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  • Blood drives

    The American Red Cross Blood Services is holding these local drives in January:

    — On Saturday, Jan. 5 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Duanesburg Area Community Center in the community room, 221 Victoria Dr., Delanson;

    — On Saturday, Jan. 12 from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Delmar Reformed Church in the fellowship hall, 386 Delaware Ave., Delmar;

    — Saturday, Jan. 12 from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., at the Voorheesville Fire Department in the meeting room and bays, 12 Altamont Rd., Voorheesville;

    — On Tuesday, Jan. 22 from 1. to 6 p.m., at the Guilderland Public Library in the Helderberg Room, 2228 Western Ave., Guilderland;

    — On Saturday, Jan. 26 from 7:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., at Helderberg Ambulance Inc. in the community room and bays, 978 Cole Hill Rd., East Berne.

    During the month of January all donors will receive a coupon for a free pound of Dunkin’ Donuts coffee.

  • Gillson, Whipple to wed

    gillsonwhipple-color-webDavid Whipple and Cortnee Gilson

     

    GUILDERLAND — Cortnee Gillson, the daughter of Shannon and Douglas Gillson of Guilderland, and David Whipple, the son of Henry and Patricia Whipple of Altamont, are engaged to be married.

    The wedding will take place in the summer of 2014.

    The couple lives in Stamford, Conn. Both are graduates of Guilderland High School.

    Ms. Gillson earned a bachelor of science degree in biology from Siena College and is currently working on her doctorate degree in chiropractic at the University of Bridgeport College of Chiropractic in Connecticut.

    Mr. Whipple earned a bachelor of science degree in business administration from the State University of New York College at Brockport and works as an operations manager for Buy Buy Baby.

  • Dutch doing it with defense

    By Jordan J. Michael

    img 9177-webThe Enterprise –– Jordan J. Michael
    Prime focus: As part of her unique free-throw routine, junior Shannon Mackesey holds the basketball out like a shrine just before shooting a foul shot for Guilderland last Thursday during a game at Niskayuna. Mackesey made the shot, and led the Dutch with 12 points in a 45-to-34 victory.
    NISKAYUNA –– In three wins so far this season, the Guilderland girls’ basketball team has held its opponent to a low score. Last Thursday, solid defense turned into some simple offense for the Dutch.

    The first quarter was a little rough around the edges, but, eventually, Guilderland got into a rhythm. Sunshine Edwards made a jumper at the halftime buzzer to give Guilderland the lead, and the Dutch never trailed again.

    In the fourth quarter, junior point guard Shannon Mackesey made a sensational pass to Guilderland teammate Olivia Baumann, an eighth-grader, who calmly put in a lay-up for a 35-to-24 lead. Mackesey drew the Silver Warriors’ defense, and then fired the ball to the wide-open Baumann.

    The Dutch had made a few long, excellent passes prior to Mackesey’s wonderful move. Guilderland’s offense was benefiting from the team effort on the defensive side.

  • Golderman punts, passes, and kicks her way to national level

    By Jordan J. Michael

    img 9199-webThe Enterprise –– Jordan J. Michael
    Prime passer: Rebecca Golderman, a sophomore at Guilderland, will compete in the National Football League’s Punt, Pass, and Kick National Finals on Jan. 12 or 13 after finishing first at Giants Stadium in the division for girls aged 14 and 15. Here, Golderman throws a football in Altamont. She is ranked fourth in the nation.
    GUILDERLAND –– Rebecca Golderman has been competing in the National Football League’s Punt, Pass, and Kick program for years to add some extra fun to her life, but, after qualifying for the National Finals, she might have to do a little more practicing.

    Golderman, 15, of Guilderland, says she just competes for enjoyment. She plays three sports –– soccer, lacrosse, and cross-country skiing. However, she’s gotten really good at punting, passing, and kicking a football. Her older brother, Eric, used to do this, and now her younger sister, Jamie, is following along.

    She is the first Golderman to reach the National Finals of PPK. Her fun just got a little more serious.

  • “The Big House” runs his season record to 14-0

    HILLTOWNS — The Berne-Knox-Westerlo wrestling team completed the early part of its schedule with a very busy week. The week started with the Bulldogs defeating Canajoharie-Fort Plain, 54-36, for its first Western Athletic Conference win of the year in its home debut of the season.

    One day later, the Bulldogs defeated Division I Albany High School, 51-29.

    The week ended with senior Joe “The Big House” Sprung winning the Cuneen Doane Memorial Tournament Championship, running his season record to 14-0.

  • Justice takes the stage

    By Tyler Murphy

    CLARKSVILLE — Town of New Scotland Court will soon hear cases from the stage of the old Clarksville Elementary School auditorium, after local leaders approved a plan to rent space at the building from the Albany County Sheriff’s Office.

    img 5338 copy-webThe Enterprise — Michael Koff
    Once a stage and cafeteria, soon to be a courtroom: The former Clarksville Elementary School is now leased by the Albany County Sheriff’s Office. New Scotland town justices will take to the stage, starting next month, as the town is renting the space to use as a courtroom.
    Court cases will be heard in the auditorium after the New Year, beginning Jan. 2.

    “We’re very pleased that this opportunity became viable,” said New Scotland Supervisor Thomas Dolin, “It’s an excellent solution to some security issues found in an audit by the Unified Court System.”

    “The old Clarksville Elementary building provides a better, larger and more secure facility; we’ve been operating in fairly cramped quarters,” said Town Justice David J. Wukitsch.

    The judge said he and Town Justice Margaret Adkins would hear cases from the bench atop the auditorium stage.

    “I’m looking forward to using the new space, which is also more user-friendly for the public,” noted Wukitsch.

  • Quiet Friday: Rumors of violence unfounded

    By Melissa Hale-Spencer

    GUILDERLAND — Despite rampant rumors about threats of school violence last Friday, the day went “very smoothly,” according to Superintendent Marie Wiles.

    However, the absentee rate at the high school was 28 percent.

    “Some of that could be because it was the day before the winter break and people had travel plans,” said Wiles, also noting illness was widespread.

    The absentee rate at the middle school was 13 percent, and at the five elementary schools ranged from a low of 7 percent at Altamont to a high of 12 percent at Westmere, with Lynnwood, Pine Bush, and Guilderland falling in the more normal range of 10 or 11 percent, said Wiles.

  • GPD’s Night Out garners $1K grant

    By Anne Hayden

    img 1209-webEnterprise file photo — Michael Koff
    Demonstrating arrest: Emergency Response Team officer Raymond Head slaps handcuffs on 12-year-old Caleb Czolowski at Guilderland’s National Night Out in Tawasentha Park. The police department was awarded a $1,000 grant, by the Target Corporation, for excellence at its fourth annual NNO program.
    GUILDERLAND – Chief of Police Carol Lawlor announced. at a town board meeting this month, that the police department was awarded a grant from Target for its annual National Night Out program

    National Night Out is a nationwide program designed to heighten crime and drug-prevention awareness, generate support for local anticrime programs, strengthen neighborhood spirit and police-community partnerships, and send a message to criminals letting them know that neighborhoods are organized and fighting back.

    The first National Night Out took place in 1984, and 23 states participated; by 2011, all 50 states had gotten involved.

  • Westerlo’s new highway super

    By Marcello Iaia

    dsc03868-webThe Enterprise — Marcello Iaia
    Driving Irene away: Westerlo’s new highway superintendent, Keith Wright, drives from surveying Lobdell Mill Road, which needed to be refilled after it was severely washed out during Tropical Storm Irene over a year ago.
    WESTERLO — Amid a recent reshuffling of town officials, Keith Wright, was chosen by an all-Democratic town board on Dec. 4 to fill the vacancy left by retiring Highway Superintendent John Nevins.

    The maintenance of all 54 miles of town roads is the responsibility of Wright’s department and, in a rural Hilltown like Westerlo, he is focused on keeping them drivable during the winter and overseeing repairs of damage sustained last year during Tropical Storm Irene.

  • Kids make the melting pot sing

    By Melissa Hale-Spencer

    pict0013-webThe Enterprise — Melissa Hale-Spencer
    Playing with aplomb, Jesse Cohen-Greenberg, a fifth-grader at Westmere Elementary, plays “Welcome, Welcome, Emigrante” at the start of a celebration of diverse heritage. He is dressed to reflect his own Welsh heritage.
    GUILDERLAND — Westmere Elementary School is as wide as the world.

    Last Friday, fifth-graders — many of them dressed in clothes reflecting their heritage — paraded for their families, waving flags from countries around the globe. A girl in a shimmering emerald dress waved an Irish flag; she walked next to a girl with a Russian flag, a turquoise and tawny babushka wrapped artfully about her head.

    “What a great day to honor our similarities as well as our differences,” a boy of Dutch heritage — wearing oversized clogs made of paper — told the crowd from a microphone in front of the room.

    “Welcome, welcome, emigrante, to the country that I love,” the children sang as Jesse Cohen-Greenberg flawlessly played Buffy Sainte Marie’s song on the piano. “I am proud, I am proud, I am proud of my forefathers and I sing about their patience for they spoke a foreign language and they labored with their hands….”

    Jesse’s hands seemed too small and child-like to play with such assurance and expertise. He wore a black bowler hat, a symbol of his Welsh ancestry. Greeted with thunderous applause at the close of his song, Jesse gave a brief bow, more of a nod, and disappeared into the crowd.

    The students, for the last month, had worked at school and at home to research their history. “We develop a respect and understanding for each other,” the school’s principal Beth Bini, told The Enterprise of the longstanding Westmere tradition. “It also builds the school-home connection.”

  • Rugged history for sale

    By Tyler Murphy

    dsc 1036 copy-web2The Enterpirsie — Tyler Murphy
    A poem of life arches over graves. The arch, made by Charles Bouck White for a neighbor’s family cemetery, has a line written on it from poet Robert Browning. It reads, “Morning’s at seven; The hill-side’s dew-pearl’d; The lark’s on the wing; The snail’s on the thorn; God’s in His heaven — All ‘s right with the world!” The cemetery is located near property where Bouck White built the Helderberg Castle.
    NEW SCOTLAND — A piece of New Scotland history is for sale.

    Perched on the ledge of a limestone escarpment, the strange and beautiful Helderberg Castle and its surrounding ruins are a testament to their infamous creator’s independent will.

    Charles Bouck White, social revolutionary, artist, clergyman and pottery-maker, began hand-building one of the many stone structures at the site in 1933.

    Though a more recently built home and garage sits on the property, most of the stone structures, such as Bouck White’s workshop and former home, are shelled ruins of their former magnificence.

    However, Bouck White’s crowning architectural achievement, an impressive three-story castle with handcrafted glass windows and high walls, though deteriorated, stands nearly whole.

    The four-and-a-half acre property can be bought for $179,000.

  • Away from the rush of war, Berne Marine finds renewed sweetness at home

    By Marcello Iaia

    dsc03640-webThe Enterprise — Marcello Iaia
    A gift from Afghanistan: DonnaJo Krimsky grasps the hand of her mother, Evelyn, as they wait in the Albany International Airport on Dec. 13 for her brother, Marine Theodore Wiederhold, returning from Afghanistan. Behind, her father’s hand holds a banner brought to welcome Wiederhold home, standing with a dozen friends and family members. DonnaJo wears her brother’s dog tags.

     

    BERNE — “I’m better now.”

    Theodore Wiederhold clutched his green garrison cap and answered the family members who asked how he felt.

    As he walked from the plane into the arms of his mother, they wrapped themselves together in a tight embrace.

    Passengers waiting in line nearby on Dec. 13 smiled, looking on, as the returning Marine hugged friends and family with misted eyes, and others held a bright orange banner that read, “We are proud of you. Thank you for your service.”

  • Afghanistan and Back

     

    Happy homecoming: Lance Corporal Theodore Wiederhold, a Marine, has been away from his Berne family, fighting in Afghanistan. He returned on Dec. 13, after more than six months away, to see them in time for the holidays. He embraces his mother, Evelyn Krimsky, as friends and family held a large welcome banner. His 6-year-old sister, DonnaJo Krimsky, waves an American flag as she holds her mother’s hand for his morningtime reception at Albany International Airport.

     

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    Photos by Marcello Iaia

     

     

  • Legacy In Stone

     

    In 1933, Charles Bouck White, a social revolutionary, artist, clergyman and pottery-maker, began building the Helderberg Castle. The castle is but one of a collection of limestone buildings and ruins at the site, including his former home, and a workshop, which are both now mostly ruins. Other structures such as a well, top, and a giant arch of a nearby family cemetery had survived mostly intact. The property is for sale and the owners are looking for a buyer who will respect the site’s history. Bouck White tried to visit the property every summer even after he suffered a stroke and was forced to sell it. Following his death in 1971, his ashes were spread on a cliff near the castle.

     

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    Photos by Tyler Murphy

     

     

  • More guns is not an answer — let out leaders know

    To the Editor:

    As a gun owner and hunter, I wish to express my total agreement with Dan Hughes’s letter in the Dec. 20 issue of The Enterprise. Since Dan’s letter, we have heard from the National Rifle Association, urging armed security in all schools — with no mention of more background checks on gun purchasers nor a ban on assault-type weapons.

    In my opinion, more guns is not an answer.

    While the cost may be greater to properly conduct these investigations, we cannot afford the cost of losing our young and promising lives. Let us also invest in the mental screening and care that is so seriously needed.

    Please join in letting our government leaders know of our desires — only they can pass the needed laws to create a safer environment for this nations’ greatest asset: our children.

    Hal Grant

    Altamont

  • A Wild West attitude in every phase of our lives?

    To the Editor: 

    As I sit here on my deck in Knox on a spectacular Christmas Eve afternoon, my ears are pummeled with the sounds of rapid-fire gunshots off in the hills. It has been virtually non-stop since yesterday morning.

    My suspicion is that these are newly acquired assault rifles purchased in the flurry of pre-Congressional action. Wayne LaPierre of the National Rifle Association has already offered his lobbying organization’s position so we probably will not see any meaningful legislation to halt the sale of these people-killing machines.

    Our Congresspersons are more concerned with re-election and the effect that taking a stand may have on their ability to solicit contributions from the powerful NRA.

    If we need to place armed guards at every school in America, we need to take a very serious look at the direction that our civilization is heading.

    Are we heading for a Wild West attitude in every phase of our lives? Does everyone need to carry a sidearm for protection? Is this really where we are headed? This is not the advance of mankind; this is the decline of the civilization. 

    Jay Baumstein

    Berne

  • Run-ins with the law can be solved only from within oneself

    By Frank L. Palmeri

    Not long ago, we were having dinner at the Highlands restaurant, right at the top of Altamont Hill. This place is special to us — my lovely wife used to play in a band there.

    As we’re sitting at the table, the waitress comes over to take our drink orders.

    My buddy says to her, “Hey, you have a celebrity here — he’s in The Altamont Enterprise.”

    The waitress, not missing a beat, looks at me and says, “Oh yeah? Are you in the ‘Blotters and Dockets?’”

    With that, of course, everyone cracks up at my expense, not for the first time and I’m sure not for the last.

    I read a lot of newspapers when I lived downstate, but I don’t remember reading anything like the individual “Blotters and Dockets” listings we have in The Enterprise and other local newspapers. I guess this is because there was just so much news in the big city, and so many more people in the area, the papers just couldn’t spare the space. So it’s interesting to read what your neighbors are up to.

    I say “neighbors” and I really mean it. When everyone at the restaurant stopped laughing, we got to talking about the “Blotters and Dockets”; the waitress said she sees someone she knows in there every week. I can’t go that far, but I can say that, every now and then, someone in my family will see a familiar name in there.

    Of course no one wants to see their friends or family members in trouble, but it sure is a good way to keep tabs on them.

    When you read the “Blotters and Dockets,” it’s interesting to see what the offenses are. Many are shoplifting related. That’s why I’m glad I’m not in retail.

    I could not handle someone lifting merchandise from me, period. I do not have the temperament to deal with that gracefully at all.

    Sometimes, with the shoplifting, they’ll list the stolen goods and their prices. The ones that stick out are where it’s something personal, like underwear. Yikes. How embarrassing is that?

    I know I haven’t been the best parent — there are many things I’m sure I could have done better — but, as far as I know, my kids always had enough underwear.

    At least I can be proud of that.

    Other offenses are much more serious: harassment, assault, and driving under the influence come to mind. When I read about these, I’m always reminded that life is all about choices.

    At any given moment, you have a choice to do or not do something; it’s as simple as that.

    Some of us are mature or smart enough at an early age, or have a genuine good nature, or are born rich (not that money solves all or even the really important problems) so that making bad choices is not ever a problem.

    Others, for one reason or another, make bad choices. The thing is, making a bad choice now and then (as long as you don’t kill anyone or yourself) can actually be a good thing, a kind of tough love, as long as you learn from it.

    That’s why employers are always looking for workers who have experience; they want someone else to have had to pay you while you made enough mistakes (and survived) so you can now do the job properly.

    For some reason, so-called reality TV remains popular; however, there is very little reality involved, because you have writers, producers, etc. involved.

    If you want reality, go sit in your local town court some night; it doesn’t get any more real than that. Here is where you really get to see what your neighbors are capable of, from speeding to far, far worse.

