0226 RS eedition

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LOCAL

SPORTS

SPORTS

No injuries reported in Greenport head-on crash n Page A3

Steinbrenner, Cole square off during unproductive lockout meeting n Page B1

NYC Marathon to return to full field size for first time in 3 years n Page B1

Register-Star Copyright 2022, Columbia-Greene Media Volume 238, No. 40

WEEKEND

Serving Columbia and Dutchess counties since 1785

All Rights Reserved

Price $2.50

Saturday-Sunday, February 26-27, 2022

Winter Hudson’s storm Black community drops 6” members call for unity on area By Bill Williams Columbia-Greene Media

Residents of Columbia and Greene counties spent Friday digging out from the latest winter storm. The forecast, which had predicted between 6 to 12 inches of snow, came in on the low end, said Allan Porreca, a local meteorologist. The first part of the storm, which came in through the Ohio Valley, arrived on schedule, however, the second storm, which formed off the New Jersey coast, didn’t develop as quickly as anticipated, and tracked further east, which cut down on the maximum snow totals, Porreca said. The area received between 5 and 6 inches, Porreca said. Area residents awoke Friday morning to between 4 and 5 inches on the ground. The snow became lighter mid-morning and tapered off before noon. There were some areas that saw a very light accumulations later in the afternoon, Porreca said. State, county and town road crews were out early Friday morning plowing area roads, sanding and salting. Driving was dangerous on most roads early Friday morning. Area police and tow truck operators were kept busy with several dozen car accidents throughout the day. Most of the crashes were fender-bender accidents or cars that slid off the road, with no injuries reported. Fire and rescue crews were sent to two accidents in Greene County on Friday morning. The first occurred at about 7:09 a.m. on Route 32 in Greenville when a woman suffered minor injuries after her car slid into a ditch. The second accident happened about 9:06 a.m. on Green Lake Road in Athens when a snow plow struck a utility pole. There were no injuries reported to the 20-year-old male driver. The recent winter storm did not disrupt electric service to the Twin Counties

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

Hudson’s former Harlem Bar on Columbia Street, which served as a social gathering space in the city for the African-American community.

By Noah Eckstein Columbia-Greene Media

HUDSON — Katherine Ryan, the sole Black woman to graduate from Hudson High School in 1951, has watched Columbia County’s only city become more racially segregated now than her childhood

in the wake of the Great Depression and World War II, she said. Ryan, now 88, reflected Friday as Black History Month draws to a close on her memories of the Jim Crow era that cemented segregation and race-centered hatred into the lives and hearts of Americans. As a young Black woman born and raised in Hudson, Ryan recalled belonging to the city’s Colored Citizen’s Club — a social gathering place

for African-Americans that existed from 1940 for several decades. “It was a better time,” Ryan recalled. “We had our own ballroom, our own bars. People affiliated with all walks of life came to our events.” The Colored Citizen’s Club of Hudson purchased the building at 255 Columbia St., which was the site of former St. John’s Methodist Episcopal Church, in 1940 from the See UNITY A2

NOAH ECKSTEIN/COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

The Constitution and By-laws of Hudson’s Colored Citizens’ Club dating back to the ‘50s or ‘60s.

See STORM A2

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has local officials on alert By Natasha Vaughn-Holdridge Columbia-Greene Media

COLUMBIA — The Russian invasion of Ukraine has local and state officials concerned about the safety of Ukranians and about its global repercussions. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine this week displaced tens of thousands Ukranians, as a response by President Joe Biden and U.S. officials called for sanctions on Russia. A number of local people who have family and friends living in Ukraine, Hudson City Mayor Kamal Johnson said Friday. “I think it’s a very scary situation for our nation,” Johnson said. “Who knows where the

future is headed. [We are] worried about our Ukraine population and I know they have deep fears as they have family and friends back in the Ukraine. We as a city just want to support them as much as possible.” New York state has one of the largest Ukrainian populations outside of the country, Gov. Kathy Hochul said late Thursday. “We’re proud of this,” the governor said in a statement. “We’re proud of their diversity and what they bring to all of us, but now they have family members and are deeply concerned about what’s going on in their See UKRAINE A2

Index

STRINGER/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES/TNS

Russian army military vehicles are seen in Armyansk, Crimea, on Feb. 25, 2022.

On the web

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FORECAST FOR HUDSON/CA

TODAY TONIGHT

SUN

‘Severance,’ the importance

of dancing and why he

speaks in

THAT WALKEN WAY Christopher Walken on

Dark origin of kids fable Original ‘Bambi’ was not a children’s story, says a folklore expert By RICHARD CHIN Star Tribune

Sunny much of the time

Mainly clear

Afternoon snow showers

HIGH 34

LOW 14

41 11

Walken as Burt in “Severance.”

Apple TV Plus

DisThe novel on which the dealt ney movie was based racand with loss, loneliness ism. rough If you thought it was die to see Bambi’s mother you film, in the 1942 Disney story. should read the original Before it became an animatchildren, ed classic movie for novel by “Bambi” was a 1922 journalAustrian writer and to a ist Felix Salten. According Zipes, new translation by Jack brutality, it’s a dark story of loneliloss and, ultimately, ness. c tales As anthropomorphi “Charof animals go, it’s less “Anilotte’s Web” and more mal Farm.” of MinZipes, a University of nesota emeritus professor authorGerman and a leading litfolk and tales ity on fairy isn’t an erature, said the story early an animal rights fable or ical parable. “Bambi,”

C INSIDE TODAY! John Turturro, left,

as Irving and Christopher

By STUART MILLER Washington Post

alken is renowned for


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