June 12, 2014 - nyeaglenews.com
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June 12, 2014 - nyeaglenews.com
w e York N e Th Eagle Thursday nyeaglenews.com New York E a gle News FREE TAKE ONE News The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 "The Weekly Newspaper That's Read Daily" ISSN: 2162-2930 Serving Avon, Bath, Canandaigua, Cohocton, Dansville, Geneseo, Hammondsport, Honeoye, Lakeville, Livonia, Mt. Morris, Naples, Penn Yan, Prattsburgh, Wayland and Neighboring Communities By Brian Palmer Special to The New York Eagle News/The Washington Post W hen you're working in the yard this summer, take a look up: Using a satellite, NASA scientists are paying attention to how healthy your lawn and garden are. This month, the agency plans to launch the Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2. Its primary aim is to create a global map of carbon sources and carbon sinks. The OCO-2 mission will provide the most detailed map of photosynthetic fluorescence — that is to say, of how plants glow — ever created. Using this data, scientists should be able to estimate how quickly the world's plants are absorbing carbon from the __________________ SATELLITES PAGE 10 This Summer, a Satellite Will Begin Eyeing Your Garden With data from NASA’s Orbiting Carbon Observatory, or OCO-2, scientists should be able to estimate how quickly the world’s plants are absorbing carbon from the atmosphere. The spacecraft was scheduled to be launched this month. (Jet Propulsion Laboratory/NASA.) Sergeant Stubby By Gillian Kane The New York Eagle News/ Slate A merica's original dog of war fought bravely on the Western Front — then helped the nation forget the Great War's terrible human toll. 1. A Dog Has His Day On July 6, 1921, a curious gathering took place at the State, War, and Navy Building on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington. The occasion was a ceremony honoring veterans of the 102nd Infantry of the American Expeditionary Forces' 26th "Yankee" Division, who had seen action in France during the Great War. The hall was packed with dozens of members of the 102nd — field clerks, infantrymen, generals — but one soldier in particular commanded the spotlight. The attention seemed to bother him; The New York Times reported that the soldier was "a trifle gun shy, and showed some symptoms of nervous excitement." When photographers snapped his picture, he flinched. Florida Fighting a Losing Battle Against Invasive Species By Darryl Fears The New York Eagle News/The Washington Post O Sergeant Stubby, a short brindle bull terrier mutt, was officially decorated a hero of World War I. Regarded as the greatest war dog in the nation’s history, he earned one wound stripe and three service stripes. (Courtesy of Division of Armed Forces/ Smithsonian National Museum of America History/ Slate.) The ceremony was presided over by Gen. John J. Pershing, commander of the American forces in Europe during the war. Pershing made a short speech, noting the soldier's "heroism of highest caliber" and "bravery under fire." The general solemnly lifted an engraved solid gold medal from its case and pinned it to the hero's uniform. In response, the Times reported, the solider "licked his chops and wagged his diminutive tail." Sergeant Stubby, a short brindle bull terrier mutt, was officially a decorated hero of World War I. The award was not a formal U.S. military commendation, but it symbolically confirmed Stubby, who'd also earned one wound stripe and three service stripes, as the greatest war dog in the nation's history. According to the Smithsonian __________________ SGT STUBBY PAGE 7 nly in Florida can a search for one invasive monster lead to the discovery of another. On a balmy Sunday in early spring, a group of volunteers called Swamp Apes was searching for pythons in Everglades National Park when it stumbled on something worse: a Nile crocodile, lurking in a canal near Miami suburbs. It was an all-points alarm, prompting an emergency response by Ruben Ramirez displays pythons that he and his competition partner, George Brana, caught by hand during Florida's Python Challenge. Up to 100,000 pythons are estimated to be living experts from the nation- in the Florida Everglades. (Photo Courtesy of Florida Python Hunters) al park, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Nile crocs are highly aggres- in the swamp since it was first Commission and the Univer- sive man-eaters known to take spotted two years ago. sity of Florida. They joined down huge prey in Africa, and Worrying is what Florida __________________ the Swamp Apes and wrestled officials worried that the one the reptile out of the canal. in the canal might be breeding INVASIVE PAGE 22 2 EAGLE NEWS nyeaglenews.com Regional Bath Beautification Project Supported By Local Rotary Club Way-Co Top Seniors for Class of 2014 Information Provided By Elaine Tears The New York Eagle News/PCSD The New York Eagle News/ Bath Rotary W ayland-Cohocton High School’s Valedictorian for the Class of 2014 is Abigail Beaupre, and the Salutatorian is Olivia Bernal. Honors for high GPAs were as follows: Summa Cum Laude Recognition (GPA of 96-100) • Abigail Beaupre (Valedictorian) • Olivia Bernal (Salutatorian) Magna Cum Laude Recognition (GPA of 93-95.999) • Andreanna Bowers • Cameron Ellis, Jr. • Hannah Kuhn • Kaitlin Moose • Megan Rounsville • Madelyn Schwartz Cum Laude Recognition (GPA of 90-92.999) • Tyler Bautista • Alexis Becker • Christopher Becker • Luke Bembower • Hannah Brunner • Joseph Cartella • John-Paul Holubek • Jason Howland • Courtney Lewis • Danita McClure • Hannah McKelvey • Alexander O’Hare • Brianna Parkinson The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 O Above, Abigail Beaupre (Valedictorian), and below, Olivia Bernal (Salutatorian) for Wayland-Cohocton's class of 2014 (Photos provided.) • Justin Rossmann • Sara Traphagen • Rebecca VanDuzer • Austin Votypka • Hunter Willoughby • Rachel Wormuth ■ Bounce House & Tent Rentals For Parties, PicnicsAll Events! (585) 764-0088 LaidlawBounce@gmail.com facebook.com/laidlawbounce n May 29th the Bath Rotary Club saw its Bath Beautification Project come to fruition when the twenty-three wrought iron hanging baskets, purchased by the local club last year for the light poles along Liberty Street, were filled with colorful flowers. The floral arrangements in both the baskets and barrels throughout the downtown area were done by TNT Greenhouses in Bradford. Bath Rotarians helped hang the baskets and position the barrels that day with the assistance of personnel from the Bath Village Department of Public Works. Funding for the flowers was provided by the Bath Rotary Club and the Bath Beautification Trust. In addition, flower beds were planted in front of the Bath Village Hall by MaryAnn Robinson and Rhonda Billmeyer, two members of the Bath Village Watering Team In April, the local Rotary Club held a Stearns’ Chicken Barbeque to fund this project and would like to thank those who purchased tickets for this fundraiser. Becky Stranges, Bath Rotarian, remarked, “Flowers say to residents and visitors that people care about the community. While the flowers enhance the appearance of historic Liberty Street and are an asset Bath Rotarians support the beautification of its village with new flower arrangements lining historic Liberty Street. Left to right are Rotarians John Stranges, John Gould and Becky Stranges. (Photo by Al Johnson) to businesses along the street, the beautiful blooms are also enjoyed by everyone in the Village of Bath. The flowers are maintained by the village watering team, a group of volunteers who water and care for the baskets and barrels. Each team takes care of the flowers for one week of the summer.” Stranges, who is in charge of organizing this volunteer group, urges anyone interested in helping with the project to contact her at bstranges@ gmail.com. Rotary Clubs exist to improve communities at home and abroad through a wide array of humanitarian, intercultural, and educational activities. The planning and working together to accomplish goals is the mainstay of Rotary; every member’s help is needed in some way to realize these goals. Each Rotarian is encourage to participate in at least three of the local club’s activities or projects each year. Indeed, Rotary is a service club: its business is mankind, and its product is service. The best reason for becoming a Rotarian is the chance to do something for somebody else while experiencing self-fulfillment and friendship in the process. The local Rotarians will feel great pride and joy as residents and visitors enjoy the flower baskets and barrels throughout the summer and into the fall. ■ Event to Honor Cancer Patients, Survivors & Families Article Submitted The New York Eagle News T hompson Health is honoring all those touched by cancer at its seventh annual Colors of Hope and Courage, on Thursday, June 26, from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Inn on the Lake, 770 S. Main St. in Canandaigua. Colors of Hope and Courage encompasses all forms of cancer, not only celebrating survivors but acknowledging the journeys of their loved ones as well. All who have been touched by cancer – men and women, young and old – are welcomed to this event each year. The event will be held lakeside, under a large tent. In addition to a light dinner prepared by the Inn’s renowned chefs, it will include music from Almost Irish, a photo booth, and family-friendly offerings such as face painting and jewelry making. There is no charge to attend. However, those planning on attending must RSVP no later than June 20 by calling Thompson Health’s Wellness Department at 396-6111. ■ Mow Boys Lawncare Lawn Mowing • Trimming • Mulching • Weeding Spring Clean-up • Leaf Removal • Snowplowing Free Estimates • Fully Insured Serving Bath, Branchport, Canandaigua, Geneva, Naples, Penn Yan, Prattsburgh & Pulteney Doug Raner 315.412.4214 Jared Andrews 315.759.0387 Errick Raner 315.521.5923 3 nyeaglenews.com The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 Honoring My Dad on Father’s Day By Steve Barnhoorn Special to The New York Eagle News O n this Father's Day, I remember my father Bart J. Barnhoorn (1930-1996) with deep appreciation and admiration. He grew up in Holland in World War II during the Nazi occupation. My late father once told our family the story how the Barnhoorn family outsmarted the Nazis under frightening conditions. In December 1944, the Nazis conducted razzias in the town where Dad’s family lived. SS troops searched homes, rounding up teenage boys to send to labor concentration camps in Germany. For several days, my Dad and my Uncle Simon hid underneath the floor in the house, with steel lids over their heads. If the Nazis suspected they were misled, they had orders to shoot through the floors. Thankfully, no family member was harmed. After the war, my father went to trade school to learn how to repair electric motors. In order to realize his dream to come to America, he knew he had to have a good skill to get a Steve Barnhoorn's late father, Bart J. Barnhoorn, on the shore of Honeoye Lake with dog Peppy in the spring of 1961. The photo taken by Steve's mother Rebecca, when the family lived in the Times-Union Tract (now Honeoye Lake Park) near the lake. good job. After arriving in America on February 28, 1957, when my Dad was only 26 and with no family to fall back on here, he took night classes at a high school in Rochester to learn English. The first job my Dad landed was a machine operator. Not long after that, he got a job at the General Motors Delco Products Division in Rochester where he worked for 30 years. My fondest childhood memory of my father was when I was 3 years old. I had a stuffed Yogi Bear that I literally loved to death. When Christmas 1965 rolled around, Dad was determined to replace my worn out bear. He made several shopping trips to find my favorite bear, with no luck. He tried one last store and there it was. On Christmas morning, I opened one of my presents and there was my new Yogi Bear. I didn't care about any other presents after that. My father was so touched by my attachment to the new bear that he had a tear in his eye. While working at Delco, with a family of five kids, my father needed more money, and decided to become a local trash hauler, when we lived in the Times-Union tract on Honeoye Lake. I was 8 years old when Dad got his trash route. For the next 7 years, on and off, I would go with my father on his route. Most of his customers lived on the lake. I loved going and spending time with him, and helping out as much as I could. I am sure it took a lot of patience on my Dad's part but he always made me feel special. Working with my father is one of my warmest recollections. Through him, I learned to appreciate my neighbors and the people in my hometown. He taught me to respect other people and to respect myself. By sharing these memories, I wanted to honor my Dad this year to all who didn't get the chance to know him. He was kind, gentle, loving father, with a strong work ethic and quiet strength. And I owe a lot of who I am today to him. - Steve Barnhoorn of Honeoye is a member of the Richmond Town Board. Yates Community Endowment Extends Grant Application Deadline Article Submitted The New York Eagle News T he turmoil and devastation resulting from flash floods in mid-May have prompted the Yates Community Endowment to extend the application deadline for its 2014 grants by three weeks. The new deadline is Friday, June 20. Applicants must be a 501(c)(3) organization or sponsored by a chari- table, nonprofit organization and intend to use the grant in Yates County to benefit Yates County residents. Successful applications will: • Focus on an unmet need; • Address an important quality of life and/or economic development issue; • Offer broad community benefit; • Be rooted in the local community and build on local strengths; • Avoid duplication with other programs or services; • Demonstrate that the project can be sustained if the project is expected to continue beyond the grant period; and • Be able to measure the project’s success and its results in the community. Grants will not support individual residents, debt reduction, religious activities, or endowment campaigns. The typical grant size is between $1,000 and $5,000 and will be consid- ered by a grants committee of the alllocal, all-volunteer Yates Community Endowment Advisory Board. Find the application online at www. racf.org/Yates. For additional questions, contact Joy Benson, regional coordinator at Rochester Area Community Foundation, at jbenson@racf. org or 585.341.4412. The Yates Community Endowment, an affiliate of Rochester Area Community Foundation, was founded in 2011 by a group of committed The New York Eagle News (Formerly The Prattsburgh News) Serving Avon, Bath, Canandaigua, Cohocton, Dansville, Geneseo, Hammondsport, Honeoye, Lakeville, Livonia, Mt. Morris, Naples, Penn Yan, Prattsburgh, Wayland and Neighboring Communities. *** Linda Rex Childs - Owner/Publisher Published Weekly (except for the last week of December and the first week of January) *** The New York Eagle News 8 Mechanic Street • Prattsburgh, NY 14873 Phone: (607) 522-5676 www. nyeaglenews.com General: culpepper@empacc.net Advertising: eaglenews@empacc.net *** U. S. Library of Congress International Standard Serial Numbering ISSN 2162-2930 *** Advertising Deadlines are Thursday Noon for the next upcoming Thursday Edition. *** Content © 2013, The New York Eagle News including contractual news sources of The Washington Post News Service with Bloomberg News, Foreign Policy, Slate Magazine, Thomson-Reuters, UPI, King Features Syndicate and special features from outside sources, all rights reserved. May not be republished or distributed without permission. All Graphic Content © The New York Eagle News. Publisher does not sponsor, reccomend or endorse any third-party product or service, or make any representation regarding its advertisers nor guarantee the accuracy of claims made in advertisements in this publication, and urges readers to use due dilligence in all transactions. Table of Contents Arts & Entertainment . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Etcetera . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Economy & Business . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Food/Groceries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24-25 Going Out Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Health & Science . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Horoscopes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Lifestyle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12 Obituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Recipes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24-25 Real Estate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Back cover Regional . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Senior News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Travel & Leisure. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Veterans Post . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Wheels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . 16 World . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 residents interested in securing the future of Yates County. The Endowment awarded $16,500 in grants to local nonprofits last year. ■ Hawks Named Thompson DWI Accident Health Board Chair Survivor Honored Article Submitted The New York Eagle News R ichard H. Hawks Jr. was named chairman of Thompson Health’s Board of Directors at the health system’s recent Annual Meeting. Hawks, of Canandaigua, is a senior vice president and trust administration officer at Canandaigua National Bank & Trust. He has been active at Thompson Health since 1978, serving on various boards and co-chairing the Advancing Excellence Capital Campaign from 2002 to 2004. Hawks is also a former board chairman for the Healthcare Trustees of New York State. “With his rich history within Thompson and the many contributions he has already made to its growth and to the health of our community, we are thrilled Rick has accepted the role of chairman at this point in our journey,” said Thompson Health President/CEO Michael F. Stapleton Jr. At the Annual Meeting, Stapleton thanked William R. Kenyon, Jr. for his service as chairman since 2009 and his support of Thompson, in various capacities, for more than 20 years. “Bill Kenyon is a tremendous advocate for Thompson Health. Through his work as our chairman, he has helped shape our vision of high-qual- ity, accessible health care into a reality and we are incredibly grateful,” Stapleton said of Kenyon, who remains a board member. Also during the Annual Meeting, four recently-retired physicians were celebrated for their combined 95 years of service to the community. Dr. Brendan Brady, Dr. Anthony Geraci, Dr. Philip Nevin and Dr. W. Jeffery Page are now honorary members of the Thompson Health Medical Staff. ■ Article Submitted The New York Eagle News T he survivor of a DWI accident was honored June 2nd by the Steuben County Sheriff ’s Department and the Legislature’s Public Safety and Corrections Committee. Justin Randall, no address given, shares his compelling story with school students and DWI offenders during school “Alcohol and Drug Awareness” programs, and the county’s Victim Awareness Panel. Randall is unable to walk, speak, or use his left arm after he chose to drive after drinking alcohol, county Sheriff David Cole told the legislative com- mittee June 2nd. “Our student surveys indicate very clearly that you’ve impressed upon them the importance of not driving drunk and avoiding those who do,” Cole told Randall. “You truly make a difference.” ■ U-pick Strawberries Starting approx. June 15th $2 per qt. Eelpot Rd., Naples (Behind Bob’s Alignment) for more info: 585.374.5198 or 585.943.0218 4 EAGLE NEWS nyeaglenews.com Bristol, NY Vincent Tripi Bristol, NY - Vincent Tripi, age 57, passed away May 31, 2014 at his home, surrounded by family and friends. He is survived by his wife of 30 years, Nancy Tripi; two children, Kaitlin (Brian) Fisher and Ben Tripi (Erika Langworthy); three sisters, Kathy Dorie, Lisa Suomala (Pati Lawson) and Jennifer (Steve) Lynn; and other extended family members. He was predeceased by his mother, Evelyn Suomala; and grandmother, Beatrice Colvin. A devoted husband, father and friend, Vince enjoyed cooking, Scrabble, fishing, metal detecting and most of all, spending time with those he loved. He will be remembered for his hard work and business ventures. Vince formerly owned and operated Parkside Pizza in Bloomfield for over 10 years. He presently owned and operated Pasta Classics and along with his family produced homemade ravioli and fresh pasta for several local markets and restaurants. Vince will be dearly missed by his family and many friends. Services are private. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to Ontario-Yates Hospice, 756 Pre-Emption Rd., Geneva, NY 14456. Arrangements are by Johnson-Kennedy Funeral Home, Inc., Bloomfield. *** Canandaigua, NY Obituaries "Mutt" Coyne, age 85, passed away peacefully at home on June 4, 2014. He is survived by five children, Michael "Mutt" (Jeanne) Coyne, Patty (Jim) Stahl, Bob (Carol) Coyne, Pam (Tom) Scharr and Cathy (Marty) Crosby; 13 grandchildren, Jimmy, J.T., David, Dawn, Megan, Tanner, Matthew, Katie, Courtney, Andrew, Michael, Rob and Adam; five greatgrandchildren; brother, Bill (Katie) Coyne; a niece and a nephew; and many dear friends. He was predeceased by his wife, the love of his life, MaryLu Coyne in 1970. Bob was born in Canandaigua and was the son of James P. and Marion (Breen) Coyne. He was a graduate of St. Mary's School and Canandaigua Academy. Bob was a proud US Marine Corps veteran, serving in Korea for two years. He retired from the VA Medical Center in 1992 after 40 years there. Bob was a member of St. Mary's Church, American Legion Post 256, and Canandaigua Elks Club. He enjoyed spending time with his family and grandchildren and attending their school and sporting events. Bob was an avid golfer, walker and runner. A Funeral mass was celebrated June 9, 2014 at St. Mary's Church, Canandaigua. Interment was set for Calvary Cemetery, Canandaigua. