eedition Register-Star July 23 2019

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Register-Star Copyright 2019, Columbia-Greene Media Volume 235, No. 144

All Rights Reserved

Marker unveiling Historic Claverack lumber mill to be honored Inside, A3

The nation’s second-oldest newspaper • Serving Columbia and Dutchess counties since 1785

TUESDAY, JULY 23, 2019

Price $1.50

Hudson assault suspect indicted

n FORECAST WEATHER FOR HUDSON/CA TODAY TONIGHT WED

By Amanda Purcell Columbia-Greene Media A couple of morning showers

Mainly clear

Mostly sunny and pleasant

HIGH 75

LOW 58

81 58

Complete weather, A2

n SPORTS

HUDSON — A Columbia County grand jury decided to file an assault charge against a Hudson man who allegedly beat another man unconscious. Lance M. Fongemie, 35, was arraigned July 16 on a charge of second-degree assault, a class D violent felony. The grand jury voted in favor of handing up the indictment against Fongemie on Friday, according to court documents. An indictment is a

formal written accusation of a crime. Columbia County District Attorney Paul Czajka confirmed Monday that the charge filed by the grand jury was second-degree assault. Czajka would not say what other charges, if any, were considered by the grand jury and whether the alleged victim testified. Grand jury proceedings are secret and not open to the public. More information would be available after Fongemie’s arraignment later this week, although a date has not been set,

Czajka said. L a s t week, Czajka said other charges may be pending, given the outcome of Lance Fongemie the grand jury proceedings. Grand juries, unlike trial juries, do not determine whether a defendant is guilty. Grand juries determine if there is enough evidence to move the case to trial. Czajka declined to comment further on the case

except to add that he is “very relieved that the victim appears to be doing much better than we originally feared.” The alleged victim, Brett Worth of Hudson, alleged July 16 that Fongemie called him a “faggot,” a derogatory word for a gay man, before the alleged assault. Worth is gay. The two engaged in a verbal argument before Fongemie allegedly threw the first punch. Worth attempted to punch back but fell to the ground mid-swing. Worth was punched several times and was knocked out as Fongemie allegedly continued

to punch him in the head. A video of the fight just before it happened circulated on social media last week. The video shows Worth with his fists up, ready for a fight, and a shirtless Fongemie allegedly throwing the first punch. Worth suffered a broken nose and a broken bone under his eye; he received nine stitches on his brow. His injuries will require surgery in the coming months, Worth’s friend, Justin Weaver said. Judge Brian Herman set bail See SUSPECT A2

Delgado opens first office in Twin Counties District 15 AAA champions Taconic Hills victory over Coxsackie-Athens PAGE B1

n NATION

Deportations to expand in US ICE officers will be able to arrest and deport quickly PAGE A5

n NATION Melanie Lekocevic/Columbia-Greene Media

Assemblywoman Didi Barrett, D-106, U.S. Rep. Antonio Delgado, D-19, and Columbia County Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Jeffrey Hunt cut the ribbon on the new joint office at 420 Warren St., Hudson, on Monday.

By Melanie Lekocevic Columbia-Greene Media

EPA launches new probe Architect of EPA rollbacks faces new ethics inquiry PAGE A5

See DELGADO A2

Sheriff: Stockport man threatened officers

n INDEX Region Opinion State/Nation Obituaries Sports Classified Comics/Advice

Melanie Lekocevic/Columbia-Greene Media

Local residents filing in to the new office jointly held by U.S. Rep. Antonio Delgado, D-19, and Assemblywoman Didi Barrett, D-106, at 420 Warren St., Hudson.

HUDSON — U.S. Rep. Antonio Delgado, D-19, on Monday cut the ribbon to open the newest office in his congressional district, at 420 Warren St., in Hudson. It is his first office in the Twin Counties. Delgado will share the space with Assemblywoman Didi Barrett, D-106. “This is the fifth office that we have opened across the

district,” Delgado said as he welcomed the crowd. “Over the last couple of years I have talked a lot about accessibility and transparency, I have talked a lot about the need for you to feel connected with your representative, and this is the first order of business when it comes to democracy — if you don’t feel connected to me, your rep, then we have no chance to solve

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On the web www.HudsonValley360.com Twitter Follow: @HudsonRegisterstar Facebook www.facebook.com/ HudsonRegisterstar/

By Amanda Purcell Columbia-Greene Media

CHATHAM — Social media posts against law enforcement considered to be threatening landed a Stockport man in jail without bail, police said. Jeffrey A. Yeh, 52, was charged Friday with making a terroristic threat, a class D felony, and resisting arrest, a class A misdemeanor, according to a statement issued by Columbia County Sheriff David Bartlett. In one video posted to Facebook, Yeh can he heard saying, “I will burn that motherf****r” in reference to an investigator employed by the sheriff’s office. Search warrants in hand, deputies knocked on the door of Yeh’s home on County

Route 25 at about 9 p.m. Yeh initially refused to allow deputies to enter his home, police said. When asked to view an account of the arrest in a public court file by fax or in person, a person who answered the phone at Chatham Town Court denied access and offered instead to read the charges over the phone. Earlier that day, Yeh had filed several complaints about threats made against him. Yeh posted a video of a deputy taking the complaint at his home. Yeh reported to police he received a phone call at 1:35 p.m. Thursday when an unidentified person said, “Jeffrey Yeh, you are going to die f****t,” and hung up. Yeh claimed the harassment

he received was coming from the sheriff’s department. He claimed to have 473 recorded conv e r s a t i o n s Jeffrey A. Yeh with members of the sheriff’s office including highranking administration that spoke of evidence tampering. Columbia County Judge Richard Koweek signed two search warrants that were executed by police at 282 County Route 25 and at 59 County Route 25 in the Town of Stockport. The first address is owned by former sheriff’s sergeant Andrew Broockmann. The Register-Star has filed

a freedom of information request for copies of the search warrants. As officers were arresting Yeh, another man in the home at the time, David Fitting, intervened. Fitting, 62, of Stockport, was arrested and charged with obstructing governmental administration, a class A misdemeanor. Fitting is a retired senior management specialist for the state Department of Social Services, according to court documents. Yeh is due back in Chatham Town Court on Thursday for a preliminary hearing, police said.

OTHER CHARGES State police said Yeh could face additional charges,

including allegedly using his stepfather’s credit cards without permission. He was charged in June with second-degree forgery, a class D felony; endangering the welfare of an incompetent or physically disabled person, a class E felony; two counts of fourth-degree grand larceny, a class E felony; two counts of criminal possession of stolen property, a class E felony; and third-degree computer tampering, a class E felony. He is fighting the charges. A trial is scheduled to begin Jan. 27. To reach reporter Amanda Purcell, call 518-828-1616 ext. 2500, or send an email to apurcell@ thedailymail.net, or tweet to @ amandajpurcell.


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COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA • REGISTER-STAR

A2 Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Weather FORECAST FOR HUDSON/CATSKILL

TODAY TONIGHT WED

THU

FRI

SAT

Trump accuses four minority congresswomen of being ‘very Racist’ and ‘not very smart’ John Wagner and Seung Min Kim The Washington Post

A couple of morning showers

Mainly clear

HIGH 75

LOW 58

Mostly sunny Sunny to Mostly sunny Mostly sunny and pleasant partly cloudy

81 58

83 60

86 62

88 65

Ottawa 77/53

Montreal 79/57

Massena 80/55

Bancroft 74/48

Ogdensburg 78/52

Peterborough 78/52

Plattsburgh 78/57

Malone Potsdam 77/51 78/54

Kingston 77/59

Watertown 77/56

Rochester 79/61

Utica 75/53

Batavia Buffalo 77/56 78/59

Albany 77/58

Syracuse 80/57

Catskill 75/58

Binghamton 74/53

Hornell 76/53

Burlington 78/59

Lake Placid 72/48

Hudson 75/57

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

SUN AND MOON

ALMANAC Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

Temperature

Precipitation

Yesterday as of 3 p.m. 24 hrs. through 3 p.m. yest.

High

Low

74

66

Today 5:39 a.m. 8:24 p.m. none 11:57 a.m.

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

0.67”

Wed. 5:40 a.m. 8:23 p.m. 12:03 a.m. 12:57 p.m.

Moon Phases Last

New

First

Full

Jul 24

Jul 31

Aug 7

Aug 15

YEAR TO DATE NORMAL

23.03 21.5

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019

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

1

1

2

3

3

3

3

0

2

2

1

63

65

64

69

73

74

76

77

78

77

75

8 a.m. 9 a.m. 10 a.m. 11 a.m. Noon 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 3 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 6 p.m. The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature is an exclusive index of effective temperature based on eight weather factors.

NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY Seattle 75/57

Winnipeg 84/59 Montreal 79/57

Billings 97/69 Minneapolis 82/63 San Francisco 72/56

Toronto New York 75/66 77/58 Detroit 79/60

Chicago 82/61

Denver 89/62

Washington 78/66

Kansas City 78/56

Los Angeles 89/70

Atlanta 79/67 El Paso 88/71

Houston 89/68

Chihuahua 86/64

Miami 90/78

Monterrey 94/73

ALASKA HAWAII

Anchorage 68/58

-10s

-0s

0s

showers t-storms

Honolulu 88/78

Fairbanks 82/60 Juneau 66/53

10s rain

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

Hilo 86/70

20s flurries

30s

40s

snow

50s ice

60s

70s

cold front

80s

90s 100s 110s

warm front stationary front

NATIONAL CITIES City Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Billings Birmingham Boise Boston Charleston, SC Charleston, WV Charlotte Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus, OH Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit Hartford Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Knoxville Las Vegas

Today Wed. Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 85/68 pc 90/70 t 68/58 c 64/56 sh 79/67 t 83/66 pc 76/70 r 80/69 pc 78/63 sh 84/62 s 97/69 t 98/61 t 81/65 t 85/64 s 97/65 s 90/58 s 71/65 r 79/68 pc 91/71 t 79/69 t 79/56 pc 81/55 s 79/61 t 83/63 c 82/58 t 86/62 t 82/61 s 84/63 s 79/59 s 81/60 pc 78/62 s 79/61 s 79/57 s 81/58 s 89/66 s 88/65 s 89/62 s 93/64 pc 79/60 s 81/63 s 79/60 s 80/61 pc 76/60 sh 84/58 s 88/78 pc 89/78 pc 89/68 pc 90/67 s 81/59 s 82/59 s 78/56 s 81/61 s 78/59 r 80/60 s 104/85 t 100/85 t

City Little Rock Los Angeles Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Norfolk Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland Portland Providence Raleigh Richmond Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Francisco Savannah Seattle Tampa Washington, DC

Today Wed. Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 82/61 s 83/63 s 89/70 s 91/69 s 90/78 t 91/79 t 79/61 s 80/66 s 82/63 s 83/65 s 82/59 pc 84/59 s 85/72 t 87/73 t 75/66 sh 80/68 s 81/67 t 83/71 c 84/59 s 85/61 s 79/61 s 81/65 s 90/74 t 88/74 t 77/67 sh 83/66 s 107/89 pc 107/90 t 75/55 pc 75/55 pc 70/61 sh 78/61 pc 80/57 c 81/58 pc 71/62 r 81/63 pc 81/59 t 82/62 pc 73/64 r 84/64 pc 94/58 s 98/61 s 82/63 s 84/66 pc 102/77 pc 95/73 t 72/56 pc 75/56 pc 94/72 t 81/69 t 75/57 c 77/57 pc 88/75 t 86/77 t 78/66 sh 84/68 s

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

Saugerties Senior Housing

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump escalated his attacks Monday on a group of four minority congresswomen known as “the Squad,” calling them “very Racist” and “not very smart.” Trump’s assessment came in a tweet as his motorcade traveled from the White House to the Supreme Court to pay his respects to the late Justice John Paul Stevens, who died last week at age 99 and was lying in repose. It was the latest in a string of attacks directed at the four freshman lawmakers since a week ago Sunday, when Trump said in a tweet that they should “go back” to the “totally broken and crime infested places from which they came.” Only one of the four, Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., was born outside the United States, and she became a U.S. citizen in 2000. Trump has often tried to turn the tables on his political opponents, accusing them of the very shortcomings for which they criticize him. “The ‘Squad’ is a very Racist group of troublemakers who are young, inexperienced, and not very smart,” Trump wrote. “They are pulling the once great Democrat Party far left, and were against humanitarian aid at the Border . . . And are now against ICE and Homeland Security. So bad for our Country!” Over the past week, Trump has repeatedly defended his words directed at the four women - Reps. Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts and Rashida Tlaib of Michigan — despite widespread criticism that his remarks were racist and divisive. Trump went on the offensive against the four lawmakers

Delgado From A1

these complicated matters. Across the district, no matter the party affiliation, people appreciate accessibility.” The new office will serve as a resource for residents to call, email or come by in person to discuss issues or seek assistance with state or federal services. Monday’s ceremony drew a packed house. “I’d like to welcome all our constituents to visit us in our new district office in the heart of Warren Street,” Barrett said. “This location offers a walkable, accessible space that will better help us provide direct services to the people of Columbia and northern Dutchess counties. I look

Suspect From A1

at $1,000 at Fongemie’s arraignment late last Tuesday in city court. Czajka asked for no bail and that the defendant be sent to Columbia County Jail without possibility of release, given the violent nature of the alleged offense. Second-degree assault is a violent felony and punishable by up to seven years in prison, according to state law. Fongemie has a prior criminal record, according to court papers. He was convicted in 2012 by plea in Hudson City Court

Washington Post photo by Jabin Botsford

President Trump stops to talk to members of the media as he walks from the Oval Office to board Marine One to depart from the South Lawn at the White House on July 19.

again Monday during a meeting in the Oval Office with Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan. “I think they’re very bad for our country. I really think they must hate our country,” Trump told reporters. He denied that he had created any “racial tension” in the United States and pointed to lower unemployment figures for African Americans. During a heated exchange on “Fox News Sunday,” Stephen Miller, a White House senior adviser, sought to defend Trump, saying that the term “racist” is being misused. “I think the term ‘racist’ has become a label that is too often deployed by the left, Democrats, in this country simply to try to silence and punish and suppress people they disagree with, speech that they don’t want to hear,” Miller said. Asked Monday about Trump’s tweet calling the four lawmakers “racist,” White House counselor Kellyanne Conway told reporters at the White House: “Well, they certainly are young and inexperienced. That doesn’t stop all of you from elevating them into

the stratosphere and superstardom.” Behind the scenes, Trump’s staff and his allies continued to promote talking points that elevated the lawmakers, while avoiding directly injecting race into the arguments. “The President loves America. He will stick up for this country, our flag, and the men and women who serve this country in uniform,” the talking points read, according to a copy obtained by The Washington Post. “He will also publicly oppose those who compare this country to garbage, show weakness — if not outright support — for terrorists, and make anti-Semitic remarks and level attacks on our closest ally in the Middle East - Israel.” The Republican National Committee also sent several suggested talking points, encouraging allies to highlight the liberal views of Ocasio-Cortez, Omar, Pressley and Tlaib and adding: “The despicable rhetoric espoused by the socialist squad and tolerated by national Democrats is beyond disgusting.” Trump has attacked the

forward to sharing this location with Rep. Delgado and his team, and to continuing to deliver the best service possible to our constituents in the 106th Assembly District.” Columbia County Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Jeffrey Hunt said having both Delgado’s and Barrett’s offices in one location will be a benefit for the community. “The fact that they are sharing space is something that we have talked a lot about here in Hudson — sharing space,” Hunt said. “It’s a pleasure to have them both here, so if you have an issue that may have state implications but also national implications, it’s onestop shopping, which is a great thing for our community.” There are no plans to open a district office in Greene County, and the Warren Street office is expected to handle constituent issues for residents in

both counties, Greene County Chamber of Commerce President and Executive Director Jeff Friedman said. “This office will serve the region,” Friedman said. “This brings access and that’s really important. In the past, our representative has always had an office in Kinderhook, which made it difficult for Greene County residents to go to the office, it was a further drive. This is more accessible now. From a Greene County perspective, it will give a lot more access and ability to communicate with the congressman, which is extremely important.” The Warren Street office is Delgado’s fifth office in the 19th Congressional District, joining brick-and-mortar offices in Kingston, Delhi, Oneonta and Liberty. The office opening came a couple of hours before

of third-degree assault, a class A misdemeanor, and criminal obstruction of breathing or blood circulation. Fongemie struck a 33-year-old woman with a bottle, a wooden handle and a crowbar. He also obstructed her breathing. On Aug. 30, 2012, he was sentenced to time served and three years of probation. An order of protection was issued on behalf of the victim. In March 2018, Fongemie spoke about mental health and the need for more federal funding for mental health programs. “Being someone who has mental illnesses, I know it affects a lot of things,” Fongemie said. “I know the things I struggle with are a factor in

bad decisions I have made.” Fongemie said at the time he struggles with bipolar disorder, anxiety and depression — conditions for which he gets help through Columbia County’s mental health program. To reach reporter Amanda Purcell, call 518-828-1616 ext. 2500, or send an email to apurcell@ thedailymail.net, or tweet to @ amandajpurcell.

HUDSON RIVER TIDES Low tide: 1:56 a.m. 1.1 feet High tide: 7:48 a.m. 3.7 feet Low tide: 2:16 p.m. 0.7 feet High tide: 8:26 p.m. 3.6 feet

women on multiple issues in the past week, including over their views on Israel. His mention of “humanitarian aid” on Monday referenced a $4.6 billion border bill passed by the House late last month. The measure would pump billions of dollars into the budgets of agencies, including the Department of Health and Human Services, that have been overwhelmed by the influx of Central American migrants at the United States’ southern border. Ocasio-Cortez, Omar, Pressley and Tlaib voted against the legislation, saying it did not include enough restrictions on how the Trump administration could spend the money and did not include adequate protections for migrant children at detention facilities. The lawmakers have also been highly critical of Immigration and Customs Enforcement on a range of issues. During an appearance Monday morning at an NAACP convention in Detroit, Tlaib was introduced as “one of the four women who was told to go back home.” “Yeah, I’m not going nowhere, not until I impeach this president,” she said upon taking the stage. Last week, Trump directed most of his ire at Omar, a Somali-born refugee. As he criticized her during remarks at a campaign rally in North Carolina on Wednesday, the crowd broke out into chants of “Send her back!” Trump later said he was not happy with the chant but has since characterized the crowd as “incredible patriots.” Earlier last week, the Democratic-led House passed a resolution condemning his tweets directed at the four lawmakers.

Delgado was scheduled to hold his 16th town hall meeting at Subversive Malting + Brewing’s beer cafe on Main Street in Catskill. More on the town hall meeting in Wednesday’s edition. Delgado’s first Greene County town hall was held at the Orpheum Film & Performing Arts Center in Tannersville in February. Over the weekend he held a town hall meeting in Amenia in Dutchess County. “Talking to folks, hearing their concerns and using my position as their elected representative to address them is the most important part of my job,” Delgado said. “Despite all of the noise going on in Washington, I am squarely focused on doing the work, and I’m looking forward to hearing from everyone.” COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA The Register-Star/The Daily Mail are publishedTuesday through Saturday mornings by Columbia-Greene Media (USPS 253620), One Hudson City Centre, Suite 202, Hudson, NY 12534, a subsidiary of Johnson Newspaper Corp. Periodicals postage paid at Hudson, N.Y., and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Register-Star, One Hudson City Centre, Suite 202, Hudson, NY 12534. TO SUBSCRIBE To order a subscription, call our circulation department at (800) 724-1012 or logon to www.hudsonvalley360.com SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Digital Pass is included with print subscription Daily (Newsstand) $1.50 Saturday (Newsstand) $2.50 Carrier Delivery (3 Months) $71.50 Carrier Delivery (6 Months) $143.00 Carrier Delivery (1 Year) $286.00 EZ Pay Rates: 3 months $65.00 6 months $130.00 1 year $260.00 DIGITAL PASS ONLY RATES: Includes full access to HudsonValley360.com and the e-edition. 3 Months $30.00 6 Months $60.00 1 Year $120.00 Home Delivery & Billing Inquireries Call (800) 724-1012 and reach us, live reps are available Mon.-Fri. 6 a,m - 5 p.m., Sat. 6 a.m. - noon Sun. 8 a.m. - 11:30 a.m.