    The good thing is, invariably, the court employees, from the guards to the judges and everyone in between, really want you to get out of your jam. I’ve seen second, third, and more chances given, and when someone finally “gets it,” it has to be a great relief for everyone around that person. What a fantastic outcome that is.

    Still, like quitting smoking, it has to come from within; there’s only so much anyone can do for you if you, yourself, don’t take charge of your own life.

    Here’s a quick example: I went to college at night. In the morning, I’d go to work; then, after work, I’d go to night school.

    In my travels, I’d always see people just standing around — on a corner, in a doorway, etc. Often the same people would be there all day.

    Now, I had long days for sure — working full-time and going to night school will do that to you — but still I pressed on until I got where I needed to be.

    I’d always think, jeez, why aren’t these people working, or going to school, or reading, or exercising, or doing something productive? To this day, when I drive downtown and see people just standing around, staring off into nowhere with dazed or indifferent looks, I ask myself the same questions.

    Lots of social policy there to debate, I know, but I’ll bet some of these folks wind up in the “Blotters and Dockets” from time to time, unfortunately. It’s a real shame.

    There are programs available and people who want to help but, as always, it has to come from within.

    Having said that, even the best of us have our moments. There is simply no accounting for human behavior and motivation (just ask General David Petraeus).

    I took mostly business and computer courses in college, but one of my electives was psychology, and I totally loved it. In another life, I could have been a psychologist; that’s how fascinated I was by it. There is simply no predicting human behavior.

    Just read the newspapers. Truth is always stranger than fiction.

    I hope I never do make it into the “Blotters and Dockets,” and, with any luck, I won’t. Still, nothing is ever certain in life.

    I always love good quotes, sayings, and proverbs. When I read the Blotters and Dockets, one always comes to mind: There but for the grace of God go I.

  • Roadblocks on the path to the White House

    By Jo E. Prout

    You know how it is. You get busy at work, juggling projects with different deadlines, and trying to keep everything afloat while getting priority tasks finished. That’s how it is at The Enterprise, too. On our small scale, we still succumb to the news cycle larger media outlets live by — showcasing features and special-interest stories when “happening” news doesn’t crowd them out.

    That news cycle is the reason we can’t always offer in-depth coverage for each local event or accomplishment, although we love to write about our readers. We do! Feature writing is one of the perks of the job, and we reporters relish each opportunity to listen to and learn from local residents and to present their stories in thoughtful ways.

    A simple phone call or visit lets us get to know our subjects, hear their stories firsthand, and even tease out small, tangential anecdotes that lend flavor and substance to a feature.

    Sometimes, it doesn’t work out that way, and not because of the news cycle. Sometimes, people don’t want to be interviewed. Some people are private beings and, in features, we respect that request to be left out of the public eye.

    Some people are busy, and never get back to us. And, sometimes, red tape ties up all hope of completing an interview.

    That’s what happened with a local White House intern. We received a press release that provided a cell phone number for a young professional working for a semester at the White House. I found 20 minutes to squeeze into my day and I called him. Voice mail. He was busy or screening the call. I left a message and hoped he’d call back before my 20 minutes were up. He didn’t. On to the next news story, I thought.

    The next day, there was an e-mail from the White House in my in-box. Now, you may be ecstatic about your job, or you may trudge into work each day, but you have to admit that finding an e-mail from the White House is pretty neat-o and breaks up the monotony. I was definitely curious, but here’s where the story could go all slanted and political, so let’s break it down first.

    I am a married, middle-class educated female vegetarian who still uses her maiden name while writing for a newspaper in the northeastern United States. I will let you assume my political leanings, but whichever direction you choose, keep going. Farther. I’m off the charts.

    Being a news reporter suits me because I don’t tolerate prevarication or bureaucracy. Webster’s New World Dictionary defines the former as an evasion of truth, and the latter as inflexible routine, with the following note: “see also, RED TAPE.”

    Red tape!

    My e-mail was from the director of specialty media in the White House’s office of communications. The intern had followed protocol and forwarded my message, which he did receive. I was instructed to forward any questions to the director.

    He would work on getting the intern’s responses, and forward them to me. Seriously? I laughed, saved the e-mail, and went to a meeting.

    I ignored the e-mail for several days, as the deadline for the week had passed and the new week required additional juggling. But, I couldn’t get that bureaucratic note out of my head. Submit my questions, I was told, and they, collectively, would edit and return a careful reply.

    No. That’s not what I do. I have interview skills honed over 20 years. No skills needed? Just send my questions and take whatever I’m given? No. I talk to people. I listen. I formulate new questions based on their ideas.

    I find interesting facets of their personalities, and capture them for others to read in quoted comments. I’m not at a press conference, ready to call out a pre-written question with the hope of a 10-second response. No.

    Still, a local resident in the White House would make a nice feature, and should be documented in our gem of a small-town paper, so I found a few more minutes in my day and composed a reply to the communications office. That’s not what I do, I wrote, but if your intern wants to share his motivations and career goals, and any comments about his family or interests, I’ll give it a shot.

    The gobbledy-gook I received back a week later, past another week’s deadline, was too bland and short to make into a feature. I don’t know if those were the words of the intern, or if they were carefully edited to be worthy of a response from the White House, but my short Irish temper was on the rise.

    The gall of these people to waste my time! The waste of my taxes, to pay for the salaries of the people who instituted the inflexible routine that necessitated this back-and-forth farce!

    I looked up the director’s salary: $78,000 in 2011. While my search showed me how many of the White House staff work for less than $60,000 in an expensive city, it also showed me just how many people are on the White House’s payroll. Could it be too many? Was I climbing back onto the political chart?

    I sent back a further response, asking for specific answers to specific questions, like “where,” “when,” and “how?” You know, basic stuff that doesn’t require any spin. Apparently, the intern worked with “top people” at the “tops of their fields.” Well, now we know. Or rather, we don’t.

    What should have happened? A quick call should have been answered with a quick call, and a few nice words would have been exchanged. The next day, a lovely story and a picture of a young professional would have appeared in our paper in print and online, ready for relatives to clip, and for friends to forward. Next story. Here comes a hurricane, and the school board is divided, again.

    What happened? The internship is already over and I’ve chased this feature for two months. The director, who I found to be professional, civil, and on the ball, is working on a response. Soon, I hope, you’ll get to read all about our local intern, who worked hard to get to the White House, and who is already moving off in new, exciting directions.

    I can’t wait to write it. Feature-writing is one of the perks of my job, remember? It’s going to be great.

  • Remembering that we’re still the Golden Door

    What thou lovest well remains, the rest is dross

    What thou lov’st well shall not be rest from thee

    What thou lov’st well is thy true heritage

    Whose world, or mine or theirs or is it of none?

    First came the seen, then thus the palpable

    Elysium, though it were in the halls of hell.

    What thou lovest well is thy true heritage.

     

    Ezra Pound, The Cantos

     

     

    “Truly a melting pot” said a fifth-grader speaking into a microphone last week as his classmates at Westmere Elementary School, many of them dressed in clothes reflecting their heritage, cheered and waved flags for countries around the globe.

    They had gathered with members of their families to celebrate their diverse backgrounds and to share in a feast of foods from around the world.

    Where did this term “melting pot” come from and what does it mean?

    In the 1750s, a Frenchman by the name of Michel Guillaume Jean de Crevecoeur moved to the Province of New York, becoming a citizen and taking the American name of John Hector St. John. He married an American woman, bought a farm in Orange County, and successfully raised both children and crops. He wrote about his life in Letters from an American Farmer, published in1782, a book that became popular in Europe, helping to define an American identity, rather than just describing a particular colony.

    “What then is the American, this new man?” he asked, answering himself: “He is neither a European nor the descendant of a European; hence that strange mixture of blood, which you will find in no other country….He is an American, who, leaving behind him all his ancient prejudices and manners, receives new ones from the new mode of life he has embraced, the new government he obeys, and the new rank he holds. He becomes an American by being received in the broad lap of our great Alma Mater. Here individuals of all nations are melted into a new race of men, whose labors and posterity will one day cause great changes in the world.”

    A century later, Frederick Jackson Turner, the historian whose ideas formed the Frontier Thesis — that American democracy and character was shaped by the evolving western frontier — also wrote of a “mixed race” fused by “the crucible of the frontier” into Americans.

    “The frontier promoted the formation of a composite nationality for the American people,” Turner wrote in The Significance of the Frontier in American History. “The coast was preponderantly English, but the later tides of continental immigration flowed across to the free lands. This was the case from the early colonial days. The Scotch-Irish and the Palatine Germans, or ‘Pennsylvania Dutch,’ furnished the dominant element in the stock of the colonial frontier. With these peoples were also the freed indentured servants, or redemptioners, who at the expiration of their time of service passed to the frontier….

    “In the crucible of the frontier the immigrants were Americanized, liberated, and fused into a mixed race, English in neither nationality nor characteristics. The process has gone on from the early days to our own.”

    In 1909, the term “melting pot” — where different metals are thrown together and in extreme heat form something new — came into common use as a term to describe immigrants being transformed into Americans when Israel Zangwill’s play of the same name was performed in Washington, D.C.

    The play tells of two star-crossed lovers, Russian immigrants — David, a Jew, and Vera, a Christian, who fall in love in America despite the differences between their families.

    David has come to America after the 1903 Kishinev pogrom that killed the rest of his family; he discovers that Vera’s father is the Tsarist officer responsible for his family’s death.

    David waivers in his belief expressed in the symphony he has composed, “The Crucible,” that America is a place where ethnicity has melted away. “America is God’s Crucible, the great Melting-Pot where all the races of Europe are melting and re-forming,” David says in the play’s first act. But this is not an Old World play that ends in tragedy because the lovers are from warring houses. It is a New World play where a new order is possible.

    After David’s horror in learning who Vera’s father is, and the break-up that follows, the couple reconciles and together, in the final act, they watch the sun set over the Statue of Liberty. “It is the Fires of God round His Crucible,” declares David. “There she lies, the great Melting-Pot — Listen! Can’t you hear the roaring and the bubbling? There gapes her mouth, the harbor where a thousand mammoth feeders come from the ends of the world to pour in their human freight.”

    David believes the melting pot will make the old animosities of immigrant groups disappear as they are fused into one people. “Here shall they all unite to build the Republic of Man and the Kingdom of God,” says David.

    Although, in recent years, the idea of a melting pot has been disparaged by some, who see it as a call to conformity, we believe the kids and teachers at Westmere Elementary got it just right.

    Each fifth-grader, at 10 or 11 years old, researched his or her heritage. For some, it was as immediate as talking to family members. Kajaro Evans, for instance, could talk to his family about Guyana and has even visited the South American country himself.

    wes russian girl-webHawa Sano, resplendent in a full-length gown of electric blue, a dress that belongs to her mother, said both of her parents were born in Guinea in West Africa.

    For other fifth-graders, like Kayle Messier, her family has been in America for so long with so many different pieces of the melting pot playing into her heritage, she had a choice of countries to study — France, Ireland, Austria, England, Holland, and Germany.

    She chose Germany and, as she stated, “I did a lot of research.”

    Each of the fifth-graders, following a month of research, created detailed boards to describe their heritage. The boards had maps, and flags, family pictures and family trees. As visitors circled about the classrooms, they learned about the heritage of their children’s classmates from the kids who had become both experts and ambassadors.

    This celebration accomplished two things essential to the future of our country. It let the children understand and take pride in their heritage, to explore the value and worth of it, and it taught others to understand and respect those diverse backgrounds.

    As Crevecoeur wrote 230 years ago, “Here individuals of all nations are melted into a new race of men, whose labors and posterity will one day cause great changes in the world.”

    We believe that brave new world, with that race of men and women is here — forged of many diverse heritages, not into a single mold, but as something new and vibrant, ever capable of change and new strength as more are added.

    No longer do we have an unfolding frontier to define our American charcter; our borders are well established and we must work to preserve, rather than tame, the scant wildness that remains.

    But, in the spirit of Israel Zangwill’s David and Vera, we must continue to create a world that is greater than the sum of its parts, that allows individual freedoms because it transcends the bonds of hostile histories.

    Our leaders over the centuries have spoken of this shared heritage. Abraham Lincoln, on the eve of the Civil War spoke of the need to free those who were enslaved.

    “What constitutes the bulwark of our own liberty and independence?” he asked in a speech given in Edwardsville, Ill. in 1858. “It is not our frowning battlements, our bristling sea coasts, our army and our navy. These are not our reliance against tyranny. All of those may be turned against us without making us weaker for the struggle. Our reliance is in the love of liberty which God has planted in us. Our defense is in the spirit which prized liberty as the heritage of all men, in all lands, everywhere. Destroy this spirit and you have planted the seeds of despotism at our own doors.”

    A century later, John F. Kennedy spoke of a similar common heritage that defined Americans a half-century before now.

    “Let the word go forth from this time and place, to friend and foe alike,” he said in his inaugural address in 1961, “that the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans, born in this century, tempered by war, disciplined by a hard and bitter peace, proud of our ancient heritage, and unwilling to witness or permit the slow undoing of those human rights to which this nation has always been committed, and to which we are committed today at home and around the world.”

    We trust our newest generation to value the shared heritage of American liberties and keep the torch burning bright.

  • Elaine B. Martin

    obit elaine martin-webKNOX — Elaine Martin was a devoted and compassionate nurse and spent more than 40 years using her education to care for family and friends.

    She died unexpectedly at her home on Saturday, Dec. 22, 2012. She was 65.

    Born in Albany, she was the daughter of the late Charles and Barbara Pollock. She graduated from Berne-Knox-Westerlo High School in 1966 and soon after became a licensed practical nurse (LPN). Most recently, Mrs. Martin worked for Altamont Internal Medicine, and as a home-care nurse. She was president of the Altamont Rescue Squad where she had volunteered for 21 years.

    Robert Trottier, an emergency medical technician with the squad since 1991, said Mrs. Martin was an outgoing, diligent, and “community-oriented” president who was often willing to cover others’ shifts. She organized open houses and banquets, handed out candy to trick-or-treaters, and participated in a show-and-tell with the ambulance for elementary-school children.

    “A lot of people like to do the EMS work, but she was always willing to go above and beyond and help in the running of the organization, whether it was as a president or a board member,” said Mr. Trottier on Wednesday. On the board, he said, she was good at “mediating between disagreements.”

    Mrs. Martin loved the beaches in York Beach, Maine, and gardening flowers in the yard. For the past 40 years, she participated in many bowling leagues and most recently was in leagues with her sons at Town and Country. She was also fond of her dog, Kasey.

    “Above all,” her family wrote in a tribute, “she enjoyed spoiling her grandchildren.”

    ****

    Mrs. Martin is survived by her three sons, George Martin Jr. and his wife, Jennifer, Chad Martin and his wife, Stacey, and Scott Martin and his wife, Mary Carrillo; her nine grandchildren, Zachary, Tyler, Zachary Lonergan, Ryan, Noah, Hailey, Nathan, Lillian, and Alea; her brother, Charles Pollock II and his wife, Vickie; and special friends, Barbara Henderson and Noel Hatley.

    Her husband of 40 years, George Martin Sr., died before her.

    A funeral service will be held on Friday, Dec. 28, at 10 a.m. at the Fredendall Funeral Home in Altamont, followed by an interment in Prospect Hill Cemetery in Guilderland. Family and friends may call today, Dec. 27, from 4 to 8 p.m.

    Memorial contributions may be made to the American Red Cross, 2025 E Street, NW, Washington, DC 20006.

    — Marcello Iaia

  • New Year’s tokens and Christmas cards have gone the way of the Dodo bird

    By John R. Williams

    It is getting close to the end of 2012, and the Old Men of the Mountain met on Dec. 18 at Mrs. K’s Restaurant in Middleburgh for the final breakfast of this year.

    Tuesdays fall on Christmas and New Year’s this year so the OFs have decided to meet on Jan. 8 at the Home Front Café in Altamont. This will be our first breakfast of the New Year, 2013.

    This is the first time this has happened in the existence of the Old Men of the Mountain, and this group of guys has been gathering for many, many years.

    Twenty-thirteen does not have the pleasant ring to it as did twenty twelve. If the Mayans are right, we won’t have to worry about 2013 anyway.

    With the coming of the New Year so close, the OFs were wondering what happened to the give-aways that used to appear at this time each year. The OFs remembered getting calendars (really nice ones), rulers with a company name on them, cigarette lighters, pencils, jackknives, and all types of items bearing the name of a particular company.

    The Fuller Brush man or the Watkins man did this and one OF remembered that even his doctor gave out pens.  The oil company, the local grocery store, and Freihofer’s — they all had something to offer to thank you for your business.

    Some companies still do this giveaway, but it is very rare; however, one business still doing it is the Agway store in Altamont — good for them.

    The OFs said the gifts were appreciated, and most were put to good use. Calendars were hung on the kitchen door; matches were placed on the mantle of the cook stove; the pens and pencils put in a cup on the writing stand, or on top of the Governor Clinton desk. Most of this homey practice has all gone by the wayside.

    “It is strictly business,” one OF said.

    Another OF said he thought businesses could not afford it now because it has probably gotten very expensive, especially for the smaller mom-and-pop businesses.

    E-cards seem cold

    This section of the conversation seemed to be a continuation of the discussion on the end of the year and on sending out Christmas cards.