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to St. Mary's School, 16 Gibson St., Canandaigua, NY 14424. Arrangements were by Johnson-Kennedy Funeral Home, Inc., Canandaigua *** Ronald J. Tschetter James R. "Bob" "Mutt" Coyne Canandaigua, NY - James R. "Bob" Canandaigua, NY - Ronald J. Tschetter, age 73, passed away June 4, 2014 at Benincasa (comfort care home). He is survived by his wife, Amy Sherman; two sons, Drew and Brett Tschetter; sister, Kathy Tschetter; two brothers, Larry (Nancy) Tschetter and Alan Tschetter; mother-in-law and fatherin-law, Marcia and Jack Sherman; brother-in-law, Skip Sherman; sisterin-law, Jo Sherman; and many nieces and nephews. Ron was born and raised in Rochester and was a graduate of Aquinas. He worked in the banking industry in Rochester for many years. Ron was a longtime member of the Monroe "Y" Ski Club. Friends may call Friday, June 27 from 4-7 p.m. at Johnson-Kennedy Funeral Home, Inc., 47 N. Main St., Canandaigua. His memorial service will be held Saturday, June 28 at 10 a.m. at the funeral home. Interment will be in Canandaigua Lakeview Cemetery, Rushville. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to Benincasa (comfort care home), 3880 Rush-Mendon Rd., Mendon, NY 14506, or the Canandaigua Lake Watershed Association, P.O. Box 323, Canandaigua, NY 14424 or Habitat for Humanity of Ontario County, 3040 County Rd. 10, Canandaigua, NY 14424. *** Albert W. Wagner, Canandaigua, NY - Albert W. Wagner, age 72, passed away June 3, 2014. He is survived by his wife of 47 years, Christine E. Wagner; son, Michael Wagner; a beloved niece and several nephews; and many dear friends. Mr. Wagner retired from F.L.C.C. He enjoyed bass fishing with his son, Michael. Services are private. Memorial contributions may be made to the American Cancer Society, P.O. Box 7, East Syracuse, NY 13057. Arrangements are by Johnson-Kennedy Funeral Home, Inc., Canandaigua. *** Cohocton, NY Fred R. Zeh St. George-Stanton Funeral Home St. George Monuments Wayland, New York 585-728-2100 The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 Todd and Jill Forsythe Bud and Sue St. George Cohocton, NY - Fred R. Zeh, age 69, passed away June 4, 2014 at Noyes Memorial Hospital in Dansville. A loving great-grandfather, Fred was born on Sept. 7, 1944 to Ralph and Linda (Alderman) Zeh, who predeceased him. Besides his parents, he was predeceased by his grandson, Dillon Zeh; his sister and brotherin-law, Virginia and Donald Francis; and his special friends, Vic and Janet Hammond. Fred was employed by the NYSDOT in Hornell before retiring in 2004. Fred was an avid hunter and enjoyed the outdoors. Babies of all kinds brought him great joy and put a smile on his face. His hobbies included photography, woodworking and especially raising pygmy goats and other farm animals. His family includes his three chil- dren, Sally (John) Mitchell of Virgina, Veronica Zeh of Wellsville and Justin Zeh of Cohocton; his five grandchildren, Jacob (Latosha) Mitchell, Felicia (Thomas) Beebe, Fred (LaToya) Zeh, Hilary Mitchell and Logan King; his six great-grandchildren; his siblings, Paul (Lucille) Preston of Avoca, and Margery (Robin) Homokay of Arizona; and his good friends, Doug and Kathy Mehlenbacher. Funeral services were held on June 9, 2014 at the Avoca Funeral Home, Avoca, with the Rev. Daniel Pickering having officiated. Committal services and interment was set for Maple View Cemetery, Cohocton. In lieu of flowers, those wishing may contribute in his memory to Noyes Memorial Hospital, 111 Clara Barton St., Dansville, N.Y. 14437 *** Dansville, NY Ethel M. (Eick) Button Dansville, NY - Ethel M. Button, age 82, passed away June 1, 2014, at the McCauley Manor at Mercycare in Hornell, where she had been a resident for the past several years. Ethel was born in Gasport, NY on October 19, 1931, a daughter of the late Avery and Helen Schilling Eick. On July 2, 1949, she was married to Charles W. Button Jr. who predeceased her on April 6, 2007. She was also predeceased by a son, James Button in 2002. Charlie and Ethel owned and operated Dansville Pump Supply for many years, retiring in 1997. She was a member of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in Dansville. Ethel and Charlie had lived on Conesus Lake for many years. Ethel is survived by two daughters, Kathy (David) Gates of PA, and Tammy (Rodney) Morsch of Dansville; three sons, Lynn (Fran) Button of Nunda, Paul (Tina) Button and Rodney Button, both of Dansville; a brother, Laverne (Bea) Eick of Medina; fifteen grandchildren, many great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews. Funeral services were held on June 4, 2014 at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church in Dansville with the Rev. Virginia Mazzarella officiating. Interment was set for Greenmount Cemetery in Dansville. In lieu of flowers memorial contributions may be made to the St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, 21 Clara Barton St., Dansville, NY 14437. Arrangements were with the Hindle Funeral Home, Inc., Dansville. *** Norma M. (Smith) Crane Dansville, NY - Norma M. Crane, age 83, passed away June 3, 2014, at Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester. Norma was born in the Town of Sparta on November 20, 1930 a daughter of the late Paul and Verlie Perry Smith. On October 28, 1950 she was married to Murray Crane, who predeceased her on February 24, 2013. She was also predeceased by her siblings Margaret Trescott, Erma Cox and Paul Smith. Norma was a member of the Dansville United Methodist Church, the Woman of the Moose and was past financial treasurer of the Groveland Federated Church. She was a former dining room attendant at Craig Colony in Sonyea. She retired as a telephone operator from SUNY Geneseo. Norma is survived by two sons, David (Joan) Crane of Bow, WA, and Murray P. “Chip” Crane of Dansville; a grandson, Murray David Crane; three great-grandchildren; a sister, Audrey Kline of Wayland; and many nieces and nephews. Funeral services were held on June 6, 2014 at the Dansville United Methodist Church, with the Rev. James W. Stevens officiating. Interment was set for Kiehle Cemetery Sparta. In lieu of flowers please make memorial contributions to the Dansville United Methodist Church, 5 Chestnut Ave., Dansville, NY 14437 or the Livingston County Hospice, 3 Murray Hill Drive, Mt. Morris, NY 14510. *** Dansville, NY/Boca Raton, FL Kameron P. “Kam” Mason Dansville, NY/Boca Raton, FL - Kameron P. Mason, age 62, passed away June 6, 2014 in Boca Raton, Florida, where he had happily made his home for the last fourteen years of his life and was intimately invested in the lives of his daughter Jennine and her two boys, Joseph and Anthony Fabiani, to whom he was affectionately known as “Bapa”. Kam lived most of his early years on Conesus Lake where he was something of a daredevil for water sports and anything else involving speed or risk, including an early career driving pace horses in Batavia and Buffalo. Ever the showman, he reveled in driving racecar #23 using the moniker, “The Undertaker”. He grew up hunting and fishing in the hills of Western New York with his father, Nelson and brother, Kirk. He passed along this love of the outdoors to his son Kevin and both grandsons. Kam attended Livonia Central School and then pursued a lifetime desire to become a funeral director when he attended Simmons School of Embalming and Mortuary Science in Syracuse, NY. He apprenticed at Gormley Funeral home in Phoenicia, NY and went on to become part owner of John W. Martin Funeral Home in Mt. Morris and then Chamberlin Funeral Home in Dansville, NY with _________________________ OBITUARIES PAGE 10 5 nyeaglenews.com EAGLE NEWS The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 The World Coal-fired Plant in Kosovo Tests World Bank Clean-Air Pledge By Sandrine Rastello The New York Eagle News/ Bloomberg News T he smokestacks at Kosovo's oldest power station tower over decaying buildings and a tangle of rusty pipes, polluting the Balkan countryside and posing the first test of the World Bank's pledge to avoid coal. The half-century-old plant near the capital, Pristina, produces a third of the nation's electricity by burning lignite, a type of coal that emits more greenhouse gases than any other fossil fuel and is blamed for hundreds of premature deaths a year in Kosovo. Chronic power outages hobble the country's $7 billion economy, the poorest in Europe after Moldova. Kosovo's government is asking the World Bank to help finance a new plant that would provide a reliable power supply while still tapping the nation's lignite reserves, the world's fifth largest. The proposal is forcing the lender and its biggest shareholder, the U.S., to make an exception in their clean-energy commitments and concede that burning coal can be the fastest route out of poverty. "We're going to avoid coal except in the most exceptional circumstances, and in this case, it is one of the exceptional circumstances," World Bank President Jim Yong Kim said in a May 30 interview. "It's a dilemma, not just as the World Bank -- it's a dilemma all over the world." Boosting growth and attracting foreign investment while agreeing to close the old plant means the country of more than 1.8 million people needs new sources of electricity. The debate with environmentalists is whether that can be achieved without coal, an abundant resource that's been a source of pride in the former province of Yugoslavia. "All these years, we have not been able to think about anything else," said Visar Azemi, who coordinates Kosid, a coalition of nonprofit organizations, media and research institutes that oppose a new plant, in an interview in Pristina. "To talk to people about shifting this mindset to renewables, to something else besides coal, was not an easy task to do." Containing less energy and more carbon, lignite is cheaper than hard coal and has seen a recent revival in Europe as policymakers allowed mines to be expanded to drive down power prices. The Kosovo project -- a two-unit, 600-megawatt plant that would be fed The Kosovo B power plant seen from the town of Obiliq, near Pristina, Kosovo. The half-century-old plant produces a third of the nation’s electricity by burning lignite, a type of coal that emits more greenhouse gases than any other fossil fuel and is blamed for hundreds of premature deaths a year in Kosovo. (Bloomberg News photo by Sandrine Rastello). coal from nearby state-owned mines -- is estimated by the government to cost less than 1 billion euros ($1.4 billion). It would be built with private funds and sit next to Kosovo's second power plant, which dates back to the 1980s and needs upgrades. U.S. and European companies are lining up to bid on the project. New York-based ContourGlobal LP and Sithe Global Power LLC, which is owned by funds managed by Blackstone Group LP, were pre-approved as bidders, along with Turkish company Park Holding AS, according to Economic Development Minister Fadil Ismajli. Public Power Corp SA, Greece's largest electricity company, is partnering with Sithe Global, he said in an interview earlier this year. To lure investors and their financiers spooked by political or credit risks, the World Bank would offer about $60 million in loan guarantees that would kick in if the government failed to meet obligations such as supplying coal or purchasing electricity. Such guarantees ensure the bank gets involved early on in disputes and helps avoid such crises. Years without investment have curtailed the two plants' capacity, making outages part of daily life in Kosovo and forcing the state-owned utility to import more expensive electricity. More than a third of the power available is lost during transmission and distribution or is never billed. On winter nights, the smell and haze from wood-burning stoves waft through the streets of Pristina, a city of more than 200,000 inhabitants where Ottoman-era monuments sit beside concrete-block tenements built during the Cold War. The country has "obsolete technologies which are highly polluting and are not sufficient to meet even the basic demands for growth and development of the economy," Ellen Goldstein, the World Bank's country director for Southeast Europe, Europe and Central Asia, said in a phone interview. The Washington-based bank looked at all options before concluding that the best way to meet current and future demand is to build a new, more efficient coal-fired plant and complement it with renewable sources, which the government has pledged to expand, Goldstein said. The bank also plans to fund efforts to insulate government buildings. For Kosovo, which declared independence from Serbia in 2008 and is not recognized by Russia or China, coal also means security of supply, Ismajli said in an e-mail. Russia's annexation of Crimea earlier this year and the instability engulfing Ukraine "demonstrate the importance of developing indigenous resources," he said. "Kosovo has an abundance of high-quality lignite that is cheap and easy to extract." Kosid and its international allies, which include the U.S.- based environmental group Sierra Club, say a new lignite-fired plant is avoidable. "There are better, cheaper, smarter options, which also happen to be lower emitting," said Bruce Buckheit, a former official at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency who worked as a consultant on Kosovo for the Sierra Club. Among the potential sources of energy is natural gas from Azerbaijan, he said. Opponents of the plant also promote a renewable-only proposal crafted by Daniel Kammen, who heads the Renewable and Appropriate Energy Laboratory at the University of California at Berkeley, and spent a year advising the World Bank on the issues. His low-carbon scenario uses more optimistic assumptions for wind-, solar- and biomass-generated power than the bank. Kosid, which has financial backing from the Rockefeller Brothers Fund, has campaigned against the government plan, citing the bank's own estimates that air pollution causes more than 800 premature deaths in Kosovo each year. "The high cost of building a new coal plant will go into your energy bills," Kosid says in an animated television advertisement released last month in Kosovo. "And the healthcare treatment for thousands that will fall sick from the pollution, that's also an economic cost of coal." The goal for the activists is ultimately to dissuade the bank from supporting the project. The bank has become a bigger advocate for clean energy development during two years under Kim, a physician and anthropologist by training. "We just cannot tell them that they can't have energy because we can't invest in coal," Kim said in the interview. "We're going to at least make this coal-power plant the cleanest it could possibly be." Last year, the lender said it would stop financing coal projects except in rare cases "where there are no feasible alternatives available to meet basic energy needs and other sources of financing are absent." Kosovo's future with coal is "a test of the ambiguity they've left on the table," said Scott Morris, a former deputy assistant secretary for development finance and debt at the U.S. Treasury Department. "It's a dilemma for the bank in that there's no doubt that any coal project has a climate impact." The lender last financed a coal-fired plant four years ago, in South Africa. While the project was approved, several countries, including the U.S., abstained from the board vote. This time, the bank's largest member-nation appears more supportive, with officials from the U.S. Agency for International Development recommending the project in a September report. Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said during a May 8 congressional hearing that "for the poorest countries, we continue to have an exception for coal facilities." Treasury Department spokeswoman Holly Shulman said the U.S. won't make a final decision until the project is brought to the bank's board, which has yet to schedule a review. The timing is less than ideal for President Barack Obama as he makes a case for acting on climate change. The EPA on June 2 proposed cuts in greenhouse-gas emissions from the nation's power plants by an average of 30 percent from 2005 levels, the boldest single step the U.S. has taken to fight global warming. The move drew immediate Republican opposition. The U.S. and Kosovo have a close relationship that dates to the war of 1998-99, when the U.S. pushed the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to conduct air strikes to end an ethnic conflict between Serbs and Kosovar Albanians. In Pristina, a statue of Bill Clinton welcomes visitors driving from the airport on a boulevard that bears the former U.S. president's name. It intersects with a street named for George W. Bush, Clinton's successor, who supported the country's independence. Kosovo's government, which will retain ownership of the mine supplying the proposed plant, in April asked the companies to start the bidding, the economic ministry said in an email. The older of the two main plants may remain open through 2021 or 2022, until a new one is operating, said Ismajli, the economic development minister. — With assistance from Ben Holland in Washington and Maria Petrakis in Athens. © 2014, Bloomberg News. ■ “When Experience & Quality Count” Providing Naples with Complete Automotive Care for 30 years! Pat’s Radiator COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE REPAIRS › Official NYS Inspection Station ‹ Specializing in Subaru Repair YES! We also do Storm Window and Screen Repair 8633 Cohocton St. (Rte. 21) Naples, NY • (585) 374-2262 6 EAGLE NEWS nyeaglenews.com The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 Health & Science Women with Pre-Cancer Tumors Urged to Reconsider Surgery By Michelle Fay Cortez and Shannon Pettypiece The New York Eagle News/ Bloomberg News J ackie Fox and Peggy MacDonald share a diagnosis. Both were told by doctors they had a cluster of abnormal cells in one of their breasts that may turn into cancer. Each reacted in vastly different ways to their bad news. Fox, 57, diagnosed five years ago, had her breast removed. MacDonald, 49, got her news last year. She opted against surgery. Their decisions were highly personal, driven by unique circumstances and long-held feelings about cancer, the women said in separate interviews. Both believe they made the right decision. "Some people can bash a woman's choices," said Fox, of Omaha, Neb. "They can tell you it isn't likely that anything is going to happen, but they can't tell you you're not going to live in fear." That wasn't the issue for MacDonald, of Portland, Ore. After her diagnosis for the same condition — ductal carcinoma in situ, or DCIS — McDonald felt as if her doctors put her on a "cancer conveyor belt" that moved too quickly: a mammogram, a biopsy, and then a breast surgeon discussing the intricacies of surgery. How to slow down and, when necessary, stop that process is at the core of a report released last year by a National Cancer Institute panel of physicians. The report has kicked off a debate on how best to make use of the surge of early warnings unleashed from powerful new tests for breast, prostate and other forms of cancer. Journal of the American Medical Association. What's more, while science has developed increasingly sensitive tests to find abnormal cells, there still remains no clear way to determine when or if the cells will become cancerous, said Jennifer Litton, an oncologist at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. That's left doctors and patients in a no man's land where fear can play as big a role as science. “You have to do what you feel is right, and what will help you "There is over-diagnosleep at night ,” says Jackie Fox, left, hugging her friend Pam Van Compernolle, who died of metastatic breast cancer in last year at sis and there certainly 40. Fox opted for a mastectomy after learning she had a cluster of is over-treatment, but abnormal cells in one breast. (Photo credit Jackie Fox). because we can't predict in many cases what the outcome will The panel concluded that doctors who have now become highly adept be, we usually err on the side of what at finding abnormal cells are far less we think will have more benefits than skilled at assessing treatment options, risks," Litton said. "It's a hard converpushing patients toward risky surger- sation when you are talking about risks because no one has a crystal ies that may not be necessary. "We are finding more and more le- ball." Renaming pre-cancer conditions sions at earlier and earlier time points in the cancer diagnosis," said Asad may help ease some of that fear, the Umar, chief of the cancer institute's panel suggested in its commentary. It gastrointestinal research group, by urged changing the name of Fox and telephone. "This was our goal. But MacDonald's condition from DCIS now we realize we have created a to IDLE, an acronym for indolent problem. Our strategy has been like lesions of epithelial origin that can carpet bombing. We need to clear develop in the breast and elsewhere. up the confusion by coming up with That would remove the fearful word some kind of strategy that will miti- "carcinoma" and offer a more precise medical definition, they wrote. gate this over diagnosis." It's a good first step, said MacDonThat runs counter to the fix-itand-move-on mindset built into the ald, whose mother was diagnosed U.S. medical system, even when that with breast cancer in her 40s, and means costly, dangerous surgery or died from it 25 years later. Adjusting toxic chemotherapy. The challenge is the name "would change the way peochanging that culture, the panel wrote ple approach" the diagnosis, she said. "You're trained to panic when you in its commentary last August in the You Know You've Turned Into a Mom When... 8468 Route 54, Hammondsport 607-569-2363 • 888-569-2363 Penn Yan • You actually start to like the smell of strained carrots mixed with applesauce. • You weep through the scene in Dumbo when his mom is taken away, not to mention what Bambi does to you. • You get soooo into crafts you contemplate writing a book called 101 Fun Crafts to do with Dryer Lint and Eggshells. • You spend a half hour searching for your sunglasses only to have your teenager say, "Mom, why don't you wear the ones you pushed up on your head?" ■ get this thing that says cancer," said MacDonald, the mother of three children ages 8 to 14 and a product manager at eBay. Re-educating the medical community on how it can better help women make