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Tuesday, July 23, 2019 A3

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA • REGISTER-STAR

CALENDAR Tuesday, July 23 n Chatham Central School District Board of Education 6:30 p.m. High School Library, Chatham 518-392-2400 n Columbia Economic Development Corporation Full Board 8:30 a.m. 4303 Route 9, Hudson n Greenport Planning Board 7:30 p.m. Town Hall, 600 Town Hall Drive, Hudson 518-828-4656 n Hudson Development Corp. noon 1 North Front St., Hudson n Rhinebeck Planning Board 6:45 p.m. Town Hall, 80 East Market St., Rhinebeck n Stuyvesant Zoning Board of Appeals 7:30 p.m. Town Hall, 5 Sunset Drive, Stuyvesant 518-758-6248 (as necessary)

Barton’s Mill Historic Roadside Marker unveiling CLAVERACK — The Barton’s Mill Historic Roadside Marker Unveiling and Commemoration will take place 11 a.m.-3 p.m. July 27 at 2136 County Route 11 (Martindale Road), Claverack. The public is invited to this free event. The historic marker is made possible by the William G. Pomeroy Foundation. The Claverack Historic Society is a sponsor of the Barton’s Mill Historic Roadside Marker Unveiling and Commemoration.

Barton’s Mill, also known locally as the Mill at Green Hole, was one of the earliest water powered grist and lumber mills, and cider presses in the area. The mill is located on the eastern tributary (East creek) of the Agawamuck Creek which has a natural drop and plenty of year round waterpower. Van Rensselaer’s held the first patent for the land that included the mill site, and early records indicate a prelease mill operation there

around 1700. The Barton family, proprietors of the complex from 1832-1990, sold the mill to a sea captain. On July 27, Captain Formel, the current owner of the mill, will present the history of Barton’s Mill, and mills in the town of Claverack. The Captain has given nearly 30 years researching and personally restoring the complex which today is reminiscent of the original, a fully functional, fully water powered milling

Wednesday, July 24 n Claverack Zoning Board of Appeals

7:30 p.m. Town Court Building, Route 217, Mellenville 518-672-7911 n Clermont Zoning Board of Appeals 7:30 p.m. Town Hall, 1795 Route 9, Clermont 518-537-6868. n Columbia County Board of Supervisors Public Works Committee 6 p.m. 401 State St., Hudson. 518-828-1527 n Columbia Economic Development Corporation 8:30 a.m. 4303 Route 9, Hudson. n Copake Hamlet Revitalization Task Force 7 p.m. Town Hall, 230 Mountain View Road, Copake 518-329-1234 n Kinderhook Town Historical Committee 7 p.m. Town Hall, 3211 Church St., Valatie n Philmont Village Board Workshop 7 p.m. Village Hall, 124 Main St., Philmont 518-672-7032 n Pine Plains Zoning Commission 5:15 p.m. Town Hall, 3284 Route 199, Pine Plains 518-398-7155 n Red Hook Central School District Board of Education 7 p.m. District Office Conference Room, Mill Road Elementary School, 9 Mill Road, Red Hook 845-7582241 n Red Hook Town Board 7:30 p.m. Town Hall, 7340 South Broadway, Red Hook 845-758-4606 n Taghkanic Comprehensive Plan Committee 6:30 p.m. Town Hall, Route 82, West Taghkanic 518-851-7638

Thursday, July 25 n Chatham Village Board 7 p.m. Tracy

Memorial Hall, 77 Chatham St., Chatham 518-392-5821 n Chatham Town Zoning Board of Appeals 7 p.m. Town Hall, 488 Route 295, Chatham 518-392-3262 n Columbia Economic Development Corporation. Governance and nominating committee 8:30 a.m. 4303 Route 9, Hudson. n Copake Zoning Board of Appeals 7 p.m. Town Hall, 230 Mountain View Road, Copake 518-329-1234 n Germantown Planning Board 7 p.m. Town Hall, 50 Palatine Park Road, Germantown 518-537-6687 n Hudson Community Development and Planning Agency noon One North Front St., Hudson n Kinderhook Village Planning Board 7:30 p.m. Village Hall, 6 Chatham St., Kinderhook 518-758-9882 n Kinderhook Town Board 7 p.m. Town Hall, 3211 Church St., Martin H. Glynn Municipal Building, Valatie n Kinderhook Town Zoning Board of Appeals 7 p.m. Town Hall, 3211 Church St., Valatie 518-758-9882 n Rhinebeck Zoning Board of Appeals 7:30 p.m. Town Hall, 80 East Market St., Rhinebeck 845-876-1922 n Stockport Town Board Workshop 7 p.m. Town Hall, 2787 Atlantic Ave., Hudson 518-828-9389

Friday, July 26 n Hudson Historic Preservation Commission 10 a.m. City Hall, 520 Warren St., Hudson 518-828-1030

Saturday, July 27 n Copake Conservation Advisory

Committee 9 a.m. Town Hall, 230 Mountain View Road, Copake 518-329-1234

operation. The Barton’s Mill Program will begin at 11 a.m. with welcome remarks and introductions of guests by Jeane LaPorta, public Historian Town of Claverack. Claverack Town Supervisor, Clifford Weigelt and representatives from New York will offer remarks. The accomplishment of the historic marker award by the William G.. Pomeroy Foundation requires authentic historic accuracy by primary source documentation in order to

be considered for the award of the historic marker. The William G. Pomeroy Foundation is dedicated to helping people to celebrate their community’s history by providing grants to obtain signage in the form of roadside markers and plaques. Vendors participating in the Barton’s Mill Marker event include: Columbia Tent, Love Apple Farm, Little Apple Cidery, Hudson Chatham Winery, Old Klaverack Brewery, Nine Pin Cider Works, Chatham Brewing.

Visit us at the Greene County Youth Fair! July 25 - July 28

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Travelers losing thousands to ‘Expedia’ imposters BUFFALO — After several Better Business Bureau Scam Tracker reports, BBB is working with Expedia group to issue a warning about a network of scammers is using Expedia Group’s name to take consumers for thousands of dollars. Some consumers lost as much as $3,700. The scam starts when consumers search online, then call customer service numbers purporting to be Expedia. Customers ask the representative to confirm or change existing reservations they’ve made through the Expedia travel site. But instead of legitimate Expedia reps, they are calling phone numbers used by impostors. The impostors say their refund site isn’t working properly and the consumer needs to purchase gift cards to receive a refund or change bookings. Consumers reporting this scam are from 17 different states and Canada, and report losing nearly $10,000 total. One woman told BBB that the scammer kept telling her to, “purchase (additional) gift cards saying that he had to merge the cards together,” but not to worry as she, “was going to be well reimbursed.” Several customers say the fake customer service rep stayed with them on their cell phones while they purchased the gift cards. That’s what happened when BBB contacted one of the

phony numbers and listened as the impostor tried to convince us we needed to buy gift cards, giving us a convoluted explanation of how we would get a refund. Expedia is a BBB Accredited Business with an A+ rating. In a statement, the Bellevue, Washington-based company said, “We are happy to team up with the BBB to educate people about this scam and share tips on how they can protect themselves.” Expedia Group’s statement continues, “Our goal is always to ensure travelers have a seamless and trouble-free booking experience with us, and it’s incredibly unfortunate that scammers have disrupted our customers’ well-deserved vacations and travel plans. Rest assured that we are also working hard to identify ways to prevent this from happening in the future.” Expedia Group is taking steps to counteract these impostors, including working with popular search engines to reduce the occurrence of fake ads, making its customer service contact number more visible, and adding info about these scams to its customer service portal. BBB offers the following tips for consumers to protect themselves: Most trustworthy companies will never demand a gift

card as any form of payment and consumers should never have to pay to get money back. Using a search engine does not guarantee that you will get the correct number. Always go directly to a website to find contact information. Large companies often have a ‘Contact Us’ button or a help hotline number directly on their webpage. Protect personal information. Be cautious when connecting to public WiFi and never use it for online banking or entering personal or financial information.

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COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA • REGISTER-STAR

A4 Tuesday, July 23, 2019

REGISTER-STAR Established 1785 Published Tuesday through Saturday by Columbia-Greene Media

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OUR VIEW

Color and flavor hide truth about vaping Lisa Heintz knows a thing or two about smoking fads. When young people begin to turn away from traditional cigarettes, the community engagement coordinator for the Tobacco-Free Coalition of Columbia and Greene Counties said, another form of smoking, just as addicting, will take its place. Such substitution is possible because of new smoking technology that always seems one step ahead of the no-smoking advocates. E-cigarette use is rising among young people, with 20.8% of them using e-cigarettes, compared to 8.1% using traditional cigarettes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A study by the U.S. Surgeon General indicated

e-cigarette use among high school students rose a whopping 78% from 2017 to 2018. Heintz said e-cigarettes and vaping have seen a sharp rise in use among teenagers. From 2014 to 2018, there was a remarkable 160% increase in high school students using ecigarettes, according to the CDC. Here’s another troubling development: Young people between the ages of 18 and 21 are purchasing tobacco products for younger teens. In many cases this helps them start the habit, Heintz said. “Too many younger teens get cigarettes and vapes from older students who buy them legally,” Heintz said. The new law signed by Gov. Andrew Cuomo that

raises the age to purchase tobacco products from 18 to 21 is a step in the right direction to curtail teenage smoking. But we must do more to fight the growing epidemic of teen vaping. These products, with their candy-like flavors and colorful marketing, can entice young people and sadly, after decades of decline, have significantly increased nicotine use among adolescents. Teaching kids at home and in schools about the dangers of vaping is important as is providing good adult role models who can show teens that it is not cool to smoke or vape. Think of these as counterprogramming to the bright tastes and deceptively alluring advertising.

ANOTHER VIEW

Opioid deaths are down. But challenges continue. (c) 2019, The Washington Post

As the 20th century came to a close, the United States faced many challenges, but a high rate of death from prescription opioid overdoses was not one of them. In 1999, 3,442 people died from taking excessive painkilling substances such as oxycodone or hydromorphone. Each such death, of course, was a tragedy; but the country as a whole could not speak of a crisis. Only eight years later, the number of prescription opioid-related deaths had nearly quadrupled, reaching 12,796 in 2007 — and the United States was in the grip of an addiction crisis. It would ultimately morph into new epidemics of heroin and fentanyl use, leaving hundreds of thousands of people dead and families shattered all over America. The latest news from the opioid addiction front, though, is encouraging. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that the total number of drug overdose deaths in the United States declined in 2018, by 5.1%, the first annual decline in nearly three decades. The raw numbers of deaths — 68,577 in 2018, vs. 72,224 in 2017 — are still unconscionably high. But the progress shows that the

federal, state and local mobilization against drug addiction, which has emphasized treatment and availability of the life- saving opioid antidote naloxone, is producing results. Particularly noteworthy was the fact that some 59 percent of the decline in overall drug deaths could be attributed exclusively to a reduction in those caused by prescription opioids. More cautious prescribing practices by doctors, partly because ofCDC guidelines issued in 2016, have curbed the once-rampant supply of these addictive medications, saving many lives. As Drug Enforcement Administration data released in response to a Washington Post lawsuit demonstrate with astonishing clarity, the pharmaceutical industry — manufacturers, distributors and retailers — practically flooded the United States with opioids in the pre-guideline period. And of the 76 billion oxycodone and hydrocodone pills supplied between 2006 and the peak year of opioid prescriptions, 2012, a disproportionate number reached rural communities in Appalachia. Norton, Virginia, received 306 pills for each of its about 4,000 residents during those seven years. Not coinciden-

tally, The Post’s reporting found that counties with the most pills distributed per person experienced more than three times the national death rate from opioid overdoses. These data are critical, both to the ongoing effort to hold accountable those responsible and to help prevent a repetition. The main threat now is fentanyl, an illicit opioid that is imported from China and Mexico, as well as manufactured clandestinely in the United States, and that was implicated in nearly half of overdose deaths in 2018. With respect to presciption opioids, the challenge will be to continue reducing supply, and overdoses, without overcorrecting to the detriment of patients for whom opioids remain necessary and appropriate. Historians may look back on the first two decades of the 21st century as a time of an avoidable public health crisis whose effects touched every aspect of national life, from medical practice to electoral politics. First, though, we must redouble efforts to insure that the epidemic does, indeed, become a thing of the past.

Hispanic Americans are strangers in our own land By Stacy Torres Special To The Washington Post ·

On the first day of planned immigration raids across the country last Sunday, eerie quiet settled over Fruitvale, the heavily Mexican and Central American neighborhood where I live in Oakland, California. Fliers on lampposts in English and Spanish offered instructions on what to do if Immigration and Customs Enforcement came to the door. So far, only a handful of ICE arrests have occurred, but fear has already imposed its toll. Absent from the streets were the many “familiar strangers” I see during my daily travels, despite urging from the city councilperson who represents this district, Noel Gallo: “Don’t run and hide in your home because that’s not going to solve anything. Continue to work, continue to be in school, and do well and continue to do your paperwork to become a citizen.” Calls to carry on with business as usual reminded me of similar appeals in New York after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. In 2019, we live with a new yet familiar terror. Sunday services went on without interruption at the sanctuary church Primera Iglesia Presbiteriana Hispana two blocks from my home. In his sermon, the Rev. Pablo Morataya said, “It’s impossible to put yourself in the shoes of somebody unless you’re in the same situation or same condition. I have heard in the last two days of at least three cases of people who, from my point of view, have all the reason in the world to be full of panic.” Normally bustling places were deserted and somber. The feeling of a community holding its breath hung like a fog. Few vendors roamed the sidewalks selling raspados, ice cream and sliced mango. Missing were the mothers I glimpse from my porch walking with young children toddling alongside or babies expertly wrapped in cloth bound to their backs. The baseball diamond and playing fields of Brookdale Park remained empty. Finally, around 8:20

p.m., with the sky still tinged with faint light, the park filled with children and a group of men playing soccer on a neighboring field. The fog of fear had lifted, allowing everyone to burn energy pent up after a day of hiding. I boil at the reality of children living in fear and under house arrest on a beautiful afternoon when they should have been laughing and playing - not hiding like fugitives. As days such as these accumulate and nick at any feeling of belonging and security, even for those of us with the privilege of American citizenship, what collateral damage are the children absorbing? I am the daughter of a onceundocumented immigrant from Chile. I’ve tried my entire life to set a good example and be a good American. But I’m sick of hiding, too. I never thought I’d feel compelled while grocery shopping to carry my own passport to prove my citizenship “just in case.” Or that I’d have to remind my 76-year-old father in New York City, where he has lived more than half his life, to bring his original green card when he walks the one block from home to the restaurant where he goes for food, company and conversation in Spanish. A few days later, the mothers and children return. After all, it’s summer and school’s out. Many head to the Fremont Pool, which advertises itself in English, Spanish and Chinese signage on its nondescript exterior. A little girl in flip-flops walking alongside her mom and sister eagerly pulls goggles and a fluffy pink towel from her bag a half-block before reaching the pool’s entrance. She’s ready to splash. Other kids accompany their parents to work, like the chubby-cheeked, ponytailed girl at her mom’s snack stand near the Bay Area Rapid Transit station, cheerfully informing passersby of their ice pop offerings: “Coco, fresa, limón.” Families also frequent Romo’s Caffe, a bright and airy coffee shop on the corner of Bancroft and Fairfax. In the

year since owners and sisters Laura Romo and Irma Enriquez, originally from San Juan de los Lagos in Mexico’s Jalisco state, opened it, the cafe has fast become a clearinghouse for vital information. In addition to homemade fare and free WiFi, patrons find notice of community council meetings and can stock up on wallet-sized “red cards” in Spanish with a bullet-point list of constitutional rights, cards for small businesses and fliers for nonprofit organizations that provide youth job training, health care and legal services. As we move toward a minority-majority U.S. population, President Donald Trump’s racism is the last siren call to a white electorate threatened with losing its power. Researchers project a third of eligible voters in 2020 will be nonwhite and just over 13 percent will be Hispanic. We need to make sure these voters understand their power. Mobilization will require a concerted effort to help the newest and youngest eligible voters to register. They might not have seen their parents vote in this country. When I turned 18, my father warned me against voting due to fear my name would go “on a list” - a reasonable worry for someone from a country where the brutal Pinochet dictatorship had taken over. “I know it’s a lack of history and representation in schools that makes us vulnerable. It’s a damaging dynamic, and I experienced it,” says comedian John Leguizamo, who is now touring his one-man show, “Latin History for Morons.” Our ancestors helped build this country, and its future rests on our shoulders. Our story in this place is long and rich and indelibly American. Voters of color, the sun is shining, and you have strength in numbers - don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. Torres is an assistant professor of sociology at the University of California at San Francisco.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

New law has life-saving potential To the editor: I am writing to thank Governor Cuomo for raising the age of sale of all tobacco products — including electronic cigarettes — from 18 to 21 throughout the state. This is truly a milestone to celebrate as we work towards educating decisionmakers, reducing youth tobacco use, and improving the health and wellness of younger generations. We also must thank our local leadership including Senator Daphne Jordan for her willingness to listen and be educated on the dangers

of youth tobacco use and ultimately voting for the bill. Make no mistake, this law has life-saving potential. We already know that adolescents and young adults are uniquely vulnerable to the effects of nicotine and nicotine addiction, and with the rise of easily concealable and fruit and candy flavored tobacco products, Tobacco 21 has never been more important. Today, thanks to this law, New Yorkers are better suited to protect children from the dangers of tobacco addiction, reduce smoking rates, save on

healthcare costs, and prevent tobacco related death and disease among some of our most vulnerable residents. We are eager to celebrate the enactment of this law in November, and look forward to continuing to educate decisionmakers on the tobacco epidemic, while seeing our young people reap the rewards. ELIZABETH HAMLIN-BERNINGER DIRECTOR OF ADVOCACY AMERICAN LUNG ASSOCIATION IN NEW YORK KINDERHOOK

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY ‘Any mother could perform the jobs of several air traffic controllers with ease.’ LISA ALTHER

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Tuesday, July 23, 2019 A5

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA • THE DAILY MAIL

How to submit obituaries and death notices Obituaries: Are paid notices. We reserve the right to edit all copy. Funeral directors may email us the information at obits@columbiagreenemedia.com anytime. Include life background information on the deceased, a full list of immediate survivors, services and the name of the funeral home. Any questions or for rate information, call 518-828-1616, ext. 2461. Funeral notices: Are paid follow-ups to obituaries. We reserve the right to edit all copy. Funeral directors may email us the information at obits@columbiagreenemedia.com anytime. Any questions or for rate information, call 518-828-1616, ext. 2461. Death Notices: Are free notices that don’t exceed 20 words. For more information, funeral directors may call 518-828-1616, ext. 2461. In memorium ads: Are paid ads that are guaranteed to run. Call the Classified department at 518-828-1616, ext. 2461

Rudolph Angelo Perini Rudolph Angelo Perini was the Justice of the Peace in passed away in his sleep July the town of Clinton from 197611, 2019 after a long illness. 1984. He volunteered as the Born to John and Margaret Recreation Commissioner, was (Franzoni) Perini in 1932, he is on the town board, and coached survived by his loving wife of Little and Junior League base64 years, Joan Martoglio Perini, ball. In 1981, Rudy and his son, his children, Nancy Perini Chin, Rudy, bought a plane and both Rudolph (Michelle) Perini, and obtained their private pilot’s liJohn (Janet) Perini. He has one censes in 1981. In retirement, grandchild, Matthew Chin, as he taught Private Pilot Ground well as many nieces, nephews, School at Dutchess Community and extended family. College and was a flight Rudy was a veteran of instructor. In his later the Korean War, havyears, he enjoyed his ing served in Korea as role as family patriarch a Communication Speand advisor for four cialist in the Army. He generations of the Perimet his wife, Joan, on a ni family. He will be recommuter train to New membered for his quick York City and Joan and wit, quirky sense of huhe were married six mor, and devotion to Perini months later. He graduhis wife without whom ated from Blair Acadhe would not have aged emy in Blairstown, NJ. Using as gracefully. the GI bill, he studied part-time A memorial service will be at Fairleigh Dickinson University held Saturday August 17 from earning a BS degree in electrical the St James R.C. Church Chaengineering. He worked three tham, New York. A Calling hour jobs at the same time. Rudy was will be from 10am – 11:00 am. a long time IBM employee. In In lieu of flowers, contributions addition, he raised Bob White may be made to the Community quail on a small farm in Clinton Hospice of Columbia Greene Corners, NY. He earned a black 47 Liberty St. Catskill, N.Y. belt in Tai Kwon Do, and taught 12414 or to one’s charity of your karate at Vassar College and choice. For on-line condolences Clinton Corners Town Hall. He visit wenkfuneralhome.co

Silke A. Schmeelk Round Top- Silke A. Sch- but also extremely proud to be meelk, 74, passed away sur- an American! Survivors include rounded by her loving family her husband Harald Schmeelk; on July 19, 2019. She was born daughters Connie (Bob) Doon September 2, 1944, in Ger- nahue and Ingrid Leis; grandmany to the late Heinz and Herta daughters Amanda (TJ) Dwyer, Warrings. When Silke was eight Ashley Leis, Candice (Pete) Kayears old, she and her vakos, and Courtney family moved to New (Rob) Hasenkopf; five York, eventually setgreat grandchildren tling down in Round Avery, Emelia, Heidi, Top. On October 20, Grace, and Logan; and 1962 Silke married many nieces and nephHarald Schmeelk and ews. they spent 56 hapA memorial service pily married years towill be held for Silke gether, watching their on Thursday, July 25, family grow. Silke was 2019, at 4:00 P.M. at Schmeelk very involved in The The Resurrection LuKaatskill Germania Schuhplat- theran Church, Routes 32 and tlers for many years and was a 23B, Cairo, N.Y. 12413, with lifetime member of The Round Pastor Victor Nelson officiatTop Fire Company Ladies Aux- ing. In lieu of flowers, donations iliary. Silke enjoyed gardening, may be made to the Resurrecsewing, playing scratch-offs, tion Lutheran Church, P.O. Box and spending time in her screen 563, Cairo, N.Y. 12413. Funeral house listening to German mu- arrangements are under the sic and making memories with direction of Richards Funeral family and friends. She made Home, 29 Bross Street, Cairo, sure to pass on the traditions N.Y. 12413. Condolences may of her German heritage. Not be made at www.richardsfuneronly was she proud of her roots, alhomeinc.net.

