel Laboratories and a leading producer of soap products, is located in Greene County, the 17,000-panel solar array with an estimated electricity generation capacity of 6.9 megawatts is located 90 miles away in an undisclosed location in the Catskill Mountains. The Oak Hill site on Friday did not allow access to its East Durham location. “The solar site is 90 miles away from GlaxoSmithKline’s East Durham location, but still within New York state,” said Sarah Miller, a

spokeswoman for GlaxoSmithKline. GlaxoSmithKline and Ameresco held an internal ribbon cutting earlier this week to open the new installation. The main facility on Route 145 manufactures the oral health care Sensodyne, Pronamel and Paradontax. The company announced the solar project had been completed Wednesday in partnership with Ameresco, a leading renewable and energy efficiency company based in Framingham, Massachusetts. According to a statement from the company, “In addition, at Oak Hill in New York, a major manufacturing

facility in GSK’s Consumer Healthcare network, GSK is confirming today that through new investment in solar energy production, it will achieve the landmark of converting 70% of power consumption to solar energy by the end of 2021.” The solar farm for the GSK Consumer Healthcare site in East Durham is the 12th in which the company has made investments. The project will enable the GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Health Care site in Oak Hill to reduce its carbon emissions.

March to honor missing and murdered indigenous women By Noah Eckstein Columbia-Greene Media

HUDSON — A march and day of awareness for missing and murdered indigenous people will take place in Hudson on May 6. The event will begin at the Henry Hudson Riverfront Park at 5:30 p.m. and conclude at Hudson City Hall about 7 p.m. Remarks and chants will be uttered for the purpose of raising awareness for the indigenous people who go missing and who are murdered each year. The march is sponsored by Forge Project, a private native-led private art, culture and decolonial education initiative in partnership with RISE: Radical Indigenous Survivance and Empowerment, a nonprofit organization dedicated to the education, dissemination and evolution of indigenous culture. “Our role at Forge is to raise awareness across the

United States creating an understanding that this part of the Hudson Valley has been a place of displacement of natives,” said Candice Hopkins, executive director of the Forge Project. On March 7, the Hudson Common Council designated May 5 as the National Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Hudson. Heather Bruegel, former director of Education at the Forge Project, brought the resolution to the Common Council. “New York state is not immune to the crisis of missing and murdered indigenous persons, either,” Hopkins said. Hopkins was born in Whitehorse, Canada, near the Highway of Tears, a 450-mile stretch of Highway 16 that is the location of many missing and murdered indigenous women. Indigenous women and girls are murdered at a rate

10 times higher than other ethnicities, according to Native Women’s Wilderness, a group that supports indigenous women. Many tribal nations consider the kidnapping and murder of indigenous people an epidemic, with some even considering it to be a form of genocide. Forge Project believes that missing and murdered indigenous persons is rooted in the systemic belief that indigenous women are not valued in a predominantly white colonial society, and therefore can easily be disposed of or exterminated with little media attention. In a country built on the forced displacement of native peoples from their homelands in order to exploit that land for profit and growth of European conquest, the murder of Indigenous women often goes unnoticed by mainstream culture throughout history. This is why the Forge Project is committed to

raising awareness of missing and murdered indigenous persons. There are no longer dedicated Native American reservations in the Hudson Valley. Though, the Catskill mountains area is the unceded territory of the Mohican tribe, known as the Muh-he-conne-ok. Their name means “the people of the water that never stills,” reflecting the reverence they had for the Hudson River. The Mohican

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tribe way of life was disrupted by European settlers forcing them to move to a distant reservation in Wisconsin. A poster and banner workshop will take place Sunday to prepare for the protest. Forge recommends wearing comfortable shoes, bringing hats and umbrellas and wearing masks to keep everyone in the community safe during the event.

Tickets can be purchased at the door or online at Eventbrite.com. All proceeds benefit the playgrounds in the Catskill community.

The Fortnightly Club OF CATSKILL = EST 1932 = Sponsored by: Bank of Greene County, Columbia Greene Media Corp, Columbia Memorial Hospital, County Waste and Recycling, Empire Riverfront Ventures Greene County Legislature, North Dome Operations Inc., RC Lacy Ford Lincoln Subaru, Greene County Pennysaver, Hudson Valley Wine Magazine, Century 21 New West Properties, Angela Lanuto Team Coldwell Banker Village Green Realty, Greene Meadows Skilled Nursing & Rehab, Lake Mountain Realty, Michael Lanuto CPRC, AWMA Financial Advisor, Mid-Hudson Cable, New Athens Generating, New York Restaurant, Parkitects Inc., Shook Insurance Agency, UHY LLP Advisors & many other local business sponsors.


A4 - Saturday - Sunday, April 30-May1, 2022

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA • THE DAILY MAIL

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OUR VIEW

Civility and conduct unbecoming Once in a while, small rural governments must complete a task that stretches far beyond town lines and reaches into the national fabric. Case in point: The Ancram Town Board had to investigate allegations of genderbased discrimination and “disrespectful behavior.” A report on the investigation, headed by attorney Elena DeFio Kean, made public this week concluded no violations of laws or ethics were committed. However, the report also contained recommendations for potential improvement of conduct at town meetings and consideration of policies to achieve that improvement. We think Ancram officials handled this difficult situation fairly and admirably. However, a general pattern of uncivil behavior emerged. That seems to be the case. Town Supervisor Art Bassin said a code of conduct is in

the drafting stage and the board is working on a policy statement. The investigation, which began Feb. 12, was keyed by comments made by Jack Lindsey, chairman of the Ancram Ethics Board in January, about allegations of disrespectful behavior toward women. Lindsey spoke as a private citizen, not in his official capacity, he said, because no formal complaints of ethical violations were filed. For a small town, the investigation appeared to be thorough. It included interviews with 20 town employees, elected town officials and volunteers for town committees. Town board memos, draft resolutions, a potential code of conduct, the town handbook, the town code of ethics and relevant emails were reviewed. Kean said this week many of the allegations raised by Lindsey had to do with in-

cidents that occurred more than 10 years ago. “However,” Kean added, “the investigation did reveal, and exposed quite frankly, a perceived theme of dismissal and disrespective treatment towards women by many of the women who were interviewed. Not all, but there was a theme of many feeling that way.” The job of investigations like this is neither to absolve the elected officials of responsibility nor smear them nor tear them down. Reckoning and solving the problem so such incidents don’t happen again is the job. Lindsey did a brave and valuable service by going public with these allegations. The town board did the right thing by assigning the task of investigating the allegations to Kean. The next step is to bring civility back to Ancram Town Hall.

ANOTHER VIEW

The Education Department’s ‘fix’ for charter schools is misguided Jared Polis

between 2005 and 2017, students in the charter sector As governor of Colorado, made greater academic gains I’ve seen the enormous chal- than their district peers, with lenges faced by our students Hispanic and Asian students as a result of the covid-19 and students in the lowest pandemic. During this time, socioeconomic quartile seethe federal government has ing nearly an additional half generally been a helpful part- of years’ worth of learning. ner to get and keep schools In Colorado, 7 of the top 10 safely open by providing rated public high schools in flexible funding with few ad- the most recent U.S. News & ministrative burdens. World Report rankings are So it’s confounding that charter schools. the Education Department Charter schools also lead is about to create chaos and the way in spurring innovalimit public school choice tive models of learning, such by instituting new rules that as the network of Colorado would gut the federal Charter Early Colleges that provide Schools Program (CSP) - a students with pathways to program that I helped updebt-free college degrees and date and greatly expand, career credentials, and the with bipartisan support, Pikes Peak School of Expediduring my time in Congress. tionary Learning in Falcon, The CSP supports the devel- Colo., that gives students opment and expansion of access to project- and fieldhigh-quality public charter based learning opportunities schools and provides techni- as early as preschool. cal assistance and training Yet the Education Departwhere there is demand. ment has proposed rules that In Colorado, that demand would halt innovation in its is higher than ever. Public tracks and make it harder charter schools - tuition-free for communities to meet the public schools that are grant- educational needs of their ed site-based governance students. and flexibility in exchange for The rules would put mahigh accountability - are an jor, sometimes unworkable important part of Colorado’s barriers in the way of charter public school landscape. To- schools seeking CSP funding. day, about 15% of Colorado’s For one, they would require a public school students atfederal “community impact tend a charter school. analysis,” giving anonymous This is in part because of grant reviewers in Washinghow successful the charter ton the ability to veto parent, schools have been, in Colocommunity, district and rado and across the country. state efforts to open a new A recent national study from school. This second-guessHarvard University’s Proing is absurd and flies in the gram on Education Policy face of common sense. Obviously a locally elected school and Governance found that

The Washington Post

board or other high-quality local authorizer is in the best position to weigh community support, not distant bureaucrats. The community impact rules would also require schools to demonstrate their intent to have a culturally diverse student body and staff - a noble goal, but one that makes it difficult for schools that focus on an underrepresented population to get funding, especially when they are geographically isolated or serve indigenous populations. Consider Kwiyagat Community Academy, a public charter school in Towaoc, Colo. Founded last year by the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, it teaches a new generation a culture and language infamously repressed by previous schools run by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. However, under these new rules, the Education Department would disqualify a culturally-affirming school such as Kwiyagat from participating in the grant program, simply because of the mission of their school. Another proposed regulation would require states to prioritize charter applicants that can find a school district to “partner” with them. This is ill-advised: A district could disadvantage a proposed charter school by refusing partnership - even though charters are often most needed in districts with a history of failed cooperation with new innovative models. Jared Polis is the governor of Colorado.

Mike Pompeo ponders entering the presidential marathon WASHINGTON — Mike Pompeo, who has been a soldier, businessman, congressman, CIA director and secretary of state, says he thinks that ever since he was a 17-year-old assistant manager of a Baskin-Robbins store in Orange County, Calif., he has improved the cultures almost everywhere he worked. Almost. Not, however, at the State Department. Concerning it, his opinion is similar to that of the wit who said the State Department is like tundra — anything you could do to it would improve it. But, then, no Republican ever annoyed the party’s base by disparaging State. From a California childhood, Pompeo went to West Point, where he finished first in his class. He left the Army a captain, having been a tank commander along the East German border. At Harvard Law School, he served on the Law Review with a student one year behind him, Ted Cruz. After a stint with a premier Washington law firm, Williams & Connolly, in 1996 he moved to Kansas to start a business, Thayer Aerospace. He became a Republican national committeeman, then won the first of four congressional terms in 2010, before being sent by President Donald Trump first to Langley, then Foggy Bottom. Pompeo is exploring a presidential candidacy in the orthodox way, campaigning for Republican candidates hither and yon, falling in love with Iowa’s vistas and Iowans’ wisdom, etc. Recently, Pompeo was in Pennsylvania campaigning for his West Point contemporary, David McCormick, a hedge-fund titan seeking the Republicans’ Senate nomination. Pompeo’s argument for himself is that he has had presidentially germane government experience within institutions critical to coping with a world growing more dangerous.

WASHINGTON POST

GEORGE F.

WILL Pompeo’s selection as CIA director was somewhat accidental, the result of Trump’s slapdash approach to everything. During the 2016 Republican nomination competition, at the Kansas caucuses in Wichita, Pompeo spoke for Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida, with Trump listening backstage. Trump reached a rolling boil when Pompeo cited Trump’s claim that if, as president, he ordered a soldier to commit a war crime, the soldier would do it. Pompeo said Trump would be an “authoritarian president who ignored our Constitution.” Eight months later, eight days after the election, at Trump Tower in New York, Pompeo met Trump for the first time and accepted the CIA job, which Trump offered to someone he barely knew because Vice President-elect Mike Pence urged him to. Tim Alberta, an impeccable reporter, writes in his book “American Carnage” that when Trump was told he had just bestowed a plum position on the congressman who had committed the Wichita sacrilege, Trump exploded: “No! That was him? We’ve got to take it back. This is what I get for letting Pence pick everyone!” Ah, well. The dogs bark, but the caravan moves on. Trump’s plentiful anger found new targets, including Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. (Thou shalt not call the president, at whose pleasure you serve, a “[expletive] moron.”) So, Pompeo can now

try to become the first former secretary of state since James Buchanan 165 years ago to become president. Pompeo might be a president with some surprising depths: He named Peter Berkowitz, a distinguished political philosopher with a Yale PhD, director of the State Department’s Policy Planning Staff, whose first two directors were extraordinary architects of the post-1945 world: George Kennan (19471949) and Paul Nitze (19501953). It took an interesting secretary to pick Berkowitz, the author of, among other books, “Nietzsche: The Ethics of an Immoralist.” When preparing to run a marathon, you get in trim. Pompeo has shed 90 pounds — nearly a third of his weight. He is almost svelte and altogether convinced that many Republican presidential aspirants will enter the nomination scramble before Trump answers this question: Dare I risk running another campaign that might end with mere arithmetic — vote sums — being construed as evidence that I lost? As Pompeo leaves a breakfast where his hearty appetite for scrambled eggs and chicken sausage indicated that he is happy with his current configuration, he is enveloped by his security detail. This is not an entitlement for a former director of the CIA; it is a necessity. Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has agents in the United States, says he wants to kill Pompeo, whom the ayatollah blames for the Jan. 3, 2020, U.S. drone strike that killed Maj. Gen. Qasem Soleimani, the terrorist who was an Iranian national hero. In Republican primaries, campaigning with a target placed on your back by Iran is an unfair advantage. George Will’s email address is georgewill@washpost.com.

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Saturday - Sunday, April 30- May 1, 2022 - A5

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An ode to dandelions By Dick Brooks For Columbia-Greene Media

Telly, my trusty canine companion and I paused from our morning duties during our usual tour of the yard to appreciate the warm sunshine and the verdant yard. The gardens are starting to show color but it was the lawn that caused the pause. The lush dark green of the crabgrass sprinkled with spring gold was breathtaking. I have always considered myself a protector of the weak and helpless, a champion of the underdog, a guardian of the downtrodden. I even voted for Ross Perot once. As such I feel that I must speak out against the mass mayhem taking place all across our country. Armies of horticulturalists and gardeners are waging their annual war against the dandelion. Their arsenal is extensive, grass whips for decapitation, claws for gouging them from the ground, poison sprays, there is even a version of flame thrower you can order to fry these poor little plants where they grow. If you don’t want to do the dirty work yourself, for a second mortgage and your first born child, you can hire a company of hit men to come in and cover your yard with a chemical soup to kill them off mass destruction style. I can’t understand this outpouring of disgust, dislike, disdain and even hate. I blame it partly on The Home and Garden Channel and their shows extolling the virtues of

WHITTLING AWAY

DICK

BROOKS the ideal lawn devoid of all but perfectly trimmed and manicured Kentucky blue grass. Illegal immigrants such as crabgrass and the maligned dandelion are to be eliminated leaving that astro-turf perfection that they desire. What, I ask, has a dandelion ever done to you or yours? I think they’re pretty, their little golden fuzzy faces glowing all over the place brighten our day. They are one of the very first wild flowers to help relieve us of the winter doldrums. They grow anywhere and require no care at all. They certainly are prolific, turning lawns and open fields into carpets of gold. The more untended the property, the harder they try to beautify it. They are one of the first flowers that children learn they can pick with impunity. Is there a parent, grandparent or teacher who has no memories of a pudgy little fist full of wilted dandelions being offered with love? The dried head full of little parachutes, each carrying its own seed, kept me busy for hours, puffing until I

hyperventilated and filling the air full of flying fluff. I think the first time I really paid attention to girls was when I was snapping dandelion heads at them on the playground. Later on, one special one taught me how to make chains which we wore in our hair as we listened to folk music in the park. They are edible, the tender young leaves are a great addition to a salad. The roots were used as a medicine by our ancestors and one of the finest adult beverages I’ve ever tasted was the dandelion wine my Father made from their blossoms. All in all, a pretty, useful little memory maker. I can’t understand the waging of war against them. Go pick on Poison Ivy and appreciate the sunny little dandelion. I’m sure if you went to a spot on this old dirt ball we live on where dandelions don’t grow (although I can’t think of a place right off hand), you could probably find people buying flats of them in their local nursery. We’re lucky enough to get all we want for nothing! Thought for the week — My advice to you is get married: if you find a good wife you’ll be happy; if not, you’ll become a philosopher. — Socrates Until next week, may you and yours be happy and well. Reach Dick Brooks at whittle12124@yahoo.com.

No mow May: A conservation idea for lawns By Bob Beyfuss For Columbia-Greene Media

As we enter the lawnmowing season, in earnest, this month, our thoughts are mixed about this time honored activity. A reader recently told me about an idea that may be of interest to some of you. I guess it would be best described as a “conservation practice” that is intended to encourage and increase the population of pollinating insects, by allowing grassy plants and non-grass plants that are growing in your lawn to flower and go to seed. I have observed that for some people, particularly some weekend or seasonal residents, having and maintaining a large lawn is one of main reasons why they own property here. City dwellers, living in apartments, surrounded by other people, also confined by concrete, often long for open space to enjoy. I know of several people whose greatest joy is driving upstate from New Jersey, each weekend, solely to ride their garden tractor and mow acres of grass. Lawns evolved partially as a way to improve one’s view of surrounding areas, in order to better watch out for predators, or the bad guys, who may be about to attack at any moment. Lawns also served as “commons” where people could gather to exchange goods, socialize and play. It’s pretty much impossible to play baseball, football, soccer, tennis, rugby, cricket or many other sports in a forest. Perhaps the highest evolution of lawns as play areas is exemplified by golf. Golf fairways, roughs, and especially greens are among the most intensely maintained places where plants are intentionally grown, for any purpose. I am not a golfer myself, but I do appreciate the aesthetic appeal of well-maintained golf courses. Greene County has

GARDENING TIPS

BOB

BEYFUSS at least seven golf courses and these recreational businesses certainly contribute to our economy. But for many people, including myself, mowing the lawn is not fun at all! I wish I could convert my entire lawn to the low growing wild thyme that occupies only a small portion of it right now. I love the smell of the thyme as well as its pretty pink flowers and it never needs to be mowed! I have been unable to get it to spread despite my best efforts to kill the grass nearby. It is quickly outcompeted by dandelions and other plants that I consider as weeds. I will also admit that I like the smell of a freshly mowed lawn and the uniform neatness of the mowed area is appealing to my German nature. Some suburban communities may require residents to maintain a lawn whether they want to or not. Such is the price some people choose to pay for living in suburbia! Grass plants react to being mowed by growing new shoots. Their growing point is located at the base of the shoot and cutting off the top of the blade does them no harm. This give them a distinct advantage over non grass plants that have their growing points at the top of the plant. When newly arrived city dwellers asked me how they could cultivate a large lawn, from the fields surrounding them, my advice was simple. Just mow it.

Allowing grasses to grow and produce seed may not immediately provide a sequence of lovely wildflowers, as some people may envision. Grass flowers, in general, are not all that exciting to look at. At least not at first, but eventually, broad leaved plants will replace the grasses and produce some interesting flowers. These flowers will also produce pollen and provide food and habitat for pollinating insects, which, by most accounts, are declining drastically in recent years. Hence, conservation of a valuable natural resource is a positive ecological service that you can perform by doing nothing! This May, I suggest you try to refrain from mowing at least some of your lawn just to see what happens. There are some potential downsides to this experiment, from scowling neighbors who disapprove of the appearance, to possibly allowing some nasty, invasive plants, such as Japanese stilt grass, to proliferate and spread. I have no idea if allowing plants to flower will increase allergies in sensitive people. Tall weeds are also far more conducive to harboring deer ticks, as well as pollinators. Mowed lawns harbor no deer ticks whatsoever. You might consider “event mowing” in which you mow only a few times each season, thus preventing the lawn from reverting to brush, to trees, eventually. If you decide to participate in “no mow May” at any level, I would like to hear from you about your experience. There is no question that refraining from using lawn fertilizers, weed killers, soil insecticides and other lawn care chemicals is a good idea in general from an environmental perspective. Reach Bob Beyfuss at rlb14@ cornell.edu.

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APRIL 30 ASHLAND — The Ashland Fire Department, 12096 Route 23, Ashland, will serve a roast beef dinner on April 30. Take outs start at 4:30 p.m. Starting at 5 p.m. seating will be available inside. Adults, $15; children 5–12, $6; under 5, free. CAIRO — The Greene County Women’s League Cancer Patient Aid will host their first Cancer Patient Aid Mother’s Day Craft Fair 10 a.m.-3 p.m. April 30 at the Red Rooster Restaurant, 851 Main St., Cairo. More than 24 handcraft vendors, chance auction, 50/50 and food available. Admission is free. For information, email greenecountywomensleague@ gmail.com.

school there is no table fee. The table fee is $10. Sign up by April 14 to secure a table. For information, email hcslibraryfund@yahoo.com. CATSKILL — The Catskill Glee Club will present their annual Spring Concert “A Night on Broadway!” at 7:30 p.m. May 7 at the First Reformed Church, 310 Main St., Catskill. The 25-voice all male chorus will be directed by Michael Wright and accompanied by Lisa D’Arcangelis. The guest artist will be Michael Benedict Jazz Vibes. Suggested offering is $10 at the door. Information can be found at www.CatskillGleeClub.org.

