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Fresh attacks hit Ukraine as Mariupol refuses Russian demands to surrender n Page A2
Bloody weekend in New York City with 28 people shot across the five boroughs n Page A2
STATE CHAMPIONS! Riders secure first Class B boys basketball title n Page B1
The Daily Mail Copyright 2021, Columbia-Greene Media Volume 230, No. 56
Serving Greene County since 1792
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TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2022
DA: Video key to Myers murder case By Ted Remsnyder Columbia-Greene Media
CATSKILL — The arrival of surveillance footage from the apartment of Catskill murder victim Scott Myers could be imminent, Greene County District Attorney Joseph Stanzione said Monday. A conference in the case of suspected murderer Carrie Weiser was held Monday in the courtroom of Greene County Judge Terry A. Wilhelm in Greene County Court in Catskill. Wilhelm adjourned the matter until April 25 as the prosecution awaits security footage from Myers’ 39 W. Bridge St. apartment that could shed
new light on his death on the evening of Nov. 27. Myers had installed security cameras in his apartment and state investigators have been attempting to crack the code on the encrypted footage since Myers’ death four months ago. “We don’t have the information pertaining to the videos yet,” Stanzione said on Monday. “That should be forthcoming this week. So basically our discovery is pretty much complete.” The defense and prosecution will hold another conference in Wilhelm’s courtroom next month after
the prosecution and defense have potentially examined the security camera footage. “Certainly by that date we should have any information pertaining to Carrie Weiser the video camera,” Stanzione said. “So the matter is rescheduled to April 25 and by that date everything should be complete with respect to the discovery process. Between now and then we should have received video footage and we’ll probably have sat down together (with the
death. The authorities believe that the duo left the restaurant and subsequently went down the street to Myers’ apartment, where Weiser allegedly stabbed the victim in the left side of his neck, which subsequently severed his carotid artery. Police believe that Myers then bled to death in a short period of time. Weiser made the 911 call at approximately 12:15 a.m. on Nov. 27 to report that Myers had been stabbed, police said. Weiser was still at the scene of the crime in Myers’ apartment when police arrived at the victim’s Bridge Street apartment.
defense) to review the video footage. Then we can report to the judge where we are with respect to the case.” Weiser, 32, was indicted by a grand jury Dec. 2 on a felony second-degree murder charge for the stabbing death of Myers, 68, on Nov. 27 in his Catskill apartment. Weiser was also charged with a misdemeanor count of criminal possession of a weapon. Stanzione said that at the upcoming conference on April 25 that a clearer picture of a trial timeline could come into view. Weiser and Myers ate dinner together at the Bridge Street restaurant Subversive on the evening of Myers’
Jewett youth group collects medical supplies for Ukraine
By Ted Remsnyder Columbia-Greene Media
JEWETT — Parishioners at St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Catholic Church have watched with dismay as the Russian war in Ukraine has raged on, and now a youth group is doing its part to help the Ukrainian people. See SUPPLIES A8
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
Volunteers from the Ukrainian American Youth Association of the Hudson Valley pack medical supplies at the St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Catholic Church in Jewett on Sunday for Ukraine.
Police: Burglary suspect left cellphone at scene By Bill Williams Columbia-Greene Media
SAUGERTIES — Police were able to identify the person who allegedly broke into a Saugerties mini-mart because the man left his personal belongings at the store, said Joseph A. Sinagra, Saugerties police chief. Michael S. Spiecker, 36, of Kingston was taken into custody later in the day, Sinagra said. On Friday, at about 2:30 a.m., police responded to the Sunoco gas station on Route 32 after a burglary alarm sounded. When police arrived, officers saw that the business had been broken into. A large rock had been thrown through the glass doors. The investigation also revealed the burglar had stolen cash, New York Lottery scratch-off tickets and several packs of cigarettes, Sinagra said. While examining the scene and before searching the area, officers located a cell phone and personal documents that belonged to Spiecker, Sinagra said.
After searching throughout the day, later on Friday, at 7:46 p.m., Spiecker was taken into custody by police. Spiecker was charged with thirddegree burglary, a Michael S. class D felony, fourth- Spiecker degree criminal mischief and petty larceny, both class A misdemeanors, Sinagra said. Spiecker was arraigned in Saugerties Town Justice Court and released on his own recognizance. Spiecker is scheduled to make his next court appearance on March 23, Sinagra said. According to New York Penal Law, a person is guilty of third-degree burglary when he knowingly enters or remains unlawfully in a building with intent to commit a crime therein. If found guilty in court, the sentence can range from probation to up to seven years in prison. The law also says that a person is
Index Obituaries ...................A6
Opinion .......................A4
Sports .........................B1
Local ...........................A5
Classified ................ B3-6
State/Nation ................A6
Comics/Advice ........ B7-8
guilty of fourth-degree criminal mischief when, having no right to do so, nor any reasonable ground to believe that he or she has such right, he or she intentionally damages property of
On the web www.HudsonValley360.com
Weather
Columbia-Greene Page A2 FOR HUDSON/CA FORECAST TODAY TONIGHT WED
Twitter Follow: @CatskillDailyMail Mostly sunny Mainly clear
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another person. If convicted in court, the sentence ranges from probation to a year in jail. The judge may also impose a fine, and order the defendant to pay restitution.
HIGH 52
LOW 30
Mostly cloudy, p.m. showers
46 35
MEDIA
Region ........................A3
FILE PHOTO
A Kingston man was charged with breaking into the Sunoco gas station on Route 32 in Saugerties on Friday.
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
A2 Tuesday, March 22, 2022
Weather FORECAST FOR HUDSON/CATSKILL
TODAY TONIGHT WED
THU
FRI
SAT
Fresh attacks hit Ukraine as Mariupol refuses Russian demand to surrender Patrick J. McDonnell and Jaweed Kaleem Los Angeles Times
Mostly Mostly Rain tapering cloudy; not as Mostly cloudy Mostly sunny Mainly clear cloudy, p.m. off showers cool
HIGH 52
46 35
LOW 30
48 46
57 44
54 36
Ottawa 39/23
Montreal 38/23
Massena 40/22
Bancroft 42/20
Ogdensburg 43/23
Peterborough 44/26
Plattsburgh 41/24
Malone Potsdam 38/20 40/23
Kingston 42/27
Watertown 41/26
Rochester 45/30
Utica 44/24
Batavia Buffalo 49/35 51/35
Albany 49/27
Syracuse 45/27
Catskill 52/30
Binghamton 44/27
Hornell 52/34
Burlington 41/25
Lake Placid 35/18
Hudson 51/29
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
0.03”
Low
Today 6:56 a.m. 7:10 p.m. none 9:17 a.m.
Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
Wed. 6:54 a.m. 7:11 p.m. 12:36 a.m. 9:55 a.m.
Moon Phases 53
Last
New
First
Full
Mar 25
Apr 1
Apr 9
Apr 16
36 YEAR TO DATE NORMAL
5.68 6.98
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2022
CONDITIONS TODAY AccuWeather.com UV Index™ & AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature®
2
3
4
1 28
33
38
41
5
4 45
4
47
4
49
49
3
2
1
49
46
44
8 a.m. 9 a.m. 10 a.m. 11 a.m. Noon 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 3 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 6 p.m. The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature is an exclusive index of effective temperature based on eight weather factors.
NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY Winnipeg 36/27
Seattle 61/48
Toronto 43/32
Billings 55/35
New York Chicago 59/40 54/47 Detroit 49/41 Washington 66/47
Minneapolis 47/35 Denver 42/27
San Francisco 74/52
Montreal 38/23
Kansas City 61/36
Los Angeles 85/63
Atlanta 74/61
El Paso 56/39 Chihuahua 67/35
Houston 76/45
Miami 81/75
Monterrey 87/51
ALASKA HAWAII
Anchorage 32/20
-10s
-0s
0s
showers t-storms
Honolulu 82/72
Fairbanks 13/0
Hilo 81/69
Juneau 40/35
10s rain
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
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 46/30 sn 32/20 pc 74/61 pc 58/47 pc 66/44 pc 55/35 pc 76/59 c 62/39 pc 49/32 s 75/63 c 69/56 c 74/59 c 37/26 c 54/47 r 61/57 r 57/48 c 60/54 c 58/44 c 42/27 c 54/36 r 49/41 r 52/30 s 82/72 sh 76/45 t 57/52 r 61/36 sh 75/59 c 76/53 s
Wed. Hi/Lo W 54/32 pc 40/27 pc 75/48 t 53/49 r 58/54 r 65/45 s 69/43 pc 69/43 s 45/36 pc 78/64 t 74/54 t 71/58 t 50/34 s 57/38 r 66/45 t 63/49 t 66/49 t 62/40 pc 53/33 s 42/31 c 55/48 r 49/35 pc 83/71 sh 67/42 s 62/43 sh 43/34 r 74/47 r 76/54 s
City Little Rock Los Angeles Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Norfolk Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland Portland Providence Raleigh Richmond Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Francisco Savannah Seattle Tampa Washington, DC
Today Hi/Lo W 64/46 t 85/63 s 81/75 pc 48/42 r 47/35 r 71/58 r 80/56 t 59/40 pc 69/52 pc 45/36 sh 43/32 r 85/69 pc 63/44 pc 82/58 s 58/48 c 43/26 s 69/51 pc 52/30 s 72/56 pc 73/50 pc 83/54 s 63/51 r 53/35 s 74/52 s 76/63 pc 61/48 c 88/73 s 66/47 pc
Wed. Hi/Lo W 53/39 pc 87/62 s 85/76 pc 47/36 r 41/32 c 67/44 pc 68/49 pc 49/43 r 69/63 t 53/33 c 42/30 c 89/70 c 52/46 r 81/55 s 62/50 t 46/34 pc 58/42 r 47/37 pc 75/63 t 67/64 t 81/51 s 55/39 sh 58/42 s 65/49 pc 78/61 t 54/38 r 88/72 pc 60/57 r
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Saugerties Senior Housing
LVIV, Ukraine — As the besieged city of Mariupol rejected a demand to surrender, Russian forces mounted attacks across Ukraine overnight and into Monday, including a missile strike that officials said hit a Kyiv shopping center and killed at least eight people. With fears growing that Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine is turning into a bloody war of attrition, Mariupol leaders rebuffed the Russian proposal -which offered evacuation routes for Ukrainian troops if they left by Monday morning -- even after the reported bombing of a local art school where officials said hundreds of people had taken shelter. Mariupol’s mayor swiftly ruled out giving in to the enemy troops that have surrounded his city, which has become a symbol of Ukrainian suffering and destruction. Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk also dismissed the Russian demand. “There can be no talk of any surrender, laying down of arms,” she told the Ukrainian Pravda news organization. In an overnight address, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the bombing of the art school, where he said 400 people had taken refuge, was further proof against Russian claims that it’s not targeting civilians. “There were no military positions,” Zelenskyy said. “They are under the debris. We do not know how many are alive at the moment.” The bombing, in a war-torn city where few journalists are present and internet connections have become scant, could not be independently verified. Ukraine officials have also accused Russians of forcing thousands of Mariupol residents to be deported to Russia. The allegation has also not been independently confirmed. Nearly a month after the Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine began, more than 3.3 million people — about 1 in 13 — have fled the nation, according to the United Nations. Millions more have been internally displaced, with many jamming trains and buses bound for western Ukraine, which has seen significantly fewer attacks than the east, where the war began. The U.N. reported Monday that more than 900 civilians have died, though the real count is likely much higher. With the capital of Kyiv still under Ukrainian control, the Russian military has resorted over the last week to shelling residential areas outside the center of the city, with missiles regularly hitting high-rise apartments and commercial strips. Some are direct impacts from Russian launches. Damage to at least one high-rise building last
ARIS MESSINIS/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES/TNS
A man stands looking at the burning and destroyed Retroville shopping mall after a Russian attack on the northwest of the capital Kyiv on March 21, 2022. - At least six people were killed in the overnight bombing of a shopping centre in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, an AFP journalist said, with rescuers combing the wreckage for other victims.
week was the result of a Ukrainian attempt to intercept fire. Late Sunday, the Ukrainian emergency service reported that missiles struck a shopping center in the Podilskyi district, northwest of the central Kyiv, partially destroying it. At least eight people were killed, according to the Ukrainian emergency service. Mayor Vitali Klitschko said that houses were also hit. “Several explosions in the Podilskyi district of the capital. In particular, according to information available at the moment, shells hit some houses and one of the shopping centers. Rescuers, medics and police are already there,” Klitschko said on his Telegram channel. The shopping center, called Retroville, had fast food restaurants -- including a KFC and McDonalds -- a movie theater and a gym, among other businesses. According to a Facebook post, it had shut down last month as the war began. It’s unclear if it was operating this week. Amid the barrage of attacks, the city will undergo another 35-hour curfew, from 8 p.m. Monday until 7 a.m. Wednesday. A similar curfew was imposed last week at what Klitschko called a “dangerous moment” for the capital. Despite the daily shelling in Kyiv, where many embassies closed or evacuated staff last month, one European nation said Monday that it would relaunch its presence in the city. Prime Minister Janez Jansa of Slovenia, which had evacuated diplomats in February, said several would return to Kyiv. Jansa, who was among a delegation of European leaders to travel to Kyiv on a daring visit last week, wrote on Twitter that the workers volunteered to go back because the nation “needs direct diplomatic support.” In the western city of Lviv,
a relative safe haven from the violence, life continued at a normal pace Monday despite fears that Friday’s bombing of a decommissioned aircraft repair facility adjacent to the city airport augured a new front for Russian attacks. It was the first strike within the city limits, and authorities said one person was injured. On Sunday, people crammed the streets of Lviv, where the population has increased dramatically because of a flood of displaced people. Beneath sunny skies, cafes and parks were packed. But city officials continue to regularly sound air sirens and warn residents to remain vigilant. The White House said President Joe Biden would speak Monday with leaders of Britain, France, Germany and Italy on the Ukrainian crisis. On Wednesday, he is scheduled to be in Brussels, where an emergency meeting of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization will be held to discuss the war. One issue expected to be on the agenda is a proposal from Poland, a NATO member state, to send an international peacekeeping mission to Ukraine. NATO has dispatched similar missions after conflicts elsewhere, but they have not taken place while war was underway. Such a move would also no doubt be seen as provocative by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is bent on preventing any Ukrainian association with NATO. On Thursday, Biden is scheduled to attend a European Council summit and a G-7 meeting on the topic of increasing sanctions against Russia. On Friday, Biden will travel to Poland, which is across the eastern border of Ukraine. More than half the refugees to leave Ukraine have fled to Poland. White House Press Secretary
Bloody weekend in New York City with 28 people shot across the five boroughs Rocco Parascandola New York Daily News
NEW YORK — Cops assigned to the NYPD’s new anti-gun unit have their work cut out for them -- nearly 30 people were shot in the city over the weekend, according to preliminary statistics. Through 4 p.m. Sunday, 28 people were shot, two fatally, in 23 different incidents, the statistics show. And it appears a 29th person was shot in the Bronx at 9:20 p.m. There were also five incidents in which shots were
fired but no one was struck, according to the stats. And there were six stabbings, one of them fatal. Mayor Adams Monday afternoon plans to visit an NYPD public housing command to thank the Neighborhood Safety Unit assigned there. Last Monday, the new anti-gun unit’s first phase was rolled out, with officers in 25 precincts across the city tasked with one focus -- to get weapons off the streets and drive down soaring gun
Jen Psaki said Biden’s European visit “will be focused on continuing to rally the world in support of the Ukrainian people and against President Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.” Zelenskyy has called on NATO to enforce a no-fly zone over Ukraine. Leaders of NATO member states, including Biden, have refused. They say a no-fly zone would with near certainty result in direct military confrontation with Russian forces, which the U.S. wants to avoid to prevent provoking a bigger war. The U.S. and other NATO member states have pledged billions of dollars in aid and weapons to Ukraine. While the death toll continues to climb, Zelenskyy has said he wants to enter direct negotiations with Putin. “It’s time to meet, time to talk,” Zelenskyy said over the weekend. The Kremlin has not replied to his request. U.S. officials have said they support the attempt at negotiation, which would follow video meetings that representatives from the warring sides held last week, but suggested that expectations are low. “The Russians have not leaned into any possibility for a negotiated and diplomatic solution,” Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N., said Sunday said on CNN. “But we’re still hopeful that the Ukrainian effort will end this brutal war.” (McDonnell reported from Lviv and Kaleem from London. Staff writer Marcus Yam contributed reporting from Kyiv, Ukraine.) (C)2022 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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.
violence that has plagued the city the past two years. According to citywide crime statistics through March 13, murders have dipped so far this year, to 76 from 82 at the same time last year. But there had been 217 shooting victims by March 13, up 11% from the 196 incidents during the same period last year. (C)2022 New York Daily News. Visit at nydailynews.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
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CALENDAR EDITOR’S NOTE: Most events and meetings are cancelled due to the virus outbreak. Please call ahead to confirm.
Tuesday, March 22 n Catskill Town Planning Board 6:30
p.m. Robert C. Antonelli Senior Center, 15 Academy St., Catskill 518-943-2141
Wednesday, March 23 n Athens Village Board 6:30 p.m. Ath-
ens Fire Department, 39 Third St., Athens Consult the village website for updates the day of the meeting n Catskill Town Zoning Board of Appeals 6 p.m. Town Hall, 439 Main St., Catskill 518-943-2141 n Catskill Village Board of Trustees 6:30 p.m. Robert C. Antonelli Senior Center, 15 Academy St., Catskill 518-9433830
Thursday, March 24 n Coxsackie Village Board 7 p.m.