decisions would be more valuable, she said. MacDonald was diagnosed in March. Two doctors said her only options were to either remove the abnormal tissue and have radiation or undergo a mastectomy. Neither suggested simply monitoring the cells for change or using medicine to starve their growth. "I was starting to have all these little red flags," she said. "My instinct was it annually, with about one-third to half of those seen by doctors falling into the lowest risk category, Esserman said. As with MacDonald, no one discussed watchful waiting with Fox, who recalled her doctor telling her that the condition wasn't life-threatening, then quickly speaking of a mastectomy. Her growth was described to her as not "real cancer" or "stage zero" cancer. "I was thinking, wait a minute, why are we talking about mastectomies?" recalled Fox, who works for an engineering company. "I kept thinking, why are we looking at this option?" After receiving the same diagnosis as Jackie Fox, Peggy MacDonald felt as if her doctors put her on a “cancer conveyor belt” that moved too quickly, and chose to monitor the abnormal cells rather than have a mastectomy. (Photo credit: Peggy MacDonald.) to question why go to such extremes for something that doesn't sound so bad." While she was waiting for the results from a genetic test that would tell her if she was predisposed to cancer, her sister told her about Laura Esserman, a doctor at the Carol Franc Buck Breast Care Center at the University of California, San Francisco, and the lead author of the journal commentary by the National Cancer Institute panel. Under Esserman's care, MacDonald began taking drugs designed to slow the growth of the abnormal cells. They would be monitored via an MRI in about three months to decide on any further treatment. More than 230,000 women are diagnosed with breast cancer in the U.S. each year, making it the most common tumor type among women, according to the American Cancer Society. Fewer than 40,000 die from Her views changed after meeting with an oncologist and two unsuccessful attempts at removing abnormal cells. Her oncologist told her she had a 50 percent chance of developing cancer, based on the physical characteristics of the abnormality and density of her breast tissue. She doesn't regret her decision to have a mastectomy. She has since written a book on DCIS, "From Zero to Mastectomy," and writes about cancer for a blog and on social media. "You need to really talk to your doctor about your own risk factors, but people's personal tolerance for risk comes into this too," Fox said. "I personally didn't choose a preventative bilateral mastectomy but some women do, and maybe some doctor wouldn't agree with that. But you have to do what you feel is right, and what will help you sleep at night." © 2013, Bloomberg News. ■ Domestic Violence Support Group Offered • every Tuesday at 6:45pm • for DV victims (and their children) • Childcare/group is offered during the sessions • No charge for groups or childcare Contact the shelter at 1-800-286-3407 for more info/location 7 nyeaglenews.com The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 Stubby's provenance is unknown. According to several news reports, National Museum of American His- he first enters the historical record in tory, he was the first dog ever given July 1917 as an ownerless stray. The rank in the U.S. Army. His glory was journey to the theater of war has the even hailed in France, which also pre- quality of legend — a scruffy, peculiarly American brand of myth. Stubsented him with a medal. Millions of Americans heard tales by was like a character out of Horatio of Stubby's courage. He had report- Alger, or a sentimental one-reel silent edly comforted wounded warriors on movie: an orphan who made his way bullet-strafed battlefields. It was said in the world with perseverance and he could sniff out poison gas, bark- pluck. The setting for Stubby's debut was ing warnings to doughboys in the trenches. He even captured a Ger- the Yale Bowl in New Haven, Conman soldier. These exploits made the necticut. Yale University's football dog nothing less than a celebrity. He stadium was the site of Camp Yale, met three sitting presidents, traveled where the soldiers of the 102nd Infanthe nation to veterans' commemora- try, part of the New England-based tions, and performed in vaudeville 26th "Yankee" Division, were doing basic training prior to their deployment. On a steamy summer morning, news reports would later recount, Stubby wandered onto the massive field, where the soldiers were doing exercises. He was not an impressive sight: short, barrel-shaped, a bit homely, with brown and white brindled stripes. Stubby lingered around Camp Yale after that first appearance. Ann Bausum, author of "StubA French sergeant and a dog, both wearing gas masks, on their way to by the War Dog: The the front line. (Library of Congress/Slate.) True Story of World shows, earning $62.50 for three days War I's Bravest Dog," writes that J. of theatrical appearances, more than Robert Conroy, a 25-old private from twice the weekly salary of the aver- New Britain, Connecticut, forged the age American. For nearly a decade closest bond with the mutt. The two after the war until his death in 1926, were soon inseparable. In September 1917, a few months Stubby was the most famous animal after Stubby first embedded with the in the United States. "Stubby's history overseas," a Wa- troops at the Yale Bowl, the 102nd terbury, Connecticut, newspaper prepared to ship out. Conroy faced a wrote in 1922, "is the story of almost problem: What to do about the dog any average doughboy." But of course he had adopted and named Stubby? Stubby was not a doughboy, and his Dogs were forbidden in the U.S. renown was anything but average. military, but Conroy had managed to Despite his postwar stardom, Stubby keep the stray as a pet throughout his has faded from memory in the centu- three-month training in Connecticut. ry since the war commenced. But his Getting Stubby to Europe would be a story is worth revisiting, and not just more daunting challenge. The troops traveled by rail to Newas a cute, curious footnote. Stubby's tale offers a glimpse of the American port News, Virginia, a newly desigArmy as it prepared to fight its first nated port of embarkation for solmodern war — and later, of a bruised diers heading to France. Here the nation as it commemorated a victory 26th Division was slated to board one obtained at unthinkable human costs. of the largest freighters navigating the Atlantic, the SS Minnesota. The New 2. A Mutt Goes to Yale SGT STUBBY FROM COVER _________________________ Vets One Taxi Dispatch #: 607 - 481 - 0965 or call office: Office Hours: M - F 8 am - 4 pm 607 - 962 - 0100 Hours for Bath/nearby areas: Mon. - Sat. 7 a.m. - 10 p.m. Sunday 9 a.m. - 2 p.m. 24/7 for Corning/nearby areas • The PROFESSIONAL Taxi Service! • Serving Steuben County & beyond • Best competitive rates in the area • Reliable and Prompt • Local Veteran owned business since 2000 Women Veterans React Differently to TBI Treatment of veterans with Traumatic Brain Injury has been difficult because of the many symptoms that the illness presents. Now add another barrier ... there are differences in symptoms between men and women. Women veterans with TBI suffer from chronic pain, joblessness, PTSD, homelessness and depression in greater numbers than male veterans. They are more likely to suffer from anxiety, neurological problems and sleep disorders. Additionally, women veterans are more likely to suffer from multiple symptoms. If PTSD is part of the package, women likely take longer to heal. Odette Harris, associate professor of neurosurgery at the Palo Alto Veterans Affairs Health Care System) studied the effects of TBI on women veterans. She began with the fact that women veterans are more likely to be single parents and more likely to suffer from harassment and assault related to gender, both of which add to stress of TBI. York Times describes how Conroy eluded the ship guards by concealing Stubby in his Army-issue greatcoat. He then spirited the dog down to the hold and hid him in the ship's coal bin. At some point during the turbulent Atlantic crossing, Stubby was found out. Here the lore of Stubby, as reported by various newspapers, takes on a suspiciously cutesy cast: The story goes that the dog charmed his way into the good graces of the officers who discovered him by lifting his right paw in a salute. Out of hiding and free to roam the freighter, Stubby proved popular with the crew. A machinist onboard fashioned Stubby his own set of metal "dog tags." By the time the troops disembarked in the port of Saint-Nazaire on France's western coast, Stubby was the 102nd Infantry's unofficial mascot. 3. Dogs in the Trenches The story of dogs in warfare is an old one, stretching back to antiquity. Persians, Greeks, Assyrians, and Babylonians all used dogs in battle. Dogs were part of Attila the Hun's forces in his fifth-century European conquests. In the Middle Ages, knights outfitted dogs with canine armor; Napoleon used trained dogs as sentinels in the French campaign in Egypt. Many of the countries involved in World War I had war dog training schools in place prior to the conflict. France, Britain, Belgium, Germany, and Russia all recognized the value of trained dogs on the battlefield. The conventional wisdom favored pedigreed dogs: Jack Russell terriers for chasing rats out of trenches; German shepherds, Chiens de Brie, and Alsatian sheep dogs for sentry duty. Airedale terriers were considered good Her research concluded that women veterans with TBI are: --Four times more likely than male veterans to have substance-abuse problems. --Seven times more likely to be homeless, and 2.7 times more likely to be unemployed. --30 percent more likely to also have PTSD. (The good news here is that women are more likely to ask for help and respond to treatment as well as men, if not better.) Harris produced video narratives of women veterans describing their conditions in the hope that fresh approaches to treatment will come out of the new paradigm: men and women who have TBI need different care because they have different symptoms. To learn more, visit the Veterans Resource Center on nami.com, the site for the National Alliance on Mental Illness. Also see the VA's TBI site at www.polytrauma.va.gov. The www.ptsd. va.gov site has information for veterans, and friends and family of veterans with PTSD. Freddy Groves regrets that he cannot personally answer reader questions, but will incorporate them into his column whenever possible. Send email to columnreply2@gmail.com © 2014 King Features Synd., Inc. ■ messenger dogs. Siberian huskies, naturally, were relied on for transport. Dogs were also a key part of the Red Cross' aid efforts, and every country had its own unit. Red Cross dogs, also called sanitary dogs, or Sanitätshunde by the Germans, negotiated battlefields and no-man's lands to aide wounded men. Saddlebags stocked with water and medical supplies were strapped to their backs. Because they wore the Red Cross symbol, these dogs were, in theory, protected from being shot by the enemy. Often, the dogs simply provided comfort and a warm body to dying men on battlefields. Many dogs, including Red Cross dogs, performed heroically. In one battle, Prusco, a French dog, located and dragged more than 100 Keep Your Cool Everyone needs to take steps to stay safe in hot weather, but seniors especially need to be careful. Our internal "temperature gauge" doesn't work the way it used to, and becoming overheated can sneak up on us, with dehydration right on its heels. Here are a few ways to stay cool in summer: • If you have air conditioning, use it. Keep an eye on the heat index (temperature plus humidity) on the weather news. The higher the humidity, the less we're able to sweat and let air evaporation cool us. • Go somewhere cool in the middle of the day, such as the library or a nearby coffee shop that has air conditioning. Find out from your senior center if there are cooling centers in your area where you can go for a few hours. • Drink plenty of water. Some of our drugs can be dehydrating; ask your doctor if your prescriptions mean you should drink more water. Ask him how much liquid you should drink during hot weather, especially if your intake is limited because of water retention. Remember that drinks with caffeine (such as tea or coffee) can be dehydrating, as well as alcoholic beverages or sugary drinks like sodas. • Dress in lightweight clothing. Wear a hat if you go outside. • Put a cool, damp washcloth on pulse points, like wrist and neck. Take a cool shower. • Sign up with a seniors phone service that will check on you, or arrange with friends and family to stay in close contact during hot weather. • Keep an eye on the symptoms of heat exhaustion: clammy skin, fainting, nausea, muscle cramps and weakness. Call for help if you experience any of these, because they can lead to heat stroke if not taken care of. - Matilda Charles regrets that she cannot personally answer reader questions, but will incororate them into her column whenever possible. Send email to columnreply2@gmail.com. © 2014 King Features Synd., Inc. ■ ____________________ SGT STUBBY PAGE 9 8 EAGLE NEWS nyeaglenews.com The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 Economy & Business Opponents of Health Law Turn to Nonprofits to Avoid Regulated Insurance Plans By Sandhya Somashekhar The New York Eagle News/ The Washington Post S usan Tucker is one of millions of Americans who dislike the health law and want nothing to do with it. But the 54-year-old Venice, Florida, homemaker took her opposition a step further: She opted out. Tucker dropped the private health plan she had carried for more than a decade and joined Christian Healthcare Ministries, a faith-based nonprofit in which members pool their money to pay for one another's medical needs — and promise to adhere to biblical values, such as attending church and abstaining from sex outside of marriage. "When all this came up with the ACA, I just realized, I don't want to be a part of any of this," said Tucker, who views the Affordable Care Act as the government meddling in her personal health care. The Christian Healthcare program is not as comprehensive as insurance — she has to pay for her preventive care, for example — but the monthly payment of $150 can't be beat, she said. Tucker is part of a small but growing group of Americans whose opposition to the Affordable Care Act is spurring them to seek out alternatives, choosing once-fringe methods to pay for their medical care in an have to pay the penalty for not carrying adequate coverage. In other cases, the options are not sanctioned by the law, leaving people on the hook to pay the fine. But some critics of the law say that even with the penalty, the alternatives are worth it. Advocates and healthpolicy experts say there are risks in addition to the penalty. The programs typically do not carry the law's consumer protections, such as a ban on insurers refusing to cover pre-existing Susan Tucker, seen June 4, 2014 in Venice, Florida, uses Christian Healthcare Ministries, a faith-based nonprofit, to cover her medical conditions. Consumcosts so she can avoid using an insurance plan regulated by the ers won't be eligible for Affordable Care Act. (Photo for The Washington Post by Edward federal subsidies to help Linsimier) them pay their premieffort to skirt the many requirements ums. They could get stuck with unthe law imposes on the private health paid medical bills. While some of the plans might insurance market. The result is a burgeoning business "make sense" for healthy consumers, among brokers, clinics and insur- "a lot of this stuff is truly just junk ers that are advertising themselves coverage," said Sabrina Corlette, projas a way to avoid the sweeping fed- ect director at Georgetown Univereral program. The options range from sity's Center on Health Insurance ReChristian co-ops such as Tucker's to forms. She said consumers should be membership-based primary-care especially wary of specialty or partial clinics to insurance policies that cover plans being marketed as traditional coverage. specific diseases, such as cancer. Critics of the health-care law counIn some cases, such as Tucker's, the options are permitted by the health ter that these options can be a good law; the people who sign up don't deal for consumers — even if they have to pay the penalty. Because many of the plans do not include mental health or maternity coverage, they can be cheaper than the policies offered by the new online marketplaces. And since the plans often do not create networks of doctors, patients are free to choose the physicians they want. There is a "parallel free market that exists alongside the conventional market" for health insurance, said Sean Parnell, a public policy consultant who has become a guide for the opt-out crowd with his blog and book called "The Self-Pay Patient." "What I tell people is, there are alternatives." The Affordable Care Act was intended in part to standardize individual policies to ensure that people were buying comprehensive coverage — and not plans that, for example, refused to cover unexpected pregnancies. The law established categories of medical care that must be covered, including contraception. But those requirements have sparked a backlash among people who oppose the idea of paying for others' birth control and those who consider the requirements onerous and costly. One alternative has already been swatted down by the Obama administration. "Fixed-benefit" plans give beneficiaries a predetermined amount for injuries and illnesses — for instance, $1,000 a day for a hospital stay or $30 for a doctor visit. But those amounts could leave patients on the hook for potentially thousands of dollars if the actual costs exceed those payments. Some companies had promoted these plans, which are typically used as an extra layer of coverage on top of standard health insurance, as a substitute for traditional insurance. Last month, federal health officials banned the sale of most such plans as standalone policies beginning in January 2015. Some other alternatives, however, are tolerated or even encouraged by the health-care law — to promote innovation or religious freedom, or because it was not expected that large numbers of people would enroll. People who sign up for certain health-care ministries are exempt from the law's penalty for people who lack insurance. Direct primary-care clinics, which provide around-theclock access to doctors for a monthly fee, can apply to the federal government on a case-by-case basis to be considered acceptable coverage under the law. There are short-term plans that can be purchased for part of a year and are often cheaper than the policies sold via the online marketplaces. But in these cases, the insurers can still reject those with pre-existing conditions. The short-term plans often do not cover mental health or maternity care. And people who sign up may have to pay the penalty, just as if they were uninsured. Parnell, the blogger, joined one of the Christian health-care sharing ministries, which have been around for years but are flourishing. They do not consider themselves insurance, nor do many state insurance departments. Conservative lawmakers have encouraged the ministries, with 28 states passing laws that explicitly exclude the ministries from state insurance regulations. All of the ministries work slightly differently. One of the oldest, Samaritan Ministries, based in Peoria, Illinois, has members send monthly checks not to a central office but directly to people in need. It not only requires people to sign a pledge to adhere to Christian values, but it also asks for an annual sign-off from a deacon or pastor attesting that the person is being truthful. "Beyond that, we just leave it up to spirit to convict that person if they decide to lie," said Joel Noble, public policy manager for Samaritan as well as the Alliance of Health Care Sharing Ministries. Noble has been a member of Samaritan for 13 years. "I'm expecting my fourth child in July," he said. "I probably have 21 checks sitting on my desk at home waiting to be cashed." He said Samaritan is adding about 1,000 families a month — up from about 700 a month a year ago. Christian Healthcare Ministries, which Tucker joined, has existed since the 1980s, but membership has surged — growing by 60 percent to more than 80,000 members — since the health-care law was passed. The most popular plan costs $150 a month per person and covers medical bills up to $125,000 for any single illness or incident. People with higher bills are covered if they belong to a special program in which members split the cost. This "brother's keeper" program typically costs less than $100 a year, according to the group. While Tucker is a member, her husband is not because he smokes, which the ministry forbids. He pays Blue Cross Blue Shield $840 a month for a plan he purchased independently of the marketplaces, which he did not use because of the couple's opposition to the health law. Experts warn that there is significant risk in joining these ministries. Dissatisfied consumers often cannot turn to state insurance departments to resolve disputes — and they may be limited in their efforts to pursue grievances through the courts. Members of the ministries also are expected to negotiate with hospitals to reduce their bills, something hospitals often do for uninsured patients. Disputes have arisen in Montana, Illinois and elsewhere between ministries and their members over unpaid bills. But longtime members say the ministries work, even when it comes to serious illnesses such as cancer. Norma Beech, 67, has been a member of Christian Healthcare Ministries since 1991. The retired secretary from Port St. Lucie, Florida, used the program for her husband and two children. She underwent chemotherapy and a costly bone marrow transplant when she was diagnosed with non-Hodgkins lymphoma. She negotiated with her doctors and hospitals, who agreed to reduce the amount she owed from more than $1 million to closer to $350,000, she said. Christian Healthcare Ministries then sent her checks for the rest. "You _________________________ INSURANCE PAGE 9 9 nyeaglenews.com The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 Best State in America: New York, For Its Shrinking Carbon Footprint By Reid Wilson The New York Eagle News/The Washington Post T he Environmental Protection Agency announced plans June 2nd to require big reductions in carbon output from coal-fired power plants. It may sound drastic, but advances in technology mean that some states are well on their way to meeting the administration's goals. No state has made more progress than New York. The proposed EPA rules would require states to cut emissions 30 percent below 2005 levels by 2030. As of 2011, the last year for which data from the Energy Information Administration are available, New York's carbon emissions were 23.5 percent below its 2005 levels. (The EPA rules would require New York to reduce carbon levels by a total of 44 percent by 2030.) New York is one of nine states that are part of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), a 2006 capSGT STUBBY FROM PAGE 7 _________________________ wounded men to safety. In 1915, the French government asked Allan Alexander Allan, a Scotsman living in Alaska, to provide its army with sled dogs. Heavy winter snows in the Vosges Mountains were holding back French supply lines; mules and horses couldn't breach the impasse to move artillery and ammunition. Allan managed to transport, in secret, more than 400 sled dogs from Alaska to Quebec, where he and the dogs boarded a cargo ship bound for France. Once there, the dogs hauled ammunition, aided soldiers in the work of laying communication lines, and helped transport wounded soldiers to field hospitals. "It was enough to make one forget all about the war," Allan recalled later. "Even when the shells were singing, to see a line half a mile long of dog teams tearing down the mountain to the base depot, every INSURANCE FROM PAGE 8 _________________________ have to be pretty honest and say, 'That money goes right to paying my doctor's bill,' " she said. Unlike insurance companies bound by the health law, these ministries typically do not pay for contraception, abortion or treatment for most mental illnesses. An injury arising from what is considered non-Christian behavior, such as a drunken driving accident, may not be covered. "These ministries operate on a very high degree of trust," said Timothy Jost, a Washington and Lee University law professor and consumer advo- Washington Post graphic showing best and worst states for carbon dioxide emissions. and-trade agreement aimed at cutting carbon emissions. Those states hold auctions to sell emissions allowances and invest the proceeds in energy efficiency, renewable energy and other programs to cut emissions. Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Maryland, all RGGI members, are among the nation's 10 most-improved states. "The states that are addressing carbon emissions directly are the capand-trade states," says Kyle Aarons, a senior fellow at the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions. New York also benefited from deregulation of its electric power system in the 1990s. When new owners blue devil whooping and yelling and trying to pass the one ahead." Germany had a long tradition of military dogs and had the war's besttrained canine force. In the 1870s, the German military began coordinating with local dog clubs, training and breeding dogs for combat. They established the first military dog school in 1884, and by the start of the Great War, they had almost 7,000 trained dogs. At the peak of the war, Germany's dog forces numbered more than 30,000: messengers, Sanitätshunde, draught animals, guards. Among the allies, France had the largest and most diverse dog units. At one point, the U.S. Army borrowed French-trained dogs for sentry duty, but the plan was eventually aborted because the dogs only responded to commands in French. At the start of the war, the United States was one of the few participants in World War I that did not maintain a canine force. War dogs weren't the only area in which the U.S. military was wanting. The Army lagged behind its allies in both recruiting and preparedness. "We came into this war without an army … so now must build an entire new organization," said Gen. Pershing in 1917. Stubby, the foundling mutt, was thus an apt mascot for the U.S. forces: unpedigreed, untrained, an underdog. 4. Stubby in Action In October 1917, one month after landing in France, the American Expeditionary Forces entered the Western Front. The raw troops of the 26th Division were brought to Neufchâteau, in the Lorraine region of northeastern France, to train with more experienced French forces. The 26th would end the war as one of America's most battle-scarred. They took part in four major offensives — Aisne-Marne, Champagne-Marne, Saint-Mihiel, and Meuse-Argonne — cate. "It's really important that people really believe in this and are committed to this. If you have a bunch of people sign up who are doing this only to [avoid the health-care law], the whole thing can collapse." At least one ministry has taken a more liberal approach to the religious aspect. Liberty HealthShare, which is based in Ohio, accepts non-Christians as long as they adhere to certain values, including the belief that "it is our fundamental right of conscience to direct our own healthcare, in consultation with physicians, family or other valued advisors, free from government dictates, restraints and oversight." It is an option that appeals to Anthony Wilson, 56, a southeast Indiana engineer who never warmed to the health law and planned to stick with his old health plan — until Anthem said it would be raising the rate for him and his wife to more than $1,400 a month. He said that the Liberty plan has shortcomings but noted that it is cheaper than the Anthem policy and aligns with his Catholic faith. And he is happy that he is not participating in the health-care law. "I would prefer to not be a part of that if I can," he said. © 2014, The Washington Post. ■ bought old coal power plants, federal rules required them to make costly changes or switch to cleaner-burning natural gas; most opted to move to gas, contributing to a decline in emissions over the subsequent decade. The Empire State emits less carbon dioxide per capita than any other state, 8.1 metric tons per person, according to data from the EPA. Only the District of Columbia emits less per capita, though D.C. has been slower to cut its carbon emissions. On the other end, emission levels in energy-producing states and Midwestern states are increasing. Nebraska's carbon emissions rose 21 percent from 2005 to 2011. And Wyoming creates 112.8 metric tons of emissions per capita, far higher than any other state. The EPA's proposed rules would require each state to cut its emissions even further. Already on its way to that goal, the Empire State can breathe a little easier. © 2014, The Washington Post ■ and 17 engagements. They saw more fighting than any other American infantry division: 210 days in total. Stubby was there for the duration. The regiment's leader, Col. John Henry Parker, was a gruff, intimidating man, a veteran of the Spanish-American War and an expert machine gun tactician who eventually received a Silver Star for extraordinary heroism. It was Parker who gave special orders that Stubby remain with the 26th. The dog, it was said, "was the only member of his regiment that could talk back to [Parker] and get away with it." Stubby remained with the 102nd throughout the training period in Neufchâteau. Initially, he didn't serve in an official capacity, but the dog was allowed stay with Conroy, even when he went on assignment as a dispatch rider delivering messages to command posts on horseback. By February 1918, the 102nd was bunkering along the lines of Chemin des Dames, the French-held "ladies path" on the ____________________ SGT STUBBY PAGE 10 Nightmare Scenario: Computer Data Lost All the data on your computer is only one glitch away from being lost. Be it a hard-drive crash, virus, electrical storm or power surge, everything you have on your computer could vanish in an instant. While most newer computers have internal backup features, those are only as good as the condition of your computer. In a catastrophe, it won't do you any good. But there are steps you can take to safeguard your data. Manually backing up your files: • Use a storage device. A thumb drive is the easiest way to transport a file elsewhere, but don't use thumb drives for long-term storage. • CDs are handy and hold a lot of data, but they're not forever. One scratch and the whole collection of data could be lost. If you save to CD, save to two of them, and spring for the hard plastic cases. • External drives are a good bet and come in all sizes and prices. However, if a glitch takes out your computer, it could affect the external hard drive as well. In the event of a catastrophe (tornado, fire), you can grab the drive and go. • If you're on a home network, moving all your data to another computer is easy enough, but again, if a glitch hits the first computer, it also might strike your second computer. • Remember to do your backups. If you make a habit of backing up at the end of each day, in a crisis situation you'll only lose what you've done that day. Automatic backing up of your files: • Cloud services are distant locations that will save your data for you. These are paid-for services, but beware you don't sign on with a startup company to get a lower price. Go with the tried and true. You'll pay for both storage and download fees should you need your files back. • If you go with an external hard drive, many of them come with software that will automate your backups. Schedule it to copy your files daily and then check once a week to be sure those downloads happened and that you can reacquire a file or two. If your data is for work (or if you're writing a thesis or novel), schedule more frequent backups. Every five minutes is not too much. Best bet: Back up your data via two methods, one of which stores your data in a different location. - David Uffington regrets that he cannot personally answer reader questions, but will incorporate them into his column whenever possible. Send email to columnreply2@gmail.com. © 2014 King Features Synd., Inc. ■ Busy Bee Bottle & Can Return Mon & Tues 9-5, Wed 10-7, Thu & Fri 8-4,Sat 9-4 Only 5 miles from Naples, Cohocton & Wayland! $ ALL BRANDS! NO LIMITS! We Accept Used Electronics! FREE Drop - off 24/7 (computers, TVs, stereo equipment, microwaves, game systems, etc.) 19 Cohocton St (371), Atlanta 14808 Located between Naples and Cohocton, just a few doors down from Mikey's, Mojo's and Empire Tractor “Like” us on facebook - 585-645-7022 - returncans@yahoo.com 10 nyeaglenews.com THE ONCE AGAIN SHOPPE Quality Used • Clothing • Furniture • Household Items • Gift Items • Some toys All At Very Reasonable Prices Every Day is “BAG SALE DAY” Bags of Clothes Bags of Linens $ 5.00 $ 6.00 Open: • Wednesday - Friday 10 am - 4 pm • Saturday 10 am - 2 pm Donations may be left during store hours or on Monday & Tuesday between 9 am - 12 Noon. For Furniture donations, please call (315) 536-3620. 100 East Elm Street Penn Yan, NY (315) 536-3620 www.onceagainshoppe.org VANDURME EXTERMINATING P.O. Box 252 Dansville, NY 14437 WE DO EVERYTHING: • Ants • Bees • Squirrels • Spiders • Fleas • Flies • Boxed Elderbugs • Bedbugs • Cluster Flies WE SPECIALIZE IN BAT REMOVAL GUARANTEED 585-335-6550 888-335-6550 585-233-5076 (c) SGT STUBBY FROM PAGE 9 _________________________ Western Front, nervously anticipating the Germans' launch of a spring offensive. On St. Patrick's Day, bells and klaxons, the signal of a poison gas attack, rang out along the hillside in the Marne where Stubby and Conroy were stationed. For a full 24 hours, German gas shells rained down. Somehow, the dog and his master survived. (Perhaps gas masks were to thank — man and dog alike were issued masks, though The New York Times reported that "Stubby's physiognomy was of such peculiar contour that no mask could afford real satisfaction.") It was at Chemin des Dames that Stubby reportedly saved the 102nd from a gas attack. The Times describes how one morning, while most of the troops were sleeping, the division was assaulted by an early morning gas launch. Stubby first smelled the gas then ran up and down the trenches barking and biting soldiers, working to rouse them from slumber and getting them to safety. On April 5 Stubby became a private first class, his first military rank. The 26th Division soon moved from Chemin des Dames to nearby towns of Saint-Mihiel and Seicheprey. The 102nd Infantry headquarters were set up near a dangerous spot 1 1/2 miles north of Mandres-aux-QuatreTours. Known as "Dead Man's Curve" because the hazardous turn required oncoming vehicles to slow down, the location made easy prey for the German artillery. Stubby and company were placed in support positions to wait for a German breakthrough. On April 20, near Seicheprey, the Germany infantry led one of its first attacks against American troops. Almost 3,000 German Stoßtruppen (shock troops) fired on, and overwhelmed, a small contingent of 600 American soldiers from the 26th. Fighting was so intense that Maj. George Rau, commander of the 102nd, ordered his cooks, truck drivers, and even the marching band into the fray. The Germans claimed victory, leaving 81 Allied troops killed, 424 wounded, and 130 captured. Seicheprey sustained the heaviest losses in the Saint-Mihiel sector. Stubby got his first war wound at Seicheprey, when a German shell fragment lodged in his left foreleg. By June, however, Stubby had recovered and was back in action. When the 102nd reached Chateâu Thierry in July, the dog had evidently learned to distinguish a khaki doughboy uniform from gray serge Germany garb: He recognized a uniformed enemy soldier. Stubby's rage at the sight of a German was reportedly so "savage," in the words of an Associated Press account, that "it was found necessary to tie him up when batches of prisoners were being brought back, for fear that trouserless Germans would be reaching the prison pens." In the Argonne, Stubby sniffed out a lost German soldier hiding in nearby bushes. The dog gave chase, eventually dragging the soldier back to the 102nd. To the victor go the spoils: The Iron Cross medal that had been pinned to the German's uniform thereafter adorned Stubby's Army "coat." Stubby later took part in the brutal offensives of Saint-Mihiel, AisneMarne, and the Champagne-Marne. When the war ended on Nov. 11, 1918, Stubby was in Meuse-Argonne. The process of demobilization was protracted, and troops stayed on for several months after Armistice. While waiting out the trip home from France, Stubby met his first of three presidents, Woodrow Wilson, on Christmas Day 1918 in Mandres en Bassigny. According to Bausum, the two reportedly shook "hands." Four months later, on April 29, 1919, Stubby and Conroy were demobilized at Camp Devens, Massachusetts. 5. The Perfect War Hero After the war, Stubby was ubiquitous. He attended the 1920 Republican National Convention, which culminated in the nomination of Warren G. Harding. Harding officially received Stubby at the White House in 1921; in 1924, the dog passed review for Harding's successor, Calvin Coolidge, three times. When Conroy went to study law at Georgetown, Stubby became the university's official mascot, a predecessor to the Hoya bulldog of the present day. Usually closed doors were flung open for Stubby. In December 1922, The New York Times reported that for the first time, the exclusive Hotel Majestic on Central Park had broken its own rules and allowed the dog to stay overnight. Stubby was made a member of the Red Cross and the American Legion. The YMCA conferred a lifetime membership on the dog, stipulating that he was entitled to "three bones a day and a place to sleep" for as long as he lived. In the division of armed forces history at the Smithsonian National Museum of America History in Washington, there is a fascinating artifact, a testament to Stubby's fame and the swath he cut across American popular culture in the immediate postwar years. It is a leather-bound scrapbook, kept by Conroy. The book is crammed with documents and ephemera: fan letters, poems, drawings, an invitation to the White House from President Wilson. And there are newspaper clippings, the closest we have to a comprehensive anthology of the press coverage of Stubby. The accounts collected in Conroy's scrapbook broadly sketch the narrative of Stubby's service that became familiar in the immediate postwar years. The clippings in Conroy's scrapbook conflict on many particulars of Stubby's story: Was he wounded in the chest or in the left foreleg in Seicheprey? Was he mostly a Boston bull terrier or a bulldog or a fox terrier? The stories are mostly written in a breathless tabloid tone that suggests the truth was less important to their authors than a good yarn: __________________ SGT STUBBY PAGE 19 The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 SATELLITES FROM COVER _________________________ atmosphere. The applications of the project are wide-ranging, but the science is easy enough to understand. During photosynthesis, a plant absorbs light, then immediately reemits it at a different wavelength. This is known as fluorescence. In a laboratory setting, botanists can measure the intensity of fluorescence to estimate how actively a plant is photosynthesizing. A satellite could, in theory, detect the light emitted by the world's plants to estimate how much carbon the plants are absorbing. But there has always been a big, fiery problem: the sun. The sun is, in most ways, a nice thing to have around. It makes life possible by supplying energy to our planet. From an observational standpoint, though, it can be a major pain. There are huge swaths of the universe that we simply cannot see because the brightness of the sun obscures our view. In much the same way, the sun was thought to make it impossible to measure global photosynthetic fluorescence. The signals we want to observe are subtle and represent a narrow slice of the electromagnetic spectrum. The sun's broad-spectrum rays were presumed to overwhelm the wavelengths of plant fluorescence, making them virtually impossible to detect. That's where NASA's Joanna Joiner of the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., and Christian Frankenberg of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., came in, with their innovative use of an electromagnetic phenomenon known as Fraunhofer lines. In the early 19th century, German optician Joseph Fraunhofer noticed that, in between the beautiful bands of colored light that emerged from a prism, several dark lines appeared. That's because, by the time sunlight reaches Earth, molecules in the atmosphere have absorbed certain wavelengths of light. In other words, our atmosphere blocks out the sun in certain wavelength bands of the electromagnetic spectrum. Joiner and Frankenberg realized that they could look for plant fluorescence in the bands of the electromagnetic spectrum where the sun's light has been dimmed. Data from the Japanese Greenhouse Gases Observing Satellite, which was launched in 2009, confirmed their hunch. Although the OCO-2 project was already in motion by the time Joiner and Frankenberg made their breakthrough, adding fluorescence readings will massively amplify the satellite's ability to carry out its carbon-measuring mission. A detailed map of photosynthetic activity and carbon absorption will better inform conservation efforts. It is widely believed that tropical forests absorb approximately 20 percent of global carbon emissions from fossil fuel combustion. But where else is carbon absorption highest? If the satellite data detect other areas of intense photosynthetic activity, we ought to be working hard to preserve them. The carbon-uptake map should also help settle some long-running disputes. Conventional wisdom once held that old-growth forests were bad at carbon sequestration, because they seemed to be finished growing. Some analysts suggested that turning those trees into houses or furniture would make room for newer trees to absorb more carbon. More recent findings, however, suggest that old trees continue to breathe in carbon at high rates. OCO-2's data will shed light, so to speak, on the relative photosynthetic activity of old and new forests. The data will also provide an early warning system. In 2005, for example, a drought severely hampered the Amazon rain forest's ability to absorb carbon, but scientists didn't realize the full scale of the impact for several years. Satellite fluorescence data could have identified the situation almost as it was happening. There may not be much we can do to stave off a drought in the Amazon, but there are other ways the data can be used. A decline in photosynthesis rates, as identified by falling fluorescence, could alert farmers to crop failure much earlier. It could help planners manage irrigation resources, as well as alert global relief organizations to potential famines before they happen. Managing a garden from space sounds a bit futuristic, but horticulture is about to enter the space age. From now on, you're not just trying to impress the neighbors with your green thumb. © 2014, The Washington Post. ■ OBITUARIES FROM PAGE 4 _________________________ long-time friend and partner Kevin Dougherty. He often remarked that he was privileged to have loved the work that he did, including the grief counseling that he felt was inherently necessary for families in times of loss. Kam was a proud Rotarian with connections in both Mt. Morris and Dansville, where he and his former wife Sue (Scardilla) Vernam were enthusiastically and civically involved and where they raised their two children Kevin and Jennine. Kam will long be remembered for his raucous gift of humor, his fearless sense of adventure and his adherence to living life on his own terms without apology. For all who loved him, the world will be a little less colorful and exciting without him. He is predeceased by parents, Nelson and Barbara Mason and brother Kevin. Surviving family include: Jennine (Mason) Fabiani and grandsons Joseph and Anthony of Boca Raton, Florida; son Kevin Mason of Rochester; brother Kirk (Danuta) Mason of Dunedin __________________ OBITUARIES PAGE 11 OBITUARIES FROM PAGE 10 _________________________ Florida; Kathie (Mason) Briggs and her children Kiersten and Nicholas King, of Syracuse; Mason and Proctor