MAY 8 CATSKILL — Catskill Elks Lodge, 45 North Jefferson Ave., Catskill, will serve Mother’s Day breakfast May 8 with seatings at either 9 a.m. or 10:30 a.m. Reservations must be made by May 4 by calling Debbi at 518-6101301. Mons and kids under 6 are free; all others, $9.

MAY 1

MAY 9

ATHENS — The West Athens-Lime Street Fire Company, 933 Leeds Athens Road, Athens, will hold an all you can eat breakfast 8 a.m.-noon May 1. All proceeds will benefit the family of deceased West Athens-Lime Street Firefighter William K. Kohler Jr. Freewill offering accepted.

DELMAR — The Delmar Community Orchestra, under the direction of Vincent Bonafede, will present a Spring Concert performed by the Orchestra’s string section at 7:30 p.m. May 9 at the Delmar Reformed Church, 386 Delaware Ave., Delmar. The concert, which will include classical selections and pops, is free and open to the public. For information, contact DCO President Janet Behning at delmarcommunityorchestra@gmail.com or 914-2712055, or visit the DCO website at www.delmarcommunityorchestra.org.

MAY 3 CAIRO — The Greene County Women’s League Cancer Patient Aid (GCWL) will meet at noon May 3 at Red Rooster, 845 Main St, Cairo. Greene County Women’s League (G.C.W.L.) is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization whose mission is to provide Greene County Cancer patients (men, women and children) with assistance in paying medical expenses resulting from the diagnosis and treatment of cancer. For information, call 518-819-1249, visit GCWL at www.greenecountywomensleague.com.

MAY 5 SELKIRK — Bethlehem Grange 137, 24 Bridge St., Selkirk, will serve a chicken barbecue dinner 3-6 p.m. May 5 in the Grange Hall. The dinner will include half a chicken, baked potato, coleslaw, roll and butter for $15. Home made baked goods will also be available for additional purchase of $1.50 each. To reserve dinners, call Carol Carpenter at 518-421-1384, no later than May 4. Make sure the phone number is displayed, for a confirmation call back.

MAY 7 EAST BERNE — Helderberg Christian School, 96 Main St., East Berne, will be hosting a garage sale fundraiser 8 a.m.-3 p.m. May 7. Vendors are being sought for the run your own table sale. Bring it in and take what’s left when you leave. If you donate all your proceeds to the

MAY 13 CATSKILL — The First Reformed Church of Catskill, 310 Main St., Catskill, will be holding their Spring Rummage Sale 9 a.m.-5 p.m. May 13 and 9 a.m.-1 p.m. May 14. On Saturday items will be sold for $4 a bag. CATSKILL — Catskill Elks Lodge, 45 North Jefferson Ave., Catskill, will serve a chicken parm dinner 4:406:30 p.m. May 13, eat in or take out. Full dinner, salad and dessert, $14. Reservations must be made by May 9 by calling Brenda at 518-9451179. DELMAR — Q.U.I.L.T. Inc. will meet at 9:45 a.m. May 13 at the Delmar Reformed Church, 386 Delaware Ave., Delmar and via Zoom. We will be holding a general meeting and member Helen Ernst will be demonstrating EQ8 (Electric Quilt 8), a computer-based quilting design program. Q.U.I.L.T., Inc. is a not-for-profit guild of quilters interested in learning about the art of making quilts. Members live in the Capital Region and surrounding communities. All levels of quilters are welcome. Meetings are held the second Friday of each month

Last Week’s

September through June. Visitors are welcome. This will be an experimental hybrid in person/virtual meeting. Visit www.quiltinc.org for more details.)

MAY 14 HAINES FALLS — The Mountain Top Historical Society presents A Hike at Latvian Camp at 9 a.m. May 14. Longtime MTHS member Nancy Allen will lead an easy hike around the grounds of the Latvian Evangelical Lutheran Summer Camp located in Elka Park. Learn about the history of the camp, visit the lake and buildings, and take a walk through the woods on the camp’s trails. Meet at the parking area on the left at the end of Green Hill Road, just past the camp entrance and before the Elka Park entrance. See the exact Google maps location at: https://tinyurl.com/camphike The hike will end at approximately 11:30 p.m. Steady rain will cancel. Registration is required, email mthsdirector@mths.org or call 518-589-6657 to register. WEST SAND LAKE — Cornell Cooperative Extension’s Master Gardener will hold their “Garden Hand Tool Sale,” May 14. A wide selection of gently-used garden tools, new Spearhead Spades, and CobraHead Weeders, unique plant containers, glittering glass garden totems, English stone trough planters and other garden delights will be offered. This sale is in conjunction with the larger Garden Faire hosted by the Sand Lake Garden Club. Sales start at 8 a.m., rain or shine, at the Salem United Methodist Church, 349 Shaver Road, West Sand Lake. For more information on Extension’s gardening programs visit http://ccerensselaer.org/ or contact Cornell Cooperative Extension at 518-272-4210 or mmp74@cornell.edu. SOUTH BETHLEHEM — The South Bethlehem United Methodist Church, 65 Willowbrook Ave., South Bethlehem, will hold a Vendor Craft Fair 9 a.m.-2 p.m. May 14. Breakfast and lunch will be available plus a bake sale to support the church’s United Methodist Women. The Thrift Shop ‘Boutique’ will be open as well. Contact Emily Shutter at 518-813-0661 for further information. SELKIRK — Bethlehem Grange 137, 24 Bridge St., Selkirk, will serve a goulash dinner 3-6 p.m. May 14. Dinner includes goulash with tossed salad, roll/butter and dessert for $14. Pick-up the dinner at Bethlehem Grange. Reserve dinner by calling Carol Carpenter at 518-421-1384. Make sure the phone number is displayed to receive a confirmation phone call. Reserve your dinners by May 13.

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A6 - Saturday - Sunday, April 30-May1, 2022

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

How to submit obituaries and death notices Obituaries: Are paid notices. We reserve the right to edit all copy. Funeral directors may email us the information at obits@columbiagreenemedia.com anytime. Include life background information on the deceased, a full list of immediate survivors, services and the name of the funeral home. Any questions or for rate information, call 315-661-2446. Funeral notices: Are paid follow-ups to obituaries. We reserve the right to edit all copy. Funeral directors may email us the information at obits@columbiagreenemedia.com anytime. Any questions or for rate information, call 315-661-2446. Death Notices: Are free notices that don’t exceed 20 words. For more information, funeral directors may call 315-661-2446. In memorium ads: Are paid ads that are guaranteed to run. Call the Classified department at 315-661-2446 or send to Obits@wdt.net

Henry Barz Henry Barz passed on April 19,2022 at the age of 92. He was predeceased by his parents, Heinrich and Johanna Barz, and his wife of 47 years, Delores Barz. Hank will be missed by his daughter and son-in-law, Linda and Jerry St Pierre, as well as his granddaughter, Emma St Pierre, and many friends. He was a devoted husband, father and grandfather. His pride and joy was his granddaughter and it gave him tremendous pleasure to watch her grow into a fine young lady. Rest In Peace. Private burial will be held at a later date.

Sharyn A. Groat March 26, 1947 - April 27, 2022 Sharyn A. Groat, 75, of Stuyvesant, NY, passed away peacefully Wednesday, April 27, 2022 at Columbia Memorial Hospital. Born March 26, 1947 in Hudson, NY, she was the daughter of the late Joseph and Anna (Laurella) Porreca. Sharyn and Douglas were married on September 6, 1970. Sharyn loved to be surrounded by her family, especially her grandchildren, who they referred to as “Nannie”. Nannie adored her grandchildren very much. Sharyn took great pleasure in entertaining at her home and at the Kinderhook Lake house. She will always be remembered for her Christmas cookies, well kept gardens, and love for shopping. She enjoyed traveling with her husband, friends, and family. Sharyn always attended Saturday night mass at St. John’s Church. She is survived by her husband: Douglas E. Groat, two children, Ryan E. Groat (Jeanann) of Kinderhook, NY and Rynee (Kratt) Groat of Stuyvesant, NY, a brother Gerald “Jerry” Porreca of Hudson and four grandchildren, Parker & Logan Groat, Mariah & Lucas Kratt. A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated 11AM, Monday, May 9, 2022 at St. John the Baptist Church, Valatie. Visitation will be on Monday, May 2, 2022 from 3-7pm at the Raymond E. Bond Funeral Home, Valatie. Burial will be in St. Mary’s Cemetery, Stuyvesant Falls. In lieu of flowers, please consider donations directly to the Cavell House, 69 Prospect Ave., Hudson, NY 12534.

Daniel W. Paquin September 3, 1965 - April 28, 2022 CATSKILL - Daniel W. Paquin, 56, of Post Ave., died Thursday, April 28, 2022 at his residence. He was born in Catskill on September 3, 1965 to the late Francis and Suzann Short Paquin. He enjoyed the outdoors, hunting and supporting his son through his activities such as Little League. For many years he was a truck driver for Jurgenson Trucking. Survivors include his wife of 26 years, Penny; son, Daniel, Jr. both of Catskill; sister, Margaret (George) Norris of Hopewell Junction; many nieces and nephews. He was predeceased by his brother Frank Paquin, Jr. His Funeral Service will form 9:45 am Monday at the SeamonWilsey Funeral Home Inc., corner of John and Lafayette Sts., Saugerties. Thence to St. Mary of the Snow Church where a 10 am Funeral Mass will be offered. Burial will follow in the Blue Mt. Cemetery. Visitation will be 2-5 pm Sunday. Further obituary information and expressions of condolence may be shared on his Tribute Wall at SeamonWilseyFuneralHome.com

U.S. soldiers took her birthday cake in 1945. They finally replaced it. Jaclyn Peiser The Washington Post

Gunshots boomed, rain poured and thunder crashed as Meri Mion and her mother huddled in the attic on their farm in northern Italy. It was April 28, 1945, and the Germans were retreating as U.S. soldiers pushed into the nearby city of Vicenza, northwest of Venice. Mion emerged from the hiding spot the following morning to find the strident sounds of war replaced with the sweet smell of cake. It was her 13th birthday, and American soldiers were parading through her village of San Pietro in Gu, collecting bread and wine from grateful locals. Mion’s mother retrieved the steaming cake from the oven and placed it on the windowsill to cool. But by the time Mion planned to taste the dessert, it was gone. American soldiers had already eaten it, an Army news release said. On Thursday, as Mion

prepared to celebrate her 90th birthday, U.S. soldiers based in Italy “returned” the birthday cake, according to Army officials. Locals, soldiers, police and veterans from the United States and Italy watched as Sgt. Peter Wallis and Col. Matthew Gomlak, the commander of U.S. Army Garrison Italy, presented the guest of honor with a large white cake adorned with a chocolate shell filled with fruits and mini meringue cookies. “Buon 90 compleanno,” the icing on the cake read - “Happy 90th birthday.” Wearing a navy floral dress and blazer, Mion received the cake with a warm smile and open arms. She said she planned to take it home and share it with her family on Friday, her 90th birthday. “Tomorrow, I will eat that dessert with all my family remembering this wonderful day that I will never forget,” Mion said.

Coyote attacks, seriously injures girl in Huntington Beach Nathan Solis Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — A young girl was attacked by a coyote in Huntington Beach on Thursday night, according to authorities. The girl was taken to a local hospital

with serious but non-life-threatening injuries, according to the Huntington Beach Police Department. The victim was not identified because she is a minor. The attack occurred north of the pier about 9:45 p.m., police said.

Police are working with the California Department of Fish and Game to track and euthanize the coyote involved in the attack. Authorities have also stepped up their trapping efforts in recent weeks as animals seek water amid a continuing drought.

Angry Birds mobile games maker’s stock takes flight on strong earnings beat Kati Pohjanpalo Bloomberg

The maker of the Angry Birds mobile games, Rovio Entertainment, soared the most on record on Friday after saying strong sales growth in the first quarter would continue for the remainder of the year. Shares rose as much as 21.5% in Helsinki, the most since the game developer’s 2017 initial public offering, amid heavy trading volume. The company’s revenue rose 27% to 85 million euros ($90 million), topping estimates. Adjusted operating profit came in at 10 million euros, more than twice the average analyst projection. “Rovio had a huge earnings beat in the first quarter,” analyst Atte Riikola at Inderes Oy, said in a note, adding he expects Rovio to invest less in growth and still reach its “strong earnings outlook.” “This is reflected on the bottom line with force and puts upward pressure on our earnings estimates,” he said. Two of Rovio’s staple games had their best quarters

BLOOMBERG PHOTO BY RONI REKOMAA

A model of Angry Birds character ‘Red’ sits on display inside the Rovio Entertainment headquarters in Espoo, Finland, on Feb. 28, 2019.

in years. The biggest game, Angry Birds 2, had gross bookings of 30.3 million euros, the most since early 2019, while Angry Birds Friends generated the most revenue since late 2016. Angry Birds

Journey, launched in January, brought in 10.1 million euros in gross bookings. Rovio also said its games have now been downloaded more than 5 billion times. Some of the sales growth

came as a result of record spending on marketing, with user acquisition investments rising to more than 31 million euros, equivalent to more than a third of the Games unit’s revenue.

Russia appears several days behind schedule in new assault on Donbas, Pentagon says Dan Lamothe, Timothy Bella and David Stern The Washington Post

Russian forces appear to be “at least several days behind where they wanted to be” in their new assault on the Donbas region of Ukraine, the Pentagon said Friday, citing Russia’s incremental progress and strong Ukrainian resistance. The assessment comes after Russia abandoned its earlier goals in the invasion to capture the capital city of Kyiv and other major Ukrainian population centers, focusing instead on a section of eastern Ukraine where fighting has been going on for years. Russia has relied on airstrikes, followed by artillery strikes, before moving its ground forces forward but has still faced stiff Ukrainian defenses, a senior U.S. defense official said Friday, speaking on the condition of anonymity under ground rules set by the Pentagon. Russia’s “incremental” gains are south of the town of Izyum, the official said, with ground movements that are “fairly plodding.” In Mariupol, Ukrainian officials are waiting to see whether there will be an evacuation of the Azovstal steel plant. A Mariupol official said Friday that the area remains “under tank fire” from Russian troops. Mykhailo Vershynin, the chief of the Donetsk region patrol police, told The Washington Post that the area surrounding the Azovstal field hospital is still being bombarded at a time when officials have called for a planned evacuation from the steel plant in the besieged port city. The area is reeling after another significant air raid by Russian Tu-22M3 bombers, he said. “Right now, we are under tank fire,” Vershynin said, adding that Ukrainian forces are facing more naval artillery fire Friday.

“We don’t have a cease-fire.” The strikes follow “unprecedented” air attacks at a time when Ukrainian officials have accused Russia of preventing civilians trapped in the Azovstal plant from leaving. Vershynin said a shortage of food and water “has long been critical for us, for civilians, and for the wounded.” “There is a serious shortage of this, as well as of medicines, as well as of surgical instruments,” he said. Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boychenko said in a news release that more than 600 people have been injured in the airstrikes at the hospital. Boychenko claimed that the more than 20,000 people reported to have died in Mariupol since the start of a fullscale Russian offensive there was “more than during the two years of the Nazi occupation during World War II.” Vershynin emphasized to The Post that the hundreds of wounded Ukrainians, many of whom can hardly walk or need to be carried, had to be evacuated. “We are ready to leave the territory of the Azovstal plant,” he said. “But this

requires guarantees.” Meanwhile, U.N. Secretary General António Guterres said Friday he was touched by the “resilience and bravery” of the Ukrainian people more than two months into the Russian invasion. Guterres, who met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Kyiv on Thursday, tweeted photos of his time touring decimated buildings around the capital. “I was moved by the resilience and bravery of the people of Ukraine,” he wrote. “My message to them is simple: We will not give up.” Five Russian missiles rocked the capital during Guterres’s visit, according to Ukrainian officials. Russia on Friday confirmed it struck the city, saying it had destroyed an arms factory. Other buildings were also reportedly hit. Guterres, who on Thursday said the war in Ukraine was “evil,” vowed that the United Nations would “redouble its efforts to save lives and reduce human suffering.” “In this war, as in all wars,

In Loving Memory of

the civilians always pay the highest price,” he tweeted Friday.

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


Religion

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Saturday - Sunday, April 30-May 1, 2022 - A7

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

Church Briefs Please send all Church news to editorial@thedailymail.net; or mail to Attention Church News, Register-Star/The Daily Mail, 364 Warren St., Unit 1, Hudson, NY 12534. For information, call 315-661-2940.

YARD SALE AND BAKE SALE SAUGERTIES — The Katsbaan Ladies Aid Society will hold a Yard Sale & Bake Sale 9 a.m.-3 p.m. April 30, rain or shine, in the Katsbaan Reformed Church Hall, 1801 Old Kings Highway, Saugerties. Tables full of household items, books, toys, games, jewelry, etc. and delicious homemade baked goods. Visit church website at http://www.katsbaanchurch.org.

BOOK, BAKE AND LITE CAFE SALE WEST GHENT — The Ghent Reformed Church, 1039 County Route 22, West Ghent, Book, Bake & Lite Café Sale will be held 11 a.m.-2 p.m. April 30. There is a huge collection of books, there will be baked goodies, and the kitchen counter will be providing a small selection of summer foods for take-outs. Hamburgers, hotdogs, pepperoni sliders, baked beans and more.

TREASURE & TRIFLE SALE CHATHAM — St. James Parish, 129 Hudson Ave., Chatham, Treasure & Trifle sale will be held 9 a.m.-3 p.m. April 30 and May 7 and 10:30 a.m.1 p.m. May 1 in the basement. This sale is to benefit a community in Haiti.

ROAST PORK DINNER COEYMANS HOLLOW — Trinity United Methodist Church, 1313 Route 143, Coeymans Hollow, will serve a roast pork dinner 4-6 p.m. June 8, take out only. The menu includes roast pork, dressing, potatoes, gravy, vegetable, applesauce, roll and pie. Adults, $14; children, $56.

CHICKEN BARBECUE CATSKILL — A Frese’s Chicken Barbecue will be served 3-6 p.m. May 19 take out only in the parking lot of St. Patrick’s, 66 William St. Catskill. Tickets are $14. For reservations, call 518-9435235. ATHENS — The First Reformed Church, 18 North Church St., Athens, will serve a Frese’s Chicken Barbecue noon-1 p.m. June 5, take out only. The cost is $15. Tickets need to be purchased by May

28 and they may be purchased from any Church member or by calling 518-945-1801 to leave a message.

BAKE AND RUMMAGE SALE COXSACKIE — The First Reformed Church of Coxsackie, 285 Mansion St., Coxsackie, bake sale and rummage sale will be held 9 a.m.-1 p.m. May 21.

BOOSTER CLINIC WEST GHENT — Ghent Reformed Church, 1039 County Route 22, West Ghent, is hosting a COVID Booster Clinic 1-3 p.m. May 4 for anyone wishing to receive a second COVID booster shot. They will also have initial doses of Pfizer and Moderna, if you haven’t been previously vaccinated, along with the first booster dose.

CONCERT CATSKILL — The Catskill Glee Club will present their annual Spring Concert “A Night on Broadway!” at 7:30 p.m. May 7 at the First Reformed Church, 310 Main St., Catskill. The 25-voice all male chorus will be directed by Michael Wright and accompanied by Lisa D’Arcangelis. The guest artist will be Michael Benedict Jazz Vibes. Suggested offering is $10 at the door. Information can be found at www.CatskillGleeClub.org.

LIFE IN THE SPIRIT SEMINAR GUILDERLAND — The Catholic Charismatic Renewal announces ”Life in the Spirit” seminar to be held 6-9 p.m. May 6; 8:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. May 7; 6-9 p.m. May 20 and 8:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. May 21 at Christ the King Church, Guilderland. Pre-registration is necessary by going to WWW. AlbanyCCR.org. For information, email infor.dsc.albany@ gmail.com.

GARAGE SALE FUNDRAISER EAST BERNE — Helderberg Christian School, 96 Main St., East Berne, will be hosting a garage sale fundraiser 8 a.m.-3 p.m. May 7. For information, email hcslibraryfund@yahoo. com.

SPRING RUMMAGE SALE CATSKILL — The First Reformed Church of Catskill, 310 Main St., Catskill, will be holding their Spring Rummage Sale 9 a.m.-5 p.m. May 13 and 9 a.m.-1 p.m. May 14. On Saturday items will be sold for $4 a bag.

VENDOR CRAFT FAIR

SOUTH BETHLEHEM — The South Bethlehem United Methodist Church, 65 Willowbrook Ave., South Bethlehem, will hold a Vendor Craft Fair 9 a.m.-2 p.m. May 14. Breakfast and lunch will be available plus a bake sale to support the church’s United Methodist Women. The Thrift Shop ‘Boutique’ will be open as well. Contact Emily Shutter at 518-813-0661 for further information.

FIRST REFORMED CHURCH OF ATHENS ATHENS — First Reformed Church of Athens, 18 North Church St., Athens, worships at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. Communion is celebrate the first Sunday of each month. Senior Choir rehearsal is at 6:30 p.m. each Wednesday. We ask that you be vaccinated if you would like to join us. Hudson River Bells will resume rehearsals in the Fall. For information, call the church at 518945-1801.