Trump administration to expand quick deportations anywhere in US By Molly O’Toole Los Angeles Times (TNS)

WASHINGTON — Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers will be able to more quickly arrest and deport undocumented immigrants anywhere in the United States without going before an immigration judge under a new policy released by the Trump administration Monday. The move aggressively expands a process known as “expedited removal” — quick deportations that generally aren’t subject to judicial review. The expanded process is set to take effect Tuesday. Under current policy, immigration officials can apply expedited removals to speed deportations of people apprehended within 100 miles of the border and for those who’ve been in the country up to two weeks. Those who arrived in the U.S. by sea, rather than at U.S. land borders, can be subject to expedited removal for up to two years. Under the new policy, officials will be empowered to use the fast-track procedures anywhere in the U.S. and for anyone who cannot show “to the satisfaction of an immigration

John Moore/Getty Images/TNS

Immigration agents will target Miami, Atlanta, Chicago, Baltimore, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, New Orleans, New York City, and San Francisco.

officer, that they have been physically present in the United States continuously for the two-year period immediately preceding” arrest, regardless of how they arrived, according to the notice published Monday. The new deportation policy is the second major effort by the administration this month to aggressively expand its power to try to keep migrants out of the U.S. or remove them if they enter. Last week, the administration moved to curb asylum

Hudson – Vernon Keesler, 91, a ten year resident of Hudson, NY and former resident of Millerton, NY for over sixty seven years died peacefully on Sunday, July 21, 2019 at Columbia Memorial Hospital in Hudson. Mr. Keesler worked as a truck driver for eighteen years and also worked for the Town of North East Highway Department for twenty years, retiring on January 5, 1990. Born October 1, 1927 in Barrytown, NY he was the son of the late Alva B. and Marguerite (A’Barail) Keesler. He graduated in 1945 from Pine Plains High School and served his country in the United States Army Signal Corps. from 1951 until his honorable discharge in 1953. Vernon married Louise Canavari on October 8, 1966 in Copake, NY. Mrs. Keesler died February 10, 1998. Mr. Keesler was a life member of the Millerton Fire Company and the Millerton American Legion Post 178. He served four years on the Village of Millerton Board of Ap-

peals and enjoyed hunting and fishing in his spare time. Mr. Keesler is survived by his son, Michael Keesler of Hudson, his longtime loving companion, Marion Leffingwell, five grandchildren, a brother, Alva Keesler of Tuscon, AZ, two step daughters and several nieces and nephews. He was predeceased by a sister, Wanda Roberts of Amenia, NY. Graveside services and burial with standard military honors will take place at Irondale Cemetery in Millerton at 12pm on Friday, July 26, 2019. Pastor William Mayhew will officiate. Arrangements are under the direction of the Scott D. Conklin Funeral Home, 37 Park Avenue, Millerton, NY 12546. Memorial contributions may be made to the Millerton Fire Company, P.O. Box 733, Millerton, NY 12546 or Millerton American Legion Post 178, 155 Route 44, Millerton, NY 12546. To send an online condolence please visit www.conklinfuneralhome.com

Death Notice Nancy Exman Nancy Exman passed away on July 20, 2019, Lake Katrine,

N.Y. Gilpatric-VanVliet Funeral Home www.GVVFH.com

Find us at: HudsonValley360.com

(c)2019 Los Angeles Times Visit the Los Angeles Times at www. latimes.com Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

19 deaths in Costa Rica attributed to tainted alcohol by authorities Hannah Knowles The Washington Post

Nineteen people have died from methanol poisoning in Costa Rica since June, the country’s Ministry of Heath said as it warns of alcohol tainted with dangerous levels of the chemical. Authorities have confiscated about 30,000 containers of six different brands of alcohol in an effort to keep people from drinking contaminated products, the Ministry of Health said Friday. A notice the day before warned the public about products packaged under names like “Guaro Gran Apache,” “Red Star Brandy,” “Guaro Montano” and more. The ministry issued a July 4 alert about the methanol issue only for drinks identified as “Guaro Montano,” but expanded its warnings after collecting samples of alcohol under several other names. The deaths have been growing more frequent, rising from

one or two each week in June and early July to eight and six per week most recently. The victims include 15 men and five women between 32 and 72 years old, according to authorities. Costa Rica President Carlos Alvarado Quesasda tweeted Friday of his regret for the lives lost, saying that he has told authorities to “collect all possible data to establish responsibility.” Donald Corella, head of emergency services at Calderon Guardia Hospital in the city of San José - where seven of the deaths occurred - told the Argentine newspaper La Nacion that some of the bad alcohol tested consisted of 30 to 50 percent methanol. The four people who survived the poisoning at the hospital had “very serious aftereffects” such as total blindness and Parkinon’s-disease-like tremors caused by brain lesions, he said. The Ministry of Health has advised the public to not to consume or sell the six brands

of alcohol unless they are sure a product has not been tampered with. Anyone with symptoms of methanol poisoning - which include abdominal pain, headaches, dizziness, confusion and inability to coordinate body movements - is asked to contact the Ministry of Health. Methanol is widely available and present in household items such as varnishes and antifreeze, according to the World Health Organization. Methanol also occurs naturally in fruit juice and shows up in low levels in fermented drinks such as alcohol. Badly managed distillation can lead to toxic amounts of the chemical in alcohol, the WHO says, but particularly dangerous is the practice of adding methanol to “informally-produced” drinks or tampering with existing ones. Sellers may add methanol to increase their alcohol’s potency. The WHO warns that drinks with too much methanol can

Bill Wehrum, an architect of EPA rollbacks, faces new ethics inquiry Lisa Friedman The New York Times News Service

Vernon Keesler

in the U.S. That rule effectively eliminated almost all asylum claims at the U.S. southern land border by rendering ineligible any asylum-seeker who’d transited at least one other country prior to arriving. The move to expand expedited removals comes as backlogs in immigration courts continue to grow. Nearly 950,000 cases are currently pending in U.S. immigration courts, with an average wait time of 713 days, or just under two years, according

to Syracuse University’s Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. President Donald Trump and his hard-line anti-immigration aides have been frustrated that despite concerted efforts to step up enforcement and crack down on immigration, they’ve largely been unable to reverse a surge in migration to the U.S. southern border and the ballooning backlog in immigration cases. Lee Gelernt, deputy director of the ACLU’s national Immigrants’ Rights Project, said the expanded expedited removals increases the concern advocates already had that the quick deportations have been violating immigrants’ rights to due process. “The expedited removal system is already unconstitutional, in our view,” Gelernt said. “This expansion will only increase the illegality.”

WASHINGTON — The Environmental Protection Agency’s inspector general will investigate allegations that William L. Wehrum, the agency’s former air quality chief, violated ethics rules when he met with former clients from his days as a lawyer and lobbyist for the oil, gas and coal industries. The inquiry will look into whether Wehrum’s efforts at the EPA to weaken climate change and air pollution standards improperly benefited those former clients, a congressional aide said. Wehrum resigned in June after helping to finalize a regulation that would relax restrictions the Obama administration had sought to impose on greenhouse gas emissions from coal-fired power plants. As the agency’s assistant administrator for air and radiation, he was the legal expert behind other rollbacks of key climate change and air pollution regulations, including weakening Obama-era regulations on greenhouse gas emissions from automobile tailpipes and methane from oil and gas wells. The House Energy and Commerce Committee has already opened an inquiry into whether Wehrum and David Harlow — a senior counsel at the EPA who worked with Wehrum at the law firm — improperly worked to reverse an

Bill Wehrum

enforcement action that would have aided a former client, DTE Energy. The law firm is now known as Hunton Andrews Kurth. Wehrum could not immediately be reached for comment. A spokesman for the EPA did not respond to a request for comment but in the past has said that both Wehrum and Harlow had consistently recused themselves from all “particular matters” where DTE had been a party. The new investigation was first reported by The Washington Post. Sen. Tom Carper of Delaware, the top Democrat on the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, and Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., on Sunday sent an investigative report to the EPA inspector general that outlined new allegations about both Wehrum

and Harlow. Those included accusations that Wehrum’s recusal statements did not disclose some meetings with former clients. In a letter to Charles J. Sheehan, the EPA inspector general, the senators accused the Trump administration of ethical failings and an absence of accountability and said those shortcomings “should not be aided by an implicit message that one can avoid investigation if one simply resigns before the investigation is complete.” Under ethics rules developed under both the Obama and Trump administrations, public officials are not permitted to take part in “particular matters” involving specific parties on which they worked in the private sector. They are, however, allowed to offer general expertise. Jeffrey R. Holmstead, a lawyer for the electric utility industry, accused opponents of the Trump administration’s policies of using ethics rules to attack Wehrum personally. “We’re talking about regulations and policies of general applicability,” he said. The EPA has been the focus of numerous ethics investigations under the Trump administration. The former administrator, Scott Pruitt, faced more than a dozen internal and congressional inquiries before resigning in July 2018.

make their way into both legal and illegal drinking areas, especially in some tourist spots. Fake labeling can trick customers into thinking they are buying established brands at what seems like bargain prices. Methanol poisoning victims often delay getting medical help, the WHO adds. Health issues can take a while to show up, and a drinker might think initial symptoms are just signs of drunkenness. Those poisoned may vomit, feel vertigo or hyperventilate, and can even experience blindness. Toxic amounts of methanol can lead to coma, convulsions and death, and survivors could have permanent damage to their vision.

FUNERAL DIRECTORS Copake, N.Y. (518) 329-2121 Pine Plains, N.Y. (518) 398-7777

VITO LAWRENCE SACCO Sacco-McDonald-Valenti Funeral Home 700 Town Hall Drive Hudson, New York 12534 • 518-828-5000 e-mail: smvfh700@gmail.com

M. GRIMALDI FUNERAL HOME & CREMATION SERVICES 25 Railroad Ave., Chatham, N.Y. (518) 822-8332 Mario A. Grimaldi, Manager

RAYMOND E. BOND FUNERAL HOME Kinderhook Street, Valatie, N.Y. (518) 758-7031 David B. Scace, Richard J. Gagnon Andrew P. Scace

ATTENTION FUNERAL DIRECTORS Obituaries, Death Notices or Funeral Accounts Should Be Submitted Before 2PM Daily For The Next Day’s Paper. Notices should be emailed to: obits@registerstar.com or obits@thedailymail.net

Call Patti to advertise your funeral home: (518) 828-1616 x2413

For

CURRENT OBITUARY LISTINGS be SURE to CHECK our WEBSITE: hudsonvalley360.com


CMYK

A6 Tuesday, July 23, 2019

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA • REGISTER-STAR

PUBLIC STATEMENT HEARINGS TO BE HELD IN PSC CASES 19E-0378, 19-G-0379, 19-E-0380, and 19-G-0381, ON NEW YORK STATE ELECTRIC & GAS AND ROCHESTER GAS AND ELECTRIC CORPORATION’S PROPOSALS – ELECTRIC AND GAS RATES The New York State Department of Public Service Commission (“Commission”) invites public comment concerning the proposed changes in the electric and gas delivery rates and practices of New York State Electric & Gas Corporation (NYSEG) and Rochester Gas and Electric Corporation (RG&E) (collectively, the Companies). The Companies filed new electric and gas tariff schedules on May 20, 2019, intended to take effect in April 2020. NYSEG proposes to increase its annual electric delivery revenues by approximately $156.7 million (an increase of 20.4% in electric delivery revenues and 10.4% in total revenues); and it proposes to increase its annual gas delivery revenues by approximately $6.3 million (an increase of 3.0% in gas delivery revenues and 1.4% in total revenues). RG&E proposes to increase its annual electric delivery revenues by approximately $31.7 million (an increase of 7.0% in electric delivery revenues and 4.1% in total revenues); and it proposes to increase its annual gas revenues by approximately $5.8 million (an increase of 3.3% in gas delivery revenues and 1.4% in total revenues). According to the Companies, vegetation management is the largest driver for the requested electric rate increase for NYSEG. RG&E’s electric rate increases are driven by increases in operating expenses, depreciation and infrastructure investments. The gas delivery rate increases at the Companies are primarily associated with depreciation, infrastructure investments, and increases to Operation and Maintenance expenses. Although the actual bill impacts of these proposed changes on any particular customer class will vary based upon revenue allocation and rate design, NYSEG projects that total average residential monthly electric bills will increase by approximately $10.17 (an increase of 23.7% on the delivery portion of the bill or 13.6% on the total bill) and that total average residential monthly gas bills will increase by $1.05 (an increase of 1.9% on the delivery portion of the bill or 0.9% on the total bill). RG&E projects that total average residential monthly electric bills will increase by approximately $2.86 (an increase of 5.4% on the delivery portion of the bill or 3.0% on the total bill) and that total average residential gas bills will increase by $1.56 (an increase of 4.0% on the delivery portion of the bill or 2.2% on the total bill). Further information and the Companies’ pre-filed testimony and exhibits in these proceedings may be reviewed online at the Department of Public Service web page (www.dps.ny.gov) by searching under the applicable case number, namely, “Case 19-E-0378” (NYSEG electric rates); “Case 19-G- 0379” (NYSEG gas rates); “Case 19-E-0380” (RG&E electric rates); or “Case 19-G-0381” (RG&E gas rates). Under New York State Law, the New York State Public Service Commission (Commission) may adopt, reject, or modify, in whole or in part, the Companies’ proposals. In considering the proposals, the Commission will review the positions proposed by the participating parties and the general public. Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) will preside over the public statement hearings, the gathering of public comments, the evidentiary hearing, and all evidence relating to the proposals. To provide individuals with information in advance of the public statement hearings, information sessions will be conducted during the hour preceding the public statement hearings. During these sessions, the ALJs will provide a brief overview of the rate case process and NYSEG/RG&E representatives will provide a brief overview of their rate proposals associated with each entity serving the applicable area. These presentations will be followed by a brief opportunity for questions. Each information session will conclude at least five minutes before the public statement hearing is scheduled to commence. TAKE NOTICE that the Public statement hearings on these matters will be held before the Administrative Law Judges assigned by the Commission to hear these cases, as follows: Rochester – Tuesday, August 6, 2019 City of Rochester City Council Chambers 30 Church Street Rochester, New York 14614 Afternoon Information Session: Afternoon Public Statement Hearing: Evening Information Session: Evening Public Statement Hearing:

Ithaca – Wednesday, August 14, 2019 Tompkins County Public Library Borg Warner Room 101 E. Green Street Ithaca NY 14850 1:30 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m.

Keene Valley – Wednesday, August 14, 2019 Keene Valley Public Library 1796 NYS Route 73 Keene Valley, New York 12943 Information Session: Public Statement Hearing:

Information Session: Public Statement Hearing:

1 p.m. 2 p.m.

Binghamton – Thursday, August 15, 2019 Binghamton City Hall Council Chambers 38 Hawley Street Binghamton, NY 13901 Information Session: Public Statement Hearing:

5 p.m. 6 p.m

1 p.m. 2 p.m.

At the public statement hearings, those wishing to comment on the Companies’ rate proposals will have an opportunity to make a statement on the record. It is not necessary to make an appointment in advance in order to speak at the hearing. Persons wishing to comment will be asked to complete a card requesting time to speak when they arrive at the hearing and then will be called in the order in which the cards are received. Speakers may, but are not required to, provide written copies of their comments. Each public statement hearing will be held open for a minimum of one-half hour and will be kept open until everyone wishing to speak has been heard or other reasonable arrangements have been made to submit comments. A verbatim transcript of the hearings will be made for inclusion in the record. Persons with disabilities requiring reasonable accommodations should contact the Department of Public Service’s Human Resource Management Office at (518) 474-2520 as soon as possible. Users of Telecommunication Devices for the Deaf may request a sign language interpreter by placing a call through the New York Relay Service at 711. Individuals with difficulty understanding or reading the English language are encouraged to call the Commission at 800.342.3377 for free language assistance services regarding this notice. OTHER WAYS TO COMMENT For those who cannot attend or prefer not to speak at a public statement hearing, there are several other ways to comment about these cases to the Commission. Comments should refer to one or more of the following cases: “Case 19-E-0378” (NYSEG electric rates); “Case 19-G-0379” (NYSEG gas rates); “Case 19-E-0380” (RG&E electric rates); or “Case 19-G-0381” (RG&E gas rates) and are requested by August 26, 2019, although comments will be accepted throughout these proceedings. Written comments may be viewed online by going to www.dps.ny.gov, clicking on “Search,” entering the applicable case number (19-E-0378, 19-G-0379, 19-E-0380, or 19-G-0381), and then clicking on the “Public Comments” tab. Internet or Email: Go to dps.ny.gov, click on “Search,” enter the applicable case number (19-E-0378, 19-G-0379, 19-E-0380, or 19-G-0381) and then click the “Post Comments” button at the top of the page; or email comments to the Secretary for the Commission at secretary@dps.ny.gov. Mail or Hand Delivery Alternatively, comments may be mailed or delivered to the Honorable Kathleen H. Burgess, Secretary, Public Service Commission, Three Empire State Plaza, Albany, New York 12223-1350. Written comments received by the Department will become part of the record considered by the Commission. Toll-Free Opinion Line: Commenters also may call the Commission’s Opinion Line at 800.335.2120. This number is set up to take comments about pending cases from in-state callers, 24 hours a day. Comments provided through the Toll-Free Opinion Line are not transcribed, but a summary is provided to the ALJs and to the Commission for its consideration.