    The OFs are of the old school and think that getting a card in the mail is much warmer than getting something on the computer. Reading a card on a screen and then clicking it out just seems so cold.

    Sometimes a card means a lot and a personal note from some people on your list warms the heart, so the OFs say they hang on to this card for awhile and may even file it away only to be found after the OF is gone.

    One OF said that they used to send out lots of cards with notes and even letters in them to people far away and not seen, but they have cut way back because, if you send 100 cards today it costs $45.

    Another OF mentioned that, with computers and texting, people are in contact all over the world (sometimes every day) with friends and relatives, and with Skype they can even see them.

    “We are old school,” this OF said, “but cards are still nice; it is good to hear the mailman stop at your mailbox.”

    Another OF said, “Yeah, but to me that only means another bill or catalog for stuff I don’t need.”

    Tragedy in Newtown

    Now the conversation turned to the tragedy of Newtown, Conn. Like most talking heads, there were many differences of opinion among the OFs; however, there was mutual agreement on a couple of things.

    The first was that guns were not the problem. As one OF said, it was no more the gun, than it is the piece of pipe in a pipe bomb thrown into a classroom full of kids, or the bottle and the gasoline in it as a Molotov cocktail tossed into a principal’s office, or the car in a crash that was driven by a drunk and hit a school bus killing a bunch of kids.

    It is not the pipe, nor the gun, it is not the gas nor the car; it goes way beyond the method used — that has nothing to do with it. This is where the difference of opinions cropped up.

    One OF blamed the perpetual violence on TV, in the movies, and in video games.

    Then an OF said, “Well, we had Tom Mix, Buck Rogers, Roy Rogers, the Lone Ranger, and all those guys.”

    “But somehow,” another OF believed, “it was not the same.”

    “Because we grew up with them,” an OF replied.

    Some OFs blamed drugs, and people on drugs who are so stoned out of their minds that they have no idea what they are doing.

    The OFs began to come together when it came to the lack of mental institutions, and parents with mentally disturbed children wanting them mainstreamed. These parents do not want to admit that there was something wrong.

    The OFs were talking firsthand on this one. The state, particularly New York, turning all the “nut cases” out on the streets is the way one OF put it.

    Many OFs blamed the media feeding on events like this and turning them into circuses. Leave those people alone; let them grieve without a camera stuck in their face — they have enough to deal with without being harassed.

    One OF said it is almost like NBC, CBS, ABC, and Fox saying in their press rooms “Oh boy, we have something juicy here; this will keep us busy for a few weeks.”

    The attention does point up one thing an OF said: “If anything, it gets a conversation going, and, in major catastrophes like Katrina, or Irene and Lee, or Sandy, and even this one, people will talk about it and help will come from all over.”

    So this OF feels it is good to hear about it.

    One OF thought it was just numbers, meaning that there are so many more people around now that, just by numbers, there will be more weirdoes on the street and we can’t watch all of them.

    Another OF said he thinks tragedies like this have been going on for a long time but today we live in the time of instant, worldwide communication so these tragedies just seem worse. Looking back at the Johnstown Flood, yellow fever, and the Panama Canal, today we would see these events in real time.

    Now in real time we see the crises — in Haiti from the earthquake, the gunman that shot 78 kids on a church outing on an island with no means of escape in Norway, and the man in China who killed 33 kids with a machete about the same time as Newtown.

    This OF said, “Satan is running wild.”

    Phew, heavy discussion and the scribe had a lot of condensing to do on that last conversation and the OFs that made it to Mrs. K’s Restaurant in Middleburgh were: George Washburn, Robie Osterman, Carl Slater, Miner Stevens, Glenn Patterson, Mark Traver, Jim Heiser, Roger Chapman, Henry Witt, Steve Kelly, Roger Shafer, John Rossmann, Frank Pauli, Dave Williams, Harold Grippen, Harold Guest, Don Wood, Mace Porter, Gary Porter, Henry Whipple, Don Moser, Jack Norray, Lou Schenck, Willard Osterhout, Bill Krause, Jim Rissacher, Mike Willsey, Gerry Chartier, Elwood Van Der Pelt, Warren Willsey, and me.

  • Amedore declares victory — again, Tkaczyk appeals

    By Anne Hayden

     

    senate raceThe Enterprise —Michael Koff
    Amedore declares victory  — again: Six weeks after Election Night, when both Republican George Amedore and Democrat Cecelia Tkaczyk declared themselves winners in the race for the 46th Senate District, Amedore says he is the ultimate victor. His announcement comes after weeks of ballot-counting in the Montgomery County Court, which left him with a lead of 39 votes. Tkaczyk’s campaign manager says she will appeal that decision and send the case to the Appellate Division.

    GUILDERLAND — Six weeks after Election Day, in a tight and hotly-contested race for the State Senate, Republican George Amedore is declaring victory.

    Democrat Cecelia Tkaczyk, however, will be appealing that decision, in hopes that the Appellate Division, the middle-level court in the state’s three-tiered system, will rule in her favor on outstanding objections by the Republican Party.

    Both candidates declared victory on Nov. 8, and, according to the unofficial results from boards of election in the five counties in the 46th Senate District — Albany, Schenectady, Greene, Montgomery, and Ulster — Tkaczyk, who described herself as a mother, farmer, and school board leader, had a lead of 139 votes.

  • BKW wins big over Sharon Springs

    By Jordan J. Michael

    img 9146-webThe Enterprise –– Jordan J. Michael
    Bulldogs can fly? On Tuesday, Berne-Knox-Westerlo blew out Sharon Springs, 87 to 38, during its first home game of the season. Here, junior Justin Lee goes up for a lay-up in the second half. Lee scored 10 points, and the Bulldogs moved to 4-2.
    BERNE –– The Bulldogs’ bark had serious bite on Tuesday. The hoopsters from Berne-Knox-Westerlo dismantled Sharon Springs, 87 to 38.

    The Bulldogs (4-2) are running with a high-octane offense and tenacious defense this season. BKW is very athletic and lightning quick.

    After ending the first quarter with a 19-point lead, the Bulldogs streaked up and down the court for the remainder of the game. BKW had a 62-to-12 lead in the third quarter, never once taking its foot off the accelerator.

    Four players scored 10 or more points for the Bulldogs –– Tanner Laurie, Kyle Gibbs, Garrett Pitcher, and Justin Lee –– and 11 of the 12 players scored. Pitcher scored 17 points and Gibbs nailed four three-pointers.

    Head Coach Andy Wright couldn’t remember the last time BKW put 87 points on a scoreboard.

  • Dutch team wrestles on despite vacancies in classes

    By Jordan J. Michael

    GUILDERLAND –– Despite forfeiting points during Suburban Council dual meets because of five vacant weight classes, the Guilderland wrestling team is using its muscle to push through the season. The Dutch have been low on numbers over the past few years.

    img 9119-webThe Enterprise –– Jordan J. Michael
    Smush: Junior Josh LoGiudice locks fellow Guilderland wrestler, David Wolanski, under his arm during practice on Monday. LoGiudice, who wrestles in the 99-pound weight class, placed third at State Qualifiers last season, and is hoping to make States this year. He’s 13-0 so far this season.
    Guilderland doesn’t have wrestlers competing at the 195-pound, 220-pound, and 285-pound weight classes, as well as “a few others,” said varsity assistant John D’Ambrosio at practice on Monday.

    “The numbers could always be better,” he said, “but the kids we do have are all great kids. They work hard and buy into what we’re coaching. That’s the important part.”

    Don Favro struggled to fill up the team roster when he took over the head coaching position two years ago. This week, Favro tried to wrap his head around the concept. Wrestlers still aren’t coming out.

    “I wish I had the answer,” said Favro of the low numbers. “It’s a hard sport, so maybe guys are finding easier things to do? You go back two years, and it’s the same problem. Sometimes, it’s hard getting kids to commit to wrestling.”

  • Koivula, new hockey coach, has tough task

    By Jordan J. Michael

    GUILDERLAND –– Ed Koivula is faced with challenges as the new head coach for the Guilderland-Mohonasen hockey team. The Dutchmen have only 15 players; they are developing their skills.

    img 5587-webThe Enterprise –– Michael Koff
    New guy in the rink: The Guilderland/Mohonasen hockey team has a new head coach this season, Ed Koivula, who says a word to his team last Saturday right before the start of a home game against BurntHills/Ballston Spa at Union College. The Dutchmen lost, 5 to 1.
    With four lopsided losses in four games this season, learning is coming on a game-by-game basis, or, for that matter, a period-by-period basis.

    “Winning doesn’t define our success,” Koivula said this week. The 44-year-old was a former assistant coach for both Shaker-Colonie and Burnt Hills, instructing hockey since 1997. “Small little goals define our success,” he said. “I’m looking for effort and heart from the kids.”

    Guilderland-Mohonasen lost to Saratoga, 12 to 0, in its first game on Nov. 28. Last Saturday, the team fell to Burnt Hills-Ballston Spa, 5 to 1. The Dutchmen have scored two goals and given up 28, and sit at the bottom of the Section 2 standings.

    Koivula knows that the scores are unbalanced, but he’s trying to key in on the positives. A scoreboard is just a scoreboard, he says.

  • Guilderland Girls’ Basketball Club’s fourth-grade team remains undefeated

    Fourth grade Biddy C

    The fourth grade “Storm” took on Burnt Hills in the first of two weekend games.  

    Getting off to a slow start, the Storm held a 2 to 0 lead for the first several minutes. Caroline Burns, Empress Lee, and Ava Lia kept the Burnt Hills team at bay while dominating the boards and frustrating the post players until the Storm could get the offense going.

  • Birds adjusting to roster changes

    By Jordan J. Michael

    VOORHEESVILLE –– After losing a core of fortified seniors to graduation, the Voorheesville girls’ basketball team is building from the ground up.

    img 9053-webThe Enterprise –– Melissa Hale-Spencer
    The Voorheesville girls’ basketball team moved to 1-2 on the season with a home victory, 43 to 41, over Schalmont last Friday. Here, the Birds’ Anna Feller, left, turns her head towards the referee’s whistle. Feller, a senior, and Voorheesville’s leading scorer, had 10 points against Schalmont.

    The Blackbirds followed up a 2010 state semifinal bid with a playoff run to the Class C finals in 2011. But, with seven new players this season, Voorheesville has to adjust.

     

    img 9046-webThe Enterprise –– Melissa Hale-Spencer
    Tug-of-war: Voorheesville’s Anna Norris, right, fights with a Schalmont player for the basketball last Friday during a game in Voorheesville. The Blackbirds won, 43 to 41, and Norris scored three points. Carla Planz and Katina Wallace each scored eight points for Voorheesville.

    “We have a huge learning curve,” said Head Coach Bob Baron this week. “The adjustments aren’t so easy now.”

  • Empire State Sports Foundation launches appeal

    The Empire State Sports Foundation has launched a public fundraising campaign with an appeal to all supporters, alumni, and athletes across the state to get involved and help bring back the games. In the coming year, the winter games are scheduled to take place in Lake Placid on Feb. 7-10, and the Empire State Summer Games will be re-launched July 24-28 in the Rochester area. 

  • DOH fines nursing home

    By Anne Hayden

    GUILDERLAND — The State Department of Health as found serious violations at the Guilderland Center Nursing Home and ordered the facility to pay federal fines of nearly $76,000 along with state fines of $250 per day.

    The DOH was conducting a regular recertification survey, which occurs every 18 months, according to spokesman Peter Constantakes, when it found several “immediate jeopardy” violations, as well as other, smaller infractions.

  • BKW super says plans will be reviewed

    By Marcello Iaia

    HILLTOWNS —A half-dozen parents questioned the Berne-Knox-Westerlo School Board on Monday about school security; one recommended setting up a patrol of volunteers.

    The school shooting in Newtown, Conn. Friday fueled the discussion about how the district could be more secure.

    “It was a little dinky town that you never heard of and, like I said, I’d never heard of Berne before I moved here,” said one district parent.

  • GCD super says safety has always been our first job

    By Melissa Hale-Spencer

    GUILDERLAND — In the wake of last Friday’s Sandy Hook Elementary shootings, school leaders here met Monday morning with first responders from local fire, police, and emergency services to be sure Guilderland has a good plan in place to deter violence and deal with an emergency.

    “I always say our first job is not teaching and learning; it’s safety,” Superintendent Marie Wiles told The Enterprise on Tuesday. “We think about this all the time.”

  • VCSD super says schools are secure, but there’s no guarantee

    By Tyler Murphy

    VOORHEESVILLE — In light of the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre, on Voorheesville Superintendent Teresa Thayer Snyder sent a letter on Monday to parents saying the school would re-evaluate its already robust security measures.

  • Library board flummoxed on future

    By Tyler Murphy

    dsc 0086-webThe Enterprise — Tyler Murphy
    Project rejection: Voorheesville Public Library Board President Robert Kent, left, and Library Director Gail Sacco, far right, listen to discussions about the library’s defeated building project referendum. In a record-setting turnout on Nov. 13 voters defeated the measure. Kent urged members to keep public sentiment in mind as they consider the library’s next step.
    VOORHEESVILLE — A month after a record number of district voters cast ballots against a library building project, the board of trustees is still collecting information and seeking consensus about what to do next.

    The Dec. 17 meeting was the board’s first since voters defeated a Nov. 13 referendum to build a $7.6 million library. Of the 1,778 votes cast, 1,446 voted against the measure and 332 voted in favor.

    The project would have nearly doubled the library taxes on an assessed $200,000 home in New Scotland, from the current rate of about $252 a year to about $478 a year — $226 higher during the first year of the 20-year bond. The project also would have to raise annual operating costs by $246,750.

  • Quiet zone committee makes some noise

    By Jo E. Prout

    VOORHEESVILLE – A committee hoping for the creation of a quiet zone here last week critiqued the village board’s progress on reducing train-whistle noise, claiming that the board ordered a study for an unlikely solution and refused to pay for or discuss a second.

    In November, the board received village engineer Barton & Loguidice’s report on the proposed cost of installing a four-gate system at each of the two crossings in the center of the village. Last week, the board reviewed the report, which stated that upgrading the crossings would cost $1,015,000, and could cost individuals $66 per year if the money were borrowed and added to tax bills.

    Engineer Richard Straut said that the complexity of the two crossings and their local switching stations added to the costs “significantly,” over Federal Railroad Administration online calculations of $256,000.

  • GCSD to name facilities committee

    By Melissa Hale-Spencer

    GUILDERLAND — The meeting after the school board approved its last change order for a $27 million project, members were enthused about establishing a committee to consider the district’s next bond project.

    Assistant Superintendent for Business Neil Sanders proposed a facilities committee be set up to work with an architect and report to the board on whether a capital project should be undertaken and, if so, to recommend the size and scope of the project.

  • Federal ban on assault weapons needed

    To the Editor:

    I write this with a broken heart.

    Twenty angels and six guardian angels were taken from us on Friday.

    The price for our Second Amendment right is just too high. We can’t let this insanity continue. We allow the insane to buy guns but they’re too crazy to stand trial for their crimes.

  • Do we hear the pleas and the need for food, toys, clothing, and shelter?

    To the Editor:

    With the holiday season upon us, the frenetic rush to finish our Christmas shopping list hit us full force.

    We are running around from one store to the next to get that last gift, the perfect gift. We are fighting traffic, trying to find that parking space close to the store’s entrance.

  • Caregivers’ corner - Keeping the holidays happy and bright

    By Mary Neumann

    I don’t know about you, but for me, the time between Thanksgiving and Christmas feels more like two weeks than four. Even though our kids are grown up and living on their own, I still seem to have more things on my list than can possibly be accomplished.

    This year, things feel a little different though. One of our daughters and her husband bought a house and I’ve been pondering the changes in their lives — and mine. For them, the tradition of busy holidays is just beginning. They’re decorating and baking cookies and having people over. And, when they have kids of their own, the holidays will be even more hectic. Wonderful, but hectic.

    Naturally, I’ve come up with some sage advice for them. Take time to smell those cookies. It’s not about spending on gifts, it’s about spending quality time together.

    As they get busier, the holiday pace will slow for my husband and me. What will that be like?

    Thankfully, our kids live nearby and we see them often. But that doesn’t mean they might not relocate someday. What will it be like if they aren’t close by during the holidays?

    Gifts of time

    Seniors are susceptible to periods of loneliness any time of the year. But the feelings often worsen during the winter holidays. What was once a time of joyful celebration becomes instead a sad and stressful time. The holiday season can be a painful reminder of how their lives have changed.

    If you have a neighbor (of any age) who might be feeling lonely during the holidays, see if there’s something you can take off your list so you have time to drop by and visit. You don’t have to take cookies or a present; your time is the most valuable gift you can give.

    If you would to like to reach out to help a neighbor but you don’t have anyone in mind or you aren’t sure how you can help, call Community Caregivers. The need in our community is growing and we are always looking for volunteers.

    Gifts that keep giving

    We have another need you can help fill. In addition to needing volunteers, we also need financial support.

    Why does an organization that uses volunteers to provide services need money? Because without a staff and an office, we can’t provide services.

    Yes, we do receive grants and funding from various agencies and organizations. But we also depend on gifts from individuals to make ends meet.

    You can give your gift even more meaning by making a donation in honor of, in memory of, or in celebration of a loved one or a Community Caregivers volunteer.