LIVING FAITH COMMUNITY CHURCH MAPLECREST — Living Faith Community Church, 54 Route 56, Maplecrest, welcomes locals and visitors to worship together at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. Adult Bible Study meets before service at 9:30 a.m. Fellowship meal follows service on the second Sunday of each month. For information, call 518-734-4275.

FIRST REFORMED CHURCH OF COXSACKIE COXSACKIE — The First Reformed Church of Coxsackie, 285 Mansion St., Coxsackie, worships at 9:30 a.m. Sunday. All are welcome. Communion is celebrated the first Sunday of each month. Sunday School is available during the worship service time. Free Food Fridays provide a meal for anyone at 6 p.m. on the third Friday of each month; www. firstreformecoxsackie.com.

SOUP KITCHEN OPEN CATSKILL — The Camp Grace Inc. Soup Kitchen, located at the First Reformed Church of Catskill, 310 Main St., Catskill, is open noon-1 p.m. Tuesday through Friday. For information, call Director Lamont Taylor at 518-2497009.

EMANUEL LUTHERAN CHURCH STUYVESANT FALLS — Emanuel Lutheran Church is located at the junction of US Route 9 and County Route 46

in Stuyvesant Falls. Church services are at 8:30 a.m. Sunday and all are welcome and invited.

ST. MARK’S SECOND EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH HUDSON — St. Mark’s Second Evangelical Lutheran Church, 8 Storm Ave., Hudson, worships 9:30 a.m. Sunday. Communion is celebrated on the first Sunday of every month with Pastor Stan Webster. Child care is offered during the service and Sunday school after the service ends. Easter Sunday at 9:30 a.m. For information, call the Church office at 518-828-9514.

ST. JOHN’S LUTHERAN CHURCH STUYVESANT — St. John’s Lutheran Church, 159 Route 26A, Stuyvesant, has in-person and live online worship services at 10:15 a.m. Sunday. Sunday School is at 9 a.m. for children 3 and older. Face masks and social distancing is required at this time. The live broadcasts are on www. facebook.com/St-Johns-Lutheran.

CHRIST CHURCH EPISCOPAL HUDSON — Christ Church Episcopal, 431 Union St., Hudson, worships at 9 a.m. Sundays in person and online. Masks are optional. Live broadcast on Facebook.com/ ChristChurchEpiscopalHudson, or christchurchepiscopalhudson.org. Midweek Eucharist at 12:15 p.m. Wednesdays in the church, join us for a quiet and uplifting service with anointing and prayers. Office hours and Emergency Food Shelf 9 a.m.-noon weekdays. For information, call 518-828-1329 or email christchurch1802@ gmail.com.

SAINT PAUL’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH KINDERHOOK — St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 8 Sylvester St., Kinderhook, Holy Communion in person at 8 and 10 a.m. Sundays. Face masks and distancing required regardless of vaccination status. For information and news, www. saintpaulskinderhook.org/ or follow us on Facebook. Subscribe to our newsletter: http://eepurl.com/cG4YSv; 518-758-6271 or saintpaulskinderhook@gmail.com. Office open 1:30-4:30 p.m. Tuesday-Thursday and by appointment.

KINDERHOOK REFORMED CHURCH KINDERHOOK — The Kinderhook Reformed Church,

21 Broad St., Kinderhook, will have in person and live online Sunday worship include Sunday 8:45 a.m. prayer group 1; 9:30 a.m. worship and youth Sunday school; 10:30 a.m. coffee hour; and 11 a.m. prayer group 2. Weekly Bible studies available. Live broadcast on http://www.youtube. com/channel/UCCTUNikeMHshkf-mqhM-NxCw or www.facebook.com/KinderhookReformedChurch. For information, call 518-7586401 or kinderhookreformedchurch.com.

a.m. on Sunday. Emanuel/St. John’s Lutheran Church, 20 South Sixth St., Hudson, worships at 11 a.m. Sunday. Greene County: Zion Lutheran Church, 102 North Washington St., Athens, worships at 9 a.m. Sunday. Rensselaer County: Trinity Lutheran Church, 68 Green Ave., Castleton, worships at 9 a.m. Sunday. St. Stephen’s Lutheran Church, 751 County Route 7, East Schodack, worships at 11 a.m. Sunday.

CLAVERACK REFORMED DUTCH CHURCH

RHINEBECK — Grace Bible Fellowship Church, 6959 Route 9, Rhinebeck, worships at 10:45 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday. Sunday School for all ages meets at 9:30 a.m. Women’s bible study and Grace Bible Institute meets at 7 p.m. Mondays. Mid-week prayer meeting is at 7 p.m. Wednesdays. For information, call 845-8766923 or cdfcirone@aol.com.

CLAVERACK — The Reformed Dutch Church, 88 Route 9H, Claverack, worships at 9:30 a.m. Sundays in the sanctuary. For information, call 518-851-3811.

GHENT REFORMED CHURCH WEST GHENT — The Ghent Reformed Church, 1039 County Route 22, West Ghent, worships at 9 a.m. Sundays. Sunday School begins at 10:15 a.m. Sunday for pre-school to middle school aged children. In accordance with the New York state mandate, masks will be required. Cleaning is as diligent as always. Coffee time follows worship.

REFORMED CHURCH OF GERMANTOWN/MT. PLEASANT REFORMED CHURCH GERMANTOWN — The congregations of the Reformed Church of Germantown, 20 Church Ave., Germantown and the Mt. Pleasant Reformed Church, 33 Church Road, Hudson. The Germantown congregation meets at 9 a.m. and the service at Mt. Pleasant begins at 10:30 a.m. A weekly Bible Study on the book of Revelation meets at the Germantown Church Office at 7 p.m. Wednesdays.

TRI COUNTY LUTHERAN PARISH VALATIE — The following is the worship schedule for the Tri County Lutheran Parish. Visit TCLParish.org website for weekly Zoom worship schedule and link. Columbia County: Emanual Lutheran Church, 506 County Road 46, Stuyvesant Falls, worships at 8:30 a.m. Sunday. Christ Our Emmanuel, 19 Park Row, Chatham, 9:30 a.m. Sunday. St. Luke’s Lutheran Church, 1010 Kinderhook St., Valatie, worships at 10:30 a.m. Sunday with Sunday School also at 10:30

REPORTERS, EDITORS AND PHOTOGRAPHERS CREATE REAL NEWS. JOURNALISM YOU CAN TRUST.

GRACE BIBLE FELLOWSHIP CHURCH

LUTHERAN PARISH OF SOUTHERN COLUMBIA COUNTY GERMANTOWN — Lutheran Parish of Southern Columbia County has updated its worship schedule. In-person worship has resumed by prayerful discernment of the Church Councils. St. John’s in Manorton, Elizaville, 9 a.m. April, June and August; Christ Church in Viewmont, Germantown, 9 a.m. May and July; St. Thomas in Churchtown at 11 a.m. Communion celebrated on first Sundays and Holy Days.

ST. JOHN’S REFORMED CHURCH RED HOOK — St. John’s Reformed Church, 126 Old Post Road North, Red Hook, worships at 10 a.m. Sundays in person and via Zoom. Worship services can be viewed after the service on YouTube. com at “St. John’s in Red Hook.” Social distancing and hand sanitizing encouraged. Masks are not required. Children are dismissed to Sunday School after the Children’s Message. Communion is celebrated the first Sunday of the month. All are welcome. Bible Study meets Tuesdays at 10:15 a.m. in the fellowship hall. For more information, call the Church Office at 845-7581184, email <office@stjohnsreformed.org>, check out St. John’s website www.stjohnsreformed.org or follow us on Facebook.

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House of Worship

News & Services Catholic Community of Saint Patrick

New Baltimore Reformed Church

Church of Saint Patrick 21 Main Street, Ravena, NY 12143 • (518) 756-3145 https://churchofsaintpatrick.wixsite.com/church-ravena

24 North Washington Street, Athens 12015 · 943-3150 66 William Street, Catskill 12414 · 943-3150

518 756 8764 • Rt. 144 and Church St. NBRChurch@aol.com • www.nbrchurch.org

Rev. Rick L. Behan, Pastor

Fr. Joseph O’Brien, Parochial Vicar

Sunday Worship - 9:30 AM Communion First Sunday every month Fellowship before and after worship Thursday - Choir Rehearsal 4:45 PM Tuesday - Bible Study 10:00 AM 2nd Sunday - Helping Hands 10:30 AM

Weekend Masses: Saturday Vigil 4:30 p.m. Sunday 9:30 a.m. (also St. Patrick’s YouTube channel or Mid-Hudson 901) Weekday Mass: Tuesday 8:30 a.m. Also Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament 8:30-9 a.m. Wed, Thurs Food Pantry Hours: Tues & Fri 10–11 a.m. and Wed 6–7 p.m. Thrift Shop Hours: Thurs 1 – 3 p.m. Sat from 9 a.m. – Noon

Come to the Church in the Hamlet! Working together since 1833

You Are Welcome Here!

Janine O’Leary, Parish Life Coordinator Fr. Michael Melanson, Parochial Vicar Saturday* 4:00 p.m. *1st / 3rd Athens and 2nd / 4th Catskill Sunday 8:45 a.m. Catskill / 10:45 a.m. Athens

All Are Welcome!

St. Mary’s Church 80 Mansion Street, Coxsackie, NY 12051 (518) 731-8800 • stmaryscoxsackie.com

Fr. Joseph O’Brien, Parochial Vicar Weekend Masses: Sunday 9:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. 11:30 a.m. Mass is livestreamed at St. Mary’s YouTube Channel Weekday Mass: Wednesday 8 a.m. Also Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament 8-8:30 a.m. Mon & Tues

You Are Welcome Here!

To list your Church Services please call Patricia Bulich at (518) 828-1616 x2413


COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

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Sports

SECTION

Yankees sweep O’s

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

& Classifieds

Yankees beat Orioles for sixth straight win. Sports, B2

B Saturday - Sunday, April 30-May1, 2022 - B1

Tim Martin, Sports Editor: 1-518-828-1616 ext. 2538 / sports@registerstar.com or tmartin@registerstar.com

LOCAL ROUNDUP:

H.S. SOFTBALL:

Chatham earns non-league win vs. Germantown

Hudson walks it off in thrilling 13-12 slugfest over C-A

Tim Martin Columbia-Greene Media

CHATHAM — Chatham overcame an early fiverun deficit and went on to defeat Germantown, 11-6, in Thursday’s non-league baseball game. Germantown scored two runs in the first inning and three more in the second to build a 5-0 cushion, but Chatham with five runs in the bottom half of the second to tie the score. The Panthers went on to outscore the Clippers, 6-1, over the final five innings to lock up the victory. Cam Horton and Matt Thorsen both went deep for Chatham. Thorsen also doubled and drove in two runs, while Horton had a

single to go with his homer and finished with two RBI. Matt Radley added two triples and an RBI to Chatham’s 12-hit attack. Tate Van Alstyne had a double and single with an RBI, Vinnie Marasco contributed two singles and two RBI and Mike Pierro and Noah Hutchinson both singled. Mason Ferrer and Logan McDonald both singled and drove in a run for the Clippers. Jonathan Mollo added a single. Pierro startef ro Chatham and pitched the first two innings, striking out four, walking six and allowing five runs (one earned) and one hit. Gavin See CHATHAM B6

TIM MARTIN/COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

Coxsackie-Athens’ Riley Sitcer slides home safely as Hudson catcher Aliyah Camacho takes the throw during Thursday’s Patroon Conference softball game.

Matt Fortunato Columbia-Greene Media

HUDSON — The Hudson Bluehawks won their Patroon Conference softball match-up at home Thursday, 13-12, over the Coxsackie-Athens Riverhawks. Each offense was boosted by the long ball on a constantly windy afternoon in Hudson. The Bluehawks scored the winning run on a ground ball off the bat of Gabby Logue past the shortstop and were victorious 13-12 in the bottom of the seventh in walk-off fashion. Olivia Plaia started on the mound for Hudson and issued a walk to Riverhawks leadoff hitter Julia Grounds. With two outs, Natalee Farrand ripped one into the outfield for an RBI triple and gave the visiting Riverhawks a 1-0 lead. In the bottom half of the first, Alyssa Harp led off with a double off of Coxsackie-Athens pitcher Farrand. After Logue struck out on a dropped third strike, Harp advanced to third base on the throw to first. Lily Kritzman hit a ground ball to short and the throw was

TIM MARTIN/COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

Hudson third baseman Ashley Harp throws to first base after fielding a ground ball during Thursday’s Patroon Conference softball game against Coxsackie-Athens.

in time to first, but bobbled, and a run scored while Kritzman reached safely to tie it 1-1.

Plaia struck out Lauren Winegard and Patience DeRose to begin the second inning, but

Abigail O’Dell hit back-to-back singles to keep the inning alive. Then Kasey Purdy was hit by a pitch to load the bases for the Riverhawks. O’Dell scored on a wild pitch, and Riley Sitcer followed it up with a three run shot over the fence in center field to widen the lead to 5-1 for Coxsackie-Athens. Plaia reached base safely to lead off the bottom of the second and moved into scoring position by the time the second out was made. Alyssa Harp grounded one between first and second and after both defenders overcommitted, no one covered the bag and a run scored as Harp was safe at first. With a 5-2 lead, the Riverhawks looked to pile on in the third. With runners on the corners and two outs, O’Dell poked a two run single over the second baseman to extend the lead to 7-2. Grounds hit a single for Coxsackie-Athens to continue the inning, but Purdy struck out to end the top half of the third. Kritzman doubled to lead off the See HUDSON B3

KIRBY LEE/USA TODAY

Oregon defensive end Kayvon Thibodeaux with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell and New York Giants fan Sam Prince after being selected as the fifth overall pick to the New York Giants during the first round of the 2022 NFL Draft at the NFL Draft Theater on Thursday.

NFL draft winners and loser: Rare ‘W’ for Lions Pat Yasinskas Field Level Media

The NFL is a copycat league in which teams borrow or flat-out steal concepts that have worked out well for other teams. That never was more evident than on Thursday in the first round of NFL Draft. Some teams followed the

new-age model the Los Angeles Rams used to win a Super Bowl last season. The Rams threw conventional wisdom to the wind as general manager Les Snead followed a win-now approach and gave away most of his draft currency. See NFL B6

Giants decline QB Daniel Jones’ fifth-year option Pat Leonard New York Daily News

NEW YORK — Daniel Jones has one more season at most -- and only one -- to prove he’s the Giants’ quarterback of the future. As expected, GM Joe Schoen decided on Thursday that he will not pick up the fifth-year option on Jones’ rookie contract as a former first-round pick, a source confirmed. Leaking that decision only hours before Thursday night’s NFL draft first round served as a reminder that the Giants are far from set at the sport’s most important position. Picking up Jones’ option would have guaranteed him a $22.384 million salary for the 2023 season, per sources. It wouldn’t have made sense for the Giants to lock themselves into that number given that the new regime is in wait-and-see mode on Jones’ ability. If Jones falters this fall, the Giants will be in the market for a new quarterback in the 2023 NFL draft. If Jones plays well and proves his worth, the Giants still have the franchise tag (projected at $31.497 million by overthecap.com) and transition tag ($28.337 million) available to keep him under contract in 2023. So this is essentially a $5.9 million-to $9.1 million gamble. That extra cost also probably would be negligible if Jones, 24, played great this season. The Giants and Jones’ agents likely would be working on a contract extension anyway.

AL BELLO/GETTY IMAGES

Daniel Jones (8) of the New York Giants runs under pressure from Haason Reddick (43) of the Carolina Panthers during the second half of the game at MetLife Stadium on Oct. 24 in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

The Giants did pick up the fifth-year option on defensive tackle Dexter Lawrence for 2023 on Thursday, a source confirmed. That guarantees Lawrence a salary of $10.753 million for that season. And Lawrence, 24, still

has a chance to earn an extension and fold that money into it, too. The timing of the Jones decision was interesting, though, considering the Giants did due diligence on this year’s quarterback class that

includes names like Liberty’s Malik Willis, Pitt’s Kenny Pickett, UNC’s Sam Howell, Ole Miss’ Matt Corral and Cincinnati’s Desmond Ridder. But co-owner John Mara said on the record that he’d be surprised if Jones isn’t his Week 1 starter this fall. And ownership enjoyed the fact that many GM candidates told the Giants they had faith in Jones in January. The 2023 quarterback class also is expected to be much richer than this year’s, headlined by Alabama’s Bryce Young and Ohio State’s C.J. Stroud. The only problem is the Giants will have competition if they’re trying to draft a QB next year. Entering Thursday night, the Giants held only one pick in the 2023 NFL draft’s first round, while several teams already have two: the division rival Philadelphia Eagles, Houston Texans, Seattle Seahawks, Detroit Lions and Miami Dolphins. Since the Giants are rebuilding, Schoen has been making or taking calls on many of his current roster’s most talented players, from Saquon Barkley to James Bradberry to Kadarius Toney. But the GM has to be careful he doesn’t tear this down so far that he doesn’t give Jones a fair crack at a winning roster in 2022. Schoen has said he wants to compete today while building for tomorrow. The reality is that the long term is the priority for the Giants, and has to be, while it’s 2022 or bust for Jones. It will be fascinating to see if the Giants can turn this around quickly for Jones’ sake, and if Jones will be capable of doing his part.


B2 - Saturday - Sunday, April 30-May1, 2022

ML Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pct GB N.Y. Yankees 13 6 .684 — Toronto 13 7 .650 .5 Tampa Bay 11 8 .579 2.0 Boston 8 12 .400 5.5 Baltimore 6 13 .316 7.0 Central W L Pct GB Minnesota 11 8 .579 — Kansas City 7 10 .412 3.0 Chicago White Sox 7 11 .389 3.5 Cleveland 7 12 .368 4.0 Detroit 6 12 .333 4.5 West W L Pct GB L.A. Angels 13 7 .650 — Seattle 11 8 .579 1.5 Oakland 10 9 .526 2.5 Houston 10 9 .526 2.5 Texas 6 13 .316 6.5 Wednesday’s games Chicago White Sox 7, Kansas City 3 Tampa Bay 3, Seattle 2 N.Y. Yankees 5, Baltimore 2 Boston 7, Toronto 1 Minnesota 5, Detroit 0 Houston 4, Texas 3 L.A. Angels 9, Cleveland 5 Thursday’s games N.Y. Yankees 10, Baltimore 5 Minnesota 7, Detroit 1 Tampa Bay 2, Seattle 1 Houston 3, Texas 2 Kansas City 5, Chicago White Sox 2, 10 innings Toronto 1, Boston 0 L.A. Angels 4, Cleveland 1 Friday’s games Boston (TBD) at Baltimore (TBD), 7:05 p.m. Houston (TBD) at Toronto (TBD), 7:07 p.m. Minnesota (TBD) at Tampa Bay (Kluber 0-1), 7:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (TBD) at Chicago White Sox (Giolito 0-0), 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Cortes Jr. 0-0) at Kansas City (Bubic 0-1), 8:10 p.m. Cleveland (Civale 0-2) at Oakland (Montas 2-2), 9:40 p.m. Saturday’s games Boston at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m. Houston at Toronto, 7:07 p.m. L.A. Angels at Chicago White Sox, 7:10 p.m. Minnesota at at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Kansas City, 8:10 p.m. Cleveland at Oakland, 9:40 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE East W L Pct GB N.Y. Mets 14 6 .700 — Miami 10 8 .556 3.0 Philadelphia 10 10 .500 4.0 Atlanta 8 11 .421 5.5 Washington 6 15 .286 8.5 Central W L Pct GB Milwaukee 13 7 .650 — St. Louis 10 7 .588 1.5 Chicago Cubs 8 10 .444 4.0 Pittsburgh 8 11 .421 4.5 Cincinnati 3 16 .158 9.5 West W L Pct GB San Francisco 13 6 .684 — L.A. Dodgers 12 6 .667 .5 San Diego 13 7 .650 .5 Colorado 10 9 .526 3.0 Arizona 8 11 .421 5.0 Thursday’s games San Diego 7, Cincinnati 5 Milwaukee 3, Pittsburgh 2 Philadelphia 7, Colorado 1 Miami 3, Washington 2 Chicago Cubs at Atlanta, 7:20 p.m. Arizona at St. Louis, 7:45 p.m. Friday’s games San Diego (Darvish 1-1) at Pittsburgh (Thompson 0-2), 6:35 p.m. Philadelphia (Nola 1-2) at N.Y. Mets (Megill 3-0), 7:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (TBD) at Milwaukee (Houser 1-2), 8:10 p.m. Arizona (Bumgarner 0-1) at St. Louis (Wainwright 2-2), 8:15 p.m. Cincinnati (TBD) at Colorado (TBD), 8:40 p.m. Washington (TBD) at San Francisco (Wood 2-0), 10:15 p.m. Saturday’s games San Diego at Pittsburgh, 6:35 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m. Arizona at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m. Cincinnati at Colorado, 8:40 p.m. Washington at San Francisco, 10:15 p.m. INTERLEAGUE Wednesday’s game Oakland 1, San Francisco 0 Friday’s games Seattle (Brash 1-1) at Miami (Hernandez 1-1), 6:40 p.m. Atlanta (TBD) at Texas (Howard 0-1), 8:05 p.m. Detroit (Alexander 0-2) at L.A. Dodgers (Anderson 1-0), 10:10 p.m. Saturday’s games Seattle at Florida, 6:40 p.m. Atlanta at Texas, 8:05 p.m. Detroit at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.