CMYK

Health & Fitness

www.HudsonValley360.com

Tuesday, July 23, 2019 A7

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

Is this really America’s favorite pastime? Baseball, once considered to be “America’s favorite pastime,” has now been replaced with America’s new favorite pastime — dieting. That’s right — Americans are obsessed with dieting and everything that comes along with it. Come the New Year, 45% of Americans will make a resolution to lose weight, exercise or get healthy. And with those resolutions Americans will spend north of $66 billion annually trying to lose pounds on everything from gym memberships to magazines, books, exercise DVDs, exercise equipment, diet pills and online diet programs. So with all this interest in weight loss, why are 68.8% of Americans still overweight or obese? Regardless of what diet commercials tell you, the best way to lose weight is to eat real, whole foods that include healthy fats, protein and carbohydrates — not with portion controlled, prepackaged foods. I advise my clients to focus on their health first, rather than weight loss, and to follow these seven steps to achieve their optimal weight. H — Have most of your calories during the day. My fatherin-law always said, “Breakfast

CONCEPTS IN FITNESS

MARY

SCHOEPE like a king and dine like a pauper.” If you can’t make breakfast your biggest meal, then make it lunch. Getting most of your calories when you’re active during the day and not in the evening when you’re winding down makes a lot of sense, right? E — Eat two to three meals a day — dump the snacks! When you eat excess calories, your body stores the energy as glycogen (sugar) or fat to use at a later time. Over time, eating excess calories causes your body fat stores to expand, resulting in weight gain. A — Are you getting enough slow carbs? Slow carbs include spinach, cruciferous vegetables, asparagus and other vegetables that won’t spike insulin or blood sugar like other carbs such as bread, pasta and rice. L — Listen to your body. Have you ever had a meal and

then had a craving for something sweet? Or maybe you felt bloated or even tired. That’s your body telling you that your last meal wasn’t the correct proportion of carbs, fats and proteins to suit your individual needs. T — Take a multi-vitamin daily. Your body needs important vitamins and minerals in order to function at optimal levels. When choosing a supplement, make sure it has a have third party certification. H — Heal your liver with superfoods like dark green leafy veggies, garlic, onions and eggs so it can return to a fat burning organ. Your mighty liver is your most important organ for fat burning and metabolism Y — You don’t have to count calories, ever. Calorie restrictive diets don’t work because they disrupt certain hormones like insulin that make it even more difficult to lose weight. There you have it. My advice is to take one step and implement it for 30 days, the next month take another step and do the same. It doesn’t matter where you start but remember, it takes time to restore a healthy balance to your body, so be patient. Reach Mary Schoepe at fitnessconcepts001@yahoo.com.

Who’s New COLUMBIA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL HUDSON — Columbia Memorial Hospital has recorded the following births. BECKER, Alijah James, son of Heather Becker, Acra, June 2. MILLARD, Summer Renee, daughter of Erica June and Jon Millard, June 7. GABRIELLE, Frank John, son of Kim North and Frank Gabrielle III, June 16. HARTE, Sha’Kai Santana, son of Myaijah Williams and Shacquille Raffiel, June 17. DeJESUS, Idalis Rose, daughter of Katlynn Pfeiffer and Hector DeJesus, June 25.

PENNY, Weston James, son of Dayna and James IV Penney, June 27.

NORTHERN DUTCHESS HOSPITAL RHINEBECK — Northern Dutchess Hospital has recorded the following births. Brandon Vladich and Taylor Mentessi of Kingston are the parents of a baby boy born May 22. Christopher and Leighann Trent of Shandaken are the parents of a baby boy born June 23. Lou and Brittany D’Orazio of Kingston are the parents of a baby girl born June 25. Adam and Kimberly Kudlo

of Kerhonkson are the parents of a baby girl born June 27. Aron Bedell and Amanda VanLeuven of Boiceville are the parents of a baby boy born June 28. Joan Carlos Pena and Marisol Calderon of Kingston are the parents of a baby boy born June 29. Kyle and Kelly Petramale of Saugerties are the parents of a baby boy born July 4. Daniel and Caroline Blackburn of Clinton Corners are the parents of a baby girl born July 6. Devin and Emily Berrian of Milton are the parents of a baby girl born July 7.

Red Cross issues urgent call for blood and platelet donors ALBANY — Following a difficult Fourth of July week for blood and platelet donations and ongoing challenges finding new blood donors, the American Red Cross now faces a blood shortage and has issued an emergency call for eligible individuals of all blood types to give now and prevent delays in medical care. About 450 fewer blood drives were organized by businesses and other community groups that week than during a typical week as people across the country celebrated the holiday with activities and travel. This led to about 17,000 fewer blood donations than needed for patients in a single week, causing the Red Cross to now have less than a three-day supply of most blood types available — and less than a two-day supply of type O blood — for patients. At least a five-day supply is desired. Missing Types sees encouraging response, but all donors needed now In June, the Red Cross launched the Missing Types campaign to encourage donors — especially new donors and those who have not donated in the past years — to give blood or platelets during the challenging

summer months. Through the campaign, the letters A, B and O — letters that make up the main blood groups — disappeared from popular brands to symbolize what happens when blood goes missing from hospital shelves during blood shortages. Despite an encouraging response to the campaign, blood donations still fell short of expectations in June, resulting in more than 24,000 fewer donations than needed, approximately 3050 fewer donations in the New York-Penn Blood Services Region, causing a significant draw down of the Red Cross blood supply. Donors of all blood types, especially type O, are urged to make an appointment to donate using the Blood Donor App, at RedCrossBlood. org or by calling 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-733-2767). Donation appointments and completion of a RapidPass online health history questionnaire are encouraged to help reduce the time it takes to donate. Those interested in hosting a blood drive can learn more and sign up to sponsor a drive this summer by visiting RedCrossBlood.org/HostADrive. Upcoming blood donation opportunities through July

31.

DUTCHESS COUNTY Moose Lodge 904, 1273 Route 9G, Hyde Park, noon-5 p.m. July 26. Boardman Road Branch Library, 141 Boardman Road, Poughkeepsie, 2-7 p.m. July 23. Arlington Professional Firefighters, 213 Vassar Road, Red Oaks Mill Fire Co. Station 3, Poughkeepsie, 1-6 p.m. July 25.

GREENE COUNTY American Legion Post 291, 54 Maple Ave., Greenville, 2-7 p.m. July 30. Sgt. James F. Carty, D.S.C. VFW Post 1545, 5565 State Route 23, Windham, 2-6 p.m. July 26.

ULSTER COUNTY Mid Hudson Valley Federal Credit Union, 1099 Morton Blvd., Kingston, 9:30 a.m.2:30 p.m. July 24. Grace Community Evangelical Free Church, 160 Seremma Court., Lake Katrine, 1-6 p.m. July 30. Saugerties Knights of Columbus Council 4536, 19 Barclay St., Saugerties, 1-6 p.m. July 26. Woodstock Rescue Squad, 226 Tinker St., Woodstock, noon-6 p.m. July 31.

Columbia Memorial Health Stroke Care program again receives top award HUDSON — Columbia Memorial Health has once again been recognized for its outstanding stroke care program, receiving the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association’s Get With The Guidelines-Stroke Gold Plus Quality Achievement Award for the second year in a row. The award recognizes CMH’s commitment to ensuring stroke patients receive the most appropriate treatment according to nationally recognized guidelines based on the latest scientific evidence. The Gold Plus award, the highest level possible, is

an advanced level of recognition acknowledging select hospitals for consistent high level performance across a broad range of stroke care quality measures. Columbia Memorial Health Chief Medical Officer Dr. Clifford Belden, said: “One of the most critical elements of stroke care is quick access to the best evidencebased care available. Meeting and maintaining these high standards for stroke care is an incredible achievement that results directly from the expertise and unending commitment and diligence of CMH’s care team.”

According to the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association, stroke is the fifth leading cause of death and a leading cause of adult disability in the United States. On average, someone in the U.S. suffers a stroke every 40 seconds and nearly 795,000 people suffer a new or recurrent stroke each year nationally. Research has shown that hospitals adhering to clinical measures through the Get With The Guidelines quality improvement initiative often see fewer readmissions and lower mortality rates.

Panel discussion focused on making health decisions during pregnancy TROY — Community members are invited to WMHT’s studios for HEADLINE: Birth Justice, a moderated panel discussion and conversation with members of the Birth Justice Coalition beginning at 6 p.m. July 23. The event will be live-streamed on WMHT’s Facebook page and website at wmht.org/headline. Panelists will include: Nakia Tillman, Early Childhood Specialist with Trinity Alliance; Esther Patterson, Community Maternity Services

and Baby Institute, doula; Betsy Mercogliano, Certified Nurse Midwife, LM, Certified Professional Midwife, educator, doula, owner of the Family Life Center; and Deshaya Williams, Certified Doula. Birth justice is defined as existing when women and transgender people are empowered during pregnancy, labor, childbirth and postpartum to make healthy decisions for themselves and their babies. Birth justice is part of a wider movement against reproductive oppression.

Doulas have been a focal point in the region’s Birth Justice movement as a way to improve birth outcomes, particularly among women of color. The panel discussion will be moderated by Times Union reporter Bethany Bump, who covers all things health-related including health care, public health, substance abuse, and mental health. For information and to RSVP: http://www.wmht.org/ headline/laboroflove/#live.

Capital Region residents encouraged to join the ‘Year of Cessation’ movement ALBANY — While adult smoking rates are at all-time lows, the fight isn’t over to promote tobacco-free living in New York state. This is one of several reasons the Centers for Disease Control’s (CDC) Office on Smoking and Health designated 2019 as the “Year of Cessation.” With support from the CDC’s “Tips” campaign, the New York State Smokers’ Quitline, area healthcare professionals and St. Peter’s Health Partners Community Health Programs, Capital Region residents have more resources than ever before to reduce or eliminate tobacco-use. During the “Year of Cessation’s” summer months, the CDC highlights the integral role quitlines play in cessation and the 15th anniversary of the national network of state quitlines. Six new online videos demonstrate what callers can expect when calling a quitline and emphasize free, confidential and nonjudgmental coaching. These resources complement the ongoing “Tips From Former Smokers” campaign, now in its eighth year. “The ‘Tips’ Campaign

creates a noticeable boost in call volume to the New York State Smokers’ Quitline,” said Andrew Hyland, Ph.D., director of the Quitline and professor of oncology at Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center in Buffalo — the Quitline’s physical location. “The Year of Cessation is yet another valuable CDC initiative to help educate about the dangers of smoking and benefits of becoming tobacco-free. On a local level, New York State residents should know that besides the CDC and the Quitline, their healthcare professionals and regional tobacco-free organizations play a major role in these efforts.” Most people who call the Quitline at 1-866-NY-QUITS or visit www.nysmokefree. com are eligible for a complimentary starter kit of nicotine replacement therapy, including patches and gum or lozenges. The Quitline’s Quit Coaches will work with tobacco users to develop a customized quit-plan and steps to overcome triggers. The Quitline also encourages tobacco users to talk with their healthcare professionals and access their health

plan benefits for additional cessation support and stopsmoking medications. Locally, as part of Health Systems for a Tobacco-Free New York, St. Peter’s Health Partners Community Health Programs works directly with area healthcare professionals and organizations to develop appropriate screening for tobacco-use and to improve the reach and delivery of evidence-based tobacco dependence treatment. More information about the regional contractors with Health Systems for a Tobacco-Free New York is available online by visiting www.tobaccofreeny. org. “We’re proud to support the CDC’s ‘Year of Cessation’ and the Quitline, and remind all Capital Region tobacco users that quitting is the very best thing they can do to improve their health and quality of life,” said Erin Sinisgalli, director of St. Peter’s Health Partners Community Health Programs. “Tobacco users should always talk with their doctor or healthcare provider and call the Quitline for extra support.”

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CMYK

A8 Tuesday, July 23, 2019

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA • REGISTER-STAR

Kinderhook-Valatie Grand Opening! Please join us for our

Grand Opening Celebration at our new branch 2827 Route 9, Valatie (Ocean State Job Lot Plaza)

Saturday, July 27 9:00am-1:00pm Ribbon Cutting at 12pm

! y t r a P h c a e B a It’s Grand Opening Specials! ! s e z ri P e ffl a R & ts n e m h Refres ! T A C e th .5 8 9 / .5 3 9 s ie Old Chicken BBQ!

www.tbogc.com (518) 943-2600


CMYK

Sports

SECTION

For Roy

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

& Classifieds

Brandy Halladay’s Hall of Fame speech is a crowd pleaser. Sports, B2

B Tuesday, July 23, 2019 B1

Tim Martin, Sports Editor: 1-800-400-4496 / tmartin@registerstar.com

District 15 AAA champions

Logan Weiss/Columbia-Greene Media

The Taconic Hills Little League 8-10 year-old All-Star team players and coaches display the District 15 AAA championship banner they won recently with a 10-0 victory over Coxsackie-Athens.

Photos contributed

HRCBL Storm reign on Knights

Awards will be handed out to the championship winning team and the team shwoing the most creativity with their uniforms at the first Hudson Kickball Showdown on August at Galvan Field.

Columbia-Greene Media

GREENPORT — The Hudson River Collegiate Baseball League entered its final weekend of regular season play with the Storm earning a 20-0 victory over the Knights on Saturday. The league playoffs begin on Wednesday, with the championship slated for Saturday at Greenport Town Park. Knights manager Josh Johnson gave the ball to The College of Saint Rose’s Joe Rizzo. Rizzo struggled against the Storm offense and was lifted after the second inning, but the damage was done. Rizzo gave up nine hits, eleven runs all earned with four walks but did get one strikeout. Johnson replaced him with SUNY Maritime commit and former Chatham Panther Curtis Buchan, who also pitched two innings, giving up four hits, six runs (four earned) with four walks and one strikeout. Fulton-Montgomery Community Colleges Brendan McGillin finished the last three innings for the Knights on the mound getting, two strikeouts with two walks while also allowing four hits with three earned runs. Storm manager Ed DuPont sent his pitching ace to the mound to battle the Knights. In fact ,Connor Christensen is the 2018 “Ace” award winner for the leagues best pitcher and in 2019 has the lowest ERA

Kickball Tournament pairings set Columbia-Greene Media

HUDSON — Pairings have been announced for the first Hudson Kickball Showdown on August 3 at Galvan Field. A total of 12 teams will compete for the championship trophy, with an award

also going to the team with the most creative uniforms. The schedule for the single-elimination tournament follows: 11 a.m., Good Girls vs. See KICKBALL B3

Photo contributed

The Storm’s Matt Ferriero swings at a pitch during Saturday’s Hudson River Collegiate Baseball League game against the Knights at Greenport Town Park.

for any pitcher in the league at 1.78 while leading the league in strikeouts and wins. Christensen plays collegiately at the University of South Carolina-Aiken. The big lefty pitched four innings, allowing just one hit with three walks with five strikeouts. SUNY Cortland and local baseball standout Noah Ernst entered

in relief throwing one inning allowing two hits but no runs, no walks and no strikeouts. MCLA’s Jimmy Miller was next up and pitched the sixth inning. Miller also allowed two hits and no runs, no walks and no strikeouts. The Storm’s hard throwing lefty Adam Hall of Union College closed the show, giving up

up one hit, no runs, no walks and no strikeouts as the Storm pitchers combined to shut out the 2018 HRCBL Champions. The Knights had six hits. Columbia-Greene Community College’s Sean Berry, SUNY Oswego’s Ryan Weiss, Curtis Buchan, Brendan McGillin, See HRCBL B3

Hall ceremony features small-town feel and international flavor Peter Schmuck The Baltimore Sun

COOPERSTOWN — The fans poured into the Clark Sports Center on Sunday afternoon from just about everywhere, this year’s National Baseball Hall of Fame induction ceremony reminding everyone that baseball is both the national pastime and a very international one. Mariano Rivera fans waived Panamanian flags and Edgar Martinez expressed impassioned gratitude to his native Puerto Rico, while former Orioles Mike Mussina, Harold Baines and Lee Smith paid tribute to small-town America. There was every reason to believe that the New York Yankees multitudes would drown out the rest of the estimated crowd of 55,000, especially with Rivera arriving in the Hall as the first-ever unanimous selection and starting pitcher Mike Mussina throwing out the ceremonial first speech. The Yankees fans were loud, but they were not alone. There was a surprisingly large contingent that traveled coast-to-coast to cheer Martinez and team up with the friends, fans and family of the beloved Seattle Mariners

Jim McIsaac/Getty Images

Inductees (from left) Harold Baines, Lee Smith, Edgar Martinez, Mike Mussina, Mariano Rivera and Brandy Halladay, wife the late Roy Halladay, pose with their plaques during the Baseball Hall of Fame induction ceremony at Clark Sports Center on Sunday in Cooperstown.

designated hitter to deliver some of the loudest and most enthusiastic ovations. Apparently, Southwest Airlines had a very good weekend.

Mussina led off and deftly handled the difficult task of balancing his allegiance to both the Orioles and Yankees organizations, thanking

his fans from both cities — as well as his hometown of Montoursville, Pa. — for making the trek to upstate New York to help welcome him into the Hall. “I’m standing up here with the best who ever played the game,” Mussina said. “Some are my former teammates. Some are former opponents and some I grew up watching on television, so the obvious question is, what am I doing up here and how in the world did this happen?” Not surprisingly, he struck the same chord that would resonate throughout the ceremony, as each player talked about his roots and the unique chain of events that led him to the greatest honor that can be bestowed on a baseball player. Rivera played the closer one last time, coming in at the end and — ironically for the greatest short reliever of all time — making the longest speech. He spoke for about 25 minutes, during which he thanked everyone who had an impact on his amazing career and revealed that he never intended to pursue a career in See HALL B3


CMYK

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

B2 Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Brandy Halladay’s Hall of Fame speech about her late husband is a crowd pleaser Bob Brookover The Philadelphia Inquirer

COOPERSTOWN — One of Brandy Halladay’s favorite expressions is that “it takes a village,” and she used it again Sunday afternoon in the famous village that houses baseball’s greatest players. She used it at just the right time and in just the right way. “I say it a lot, but it takes a village and we truly have a great one,” Brandy Halladay said as she looked out at an expansive crowd that clearly understood how difficult it was for her to pinchhit for her late husband just 20 months after he died in a Gulf of Mexico plane crash that still has some dark undertones. And, boy, was it difficult. Brandy Halladay lost it before she could say hello. She started to cry as a giant video board to her right replayed highlights of her husband’s career while the late pitcher’s closest friend and former Toronto Blue Jays teammate Chris Carpenter painted a picture of Roy Halladay the pitcher and Roy Halladay the man. “He was the best pitcher of that time period and that era,” Carpenter said. “That’s the reason why he is in the Hall of Fame.” The highlights rolled: the first of Halladay’s two 10-inning complete games with the Blue Jays, the 2010 perfect game for the Phillies against the Florida Marlins and the no-hitter against the Cincinnati Reds in his first postseason start a few months later. When the video ended, it was time for Brandy Halladay to speak. The village of Cooperstown had already been kind to Brandy and her two sons, Braden and Ryan. The special week had included hugs from Hall of Famers and a joint celebration conducted by the Phillies and Blue Jays on Saturday night. “Anybody who doesn’t think baseball is a family has never been involved with baseball,” Brandy said. “I know how honored Roy would be to be sitting here with such accomplished

Jim McIsaac/Getty Images

Brandy Halladay speaks on behalf of her late husband, Roy Halladay, during the Baseball Hall of Fame induction ceremony at Clark Sports Center on Sunday in Cooperstown.

men who have represented this game so well over the course of all your careers.” The support this weekend for Brandy and her sons was astounding. “Roy had these collector cars and Reggie Jackson is a car guy,” Brandy said after her speech. “And so I was talking to Reggie and I said, ‘I don’t know what I’m going to do.’ He said, ‘Well, I’ll come over.’ Now, I get to have Reggie Jackson come over and help me with my cars. Who gets to say that? I think I’m just more currently aware of how lucky we are. These guys are unbelievable. Rod Carew asked me for my autograph. I’m like, ‘Are you serious?’ He said, ‘Yes, I’m serious.’ What do you say to Rod Carew?” When the 52 returning Hall of Famers and the six incoming members of the 2019 class