Village Hall, 119 Mansion St., Coxsackie 518-731-2718
Monday, March 28 n Catskill Village Planning Board 7
p.m. Robert C. Antonelli Senior Center, 15 Academy St., Catskill 518-943-3830
Thursday, March 31
Questar III BOCES Superintendent Gladys Cruz elected Association president-elect CASTLETON — Gladys Cruz, district superintendent of Questar III BOCES in Castleton, has been elected as the 2022-23 president-elect of AASA, The School Superintendents Association, the nation’s premier organization representing more than 13,000 public school superintendents nationwide. “When I speak of a true champion for children, the name Gladys Cruz immediately comes to mind. On behalf of the AASA family, it is an honor to congratulate her as the next president-elect of our organization,” said Daniel A. Domenech, executive director, AASA. “A longtime stalwart in public education, Superintendent
Cruz has worked diligently to meet the pressing challenges of not only the students in her own region but students across the country. Her track record as a bold and innovative leader speaks for itself. I look forward to working with her in her new role.” “We must continue to focus on putting students first with everything we do individually as superintendents and collectively in this association,” said Cruz. “In my role (as a member of AASA’s Executive Committee), I am proud to work with 22 superintendents — urban, suburban, rural, rich, poor, average wealth, high needs, average needs, and low needs districts
Gladys I. Cruz
alike. This allows me to look at opportunities and issues from a wide lens. I will help build
consensus and focus on meeting the needs of our members and students. After close to four decades in many roles in public education, my commitment is larger than ever.” Cruz serves as a commissioner of AASA’s Learning 2025 Network: A National Commission on Student CenteredEquity-Focused Education. She also serves as a lead teacher of the AASA Aspiring Superintendents Academy® for Latino and Latina Leaders and a mentor in the AASA National Superintendent Certification Program®. Cruz is a member of the New York State Council of School Superintendents. Cruz earned her doctorate
in curriculum and instruction from the University at Albany. She earned two master’s degrees—one in curriculum development and instructional technology from UAlbany and one in bilingual education from the Universidad del Turabo in Caguas, Puerto Rico. She and other newly elected AASA governance members will begin their terms on July 1. Shari Camhi, superintendent of the Baldwin Union Free School District in Baldwin and Cruz will be sworn in as president and president-elect, respectively, in July, at a summer meeting of the AASA Governing Board.
Greene County Solid Waste Management investing in sustainable management of food waste countertop compost
n Coxsackie Village Board Budget
Work Session 6 p.m. Village Hall, 119 Mansion St., Coxsackie 518-731-2718
Monday, April 4 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 Organizational Meeting 7 p.m. Village Hall, 119 Mansion St., Coxsackie 518-731-2718 n Greene County Board of Electrical Examiners 1 p.m. at the Greene County Office Building, 411 Main St., 4th Floor, Room 469, Catskill
Tuesday, April 5
CATSKILL — Greene County Solid Waste Management (GCSWM) is investing in the sustainable management of food waste through a launch of a pilot program, Help Greene Grow Green, to reduce waste going to landfills. This program will initially be available at the Catskill transfer station only but open to all residents of Greene County. Depending upon the demand, other county transfer stations may be added to the program. Currently, GCSWM is taking advantage of a grant
application through the Department of Environmental Conservation for 50% reimbursement of the purchase of a food waste composting machine and special compostable bags. Help Greene Grow Green seeks to reduce food waste and the impact it has on our environment. Greene County Solid Waste Management has purchased the EcoRich machine to turn food waste into finished compost. This machine, which is easy to use and odor and pest-free,
will help reduce food waste. Once each cycle of material is broken down compost will be made available. Residents are encouraged to bring a bucket from home and get some for your own personal use! As part of the program residents will be provided free 100% compostable bags to store and transport their food waste to the Catskill Transfer station at no charge. Bags can be picked up at the Catskill Transfer Station, 183 NY-385 in Catskill 7:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday,
Friday and Saturday. The bags can also be picked up as early as April 4 and residents can drop off the bags for composting on April 25. The date to pick-up the compost will depend on availability/demand of the program. Don’t have a container to help store and transport your food waste? Purchase a countertop compost bin for $5 at the Catskill Transfer Station. “The Legislature is committed to reducing the amount of waste being shipped out of Greene County,” stated
Vice-Chairman Matthew Luvera. “This new composting machine will do just that for residents and in the next phase for businesses.” “We are excited to provide solutions to not only help the environment but reduce the amount of money we pay to send garbage out of county to a landfill,” stated Paul Vosburgh, Director of Solid Waste. “This will also provide a way to give back to the community through the use of composting for home gardening.”
n Durham Town Board workshop
meeting 7:30 p.m. Town Hall, 7309 Route 81, East Durham
GREENE COUNTY POLICE BLOTTER
Thursday, April 7 n Ashland Town Planning Board 6
p.m. Town Hall, 12094 Route 23, Ashland n Coxsackie Village Board Budget Work Session 6 p.m. Village Hall, 119 Mansion St., Coxsackie 518-731-2718
Monday, April 11 n Ashland Town Board 7:30 p.m.
Town Hall, 12094 Route 23, Ashland n Coxsackie Village Board 7 p.m. Village Hall, 119 Mansion St., Coxsackie 518-731-2718
Tuesday, April 12 n Coxsackie Village Historic Preserva-
tion Committee 6 p.m. Village Hall, 119 Mansion St., Coxsackie 518-731-2718
Editor’s note: A charge is not a conviction. All persons listed are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Charges can be amended or dismissed.
STATE POLICE n Thomas P. Connolly, 26,
of Yonkers, Awas arrested March 12 at 10:43 p.m. in Cairo and charged with driving while intoxicated with a blood alcohol content of .08 percent first offense and driving while
intoxicated first offense, both unclassified misdemeanors. He was issued an appearance ticket. n Ivan Serrano, 45, of Kingston was arrested March 18 at 11:06 a.m. in Cairo and charged with class A misdemeanor petty larceny. He was issued an appearance ticket. n Kyle J. Weiss, 24, of Catskill was arrested March 18 at 8:07 p.m. and charged with class E felony aggravated unlicensed operation of a
Wednesday, April 13 n Athens Town Zoning Board of Ap-
peals 7 p.m. Athens Town Hall, 2 First St., Athens n Athens Village Board 6:30 p.m. Athens Fire Department, 39 Third St., Athens Consult the village website for updates the day of the meeting n Jewett Town Board 7 p.m. Jewett Municipal Building, 3547 County Route 23C, Jewett
Thursday, April 14 n Coxsackie Village Board Budget Work Session 6 p.m. Village Hall, 119 Mansion St., Coxsackie 518-731-2718
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Monday, April 18
Tuesday, April 19 n Athens Village Planning Board 6:30 p.m. Village Hall, Meeting Room, 2 First St., Athens 518-945-1551 n Durham Town Board 7:30 p.m. Town Hall, 7309 Route 81, East Durham n Hunter Town Board 7 p.m. Town Hall, 5748 Route 23A, Tannersville
Wednesday, April 20 n Catskill Library Board 6:45 p.m. at
either the Catskill Library, 1 Franklin St., Catskill or Palenville Library, 3303 Route 23A, Palenville
Thursday, April 21 n Coxsackie Village Planning Board 6
p.m. Village Hall, 119 Mansion St., Coxsackie 518-731-2718
Tuesday, April 26 n Catskill Central School District Board of Education regular business/ vote on BOCES annual budget and BOCES board members 6:30 p.m. CHS Library, 341 West Main St., Catskill 518-943-2300
Wednesday, April 27 n Athens Village Board 6:30 p.m. Athens Fire Department, 39 Third St., Athens Consult the village website for updates the day of the meeting
drug related paraphernalia, and two counts class A misdemeanor of criminal possession of a controlled substance in the seventh degree. She was issued an appearance ticket. n Jason R. McDevitt, 20, of Jewett was arrested March 19 at 5:44 a.m. in Hunter and charged with and charged with driving while intoxicated with a blood alcohol content of .08 percent first offense and driving while intoxicated first offense, both unclassified
misdemeanors. He was issued an appearance ticket. n Maceo J. Jones, 69, of Catskill was arrested March 20 at 2:25 a.m. in Catskill and charged with three count class A misdemeanor criminal possession of a controlled substance seventh degree and one count class D felony of fifth degree criminal possession of cocaine, a controlled substance. He was issued an appearance ticket.
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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 Greenville Town Board 7 p.m. Town Hall, 11159 Route 32, Pioneer Building, Greenville
motor vehicle first offense, class U misdemeanor driving a motor vehicle with suspended registration, class U misdemeanor driving while intoxicated first offense, and class U misdemeanor aggravated driving while intoxicated with no priors. He was issued an appearance ticket. n Rachel M. Corsi, 36, of Hudson was arrested March 19 at 2:15 a.m. in Catskill and charged with class A misdemeanor of manufacturing
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Find us at: HudsonValley360.com St. Patrick’s Cemetery Clean Up These rules and regulations are put in place for the safety of our visitors and staff, and to keep our cemetery beautiful for all. Thank you for your understanding. Decoration clean-up for our cemetery will begin on March 28, 2022. Lot owners are requested to remove any Fall or Winter decorations they wish to save before March 28, 2022. Fresh cut flowers in a floral cone or basket are always permitted, provided they are in good condition. Artificial flower saddles secured on top of the monuments are permitted. All other decorations will be removed during the cleanup. During the cleanup cemetery staff removes and disposes of all items not permitted from graves. Groundskeepers are instructed to leave any permitted new seasonal decorations that appear to be newly placed and are in accordance with the current cemetery Rules and Regulations.
Items not permitted include, but are not limited to: Glass urns Corner posts Glass of any kind Flags and flag holders Toys or stuffed animals Solar lights Plantings of any kind
Flower planters, boxes & pots Trellises Wooden or plastic crosses Shepherd hooks Crushed stone or wood chips
Items not permitted or in disrepair may be removed and discarded at any time by cemetery staff. For more information please visit our website at https://stpatrickathenscatskill.org/ for more information regarding our cemetery decoration regulations.
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COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA • THE DAILY MAIL
A4 Tuesday, March 22, 2022
THE DAILY MAIL Established 1792 Published Tuesday through Saturday by Columbia-Greene Media
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OUR VIEW
An absolute necessity The latest development in the long-running Columbia County broadband saga is the most promising sign in a long time that the wait for four communities is nearing an end. A bipartisan federal omnibus spending bill signed into law by President Joe Biden includes more than $829,000 for broadband relief in the towns of Ghent, Canaan, New Lebanon and Austerlitz. To be clear, though, county officials are waiting to learn how the funds will be apportioned because of a complicated set of rules and regulations. The four towns do not have a definitive time as to when they will receive the funds. If all goes according to plan, the towns that issued requests for proposals at the end of 2021 for various
broadband carriers will find out the responding companies. The proposals will be evaluated and meetings will be scheduled with representatives of the carriers so the towns get the best value they can for the money. Construction contracts with carriers will likely be finalized within a month or two. The length of time it takes to complete the construction will depend on the time needed to obtain the permits needed to install the poles that will carry the fiber optic cables. “It would be nice to finish it by the end of this year; that would be very optimistic,” said David Berman, co-chairman of Connect Columbia, a community group working to bring broadband access to all of Columbia County. “I
would assume we would finish it sometime in 2023, but the goal is to finish it this year.” The pandemic taught us that broadband access is an absolute necessity. Remote learning left us students who did not have access to education. Employees who could not go to their workplaces lacked access to their jobs and in many instances, lost their jobs or were laid off. When it came to shut-ins and the elderly who could not visit doctors and had no virtual alternative, it became a matter of life and death. Connecting hundreds of residents and businesses to internet service the rest of us take for granted has to be done, and done as cleanly and quickly as possible.
ANOTHER VIEW
Justice Thomas’ bias on Trump destroys Supreme Court integrity. He must recuse St.Louis Post-Dispatch (TNS)
Justice Clarence Thomas’ wife, Ginni Thomas, has made clear her belief that the November 2020 election was stolen. She attended Donald Trump’s Stop the Steal rally on Jan. 6, 2021, but claims she left before Trump spoke to the crowd and directed his supporters toward the Capitol. The premise behind the rally was clear: to assert that Joe Biden was not elected fairly and that Trump was the rightful winner. Such assertions have been debunked repeatedly in state election audits, and close to 60 court decisions have gone against Trump’s challenges. Ginni Thomas, however, made clear she did not respect those court decisions and attended a rally whose sole purpose was to keep Trump in power. She insists she had no role in the insurrection and that her political views don’t influence her husband. Given her ongoing public activity on Trump’s behalf and her husband’s demonstrated bias favoring Trump, it’s time for Justice Thomas to formally recuse himself from all future cases involving Trump and the insurrection. His hospitalization for flu-like symptoms on Sunday, while important, do not eliminate the conflict-of-interest issues at he heart of his wife’s political activism. No one can force a sitting justice to recuse, but many do it anyway — specifically because they do not want to create a public perception that personal bias sways their judgment on the bench. Justice Thomas and his wife have every right to support Trump and call for his return to the Oval Office. But since the high court is actively involved in deciding Trump’s political future (if not his criminality), Justice Thomas can only damage the court’s reputation by being present.
In an interview with the conservative Washington Beacon, Ginni Thomas acknowledged her presence at the Jan. 6 rally. “I was disappointed and frustrated that there was violence that happened following a peaceful gathering of Trump supporters on the Ellipse,” she stated. Yes, a peaceful gathering of Trump supporters carrying bear spray, clubs, zip ties, a gallows and military armor who were there to declare that since their candidate lost, America’s election system is corrupt. It’s highly doubtful the Thomases don’t discuss their daily experiences around the dinner table. What’s certain is that, in January, the Supreme Court ruled on whether Congress had the right to subpoena White House records concerning the 2020 election certification and the insurrection that disrupted it. Trump asked the court to rule against Congress. Eight justices ruled against Trump. The sole vote in his favor: Clarence Thomas. Chief Justice John Roberts once openly chided Trump when the president asserted that the American federal judicial system was biased, depending on the political affiliation of the judge hearing a case. That’s not the case, Roberts said, insisting that the judiciary is jealously independent, and an “independent judiciary is something we should all be thankful for.” Thomas and his wife are working overtime to undermine that independence. In the process, they are destroying the court’s credibility. Which is why Justice Thomas must recuse.
How low will the GOP go in taking on Ketanji Brown Jackson? Josh Hawley lets us know. WASHINGTON — How desperate can you get? This desperate: Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., is pushing the argument that Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson is dangerously soft on sex offenders, child pornographers in particular. “I’ve noticed an alarming pattern when it comes to Judge Jackson’s treatment of sex offenders, especially those preying on children,” Hawley tweeted. “I’m concerned that this [is] a record that endangers our children.” Right, beware America: Jackson, mother of two daughters, would be dangerous to your children’s health. In the cherry-picked, context-free Hawley-verse, Jackson has been lying in wait to foist this child-endangerment scheme on the country since her law school days. Count one is her writing as a student editor on the Harvard Law Review, about sex-offender registries, DNA databanks and civil-commitment laws that states were busy enacting. In her article, Jackson grappled with the tension between constitutional limits on permissible punishment and the community’s need for self-protection. Given conservatives’ focus on analyzing the text of a law rather than divining lawmakers’ intent, you might have thought that Hawley would cheer Jackson’s argument that in assessing the constitutionality of sex offender laws, “[c] ourts have relied too heavily on the legislatures’ intent.” But no. Instead, Hawley wrenches a few lines out of context. “As far back as her time in law school, Judge Jackson has questioned making convicts register as sex offenders — saying it leads to ‘stigmatization and ostracism.’ “ Hello, senator? That is in a section headlined “The Critics” that outlines the views of the statute’s opponents. Hawley might just have easily quoted from the previous section — “commitment legislation literally immobilizes dangerous sexual deviants and, thus, presumably promotes both immediate and long-term public safety.” It is fair to say that law-student Jackson came to the subject with a perspective sympathetic to civil liberties concerns — referring, for example, to “the current climate of fear, hatred and revenge associated with the release of convicted
WASHINGTON POST
RUTH
MARCUS sex criminals.” It’s out of line to argue, as Hawley does, that Jackson has been “advocating” for “letting child porn offenders off the hook for their appalling crimes” since law school. Count two against Jackson is her work on the U.S. Sentencing Commission. “It gets worse,” Hawley tweeted. “As a member of the U.S. Sentencing Commission, Judge Jackson advocated for drastic change in how the law treats sex offenders by eliminating the existing mandatory minimum sentences for child porn.” This is cleverly phrased. Jackson didn’t argue for eliminating mandatory minimum sentences for child porn. She — and all the other members of the Sentencing Commission, Republican and Democrat — said that the mandatory minimum for receiving child porn should be reviewed, hardly a “drastic change.” The law distinguishes between possession of child pornography (no mandatory minimum) and receipt of child pornography (five-year minimum). That makes no sense in the current technological universe, in which possession almost always involves receipt, through the Internet. Consequently, the Sentencing Commission recommended in 2012 “that Congress align the statutory penalties for receipt and possession” of child pornography — and, if it wanted to keep a mandatory minimum, make it less than five years. The underlying issue was whether the existing guidelines were unduly stringent given the increasing use of computers to share large numbers of images. Because of changes in technology, four of the six factors that generated longer recommended sentences “are now being applied routinely to most offenders” and consequently result in “overly severe guideline ranges for some offenders.” The final count against Jackson involves how she, in
Hawley’s assessment, “put her troubling views into action. In every single child porn case for which we can find records, Judge Jackson deviated from the federal sentencing guidelines in favor of child porn offenders.” Sounds terrible, right? Except because the guidelines are so outdated and therefore unfair, that’s what judges do in almost every case - 70 percent according to the latest statistics. According to data compiled by the U.S. Sentencing Commission, judges imposed below-guidelines sentences in nearly 80 percent of child pornography cases in the District of Columbia, where Jackson was a trial court judge before being elevated to the appeals court. In Missouri, Hawley’s home state, judges imposed sentences below the guidelines in more than 77 percent of cases. Douglas Berman, an expert on sentencing policy at Ohio State University, reviewed Jackson’s sentences in child pornography cases and pronounced them “not at all out of the ordinary.” Hawley’s attack is part of a broader Republican barrage seeking to portray Jackson as soft on crime (she was a public defender) and supportive of terrorists (she advocated for Guantánamo Bay detainees as a public defender and in private practice). Such representation, of course, is in the finest tradition of American lawyering; its necessity is enshrined in the Constitution. But now we are reduced to this kind of smarm from the Republican National Committee, recycling Hawley. “A pattern of advocating for terrorists AND child predators,” deputy rapid response director Kyle Martinsen emailed reporters. “What other criminals is Ketanji Brown Jackson an advocate for?” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell didn’t stoop quite that low, but close enough: “Her supporters look at her résumé and deduce a special empathy for criminals,” he said. Funny, I look at her résumé and deduce a special empathy for the Constitution. If only that were more widely shared. Ruth Marcus’ email address is ruthmarcus@washpost.com.