Pro basketball NBA PLAYOFFS FIRST ROUND Wednesday Milwaukee 116, Chicago 100, Milwaukee wins series 4-1 Golden St. 102, Denver 98, Golden St. wins series 4-1 Thursday Philadelphia 132, Toronto 97, Philadelphia wins series 4-2 Phoenix 115, New Orleans 109, Phoenix winsseries 4-2 Dallas at Utah, 10 p.m. Friday’s game Memphis at Minnesota, 9 p.m.

Pro hockey NHL Eastern Conference Atlantic Division GP W L OT SO Pts Florida 81 58 17 2 4 122 Toronto 81 53 21 6 1 113 Tampa Bay 81 50 23 3 5 108 Boston 81 51 25 3 2 107 Buffalo 81 31 39 8 3 73 Detroit 81 31 40 8 2 72 Ottawa 81 32 42 5 2 71 Montreal 81 21 49 9 2 53 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT SO Pts Carolina 82 54 20 6 2 116 N.Y. Rangers 81 51 24 3 3 108 Pittsburgh 81 45 25 4 7 101 Washington 81 44 25 9 3 100 N.Y. Islanders 81 37 34 4 6 84 Columbus 81 37 37 4 3 81 New Jersey 81 27 45 4 5 63 Philadelphia 81 25 45 7 4 61 Western Conference Central Division GP W L OT SO Pts Colorado 80 56 18 5 1 118 Minnesota 80 51 22 3 4 109 St. Louis 81 49 21 8 3 109 Dallas 81 45 30 4 2 96 Nashville 80 44 29 5 2 95 Winnipeg 80 37 32 7 4 85 Chicago 81 28 42 9 2 67 Arizona 81 24 50 3 4 55 Pacific Division GP W L OT SO Pts Calgary 80 50 20 8 2 110 Edmonton 80 47 27 5 1 100 Los Angeles 81 44 27 6 4 98 Vegas 81 42 31 4 4 92 Vancouver 80 39 30 7 4 89 San Jose 80 32 36 9 3 76 Anaheim 81 31 36 9 5 76 Seattle 80 26 48 5 1 58 Thursday’s games Boston 5, Buffalo 0 Florida 4, Ottawa 0 Carolina 6, New Jersey 3 Columbus 5, Tampa Bay 2 N.Y. Islanders 5, Washington 1 Calgary at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Nashville at Colorado, 9 p.m. San Jose at Edmonton, 9 p.m. Los Angeles at Vancouver, 10 p.m. Friday’s games Columbus at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m. Chicago at Buffalo, 7 p.m. Boston at Toronto, 7 p.m. Florida at Montreal, 7 p.m. Detroit at New Jersey, 7 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m. Ottawa at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Tampa Bay at N.Y. Islanders, 7:30 p.m. Vegas at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Colorado at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Calgary at Winnipeg, 8 p.m. Anaheim at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Vancouver at Edmonton, 9 p.m. San Jose at Seattle, 10 p.m. Nashville at Arizona, 10:30 p.m.

GF GA 338 236 310 251 281 229 253 215 229 288 225 309 223 264 211 317 GF GA 278 202 251 205 267 226 273 242 227 231 259 295 245 302 209 294 GF GA 307 225 303 250 307 235 234 244 257 243 245 253 217 288 202 309 GF GA 290 202 282 246 237 233 259 244 244 231 210 256 230 267 210 281

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

MLB roundup: Yankees beat Orioles for sixth straight win Field Level Media

Anthony Rizzo hit a tiebreaking RBI single and New York capitalized on five errors by visiting Baltimore to extend its winning streak to six games with a 10-5 victory on Thursday. Aaron Judge hit a three-run homer and had the tying single in the fifth as the Yankees won for the eighth time in nine games. Judge’s hard single deflected off second baseman Rougned Odor’s glove, after Orioles shortstop Jorge Mateo booted DJ LeMahieu’s grounder for Baltimore’s second error of the inning. Rizzo snapped a 2-2 tie in the fifth when he lined a single off Baltimore starter Bruce Zimmermann (1-1) and Giancarlo Stanton followed Rizzo with an RBI single. New York starter Jameson Taillon allowed two runs and seven hits in 4 2/3 innings and Miguel Castro (2-0) escaped a bases loaded jam in the fifth. Brewers 3, Pirates 2 Andrew McCutchen hit a home run and drove in two runs in the ninth inning Thursday as the visiting Milwaukee Brewers rallied for a 3-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates to complete a three-game series sweep. Trailing 2-1 entering the ninth against right-hander Chris Stratton (0-1), Milwaukee pinch-hitter Christian Yelich laid down a bunt single. Kolten Wong singled to right and pinch-hitter Omar Narvaez singled to left to load the bases. McCutchen, who played his first nine seasons with the Pirates, singled to center against his former team to drive in Yelich and Wong. McCutchen also sent the game’s first pitch into the stands in left for his first home run of the season. Milwaukee starter Freddy Peralta gave up three hits over six scoreless innings with no walks and seven strikeouts. Rookies Jack Suwinski and Diego Castillo each drove in a run for the Pirates, who are 0-6 against the Brewers. Padres 7, Reds 5 Ha-Seong Kim lined a tiebreaking two-out, three-run double in the sixth inning to lead visiting San Diego over Cincinnati and secure a sweep of the six-game season series. Manny Machado had four hits, including a double, and Jorge Alfaro knocked in two runs for San Diego. Nick Martinez (12) allowed two runs on five hits and two walks with five strikeouts in five innings to earn his first win as a Padre. Taylor Rogers earned his seventh save.

WIRE PHOTO

Aaron Judge of the New York Yankees connects for a three-run homer in the eighth inning Thursday against the Baltimore Orioles at Yankee Stadium on Thursday.

Mike Moustakas went 2-for-3 with an RBI and two runs scored for Cincinnati. Twins 7, Tigers 1 Carlos Correa went 3-for-5 with three RBIs, including a bases-loaded double in the fifth inning, to help host Minnesota beat Detroit for its seventh straight win. Gio Urshela had three hits and an RBI, and Trevor Larnach and Gilberto Celestino each added two hits and an RBI for the Twins. Cody Stashak (1-0), taking over when starter Bailey Ober left with a groin injury, picked up the win by allowing two hits over 1 1/3 innings while striking out one. Robbie Grossman went 3-for5 and Harold Castro had two hits for the Tigers, who committed four errors while losing their fifth straight game. Tarik Skubal (1-2) suffered the loss, allowing six runs (three earned) on six hits and two walks over five innings. He struck out four. Phillies 7, Rockies 1 Alec Bohm homered and drove in two runs, and Zack Wheeler tossed six shutout innings to lift host Philadelphia to a win and four-game sweep over Colorado. The Phillies scored seven runs on only four hits.Wheeler (1-3) allowed only one hit to go along with seven strikeouts and four walks. The struggling Rockies had five hits with no player recording more than one. Rockies starter Austin Gomber (1-2) gave up three hits and three runs, two earned, in six innings. Rays 2, Mariners 1 Brett Phillips had a pair of two-out, run-scoring singles and

made a key defensive play in the ninth inning as Tampa Bay defeated visiting Seattle in St. Petersburg, Fla. Harold Ramirez scored twice for the Rays, who took two of three games in the series. J.P. Feyereisen (1-0) earned the victory with two perfect innings of relief and fellow righthander Ryan Thompson got the final out, catching pinch-hitter Tom Murphy looking at a called third strike, for his second save of the season. Angels 4, Guardians 1 Defending American League MVP Shohei Ohtani got his first day off of the season, but host Los Angeles didn’t miss a beat, beating Cleveland to complete a four-game sweep in Anaheim, Calif. With Ohtani on the bench and Mike Trout getting a semiday off as the designated hitter, the Angels offense was not as sharp as it has been of late. They had just six hits, including three by Brandon Marsh, but made the most of their opportunities. Leadoff hitter Taylor Ward drove in two runs and Tyler Wade scored twice. The limited offense was enough because Los Angeles got another strong performance from its pitching staff. Starter Reid Detmers (1-1) gave up one run and two hits in five innings to get his first victory of the season. The bullpen came up big again, with four relievers combining for four scoreless innings. Astros 3, Rangers 2 Kyle Tucker ripped a two-run, pinch-hit home run in the eighth inning to back the four-hit outing of starter Justin Verlander as visiting Houston defeated Texas

in Arlington, Texas, in the finale of a four-game series. Tucker’s homer off reliever Matt Bush (0-1) drove in Jeremy Pena, who had been hit by a pitch, and allowed Verlander (2-1) his second victory in four starts this season after missing all of 2021 with an elbow injury that required Tommy John surgery. Verlander, 39, struck out eight and did not walk a batter and lowered his ERA to 1.73. Rafael Montero allowed a one-out home run to Texas’ Corey Seager in the ninth and then worked out of a two-out jam for his first save of the year. Marlins 3, Nationals 2 Jesus Sanchez hit a pinch-hit, go-ahead single in the seventh inning as visiting Miami won its fifth straight game, defeating reeling Washington. Trevor Rogers (1-3) earned his first victory of the season, allowing just two hits, two walks and one run in six innings. He struck out four. Cole Sulser got the final four outs for his first save with Miami. Josh Bell and Cesar Hernandez each had an RBI double for the Nats. Patrick Corbin (0-4) took the loss, allowing four hits, two walks and three runs, two earned, in six-plus innings. He struck out a season-high eight batters. The Nationals have lost eight straight games, their longest skid since 2009. Blue Jays 1, Red Sox 0 Alek Manoah struck out seven in seven innings and Toronto shut out visiting Boston. Manoah (4-0) held the Red Sox to three hits and one walk. Jordan Romano pitched around a single in the ninth to earn his

ninth save of the season. Alejandro Kirk had two singles and an RBI for the Blue Jays. In the third inning, Lourdes Gurriel Jr. reached base with one out on an error by Red Sox shortstop Christian Arroyo. Raimel Tapia walked and Kirk hit a two-out RBI single. Royals 5, White Sox 2 (10) Kyle Isbel’s two-run single in extra innings led Kansas City over host Chicago, taking the rubber game of a three-game series. The Royals loaded the bases with one out in the 10th. After Bobby Witt Jr. struck out, a passed ball scored the go-ahead run. Isbel then stroked an opposite-field single. The White Sox walked 23 Royals in the threegame series, including eight in this game and two in the 10th. Royals right-hander Brad Keller allowed one run on three hits in seven innings. It was his third quality start of the season, but he has yet to get a win. Chicago starter Michael Kopech allowed two runs on three hits. He struck out three and walked four, needing 94 pitches to get through five innings. Braves 5, Cubs 1 Kyle Wright threw seven strong innings and Dansby Swanson and Adam Duvall hit their first home runs of the season to help Atlanta beat Chicago and earn its first series win of the season. Wright (3-0) allowed one run on three hits, a season-high four walks and eight strikeouts. The Braves are 8-1 in Wright’s last nine starts dating back to Sept. 13, 2020. Atlanta’s Ronald Acuna Jr. returned to the lineup 10 months after tearing his right ACL. He went 1-for-5, striking out twice and stealing two bases. Cubs starter Drew Smyly (12) pitched 4 2/3 innings and allowed two runs on a pair of solo homers, five hits, one walk and four strikeouts. Cardinals 8, D-backs 3 Paul Goldschmidt led a 15-hit attack – all of them singles – with three hits that produced three runs, and Dakota Hudson carried a no-hitter into the sixth inning as St. Louis beat visiting Arizona. Hudson (2-1) didn’t allow a hit until Daulton Varsho’s single to right field with one out in the sixth inning. He struck out four and walked three in six innings. Tommy Edman had two hits, three runs and two RBIs for the Cardinals. Pavin Smith hit a two-run homer for the Diamondbacks. Humberto Castellanos (1-1) gave up five hits and five runs in two innings.

NHL roundup: Panthers win, then seal Presidents’ Trophy Field Level Media

Spencer Knight made 27 saves for the visiting Panthers in a 4-0 win against the Ottawa Senators on Thursday night, and Florida later clinched the Presidents’ Trophy. Carter Verhaeghe scored two goals while Sam Reinhart and Sam Bennett each had a goal and an assist for the Panthers, who had already wrapped up first place in the Atlantic Division and the No. 1 seed from the Eastern Conference playoffs. Later Thursday, when the Colorado Avalanche lost in a shootout to the visiting Nashville Predators, the Panthers sealed the first Presidents’ Trophy in the franchise’s 28-year history. Filip Gustavsson made 26 saves for the Senators, who had won a seasonhigh four straight games. Bruins 5, Sabres 0 Patrice Bergeron’s 400th NHL goal capped his eighth career hat trick and a four-point night as host Boston won its fourth straight game by beating Buffalo. Linus Ullmark pitched a 37-save shutout, his first of the season and fourth of his career, and David Pastrnak added his 40th goal of the season and an assist for the Bruins. Taylor Hall tallied a goal and an assist, and Brad Marchand added two assists. Dustin Tokarski made 27 saves for the Sabres, who had their four-game winning streak snapped. Predators 5, Avalanche 4 (SO) Matt Duchene scored in regulation and added the only goal in the shootout as Nashville beat Colorado in Denver. Mattias Ekholm and Roman Josi had a goal and an assist each, Ryan

Johansen also scored, Mikael Granlund had two assists and David Rittich stopped 42 shots for Nashville. The Predators moved a point ahead of the Dallas Stars for the first wild card in the Western Conference. Cale Makar, J.T. Compher, Artturi Lehkonen and Logan O’Connor scored goals and Darcy Kuemper made 33 saves for the Avalanche. Colorado lost the race for the Presidents’ Trophy but set a franchise high for points in a season. Hurricanes 6, Devils 3 Jesperi Kotkaniemi provided a goal and two assists in his return from an injury-related absence and Carolina used a makeshift lineup to conclude the regular season in style by defeating New Jersey in Raleigh, N.C. Ethan Bear and Martin Necas tallied goals 49 seconds apart in the first period and Teuvo Teravainen, Steven Lorentz and Jordan Martinook also had goals in Carolina’s sixth consecutive victory. Antti Raanta made 27 saves to boost his record to 7-0-1 all-time against New Jersey. The Devils lost their fifth game in a row (0-3-2) despite goals from Fabian Zetterlund, Jesper Bratt and Jimmy Vesey and two assists from Pavel Zacha. Blue Jackets 5, Lightning 2 Oliver Bjorkstrand had a goal with an assist and Elvis Merzlikins made 25 saves as Columbus cooled off visiting Tampa Bay. Jack Roslovic recorded his 22nd goal while Jakub Voracek and Cole Sillinger also scored and Andrew Peeke added an empty-netter for the Blue Jackets, who have won two of three following an 0-3-1 rut.

Facing a Tampa Bay squad that totaled 26 goals to win its previous four contests and is trying to maintain third place in the Atlantic Division, Columbus killed five of the visitors’ seven power-play chances and got a solid effort from Merzlikins in its home finale. Islanders 5, Capitals 1 Brock Nelson, Anders Lee and Kyle Palmieri scored power-play goals and Semyon Varlamov carried a shutout into the final minute in Elmont, N.Y., as New York again damaged Washington’s hopes of escaping a wild-card spot. Jean Gabriel-Pageau and Josh Bailey also scored for the Islanders, who beat the Capitals 4-1 in the opener of a home-and-home set Tuesday. Varlamov made 26 saves. Axel Jonsson-Fjallby scored with 41.4 seconds left and Vitek Vanecek recorded 21 saves for the Capitals, who have lost three straight (0-2-1) and four of five (1-2-2). Washington was without star left winger Alex Ovechkin, who missed a second straight game with an upper-body injury. Oilers 5, Sharks 4 (OT) Zach Hyman scored the overtime winner to give host Edmonton a comeback victory over San Jose, allowing the Oilers to seal second place in the Pacific Division. Ryan McLeod, Kailer Yamamoto, Derek Ryan and Philip Broberg also scored for the Oilers, who will face the Los Angeles Kings in the opening round of the playoffs. Mikko Koskinen made 40 saves for Edmonton, which has a 13-0-1 record in its past 14 home games. Noah Gregor scored twice, while Scott Reedy and Nick Bonino added

singles for the Sharks. James Reimer stopped 26 shots. Wild 3, Flames 2 (OT) Kirill Kaprizov scored in overtime to give Minnesota the victory over Calgary in Saint Paul, Minn., and a firmer hold on second place in the Central Division. Frederick Gaudreau had a goal and an assist and Jonas Brodin also scored for the Wild. Cam Talbot made 31 saves for the win. The Wild have a two-point edge on the St. Louis Blues, with home-ice advantage up for grabs in their pending Stanley Cup playoff series. Johnny Gaudreau, with his 40th goal of the season, and Elias Lindholm scored for the Pacific Division-champion Flames. Gaudreau also had an assist, Nikita Zadorov contributed two assists and Jacob Markstrom stopped 22 shots. Canucks 3, Kings 2 (OT) Brock Boeser scored his second goal of the game with 30 seconds left in overtime to lift Vancouver to a win over visiting Los Angeles. Alex Chiasson also scored and Spencer Martin made 33 saves for the Canucks, who overcame a 2-0 deficit after two periods. Vancouver had lost three of its previous four to fall out of playoff contention. Gabriel Vilardi and Adrian Kempe scored and Cal Petersen made 26 saves in the regular-season finale for the Kings. Los Angeles forward Dustin Brown, a two-time Stanley Cup Champion with and the Kings’ all-time leader in regular-season games played, appeared in his final regular-season game after announcing earlier Thursday that he was retiring.


COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

TIM MARTIN/COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

Coxsackie-Athens’ Riley Sitcer is greeted at home plate by her teammates after blasting a three-run homer during Thursday’s Patroon Conference softball game against Hudson.

TIM MARTIN/COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

Hudson’s Olivia Plaia (1) scores as Coxsackie-Athens catcher Bella Bushane looks for the throw during Thursday’s Patroon Conference softball game.

TIM MARTIN/COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

Coxsackie-Athens starting pitchr Natalee Farrand goes into her wind-up during Thursday’s Patroon Conference softball game against Hudson.

Hudson From B1

bottom of the third for Hudson and Aliyah Camacho brought her around with an RBI base hit up the middle. After an Ashley Harp groundout, Lindsey Martin laced a two-run homer to left field to cut the Riverhawks’ lead to 7-5. With two outs in the top of the fourth, Leigha Wiley doubled to left field for Coxsackie-Athens, but Plaia struck out Bella Bushane for the third out and escaped potential trouble. Sydnee Cooley-Grossman led off with a walk for the Bluehawks in the bottom half, but was retired on a fielder’s choice by Alyssa Harp. With Harp on first base, Logue returned to the plate and belted a two run blast to tie the game, 7-7. O’Dell came up with two gone in the fifth and tripled to left-center field to start another two out rally for the Riverhawks. The Coxsackie-Athens lineup responded in kind, and they took a 9-7 lead thanks to RBI singles from Grounds and Sitcer. Farrand stepped in the box and knocked in two more with a double as the lead swelled to 11-7 for the Riverhawks. Wiley fouled out to the catcher Camacho for the third out and Hudson stopped the bleeding there. Wiley took the ball in the bottom half in a relief appearance for the Riverhawks as they looked to shut the door on the Bluehawks. Hudson managed to get one run across in the inning but that’s all they would get for now, Lindsey Martin crossing the plate on a wild pitch to narrow the deficit to 11-8. Plaia had the best inning of her outing Thursday in the top of the sixth when she struck out the side to get her team back at the dish. Alyssa Haro got things started in the bottom half of the sixth with a line drive into right off the first baseman’s glove. She moved to second on a wild pitch and then to third on a single that Kritzman dropped into left field. Aliyah Camacho drove in one run with an RBI groundout to third base to cut it to 11-9, and Kritzman took a gamble but made it to third on the throw to first. Her risky baserunning paid off and Kritzman scored on another wild pitch to pull the Bluehawks within one, 11-10. O’Dell stayed hot at the plate and lined one up the middle for another leadoff base hit in the top of the seventh. Grounds moved O’Dell into scoring position with a sacrifice groundout to first and O’Dell scampered to third on a passed ball. The Riverhawks traded an out for another run and Purdy’s RBI groundout made it 12-10 as Coaxsackie-Athens looked to

lock it up in the bottom of the seventh. However, the Hudson Bluehawks had an answer for almost every piece of offense the Riverhawks threw at them and they would not go down easily. Lindsey Martin slapped a double into left past the glove of the left fielder to start off the inning. Plaia grounded out but moved Martin to third on the play as Hudson just needed to keep sending hitters to the plate. Arianna Camacho worked a walk to put runners on the corners and then stole second base to get into scoring position as the tying run. Cooley-Grossman dropped an RBI single into shallow right field and the lead was

down to one, 12-11. Alyssa Harp tied the game at 12 with an RBI single into the outfield and the winning run was now on third base for the Bluehawks on an obstruction call as she rounded second base and bumped into the infielder. Gabby Logue got up with the game tied and the pressure now off, and she hit a hard grounder to deep short and the ball skirted off and away from the shortstop’s glove and the winning run came around to score. The Hudson Bluehawks won it 13-12, in a slugging marathon over the Coxsackie-Athens Riverhawks in an action-packed contest Thursday.