Harvick holds off Hamlin to win at New Hampshire Field Level Media

Kevin Harvick’s bizarre 2019 season got less bizarre Sunday when the StewartHaas Racing driver finally got his first victory. It came when he held off Denny Hamlin over the final 30 laps in winning the Foxwoods Resort Casino 301 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. In 2018, Harvick won a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series-best eight races. This year, win No. 1 came just seven races before the start of the playoffs. “We’ve run well enough a few times to win,” Harvick, who has five top-five finishes this year, said. “We just made mistakes. To finally battle and get over that hump is a great day for everybody at Stewart-Haas Racing and everybody on the 4 car.” The victory, which came as he and Hamlin beat on each other’s car heading to the finish line, assures Harvick a berth in those playoffs. The margin of victory was .21 seconds. Hamlin said he thought he could have dumped Harvick on the final lap and got the win. But, he said, “I wanted to just tap him there but I didn’t want to completely screw him. I at least wanted to give him a fair shot there.” He then paused, and said, “Second sucks.” After taking the checkers, Harvick took a reverse victory lap around the 1-mile track in Loudon, N.H. Erik Jones, Hamlin’s teammate, finished third. Ryan Blaney of Team Penske was fourth, and Matt DiBenedetto was fifth. Kyle Busch dominated the first two stages of the race as he led 118 laps. But a wheel rub early in Stage 3 dropped him back to 15th. Attempting to drive back up to the front, he got loose and slapped the wall while

running seventh. He finished eighth. Benefiting was Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Hamlin, who restarted the final stage in first place and held it for the next 113 laps. He gave that lead up when he pitted under yellow with 35 laps to go. Harvick did not stop under yellow and inherited the lead for the restart with 29 laps to go, but on old tires. Hamlin, with two fresh right-side tires, closed in but could not make the winning pass. Harvick said afterward he thought the move to stay on old tires was the wrong one. “I didn’t think we had the best chance staying out there (on old tires),” said Harvick, who collected his fourth New Hampshire win. His crew chief, Rodney Childers, insisted. Harvick was, Childers said, in a “Really bad spot with track position. That track position was key today and clean air.” With just six races remaining to the 16-driver playoffs after the New Hampshire event, a lot of eyes were on bubble drivers. Several had bad days. Clint Bowyer’s freefall in the points standings continued in Loudon. The Stewart-Haas Racing driver was 14th in points when the race started but was involved in a wreck late in Stage 2. Appearing to be in great shape to make the postseason early in the summer, Bowyer finished 20th and has now logged finishes of 20th or worst in four of his last six races. Seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson started the day 15th in points, but a belt failure knocked him back 13 laps off the pace. He finished 30th. Kyle Larson,13th in the standings before the race, spun on a late restart, blew a tire and slammed the wall with 37 laps to go and finished in the garages.

were introduced to the crowd, only three of them received prolonged standing ovations. The first was Hank Aaron, who is 85 and needed the assistance of a cane and Jim Thome to make it onto the stage. Brandy Halladay and Mariano Rivera, the Yankees’ closer who was the class of 2019 headliner, received the same treatment from the crowd. Now it was time for Brandy to speak, and she was still choked up from the highlight video tribute from Carpenter. This time, the applause from the crowd was mostly polite until every Hall of Famer on the stage behind her stood and applauded. The crowd took the cue, and Brandy Halladay was soon receiving a second standing ovation. “I knew I was going to cry at some point,” she said. “I never know what’s going to get me and

that video, I couldn’t watch it, so if someone could send me a copy of that I’d appreciate it.” Perhaps it was fitting that Brandy Halladay broke down early, then rebounded to give a Hall of Fame speech about her Hall of Fame husband. That’s how Roy Halladay’s career went, too. “This is not my speech to give, but I’m going to do the best I can to say the things I believe Roy might have wanted to say if he was here today,” Brandy said. “The thanks yous could and should go on for days when you consider the impact so many people have had on Roy’s career. “To both of the teams we were blessed to be a part of — the Blue Jays and the Phillies — thank you for allowing us to grow up and to fail over and over and finally to learn how to succeed with your organizations. There were some really amazing years, but there were some really tough ones, too, and you never gave up on him. When Braden and Ryan and I decided that Roy would be inducted into the Hall of Fame with no logo on his hat, both teams quickly reached out to tell us how proud they were of our decision. That validated a choice that we knew in our hearts was in fact the correct one. We want both organizations to know that they hold a huge place in our heart and they always will.” Near the end of her seven-minute speech, Brandy Halladay delivered a message about perfection, but it had nothing to do with her husband’s perfect game. “I think that Roy would want everyone to know that people aren’t perfect,” she said. “We are all imperfect or flawed in one way or another. We all struggle, but with hard work, humility and dedication, imperfect people can still have perfect moments.” Brandy Hallday’s relief appearance for her late husband Sunday was one of those moments.

Forget signing stars — Knicks’ rebuild will require work and patience Steve Popper Newsday

NEW YORK — When the Knicks cleared $70 million of cap space for this summer’s free-agent market, Garden Chairman James Dolan didn’t hide his belief that the stars were coming to join the planned remaking of the longsuffering franchise. In his appearance on ESPN radio’s Michael Kay Show in March he reminded the audience that New York was the mecca of basketball and admitted, “We hear from people all the time, from players, representatives. It’s about who wants to come. We can’t respond because of the NBA rules, but that doesn’t stop them from telling us and they do. I can tell you from what we’ve heard I think we’re going to have a very successful offseason when it comes to free agents.” And when the dust cleared the Knicks hadn’t even scored a meeting with the top free agents, signing seven players who could be aptly described as journeymen to fill the cap space and the nearly barren roster. To add insult to injury, Kyrie Irving and Kevin Durant landed in New York — just across the bridge in Brooklyn with the Nets. So what went wrong? And maybe just as important, what went right in Brooklyn? The reality struck that the power belongs to the players and the best-laid plans can crumble once players decide that your offer isn’t the one that tantalizes them. It happened to the Knicks, but not only them. The Warriors were left to wonder why Durant spurned their offer — which was for more years and more money than the Nets could put on the table. The Raptors, with a championship culture and a countrywide effort to convince Kawhi Leonard to stay came up empty. What none of the stars did though in their pairing up was head to a team like the Knicks who were a league-worst 17-65 last season. Durant and Irving set up a combination in Brooklyn to team with a group that already had managed to reach the postseason, and one that

Ben Solomon/The New York Times

James Dolan, the New York Knicks owner, courtside for a game against the Denver Nuggets at Madison Square Garden, Feb. 10, 2017.

got there by exceeding expectations with a focus on player development. Kendrick Perkins, Durant’s former teammate and friend, appeared on a podcast on KNBR.com and explained that it was the Nets’ culture that made the difference. “I think people had speculation that the Knicks were actually the front-runners, but they weren’t,” Perkins said. “In my opinion, it was either Brooklyn or going back to Golden State. I asked Kevin what was the reason behind him ultimately choosing Brooklyn and he told me: ‘Perk you’re not stupid, you know why I chose Brooklyn, man. Look at the organization and look at the direction they’re going in.’ “ Sean Marks and Kenny Atkinson took a franchise stripped of assets and somehow turned it into something exciting and alluring. Caris LeVert was the 20th overall pick. Jarrett Allen was No. 22. Rodions Kurucs was picked 40th. Joe Harris and Spencer Dinwiddie were both secondround picks elsewhere, shuttled to and from the G League and waived by teams before the Nets made them into reclamation projects. And it’s that, not stars, that lured Durant and Irving. If that surprised the Knicks and the

NBA, it also surprised the Nets. “Quite honestly, it did surprise me,” Atkinson said. “Obviously we improved a lot last year but it wasn’t a so-called star system. It was a group of guys that play really well together. I think it gives more credit to the guys that are coming here that say I like that style of play, I like the way they play. I think they want to participate in something like that. “Yeah, it surprises me just because we’ve come a long way in a short time. That’s the biggest surprise. And it happened quicker. I know Sean was strategizing and thinking big picture. I was kind of focused more on the day to day. It was a surprise they chose to participate in this type of system that we’re running.” “Our whole infrastructure has been built around development,” Marks said, pointing to Atkinson as he added. “That’s why he’s here.” Coincidentally, Atkinson was once with the Knicks, serving as the player development guru. Now, the Knicks are hoping to do the same thing, but so far have not been able to do it despite having four lottery picks starting with Kristaps Porzingis in 2015. David Fizdale and the Knicks front office folks spent last year talking player

development, but spent much of the season relying on the likes of Emmanuel Mudiay, Trey Burke, Mario Hezonja and Noah Vonleh — all who departed as free agents while Frank Ntilikina was shuttled from role to role and rookies Kevin Knox, Mitchell Robinson and Allonzo Trier got minutes. And of course, the most painful part of the player development struggles came when the Knicks shipped Porzingis out to Dallas because they couldn’t create a culture that satisfied the star they had in place. Atkinson and Marks talked about their players being the best salespeople for their program and that is not just talk. The Knicks don’t have stars. Maybe RJ Barrett will become one. Perhaps Knox will take a step forward in his second season. What they can have and the real lesson learned from free agency and the Nets success is that there is a way to get better in a rebuild — and it’s not with star power or the allure of Madison Square Garden. It takes work and patience and planning. The Knicks bought themselves another year with the free-agent contracts they signed this summer. Now they have to show that the wait is not in vain.


CMYK

Tuesday, July 23, 2019 B3

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

Pacquiao’s victory would be the ultimate farewell to a storied career Bill Dwyre Los Angeles Times

LAS VEGAS — As storybook endings go, this one belonged on Broadway. Call the Hallmark Channel. Don’t be ashamed if you tear up. When Manny Pacquiao, the boxing senator from the Philippines, emerged from the ring Saturday night at the MGM Grand Garden Arena, the fighting fireplug had conquered two formidable opponents — unbeaten welterweight champion Keith Thurman and seldom-beaten all-division champion Father Time. Pacquiao is 40. Thurman is 30. This was Pacquiao’s 71st professional fight, Thurman’s 30th. Pacquiao, the only person to become an eight-division boxing champion, has fought almost as many fights in Las Vegas (20) as Thurman has fought anywhere. Boxing gives us so many disappointments — mismatches, bad judging decisions, lackluster performances. But when it gives us something spectacular, as it did Saturday night, all is forgiven, at least for a while. Former champion Shane Mosley made his way through the crush of family, friends and wannabes clogging Pacquiao’s

Hall From B1

baseball. “I wanted to be the next Pele,” he said, “but my ability was not good enough to be a soccer player. The Lord was pushing me toward baseball.” Mike Mussina, Mariano Rivera bookend Sunday’s Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony, much the way they did on the field “ He came up with the Yankees as a starting pitcher, but didn’t thrive in that role and was sent back to the minor leagues. When he made the switch to the bullpen and mastered his famous cut fastball, he emerged as a dominant closer and played a huge role in the Yankees dynasty of the late 1990s and early 2000s. “I tried to carry the pinstripes the best way that I

Kickball From B1

Nest Kite; 11:20 a.m., Island vs. Rolling Grocer; 11:40 a.m., Kites Nest vs. Most Hated; 12 p.m., Wallace vs. Drive Time;

dressing room after the bout to congratulate the fighter who beat him in May 2011, in a unanimous decision in this same MGM Grand Garden ring. Only one thing could detract from all this: If Pacquiao decides this isn’t the end. In our sports fantasies, we want Tiger Woods to retire after an eagle for the win at the 18th hole of the Masters; Roger Federer to serve his final ace on match point in the Wimbledon final; Albert Pujols to hit the winning grand slam homer in the seventh game of the World Series. Pete Sampras got it right. He won the 2002 U.S. Open, his then record 14th tennis Grand Slam title, and never played another pro match. For Pacquiao, Saturday night’s stirring victory over Thurman was his hole-in-one, ace on match point and grand slam homer all in one. Thurman, his highly able opponent, called the night one of “blessings and lessons.” Presumably, he meant Pacquiao had been the teacher. The match itself — high-quality boxing skills, fan frenzy (a sold-out 14,356 arena), and the class with which both fighters conducted themselves afterward — was the blessing.

Pacquiao retired in 2016 after his third fight with Tim Bradley, but he was back seven months later. That time, Pacquiao said his family wanted it. This time, in the immediate aftermath Saturday night, everybody in Pacquiao’s camp seemed to want it. In the scrum of his locker room, which became such an orgy of selfies and sycophants that officials had trouble marshaling Pacquiao to a place where he could provide a urine sample, the atmosphere seemed to be celebrating an ending. Of those retirement advocates, only Freddie Roach, boxing’s most open person, would talk on the record about it. He, like everybody else, had seen Pacquiao enter the ring moving and boxing like a 25-year-old and leave it, while victorious, looking like an exhausted 50-year-old. “Me and Manny, we’re going to have a long talk,” said Roach, who has now been with Pacquiao for 18 years. “I want to let everything settle down. But then we will talk. One on one. Being honest, completely honest, with each other.” Roach said that, even as Pacquiao was turning in perhaps the best, certainly the gutsiest, performance of his

could,” Rivera said. “I think I did all right with that.” Mussina, who chose not to designate whether he was going into the Hall as an Oriole or a Yankee, was highly complimentary of both organizations, thanking the Orioles for giving him his start in professional baseball and the Yankees for giving him the opportunity to pitch in two World Series. “I want to thank the Orioles for giving me the opportunity to pitch and prove that I could succeed at the major league level,” Mussina said. “To the Orioles executives who brought baseball back to Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, it remains one of the best ballpark environments in the game. To the Orioles fans who came out every game 48,000 strong to support us and support me, thank you. I have some great memories from those years and I loved pitching in orange and black.”

Of course, the Yankees lured him away after the 2000 season and his decision to leave may have paved his way to Cooperstown. “For the longest time while I was in Baltimore, I told myself I would never play in New York,” he said. “I’m a smalltown guy and that place is too much for me. Well, obviously, I changed my mind, mostly because Joe Torre called me two or three days after they won the 2000 World Series over the Mets, and Joe simply said, ‘I just want you to know that were interested in you coming to New York to pitch for us.’ Well, his first impression was a big one, so after 10 years in Baltimore I was off to New York City.” Harold Baines, who let his performance do the talking for much of his career, gets the last word “ Baines promised on Saturday that he would speak a lot about the importance of

12:20 p.m., HuD citY ChAmPs vs. The Booters; 12:40 a.m.Just Kickin’ it vs. Monstars. 1 p.m., Good Girls/Nest Kite winner vs. Wallace/Drive Time winner; 1:20 p.m., Island/Rolling Grocer winner vs. HuD citY ChAmPs/Booters winner; 1:40 p.m., Kites Nest/

Most Hated winner vs. Just Kickin’ It/Monstars winner. The team that wins by the most points in the first two rounds gets a pass to the championship game at 3 p.m., while the other two secondround winners will compete in the semifinals at 2:30 p.m.

HRCBL From B1

Marist College’s Connor Hall all went 1 for 3 with a single. SUNY Oswego’s Christian McCarthy went 1 for 2 with a single and a walk. The Storm’s offense was relentless as the team had seventeen hits and five stolen bases. They were lead by Fairfield University’s Matt Ferriero who went 3 for 5 with a single, two doubles and one RBI, Salisbury University’s Brandon Bonesteel went 2 for 5 with a single, a double a walk and three RBI, Christian Baaki from Vassar College went 2 for 3 with two singles, two walks and two RBI, Lewi Clarke from Manhattan College went 2 for 4 with two singles and a walk and Nyack College’s Chris Colotti went 2 for 3 with two singles and two RBI. Colotti has 21 RBI on the season which leads the league. C-GCC’s Matt Gaebel went 1 for 1 with a single that brought home three runs, SUNY Cortland’s Joe Dwy went 1-3 with a single, a walk and was hit by a pitch. Dwy is leading the league in batting average with a .417 average. Jeremiah Ernst from CGCC went 1 for 4 with a single, a walk and one RBI, St John Fisher College’s Kurt Forsell went 1 for 5 with a single and

long career, he saw some hints that the time to step away is now. Pacquiao knocked Thurman down in the first round and Roach said, “Earlier in his career, he would have finished him right there.” In the 10th round, Pacquiao hit Thurman with a body shot that doubled him over in pain. “He normally would have finished a guy there,” Roach said. The key element here is that, unlike many boxers who reach the golden age and have no other interests, Pacquiao has the ultimate second career. He is one of 24 senators in the Philippines. He talks more freely and enthusiastically about bills he is sponsoring than about fights he is training for. Because the Philippines state of the union address is Tuesday, his original plan was to get on a private plane a few hours after the fight, fly as far as Anchorage for refueling and continue on immediately to Manila. That would be a trip of nearly 9,000 miles, just hours after taking a bit of a beating against Thurman. Reportedly, cooler heads prevailed and a doctor delayed that trip until later Sunday. Still, the very existence of the plan speaks to the serious nature of

family and community and not much about himself, but opened his remarks by poking fun at his reputation as a man of very few words. “To all my friends and teammates, you can start your start your stopwatches now,” Baines quipped. Turned out, Baines did make the shortest speech of the five new Hall of Famers on stage, but only by a minute or so. He talked eloquently about the subject he came to address, the impact of his family and the Eastern Shore community of St. Michaels on his life and career. “I owe a debt of gratitude to that entire close-knit community for raising me as a child and as a teenager,” he said.

Pacquiao’s involvement in his country’s government. Pacquiao might be well ahead of all of us on this. While he has said he thinks he will fight again next year, there is nothing set in stone. Nor had he gone through some thrashing from Thurman when he said that. When he was asked in the ring afterward what will come next for him, he quickly said he will wait on that until next year. Between now and then, his political star may continue to rise. The next presidential election in the Philippines will be May 9, 2022. The current president, Rodrigo Duterte, who will term out in 2022, long ago stated publicly that he would support Pacquiao for the next presidency. When Pacquiao was elected to the Senate in 2016, he got 16 million votes, or seventh-most among the 12 who were elected that year. Pacquiao quickly told NBC News, in reaction to Duterte’s endorsement, that he wasn’t planning to run for president, that he was enjoying serving the Philippine people as a senator. Actually, his direct quote about him running for president : “It is not in my mind right now.”

“St. Michaels formed me and I would not be where I am today in baseball and life without so many people in St. Michaels, who cared enough to do more than their expected part to help a youngster like me.” The afternoon also featured an emotional appearance by the widow of new Hall of Famer Roy Halladay, who died in plane crash off the coast of Florida in 2017, and an upbeat speech by Smith in which he managed to say something nice about each of the eight teams he played for — including the Orioles — during his 18-year career. Smith also mirrored Baines’ small-town theme with stories about growing up in tiny Castor, La., and the positive

impact that community had on his life. “If you think Cooperstown is a small town, you haven’t been to Castor,” Smith said, “(but) it was a that community that gave me the chance to play baseball.” Baines eventually came back to the subject of his softspoken nature, acknowledging that it might have been embellished by the time he hit a dramatic walk-off home run, then answered the only question of his postgame interview with a single word. But he said it might be better explained by a quote from his father that he took to heart early in life: “Words are easy, deeds are hard. Deeds can be silent, but sometimes they echo forever.”

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Photo contributed

The Knights’ Joe Rizzo throws during Saturday’s Hudson River Collegiate Baseball League game against the Storm at Greenport Town Park.

a walk, Kyle Caccamise From Charleston Southern University went 2 for 2 with two singles, one walk and two RBI. “This was a very hot day for baseball,” Storm manager Ed DuPont said. “It would have been easy for players not to

play hard, but this group kept focused all day. Connor, Noah, Jimmy and Adam all gave us quality pitching today. Christian Baaki works as hard as anyone I have ever coached behind the plate. I am very proud of this team.”

