LOCAL • INDEPENDENT • FREE
Prepare for the Worst
Volume 11 • Issue 39 • September 30 – October 6, 2016
Hope for the Best
by Thomas Dimopoulos Saratoga TODAY
Members of the Saratoga Springs Police Department conduct an exercise in active shooter training on a public bus. Photo provided.
SARATOGA SPRINGS — Workplace violence and school shootings. Catastrophic weather events and rail accidents exposing residential neighborhoods to hazardous materials. “Those to me are the hazards we face on any given day,” explained John Catone. The assistant city police chief recently completed a near-two-year project of compiling potential disaster concerns in Saratoga Springs and how to best address them. The Comprehensive
saratogaTODAYnewspaper.com • (518) 581-2480
Emergency Management Plan – comprised of approximately 500 pages of documents and annexes – was unanimously approved by the council this month. It is the first new comprehensive plan the city has had in nearly a decade. Risk preparedness, response, and recovery are three aspects of the plan. In terms of concerns, the potential of a catastrophic weather event, and terrorism register on the city agenda. “You’re also taking into account school shootings and workplace violence, because that’s really what’s going on today,” Catone said. See Plan pg. 16
True Sportsmanship Taxi With a Twist Compassion Trumps Rivalry
Schuylerville turns out to support young rival who was diagnosed with cancer. Photo by MarkBolles.com. See Sportsmanship pg. 12
by Megin Potter for Saratoga TODAY
SARATOGA SPRINGS — On the road, life-altering decisions must be made in a heartbeat. As co-owners of a taxi company, Amanda and Tim Putman saw so many terrible things while they were out on the area's roads. Then Tim thought of a way to make a change that would add an amazing value to people who needed a ride; he started making sure their vehicle got home safely too. That’s how Saratoga’s Designated
Driver’s Car Service was born in January and since then it’s been a different scene full of people that are appreciative and happy. “The feedback’s been awesome. Customers rave the whole time about how much they love the service. It’s been that great response that keeps us moving every day,” Amanda said. What makes them different is that the drivers pair up and meet you at your location. One will drive you home in your car, while the other follows to retrieve the driver after the customers have arrived at See Taxi pg. 14
New
Korean BBQ See pg. 11
World's
Largest
Garage Sale See pg. 34
Honoring Local Legend See pg. 32
Inside TODAY Blotter 5 Obituaries 6 Business
15, 17-19
Education 22-23 Pulse 32-36 Sports 42-48
Weekend Forecast FRIDAY
63|50 SATURDAY
58|50 SUNDAY
66|55
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Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
Man on the Street “What is your most memorable moment at SPAC? ”
Joshua Bell’s performance was fabulous. It was like a classicalrock concert. – Susan Dake, SPAC board member.
For Marylou, it was seeing the Grateful Dead when they performed several years ago. Really, it was! – John Hendrickson, philanthropist and husband of Marylou Whitney.
Farm Aid. These are some of the greatest artists in the world bringing awareness to the importance of New York State farming. They can go anywhere in the world and they came to SPAC. And they said that they’ll be back. – Marcia White, President at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center
Peter Gabriel. I was a Genesis fan and have everything they ever did. – Saratoga Hospital CEO Angelo Calbone.
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
NEWS 3
For SPAC: A 50th Anniversary Ornament, Book SARATOGA SPRINGS — Saratoga Hospital presented the Saratoga Performing Arts Center with a limited edition ornament Monday in commemoration of the center’s 50th anniversary. The 24-karat gold on brass ornament, designed by Saratoga Hospital Medical Group surgeon, Dr. Joseph Bell, features the SPAC amphitheater design. The
Saratoga Hospital CEO Angelo Calbone, Dr. Joseph Bell, Marcia White, SPAC board member Susan Dake, and John Hendrickson on Monday unveiling a limited edition SPAC ornament, and a symbolic representation of the forthcoming SPAC 50th anniversary book. Photo by Thomas Dimopoulos.
collectable ornament sells for $15, and supports the Cancer Fund of Saratoga Hospital. In one of her last actions as president of SPAC, Marcia White on Monday also announced that the longawaited 50th anniversary SPAC book will be published in advance of the holiday season.
4
WEEK IN REVIEW
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
George Donalson is cruisin' in style in his '36 Ford Tudor Deluxe, at Concours d'Elegance at the Saratoga Spa State Park Sept. 24. Photo by MarkBolles.com
Public Tours Offered For Repairs and Upgrades at City Hall
Back seat driver Reilly in a 1930 Ford Model A at Concours d'Elegance at the Saratoga Spa State Park Sept. 24. Photo by MarkBolles.com
PUBLISHER/EDITOR Chad Beatty 581-2480 x 212 cbeatty@saratogapublishing.com
GENERAL MANAGER Robin Mitchell 581-2480 x 208 rmitchell@saratogapublishing.com MARKETING DIRECTOR Chris Bushee 581-2480 x 201 cbushee@saratogapublishing.com PHOTOGRAPHER Mark Bolles 490-1757 mbolles@photoandgraphic.com
ADVERTISING Jim Daley 581-2480 x 209 jdaley@saratogapublishing.com Cindy Durfey 581-2480 x 204 Briefs, Calendar cdurfey@saratogapublishing.com Erin Boucher 581-2480 x 219 eboucher@saratogapublishing.com
SARATOGA SPRINGS — Finance Commissioner Michele Madigan will offer public tours to review and discuss repairs and upgrades to the City Hall Finance Office space. Public tours will take place 2 p.m. Tuesdays from Oct. 4 through Nov. 1. Residents, members of the public, press and
especially taxpayers are invited to take part of the tour. “Maintaining City Hall, a valuable taxpayer owned city asset, is essential and the public deserves to understand the necessity of this project and see their taxpayer dollars in action,” said Madigan in a public statement. Those interested
DISTRIBUTION Kim Beatty 581-2480 x 205 kbeatty@saratogapublishing.com
GRAPHICS Andrew Ranalli 581-2480 x 202 Production Director, Website andrew@saratogapublishing.com Kacie Cotter-Sacala 581-2480 x 215 Graphic Designer alyssa@saratogapublishing.com Morgan Rook 581-2480 x 207 Advertising Design ads@saratogapublishing.com
EDITORIAL Norra Reyes 581-2480 x 203 Newsroom Manager, Education norra@saratogapublishing.com Thomas Dimopoulos 581-2480 x 214
City, Crime, Business thomas@saratogapublishing.com
in taking the tour are asked to meet at the main entrance to City Hall by 1:50 p.m. for any one of the scheduled tour dates. The city’s recently approved Capital Budget calls for a near$750,000 cost in office renovations and improvements.
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Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
COURTS Edmund D. Davis, 26, of Middle Grove, was sentenced on Sept. 15 to serve 30 days in jail and five years of probation, after pleading to felony DWI. Kevin G. Taylor, 62, of Cohoes, pleaded on Sept. 15 to felony DWI. Sentencing is scheduled to take place Nov. 10. Adam E. O’Brien, 31, of Saratoga Springs, was sentenced on Sept. 15 to serve five days in jail and five years of probation, after pleading to felony DWI. Thomas J. McGaughnea, 56, of Watervliet, was sentenced on Sept. 15 to serve five days in jail and five years of probation, after pleading to felony DWI. Matthew T. Delvecchio, 27, of Schenectady, was sentenced on Sept. 15 to serve 1 to 3 years in prison, after pleading to second-degree forgery, a felony. Lavar A. Brown, 37, of Troy, was sentenced on Sept. 16 to serve 2 years in prison and 1 year post-release supervision, after pleading to criminal possession of a controlled substance, a felony. Daniel J. Champlin, 31, of Clifton Park, was sentenced on Sept. 16 to serve 1 year in jail on the first charge, and 3 years conditional discharge on the second charge, after pleading to felony DWI, and resisting arrest – a misdemeanor. Kaitlyn Fox, 25, of Boilingbrook, Illinois, pleaded on Sept. 16 to attempted rape in the first degree, a felony. Sentencing is scheduled to take place Nov. 21. The charges stem from an incident that took place in Saratoga Springs in December 2014, and involved a boy who was under the age of 13, police said earlier this year after Fox was located in Illinois
and she was extradited back to New York. Reagan R. Moon, 35, of Gansevoort, was sentenced on Sept. 16 to serve 3.5 years in prison and 3 years of post-release supervision, after pleading to attempted criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third degree. Rafael Aviles-Martinez, 23, of Amsterdam, was sentenced on Sept. 16 to serve 3 years in prison and 3 years of post-release supervision on the first charge, and 1 year in jail on the second charge, after pleading to attempted criminal possession of a weapon in the second degree, and misdemeanor DWI. Russell Dawson, 43, of Waterford, pleaded on Sept. 19 to first-degree sexual abuse, a felony. Sentencing is scheduled to take place Nov. 14. Leroy L. Ramsey, 45, of Gansevoort, was sentenced on Sept. 22 to serve 2.5 years in prison and 2 years of post-release supervision, after pleading to attempted criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third degree. James C. Moses, 30, of Troy, pleaded on Sept. 22 to felony burglary. Sentencing is scheduled to take place Nov. 17. Brenton M. Wrobel, 27, of South Glens Falls, was sentenced on Sept. 22 to serve 1.5 years in prison and 2 years of post-release supervision, after pleading to attempted criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third degree.
POLICE BLOTTER Donnie R. Moore, 46, of Schuylerville, was charged on Sept. 19 with assault in the third degree. Jahaz M. Miller, 21, of Schenectady, was charged on Sept. 17 with assault in the third degree.
BLOTTER 5 Christine M. Crescenzi, 50, of Scotia, was charged on Sept. 16 with third-degree grand larceny, and criminal possession of stolen property, both felonies. Sommer B. Poirier, 27, of Stillwater, was charged on Sept. 16 with aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle, and operating a vehicle with a suspended registration, both misdemeanors. Joseph M. Frank, 24, of Saratoga Springs, was charged on Sept. 16 with
misdemeanor DWI, and failing to signal a turn. S.
Jay Downing, 54, of Saratoga Springs, was charged on Sept. 14 with misdemeanor DWI, leaving the scene of an auto accident, and making an unsafe lane change, after being involved in a property damage accident on Jefferson Street.
Ryan T. Petronis, 29, of Saratoga Springs, was charged on Sept. 14 with failing to register as a sex offender, a felony.
Tyler A. Coon, 23, of Saratoga Springs, was charged on Sept. 13 with third-degree criminal mischief, a felony. Sean P. Bass, 27, of Saratoga Springs, was charged on Sept. 13 with fifthdegree criminal possession of stolen property, a misdemeanor. Jodi A. Lant-Truett, 43, of Saratoga Springs, was charged on Sept. 12 with criminal sale, and criminal possession of a controlled substance, both felonies.
6
OBITUARIES
Dennis Achilles Bellone
Frederick Carpenter
SARATOGA SPRINGS — Dennis Achilles Bellone of Saratoga Springs passed away on Wednesday morning, September 21, at Ellis Hospital in Schenectady, suddenly but peacefully, surrounded by his loving family. A memorial service will be held at 4001 Wilson Lane, Galway Lake, NY on October 15, 2016. Check http://www.tunisonfuneralhome.com for details which will be available shortly.
SARATOGA SPRINGS — Frederick T. Carpenter, Jr. passed away Monday, Sept. 26, 2016 at Wesley Health Care Center at the age of 93. Relatives and friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. Friday, Sept. 30, 2016 at the William J. Burke and Sons/Bussing and Cunniff Funeral Homes, 628 North Broadway in Saratoga Springs. A funeral home service will be at 10 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 1, 2016 and burial will follow in the family plot at Maplewood Cemetery, also in Saratoga Springs.
Dorothy A. “Dot” Peets SCHUYLERVILLE – Dorothy A. “Dot” Peets, 93, a resident of Church St. in Schuylerville, passed away Tuesday, September 27, 2016 at her daughter’s home on Casey Rd. A funeral service will be held at 1:30 p.m. Friday, September 30, 2016 at Flynn Bros. Inc. Funeral Home, 13 Gates Ave., Schuylerville, with Rev. Martin Fisher, officiating. Burial will follow in Notre Dame Cemetery in Schuylerville.
Linda “Lin” Ann True SARATOGA SPRINGS — Linda “Lin” Ann True, 61, passed away peacefully at her home in Saratoga Springs on Wednesday, September 21, 2016. In lieu of flowers, please make a donation to your favorite charity in her honor.
Lloyd C. Woodcock SARATOGA SPRINGS — Lloyd C. Woodcock, 67, of Friar Tuck Way, passed away Tuesday, September 13, 2016 at his residence.
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016 The family will host a Celebration of Life from 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday, October 29, 2016 at Empire State College SUNY, 2 Union Ave., Saratoga Springs. Gifts in Lloyd’s memory may be made to Amnesty International (amnestyusa.org/donate), in lieu of flowers.
Robert J “Bo” LaBrake DELAND, FL — Robert J “Bo” LaBrake of DeLand, Florida passed away on January 20, 2016 at age 62. The family invites friends to join them in an informal memorial gathering on Saturday, October 1 at 11 a.m. at the Maplewood Cemetery in Saratoga Springs.
Thomas Taylor GLENS FALLS — Thomas Taylor, age 52, passed away on Wednesday, September 21, 2016 at Glens Falls Hospital surrounded by his loving family. Interment was held on Thursday, Sept. 29, 2016, with military honors, at the Gerald B. Solomon Saratoga National Cemetery, Duell Road in Schuylerville.
SEE FULL OBITS ONLINE AT SARATOGATODAYONLINE.COM
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
7
Giant Pumpkins
Courtney Seelow showcases her pumpkin - which weighed in at 1,358 pounds and presented in honor of her cousin Avery Mathew Demarsh - at New York’s Giant Pumpkin Weigh-Off at Sunnyside Gardens on Saturday. Photo by Francesco D’Amico.
New York’s Giant Pumpkin Weigh-Off was staged at Sunnyside Gardens on Saturday. Photo by Francesco D’Amico.
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Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
Waldron-Ryan Family Welcomes New Addition SOUTH GLENS FALLS — Rachel Waldron and Greggory Ryan of South Glens Falls welcomed their new son, Brantley Axel James Ryan, into the world on August 29 at 1:11 p.m. at Saratoga Hospital in Saratoga Springs. He weighed
7 pounds 12.6 ounces. His family includes big sister Isabella Grace Ryan; maternal grandparents Colleen and Raymond Waldron of Gansevoort; and paternal grandparents James and the late Pamela Ryan of Queensbury.
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Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
Take a look at this week’s newest club members!