Saturday - Sunday, April 30-May 1, 2022 - B3

TIM MARTIN/COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

Coxsackie-Athens’ Abigail O’Dell (10) slides home safely on a wild pitch as Hudson pitcher Olivia Plaia awaits the throw from the backstop during Thursday’s Patroon Conference softball game.


B4 - Saturday - Sunday, April 30-May1, 2022 Register-Star

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LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF ANNUAL DISTRICT MEETING GERMANTOWN CENTRAL SCHOOL DISTRICT GERMANTOWN, NEW YORK 12526 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Annual Meeting and election of the inhabitants of the Germantown Central School District, Columbia County, New York, qualified to vote in the school meetings in said District, will be held on Tuesday, May 17, 2022, at the Kellner Community Activities Center, 50 Palatine Park Road, Germantown, New York, between the hours of 12:00 noon and 9:00 P.M., for the election of two (2) members of the Board of Education; the vote upon the appropriation of the necessary funds to meet the estimated expenditures for the 20222023 fiscal year; and the vote on all propositions involving the expenditures of money or authorizing the levy of taxes;

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NOTICE IS ALSO GIVEN, that a copy of the statement of the amount of money which will be required for the 2022-2023 fiscal year for school purposes, may be obtained by any residents in the district during the fourteen (14) days immediately preceding the Annual Meeting except Saturday, Sunday or holidays, at the District Office of the Germantown Central School, Germantown, New York, between 9:00 A.M. and 3:00 P.M. and on the District website; NOTICE IS ALSO GIVEN, that a tax exemption report, showing how much of the total assessed value on the final assessment roll or rolls used in that budgetary process is exempt from taxation, shall be annexed to the budget document, shall be posted on the District’s website for public notices; NOTICE IS ALSO GIVEN, that a public hearing on the proposed budget will be held on Wednesday, May 4, 2022 at the Germantown Central School, Germantown, New York, beginning at 6:00 P.M.;

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NOTICE IS ALSO GIVEN, that petitions nominating candidates for the office of member of the Board of Education of this District must be filed in the Office of the District Clerk at the Germantown Central School,

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(1)4-year term - last incumbent - Donald Coons (2)4-year term - last incumbent - Lester Olsson Each petition must be directed to the Clerk of the District, shall be signed by 25 qualified voters of the District and shall state the name and residence address of the candidate and of each signer.

Employment 415

General Help

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CDL DRIVERS wanted for rolloff truck. Class B or Class A. Immediate position. Call 518-398-7533.

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Professional & Technical

Beekmantown Central School District seeks the following NYS anticipated certified positions: Associate Principal (Grades PreK-5) Associate Principal (Grades 9-12) French Teacher 2 - Special Education Teachers 2 - Counselors Consultant Teacher (Indirect Model) Reading Teacher Reading Interventionist Physical Education Teacher Teaching Assistant Family Consumer Science Teacher Mathematics Teacher Science Teacher 3 - Elementary Teachers/Interventionists Library Media Specialist PLEASE SEE THE LINK BELOW TO APPLY!

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www.bcsdk12.org/jobs/ TOWN OF DURHAM ASSESSOR’S CLERK Immediate opening in busy office. Position requires assisting residents, data entry, filing, answering phones, maintaining records, etc. Computer experience including Word & Excel preferred. Salary commensurate with experience. Approximately 25 hours/week. Send resume, work experience and contact information to: assessor@durhamny.com

Wellsville Central School Elementary Teacher NYS Early Childhood (Birth – 2nd) OR Birth – 6th Certification AIS Reading Teacher (Elementary) Literacy Specialist, NYS Literacy Certification OR NYS Elem. Ed. Certification experience in Literacy Speech Pathologist NYS Certified Speech and Language Disabilities Full-Time, Tenure Track Application Deadline: May 6, 2022 Please apply via www.wnyric.org/application EOE/AA

Two (2) vacancies for the office of the member of the Board of Education will be filled. The vacancies to be filled shall not be considered separate specific offices, and the nominating petition shall not describe any specific vacancy upon the Board of Education for which a candidate is nominated. The two (2) candidates receiving the greatest number of votes shall be elected to fill the vacant offices. NOTICE IS ALSO GIVEN that pursuant to Section 2014 of the Education Law, personal registration of voters is required, and no person shall be entitled to vote at said Annual District Meeting to be held on May 17,

HOME CARE needed full time for adult woman in Germantown. Please call (518)537-3677

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Germantown, New York, between the hours of 8:00 A.M. and 3:00 P.M., and by not later than 5:00 P.M. on April 18, 2022. The following vacancies are to be filled:

2022, whose name does not appear on the register of said School District or who does not register as hereinafter provided, except a person who is otherwise qualified to vote and is registered to vote with the County under the provisions of Article 5 of the Election Law. The Board of Registration shall prepare a register for said Annual District Meeting which shall include all persons who shall have been previously registered with the school district or County. NOTICE IS ALSO GIVEN that the register of the School District, so prepared, including the names of military voters who submit valid military voter registrations, will be filed in the District Clerk’s Office at Germantown Central School, Germantown, NY, where the same will be open for inspection by any qualified voter of the District between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. on each of the five (5) days prior to the said Annual School District Election and Vote, except Sundays and holidays. NOTICE IS ALSO GIVEN that Military Voters who are not registered in the District may register as a qualified voter of the District and Military Voters who are registered in the District may request a military ballot from the District Clerk at email: Ishanlev@germantowncsd.org or Telephone (518) 537-6281, Ext. 2302 by no later than 5:00 P.M. on April 21,2022. The Military Voter may indicate their preference for receiving the registration application or ballot application by mail, by facsimile or email. Military ballots will be mailed or otherwise distributed no later than 25 days before the election. Military ballots must be returned by mail or in person and received by the District Clerk by 5:00 P.M. on election day. NOTICE IS ALSO GIVEN, that provision is made for absentee balloting for election of members of the Board of Education and vote on the district budget. Applications for absentee ballots may be obtained at the District Office. The application must be received by the District Clerk not more than 30 days at least seven (7) days prior to the election if the ballot is to be mailed to the voter or the day before the election, if the ballot will be picked up personally by the voter or the voter’s authorized agent as set forth in the application, at the District Office. Absentee ballots must be received at the office of the District Clerk by no later than 5:00 P.M. prevailing time, on the day of the election and vote, May 17,2022. A list of all persons to whom absentee ballots shall have been issued and a list of military voters to whom military ballots shall have been issued will be available for inspection to qualified voters of the District at the Office of the District Clerk during regular office hours, 7:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. prevailing time, until the day of the Election and Vote. Any qualified voter may file a written challenge of the qualification of a voter whose name appears on such list, stating the reasons for the challenge. Lisa Shanley Germantown Central School District District Clerk (518) 537-6281 ext. 2302

NOTICE OF COMPLETION OF TENTATIVE ASSESSMENT ROLL (Pursuant to Sections 506 and 526 of the Real Property Tax Law) Notice is hereby given that the Assessor of the Town of Prattsville, County of Greene has completed the Tentative Assessment Roll for the current year and that a copy has been filed with the Prattsville Town Clerk at Town Hall, 14517 Main St., Prattsville , where it may be seen and examined by any interested person until Grievance Day. The Assessor will be in attendance, by appointment only, with the Tentative Assessment Roll at Town Hall on the following days: May 5th between 11:30 am and 3:30 pm, May 12th between 1:30pm and 4:30pm; May 7th between 12:30pm and 4:30pm, and May 19th between 4pm and 8pm. The Board of Assessment Review will meet on May 25 between the hours of 4pm and 8pm, at Town Hall in said town, to hear and examine all complaints in relation to assessments, on the application of any person believing himself to be aggrieved. A publication containing procedures for contesting an assessment is available at the assessor's office at 14517 Main St, Town Hall, Prattsville or online at tax.ny.gov. Dated this 30th day of April, 2022 Nancy Wyncoop Bower, Assessor NOTICE OF COMPLETION OF TENTATIVE ASSESSMENT ROLL (Pursuant to Sections 506 and 526 of the Real Property Tax Law) Notice is hereby given that the Assessor of the Town of Ashland, County of Greene has completed the Tentative Assessment Roll for the current year and that a copy has been filed with the Ashland Town Clerk at Town Hall, 12094 Route 23, Ashland, NY, where it may be seen and examined by any interested person until Grievance Day. The Assessor will be in attendance, by appointment only, with the Tentative Assessment Roll at Town Hall on the following days: May 12th between 9am and 1pm, May 19th between 9am and 1pm; May 7th between 8 am and noon, and May 5th between 4pm and 8pm. The Board of Assessment Review will meet on June 1st between the hours of 4pm and 8pm, at Town Hall in said town, to hear and examine all complaints in relation to assessments, on the application of any person believing himself to be aggrieved. A publication containing procedures for contesting an assessment is available at the assessor's office at 12094 Route 23, Town Hall, Ashland or online at tax.ny.gov. Dated this 30th day of April, 2022 Nancy Wyncoop Bower, Assessor NOTICE OF COMPLETION OF TENTATIVE ASSESSMENT ROLL (Pursuant to Sections 506 and 526 of the Real Property Tax Law) Notice is hereby given that the Assessor of the Town of Jewett, County of Greene has completed the Tentative Assessment Roll for the current year and that a copy has been filed with the Jewett Town Clerk at Town Hall, 3547 Route 23C, Jewett, where it may be seen and examined by any interested person until Grievance Day. The Assessor will be in attendance, by appointment only, with the Tentative Assessment Roll at Town Hall on the following days: May 4th between 10am and 2pm, May 11th between 4pm and 8pm; May 14th between 8 am and noon, and May 16th between 10am and 2pm. The Board of Assessment Review will meet on May 24 between the hours of 2pm and 4pm and the hours of 6pm and 8pm, at Town Hall in said town, to hear and examine all complaints in relation to assessments, on the application of any person believing himself to be aggrieved. A publication containing procedures for contesting an assessment is available at the assessor's office at 3547 Route 23C, Town Hall, Jewett or online at tax.ny.gov. Dated this 30th day of April, 2022 Nancy Wyncoop Bower, Assessor NOTICE OF COMPLETION OF TENTATIVE ASSESSMENT ROLL (Pursuant to Sections 506 and 526 of the Real Property Tax Law) Notice is hereby given that the Assessor of the Town of Durham, County of Greene has completed the Tentative Assessment Roll for the current year and that a copy has been filed with the Durham Town Clerk at Town Hall, 7309 Route 81, East Durham, where it may be seen and examined by any interested person until Grievance Day. The Assessor will be in attendance, by appointment only, with the Tentative Assessment Roll at Town Hall on the following days: May 10th between 10am and 2pm, May 17th between 4pm and 8pm; May 14th between 1pm and 5pm, and May 3rd between 10am and 2pm. The Board of Assessment Review will meet on May 26 between the hours of 4pm and 8pm, at Town Hall in said town, to hear and examine all complaints in relation to assessments, on the application of any person believing himself to be aggrieved. A publication containing procedures for contesting an assessment is available at the assessor's office at 7309 Route 81, East Durham, NY, or online at tax.ny.gov. Dated this _______________________ day of May, 2022 Nancy Wyncoop Bower, Assessor

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B6 - Saturday - Sunday, April 30-May1, 2022

NFL From B1

In essence Snead traded for a Lombardi Trophy, and that’s something no team is going to turn down. Some other teams quickly grabbed onto the Rams’ model. The Dolphins, for example, gave up a slew of draft picks to acquire wide receiver Tyreek Hill from the Kansas City Chiefs, so Miami had to sit out the first round. But that doesn’t mean the old-school way of building a team through the draft has been forgotten. Not every team did what the Rams and Dolphins did. In fact, stockpiling picks may still be the preferred method. An unprecedented eight teams had multiple picks in the first round, and first-round picks usually translate into instant starters. There were a lot of trades after the draft began, leaving many mock drafts looking useless. With that in mind, let’s take a look at the winners and losers in the first round. NEW YORK GIANTS: General manager Joe Schoen didn’t do anything exciting in his first draft, but that’s the exact approach he should have followed. After making questionable decisions on skill-position players in recent years, the Giants got back to basics. With the fifth overall pick, the Giants took Oregon defensive end Kayvon Thibodeaux, and with the No. 7 selection, they drafted Alabama offensive tackle Evan Neal. There is nothing exciting there, but that’s not a bad thing. Thibodeaux easily could have gone at No. 1 or 2 because he can rush the passer. Neal will bring some much-needed protection for quarterback Daniel Jones. Thibodeaux and Neal will start right away, and the Giants might have come out of the first round as the NFL’s most improved team. Think about it: During some of the best years in franchise history, the Giants were built around solid offensive lines and pass rushers such as Lawrence Taylor and Michael Strahan. The Giants walked out of the first round with two cornerstones. DETROIT LIONS: Ordinarily, I would say a team drafting at No. 2 shouldn’t get too much credit for making an easy pick. However, given the embarrassing draft history of the Lions, nothing was out of the question. This time,

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA though, Detroit got it right. Although No. 1 overall pick Travon Walker might end up being a superstar in Jacksonville, the Lions lucked out when defensive end Aidan Hutchinson was available. First, he’s a Michigan kid, and that will play well at the box office. Second, Hutchinson can rush the passer, and the Lions were desperate for that. Third, Hutchinson doesn’t have the ceiling that Walker does, but he also doesn’t have the same kind of floor. The Lions followed that up by trading up to take Alabama wide receiver Jameson Williams at No. 12. That’s a coup because Williams might have been the best receiver in the draft. Yeah, he tore his ACL late last season and probably won’t be able to play until around midseason. That’s fine because the Lions aren’t expecting to turn things around immediately. CAROLINA PANTHERS: There was a school of thought around the league that Carolina owner David Tepper, who is not the most patient man, was going to force general manager Scott Fitterer to use the No. 6 pick on Liberty quarterback Malik Willis. Maybe Tepper has more patience than anyone realized. Or maybe his thought process gave way to common sense. Whatever, the Panthers made the right call in drafting North Carolina State offensive tackle Ikem Ekwonu. That’s as solid a pick as the Panthers could have made. Ekwonu will give Carolina its first reliable left tackle since Jordan Gross retired after the 2013 season. Yeah, that means Carolina fans can look forward (maybe that’s too strong a word in this case) to another year of Sam Darnold at quarterback. But that’s a better alternative than drafting Willis too early and surrounding him with a bad team. Earlier this week, Tepper reminded the media he said he expected coach Matt Rhule would take five years to rebuild when he was first brought on board. Rhule is entering his third season. He still doesn’t have a solid quarterback, but at least he’s not stuck with a quarterback who would have set the rebuilding process back. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS: General manager Mickey Loomis has never been afraid to gamble. That’s especially true now that coach Sean Payton is gone. The Saints entered the night with the 16th and 19th picks. Loomis traded up with

the Washington Commanders to get the No. 11 pick. The Saints used it on Ohio State wide receiver Chris Olave. If Loomis hadn’t made the deal, Olave would have been gone and the Saints, who need to surround quarterback Jameis Winston with weapons, might have been out of suitable options because the wide receiver pool was drying up. Loomis’ second pick of the night wasn’t as flashy, and some may question how quickly offensive tackle Trevor Penning can contribute because he played at Northern Iowa. But keep this in mind: Loomis once drafted guard Jahri Evans out of Division II Bloomsburg (Pa.). Evans turned out to be a four-time All-Pro and a six-time Pro Bowler. LOSERS GREEN BAY PACKERS: If ever a team was expected to address a certain position coming into a draft, it was the Packers and a wide receiver. After trading Davante Adams to the Las Vegas Raiders, Green Bay was running extremely thin on wide receivers for Aaron Rodgers to target. But, somehow, the Packers managed to come out of the first round without a wide receiver. Instead, they brought

in two defensive players from the University of Georgia. Linebacker Quay Walker was drafted at No. 22 and defensive tackle Devonte Wyatt, who has had some off-field problems, was taken at No. 28. Did the Packers whiff on getting a receiver? Maybe. Maybe not. With receivers coming off the board at a rapid rate, the value just wasn’t there for the Packers. But a couple of things need to happen to straighten out a potential mess. The Packers need to get a receiver with some upside in the second or third round. More important, Rodgers is going to have to make that receiver look good right away. HOUSTON TEXANS: The history books say that 2002 was Houston’s expansion season. They might have been wrong. Look at Houston’s current roster. It’s actually worse than it was in 2002. The Texans drafted LSU cornerback Derek Stingley Jr. at No. 3 overall. That’s a violation of the cardinal rule that you don’t draft a cornerback in the first five. Deshaun Watson is gone and Davis Mills is Houston’s current starting quarterback. There is a reason why Mills wasn’t taken until the third round in 2021. The Texans also

entered the draft with the No. 13 overall pick. They traded it to Philadelphia and wound up with Texas A&M guard Kenyon Green at No. 15. Green may end up being a solid player, but has a guard ever turned around the direction of a franchise? The Texans went 4-13 last season. They’ll be lucky to win four games this year. NEW YORK JETS: Commissioner Roger Goodell didn’t get as many boos from Jets fans as he did back when the draft was held at Radio City Music Hall. He should have. The Jets had a chance to get Thibodeaux and fill their biggest need. Instead, they made the same mistake the Texans did and drafted a cornerback too soon, taking Ahmad “Sauce” Gardner at No. 4. The Jets also veered off the track from their biggest needs at No. 10 when they chose Ohio State wide receiver Garrett Wilson. He’s a nice player, but he doesn’t fill a huge need. The Jets finally did get a pass rusher when they traded back into the first round to get Florida State linebacker Jermaine Johnson II at No. 26. He has lots of potential, but he’s far from a sure thing. The Jets came into the draft with a great chance to

improve. At the end of the night, they didn’t look much better. BALTIMORE RAVENS: The Ravens drafted Notre Dame’s Kyle Hamilton at No. 14. That’s anywhere from five to 15 spots too high. Yeah, Hamilton was a productive college player, but there are questions about his ability to be an impact player on the next level: What about that 4.7 time in the 40-yard dash at the scouting combine? And is Hamilton a safety or a linebacker? Baltimore’s biggest need heading into the draft was on the defensive line, where the Ravens haven’t used a firstround pick since Haloti Ngata in 2006. Coming out of the first night of the draft, defensive line still is Baltimore’s biggest need. On a night when the Ravens made multiple trades, drafting Hamilton wasn’t their only puzzling move. They traded Marquise “Hollywood” Brown, a 1,000-yard receiver last year, to the Arizona Cardinals. At least the Ravens made one move that made some sense when they used the No. 25 pick on Iowa center Tyler Linderbaum. It’s hard to find a center that turns out to be a bust.

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Chatham From B1

Tanner turned in four innings of solid relief work, striking out five and walking four while not allowing a run or hit. Radley pitched the seventh, striking two, walking two and allowing a run and two hits. Mollo pitched the first tree innings for Germantown, allowing eight runs and nine hits with one strikeout and seven walks. Ferrer finished up, striking out three, walking three and allowing three runs and three hits. TRACK & FIELD GIRLS Maple Hill 102.5, Hudson 34.5 Maple Hill 97, Rensselaer 34 Rensselaer 72.5, Hudson 49.5 Results 4x800 relay: Maple Hill 11:54.6; 100 hurdles: Jacobs (MH) 18.37; 100m: Burden (Ren) 13.68; 1500m: Pusateri (MH) :5:42.9; 4x100 relay: Rennselaer 54.70; 400m: Thomas (MH) 1:10.63; 400 hurdles: Jacobs (MH) 1:19.57; 800m: Pusateri (MH) 2:51.12; 200m: Hirschoff (MH) 29.53; 3000m: Pusateri (MH) 13:01.34; 4x400 relay: Maple Hill 4:56.97; Pole vault: Kudlack (Hud) 5-0; High jump: Mann (Hud) 4-9; Long jump: Mann (Hud) 14-7; Triple jump: Thomas (MH) 29-00.75; Shot put: Goldstien (Hud) 3003; Discus: Burden (Ren) 86-09. BOYS Maple Hill 123, Hudson 12 Rensselaer 89, Hudson 32 Maple Hill 121, Rensselaer 18

Results 4x800 relay: Maple Hill 10:40.2; 110 hurdles: Charlebois (MH) 17.69; 100m: Pomykaj (MH) 12.13; 1600m: Marra (MH) 5:08.27; 4x100 relay: Maple Hill 47.36; 400m: Sterantino (MH) 58.13; 400 hurdles: Charleboiss (MH) 1:03.33; 800m: Marra (MH) 2:29.91; 200m: Sterantino (MH) 26.00; 3200m: Basile (MH) 12:11.04; 4x400 relay: Maple Hill 4:02.17; Pole Vault: Pomykaj and Brewer (MH) 7-0; High jump: Haller (MH) 5-4; Long jump: Pomykaj (MH) 20-8; Triple jump: Coyne (MH) 37-5.25; Shot put: Sturgis (MH) 36-11; Discus Donnelly (MH) 97-04. TENNIS PATROON Coxsackie-Athens 6, Cairo-Durham 1 COXSACKIE — CoxsackieAthens wo four of five singles matches en route to a 6-1 victory over Cairo-Durham in Thursday’s PAtroon Conference tennis match. Results Singles: Leo Woytowich (Coxsackie-Athens) defeated Kingston Czajkowski, 10-7; Gavin Hanse (Coxsackie-Athens) defeated Brenden Feeney, 10-2; Gage Decker (Coxsackie-Athens) defeated Thomas Rohan, 10-4; Matt Burch (Coxsackie-Athens) defeated Alex Gouza, 10-6; Anthony Brooks (Cairo-Durham) won by forfeit. Doubles: Charlie Petramale & Caleb McIlroy (CoxsackieAthens) defeated Axl Agustin & Christian Agustin(CairoDurham), 10-4; Asa Decker & Nathan Rausch defeated Drew Warner & Gavin Warner, 10-1.