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CMYK

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

B4 Tuesday, July 23, 2019

After tough loss, Katie Ledecky must recover and refocus at swimming championships Rick Maese The Washington Post

GWANGJU, South Korea - Katie Ledecky was back in the pool Monday, doing what she does best, almost mechanically windmilling her arms and gliding across the water. Forty strokes in one direction. Forty strokes back. There could be no sulking after Sunday night’s devastating defeat in the 400-meter freestyle at these FINA world championships. Ledecky was due back in the pool 15 hours later for a 1,500-meter qualifying heat. If losing a signature race was unfamiliar, rebounding from disappointment was completely new territory. But with four more races on tap at the year’s biggest meet, Ledecky knew she had no choice. “If anyone is equipped to deal with this, it’s Katie Ledecky,” said Yuri Suguiyama, her youth coach at Nation’s Capital Swim Club. The next several days will force Ledecky to do something she has rarely had to think about: shake off disappointment, channel her emotions, quickly turn the page. After Ariarne Titmus, the 18-year old Australian, chased down Ledecky in the final lap of Sunday’s 400 - one of Ledecky’s three dominant distances - the Bethesda, Maryland, native returned to the athletes’ village and had a full night to refocus. She returned to the Nambu University Municipal Aquatics Center on Monday morning for the 1,500-meter heats. She posted the fastest time - 15:48.90, which is a great mark for any other swimmer. It was the year’s fourth-fastest time, in fact, but gave few hints as to how Ledecky might perform in Tueday’s 1,500 final. At the world championships four years ago, Ledecky broke the world record in the qualifying heats with a time of 15:27.71. The next day she broke it again in 15:25.48. (And last year lowered it again - to 15:20.48.) She looked tired following Monday’s heat and didn’t talk to reporters afterward, uncharacteristic for her. “I need to get my fight back,” she said the night before. No swimmer, of course, is invincible. Not forever at least. Michael Phelps might have been unbeatable in 2007 and ‘08, but he also retired with seven individual silver medals

Kelvin Kuo/USA TODAY

Katie Ledecky competes in the Women’s 200 LC Meter Freestyle final during the 2018 USA Swimming Phillips 66 National Championships swim meet at William Woollett, Jr. Aquatics Center.

and a bronze from his 11 trips to the Olympics and world championships. “You look back at Michael’s career,” said Greg Meehan, Ledecky’s coach, “some ups and downs, some wins and losses, always learning from each experience.” Ledecky’s experiences have been overwhelmingly positive. At 22, she has made domination look routine. She has faced no serious injury, has been dealt no major setback. Most elite swimmers - virtually every other Olympic champion - is somewhat accustomed to losing a big race on a big stage at some point, dusting off the disappointment and pulling themselves back up. Ledecky has been in a league of her own, though. In major international competitions - the Pan Pacific championship, world championships or Olympics - she’d competed in

23 individual races entering this week. She’d finished in first place 21 times, her only losses coming at 200 meters each of the past two years. But her best distances, the ones at which she holds world records, have always been the 400, 800 and 1,500, and Sunday was the first time she lost one of these races at a big meet. As much as Ledecky trains - her work ethic around the pool has always been lauded by coaches - there’s no practice for losing, for feeling pain, for regrouping. You just have to do it. And Ledecky actually has - just not much and not in a long while. While she has made a comfortable home atop the medals podium, she also remembers the early losses that helped get her there. Until Sunday, perhaps

none stung as much as the 2012 U.S. Olympic trials, the very meet that launched her into this otherworldly strata of elite swimmers. Ledecky was all of 15 years old then and had just wrapped her freshman year at Stone Ridge. She had three big races at the trials in Omaha. The first one - the 400 free - was considered her best shot at making the U.S. Olympic team bound for London. On the second day of trials, she broke a 24-year-old national record for her age group that was held by Janet Evans. But her time - 4:05.79 - was only good enough for third place. Only the top two finishers make the team. “In most cases, that would have devastated most 15 year-old swimmers,” said Suguiyama, now the head women’s coach at Wisconsin, “but after the initial shock and disappointment, we focused on the positive - something I’m sure Greg Meehan will be doing - and Katie recovered.” The next day in the 200 free, she finished in ninth in the semifinals and missed making the finals by 0.02 seconds. That left her with just one final shot, and she had three days to calm her nerves. A teenage Ledecky won the 800 in Omaha and punched her ticket to those London Games, where she became the youngest member of the U.S. team and would go on to win the first of her five Olympic titles. “The rest,” said Bruce Gemmell, who later coached Ledecky at Nation’s Capital Swim Club, “is history.” There was no way of knowing at the time that Ledecky was embarking on a stretch of nearly unmatched dominance. She has consistently shown what it is like to win big, and it wasn’t until Sunday night in Gwangju that she really had to deal with a big loss. “While I’m sure this one will sting, I think she’ll be able to get over it because she has such a strong sense of self, a comfort and confidence in her own skin,” Suguiyama said, “as well as an unbelievable support system in her family and the U.S. national team.”

AFC East training camp primer Field Level Media

New faces: RB Le’Veon Bell, LB C.J. Mosley, DT Quinnen Williams, WR Jamison Crowder, OG Kelechi Osemele, CB Brian Poole, QB Trevor Siemian, WR Josh Bellamy, WR Deonte Thompson, K Chandler Catanzaro, OLB Jachai Polite They’re gone: OG James Carpenter, C Spencer Long, CB Buster Skrine, DL Mike Pennel, WR Andre Roberts, K Jason Myers, S Terrence Brooks, WR Jermaine Kearse, RB Isaiah Crowell 2019 snapshot: Few teams in the league had a more complicated offseason than the Jets, who apparently disliked their own moves from this spring so much that the man who made them is now gone. Former GM Mike Maccagnan was fired in May, with Joe Douglas hired in June. That came after Maccagnan hired Adam Gase as head coach, led a free agent spending spree for Bell, Mosely and Crowder, and ran the draft room as normal in April. Did the team finally get it right by hiring Douglas? Or does that bizarre sequence of events simply show a dysfunctional organization? Maccagnan’s moves certainly raised a few eyebrows. He made outlandish investments at two of the league’s least valuable positions in running back (Bell; four years, $52 million) and inside linebacker (Mosley; five years, $85 million), then added an expensive slot wideout (Crowder; three years, $28.5 million) just a few months after extending Quincy Enunwa, who predominantly plays the slot. The draft was more encouraging, as Williams was clearly the best player available, even at a crowded position with Leonard Williams, Steve McLendon and newly resigned Henry Anderson. Thirdround picks Polite and OT Chuma Edoga each bring some upside (albeit amid character concerns), and TE Trevon Wesco (fourth round) should be a nice Swiss-army knife as a tight end/H-back. Worth the investment? –The Jets managed just four wins a year ago, but with several major talent upgrades, they could reasonably flirt with the postseason. It’s not hard to see them topping their

7-win over/under. –As far as MVP longshots go, you could do far worse than Sam Darnold (+7500), who came on strong to finish his rookie season and now has Adam Gase as his head coach. Bottom line: It was probably the right move to fire Maccagnan, but it’s hard to justify the process that led up to it or the timing. Still, if Williams stars like expected – he’ll need to sign his contract and report to camp first – this team looks much more talented. Buffalo Bills New faces: C Mitch Morse, DT Ed Oliver, WR John Brown, WR Cole Beasley, OL Cody Ford, OG Spencer Long, OG Quinton Spain, OT Ty Nsekhe, OT LaAdrian Waddle, TE Tyler Kroft, TE Lee Smith, TE Dawson Knox, RB T.J. Yeldon, RB Frank Gore, RB Devin Singletary, CB Kevin Johnson, CB E.J. Gaines, WR Andre Roberts They’re gone: DT Kyle Williams, TE Charles Clay, OG John Miller, OT Jordan Mills, WR Deonte Thompson 2019 snapshot: Mostly patient a year ago, the Bills went crazy in free agency this offseason, adding both quality and quantity with all kinds of deals. Morse isn’t worth the largest contract in NFL history for a center (four years, $44.5 million), but GM Brandon Beane found bargains on the O-line in Nsekhe (two years, $10 million), Spain (one year, $2 million) and Waddle (one year, $2 million). After jumping up in Round 2 to nab Ford – who could play tackle or guard – the Bills should have a much improved front five with four new starters. Buffalo found QB Josh Allen more weapons in Brown, Beasley, Kroft and Knox, a third-rounder with athletic upside. Each were reasonable investments, especially because they’ll help determine just how quickly Allen is progressing. Answers were also added to replace the aging LeSean McCoy, with Singletary (third round) drafted and Gore and Yeldon added in free agency. Despite extending contract-year DE Jerry Hughes, the Bills didn’t add an edge rusher to complement him, which they might regret unless Shaq Lawson takes a major step. On

the bright side, though, they managed to get Oliver at No. 9 overall. Not nearly the polished pass rusher Aaron Donald was coming out of Pitt, Oliver nonetheless has similar athletic gifts and will be disruptive (if not a finisher) from Day 1. Worth the investment? –Two years removed from a 9-7 campaign and a playoff appearance, the Bills are certainly capable of going over seven wins. But Allen must develop as a passer, making this a bit of a risky play. –Only one team, the 2008 Dolphins, has taken the AFC East from the New England Patriots since 2003, and that was with Tom Brady missing virtually all season. Even at +700, the Bills’ odds to win their first division title since 1995 probably aren’t worth taking. Bottom line: The spending spree looked a little wild, but the Bills structured contracts smartly and didn’t take on much risk. They also managed to address most major holes, with plenty of upside in the draft class. New England Patriots New faces: DE Michael Bennett, LB Jamie Collins, WR Demaryius Thomas, TE Benjamin Watson, TE Matt LaCosse, WR N’Keal Harry, WR Dontrelle Inman, DL Mike Pennel, RB Brandon Bolden, S Terrence Brooks, CB Joejuan Williams, DE Chase Winovich, RB Damien Harris They’re gone: TE Rob Gronkowski, DE Trey Flowers, OT Trent Brown, DT Malcom Brown, WR Chris Hogan, DE Adrian Clayborn, TE Dwayne Allen, WR Cordarrelle Patterson, CB Eric Rowe, OT LaAdrian Waddle 2019 snapshot: Another offseason, another talent exodus in New England. Given the Patriots just won the Super Bowl, nobody should be panicking, but Gronkowski, Flowers and Trent Brown will be very tough to replace. At the same time, Gronk’s retirement was out of the team’s control, and the Patriots certainly would not have paid Flowers (five years, $90 million) or Brown (four years, $66 million) anywhere near the money they landed on the open market. As usual, the Patriots regrouped and reloaded in a variety of creative ways. Bennett cost only a swap of

late-round picks and should step right into Flowers’ role, with insideoutside versatility and pass rush. Collins was brought back for a bargain $2 million after his release in Cleveland, and Watson (one year, $3 million) and LaCosse (two years, $2.8 million) provide cheap options at tight end. Between Thomas, Harry and Inman, the receiving corps should produce a few suitable options. Some questions remain. Offensive tackle is thin after Brown and Waddle left in free agency, and signee Jared Veldheer decided to retire. The tight end spot lacks a clear answer or upside after Bill Belichick surprisingly didn’t draft one from a quality group of prospects and released Austin SeferianJenkins during the offseason program. Even so, Belichick produced an excellent draft class overall, with Williams, Winovich and Harris all expected to contribute early in addition to Harry. Worth the investment? –The Patriots have the NFL’s highest over/under win total (11) and the best odds to win Super Bowl LIV (+600). Both figures feel a tad rich, but each could hit if Tom Brady doesn’t fall off a cliff. –As usual, Brady is among the favorites for MVP, with decent odds at +1400 (surprisingly behind Baker Mayfield at +1100). He needs two more to tie Peyton Manning (five) for most all-time, but the soon-tobe 42-year-old might not get the requisite volume. Bottom line: The Patriots are clearly less talented overall, but it’s hard to argue with many of their decisions in a vacuum. Until Brady declines, they should remain a juggernaut. Miami Dolphins New faces: QB Ryan Fitzpatrick, QB Josh Rosen, TE Dwayne Allen, DT Christian Wilkins, CB Eric Rowe, OT Jordan Mills, OG Chris Reed, C Michael Deiter They’re gone: QB Ryan Tannehill, OT Ja’Wuan James, DE Cameron Wake, DE Robert Quinn, OG Josh Sitton, RB Frank Gore, WR Danny Amendola, C Travis Swanson 2019 snapshot: Miami made major changes last spring while touting the importance of culture, but this offseason was even more

extreme in that regard, with a complete reset. GM Chris Grier gained full control of personnel with Mike Tannenbaum gone and brought in head coach Brian Flores, who will run the defense while fellow former Patriot Chad O’Shea coordinates the offense. Jim Caldwell was brought in to be assistant head coach/quarterbacks, but will instead be a consultant after a leave of absence for medical reasons. The offense will also have a new leader for the first time since 2012, as Tannehill was dealt, and Fitzpatrick (two years, $11 million) and Rosen (acquired for second- and fifth-round picks) were brought in. The trade for Rosen is a home run any way you look at it: The Dolphins owe just $6.3 million over three years for the opportunity to see if a top-10 prospect (who was better than his numbers in Arizona) is their long-term answer at QB. If he isn’t, he still brings value as a backup. The Dolphins were mostly quiet elsewhere, saying goodbye to three key O-linemen and bringing in uninspiring replacements. Mills isn’t nearly at James’ level, and the interior has major concerns even if Deiter (third round) can start right away. Those issues could muddy the evaluation of Rosen. Worth the investment? –The Dolphins and Cardinals are tied for the NFL-low over/under win total (five), and Miami’s tanking intentions have been widely reported. That said, Fitzpatrick could get hot and win a few games, and Rosen will be quite motivated. We’d say away from this one. –For longshot fans out there, how about Miami at +2000 to win the AFC East? Stranger things have happened, like when the 2008 Dolphins – coming off a 1-15 season – claimed the only non-Patriots division title since 2003 despite preseason odds of +4000. Bottom line: The defense could use more help, and the lack of investment in the O-line is troubling, but Rosen’s arrival is a major boost. Odds are, it won’t lead to many wins in 2019, which might be Miami’s preference, anyway.


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BROOKLYN ROSE FILMS LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 6/20/19. Office in Columbia Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to The LLC 4540 Center Blvd Apt 1804 Long Island City, NY 11109. Purpose: Any lawful activity.

106E101 Holdings LLC, Arts of Org. filed with Sec. of State of NY (SSNY) 3/27/2019. Cty: Greene. SSNY desig. as agent upon whom process against may be served & shall mail process to 138 Vienna Woods Rd., COLUMBIA ECONOMDEVELOPMENT Purling, NY 12470. IC CORPORATION General Purpose. NOTICE OF PUBLIC 111 MILLER LLC. Arts. MEETING of Org. filed with the Please take notice that SSNY on 07/01/19. Of- there will be a meeting fice: Columbia County. of the Columbia EcoSSNY designated as nomic Development agent of the LLC upon Corporation Board on whom process against July 30, 2019 at it may be served. 8:30am at 4303 Route SSNY shall mail copy 9 for the purpose of of process to the LLC, discussing any busi111 Miller Road, Hud- ness presented to the son, NY 12534. Pur- Corporation for conpose: Any lawful pur- sideration. pose. Dated: July 23, 2019 210 PINE LANE LLC Sarah Sterling Articles of Org. filed CEDC Secretary Economic NY Sec. of State Columbia (SSNY) 5/16/2019. Of- Development Corporafice in Greene Co. tion SSNY desig. agent of COOK CONSULTING LLC whom process LLC Articles of Org. may be served. SSNY filed NY Sec. of State shall mail process to (SSNY) 6/19/19. Office 143 Kenilworth Rd., in Columbia Co. SSNY Ridgewood, NJ 07450. design. Agent of LLC Purpose: Any lawful upon whom process purpose. may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of pro31 Trask Road LLC, cess to The LLC Articles ofOrg filed 18Willoughby Ave with SSNY 5/3/19. Of- Brooklyn, NY 11205. fice location: Columbia Purpose: Any lawful County, United States activity. Corporation Agents, Inc., 7014 13th Ave, Suite 202, Brooklyn, It’sClimbTime, LLC. NY 11228, designated Articles of Organizaas agent upon whom tion filed with the process may be SSNY on 6/21/2019. served & who shall Office: Greene County. mail copy to LLC at SSNY designated as 2559 Route 23, PO agent of the LLC upon Box 152, Hillsdale, NY whom process against 12529. Purpose: any it may be served. lawful purpose. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC, 3 EAST 3RD STREET 143 County Route 51, COMMON LLC Arti- Coxsackie, NY 12051. cles of Org. filed NY Purpose: Any lawful Sec. of State (SSNY) purpose. 6/18/19. Office in Columbia Co. SSNY de- JHS BUILDERS LLC, sign. Agent of LLC Arts. of Org. filed with SSNY on upon whom process the may be served. SSNY 04/16/2019. Office loc: County. shall mail copy of pro- Columbia cess to The LLC 81 SSNY has been desigProspect ST Brooklyn, nated as agent upon NY 11201. Purpose: whom process against the LLC may be Any lawful activity. served. SSNY shall 3 EAST 3RD STREET mail process to: The JV LLC Articles of Org. LLC, 859 Canaan Rd., filed NY Sec. of State Canaan, NY 12029. (SSNY) 6/18/19. Office Reg Agent: U.S. Corp. in Columbia Co. SSNY Agents, Inc. 7014 13th design. Agent of LLC Ave., Ste 202, Brookupon whom process lyn, NY 11228. Purmay be served. SSNY pose: Any Lawful Purshall mail copy of pro- pose. cess to The LLC 81 Prospect ST Brooklyn, Legal Notice NY 11201. Purpose: Notice of Public Hearing Any lawful activity. Notice is hereby given ARTICLES OF OR- that a Public Hearing GANIZATION OF will be held at the ofLIMITED LIABILITY fice of the Columbia COMPANY County Civil Service SITTING IN A TREE, Commission, 401 LLC State St., Hudson, Notice of formation of N.Y. 12534, on TuesLimited Liability Com- day, August 13th, 2019 pany (“LLC”). at 9:50 A.M. to amend Articles of Organiza- the Columbia County tion filed with the Sec- Civil Service Commisretary of State of New sion Rules and AppenYork (“SSNY”) on dices as provided in 06/26/2019. Office lo- Civil Service Law, Seccation: Columbia tion 20, Subdivision County. SSNY has (2). A detailed copy of been designated as this amendment is agent of the LLC upon available for inspection whom process against at the Columbia it may be served. County Civil Service SSNY shall mail a copy Office, 401 State St., of any process to the Hudson, N.Y. 12534. LLC to Kristal Heinz, Open 8:00 A.M. to ESQ., P.O. Box 1331, 4:00 P.M. Hudson, NY 12534. Civil Service CommisPurpose: To engage in sion of Columbia any lawful activity. County Dated: July 18, 2019 Artschatz LLC. Art. of Attest:Rebecca VinOrg. filed with the chiarello, SSNY on 06/13/2019. Administrator Office: Columbia Columbia County Civil County. SSNY desig- Service nated as agent of the 401 State Street LLC upon whom pro- Hudson, NY 12534 cess against it may be served. SSNY shall Logan and Tim Carmail copy of process pentry LLC Art. of Org. to the LLC, 222 Percy filed with the SSNY on Hill Road, Old Chat- 5/14/2019. Office in ham, NY 12136. Pur- Columbia Cty. New pose: Any lawful pur- York SSNY designatpose. ed as agent of LLC upon whom process D.O.G. Board N’ Train, may be served. SSNY LLC, Arts of Org. filed shall mail process to: with Sec. of State of 70 Deer Haven Rd, EliNY (SSNY) 6/25/2019. zaville, NY 12523 PurCty: Columbia. SSNY pose: Any lawful purdesig. as agent upon pose whom process against may be served & shall NK Apparel LLC. Filed mail process to 120 08/22/18. Office: CoLower Post Rd., lumbia Co. SSNY desGhent, NY 12075. ignated as agent for General Purpose. process & shall mail to:

Karlis Medins Jr. 818 Route 217, Hudson, NY 12534. Purpose: Any Lawful Purpose Notice is hereby given that a license, Number 2217720, for on-premises liquor, beer, wine and cider, has been applied for by the undersigned to sell liquor, beer, wine and cider at retail in a restaurant establishment under the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law at 920 Rte 82, Ancram, NY 12502 for on premises consumption. Miller's Tavern 82 Inc 920 Rte 82 Ancram, NY 12502 NOTICE OF ABANDONED VEHICLE This is notification to any owner or lien holder only to recover their vehicle within thirty (30) days or it will be sold at public auction as per Section SC Law 29-15-10. To recover call Gizella Studwell @ Rapid Transit Towing, (843) 591-2670. 2005 Ford Escape, VIN# 1FMYU931X5KB27314 . Located at: Rapid Transit Towing 8603 Highway 544 Myrtle Beach, SC 29588 Notice of Bear & Fox Provisions LLC. Articles of Org. filed with NY Secretary of State (NS) on 4/22/2019, office location: Greene County, NS is designated as agent upon whom process may be served, NS shall mail service of process (SOP) to NW Registered Agent LLC @ 90 State Street Suite 700 Office 40, Albany, NY 12207, NW Registered Agent LLC is designated as agent for SOP at 90 State Street Suite 700 Office 40, Albany, NY 12207, purpose is any lawful purpose. NOTICE OF FORMATION OF LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY. NAME: THE FROZEN SPOON, LLC Articles of Organization were filed with the Secretary of State of New York on 03/05/2019 Office location: 497 Mountain View Rd. Freehold, NY 12431 Greene County. The Secretary of State of New York has been designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The Secretary of State of New York shall mail a copy of process to the LLC, at 497 Mountain View Rd. Freehold, NY 12431 Purpose: For any lawful purpose. NOTICE OF FORMATION OF A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY

First: The name of the Limited Liability Company is Local 111 Restaurant, LLC. Second: The Articles of Organization of the Company were filed with the Secretary of State on July 3, 2019. Third: The County within the State of New York in which the office of the company is located is Columbia. Fourth: Susan G. Baer, CPA has been designated as agent upon whom process against the Company may be served. The address to which the Secretary of State shall mail process is Susan G. Baer, CPA. PC, 60 Garage Place Road Ghent, NY 12075. Fifth: This Limited Liability Company is organized for all lawful purposes, and to do any and all things necessary, convenient, or incidental to that purpose.

nated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail a copy of process to Andrea Neiman, PO Box 244, North Chatham, NY 12132. Purpose: For any lawful purpose.

LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail process to 256 Adams Rd., Athens, NY 12015. Purpose: any lawful activities NOTICE OF FORMATION OF PETER MELEWSKI, LLC PURSUANT TO SECTION 203 OF THE LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY LAW Notice of formation of Peter Melewski, LLC. Arts. Of Org. filed with Sec'y of State of NY (SSNY) on 06/04/2019. Exist date: 06/04/2019. Perpetual existence. Office Location: Greene County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail process to: P.O. Box 117, 936 Route 144, New Baltimore, NY 12124. Purpose: any lawful purpose.

Notice of Formation of Limited Liability Company (LLC) Name: TJR HOLDINGS OF COLUMBIA, LLC. Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on June 28, 2019. Office Location: Columbia County. SSNY designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to: 114 Prospect Hill Road, Pine Plains, New York, 12567. Purpose: to engage in any and all business for which LLCs may be formed under the New Notice of Formation of NOTICE OF FORMA- York LLC law. SWM LAND DEVELTION OF A LIMITED Notice of Formation of OPMENT LLC. Articles LIABILITY COMPANY First: The name of the Linda Dias Yoga LLC, of Organization filed Limited Liability Com- Art. of Org. filed with with NY Secy. of State pany is Gordon's Phil- Sec’y of State (SSNY) on October 4, 2018. on 5/6/19. Office loca- Office location: Colummont, LLC. Second: The Articles tion: Columbia County. bia County. SSNY desof Organization of the SSNY designated as ignated as agent of Company were filed agent of LLC upon LLC upon whom prowith the Secretary of whom process against cess against it may be it may be served. served. SSNY shall State on July 3, 2019. Third: The County SSNY shall mail copy mail process to: 50 within the State of New of process to 114 Rossman Circle, #14, York in which the of- Pooles Hill Rd., An- Hudson, NY 12534. No fice of the company is cram, NY 12502. Pur- registered agent. Purpose: any lawful ac- pose: Any lawful purlocated is Columbia. pose. Flint Law Firm Fourth: Susan G. tivity. Baer, CPA has been Notice of Formation of P.C., 75 Main Street, P. O. Box 363, Chatdesignated as agent LUCINDA BEAKMAN ham, NY 12037, upon whom process LLC against the Company Arts. of Org. filed with (518) 392-2555 may be served. The Secy. of State of NY Notice of Formation of address to which the (SSNY) on 06/26/19. TREGARDOCK LLC. Secretary of State shall Office location: Colum- Arts. Of Org. filed with mail process is Susan bia County. SSNY SSNY on 7/11/19. OfG. Baer, CPA. PC, 60 designated as agent of fice location: Greene Garage Place Road LLC upon whom pro- SSNY desg. as agent Ghent, NY 12075. cess against it may be of LLC upon whom Fifth: This Limited served. SSNY shall process against it May Liability Company is mail process to c/o Be Served. SSNY Mail organized for all lawful Corporation Service Process to Eleven purposes, and to do Co., 80 State St., Albaany and all things nec- ny, NY 12207, regd. essary, convenient, or agent upon whom and incidental to that pur- at which process may pose. be served. Purpose: Any lawful activity. Notice of Formation of Kumoi Jishi Investors, Notice of Formation of LLC, Art. of Org. filed LUCINDA BEAKMAN with Sec’y of State MANAGEMENT LLC (SSNY) on 5/24/19. Of- Arts. of Org. filed with fice location: Columbia Secy. of State of NY County. SSNY desig- (SSNY) on 06/26/19. nated as agent of LLC Office location: Columupon whom process bia County. SSNY against it may be designated as agent of served. SSNY shall LLC upon whom promail copy of process cess against it may be to PO Box 413, South- served. SSNY shall field, MA 01259. Pur- mail process to c/o pose: any lawful ac- Corporation Service tivity. Co., 80 State St., Albany, NY 12207, regd. NOTICE OF FORMA- agent upon whom and TION OF LIMITED LI- at which process may ABILITY COMPANY be served. Purpose: Name: The H.A.N.D.S. Any lawful activity. Program, L.L.C. Articles of Organization Notice of Formation of were filed with the M&R Rentals LLC. Art. New York Secretary of Of Org. filed with Sec’y State (SSNY) on of State (SSNY) 7/2/19. Office location: 5/31/19. Office locaColumbia County. tion: Greene Co. SSNY SSNY has been desig- designated as agent of

Times Square, Room 301, New York, New York, 10036. Any lawful purpose. NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT COUNTY OF GREENE NEW CENTURY MORTGAGE CORPORATION, Plaintiff AGAINST STEVEN D. HOROWITZ and PATRICIA A. CAMERON, et al., Defendant(s) Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly dated November 29, 2007 I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Lobby of the Greene County Courthouse, 320 Main Street, City of Catskill in the County of Greene, State of New York, on August 23, 2019 at 10:00AM, premises known as 8 BARTELS LANE, CATSKILL, NY 12414. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements erected, situate, lying and being in the Town of Catskill, County of Greene and State of New York, SECTION 138.01, BLOCK 2, LOT 18.1. Approximate amount of judgment $228,034.75 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment for Index# 1187/07. James E. Gross, Esq., Referee Gross Polowy, LLC Attorney for Plaintiff 1775 Wehrle Drive, Suite 100 Williamsville, NY 14221

MAURO A/K/A FRANCIS A. MAURO SR. A/K/A FRANCIS MAURO SR., et al, Defts. Index #14-1154. Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure and sale dated May 16, 2019, I will sell at public auction at the Greene County Courthouse, 320 Main St., Catskill, NY on Aug. 6, 2019 at 9:00 a.m., prem. k/a 9806 Route 23A, Hunter, NY a/k/a 9806 Route 23A, Jewett, NY a/k/a Section 146.00, Block 1, Lot 60.1. Said property located in the Town of Jewett, County of Greene and State of New York, bounded and described as Lot 3-D on map entitled. "Nolden Subdivision Filing No. 4, a Replot of Lot 3-B Nolden Subdivision Filing No. 3" which map is filed in the Greene County Clerk's Office on 1/6/95 as Map 111 of Drawer 219. Approx. amt. of judgment is $432,238.14 plus costs and interest. Sold subject to terms and conditions of filed judgment and terms of sale. PAUL M. FREEMAN, Referee. THE MARGOLIN & WEINREB LAW GROUP LLP, Attys. for Pltf., 165 Eileen Way, Ste. 101, Syosset, NY. #97276

Oneal's Construction LLC, Art. of Org. filed with SSNY on 3/14/19. Off. loc.: Greene Co. SSNY designated as agent upon whom process may be served & shall mail proc.: 50 NOTICE OF SALE New St., Coxsackie, SUPREME COURT: NY 12051. Purp.: any GREENE COUNTY. lawful purp. GOSHEN MORTGAGE LLC AS SEPARATE PUBLIC NOTICE TRUSTEE FOR GDBT I NOTICE OF FORMATRUST 2011-1, Pltf. TION OF A LIMITED vs. FRANCIS A. MAU- LIABILITY COMPANY RO A/K/A FRANCIS (LLC)


CMYK

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

B6 Tuesday, July 23, 2019 The name of the LLC is Casa Neapolis LLC. Articles of Organization filed with Secretary of State of New York (SSNY) on May 17, 2019. New York office location: 68 Lakeside Drive, Town of Catskill, County of Greene and the State of New York. SSNY has been designated as agent of LLC upon whom process against it may be served. The post office address to which the SSNY shall mail a copy of any process against the LLC served upon him/her is: Casa Neapolis LLC; 68 Lakeside Drive, New York Catskill, 12414. Purpose/Character of business: Any lawful business purpose permitted under the New York Limited Liability Company Law. This notification is made pursuant to Section 206 of the Limited Liability Company Law. ROSENSTRACH RENOVATIONS LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 06/07/19. Office: Columbia County. SSNY designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC, 3093 County Route 21, Kinderhook, NY 12106. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. The Kawa Group LLC. Arts. of Org. filed with the SSNY on 6/28/19. Office: Columbia County. SSNY designated as agent of the LLC upon whom process against it may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to the LLC, 546 Columbia St Rear 1, NY 12534. Purpose: Any lawful purpose. STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY COURT : COUNTY OF GREEN NOTICE OF SALE Index #18-366 THE BANK OF GREENE COUNTY, Plaintiff, -against-

ANTHONY G. MARINO, STEPHANIE C. MARINO, VON AWEYDEN, LLC, AQUA TEC WATER SERVICES, INC., SEAN MARINO, KEVIN SCHULTZ, EDWARD AHRENS and LORI AHRENS, SAUGERTIES LUMBER CO., INC., BELGIAN TRUCKING & EXCAVATING, LLC, and WINDHAM EQUIPMENT RENTALS, INC., Defendants. Pursuant to a Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale duly made and entered in the above-entitled action, bearing date the 24th day of June, 2019, I the undersigned, the Referee in said judgment named, will sell at public auction in the first floor lobby of the Greene County Courthouse at 320 Main Street, in the Village of Catskill, County of Greene and State of New York, on the 21st day of August, 2019 at 10:00 a.m. o'clock in the forenoon on that date, the premises directed by said judgment to be sold and therein described as follows: ALL that piece or parcel of land situate, lying and being in the Town of Ashland, County of Greene and State of New York, said parcel being more particularly described as follows: BEGINNING at a point in the center of Greene County Route 17, said point also being in the center of a private roadway running to the east from Greene County Route 17, said point being the westerly corner of the parcel herein described and being located the following course and distance from a point in the center of the bridge which carries said Route 17 over the Batavia Kill: S 16? 26' 12" W 833.46 feet; running thence from said point of beginning along the centerline of said private roadway and through the lands

of the grantors herein, Robert O. Goff and Jeanette Goff, N 76? 09' 51" E 250.00 feet; thence continuing along the centerline of said private roadway and along the southerly bounds of lands of Jorge I. Pardo and Elba N. Provost (L. 841 - p. 138) the following five (5) courses and distances: N 76? 09' 51" E 254.77 feet to a point of curvature; along a curve which bears to the right having a central angle of 19? 52' 50", a radius of 432.83 feet, and a length of 150.18 feet to a point of tangency: S 83? 57' 19" E 98.61 feet; S 75? 13' 19" E 159.25 feet; and S 69? 25' 39" E 160.95 feet; thence continuing along the westerly bounds of said lands of Jorge I. Pardo and Elba N. Provost (L.841 p.138) passing through an iron pin set twenty-five (25) feet from the centerline of the aforementioned private roadway S 04? 58' 50" W 432.71 feet to an iron pin set in the northerly bounds of lands now or formerly of Amos and Ichabod, Inc. (L. 615 - p. 96); thence running along said lands now or formerly of Amos and Ichabod, Inc. N 85? 01' 10" W 898.27 feet, passing through an iron pin set, to a point in the centerline of said Greene County Route 17; thence running along the centerline of said Greene County Route 17 the following two (2) courses and distances: N 19? 21' 18" W 261.90 feet to a point of curvature; along a curve which bears to the right having a central angle of 08? 02' 04", a radius of 611.94 feet, and a length of 85.81 feet to a point of tangency at the point and place of beginning. Containing 10.116 acres of land. TOGETHER with and subject to an easement for ingress and egress, to be used in common with others,

Earn up to $1,500 every month! Independent contractors needed.

Columbia County Early morning hours---you can be earning money to help pay bills, pay the mortgage, save for college, all while others are sleeping! Routes available now! Must have a vehicle, Valid Drivers License, Vehicle insurance and registration is a must. Knowledge of the area recommended. Previous experience delivering newspapers a plus. To apply call

518-828-1616 ext. 2411 Or send an email to: pdedrick@columbiagreenemedia.com

fifty (50) feet in width, the centerline of which is described as follows: Beginning at a point in the centerline of said easement in the centerline of said Greene County Route 17, which point of beginning is located S 16? 26' 12" W 833.46 feet from the point in the center of said bridge which carries said Route 17 over the Batavia Kill; thence proceeding along the centerline of said easement N 76? 09' 51" E 250.00 feet; N 76? 09' 51" 254.77 feet to a point of curvature; thence along a curve which bears to the right having a central angle of 19? 52' 50", a radius of 432.83 feet, and a length of 150.18 feet to a point of tangency: S 83? 57' 19" E 98.61 feet; S 75? 13' 19" E 159.25 feet; and S 69? 25' 39" E 160.95 feet. TOGETHER with and subject to an easement for the installation and maintenance of public utilities within an area having a width of eighty (80) feet, for the length of the aforesaid easement for ingress and egress, the centerline of which is the centerline of said easement for ingress and egress. SUBJECT to the rights of the public in and to that portion of the above described premises as lies within the bounds of Greene County Route 17. THE above described premises is conveyed subject to the covenant and restriction that no house trailer, mobile home nor junk cars may be stored, erected or maintained upon the above described premises. Excepting and reserving from the above described parcel, all that piece or parcel of land with improvements thereon, situate, lying and being in the Town of Ashland, County of Greene and State of New York, being more particularly described as follows: That certain lot depicted as "Lot 2" upon the survey map by Santo Associates Land Survey and Engineering, P.C., dated June 2, 2003, entitled "survey Map and Subdivision of Lands of Anthony G. Marino & Stephanie C. Marino", which map was filed in the Greene County Clerk's Office on May 12, 2004 as File EASI-B as Map No. 2004-54. Lot 2 contains 5.100 acres of land. Dated:July 19, 2019 s./ Ann Marie Rabin Ann Marie Rabin, Referee DEILY & SCHAEFER Attorneys for Plaintiff One Bridge Street Catskill, NY 12414

DONALD C. GIGLIO A/K/A DONALD GIGLIO; ET AL. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated April 6, 2018, and entered in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Columbia, wherein NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC is the Plaintiff and DONALD C. GIGLIO A/K/A DONALD GIGLIO; ET AL. are the Defendants. I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the COLUMBIA COUNTY COURTHOUSE, FRONT LOBBY, 401 UNION STREET, HUDSON, NY 12534, on August 5, 2019 AT 10:00 AM, premises known as 17 FARM ROAD, COPAKE, NY 12516: Section 176.3, Block 4, Lot 52: ALL THAT PARCEL OF LAND IN TOWN OF COPAKE, COLUMBIA COUNTY, STATE OF NEW YORK Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 009222/2015. Kathryn Barber, Esq. Referee. RAS Boriskin, LLC 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310, Westbury, New York 11590, Attorneys for Plaintiff.

sale. Minimum bid of $2,500.00 1965 International Brush Truck. The truck can be viewed and inspection by appointment at the Fire Company. Please submit your sealed bid to the Attention of Truck Committee Sealed Bid c/o West Ghent Volunteer Fire Company 74 Bender Blvd Ghent NY 12075 no later than August 19th 2019 by 4PM. Bids must be on an official form to be considered. Forms are available at the Fire Company, or email us at westghentfire@outlook.com. Questions on this vehicle should be referred to the Fire Chief Art Sherman. Only successful bidders will be notified.

Real Estate 255

Lots & Acreage

VACANT LAND for Sale. Ready to Build on Sleepy Hollow Lake, $5,000, call 518-945-1659.

Rentals Apts. for Rent Columbia Co.

295 SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK - COUNTY OF COLUMBIA U.S. BANK TRUST, N.A. AS TRUSTEE FOR LSF9 MASTER PA R T I C I PAT I O N TRUST, V. LUIS A. VEGERANO, SR., ET AL. NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated April 16, 2018, and entered in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Columbia, wherein U.S. BANK TRUST, N.A. AS TRUSTEE FOR LSF9 MASTER PA R T I C I PAT I O N TRUST is the Plaintiff and LUIS A. VEGERANO, SR., ET AL. are the Defendant(s). I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the COLUMBIA COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 401 UNION STREET FRONT LOBBY, HUDSON, NY 12534, on August 16, 2019 at 12:00 PM, premises known as 187 ROUTE 9J, HUDSON, NY 12534: Section 72.2, Block 1, Lot 6: ALL THAT CERTAIN PLOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND, WITH THE BUILDINGS AND IMPROVEMENTS THEREON ERECTED, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING IN THE TOWN OF STOCKPORT, COUNTY OF COLUMBIA, AND STATE OF NEW YORK Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index # 6401/2013. James J. Brearton, Esq. - Referee. RAS Boriskin, LLC 900 Merchants Concourse, Suite 310, Westbury, New York 11590, Attorneys for Plaintiff.

VITAL KNOWLEDGE MEDIA LLC Articles of Org. filed NY Sec. of State (SSNY) 6/14/19. Office in Columbia Co. SSNY design. Agent of LLC upon whom process may be served. SSNY shall mail copy of process to The LLC 261 Hudson ST Apt 11G New York, NY 10013. Purpose: Any West Ghent Volunteer lawful activity. Fire Company 74 Bender Blvd Ghent, NY 12075 SUPREME COURT OF Te l : 5 1 8 - 8 2 8 - 6 4 7 8 westghentTHE STATE OF NEW Email: YORK - COUNTY OF fire@outlook.com **PUBLIC NOTICE** COLUMBIA NATIONSTAR MORT- The West Ghent Volunteer Fire Co has the GAGE LLC, follow surplus item for V.

KINDERHOOK AREA- 1 & 2 bdr. Town Houses. starting at $950/mo. 1 yr lease, no pets. Call 518758-1699

Apts. for Rent Greene Co.

298

ATHENS, 5 large rooms. upstairs. 3 bdr., kitch. & DR. No pets, Very good condition. Call 518-945-1659 COXSACKIE- sm 1 bdr, 2nd flr. Heat & hot water incl. $725/mo. of st parking, 518258-6546 no calls after 8pm

326

Houses for Rent Greene Co.

CATSKILL- 20 Dumond St., upper, newly renovated, 3 bdr, behind HS, $925+ Utils & sec, avail 8/1. No pets, call or text 518-929-1826.

TAGHKANIC, 2 BDR, no smoking,. no pets, $850 plus util. a mo., plus sec. dept. Call 518-851-2389, 518-965-6038.