Benjamin
Aurora
Lily
Jade
Alyssa
Tooth Fairy Club is sponsored by:
Nicole M. Byrne, D.M.D Pediatric Dentistry 659 Saratoga Road Gansevoort, New York 12831 (518) 226-6010
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OP/ED LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
America – Take Back Your Power Yepsen’s September 20 Vote Ethics is not complicated, not hard to understand and not confusing. It is simply knowing right from wrong, being truthful, honest and recognizing when you have a true conflict of interest. Not being truthful has consequences in politics and in life. Olympic gold medal swimmer Ryan Lochte will forever be remembered as the Olympian who lied about being robbed at gunpoint rather than as a multiple gold medal winner. Elected politicians who are not truthful are remembered for their ethic violations, not for any previous good they may have done for their community. When a politician commits an ethical violation and lies to the public they let down the public they were elected
to serve, their supporters and their fellow elected officials. Not recusing yourself on a vote that only benefits you and has no benefit to the taxpayers is an obvious conflict of interest that even partisans cannot deny. While it may be difficult to hold a national candidate to high standards of conduct, it is much easier to hold a local politician to ethical standards. Saratoga Springs Mayor Yepsen’s participation in the vote to pay her personal attorney $12,000 should be reviewed by the City’s Ethics Board. John Herrick Former Saratoga County GOP Chair Saratoga Springs
The Right to Vote is a precious privilege, fellow Americans! Yet, out of our 320 million population, and 220 million eligible to vote, only 146 million are registered. That means at least one-third of eligible voters are unlikely to participate on November 8. Here are reasons why all eligible Americans need to be registered to vote for America’s good: • Job Creation, Support
and Retention on National and Local Levels: working Americans support themselves, families and pay taxes • Fairness and Justice for White-Collar and Blue Collar Americans: no politician should be exempt from any law passed by politicians • Educational Choice: education, which is a critical element in a strong and independent nation, ensures America keeps its freedom
• Protection of the Financial Stability of America by Being Fiscally Responsible and Accountable with Spending Tax Dollars America matters and citizens protect it by electing politicians who care about America and its citizens. Barbara Garro, MA Author/Artist/Speaker Saratoga Springs
The League of Women Voters of Saratoga will be offering Voter Information tables in Sept and October at various locations in Saratoga County. Residents can learn where to find information about polling places, information about registration, answers to general voting questions and pick up voter registration forms. The LWV tables will be available on: Sat. Oct 1 Sat. Oct 8
9 am - 12pm Ballston Spa Farmers' Market 9am - 1pm Saratoga Farmers' Market
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
NEWS 11
Crêpes, Korean BBQ, & Rock-n-Roll by Norra Reyes Saratoga TODAY SARATOGA SPRINGS — Walking into the Kraverie at 78 Beekman Street is as welcoming as walking into a party at the home of a good friend. The polished wood of the bar and tables – all made by Kraverie coowner Charles Usher – glows with warmth, and the classic rock décor with wall-size posters of award-winning artists lends to the comfortable upbeat-at-home atmosphere. Husband and wife team Charles and Amy Usher began Korean BBQ with a friend in New Jersey who, like them, had owned a food truck, and they decided to go into business together and started the Kraverie in a small storefront in Jersey City, NJ. Amy Usher said that it really took off, but after awhile, she and her husband realized they wanted to be closer to nature, to get away from dense population. So they started looking for a place to settle. “We love Saratoga,” said Amy. “So much to do, lots of outdoor
Korean Tacos
activity. And there’s nothing like the really great spot here – we’re on a really cool street, it’s a good fit.” The Jersey City partner preferred to stay behind, so the Ushers launched the Beekman Street Kraverie at the end of June with their own personal touches, such as the display of album covers and records Amy took from her parents’ basement. “Who doesn’t love music?” she smiled, and said they offer live music two or three times a week, always on Fridays an sometimes on Saturdays and Wednesdays. On Friday,
September 30, Kraverie is hosting an 80’s Night, with a DJ, costumes, prizes and giveaways. And then there’s the food. Korean BBQ has a distinct savory flavor and method of cooking that brings out the best in the meat, often cooked with Kraverie’s homemade kimichi, a national Korean dish made of fermented cabbage and chilies. The signature dish is Bibimbap, made up of rice, vegetables, egg, your choice of meat, and Korean sweet chili sauce. The Korean tacos are immensely popular, as is the bulgogi-ribeye. The menu has such variety that there’s something for everyone, including an arugula and pear salad, and several sweet and savory crêpes. “The dishes are very versatile,” said Amy, “so we can easily change them up. We offer vegan and glutenfree. It’s nice to have so many options.” The bar serves wines and beer, and this weekend they are starting their fall beer and cider line-up. The owners are dog friendly and have a big, beautiful patio out back where folks can sit with a beer
Photos by MarkBolles.com
Classic rock and hand-made wood décor fill Kraverie with upbeat warmth. Friday, September 30 is 80’s Night!
Server Kaitlynn Hernandez.
and their dogs. They’ll be hosting a fundraiser on October 15 to
benefit dog rescue – more information on that is coming.
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NEWS
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
True Sportsmanship Compassion Trumps Rivalry by Norra Reyes Saratoga TODAY SCHUYLERVILLE – No one on Schuylerville High School’s girls varsity soccer team will forget October 29, 2015, when 8th grader Davia Rossi made the winning kick for the Schalmont Sabres that cost the Lady Horses the Class B state championship. “Obviously, losing the season was heartbreaking,” said Schuylerville senior and soccer co-captain Maddy Nevins, “but what happened on the field is completely different than off the field. All of us respect Davia and
wanted to do everything we could to help.” Rossi, now a 14-year-old freshman at Schalmont High, was diagnosed in August with non-Hodgkin lymphoma. “I was at my house and my assistant coach texted me,” said Nevins. “I was going to a school event where most of my team was, and told them. The whole time, we were brainstorming ideas of how to help her. It did make us realize it can happen to anyone, and we wanted to support her as the whole team.” This week, not just the team but also the whole community came
Schuylerville wears Schalmont Strong t-shirts in support of their sister in soccer, Davia Rossi of the Sabres, who was recently diagnosed with cancer. Coach Michael Kopp holds a donation check for $1,083 from Saratoga Athletic Association for the American Cancer Society. Photo by MarkBolles.com.
out to support Rossi. Every year, the Schuylerville boys and girls soccer teams have held a fundraiser for the American Cancer Society, and Monday, September 26, the fourth annual Kickin' Out Cancer event held special meaning for the teams in light of Rossi’s diagnosis. Lady Horses’s Coach Michael Kopp said the girls’ fundraising efforts were done “with zero coaching from me.” Before he could suggest a word, they were all in. “I just watched in astonished silence,” he said. “Their sense of responsibility and call to action far outweighs their age.” The Saratoga Athletic Association, Schuylerville’s K-6 youth program, hosted a Pay for Pink Day
in their field over the weekend. “They collected $1,083 that day, an incredible number from the community,” said Kopp. “In addition to that, through Monday night’s concession sales, balloon sales and raffles, another almost $2,000 was raised from people at the game for the American Cancer Society. We [the girls soccer team] also had our own fundraiser especially for Davia Rossi that we did on our own, and also gave her a gift and a signed shirt from all of our players.” At halftime of the Lady Horses’ home game against Johnstown that night, which ended with a 4-0 win for Schuylerville, there was an Continued on page 22.
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
NEWS 13
14
NEWS
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
15 Years of Fine Dining Success Founded in Friendship by Norra Reyes Saratoga TODAY ROUND LAKE — When Bob McKenna and executive chef Scott Ringwood first met as neighbors in Clifton Park, they had no idea they would one day be close friends and co-owners of the award-winning Lake Ridge Restaurant in Round
Lake, much less be so successful after 15 years that they would open a second restaurant together – Dunning Street Station in Malta, which opened over the summer. “We opened Lake Ridge Restaurant on September 26, 2001,” said McKenna, reflecting on their 15th anniversary this week. “We had become really good friends by then and, at a neighborhood party
one night, he told me he was leaving Dater Tavern – it was closing – and I said I’d always wanted to get into a sports bar or restaurant. Maybe we should try it together.” So they did. But resounding success was not to be theirs that first year, as the nation was thrown into mourning and economic downturn after the devastating destruction of the World Trade Center a matter of
days before they opened. “Obviously, after that terrible day on 9/11 no one was coming out,” said McKenna. “It was just the way the country was after that terrible tragedy. It was a very tough start.” But they persevered and McKenna said with the combination of Ringwood’s culinary skill and their excellent staff, the restaurant built a glowing reputation that has made each year better than the last. “We’ve had such a wonderful staff,” said McKenna. “Diana Murphy, our manager, does a great job with our wait staff, exceeding customers’ expectations. And Scott and I share in the duties making the restaurant the best and have built a fantastic partnership, working and helping each other. He is very creative. He ages all the beef, and we like to say the seafood is so fresh, it swims to the table.” As the area around the restaurant continues developing and growing, McKenna said they’ve been growing right with it, winning numerous awards every year. In celebration of its 15 years, the restaurant offered a complementary toast of sparkling wine and special plates
Lake Ridge Restaurant Co-Owner, Executive Chef Scott Ringwood (left) and Co-Owner Bob McKenna celebrate the restaurant’s 15th anniversary and a lifelong friendship on September 26. Photo provided.
all week long. Oktoberfest begins October 1 with German-style offerings throughout the month. Open Tuesday through Saturday for lunch and dinner, and dinner on Sundays, information about specials and more can be found at www.lake-ridge.com.
Taxi With a Twist Continued from front page.
their destination. “All it takes is to use us once and see what it’s all about. Then people end up calling us again and again. They feel safe with us to drive their car and bring them home,” said Amanda. While they were a little itchy going into the busy summer season in Saratoga, she said she thought they did great handling the increased demand, and balancing the needs of both new and regular customers. “There was one situation where a guy couldn’t remember where his car was. We spent an hour looking for it, and it turned out it was parked at the track. The next time we picked him up he was so sorry, apologizing for that, but also so happy because we helped,” recalled Amanda. It’s that extra added value that keeps people calling back. The drivers charge a flat rate based on mileage, not on time. With Caroline Street as a central location, they charge a flat $20 fee within a 7 mile radius and then $2 per mile after that. The further the distance, the more comparable the rates are with other local cab
companies, especially once the added service of bringing your car home is factored in. For example, the cost for a trip to Malta after midnight in a traditional cab is $18, but Saratoga Designated Drivers will drive you and your car there for just $22. “The beauty of being such a new business is that we’re still a little moldable,” added Amanda. They now charge for multiple stops, ($5 per stop) and have cut back their hours to operate from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. daily (not all day). They try to steer clear of appointments and instead request patrons call approximately a half hour before pick-up. They do make exceptions, such as during festivals, and recently when the Saratoga Police Department requested their service for a disoriented elderly woman. “Our goal is to get people home safe. We’d like to expand in the future and keep offering more people out there another option. It’s such a beneficial thing for people everywhere,” said Amanda. To get a ride for you and your car call or text 518-937-1330, or find them on Google and Facebook.
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
BUSINESS 15
Meet the New Leadership Saratoga Class! Leadership Saratoga, a program of the Saratoga County Chamber of Commerce, announces its thirtieth class of participants. The group held its opening retreat on September 18 and 19 at Minnowbrook Conference Center in Blue Mountain Lake, NY. The Leadership Saratoga program selects up to 24 people each year to participate in an intensive nine month training program designed to teach them skills for stronger leadership, group dynamics, and issues facing Saratoga County and area nonprofits. After completion of the program, participants are expected to volunteer as leaders in their communities within Saratoga County. Members of the Class of 2017 are: Walt Adams, (AIM Services, Inc.) Brandee Armer, (Bonacio Construction)
Keri Ashline, (Embassy Suites Saratoga Springs) Leigh Berenis, (Saratoga Children's Theater) Angela Charlap, (Saratoga Bridges) Christine Conto, (HAPPY Software, Inc.) JT Cox, (Retirement Planning Group) Dave Cumming, (Morgan Stanley) Stephen CuttingMiller, (Continuum Wealth Advisors, LLC) Neil Edmonds, (Ascent Wealth Partners) Ryan Faville, (Stewart's Shops) Lisette Garrison, (Fingerpaint Marketing, Inc.) Justin Grassi, (Miller, Mannix, Schachner & Hafner, LLC) Alison Halpin, Andrei Krasnokutski, (Ballston Spa National Bank) Sybil Newell (Transitional Services Association), Jessica Niles, (Janney Montgomery Scott) Amy Potter (Stewart's Shops), Sean Rigney (Name Bubbles LLC), Sue Rogan, (Adirondack Trust Insurance) Tony Ryan,
(DeCrescente Distributing Co., Inc.) Wayne Samascott, (Malta Development Co., Inc.) Michelle Smallwood, (CAPTAIN Youth and Family Services) and Dave Womer, (Adirondack Cabling and Security). In addition to the various sessions they will attend, participants will also work on group projects to benefit four area nonprofits: Grant Cottage, Recovery Advocacy in Saratoga (RAIS), Saratoga Regional YMCA, and Wellspring. The Leadership Saratoga program has been in existence since 1985 and has an Alumni Association of more than 550 graduates. Those that are interested in learning more about the program can visit www.LeadershipSaratoga. org or can contact Program Director Kathleen Fyfe. Applications for the next class
Leadership Saratoga Members of the Class of 2017. Photo provided.
will be available in April 2017. VOLUNTEERS! Looking for some? Leadership Saratoga's volunteer match resource has been created to help you find the skilled and qualified people you are looking for. If you
are interested in a one-onone training for your staff to quickly learn how to use this free and simple tool, contact Kathleen Fyfe at kfyfe@ saratoga.org, or visit www. LeadershipSaratoga.org.
16
NEWS
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
Hope For The Best, Prepare For The Worst Continued from front page.
The potential for public exposure to hazardous materials weighs heavily, as well. “What is of interest around here is the rail. In terms of a potential incident, that is a reality for us because we have a lot of things shipped along the rail line that runs along a large section of the city,” Catone said. The Department of Environmental Conservation and the state Thruway Authority are preparing a draft Environmental Impact Statement regarding a pipeline project which would span nearly 170 miles from Albany to New Jersey and carry Bakken crude oil through Saratoga Springs and in close proximity to local homes, Saratoga Hospital, Skidmore College and Saratoga Springs High School. “Originally there was some discussion about whether we could use what we had (written prior to 2008) and make some adjustments. I started reading through it and saw there was no way. Times have changed. So many adjustments have been made to emergency management that the only way was to do a total re-write of the plan; take the old one and do
an entirely new one based on all the things that have occurred since Hurricane Katrina,” Catone said. The combination of a shortstaffed department – decimated from 68 to 69 members down to 54 because of layoffs and retirements – and an ever-changing City Council which didn’t place a high priority on emergency management, contributed to the time-lag, Catone said. The City Charter stipulates the plan should be reviewed every three years. Catone is pushing to change that to an annual review, as well as getting all of the city departments involved. “I made it clear to the council that they’ve got to change the City Charter, because things change so much in emergency management. This should be a fluid document. If you wait three years and it becomes a fourth and a fifth year, then whoever comes after me is going to have to do a complete rewrite,” Catone said. “The way it’s written, it also all falls under the Commissioner of Public Safety, but that’s not the way it’s supposed to be. The Commissioner of Public Safety does not make financial policy – that’s
Finance; does not make purchasing policy – that’s Accounts; does not deal with other things that belongs to the mayor’s office, or manage the resources and personnel of DPW. So, I came back to everybody and said: this is the draft and you all have to be involved.” On any given day, the city population of 29,000 can swell exponentially given visitors to large venues such as the racecourse, SPAC, and special events staged throughout the year, as well as the flow of area residents from rapidly expanding adjoining communities. “We are very unique. Without all the planning and training we do, there’s no way that we could accommodate all those events (and guard against) major incidents. If the first day you’re going to prepare for this is the day that the event happens - forget it. The event will have already run you over,” said Catone who is chairman of the Emergency Management Team and is currently coordinating a Disaster and Recovery Team to include members of all departments. Police training has amped up in recent years to include active shooter drills, large-scale school evacuations, and in preparation of potential scenarios at places like Saratoga Hospital and Skidmore College. “I can tell you from experience: never say never,” said city DPW Commissioner Anthony “Skip” Scirocco. “When I was
Saratoga Springs Assistant Police Chief John Catone and the three-inch binder containing the pages of the city’s emergency preparedness plan. Photo by Francesco D’Amico.
county supervisor, I can’t tell you the chaos that happened after the tornado in Mechanicville because of the radio system; nobody could talk to anyone down there and I don’t think there was a comprehensive plan in place like this one. Through situations like that, we learn and we make changes.” Recent changes include integration with the county radio system to allow for better communication in the case of a major emergency, developing a business continuity plan to specify
how each department expects to function in the case of a major disaster, and designating a shelter or other place where people can bring their pets – the latter being a lesson learned after people lost their lives during Hurricane Katrina because they refused to evacuate their homes and leave their pets behind. “You also need to have an emergency operation center,” Catone said. “It can’t be on the hood of a car. When we had the major ice storm in 2006, the council met in the stairwell down by the vending machine because there was nothing else. You can’t operate that way.” In February 2006, a winter storm plunged the city into an icy darkness that lasted in some wards for several days. Since that time, an emergency generator has been installed at City Hall, and Catone has specified the Saratoga Music Hall, on the upper floor of City Hall, would serve as an operations center. “The major players all work in this building. We’ll be able to do things with the generator running and if we gather in the Music Hall it will give us, for now, a place to break out into work groups and bring everybody together for meetings,” he said. At least one alternate site still needs to be designated, as the city has plans to convert the hall into a courtroom. “The public has an expectation given all the events of the past 10 or 15 years that you know how to do this, and that you’re prepared,” Catone said. “So, you better know how to do this.”