cousins in the US and Canada and close friends in Dansville, Livonia and Mt. Morris. Calling hours will be held Friday, June 13th, from 4 to 7 PM at the Kevin W. Dougherty Funeral Home, 21 Big Tree Street, Rte 15 & 20A, Livonia, NY. Friends and family are invited to attend Kam’s Funeral Mass at St. Mary’s Church, 40 Elizabeth Street, Dansville, NY at 10 AM on Saturday June 14th. There will be a private interment in Ossian per Kam’s wishes. Donations in his name can be made to the Mary Saunders Beiermann Emergency Department Project, 111 Clara Barton St., Dansville, NY 14437; the Dansville Rotary, PO Box 6, Dansville, NY 14437 or a fund of personal choice. *** Geneseo, NY Mary R. (Rodman) Leven Geneseo, NY - Mary R. Leven, age 81, passed away peacefully June 2, 2014 at Highland Hospital in Rochester. Mary was born June 30, 1932 in Dansville, a daughter of Frank Anna (Schwan) Rodman. She married Carl "Skip" Leven on August 9, 1952; he predeceased her on December 30, 2009. Mary was a cafeteria employee at St. Mary's School for many years. In addition to her parents and husband, Mary was predeceased by her son Christopher P. Leven on February 25, 2012, and her brothers and sisters. Mary was a communicant member of the Holy Family at St. Mary's Church. Mary enjoyed cooking, traveling, playing cards, dominos and visiting the casinos, but most of all she loved spending time with her grandchildren and friends. Mary is survived by her son and daughter-in-law, Steve and Sue Leven; 3 grandchildren, Dan (Katie) Leven, Sarah Leven and Chris McDonald; 2 sisters-in-law, Nancy Wyant and Libby Rodman; 1 brother-in-law, Jim Bush; several nieces, nephews and cousins. A Mass of Christian Burial was held June 5, 2014 at St. Mary's Church, Dansville. Burial was set for Holy Cross Cemetery, Dansville. Memorial contributions may be made to the Alzheimer's Foundation of America, 322 8th Ave. 7th Floor, NY, NY 10001 or the Dansville Fire Dept. Scholarship, PO Box 401, Dansville, NY 14437. Arrangements were with the Chamberlin-Baird Funeral Home, Dansville. *** Lakeville, NY Maurice C. “Maury” “Mo” Boutell Lakeville, NY – Maurice C. Boutell “Maury” “Mo”, age 60, passed away 11 nyeaglenews.com The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 suddenly on May 30, 2014. He was predeceased by his father Albert R. Boutell in 1979; mother Dorothea “Dottie” Boutell in 2010; brother Donald E. Boutell in 1992; and nephew David Boutell in 1999. He is survived by siblings Richard Boutell of Macedon, James Boutell of Oceanside, CA, William (Merci) Boutell of Hudson, FL, Jean DiFranco of Geneseo, Joan Boutell of Portland, OR, Bernice (Ken) Wilkinson of Fairfield, PA, Denise Boutell of Littlestown ,PA, Laurie (Jay) McKaye of Manifee, CA, Larry Boutell of Simi Valley, CA, and Keith Boutell of Camorillo, CA; 14 nieces and nephews; and 12 greatnieces and nephews. Maury was born on October 31, 1953 in Clifton Springs, NY to parents Albert and Dorothea Boutell. He was an avid motorcycle enthusiast both in his work career and personal life. He belonged to the Trials Riders in MD, PA, and NY and rode in the Vintage Trials Class. In 1999 he was ranked 2nd in the Nation for the Intermediate Class Hare Scramble. He also raced Motocross in his earlier years. Growing up on Conesus Lake gave him a love for boats and motors too. He could fix any motor and make it run like new. Friends are invited to a Celebration of Life service on Monday, June 16, 2014 at 11am at the Kevin W. Dougherty Funeral Home Inc., 21 Big Tree Street, Rte 15 & 20A, Livonia. Burial will follow services at Lakeview Cemetery, Groveland, NY. Pastor Mark Shepard will be the celebrant. Memorial contributions may be made to Barn Cat Outreach, P O. Box, 11 Springwater, NY 14560. *** Livonia, NY Eugene R. "Gene" Every Livonia, NY - Eugene R. "Gene" Every, age 56, died June 4, 2014 at Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester, NY. Eugene is survived by his wife, Dawn Milliman Every; children, Melanie (Dan) Olver of Geneseo, Kathi (Justin) Ford of Livonia, Brian and Thomas Every, both of Livonia; grandchildren, Hannah, Jacob, Leah, Bryanna and Seaenna "CC"; mother Carolyn Every D'Angelo of Geneseo; sisters, Rondalyn (Richard) Jacobs of Ogdensburg, NY, and Lynnette (Michael) Cook of Conesus; mother-inlaw, Kathelene Milliman of Geneseo; brother-in-law, Jim (Kim) Milliman of Geneseo; and many nieces and nephews. Eugene was born May 23, 1958 in Rochester, NY, the son of Ronald Every and Carolyn Every D'Angelo. He was a US Coast Guard veteran. Gene was a beloved Bus Driver for Livonia Central School. He enjoyed spending time with his grandchildren and camping with his family. Gene was an avid hunter and golfer. Funeral services were held on June 7, 2014 at the Rector-Hicks Funeral Home, Geneseo with Terry Peters officiating. Burial with Military Honors was set for Mt. Pleasant Cemetery in Geneseo. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made in memory of Gene's grandson, Ryan Olver to the Ronald McDonald House, 333 Westmoreland Dr., Rochester, NY 14620. *** Naples, NY Gretchen L. (Wamp) Aulls Dawn M. Stekl Livonia, NY – Dawn M. Stekl, age 74, passed away June 4, 2014. She is survived by her children Patti (Steve) Twombly of Lawrenceville, GA, William (Sue) Stekl of Brighton, and Lori (Bob) Scata of Geneseo; grandchildren Tyler Twombly and Andrea Stekl; siblings Dale (June) Miller, Wendell (Jerry Herring) Miller, Sandy (Gene) Harper, and Ronda (David) Robb; nieces and nephews; cousin; and many dear friends. A Celebration of Life Memorial Service was held on June 9, 2014 at the United Methodist Church of Livonia. Pastor Dan Finch was the celebrant. In lieu of flowers memorial contributions may be made to the Teresa House, 21 Highland Road, Geneseo, NY 14454 or the Livonia Community Players, PO Box 240, Livonia, NY 14487. Arrangements were entrusted to the Kevin W. Dougherty Funeral Home Inc., Livonia-Honeoye. *** Naples, NY - Gretchen L. (Wamp) Aulls, age 90, passed away peacefully on May 24, 2014 in Rochester, after a brief illness. She was predeceased by her parents, Paul E. Sr. and Anna Wamp; brother Paul E. Wamp, Jr.; sister, Molly P. Wamp; husband Franklin “Busty” Aulls; and nephew Paul M. Wamp. Gretchen was born in Naples, NY and resided at her Lyon Street address until just recently. Valedictorian of her Naples senior class, Gretchen graduated from the University of Rochester in 1945 with a business degree and started a full-time job at Morgan Stanley Bank in NYC. During her 20 years in NYC, she also worked as Personnel Manager at Bristol Myers and as Public Relations Director of The Katharine Gibbs Finishing School for Girls. Gretchen married in 1965, moved to Hammondsport, NY and became a high school business teacher at Prattsburgh Central School in 1967, retiring in 1989. During that time, she obtained a masters degree in business education from Elmira College before moving back to Naples to care for her mother. After her retirement, she traveled extensively with trips planned by the University of Rochester. She also took a strong interest in the activities of her grandnieces and nephews, attending many of their sporting events. Aunt Gretchen is survived by her nephews Thomas (Joan) Wamp of Dansville and Mark (Cathie) Wamp of Houston; her nieces Marilynn Wamp of Penfield and Sally (John) Vaughan of Pittsford; along with 8 grandnieces and nephews; and 7 great-grandnieces and nephews. Funeral services were held on June 7, 2014 at the Baird-Moore Funeral Home, Naples. Memorial contributions in Gretchen L. Aulls memory may be made to St. John Fisher College, Paul M. Wamp Community Service Travel Fund, c/o Sally J. Vaughan, OBITUARIES PAGE 26 _________________________ 12 EAGLE NEWS nyeaglenews.com Lifestyle Slate's You're Doing it Wrong: Quinoa By L.V. Anderson The New York Eagle News/ Slate All We Are Saying is Give Peas a 2nd Chance By Barbara Damrosch Special To The New York Eagle News/The Washington Post. Q uinoa has been described as a "superfood," "miracle grain," "powerhouse seed." I never really got what all the fuss was about, honestly. I mean, yeah, sure, it's high in protein and gluten-free, but when you cook it, it resembles every other grain: fluffy, starchy, bland. It's filler, something there to take up space between more interesting stuff. Quinoa is the edible equivalent of Tim Carleton's "Opus No. 1," one of the most popular pieces of telephone hold music. Which is to say that the key to making quinoa taste good is to add good-tasting things to it. There's only so much you can do to enhance quinoa's natural flavor and texture: Use the right amount of water, don't cook it too long, don't forget the salt, etc. (Lots of people tell you to rinse it before you cook it to remove bitter compounds, but most quinoa is prerinsed, so it's usually not necessary.) Sautéing the seeds in oil or butter before you add water is always a good idea — it leads to a fluffier end product by preventing the grains from sticking together — but the most important thing is what delicious things you add to flavor the quinoa. Here is a blueprint for making a good quinoa pilaf (or any other kind of pilaf, for that matter). You do not need to add all of these types of ingredients every single time, but you should definitely add most of them if you want to protect yourself from the vexatious fate of tedious quinoa. First you need an allium. Onion, scallion, shallot, leek or garlic will do. Slice or chop it and cook it in oil or butter until it's soft. Then, add the quinoa, toast it in the oil for a few minutes, and throw in some nuts or beans along with some The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 S The key to making quinoa taste good is to add good-tasting things to it. (Slate photo by Juliana Jiménez Jaramillo.) dried fruit. The dried fruit does not have to be a super-sugary dried fruit — in the below recipe, for instance, I use sun-dried tomatoes — but a little sweetness to counterbalance savory flavors is always nice. Some fruit-nut combinations are obvious (raisinwalnut, cranberry-pecan, apricotalmond), but by all means mix things up. After you've added water and cooked the grains thoroughly, turn off the heat and toss in some cheese and fresh herbs. For pilafs, I prefer a crumbly cheese, like feta, ricotta salata or gorgonzola, which is less likely to get gluey than a grated cheese. As for herbs, anything goes — parsley, cilantro, basil, mint, dill, rosemary, thyme, oregano. Be careful not to overdo it with the more powerful herbs; rosemary, for instance, can easily overpower a dish. These five categories of ingredient will guide you on your quest to make quinoa that kinda-sorta lives up to the moniker "superfood." © 2014, Slate. ■ Same Day Service Residential & Commercial Installation, Service & Repairs 585-330-4992 Air Conditioners, Furnaces, Fully Insured Boilers & Water Heaters Dryer Vent Cleaning Senior Discounts FREE Carbon Monoxide Testing On Any Call Quinoa Pilaf with Chickpeas, Feta and Sun-Dried Tomatoes Yield: 4 to 6 servings Time: About 1 hour, partially unattended Ingredients: • 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil • 1 leek, white and light green parts only, chopped • Salt and black pepper • 1 1/2 cups quinoa • 1/2 cup roughly chopped sundried tomatoes • 1/2 cup drained cooked chickpeas • 4 ounces feta cheese, crumbled • 2 tablespoons chopped fresh dill Steps: 1. Put the olive oil in a medium pot over medium-high heat. When it's hot, add the leek and season with salt and pepper. Cook, stirring occasionally, until it softens, 8 to 10 minutes. 2. Add the quinoa and stir until it dries out and begins to stick together, about 5 minutes. Add the tomatoes, the chickpeas and 3 cups of water. Raise the heat to high and bring to a boil, then cover the pot and adjust the heat so the mixture simmers gently. Cook until the quinoa has absorbed all the liquid and is tender, 15 to 20 minutes. 3. Remove the pot from the heat and let sit for 5 minutes. Stir in the feta and dill, then taste and adjust the seasoning. Serve hot, warm or at room pring-planted peas are a choice crop for the kitchen gardener, but it's easy to miss the boat. Well, two boats, actually. The first one sailed this spring when the ground thawed, warmed up a bit and was finally dry enough to be worked. If you didn't get those seeds in promptly, the plants will still grow, but they will struggle increasingly as spring temperatures yield to summer ones. Heat is the enemy of a good pea. So is maturity — that second boat, if you will. Garden peas that have filled out their pods are good for one day, maybe two, before they turn starchy and lose their delectable, just-picked, sweet taste. By the time the pods lose their green smoothness and are pale and rough to the touch, they are beyond eating. If you are filling your freezer with your pea harvest now, or are about to, bravo for you. If not, consider planting some for fall eating, even a small plot. Just as with the early crop, the timing is tricky at both the germination end and the picking end. You'll need to start them anywhere from midJuly to early September, depending on how late the first frost is expected in your zone or microclimate, and how many days to harvest are noted for any given variety. (Store seed peas in the fridge until sowing time.) Yes, peas are a cool-weather crop, but unlike winter warriors such as spinach and kale, they are not frost-proof. The vines tolerate a few below-freezing nights, but the blossoms and pods will not. And sowing in summer's heat is a challenge, too. But give it a try. Lots of empty spaces appear in the garden in late summer, so when lower temperatures are at least on the horizon, spread a mulch of hay, straw or newspaper on an empty bed to make it more cool and moist. Then start pea seeds indoors or in cool spots, in soil blocks or plug trays. (If you have saved any little plastic six-packs from purchased annuals, you can also re-use those.) The minute you see that bump temperature. (Store leftover quinoa pilaf in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to several days.) - Don't forget to check out our regular recipe section on pages 24-25. ■ Peas in the author’s garden. Spring-planted peas are a choice crop for the kitchen gardener, but it’s easy to miss the boat. If spring didn’t work out, try a fall crop.(Photo credit: Barbara Damrosch) of green, pop them in the ground. Starting them this way will get them off to a quicker start and will avoid gaps in the row where seeds might have failed to germinate because of heat stress. Choosing a quick variety is also a good strategy, but heat tolerance might be an even more important factor. Lincoln is a time-honored heirloom for warm-climate gardens, although it's tall and you'd need to support it with a trellis. Wando, Maestro and Top Pod are shorter heat-resistant varieties that can more or less support themselves, or can be allowed to sprawl on the ground. You might also grow a Sugar Snap type such as the super-quick Sugar Ann, or a snow pea such as Oregon Sugar Pod II. As days grow cooler and shorter, growth will slow down a bit. If frost threatens, just drape some floating row cover over your trellis — if you're using one — so that it becomes a tent. Dwarf, ground-hugging vines will be less exposed to the cold, but these, too, might need covering on cold nights if you're racing with frost. I find an old blanket works fine, as long as I remember to remove it promptly in the morning. At that point I'm in battle mode. I want those peas on my table, and I won't take no for an answer. - Damrosch's latest book is "The Four Season Farm Gardener's Cookbook"; her website is www.fourseasonfarm. com. © 2014, The Washington Post ■ nyeaglenews.com The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 The Oprah-Endorsed Happiness Guru & Me By Rachel Dry The New York Eagle News/The Washington Post T he happiness guru looks relaxed. His bright red shoes echo the brightness of Oprah's pink shirt and the flowers behind them. It's the sort of color palette that is either carefully planned or happens naturally when one of you is a happiness guru and the other one of you is Oprah. been viewed 7.6 million times — it's among the site's 20 most popular lectures, beating out a talk by Steve Jobs. Yet long before all that, the man whose expert counsel is now sought by Fortune 500 companies lived upstairs from me in a dorm. And happiness, whatever that means, seemed very far away. I first met Shawn my freshman year in college, in the fall of 2000, when he was a divinity school graduate student. In exchange for on-campus housing, he was tasked by the school Happiness guru Shawn Achor on Oprah’s “Super Soul Sunday.” The man whose expert counsel is now sought by Fortune 500 companies lived upstairs from the author in a dorm. (George Burns/courtesy of Harpo Studios Inc.) In the promo for this episode of her "Super Soul Sunday," the talk-show impresario promised in trademark sing-song that this would be part one of a two-week conversation "that's gonna make ya happier!" Because that is what Shawn Achor does. Before setting out to lift the spirits of Oprah's viewers — the second installment aired June 1st on the OWN network; check listings for re-runs — he wrote two best-selling books on happiness. His TED talk on "the happy secret to better work" has with providing "important personal and social counsel as first-year students adjust to independent life in the College." Also, if memory serves, he hosted study breaks. With cookies. I hung out at some of those study breaks. And Shawn and I chatted regularly in the halls. Yet, that year, I was floundering. Part of the problem was that I'm not exactly hard-wired for optimism and have often looked for help on the _________________________ HAPPINESS PAGE 23 Critter Corner Back by popular demand! Ooo, they made my bed nice and thick, just the way I like it! Happy dreams... Got a photo of your pet or other critters that you'd like to share with the readers of the New York Eagle News? So many people just love this sort of thing and would like to see yours! Submit your original, unedited .jpg or .tif format photos (with or without caption--if you can't think of one, perhaps we can!) via email to eaglenews@empacc. net, along with the names of you (optional) & your pet. By submittiong photos you grant us use of the material, including your names. We may modify, reproduce and distribute it in any medium, manner or appropriate place, or may choose not to use it. (This photo is of a pig that belongs to Michelle Polle of Honeoye.) 13 Home Front: The Collector's Edition The New York Eagle News/The Washington Post M ary Randolph Carter, author of "Never Stop to Think . . . Do I Have a Place for This?," was the guest last month on Post staff writer Jura Koncius' Home Front online chat. Here is an edited excerpt. Q: Now that I am finally through the winter doldrums, I am going to attack the beautiful sunroom in my new house. I have collected a decent amount of Mexican art (statues, paintings, vases) and need some ideas on how to best display them. I also will use decorative ceramic pots for the plants. I would appreciate any display tips and paint color suggestions. A: Collecting is always associated with memory, and you have some great ones. With a sunroom you start with the most valuable asset of all, beautiful light. The ceramic pots sound so exotic for your plants. For those Mexican art treasures, perhaps find a wonderful hanging wooden shelf in a great color to display them. I'm not sure how many walls you have in the sunroom, but I love pedestals for showing off a special statue or clustering them all together on a little table, an altar to your love of these things. For texture, you could find a great old raffia rug or several. I would keep the background colors simple so your plants and collections stand out. Every wall in my house is white but covered with paintings and photos and maps and prints — all the things that I love! Q: What constitutes a collection? A: There are probably as many answers to this question as there are collectors, but I'll take a stab and say: once you've got three of anything you're on your way. Q: When is money a roadblock to owning something that you think you can't live without? A: Oh that wretched subject — money. Thank goodness there's so much great stuff out there that if you fall in love with something you can't (or shouldn't) afford, just wait a while and you'll find something just as good that fits your pocketbook. There was once an amazing serape that I fell for at the Washington Flea years back. I left it behind and went on my way, and sure enough, there on another dealer's table just minutes away was another for $15 that was even more extraordinary. So love what you love, but don't be too impulsive. On the other hand, sometimes if it's worth it to you, save up or have a tag sale and go for it. Q: How have the Internet and eBay changed collecting? A: The Internet has changed the world at large, and in particular, junk- ing and hunting for the things we love. My friend and fellow collector Tom Judd (featured in my new book) swears by the online hunt. He has had great luck finding handwritten recipes, diner menus, old botanical prints and fragments of vintage wallpaper. He layers them into his beautiful collages and never looks back. Have fun, Tom, but I'll have more fun mucking around in the In her book “Never Stop to Think . . . Do I Have a Place for This?” Mary mud and rain at Randolph Carter offers ideas and inspiration on how to accessorize and a good old-fash- display items and collections. (Photo Courtesy of Rizzoli.) ioned outdoor Q: I am interested in adding brass flea market. Q: Other than in a cupboard with to our decor as accent pieces. What glass doors, what is the best way to are the best options for incorporating this? Does it matter that we do not store jadeite ware? A: Jadeite ware, which is incredibly currently have anything that is brass? A: You're so lucky if you're starting beautiful, is not exactly in my collector's bag, but I can imagine it on a on a new journey of collecting brass. simple long shelf one right after the I once collected all these old brass other. My mother had a collection trays. I think I shared them in my first of beautiful American glazed pots "American Junk" book. I just looked and displayed them on a long narrow them up; they were hammered brass shelf near the ceiling of her kitchen. wall plaques depicting scenes of skatSometimes we want to protect our __________________ collections, but they can get lost behind glass. COLLECTING BACK COVER 14 EAGLE NEWS nyeaglenews.com The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 Going Out Guide Finger Lakes area nightlife, events and dining ey's n lo CALL US TODAY @ 607-522-5676 Atlanta, NY b pu ma ADVERTISE YOUR EVENT IN THE NEW YORK EAGLE NEWS. Darn Good Food! hammondsport, ny Full Freshly Menu ofmadeAmerican Favorites to your liking 144 Main Street Dansville NY 14437 Playing 6/13 ~ 6/19 102 min. Big Daddy, Boomer and Jr. on Sax 9 -1 SHOWTIMES • Nightly - 7 pm • Special Matinees: Sat. & Sun. - 3 pm Wednesday - 1 pm ManEQ 9 -1 How To Train Your Dragon Part 2- When Hiccup and Toothless discover an ice cave that is home to hundreds of new wild dragons and the mysterious Dragon Rider, the two friends find themselves at the center of a battle to protect the peace. All-star cast includes Jay Baruchel, Cate Blanchett, Gerard Butler, Craig Ferguson & Jonah Hill. • Matinees, all seats - $6 • Children up to 18 - $7 Have Your Doors open • Kids with 62 or more years 30 minutes Best Birthday Party Ever of experience - $7 at The Star Theatre! prior to • Military/College ID - $7 show times. Call 585-739-3841 for more info • Adults - $8 We do not accept credit/debit cards. hosted by P.J. Elliott Daily Lunch Specials 1 pm • Burgers • Fries • Wings • Pizza & MORE! HOURS: Mon. - Fri. 5:30am - 7pm Sat. 7am - 5pm Sun. 8am - 4pm PHONE: 585-534-5010 Corner of State Routes: & Movie Info: 585-335-6950 • Management: 585-739-3841 57 Pulteney Street 607-569-2264 Check Out the Going Out Guide Every Week for Local Happenings! www.maloneyspub.com Finger Lakes in Motion Dance Camp 2014 Ages 3 & up By Samantha Alger Fundamentals of Hip Hop, Jazz & Ballet 2 Sessions: July 21-25 & Aug. 18-22 $50 per session ($45 if paid by 7/11or call to pre-register) 7/11 Meet & Greet 10am - 2pm To be held at the Naples VFW 7811 St. Rte. 21 (N of town), Naples Dance Masters of America Certified For information or to register call (607) 661-6594 Chat a Whyle Restaurant Home of the World Famous Sticky Buns Family Owned and Operated • We offer a complete selection of homemade foods and desserts. • Breakfast, lunch, and dinner are served from 5:30am to 8:00pm daily. • We offer a senior citizen discount on Monday and Tuesday. • We offer superb service in a relaxed, family style atmosphere. • On Sundays we offer a breakfast bar and for lunch and dinner there is a exceptional value, as we serve you full course dinners which include your dessert. 