    You can also recognize significant occasions and milestones — your own or someone else’s — by contributing to Community Caregivers. Instead of trying to buy presents for those who seem to have everything, why not mark a special anniversary, birthday, or retirement in a meaningful way by making a donation in their name?

    Donations to Community Caregivers are tax deductible and the tax year is ending soon. You can get more information and/or make a donation at our website: www.communitycaregivers.org.

    We also have a “wish list” on our website, and we accept gifts of stocks or securities. Feel free to contact us at 465-2898 if you have any questions.

    Our very best wishes to all for a wonderful holiday season!

  • Thanks for supporting our brave little girl

    To the Editor:

    My family and I wanted to take this time to thank our wonderful family, friends, neighbors, Berne-Knox-Westerlo staff and teachers, co-workers and the whole BKW community for their support, prayers, prepared dinners, cards, and gifts for our family.

  • Volunteer drivers sought-“All you need is a license and a giving heart”

    To the Editor:

    I was just wondering if there are any people in the area who would be willing to help a fellow neighbor to get to a medical appointment, dialysis appointment, grocery shopping, or to or from adult day care.

  • Victorian Holiday was a rousing success

    To the Editor:

    On behalf of Altamont Community Tradition, I would like to express our sincere gratitude to all those who helped make our 11th Annual Victorian Holiday a rousing success. 

  • As World War II navigator Gordon charted a course for life

    By Tyler Murphy

    ALTAMONT — In 1940, Adolf Hitler’s army conquered France and his air force, the Lufftwaffe, led an all-out siege on the Isle of Great Britain from the sky.

    An ocean away, the Americans watched, as the war escalated and politicians debated the country’s role in the world.

    Still more than a year before the bombing of Pearl Harbor and the nation’s declaration of war, one 19-year-old decided to take action.

    Against his parents’ wishes, John Gordon passed on a chance to attend Yale University that year, where other family members had gone.

    Instead, Gordon ran off with friends to Canada were he joined the Royal Canadian Air Force, the RCAF, England’s ally, so he could help fight against the Axis advanced.

  • School leaders clash-where will water go?


     By Marcello Iaia

    lounsbury-webThe Enterprise — Marcello Iaia
    Parsing words: Berne-Knox-Westerlo School Board member Helen Lounsbury, right, and district bus driver Darleen Shrederis, left, talk during a break at the Dec. 3 board meeting about Shrederis’s accusation that Lounsbury had threatened her job.
    HILLTOWNS — As winter weather looms on the horizon, the Berne-Knox-Westerlo School Board is looking at ways to solve a drainage problem at the district’s bus garage.

    A study to be completed next month will help the school board deal with water accumulated in the district bus garage during winter months. The study will outline options for long-term maintenance of the bus fleet and working conditions for mechanics.

    District Business Official David Hodgkinson said yesterday that the study by Schafer Engineering Associates & Huntley Associates P.C. is not yet completed, but estimated it would be ready in January. It will determine the costs and possible solutions for removing water that drips from melted ice and snow on buses and accumulates in a puddle that bus driver Darleen Shrederis, who is also local unit president of the Civil Service Employees Association, said can be two inches deep and several feet long.

  • A mother’s quest to see her son’s words live on

    pict0040-webThe Enterprise — Melissa Hale-Spencer
    Clear-eyed: Debra Pratt sees her son, Jonathan, in new ways through the poetry he left behind. He died in 2009. One book of his poems was published this month and Debra Pratt plans to publish two more.

    By Melissa Hale-Spencer

    Three years after his death at the age of 23, Jonathan Pratt’s poetry has been born in book form. His mother, Debra Pratt, served as the midwife, delivering the poems into the published world, to see the light of day.

     She plans to publish all three of his books. The cover of the first book, The Collected Poetic Works of Jonathan Pratt, is a photograph of a part of a favorite denim jacket on which Mrs. Pratt had embroidered for her son when he was in high school; that was when he wrote those first poems, now printed on 137 pages.

    The second book will have a cover picture of his flight jacket — he went to school to be a pilot. Jonathan later wore it as a motorcycle jacket on a road trip during which he wrote his poems longhand in small bound volumes.

    The third and final volume will feature a picture of a leather coat Jonathan wore in Hollywood. A musician, he went there to play the keyboard when his friends were recording an album, and wrote poetry about the experience.

  • Obituaries 12-20-12

     


    BERNE — Flowers, jars, rowboats, barns, and British buses — Pauline Bosset painted quiet, still objects, remaining loyal to her eye, her country, and her family.

    Pauline Mary Bosset died peacefully on Saturday Dec. 15, 2012, at the Community Hospice of Albany County. She was 86.

    Mrs. Bosset’s oil paintings have been rotated at the Altamont Key Bank for years, and have won prizes at the Altamont Fair amateur painters’ contests. Her husband, George Bosset, says the precious ones are hanging at his home.

    “She did it primarily for her own enjoyment,” said Mr. Bosset on Tuesday. “As a matter of fact, today, my daughter took one of them home with her, again. I’ve got what I want right here.”

    Born in London, Mrs. Bosset was evacuated to Wales during the Second World War, later staying in the south London suburb of Norbury.

    Mr. Bosset was a young man from New Jersey working in London as a gofer at an American military base for the 8th Airborne. Standing in line for a movie, a woman overheard him speak.

    “This American woman turned around and said, ‘You sound like you’re from New York.’ I said, ‘No, New Jersey,’ and she said, ‘Close enough.’”

    The woman was Mrs. Bosset’s friend who introduced the couple. Within the year, they agreed to marry as they were walking along the River Thames.

    “We hit it off and we hit it off for 67 years,” said Mr. Bosset.

    Mr. Bosset worked during the week for Essex County in New Jersey, driving up to Berne every weekend, where the couple had their home. The builder constructed the outside shell, including the fireplace and foundation, but the Bossets for 15 years filled it in with plaster, flooring, plumbing, and electrical work. Mrs. Bosset carefully refinished and stained the woodwork done by Mr. Bosset.

    “She was wonderful,” said Mr. Bosset, recalling her talent with a brush.

    Mrs. Bosset was a gardener and extended her aesthetic education to include pottery and cake decorating lessons.

    After the Bossets married in England when Mrs. Bosset was around 18, they came to the United States in 1946.

    Ever the British subject, Mrs. Bosset never became an American citizen.

    “I never noticed her accent,” said Mr. Bosset. “I don’t, but anytime she spoke to someone they’d say, ‘You sound like you’re British.’”

    Noting her sense of humor, Mr. Bosset recalled her common response to the question of whether, after so many years, she would become an American citizen: “You know, I don’t know whether I’m going to like it over here or not.”

    The cats Mrs. Bosset loved and cared for are too many for Mr. Bosset to count, he said, and they are never around at the same time. Her paintings have similarly been distributed and have taken new homes with friends and family.

    “I don’t ever remember having an argument with her,” said Mr. Bosset. “There was no point in it.”

    ****

    Pauline Mary Bosset is survived by her husband, George, to whom she was married for 67 years, as well as by her three children, Robert Bosset of Schenectady, Frances Brown of Berne, and Jacqueline Moore of Berne; three grandchildren; and one great-granddaughter.

    Arrangements are by the Meyers Funeral Home at 741 Delaware Ave. in Delmar. She requested there be no service. Memorial contributions may be made to the Community Hospice of Albany County, 445 New Karner Rd., Albany, N.Y. 12205, or to the Alzheimer’s Association, Northeastern New York Chapter, 85 Watervliet Ave., Albany, N.Y. 12206.

    – Marcello Iaia


    obituary james reed-webGUILDERLAND — James F. Reed, a Vietnam War veteran who married his high school sweetheart and enjoyed coaching Little League sports and helping the elderly, died unexpectedly on Sunday Dec. 16, 2012. He was 68.

    Known to friends as Jimmy, he referred to his mother, Hazel M. Reed, as “a local nursing home legend.” She owned the Guilderland Center Nursing Home, where Jimmy Reed became an administrator.

    Mr. Reed was a lifelong Guilderland resident and a 1962 Guilderland High School graduate. He served in the United States Air Force as a radar controller during the Vietnam era, after which he attended Bethel College and Junior College of Albany.

    Mr. Reed married his high school sweetheart, Donna (Kiernan) Reed in 1969. The two met in high school when he was 17 years old.

    “He was my best friend, my everything, forty-three years was not enough time,” said his wife.

    “When I first saw him, he was playing basketball on the court,” recalled Mrs. Reed, reflecting on her days as a student at Guilderland High School.

    In his own words, before his death, Mr. Reed wrote, “Donna, who had given me so much more than I deserve. Truer words were never spoken.”

    Mr. Reed was a long-term president and administrator of the Guilderland Center Nursing Home from about 1970 to 1990. He believed the facility’s outstanding reputation was the result of the loyal and dedicated staff working there.

    He was the former long-term President of the New York State Health Facilities District 5 and the New York State Health Facilities board member.  

    “He was brought up in that business, his mother started a nursing home with just 12 beds,” said Donna Reed. “As a little boy coming home from school, about eight or nine, he helped serve dinner to residents.”

    Mr. Reed was a former President of the Guilderland Chamber of Commerce in its early, formative years. He was an avid coach of the champion Pine Bush Little League and of the Pine Bush Softball League. He was active with the Capital District Soccer Club and the Soccer Select Team, which traveled internationally. He was the co-founder of the Guilderland Lettermen Golf Classic, which is dedicated to Guilderland athletes’ collegiate scholarships.

    “He loved working with kids and helping the elderly. He always volunteered and was involved in all kinds of sports, “ said Mrs. Donna Reed.

    Mr. Reed had an unquenchable thirst for knowledge and spent a great deal of time at the library, where he researched various topics depending on which book he was reading, he wife said.

    Mr. Reed was devoted to his family dogs that were always waiting at the door for him to return home.

    He will always be remembered for his compassion for the elderly and kids. “Everyone who knew him knew that,” said his wife. “He was so proud of the nursing home staff he worked with.”

    ****

    Mr. Reed is survived by his wife, Donna; his daughter, Jill Sheehan and her husband, James; his son, James F. Reed II and his wife, Jamie; and four grandchildren, Morgan K. Reed of New City and Quinn, Riley and Kieran Sheehan of Hingham, Mass.

    Family and friends are invited to a graveside memorial service at 10:30 a.m., Today, Dec. 20, at the Saratoga National Cemetery. Mr. Reed will be buried with full military honors.

    Memorial donations may be sent to St. Jude’s Church, Post Office Box 1000, Dept. 142, Memphis, TN 38148, Contribution # 32289509, or to Guilderland Lettermen Foundation, 215 Vincenva Lane, Schenectady, NY 12303.

    — Tyler Murphy


     ALTAMONT — Denise M. Shutter, a loving wife, mother, and grandmother, died on Wednesday, Dec. 12, 2012. She was 56.

    Mrs. Shutter was an Auxiliary member of the American Legion Post 1493 of Voorheesvile for over 25 years.

    “Denise spent the last few years at home, where she enjoyed being with her family, traveling, cooking, and making sure everyone was well taken care of,” wrote her family in a tribute. They also wrote she was “an amazing grandmother.”

    She is survived by her husband, William J. Shutter II; her children, Darshane, Jayden, and William III; her grandchildren, Payton and Amelia; her parents, Donald G. Duncan Sr. and Mae E. Duncan; her brothers, Darrell, Don Jr., Darrin; and her sisters, Debbie, Dodie, and Dee.

    A funeral service was held at the Fredendall Funeral Home in Altamont on Dec. 17. Interment was at the Prospect Hill Cemetery in Guilderland.


    GUILDERLAND — Outgoing and caring, Patricia Ann Tymchyn was as energetic line dancing as she was baking or making crafts.

    She “went to her eternal rest, surrounded by her loving and devoted family” on Wednesday, Dec. 12, 2012, her family wrote in a tribute.

    She was born on Jan. 28, 1941 in Albany, the daughter of the late Alton and Blanche Fisher La Roche, and late stepmother, Evangeline La Roche.

    In 1958, she graduated from Vincentian Institute in Albany. Her working career included employment with Travelers Insurance, Friendly Hometoy Parties, and Georgia Pacific, where she met the love of her life, Walter J. Tymchyn.

    “It was love at first sight for me,” said Mr. Tymchyn. He was working for Georgia Pacific as a trucker when he met the secretary who would change his life.

    “She was a terrific wife and mother, none better,” he said. “She was very outgoing, caring, giving to a lot of people.”

    One of the couple’s favorite activities was teaching line dancing in and around Albany. Through their “Get in Line and Dance” company, they met and made many friends.

    “She was a terrific dancer when I stayed off her toes,” said her husband with a chuckle.

    He said she also liked to do crossword puzzles.

    Mrs. Tymchyn was devoted to animals, particularly her beagle, Lucy. “We’ve had her since she was eight weeks old; she’ll be six in February,” said Mr. Tymchyn. The love between his wife and Lucy “went two ways,” he said. “The dog was very protective of her.”

    Mrs. Tymchyn’s daughter, Stacie Ann Farina, said, “She was the epitome of a perfect mom…You never went without hugs and kisses.”

    She was very energetic and enthusiastic, her daughter said. “When we had school field trips, she was always the first one to go,” she said.

    Mrs. Farina went on, “She taught me how to bake when I was so small I was tripping over the apron on the floor. And she got me into arts and crafts.”

    When Mrs. Farina was a girl, her mother was the “craft lady” for her Girl Scout troop. “I could never surprise her with a craft like the other girls,” she said.

    The mother-daughter duo went to many craft fairs over the years. “She sewed. She made doll clothes. She made clothes for my dolls, for me, and for herself,” said Mrs. Farina.

    Mrs. Tymchyn made the holidays fun. Around Halloween, for example, she brought out cookie cutters in the shape of pumpkins, ghosts, and witches. She’d make white sugar cookies with an egg-yolk glaze. She’d put dye into the glaze in different colors. “We’d use our paintbrushes to dip in and decorate the cookies,” said her daughter.

    Mrs. Tymchyn relished many experiences. She loved taking a pontoon boat ride in Saratoga, her daughter said, and was equally thrilled with front-row tickets to see The Will Rogers Follies, a surprise gift from the Farinas.

    Mrs. Farina went on to fondly recall one adventure she had with her mother. “We both read a book set in the 1890s about Maggie, an Irish house servant in Glens Falls who was murdered,” she said. “One Mother’s Day, she said, ‘Let’s find Maggie.’ We went to all the cemeteries in the area on a hunt for her grave….We found Maggie.”

    Mrs. Tymchyn, who was known for her beautiful floral arrangements, left a bouquet on Maggie’s grave.

    “She always had a lot of empathy and compassion for everybody else,” said Mrs. Farina. “At the hospital, her last evening, she was apologizing to the staff for putting them out…She said there must be people who were sicker who needed tending to.”

    Mrs. Farina concluded of her mother, “She was always hands-on and arms-around.”

    ****

    She is survived by her husband and best friend of 42 years, Walter Tymchyn; her sister and brother-in-law, Ida and Robert Trollinger of San Antonio, Texas; her sisters-in-law, Gloria Rice and Elizabeth Staroba; her sons, John M. Tymchyn of Connecticut  and Scott A. Tymchyn of Guilderland; her daughter and son-in-law, Stacie Ann and Nick Farina of Stephentown; and many nieces, nephews, great-nieces, and great-nephews.

    Her brother, George Kenneth La Roche, died before her.

    Her family gives heartfelt thanks to the staff at Albany Memorial Hospital and Albany Dialysis Center for their care, kindness, and love.

    At the request of Mrs. Tymchyn and her family, there will be no calling hours. A memorial service will be held to celebrate her life. Friends and family are invited to the Church at the Crossroads, State Route 43 in Stephentown, for 5 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 22. Arrangements are by Newcomer Cannon Funeral Home in Colonie. Mourners may leave online messages for the family at www.NewcomerAlbany.com.

    Mrs. Tymchyn requested donations be made to Steve Caporizzo’s Pet Connection, 341 Northern Boulevard, Albany, NY 12204 or to local chapters of the American Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

    — Melissa Hale-Spencer


    obit kathleen e kaiser-webKathleen E. Kaiser, a social worker, died unexpectedly at home while attending to her pets — Rusty, Liam, and Sophie — on Monday, Dec. 17, 2012. She was 60.

    “She was hand-feeding Rusty last night,” said her partner, Andrew Tinning, referring to one of their three dogs. “Rusty hadn’t been feeling well. She just fell over and never came up.”

    Mr. Tinning went on to describe his partner as “an incredibly alive person, and very loving.”

    Born on Sept. 12, 1952 in Schenectady, Ms. Kaiser was the daughter of the late Melvin and Esther Fry. Her father worked for the post office, and her mother died when she was 7, said her sister, Charlotte Giardino.

    Ms. Giardino described her sister as “a wonderful cook and homemaker.”

    She went on, “She loved recipes.” One of her specialties was spinach brownies; another was homemade stuffing.

    “She used spices she grew herself,” said her sister. “Her and Andy gardened together and grew their own vegetables.”

    Ms. Giardino went on, “She was versatile in home decorating. Every time I visited, her house would be set up differently….She had an appreciation of antiques. She would find little trinkets at a garage sale and know the value of them.”

    Ms. Kaiser was employed at Ellis Hospital for 12 years as a social worker and, before that, had worked with victims of domestic violence.