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
BUSINESS 17
Homesteading in the 21st Century BALLSTON SPA — On Saturday, October 1, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Cornell Cooperative Extension of Saratoga County and Milton Grange #685 are sponsoring a free program to help people learn about modern homesteading at the 4-H Training Center, 556 Middleline Road in Ballston Spa. As stated on the event’s website, going back to the land means different things to different people. For some it’s planting a garden and for others it’s living completely from their own means. The modern homesteader can provide food, fuel, and shelter for themselves and family. A new age of homesteader is embracing a mixture of technology and traditional wisdom to expand their skills and gain control of their lives. Saturday’s program is suitable for anyone interested,
Arrow Named to Forbes ‘Most Trustworthy Financial Companies’ List GLENS FALLS — Arrow Financial Corporation (NasdaqGS® – AROW), the parent of Glens Falls National Bank and Trust Company and Saratoga National Bank and Trust Company, was recognized by Forbes as one of “America's 50 Most Trustworthy Financial Companies” for its accounting and governance practices. This is the fifth consecutive year the Glens Falls-based company has received a “Most Trustworthy” designation from Forbes. Arrow is the only New York-based bank listed for 2016. To create its “Most Trustworthy” list, Forbes enlisted MSCI ESG Research to evaluate nearly 700 publicly traded North American financial companies with a market cap of $250 million or more for the year ending December 2015. Factors including high-risk events, revenue and expense recognition methods, SEC actions, and bankruptcy risk were all considered as indicators of a company’s credibility.
whether you have a small plot of land or several acres. Information will be available on many topics including but not limited to: gardening, equipment, livestock, wood harvesting, the local
environment, trapping, and traditional skills, as well as educational programs during the day. Topics and presentations include: Archery, FFA, Stihl Chain Saws – Safety
Clinic, Organic Growing & Hydroponics, Trapping – Skinning, Food Preservation, Ice Cream Making, Bee Keeping, Mushroom Growing, Animal Feed Formulation and Livestock Nutrition,
Solar Power, Shooting Sports, Kubota Tractors, John Deere Tractors, Herbal Health, Butter Making and Blacksmithing. For more information about this free event, call 518-8858995 or visit www.ccesaratoga.
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BUSINESS
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
ATC Community Fund’s Autumn of Giving Match Campaign SARATOGA SPRINGS — The Adirondack Trust Company Community Fund announced it is launching its fourth Autumn of Giving Match Campaign on October 1. This campaign brings together the ATC Community Fund, The Adirondack Trust Company, and community-minded individuals and businesses to raise donations to benefit the Fund's
annual, local, charitable LendA-Hand Grant Program. The Match Campaign’s goal is to raise a minimum of $40,000 in donations from the community, similar to the results of last year’s match campaign. Contributions are derived from donations, fund raising initiatives sponsored by generous local business campaign partners, and sponsorship/ticket sales for the signature event, An Evening of Autumn of Giving, which will be held at Longfellows on Wednesday, October 19. The Adirondack Trust Company will match, dollar-fordollar, all money raised during the month of October. Speaking on behalf of the ATC Advisory Committee, volunteer Chairperson Mary Gavin noted, “The Autumn of Giving Match Campaign offers an opportunity for donors to ‘do double the good’ for their community with their philanthropic dollars. We are
extremely grateful to the many individuals and businesses who generously responded to the 2013 inaugural Match Campaign, making it and the following years a great success.” The 2016 Match Campaign's goal is to build on last year's success by continuing to increase public awareness and philanthropic support of the ATC Community Fund. The Fund’s mission is to build a strong, enduring source of financial support for local nonprofits. Over the past five years, the Community Fund has provided 78 grants in excess of $151,000 in Lend-A-Hand Grants to nonprofit charities in Saratoga, Warren and Washington Counties. These grants, spanning areas such as arts, agriculture, education, health and human services, support charitable work that makes a significant contribution to the quality of life we all enjoy.
“As the Fund grows” said Mary Gavin, “it will do more and more to ensure that our community remains strong and vital.” Online donations can be made by using the Donate Now button on the ATC Community Fund’s website: www.atccf.org or the Make the Match tab on ATC Community Fund’s Facebook page: Facebook.com/ AdirondackTrust CommunityFund. Donations can be mailed to: ATC Community Fund, Attn: Kimberly Gallo, 31 Church St. Saratoga Springs, NY 12866. Business Partners’ promotions are planned and can be viewed on a calendar at www. atccf.org. Local businesses and media partners are participating in the 2016 Autumn of Giving Match Campaign by offering special promotions to the public that generate a donation to the ATC General Community Fund. The ATC will also match resulting donations.
Tickets to the event, An Evening of Autumn of Giving, on Wednesday, October 19 at Longfellows Restaurant, can be purchased at www.atccf. org/events. The Adirondack Trust Company Community Fund (The Community Fund) was established in 2009 to serve as a perpetual source of philanthropic support for the needs of local charities. The Fund is an independent 501(c) (3) charitable organization. Since its inception in 2013, the Autumn of Giving Campaign has raised over $125,000 from the community. With the bank match, the overall total raised exceeds $250,000. The Adirondack Trust Company serves as the Trustee and Administrator of The Community Fund with the guidance of an Independent Advisory Committee, comprised of individuals from the community. The Community Fund’s website is www.atccf.org.
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
New Director of Marketing, Collaborative Divorce Association
of leaving it up to a stranger. Each family is unique and no one family does things exactly like another. Collaborative divorce allows families to craft a divorce plan that embraces their unique family structure. At DONNELLAN & KNUSSMAN, PLLC, Attorney Wood, as well as Attorneys Teresa G. Donnellan and Amy J. Knussman, are collaboratively trained and able to represent couples seeking to use this form of alternative dispute resolution. For more information, call 518-2784059 or visit www.dklawfirmny.com.
Welden-Pinney Joins The Wesley Community BALLSTON SPA — DONNELLAN & KNUSSMAN, PLLC announced that Sarah I. Wood, Esq. has been elected as the Director of Marketing for the Collaborative Divorce Association of the Capital District. As the Director of Marketing, Attorney Wood will promote awareness of the organization, as well as the process of collaborative divorce. Collaborative divorce is a form of “alternative dispute resolution” whereby couples agree to resolve their divorce matter outside of Court. There is no trial before a Judge and the couple works with a team of professionals to plan their divorce. Each party must retain a collaboratively trained attorney to represent them. In addition, one or two mental health professionals are retained to act as a coach to the parties as well as a financial neutral to resolve the financial aspects of the marriage. Together, the team meets and problem solves all issues of the divorce allowing the parties to decide every aspect in their divorce instead
BUSINESS 19 housing services to The Wesley Community’s continuum of care model, which includes independent and enriched living, adult day services and long-term care options. Welden-Pinney most recently served as property manager at Schaffer Heights, a 10-story senior apartment community in Schenectady. She has also held roles with Prestwick Chase at Saratoga in Saratoga Springs and the Coburg Village Retirement Community in Rexford. Welden-Pinney earned her Certified Aging Services Professional certification from the University of North Texas, and holds an associate’s degree in Criminal Justice from Adirondack Community College. She has received numerous certifications related to her field. For more information about The Wesley Community, visit www.wesleycommunity.org.
Wellspring to Participate in 2016 Allstate Purple Purse Challenge
SARATOGA SPRINGS — The Wesley Community announced that Kathy Welden-Pinney has been appointed Director of Housing and Community Based Services for the senior care organization. In her new role, Welden-Pinney will oversee the operation, design, and marketing of The Wesley Community’s housing and community based service programs. Welden-Pinney brings nearly a decade of experience in senior
SARATOGA SPRINGS — On Wednesday, September 28, Wellspring began a month-long fundraising campaign as part of the 2016 Purple Purse Challenge, a fundraising competition for charities benefiting domestic violence survivors, competing to raise the most money with the top teams winning grand prize cash donations totaling $325,000 from The Allstate Foundation. The Challenge, an annual competition hosted on CrowdRise, is a public fundraising and awareness campaign that Challenge
provides an opportunity for organizations that support domestic violence survivors to increase their donor base and push for vital funds as part of Domestic Violence Awareness Month. This is the first time Wellspring has competed in the Challenge, which last year raised nearly $3.1 million for 161 domestic violence organizations throughout the United States. People interested in fundraising for the challenge and supporting Wellspring can sign up at https://www.crowdrise.com/ DomesticViolenceS er vicesPurplePurse2016/.
In order to count toward an organization’s total, donations must be received by Oct. 25 at 2 p.m. ET.
October Torch Club SARATOGA SPRINGS — The Saratoga Torch Club begins it series of monthly presentations on Thursday, October 6, 2016. The topic will be The Jewish Community in Saratoga Springs in Its Heyday. The dinner meeting will be at Skidmore College, 815 Broadway, Saratoga Springs. Contact Gerald Stulc (deusrex@live.com) for information and reservations.
20
PROPERTY TRANSACTIONS BALLSTON SPA
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
44 Forestbrook Dr., $332,500. Erdinc Karakas sold property to N.P. Dodge, Jr. (as Trustee).
1 Racemark Way, $6,175,000. Yellowstone Holdings LLC sold property to Tivoli Propertises LLC and M and L Properties LLC.
1448 Route 50, $367,500. William and Kimberly DeGroff sold property to Thomas Realty Enterprises, LLC.
39 Admirals Way, $429,250. Malta Land Company sold property to Jay Dickstein and Linda Tidd-Dickstein.
63 Cypress St., $289,980. Heritage Builders Group LLC sold property to Stephanie Joslin.
7 Stonebreak Rd., $700,000. 120 Division Street Holdings LLC sold property to MJ Properties of Clifton Park Inc.
12 Lake Rd., $238,000. Annette and Thomas Waring, Jr. sold property to James Ziobrowski.
MALTA 10 Canopy Lane, $377,500. Jason and Erica Choi sold property to Gregory Oberg. 59 Weston Way, $314,423. Barbera Homes Malta Springs LLC sold property to Stacey McVaigh. 55 Pepperbush Place, $175,500. Adam Manella sold property to Arlene Carrozza.
2439 Route 9 (rear portion), $125,000. Capital Communications Federal Credit Union sold property to Sitwell Enterprises LLC. 117 Plum Poppy North, $228,000. Matthew and Lindsay Callahan sold property to James Cunningham. 8 Fenlon Lane, $365,851. John Luke Development Co LLC sold property to Christopher and Jennifer Madia.
SARATOGA SPRINGS 43 Kirby Rd., $235,000. John and Stephanie Phillips sold property to Amber McManus. 182 Ballston Ave., $660,000. Norman Bovee and Sandra Macica sold property to Jason and Tara Penge. 5 Friar Tuck Way, $340,500. James and Deborah Snyder sold property to Michael Gestwick. 64 Second St., $429,000. Christopher and Rachel Harris sold property to Kurt and Elizabeth Mausert. 18 Division St., Unit 602, $1,185,000. Robert and Sheila Striffler sold property to James Brockman. 2 Lady Slipper Lane, $410,000. Paul and Karen Kelly sold property to William and Melody Pisana. 2 Waterbury St., $340,000. Michael Grolley, Jr. (Ind. and
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016 as Agent) and Patricia Bryant (Ind. and as Agent) sold property to Mark Sonday and Wendy Lee. 7 Worden Lane, $210,000. Donald and Lorraine Wellington (by Atty) sold property to Wade Brock. 73 Union Ave., Unit 1, $930,000. Aime and Thomas Richards sold property to John and Michelle Haller. 73 Union Ave., $620,000. Aime and Thomas Richards sold property to John and Michelle Haller. 4 Cliffside Dr., $468,650. Sajed and Anjuma Chowdhury sold property to National Residential Nominee Services. 4 Cliffside Dr., $458,650. National Residential Nominee Services sold property to Christopher and Kathleen Hogan. 28 Waterbury St., $300,000. Paul Fletcher, John Morrison (by Atty) and Clara Quintal (by Atty) sold property to Charles Nichols. 10 Longwood Dr., $156,900. Stephen Simon and Amy Bloom sold property to Amy Bloom. 208 Circular St., $353,000. Dennis and Nancy Belt sold
PROPERTY TRANSACTIONS
property to Craig Cook and Kirsten Ferguson. 5 Swanner Lane, $430,000. Patrick Brereton sold property to Lisa Bates. 38 High Rock Ave., Unit 6D, $762,000. High Rock Condominiums LLC sold property to Russell Danforth. 6 Gick Rd., $314,900. Richard and Janet Ostrov sold property to Lucas Ruglis and Victoria Graf. 34 Benedict St., $422,500. Feura Bush Development LLC sold property to DGD holdings LLC and Goodhue Wilton Properties Inc. 9 Whitney Place, $490,000. Bruce and Cathleen DeLuke sold property to William and Maureen Bergan. 72 Vista Dr., $465,000. Mark and Elizabeth Thornhill sold property to Arlen R. Dahlquist Revocable Trust. 158 Lake Ave., $890,000. William and Mary Hollyer sold property to Otis and Carol Maxwell.
WILTON 2 Palmer Terrace, $182,500. Anna Watson sold property to Michael and Jessica Blake.
60 Cobble Hill Rd., $410,000. Woodlake Holdings LLC sold property to Sewon and Eunji Kim. 73 Edie Rd., $185,000. Nikki Jones sold property to Jessica and Joshua Brecht. 19 Burnham Rd., $400,000. North Manor Development LLC sold property to William and Charlene Lamb. 4 Wellington Ct., $539,500. Michael and Harrilyn Beehner sold property to Christopher and Sara Hewitt. 50 Timbira Dr., $259,900. Kevin Manz sold property to Robert and Georgia Massimi. 811 Rte 9, $275,000. Michael Nicosia sold property to Amy Deegan. 10 Carr Rd., $272,000. Timothy Thornton sold property to Trey and Lindsay Bodkin. 31 Hillside Ave., $400,000. Maureen Rooney sold property to Donna Bird and John Lins. 10 Huntington Ct., $485,000. Ronald and Carol Conti (Trustees) sold property to Adam and Jessica Dolan.