28 Liberty St. - Bath, NY Phone: (607) 776-8040 - Fax: (607) 776-4602 Pick-up Line Comebacks • Man: So what do you do for a living? Woman: Female impersonator. • Man: So, wanna go back to my place? Woman: Well, I don’t know. Will two people fit under a rock? • Man: Where have you been all my life? Woman: For the first half of it, I probably wasn’t born yet. • Man: I’d like to call you. What’s your number? Woman: It’s in the phone book. Man: But I don’t know your name. Woman: That’s in the phone book too. • Man: Haven’t I seen you someplace before? Woman: Yes, that’s why I don’t go there anymore. • Man: Is this seat empty? Woman: Yes, and this one will be if you sit down. • Man: Your place or mine? Woman: Both. You go to yours, and I’ll go to mine. ■ 15 nyeaglenews.com EAGLE NEWS The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 Arts & Entertainment Summer Dance Camp to be Offered in Naples you can relate to personally can help reduce stress and escape Staff Report from life’s hardships.” The New York Eagle News Now as a teacher and choreographer “Miss Sam” as her students call her, hopes to share her edu"Dance is your pulse, your heartbeat, cation and similar opportunities your breathing. It's the rhythm of your with children in the community life. It's the expression in time and through her latest project, Finger movement, in happiness, joy, sadness Lakes in Motion Dance Camp and envy." ~Jaques D'ambroise 2014, which will be held at the he art of dance has been SaNaples VFW at 7811 State Route mantha Alger’s passion from 21 in Naples. During the camp, a very young age. “I've danced each age group will get the chance for over 18 years and loved every to experience 3 main genres of minute of it.” says Samantha. “My dance education over a 5 day sesdance studio was my sports team, my sion, including ballet, jazz and hobby and my second family grow- The art of dance has been dance instructor Samantha ing up. Dance taught me discipline, Alger’s passion from a very young age (Photo provided.) hip hop. This refreshingly fun and educational camp will be dedication, self confidence, respect for myself and others, along with the posture. I believe dance is a therapy offered in two sessions, one running physical aspects like poise, grace and form in itself. To move to a song that from July 21-25 and the second running from August 18-22. Students may attend one or both sessions. The Naples Fire Dept. cost for each session is $50 at the door, or $45 if paid in advance with pre-registration. There will be a “meet and greet” at the VFW on July 11th from 10 am – 2 p.m., where students and their parents may meet Samantha until the end of November and pre-register for the camp. Those who can't attend this event may call Samantha at 607-661-6594 to register ·Games 7 - 9:30 pm or for more information. ·Doors Open at 5:30 p.m. “Growing up I had so many priceless opportunities from my childhood studio which will always be very close to my heart.” Samantha reminisced. “I traveled to NYC and danced at Radio City Music Hall with the Rockets. On weekends I traveled to NYC for workis at 50 numbers or less shops and classes. I was “Clara”, the lead role in the Nut Cracker Ballet, and the Sugar plum fairy in a different performance of the Nut Cracker. I held lead roles in 42nd Street and Oliver Twist. I was cast as a dancer in many other musicals as well, including Wizard of Oz, Peter Pan, South Pacific, Annie and West Side Story .We also performed at Sea Breeze and Darien Lake amusement parks along 8181 Maxfield Road (off County Rd 36) with many festivals, competitions and Naples, NY local community events. T Every Tuesday Night Our $1,000 progressive game Queen of Hearts raffle jackpot is over $3300 Dinner Specials along with hot dogs & hamburgs are available “As time went on,” Samantha continued, “I had the opportunity to work with multiple theater groups and schools in the surrounding areas. I’ve choreographed Pippen, Joseph, Aida, Hairspray, The Great American Trailer Park Musical, Fiddler on the Roof and The Musical Adventures of Flat Stanley. Every show, musical, bal- let, recital, etc. I’ve been able to be a part of has been an absolute blast! Not only do I get to do what I love but I get to meet so many talented people and make so many priceless memories.” Samantha is certified by test ____________________ DANCE CAMP PAGE 26 • Seasonal Foods Made Fresh! • Daily Soups & Specials NOW CARRYING: Fingerlakes Coffee Roasters Canandaigua blend coffee Wines: Angelica, Hunt Country & Salmon Run Beers: Imported & NY State Brands 22 Main Street, with a view of the park Prattsburg, NY ~ 607-522-6359 Open Tues. - Wed., 10 - 4 and Thurs. - Sat. 10 - 8:30 with dinner starting at 5 p.m. M P onica's ies FRUIT PIES • JAMS & JELLIES • CHICKEN POT PIES • QUICHE Strawberry Glacé Pies & Strawberry Rhubarb Pies in season NOW! OPEN 9AM - 6PM 7 Days a week ALL YEAR ROUND! 7599 Route 21, Naples • (585) 374-2139 www.monicaspies.com • Visit us on Facebook Maxfield Hose Company TEXAS HOLD’EM TOURNAMENT Every other Thursday 7:30 p.m. Fresh Fruit Sundaes: Red Raspberry & Strawberry a Bringhair c n w a L CAR CRUISE Zwe i Hotgles s! Starting June 11 Open Daily through October Every 2nd & 4th Wed. ~ 5-8 pm 8665 RT 21 South Naples, NY (585) 374-5980 ~ Like us on Facebook Upcoming dates include: • June 19th • July 3rd $40 Entry Fee · Food Included Maxfield Hose Memorial Hall 8181 Maxfield Road (off County Rd 36) Naples, NY 16 EAGLE NEWS nyeaglenews.com The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 Wheels BMW Sells Hybrid I8 as Germans See Tesla as Choice of One doors and optional laser headlights. The rollout By Elisabeth Behrmann last Thursday at a cereThe New York Eagle News/ mony near BMW's MuBloomberg News nich headquarters caps a development effort that started about a year ayerische Motoren Werke is before Tesla's first car -rolling out the plug-in i8, its a discontinued roadster first sports car in more than -- hit the road in 2008. three decades, in a bid to keep its After decades of relycutting-edge image as Tesla Motors ing on performanceshakes up the luxury auto market. oriented sedans and The world's largest maker of upSUVs, the i8 marks scale vehicles started deliveries last BMW's first pure-bred Thursday of the $135,700 hybrid hot sports car since the M1, rod to show it can do more than make which was halted in conventionally powered sedans and 1981. sport- utility vehicles. BMW's most The 362-horsepower expensive model combines an electric motor and a lightweight carbon-fiber BMW rolls out the plug-in i8, its first sports car in more than three decades, in a bid to keep its cutting-edge image as Tesla i8 accelerates to 100 kiframe to get better gas mileage than Motors shakes up the luxury auto market. An i8 sits on display at last month’s Auto Mobil International automotive trade lometers (62 miles) per hour in 4.4 seconds, the Toyota Prius and accelerate faster fair in Leipzig, Germany. (Bloomberg News photo by Krisztian Bocsi). compared with 4.6 secthan a Porsche 911, demonstrating onds for the Porsche 911 Carrera. the breadth of its technology with la's emergence threatens to make the very quickly become a must-have." While Tesla sells about one vehicle Combining a three-cylinder gasoline Tesla set to outsell BMW in emission- German brand's refined muscle cars appear antiquated, putting at risk a for every 60 sold by BMW, the Palo engine with an electric motor that can free cars. "Germany's premium automakers business model that depends on its Alto, California-based manufac- propel the car for 37 kilometers emisfeel Tesla's rise more keenly because ability to command premium prices. turer led by Elon Musk has become sion free, the i8 gets the equivalent of they're expected to be the biggest BMW is particularly vulnerable to a sought-after brand for trendy con- about 135 miles per gallon, compared innovators," said Juergen Pieper, a Tesla's inroads because it's a stand- sumers because it offers clean motor- with 51 mpg for the Prius. Tesla is unfazed by the new competition. Frankfurt-based analyst at Bankhaus alone luxury-car maker in contrast ing and a maverick image. The $63,570 Model S can drive as "For buyers looking for an all-elecMetzler. "Tesla will be able to win over to Volkswagens Audi and Daimler's far as 265 miles before needing to re- tric premium sedan that seats up to people who'd normally buy a BMW. Mercedes-Benz. "The i8 is a brand shaper," Ian Rob- charge, and Tesla operates fast-charg- seven, there is a choice of one -- the Even in Germany, people are lining up to test drive" the U.S. carmaker's ertson, head of sales and marketing ing stations in North America and Model S," said Tesla spokesman Sifor BMW, said in an interview. "Today Europe that are free for its customers mon Sproule. "For buyers still wantModel S sedan, the brand's only car. ing to put gas in a tank, the choices For BMW, which claims to make sustainability is another important to facilitate long-distance driving. "It represents the right direction, a have never been broader." the "ultimate driving machine," Tes- element of premium cars and it may paradigm change," said Michael WillThe BMW sports car, which has alberg, chief executive officer of Ger- ready made a cameo alongside Tom man headphones maker Ultrasone Cruise in a "Mission: Impossible" AG. He got a Tesla Model S in Febru- movie, is part of a broader effort by ary after driving Mercedes and Audi BMW to polish its image as an incars for 20 years and has driven from novator with the "i" eco-friendly subthe Munich area to Berlin, Cologne brand. The plug-in sports car is the and Dresden. "Tesla is the car of our second model after introducing the i3 times." city car in 2013. � Hydraulic Hoses Made � Drums & Rotors Turned In a bid to counter that, the i8 can The compact all-electric i3 has an (farm - Industrial - Snowplows) � Parts for every type of vehicle drive emission-free for 23 miles and order book stretching for the next � Starters & Alternators Tested Free offers flourishes like distinctive wing six months and is helping win over B OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 206 S. Main St., Naples 8649 Main St., Honeoye Mon-Fri 8am - 5pm Sat: 8 - 3 ; Sun: 9 - 1 Mon-Fri 7am - 7pm Sat: 8 - 3 ; Sun: 9 - 1 585-374-8890 585-229-5116 new customers with 80 percent of the buyers fresh to the brand, Robertson said. BMW is committed to pushing the technology. "Zero emissions is going to play a role in our industry," said Robertson. "There is currently no other viable option" to making the car sustainable. Aside from the ability to drive on electric power, both i models feature frames made with carbon fiber, which is about 50 percent lighter than steel to reduce the cost of the batteries and improve performance. (Tesla's Model S is built on an aluminum frame.) IHS Automotive forecasts that BMW will sell 23,000 i models this year, trailing Tesla's 31,200 sales of the Model S. BMW's namesake brand in total is set to deliver 1.78 million cars in 2014. Even with demand for the i3 and i8 modest, the company is committed to the marque. "You don't develop a brand like 'BMW i' if you don't think about the road ahead," said Robertson. "We spent a lot of money on this and are definitely thinking long term. There are going to be others in the BMW i lineup." Early response to the i8 shows that it is doing what BMW hoped for: that is, turning heads. During recent testing in California, the car had enough star power to gain paparazzi-like attention from passersby on Beverly Hills' Rodeo Drive, where exotic cars are commonplace. "People were jumping into the street with their smartphones to get a picture," Carsten Breitfeld, project manager for the i8, said in an interview. "It's not easy to get that kind of attention on Rodeo Drive." — With assistance from Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles. © 2014, Bloomberg News. ■ We’ve Got You Covered! Richmond Automotive Center 8598 Main Street Honeoye, NY 14471 Day: 585-229-5110 • Night: 585-721-8872 We Specialize in Auto Repair! Full Service Repair Shop We Can Take Care Of ALL Your Mechanical & Computer Car Problems! HOURS: Mon-Tues-Wed-Fri-Sat 7 am -8 pm Thurs Summer Tire Event! NON-ETHANOL Day & 8 am - 6 pm Night Towing SUPER Fuel Available Here • GAS • DIESEL • KEROSENE • PROPANE FILL STATION 7 am - 9 pm Sun Boats • Auto• Classic Cars • Motorcycles • Commercial • Home • Renters • ATVs • RVs Let our experienced agents help you with all your insurance needs. We offer many companies with competitive rates plus personalized hometown service. 9 Honeoye Commons, Honeoye, NY (585) 229-2300 ~ www.insurecig.com Karen Goddard Kathy Fleig 17 nyeaglenews.com The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 Clean Hydrogen Advances Amid Fuel Cell Technology Gains By Christopher Martin The New York Eagle News/ Bloomberg News O nce relegated to the realm of science projects, hydrogen fuel cells are starting to displace fossil fuels as a means of powering cars, homes and businesses. On June 10, in the latest addition to mainstream fuel-cell use, Hyundai began deliveries of a consumer SUV in Southern California. The technology is already producing electricity for the grid in Connecticut. AT&T is using fuel cells to power server farms, and Wal-Mart Stores uses hydrogenpowered forklifts. Later this, summer FedEx will begin using hydrogen cargo tractors at its Memphis air hub. "This is the most exciting time for fuel cells in my career," said Daniel Dedrick, head of hydrogen and combustion technologies at Sandia National Laboratories in Livermore, California. The hydrogen market "is starting to accelerate." Fuel cells produce electricity from hydrogen in a process that dates back to the 1830s, yet high costs have historically made the technology better suited for Apollo space missions and Soviet submarines. In recent years, the technology has made big strides, and prices are falling. And because the process produces little or no greenhouse gases, hydrogen power stands to get a boost in the wake of President Barack Obama's recent call for tighter controls on carbon emissions. It's still early days for hydrogen power. Prominent skeptics, including former Energy Secretary Steven Chu Once relegated to the realm of science projects, hydrogen fuel cells are starting to displace fossil fuels as a means of powering cars, homes and businesses. A Daimler Mercedes-Benz F-Cell vehicle is fueled at a public hydrogen pumping station in Fountain Valley, California, in February. (Bloomberg News photo by Patrick T. Fallon). and Tesla Motors Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk, have questioned whether the technology will ever catch on. Hydrogen currently provides less than 1 percent of power worldwide, while coal and gas produced 67 percent of U.S. electricity in 2012, according to the Energy Information Administration. Chu, who was appointed by Obama, called for a 44 percent reduction in funding for hydrogen research. "People have been working to improve fuel cells for over 150 years, and it's still not commercially viable," said Joseph Romm, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, a Washington-based think-tank. Only about 1,000 cars and buses using hydrogen technology operate today worldwide. There are nine hydrogen filling stations in California, with 48 more under development. California promises to boost that number to about 100 over the next several years. By comparison, there are 160,000 traditional filling stations across the country. Advocates argue the hydrogen landscape could quickly evolve as corporations' use of hydrogen spreads. The infrastructure for corporate fuel cells has been quietly spreading. Across the U.S., there are now tanks of hydrogen and fueling systems for fleet vehicles and forklifts. There are pipelines delivering the fuel to refiners that use it to make gasoline. As more companies adopt hydrogen power, the needed equipment will come, said Andy Marsh, chief executive officer of Plug Power Inc. in Latham, New York. Yet even industry leaders say that, without a national pipeline network, it will be a long time before the nascent industry will enjoy widespread development. "You have to get critical mass to build a business case," said Ed Kiczek, Driver’s License Photo When I went to get my driver’s license renewed, our local motor-vehicle bureau was packed. The line inched along for almost an hour until the man ahead of me finally got his license. He inspected his photo for a moment and commented to the clerk, “I was standing in line so long, I ended up looking pretty grouchy in this picture.” The clerk looked at his picture closely. “It’s okay,” he reassured the man: “That’s how you’re going to look when the cops pull you over anyway.” ■ By far, the most well read, passed around newspaper in the entire area. Heavy Duty Truck Repair & Service 1 The Eagle News • Preventative Maintenance Service ( Oil Change / Grease) • Brake Service • Suspension Repair • Clutch Installation • Engine/ Transmission Repair 2805 Keech Rd., Branchport, NY Call Mike @ Shop: (315) 595 2716 Cell: (315) 569 2503 global business director for hydrogen at Air Products and Chemicals in Allentown, Pennsylvania, the world's largest supplier of hydrogen. "That could be 30 years away." For now, local pockets of hydrogen use are flourishing. Plug supplies fuel-cell powered forklifts for customers including Wal-Mart, the grocery chain Kroger and Bayerische Motoren Werke. Plug also provides hydrogenfueling systems. Once a company has a flock of its forklifts at a warehouse, it's a short leap to installing larger fuel cells that can produce both hydrogen on site and electricity for the entire building, Marsh said. The company is supplying the systems for FedEx's airport tractors in Memphis, another location where stationary fuel cells might eventually become either a primary or back-up source of electricity. AT&T is the largest non-utility fuel cell customer in the U.S.. It has 17.1 megawatts of fuel cells operating at 28 sites in California and Connecticut. The systems offer cleaner power that's more consistent than electricity supplied by the grid, said John Schinter, the company's assistant vice president of energy and smart buildings. "For us, reliability is so critical and these help us ride through power disruptions," Schinter said. "We deploy fuel cells in our high-cost markets, so these actually reduce our operating costs. We're definitely planning to expand." Proponents of hydrogen say all this activity will soon spill over to the auto market, and it's already happening in Southern California. Hyundai was set to begin deliveries of its fuel- cell Tucson SUV this week. Honda already offers one there and Toyota will follow next year. "The shift to hydrogen is inevitable, and it's happening faster than we expected," said Amory Lovins, founder of the Rocky Mountain Institute, a non-profit clean energy research organization based in Snowmass, Colorado. Not everyone agrees. Elon Musk, a longtime critic of fuel cell technology, particularly in automobiles that compete with Tesla's Model S, revisited his opposition to the power- generating devices earlier last week. "I'm not the biggest fan of fuel cells," Musk said at the company's annual meeting in Mountain View, California, on June 3. "I usually call them 'fool cells.' " Even so, California is participating in an eight-state effort to get 3.3 million zero-emission cars on the road by 2025, powered by either fuel cells or batteries. Also participating are Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island and Vermont, which together account for 25 percent of all U.S. auto sales. Some analysts are predicting steady if modest growth. Automakers may be selling 1.76 million fuel-cell vehicles a year worldwide by 2025, according