Employment Farm Help Wanted

410

FARMWORKERS: Golden Harvest Farm in Valatie, NY - 40 temp jobs 9/1 - 11/8 Rate $13.25 hr, 3 mths exp. Manually prune, cultivate & harvest apples. Tools/ equipment supplied at no cost. Employment guaranteed for ¾ of work contract. Free housing to workers not able to return home same day. Transportation/subsistence provided by employer upon 50% completion of work contract. Apply One Stop Office - 877-466-9757 Job NY 1307854 FARMWORKERS: Indian Ladder Farm in Altamont, NY - 6 temp jobs 8/29 11/15 Rate $13.25 hr, 3 mths exp. Manually plant, cultivate & harvest fruits & vegetables. Tools/equipment supplied at no cost. Employment guaranteed for ¾ of work contract. Free housing to workers not able to return home same day. Transportation/subsistence provided by employer upon 50% completion of work contract. Apply One Stop Office - 877-466-9757 Job NY 1307852

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13 days, departs year-round Enjoy a 4-island Hawaiian vacation with beachfront lodging on Kauai, Maui, and Hawaii, and a centrally-located hotel in Waikiki on Oahu. Includes a Pearl Harbor experience where you will see the USS Arizona Memorial. Visit historic Lahaina, enjoy a boat cruise on the Wailua River, and authentic Hawaiian entertainment and food at our Farewell Feast.

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General Help

AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here -Get trained as FAA certified Aviation Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call AIM for free information 866296-7094 MOD. BOYS Soccer Coach, NYS coaching certification w/first aid and CPR required. Coaching and/or playing experience preferred. for www.catskillcsd.org employment application.

Services 514

CALL 1-866-823-5693

*Prices are per person based on double occupancy plus up to $299 taxes & fees. Cruise pricing based on lowest cabin category after Instant Rebate; upgrades available. Single supplement and seasonal surcharges may apply. Add-on airfare available. Onboard Credit requires purchase of Ocean View or Balcony Cabin. For full Set Sail terms and conditions ask your Travel Consultant. Offers apply to new bookings only, made by 8/31/19. Other terms and conditions may apply. Ask your Travel Consultant for details.

Services Offered

AFFORDABLE NEW SIDING! Beautify your home! Save on monthly energy bills with beautiful NEW SIDING from 1800Remodel! Up to 18 months no interest. Restrictions apply 855773-1675 A PLACE FOR MOM has helped over a million families find senior living. Our trusted, local advisors help find solutions to your unique needs at no cost to you. Call: 1-800-404-8852, 1- 844-258-8586 Buying diamonds, gold, silver, all fine jewelry and watches, coins, paintings, better furs, complete estates. We simply pay more! Call Barry 914-260-8783 or e-mail Americabuying@aol.com COMPUTER ISSUES? FREE DIAGNOSIS by GEEKS ON SITE! Virus Removal, Data Recovery! 24/7 EMERGENCY SERVICE, Inhome repair/On-line solutions . $20 OFF ANY SERVICE! 844-892-3990, 855385-4814 Earthlink High Speed Internet. As Low As $14.95/month (for the first 3 months.) Reliable High Speed Fiber Optic Technology. Stream Videos, Music and More! Call Earthlink 1-855-970-1623, 1-888586-9798 VIAGRA & CIALIS! 60 pills for $99. 100 pills for $150 FREE shipping. Money back guaranteed! Call Today: 800-404-0244, 1-800870-8711

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FARMWORKERS: Yonder Fruit Farm in Valatie, NY 96 temp jobs 8/23- 12/15 Rate $13.25 hr, 3 mths exp. Manually prune, cultivate & harvest fruits. Tools/equipment supplied at no cost. Employment guaranteed for ¾ of work contract. Free housing to workers not able to return home same day. Transportation/subsistence provided by employer upon 50% completion of work contract. Apply One Stop Office - 877-466-9757 Job NY 1307794

Mobile Homes for Rent

345

BOOK YOUR VACATION NOW – CALL FOR LIMITED-TIME SAVINGS $

FARMWORKERS: Windy Hill Orchard in Castleton, NY - 6 temp jobs 9/6 11/15 Rate $13.25 hr, &/or piece rate per bu of .90 apples, 3 mths exp. Manually prune, plant, cultivate & harvest fruits & vegetables. Tools/ equipment supplied at no cost. Employment guaranteed for ¾ of work contract. Free housing to workers not able to return home same day. Transportation/subsistence provided by employer upon 50% completion of work contract. Apply One Stop Office - 877-466-9757 Job NY 1307627

Services Wanted

DENTAL INSURANCE. Call Physicians Mutual Insurance Company for details. NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage for 350 procedures. 866-679-8194 or http://www. dental50plus.com/41 Ad# 6118

Farm & Garden 654

Farm Machinery & Implements

BALE GRABBER and spear. Call 518-732-2021

Merchandise 730

Earthlink High Speed Internet. As Low As $14.95/month (for the first 3 months.) Reliable High Speed Fiber Optic Technology. Stream Videos, Music and More! Call Earthlink Today 1-877-933-3017 Get DIRECTV! ONLY $35/month! 155 Channels & 1000s of Shows/Movies On Demand (w/SELECT All Included Package.) PLUS Stream on Up to FIVE Screens Simultaneously at No Additional Cost. Call DIRECTV 1-888-534-6918 HOME SECURITY - Leading smart home provider Vivint Smart Home has an offer just for you. Call 877-480-2648 to get a professionally installed home security system with $0 activation.

OXYGEN - Anytime. Anywhere. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The All-New Inogen One G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: 888-7444102 RIDING LAWN mower 48" cut, runs good, $595 obo. 2300 watt generator $180 obo. (518)610-8248. SAVE ON YOUR NEXT PRESCRIPTION! World Health Link. Price Match Guarantee! Prescriptions Required. CIPA Certified. Over 1500 medications available. CALL Today For A Free Price Quote. 1-866886-8055 Call Now! SAY WHAT YOU NEED TO SAY with NYNPA. Put your 25-word ad in front of MILLIONS of people statewide with a single call with the New York Daily Impact. Call 315-661-2446 or contact this paper today! Spectrum Triple Play! TV, Internet & Voice for $99.97/mo. Fastest Internet. 100 MB per second speed. Free Primetime on Demand. Unlimited Voice. NO CONTRACTS. Call 1-855-9777198 or visit http://tripleplaytoday.com/press Stay in your home longer with an American Standard WalkIn Bathtub. Receive up to $1,500 off, including a free toilet, and a lifetime warranty on the tub and installation! Call us at 1-877-772-6392

**STOP STRUGGLING ON THE STAIRS** Give your life a lift with an ACORN STAIRLIFT! Call now for $250 OFF your stairlift purchase and FREE DVD & brochure! 1-855482-6660 VIAGRA & CIALIS! 60 pills for $99. 100 pills for $150 FREE shipping.Money back guaranteed! 1-800-7589761

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BATHROOM RENOVATIONS. EASY, ONE DAY updates! We specialize in safe bathing. Grab bars, no slip flooring & seated showers. Call for a free in-home consultation: 888-6579488. Denied Social Security Disability? Appeal! If you're 50+, filed for SSD and denied, our attorneys can help get you approved! No money out of pocket! 855-4782506 Finally, affordable hearing aids!! High-quality Nano hearing aids are priced 90% less than other brands. Buy one/get one free! 60-day free trial. 866-251-2290

Medical Aides & Services

LUNG CANCER? And Age 60+? You And Your Family May Be Entitled To Significant Cash Award. Call 866951-9073, 877-915-8674 for Information. No Risk. No Money Out Of Pocket.

564

DISH TV $59.99 For 190 Channels $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. Call 1-855-401-9066

Miscellaneous for Sale

DISH TV $59.99 For 190 Channels + $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. 1800-943-0838

Transportation 930

Automobiles for Sale

DODGE STRATUS- 2006, 4 dr sd, well maintained, about 137,000 miles, asking $900. 518-672-4020.

DONATE your car to Wheels For Wishes, benefiting Make-A-Wish. We offer free towing and your donation is 100% tax deductible. Call (914) 468-4999, (585)507-4822 Today! FORD FOCUS 2004- ZTS, 4 cyl, 5 spd, ac, 4 dr, 116k miles, beautiful condition, $1995, call (518)758-6478

955

Trucks for Sale

1968 CHEVY C-10 Pickup restored, runs excellent 6cyl, 3 speed, new wood bed, new tires, asking $18500. Call 518-567-4556

995

Autos/Trucks Wanted

CASH FOR CARS! We buy all cars! Junk, high-end, totaled - it doesn't matter! Get free towing and same day cash! NEWER MODELS too! Call 1-833-258-7036

For Emergency

Dial 911


CMYK

Tuesday, July 23, 2019 B7

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

Thieving ex-boyfriend turns up on facebook I recently located a person I knew a long time ago who stole an expensive gold bracelet from me. I’d dated this guy for a while. He wore my bracelet, and I wore his. My bracelet was a gift from a relative I cared for deeply. His bracelet was a piece of junk, but I was a teenager DEAR ABBY with no brains and allowed him to wear mine. Well, we split up and he just disappeared. I tried getting my bracelet back but couldn’t find him. As I mentioned, I found him on Facebook, married with children, and I felt this anger come over me. Should I contact him and ask what happened to my jewelry? Golden Girl In Mississippi

JEANNE PHILLIPS

No, you should contact him and tell him you would like the item returned or be compensated for it. What “happened” to the bracelet was that he stole it. Because many years have passed since you two dated, the odds that he still has the bracelet are slim. But it’s worth a try. I am 16 and have a hard time making friends. I have more guy friends than girl friends, which causes me problems. I got called a slut again the other day because of it. I’m a virgin and only have a crush on one of the guys I hang out with (my boyfriend). I have tried finding more female friends, but the drama is really hard to put up with. I have tried ignoring the comments, but after a while it gets hard to ignore. I’m not sure what else to do. Please help me out. I would be really grateful. Misunderstood In Oklahoma

I wish I could make the name-calling go away, but I can’t. The perpetrator is most likely jealous because of the relationship you have with your boyfriend and other guy friends. Not everyone makes friends easily. It’s nothing to be ashamed of; it’s just a fact of life. That’s why you should treasure the ones you DO have — because old friends are some of the best friends, and high school and its cliques won’t last forever. Two years ago my family had a run of bad luck, which landed us in a homeless shelter. I got an apartment fairly quickly, and it’s mine and my daughter’s. My mother was supposed to move in rentfree, but she brought her boyfriend, who I didn’t want here. He’s still here and barely contributes to the expenses. I recently lost my job and he promised to help out more financially, but he hasn’t. He continues to mooch. This has caused so much stress between my mother and me. “Hate” is a strong word, but I hate him and want him out. He knows it, but makes no effort to leave. What can I do? Wanting My Own Space You are not helpless, and you shouldn’t be held hostage because of your mother’s feelings for her deadbeat boyfriend. Contact your state bar association to see what your legal rights are. Then tell your mother you want him out, give her a deadline to see that it happens, and suggest that she go with him if she can’t bear to be separated from him. If he doesn’t meet the deadline, put his belongings in a box, place them outside and change your locks.

Patients: Take charge of following up on lab, scan results Recently I was in the hospital. I had a CT scan and was told that I have a “mass” on my kidney (unrelated to my hospital stay). One doctor said they would probably do an aspiration to determine what was in it, and another doctor told me not to worry, that it was just a cyst. This was concerning, as I have no symptoms or problems with my kidneys and I drink tons of water. TO YOUR Should I see a kidney doctor? GOOD HEALTH

DR. KEITH ROACH

Incidental findings — conditions discovered unintentionally in the course of unrelated testing — are increasingly common given the advanced imaging tests routinely used in the hospital. In the kidney, abnormal masses (in this context, “mass” is just a general term for something that doesn’t belong there) are separated into solid masses and cystic ones. A cyst is a fluid-filled structure. A solid mass greater than 1 cm is risky and is usually biopsied. Cystic masses are very common. The CT scan is good at separating low-risk cysts from moderate- and high-risk ones. Low-risk cysts generally cause no symptoms and do not need further evaluation, although some experts will get a sonogram in six to 12 months to be sure it is stable. A sonogram or ultrasound uses soundwave, not radiation, and is very good at looking at cysts in particular. You should find out more about the abnormality on the scan. I suspect it is a simple, low-risk kidney cyst based on what the second doctor told you, but I think it prudent to be sure. Your regular

Family Circus

doctor should be able to find out, but may want to refer you to a kidney specialist. Doctors should be diligent about following up on your results. If you don’t hear from your doctor, don’t assume everything is OK. It is definitely in your best interests to make sure any abnormal findings you hear about get the appropriate follow-up, and you can’t know that until you know your test results. If no follow-up is necessary, your doctor should be able to explain why. In your case, I suspect it was that the cyst was of the lowest risk category.

Classic Peanuts

Garfield

Blondie

Hagar the Horrible

I’m writing to ask if it’s a problem if my poop floats. It has been for a few months. Should I see a doctor about this? This is a question that is asked often, and the answer is that it is probably not a problem. If you made a change in your diet a few months ago, especially increasing your fiber consumption, that is likely the cause. If you have no other symptoms, there is very likely no cause to be concerned. There are serious medical conditions that should be considered. They are in the general category of malabsorption. The most common causes of malabsorption are celiac disease, lactose intolerance and pancreatic insufficiency, though there are dozens more. Symptoms to be concerned with include abdominal discomfort, especially after eating; weight loss; and an oily residue in the toilet bowl. Any of those symptoms should definitely prompt you to see your doctor .

Zits

Horoscope By Stella Wilder Born today, you are a rather modest, selfeffacing and soft-spoken individual — in your private life, behind closed doors and when no one is watching you or demanding something from you. When the spotlight is shining on you, however, you can be quite forceful, aggressive and even ruthless in your pursuit of accomplishment and success. You tend to believe in that brand of “success” as defined by others, and for that reason you can be quite covetous of another’s accomplishments and rewards. “Keeping up with the Joneses” is one of your most driving motivators — though you must realize that to pursue what others have can pull you so very far from yourself that you risk never getting back again. When it comes to your private life, you do all you can to keep yourself out of the public eye; what you do behind closed doors, whether commonplace or unorthodox, is simply nobody else’s business as far as you are concerned. Also born on this date are: Daniel Radcliffe, actor; Slash, guitarist; Woody Harrelson, actor; Marlon Wayans, actor; Philip Seymour Hoffman, actor; Stephanie Seymour, model; Alison Krauss, singer; Raymond Chandler, author. To see what is in store for you tomorrow, find your birthday and read the corresponding paragraph. Let your birthday star be your daily guide. WEDNESDAY, JULY 24 LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — You may encounter some opposition when voicing your opinions about what should be done today, tomorrow or the next day. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Your approach to a problem may be picked apart by critics, but the fact

is that you know best how to do what needs to be done. Don’t delay! LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — You’re going to have to deal with internal issues that were, in the past, of no concern to you. Much has changed since the old days. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — You’re too concerned with being comfortable today. You must focus instead on what must be done, no matter how uncomfortable it may be. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — You and a friend or partner can put your heads together today and come up with a permanent solution to a very stubborn problem. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — You can enjoy yourself with someone who is relatively new on the scene. Something may be developing of which you are not entirely aware. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — You receive an offer that stops you in your tracks today. Think about what you’ll have to change in order to accept it; will it be worth it? PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — You can enjoy yourself much more than you thought possible today if you’ll just let go and allow someone else to call the shots. ARIES (March 21-April 19) — You’re grappling with uncertainty at this time. Get a friend to help you with issues that are out in the open. Time is on your side. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — You don’t want to spend time doing the same old things today, and yet you may not know just how best to focus your energies. Experiment! GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — You’re expecting things to change, but until they do, you must stay the course. You’re ready to shift gears at the first sign of something new. CANCER (June 21-July 22) — The more you focus on money matters today, the more you will find yourself in over your head. Still, you cannot avoid the unavoidable, can you? COPYRIGHT 2019 UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE, INC.

Baby Blues

Beetle Bailey

Pearls Before Swine

Dennis the Menace


CMYK

COLUMBIA-GREENE MEDIA

B8 Tuesday, July 23, 2019 Close to Home

SUPER QUIZ

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME By David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Score 1 point for each correct answer on the Freshman Level, 2 points on the Graduate Level and 3 points on the Ph.D. Level.

Get the free JUST JUMBLE app • Follow us on Twitter @PlayJumble

Unscramble these Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

VEEAL ONHRO TECRIM GOMYGS ©2019 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

One official language Level 1

2

3

Name the one official language of the given country. (e.g., Iceland. Answer: Icelandic.) Freshman level 1. Monaco 2. Austria 3. Egypt Graduate level 4. Brazil 5. Panama 6. Senegal PH.D. level 7. Nigeria 8. Cambodia 9. Thailand

4

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

Answer here: Yesterday’s Saturday’s

(Answers (Answerstomorrow) tomorrow) Jumbles: BULKY HEDGE SNIFF DAILY QUEASY HARDER EMBARK PADDLE Dracula’s washed-up wife caught coffeehim grower cheating was aon—her, and Answer: The HAS now she “BEAN” was going to — BLEED HIM DRY

Solution puzzle Solution to to Saturday’s Monday’s puzzle

7/23/19 Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit

Heart of the City

sudoku.org.uk © 2019 2019 The The Mepham Mepham Group. Group. Distributed Distributed by by © Tribune Content Agency. All rights reserved.

SUPER QUIZ ANSWERS 1. French. 2. German. 3. Arabic. 4. Portuguese. 5. Spanish. 6. French. 7. English. 8. Khmer. 9. Thai. 18 points — congratulations, doctor; 15 to 17 points — honors graduate; 10 to 14 points — you’re plenty smart, but no grind; 4 to 9 points — you really should hit the books harder; 1 point to 3 points — enroll in remedial courses immediately; 0 points — who reads the questions to you?

Mutts

Dilbert

Pickles For Better or For Worse

Get Fuzzy

Hi & Lois

Crossword Puzzle Mother Goose & Grimm ACROSS 1 Mountain ridge 5 Venetian blind pieces 10 Opine online 14 Byway 15 Eastern capital 16 Overnight dance party 17 Highest point 18 __ agent; spy 20 To the __; fully 21 Yucky 22 Warning device 23 Lively dance 25 Part of TGIF: abbr. 26 Walks off with 28 Actor James 31 Whiplash sites 32 Take a __ to; like 34 Religious promise 36 Sciences’ partner 37 Circular snack 38 Reminder 39 Prefix for paid or med 40 Nudges along roughly 41 Not as ornate 42 Mixed up 44 Western sight 45 __ deal; unfair treatment 46 Connective tissue 47 Wizardry 50 Fix socks 51 Used to own 54 Trustworthy 57 Pool unit 58 Rubik’s invention 59 Still breathing 60 Shackle 61 __-fry; wok dish 62 Deadly viper 63 Queue cue DOWN 1 Grand __; fourrun homer 2 __ Bear 3 Out of the blue 4 Film critic Reed 5 Removes corn husks

Bound & Gagged

Created by Jacqueline E. Mathews

6 Sri __ 7 Actor Griffith 8 Extremity 9 __ Isaac Newton 10 Actor James 11 Volcanic output 12 Done with 13 Bit of bacteria 19 Tote 21 Plagues 24 Large trees 25 In __; truly 26 Button alternative 27 __ firma; dry land 28 Wildebeests 29 Worldwide 30 Tragic Shakespearean lover 32 Vittles 33 Common connector 35 __-out; exhausted 37 “The Price Is Right” host 38 Horse’s neck hair 40 Run in __; use a treadmill

7/23/19

Saturday’s Puzzle Solved Solved Monday’s Puzzle

Non Sequitur

©2019 Tribune Content Content Agency, Agency, LLC LLC ©2019 Tribune All Rights Reserved. Reserved. All Rights

41 Musical group 43 Chauffeur 44 Hot coal fragment 46 Begin a tennis game 47 Big __; fast-food hamburgers 48 Lie next to

7/22/19 7/23/19

49 Large desert 50 Duster 52 Healthy as __ 53 Fender ding 55 Cry from a flock 56 Aged 57 Martini ingredient

Rubes


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