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22
EDUCATION
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
True Sportsmanship: Compassion Trumps Rivalry Continued from page 12.
inspirational walk around the track including a release of pink balloons. They were joined by Rossi, the Schalmont team, and their families, invited as special guests of the event. All told, Kickin’ Out Cancer broke their previous fundraising record for the American Cancer Society, raising just over $3,000. “Last year, we raised about $1800, certainly significant,” said Kopp. “I want to make sure the boys and their coach get recognized for the hard work they did – they set up everything, the tables, the balloons, a lot of work. They never complained, never wavered, it was a collaborative effort of the boys and girls teams, all in the name of raising awareness and helping Davia.” Kopp said he has two 9th graders on the team. “I look at their faces and I see Davia,” he said. “They are so young compared to my juniors and seniors. Rossi is exceptional; playing varsity as an eighth grader. You can’t help waking up to tears. The emotion
Halftime walk around the track in support of the American Cancer Society and Davia Rossi. Photo by MarkBolles.com.
comes out.” According to Kopp, Monday night’s event put a spotlight on the fact that cancer can affect anyone, including young people that we know. “This was not about us teaching them about life,” said Kopp. “It was the other way around. I’m proud of
them on the field, too, but this makes it even better. It’s gone beyond team now; it feels like family. Coaches, community, family and now opposing team family.” Game Results The Kickin’ Out Cancer girls soccer game was played against
The boys' varsity soccer team pitched in for the fundraising effort. Photo by MarkBolles.com
Johnstown Monday night. Emily Vallee recorded a natural "Hat Trick" (3 in a row) in the first half. This was Vallee's second Hat Trick of the year, and boosts her total goals to 17 on the season. Maddy Nevins, delivered a goal and
two assists. Caitlin Kelleher and her "D" notched their 6th shutout of the year. Corner kicks: Schuylerville 9, Johnstown 0. Goalies-saves: Caitlin Kelleher (Schuylerville) 2, Allison Morey (Johnstown) 18. Final score, Schuylerville 4, Johnstown 0.
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
Wanted: Prospective Girl Scouts
Daisy Girl Scouts Meya Davenport and Lauren Urban from Troop 3444 (Mandy Kepner, leader) perform exams on stuffed animals during a field trip to Battenkill Vet in Petsmart. Girl Scout troops are organizing throughout the Saratoga Springs area this fall. Parents are welcome at an informational meeting a 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 6, in the Glasby Room, Saratoga Springs Public Library.
Project Lift University Fundraiser SARATOGA SPRINGS — Franklin Community Center’s Project Lift will be expanded to include Division Street and Lake Avenue Elementary Schools and now is operating in all six of the Saratoga Springs City School District elementary schools. In order to build awareness and raise essential funds for Project Lift, Franklin Community Center is hosting their Annual Project Lift University, a benefit uniquely designed for the program itself. The
evening includes amazing food from Longfellows, live music by Rich Ortiz, tarot card reading, drinks, a large silent auction and a live mission-based auction led by Saratoga TODAY’s Chad Beatty. Project Lift University, presented by Informz, will be held on October 13 at 6 p.m. at Longfellows in Saratoga Springs and tickets are on sale at www.franklincommunitycenter.org or by calling Franklin Community Center at 518-587-9826.
EDUCATION BRIEFS
23
Students Raise Alzheimer’s Awareness
BALLSTON SPA — Students and staff members of the Ballston Spa Middle School recently participated in a series of events to raise awareness of Alzheimer’s and collect funds to support research. Everyone joined together on Friday, September 23, to show their support by wearing purple. Student Council and NJHS
members helped raise awareness throughout the week by selling “Arrows of Awareness” and purple bracelets. A group of students and staff also participated in walking Saturday morning to represent BSMS and the generous donations of over $2,200 for the annual Walk to End Alzheimer’s at Siena College.
Currently, more than 5 million Americans have Alzheimer's and that number is expected to grow to as many as 16 million by 2050. Our future is at risk unless we can find a way to change the course of this disease. To learn more or if interested in making an online donation, please go to www.alz.org.
SUNY Financial Aid Days SARATOGA SPRINGS – SUNY Empire State College will participate in the annual SUNY Financial Aid Days, Saturday, October 15, from 10.m. to noon at SUNY Empire State College, 113 West Avenue, Saratoga Springs, along with 46 other SUNY locations. Financial Aid Office staff will
present information on financial aid basics, including the application process, types of aid available and the introduction of best resources for students. Staff will be available to answer any questions regarding the financial aid process. Students/parents can register by going to www.suny.edu/
studentevents or by calling 1-800342-3811. This workshop is open to all prospective college students and their families. Registrants will receive an email listing necessary information, including what materials students/parents will need to bring with them, building location details, and parking directions.
24
RELIGION
2016 Great Fall Festival & Giveaway
On Saturday, October 22, all are invited to the 2016 GREAT FALL FESTIVAL AND GIVEAWAY to be held at New Life Fellowship Church, 51 Old Gick Road, Saratoga Springs. The FALL FESTIVAL will run from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. It will be enjoyed by everyone and it's all FREE as New Life reaches out to our region in a gesture of Christian sharing. Family activities will include hay rides, face painting, crafts, balloon artist, petting zoo, photo booth, pie-eating contest, bobbing for apples, scarecrow relay,
and a brave caves adventure where you must dare to trust God. A light lunch will be served. Don't miss the chili cook-off from 11 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. Come and taste the many varieties and vote for the winner of your choice. To enter your recipe, call 518-580-1810 for information. From 9:00 a.m. – Noon, a FREE GIVE-AWAY of men's, women's and children's winter clothing and toys will highlight the day. Those wishing to donate
items, please call 518-580-1810 for drop off dates and times. “We are excited to once again be able to bless members of the community in need with winter clothing and toys for the holidays that they may not otherwise have been able to obtain,” said Jen Veitch, Director of Family Ministries at New Life Fellowship Church. For more information, contact: Jennifer Veitch, Dir. of Family Ministries, dfm@newlifeinsaratoga.org or 518-580-1810. Thanks for your help!
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
Evening Renewal Guest Speaker, Jaimen McMillan founder of Spacial Dynamics
Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Saratoga Springs, please join us
on Sunday, October 2, 2016, 5:006:00 pm 624 N. Broadway as Jaimen McMillan, founder of the Spacial Dynamics Institute, explains and leads us in “meditation in movement.” Peace is a Movement to Practice Every Day: “It is the space in-between where the dynamic takes place.” The Spacial Dynamics Institute is an international training center based in New York, training gym teachers in inclusive physical education and medical professions in
movement therapy. In addition, he has a private practice working with clients ranging from those with movement challenges, to top- level athletes and professional performance artists, all learning to enhance their skills and abilities. Mr. McMillan is lecturers in academic and business settings, a consults about industrial injury prevention, directs wellness courses in hotels, enhances business leadership, and is a contributes to the world -peace movement. As a co-founder of “Hands in Peace,” he received an award at the United Nations for supporting the culture of friendship and peace. Evening Renewal is a contemplative service held at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Saratoga Springs, on the first and third Sunday of each month, 5-6 PM. For more information, contact Linda Wilkes at lwilkes@neami.com or call the church office at (518) 5841553 or on the web at uusaratoga.org
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RELIGION
HIGH HOLY DAY SCHEDULE 2016 - Hebrew Year 5777: Rosh Hashanah Sunday, 10/2 (8 p.m.) at Bernhard Theater, Skidmore Monday, 10/3 at Bernhard Theater, Skidmore • 10 a.m. - Morning Service • 10 a.m. - Children's Service (meet at Bernhard Theater) • 4:30 p.m. - Tashlich ceremony (at Congress Park) Tuesday, 10/4 (10 a.m.) at Temple Sinai Shabbat Shuvah at Temple Sinai Friday, 10/7, 6 p.m. (oneg preceding at 5:30 p.m.) Saturday, 10/8, 10:30 a.m. (includes BM of Lily Rosan) Yom Kippur at Bernhard Theater, Skidmore Tuesday, 10/11, 8 p.m. Kol Nidre Wednesday, 10/12 • 10 a.m. - Morning service • 10 a.m. - Children's Progr a.m. • Following services - Walk in Skidmore North Woods • 3 p.m. - Discussion Group • 4 p.m. - Afternoon, Yizkor (memorial), and Neilah (closing) services, followed by breakfast
Sukkot and Simchat Torah at Temple Sinai Sukkot • Sun., 10/16, Family Service (6 p.m.) • Mon., 10/17, Morning Service (10:30 a.m.) Rabbis' Sukkot Open House Sunday, 10/23, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. (at the Rabbis' home) Simchat Torah • Sun., 10/23, Family Service (6 p.m.) • Mon., 10/24, Morning Service w/ yizkor (10:30 a.m.) HIGH HOLY DAY INFO Children's Program There will be Children's progr a.m.s coinciding with the adult services at Skidmore College on the mornings of Rosh Hashanah (10/3) and Yom Kippur (10/12), with separate groups for children pre-K through 2nd grade, and for 3rd-5th grade. For more info, and to assist with these programs, please contact the appropriate service leader: • Helaini Zobel - For pre-K - 2nd grade on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. • Dana Citron - For 3rd-5th grade on Rosh Hashanah.
• Sue Bernd - For 3rd-5th grade on Yom Kippur contact. Children are also welcome to remain with the adults in the Bernhard Theater main service. Due to security concerns, children under Bar/Bat Mitzvah age attending services at Skidmore must either be at the Children's program or under the direct supervision of a parent. Because of other activities taking place in the Theater Building, no child will be permitted to leave the services in the Theater unaccompanied by an adult. Middle school students (6th grade and up) are encouraged to attend the adult services. As there will be no childcare provided for children under pre-K, parents are welcome to bring their infants to the regular service and bring them into the Theater Lobby when they need a break. Families with young children are encouraged to come to the Tashlich ceremony in Congress Park on the afternoon of the first day of Rosh Hashanah.
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
26
FOOD
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
Anticipating Fall Frosts Cold Hardiness Guidelines Pam Dawling, author of Sustainable Market Farming: Intensive Vegetable Production on a Few Acres, has created this set of guidelines for the temperatures in Fahrenheit for when some commonly grown fruit and vegetable plants will likely die. This list covers temperatures for plants with no row cover or other added protection. You can find more at her website www. sustainablemarketfarming.com/. Keep in mind that hardiness will vary with the location and growing conditions of your garden.
Saturdays, 9 to 1 Wednesdays, 3 to 6 High Rock Park Frost advisory. That phrase popped up on my iPhone’s weather app last Saturday morning. My husband and I had a busy day, but we knew we would have to hustle if we wanted to save what was left of our garden. Frosts are like bookends to a gardening season: The last frost in May marks the point where one can start thinking about
Temperature
Vegetables
35
Basil
32
Bush beans, cauliflower curds, corn, cucumbers, eggplant, melons, okra, peppers, tomatoes.
27
Outer leaves of most varieties of cabbage.
25
Broccoli heads, outer leaves of Napa cabbage, dill, most Asian greens (tatsoi, pak choi, etc.) fennel, large leaves of lettuce (onion scallions, radicchio.)
22
Arugula
20
Beets, radishes, turnips.
15
Broccoli leaves, cilantro, endive, kohlrabi, some varieties of kale.
12
Carrots, multicolored chard, leeks
10
Brussels sprouts, green chard, collards, kale
Brian Denison harvesting sweet potatoes
transplanting and direct sowing the rich fruits of summer while the first frost in September
signifies the end of the harvest of those fruits. Like many others, my husband and I enjoy eating a wide range of seasonal vegetables and fruits, obtained from our favorite farmers at the Saratoga Farmers’ Market or grown ourselves. Yet, the first frost of fall often catches us by surprise. Longtime Saratoga Farmers' Market farmers, however, have learned to prepare for frosts in advance. Justine Denison, of Denison Farms, for instance, notes that advance preparations for frost begin well before one needs to worry about the sudden advisories. By the time a fall frost arrives, the summer crops have mostly been harvested, and either sold or stored, and Denison is busy preparing its fall crops for harvesting, curing or storage. A light frost doesn’t have to mean the end of your gardening season. In fact, frosts can improve the flavor of some vegetables such as Brussels sprouts, kale, collards, and other hardier greens. Mark Bascomb and Lindsey Fisk of Owl Wood Farms, as a result, work at lengthening the season of their summer crops with row covers and tunnels. They also keep summer crops like eggplants in storage for as long as they’ll remain fresh. It helps to have some understanding of the hardiness of various plants, and to start keeping records of what works in your own background. One small scale farmer, Pam Dawling, has come up with a good working list for her book Sustainable Market
Farming: Intensive Vegetable Production on a Few Acres. She notes, for instance, that basil will usually die at 35 degrees Fahrenheit, while chives, collards, leeks, and kale can still be flavorful at 0 degrees. But inevitably seasons change, and that’s not a bad thing. After all, as Bascomb puts
it, “eating locally means eating seasonally,” and even as winter approaches, the offerings of local produce still carry a lot of diversity. The Saratoga Farmers’ Market is at High Rock Park through October, from 3-6 p.m. Wednesdays and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays.
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
FOOD 27
Smooth Operator
by John Reardon for Saratoga TODAY Hello Foodie Friends. Happy autumn! Hearty foods are typical this time of year. Autumn vegetable soups can satisfy our soul and provide a way to fulfill large and small appetites. Soup can also be a comfort food. This time of year we tend to gravitate towards soups made with bold and deep flavors that include carrots, acorn, butternut squashes, sweet potatoes, parsnips, beets, and mushrooms. Autumn temperatures call out for the stickto-the-rib soups. The base of these soups begins with onions, garlic, olive oil or bacon fat, and your selected vegetable, then sautéing them over low heat. Once the vegetables are tender, add a vegetarian or meat stock and simmer. The final step would be to puree or blend the soup to make it smooth and silky. Adding coconut milk, heavy cream, sour cream, half and half, or whole milk adds to the rich texture in the soup. Adding a spice such as curry, orange juice, or maple syrup can elevate the taste of your soup. Toppings in a soup add an extra element of flavor and texture. Adding grated parmesan cheese, broken breadsticks,
nuts, chow mein noodles, crushed tortilla, or nacho chips can fit nicely in a soup spoon. One important tool needed for smoothing out your soup is either a blender or an immersion blender. If you want to get creative in the kitchen, add a machine that can help you transform whole ingredients into sauces, soups, and chopped bits. Here’s the difference between blenders, food processors and immersion blenders so you can decide which works best for you. You should stick with a countertop blender if you mainly make smoothies, blended cocktails, soups and emulsified condiments like mayo. Spring for a higher end blender if you also want to be able to make your own nut butters and whipped cream. If you really only need a blender for pureeing soups or other liquids (like applesauce or baby food), buy an immersion blender. You’ll save on storage space and be able to blend batches right in the pot. Many immersion blenders also have attachments you can buy for things like whipping cream or chopping herbs. Bringing in autumn also brings out the pumpkins. As I
walk into the grocery stores, I am hit with the wonderful smell of cinnamon and the colors of various gourds and pumpkins. There are so many wonderful recipes and creations to make with pumpkin. Here is one pumpkin soup recipe that really fills you up on those cool autumnal days. You will need blender or immersion blender for this. BLENDER THAI PUMPKIN SOUP (VEGAN AND GLUTEN FREE! Serves: 3 INGREDIENTS • ½ large onion, peeled, chopped • 1 Tablespoon olive oil • ½ Tablespoon tomato paste • 1 Tablespoon Red Thai Curry Paste (ensure this is gluten free if needed) • 1¼ cups (305 g) canned pumpkin • 1 Tablespoon minced ginger root • 1 garlic clove, peeled, chopped • 1½ cups vegetable broth (gluten free if needed) • 1 cup light coconut milk (canned) • ½ Tablespoon lemon juice • ½ teaspoon salt • Pinch of pepper
INSTRUCTIONS 1. Sauté onion in olive oil until soft. Add tomato paste, red curry paste, pumpkin, ginger, garlic, broth, and coconut milk. Combine until thoroughly heated through. 2. Place mixture, lemon juice into your blender. 3. Blend on low and slowly increase to the highest setting and blend for 30 seconds to 1 minute on high or until smooth. 4. Season to taste with salt and pepper. 5. Serve garnished with green onion and a sprinkle of chili powder! 6. Enjoy!