    She worked with psychiatric patients, said her supervisor at Ellis, Claire Wieman. “She gravitated towards really supporting the vulnerable.” Throughout her career, Ms. Weiman said, “She was an advocate for those who were abused or neglected.”

    Ms. Weiman went on, “It’s a very taxing, tiring job and she did it even when she wasn’t feeling good. She never complained.”

    “It was very demanding work,” agreed Mr. Tinning.

    Ms. kaiser enjoyed getting away on cruises. The couple took a cruise in the Thousand Islands, and also cruised Glimmerglass Lake on one of their frequent trips to Cooperstown as well as taking overnight cruises out of New York City. They also enjoyed a trip to Niagara Falls, Mr. Tinning said.

    “She loved to travel, cook for her family, spend time with her children and pets, and participate in local activities in the Altamont area,” her family wrote in a tribute.

    Ms. Kaiser was artistic since she was a child, her sister said. She enjoyed traveling to art museums, Mr. Tinning said, naming several they had visited.

    “She was very knowledgeable,” her sister said. “She read quite a bit….She liked to read self-improvement books to increase her knowledge.”

    Ms. Giardino concluded, “She was a very loving sister and aunt. We had many good times together….She was very generous, very giving.”

    ****

    She is survived by her children, William and Nora Cummings; her partner, Andrew Tinning; her sister, Charlotte Giardino and her husband, Rich; her brothers Bill Fry, Jim Fry and his wife, Peggy, and John Fry and his wife, Denise.

    Her brother Ray Fry died before her.

    Family and friends are invited to calling hours on Friday, Dec. 21, from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Fredendall Funeral Home at 199 Main Street in Altamont with a funeral service to follow at 8 p.m.

    Memorial donations may be made to the American Heart Association or a local chapter of choice of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

    The family extends a special thanks to the Altamont Rescue Squad and the staff at the Ellis Hospital Emergency Room.

    —Melissa Hale-Spencer


    obituary e. lawyer -webVOORHEESVILLE — Cooking for a crowd was something that Elinore R. Lawyer grew into. She first raised seven children and then worked in three cafeterias around the area.

    Mrs. Lawyer died on Monday, Dec. 16, 2012, at the hospice at St. Peter’s Hospital. She was 88.

    “She didn’t have an easy life, but she was a hard worker,” said her daughter, Phyllis Mazone.

    Janet Shultes, another of her children, echoed the sentiment, saying of the family, “We didn’t have a lot, but we had each other. We had good parents.”

    Mrs. Lawyer was born in Cleveland, Ohio and moved with her parents, the late Phillip and Effie Georgia, to the Schoharie Valley as a girl.

    It was at a church dance there that she met her husband, the late Clinton Lawyer. The pair married in 1941 and Mr. Lawyer soon shipped out to fight in World War II. He didn’t see his first child until she was 2 years old, when he returned from overseas.

    Mr. Lawyer got a job at the Duffy Mott cider mill in Voorheesville, where the family settled.

    Mrs. Lawyer first got a job in the cafeteria of the Army Depot, said Mrs. Shultes, and then went on to work at the Empire State Plaza and the Voorheesville school district.

    She had always prepared all of the quarry from her husband’s hunting and fishing trips, said Mrs. Mazone, and she would treat her family to slaughter popeye, a thick chicken dumpling stew, Mrs. Shultes said.

    She also delighted her children and grandchildren with fudge and cream candies.

    Mrs. Lawyer liked being around the kids in the school cafeteria, Mrs. Shultes said, and she made good friends in the kitchen.

    “She was a quiet person,” said Mrs. Shultes, but the family’s house was always full of people. Mrs. Lawyers was an understanding person, someone who cared about people and put herself on the line to help them.

    Mrs. Lawyer and her husband always remained fond of the Schoharie Valley and would frequently go there on day trips, their daughters said. “They always had the love of the land,” said Mrs. Mazone.

    ****

    Mrs. Lawyer is survived by her children: Phyllis Mazone and her husband, Joseph; Clinton J. Lawyer Jr.; Janet Shultes and her husband, Robert; Pauline Lawyer and her partner, Spencer Flansburg; and Esther Klopfer and her husband, George.

    Her husband, Clinton Lawyer, died in 2006. Her children, William and Frances Lawyer, also died before her.

    A memorial service was held at noon on Dec. 19 at the New Comer Cannon Funeral Home in Colonie, with interment in the Prospect Hill Cemetery in Guilderland. A message for the family may be left at www.NewComerAlbany.com.

    Memorial contributions may be made to the Community Hospice of Albany, 445 New Karner Rd., Albany, NY 12205.

    —Saranac Hale Spencer


    obit herbert schiable-webALTAMONT — A religious man and a World War II veteran, Herbert G. Schaible worked in the lumber industry and was devoted to his family.

    He died on Monday, Dec. 17, 2012, after a long battle with Parkinson’s disease. He was 85.

    He was born in the old Severson house on Brandle Road in Altamont on June 29, 1927 to Blanche and Fred Schaible. “When Herb was born, his father, Fred, and Dr. Cullen were fishing at Warners Lake, so Herb was delivered by a midwife, Annie Reed,” his family wrote in a tribute.

    He graduated from Altamont High School in 1945. Mr. Schaible then enlisted in the Army in September 1945; he attended the Armored Services School, at Fort Knox in Kentucky. He achieved the rank of technician 4th grade and spent his last year of service in Italy.

    After coming home from the war, Mr. Schaible attended Albany Business College. After, he was hired as a bookkeeper for the Ward G. Ackerman Lumber Company. He spent his professional career in the lumber industry. After working at Ward G. Ackerman, he was employed by Paulson Lumber and Millwork Specialties. He retired at the age of 65.

    Mr. Schaible married Barbara (Bobbie) Joan Mattice from Warners Lake on July 14, 1951. They had three children.

    Mr. Schaible and his family enjoyed many years of camping and traveling with Kelly and Jackie Warner and their family of Altamont.

    For 75 years, Mr. Schaible was a devout member of the Altamont Reformed Church. He sang in the choir for over 51 years and served as the Sunday School superintendent and teacher, and was also the youngest person elected to the consistory.

    Mr. Schaible was also a member of the American Legion Boyd Hilton Post for over 50 years. He served in many roles at the post, including commander. “He will be most remembered at the post for his 40 years of conducting and calling bingo every Tuesday night,” his family wrote.

    Mr. Schaible served both the church and legion, by working for many years at the Altamont Fair, for the Church Restaurant and American Legion Food Booth.

    After retiring, Mr. Schaible became a member of the Altamont Senior Citizens, and drove the Senior Van for a number of years.

    During his free time, he loved to play cards, especially poker, pinochle, and rummy. He also enjoyed fishing, playing golf, pitching horseshoes, and reading Westerns, especially those written by Louis Lamour.

    ****

    Mr. Schaible is survived by his wife of 61 years, Barbara (Bobbie) Joan Mattice Schaible; his three children and their spouses, Ruth Pollard and her husband, James, of Altamont, Barbara Lynn Bradt and her husband, Douglas, of Scotia, and Mark Schaible and his wife, Kathy, of Esperance; and his four grandchildren, Amy Pollard, Brian Pollard, Amanda Schaible, and Abby Schaible.

    His brother Harold Schaible, who had lived in Nebraska, died before him as did his brother, Robert (Bob) Schaible, who had lived in Berne, and his sister, Marion Schaible, who had lived in Altamont. He is survived by his brother Howard (Howie) Schaible of Washington.

    Mr. Schaible’s family thanks the entire staff at Baptist Health Nursing Rehabilitation Center “for the loving care and compassion they gave to Herb over the last two-and-a-half years.”

    Relatives and friends are invited to attend a celebration of his life on Saturday, Dec. 22, at 1 p.m. at the Altamont Reformed Church at 129 Lincoln Avenue in Altamont. Burial will be held in the spring. Arrangements are by the Fredendall Funeral Home of Altamont.

    Memorial contributions may be made to the Altamont Reformed Church Choir Fund at Post Office Box 671, Altamont, NY 12009.

  • Why not shop for the person rather than wait for the occasion?

    By John R. Williams

    It was the 11th day of December 2012 when the Old Men of the Mountain met at the Chuck Wagon Diner in Princetown. The OGs missed 12/12/12 by one day by being there one day early. Too bad — that would have been a date to put a nick in the post for.

    Anyone know what time of year it is? You got it, it is shopping season, so the OF’s discussed shopping and how most of them hate it.

    The main reason is because they have to shop — it seems to be a requirement. Why not buy something for somebody because you want to?  Who cares what date it is?

    If an OF spots something that his wife would like, or his grandkids, or his own kids, and it is miles from their birthdays, and it is the middle of June, why not get it then so they can have it and use it — why wait?

    For example, it makes no sense to some of the OFs to see something that the wife could use, or perhaps she wants to buy it then. We will eventually buy it, but now we have to stash it someplace where she won’t find it. Then we will give it to her on her birthday, or Christmas, or Valentine’s Day. Why not give it to her when it is purchased so she can enjoy it?

    One OF wanted to know when the special-day rule was written and, if you don’t follow this rule or if you break it, are the gift-giving police going to come and slap the cuffs on you. This was approaching bah-humbug – for the special days — not the impulse to please someone with a special gift no matter when.

    Being prepared

    The shopping talk led to shopping, period, for groceries and the basic everyday-living items.

    One OF said that, where he worked, there were people who shopped every day because, if they didn’t, all they would have to eat was bread and peanut butter — if that.

    On the Hill, the OFs learn to shop for weeks at a time and how to prepare for events like power outages, being snowed in for days at a time, and bad storms that disrupt travel — summer or winter.

    One OF mentioned that they have Asian friends who many years ago showed them how to shop for supplies to last for a year in case of a real calamity.  This OF gained knowledge of what to purchase and how to rotate it out; what will last for long periods of time, and require no refrigeration.

    They become skilled at how to rotate the stored water and also how to allow yourself two gallons of water per person per day. They learned how to use rain barrels to augment this water as it is depleted and there is no power to run pumps to replace it; to have an area with a wood stove, and enough wood to go the winter just in case.

    They were also shown how they could cook a carp on a wood plank; that fish was good, the OF said. 

    Safety first

    Talking about all this led to talking about general safety and having a gun and ammunition for hunting in case things became really bad.

    Being safe with a gun came up because the OFs have had two people they know shot so far this hunting season, and another person (whom the OFs didn’t know) was shot up north — all in hunting accidents. One of the people that the OFs did know shot himself in the butt with his own gun. Golly, that must have been a fun place to put on a Band-Aid.

    Then safety generally became the topic of discussion, and it lasted quite awhile. How many farmers and industrial workers the OFs knew that were hurt on the job, and some who even died from these accidents.

    The OFs found that, in all the cases they talked about, there was human error or carelessness that caused these accidents — none were the failure of a piece of equipment. There were instances of guards being removed and not replaced, people not thinking when working with a table saw or chain saw, and then trying to do things the quick way and not taking the time to jig it properly.

    One OF said we all have done these types of things, and we still continue to do it.

    The OFs started talking about accidents that we have seen and we thought (as we have said before) all the OFs at the breakfast are lucky to be there because we all have had some pretty close calls, and many have had accidents and gotten hurt. Most agreed it was our own dumb fault, but these incidents happen so fast most of the OFs never saw it coming.

    One OG said the government is trying to, either by law, or by insisting, have manufacturers install completely unnecessary guards and place so many labels on whatever you buy that accidents will be eliminated.

    The OFs say, duh — no matter what you do, you can’t legislate stupid.

    One OF said the manufacturer could place so many warning labels on a ladder that the labels are longer than the ladder, and then they give the ladder to a worker who can’t read — another duh.

    Another OF said he didn’t want to be spitting into the wind on this one, but look at us OFs going out to buy a new car and the one we like is a thousand horsepower. The dealer is more than anxious to sell it to us because we have the money.

    That is like starting a chainsaw and giving it to a 6-year-old and telling him to go out and cut some brush. With our reaction time cut in half, what the h--- is any OF going to do with a car that has a thousand horsepower? 

    The first thing the OF will probably do is drive it through the showroom window while pulling back on the steering wheel hollering, WHOA!

    Those OFs showing up at the Chuck Wagon Diner in Princetown in their 100-horsepower vehicles were: Robie Osterman, Bill Krause, Miner Stevens, Roger Chapman, Henry Witt, Roger Shafer, Steve Kelly, Harold Guest, Frank Pauli, Mark Traver, Glenn Patterson, Gary Porter, Jack Norray, Otis Lawyer, Willard Osterhout, Ted Willsey, Jim Rissacher, Henry Whipple, Mike Willsey, Gerry Chartier, Harold Grippen, Warren Willsey, and me.

  • In the face of tragedy we feel powerless — we’re not

    One of the great things about Altamont is it has a village square — a center, a place where citizens can meet. Sometimes they come together for summer concerts put on by the library, moved by music; kids dance, grown-ups tap their feet. Sometimes they gather to hear speeches after the Memorial Day parade, as patriotism is lauded and taps are solemnly played.

    Last Friday evening, as darkness fell, the streetlamps came on, the colorful lights from the Christmas tree glowed, and a solitary figure stood stock still on the edge of the square, holding a handmade cardboard sign.

    His name is John Walkuski; a one-time Altamont resident, he lives now in Knox. He struck a mournful pose — head down — as he held the sign across his chest, arms outstretched. He had written in black marker, in capital letters: “Ban all assault weapons.” And then, in smaller letters, at the bottom: “God forgive us.”

    All day long, reports had been unfolding of the news about the massacre of schoolchildren at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. The count kept rising — to 20 children and six school adults — as the day went on and the details were discovered. Police said that 20-year-old Adam Lanza, after killing his mother in the house they shared, drove to the school and went on a killing rampage, before shooting himself; he used a Sig Sauer and a Glock, and police also found a Bushmaster .223 M4 carbine at the scene.

    “I was stunned,” said John Walkuski. “I had to do something.”

    As he stood on the edge of the village square, facing Main Street, passing motorists honked approval and waved.

    Walkuski, who is 77, has been an active protester for most of his life. He worked as a city firefighter for 26 years before being injured; that re-set his course to become a nurse. He liked working in emergency rooms. “You know you’re really doing something,” he said. “You have to deal with whatever comes up.”

    Walkuski was in ’60s war protests and in later protests against corporate wrongdoing.

    “The kids were totally embarrassed with Dad marching up and down in front of some corporate building in Manhattan,” he recalled.

    But now his children, in their 50s, and his grandchildren, too, have done their share of protesting, some of it global, on issues ranging from civil rights to environmental preservation.

    His daughter walked with Native American friends from San Jose to Washington, D. C. and asked him to join them. He remembers tramping through the “flat, flat cornfields of Iowa.”

    They arrived in D.C. on Columbus Day with this message: “You didn’t discover us. We were here all the time,” he said.

    As Walkuski stood on the village square in Altamont on Friday evening, Jerry Oliver, a minister, walked by. He clapped Walkuski warmly on the back.

    “Amen to that!” said Oliver, gesturing to Walkuski’s sign.

    “Thank you, brother,” responded Walkuski.

    Edna Litten stepped up to Walkuski to shake his hand.

    “I’ve stood with peace signs for I don’t know how many years,” she said.

    Indeed, we remembered her standing in that very village square in March of 2003 as the networks were airing President George W. Bush’s comments on impending war with Iraq. About 130 people gathered in Altamont’s square that night to be part of a worldwide candlelight vigil for peace. The boy standing next to Litten that cold, dark night professed he was scared. She comforted him by leaning over and saying, “I’m scared, too.”

    He smiled a little around the corners of his mouth.

    Litten called The Enterprise this week to say that, when she shook Walkuski’s hand last week, she hadn’t known about the Sandy Hook killings. “I just knew we needed to ban assault weapons,” she said. “The only thing they are good for is to shoot large numbers of people. If they had been banned before, there wouldn’t have been a shooting in Connecticut.”

    She added, “Statistics show that having a gun in your house increases your chances of being shot; it doesn’t make your house safer.”

    Litten concluded by saying, when she saw the pictures of the children who had been shot, she cried.

    President Barack Obama made a televised speech on Friday as Walkuski stood alone in the village square. The president gave voice to the nation’s grief as he spoke of the beautiful children who had died. “They had their entire lives ahead of them — birthdays, graduations, weddings, kids of their own,” he said.

    Other politicians issued statements, too.

    “President Obama rightly sent his heartfelt condolences to the families in Newton,” New York City’s mayor, Michael Bloomberg, said in his statement. “But the country needs him to send a bill to Congress to fix this problem.”

    Under President Bill Clinton, a flawed ban on assault weapons was enacted that has expired. How many massacres will it take before high-capacity bullet clips and assault weapons are banned?

    They aren’t needed for hunting. They aren’t needed for self-protection.

    President Obama said on Friday that, to prevent more tragedies, the nation, regardless of politics, has to take meaningful action. He’s right, but the massacres to date haven’t produced any movement.

    What can individuals do in the face of powerful lobbies?

    Asked why he was standing in the village square on Friday, Walkuski answered, “Most people will say, ‘Yeah, they should do that’ — whatever it is. It starts with one person.”

    We stand with him.