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Saturday - Sunday, April 30- May 1, 2022 - A7

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

Childhood sexual abuse puts woman on a difficult path Dear Abby, I’m a widow in a new relationship. I was molested for years by an older sibling. When my behavior became troublesome — skipping school, becoming antisocial — I was sent to a reform school for several years. The sibling was sent into the army. When I was released from the school, I drifted into worse DEAR ABBY relationships and into the sex trade. I got out of that after six months. I’ve always felt like a “good girl,” but the past haunts me. I used to talk about the abuse constantly. It was always in the back of my mind. It still pops up on a regular basis, but I have not told my new partner. A friend once told me that people don’t need to know everything about you, and I believe that. Some folks blamed me for the abuse, although it started before I was 8. Sometimes I feel I should tell my partner, as it does affect my behavior — I have low self-esteem, etc. I’ve had counseling, but it didn’t help me. When I confronted my abuser years later, he told me it was my problem. Do I need to share this to be completely honest about who I am? I have never felt “normal.” It’s as if I’m carrying a dreaded secret. Any advice? Good Girl In Washington

JEANNE PHILLIPS

What you suffered as a child was not your fault. You needed counseling then, not blame. Because you didn’t receive it at that time, it isn’t surprising your problems followed you wherever you went. Not knowing your partner, I cannot decide for you whether you should reveal your history to him. I can, however, strongly recommend that you contact the Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network (RAINN). When you do, you will be talking with a trained counselor who can guide you. Nothing you confide will be a shock to that person, and you may be put in touch with help in your local area. The RAINN website is rainn.org and its

Pickles

toll-free phone number is 800-656-4673. Please don’t wait to reach out. Everything is confidential. Dear Abby, My wife and I have been together for 30 years, married for 20. We have two sons living at home, a 20-year-old who works fulltime and a 17-year-old who is graduating from high school in the spring. I have been offered a transfer to Australia by my employer — a transfer I had asked for. When we discussed it in the past, everyone was all for it. My oldest can likely stay with the multinational hotel chain he works for now, and I can get my youngest a decent career in my field of work as there is a tremendous shortage of skilled labor in Australia. Now my wife tells me she can’t leave her family, especially her father, who has Parkinson’s. I have told her she can expect to return every summer to our condo on the beach and an additional two trips per year. Abby, I thought our vows meant we would be together forever, wherever. My employer will soon begin the process of opening the Australian office, a process I will be part of and likely train the new hire. I am bitter and resentful toward my wife, and it is affecting my attitude toward her. I love her, but I am struggling to get over the fact she is denying me a very lucrative opportunity. Advice? Losing out in Canada

Pearls Before Swine

Classic Peanuts

Garfield

It’s time for you and your wife to put your heads together and work out a solution. By that I mean you should accept the lucrative business opportunity you have been offered, AND your wife can take care of her father as long as she needs to. Unless his condition is critical, she can visit you and your sons periodically so it shouldn’t put too much strain on your marriage. I hope you will consider it because the kind of resentment you are feeling now can destroy a marriage. Zits

Horoscope

Dark Side of the Horse

By Stella Wilder Born today, you are quite soft-spoken, and yet in spite of this, everyone knows just exactly who you are and what you stand for, because your personality is always so clearly on display. You are a strong and confident individual, even to the extent that you rarely, if ever, have to announce your intentions or advertise your actions before setting out to do something. You simply do it, knowing full well that everyone will soon know all there is to know about the endeavor because of the way you go about it. There is something surprisingly poetic in your nature, and despite your straightforward approach to life, you are always considering the more poetic and philosophical questions, and applying them in your own quiet way to your own life. You are quite adept at interpreting world events in a very personal way. Also born on this date are: Willie Nelson, singer; Kirsten Dunst, actress; Cloris Leachman, actress; Eve Arden, actress; Jill Clayburgh, actress; Jane Campion, screenwriter; Burt Young, actor. 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. SUNDAY, MAY 1 TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — You’re sure to be noticed today, but not necessarily for the reason you had anticipated. This may require a total shift in thinking. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — Whether you are standing center stage or supporting another from the wings, what you do will surely make a difference today. Think ahead. CANCER (June 21-July 22) — You are eager to learn a lesson or two today from someone who

is in a position that you all but covet. You can be there yourself very soon. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — You have more time available to you today than you think, but that doesn’t mean you can slow down. In fact, the opposite is true: Speed up! VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — The balance with work, rest and play may well be disrupted today by someone who doesn’t know what’s going on with you. Explain it. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — You are in the midst of a change that you don’t fully understand — yet. You may benefit from walking in another’s shoes for a while today. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — You are missing something that you can’t quite identify. Take time to reflect — and write things down in order to remember minute details. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — You may be feeling somewhat separated from those who share your overall attitude about how things are going. Reach out to them! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — It may be time for you to explain, in no uncertain terms, just what you intend for the next few days or weeks. This will require planning. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — You may not be able to move forward on your own today, but there are those who wish to join you in your efforts, and that can work wonders. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — How you organize your thinking will make a big difference today and prepare you to take a stand when it’s no longer an option to be silent. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — You can surely excel today, but you’ll want to explore a few new options as well — which may limit your progress as you experiment a little.

Daily Maze

COPYRIGHT 2022 UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE, INC.

Goren bridge WITH BOB JONES ©2022 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ Q 1 - Neither vulnerable, as South, you hold:

NORTH 1♥ 2♥

EAST Pass Pass

SOUTH 1♠ ?

WEST Pass

♠K764♥AJ4♦A7♣A852

What call would you make?

Right-hand opponent opens 2H, weak. What call would you make?

Q 5 - East-West vulnerable, as South, you hold:

Q 2 - North-South vulnerable, as South, you hold:

EAST SOUTH 2♦ 1♥ Pass ? *Negative

♠ 10 8 7 6 4 ♥ A K Q ♦ K J ♣ 9 8 6

Right-hand opponent opens 1C. What call would you make?

♠A4♥QJ5♦KQ9853♣87 WEST Dbl*

NORTH 2♠

What call would you make? Q 6 - North-South vulnerable, as South, you hold:

♠ K Q 5 ♥ A 9 7 3 ♦ 7 ♣ K J 10 7 5

♠ J 10 6 ♥ K 10 8 7 6 4 3 ♦ 5 ♣ 9 7

SOUTH 1♣ ?

As dealer, what call would you make?

WEST Pass

NORTH 1♠

EAST Pass

What call would you make? Q 4 - Both vulnerable, as South, you hold: ♠ A985♥K9♦7643♣A83

Look for answers on Tuesday. (Bob Jones welcomes readers’ responses sent in care of this paper or tcaeditors@tribpub.com)

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Q 3 - East-West vulnerable, as South, you hold:

Sponsor Comics 518-828-1616


B8 - Saturday - Sunday, April 30-May1, 2022 Close to Home

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THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Level 1

2

3

4

ALTSN FTONE RALSAY BERAGL Solution to Friday’s puzzle

4/30/22 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

©2022 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

Yesterday’s

sudoku.org.uk

Heart of the City

Dilbert

B.C.

For Better or For Worse

Wizard of Id

Crossword Puzzle

Andy Capp

Bound & Gagged

Created by Jacqueline E. Mathews

4 Playing card 5 Underhanded 6 Buckets 7 Go higher 8 “__ Maria” 9 Craving 10 Makes amends 11 Arguments 12 Genealogist’s drawing 13 Put papers in order 19 Time units 21 Skin marking 24 Unwrap 25 Lug 26 __ on; victimize 27 __ about; praises highly 28 Cry loudly 29 Great respect 30 Laceration 32 Minstrel’s guitar 33 “Pull __ chair”; DOWN welcoming words 1 Reclines 35 Matures 2 “__ Anything”; 37 Jab song from “Oliver!” 38 __ song; farewell 3 Thinnest appearance

4/30/22

Friday’s Puzzle Solved

Non Sequitur

©2022 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

40 Absorbent cloth 41 Part of the leg 43 Rejuvenates 44 Actress Ally 46 Refers to 47 Likelihood 48 Neighbor of Ecuador

4/30/22

49 __ pistachio latte; Starbucks order 50 Light source 52 Encourage 53 Girl’s nickname 55 CD followers 56 Charles, for one 57 The __; English rock band

Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

Ans. here:

© 2022 The Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. All rights reserved.

ACROSS 1 Shopper’s paper 5 Aerosol 10 __ and crafts 14 Just sitting there 15 Unsuspecting 16 Lawn mower brand 17 Actress Barbara 18 20th-century U.S. president 20 Male relative 21 Realtor’s delight 22 First phase 23 Wharves 25 Color 26 __ for; purchase in advance 28 European capital city 31 More unusual 32 Lanai banquets 34 “__ good turn daily”; Scout slogan 36 Tied 37 Part of the eye 38 Self-righteous 39 Cry of triumph 40 Adder’s result 41 Farm animals 42 High blood pressure risk 44 Glass fragments 45 Lamb bearer 46 Fine dinnerware 47 Give one’s views 50 Title search discovery 51 Bathroom feature 54 Slow down 57 Telegram 58 __ Barrymore 59 Well-known 60 Takes more than one’s share 61 Foamy lather 62 Entertainer __ Rose Lee 63 Billfold contents

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.

Rubes

Answers Monday) Tuesday (Answers Jumbles: WHILE SWOON LOCALE HUDDLE Answer: When bats turned the small cave’s chamber into a shrine, it was a — HALLOWED HOLLOW


Saturday - Sunday, April 30- May 1, 2022 - C1

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From left, Tarantula (voice of Awkwafina), Snake (Marc Maron), Shark (Craig Robinson), Piranha (Anthony Ramos) and Wolf (Sam Rockwell) appear in a scene from the animated film, “The Bad Guys.” DreamWorks Animation/TNS

Going for good ‘The Bad Guys’ is a slick animated adventure with heart

‘THE BAD GUYS’

By MARK MESZOROS

2.5 stars (out of 4)

News-Herald (Willoughby, Ohio)

MPAA rating: PG (for action and rude humor)

Sometimes it’s good to be bad. As long as, at the end of the day, you’re being pretty good. That, more or less, is the message of “The Bad Guys,” a very slick and pretty fun offering from DreamWorks animation based on Aaron Blabey’s popular book series of the same name. The Bad Guys are a crew of anthropomorphic animals, each of whom brings his or her own skill-set to the enterprise of stealing this, that and the other in their city. We first are introduced to their leader, handsome pickpocket Mr. Wolf (voiced by Sam Rockwell), enjoying a meal at a coffee shop with his pal and colleague Mr. Snake (Marc Maron), who isn’t at all interested in celebrating his birthday — for reasons that will become apparent deeper into the movie. The buddies finish up their lunch and proceed to rob a nearby bank with the rest of their gang: easy-going master-of-disguise Mr. Shark (Craig Robinson), shortfused tough guy Mr. Piranha (Anthony Ramos) and expert hacker Ms. Tarantula (Awkwafina). “Go bad ...” Mr. Fox says as he drives them away from the scene of the crime in his souped-up car. “... or go home,” Mr. Snake says, completing the accompanying offer of a fist bump from Mr. Fox. Back at their super-secret, loot-filled hideout, Mr. Wolf is eager to watch a news report covering their latest heist. However, he quickly becomes upset by a new city official, Governor Diane Foxington (Zazie Beetz), saying she feels sorry for The Bad Guys, referring to them as “second-rate has-beens.” Mr. Fox crafts a plan for a high-profile heist at a big public event attended by See BAD C2

Molly Shannon goes deep in new memoir By DONALD LIEBENSON Washington Post

A Memoir By Molly Shannon with Sean Wilsey Ecco. 304 pp. $27.99

Running time: 1:40 How to watch: In theaters Aprill 22

Wolf is voiced by Sam Rockwell in “The Bad Guys,” in theaters now. DreamWorks Animation/TNS

At more than a kid-friendly 90 minutes, their adventure could have been a little tighter, but there is a lot of amusement here for the little ones — regardless of whether they know the books. DreamWorks Animation/TNS

Molly Shannon is an inveterate credit giver. Ask her about the title of her new memoir, “Hello, Molly!” and she volunteers that Allison Saltzman, an art director at HarperCollins, came up with it. Praise her “Saturday Night Live” sketch “Dr. Beaman’s Office,” in which Tim Meadows performs the robot as Dr. Poop, causing Shannon to break out laughing, and she’ll offer, “Adam McKay wrote it.” Mention you enjoyed the first two episodes of her Showtime series, “I Love That for You,” premiering April 29, and she’ll give props to show creators Vanessa Bayer and Jeremy Beiler, showrunner Jessi Klein, director Michael Showalter and costar Jenifer Lewis. But “Hello, Molly!” is all about Shannon, and it thrums with her indefatigable and fearless spirit. These qualities were instilled in her following the tragic death of her mother, sister and cousin in a 1969 car crash that she and her father, who was at the wheel, survived. She was 4 years old. “I was tough,” she writes. “When you lose a parent, you don’t want anybody to treat you differently. You want to blend in.” But Shannon can’t help but stand out, much like her iconic “SNL” character, Mary Katherine Gallagher, the aspiring “superstar” who literally throws herself into everything she does. In “Hello, Molly!” Shannon shares her journey from Cleveland, where she lived with her permissive, but nurturing, alcoholic father, to Hollywood and New York where See SHANNON C2

Need an early a summer anthem? We dare you not to let Lizzo’s ‘About Damn Time’ put you in the mood By NARDINE SAAD Los Angeles Times

According to Lizzo, it’s bad-bitch o’clock. (And thick-thirty.) But it’s also nearly summertime, maybe even in the 1970s. The three-time Grammy winner unleashed her newest song, “About Damn Time,” on Thursday, and, well, it’s about damn time.

“Have you been feeling stressed? Have you also been feeling sexy? Well I got the remedy for you... I put my whole Lizussy in this one!... ABOUT DAMN TIME IS OUT NOW!” the “Juice” and “Truth Hurts” singer wrote Thursday on Instagram. The track — with its affirmative, instantly uplifting disco beat — hails from Lizzo’s just-announced fourth album, “Special,” which is slated for July 15. The new song throws back to 1975 and Van McCoy’s “The Hustle” flute solo.

The accompanying music video, directed by Christian Breslauer, also dropped late Thursday. It opens with a sweatsuit-clad Lizzo reluctantly attending a “Stressed and Sexy” support group meeting that she completely turns on its head by manifesting her inner disco diva. And that brings the technicolor dazzle to a nondescript office building she basically takes over. (We dare you not to bop along.) Sporting a bouffant and clad in sequins, the 33-year-old singer does

the Carlton dance, splits, twerks and moon walks, then plays the flute on top of a swimming pool while surrounded by synchronized swimmers. “Turn up the music/ Turn down the lights/ I’ve got a feeling/ I’m gon’ be all right/ OK, all right, it’s about damn time,” she sings along to bouncy choreography. The flautist, who recently launched the size-inclusive shapewear line Yitty, told Apple Music host Zane Lowe that her positive new See LIZZO C2

Lizzo on the red carpet at the 63rd Annual Grammy Awards at the Los Angeles Convention Center in downtown Los Angeles on March 14. Jay L. Clendenin/Los Angeles Times/TNS


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C2 - Saturday - Sunday, April 30- May1, 2022

All aboard for a ride back in time Nevada’s ‘most authentic’ railway site has steam, smoke — and a cat By JUSTIN FRANZ Washington Post

One of the things Mark Bassett noticed on his first visit to the Nevada Northern Railway Museum some 25 years ago was the lack of warning signs, glass cases and velvet ropes protecting the artifacts. “There were no signs saying, ‘Don’t Go There’ or ‘Don’t Touch That,’” said Bassett, then just a visitor but now president and executive director of the railroad. “It was very unusual for a museum.” That’s because the Nevada Northern Railway Museum is not your typical museum. William Withuhn, the Smithsonian’s late transportation curator, called the museum complex one of the “most complete, most authentic, and best cared-for” historic railroad sites in North America. Spread out over 56 acres on the edge of Ely, Nev., are more than 100 historic rail cars, 58 buildings and structures, three restored steam locomotives, one Internet-famous cat and countless artifacts that contribute to the site’s designation as a National Historic Landmark. It’s one of the few historic railroads in the country to achieve such distinguished status. Railroad tracks were first put down in this remote stretch of Nevada desert — about four hours north of Las Vegas and 3 ½ hours southwest of Salt Lake City — about 116 years ago, shortly after copper was discovered in the mountains that surround Ely. At the time, the nation’s need for copper was booming as electricity and telephone lines spread across the country. Ely’s economy boomed, too, and a railroad was

Bad From C1

Foxington and other important types. There — and disguised as the sophisticated (and excellently named) Oliver Poodleton — he chats her up, and we see these furry mammals have a little chemistry. Also in attendance is Chief of Police (Alex Borstein), who’s long been obsessed with seeing The Bad Guys pay for their crimes. When their plan goes awry, she is close to getting her wish, but, instead of being sent to prison, The Bad Guys strike a deal. Instead, they will work with the night’s honoree, kind-hearted guinea pig Pressor Marmalade (Richard Ayoade), who will teach them how to be (gasp!) good guys. Will they be able to make the big change? Do they really even want to? And might a REAL villain emerge before the adventure is all said and done? (Well, obviously, the answer to the final question is yes, but we’ll say no more.) Pierre Perifel, an animator on the “Kung Fu Panda” movies, makes his featuredirecting debut with “The Bad Guys,” working from a screenplay by Etan Cohen (“Tropic Thunder,” Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa”). At more than a kid-friendly 90

Lizzo From C1

song “can lead into so many conversations.” “It’s about damn time I feel better, it’s about damn time we get out this pandemic. It’s about damn time we to get the first Black female Supreme Court justice,” she said. “There’s so many things. It’s about damn time we popped the champagne. It’s about damn time the tequila got here.” Her fans seemed to agree, with several on Twitter dubbing

A Nevada Northern Railway volunteer looks up at locomotive No. 81 while preparing the engine for a day of service on in February. Justin Franz/Washington Post

built from the mines just south of there north to McGill, where raw copper ore was processed, then on to Cobre and Shafter, where the finished product was handed off to massive transcontinental railroads for shipment to market. In the 1910s and 1920s, dozens of trains would chug through Ely around the clock, taking raw ore to the smelter at McGill. The railroad also operated passenger trains to take miners to work and children to school. One train, the Steptoe Valley Flyer, ran all the way to Cobre, where passengers could transfer to a mainline train bound for the big cities to the east and west. Passenger trains stopped running in 1941 after better roads opened up in the area, but the government regulator

that oversaw the railroad required it to keep one passenger train — steam locomotive and all — just in case those newfangled automobiles didn’t pan out. That decision would have a big effect on the community a few decades later. Moving copper kept the railroad busy until around the 1980s, when demand waned and the mines closed. Almost overnight, the railroad had nothing to haul, so its owner, the Kennecott Copper Corporation, shut it down in June 1983. The busy little rail yard in Ely, which had hummed with the sounds of trains coming and going day and night for about 77 years, fell silent. The closure of both the mine and the railroad spelled trouble for the town. “The plug had been pulled on the town, and they were scared,

minutes, their adventure could have been a little tighter, but there is a lot of amusement here for the little ones — regardless of whether they know the books. Plus, there are lessons to be found, especially when it comes to the testing of the bond between Mr. Fox and Mr. Snake. Thankfully, “The Bad Guys” also traffics in some gags only adults will get, including a silly-clever throwaway joke involving Ms. Tarantula’s computer work. Also, “The Bad Guys” gets kudos for its voice casting. Rockwell (“Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri”) is cool and smooth as Mr. Fox, while podcast host and comic Maron crushes it as the curmudgeonly and abrasive Mr. Snake. And then there’s Maron’s “Joker” castmate Beetz (“Atlanta”), who helps Foxington come across as appropriately confident and capable. According to the movie’s production notes, “The Bad Guys” isn’t a straight adaptation of the first graphic novel but instead folds in elements from the first four of Aussie Blabey’s bestselling 22-book series. While this falls short of an animated classic, we certainly wouldn’t mind Hollywood looting Blabey’s treasure chest to craft another adventure of these rather good Bad Guys.