At CTTC, located in the Compliments to the Chef Plaza at 46 Marion Avenue in Saratoga Springs, we carry various blenders and immersion blenders to assist you with your culinary needs. We have “cool” Tools for Cooks. Help out your “smooth operator” by having the right tools to amazing and fulfilling soups. Having a hearty soup on a weekend night can be a wonderful way to share time with your family and friends. Have a “soup and story” night at the dinner table! Remember; “Life Happens in the Kitchen.” Take care, John and Paula
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CALENDAR Prevention Council works to give young people the skills to choose healthy behaviors, and to prevent bullying and promote internet safety. The organization also presents substance abuse education programs.
Family Friendly Event
Friday, September 30 Lunch, Learn and Lend a Hand The Saratoga Senior Center, 5 Williams St., Saratoga Springs, 1 - 3:30 p.m. Educate the Community about senior services and recruit volunteers to help seniors. Hosted by the Mayor’s Senior Advisory Committee, includes lunch, a welcome message from Mayor Joanne Yepsen and a panel discussion about senior services and volunteer opportunities in our community. Panel discussion participants include: Saratoga Senior Center and Community Connections, NY Connects, Saratoga Hospital, SSHA, Saratoga Office of Community Development, Wesley, and Veterans Assoc. Please call the Senior Center to RSVP. 518-584-1621.
Slaying the Dragon The Law Office of Andrew DeLuca, 9 Maple Ave., 2nd Floor, Saratoga Springs, 6 – 8 p.m. This innovative art show is free and open to the public. Mr. DeLuca has partnered with The Prevention Council for the show, in which several well-known and up-and-coming local artists will display their work. The art on display will be for sale, with a portion of the proceeds donated to The Prevention Council, a well-respected non-profit organization in Saratoga Springs that has deep roots in the community and strong relationships with schools, mental health agencies, and the judicial system. The
Saturday, October 1 Pink Bows on Broadway Steps of City Hall, Saratoga Springs, 9 – 11 a.m. Celebrate the kickoff of Breast Cancer Awareness Month. This annual event decorates downtown with large pink bows for the month of October and pays tribute to the heroes who have and continue to battle on the front lines of cancer. The event starts on the steps of City Hall and will entail the posting of big pink bows up and down Broadway. Finished tribute bows will be ready for hanging and Pink Bows may be purchased the day of, as well. This 4th annual campaign benefits floydwarriors.com so families battling cancer may be served with real help in the home. floydwarriors.com's mission of "Dinner is Done, Dishes are Clean and the Kids are OK!" is achieved through voluntary help and contracted services. This Capital Region 501 c3 not-for profit organization relies on contributions and grants to fund their efforts.
Tree Planting Outside Stonequist Apartments, Federal St., Saratoga Springs, 9:30 a.m. A great family activity, have fun being part of a spirited horde of tree planters. Sustainable Saratoga’s Urban Forestry Project will be planting 25 trees, funded by generous donors to Sustainable Saratoga from 9:30 a.m. to noon. To volunteer or if you have questions email us at trees@sustainablesaratoga. org or visit, www. sustainablesaratoga.org/ TreeToga5-flyer.
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
Living History Day at the Saratoga Battlefield
Fundraiser for Local Veterans' Health Needs
Dharma Meditation with Pierre Zimmerman
Saratoga National Historic Park, 648 Rt. 32 Stillwater, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. A single-day event with "living history" demonstrations - presentations of several examples from everyday civilian and military life in 1770's America. The event is free, but battlefield entrance fees apply.
Knights of Columbus, 50 Pine Rd., Saratoga Springs, 5 p.m. Dinner is at 7p.m. Chinese raffle closes at 7:30 p.m., Silent auction at 8:30 p.m. Many donated items offered during dinner. Dinner ticket cost: Single $20. Two $36 or a table of 10 for $140. For information and reservations call Tom Boehlert 518-5834809 or 518-584-8547.
One Big Roof, Center for Mindful Practices, 538 Maple Avenue, Saratoga Health and Wellness Building, Saratoga Springs, 9-10:15 a.m. Weekly meditation followed by short discussion. All contemplative traditions honored. By Donation. For more information call 413-992-7012 or visit www. oneroofsaratoga.com.
50+ Living Expo
Ninth Annual Pet Fest
“History, Legends, Lore and More" Guided Walking Tour Saratoga Heritage Area Visitor Center, 297 Broadway, Saratoga Springs, 10:30 a.m. – Noon A 90-minute walking tour that concentrates on historic Congress Park and the colorful characters who helped make Saratoga what it is. This guided tour of legends and lore will walk you through history while sipping the famous mineral waters and strolling through the Victorian Congress park. Rain or shine. Cost is $8 for adults. Children under 12 are free.
Community Shred Day Mabee Building, West End Parking Lot, 31 Church St., Saratoga Springs. 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. The Adirondack Trust Company will be having a community shred day in recognition of Green Consumer Day. Bring your sensitive paper documents to be safely and securely destroyed by 3N Document Destruction Inc., on site. You may bring up to two boxes of your sensitive papers (white or color), carbon paper, file folders, old checkbooks, old credit cards, debit cards or plastic ID cards. Please do not bring non-sensitive document. Rain or Shine. First come, first serve basis. Learn more at info.AdirondackTrust.com/ ShredDay.
Saratoga Springs City Center, 522 Broadway, Saratoga Springs, Noon – 5 p.m. The Daily Gazette Company is proud to host the 5th Annual 50+ Living Expo which features vendors, speakers and demonstrations. You will have the opportunity to connect with exhibitors that can answer your questions and introduce you to new products. There will be informative and interactive seminars throughout the day that will educate you on topics like finance and health care. The 50 Living Expo is also full of fun and excitement. There will be live entertainment provided by Russ Kennedy, a Wine and Food Tasting and great raffle prizes throughout the day. Free admission.
Sunday, October 2 Breakfast Buffet Saratoga-Wilton Elks, 1 Elks Lane, Rt. 9, Saratoga Springs, 8:30 – 11 a.m. Fruit cocktail, French toast, pancakes, potatoes, breakfast sausage and ham, corned beef hash, scrambled eggs, eggs benedict, juice, coffee and tea. Donation Requested: Adults $10, Seniors and Military (Active/Retired with ID Card) $9, Children 5—12 $8, Under 5 Free, Take-outs $10. Call 518-584-2585 for more information.
Clifton Commons, Clifton Park, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Sponsored by Mohawk Honda, Bonacio Construction, Zappone Auto and Key Bank. There is no entry fee and once again kids will be offered free pony rides. Among special attractions will be Joe Macken's miniature version of the island of Manhattan. This 10 by 30 detailed rendering has enjoyed a great deal of attention. "Bring a pet, adopt a pet" is the theme. Many shelters and rescue groups represented. Father Pat Butler, pastor of St.Edward's the Confessor will give the blessings at noon time. This will be followed by the Grand March of Pets, with prizes from area merchants. For more information, call Frank at 518-371-4547.
ConsciousnessRaising Book Discussion Woodlawn Commons, 156 Lawrence St., Saratoga Springs, 6 p.m. Albany-Saratoga Spiritual Adventures is hosting a spiritual book discussion. Join us for a spiritual book discussion. All are welcome whether or not they’ve read. This month’s book is The Heart of the Soul: Emotional Awareness by Gary Zukav and Linda Francis. For more information, visit www. newthoughtnewyork.org or call 518-366-9918.
Send your calendar events to calendar@saratogapublishing.com two weeks prior to the event.
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
Monday, October 3 Saratoga Retired Teachers Meeting Longfellows Restaurant, 500 Union Avenue (Rte. 9P), Saratoga Springs, Noon Prospective members, please call 518-587-5356 for membership information and luncheon reservations. Retired educators who worked in Saratoga County or live in the County are eligible for membership. October Auxiliary Meeting 23 Pleasant St. Ballston Spa, 7 p.m.
Tuesday, October 4 Frances Steloff Lecture Gannett Auditorium of Palamountain Hall, Skidmore College, 8 p.m. The event, free and open to the public, will begin with
his receiving an honorary doctorate of humane letters and will end with a Q&A and a book-signing of his most recent works. His lecture, titled "What the %@&*! Happened to Comics?" will explore evolving perceptions of comics as a literary medium. Skidmore’s annual Steloff Lecture, endowed in 1967, honors the late Saratoga native Frances Steloff, who founded New York City’s legendary Gotham Book Mart and acquired a vast collection of literary memorabilia, much of which she donated to Skidmore College.
Wednesday, October 5 Olde Saratoga Seniors Meeting Schuylerville Town Hall, 12 Spring St., Schuylerville, Noon It will be a casserole luncheon. Please bring a
CALENDAR 29 dish to share. New members welcome. Call Pat for more information 518-331-2978.
Guided Mindful Meditation Saratoga Springs Public Library, Susman Room, 12:30 p.m. Take a break from the daily grind and clear your mind with guided Mindful Meditation led by professionals from One Roof Holistic Health Center. Sessions are free and open to the public, and will be held on the first and third Wednesday of each month. Everyone is welcome. For more information, visit www. oneroofsaratoga.com.
Caffe Lena Poetry Readings and Open Mic Northsire Bookstore, 424 Broadway, Saratoga Springs, 7 p.m. Northshire Bookstore is proud to be the host venue
for Caffe Lena’s poetry open mic while the Caffe undergoes renovation. Poetry readings by Judith Kerman and Adam Tedesco followed by Open Mic. Signups are at 6:30 p.m., and the open mic starts at 7 p.m. Carol Graser will host the event. $5 suggested donation at the door goes to Caffe Lena to support this great event.
Thursday, October 6 Korean War Veterans Association Meeting VFW Home, 1Veterans' Way, Saratoga Springs, 1:30 p.m. All Korean War Veterans and anyone who served in Korea at any time, spouses, widows and friends are all invited to attend. For further information or an application to join the organization, please contact Comm. Roger Calkins at 518-584-3037.
An Evening with a Best Selling Author Northshire Bookstore, 424 Broadway, Saratoga Springs, 5:30 p.m. An evening with author of the best-selling "Don't Know Much About History" series, Kenneth C. Davis , as he discusses his new book, “In the Shadow of Liberty: The Hidden History of Slavery, Four Presidents, and Five Black Lives” which was written for older children and teens but is compelling reading for adults as well. Through the powerful stories of five enslaved people who were owned by four of our presidents, this book helps set the record straight about the role slavery played in the founding of America. For more information, visit www. northshire.com.
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LOCAL BRIEFS
Ghosts in the Yaddo Gardens Experience the Spirit(s) of the Gardens. Feel the energy and creativity of the forces of the earth. Share in in the spiritual intrigue from Native Americans, Edgar Allan Poe, The Trask family and other contemporary visitors. Ghosts in the Yaddo Garden Tours will be held on Friday and Sunday evenings at 5 p.m., through October 30. Docent led tours begin at the Yaddo Garden parking lot and last for approximately one hour. This tour is of the Yaddo Gardens and does not include the Yaddo Mansion. Cost is $10 per person (children 12 and under are free). Private docent led ghost tours may be arranged at a date convenient to your group from September 19 through October 30. Contact Yaddo at 518-584-0746 or www.yaddo.org for more information. Open Mic Fundraiser Showcase your talent at SOUNDBYTES, Saratoga Soundtrack’s open mic fundraiser and we invite you to participate on Friday, October 7, 7 p.m. at the Knights of Columbus, located at 50 Pine Road, Saratoga Springs, NY. Performance time: 1 or 2 songs or 5 minutes, 16 acts only for 90 minutes show. NO application process/audition. Age limit: If you are between 15 and 105, you are eligible to perform. Order of appearance will be given when intent to perform is received. Cost is $10 at the door suggested donation, including participants. Cash bar and snacks will be provided by Knights of Columbus If you are interested in performing, email your name or group name and contact information with a brief description of your talent to tcfit@aol.com by August 31. Women's Health Expo Join many local health practitioners and consultants on Saturday, October 8 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Saratoga Springs Public Library to learn more about women's holistic options through your lifespan. There will be presentations throughout the day, as well as giveaways and snacks. Bring a friend, sister, mother or daughter... it's FREE! Contact Shannon Regner at shannon@innovapt.com or 518-6324944 with questions.