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Tuesday, March 22, 2022 A5
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA • THE DAILY MAIL
BRIEFS
Spring is in the headlines this week By Dick Brooks For Columbia-Greene Media
Spring has finally come to the Hudson Valley. I knew it was going to, it usually does, but this winter has seemed to go on forever. I am so eager for the warming time to come after what seems like months of below freezing weather, I went looking for signs of spring. A week Into March I shoveled my way to our crocus bed through the snow, broke through the ice crust, pawed through 5 or 6 inches of snow, chopped through 5 inches of permafrost, chiseled a crocus bulb out of the ground, placed it in the microwave for a minute or so to thaw it enough so that I could cut it in two and sure enough, there was a little green shoot starting to appear. It really is spring! There are other sure signs of spring starting to appear. Sap buckets are starting to show up around the area. I’ve been past a couple of areas where the folks are serious about gathering nature’s sweet stuff, dozens of pails, buckets, old milk jugs and yards of blue plastic tubing hanging in the woods. It’s a lot of work but the rewards are mighty tasty. One site I went past made me smile, there in the front yard were two coffee cans hanging from a large tree, a little girl was peeking into one of them while dad stood there, a bit
WHITTLING AWAY
DICK
BROOKS and brace in hand and a proud look on his face. I wondered to myself how long it would be before someone told him that the large tree was an oak. Last Saturday during the most recent snowfall I saw a pair of robins in the berry tree in our front yard, they didn’t look happy, fluffed up as snowflakes fell around them. The female was the unhappier of the two and seemed to be giving the male a piece of her mind. The male just sat there, snow building up on his head, shoulders hunched and took it. It’s amazing how animal behavior mimics human behavior sometimes. Today I heard the first true sign of spring. It was a sunny warm day and I heard the first thumping sound of a Harley Davidson cruising past the house. Meanwhile I was worried that if the recent snowfall didn’t melt the Easter Bunny would be coming on snow
shoes dragging a sled full of eggs behind him. I should know by now that the four seasons around here are — Almost Winter, Winter, Still Winter and Summer. I’m hoping that summer comes on a Saturday this year, if I remember right, it was on a Wednesday last year and I missed it. Thought for the week — I was given this list of real headlines recently. They are just too good not to pass along: Something Went Wrong in Jet Crash, Expert Says; Police Begin Campaign to Run Down Jaywalkers; Iraqi Head Seeks Arms; Panda Mating fails, Veterinarian Takes Over; Teacher Strikes Idle Kids; Miners Refuse to Work After Death; Juvenile Court to Try Shooting Defendant; War Dims Hope for Peace; Cold Wave Linked to Temperatures; Red Tape Holds up New Bridges; Man Struck by Lightning Faces Battery Charge; New Study of Obesity Looks for Larger Test Group; Astronaut Takes Blame for Gas in Spacecraft; Kids Make Nutritious Snacks; Local High School Dropouts Cut in Half; and finally — Hospitals are Sued by 7 Foot Doctors. Until next week, may you and yours be happy and well. Reach Dick at whittle12124@yahoo.com.
CGHS/SPCA announces March adoption fees will be sponsored HUDSON — All adoption fees will be sponsored during the month of March at the Columbia-Greene Humane Society/SPCA (CGHS/SPCA). In an effort to find forever homes for all the animals at CGHS/SPCA, the shelter’s adoption fees will be waived
for the entire month of March. Normal adoption fees are $175 for dogs and $75 for cats. The adoption fees will be sponsored by a volunteer of CGHS/ SPCA. Currently, CGHS/SPCA has a great selection of cats, kittens, dogs, rabbits, and guinea pigs.
Potential adopters are encouraged to fill out an adoption application online to be pre-approved for adoptions at cghs.org. For more information, email the shelter by email at info@cghs.org or by phone at 518-828-6044 ext. 100.
Writers in the Mountains presents poetry workshop ROXBURY — Writers in the Mountains (WIM) presents The Animals in Our Lives, a six-week poetry workshop with Lynn Domina, April 5 through May 10. The class will be held online 6-8 p.m. Tuesdays. Once they register and pay, participants will be given instructions on how to join the class. Remember that gerbil you had as a child, how you took him outside one morning, how he ran off, and how anxious you were until you found him? Or think about that hummingbird you saw whirring outside your window last summer — what metaphors could you use to describe that hummingbird? Or, how is the
hummingbird a metaphor for you and your life? When you hear the word “animal,” do you first think about all of the animals that are gone from our lives through extinction? In this workshop, we’ll write poems in response to animals — the cuddly and the fierce, the awesome and the ugly, those here now and those here no more. We’ll focus particularly on how concrete imagery and figurative language can improve our craft. The instructor will provide optional prompts as well as many sample poems. Domina is the author of numerous books, including two collections of poetry, Corporal Works and Framed
Looking For Free Recycled Papers? Useful for Pets, Packing, Crafts, etc. Call 518-828-1616 Ext 2413 We will arrange a time to meet. We are typically available Mon - Fri 8:30am - 3:30pm 364 Warren St.Unit 1, Hudson, NY
in Silence. Her recent poetry appears or is forthcoming in The Alaska Quarterly Review, The Museum of Americana, The New England Review, Stone Canoe, and many other periodicals and anthologies. After living for many years in Delhi, she moved to Marquette, Michigan in 2015. She currently serves as head of the English department at Northern Michigan University and as Creative Writing Editor for The Other Journal. Read more at www.lynndomina.com. To register for this class, email writersinthemountains@ gmail.com. To register online, visit writersinthemountains. org. Class fee is $120. Registration deadline is March 22.
We want to hear from you. To send information to be included in Briefs, email to editorial@thedailymail.net; or mail to Briefs: The Daily Mail, Unit 1, 364 Warren St., Hudson, NY 12534. For information, call 315-661-2490.
COXSACKIE-ATHENS ROTARY CLUB STUDENT OF THE MONTH
COMING UP ASHLAND — The Windham Rotary, through their foundation, The Windham Rotary Foundation, is hosting the Cancer Patient Aid Car Show Aug. 14 at the Ashland Town Park, 12187 Route 23, Ashland. Pre-registration is $10 now through April 15. Day of show registration is $15. The show is will be held rain or shine. For information, call 518-734-7303 ext. 2 or 518-291-0883 or https://www.facebook.com/ events/676104473772374. Pre-registration forms can be printed off the GCWL website at http://greenecountywomensleague.com/2022/01/ cancer-patient-aid-carshow-2/
MARCH 24 HUNTER — The Mountain Top Historical society presents “Three Extraordinary Ordinary Women of the Mountain Top” at 7 p.m. March 24 via Zoom. In celebration of Women’s History Month, join the Mountain Top Historical Society for an evening on Zoom to celebrate three exceptional Mountain Top women: Justine Hommel, Hunter Historian for three decades and co-founder of the MTHS; Bernadine Wesley, engineer and civil rights activist, as well as a member of the Hunter Planning Board for 10 years; and Sidonia Palace, managing editor of the Windham Journal for 28 years and a community volunteer extraordinaire. Deborah Allen, Johanna Titus and Cyndi LaPierre will speak about these three Mountain Top women from very different backgrounds whose leadership, accomplishments, and legacy helped to make the Mountain Top what it is today. Admission is free. Register in advance for this webinar at mths.org/events. HUDSON — Community members are invited to participate in an engaging in a discussion about Ukraine’s history and culture 12:301:30 p.m. March 24 via Zoom. Distinguished guests include Very Reverend Dr. Ivan Kaszczak, pastor of the Holy Trinity Ukrainian Catholic Church in Kerhonkson, NY; and Father Janusz Jedrychowski of St. Nicholas Ukrainian Catholic Church in Hudson, NY. The discussion is presented as part of the College’s Western Civilizations and U.S. History classes, and is facilitated by Associate Professor of History Nicole Childrose, Ph.D. This online event is open to all students, employees, and interested community members. Contact Mary Garofalo at 518-697-6325 or garofalo@ sunycgcc.edu for information on accessing the Zoom presentation.
MARCH 26 COEYMANS HOLLOW — Trinity United Methodist Church, 1313 Route 143, Coeymans Hollow, will serve a baked ham dinner, take out only, 4-6 p.m. March 26. The menu will include baked ham, potatoes, vegetable, applesauce, rolls, and pie. Adults, $13; children, $6. Reservations suggested by March 23 by calling 518-7562629. You may check the day of the dinner to see if there are extra dinners available at 518-756-2091. OAK HILL — The Oak HillDurham Volunteer Fire Company, 103 County Route 22, Oak Hill, will serve a spaghetti and meatball dinner 4-7 p.m. March 26 to benefit Charles ‘Charlie’ Fremgen, eat in or take out. The cost is $12. For information and to schedule take out, call 518-239-4837. KINGSTON — The Cornell Master Gardeners will host a
CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
Noah Bellerose, sixth grader, has been named the CoxsackieAthens Rotary Club Student of the Month. Noah B. is one of the most positive and joyful people the 6th grade team has ever worked with. He comes into each class with a greeting and a smile. Noah is kind to everyone and willing to help his peers in any way. Noah is eager to learn and contributes to a positive classroom environment with his exemplary behavior and thoughtful participation. The 6th grade team is so very pleased to nominate Noah Bellerose as our Rotary Student of the Month.
Seed Swap 1-3 p.m. March 26 at Cornell Cooperative Extension Ulster County, 232 Plaza Road, Kingston. Gardeners can share seeds they’ve harvested from their own plants, seeds from crops they no longer care to grow, or leftover seeds they don’t have time to use. The seed swap is a great opportunity to exchange your extra viable seeds and seek new varieties of vegetables and ornamentals. Many of our perennials and native plants are best sown in late winter and early spring. Bring your extra seeds in envelopes labeled with the type, variety, if it was purchased or saved yourself and any helpful growing instructions. We will have extra envelopes at the swap. Some seed varieties may be limited but as we have found out from our plant swap, we never know in advance what is coming in. Don’t have any seeds to swap? No problem, we are just asking for a fifty cent donation for each pack that you take (cash only). The Master Gardeners will be on hand to answer questions. The event is free but registration is required since space is limited. You can review the Seed Swap Guidelines and register on our website. COVID-19 is still a risk, all attendees must wear a mask. ALBANY — The Capital District Genealogical Society will meet at 1 p.m. March 26 via Zoom. CDGS meetings are presently held on Zoom. Registration is free and will open to the public on March 26. See www.CapitalDistrictGenealogicalSociety.org under meetings and events. There is a 100-person limit. “Write As You Go” by Elissa Powell is the topic. The “write as you go” method has become an efficient and popular process to gain insights, stay organized and create a work product as you do research. Adopters of the method state that their time is used more efficiently and they can pickup the research with minimal lost time if it should be interrupted.
are $10 per person. For information or to RSVP, contact Gordon Mosher at 518-5675529.
APRIL 2 ATHENS — HVVFA HazMat, Homeland Security and Training Committee with the Fire and Accidental Prevention Committee present the annual Bill Eck and John J. Mulligan Haz-Mat, Homeland Security and Fire Training Seminar 8 a.m.-2 p.m. April 2 at the Athens Volunteer Fire Department, 39 Third St., Athens. If a date change is needed due to gathering restrictions, it will be announced by March 26. Pre-registration is requested by email to Fred Pettingell at fpettingell@aol.com. Note April 2, 2022 registration on the subject line. Registration begins at 7 a.m. on the morning of the seminar. Registration fee of $10 will cover all seminar needs. Certificates will be issued following the seminar. Pre-register as seating may be limited. HUDSON — ColumbiaGreene Community College is opening its campus to prospective students and their families 9 a.m.-1 p.m. April 2. Ten faculty members will be giving overviews of their programs that include Art, Automotive Technology, Business, Construction Technology/Preservation Carpentry, Criminal Justice, Education, History, Psychology/ Sociology, Math/Science, and Nursing. Register now at sunycgcc.edu/2022-openhouse, or call 518-697-6500.
APRIL 5
MARCH 27
CATSKILL — Greene County Women’s League Cancer Patient Aid (GCWL) will meet for their first Membership Meeting for 2022. The meeting will be held April 5 at the Creekside Restaurant, 160 West Main St., Catskill with lunch beginning at noon and the meeting called to order at 1 p.m. Yearly membership to GCWL is $25/year. New members are welcome. For information, call 518-8191249 or e-mail greenecountywomensleague@gmail.com.
ATHENS — TGM American Legion Post 187 Post Commander Gordon Mosher invites all local female veterans to dinner at 4 p.m. March 27 at the Athens American Legion Post, 94 Second St., Athens. As this is a plated dinner, and the menu will be decided based on demand, the Post is asking that attendees RSVP by March 18. Female Veterans eat for free and all others
KISKATOM — The Kiskatom Firehouse, 4838 Route 32, Catskill, will serve a Palm Sunday pancake breakfast 8 a.m.-noon April 10. The menu includes all you can eat pancakes, scrambled eggs, bacon, sausage, hash browns, toast, orange juice, coffee and tea. Adults, $8; children 6-12, $5; children 5 and younger, free with paid adult.
APRIL 10
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
A6 Tuesday, March 22, 2022
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Douglas Sanford Sr. November 24, 1959 - March 17, 2022 Douglas Sanford Sr. of Athens N.Y. passed away on March 17, 2022, at home in the care of Community Hospice and family and friends. Born November 24, 1959, he was the son of the late Charles Yakman and Helen Yakman. Douglas was predeceased by his loving wife Cindy Sanford and Brother Bruce Yakman. He is survived by his sons Douglas Sanford Jr. and Brett Perez and daughter Diana Isherwood. He is also survived by his brother Tony Sanford, his sisters Rhonda and Helena and many nieces and nephews. Services will be held at The W.C Brady’s Sons, Inc. Funeral Home, 97 Mansion Street, Coxsackie, N.Y. 12051, on Saturday, March 26, 2022, from 12:00 Noon – 2:00 P.M. Condolences may be made at www.wcbradyssonsinc.net.
Bruce Vernon Bartley September 1, 1946 - March 20, 2022 Bruce Vernon Bartley, age 75, of Catskill, passed peacefully, after a long bout with Parkinson’s Disease on Sunday, March 20, 2022 at the Pines of Catskill. Bruce was born September 1, 1946 in Catskill, the son of the late George and Lilliemae (Bush) Bartley. Bruce was a graduate of Catskill High School, Class of 1964. He was employed at IBM, Poughkeepsie and Kingston, as a staff systems analyst, prior to his retirement in 1993. He was later employed as a code enforcement officer for the Town of Athens for 17 years. Bruce is survived by his wife, Martha (Pfeifer) Bartley of Catskill; two children, Robert Bartley and wife, Kasie of Mooers, NY; and Karen Feeley and wife Meghan of Garner, NC; three grandchildren, Hannah Bartley, Keegan Feeley and Oliver Feeley; a brother, George Bartley Jr. of Florida; and several cousins, nieces, and nephews. As per Bruce’s request, funeral services will be private. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the National Parkinson’s Foundation, 200 SE 1st Street, Suite 800, Miami, Florida 33131
Harold W. (Socky) Traganza May 8, 1935 - March 15, 2022 Harold W. (Socky) Traganza, 86, passed away at home on March 15, 2022. He was born on May 8, 1935, to the late William and Helen (Wood) Traganza. Socky was a veteran of the Army after graduating from Roeliff Jansen School in 1954. Socky’s love for animals inspired him to start a career raising and racing Standardbred horses all over the east coast. He was an owner, breeder, trainer, and driver until the age of 80. He is survived by his daughter Stacey and her husband Brian Faulisi of West Glenville. At his request there will be no services. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to Columbia-Greene Humane Society, 111 Humane Society Rd., Hudson, NY 12534. To leave a message of condolence please visit www.peckandpeck.net
Lillian F. Valente September 18, 1922 - March 20, 2022 Lillian F. Valente, age 99 years, of Leeds, N.Y., formerly of Purling, N.Y., passed away peacefully at The Pines Nursing Home and Rehabilitation Center, Catskill, N.Y. She was born on September 18, 1922, in Brooklyn, N.Y., and is the daughter of the late Joseph and Catherine (Puccio) Campisi. Besides her parents, she is predeceased by her beloved husband Ralph R. Valente, who passed away on September 18, 1989, her sister Marie Campisi, her brother Joseph J. Campisi who passed away on February 24, 2019, her loving son in law Vincent J. Valenti, who passed away on December 20, 1992, and many other family members and friends over the year whom she cherished deeply. Survivors include her two beloved children Lillian M. Valenti of Leeds, N.Y., and Ralph Valente of East Amherst, N.Y., son in law James Simonis of East Amherst, N.Y. niece Arlene Merola of Las Vegas, Nevada, cousin Lydia LiCausi of New Jersey who was like a sister to her, many nieces, nephews, cousins, extended family and friends. She also leaves behind her cherished “Granddaughter” Lillian’s beloved calico cat GiGi. During her lifetime, Lillian was employed and retired at The New York Telephone Company as a telephone operator/bookkeeper. After retiring from The New York Telephone Company, she also was a bookkeeper for Richards Ambulance Service. Lillian was a member of The Cairo American Legion Mohican Post # 983 Ladies Auxiliary, The Greene County Women’s League, and also a member of The Sacred Heart Church, Cairo. Lillian loved gambling, cooking and reading. Relatives and friends are cordially invited to attend calling hours at Richards Funeral Home, 29 Bross Street, Cairo, N.Y. on Wednesday, March 23, 2022, from 3:00 P.M. – 7:00 P.M. Mass of the Christian Burial will be celebrated on Thursday, March 24, 2022, at 10:00 A.M., at Sacred Heart Church, Mountain Avenue, Cairo, N.Y. Interment will follow in the family plot of The St. Patrick’s Cemetery, Catskill, N.Y. The family wishes to thank the staff of The Pines Nursing Home and Rehabilitation Center, Catskill, N.Y., for their loving care during their Mom’s stay at The Pines. Condolences may be made at www. richardsfuneralhomeinc.net.