Shannon

“About Damn Time” the new song of the summer and a longawaited track from “a feel good queen.” The singer also told Lowe that she’s writing songs “about love from every direction” and hopes to “turn a little bit of the fear that’s been running rampant in this world, energetically into love.” “I had a lot of fear, and I had to do the work on myself, and this music is some of that work in turning that fear into love. I hope that when people listen to this album, it makes their day just a little bit better, a little bit more filled with love,” she said.

because if you look at the history of Nevada, you’ll see a lot of towns that died when the mine closed,” Bassett said. “The people of Ely knew that if they didn’t do something, the town might just dry up and blow away into the desert.” Although there was no way for the town to reopen the mine, some community members thought reopening the railroad and running excursion trains could help attract tourists. They approached Kennecott about donating some track, locomotives and cars. Instead, the company gave the town almost everything, including that old passenger train that had been stored back in 1941. In May 1987, the Nevada Northern Railway Museum opened for business, with locomotive No. 40 — a 4-6-0 steam locomotive built in 1910 for passenger trains — leading the way. Initially, the museum’s volunteers were primarily interested in running train excursions for locals and tourists. But as the years went on, they realized that Kennecott had given them something pretty special. Due in part to the area’s remoteness, much of the railroad and its facilities were never upgraded. When updates did come along, as when modern diesel locomotives arrived in the 1950s, the old equipment was just pushed out of the way instead of being scrapped. The Nevada Northern employees were also pack rats. Along with railroad equipment, the Nevada Northern has what it believes is one of the largest and most intact collections of corporate paperwork anywhere in the country, with documents dating back to the construction in 1905 and 1906. “They didn’t throw anything away,” said archivist and trainmaster Con Trumbull, the man tasked with sorting through the museum’s artifacts. “When you’re here,

you’re really stepping into a time warp, and you’re able to see what a railroad looked and felt like in the 1920s and 1930s.” To maintain that “time warp” quality, the organization doesn’t rope off exhibits or put up “Keep Out” signs; visitors can wander the grounds as they please and watch up close as workers maintain the vintage steam locomotives. That unusual access is what Bassett loved about the place when he first visited in the late 1990s and why he quickly came back as a volunteer. In 2002, he became executive director and president of the railroad. Bassett said maintaining that type of unfettered access is challenging at times, but it’s something he believes is important. Once visitors arrive at the museum — after buying a ticket at the depot — they receive constant safety reminders: to stand back at least six feet from moving equipment, to not climb onto anything and to be aware of their surroundings. The message is even incorporated into the railroad’s logo. One of the highlights of any visit to the Nevada Northern, though, is the train ride. On most weekends from March until December, and daily from spring until fall, visitors can take a ride through Robinson Canyon, along the same route that copper ore traveled a century or so ago. Vintage steam locomotives power the train, giving visitors a smoky but unforgettable experience. On select Friday nights from May until September, the railroad runs a train out into the desert where it’s met by a park ranger with telescopes from nearby Great Basin National Park, known for having some of the darkest skies in the Lower 48. The excursions regularly sell out a year in advance. The railroad employs about 20 people and many volunteers,

who run and maintain trains, write grants, archive and more. However, the most famous onsite personality is a cat named Dirt. Born inside the locomotive shop in 2008, the orange-andwhite cat was adopted by the workers and spends his days exploring the complex and welcoming visitors. He’s also built up a considerable following on social media. One look at Dirt and the reason for his name quickly becomes clear: Living inside an active railroad shop is a dirty affair, but there’s no doubt the cat is well cared for, as exemplified by the bags of treats everywhere and the affection he gets from workers. Although the museum offers guided tours and interpretive signage, Trumbull said it’s important to remember that a visit to the Nevada Northern isn’t your typical museum experience. The reason to visit is to immerse oneself in a place as it existed a century ago — warts and all. “When you visit the Nevada Northern, you’re going to smell coal smoke and sweat,” he said. “We’re not fancy here. This is a blue-collar railroad.” The bet made more than 30 years ago to turn an unused railroad into a tourist attraction is also paying off for the community. In 1987, the first year excursions ran, the railroad hauled about 4,000 people; now, it regularly moves about 36,000 passengers annually. The railroad also hosts a number of experiences that draw visitors from around the world. Among the most popular is “Be the Engineer,” which allows participants to learn how to run a locomotive before taking it out on the line leading a freight train. (People pay nearly $800 to run the diesel locomotive and about $3,000 to run a steam locomotive on a 14-mile round trip through the sagebrush.)

From C1

she became one of “SNL’s” most beloved cast members. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. Q: You write about being in something called the New Little Rascals when you were young. Did you watch the original “Our Gang” comedies growing up? Who were the actors who inspired you? A: I definitely watched “Our Gang” after school on TV. John Ritter on “Three’s Company” was a great influence as a physical comedy performer. Years later, I met him at a Starbucks with his wife in West L.A. He saw me and I saw him and we gave one another a big hug. I also watched “Little House on the Prairie.” Melissa Gilbert was about my age. She was a little spitfire. And Gilda Radner! I grew up watching “SNL” on babysitting jobs after I put the kids to bed. I didn’t think I could ever be like her; she was a unique one-of-a-kind talent. My dad loved her character, Roseanne Roseannadanna. Q: You had a rich interior life growing up and the book is filled with outrageous stories. The one that comes to mind is your dad daring you and your friend to hop a plane to New York. You were 13! Do you think this fearlessness prepared you as a comic actor? A: It gave me a zest for life and a kind of exuberance. My dad liked to be silly and have fun. Someone asked me once if I was scared. I wasn’t scared at all. We were thrilled and overjoyed. It was like a fun adventure. Q: Your first “SNL” episode was hosted by George Clooney. Do you remember getting your first laugh? A: I was very nervous. When I got the job, I went to my friend Michael Palermo and said, “Mike, what if I forget

Molly Shannon attends the Los Angeles premiere of the new HBO series “The White Lotus” at Bel-Air Bay Club on July 7, 2021, in Pacific Palisades, California. Emma McIntyre/Getty Images

how to walk and talk?” I went to his office where he was temping and practiced walking and reading lines and he said, “See, you can do it.” I played George Clooney’s assistant in a sketch. I do remember I got a laugh. George Clooney couldn’t have been nicer. He was a great person to perform with for the first time on the show. I was like, “OK, and we’re off.” Q: You write extensively about the creation of your iconic characters Mary Katherine Gallagher and Sally O’Malley. But you were also in sketches that rank in the “SNL” pantheon with “More Cowbell” and “Delicious Dish.” When you’re in a sketch like that, do you have any inkling it’s going to become part of the culture? A: Ana Gasteyer brought that to me. Dennis McNicholas, Michael Schur, Robert Carlock and Ana wrote that together. It was such a pleasure to perform because we would do it center stage and it just killed. I think I did have a sense right from the beginning, “This is going to be good.” Q: In the book, you have an

interesting take on breaking character; you defend it. I’ve read Lorne Michaels isn’t a fan of the actors laughing during a scene, but audiences love it. Why is that? A: Because they feel like they’re in on something as it’s happening right before their eyes. It’s like they’re laughing with you, as though they are part of it. It also means you’re a happy performer; you’re obviously relaxed and having so much fun. It happened to me in a sketch with Brendan Fraser. I was playing Xena, the warrior princess, and he was my rival. I accidentally pulled his wig off. I could not stop laughing. It was so unprofessional. All of us couldn’t stop laughing. Q: Was it cathartic to write the book? A: People have asked that and I’ve said, “No, I’ve already processed so much of this stuff.” But the truth is, it is cathartic because there are all these things you think about and you dig deep to make the book rich. For the first time in my life, I Googled the place of the accident and how far we were from home. My whole life I had never

done that. We were 18 minutes from home. Q: What do you hope readers get out of your story? A: I hope it can inspire people [to realize] that they can overcome difficult things from their childhood, and to see that it’s great to stick to what you’re passionate about. It’s not always easy, but it does make for a good life. Q: Your story is in part a testament to the importance of the arts in school. And yet the arts are often the first thing that gets cut. A: It’s so important. My grade school did not have a big budget, but we could do cheap stuff. We had a mom who came in after school and taught us improv. It changed my life. We could just make up little skits. I lived for the St. Patrick’s Day show where each grade would do a big song and dance number. It was the highlight of my year. Donald Liebenson is an entertainment writer. His work has been published by the Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times, VanityFair.com and Vulture.


Saturday - Sunday, April 30- May 1, 2022 - C3

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Food

SWEET

Savor your favorite show

This salad of pears, field greens and black-eyed peas is tossed in a sweet, savory citrus vinaigrette. Gretchen McKay/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette/TNS

elegance

Now you can have your ‘Bridgerton’ and drink it, too

Salad recalls chef’s roots in Gullah country

By KARLA PETERSON By GRETCHEN MCKAY

San Diego Union-Tribune

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

SAN DIEGO — You can’t dress like them, even if you were willing to don the required undergarments. You can’t dine like them, unless you have a generous staffing budget and an over-achieving metabolism. (So! Many! Cakes!) And you can’t duel like them, no matter how much you loathe your neighbor and their infernal leaf-blower. As much as you may love a day of lounging and plotting and an evening of quadrilles and bodice-ripping, you cannot live like the mansion-dwelling le bon ton aristocrats of Netflix’s delightful, binge-worthy series”Bridgerton.” But thanks to a new book from former San Diego writer Amy Finley, you can drink like them. Using the cheeky nom de quill of Lady Thornwood, Finley has written “The Regency Book of Drinks: Quaffs, Quips, Tipples, and Tales from Grosvenor Square,” a new collection of deeply researched, eminently quaffable cocktail recipes shaped by the Regency period of 1811 to 1820 that provided the historical framing for “Bridgerton.” The series is now in its second season. Adapted from Julia Quinn’s novels, “Bridgerton” debuted during the shut-in Christmas of 2020. It quickly became one of Netflix’s most-watched shows, as pandemic-weary viewers swooned over the Regency romances, the Jane Austen-worthy social machinations, and the dishy narration by the mysterious scandal-sheet writer known as Lady Whistledown. One of those viewers was Finley.

“This salad is, for me, about flavor, texture and childhood memories,” chef Alexander Smalls says in his cookbook, “Meals, Music, and Muses: Recipes From My African American Kitchen.” The cookbook is a tribute to his South Carolina heritage and the music that inspired the former professional opera singer. A childhood favorite, it was on Alexander Smalls the menu when he opened The Cecil, New York City’s first AfroAsian-American restaurant, in 2013. It honors his father and grandfather and the pears they grew in their backyard in Spartanburg, S.C. The beans add protein and the pears a touch of elegance. A lemony vinaigrette ties it all together. It’s a versatile recipe that can be made ahead to be dressed later, and it easily goes from an appetizer to a full meal depending on the size. I halved the ingredients for smaller portions. See SALAD C8

See BRIDGERTON C8

Your go-to pantry recipe: Spicy sesame chili noodles By JOE YONAN Washington Post

When I interviewed Stephanie and Mike Le about their new book, “That Noodle Life,” the first thing I wanted to know was this: What is it about noodles? That is, why are noodles what they, I and so many other people want to eat all the time? Stephanie didn’t miss a beat: “I know this isn’t going to sound right, but I think they just feel good in your mouth. There’s something about the physicality of eating noodles that’s really appealing.” Mike had another idea: “Noodles are the only food where you can eat more than a mouthful at a time.” Ultimately, wife and husband agreed, it’s also because of the universality of noodles as a comfort food. “Everybody’s eaten a bowl of noodles at some point in their lives,” Stephanie said. “They just taste good, and they’re a great vehicle for all sorts of flavors.” To call the Les’ new book a

Spicy Sesame Chili Oil Noodles. Tom McCorkle/Washington Post

love letter to noodles is to sell short its passion and quirky charm. It includes references

to rap lyrics (“We love big noodles and we cannot lie”) and “Star Trek” (“Live long and

lasagna”), a March Madnessstyle bracketed recipe competition, even a noodle glossary written in haikus. And then there are the recipes, for Philly cheesesteak noodles, yaki udon al pastor and Chinese Bolognese pappardelle. The book honors the traditions of Asian noodles and Italian pasta while showing how they can come together and play. The couple dive into the Southeastern Asian soup laksa, offer instructions for making spaghetti alla chitarra from scratch the traditional way, and feature plenty of recipes that come together in mere minutes. It’s the latter that drew my immediate attention, particularly this recipe for Spicy Sesame Chili Oil Noodles that employs a mere handful of ingredients and simple steps to make something that tastes wonderfully complex. The recipe calls for any favorite noodle, but I couldn’t take my eyes off the ones in the photo, ruffle-edged dried

Chinese knife-cut numbers called Shangxi planed noodles. I didn’t find them on a trip to my closest Asian supermarket, but they reminded me of a pasta I love, mafaldine, that’s shaped like a stretched-out lasagna noodle, complete with ruffles, so that’s what I used. When we photographed the recipe, our food stylist could not find either, so I suggested long fusilli, a curly noodle that looks like an old-fashioned telephone cord. “That’s exactly what we want people do to,” Stephanie said. “Those are perfect substitutions.” The couple does try to stick to general guidelines about swaps: “We try to sub long for long and short for short, and if it’s like a curly shape or a smooth shape, then we’ll match that, too, because a lot of sauces are meant to be picked up by noodles and their crevices,” Mike added. “Other than that, we’re not too picky about substitutions. The shape is the most important thing.”

The recipe includes one of my favorite ingredients, Chinese black vinegar, and introduced me to another, Chinese sesame paste, but offers stand-ins for both: balsamic for the former and tahini for the latter. I’m a longtime tahini devotee, but the Chinese sesame paste is wonderfully dark and nutty and altogether something I now can’t imagine living without. In a similar spirit, while they include a recipe for a homemade (and wonderful) Sichuan-style chili oil, they also allow for store-bought chili oil, which turns this recipe into one of those pantry champions I can’t get enough of. It was so easy, so tasty and so fun to eat that when I watched over Zoom as our visuals team made it, right around lunchtime, my stomach rumbled and I stepped out of the frame and into the kitchen, whipping up another See NOODLES C8


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Saturday - Sunday, April 30- May 1, 2022 - C5

Puzzles

Last week’s puzzle answers

Horoscope By Stella Wilder Born Sunday, you may rarely, if ever, find yourself in the spotlight, but you will almost always be contributing mightily to the things that go on around you at all times. You are no wallflower, and you will not recede from view entirely as you help another assume a rightful place center stage. You will be there to play the kind of supporting role every story requires — and you enjoy having maximum impact without having to risk everything on your own time. You enjoy travel and yearn to see as much of the world as possible in your lifetime. You derive great pleasure, and often a good deal of inspiration, from being introduced to new places and cultures, and your experiences on the road — and often off the beaten path — always enrich you in ways that sometimes take you by surprise. You enjoy learning lessons you didn’t see coming. Also born on this date are: Tim McGraw, singer; Judy Collins, singer; Ray Parker Jr., singer; Glenn Ford, actor; Joanna Lumley, actress; Kate Smith, singer; Rita Coolidge, singer; Dann Florek, actor; Jack Paar, TV host.

To see what is in store for you Monday, find your birthday and read the corresponding paragraph. Let your birthday star be your daily guide. MONDAY, MAY 2 TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — A mistake needn’t follow you any longer — but you’re going to have to come clean about something you’ve been trying to hide for a while. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — A complication can be overcome today, but not if you overreact. Remain calm, and take the time to track the evolution of what’s happened. CANCER (June 21-July 22) — You may choose to do something that others have refused to do — but not to set yourself apart, merely because it seems right to you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — You may be thinking too much about a single episode when you should be considering the effects of several that, together, are forcing some change. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — You’re not about to let yourself be backed into a corner today. Do what you can to anticipate what others around you will do — and act first! LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — An opportu-

nity passes you by today, but not before you recognize certain aspects of it that you can resuscitate before it’s entirely too late. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Others are waiting for you to give them a thumbs-up — but there’s more for you to think about, and making a hasty decision serves no one. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — You are drifting ever closer to a point in which you will either make a major discovery or give yourself over to the status quo. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Take care that you don’t neglect your needs today. You could use a little of what you’re dispensing in order to ensure progress. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Another’s desires may be in direct contradiction to your own today — but that only means that you’re going to have to negotiate openly. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — You’ll want to avoid making an important decision behind closed doors today. Transparency is a valuable tool that serves you quite well. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — You can hand someone a surprise today and get yourself out of a tricky situation at the same time. You’re surprised by what inspires you.

Answers on C8

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Answers on C8


C6 - Saturday - Sunday, April 30- May1, 2022

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Books & authors

Gig workers try to stave off the end of humanity By MARK ATHITAKIS Star Tribune

“The Temps” by Andrew DeYoung; Keylight Books (264 pages, $27.99) What’s your preferred plot about the end of the world? Zombie hordes? Viral contagion? Some inhumane corporate scheme that gets out of hand? Andrew DeYoung’s seriocomic second novel, “The Temps,” has an apocalypse for every taste. It opens with a mass human catastrophe that’s witnessed by Jacob, a temp on his first day at Delphi, an omnivorous megacorp. (“What don’t we do?” he’s told when he asks someone what

his new employer does.) An open-air all-staff meeting is interrupted by a yellow mist that leaves every attendee

crazed and homicidal. The mist soon goes global. But 350 Delphi temps, sealed in the headquarters building, are spared the madness. DeYoung delivers this global catastrophe with a bit of a wink: Finally, no more all-staff meetings! Among the novel’s chief targets is the anonymizing, dehumanizing world of corporate drudgework. Jacob and his cohort need to fight the mist, but also a brainkilling workplace cult of compelled ignorance. And one of the jokes is that this takes some doing. A selfappointed leader introduces himself via PowerPoint. While the temps gather resources and brace for attack, they also

get back to work, hoping to spreadsheet their way back to civilization. As one temp observes, “Isn’t this basically what people have been doing for hundreds of years, with religion? Some absent, allseeing god is watching -- and if you do certain things, do them exactly the right way, that god will rescue you, bring you into paradise.” So in large part, “The Temps” is an allegorical yarn about the modern workplace, with a dash of “The Walking Dead” and Don DeLillo’s “White Noise” tossed in. It fits well on the ever-growing shelf of novels that similarly critique corporate conformity, like Ling Ma’s “Severance”

and Dave Eggers’ “The Circle.” But DeYoung, who won a Minnesota Book Award for his 2017 novel, “The Exo Project,” distinguishes this book by working in a more meta theme: Why are we so obsessed with these tales of mass destruction anyway? And why do they fall into such familiar ruts? Characters make multiple references to quest tales and hero’s journeys. (Jacob was an English major before working at Delphi.) Hero narratives have ways of making people selfish, DeYoung suggests: The temps’ first organizing efforts take on a survivalist and macho bent. And when the reason behind the yellow mist emerges, it has a grim,

selfish narrative behind it, too. The gears in DeYoung’s own narrative sometimes grind because he’s working at crosspurposes — he strives to construct a thriller-like dystopian narrative while pulling at the threads of thriller and dystopian tropes. Characterization is sacrificed for the sake of pointscoring. But the temps do make good points: “They gave us the jobs they didn’t want and asked us to thank them for it,” one notes. And the main point gets across firmly, and darkly: Stories have consequences, so be careful about whose story you trust. Mark Athitakis is a writer in Arizona.

‘Glory’ is satire with plenty of teeth By COLETTE BANCROFT Tampa Bay Times

“Glory” by NoViolet Bulawayo; Viking (416 pages, $27) With its entirely nonhuman cast of horses, goats, donkeys, dogs, cats and cattle and its merciless focus on politics, NoViolet Bulawayo’s novel “Glory” is bound to evoke George Orwell’s “Animal Farm”for many readers. But this is no reboot. Beyond those broad similarities, Bulawayo’s story is her own. And just in case you don’t notice, one of her many memorable characters, Dr. Sweet Mother, a stylish and ambitious donkey who is the wife of the dictator of the fictional African nation of Jidada, makes the point clearly early in the book: “I’m standing here to address this nonsense right here right now, with Jidada itself and this sun over there as

my witnesses, and I’m saying: This is not an animal farm but Jidada with a -da and another -da! So my advice to you is, Stop it, and Stop it right now!” NoViolet Bulawayo is the pen name of Elizabeth Zandile Tshele, who was born and raised in Zimbabwe and now lives in the United States. Her first novel, “We Need New Names,” in 2013 won the PEN/Hemingway award and a number of other prizes and was short-listed for the Man Booker Prize. The plot of “Glory” echoes the history of Zimbabwe under Robert Mugabe, who ruled the country for 40 years until a coup in 2017. His career followed an all-too-familiar trajectory, from anti-colonialist revolutionary to ruthless dictator, a political path found in nations around the globe. Mugabe’s counterpart in “Glory” is the Old Horse, a

once-magnificent stallion whose grip on reality is starting to slip. It seems everyone in his inner circle is poised to take over the reins, especially Dr. Sweet Mother (although women don’t do politics in Jidada; these animals are quite sexist) and the vice president, Tuvius Delight Shasha, Tuvy for short, “an old horse, but not as old as the Father of the Nation.” Tuvy proves to be a step ahead of Dr. Sweet Mother when the Old Horse is ousted in a military coup — the army is made up entirely of dogs — and Tuvy is declared interim president. The first third of the book recounts that political upheaval, replete with bombastic speeches and secret meetings and lethal repression and a chorus of mordant commentary by the citizens of Jidada. They’ve seen it all before but

hope maybe this time promises will be kept. The book’s main character appears about a third of the way in, and at first glance she might look like she belongs in a children’s book: “the slim goat in the long white tunic dress and bright yellow tennis shoes, a black satchel on her back, dragging an oversize purple hard-shell suitcase along the longest road...” But the young goat, whose name is Destiny Khumalo, has a complicated story. She’s returning to Jidada after fleeing the country a decade before, after an earlier round of political upheaval and terrible violence left her traumatized. Since then, she’s had no communication with her mother, Simiso. When Destiny returns to their village, Lozikeyi, she learns that her mother was so overcome by grief at her only child’s

disappearance that she’s spent the time since wandering the streets. Bulawayo skillfully deletes humans from the world of Jidada, right down to clever linguistic choices like “femal,” a portmanteau of “animal” and “female” used for animals who would be called

women if they were human, and its sly counterpart, “mal.” Her four-legged animals often walk on their back legs, or “hind,” especially when they want to look imposing, like “a fancy-looking pig hinding to the platform.” (There are a few allusions to real-world human political figures, though, given unflattering animal avatars.) “Glory” weaves Destiny’s return to her village and family together with Jidada’s politics as an utterly corrupt election looms. Her reconciliation with Simiso will bring mother and daughter to the revelation of horrifying secrets and the rediscovery of boundless love. While the powerful whinny and bray and fly around the world on private jets, Jidada’s ordinary citizens suffer and die, and tweet hilarious threads smarter than any politician’s speech, and do the work of making life go on.