Third Annual Elktoberfest Elktoberfest, to benefit the Cerebral Palsy Association of New York State, will be held on Saturday, October 8 from noon to 6 p.m. at the Elks lodge located at 695 MacElroy Rd. in Ballston Lake, NY. Beer, wine & liquor tastings, authentic German food, games and prizes for a great cause! Tastings are $15 each and include a commemorative glass and six tastings of your choice. Senior citizens rate is only $10. You must be 21 or older to drink alcohol. Our Chef will be cooking up a great selection of German food as well for lunch and dinner. Bratwurst, schnitzel, red cabbage, German potato salad, pretzels with mustard and more will be available to purchase. Bring the whole family for a great meal. There will be fun games and raffles throughout the day as well, so wear your lucky lederhosen. Current confirmed participants include: Albany Distilling Co.. Davidson Brothers Brewing Co., Mad Jack Brewing Co., Olde Saratoga Brewery, Regal Wine & Liquor, Wolf Hollow Brewery and Yankee Distillers. Cash and checks only. For more information, contact us at elktoberfest@cliftonparkelks. org , (518)-877-5200. 11th Annual Memorial Walk Angel Names Association (ANA) will hold its 11th Annual Memorial Walk on Saturday, October 8, 2016 at the Saratoga State Spa Park in Saratoga Springs. The walk is being held in recognition of National Pregnancy Loss and Infant Death Awareness month. Registration begins at 12 p.m. and the walk will follow at 1:15 p.m. The day includes children's activities, light refreshments and prizes. Everyone is welcomed to attend this uplifting, free family event to walk and raise awareness of pregnancy loss and infant death. For additional information, visit www.angelnames. org or contact Michelle Mosca at mgmosca@msn.com . The 14th Annual “The Way We Were” Car Show The Ballston Spa Business and Professional Association and Saratoga Automobile Museum will, once again, partner to bring the 14th Annual “The Way We Were” Car Show is to be held Sunday, October 9, 2016 from 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. on Front St. in Ballston Spa. The rain date will be October 16. The public is invited to come stroll our historic
village, check out the hundreds of cars and trucks on display, and enjoy the music, vendors and downtown businesses. It’s a great day for the whole family. For more information, visit www.ballston.org or call 518885-2772. Fall into Autumn Luncheon All women are invited to attend a luncheon Tuesday, October 11, 2016 from Noon-2:00 p.m. at Longfellows Restaurant, Rt. 9P Saratoga. Cost is $15 inclusive. Our special feature will be John Parker, who will present his tea pots and their stories. Our Speaker, Lovely Alexander from Limerick, Maine, will tell her story of “Losing Control and Finding Peace”. Reservations are required by October 6. Please RSVP to Ellie at 518-584-3779 or Anita at 518-5834043. No Membership or dues required. Presented by Saratoga Christian Women's Club. Fall Fun Day Enjoy a free day of fun with The Children’s Museum at Saratoga, Heading for Home and ECS Psychological Services. The event will take place at ECS Farm located at 683 Lake Avenue, Saratoga Springs on Saturday, October 15 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. There will be fall activities, face painting, a bounce house, tea and honey tasting from our friends at Saratoga Tea & Honey, food from Mr. Bills, raffles from Ellms Family Farm, Saratoga Apple and more. Plus, enjoy a special meet and greet with retired and rehabilitated racehorses from Heading for Home. Donations will be accepted to benefit The Children’s Museum at Saratoga and Heading for Home. To honor the work of Heading for Home, we invite you to a special ceremony to honor our military veterans and public service members. Fall Craft Fair and Bake Sale The American Legion Auxiliary at Post 1450, located on Grooms Rd. in Halfmoon is planning their annual fall craft fair and bake sale for October 15 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Crafters who are interested in attending can email alcraftshow@ aol.com for more information. Annual Fall Clay Arts Fair On Saturday, October 15, 2016 from 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. the Saratoga Clay Arts Center will hold its annual Fall Clay Arts Fair. Fun for the whole family. Original Clay work by local
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016 artists. Fun, Food, Entertainment and Kids activities. The Saratoga County Animal Shelter will hold a Pet Adoption Clinic. Proceeds from raffles will be donated to the shelter. Please join us for this spectacular event. We are located on Hayes Road in Schuylerville NY. Halloween Party Please join the American Legion Auxiliary, Henry Cornell Unit 234, located at 23 Pleasant St., Ballston Spa on October 15 from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. for some ghoulish games, freaky fun, creepy crafts and frighteningly fabulous food! There will be a costume contest with prizes for kids and a raffle for parents. This event is open to the community. Sip and Shop Vender and Craft Fair Enjoy food, fun, friends and more on Saturday, October 15 at the Embassy Suites, located at 86 Congress St., Saratoga Springs. Venders and crafters include: Lilla Rose, Freedom Resort, Arbonne, Celano Pure, Thirty One Gifts, Scentsy, Young Living, Usborne Books & More, Mary Kay Cosmetics, Tupperware, Princess House, Creative Cards, Pink Zebra, Crochet Crafts and More. April March, the first lady of Burlesque will be there to sign her book, “Reflections of My Life, the First Lady of Burlesque”. Admission is $3 or you can bring an unwrapped children’s Christmas gift. You can also enter to win baskets to benefit Toys for Tots. For more information contact Ellie at 518-578-1089 Multicultural Dance Day The event on Sunday, October 16, will showcase various cultural dance groups from in and around the capital region including Irish Step, break dance, tango, Greek and belly dance. The performance will begin at Noon in the foyer of the National Museum of Dance located at 99 South Broadway in Saratoga Springs. This event is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be available. For more information, visit www.dancemuseum.org or call 518-584-2225. Low Vision Technology Fair The Northeastern Association of the Blind at Albany (NABA) will be hosting a Low Vision Technology Fair on October 20, 2016 at the Saratoga Springs City Center, located at 522 Broadway in Saratoga Springs. The fair is free to the public.
People with vision impairment as well as family members, caregivers, educators and healthcare professionals are encouraged to attend. The purpose of a Low Vision Technology Fair is to showcase the latest in technologies designed to assist the visually impaired with reading and daily activities. Low vision technology and vision related companies will be showcasing state-of-the-art products that help with reading and everyday tasks. Other related organizations will be available to provide service information including the Lions Clubs, NYS Talking Book and Braille Library, WMHT RISE Radio, the NYS Commission for the Blind, Guiding Eyes for the Blind, CDTA, Stratton V.A. Medical Center, local eye care professionals and more. New sponsors and exhibitors are welcome. Guest speaker ophthalmologists Dr. Christopher Zieker with Dr. Steven Clark and Dr. Edwin Davison will be presenting at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. respectively on issues related to eye health, diseases, research and treatments will speak in Saratoga. For more information about NABA’s Low Vision Technology Fairs, contact Cheryl Lawyer at 518-463-1211, clawyer@naba-vision.org or www. naba-vision.org. An Evening with Meg Wolitzer On Thursday, October 27, 2016 at 7:30 p.m., bestselling author Meg Wolitzer will appear as part of the popular “Yaddo Presents” series, an ongoing collaboration between Northshire Bookstore and the esteemed artists retreat Yaddo. This event will take place at Universal Preservation Hall, 25 Washington Street in Saratoga Springs, and is a fundraiser for both Yaddo and Universal Preservation Hall. Ms. Wolitzer will speak about her her work, followed by an audience question and answer session and book signing. Tickets are required for this event and space is limited. Tickets are on sale now, and can be purchased at Northshire Bookstore, 424 Broadway in Saratoga Springs, by phone at 518682-4200, or at www.northshire. com. Tickets are $17.50, general admission. $10 from each ticket sold will be divided between Yaddo and Universal Preservation Hall. In addition, each ticket purchased is good for a discount of $5 off any book by Meg Wolitzer the night of the event.
Send your local briefs to calendar@saratogapublishing.com two weeks prior to the event.
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
NEWS 31
Travel Experiences: Street Food Vendors Locally and Around the World
by Tony Mariotti for Saratoga TODAY For many of us, one of the best experiences when traveling is the search for authentic local food favorites. These can often be found at street vendor carts or food trucks. When traveling, it is MANDATORY to seek out these mobile food stations. Food carts are typically friendly to our wallets and are convenient to those of us that are on the move. They also offer a chance to experience the personalities behind the cart that are as diverse as the aroma of what is cooking. There are countless recipes and varieties of food that are available when exploring new and familiar places. According to the FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN) it is estimated that 2.5 billion people consume “street food” per day. The term “street food” refers to cuisine that is typically prepared and served via food carts, trucks or a booth. We have all seen and experienced these foods either locally or in our travels. Often when we think of a city, we associate a street food that is sometimes synonymous with that location such as: Philadelphia – Cheesesteak Sandwich; Berlin – Bratwurst; Mexico City – Tacos, with fresh lime; Taipei Taiwan – Deepfried Milk (cubes of condensed milk are rolled in batter and deep fried); or South Africa – “Walkie-Talkies,” chicken feet (walkie) and heads (talkie) are boiled, seasoned and grilled. As with many local foods, this South African yummy has an interesting story. During the days of apartheid in South
Africa, the wealthy landowners would naturally dine on the best portions of the chicken. The scraps (heads and feet) were given to the servants and peasants in the community. This may sound crazy to most of us, but think about it the next time you order Buffalo chicken wings! Most times, this street cuisine is prepared by locals with a story to tell or advice to lend. When I travel, I like to embed in the local culture and make myself part of it. I eat what the locals eat and seek the hidden landscapes that they choose to escape to. Finding that secret place that only the locals know about often starts with a conversation at a food cart. Don’t be surprised to learn that the food you are consuming comes from a recipe that has been handed down through the vendor’s family dating back several generations. These people are not likely to be culinary school graduates or famous chefs but are just normal outgoing individuals that earn a living treating us tourists to good eats. Many will treat you as if you are part of their own family. I enjoy learning about the local culture and their experiences in the area I am visiting. I pick their brains for tips on what to do and see locally, what is “off the beaten path.” My favorite experiences in travel have been when stopping at these street-side eateries. I discovered fried plantains in Puerto Rico and simple fresh coconut water in Costa Rica. The coconut was likely cut from the tree that morning and put on ice for me to enjoy. Regardless of how far from home we are, there are street foods that represent the region. Lobster rolls are sold in abundance from Cape Cod to Maine. When I think of a NYC street scene, I have images of kosher hot dogs or sugar-glazed nuts. Many large cities, such as NYC, are very ethnically diverse. Cultures and street foods are vastly different from one niche neighborhood to the next. We don’t need to travel the world to taste foods from around the world!
Even locally, we have several unique options. Every weekend I make a point to check out the local farmers' markets. The pride and craftsmanship that is put into giving us the best products can be found in every booth in the market; the French crepes, the mediterranean cuisine, handmade breads and cheeses, hand-crafted wine and brews, grass-fed meats, mushrooms and of course the fresh local veggies! Whether it’s locally or in your travels, give some business to the street vendor. It is not just about the food they are preparing, but also about the experience of meeting, learning and perhaps making friends with the vendor. Don’t forget to say thank you in the language of the vendor if you can. Bon Appetit. Tony Mariotti is the owner of Bucket List Vacation Planners (a Cruise Planners Franchise) and can be reached at 518-250-1111, BucketListVacationPlanners@twc.com or www.BucketListVacationPlanners.com.
Photos by Tony Mariotti.
Local produce vendors at a stand in Quepos, Costa Rica
"Off the beaten path" refreshment stand (and living quarters) on a remote road in Costa Rica.
PULSE
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Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
Key Figure In Comics Subculture To Deliver Steloff Lecture at Skidmore by Thomas Dimopoulos Saratoga TODAY SARATOGA SPRINGS — Frances Steloff was two months old when one of the worst blizzards in American history battered the northeast, killing more than 400 people and dropping nearly six feet of snow on Saratoga Springs. Steloff was born on New Year’s Eve in 1887 and on her 100th birthday was presented the keys to the city by Saratoga Springs Mayor Ellsworth Jones. In the time between, she helped launch a literary foundation whose repercussions are being felt around the world, still. Young Frances grew up on the west side of Saratoga, the clamor of the Delaware & Hudson Railroad rumbling outside her bedroom window. On summer days in turn-ofthe-century Saratoga Springs, she sold flowers to tourists at
the Grand Union Hotel. At 19, Steloff ran off to New York City and in 1920 opened her bookstore - the Gotham Book Mart - on the city’s west side. Over the next 60 years she earned a reputation as a courageous force in the business of words. Steloff battled with censors and sold in her store then-banned books penned by James Joyce, D. H. Lawrence, and Henry Miller – often receiving copies to sell from the authors themselves. Her actions helped lead to landmark decisions and making available works that were previously expelled. From Charlie Chaplin and George and Ira Gershwin, to Woody Allen, Dylan Thomas and Patti Smith, artists of all types became regular customers at the Gotham, where the store’s familiar sign - ''Wise Men Fish Here” – hung outside the shop’s storefront window. Steloff sent money
Frances Steloff gravesite at the Jewish Community Center Cemetery on Weibel Avenue. Photo by Thomas Dimopoulos
to Anais Nin to publish her books, hired Allen Ginsberg and Tennessee Williams as store clerks and staged booksigning parties for authors like William S. Burroughs. “The number of wellknown writers, dancers, artists and theater people who were her customers, clients and friends made up an
encyclopedia of 20th-century culture,” the New York Times reported about the literary haven, shortly after Steloff ’s death in 1989. Despite spending several decades away, the native Saratogian re-visited her old haunts. “I am sorry the old house is no longer there,” she told city resident Paula Costamzo, in a
letter written on Gotham stationary in 1987 and salvaged for safe-keeping in the Saratoga Room of the Saratoga Springs Public Library. “I sometimes visit the old grounds near the place where the train engines used to stop for fuel, water, etc., to see if I might retrieve some of the pennies and other Continued on page 33.
Fireball Run Adventure TV Series Coming To Saratoga Clifton Park - Fireball Run, a world-famous television and internet streaming series, will pass through
southern Saratoga County on September 29-30. Welcome events are planned in Ballston Spa and Clifton Park as 40
competing teams vie for top honors in solving clues, engaging with historic artifacts and meeting significant figures in our region and nation’s history. Contestants also aid in the search for America’s missing children, and to date 48 children have been found in part by their efforts. The mission of Fireball Run is to draw attention to and aid in the search for America’s missing children. Every driving team is assigned a child missing from their home of origin, and they are provided 1,000 missing child flyers to distribute along the 2,000-mile journey. It is hoped that more of our missing children will be recovered this year through this concentrated effort. The public is invited to visit the farewell in Clifton Park on Friday. For more information, visit: www. southernsaratoga.org.
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016 Continued from page 34.
childhood treasures which slipped through the cracks in the boards of what used to be the old house porch.” Steloff died in 1989 at the age of 101, and was buried in Saratoga Springs. The west 47th street building that housed the bookstore and Steloff ’s upstairs apartment which she initially purchased for $65,000 -was sold for $7.2 million dollars in 2003. The Saratoga native is remembered in name by Skidmore College’s hosting of the school’s annual Frances Steloff Lecture. This year’s event, which takes place Tuesday, Oct. 4, features guest lecturer Art Spiegelman – a decade-long artist for the New Yorker, and a 1992 Pulitzer Prize winner for Maus, his ground-breaking graphic novel of the Holocaust. Spiegelman grew up in Queens, N.Y. and began his career by cartooning for Topps
bubblegum cards. Popular images depicting “Star Wars” movie characters, and a Cabbage Patch Kids parody called “Garbage Pail Kids” are among his creations. Spiegelman became a key figure in 1970s comics subculture, founding the influential avant-garde comics magazine Raw and during the 1980s drew on his father’s concentration-camp experiences to create his acclaimed “Maus.” “Maus II,” and “Metamaus” would follow. After 9/11, he created a cycle of broadsheet pages, "In the Shadow of No Towers," which was serialized in the London Review of Books and published in book form in the U.S. Retrospective exhibitions of his work have been held recently at major museums from Paris and Cologne to Los Angeles. His multimedia “Wordless,” on the history of the graphic novel, premiered at the Sydney Opera House in 2013 and the Brooklyn Academy of Music in
33 PULSE 2014. In 2015 he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters. In 1994, Spiegelman applied his black-and-white drawings to Joseph Moncure March’s “The Wild Party,” a jazz-age tragedy first published 1928. In a peculiar case of serendipity given the circumstances of the Steloff lecture, it was William Burroughs, who after first reading “The Wild Party” in the 1930s, explained: it's the book that made me want to be a writer. Spiegelman will deliver the Frances Steloff Lecture, titled "What the %@&*! Happened to Comics?" at 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 4 on the campus of Skidmore College. The event, staged in Gannett Auditorium of Palamountain Hall, is free and open to the public and will begin with the artist receiving an honorary doctorate of humane letters and will end with a Q&A and a book-signing of his most recent works.