Man accused in shootings of homeless men worked at D.C. winery, police say Peter Hermann (c) 2022,The Washington Post ·
A man accused in attacks on homeless men worked at a winery in Washington D.C. and visited the restaurant venue’s New York location the same day that two people were shot in that city, according to a newly filed court document. That document also states that the man, identified as 30-year-old Gerald Brevard III, may have taken a book from the New York location of City Winery that was written by its founder, Michael Dorf. Police said they found that book - “Indulge Your Senses: Scaling Intimacy in a Digital World” - in a bedroom of an apartment where Brevard was living with relatives in Southeast Washington. In the book, Dorf tracks his time through the music business. The District’s City Winery venue - a concept that includes wine, music and cultural events - is located in the former Love nightclub space on Oakie Street in the Ivy City neighborhood and is near where the three attacks in D.C. occurred. The new court document, an application by police to search Brevard’s bedroom, also says that authorities found a list of grievances he had with his workplace, including these written lines: “I write a poem, now I’m a poet. Can’t kill her I love her, she’ll never know it. Even when guilty I’m innocent.” This document does not elaborate on the writings, nor
WASHINGTON POST PHOTO BY BILL O’LEARY
Mayor Muriel E. Bowser and Washington D.C. Police Chief Robert J. Contee III at a news conference announcing an arrest in the shootings of homeless men in the District and New York.
does it suggest a motive for the attacks that police said targeted homeless men. Two men were killed in the shootings, which occurred between March 3 and March 12 in the two cities. Police have said they have linked bullet casings at the shooting scenes in both cities and that Brevard wore similar clothing in each city. D.C. police declined to comment on the document, citing the ongoing investigation. Police in New York did not immediately respond to queries. Brevard’s father referred questions to his son’s
attorney, who also did not respond to a request for comment. Dorf has not responded to questions sent by The Washington Post. Brevard, who lives in the District, has been charged with one count of first-degree murder in the March 9 death of a man who police say was shot and stabbed, and had his tent turned, near Fourth Street and New York Avenue NE. Authorities said Brevard remains a suspect in other attacks - two in Northeast Washington on March 3 and March 8, and two in New York on
March 12. One of the attacks in New York was fatal. The search warrant application adds new details to a still-developing timeline of Brevard’s movements and offers a possible connection between Brevard and the New York attacks. Police and his relatives had previously said they had no ideas what ties he might have to that city. Authorities in New York have stated that the earliest police sighting of Brevard in that city, captured on surveillance video, was about 3:30 a.m. on March 12 at Penn Station. Police said the first attack in New York occurred about 4 a.m. on King Street, about two miles south. Police said the second attack occurred 15 blocks from the site, about 6 a.m. The newly filed court document says a City Winery employee told police that Brevard visited the venue that same day. A time is not given. The document says Dorf’s book had been stolen that day from the venue’s store. Police said that they recognized the book as the one they had seen in Brevard’s bedroom in the District and that it appears to be the same copy as the one taken from New York. The court document does not say how police are sure. Author Information: Peter Hermann covers crime for The Washington Post. He previously worked for the Baltimore Sun for 22 years, covering a Baltimore suburb and then the Baltimore Police Department.
Survivor of four Nazi concentration camps is killed in Ukraine, memorials foundation says Isaac Stanley-Becker and David L. Stern The Washington Post
BERLIN — Boris Romantschenko eluded death at Hitler’s hand, surviving forced labor and detention in four concentration camps as Europe became a killing field in the 1940s. Last week, his life was snuffed out by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s onslaught in Ukraine, according to a foundation memorializing Nazi crimes. Romantschenko, 96, was killed when a Russian missile struck his apartment building in Kharkiv. “It is with horror that we report the violent death of Boris Romantschenko in the war in Ukraine,” read a statement on the website of the Buchenwald and Mittelbau-Dora Memorials Foundation. The foundation said it learned of the elderly man’s death from his son and granddaughter. Romantschenko’s “horrific death,” the statement
continued, “shows how threatening the war in Ukraine is for concentration camp survivors.” The foundation, along with numerous others, established an aid network distributing food and medicine to Ukrainian victims of Nazi persecution. Ukraine is home to about 10,000 Holocaust survivors, according to an American nonprofit, The Blue Card, that provides financial assistance to indigent survivors in the United States. Romantschenko was born in 1926 in Bondari, near the city of Sumy in northern Ukraine. In 1942, he was deported to the German city of Dortmund, where he became a forced laborer, according to the Buchenwald foundation. When he tried to escape, he was captured and sent to Buchenwald, near Weimar in central Germany, in January 1943. He would later be sent to Peenemünde, a military research center, where he participated in the construction of
the V-2 Rocket, the world’s first long-range ballistic missile. Other places he was detained included Dora-Mittelbau, originally an appendage of Buchenwald, and Bergen-Belsen, a camp in northern Germany that started out as a site holding prisoners of war and in 1943 became a concentration camp. In its statement, the foundation did not describe how Romantschenko survived Bergen-Belsen, which was liberated in April 1945 by the British 11th Armored Division, or what he did after the war. For many years, though, he served as vice president for Ukraine on an international committee for Buchenwald survivors. In a ceremony in 2015, he recited an oath in Russia spoken by survivors of the camp, which has become known as the Oath of Buchenwald. It concludes with a pledge: “To build a new world of peace and freedom is our ideal.” As of Sunday, 2,421 civilian casualties have been recorded
Just a few major energy firms still trade with Gazprom arm Todd Gillespie and Isis Almeida Bloomberg
Just a few large European energy firms are still striking deals with the trading arm of Gazprom, as companies shun Russian business in response to the war in Ukraine, according to people familiar with the matter. Nearly all the big companies that buy and sell gas have told their traders not to execute over-the-counter deals with Gazprom Marketing & Trading, according to the people. Among those still trading are France’s TotalEnergies and Engie, and Austria’s OMV, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the information is private. Some small players are still making transactions. Trading firms have sought to cut ties with Russia as Europe seeks to diversify its gas supplies to punish President Vladimir Putin for the war in Ukraine. BP and Shell are moving to dump
their stakes in Russian energy ventures, and while German utilities RWE, E.ON and Uniper are sticking with existing contracts, they aren’t signing new ones. TotalEnergies and Engie declined to comment. OMV confirmed it’s still buying gas from the company. A spokesperson for Gazprom didn’t reply to a request for comment. The company is still trading freely on the exchanges. Europe relies on Russia for about a third of its gas, making it harder for the continent to fully cut its ties. While the European Union and the U.K. have implemented wide sanctions against Russia, energy has so far been left out. But traders are concerned that Gazprom’s trading arm, which also owns one of the U.K.’s top retail suppliers, could eventually be hit with restrictions. Already Gazprom’s centralLondon landlord, British Land Co, is planning to cut short its rental agreement, and the U.K.
government is pressing public bodies that buy gas from Gazprom to find alternative suppliers. Gazprom opened its first office in London in 1999 and made more than 235 million pounds ($309 million) in profit in 2020, according to a regulatory filing. Its retail arm provides more than a fifth of the gas supplied to commercial firms in the U.K. and had over the past decade 127 million pounds worth of contracts with U.K. government bodies and agencies, including the National Health Service.
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in Ukraine by the United Nations, including 925 deaths. Over the weekend, media in Kharkiv quoted authorities saying 266 people, including 14 children, had died in the city.
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Tuesday, March 22, 2022 A7
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
A new treatment that boasts a cure for leukemia By Inez Whitehead Dickens For Columbia-Greene Media
Dear Warriors, You may have heard about a new treatment that boasts a cure for Leukemia, called CAR T cell therapy. The treatment removes T cells, white blood cells that fight viruses, from a patient’s blood and genetically engineers them to fight cancer. The modified cells are infused back into a patient’s circulation. To save you the trouble I researched the information on this and referenced where you can find it, at the end of this article. Ten years ago a trial conducted at the University of Pennsylvania involved two patients, Doug Olson and Bill Ludwig, who had chronic lymphocytic leukemia. In 2010 Doug Olsen described how after several weeks from receiving the treatment, he became very ill with a short term side effect known as cytokine release syndrome; however, the doctor treating him, David Porter, M.D one of the authors of the trial, found no sign of leukemia. First author of the trial, J.Joseph Melenhorst, PhD established the lab at the University of Pennsylvania to follow patients treated with CAR T therapy. A decade after the initial treatment, CAR T cells had remained detectable in both patients. Melenhorst stated, “The killer T cells did the heavy lifting of eliminating the tumor”.
CANCER KICKIN’ WARRIOR
INEZ
WHITEHEAD-DICKENS Dr. Carl H. June, director of the Center for Cellular Immunotherapies at the University of Pennsylvania also stated “Ten years [post infusion], we can’t find any of the leukemia cells and we still have the CAR T cells that are on patrol and on surveillance for residual leukemia,” When Olson, donated his cells to the center after 9 years, the researchers found that his cells were still capable of destroying leukemia cells. Now despite the more encouraging findings in blood cancers, even with those, “the biggest disappointment is that CAR T-cell therapy doesn’t work on every patient,” said coauthor David Porter, MD, the University of Pennsylvania oncologist who treated the two patients. There have been no studies that indicate CAR T cell therapy have promising results on solid cancers. Dr. June states, “There appear to be a number of reasons, including that the [solid] tumor is more complex, and these solid cancers have ways
to evade the immune system that need to be overcome.” Now with all of these groundbreaking results CAR T brings there is a downside, cost. Richard T Maziarz, professor of medicine at Oregon health and Science University’s Knight Cancer Institute states, “When factoring all of the cost associated with chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy, hospitals can charge $1.5 million or more just to break even. Medicaid patients could be charged $2 million. This includes $475,000 for the drug tisagenlecleucel (Kymriah; Novartis”. You can predict the fighting with the insurance companies. Warriors, when a cancer is dormant we say the cancer is in remission; but this is the first time we can use the word “cure” when it comes to cancer and mean it. As promised you can find this information at: https://www.healio.com/ news/hematology-oncology/20190529/car-tcell-therapy-total-cost-can-exceed15-million-per-treatment https://www.nytimes. com/2022/02/02/health/leukemia-car-t-immunotherapy. html https://www.webmd. com/cancer/lymphoma/ news/20220203/car-t-therapycured-two-patients Reach Inez at callherid8@aol. com.
U.S. Postal Service has delivered more than 270 million COVID-19 test kits WASHINGTON, DC — The United States Postal Service announced that it has delivered more than 270 million COVID-19 test kits to American households as part of President Biden’s plan to distribute free at-home tests to Americans for free. The Postal Service reported over 68 million test kit packages (with four tests per kit) have been shipped to American households across all states, Tribes and territories; each package contains four individual test kits. On average, it takes just 1.2 days for the Postal Service to deliver a test kit package once it has been received from the manufacturer, kitted and entered into the mailstream. On Feb. 22, the Postal Service delivered over 6 million COVID-19 test kit packages — the highest single day volume delivered since shipping began at the end of January. “There are few assignments the Postal Service has received that better exemplify our public service mission than the request of the Biden Administration to deliver America’s COVID-19 test kits,” said Postmaster General and Chief Executive Officer Louis DeJoy. “It is a major point of pride throughout our organization to have met our own performance expectations and those of the public. We are grateful for the strong collaboration of our partners across the federal government, including the White House, the Department of Health and Human Services
and the Department of Defense. Thank you to our Postal Service employees, our union and management association partners for so effectively and efficiently delivering such strong performance across the board.” COVID-19 Test Kit Delivery by the Numbers: Over 270 million – tests packaged and shipped to American households across the country. Over 68 million – packages delivered to households across all states, Tribes and territories to date. 1.2 average days to delivery Over 6 million – number of test kit packages delivered by the U.S. Postal Service on Tuesday, Feb. 22, the highest single day volume since delivery began end of January. Over 68 million orders for free rapid at-home COVID-19 test kits have been placed through the Biden Administration’s covidtests.gov, an easy-to-use consumer website established and managed by USPS in partnership with the United States Digital Service, since the website was launched on Dec. 21, 2021. The Postal Service immediately pivoted from a successful 2021 peak holiday season to focus on the delivery of America’s COVID-19 test kits. Quick negotiations with the postal unions enabled the retention of many of the seasonal staff who were reassigned from their holiday roles, and new annex facilities acquired in the
year prior were rapidly reconfigured to ensure workspace and storage capacity could handle the immediate influx of millions of test kits daily. Strong interagency collaboration between the Postal Service, White House, Department of Health and Human Services and Department of Defense has been a key factor in the success of this mission. Coordinated efforts included test kit inventory flow management from manufacturers to USPS Surface Transportation Centers, and then onto 48 Postal processing facilities to pack, label and ship. Test kit orders in the continental U.S. are sent through First Class Package Service, and by Priority Mail to Alaska, Hawaii, and the U.S. Territories and APO/FPO/DPO addresses. Once an order is placed on the covidtests.gov website, the requestor receives an order confirmation email and additional status updates as the package is shipped. Requestors can track their package online and receive status updates via the Informed Delivery notification feature. Order your free at-home COVID-19 test kit at covidtests.gov or by calling 1-800-232-0233 (TTY 1-888720-7489). The Postal Service generally receives no tax dollars for operating expenses and relies on the sale of postage, products and services to fund its operations.
Columbia Memorial Health opens new Red Hook primary care center RED HOOK — Columbia Memorial Health (CMH) announced the opening of a new primary care practice at 17 Glen Pond Drive in Red Hook. The new practice will be led by Dr. Sheetal Jain, an internal medicine specialist. The new office, which replaces the former CMH location at 7385 South Broadway, offers larger, more modern and comfortable care areas, and abundant off-street parking. Board certified in internal medicine, Dr. Jain received her medical degree from Terna Medical College and Hospital, and completed her postgraduate training in internal medicine at Berkshire Medical Center. She replaces longtime CMH Red Hook physician Dr. Kenneth Schnide, who recently retired. “We are very excited to welcome Dr. Jain to the CMH family of providers,” said Ronald Pope, DO, CMH Vice President for Medical Services, Care Centers. “Her expertise, coupled with our new care center, offer adult patients a comfortable and convenient option for their primary care needs.” Dr. Jain said: “I’m very happy to be part of the CMH team and to play an important role in CMH’s continuing commitment to the people of
Dr. Sheetal Jain
Dutchess, Columbia and Ulster counties. I look forward to helping my patients achieve and maintain good health.” Dr. Jain and her team are
now accepting new patients 18 and older. Former adult patients of Dr. Schnide are also welcome. To make an appointment, call 845-758-9118.
Epilepsy Foundation of Northeastern New York announces 2022 Winning Kid ALBANY — Each year, the Epilepsy Foundation of Northeastern New York (EFNENY) selects a “Winning Kid” to represent all children with epilepsy in northeastern New York. Our Winning Kid symbolizes the spirit and courage that all children with epilepsy display in managing their seizures. We are excited to announce our Winning Kid for 2022 is 8-year-old Lorenzo Boles from Gloversville. Lorenzo was diagnosed with epilepsy at four years old after experiencing absence seizures. Since then, his family has stopped at nothing to show their support, find resources, and spread
awareness for epilepsy. No matter the challenge or obstacle, Lorenzo keeps his spirits high, he has even won the “Kindness Award” at school two years in a row. Lorenzo will make his debut as the 2022 Winning Kid at our 34th Annual Confections in Chocolate Gala for Hope on April 2 at Glen Sanders Mansion. Throughout 2022, Lorenzo will help us spread awareness, advocate for those affected by epilepsy and participate in the organization’s fundraising events. Learn more about Lorenzo and our Winning Kid program by visiting our website at www.efneny.org and click
on “Programs.” You can also find information and registration for our Gala for Hope at www.bit.ly/ChocolateGala2022. Epilepsy is a neurological disorder defined as having two or more recurring seizures; it can happen to anyone, at any age, at any time. One in 26 people will be diagnosed with epilepsy in their lifetime. Epilepsy is more common than Cerebral Palsy, Muscular Dystrophy, Multiple Sclerosis and Parkinson’s disease combined. For more information, call the Epilepsy Foundation at 518-456-7501 or visit our website at www. efneny.org.