    — Melissa Hale-Spencer, editor

    cartoon-12-20-12-guns-web

  • Helderberg Kiwanis provides Thanksgiving meals

    hilltown kiwanis-webCornucopia: Members of the Helderberg Kiwanis share bounty of the season. Club President Marty Herzog is in back with Rus Gladieux. In front, from left, are Pauline Williman, Anna Wolfe, Amy Pokorny, Mary Kinnaird, and Zenie Gladieux.To the Editor:

    On Monday, Nov. 19, members of the Helderberg Kiwanis Club gathered at the Hilltown Resource Center in Westerlo to put together Thanksgiving meals for 24 families. This ongoing effort has been a project of the club for many years.

     

    Each box contained a turkey, potatoes, vegetables, cranberries, stuffing, and everything else that goes with a complete dinner, and was well received and appreciated by the many families helped by this effort.

    many families helped by this effort.

    Raymond Lauenstein

    President-elect

    Helderberg Kiwanis

     

  • Clarksville School letters should be restored

    To the Editor:

    Many community members, past employees, students, and families attended the Albany County Sheriff’s Department’s Open House at the Clarksville School on Saturday. The building looks great and everyone we talked with expressed their enthusiasm about being in the building, which is evident by the care they have taken with it.

  • Teddy Bear Tea was magical

    img 5416-webThe Enterprise — Michael Koff
    Story time: Mrs. Claus reads a Christmas book to the children during Sunday afternoon’s Teddy Bear Tea at the New Salem firehouse put on by the ladies’ auxiliary. Santa Claus and Frosty the Snowman also came to the tea and gave each child a kit for accessorizing their snowmen.
    To the Editor:

    On Dec. 9, the New Salem Volunteer Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary hosted its Fifth Annual Teddy Bear Tea with Mrs. Claus. Tea sandwiches, Christmas cookies, tea, and hot chocolate, all prepared by the auxiliary, were enjoyed with the 32 children and 32 adults in attendance.

    Mrs. Claus read to the children and answered their questions about the North Pole. A wonderful time was had by all.

    Frosty the Snowman and Santa Claus made a surprise visit and gave a gift of a snowman kit, complete with eyes, mouth, pipe, scarf, and heart for their winter snowmen friends. Miss Christina Springer, Miss Altamont Fair, also was in attendance.

  • You will tax us out of our homes

    To the Editor:

    Upon reading last week’s story, “Cost of proposed Bethlehem schools improvement project rises,” and Neil Martin’s letter to the editor, I am inspired to voice my feelings about Bethlehem Central’s budget.

    First of all — the opinion voiced by someone at the board meeting that “Maybe it would be a good thing if older residents lost their homes and had to move out, making room for some new people in town,” I find totally heartless, offensive, and frightening, but typical of what I feel is the opinion of many Bethlehem residents. Just imagine, this person may be a future board member candidate!

  • Thanks for helping your neighbor, a tot with cancer

    To the Editor:

    I would like to take this opportunity to both apologize to and also thank those who attended Sunday’s Breakfast With Santa event held at the Voorheesville Fire Department.

    First, I want to apologize for the long wait our patrons encountered while waiting to be seated and served their meal.

    Second, I want to thank you for your patience and understanding that, not only was this a true community event where you were out meeting your neighbors and celebrating the holiday season, but this year there was added meaning to the words “neighbor” and “caring.”

    This week, the members of the Voorheesville Fire Department found out a little 16-month-old “neighbor” of ours had cancer, and the membership of the department decided we would donate our proceeds from the event to help Cooper Lare and his family with expenses associated with the transportation, lodging, and food they would need to bring Cooper to either New York or Boston for his future treatments.

  • Carl Peterson is an outstanding farmer and citizen

    To the Editor:

    It has been my pleasure and honor to have served with Carl Peterson in Agrimark, school boards, Farm Credit, and many other farm organizations.

    I am very pleased that you have seen fit to emphasize the outstanding life and service to agriculture that have characterized Carl for so many years. 

    He is an outstanding farmer and citizen and I am proud to have known him.

    Ralph Miller   

    Berne

  • Christmas on Grandfather’s farm

    To the Editor:

    Snow was gently falling. The air was calm. A snow-white blanket covered the fields and pastures surrounding the old farmhouse.

    We arrived in the 1931 Oldsmobile after a 150-mile trip from New York City. The doors flung open. Brother Pauly and I sprang out and flew into the arms of Grandpa and Grandma, standing on the front porch. The Christmas holiday had just begun in South Berne.

    It was three days to Christmas and preparations had begun. The weather forecast promised cold but bright sunny days through Christmas.

  • Think twice before using the word "democracy" to describe our government"

    To the Editor:

    Last week’s letter by Sara Niccoli (“Challenging ballots is a subversion of democracy”) warrants a response on a key issue.

    One would have expected a political operative to know better than to call our form of government a “democracy.” America never has been, and by the grace of God never will be, a democracy. This incorrect characterization has been around so long that Americans now use the term as if there’s no question of its validity. They are egregiously wrong.

  • In Service

    thedore wiederhold-webTheodore J. WiederholdBERNE — Lance Corporal Theodore J. Wiederhold, with the United States Marine Corps, is returning home to Berne on Dec. 13 following deployment to Afghanistan with the 1st Battalion, 1st Marine Division 3rd Platoon Alpha Company.

    He received a letter of recognition from the commanding officer for actions and service in a combat area. He returns in January to Camp Pendleton in California.

    Wiederhold graduated from Berne-Knox-Westerlo High School in 2011.

    “Friends are invited to visit,” said his mother, Evelyn Wiederhold.

     

     

  • Degnan breaks two swim records

    Rachael Degnan, of Guilderland, broke two State University of New York at Cobleskill female swimming records during a meet against Cazenovia College last Saturday.

    Degnan, a freshman, won the 400-yard individual medley in a new Fighting Tiger record time of 5:11.10. She also broke a 25-year old record in the 1,650-yard freestyle with a time of 20:04.08.

    Cobleskill lost the meet to Cazenovia, 183 to 88, but Degnan won the 200-yard butterfly in a time of 2:46.37.

    Degnan has made an instant impact for Cobleskill by winning races and setting records this season.

  • Guilderland’s Golderman girls do well in Punt Pass and Kick

    GUILDERLAND — Jamie Golderman, 11, and Rebecca Golderman, 15, both Guilderland students, advanced to the NFL Punt, Pass and Kick Competition Team Championships held at Giants Stadium on Sunday, Dec. 9, prior to the Giants’ game against the Saints.

    The competition is held by the National Football League for kids between the ages of 6 and 15.

  • BKW has rough night, still gets it’s third win

    By Jordan J. Michael

    img 9004-webThe Enterprise –– Jordan J. Michael
    Collision course: Berne-Knox-Westerlo and Greenville played a messy game of girls’ basketball in Berne on Tuesday evening with the Bulldogs getting the win, 44 to 38. Here, senior Makayla McCormick, left, drives to the basket, colliding with the Spartans’ Kristen Bear. McCormick scored six points.
    BERNE –– The Berne-Knox-Westerlo girls’ basketball team is strong when it’s running on all cylinders. Most of the pistons were not firing on Tuesday night during the Bulldogs’ home opener against Greenville, but it still came away with the win.

    The play was messy, physical, and the Spartans put a target on the Bulldogs’ star player, senior Liz Harvey, who was fouled many times. Harvey made 13 of her 14 free throws.

    “This wasn’t a very good basketball game,” said BKW Head Coach Tom Galvin after the 44-to-38 victory moved his team to 3-0. “It was ugly, sloppy, and full of bad shooting.”

    Greenville beat up BKW a little bit, knocking players to the floor. However, the Bulldogs returned the favor.

    The Spartans had a chance to make the game closer at the end after a steal and a BKW foul led to points, but Greenville’s assistant coach received a technical foul for yelling at the referee. Harvey made the two free throws to ice the game.

  • Guilderland looks convincing in Suburban Council opener

    By Jordan J. Michael

    img 8957-webThe Enterprise –– Jordan J. Michael
    Let’s go, Dutch! The Guilderland boys’ basketball team opened its 2012-13 Suburban Council schedule with a home victory over Columbia, 73 to 61, last Friday. Here, a Guilderland cheerleader lets her voice be heard during the second half. The Dutchmen have an overall record of 2-1.
    GUILDERLAND –– The Dutchmen basketball team looked impressive during its home victory over Columbia last Friday, but, with most of the season left to play, the Dutch aren’t looking too far ahead.

    With a modestly sized line-up and with one of its best players, Matt Cerutti, on the bench with no timetable for return, Guilderland will have to battle for every win this season. Against Columbia, the Dutch played with fire and urgency, propelling it to a 73-to-61 win.

    Guilderland out-hustled Columbia while shooting 55 percent from the field. The passing was precise, and the Dutch went up and down the court with swiftness.

    “Starting 1-0 is always good, especially at home,” said senior point guard Brian Crupi, who chipped in 14 points and 12 assists for Guilderland. He played with confidence all night. “This is a good win,” he said, “but we still have work to do.”

    Guilderland also received a double-double from junior Mark DuMoulin, who scored 18 points and grabbed 10 rebounds. The Dutch had five players score 10 points or more, including 11 from freshman Andrew Platek.

  • Guilderland Knights of Columbus to sponsor Free Throw Championship

    All boys and girls ages 10 to 14 are invited to participate in the local level of competition for the 2013 Knights of Columbus Jason Brown Memorial Free Throw Championship.

    The local competition will be held on Saturday, Jan. 12 (makeup on Jan. 19) at 6 p.m. at the Christ the King Parish gym on Sumpter Avenue.

  • Guilderland Girls’ Basketball Club’s new senior team wins it’s opening game

    Seniors

    The Guilderland Girls’ Basketball Club’s newly formed Senior League (9th -12th grade) started its season last Saturday with a win against a tough Clifton Park team, 39 to 31.

    The Guilderland girls started off strong, racking up a 10-point lead going into the second half. Paige Pizzemento’s first quarter scoring streak put the Dutch on top with the first six points on the board and her strong defense held the opponent at bay.

  • BKW cheerleaders get bid to national competition

    By Jordan J. Michael

    img 8971-webThe Enterprise –– Jordan J. Michael
    Helping hands: Berne-Knox-Westerlo cheerleaders hoist a teammate during Tuesday night’s practice at the elementary school. BKW received its first-ever bid to the Universal Cheerleaders Association National High School Cheerleading Championships, which will take place on Feb. 9 and 10 at the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Fla.
    BERNE –– When Amanda Allen started coaching the Berne-Knox-Westerlo varsity cheerleaders in 2008, the squad didn’t get much attention. Now, the cheerleaders have locked up the first-ever Nationals bid in school history as Bulldog fans frequently request cheers from the team.

    At practice on Tuesday, Allen said that her 13 cheerleaders might have bet on her getting a tattoo if BKW places in the top five at the Universal Cheerleaders Association National High School Cheerleading Championships at the Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Fla. on Feb. 9 and 10.

    BKW’s school spirit has never been in question, but the cheerleaders have watched the interaction improve dramatically over the last few years. “Yes, the fans have always yelled and been into the games,” said Allen, “but the atmosphere is better.”

    BKW wasn’t cheering for the girls’ basketball team on Tuesday night because the cheerleaders were busy working on their routine for February’s competition. Since the Bulldogs don’t have a football team, the girls have had only a few months to get ready for a very important moment.

  • Curry honored - World AIDS Day is silver

    December marks the 25th anniversary of World AIDS Day and the 15th anniversary of the founding of the New York Capital Region Chapter of the NAMES Project AIDS memorial quilt. 

    These anniversaries were celebrated Saturday afternoon, Dec. 1, at an event recognizing key local individuals who helped found the local chapter of the NAMES Project.  Robert Curry, senior vice president for External Affairs at Upper Hudson Planned Parenthood, was among those recognized. 

  • Egan awarded UAlbany degree

    John Egan, a New Scotland resident who helped shape the local landscape will be awarded an honorary degree on Dec. 16 as the University at Albany holds its winter commencement ceremony.

  • McCoy won’t veto budget

    By Marcello Iaia

    ALBANY COUNTY — Albany County Executive Daniel McCoy announced yesterday he would not go forward with his threatened veto of the budget passed, 28 to 11, by the Democrat-dominated legislature on Dec. 3.

    According to Democratic county legislator, Bryan Clenahan, who represents Guilderland, Majority Leader Frank Commisso gave him an estimate of $578 million for the 2013 spending plan, an increase of $10 million from McCoy’s proposal.

  • Two choices for Knox P.O.

    By Marcello Iaia

    KNOX — While Knox residents now have a long daily drive to retrieve their mail, the United States Postal Service is weighing two options close to home — the lower level of Town Hall or the original location restored.

  • Tractor traps stone mason working in woods

    By Marcello Iaia

    WESTERLO — A man stuck under a tractor near Flood Road was released and air-lifted to Albany Medical Center Tuesday afternoon.

    Assistant Chief Eric Dutton of the Westerlo Volunteer Fire Company said the man’s legs were trapped by the steering wheel of the tractor, which appeared to have flipped backward on the wooded trail as his two-wheeled trailer slid in the mud, pulling it down a hill.

  • Crowds throng to annual breakfast to help sick baby

    By Jo E. Prout

    img 3751-web— Photo from Josh Lare
    High five from the big guy: Cooper Lare, right, and his parents, Cristen and Josh Lare, have gotten lots of support as the 17-month-old battles cancer.
    VOORHEESVILLE — More than 600 people turned out Sunday for the Voorheesville Volunteer Fire Department’s annual breakfast with Santa, after members decided to devote proceeds to the family of 17-month-old Cooper Lare, who was diagnosed with cancer last month.

    Lare’s father, Josh Lare, has been a volunteer with the Guilderland Center Fire Department for 20 years, he said.

    “The fire department gives back to the community. It’s a mind-set that we have. To see the fire community’s...unbelievable amount of support — it’s overwhelming,” Lare said.

  • Voorheesville abandons federal school lunch program

    By Tyler Murphy

    VOORHEESVILLE —Citing a drop in participation and a projected loss of about $32,000 by the end of the year, the Voorheesville School Board voted to abandon the current federal lunch program in favor of developing its own, saying recent changes to national guidelines had left students hungry and the district spending more.

    As required by regulation, the board decided Monday to give the federal program 60 days’ notice, after which the school will implement its own health-focused school lunch plan on Feb. 8.

  • Colleen Mickle named best elementary phys. ed. teacher in NY

    By Melissa Hale-Spencer

    GUILDERLAND — Colleen Mickle knew since she was 12 that she wanted to teach kids to move and play sports and have fun doing it.

    “Ever since sixth grade, I thought, ‘I like to play and I like kids. Why not do physical education?’” said Mickle, who has taught at Guilderland Elementary School for 26 years.

    At age 57, she’s still at it and was recognized last month as the Elementary Physical Education Teacher of the Year by the New York State Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance. Eight candidates vied for the honor this year, according to Lisa Corbet, administrative assistant to the 3,100-member organization.

  • Old-time Bates Hollow Church service denotes the true meaning of Christmas

    By Janet Nelson

    Community correspondent

    RENSSELAERVILLE — On Saturday, Dec. 1, fog had settled in the valley over Bates Hollow just outside Potter Hollow. A light snow on the sides of the road highlighted the route to the Bates Hollow Church.

    About 160 people found their way to the church on this foggy winter night. Kerosene and battery-operated lanterns graced the outside of the church to welcome us in, as there is no electricity here. Stepping inside the lantern-lit church, we found that Glenn Hallenbeck had a welcoming fire burning in the old woodstove. The church filled quickly with people of all ages — babies to those in their nineties.

    bates hollow service 12.2012 140 do run-webTaking their roles seriously, kids play the parts of Mary and Joseph, wise men and angels in the Christmas pageant at the historical Bates Hollow Church. The parents of some of the children had been in the pageant a generation ago.We were transported back in time in this delightful old country church.

    The program began promptly at 7 p.m. with Dorothea Cotter’s welcome, noting some history of the church. We surely appreciate her dedication over several years to help keep the Bates Hollow Church alive. It survives strictly on donations. This is currently the only service held each year in this church. The money raised helps to pay the insurance and continued upkeep of the church.

  • Hanukkah: Five lessons of the holiday to unwrap over eight days

    By Ellen Frankel and Rabbi Baruch HaLevi

    Hanukkah begins on the Hebrew calendar date of 25 Kislev and lasts for eight days. This year, the holiday is celebrated from Dec. 8 to 16.

    The story of Hanukkah chronicles the four-year war which took place between 167 and 163 Before Common Era as oppressed Jews struggled under the rule of Antiochus IV of the Syrian-Greeks. Jews were forbidden to follow their ritual observances and pagan worship was introduced into their sacred temple.

    The story is also about a civil war between those Jews who aligned themselves with the Greek-Syrian ways and the Maccabees, a small group of Jews who resisted such assimilation.

    The holiday culminates in the re-taking and rededicating of the temple in Jerusalem and re-lighting the seven-branched candelabra that was supposed to always remain lit.  The long-ago story of Hanukkah offers lessons for people of all faiths wrestling with challenges today.

  • Dalrymple plans to revitalize father’s gas stations

    By Anne Hayden

    GUILDERLAND — The $3 million estate of Joseph Calabro — well known in town as the owner of two gas stations — was not settled for more than two years after his death. The case worked its way through probate before being settled in mid-October of this year.