Art Spiegelman, photo by Enno Kapitza Agentur Focus
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Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
Inaugural Fall Festival To Be Held In Downtown Schuylerville October 9 Live music, food, art, and a family-friendly scavenger hunt will be featured at the first-ever Schuylerville Fall Festival from 1 – 5 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 9. More than 60 local businesses and organizations will participate in "Turning Leaves at the Turning Point," which will be held along Broad and Ferry Streets in historic downtown Schuylerville. The small business scavenger hunt will begin and end at the Schuylerville Public Library, where a flurry of autumn-inspired activities will be in full swing. Participants are encouraged to visit local businesses and engage with proprietors, whose downtown restaurants and store fronts will be open. Additional area food vendors will set up tents and
serve special dishes, street musicians will perform, and artists and artisans will demonstrate their skills and sell their wares. Following the scavenger hunt, participants will be entered in a small business raffle for the chance to win a large basket filled with goodies and gift certificates from our wonderful local businesses. The music schedule is as follows: Revolution Cafe 1-3 pm: Citizen's Treasure, 3-5 pm: Dave Meehan and Friends. Revibe 1-3 pm: Lucas Sconzo & Barry Hyman, 3-5 pm: Nicholas Kopp (Electronic Music). Schuylerville Public Library 1-3 pm: Two Bits, 3-5 pm: Jeanine Ouderkirk. Clark's Steakhouse: 1-3 pm: In Spite of Ourselves, 3-5 pm: Wayne White & Adam Witt. Rural Soul Studio:
1-3 pm: Andrew Mollica, 3-5 pm: Eric Jenks. GypsYoga Studio 2-4 pm: Danielle and Esmond Lyons. Local businesses and organizations participating in the festival include: Schuylerville Public Library, Schuylerville Community Theater, Schuylerville PEP Club, Amigo’s Cantina, Bon Bon Brazil, The Skin Bar and Fly Again Acupuncture, Kendra Farstad Muralist, Saratoga Apple, Cake by Alissa, EMH Photography, Kitchen at the Dovegate Inn, Yarnheads, Saratoga Gluten Free Bakery, Revibe, Over the Moon, Print Says, Barn at Bassett House on Hudson, Just Meats Deli and Market, Lucy Jo's Coffee, Challenge by Choice, Hair Divas and Nail Divas, Olde Saratoga Driftwood, Panacea,
Old Saratoga Wine and Spirits, Revolution Cafe, Hudson Crossing Park, Alaina Vooris Artist, Clark's Steakhouse, GypsYoga, Zark’s Angels, Parisi Appliance House, Stella's Salon, Turning Point Pizzeria, Rebel Woods Soap Works, Long Days Farm, The Laffer Gallery, Saratoga Clay Arts, Saratoga Tackle and Archery, 4 Grove Candles, Owl Sew It, My Inner 1800s, AMP Galleries, Old Saratoga Books, Zusin Dental, Rural Soul Studio, Doundounba, Canal Mosaics Studio, 9 Miles East, Un Petit Cochon, Kate Edwards, Saratoga Aikido, AAC Family Wellness Center, Gong Yoga, Sweeney's and Byron’s Village Market. The Schuylerville Fall Festival is hosted by the Schuylerville Small
Business Association (SSBA) and the Schuylerville Public Library, and sponsored by the Chamber of Southern Saratoga County. The SSBA's mission is to create the best community in which to live, work and do business by enhancing business collaboration and communication, supporting local entrepreneurs, advocating for our community and promoting positive advances and developments. Search and follow our Facebook event to find out more about what area businesses and organizations are offering at this very exciting first time – rain or shine - event! For more information, contact Chelsie Henderson (Rural Soul Studio) at (518) 852-1329, or email: chelsie@ruralsoul.com.
Saratoga Race Course To Host Harvest Festival SARATOGA SPRINGS — Live music, seasonal craft beers, wines, ciders and food provided by local vendors spotlight the Saratoga Harvest Festival, set to take place 1 to 7 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 1 at the racecourse. Tickets are $8 in advance and include admission to the event as well as a commemorative Saratoga
Harvest Festival hat. Tickets are $12 at the gate. Live music will be provided by Rich Ortiz, Dueling Pianos from Shake Rattle & Roll, and The Audio Stars. For more information about the event, tickets, and participating vendors, go to: https://america-on-tap.ticketleap. com/saratogaharvestfest/.
Taste of North Country Food Fest GLENS FALLS — The Taste of North Country Food Festival will take place 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 2 at Glens Falls City Park. Sample selections from dozens of North Country restaurants
during an event that includes live music and children’s activities. Admission is $5 adults, children admitted free. For more information, call 744-7470, or visit: http:// glensfallstaste.com/.
World's Largest Garage Sale This Weekend WARRENSBURG — Antiques to hard-to-find items, old and new toys, hardware, vintage clothing, handmade crafts, dollar items and just about anything imaginable will be available at the Warrensburg World's Largest Garage Sale.
The event takes place Oct. 1-2, starting south of Lake George and continuing North of Warrensburg into the Adirondacks. Warrensburg is located 30-minutes north of Saratoga Springs. For more information, visit: http:// warrensburggaragesale.com/.
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
Art Of Light, Sound Series In Saratoga SARATOGA SPRINGS — Diana Domingo & The Underground Art District will present “The Art of Light & Sound: A Three-Part Series," at AMP Galleries in October. The series – which will be held on three consecutive Thursdays
- explores the elemental life force through the phenomena of voice, frequency and art. The events will be staged 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Oct. 6, 13, and 20 at 454 Broadway. For ticket information, visit: https://www.centerforsong.com/events.html
Renowned Jazz Pianist To Perform at UPH Saturday SARATOGA SPRINGS — The Chuck Lamb Quartet, with guest cellist Petia Kassarova of the Albany Symphony Orchestra, will celebrate the release of Lamb’s “North by Northeast” release with a concert at Universal Preservation Hall on Saturday, Oct. 1. Lamb and Kassarova first met as part of a musical collaboration created for the Electric City Couture Show at the venue and
have been looking for the right opportunity to continue to collaborate. Segments of the work produced for that event will also be showcased on Oct. 1. Lamb has played piano and toured the world with the Brubeck Brothers Quartet for over a decade, and issued two esteemed recordings. Ticket are $25 in advance, $30 at the door and are available at Brown Paper Tickets: http://chucklamb.bpt.me.
Northshire Bookstore Hosts Caffe Lena Poetry Night, Children’s Book Author SARATOGA SPRINGS — Northshire Bookstore will be the host venue for Caffe Lena’s poetry open mic on Wednesday, Oct.5, while the cafe undergoes renovation. Signups are at 6:30, and the open mic starts at 7 p.m. A $5 suggested donation at the door goes to Caffe Lena to support the event. On Friday, Oct. 21, bestselling children’s book author Raina Telgemeier will speak about her new book “Ghosts.” This event will take
place at Bethesda Episcopal Church, 41 Washington St. The talk will be followed by an audience question and answer session and book signing. Tickets are required and can be purchased at Northshire Bookstore. Northshire Bookstore Saratoga is located at 424 Broadway. For more information on these or other events, call 518-682-4200 or 1-855-339-5990, or visit the Northshire Bookstore website at www.northshire.com.
Dinner to Support Preservation of Pitney Farm Sunday SARATOGA SPRINGS — Volunteers seeking to purchase the 166-acre Pitney Farm in Saratoga Springs and turn it into a community farm with a major teaching mission have raised $2 million toward their $3.1 million goal. A fundraising dinner will take place on the farm, located at 223 West Ave., from 4 to 7 p.m. on Sunday. Started by Jerome Pitney in 1862 to provide vegetables to guests staying at the city’s Pitney Hotel, the Pitney Farm is the last working farm remaining within the city limits of Saratoga Springs. When the newly formed nonprofit Pitney Meadows Community Farm, Inc. reaches its near-term $3.1 million target, it will be able to acquire the property, put in place the conservation easement that will
protect the property from development in perpetuity, and install the initial infrastructure necessary to start operating as a teaching and training farm. Over the next five years, the group aims to raise up to $15 million to fully fund the plan, which calls for a large teaching and training farm using the property’s existing buildings with new facilities to be added. The “Harvest of the Future” barbecue Sunday features 2013 Oscarcontending vocalist Donna Britton and guest speakers Field Horne, local historian, and Jerry Cosgrove, noted conservationist. Local foods will be prepared by Salt & Char and Kim Klopstock’s Lily and the Rose Catering. Reservations are $150 per person and may be made by calling 518-290-0008.
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Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
week of 9/30-10/6 @ Saratoga Race Course — 718.641.4700
friday, 9/30:
John Stack, 7 pm @ Carson's Woodside Tavern — 584.9791
The Schmooze, 8:30 pm @ Bentley's — 899.4300 Peter Mulvey w/ David Greenberger, 7 pm @ Caffè Lena at The Grove — 583.0022 Mitch Frasier, 7 pm @ Carson's Woodside Tavern — 584.9791 Jukebox, 10 pm @ Caroline St. Pub — 583.9400
Rick Nelson Band, 9 pm @ Gaffney's — 587.7359 Phil Drum, 6 pm @ Gideon Putnam — 584.3000 Michael Benedict Jazz Vibes, 9 pm @ 9 Maple Avenue — 583.2582
Ubuntu, 9 pm @ Gaffney's — 587.7359
Chuck Lamb, 7:30 pm @ Univ Preservation Hall — 581.5775
Arch Stanton Quartet, 9 pm @ 9 Maple Avenue — 583.2582 Moonshine Junkies, 9 pm @ The Mill — 899.5253
monday, 10/3:
Melissa Sgambelluri, 9:30 pm @ The Rusty Nail — 371.9875 Seth Warden Trio, 6 pm @ The Saratoga Winery — 584.9463
Alan Payette, 6:30 pm @ Brook Tavern — 871.1473
tuesday, 10/4:
saturday, 10/1: Rich Ortiz, 1 pm @ Saratoga Race Course — 718.641.4700 Dueling Pianos from Shake Rattle & Roll, 3:30 pm @ Saratoga Race Course — 718.641.4700 The Audio Stars, 5:30 pm
Tailspin, 10 pm @ Caroline St. Pub — 583.9400
Open Mic w/Rick Bolton, 7:30 pm @ Gaffney's — 587.7359
thursday, 10/6: Rachel VanSlyke, 8 pm @ Gaffney's — 587.7359
Robert Randolph and the Family Band, Fabulous Thunderbirds, Spin Doctors Headline Weekend Music Festival LAKE GEORGE — The second annual Adirondack Independence Music Festival returns to Lake George on Friday, Sept. 30 and Saturday, Oct. 1. Friday’s bill features The Fabulous Thunderbirds – who take the stage at 7:30 p.m. and Robert Randolph and the Family Band, who perform at 9:20 p.m. The Spin Doctors headline Saturday’s show to conclude a weekend filled with performances featuring several regional acts. The Spin Doctors are best known for their album "Pocket Full of Kryptonite," which peaked at number 3 on the Billboard
album charts and sold more than 5 million copies in the US alone. In addition to the music, food vendors, craft beers, wine and a kid's fun zone will also be on site at the rain or shine festival. Advance tickets are $15 each day, or $20 for a weekend pass. The festival will take place at Charles R. Wood Park, located on Beach Road at the southern tip of Lake George. Partial proceeds from the festival will go to the family of Gayle Nelson, a Lake George resident who earlier this month sustained home damage and the loss of three family dogs in a fire. For more information, visit: www.adkmusicfest.com.
38 It’s where NEED to be.
YOU
Publication Day: Friday
Ad Copy Due: Wednesday, noon
Space Reservation Due: Monday, 5 p.m.
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
CLASSIFIED MARKETPLACE
classified@saratogapublishing.com
Call (518) 581-2480 x204 WANTED
GARAGE SALE
$WANTED$ CASH PAID for Pre-1980 COMIC BOOKS & Star Wars Action Figures. Original Comic Art-Sports Cards & Autographed Memorabilia1990's MagictheGathering Call WILL:800-242-6130 buying@getcashforcomics.com
ESTATE SALE - power tools, sporting equipment, electronics, furniture, toys, household items, books, garden equipment and more. Saturday, October 8 and Sunday October 9, 10 a.m. – 3 p.m . 9 Furlong St. Saratoga Springs.
HELP WANTED
DIVORCE DIVORCE $349 - Uncontested divorce papers prepared. Only one signature required. Poor person Application included if applicable. Separation agreements Custody and support petitions. - 518-274-0380
FOR RENT OCEAN CITY, MARYLAND. Best selection of affordable rentals. Full/ partial weeks. Call for FREE brochure. Open daily. Holiday Resort Services. 1-800638-2102. Online reservations: www.holidayoc.com
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
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AUTO DONATIONS
MISCELLANEOUS
ADOPTION
Donate your car to Wheels For Wishes, benefiting MakeA-Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call 518-6501110 Today!
SAWMILLS from only $4397.00MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship! FREE Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1-800-578-1363 Ext.300N
A happily married childless couple would love to adopt. We will provide love, laughter, security & bright future. Expenses paid. Kimberly & Steve. 1-888-966-6266
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE FARM ESTATE LIQUIDATION! 7 hilltop tracts from 6 to 30 acres from $19,900! Gorgeous views, streams,ponds, woods, fields! Quiet country setting! Financing avail! 888-701-7509 NewYorkLandandLakes.com CATSKILL MOUNTAIN LAKE LOT 14 acres WAS $79,900, NOW $69,900! Beautiful lake, 2 hrs NY City! Private gated community! Terms avail! Call 888-905-8847 LENDER ORDERED FARM SALE! 39 acres WAS $119,999, NOW $89,900! Catskill Mtnís, stunning hilltop setting less than 3 hrs NY City! Woods,awesome views, great deer hunting! EZ financing. 888-479-3394
Land Bargains SCHOHARIE CO., 95.7 acres, fields/woods $129,000. OTSEGO CO., 30.7 acres, views $85,000. RENSSELAER CO., RT. 7; 27.6 acres fields/woods $75,000. Owner Financing www.helderbergrealty.com (518) 861-6541
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Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
Puzzles Across 1 Discouraged 10 Father of Reuben, in Genesis 15 Spider producer 16 __ Bowl: Boston College won the last one in 2000 17 54-Down cause, in modern jargon 18 Samurai without a master 19 Sell the scene 20 __ Air 22 Have more than enough 23 Mtge. application datum 24 Hayek of "Frida" 26 Meld 27 Shafts, so to speak 30 Court pos. 31 Hillshire Brands owner 34 "Bad idea" 35 Skosh 36 High-protein grain 37 Great Plains tribe 39 Sch. whose marching band played on Fleetwood Mac's "Tusk" 40 Spray-making co. 42 Golden Globe nominee for "Tommy" 43 Second-most populous Afr. country 44 What some authority figures wear? 46 God in 56-Across 48 Past 49 K.C. setting 52 Item on a carhop's tray 53 Fox's leg? 54 Reno-__ Intl. Airport 56 It concludes with Hector's funeral 58 Little League game ender, perhaps 61 __ mentality 62 Yosemite attraction 63 "Blade Runner" actor Rutger __ 64 "Days," for one Down 1 Gun holders 2 Bucks 3 River in a Burns poem 4 Great quantity 5 City with a Penn State campus 6 Get into
See puzzle solutions on page 46
See puzzle solution on page 46
7 Surprise letters 8 Ineffective 9 Court leader 10 Shake up 11 Hard to reach 12 Copper, notably 13 Jack Nicklaus Museum campus 14 Time to celebrate 21 Dream state? 24 Misfit '70s sitcom character 25 Power chaser? 27 Bolted 28 Up 29 Old will? 31 Easily appalled 32 Where billabongs flow 33 "The Three Musketeers" antagonist
38 Ring concerns: Abbr. 41 Vilifies 42 Indian lentil dish 45 Asian citrus fruit 47 Part of a process 49 Drag racing safety feature 50 __ system 51 "Lovergirl" vocalist __ Marie 54 Paper slip 55 "What __!": "I've been swindled!" 57 Aachen article 59 Onetime Hertz owner
60 Tube top
Writing the Right Word by Dave Dowling
Accuracy in word choice is a key to effective communication. In your daily writing and speaking, try to make sure you use the right word in the right place with the right spelling. By doing so, its effect will affect your communication in a positive way. This quick weekly tip will help you filter the confusion in some of our daily word choices. This Week: Baluster, Banister A baluster is a short pillar that supports a handrail. The balusters on the deck were secured with small screws. A banister is the handrail on a staircase. We slid down the banister when we were children. Dave Dowling is the author of The Wrong Word Dictionary and The Dictionary of Worthless Words. Both books are available from many book retailers, and signed copies can be obtained by contacting Dave at davedowling59@yahoo.com
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
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42
SPORTS
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
All Outdoors Fall Fun
by Tim Blodgett for Saratoga TODAY As sure as the rising and setting of the sun, Fall follows Summer bringing with it a blaze of color and applecrisp weather that will put a little color in your cheeks. That “vacation’s over” mindset you may be experiencing needs to be stowed away because Fall is the best time to get out and enjoy nature. You don’t need to be an avid outdoorsman to appreciate this time of year. A leisurely walk through your neighborhood or in the local park is all it takes for you to see, smell and feel the change.