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A8 Tuesday, March 22, 2022
2 Pennsylvania state troopers and civilian killed in possible DUI crash Rodrigo Torrejon, Max Marin and Ryan W. Briggs The Philadelphia Inquirer
PHILADELPHIA — Two Pennsylvania State Police troopers and a civilian were killed in a car crash on I-95 early Monday morning in what law enforcement officials described as a possible DUI incident. Around 12:45 a.m., troopers responded to calls about a man walking in a southbound traffic lane near Lincoln Financial Field. As police tried to bring the man into custody and out of harm’s way, a vehicle traveling at a high speed attempted to pass them in the shoulder lane, fatally striking both troopers and the civilian, according to state police. Captain James B. Kemm, commanding officer for the state police in the Philadelphia region, said the force of the crash threw the troopers into the northbound lane. Police backup arrived to find witnesses performing CPR on the three victims, who were pronounced dead on the
scene. “Right now we are conducting an active investigation that is DUI-related,” Kemm said at a news conference. Prosecutors have not yet decided on criminal charges, and the driver’s name was not released. District Attorney Larry Krasner said Monday he couldn’t release details, noting only that a “young driver is potentially facing extremely serious consequences.” State police identified the fallen officers as Trooper Martin F. Mack, an eight-year veteran, and Trooper Branden T. Sisca, who joined the force last year. Officials are withholding the name of the civilian until his family is notified, and declined to answer further questions on the investigation. Interstate traffic remained shut down until later in the morning as police investigated the crash site, where a state police SUV appeared with both driver-side doors ripped
off. The hatchback that struck the officers and civilian sat parked nearby on the right shoulder. Police said the driver remained on scene after the crash. Shortly after 6 a.m., a V-line of Philadelphia police officers riding motorcycles was seen leading a procession to transport the bodies of the troopers away from the scene. “Troopers Mack and Sisca made the ultimate sacrifice this morning while assisting a citizen in need,” said Col. Robert Evanchick, commissioner of the Pennsylvania State Police. “They braved traffic along the busy interstate to assist a citizen whose own life was in danger. There’s no greater act of selflessness.” At least 22 Pennsylvania troopers have died in automobile crashes in the last century, according to state police. The last fatality was in 2017, when a state police SUV collided with a garbage truck in Westmoreland County, killing Trooper Michael P. Stewart III.
Sisca, 29, and Mack, 33, were assigned to Troop K, which patrols state highways in Philadelphia and Montgomery and Delaware counties. Sisca, of Trappe in Montgomery County, graduated from the trooper academy in 2021 and also served as a volunteer fire chief with the Trappe Fire Company. He had married last fall and, according to an online baby registry, he and his wife were expecting their first child in July. In a statement, the Trappe Fire Company referred to Sisca as an “incredible person.” Those who knew him there said his dedication to public service was contagious. “He was young and energetic and really wanted to affect change,” said Chris Leder, 46, a former member of the fire company. “He put 150% into everything he did.” Mack was a father of two, according to social media. He joined the the state police in 2014, after stints as a private investigator and teachercounselor at the Glen Mills schools,
according to a Linkedin profile. On social media, he rooted for the Eagles and his local high school’s lacrosse team. Family members could not immediately be reached for comment. Assistant District Attorney Joanne Pescatore, who leads the DA’s homicide unit, said prosecutors consider a variety of factors when deciding whether to file charges in a vehicular case, including whether a person was under the influence, speeding, or engaging in other forms of dangerous driving. Speaking at the news conference Monday, Gov. Tom Wolf said the crash marked a sad day for Pennsylvania. “There are three families mourning the loss of loved ones,” Wolf said. “It’s a reminder for the state troopers of what a heroic thing they do for us each and every day. For all three it’s a reminder of how precious and fragile life really is.”
As her Supreme Court confirmation starts, Jackson is set to make history Greg Stohr and Laura Litvan Bloomberg
Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson will make history Monday as she goes before a Senate panel considering her nomination to be the first Black woman on the U.S. Supreme Court. Barring a major mishap, the Democrats’ narrow control of the Senate means confirmation is all but assured. Though she won’t shift the ideological balance on the conservative-controlled court, the 51-year-old Jackson would add a fresh voice to its outnumbered liberal wing and potentially serve for decades. In the first of four days of hearings, Jackson will listen as senators give opening statements geared as much toward this year’s elections as to her confirmation. Democrats are likely to extol her qualifications and criticize the court, while Republicans will seek to use her criminaldefense background as a way to question President Joe Biden’s commitment to law and order. “President Biden is deliberately working to make the whole federal judiciary softer on crime,” Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said last week. Republicans have also signaled they will try to connect Jackson to liberal outside groups that have endorsed her. Jackson, who will deliver her own opening remarks at the end of the day, would diversify the court in multiple ways. She would be the first justice ever to have been a public defender and the second to have served on the U.S. Sentencing Commission. She would give the
Supplies From A1
The Ukrainian American Youth Association of the Hudson Valley on Sunday packed medical supplies at the Jewett church to send packages to Ukraine. The ongoing effort from the youth group sees the organization collect supplies that have been donated by local community members. The group is accepting first-aid kits of any size, pain relievers, safety pins, triple antibiotic ointment, adhesive bandages, Pepto-Bismol pills, antibacterial ointment, aspirin, Benadryl, bandages, hydrocortisone cream and diarrhea medication. The drop-off location for the medical supplies is the Holy Trinity Ukrainian Catholic
BLOOMBERG PHOTO BY AL DRAGO
Ketanji Brown Jackson, associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court nominee, listens during a Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing in Washington on March 21, 2022.
nine-member court four women and three ethnic minorities for the first time. She would join Justice Sonia Sotomayor as the only two current justices with experience as a U.S. district judge, a position Jackson held for eight years before Biden elevated her to a
Church in Kerhonkson. The nonprofit youth group also started an online fundraiser for direct Ukrainian aid, with $23,500 raised as of Monday with a goal of $25,000. Pastor Ivan Kaszczak of St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Catholic Church said he has heard from parishioners who have family in Ukraine that are having difficulty reaching friends and relatives during the war. “Some people are able to contact their families and there are other people that aren’t able to contact them,” Kaszczak said Monday. “People are not quite sure where people are. About 20% of the country has been displaced internally. You don’t know where people are and there’s no safe place. You have hypersonic rockets coming within a few miles of Poland and Hungary. So people don’t know
how to get in touch with people. And then of course people are dead. The usual horrors associated with war.” The pastor invoked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in calling for NATO to step in and help end the war. “I think he said it well in that if Vladimir Putin doesn’t back down then you have World War III, that’s the only way you can stop it,” Kaszczak said. “Unless Europe wants to look at their largest democracy being torn about. If you have a person like Putin and no one stops him and he won’t stop, it’s a simple thing. You have the largest country there in Russia taking over the largest democracy and committing horrible crimes that appear as war crimes, and no one is going to do anything to stop him. The Ukrainians are receiving aid, and I don’t want to
powerful federal appeals court in Washington. Jackson “will bring extraordinary qualifications, deep experience and intellect, and a rigorous judicial record to the court,” Biden said when he announced her Supreme Court nomination last month. minimize the help that they’re receiving, but it’s horrible. There’s a war in Europe and we haven’t said that in a long time.” Zelenskyy has asked NATO to establish a no-fly zone over Ukraine to stop the Russian bombing campaign, which began with the invasion Feb. 24. “Someone is bombing civilians to death and it’s a horrible thing,” Kaszczak said. “Not knowing all of the logistics involved, I’d personally
Jackson would succeed the retiring Justice Stephen Breyer, 83, a liberal who worked to forge consensus on the court when possible. Jackson served as a law clerk to Breyer shortly after she graduated from Harvard Law School. She would succeed him after the court’s current term ends in late June or early July. Her nomination so far hasn’t produced the kind of political fireworks that surrounded President Donald Trump’s picks — Justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett. Led by Chairman Dick Durbin, an Illinois Democrat, the Senate Judiciary Committee is split 11-11 between the two political parties and it could deadlock over whether to advance her nomination before the full Senate. Ranking Republican Chuck Grassley and almost all other panel Republicans are hinting strongly at a “no” vote, and GOP Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is indicating he might join them — despite backing every Supreme Court nominee since he came to office in 2003. Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has the ability to call a vote to get the nomination before the full Senate, and Vice President Kamala Harris could cast a tie-breaking vote if needed. Senate Democrats have unified behind every one of Biden’s lower court picks, and GOP Senator Susan Collins of Maine had positive things to say about Jackson after they met privately this month, suggesting she could get at least some bipartisan backing.
love the Ukrainian Air Force to get MiGs from Poland or anywhere else. Those countries can get the MiGs to Ukraine, the U.S. said so. Even if the U.S. isn’t giving them, any country is able to give planes. I think at least the MiGs would give them a chance. At least if you have a plane you can go to the source of the people that are bombing you and perhaps take it out. But I think unless NATO steps in, I don’t know what hope there can be in the long run.”
The pastor denounced the atrocities that Putin has directed in Ukraine, which includes the bombing of a children’s hospital. “A normal human being would say, ‘I’m not going to kill children,’” Kaszczak said. “But here you have a guy who is saying, ‘No, I’ll kill children. I’ll blow your whole city apart.’ Like Mariupol, if you’re only bombing a city that has civilian targets and he doesn’t care how many people he kills, that’s pure horror.”
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Jazz down Knicks
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Tim Martin, Sports Editor: 1-518-828-1616 ext. 2538 / sports@registerstar.com or tmartin@registerstar.com
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Ichabod Crane won the New York State Class B boys basketball championship on Sunday with a 63-62 victory over Friends Academy at Cool Insuring Arena in Glens Falls.
STATE CHAMPIONS!
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Ichabod Crane coach Will Ferguson (middle), flanked by seniors Avery Clickman (left) and Brett Richards, holds the New York State Class B boys basketball championship plaque the Riders received after defeating Friends Academy, 63-62, at Cool Insuring Arena in Glens Falls on Sunday.
Riders complete comeback in fourth to secure first Class B boys basketball title Matt Fortunato Columbia-Greene Media
GLENS FALLS — The Ichabod Crane Riders won the New York State Class B Boys Basketball Championship by defeating the Friends Academy Quakers, 63-62, Sunday afternoon in thrilling fashion at Cool Insuring Arena. The Riders came all the way back to take their first lead of the title game in the final five minutes to finish their incredible season on top. Brett Richards recorded his 20th straight double-double for Ichabod Crane, dropping 19 points and grabbing 17 rebounds. Alex Schmidt matched Richards’ output with 19 of his own for the Riders on a potentially broken wrist and teammate Jack Mullins scored 16 points and snatched the last rebound of the game to seal the victory for Ichabod Crane (217). Richards was named the Class B Tournament’s Most Valuable Player. Schmidt was named to the All-Tournament Team and Mullins received the Sportsmanship Award. Friends Academy’s Gabe
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Friends Academy’s Malachi Polson (24) collides with Ichabod Crane’s Alex Schmidt (5) while driving to the basket.
TIM MARTIN/COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
Ichabod Crane players celebrate after winning the New York State Class B boys basketball championship with a 63-62 victory ovr Friends Academy at Cool Insuring Arena on Sunday.
Ferencz led all scorers with 21 points, Malachi Polson added 19, and C.J. Williams contributed 12 points and snagged 19 rebounds for the Quakers. Williams led off the contest with a baby-hook over Brett Richards in the paint for the game’s first points. Then
NCAA Tournament roundup: No. 10 Miami ousts No. 2 Auburn Field Level Media
Isaiah Wong scored 21 points and Kameron McGusty added 20 as 10thseeded Miami toppled second-seeded Auburn 79-61 in the second round of the NCAA Tournament’s Midwest Region on Sunday night at Greenville, S.C. Charlie Moore had 15 points, nine rebounds, eight assists and three steals, and Jordan Miller added 12 points for the Hurricanes (25-10), who next will face 11th-seeded
Iowa State in the Sweet 16 on Friday night in Chicago. The Hurricanes have won nine of their last 12 games. Jaylin Williams and K.D. Johnson both tallied 12 points for Auburn (28-6). Wendell Green Jr. had 11 points and Jabari Smith notched 10 points on 3-of16 shooting. Smith had 15 rebounds that helped the Tigers to a 47-39 edge on the boards. Auburn made just 5 of 26 attempts from 3-point See NCAA B2
Ferencz knocked down a three pointer on the Quakers’ following possession for a quick 5-0 lead. The Riders had a rough start for the second game in as many days, and could not find a rhythm early. They called an early timeout just over two
minutes into the game, attempting to refocus, now trailing 7-0. Richards was crowded in the paint and missed a shot with the area congested with defenders for the Quakers. Williams stayed See TITLE B2
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Ichabod Crane’s Brett Richards (24) starts up the floor after grabbing a rebound as Allegany-Limestone’s Huddy Kwiatkowski gives chase.
William Byron wins Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 Field Level Media
It was superspeedway racing with all the trimmings. “New” Atlanta Motor Speedway produced a fifth different 2022 winner-William Byron, who managed to keep an angry pack of drafting cars behind him for the final 10 laps of Sunday’s Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500. In a race that produced 46 lead changes among 20 drivers-both track recordsByron crossed the finish line .109 seconds ahead of Christopher Bell and .145 seconds ahead of Ross Chastain. Bell, however, was penalized for passing below the boundary line on the backstretch on the final lap and was demoted to 23rd, the last position on the lead lap. That elevated Chastain to his second straight runner-up finish. Byron took the lead from Bubba Wallace on Lap 316 of 325 and held it the rest of the way. “It was so different,” said Byron, who collected his third NASCAR Cup Series victory, his first of the season and his first at Atlanta Motor Speedway, which had undergone a See BYRON B2
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NASCAR Cup Series driver William Byron (24) celebrates in victory lane winning the Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Sunday.