An author was set to read his unicorn book to students; the school forbade it By JACLYN PEISER Washington Post

Jason Tharp wants to write books for weird kids — because he was one. Growing up in Ohio, the 45-year-old children’s author, illustrator and inspirational speaker sometimes felt invisible. But as he battled feelings of loneliness, he found comfort in books. Now, Tharp is on a mission to reach that “one kid” who needs to feel seen. So in 2017, he developed a character to remind his readers that it’s OK to be different. “I sat down and tried to figure out what kind of character would be nonthreatening, that they will be instantly lovable and I would be able to kind of get them ... to be invested in the story,” Tharp said in an interview with The Washington Post. “I was like, ‘Kids like unicorns.’” But for one Ohio school district, Tharp’s book — featuring a blue and purple unicorn underneath a rainbow-colored title — was too controversial. On April 6, as Tharp prepared to read “It’s Okay to Be a Unicorn!” to students the next day at an elementary school in the Buckeye Valley Local School District, north of Columbus, he got a call from the principal saying higher-ups didn’t want him reading the book. “I just straight up asked him,

Jason Tharp wrote “It’s Okay to Be a Unicorn!” to let children know that it’s okay to be different. Courtesy of Jason Tharp

‘Does somebody think I made a gay book?’” Tharp said. “And he said, ‘Yes. ... The concern is that you’re coming with an agenda to recruit kids to become gay.’” Jeremy Froehlich, the interim superintendent, did not respond to The Post’s request for comment. In an interview with WBNS, Froehlich said one parent visited his office on April 6, saying they were concerned about the book. “They just wanted to make sure that we vetted the book and our staff thought that they had

Tribune News Service

Here are the bestsellers for the week that ended Saturday, April 9, compiled from data from independent and chain bookstores, book wholesalers and independent distributors nationwide, powered by NPD BookScan.

HARDCOVER FICTION 1. Run, Rose, Run. Parton/Patterson. Little, Brown 2. Sea of Tranquility. Emily St. John Mandel. Knopf 3. The Candy House. Jennifer Egan. Scribner 4. What Happened to the Bennetts. Lisa Scottoline. Putnam 5. The Paris Apartment. Lucy Foley. Morrow 6. The Recovery Agent. Janet Evanovich. Atria 7. Lover Arisen. J.R. Ward. Gallery 8. The Lincoln Highway. Amor Towles. Viking

vetted it,” he said. Tharp’s event is the latest casualty in the culture war over children’s books. The selection of books available in schools has become a hot-button issue in recent years, with conflicts mainly arising for those referencing race and sexual orientation. In November, the American Library Association called the rate at which books are being challenged “unprecedented.” Last month, an assistant principal at a Mississippi elementary school was fired after he

read the children’s book “I Need a New Butt!” to second-graders. The superintendent argued that the book was inappropriate and that the assistant principal showed “impaired judgment” by reading it. Tharp, who lives in Powell, Ohio, about 10 miles south of the Buckeye Valley Local School District, was originally scheduled to visit Buckeye Valley West Elementary in 2020, but the event was postponed because of the pandemic. The school rescheduled the visit for April 7, and administrators ordered over 500 copies of “It’s Okay to Be a Unicorn!” for students in anticipation of the event, Tharp said. The book follows Cornelius, a unicorn who hides his true identity because he lives among horses who don’t like unicorns. At the end, he reveals his true self and is accepted by everyone. But on the morning of April 6, the principal at Buckeye Valley West called him to say the plans had changed — the superintendent didn’t want him to read the book. “I was just shocked — and all from one parent,” said Tharp, who had been up until 3 a.m. that day signing the books. “I never ran into an issue like this. ... I never in a million years thought I’d have to defend this book.” Tharp offered to read a

different book, “It’s Okay to Smell Good!” about a skunk who lives in a stinky world but realizes he — unlike his peers — enjoys good-smelling things. In the end, the skunk finds one friend who also likes nice smells, making him feel less alone. “There’s no rainbows. No unicorns,” Tharp said. But about 30 minutes after the call with the principal, he emailed Tharp, saying higherups didn’t want him reading that book, either. Instead, they wanted him to “continue to focus on your positive message and illustrations,” according to the email, which was reviewed by The Post. Tharp did his presentation the following day, omitting any reference to the unicorn book. News about Tharp’s visit spread quickly, angering parents who like the book and inspiring them to protest the superintendent’s decision. The school board held an emergency meeting on April 8 to address the controversy. Community members expressed frustration over the decision to stop Tharp from reading the unicorn book. Kaylan Brazelton, a parent and educator at the elementary school, said teachers were told to take down drawings of rainbows and unicorns that students made in anticipation of Tharp’s visit. Photos reviewed by The Post show the artwork

Publisher’s Weekly best-sellers 9. Shadows Reel. C.J. Box. Putnam 10. The Diamond Eye. Kate Quinn. Morrow

HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. The Mothers and Daughters of the Bible Speak. Shannon Bream. Broadside 2. Half Baked Harvest Every Day. Tieghan Gerard. Clarkson Potter 3. Atlas of the Heart. Brene Brown. Random House 4. Time Is a Mother. Ocean Vuong. Penguin Press 5. Recessional. David Mamet. Broadside 6. Nowhere for Very Long. Brianna Madia. HarperOne 7. Bittersweet. Susan Cain. Crown

8. Forever Boy. Kate Swenson. Park Row 9. Glucose Revolution. Jessie Inchauspe. Simon & Schuster 10. Life Makeover. Dominique Sachse. Thomas Nelson

MASS MARKET 1. Nine Lives. Danielle Steel. Dell 2. Dark Night in Big Rock. Johnstone/Johnstone. Pinnacle 3. Ocean Prey. John Sandford. Putnam 4. 1st Case. Patterson/Tebbetts. Grand Central 5. Any Sunday. Debbie Macomber. Harlequin 6. Sooley. John Grisham. Anchor 7. Hideaway. Nora Roberts. St. Martin’s

was replaced with drawings of characters from another one of Tharp’s books. “It’s a rainbow. The fact that we had to take all of the students’ artwork down — it was gut-wrenching, and we couldn’t even believe we were in that position to do so, but we did what we were told,” Brazelton said at the board meeting, adding that the children “were so confused.” Another parent teamed up with Tharp to start a GoFundMe to raise money for a free event next month where the author will read his unicorn book and share his story. Tharp, who before the pandemic was speaking to about 40,000 to 50,000 students a year, is convinced that those who objected to the book never actually read it because it is clear there is no reference to the LGBTQ community. “They are projecting their agenda [because] there is a rainbow ... on the back of the book,” Tharp said. But the author, who was diagnosed with a brain tumor last year and is now in recovery, said he tries not to let people’s uninformed opinions consume him. “There’s a lot of clarity a brain tumor brings,” he said. “I don’t spend my time catering to people with an agenda because there’s so much joy out there, there’s so much love to be had.”

8. Black Ice. Brad Thor. Pocket 9. Tom Clancy: Target Acquired. Don Bentley. Berkley 10. The Amish Animal Doctor. Patrice Lewis. Love Inspired

TRADE PAPERBACK 1. Chainsaw Man, Vol. 10. Tatsuki Fujimoto. Viz 2. Jujutsu Kaisen, Vol. 15. Gege Akutami. Viz 3. Verity. Colleen Hoover. Grand Central 4. Spy X Family, Vol. 7. Tatsuya Endo. Viz 5. Kaiju No. 8, Vol. 2. Naoya Matsumoto. Viz 6. Reminders of Him. Colleen Hoover. Montlake 7. The Love Hypothesis. Ali Hazelwood. Berkley 8. The Family Plot. Megan Collins. Atria 9. People We Meet on Vacation. Emily Henry. Berkley 10. The Viscount Who Loved Me. Julia Quinn. Avon


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Want likes? Subscribers? Here’s how Social media influencers are sharing their tricks — for a fee By CARLY WANNA Bloomberg

As a travel vlogger and social media influencer, Christina Galbato got a lot of messages from her online followers. They requested tips for hotels and restaurants, but many sought another kind of advice. “A lot of what they were asking was: How can I do what you do?” the 29-year-old recalls. That’s why Galbato launched “The Influencer Bootcamp,” 20 hours of prerecorded lessons in how others can monetize their social media presence. She charges $700 for a package that includes that course as well as other tools, such as sample email pitches and access to a members-only Facebook support group. Galbato says she’s on track to take in $4 million in revenue this year. The influencer marketing business is already a $20 billion industry and one that’s projected to grow as social media users increase and brands seek out online talent to pitch their products on YouTube, Instagram and other sites. It’s such a big business, influencers are now selling courses to each other on a

Bridgerton From C3

It was early 2021, and the cook, food writer and early winner of “The Next Food Network Star” had just finished writing a 500-page in-house book on bartending and bar operations for Consortium Holdings, the San Diegobased hospitality group behind such high-impact dining and drinking spots as Born & Raised, Craft & Commerce, and Raised by Wolves. A longtime lover of the novels of Austen and Charlotte Bronte, as well as an expert in cocktails and cocktail history, Finley came up with the idea of writing a book that combined the “Bridgerton” sensibility with her now-encyclopedic knowledge of all things boozy. “That era was a really fruitful period for cocktails and a really amazing period in

Salad From C3

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Social media influencer Christina Galbato offers an “influencer bootcamp” to train people on how to monetize their social media presence. Via Christina Galbato’s Blog

variety of topics. Chefs with big followings give online cooking lessons. Financial strategists peddle money planning tips. And others, like Galbato, teach about the art of viral marketing itself. Courses vary in length and focus. Darius Moravcik, a 32-year-old technology entrepreneur who writes about online marketing under the name Darius Mora, documents his own journey as a TikTok personality and shows users how he boosted his follower count from zero to more than 35,000 in three months. Simple tricks — like posting often and

history,” Finley said from Burlington, Vt., where she moved to last year to work on her master’s in Food Systems at the University of Vermont. “The trade routes were growing and the British Empire was growing, and that gave people access to spices and sugar and other commodities that they didn’t have before. And all of that was trickling into society and becoming currency. I thought this would be such a fun way to explore that historical moment and make some great drinks, too.” The spirited result is “The Regency Book of Drinks,” which features more than 75 cocktail recipes, most of them original Finley creations. The book is divided into chapters inspired by “Bridgerton”-era society and the ladies and gentlemen who make that dizzy world spin. In “The Evening Soiree” chapter, Finley — in the all-knowing voice of Lady Thornwood — extols the

consistently — can help users increase their followings, according to Moravcik. “If you study the formula, anyone can do it,” he said. Kristen Bousquet, a 28-year-old “influencer mentor” who created a course in January 2021, sells weekly live lessons as well as access to planning materials like organizational calendars and templates outlining how best to negotiate with potential sponsors. Like Moravcik, many of the lessons are easy to implement. Bousquet advises her students to limit TikTok videos to 10 seconds

party-friendly power of “deceptively potent” Champagne-forward sparkling cocktails. The “Social Graces” chapter celebrates the crowdpleasing charms of the punchbowl, where dancing couples can refresh themselves (and perhaps spark a marriage match) over glasses of the “Accomplished Swoon,” featuring gin, raspberry syrup, lemon juice, rose water and seltzer. There are low-alcohol options in the “Delicate Daytime Drinks” chapter and more potent “muscular” cocktails in the “For Members Only” section. There is even a chapter devoted to non-alcoholic beverages, many of them featuring fresh fruit juices and homemade simple syrups. “I definitely wanted to include people who are not drinking,” said Finley, who also includes a section on parlor games, along with a chapter on the spirits, tools and glassware you’ll need to set up your

to increase the chance viewers will watch them multiple times, for example. Prices for the courses also vary. Moravcik sells his prerecorded class, including roughly eight hours of content, for under $40. Bousquet markets her ten-week course for just under $400. Galbato charges as much as $9,000 for six months of live coaching. Her premium offering comes with one-on-one support, as well as a two-day retreat with other students in the program. Her sales overall doubled last year, she said. Successful online courses can diversify influencers’ incomes. “If you want to be a creator, you need to be doing multiple things,” says Mae Karwowski, chief executive officer of influencer marketing agency Obviously. For TikTokers, multiple revenue streams can be especially important. Creators like science commentator Hank Green and technology reviewer Safwan AhmedMia have publicly complained that TikTok underpays its influencers, especially relative to other sites such as YouTube. They allege that TikTok’s “Creator Fund” doesn’t offer enough resources to pay all of its successful content posters, especially as more people go viral on the platform. TikTok said its fund is just one way creators get compensated, and the social media app’s

Regency bar. “During the pandemic, some of us were drinking too much, and some of us were swearing it off. There are so many lovely ways to use infusions and flavored syrups. We really wanted to have something for every type of drinker and every situation.” Whether she is guiding her gentle readers through the making of a “cunning garnish,” or cautioning them about the dangers of underestimating a “sharp-tongued woman,” Finley’s science-loving, patriarchy-fighting, quip-loving Lady Thornwood is a gimlet-eyed narrator fit for Queen Charlotte. And if you play your mixology cards right, perhaps the queen herself will drop in on your soiree for a sustaining snack. If Finley has her way, Queen Charlotte might even bring her own recipes. “I love imagining a sequel to this book that would be told from Queen Charlotte’s point

of view, because she is an absolutely fascinating character to me,” Finley said. “I have this idea in my mind of calling it something like, ‘Comfort Me with Canapes: How to Live, Love and Eat Like a Regency Royal.’ “I can totally imagine another book with that Regency voice. I could use her as a character to get into food and drink. And houseplants, maybe.” Here’s a lovely and delightfully straightforward drink with which to toast the very mundaneness of a marriage that boasts no spectral patriarchs. Reader, before accepting a suitor’s ring, one should thoroughly exhaust the subject of their intended’s father— particularly if the relationship seems ... complicated. 1 ounce Salers aperitif liqueur 1 ounce dry vermouth 1 ounce lime juice 3/4 ounce simple syrup

From “The Regency Book of Drinks: Quaffs, Quips, Tipples, and Tales from Grosvenor Square” by Amy Finley

WEDDING BREAKFAST

From C3

batch in minutes for my husband and me. The recipe makes the perfect amount for two, but be forewarned: Anyone you serve it to might have the same reaction my husband did: “Is there more?” Next time, there will be.

SPICY SESAME CHILI OIL NOODLES

This elegant salad from Alexander Smalls is built around the flavors of pears, field greens and black-eyed peas. Gretchen McKay/ Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

poaching liquid and cut lengthwise into 1/8-inch-thick slices. Reserve poaching liquid for another use. In a large bowl, toss grape tomatoes, onion, cucumbers and greens to combine. Add black-eyed peas and vinaigrette (a little at a time, until greens are lightly coated), and

toss. Divide among 8 chilled plates. Garnish with poached pears and serve immediately. Serves 8. “Meals, Music, and Muses: Recipes From My African American Kitchen” by Alexander Smalls (Flatiron, $35)

Ice-cold seltzer Fill a highball glass nearly to the top with rocks cracked from a solid ice block, or 1-inch ice cubes, or a frozen spear of ice. Combine the aperitif, vermouth, lime juice and syrup in the base of a cocktail shaker. Add a medium-sized ice shard, lightly smashed into bits, or one or two cubes of ice; close the shaker and whip until the ice is nearly all melted. Add about 2 ounces seltzer to the shaker, then empty its contents, including any lingering ice, into the glass. If the cocktail doesn’t rise nearly to the glass rim, add no more than about an ounce additional seltzer. Garnish with a pert bloom (or a lime wedge) and wellfounded relief.

Noodles

1/2 cup Champagne vinegar 1 tablespoon each fresh lemon, lime and orange juice 1 1/2 teaspoons minced shallot 1/2 teaspoon Dijon mustard 2 tablespoons mayonnaise 1 1/2 teaspoons honey Salt and pepper 3/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil Combine pears, wine, sugar, cinnamon sticks, star anise and 1 cup water in a medium saucepan. Bring to boil over mediumhigh heat. Cover, reduce heat to low and poach until pears are tender but not mushy, about 35 minutes. Let pears cool to room temperature, then cover and chill for at least several hours or up to overnight. Prepare vinaigrette: In a food processor, combine vinegar, citrus juices, shallot, mustard, mayo, honey and a pinch of salt and pepper. Pulse until smooth, about 30 seconds. With the machine running, add oil in a thin stream and process until emulsified. Taste and season with salt and pepper. Use immediately or store in an airtight container in the fridge for up to three days. Remove pears from

tools allow the creators to be compensated directly by their fans. Not all influencers have found online courses worthwhile, however. A year and a half ago, social media strategist Caitlin Jenco paid $200 to take an Instagram management course. “The information was generic and lacked value beyond what I could find on Google for free,” she said. Jenco, who has over 110,000 followers on TikTok, describes herself as “anti-course.” Instead of teaching online classes, she charges a monthly rate to consult with companies and individuals oneon-one. The fees range from $500 to $4,500, based on the clients’ needs. Sometimes she can answer questions in an email or text message. Other students require a more substantial review of things like the scripts for videos. “It’s very much tailored to where the creator is,” Jenco said. While students risk wasting money, the social media teachers are ultimately increasing their own competition. Bousquet, the influencer mentor, sees that as a benefit, with more people negotiating higher fees from sponsors. “I won’t have to fight with brands that don’t want to meet me at my rates because another influencer is OK doing it for free,’” she said.

Active time: 15 minutes | Total time: 25 minutes 2 servings Chinese sesame paste deep and nutty -and a spicy chili oil turn these simple noodles into something complex, savory and satisfying. If you can’t easily find the sesame paste, substitute tahini, and if you can’t easily find the black vinegar, use balsamic. The fun is in the choice of noodles: Mike Le and Stephanie Le, authors of “That Noodle Life,” suggest Shangxi planed noodles, ruffle-edged dried Chinese knife-cut noodles, but you can use any of your favorites. Italian mafaldine (akin to long, skinny lasagna noodles) and long fusilli (shaped like a stretched-out telephone cord) also work well here. If you don’t like your sesame noodles spicy, use hoisin sauce in place of the chili oil. Storage Notes: Refrigerate leftovers for up to 5 days. Where to Buy: Chinese sesame paste, black vinegar and Shangxi planed noodles can be found at well-stocked Asian supermarkets. 6 ounces long dried noodles, preferably curly or ruffled, such

as Shangxi planed noodles, mafaldine or long fusilli 2 tablespoons low-sodium soy sauce 2 tablespoons Chinese sesame paste (may substitute tahini) 1 1/2 tablespoons chili oil, preferably with chili flakes included, such as Chinese chili crisp 1 tablespoon toasted sesame oil 2 teaspoons Chinese black vinegar (may substitute balsamic vinegar) 2 scallions, trimmed and thinly sliced, for serving 2 tablespoons toasted sesame seeds, for serving Bring a large pot of water to a boil, and cook the noodles according to the package directions. Reserve ¼ cup of the noodle cooking water and drain well. While the pasta is cooking, in a large bowl whisk together the soy sauce, sesame paste, chili oil, sesame oil and black vinegar. Add the drained noodles to the sauce, tossing to coat them well. Loosen the sauce with some of the noodle cooking water, if needed. Divide among serving plates, sprinkle with the scallions and sesame seeds and serve warm. Nutrition information per serving (2 cups) | Calories: 537; Total Fat: 20 g; Saturated Fat: 2 g; Cholesterol: 0 mg; Sodium: 692 mg; Carbohydrates: 74 g; Dietary Fiber: 5 g; Sugar: 5 g; Protein: 14 g This analysis is an estimate based on available ingredients and this preparation. It should not substitute for a dietitian’s or nutritionist’s advice. Adapted from “That Noodle Life” by Mike Le and Stephanie Le (Workman Publishing, 2022).


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