    The majority of the estate, including much land, went to Calabro’s son, Derick Dalrymple, who was born out-of-wedlock in 1967, as a result of an affair between Calabro and his bookkeeper, Dolores Dalrymple.

    The estate included two gas stations — Joe’s Service Station, on Western Avenue, and Ma’s Service Station, at the intersection of routes 20 and 58 — both of which closed after Calabro died.

    Dalrymple said it was important for him to settle the case so he could get both stations up and running again.

  • Westerlo breaks cap to fix roof

    By Marcello Iaia

    WESTERLO — The repair of a leaking roof in Westerlo will drain extra funds from Westerlo residents in the 2013 tax year.

    Supervisor Richard Rapp said an override of the state-set 2-percent cap on tax-levy increases to around 5 percent was necessary because of $150,000 in repairs to an old roof at the former town hall on County Route 401. The building is still used as the highway department garage, as a State Trooper satellite office, and for the town court. Rapp said the town judges are catching water drops in buckets in the courtroom when it rains.

    The board passed a law to override the state-set cap and adopted the $2.69 million spending plan on Nov. 14. The vote was 4 to 0 on both motions by the all-Democratic board, as Councilman Gregory Zeh resigned the week before, after the sale of his Westerlo residence.

    Rapp was unable after the Dec. 4 board meeting to provide the exact tax rate, but said it was increased in 2012 by around $5 to a rate of $300 per $1,000 of assessed property value. This year’s increase, he said, was unusually high.

    “Probably it’ll be up $30, $35 from last year,” said Rapp. “Of course, we’re not assessed at 100 percent.” He estimated the town last underwent a property revaluation in the 1950s.

  • Board mulls wireless proposal - BYOD for GHS?

    By Melissa Hale-Spencer

    GUILDERLAND — A self-described Machead, Demian Singleton projected a picture of the late Steve Jobs, founder of Apple, for the school board to look at as he talked Tuesday night about the need for a “paradigm shift” at Guilderland from hardware to access.

    “There’s an old Wayne Gretzky quote that I love,” said Jobs of the famous hockey player. “’I skate to where the puck is going to be, not where it’s been.’”

    “Guilderland can no longer be based on a world of yesterday or even today,” said Singleton, Guilderland’s assistant superintendent for instruction. “Technology in our students’ world is ubiquitous; it’s seamless.”

    For the first time Tuesday night, as Singleton made his presentation on technology, the district attempted to hold a paperless board meeting with four of its nine members using electronic devices instead of the usual binders filled with paper.

  • Fool me twice — Westerlo voters deserve better

    The day after Election Day, two of Westerlo’s town board members submitted letters of resignation.

    One of them, Edward Rash, said, at age 70, he wants more time to go camping, fly-fishing, and to ride his Harley Davidson. He’ll step down at the end of the year.

    The other, Gregory Zeh, said he wants to raise his children close to family in Loudonville. His resignation was effective immediately since he no longer lives in the town, as required by law to represent it.

    We have no quarrel with a man enjoying his retirement or raising his family where he sees fit.

    We do have a problem with the timing of the resignation of these elected board members. Public office is a public trust. When voters elect their leaders, as we’ve written before, a contract is formed. The contract, whether for the nation’s president or a small-town councilman, carries an obligation to serve and should not be taken lightly.

  • Plan for Helderberg parks to be released in spring

    By Tyler Murphy

    NEW SCOTLAND — A draft master plan, designed to chart the future of the John Boyd Thacher and Thompson’s Lake state parks, will be released in the spring instead of by the end of the year, said New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation officials.

    Planner for the office, Salim Chishti, said the group responsible for developing the plan is still in the process of creating a draft after it postponed some meetings due to scheduling conflicts and illness.

    “Mostly, people have been ill and we’ve been unable to all meet,” he said.

  • GHS named a 2013 Grammy Signature semi-finalist

    GUILDERLAND — Guilderland High School has once again been recognized as a Grammy Signature School semi-finalist, based upon the quality and caliber of the music-education program in the school.

    As the Grammy Award, originally named the Gramophone Award, signifies excellence in recording, the Signature Schools award is designed to honor exceptional public high school music programs. Twenty-one New York high schools were recognized this year among the top 125 high schools in the nation.

  • Troopers search for generous donor

    GUILDERLAND — The New York State Police are trying to track down a woman who anonymously donated $1,000 to a trooper over the weekend.

    Officer Christopher Manisalco was responding to a call near Oak Tree Lane in Guilderland, when he was approached by blonde woman, in her early to mid-40s, who asked if he was busy, according to a release from the State Police.

    Manisalco told the woman that he had a few minutes, and she told him, “I always see you around, doing a good job, and wanted to say merry Christmas and thank you,” the release said.

    The woman handed him a holiday card, which Manisalco accepted, thanked her, and then went back to work.

    After his shift ended, Manisalco opened the card, and found $1,000 in cash inside.

  • BCSD project cost rises from $15 to $25M

    By Tyler Murphy

    BETHLEHEM — The Bethlehem School Board heard revised estimates for a potential facilities improvement project last week, raising the predicted costs from about $15 to $26.6 million.

    The project will repair several buildings in the district, upgrade technology infrastructure and athletic facilities, with some options including the construction of the district’s first synthetic turf field.

    At a Nov. 7 meeting, the board had discussed project costs ranging from about $12 to $15 million.

    “I think we’re all a little bit shell shocked right now, in terms of numbers we’re seeing,” said board member Michael Cooper at the end of the Nov. 28 presentation.

  • Old school district office to be torn down

    By Melissa Hale-Spencer

    GUILDERLAND — School board members here dealt quickly and unanimously with the physical problem of demolishing a vacant building, but had varied views and came to no conclusion when wrestling with the conceptual issue of whether to back a resolution on federal budget cuts.

    The Farnsworth Middle School was built on property off of State Farm Road once used by golfers. The one-time clubhouse — or “caddy shack” as the school board president has called it — became the district office. It has been vacant since new offices were built at the high school as part of the recently completed $27 million building project.

    The school board last month decided, in a unanimous vote, to demolish the building once it has been stripped of useable salvage.

  • Peterson honored for a lifetime of care

    By Marcello Iaia

    dsc03406 copy-webThe Enterprise — Marcello Iaia
    “Little people can make a big difference”: Carl Peterson looks over his Knox farm, where he still works with his grandson, Jason Peterson, growing corn and hay. The 2012 recipient of the New York Farm Bureau’s Distinguished Service to Agriculture award, Peterson said, “I never looked for any reward because anything you do, you do it because you’ve got the job to do and it’s there.”
    KNOX — For more than half a century, Carl Peterson has farmed the craggy Helderberg land his father farmed before him.

    He’s reached beyond the horizon, though, to head a regional cooperative and shape federal legislation for farmers.

    At 83, he’s being recognized this week for a lifetime of work, as he has been in the past.

    Modest about his awards, he has a video he’s never seen labeled, “Agri-Mark celebrates Carl Peterson, April 2007.”

    “Someday I’m going to get the whole family together and get a DVD and we’ll look at it, but my children all know what we did, because they were all taking care of the farm,” Peterson said on Thursday.

    The video begins with the dairy co-operative’s tall CEO, Paul Johnson, stepping up to a lectern, noting how strange it is to celebrate Peterson’s retirement as chairman without him present.

    “When things get tough, farmers look to farmers for their own leadership, and Carl always provided that,” says Johnson.

    A large red banner behind him reads, “I’m a farmer, I’m an owner.”

  • Hunter mistakes partner for deer

    By Marcello Iaia

    BERNE — Mitchell Sisson of Berne was shot in the lower leg by Anthony Preston while they were deer hunting near Sickel Hill Road on Nov. 30.

    Sisson, 32, was wounded in his right leg by a 12-gauge shotgun round, according to the Friday afternoon report received by the Albany County Sheriff’s Office.

    “Upon our arrival at the scene, the New York State Environmental Conservation Police were at the scene, as were members of New York State Police,” said Inspector Michael Monteleone of the sheriff’s office.

    Lieutenant Thomas Caifa was one of the conservation officers who looked for evidence after Sisson was taken to the hospital and Preston, 57, had left.

    Caifa said it appeared Preston saw a deer in a field, shot, and was not sure whether he had hit the deer. After the deer ran away, Sisson went to flush the deer back into the field while Preston stayed.

    When Sisson appeared in the field, Preston mistook him for the deer and shot.

  • Real-world advice on farming, teaching, and medicine

    By John R. Williams

    On Dec. 4, the Old Men of the Mountain met at the Duanesburg Diner in Duanesburg on a beautiful December day.

    As one OF said, “We are going to pay for this some way or other, either with two feet of snow, or 10 days in a row with temperatures below zero — you watch.”

    The OFs talked about another OF but, as one said, “He may not be that old.”

    It was a discussion about the homeless man in New York City for whom the police officer bought boots and socks, and the next day this fellow was shoeless again, or so the paper said. When the event occurred and it was shown all over the news, the OFs said that at that time they wondered what it would be like when the homeless person returned to his cardboard box or street corner that night. Would all the other homeless men be after him to get the shoes, would he sell the shoes for food or something else, what would happen?

    The OFs thought correctly.  The homeless person did not wear them because they were too good.

    One OF said, “This is a good example of the press screwing everything up.” 

    Another said, “Boy, I would think twice now about doing anything like giving those boots, even if I had the opportunity.  The homeless guy is probably now afraid to walk the streets for fear of being mugged, and the cop’s life is now everybody’s business.  Save me from all that hassle.”

    Inside scoop

    on medical procedures

    The OFs as usual started talking about their aches and pains, especially the use of two painkillers. The two mentioned were hydrocodone and oxycoton.

    One OF really liked the stuff and thought it did wonders for him, while another OF said he took only one of those pills and wouldn’t take any more because he would rather put up with hurting. The medicine gave him such hallucinations, he didn’t know what was real and what wasn’t.

    The other OF asked, “Well, did you still hurt?” 

    The first OF said he couldn’t remember if he did or didn’t, but he knew they gave him Tylenol #3 after he wouldn’t take the other stuff.

    What prompted all this was that an OF showed up with his right arm in a sling after having recent shoulder surgery.  One OF who has had both shoulders done said, “Gee, I hope he is left-handed,” and, from watching the OF for many years, could not remember if he was right- or left-handed but thought he was right-handed.

    The OF that had both shoulders done said the doctors (at least his doctors) assume we know too much about what goes on and they do not give you the full story. One thing that doctors fail to tell you is that you better have a recliner because lying down to sleep is not an option. The other is that before the surgery, whatever hand you use to perform bathroom functions with, it is a good idea to practice with the other hand. 

    That, people, is a chore you have to do, that the doctors do not mention, so please believe these OFs who have been through it.  This is a very necessary task that has to be learned.

    “Yeah,” one OF said, who has had the same surgery, “Shaving was not a problem.”  The OF just didn’t do it. Getting dressed with one hand takes a lot of practice and having slip-on shoes is a big help but trying to tie a knot with one hand (for the OFs at least) was out of the question.

    All these normal routine functions that are going to be disrupted, the doctors usually don’t tell you about. At least the people who read this report in the paper will know now.

    Old-style farmers

    were practical

    The OFs who were farmers talked about how certain things have gotten way out of hand. When a cow was selected for butchering (or a pig, or even goats or chickens) most farmers called a local butcher and it was done right there on the farm. Head cheese was made in the bathtub.

    If a barn cat had distemper, in order that it wouldn’t contaminate the rest of the cats, it was shot. The same with any animal in misery — it was disposed of. Now you would be arrested for animal cruelty, and it is just the opposite of being cruel; it is being humane.

    Any farmer who saw another farmer or person abusing their animals would let them know about it in no uncertain terms, and as a rule that person would never abuse animals again.

    Whatever happened

    to shop class?

    One OF said that this was not the only thing that has gotten really out of whack.  Something else is this federal legislation called No Child Left Behind. The phrase is true but the application is ridiculous.

    Some people are just slow learners, and some cannot learn at all. What a strain this must put on teachers trying to have slow learners compete with whiz kids.

    One OF commented that maybe the slow learner will see what the others are doing and try to do better.

    Yet another OF said, “True, but you and I both know there are many that do not have the ability to learn, so put them in a group where what talents or skills they do have are reinforced.  Give them self-confidence that they can really do something, even if it is not algebra.”

    “You got it, whatever happened to shop, and auto mechanics, and courses like that?” asked another OF. “All kids are not cut out to be computer whizzes.

    “To me,” said one OF, “too many kids are coming out of school as dolts.  They can’t fix a faucet, or a toilet, or a furnace. Their lawn mowers quit and they think you run out to buy a new one. To me, all they know how to do is use their thumbs. I bet many teachers are going nuts.”

    An OF then declared he couldn’t really comment.  The world for him is going too fast and he wants to get off. This OF says it will all come out in the wash.   

    Then an OF alleged that there are the natural troublemakers who have to be coddled or now, like animal abuse, it becomes child abuse. The whole thing is out of whack.

    One more OF said our country used to be number one in education and our kids were the brightest. Ever since all the do-gooders seem to be in charge, our country has gone backwards.

    Boy, it is a good thing the OFs aren’t teachers; they would all be in jail. It seems the OFs have talked about this subject more than once.

    Those attending the breakfast at the Duanesburg Diner in Duanesburg, and some forgetting they were (and some still are) teachers were: Miner Stevens. Roger Chapman, Roger Shafer, Steve Kelly, George Washburn, Robie Osterman, Don Moser, Harold Guest, Mark Traver, Glenn Patterson, Jim Heiser, John Rossmann, Frank Pauli, Lou Schenck, Gary Porter, Jack Norray, Mace Porter, Gerry Chartier, Harold Grippen, Elwood VanDerbelt, Mike Willsey, Jim Rissacher, and me.

  • Earning Eagle rank Lasselle built shelves for Altamont library

    eagle scout david lasselle-webDavid Lasselle, 16, of East Berne, has achieved the highest rank offered by the Boy Scouts of America, the rank of Eagle Scout.

    He is a member of the Altamont Reformed Church and is an honors student at Guilderland High School, where he is a junior.

    Laselle was recognized in a court of honor ceremony on Nov. 24 at the American Legion Post 977 in Altamont. The ceremony was attended by relatives, friends, fellow Scouts, their families, trustees of the Altamont Free Library, and village Trustee William Aylward.

  • GBC for Girls takes on Averill Park

    Biddy B

    The Guilderland Biddy B won a nail biter, beating a tough Averill Park team, 16 to 15, on Saturday.

    The game was decided by an aggressive 2-3 defense that controlled the paint. All players contributed to the win through aggressive defense and a never say quit attitude.

    The Guilderland team fell down, 8 to 2, early but the team came to life, spurred on by the tenacious defense of Vivienne Owens. Her two quick steals led to four quick points by Graycen Dubin.

    Thanks to the tough defense by all players, the Guilderland team was able gain the lead in the second half and then never gave the lead up. Dubin finished the game with 14 points and Rebecca Rowe contributed two points to seal the deal.

  • Degnan leads Cobleskill swim team

    Freshman Rachael Degnan, of Guilderland, had a first place and two second place finishes for the State University of New York College at Cobleskill women’s swim team during last Saturday’s triangular meet against Gallaudet University and Wells College.

    Degnan won the 1,000-yard freestyle with a time of 12:06.43. She was second in both the 500-yard freestyle (6:02.77) and the 100-yard butterfly (1:05.97).

    The Fighting Tigers are 4-3 on the season.

  • Guilderland baseball holding Baseball-A-Thon

    Guilderland Travel Baseball, along with Pine Bush Little League, is holding a Baseball-A-Thon featuring 24 straight hours of youth baseball to raise money to help little leagues impacted by Hurricane Sandy.

    The players (ages 8 to 12) and families are eager to help those that have been impacted by Sandy. Guilderland Travel Baseball spends a great deal of time making sure the kids have a chance to just play ball and recognize that others are not going to have the same chance due to the aftereffects of Sandy.

    This is a great opportunity to reinforce a sense of community and charity with the young players. By partnering with local baseball focused businesses like Frozen Ropes and the Tri-City Valley Cats, Guilderland is demonstrating that sportsmanship and goodwill goes beyond the field of play.

  • With young roster, Guilderland hits reset button

    By Jordan J. Michael

    img 8902-webThe Enterprise –– Jordan J. Michael
    The fade: The Guilderland girls’ basketball team is preparing for its season opener against Columbia on Friday with some intense practices this week. Here, senior Katelyn Kaczkowski puts up a shot over Michelle Papandrea at Monday’s practice. The Dutch were beaten by Bishop Maginn in the Class AA first round last season.
    GUILDERLAND –– Long-time Head Coach Frank Cacckello has made some significant changes to the Guilderland girls’ basketball team this season. He started by choosing the 12 best players no matter what grade level.

    Over the last month of practices, Cacckello has cut half of the usual drills and transitioned the staple full-court press defense to a half-court player-to-player style. The Dutch have hit the reset button and are excited to see the results.

    “We’re probably the youngest team in the Suburban Council, but basketball is the number-one focus for all these girls,” Cacckello said at practice on Monday. Guilderland has an eighth-grader (Olivia Bauman) and a ninth-grader (Michelle Papandrea) on its roster.