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B2 Tuesday, March 22, 2022
Title From B1
dominant on the boards in the first quarter, and his teammates kept knocking down shots. Soon Friends Academy had a 13-0 lead and the Riders fans that traveled to the arena were nearly stunned silent. Jack Mullins found Daniel Warner inside for a layup and the Riders’ first points at long last. Next Mullins made two free throws to slow the action down a bit, but Ichabod Crane trailed 13-4. Then Richards ripped down an offensive rebound but landed awkwardly on his ankle and clutched it tight as he writhed in pain on the hardwood. Richards was helped off the court to the locker room with the help of two teammates and a trainer and the Riders were without their go-to big man for the time being. Dylan McCrudden took Richards’ place at the free throw line with a foul being called on the play before the stoppage, and made one of two shots. Warner had a huge block on Williams on defense, was fouled at the other end and made one of two as well. Ferencz closed out the huge quarter for the Quakers with another layup and Friends Academy led 196 after one. Before the teams got to their respective benches for the brief pause, the crowd erupted as Richards emerged from the tunnel to rejoin Ichabod Crane, ala Willis Reed, and the Riders fans went berserk. Mullins hit a gorgeous jumper from the top corner of the paint to begin the second period for the Riders. Avery Clickman added a block in the paint on defense, then made one of two shots at the line after being fouled on the Riders’ possession. The Quakers were called for an offensive foul and the Riders got the ball back. Warner had a shot blocked by Williams, and Ziad Ashmawy followed it up with a shot from beyond the arc for the Quakers. Richards got his first chance since returning from the injury, and he spun in the paint for enough space to put the shot in for two. Mullins then found Warner for another layup to cut the Quakers’ lead down to nine. Richards then got a bucket and the foul, completed the three point play the old fashioned way at the foul line. Williams was now off the court to get a break on the bench, and
NCAA From B1
range in a disappointing conclusion for a team that once held the country’s No. 1 ranking earlier this season. (Milwaukee) No. 11 Iowa State 54, No. 3 Wisconsin 49 Gabe Kalscheur scored 22 points and the Cyclones capitalized on an early injury to Wisconsin point guard Chucky Hepburn, holding off the thirdseeded Badgers in the second round. Iowa State (22-12) faces 10thseeded Miami in the Sweet 16 at Chicago on Friday. Hepburn left with a left leg injury with 4:37 left in the first half and the Badgers up 22-19. Wisconsin (25-8), first in the nation in fewest turnovers per game at 8.4, turned the ball over
Byron From B1
major repaving and reconfiguration since the series raced at the 1.54-mile track last July. “Honestly, the last few laps there and trying to manage the gap to Bubba and trying to not get too far out front. You know, my spotter Brandon (Lines), his first win, so congrats to him. Thanks to this whole team. They’ve done a great job this year. “Lots of changes with the
Ichabod Crane needed to capitalize here and now while they had the size advantage. Richards faked to the left on their next possession and pivoted to the right instead but was fouled on the shot. He made both free throws and the Riders trailed 22-18. Schmidt drained a three and then stole it on the next possession but had his subsequent shot blocked by the Quakers. Warner got back on defense to disrupt a shot but fouled the shooter and his own momentum sent him to the floor hard. The Riders took a timeout and Warner was able to get back to the bench under his own power with 2:15 left in the half. McCrudden checked back in for Warner to get a breather and Ichabod Crane trailed by three. Schmidt knocked down another shot from beyond the arc, but Malachi Polson responded with a three-ball of his own for the Quakers. Richards was fouled on his next shot, made one of two from the free throw line, and Warner checked back in with less than a minute to go. Mullins took the ball the length of the court on one of the Riders’ last possessions in the half and laid it in, cutting the lead to 29-27. Ferencz got a bucket and the foul to end the half for the Quakers, extending their lead to 32-27 at the break. Warner dished to Richards inside for a layup to start the third for the Riders as they looked to keep the momentum they garnered at the end of the first half. Richards then missed a reverse layup in the paint, surrounded by multiple defenders and having no choice but to drive past the hoop and throw it backwards. Schmidt blocked a shot on defense and Mullins knocked down a short jump shot after finding a loose ball to cut the lead to one. The Riders left Ferencz alone in the corner but he missed a wide open three pointer and Ichabod Crane got the ball back. Williams made up for the miss by Ferencz however, and got the bucket and the oil on the Quakers’ next opportunity. The Riders took a timeout midway through the quarter trailing 37-31, but Schmidt made a three pointer after the brief pause to cut the lead to four points. Both teams missed multiple shots and free throws over the next few possessions in a row, and then Ferencz and Richards traded shots from beyond the three point line. Mullins knocked down a shot for two points just to the side of the
paint to end the third and Ichabod Crane trailed by a basket 43-41. Richards started off the fourth quarter with a steal at half court and took it the rest of the way for the game tying layup. Ferencz answered with yet another three pointer for the Quakers. Then Schmidt pumpfaked from beyond the arc and took it in closer for two points after moving the defender out of the way. Logan Mott was sent to the line for Friends Academy and missed the first and made the second. Schmidt responded with a jump shot to tie the game at 47. Ferencz finally missed from three point range this time around and the Riders rebounded. Mullins got the outlet pass all the way up the court and made the layup to give Ichabod Crane their first lead of the game with just 5:41 remaining. Williams quickly erased the Riders’ lead after he gathered a loose ball off a Quakers’ miss and he laid it up and in to tie it 49-49. Mullins got fouled on his next shot and sank both free throws to regain the lead for Ichabod Crane. Richards knocked down a shot after Mullins’ next miss, and then Schmidt got to the line and made both foul shots to put the Riders up by six points in a huge momentum swing. Schmidt found Warner for a two pointer to make it 57-52 and Friends Academy called a timeout with 2:41 on the clock. The Quakers stole the inbounds pass once play resumed and Ferencz got to the line and made both shots. The Riders called a timeout themselves now as their lead was cut to three. Warner fed it to Richards underneath the basket out of the timeout for another two points. The Mullins knocked down another shot after the Riders stole the ball on defense. The Quakers scored a quick bucket and spent another timeout with 1:12 to go, down 61-56. Friends Academy had to start fouling Ichabod Crane as time ran off the clock with each dribble, because they still were not in the bonus yet to count on the Riders missing free throws. After each team missed a couple of key foul shots, the Riders called another timeout leading 61-57 with 37.1 seconds left. Warner was fouled on the next play, but he missed on his chance at the line as well, and Williams made another two point basket to cut it to 61-59 with 14.0 seconds remaining. Schmidt got fouled and sent back to the line for another
chance, and he came through in the clutch, making both free throws for a four point lead. However, Polson knocked down a shot and the foul for the Quakers, completed the three point play with the foul shot, and cut the lead to one with 5.8 seconds on the clock. Jack Mullins received the inbounds pass for Ichabod Crane and was fouled immediately with the Riders up 63-62. With Ichabod Crane in the double bonus, Mullins was guaranteed two foul shots. He missed the first and Friends Academy called their very last timeout with the game on the line. Ichabod Crane pulled everyone off the line to prepare for a last shot attempt by the Quakers. Mullins, all alone in the front court, missed his second foul shot, but caught the Quakers sleeping and ripped down his own rebound. He dribbled it out quick enough to escape another foul and passed it to Clickman as the remaining four seconds ticked off the clock and the Riders escaped with the thrilling victory. Ichabod Crane came away with its first New York State Class B Boys Basketball Championship, 63-62 over the Friends Academy Quakers in an instant classic on the final day of the 2021-22 basketball season. SEMIFINALS Ichabod Crane 53, Allegany-Limestone 43 GLENS FALLS — The Ichabod Crane Riders defeated the Allegany-Limestone Gators, 5343, in the semifinals of the New York State Class B boys basketball Final Four on Saturday at Cool Insuring Arena. Brett Richards led the Riders with 19 points and 14 rebounds to notch his 19th consecutive double-double, and he was 9-for-9 from the free throw line. Alex Schmidt added 17 points for the Riders’ offense and Avery Clickman totaled nine points that proved crucial for Ichabod Crane down the stretch. Tyler Curran was the leading scorer for the Gators, dropping 23 to lead the rest of the field, and accounting for over 50% of his team’s points. No other Gator scored more than three points in the game for AlleganyLimestone. Curran knocked down a three point shot for the Gators to begin the game, and then made a nice shot after hesitation on the next possession to give them a 5-0 lead early. Clickman responded for the Riders after an early timeout, and hit a high arcing shot that looked like it could have touched the ceiling for two
points. Then Clickman traded three pointers with Gabe Ramadhan and the Riders cut the lead to 10-5. The Gators were called for an offensive foul and Richards blocked a shot in the paint on their following possession. Schmidt made a mid range jump shot and Richards tied it 10-10 with a bucket and the foul after he blocked another shot. Maddox Delong drove to the hoop and laid it in high off the glass for the Gators to retake the lead, and the Riders trailed 1410 after one. The Gators’ lead got back up to seven after Curran opened the second period with a bucket and the foul. The Riders battled back though; Schmidt drained a three from the corner and Richards put his defender in a spin cycle under the hoop to get space for two points. Richards made another two free throws to cut the lead to two, and then converted another three point play with a basket and the foul shot to take a 20-19 lead. Daniel Warner got the pass in transition following a rebound by Richards and put it up and in for two and his first bucket of the game. The Riders needed to get the ball to Warner more often as their second big man, to draw attention away from Richards to create more opportunities. Curran made shots from beyond the arc on consecutive possessions for the Gators after Richards was called for an offensive foul. Then the Riders got a steal and passed it to Quinn Rapport for a layup to close out the half, and the Gators took their 29-26 lead into the break. Alex Schmidt grabbed a rebound early in the third quarter and found Warner for a two point shot for the Riders. The Gators quickly turned it back over to the Riders after they saved an errant pass but it went out of bounds anyway. Ichabod Crane could not convert the turnover into points, however Schmidt got back on defense quickly and took a charge from the Gators’ player who was driving down the lane on a fastbreak. Richards dished to Clickman for another basket in transition for Ichabod Crane and they looked to gain traction and build momentum in the third period. Richards was hit on his next attempt and made both foul shots, and after a strip on defense he took it the length of the court for another and-1 opportunity. Richards completed the three point play at the line yet again and the Riders were rolling. Clickman grabbed a miss
by Richards out of the air after it went wide of the rim, and laid it up and in for the bucket and the foul himself. Schmidt had a nice drive as the quarter came to a close, finishing to his left for two and giving the Riders a 3934 lead through three quarters. Brett Richards was called for a traveling violation to begin the fourth as the Gators looked to respond after a dismal third period. The Riders’ stellar defense held the Gators to just five points in the third to take control of the game and swing the momentum in their favor. Jack Mullins got his hands on a loose ball and took it the whole way for a Riders layup and extended their lead to 41-34. Out of a timeout by Ichabod Crane, Curran stole it and answered with a two point shot of his own for the Gators. After RIchards put back a miss by Warner for another two points, Ander Giardini made a nice move inside the paint for another two points to keep Allegany-Limestone within seven with 4:08 remaining. The Gators forced a turnover shortly thereafter, but they could not convert the second chance into any points on the scoreboard. Richards was called for a charge on the next Riders possession, making it the fifth turnover in a row in the last few minutes of the contest. After Schmidt took the ball the length of the court for a layin, Huddy Kwiatkowski drained a three point shot for the Gators at the other end. Schmidt got back on defense the next time around, and got his body in the way again to take another charge and get the ball back with under a minute remaining. The Gators were now forced to foul on multiple possessions as the game neared its end, to try and afford themselves a few extra chances. However Alex Schmidt knocked down a handful of free throws in the final minute of the game, and Allegany-Limestone would not score another point the rest of the way. The final buzzer went off soon after and Ichabod Crane Riders earned a spot in the Class B New York State Boys Basketball Championship thanks to a hard fought victory 53-43 over the Allegany-Limestone Gators.
17 times, leading to 11 Cyclones points. Johnny Davis, the Big Ten Player of the Year, had 17 points for Wisconsin, but made just 4 of 16 shots, including 0 of 7 beyond the arc. EAST REGION (Milwaukee) No. 3 Purdue 81, No. 6 Texas 71 Trevion Williams scored 22 points and Jaden Ivey had 18 to lead the Boilermakers past the Longhorns in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. Purdue (29-7) will face 15thseeded tournament Cinderella Saint Peter’s in the Sweet 16 at Philadelphia on Friday. Williams scored back-to-back baskets underneath to cap a 7-0 run and put Purdue in front 59-52 with just under eight minutes left. Ethan Morton’s wide-open 3-pointer from the right corner pushed the lead to 65-56. Marcus Carr’s 3-pointer pulled Texas (22-12) within
74-71, but Ivey countered with a deep 3 from the top of the key with 1:01 left. The Boilermakers closed it out with four free throws. Carr had 23 points and Andrew Jones 17 for the Longhorns. SOUTH REGION (Pittsburgh) No. 5 Houston 68, No. 4 Illinois 53 Taze Moore scored a gamehigh 21 points as the Cougars used a late run to pull away for a win over the Fighting Illini in a second-round game. Jamal Shead added 18 points for the Cougars (31-5), who advanced to the Sweet 16 for the third straight season. Next they will face top-seeded Arizona on Thursday. Kyler Edwards contributed 15 points, six rebounds and four assists for Houston, which won despite making just 42.4 percent of its shots from the field. But the Cougars earned a 39-33 advantage in rebounds
and converted 17 Illinois turnovers into 20 points. Kofi Cockburn collected 19 points and eight rebounds for the Fighting Illini (23-10) in what might be the final game of his college career. Illinois canned just 17 of 50 attempts, hitting only 6 of 25 from the 3-point line. (San Diego) No. 1 Arizona 85, No. 9 TCU 80 (OT) Bennedict Mathurin and Christian Koloko combined for 58 points, including all 10 of the Wildcats’ points in overtime, in beating the Horned Frogs in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. Mathurin scored 30 points, including a monster poster dunk and the 3-pointer that forced overtime. Koloko had a career-high 28 points on 12-of13 shooting and grabbed 12 rebounds. Arizona (33-3) next will face
Houston in the Sweet 16 Thursday in San Antonio. TCU (2113) was led by Eddie Lampkin Jr. (20 points on 8-of-9 shooting with 14 rebounds) and Chuck O’Bannon (team-high 23 points). No. 2 Villanova 71, No. 7 Ohio State 61 Collin Gillespie scored 20 points to lift the Wildcats to a win over the Buckeyes in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. Jermaine Samuels added 17 points, Eric Dixon contributed 13 and Caleb Daniels had 11 for the Wildcats (28-7), who will face 11th-seeded Michigan in the Sweet 16. Villanova has won seven in a row overall and 12 of its last 13 games. Malaki Branham scored 23 points and E.J. Liddell added 17 for the Buckeyes (20-12). WEST REGION (Greenville, S.C.) No. 2 Duke 85,
No. 7 Michigan State 76 Paolo Banchero scored 19 points and the Blue Devils overcame a five-point deficit in the last five minutes to defeat the Spartans and extend coach Mike Krzyzewski’s career in the NCAA Tournament’s second round. The Blue Devils appeared in trouble after Michigan State’s 13-2 run, but they converted on offense down the stretch to give Krzyzewski his 1,200th collegiate coaching victory. Duke closed the game on a 13-2 run. Second-seeded Duke (30-6) will meet No. 3 seed Texas Tech on Thursday. Mark Williams, Jeremy Roach and Wendell Moore Jr. each scored 15 points and Trevor Keels added 12 points for Duke. Gabe Brown’s 18 points, Marcus Bingham Jr.’s 16 and Tyson Walker’s 13 paced seventh-seeded Michigan State (23-13).
Next Gen car. The (No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports) Chevrolet was awesome there. Worked hard overnight. Had a pretty rough practice and worked hard on it and got it handling well, like I told you. It was kind of an intermediate style with a little bit of speedway into it, so a lot of fun.” In essence, track owner Speedway Motorsports Inc. transformed an intermediate downforce track into a miniDaytona, and NASCAR responded by mandating a superspeedway competition package for the first race on the new asphalt.
Those who doubted that the dramatic changes would produce nail-biting side-by-side racing were quickly proven wrong, as many of the race teams left the track with destroyed race cars and drivers with payback on their minds. Byron managed to steer clear of the chaos, but Chastain did not. Leading on Lap 94 near the end of Stage 1, Chastain blew a right rear tire on his No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet and slammed in the outside wall in Turn 2. Chastain lost two laps for improper fueling under NASCAR’s damaged vehicle policy but
regained them as the beneficiary under two straight cautions. Deft repair work by his crew kept him competitive. “That’s the fight in Trackhouse,” Chastain said. “This Gen 7 car, to take a lick like that, blow a tire out of nowhere and leading, just cruising, blow a right rear, slam the wall. Thought our day was over. Our guys went underneath the car, got the toe closer, and we got the balance back where I could drive it. “And just the Chevy was fast. It was so fast. I mean, we were fighting with Will there at the beginning. It’s so cool to race
with buddies. I’m getting to race with my-I only have a few, but the last few weeks I’ve been able to race with my buddies.” Like Chastain, Kurt Busch was collected in a major accident (Lap 145) but recovered to run third as the highest-finishing Toyota. Daniel Suarez was fourth, giving Trackhouse Racing-co-owned by Justin Marks and pop star Pitbull-two cars in the top five. Corey LaJoie came home fifth, scoring the first top five of his Cup career. Chase Elliott, Chris Buescher, Martin Truex Jr., Joey Logano and Alex Bowman completed the top 10.
All told, 28 of the 37 cars that started the race were involved in collisions. That number included Wallace, who was collected in a wreck with Justin Haley and Buescher approaching the checkered flag. Wallace finished 13th. Notes: Three different Hendrick Motorsports drivers have won three of the first five races this season, with Kyle Larson taking the checkered flag at Fontana and Bowman taking the trophy at Las Vegas... The race featured 11 cautions for 65 laps... Byron led eight times for 111 laps. Chastain was second in laps led with 42.
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Contract will be awarded based upon the lowest qualified bid.
Rentals
Contract Documents, including Invitation to Bidders, Instruction to Bidders, Wage Rates, Bid Documents, Agreement, Special Notes, Specifications Contract Drawings and any Addenda are available by email. Digital versions of the plans and specifications may be obtained by contacting the City of Hudson. Bid document requests shall be made by emailing pbujanow@cityofhudson.org. No questions or inquires regarding this bid will be accepted within five (5) business days prior to the bid opening. Each bid must be accompanied by security in an amount not less than five percent (5%) of the amount of the bid in the form and subject to the conditions provided in the Instructions to Bidders. No bidder may withdraw his bid within forty-five (45) days after the actual date of opening thereof. The attention of Bidders is particularly called to the requirements as to conditions of employment to be observed and minimum wage rates to be paid under this Contract. As part of this Notice To Bidders, and consistent with New York State Article 15A and 17B of the Executive Laws, the City of Hudson strongly encourages all firms to submit proposals that utilize partnerships, joint ventures, or sub-consultant arrangements with New York State certified MWBE and SDVOB firms for this procurement. Bids to be considered must be received in a sealed envelope at the office of Peter Bujanow, Commissioner of Public Works, City Hall, City of Hudson, 520 Warren Street, Hudson, NY 12534 by 12:30 PM, local time, on April 11, 2022 at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read aloud. Bids received after the above noted time will not be accepted. All sealed envelopes should be clearly labeled "BID FOR US ROUTE 9/NY ROUTE 23B INTERSECTION IMPROVEMENTS." The sealed bids shall include the completed Bid Form, Non-Collusive Bidding Certification (as required by chapter 956 of the Laws of New York State) and Bid Bond.
332
Roommates/ Home Sharing
HOUSEMATE WANTEDSenior Citizen request person to share expenses of 3700 sq ft modern home, 1 mile from Hudson. Private bed. Requesting $1,100 / mo. Incls. heat, elec. direct tv, trash, one time cleaning, treadmill, W/D. Full use of residence. Must be clean, non-smoker, credit score of 650 plus. Proof of income References. No pets. Call or text (518)965-3563.
415
General Help
HOME CARE needed full time for adult woman in Germantown. Please call (518)537-3677
The Bidder to whom the Contract is awarded will be required to furnish Performance, Payment and Guarantee Bonds from an acceptable Surety Company for an amount not less than 100% of the accepted bid.
DATE ENTRY Experience Preferred. F/T, Benefits, EOE, Please call Elaine @ 518-325-3331.
Owners Contact Peter Bujanow Commissioner of Public Works Phone: (518) 828-9458 Email: pbujanow@cityofhudson.org
TOWN OF NEW BALTIMORE SUMMER RECREATION Director, Assistant Director/Counselor positions are available for our annual recreation program from July 11-August 5, 2022 from 8:30 AM-12 Noon Monday-Friday. The Director will need to fundraise, plan and manage the program with an Assistant Director/Counselors. Please send cover letter/resume for Director/Assistant Director and applications for Counselors are available at www.townofnewbaltimore.org under “Parks” or at Town Hall and can be submitted to Councilwoman Shelly VanEtten, 3809 CR 51, Hannacroix, NY 12087.
Buy It, Sell It, Trade It, Find It In The Classifieds
Employment
Anyone attending the bid opening must follow the rules established by the City of Hudson for Attendance of Public Bid Openings. Upon entering the Main Door at City Hall located at 520 Warren Street, everyone will check-in and attest to the following questions: 1) I have not had COVID-19 symptoms in the past 14 days, 2) I have not been in contact with a confirmed or suspected COVID-19 positive case, and 3) I have not tested positive for COVID-19. Only one Company representative will be allowed to attend the BID. Please wear a cloth face covering at all times and maintain a distance of 6 feet whenever possible.
The City of Hudson reserves the right to consider the bids for forty-five (45) days after receipt before awarding any Contract, and to waive any informalities in, and to reject, any and all bids or to accept the one that in its judgment will be for the best interest of the City. All bids are subject to final review and approval by the City of Hudson Department of Public Works Commissioner before any award of contract may be made. Receipt of bids by the City shall not be construed as authority to bind the City.