The Woods New York’s early archery and small game seasons are open now and thousands of hunters will be stealthily entering the woods and fields in pursuit of game. Deer season has begun and will draw the largest number of hunters. Many will be trying to put meat in their freezers while others will be looking for the mature bucks with their impressive antlers. Wherever you may place yourself on that scale, remember that any deer you get with a bow is a trophy. Many of you who do not hunt may wonder why others do. For some it’s a passion as strong as the one you may have for running or writing. For others it’s an escape from the rat race of modern life and a connection
to our ancient struggle to survive. It’s a challenge, a chance to see nature as an active participant, a way to put tasty, chemical free, healthy meat on the table and it’s fun and frustrating in equal measure! Hunters and hikers alike need to remember that there’s room in the woods for both. Be courteous in your encounters and be visible when walking the trails. Hunter’s orange goes a long way towards achieving the latter and is highly recommended on your dog, too. The Water Fall fishing is some of the most exciting you can hope to enjoy. After long months lazing in bathtub temperatures, fish are re-invigorated by cooling temperatures and are feeding ferociously as they fatten up
Tail of the Fish
for lean times to come. Some of my favorite fishing memories are those of being on the water, breath steaming with numb fingers, casting to eager schools of smallmouth bass. The Hudson and the Mohawk rivers are prime places to go for that action. Schools of big, hungry fish come up out of their summer haunts and harass baitfish in the shallow flats off the main channels. Jerk baits, spinner baits and top water lures are the baits to throw if you want to have an epic day on the water. Walleye are also on the move to shallow water and will eagerly take jerk baits and diving crank baits worked on the weed edges. Saratoga Lake is a good place to go and a few fat walleye will make a fish fry your family won’t soon forget.
Don’t lament the passing of Summer, revel in the arrival of Autumn. Enjoy the raking of the leaves, go apple picking and hike some of the trails that you can find locally. Dress warmly and wear a hat. Wear high-vis colors and avoid wearing brown or white. Take a camera and send pictures to your family down south. Embrace the season; it will be over all too soon. Tim and Rose Blodgett are the owners of Saratoga Tackle and Archery located on Rt. 29 in Schuylerville. Fishing tackle and archery equipment and service are available in a friendly environment. We are there to help you to enjoy your experience and feel the outdoor spirit. For more information, call 518-584-3952 or visit us on Facebook and saratogatackle.com.
Songbird Still Undefeated
Photo by MarkBolles.com
SARATOGA SPRINGS — The Tail of the Fish regatta was held Saturday, September 24 on Fish Creek in Saratoga Springs. The 2-mile season-opener race was
well-attended with over 340 participants and nearly 2,000 spectators. For full results, visit the Saratoga Rowing Association at www.saratogarowing.com.
Songbird (left) who won the Alabama at Saratoga is now 11 for 11. The undefeated filly won the $1,000,000 Cotillion at Parx (Bensalem race track, PA) Saturday, September 24. Photo by Dan Heary.
Morris Cup Judo Championships BURNT HILLS — The Jason Morris Judo Center will host the 13th annual Morris Cup Judo Championships on Sunday, October 9, at Burnt Hills-Ballston
Lake High School in Burnt Hills, and will feature over 500 of the best competitors in the Northeast and Canada. The Judo action will start at 9:30 a.m. and continue non-stop until about 8 p.m. The event will feature many local stars, including Burnt Hills students and graduates Quentin Cook, Ruslan Izirkin, Nick Kossor, Hannah Martin Mitch Paltiel, Eric Skylar and 2012 Olympian, Kyle Vashkulat. Judo has been an Olympic sport since 1964. It is the mostwidely practiced martial art in the world. People who practice judo develop high levels of physical
fitness, discipline and an unshakeable respect for their opponents. Jason Morris, a 4-time Olympic competitor, 1992 Silver medalist and the USA's 2008
Judo coach in Beijing, is committed to growing the next generation of Judo champions. For more information, call 518-3993936 or visit www.realjudo.net.
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SPORTS
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
Community, Another Word for Team
by Damian Fantauzzi for Saratoga TODAY Passion is to do what you love and love what you do. You cannot fake passion. If you truly love the game, no matter what sport, you should have a passion for your improvement and development. You should have passion every time you step into the gym, or onto the field, with a willingness to learn and mentality of “what can I do to get better.” Teamwork is a team sport, the “we” is always more important than the “me.” The better the team, the more noticed the player. Do all you can to foster great teamwork, knowing that will get you the attention most players desire. A program with great teamwork, constantly putting others before themselves,
is easily envied by the weak. As many of you know, I played and coached basketball throughout my life. I have always emphasized the importance of team. Whatever the sport, and especially at the scholastic levels, the experience of team is a lifelong memory of the connections made with fellow teammates. Even the so-called individual sports like tennis, track and field, golf and cross country, are team sports. For example, it isn't always the first place runner who actually wins a meet in cross-country. It goes as far back to the 7th runner on the team who really isn't counted in the scoring, but displaces other runners of the opponents by coming in ahead of them giving them a higher score as they finish. Like golf, the low score wins in cross-country. This is just a small part of the team concept of the sport. The challenge for the coach is getting his or her athletes to buy into the underlying concept of the sacrifice of one's individuality by turning the part into the whole. In today's scholastic-athletic programs with parents having more to say than ever before, it has become one of the most challenging barriers or tasks for coaches. The "me verses them" scenario has a bigger meaning now than it
ever has from the past. What do I mean? There has now become the trend to focus on one sport. With the growth of AAU basketball, it's forcing young athletes and their parents to become engulfed with a single sport for a 365-day addiction. This is but one example, but because this philosophy has a grip on the majority of youth sports, it may be overshadowing scholastic basketball. In my early years as a basketball coach, AAU was nonexistent so I developed a summer league in Saratoga along with summer hoop camps, with the hope to keep kids involved with the game. The last thing I wanted to do was take these young people away from other sports, like football, baseball, or whatever other sport they wanted to play. That was never a plan of mine, because I felt it was important to experience other sports - they're meant to be fun. Even with the summer league there were many kids who weren't basketball oriented, but enjoyed spending their summers playing basketball with their friends. The rules ensured each team member had to play a half. There were no coaches and the players were led by a captain, who was one of my varsity team members. It was his job to see that all of his team members got playing time. The team concept
fed into the philosophy of all for one and one for all. They had fun, they got shirts and at the end of the summer awards for the winning team. This league went on for about 6 years, and it was at the Saratoga Armory four nights a week for 6 weeks. Notice, I said no coaches, we supplied the referees and the Saratoga Youth Commission supplied the shirts. I made the teams, trying to keep them balanced the best way possible, and somehow it all worked out. With this league, a development of community evolved. This group of local teenagers from Saratoga's and Saint Peters' schools developed a closer-knit relationship. The biggest thing I noticed was there was a growth of pride in the community of this program, and their love of the game brought them all together. I can honestly say there was a feeling of an enormous team, a family, and through that, a mutual respect developed between them all whether they were really into basketball or not.
My point is simple, when we had this youth summer program, many of the kids involved became part of a team and I can honestly say there was an understanding of what it meant to be a team player, from the best player of each team to the least talented. They could see and feel that they all counted. Winning wasn't because of one guy, it was a community of players who had something to do with being part of the whole program. I failed to mention that parents weren't allowed in the Armory, so there wasn't any criticism of officials or participants. There was no negative language, or hurtful words used toward anyone. It was an organized program of pickup basketball. You could see the talented players encourage the less talented players to be successful, and it was fun to watch and be a part of it all. It was most definitely a feeling of community, and community is just another word for team.
The 16th Annual Great Pumpkin Challenge to Benefit Saratoga Bridges
MVP Health Care presents the 16th Annual Great Pumpkin Challenge on Saturday, October 15 at 9:30 a.m. Held Rain or Shine at the Saratoga Spa State Park’s Columbia Pavilion, this well-represented community event is LIMITED to 2,000 REGISTRANTS and will feature 5K and 10K races and a Children’s Fun Run. All proceeds benefit Saratoga Bridges’ programs and services. Long-sleeve moisture wicking shirts and free raffle tickets are given to everyone who registers by October 1st. There is NO DAY OF Registration. 5K/10K Fees: $25 (by 10/1); $28 (by 10/12 at 10 a.m.); $30 (before 6 p.m. on Friday, 10/14 – in
person only); and Kids Fun Run Fee: $5 (12 and under). In addition to the 5K, 10K and Children’s Fun Run, the event includes NET Chip Timing, Disposable Bibs/Chips, MVP Health Care and other sponsor’s giveaways, homemade refreshments, donated food and beverages from Price Chopper, Dunkin’ Donuts, Freihofer’s Baking Co. and others, favorite pumpkin and costume contests and many raffle prizes. Online registration, course maps and parking information can be found at – www.saratogabridges.org by clicking on “Fundraising Events”.
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SPORTS
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
COMMUNITY SPORTS BULLETIN Ballston Spa School District Offers Community Swim Opportunities BALLSTON SPA — The Ballston Spa Aquatics Program is currently offering opportunities for public use of the pool during adult lap swimming sessions, from 6 -7 a.m. on Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings and on Monday and Wednesday evenings. A family/open swim is also offered on Saturday afternoons from noon – 2 p.m. Additional opportunities are offered throughout the year, including adult Aqua Cardio classes and a Learn-To-Swim program in the spring. The Community Swim Program is open to district students, families and community members. District residents need to show identification and pay a $1 entrance fee to utilize the pool. Non-residents are admitted, as space allows, for a $2 fee. The pool is closed during swim meets, school vacations, emergency cancellations (i.e. snow days or early dismissals) and when school activities necessitate closure. Information is available online at www.bscsd.org, by clicking on the aquatics/pool button on the left side of the homepage. For more information, please contact the pool office directly at 518-884-7150 ext. 2324.
Send your sports stories or briefs to Thomas Dimopoulos, Sports Editor at Thomas@saratoga publishing.com
Zoom Over To Zumba at Gavin Park
Fall Intro to Ice Skating
SARATOGA SPRINGS — WILTON — Zumba, the Join us on the ice this sumLatin-inspired, dance-fitness mer for Intro to Ice Skating. Saratoga Springs craze, continues to be a pop- This ular recreational offering at Recreation Department proWilton’s Gavin Park! Sign gram will introduce skaters up now for the latest round ages 3 through adult to the of Zumba classes which will exciting world of ice skatrun Mondays from 5:45 ing. Already know the basic? to 6:45 p.m., with sessions This program will build being offered November 7 upon skills already learned. A strong foundation can December 21. Pre-registration is produce of lifetime of plearequired. No drop-ins will sure on the ice. Early Bird be allowed. A minimum of registration ends October 10 people must register for a 11. Sign up at the Saratoga session to run. No more than Springs Recreation Center 75 people will be accepted at 15 Vanderbilt Avenue per session. Registration Monday–Friday 9 a.m.-7 ends one business day prior p.m. or Saturday 12-4 p.m. to the start date for each For additional information or to download forms go session. www.SaratogaRec.com. Registration may be to completed online, in person, Questions? Call 587-3550 or via U.S. Mail. Online reg- x2300 or email recreservaistrations may be completed tions@saratoga-springs.org. by going to http://townofwilton.com/departments/parksSaratoga Springs and-recreation and selecting Ice Rinks Open the appropriate quick link. In person registrations can SARATOGA SPRINGS — be completed at the Gavin Join us for skating fun at the Park Office, which is open ice rink! Open Public, Open weekdays from 9 a.m. until Stick, Open Adult Hockey 5 p.m. Payment by check, and Open Figure sessions will MasterCard/VISA, or money be offered. Call (518) 587order is accepted. All par- 3550 x2300, (518) 583-3462 ticipants must be at least 15 or visit www.SaratogaRec. years old. Any questions? com for more information. Call 518-584-9455. See you there!
Puzzle solutions from pg. 40
SSRC Drop-In Sessions
Tenth Annual Falling Leaves 5K
SARATOGA SPRINGS — The Saratoga Springs Recreation Center offers drop-in sessions in Adult Basketball, Pickleball, Racquetball and Wallyball. Visit www.SaratogaRec.com and click on Rec Center Calendar for the latest schedule. For additional information please call 518-587-3550 x2300 or email recreservations@saratoga-springs.org.
BALLSTON SPA — The Tenth Annual Falling Leaves 5K in the village of Ballston Spa will be held on the Saturday of Columbus Day weekend on October 8. The 5K race starts and ends at Kelly Park on Ralph Street in Ballston Spa. Day of race registration is $30 starts at 8:30 a.m. with the race starting at 10 a.m. Awards for the top male and female overall, and top 3 male and female in each age division (no duplicates). Long sleeved T-shirts guaranteed to the first 200 registrations. Parking is available at the village pool. Age groups: 14 and under, 15-19, 20-29, 30-39, 40-49, 50-59, 60-69, 70+. Kids fun run (Free) will be held after the 5K with each participant receiving a ribbon. Stay for delicious baked goods and an opportunity to win gift certificates to local businesses. Last year, local businesses donated over $1,800 in gift certificates! This race benefits Vet HELP program earmarked for the Vet House and Guardian House for male and female homeless Veterans Applications and online registration: ballstonspaumchurch. org/falling-leaves-5k-run. html
New Basketball Program SARATOGA SPRINGS — The Saratoga Springs Recreation Department is offering a new co-ed program for 3-5 yr olds and their parents called Tiny B'Ball. Register for this and all 2016-2017 basketball programs at the Saratoga Springs Recreation Center at 15 Vanderbilt Avenue Monday–Friday 9 a.m.-7 p.m. or Saturday 12-4 p.m. Early Bird registration ends October 11. Visit us at www. SaratogaRec.com for more information. Questions? Contact us 587-3550 x2300 or email recreservations@ saratoga-springs.org. Join us on the courts this season!
Volume 11 • Issue 39
Week of September 30 – October 6, 2016
SPORTS Blue Streaks Into Overtime
The Saratoga Springs Blue Streaks boys varsity soccer team tied Guilderland in overtime on Tuesday, September 27 at home in the non-conference game. Score: 2-2. Photos by Francesco D'Amico
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