    “When you look at it,” he said, “you know these girls will be basketball players for three, four, or five more years. It helps when comprehending the game.”

  • Burch takes helm as VCSD b'ball coach

    By Jordan J. Michael

    img 8917-webThe Enterprise –– Jordan J. Michael
    A familiar face has come back to coach basketball at Voorheesville. After coaching Voorheesville’s junior-varsity team for a few years in the past, David Burch is back on the sidelines as the brand new coach for the varsity team. Burch replaced Don Catellier, who resigned last spring after eight seasons. Here, Burch talks to the Voorheesville players during a scrimmage with Berne-Knox-Westerlo on Tuesday.
    VOORHEESVILLE –– David Burch is back to coaching basketball at Voorheesville and he couldn’t be more pleased about it. He’s taken the place of Don Catellier, who resigned last spring.

    Burch is a 1995 Voorheesville graduate and was the Birds’ junior-varsity coach under Catellier from 2005 to 2010. On Tuesday, Burch directed the varsity team during a high-energy home scrimmage against Berne-Knox-Westerlo.

    The tall, youthful looking 35-year-old commanded the sidelines like a natural. The Voorheesville players gave Burch their complete, undivided attention, and the coach returned the favor with shades of positive reinforcement.

    “It’s great to be back, and it’s very challenging,” Burch said after the relatively balanced scrimmage. “We have a great group of kids this year. I really missed coaching.”

    Burch, a fifth-grade teacher at Voorheesville Elementary, stepped away from coaching after his wife gave birth to their first child. At the time, he did not want to try to balance coaching with parenting.

    “I was hoping, and waiting, for the job to come open, and it did,” said Burch. “The timing was right for me. I had to stop for a few years, but this was the right time for me to come back.”

    After graduating from Voorheesville, Burch attended Skidmore College. He received more honors and set more records than any other basketball player in Skidmore history before graduating in 1999. Burch was inducted into Skidmore’s Athletic Hall of Fame in 2007. The former women’s college started admitting men in 1971.

  • Gatt to take pitching talents to Temple University

    By Jordan J. Michael

    gatt do run may 31 12-webEnterprise file photo — Michael Koff
    Whirlwind of power: Voorheesville senior Amanda Gatt has struck out 580 batters over the last two softball seasons for the Blackbirds, and she will take her talents to Division I Temple University in Philadelphia next fall. Here, Gatt throws a pitch during a sectional playoff game last spring. She’s a three-time Colonial Council All Star.
    VOORHEESVILLE –– Amanda Gatt’s stack of softball accolades has landed her a deal with Temple University. The Voorheesville senior will take her astounding pitching to the Division I level.

    Gatt is a National Honor Society member who wants to study kinesiology –– the mechanics of human motion –– in college. She has racked up 580 strikeouts over the last two softball seasons, including 335 strikeouts last spring (156 1/3 innings) to break her previous Voorheesville record of 245. She said this week that she’s going to try for more strikeouts in 2013.

    “It’s nice to break your own records,” Gatt said. “That’s another thing I like to work at.”

    Gatt’s chances of breaking her own strikeout record in 2013 seem inevitable because, as she’s gotten older, she’s become more serious about softball. She’s been training and playing club ball for the East Coast Elite Gold. Also, she pitches practically every inning for the Blackbirds.

    Most high school softball teams have two pitchers. Voorheesville has Gatt.

  • Senate coalition pact shifts focus

    By Anne Hayden

    Two days after a “historic bipartisan partnership” was announced for the state Senate, a race that could have made a difference in the Senate majority is still undecided.

    Now, due to the coalition formed by Dean Skelos, leader of the Republican Conference, and Jeff Klein, leader of the Independent Democratic Conference, even if Democrat Cecelia Tkaczyk wins the seat in the 46th District, her party won’t have a chance at taking the Senate majority.

    “Cecelia has made it clear that she ran as a Democrat, she will win as a Democrat, and she will sit with the Democratic conference,” Gary Ginsburg, a spokesman for Tkaczyk’s campaign, told The Enterprise yesterday.

    Kris Thompson, Amedore’s campaign manager, said the restructuring of the Senate majority is “separate and apart from this race.”

  • People and pets — an essential connection

    When Sue Green walked into our newsroom on Tuesday, she gravitated to a photograph, framed and hanging on the wall.

    “It speaks to my soul,” she said.

    The picture, “Inverness Porch” by Marty Knapp, was a favorite of Bryce Butler who wrote for The Enterprise for 17 years, ending with a stunning series of columns on facing death and living life. He died of cancer on Dec. 4, 2001.

     inverness porch marty knapp

  • Altamont to provide water beyond

    By Jo E. Prout

    ALTAMONT — The village board Tuesday conceded to the public’s reservations about sharing municipal water by reducing the amount Altamont will make available outside village lines. The board voted, 4 to 1, to adopt Phase II of its water policy to allow the village to produce more water, and provide it within and outside the village limits.

    Development with village water could begin just outside Altamont on Bozenkill Road, as the Guilderland Planning Board two weeks ago gave property owner Troy Miller its first level of approval for a 10-lot clustered subdivision on 52 acres there.

    The village board agreed Tuesday to increase water production from its Gun Club Road and Brandle Road wells to 25,000 gallons per day — an amount that could supply up to 60 additional homes.

  • Girvin looks out for those around her

    By Melissa Hale-Spencer

    GUILDERLAND — Athletes who are rivals on the playing field join together in times of grief.

    On Tuesday, three hundred Guilderland students gathered in the gym to show their support for two athletes hospitalized after a car crash and their sympathy for the two athletes who were killed in the crash.

     

    Rather than wearing their school color of red, the Guilderland students wore green for Shenendehowa and blue for Shaker.

    blue sea-web— Photo by Samantha Pitkin
    Three hundred strong: Guilderland students, wearing blue and green, the school colors for Shaker and Shenendehowa, gather behind a banner Tuesday to show their support and sympathy for the student athletes injured or killed in a car crash Saturday. “An amazing moment” is how athlete and senior class President Gaby Peda described the gathering. “We can’t heal their wounds. But it may ease a little bit of the pain,” said athlete Casie Girvin who organized the event.

     

    Shenendehowa seniors Christopher Stewart and Deanna Rivers were killed in a Northway crash Saturday night when, State Police say, the sport utility vehicle driven by Stewart was rear-ended by a drunk driver.

    Stewart was captain of Shen’s football team and Rivers was on the varsity softball team. The two injured passengers are also athletes: Bailey Wind, a Shaker gymnast, and Matthew Hardy, a Shen football player.

  • Plight of farmers in '30s Dust Bowl and India now puts local landscape in focus

    dsc03453-webThe Enterprise — Marcello Iaia
    What happened to the creameries? Chris Kemnah of Otter Hook farms in Greenville stiffened his hands as he spoke passionately to an audience at the Medusa General Store on Nov. 30 about the infrastructure needed to create a vibrant new food community. On display were prints of photos taken during the Dust Bowl made by Medusa resident Hans Soderquist — an apt topic for area residents who, he said, are very concerned about agricultural issues.

    By Marcello Iaia

    RENSSELAERVILLE — Seventy people sitting in a darkened theater Saturday looked up at the large face of director Micha X. Peled. He told the audience of farmers, photographers, gardeners, and supporters of local food, how he was not hopeful for the future of agriculture.

    “Most of the farmers are not the type of person that could carry the film, because they are too depressed,” said Peled through an online video call.

    Bitter Seeds, presented by the Carey Center Film Forum, follows Ram Krishna, a farmer in India, as he borrows money to use genetically modified Bt cotton seeds, which require more irrigation and expensive fertilizer than his money or land can provide. He wagers, and seed salesmen tell him, that the added Bollgard trait in the new seeds can improve insect resistance. Weighing on his wager is a dowry he must pay for his eldest daughter’s marriage.

    This leads to the depression Peled described, and, according to the film, the suicide of an Indian farmer every 30 minutes.

    A 2008 discussion paper, “Bt Cotton and Farmer Suicides in India: Reviewing the Evidence,” produced by the International Food Policy Research Institute compared data on the use of Bt Cotton and the trend in farmer suicides.

  • Returning the favor from Irene local firefighters help Long Beach

    By Anne Hayden

    img 0351-web— Photo by Ted Raymond
    A volunteer crew from Westmere, including, from left to right, Ted Raymond, Anthony Cannistraci, Tony Carrow, Tim Playford, Dave Weiser, and James Bornt, pose in front of the truck they brought to Long Island to help with Hurricane Sandy recovery efforts.
    GUILDERLAND – In the weeks after Hurricane Sandy wreaked havoc along the East Coast, local fire departments volunteered to go to Long Island to help fortify the departments there, and assist in the clean-up efforts.

    The Westmere, McKownville, and Guilderland Center fire departments each gathered a crew to be sent to Long Island on a staggered schedule.

    “We were notified and asked to muster a crew,” said Dave Szary, chief of the Westmere Fire Department. “We had 13 volunteers sign up, but they only needed five people.” He sent out an e-mail and the first five men to respond were designated as the official crew.

    Marc Scholer, from the McKownville Fire Department, went to Long Beach for 72 hours roughly two-and-a-half weeks after the hurricane hit on Oct. 29.

  • VCSD gets an 'AA' rating

    By Marcello Iaia

    HILLTOWNS — External and internal auditors submitted their state-required annual reports for Berne-Knox-Westerlo this fall, detailing good accounting practices in one, and over contribution to fringe benefits in the other.

    Contract language for calculating dental and health insurance payments for BKW employees does not match the method the district uses, which has overstated district contributions for an unknown number of years, according the internal audit report by Management Advisory Group of N.Y. Inc. MAG also found in its audit of the 2011-12 school year that numerous authorizations for coverage were not available.

  • No winner yet in 46th District

    By Anne Hayden

    Three weeks after election night, it is still not clear who will be representing the newly-created 46th Senate District — Republican George Amedore or Democrat Cecilia Tkaczyk. 

    The senate majority hangs in the balance and the final vote count will determine party control. The Republicans hold 31 seats to the Democrats’ 30 in the Senate, but if Tkaczyk wins, and another undecided race goes to the Democrats, and her party collaborates with the four members of the Independent Democratic Conference, the Democrats would take the majority.

    Both candidates claimed victory on Nov. 8, but, due to a close margin in the results, a large number of absentee ballots, a show-cause order filed by Amedore’s campaign, and objections to ballots from both sides, an official winner has yet to be declared.

  • GCSD digs into demographics

    By Melissa Hale-Spencer

    GUILDERLAND — About 60 people — most of them school staff or parents of students — turned out Tuesday night to learn about new state requirements for schools and to advise Guilderland administrators who will frame next year’s budget on priorities.

    gcsd map-web

    In response to a question from the gallery about whether one of Guilderland’s five elementary schools would be closed, Superintendent Marie Wiles said, “That is an important conversation we must have. Tonight is the start of that…We don’t want to make a snap decision until we have all the data.”

  • Knox paradox: Teen wants to reform the Internet

    By Marcello Iaia

    dsc03329-webKNOX — Hunter Fortuin was raised in the Hilltowns, but was driven to attend Tech Valley High School in East Greenbush. Like his contractor father, he builds and is a self-starter, but the high school senior envisions a career in computers. Instead of working steadily to retirement in a quiet hamlet, Fortuin’s number-one aim, as he puts it, is to radically change the way the Internet is used.

    It is an ambition more at home in Silicon Valley than in Knox, often attributed to tech giants like the late Steve Jobs, of Apple computers, or Mark Zuckerberg, of the popular social-networking site Facebook, who changed society through digital technology.

    Facebook just reached a billion users last month, but, with its stock dropping to a 50-percent low in September since the company went public in May, it has been fine-tuning its business model to turn popularity into profit.

  • Depression-era photos a springboard for discourse

    By April Caprio

    RENSSELAERVILLE — Medusa loves superb art — who knew is was so close? Medusa resident Hans Soderquist will be exhibiting his show, “Surviving the Dust Bowl,” at the Medusa General Store, beginning on Friday, Nov. 30. The exhibit opening is slated for 5 p.m., followed by discussion of our own state of sustainable agriculture, led by Chris Kemnah of Otter Hook Farm, a local CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) and organic farm.

    surviving-do run dustbowl-31640 press-web

    While Medusa is not new to art, we are especially excited to introduce this exhibit. Soderquist’s collection of new prints features the work of photographers such as Dorothea Lange, Walker Evans, and others hired by the United States government in the 1930s to document the impact of the economic, social, and natural forces together referred to as the “Dust Bowl.”

    This group of photographs was selected and printed by Soderquist, an artist whose love of the medium first led him to study these outstanding records of American life a decade ago. Recent natural and economic events bring renewed poignancy to these images.

    Soderquist is an American visual artist whose photographic work has been included in group shows in New York, Baltimore, and Nashville. Soderquist holds a master of fine arts degree from Yale University and has taught photography and digital media at Parsons School of Design.

    Chris and Samantha Kemnah are the proprietors of Otter Hook Farm: www.otterhookfarms.com. They are organic farming on McCafferty Road, just outside of Medusa, in Greenville, and offer CSA shares to our community. In addition to a wide range of vegetables, they raise chickens and other livestock.

    “We began as passionate foodies,” they explain. “It is our mission to deliver the best food we can grow to our members. We are continually working to improve our soils in order to grow the most nutritious and best tasting food available.”

    We in Medusa hope that this event marks the beginning of a wider conversation focusing on how to nurture community resilience, self-sufficiency, and long-term prosperity in the face of troubled times. We have started a Facebook group, “Sustainable Hilltowns,” and have additional recreational and educational events planned for 2013.

    Editor’s note: April Caprio is proprietor of the Medusa General Store.

  • A simple recipe for suburban sprawl — just add water

    Sometimes, for the greater good, a community needs to look beyond its own borders, and residents have to consider more than their wallets.

    The city of Albany in recent years wanted to make ends meet without huge tax hikes and so invited outside companies — not just the municipalities that were part of a longstanding consortium — to dump at its Rapp Road landfill. The advantage for city residents was short-lived. And the decision caused a hardship for the region.

  • Will costly race lead to the top?

    By Melissa Hale-Spencer

    pict0002-webGUILDERLAND — The school district here has already spent about 10 times as much on meeting Race to the Top requirements as it will receive over four years in federal funds.

    Guilderland will get $30,771 from the $4 billion federal program meant to spur innovation and reform. Half of the nearly $700 million New York received went to the State Education Department and the other half was distributed to school districts statewide based on the Title I formula, meaning poor districts received the most money.

    Demian Singleton, the assistant superintendent for curriculum at Guilderland who says he has “easily” spent 200 of his last 240 work days on meeting Race to the Top requirements, estimated that Guilderland so far has spent “well over $300,000 and it’s not done.”

    “You really can’t argue with the need to focus on data…but it comes at what cost when it happens at this speed,” Superintendent Marie Wiles told the school board at the close of a Nov. 20 presentation on Race to the Top and the New York State Regents reform agenda. “We’ve made a lot of sacrifices…They come on the heels of very, very challenging economic times.”

    Guilderland has eliminated more than 120 jobs in the past few years as it deals with stagnant aid, increasing health-care and pension costs, and a state-set cap on the tax levy.

    “We want our teachers to do more with larger class sizes,” Wiles said. “We had to postpone some needs we believe are more important.”

    New York’s first attempt to win the federal funds was unsuccessful. After the teachers’ unions agreed to have student performance figure in teacher evaluation, the state was successful in securing its Race to the Top grant.

    At the same time, New York is one of 45 states to agree to follow Common Core Learning Standards. “There is no doubt the Common Core narrows the curriculum,” Wiles told the board, noting teachers feel pressure to teach what will be assessed.

    “This is a very sad thing,” said Wiles. “What is worse is how we lose instructional time…It raises the question: Is the information we get…going to be valuable enough?”

    She concluded, “We don’t know the answer yet.”

  • New Scotland shows “teeth” to delinquent owners

    By Tyler Murphy

    NEW SCOTLAND — The town board is preparing legal action to demolish three vacant homes, claiming they have been neglected by property owners and have become a public health and safety hazard.

    dsc 0042-web

    One property is owned by a corporation, the second was abandoned when the owner died, and the third is owned by an elderly woman battling health problems. Ann Marie Charron was previously fined close to $18,000 for the junk on her land but refused the town’s offer to clean it up. She says she may now reconsider but it may be too late.

    It is the first time the town has attempted to use the unsafe building law, local law 8, passed in 2010, said New Scotland Building Inspector Jeffry Pine.

    “About a year or more ago, the town passed the unsafe building law, which does have a provision of last resort for the town to go in and take a building down,” he said, explaining the legal and demolition costs would be
    applied to the owner’s property tax bill.

    Unpaid tax bills could eventually lead to the county foreclosing on the property and selling it at auction.

    Before reaching that point, though, the law includes provisions to try to repair or stabilize the structure.

    Before the new law was passed, delinquent property owners in the town were primarily subject to penalties under the town’s junk law, said Pine. However, the stipulations in the junk law do not allow the town to take any physical action, only assess court-ordered fines.

    Under the junk law, officials can take an owner to court with the end result being a lien placed against the property, meaning the town could deduct any outstanding fines when the property is eventually sold. In the meantime, though, the junk laws do not force owners, or authorize the town, to clean up the delinquent property.

    “You can only go so far with fines,” said Pine.