The Town of New Baltimore is seeking a part-time clerk who is responsible for maintaining records of a court and to assist the judges with their administrative functions. Specific duties entail: Preparing dockets/calendars of cases to be called and utilizing a variety of computer software and case management systems. Recording payments of court fines and fees. Will be required to answer inquiries from the general public regarding judicial procedures, court appearances, trial dates, adjournments, and other courtrelated matters. Prepare and issue orders of the court, including probation orders, protective orders, release documentation sentencing information, and summonses as well as prepare documents regarding the outcome of court proceedings. Responsibilities will include searching files and contacting witnesses, attorneys, and litigants, in order to obtain information for the court. Must be able to work independently, as well as have strong communication and inter-personal skills. Legal or prior court clerk experience preferred. Interested applicants may obtain an application from the New Baltimore Town Hall. Submit applications along with resume to New Baltimore Town Court, PO Box 67, Hannacroix, NY 12087.
420
435
Office Help Wanted
Professional & Technical Bookkeeper, Part-Time Town of Hillsdale
The Town of Hillsdale, New York is seeking an experienced part time bookkeeper. Requirements include, but are not limited to, knowledge and experience with QuickBooks; generating abstracts for the Town Board for approval, payroll posting and transfers, entering vouchers and coding expenses to the correct department and accounts, submitting data to the Accountant. Municipal experience preferred. Please send letter of interest, resume and letters of recommendation to:
Engineers Contact Dan Reynolds, PE Creighton Manning Engineering, LLP Phone: (518) 446-0396 Email: dreynolds@cmellp.com No questions or inquiries regarding this bid will be accepted within five (5) business days prior to the bid opening.
Town Clerk, PO Box 305, Hillsdale, NY 12529 or email: Townclerkhdale@fairpoint.net. The Town of Hillsdale is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
NBA roundup: Mitchell torches Knicks for 36 in Jazz victory Field Level Media
Donovan Mitchell, a New York City-area native, scored 36 points in his return to action as visiting Utah pulled away in the fourth quarter to earn the 10893 win over New York on Sunday. Mitchell – who was born about 25 miles from Madison Square Garden in Elmsford – missed Friday’s 121-92 win over the Los Angeles Clippers due to a calf injury. Jordan Clarkson scored 23 points for the Jazz, who increased their lead over the idle Dallas Mavericks to two games in the race for fourth place in the Western Conference. RJ Barrett scored 24 points and Julius Randle had a doubledouble (13 points, 11 rebounds) for the Knicks, who remained five games behind the Atlanta Hawks in the race for 10th place in the Eastern Conference and the final spot in the play-in tournament. Evan Fournier had 17 points while Immanuel Quickley added 16. Spurs 110, Warriors 108 Keldon Johnson followed in a missed free throw with threetenths of a second remaining Sunday night, allowing the visiting San Antonio Spurs to survive a foul-filled finish to stun the Golden State Warriors 110108 in San Francisco. Josh Richardson came off the bench to score a team-high 25 points and was one of six Spurs with multiple 3-pointers as San
Antonio won at Golden State for the second time this season. Jordan Poole led all scorers with 28 points and Klay Thompson chipped in with 24 for the Warriors, who played for the first time since Stephen Curry suffered a foot injury against the Boston Celtics on Wednesday. Johnson finished with 14 points, seven rebounds and five assists for the Spurs, while Dejounte Murray had his typically strong all-around game with 19 points, six rebounds and a game-high eight assists. Raptors 93, 76ers 88 Pascal Siakam had 26 points and 10 rebounds and visiting Toronto defeated Philadelphia. Chris Boucher added 12 points and 14 rebounds and Precious Achiuwa matched his season best with 21 points for the Raptors, who have won six of their past seven games. Scottie Barnes added 13 points. Joel Embiid had 21 points and 13 rebounds for the 76ers, who had won their two previous games. Tyrese Maxey had 19 points, James Harden added 17 points, Matisse Thybulle had 12 and Georges Niang scored 11. Celtics 124, Nuggets 104 Jayson Tatum and Jalen Brown scored 30 points each and visiting Boston used a big second quarter to beat Denver. Payton Pritchard scored 17 and Grant Williams had 13 points for Boston, which has won the first three games of its
WENDELL CRUZ/USA TODAY
Utah Jazz guard Donovan Mitchell (45) goes up for a dunk in the third quarter against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden on Sunday.
four-game road trip. Nikola Jokic had 23 points on 8-for-23 shooting, Aaron Gordon scored 13, DeMarcus Cousins had 12 and Bones Hyland 11 for Denver, which has lost two straight and three in a row at home. Suns 127, Kings 124 (OT) Devin Booker scored 31 points as visiting Phoenix rallied for its fifth straight win, beating Sacramento. Mikal Bridges scored 27 points and Landry Shamet added 21 for Phoenix, which trailed by as many as 14 early in the third quarter. JaVale McGee had 14 points while Deandre Ayton had 12 points and 10 rebounds. Rookie Davion Mitchell
paced Sacramento with career highs in points (28) and assists (nine). Harrison Barnes scored 21 points while Domantas Sabonis had 18 points and 12 rebounds before exiting late in the fourth quarter with a left knee injury. Pacers 129, Trail Blazers 98 Oshae Brissett collected 24 points and nine rebounds as host Indiana recorded a win over Portland. Justin Anderson scored a season-high 18 points in his first start of the season for the Pacers, who finished with seven players scoring in double figures. Terry Taylor made all seven of his shots to match Jalen Smith with 17 points for Indiana, which enjoyed a 56-31
advantage in points from its reserves. The Pacers led wire-to-wire to send Portland to its fourth straight loss and 10th in the last 11 games. The Blazers are winless on their current five-game road swing, which concludes Monday in Detroit. Josh Hart went 3-of-5 from long range and finished with a game-high 26 points for Portland. Magic 90, Thunder 85 Wendell Carter Jr. had a career-high 30 points and 16 rebounds as host Orlando snapped a three-game losing streak with a comeback win over short-handed Oklahoma City. Orlando, which improved to 2-3 on its six-game homestand, outscored the Thunder 28-21 in the fourth quarter. Franz Wagner finished with 11 points, seven rebounds and four assists as the Magic overcame 24 missed 3-pointers (7-for-31) and 21 total turnovers. The Thunder, who failed to reach 100 points for the first time since Feb. 11 when they dropped a 100-87 decision at Philadelphia, had all nine available players reach the scoring column. Darius Bazley scored 18 points, making two triples, but Oklahoma City shot only 33 percent (30-for-92) as a team and committed 16 turnovers. Pelicans 117, Hawks 112 Jonas Valanciunas had 26 points and 12 rebounds to lead
REPORTERS, EDITORS AND PHOTOGRAPHERS CREATE REAL NEWS. JOURNALISM YOU CAN TRUST.
three New Orleans players with double-doubles in a win over host Atlanta. Willy Hernangomez had 17 points and 10 rebounds in 15 minutes off the bench, while Jaxson Hayes added 12 points and 12 rebounds. CJ McCollum scored 25 points, Jose Alvarado had 15 and Herbert Jones 11. Danilo Gallinari scored 27 points to lead Atlanta. Trae Young had 21 points and 10 assists, Bogdan Bogdanovic scored 21, Clint Capela had 14 points and 11 rebounds and De’Andre Hunter scored 11. Grizzlies 122, Rockets 98 Desmond Bane and Dillon Brooks combined for 44 points as Memphis rolled to a road victory over Houston despite the absence of Ja Morant. Memphis utilized a balanced scoring attack with Morant, their All-Star guard and NBA Most Valuable Player candidate, sidelined by right knee soreness. Bane paired 24 points with a team-high-tying seven assists to pace six Grizzlies in double figures in scoring. Brooks scored 20. Dennis Schroder scored 17 points to lead three doubledigit scorers off the Houston bench. KJ Martin scored 15 points while Alperen Sengun posted 12 points and nine rebounds. The Rockets’ starting backcourt of Jalen Green and Kevin Porter Jr. combined for 22 points on 8-for-31 shooting.
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COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
B4 Tuesday, March 22, 2022
Announcements 610
Announcements
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Notice is hereby given that the City of Hudson will accept sealed bids for: Intersection Improvements, US Route 9/NY Route 23B, in the City of Hudson, Columbia County, New York Contract will be awarded based upon the lowest qualified bid. Contract Documents, including Invitation to Bidders, Instruction to Bidders, Wage Rates, Bid Documents, Agreement, Special Notes, Specifications Contract Drawings and any Addenda are available by email. Digital versions of the plans and specifications may be obtained by contacting the City of Hudson. Bid document requests shall be made by emailing pbujanow@cityofhudson.org. No questions or inquires regarding this bid will be accepted within five (5) business days prior to the bid opening. Each bid must be accompanied by security in an amount not less than five percent (5%) of the amount of the bid in the form and subject to the conditions provided in the Instructions to Bidders. No bidder may withdraw his bid within forty-five (45) days after the actual date of opening thereof. The attention of Bidders is particularly called to the requirements as to conditions of employment to be observed and minimum wage rates to be paid under this Contract. As part of this Notice To Bidders, and consistent with New York State Article 15A and 17B of the Executive Laws, the City of Hudson strongly encourages all firms to submit proposals that utilize partnerships, joint ventures, or sub-consultant arrangements with New York State certified MWBE and SDVOB firms for this procurement. Bids to be considered must be received in a sealed envelope at the office of Peter Bujanow, Commissioner of Public Works, City Hall, City of Hudson, 520 Warren Street, Hudson, NY 12534 by 12:30 PM, local time, on April 11, 2022 at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read aloud. Bids received after the above noted time will not be accepted. All sealed envelopes should be clearly labeled "BID FOR US ROUTE 9/NY ROUTE 23B INTERSECTION IMPROVEMENTS." The sealed bids shall include the completed Bid Form, Non-Collusive Bidding Certification (as required by chapter 956 of the Laws of New York State) and Bid Bond. Anyone attending the bid opening must follow the rules established by the City of Hudson for Attendance of Public Bid Openings. Upon entering the Main Door at City Hall located at 520 Warren Street, everyone will check-in and attest to the following questions: 1) I have not had COVID-19 symptoms in the past 14 days, 2) I have not been in contact with a confirmed or suspected COVID-19 positive case, and 3) I have not tested positive for COVID-19. Only one Company representative will be allowed to attend the BID. Please wear a cloth face covering at all times and maintain a distance of 6 feet whenever possible. The Bidder to whom the Contract is awarded will be required to furnish Performance, Payment and Guarantee Bonds from an acceptable Surety Company for an amount not less than 100% of the accepted bid. The City of Hudson reserves the right to consider the bids for forty-five (45) days after receipt before awarding any Contract, and to waive any informalities in, and to reject, any and all bids or to accept the one that in its judgment will be for the best interest of the City. All bids are subject to final review and approval by the City of Hudson Department of Public Works Commissioner before any award of contract may be made. Receipt of bids by the City shall not be construed as authority to bind the City. Owners Contact Peter Bujanow Commissioner of Public Works Phone: (518) 828-9458 Email: pbujanow@cityofhudson.org Engineers Contact Dan Reynolds, PE Creighton Manning Engineering, LLP Phone: (518) 446-0396 Email: dreynolds@cmellp.com
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF
INDEX NO. 18-0808
NEW YORK – COUNTY OF GREENE
Plaintiff designates GREENE as the place of trial situs of the real property SUPPLEMENTAL SUMMONS
INDEX # EF2018-1038 FILED: 1/27/2022
Mortgaged Premises: 220 BOTTI DR, HUNTER, NY 12442
Plaintiff designates Greene County as the place
Section: 164.07 Block: 1 Lot: 8 COUNTY OF GREENE _______________________________________________ ARCPE 1 LLC Plaintiff, vs. BRUCE J. FIXELLE AKA BRUCE JAY FIXELLE; LINDA FOX FIXELLE; LINDA FOX FIXELLE, AS TRUSTEE OF THE BRUCE FIXELLE CREDIT SHELTER TRUST F/B/O ADAM HOWARD FIXELLE AND F/B/O BRYAN WILLIAM FIXELLE; ADAM HOWARD FIXELLE, AS POTENTIAL BENEFICIARY OF THE BRUCE FIXELLE CREDIT SHELTER TRUST; BRYAN WILLIAM FIXELLE, AS POTENTIAL BENEFICIARY OF THE BRUCE FIXELLE CREDIT SHELTER TRUST; BRUCE JAY FIXELLE, AS TRUSTEE OF THE LINDA FIXELLE CREDIT SHELTER TRUST F/B/O JESSE LEE FIXELLE; JESSE LEE FIXELLE, AS POTENTIAL BENEFICIARY OF THE LINDA FIXELLE CREDIT SHELTER TRUST; UNKNOWN BENEFICIARIES OF THE BRUCE FIXELLE CREDIT SHELTER TRUST; any and all persons unknown to plaintiff, claiming, or who may claim to have an interest in, or general or specific lien upon the real property described in this action; such unknown persons being herein generally described and intended to be included in the following designation, namely: the wife, widow, husband, widower, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors, and assignees of such deceased, any and all persons deriving interest in or lien upon, or title to said real property by, through or under them, or either of them, and their respective wives, widows, husbands, widowers, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors and assigns, all of whom and whose names, except as stated, are unknown to plaintiff, UNKNOWN BENEFICIARIES OF THE LINDA FIXELLE CREDIT SHELTER TRUST; any and all persons unknown to plaintiff, claiming, or who may claim to have an interest in, or general or specific lien upon the real property described in this action; such unknown persons being herein generally described and intended to be included in the following designation, namely: the wife, widow, husband, widower, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors, and assignees of such deceased, any and all persons deriving interest in or lien upon, or title to said real property by, through or under them, or either of them, and their respective wives, widows, husbands, widowers, heirs at law, next of kin, descendants, executors, administrators, devisees, legatees, creditors, trustees, committees, lienors and assigns, all of whom and whose names, except as stated, are unknown to plaintiff, THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK BY VIRTUE OF POSSIBLE UNPAID TAXES OR LIENS OF UNKNOWN BENEFICIARIES OF THE BRUCE FIXELLE CREDIT SHELTER TRUST AND UNKNOWN BENEFICIARIES OF THE LINDA FIXELLE CREDIT SHELTER TRUST; THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BY VIRTUE OF POSSIBLE UNPAID TAXES OR LIENS OF UNKNOWN BENEFICIARIES OF THE BRUCE FIXELLE CREDIT SHELTER TRUST AND UNKNOWN BENEFICIARIES OF THE LINDA FIXELLE CREDIT SHELTER TRUST; BRIAN COX, "JOHN DOE #2" through "JOHN DOE #10," said names being fictitious and unknown to plaintiff, intended to be possible tenants or occupants of the premises, or corporations, persons, or other entities having or claiming a lien upon the mortgaged premises, Defendants. _______________________________________________
No questions or inquiries regarding this bid will be accepted within five (5) business days prior to the bid opening.
To the above named Defendants YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the Complaint in the above entitled action and to serve a copy of your Answer on the plaintiff’s attorney within twenty (20) days of the service of this Summons, exclusive of the day of service, or within thirty (30) days after service of the same is complete where service is made in any manner other than by personal delivery within the State. The United States of America, if designated as a defendant in this action, may answer or appear within sixty (60) days of service. Your failure to appear or to answer will result in a judgment against you by default for the relief demanded in the Complaint. In the event that a deficiency balance remains from the sale proceeds, a judgment may be entered against you. NOTICE OF SOUGHT
NATURE
OF
ACTION
AND
RELIEF
THE OBJECT of the above caption action is to foreclose a Mortgage to secure the sum of $460,000.00 and interest, recorded on October 23, 2006, in Liber 2336 at Page 288 , of the Public Records of GREENE County, New York., covering premises known as 220 BOTTI DR, HUNTER, NY 12442. The relief sought in the within action is a final judgment directing the sale of the premises described above to satisfy the debt secured by the Mortgage described above. GREENE County is designated as the place of trial because the real property affected by this action is located in said county.
i
NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME If you do not respond to this summons and complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property.
t
ow.
