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ECRWSS PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE PAID DENTON PUBLICATIONS/ NEW MARKET PRESS PO Box 338 Elizabethtown NY 12932 Postal Patron

Saturday,ÊM ayÊ7,Ê2016

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In SPORTS | pg. 12

Automatic from the line Denis wins free throw title

www.SunCommunityNews.com

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In OPINION | pg. 6

Sharing services

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is the future for our schools

In ARTS | pg. 9

At ROTA Studio and Gallery work of Jim Kobak to be exhibited

Anger, grief follows Whispering Maples abandonment The abandonment of a pair of mausoleums in Clinton County has families searching for answers pete@suncommunitynews.com

PLATTSBURGH — It was a storybook romance. Doris Mary Richards gazed across the dance floor at Wilfred Gonyea. “I’m going to marry that boy,” Richards said. She did. The couple got hitched at St. Joseph’s Church in Mooers in July 1945. The American dream followed. Wilfred took on a number of blue collar jobs to support

WoodsÊa nd WildÊ things

his growing family — mechanic, tractor-trailer driver, mine worker. The Redford native also joined a number of civic organizations, including the Knights of Columbus, the Trail Blazers Snowmobile Club and the Peru Rod and Gun Club. Doris found joy in homemaking and raising their six children. Both were devout Catholics and deeply respected in the community. And like other sensible Americans, the couple made funeral arrangements long before they eventually passed away. Whispering Maples Memorial Gardens seemed like a good bet. The nonprofit, which was incorporated in 1980, had been advertising crypt space in a pair of new mausoleums in Platts The state declared the Whispering Maples Memorial Gardens facilities abandoned in 2015. >> See WHISPERING MAPLES | pg. 4

Peru officials creating new sidewalk plan

Plattsburgh elementary students to paint downtown mural PLATTSBURGH — Want to find where the wild things are? A new children’s mural called “Woods and Wild Things” will be featured outside the Corner-Stone Bookshop in downtown Plattsburgh. Teah The mural, which will face Trinity Park, Dowling Writer will feature Adirondack scenery and critters created by elementary students from schools across Clinton County. “We want to make Plattsburgh fun for children,” said Julia Devine, who is overseeing the project. “They’re part of the community too.” The group behind the mural, Outside Art: Plattsburgh Public Art Project, reached out to SUNY Plattsburgh art professors Norman and Tory Taber, who helped create a Beekmantown Elementary mural in June 2008. “They inspired me,” Devine said. To complete the mural, the Tabers plan on working with other area artists, Clinton County students and the art organization. Devine and Amy Guglielmo founded the movement to cre-

New Dunkin’ Donuts site might start trend in future sidewalk development The new children’s mural called “Woods and Wild Things,” which will be featured on the Corner-Stone Bookshop, draws inspiration from Beekmantown Elementary’s mural called “On the Edge.”

ate an art environment and improve livability, with the ultimate goal of making Plattsburgh an art tourist attraction. “We can make our own culture,” Devine said. “Public art can help do that.” The organization’s first mural was of the Battle of Plattsburgh on the side of the 30 City Visitors Center, followed by the Mountain Lake Mandala. Outside Art: Plattsburgh Public Art Project started a student poster contest for all Clinton County elementary students to create their favorite Adirondack animals for the children’s mural. Winners of the contest will be able to help paint their creations in the mural. >>See CHILDREN’S MURAL | pg. 11

By Teah Dowling

teah@suncommunitynews.com

PERU — Officials are stepping over cracks as they work towards implementing a sidewalk plan for the town. At the meeting last month, the planning board required Ray Aley to put in a sidewalk at his new Dunkin’ Donuts site on Bear Swamp Road. Members of the board requested Aley put in a deposit, which initial estimates have pegged at $7,000, to pay for his portion of the sidewalk. If the sidewalk isn’t installed within five years, Aley said his money would be returned. The ultimate goal of the planning board, Chairperson Richard Williams said, is to make the town more walkable. The planning board hopes to make a requirement for any new incoming businesses to incorporate a sidewalk into their site plans or to agree to an easement to install one in the future. >> See SIDEWALK PLAN pg. 10


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