Sending a payment to the mortgage company will not stop the foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. Dated: June 4th , 2021 Westbury, NY ROBERTSON, ANSCHUTZ, SCHNEID, CRANE & PARTNERS, PLLC
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Attorney for Plaintiff Veronica M. Rundle, Esq. 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310 Westbury, NY 11590 516-280-7675
AMENDED SUPPLEMENTAL SUMMONS
of trial. The basis of venue is: The location of real property being foreclosed. U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE, SUCCESSOR IN INTEREST TO WACHOVIA BANK, N.A. (FORMERLY KNOWN AS FIRST UNION NATIONAL BANK), AS TRUSTEE, FOR LONG BEACH MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST 2000-1, Plaintiff, against UNKNOWN HEIRS OF THE ESTATE OF LAWRENCE J. BYRNE, JR. AKA LAWRENCE BYRNE and DIANA HOLBROOK, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS HEIR AT LAW AND NEXT OF KIN OF LAWRENCE J. BYRNE, JR. AKA LAWRENCE BYRNE if he/she/they be living and if they be dead, the respective heirs-at-law, next-of-kin, distributees, executors, administrators, trustees, devisees, legatees, assignees, lienors, creditors and successors in interest and generally all persons having or claiming under, by or through said defendant(s) who may be deceased, by purchase, inheritance, lien or inheritance, any right, title or interest in or to the real property described in the Complaint, MICHELLE HOLDRIDGE AS HEIR AT LAW AND NEXT OF KIN OF LAWRENCE J. BYRNE, JR. AKA LAWRENCE BYRNE, WENDY HOLDRIDGE AS HEIR AT LAW AND NEXT OF KIN OF LAWRENCE J. BYRNE, JR. AKA LAWRENCE BYRNE, NATHAN HOLDRIDGE AS HEIR AT LAW AND NEXT OF KIN OF LAWRENCE J. BYRNE, JR. AKA LAWRENCE BYRNE, LAWRENCE BYRNE AS HEIR AT LAW AND NEXT OF KIN OF LAWRENCE J. BYRNE, JR. AKA LAWRENCE BYRNE, MICHAEL HOLDRIDGE AS HEIR AT LAW AND NEXT OF KIN OF LAWRENCE J. BYRNE, JR. AKA LAWRENCE BYRNE, PETER J. MARKOU AS ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF FREDERIC L. SIGLINGER, MIDLAND FUNDING LLC DBA IN NEW YORK AS MIDLAND FUNDING OF DELAWARE LLC, CACH, LLC, NATIONAL CREDIT ADJUSTERS, LLC, RONALD A. COONS SR, LVNV FUNDING LLC, DAVID A. RIKARD, NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF TAXATION AND FINANCE, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE and "JOHN DOE" and "JANE DOE", the last two names being fictitious, said parties intended being tenants or occupants, if any, having or claiming an interest in, or lien upon the premises described in the complaint, Defendant(s). To the above named Defendants: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to answer the complaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer, or, if the complaint is not served with this summons, to serve a notice of appearance on the plaintiff's attorney(s) within 20 days after the service of this summons, exclusive of the day of service (or within 30 days after service is complete if this summons is not personally delivered to you within the State of New York); and in case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. NOTICE YOU ARE IN DANGER OF LOSING YOUR HOME. If you do not respond to this Summons and Complaint by serving a copy of the answer on the attorney for the mortgage company who filed this foreclosure proceeding against you and filing the answer with the court, a default judgment may be entered and you can lose your home. Speak to an attorney or go to the court where your case is pending for further information on how to answer the summons and protect your property. Sending a payment to your mortgage company will not stop this foreclosure action. YOU MUST RESPOND BY SERVING A COPY OF THE ANSWER ON THE ATTORNEY FOR THE PLAINTIFF (MORTGAGE COMPANY) AND FILING THE ANSWER WITH THE COURT. The foregoing summons is served upon you by publication pursuant to an order of the Honorable Adam W Silverman, a Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, Greene County, granted on the 22nd day of November, 2021, and amended by Order granted on the 25th day of January, 2022, and filed with the Complaint and other papers in the office of the County Clerk of Greene County. The object of this action is to foreclose a mortgage upon the premises described below, executed by LAWRENCE J. BYRNE, JR. AKA LAWRENCE BYRNE and DIANA HOLBROOK to LONG BEACH MORTGAGE COMPANY, bearing date October 20, 2000 and recorded in Book 1401, Page 209 in the County of Greene on November 14, 2000, which was assigned to US BANK, N.A. AS SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE TO WACHOVIA BANK, NA (FORMERLY KNOWN AS FIRST UNION NATIONAL BANK) AS TRUSTEE FOR LONG BEACH MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST 2000-1 by instrument dated February 11, 2010 and recorded on March 5, 2010, in Book 2767, Page 148. Said premises being known as and by STATE RT 296 A/K/A 366 STATE RT 296, WINDHAM, NY 12439, bearing tax map designation Section: 96.14, Block: 3, Lot: 1, which is more fully described in the Schedule “A” attached to the Complaint. To the above named Defendants: YOU ARE HEREBY PUT ON NOTICE THAT WE ARE ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. There is due and owing to plaintiff the sum of $44,885.09 plus interest thereon from January 1, 2013, in addition to those accumulated late charges and those recoverable monies advanced by Plaintiff and/or Plaintiff’s predecessor-in-interest on behalf of Lawrence J Byrne, Jr. aka Lawrence Byrne and Diana Holbrook together with all costs, including but not limited to, attorneys' fees, disbursements, and further allowances provided pursuant to the underlying loan documents and applicable law in bringing any action to protect the Mortgagee's interest in the Subject Property. The relief sought in the within action is a final judgment directing the sale of the premises described above to satisfy the debt described above. UNLESS YOU DISPUTE THE VALIDITY OF THE DEBT, OR ANY PORTION THEREOF, WITHIN THIRTY (30) DAYS AFTER YOUR RECEIPT HEREOF THAT THE DEBT, OR ANY PORTION THEREOF, IS DISPUTED, THE DEBTOR JUDGMENT AGAINST YOU AND A COPY OF SUCH VERIFICATION OR JUDGMENT WILL BE MAILED TO YOU BY THE HEREIN DEBT COLLECTOR. IF APPLICABLE, UPON YOUR WRITTEN REQUEST, WITHIN SAID THIRTY (30) DAY PERIOD, THE HEREIN DEBT COLLECTOR WILL PROVIDE YOU WITH THE NAME AND ADDRESS OF THE ORIGINAL CREDITOR. IF YOU HAVE RECEIVED A DISCHARGE FROM THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT, YOU ARE NOT PERSONALLY LIABLE FOR THE UNDERLYING INDEBTEDNESS OWED TO PLAINTIFF/CREDITOR AND THIS NOTICE/DISCLOSURE IS FOR COMPLIANCE AND INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. HELP FOR HOMEOWNERS IN FORECLOSURE New York State requires that we send you this notice about the foreclosure process. Please read it carefully. SUMMONS AND COMPLAINT You are in danger of losing your home. If you fail to respond to the Summons and Complaint in this foreclosure action, you may lose your home. Please read the Summons and Complaint carefully. You should immediately contact an attorney or your local legal aid office to obtain advice on how to protect yourself. SOURCES OF INFORMATION AND ASSISTANCE The State encourages you to become informed about your options in foreclosure. In addition to seeking assistance from an attorney or legal aid, there are government agencies, and non-profit organizations that you may contact for information about possible options, including trying to work with your lender during this process. To locate an entity near you, you may call the toll-free helpline maintained by New York State Department of Financial Services’ at 1-800-269-0990 or visit the Department’s website at http://www.dfs.ny.gov Rights and Obligations YOU ARE NOT REQUIRED TO LEAVE YOUR HOME AT THIS TIME. You have the right to stay in your home during the foreclosure process. You are not required to leave your home unless and until your property is sold at auction pursuant to a judgment of foreclosure and sale. Regardless of whether you choose to remain in your home, YOU ARE REQUIRED TO TAKE CARE OF YOUR PROPERTY and pay property taxes in accordance with state and local law. FORECLOSURE RESCUE SCAMS Be careful of people who approach you with offers to “save” your home. There are individuals who watch for notices of foreclosure actions in order to unfairly profit from a homeowner’s distress. You should be extremely careful about any such promises and any suggestions that you pay them a fee or sign over your deed. State law requires anyone offering such services for profit to enter into a contract which fully describes the services they will perform and fees they will charge, and which prohibits them from taking any money from you until they have completed all such promised services. Aldridge Pite, LLP. Attorneys for the Plaintiff, 40 Marcus Drive, Suite 200, Melville, NY 11747 Our File 101222795B
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Tuesday, March 22, 2022 B5
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Merchandise 730
Miscellaneous for Sale
FREE MOTORIZED wheel chair, needs battery. (518)622-9109.
795
Wanted to Buy
VINYL WANTED!!! Cash for rock, disco, funk, jazz, punk vinyl collections. No oldies or show tunes. Can pick up anywhere in the Hudson/ Catskill area. 917-371-3232.
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COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
B6 Tuesday, March 22, 2022
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Tuesday, March 22, 2022 B7
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
Beau shows no desire to grow relationship Dear Abby, I have been dating “Brent” for four years. Prior to meeting him, I was divorced with two children. Brent shows little interest in my kids’ lives. He doesn’t want us to live together before the kids are out of the house, and he never plans to get married. (My youngest is 10.) DEAR ABBY Even if he would agree to move in now, I don’t want to move to his city because my kids need to be close to their school, their friends and their father. Brent doesn’t want to relocate because it’s heavily populated and he thinks my town is geared more toward a younger generation. I really would like to take our relationship to the next level. I have been trying to do it for four years, but he ignores my subtle hints. I can’t imagine life without him. I have even considered getting pregnant to make this relationship go further, in spite of knowing he doesn’t want a baby. Advice? Getting Desperate In The Heartland
JEANNE PHILLIPS
You have wasted four years of your life on the wrong man. Brent is centered on himself and would be a negative, disruptive influence in your children’s lives. Your first responsibility must be to them. As to the idea of “trapping” him by becoming pregnant — I DON’T RECOMMEND IT! You could get a rude awakening and end up parenting a child you didn’t really want all by yourself. So start imagining a life without him. It will be a happier one that way.
Dear Abby, I have a co-worker I enjoyed talking to and being around. I’m 27, and she is 41. We used to sit together at lunch and during our break. All of a sudden, she stopped sitting with me during the first break but she still ate lunch with me. Then she stopped that also! I asked her if I said or did anything wrong and she said no. I asked her if she was avoiding me or had found something wrong, and she insisted there was nothing and I worry too much. So now I sit alone and she sits somewhere else by herself with her phone. I was nice to her. We talked about our day and sometimes shared snacks during the break. All that is gone. I know people grow apart, but it stings. Being an adult means moving on, but when something happens for no apparent reason, there has to be an explanation. Can you share your insight on this dilemma? Lunching Alone There is always a reason. Perhaps you should believe your co-worker when she says you didn’t do or say anything wrong. What may have changed are her circumstances. You mentioned that rather than sit with you, she now sits alone with her cellphone. It’s possible that something is going on with her family — or her personal life that requires her attention. I know it stings, but you have to let it go. Find someone else to socialize with during breaks. It would be less painful if she explained it to you, but your co-worker may be a private person.
Pickles
Pearls Before Swine
Classic Peanuts
Garfield
Horoscope By Stella Wilder Born today, you enjoy taking a stab at things whenever opportunity presents itself, and you do not burden yourself with the need to succeed at everything you try. You know perfectly well that because you’re likely to try many, many things throughout your lifetime, you’re going to experience perhaps more than one’s usual share of failure or disappointment, but that’s not something that gets you down. You know that appearances can be deceiving, but that doesn’t mean that your own isn’t important to you, or that you don’t have to put your best foot forward and present yourself well whenever you have the chance to do so. You want people to size you up correctly, so you are more than willing to do what you can to make the right impression. Also born on this date are: Reese Witherspoon, actress; William Shatner, actor; James Patterson, author; Andrew Lloyd Webber, composer; Ross Martin, actor; George Benson, musician; Chico Marx, actor and comedian; Bob Costas, sportscaster and commentator. 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. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23 ARIES (March 21-April 19) — Putting your best foot forward today may not be as easy as usual — but with some forethought, you’ll present yourself in the best light. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — You mustn’t let unfamiliar surroundings slow you down today. Keep moving, and trust that you’ll know what to do when danger approaches. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — You’re going to have to take a few detours today before you fi-
nally get to your destination, but the trip may be full of discoveries. CANCER (June 21-July 22) — If you’re not ready to face an opponent, you must not enter the contest. Today, much depends on your ability to assess yourself realistically. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — You can minimize risks today — but only for so long. Eventually, you’re going to have to face the one you’ve been avoiding more than any other. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — There is no call for you to be a daredevil today — or tomorrow. See what lies ahead, assess the dangers and alter your approach accordingly. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — You must do all you can to increase your own security today — physically and financially. Most home expenditures are surely worth it. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — What someone does may get you hot under the collar today, but now is not the time to express such feelings. You’ll recover quickly. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — You are after something that has proved quite elusive, but today you are closer than you’ve been before. Timing is a key factor. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — You must consider a friend’s offer carefully before dismissing it. There’s something to be said for collaborating in such a way. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Try as you might, you are having difficulty getting someone to invest in one of your new ideas. You may have to go through official channels. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — One or two small steps will be all it takes today to start something big — but you can’t expect to get results too soon. Things must ripen.
Zits Dark Side of the Horse
Daily Maze
COPYRIGHT 2022 UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE, INC.
Goren bridge WITH BOB JONES ©2020 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ ANSWERS Q 1 - Neither vulnerable, as South, you hold: ♠ 10 5 4 ♥ A Q 9 4 ♦ K 9 5 ♣ Q 5 4 SOUTH Pass ?
WEST Pass
NORTH 1♠
EAST Pass
What call would you make? A - Hands like this have led to the overwhelming popularity of the Drury convention. A bid of 2C by a passed hand to show a fit with 10+ points is a good idea. Bid 2C. Q 2 - North-South vulnerable, as South, you hold: ♠ A Q 5 3 ♥ A K J 9 6 4 ♦ 7 ♣ K 10
Right-hand opponent opens 1D. What call would you make?
Q 3 - East-West vulnerable, as South, you hold: ♠J764♥A95♦64♣A874
Partner opens 1D and right-hand opponent bid 3H. What call would you make? A - Double. The hand is a bit light, but we would
Q 4 - Both vulnerable, as South, you hold: ♠ K 4 3 ♥ A 10 9 ♦ K J 8 7 4 ♣ 10 9
As dealer, what call would you make? A - The rich spot cards make this hand worth a minimum opening bid. Bid 1D. Q 5 - North-South vulnerable, as South, you hold: ♠KQ3♥A4♦J952♣AKJ7
Right-hand opponent opens 1D. What call would you make? A - A one no trump overcall can be a little heavy – as much as 18 points. Bid 1NT. Q 6 - East-West vulnerable, as South, you hold: ♠ Q 9 8 3 ♥ 10 8 ♦ A 9 4 2 ♣ Q 8 5
Partner opens 1C and right-hand opponent passes. What call would you make? A - In Charles Goren’s heyday, every expert would have bid 1D. Modern experts will respond 1S, focusing on the major. We like it! Bid 1S. (Bob Jones welcomes readers’ responses sent in care of this newspaper or to Tribune Content Agency, LLC., 16650 Westgrove Dr., Suite 175, Addison, TX 75001.)
Columbia-Greene
MEDIA
A - Double. Not only is this hand too good for a simple 1H overcall, double brings spades into the picture if partner has length in that suit.
risk a negative double. You must be aggressive over a pre-empt or the opponents will steal your lunch.
Sponsor Comics 518-828-1616
COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA
B8 Tuesday, March 22, 2022 Close to Home
Free Range THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
Level 1
2
3
4
NYOHE SETUG MUACSP TBINET Solution puzzle Solution to to Saturday’s Monday’s puzzle
3/22/22 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.
Print your answer here: Yesterday’s Saturday’s
sudoku.org.uk sudoku.org.uk © 2022 2022 The The Mepham Mepham Group. Group. Distributed Distributed by by © Tribune Content Content Agency. Agency. All All rights rights reserved. reserved. Tribune
Heart of the City
Dilbert
B.C.
For Better or For Worse
Wizard of Id
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS 1 Florida’s Bush 4 Floats on the breeze 9 “Fuzzy Wuzzy __ bear…” 13 Family of hockey’s Bobby 15 TV’s “Kate & __” 16 Wild goat 17 Unsmiling 18 Magnet for a moth 19 Mirth 20 Became rigid 22 No __ than; as a minimum 23 Easter flower 24 Commit perjury 26 Have high hopes 29 Office machines 34 Homes for nags 35 Asian nation 36 Tombstone letters 37 Toot one’s own horn 38 Pitchfork spike 39 Word with pop or crackers 40 Cereal grain 41 Sinatra or Gifford 42 West Point student 43 Seminary course 45 Riders’ Bets fees 40 46 Failure 47 Gunshot sound 48 Delighted 51 Become more acute 56 Seldom seen 57 Squash or melon 58 Busy cafeteria time 60 Many hardware stores 57 Hemingway’s 61 Right __; 90-degree formation 62 Very excited 63 Mixer speed 64 Next Booby prizeJrs. 61 year’s recipient 65 Popular dog breed DOWN 1 Run slowly 2 Slips up 3 Londoner, for one 4 Breakfast order
Andy Capp
Bound & Gagged
Created by Jacqueline E. Mathews
5 Backstreet 6 Caramel-topped custard Magazine 87 Caspian ortitle North 8 Very young tree 9 1960s hairpiece 10 Was __ to; could 11 Espies 12 Wood splitters 14 Beaming 21 Forest trees 25 __ nutshell; briefly 26 Monk’s superior 27 Mural’s __ Michelle 25 place Gellar 28 Babble 29 U.S. Charlatan 28 state capital 30 Salesman’s Ice skater’s pitch 29 milieu 31 Wear away 32 Egypt’s Passenger 32 boy king 33 Squabbles 35 Mountain climber’s 36 Born’s partner, in challenge 38 __ son; Gospel story squanderer 39 Like an old mattress
3/22/22
Monday’s Puzzle Saturday’s Puzzle Solved Solved
Non Sequitur
©2022 Tribune Tribune Content Content Agency, Agency, LLC LLC ©2022 All Rights Rights Reserved. Reserved. All
41 Reason to take NyQuil 42 Cheap containers 44 Most bizarre 45 Roam 47 Comedian Milton __ 48 ND’s Snatch state trees
3/22/22 3/21/22
49 Frilly trimming 50 Length times width 52 Forbidden thing 53 Yanks 54 Farm newborn 55 Meditative exercise 59 Capture
Rubes
“
Get the free JUST JUMBLE app • Follow us on Twitter @PlayJumble
By David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
”
(Answers (Answers tomorrow) tomorrow) Jumbles: TOKEN IMAGE THICK DOILY LAGOON EQUATE TEACUP BUTTER They added he started up the complaining costs to repair aboutthehismath job Answer: When teacher’s again, his car wifeand toldthen him — to TOTALED — QUIT ITIT