to Deloitte Tohmastsu Consulting. Cars that run on hydrogen can typically go more than 250 miles (400 kilometers) on a tank of the gas and then must be refilled. They differ from battery electric vehicles like Tesla's Model S or the Nissan Leaf, which use lithium ion batteries to store electricity. When those batteries are drained, they must be recharged. After decades of losses, fuel cell makers are finally closing in on profits. Ballard Power Systems Inc. expects to report break-even earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization for 2014, after posting one profitable year since 1992. The Vancouver-based company supplies power systems used in buses and Plug's forklifts. FuelCell Energy, a supplier of large stationary systems that run buildings and factories, said June 4th it will have break-even EBITDA by the end of this year. The company's systems are running the world's biggest fuelcell power plant, a 59-megawatt facility in South Korea, and the first utilityscale plant in the U.S., in Bridgeport, Connecticut. Investors are taking note. Plug is up more than 1,000 percent in the past year, the best performer on the Nasdaq Composite Index. Ballard has doubled and FuelCell has gained 49 percent, compared with a 23 percent gain for the broader market index. In the future, suppliers may tap excess power from wind and solar farms to make hydrogen, reducing the carbon emissions that come when it's derived from gas, said Michael Beckman, vice president of hydrogen fueling at Linde AG, the world's largest industrial gas supplier. "In three to five years you will see that become more prevalent," Beckman said. "Wind and solar can make hydrogen cheap when the grid doesn't need the power." — With assistance from Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles and Mary Schlangenstein in Dallas. © 2014, Bloomberg News. ■ VW/Audi (used) Sales, Service & Parts • Apply online financing • 33 years in business Relax in our enlarged customer area with Leather Theater Seats, Keurig Coffee & Wifi Open Seven days a week www.SelectEuroCars.com 685 Waterloo Geneva Rd. Routes 5 & 20 in Waterloo (315)-789-2200 18 EAGLE NEWS nyeaglenews.com The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 Sports In a Romp, Virginia 10-Year-Old Sets AgeGroup World Record in Half-Marathon By Tom Jackman The New York Eagle News/The Washington Post R heinhardt Harrison is such a typical, hyperactive 10-yearold suburban Washington boy -- loves basketball and Xbox, grossed out by onions and girls --that it's easy to overlook that he is one of the fastest 10-year-old distance runners in the world, ever. It's no guarantee of fame and fortune when the 2028 Olympics roll around. But in April in Washington, the Falls Church, Virginia, runner set the world record for the 10-mile run for 10-year-olds (yes, they keep records for every age). Then on May 25th at the Alexandria (Va.) Running Festival, he set the world record for the half-marathon by a full 2 minutes, running a steady pace of 7:15 per mile to finish in 1:35:02. That was the first time he had ever run either distance. And when he was done with the 13.1-mile course, he went on the moon bounce with his friends near the finish line. "It was fun and hard at the same time," Rheinhardt said of his first half-marathon. "At mile 10, I had a shoulder cramp. My dad had to massage it." When it was over, he added, "I was tired. But it was fun after," partly because of the moon bounce and ROLL-OFF DUMPSTERS • Roofing • Remodeling • Cleanups • Offering 12, 18 & 24 yard containers • Serving Livingston, Steuben, Ontario & Yates Counties • Rent up to 7 days • 24 hour discounts • Contractor discounts Morgans Waste Dansville: 585-335-6099 Waterloo: 315-781-0515 Ralph Sanpietro Whether running against other boys or in road races with adults, the moments before each race bring Rheinhardt extreme nervousness. "He's twirling his hair and biting his nails to the bone," Johannesen said. "You didn't have to share that story, Mom," Rheinhardt interjected. "But once he takes off," Johannesen said, "he's in his zone. Running has been good for him. It's not just a physical thing, it's providing a sense of self, and it's growing Rheinhardt Harrison, 10, of Falls Church, Va., ran his first half-marathon in 1:35:02 at the Alexandria (Va.) Running Festival May 25th. The time, every day." believed to be a world record for his age, was awaiting certification as of press time. He already holds an official 10-mile record. (By Philip Bowie/ Rheinhardt's 10mile record has photo courtesy of the Harrison family) been certified by the Association of Road Racing Statistithe free massage table. Child phenoms often inspire de- cians, which maintains databases of bates about how far they should be race records at distances from 3,000 pushed, whether in gymnastics, ten- meters to the marathon. His halfnis or other sports. In Rheinhardt's marathon time was awaiting certificacase, it's a family conversation. Rhe- tion as of press time. As an 8-year-old, Rheinhardt set inhardt's parents, Heidi Johannesen and Dennis Harrison, are deeply meet records while winning two naaware of the need to provide a balance tional championships in the 2K (1.2 between sports and just plain kid miles) cross-country championships. stuff. Both ran track in high school Prior to that, he won two national and closely monitor his running and championships on the track in the his health. Harrison has taken train- 800 meters, another in the 1,500 meing and received certification from ters and set another meet record in the USA Track and Field organization that race. In 2013, he moved up to the and helps coach the Fairfax Police 9-10 age group and didn't quite dominate as a 9-year-old. But in February, Youth Club team. "You really have to be careful with he turned 10, and it was time for bigkids at all ages," said Harrison, a vice ger things. "My dad promised I could run it president for the National Association of Home Builders who ran a 4:16 mile when I was 10," Rheinhardt said of back in his high school days. "They're the Cherry Blossom 10-Mile Run. "I really wanted to do it. It sounded going through growth spurts." He also said a child's "running age," fun." Though his first 10-mile run was or number of years running, is often more important than their full age, originally planned as a training outand Rheinhardt's seven years of experience convinced his father he was able to take on 10 miles or more. A typical week for Rheinhardt involves track practice on two afternoons ("we get lollipops after practice" he noted happily) and a meet on the weekend. He also has basketball practice or a game each week, and some Minecraft, Xbox or general running around with friends like 10-yearold Marshall Bowie. "He wants to win at everything," said Marshall, a fellow 1. Who was the first Boston Red Sox player to Fairfax youth club runner. Is that an- have three seasons of 50 or more stolen bases? noying? "Sometimes," Marshall said. 2. When was the last time before 2013 (Chris But it's not always fun and games. Tillman) that a Baltimore ing, when he broke the world record run times like that. Marc Davis, a former Olympic he decided to try for another one in the half-marathon. But really, cross- steeplechase runner and holder of the American 5,000-meter road race country is the best, to Rheinhardt. "In cross-country, you're running record from 1996 until last month, over streams and up hills," Rhe- has known Reinhardt and his family inhardt said the other night while for several years. "He's a very relaxed munching on chicken wings, broccoli kid," Davis said. "His parents are doand salad (but NOT onions). "With ing it right and allowing him to be in track, you're just running around the sport the way he wants to do it. a circle, over and over and over," he To see him run the shorter distances said, emphasizing the monotony with is one thing, but to run the longer distances and be equally successful is a slouch of mortal boredom. And a half-marathon through the pretty impressive." Next up is the "boring track" season, streets? "Not bad. There's lots of stuff to look at. I saw this water park there. and a goal of national championships in the 800- and 1,500-meter runs. BeI really want to go." Rheinhardt's running career began yond that, he'd like to attend the Uniwhen he was 3 years old, Reinhardt versity of Oregon, cradle of great dissaid. "I think I ran a 2K and I ran past tance runners including his favorite, the finish line and I didn't want to former star Steve Prefontaine. Then stop. At least that's what my dad tells the Olympics, and after sports? "I'd like to be a dancer," he anme." His father limits his distance running to a total of about 10 to 15 miles per week, and he did not run at all in the week before the 10-mile or half-marathon races. Reinhardt's adult competition is noticing him, too. When Johannesen happened to meet a fellow runner recently and Rheinhardt's name came up, the man said, "You're Reinhardt's mom? He's the one Rheinhardt Harrison with his sister, Ella, and his parents, Dennis Harrison and Heidi Johannesen, all of Falls Church, Va., after THE May 25th race at the 5K races we're in Alexandria. Both parents also compete in running events. (By Philip trying to beat," she Bowie/ photo courtesy of the Harrison family) said. Harrison said runners at the starting line's front nounced, stepping into an Irish jig group, where race organizers often along with his 8-year-old sister Ella. try to put the elite competitors, now "Or work in a running store, or be a make room for Rheinhardt, saying running coach." On Tuesday afternoon, two days "he belongs up here." To get a sense of how fast this after running his record half-mara10-year-old is, his personal best in the thon, his father held him out of track __________________ mile is 5:44 and his best time in a 5K is 19:01. Many adults would love to RECORD PAGE 19 Orioles pitcher won at least 16 games in a season? 3. In 2013, Atlanta's Tony Gonzalez set an NFL record for consecutive seasons (11) with at least 70 receptions. Who had he been tied with at 10? 4. Name the last team other than North Carolina or Duke to start ACC play 10-0 in men's basketball before Miami did it in 2012-13. 5. In 2014, Ken Hitchcock moved into third place on the St. Louis Blues' all-time list for coaching victories (124). Who is ahead of him? 6. Entering 2014, when was the last time Liverpool won the Premier League men's soccer championship? 7. Name the last boxer to defeat current IBF and WBA heavyweight champion Wladimir Klitschko, and what year was it? Answers 1. Jacoby Ellsbury (2008, '09, '13). 2. It was Mike Mussina, with 18 wins in 1999. 3. The Raiders' Tim Brown (1993-2002). 4. Virginia, in 1981. 5. Joel Quenneville (307 victories) and Brian Sutter (153). 6. It was 1990, when it was the Football League First Division. 7. Lamon Brewster, in 2004. © 2014 King Features Synd., Inc. ■ encomiums and ceremonial pomp, something was being glossed over: the grim details of life in the trenches, poison gas attacks, debilitating war injuries, death. It is a truism that World War I was the first modern war, but it's easy to forget what that meant 100 years ago. The scale and nature of World War I was unprecedented, shocking even to Americans who had lived through the Civil War a half-century earlier. Many veterans were haunted by their experiences in the trenches, but American and military culture did not encourage the airing of battlefield traumas. Shellshock was regard- Over the top he went with the boys on many occasions, and the sight of the enemy was like a red flag to a bull. On one trip "over" he sank his teeth in the seat of a fleeing Hun's trousers and did not let go. "Kamerad," howled the Hun; but Stubby paid no attention, hanging on until the foe laid down and gave up to the Yanks. We can feel confident about certain details that emerge from the journalistic record: Stubby served in France, he was the beloved mascot for the 102nd, he was wounded at Seicheprey. There are sepia-toned photographs showing the dog in the French countryside, surrounded by soldiers on a wooden Ford Model T ambulance. Another photo, dated February 1919, captures Stubby in the town of Mandres-aux-Quatre-Tours, in Lorraine in Baldy of Nome, famed Alaskan sled dog, and his owner Allan n o r t h e a s t e r n "Scotty" Allan. Baldy sired 28 of the sled dogs sent to France by Allan during WWI. (Project Gutenberg/Slate.) France. The dog sits in dappled sunlight, in a reflective pose on a wooden chair against a brick wall backdrop. But given the documentation that has survived, it is difficult at times to separate the actions of the real dog from the mythology that sprung up around him upon his triumphant return with the victorious American Army. But the very fact of Stubby's celebrity itself enlightens our understanding of the war and its aftermath. Surely some measure of his popularity in the postwar period was due to the novelty of a canine hero. But the dog was also the perfect mascot for a war that had introduced human carnage on a scale never previously seen. While Stubby was hailed with newspaper ed as a m e nt a l illness, the result of cowardice, a shameful disease. In this environment, Sergeant Stubby was an ideal World War I hero, because he was ideally stoic. He was the jaunty little creature who could be trotted out for parades, appear with politicians and military brass in photo opportunities, and was guaranteed to stay on message. It's impossible to say if Stubby's celebrity was cultivated by the U.S. government or if it was the result of an organic groundswell. While there is very little written record about Stubby's keeper, J. Robert Conroy, we do know that from 1913 on, his life was very much intertwined with the U.S. government. After the war, he worked as a bureaucrat, first for the Bureau of Investigation (predecessor to the FBI) at the Justice Department, then with military intelligence and finally on Capitol Hill as secretary for a Connecticut congressman. Still, not everyone was captive to Stubby's charms. The most revealing page in the Stubby scrapbook may be the one in which we find a note, inscribed in Conroy's handwriting: "Criticism of Stubby which proves he is famous." It is a single page, but its contents show that Stubby-mania wasn't embraced by all Army veterans. And much of the criticism illustrates that commemorating Stubby did often mean neglecting the story of human veterans. The page includes an infuriated letter to the editor by Richard L. Richardson, a Great War veteran from San Angelo, Texas. Richardson writes: If this Boston bull did so much and the boys didn't do anything, why not send an army of bull pups the next time and see who is entitled to these honors? I think the whole thing is nothing but a disgrace to the U.S. Army. I feel that I am insulted … the thousands of real heroes, the red-blooded 374-6866 585 SGT STUBBY FROM PAGE 10 _________________________ 19 nyeaglenews.com The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 Your Plumbing, Heating & Water Conditioning Specialists • All Phases of Plumbing & Heating • Goulds Pumps • Nature Soft Water Systems • WIRSBO Pro Pex Dealer American boys who left gallons of their blood and maybe an arm or a leg on the battlefields don't get these honors bestowed on them. They didn't do anything to receive a medal or the name "a real hero." But a dog did. Stubby died in his sleep in Conroy's arms in 1926. Today, he may be the last decorated World War I veteran that you can still see in the flesh. His taxidermied remains are on view at the Smithsonian, in a crowded display case alongside a mannequin doughboy and another World War I military animal celebrity, the carrier pigeon Cher Ami. Stubby's ears are pointed up, and he wears a gruff expression. He looks like a ramrod sergeant: tough, unsmiling, no nonsense, with a coat covered in medals. - Kane is a writer and policy adviser based in New York City. © 2014, Slate. ■ Romance?? • Like a lot of married men, I got the "You just don't appreciate me" speech once from the Mrs. I promised to treat her royally for the remainder of the day. I took her to lunch at Burger King and Dairy Queen for dessert. She's never mentioned it since. • The married boss said to his secretary, "Will you ever forget this weekend in Hilton Head ?" "Possibly." she replied, "What am I offered ?" • An old man goes to the Wizard to ask him if he can remove a curse he has been living with for the last 40 years. The Wizard says, “Maybe, but you will have to tell me the exact words that were used to put the curse on you.” The old man says without hesitation, “I now pronounce you man and wife.” ■ RECORD FROM PAGE 18 _________________________ practice. "Rest is just as important as pushing it," Harrison said. But after talking about that his running was over, Rheinhardt turned to his father and said, "Can I run, Dad?" © 2014, The Washington Post. ■ SAVE UP TO $70 on qualifying tires while Giving You and Your Family the Driving Comfort You Deserve! With Cooper Tire, you don't have to give up a thing! SUMMER SAVINGS EVENT THRU JULY 15! • Tune-up • Doll-up • A/C check • Battery check • Front End Alignment (got potholes?) Bob’s Alignment Office: 585.374.6420 8668 State Rte. 21, Naples ~ Hours: 8-5 Mon. - Fri. We Specialize in... Computerized wheel alignment & balancing, brakes, shocks, struts, frame & unibody service Complete Collision Service • Frame Repair • Body Work • Front End Alignment • Auto Painting • 24 Hour Towing For Towing Please Call: Cell: 585.943.6420 Nights: 585.374.5354 The Experts In Collision Service! 20 6-Year-Old Wants to Train Elephants DEAR PAW'S CORNER: My 6-year-old son, after a class trip to the circus, has informed me that he wants to be an elephant trainer when he grows up. I'm personally against keeping any animal in captivity, particularly endangered elephants, and certainly against training them to perform. When I told my son "no way," he got upset and ran to his room. How can I make him understand that elephant trainer is a horrible career choice? -- Jayne L., via email DEAR JAYNE: OK, first, remind yourself that your son is 6 years old. Kids at that age cycle through a lot of exciting career choices: fireman, policeman, trapeze artist, cowboy -- a lot of things capture their fancy. 1. What was the title of George Benson's first No. 1 single on the R&B charts? Hint: The name was the same as the album. 2. "A Little More Love" was on the "Totally Hot" album by which artist? 3. Elvis topped the charts in 1956 with his "Don't Be Cruel." Which artist released a song by the same name in 1988? 4. Which country song did Engelbert Humperdinck make a pop hit in 1967? 5. Name the song that contains this lyric: "I can't sleep nights because I feel so restless, I don't know what to do, I feel so helpless, And since you've been away, I cry both night and day." Answers 1. "Give Me the Night," 1980. 2. Olivia Newton-John in 1978. The song was used in the film "Monster House." 3. Bobby Brown. His version also topped the charts and appeared in the "Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas" video game. 4. "Am I That Easy to Forget?" 5. "I Don't Know Why But I Do," by Clarence "Frogman" Henry in 1961. The song was resurrected in the film "Forrest Gump" in 1994. He got the nickname from his croaking voice, best heard on "Ain't Got No Home." nyeaglenews.com While I respect your stance on performing animals, I think saying a flat "no" to your son isn't the best way to go about it. At 6, he's old enough for you to have a conversation with him about your opposition to trained elephants. You also can encourage him to explore other ways to work with animals while he's still fascinated with the subject. Take him to visit a local nature preserve or conservation center, and join a tour group or talk with one of the staff about the work they do with local animals. Look for age-appropriate kids' programming -- DVDs, cable TV or on services like Netflix -- that discusses efforts to protect endangered elephants and other wild animals. In short, your son is beginning to explore the world and his place in it. You can figuratively slam the door on career options that you abhor, or you can be his guide and help him think through certain issues and learn more about ways to help animals. - Send your questions, comments or tips to ask@pawscorner.com. © 2014 King Features Synd., Inc. ■ Say What?? 1. Is the book of Miriam in the Old or New Testament or neither? 2. Which book may be summarized as, "Bad times do not change the nature of God"? Judges, Job, Jeremiah, Jonah 3. From 2 Chronicles 9:11, what are psalteries for singers? Robes, Stringed instruments, Lyrics, Abodes 4. In Revelation 6, what's the name of the fourth horseman? Death, Power, Brimstone, Terror 5. From Ecclesiastes 3, there is a time to break down and a time to ...? Plow, Climb, Rejoice, Build up 6. Which of these was Abraham's wife? Rebekah, Martha, Sarah, Michal ANSWERS: 1) Neither; 2) Job 3) Stringed instruments; 4) Death 5) Build up; 6) Sarah © 2014 King Features Synd., Inc. ■ Truly Stupid People • The Los Angeles Board of Education has OK'd a plan to equip school police cars with guns. The plan works on a tier system: Police at elementary schools will carry supersoakers, junior high patrols will carry paint guns, and shotguns will be used at high schools. - Unknown • A severely disturbed geography teacher killed six people who did not know the capital of Scotland. Police say he's still on the loose and remind everyone that the capital of Scotland is Edinburgh. -George Carlin • Charlotte Hornets star Anthony Mason faces charges of statutory rape of two girls, ages 14 and 15. His attorney will use the Kennedy defense, which states that together they were 29. - Unknown • The inventor of the airplane boarding ramp has died at age 85. Funeral seating will begin half an hour before the service, with preferential treatment for immediate family members, followed by friends and relatives holding passes numbered 1 through 30. - Unknown • Did anyone see the luge? It's a 3 foot long little vehicle that has no room, has to be pushed to get started and only goes downhill. Here in America we call that a Hyundai. - Jay Leno ■ The following are alleged to be taken from real news articles: • A man in Alabama died from rattlesnake bites. Big deal you may say, but there's a twist here that makes him a candidate for Truly Stupid People (TSP). It seems he and a friend were playing catch with a rattlesnake. The friend (a future TSP candidate himself) was hospitalized. • There was a gentleman from Korea who was killed by his cell phone ... more or less. He was doing the usual "walking and talking" when he walked into a tree and managed to somehow break his neck. Keep that in mind the next time you decide to drive and dial at the same time. • Police in Wichita, Kansas, arrested a 22-year-old man at an airport hotel after he tried to pass two (counterfeit) $16 bills. • A man in Johannesburg, South Africa, shot his 49-year-old friend in the face, seriously wounding him, while the two practiced shooting beer cans off each other's head. • A Los Angeles man who later said he was "tired of walking," stole a steamroller and led police on a 5 mph chase until an officer stepped aboard and brought the vehicle to a stop. ■ ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Try using that Aries charm to warm up the usual set of workplace naysayers, and then back it up with a solid block of facts and figures to sell your idea to your colleagues. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) While nothing can deter a determined Bovine from following a course you believe in, it helps to have some supporting data and statements by trusted colleagues to make your case. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Take advantage of new information that could help make your career transition easier. The weekend is a good time to re-establish relationships with people you haven't seen in a while. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Personal matters demand your attention as once-stable situations begin to shift. Quick action to shore things up is called for in order to avoid more problems down the line. LEO (July 23 to August 22) Although your financial picture begins to brighten, "thrift" and "caution" are still the watchwords for fiscally astute Leos and Leonas to live by. Expect news about a family matter. © 2014 King Features Synd., Inc. ■ The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 VIRGO (August 23 to September 22) Before you try to blame a colleague for a workplace problem, make sure you have the proof to back you up. Make some quiet inquiries on your own to try to solicit more information. LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) Trying to cheer up a depressed friend or downcast family member can be difficult. But keep at it, and your efforts should soon pay off in ways you might have never expected. SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) Taking a new look at an old and frequently recurring problem might lead you to consider making some surprising changes in the way you had been handling it up till now. SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) Despite what the naysayers might say, setting your sights on a new goal could be one of the smartest things the typically sagacious Sagittarian has done in a long time. CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19) Rebuilding an unraveling relationship won't be easy. But you can do it, if you really want to. Just remember to keep the lines of communication open between the two of you. AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) A new friendship could develop into a close relationship. Meanwhile, reassure an old friend who might be feeling neglected that he or she is still an important part of your life. PISCES (February 19 to March 20) You might be feeling that you're still in over your head as you continue trying to adjust to your new situation. But the pressures ease by week's end, giving you time to come up for air. BORN THIS WEEK: You have a gift for sensing the feelings of others. You might consider a career in some aspect of counseling. © 2014 King Features Synd., Inc. ■ nyeaglenews.com nyeaglenews.com Check it out NOW! The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 21 22 EAGLE NEWS nyeaglenews.com Travel & Leisure Travel Q & A Q : My family (two adults and two kids under 8) is considering taking Amtrak from Washington to Montreal this summer. What do you think? A: I say do it! My boys loved the train when they were younger. It's much less confining than a plane, plus there's this great thing called the club car, where you can buy them food (c'mon, Mom, at least a bag of chips!). With today's world of hand-held devices, they can while away the time no problem (my kids actually read books). Plus there's that wonderful pastime of looking out the window. — Zofia Smardz Q: I'm looking at an SAS flight from Warsaw to Newark with a 50-minute connection time in Copenhagen. Is this feasible or is it cutting it too close? If I miss the connecting flight, what are the airline's obligations to me? A: The Copenhagen airport site indicates that 45 minutes is the minimum connection time, so if the planets align, you should be able to make it. The airline's obligation is to put you on its next flight or, at its discretion, the next flight of another carrier. — Carol Sottili Q: We're looking for a decent hotel or bed-and-breakfast in Annapolis, Md., where we can walk to restaurants, etc. If it's a bed-and-breakfast, we'd prefer that it not to be a Victorian-grandmother-bric-a-brac-explosion. Any ideas? A: Stay at the Maryland Inn (now part of Historic Inns of Annapolis). It's right downtown; just walk out the door, and you're in the middle of the shops and restaurants. It's very historic and charming and bills itself as a boutique hotel. The other two members are the Governor Calvert House and the Robert Johnson House, also very nice. No Victorian bric-a-brac, and rates are reasonable. — Zofia Smardz Q: We're flying to the Caribbean this winter. American's policy is that you can carry a guitar onboard "only if they can be safely stowed in an overhead bin or approved stowage location in the cabin." I've seen a lot of people bring guitars onboard LLEY CAMPGROU D VA ND U B 607-522-3270 Sites Available! Reserve yours today for best selection Find us on Facebook! www. budvalleycg.com budvalleycg@yahoo.com 10378 Presler Rd. Prattsburgh, NY The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 through the years, but with overhead space filling immediately these days, I'm nervous that they'll try to make us check it. A: How valuable is the guitar to you? If you think you're going to spend too much time worrying about it, then I wouldn't risk it. But if you really want to take it, I'd urge you to arrive early and sweet-talk the gate agents and then the flight attendants, impressing on them how much you value it and don't want to see anything bad happen to it. The TSA does suggest that if you check any instrument, you "include short written instructions, where a security officer will notice them, for handling and repacking your instrument." If the guitar is worth a lot (monetarily and otherwise) and it's crucial to have it for the vacation, you might consider a private service that specializes in shipping delicate items, such as Amerijet. — Joe Yonan Q: My son needs to travel to Genoa, Italy, but the return date is very openended. Is it better to buy a one-way ticket, or is it possible to buy a roundtrip with no actual return date? A: You can't buy a round-trip ticket with no return date. If you get a round-trip ticket, you'll have to pay the penalty for changing the return date, which will be steep, plus the difference in airfare. But one-way INVASIVE FROM COVER _________________________ wildlife officials often do when it comes to invasive species. The state is being overrun by animals, insects and plants that should not be there, costing Floridians half a billion dollars each year in everything from damaged orange groves to maimed pets and dead fish in water depleted of oxygen by plants. Florida spends $50 million a year just to eradicate invasive weeds from fields, pastures and canals. Yet, the problem is getting worse. "What have we learned?" said Linda Friar, a spokeswoman for Everglades National Park. "What strategy do we have in place for stopping these species from being brought here? Are we educating the public well enough? I don't know." Native Florida alligators are already in a death match with giant Burmese pythons and other python species to sit atop the food chain. On top of that is a rogues gallery of bad-to-the-bone lizards, fish and frogs. They include the Argentine tegu, which eats sea turtle eggs; the Nile monitor lizard, which kills house pets; the Cuban tree frog, which dines on other frogs; and the greedy lionfish, which is eating scores of native fish. Last year, Florida organized a month-long hunt, called the Python Challenge, and enlisted volunteers to tickets can also be expensive. Price it out both ways. Some just buy roundtrip tickets and don't use the second portion, but most airlines have rules prohibiting this and reserve the right to cancel your flight if you get caught. — Carol Sottili Q: When do you suggest booking a room for the 4th of July weekend in New Orleans? A: Most likely, prices will only rise for the holiday weekend. You could always book and, if the price drops, call the hotel and ask if they will reimburse you for the difference. Or, if they have a flexible cancellation policy, you can cancel and rebook at the cheaper rate. But I wouldn't wait too long to reserve, especially if you plan to stay in one of the main neighborhoods. Some hotels may also require minimum-night stays. — Andrea Sachs Q: We are planning a summer family vacation: two grandparents, one parent and three kids ages 8, 12 and 16. We're looking for something within a three- to five-hour drive, preferably in the mountains. It must have facilities for the kids. A bonus would be reasonable proximity to a historic site(s) for educational purposes. A: How about Liberty Mountain or Whitetail resorts in Pennsylvania? Both are near Gettysburg. © 2014, The Washington Post. ■ help remove its top-priority invasive species from the Everglades. When it was over, the state fish and wildlife commission and other experts came to this conclusion: Evicting the snakes is impossible. Up to 100,000 pythons are estimated to be living in the Everglades, and more than 1,500 thrill-seekers, amateurs and skilled hunters who flocked to the event from across the country caught only 68. Pythons are excellent at stealth. Trackers with the U.S. Geological Survey have stood a few feet from them — with radio transmitters — and failed to see them. In the challenge, 24 hunters with permits caught 42 snakes. More than 1,500 others caught 26. "That was the key . . . result, and shows why we have such a serious problem," said Frank Mazzotti, a University of Florida ecology and biology professor. "How do you win a war if you can't find your enemy? You really have to know what you're doing to even have a low level of detection." The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission ruled out a second challenge this year, partly because pythons are so hard to spot, let alone catch. "Definitely, we're understanding that better-trained people are going to do this," said Kristen Sommers, the commission's leader of exotic species What's the Deal? his week's best travel bargains around the globe. — ME Cancun, part of the ME by Melia brand, is offering resort credits of up to $800 through Dec. 22. Stay at least three nights at the all-inclusive Mexican property and receive $600 in credits pinned to specific activities and amenities. The credits include $40 for two 80-minute massages and $20 for a 50-minute massage at the YHI Spa; $25 for a room upgrade (subject to availability); $50 each for a dinner on the beach, an Exotic Rides experience, swimming with dolphins and shopping at the Luxury Avenue Boutique Mall; and $150 toward a luxury rental car. Book a minimum of seven nights and receive $800 in credits. Nightly rate starts at $310 per couple, plus 16 percent tax. Info: 888956-3542, www.melia.com — Save 15 percent on stays at the Lodge at Glendorn, a Relais & Chateaux property in Bradford, Pa. The deal is valid on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday nights through August. With tax, the reduced price is $569 a night, down from $651. Rate includes full daily breakfast, all gratuities and such on-site activities as biking, kayaking, stand-up paddleboarding and canoeing. Info: 800-843-8568, www. glendorn.com. — Rosewood Hotels and Resorts is offering free nights at 15 properties in the United States, Mexico, the Caribbean, Canada, London and the United Arab Emirates. Rules and restrictions vary by property. For example, pay for two nights at the Carlyle, a Rosewood Hotel on Manhattan's Upper East Side and receive the third night free for travel through Sept. 3. A threenight stay in mid-July costs $1,116, including taxes, a savings of $450. You must pay taxes and resort fees for the free night. Info: www.rosewoodhotels.com/en/luxury-hotel-offers. — This summer, two sail for the price of one on select 15-night cruises with Blount Small Ship Adventures. The deal applies to the Atlantic Coastal Waterways itinerary, which sails from Jacksonville, Fla., to Warren, R.I., on June 30; and two July departures of the Great American Waterways cruise between Chicago and Warren. Prices vary. For example, the Great American Waterways cruise aboard the 88-passenger Grande Caribe, which departs Warren on July 29, now starts at $4,999 per couple, plus $590 port charges. Info: 888618-4770, www.blountsmallshipadventures.com/2014offers. - Prices were verified at press time last Thursday, but deals sell out and availability is not guaranteed. Some restrictions may apply. © 2014, The Washington Post ■ coordination. Officials are not sure of the next step. "If we did it again, what would it look like?" Critics called the challenge a flop, but Mazzotti and a team of biologists who conducted necropsies on the snakes disagreed. At a university lab in Lauderhill, Fla., they faced dissecting a huge pile of giant snakes, more than any of them had seen at one time. For the first time, they examined animals as if on an assembly line — one person slicing snakes open, another examining stomach contents, a third studying sex organs. It was "the same thing Henry Ford did for making automobiles," said Mazzotti, who oversaw the work. "Instead of putting them together, we took them apart." They were looking for signs that pythons are behind the disappearance of animals in the Everglades. For a 2012 study, researchers who counted Everglades National Park mammals found that 99 percent of raccoons have disappeared since pythons became established. Marsh rabbits and foxes completely vanished. Over a decade ending in 2009, federal and state agencies spent $100 million on the recovery of wood storks, a staple of the python's diet. But the necropsies did not find evidence that the 68 pythons ate such animals. Caught throughout the Everglades, except in the national park, where their capture for monetary gain is forbidden, they feasted largely on cotton rats. Still, the commission wants to evict as many snakes as possible, and it would like to provide some type of incentive to groups such as Florida Python Hunters, led by Ruben Ramirez, who caught 18 snakes to win the challenge's top prize. But there is no money in the budget to pay them, Sommers said. The commission has turned to a Python Patrol of enthusiasts who are trained to identify and possibly remove snakes. As for criticism of the Python Challenge, federal and state wildlife officials dismissed it. "Our measure of success wasn't the same as what the public had," Sommers said. Raising public awareness was the main priority, "and we did that," she said. "Eight million people worldwide read or saw something related to it." And the necropsies already answered one odd question from Floridians: Is it OK to eat snake meat? Mercury levels varied in the dead snakes and were lower, on average, than levels in pythons captured earlier in Everglades National Park. But no, Sommers said, don't eat the pythons. © 2014, The Washington Post. ■ By Carol Sottili and Andrea Sachs The New York Eagle News/The Washington Post T EAGLE NEWS Etcetera... The View From Within HAPPINESS FROM PAGE 13 _________________________ happiness front. In my early 20s, I went to see a life coach. At one point I said the following sentence out loud: "Well, maybe I want to be a midwife." Which is a noble profession but also, in my case, a very specific cry for help. The life coach offered to see me pro bono — the way immigration lawyers offer to help people fleeing genocidal regimes. Or me, just trying to figure things out. When the future happiness guru and I were living in the same building, my problem had a lot to do with college itself. I'd grown up near a college campus, and living among polarfleeced collegiate idealists, as they tossed Frisbees and discussed the good they would do in the world, had led me to romanticize the college experience. Through my awkward slog of adolescence, I imagined that in college, everything would make sense and that I would become a better version of me. Of course, the reality turned out to be rather different. I knew enough to seek some professional help. I told one counselor that, among the things that made me feel like I was drowning, I found the dining hall overwhelming and was having trouble with out-of-control eating. Her advice: "Have you tried using a smaller plate?" Reading Shawn's books and watching his TED talk recently, I began to wonder whether, if only he had known then what he knows now, and had been able to tell me about it when I was 18, I might have been a little less lonely, a little more healthy, a little less certain that happiness was some unknown destination in the future, certainly not attainable in the present. In his first book, "The Happiness Advantage," he defines happiness as "the joy we feel striving after our potential." (When he repeated this idea to Oprah, he prefaced it by saying that its roots are in the work of the Greek philosophers he studied. She called it a "tweetable moment," no doubt gratifying Aristotle.) His definition is a savvy one, skirting ineffable notions of euphoria. Potential is more PowerPoint-ready, good for the Google executives and Swiss bankers he has coached in his consulting career. After getting a master's from divinity school, Shawn worked with positive psychologists as a research and teaching assistant. His writing is easy to understand, peppered with jokes and anecdotes from his travel, and his work essentially synthesizes scientific research while providing practical advice: Write "gratitudes" — things you are grateful for — on a daily basis, and you can retrain your brain to look for the positive. Don't check your e-mail all the time 23 nyeaglenews.com The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 By Randy Pawley Special to The New York Eagle News I Can We Be The Change? awoke this morning, turned on the news channel only to find the same dissension in the world that was present the day before. We live in a world today with much anger, pain and distrust of one another. We find that natural, or shall I say the new normal of world conditions, disasters of fires, floods, hurricanes, tornado and much more that are making the lives of so many people disrupted and painful. I found the need to seek out answers as to what part of all this I have, and what I might do to help make this world of ours a better place. The only place I could find the answer would be The View From Within. So I entered the world of silence within and here is what I found. I found that GOD in all wisdom has made all life forms, humans, trees, flowers, the animals large and small, insects, and all the other life forms of our world with pure perfection. You see the God of my understanding does not make imperfect life. Then where would all the imperfections come from? This became a very large question with a rather short answer. We humans are the ones who create our own problems of this magnificent world in which we live. Perhaps we are not all aware of this. We talk of all the bad conditions many times. I wonder how many of us take the time to understand that we come into this world as pure perfection of a divine creation. Our separation from this higher being is the ego that lets us believe we are much less then we are. Sure the ego is important to us. It allows us to live, day to day in the life of our choosing and get from here to there. Perhaps we should visit that quiet place within all of us more frequently so that we might understand the pure HIGHER potential we are capable of? Would we not make a more peaceful and loving world if we could understand the divine nature of a higher order? Could we make our world a better environment for our children and grand children? Could we be the generation that would allow higher wisdom from within to be greater than that of lower self ignorance? Could we say that we are the generational shift to make a better world ? MAY THIS BE SO! Be still and know of your greater view from within. if you are trying to concentrate. But do write nice e-mails to people, praising them for their work or thanking them for their help. That can give you a boost. Eliminate small obstacles to your goals. The examples he gives from his own life include a time when he went to sleep in gym clothes so he was workout-ready in the morning and when he kept a guitar out in his room instead of in the closet so he was more likely to practice. It all does seem relatively doable. The real problem, Shawn explains in his writing, his talk and to Oprah, is that we have to understand that happiness comes before success, not after. Because success is a moving target. Being successful doesn't make you happier; but being happier does make you more successful. Oprah's response to this insight: "I love it, I love it, I love it." One thing I have learned in the years since college is not to let regret fester. So I decided to call Shawn. To congratulate him on his accomplishments and to catch up a bit. Beyond that, I also wanted to say, as politely as possible: I feel cheated. Now you're this expert, and I missed out. What could you have done to help me be happier in college? "One of the things Oprah said to me, which is a crazy sentence — " he started by saying, allowing that quoting Winfrey wisdom as delivered in person is indeed not something everyone gets to do. Oprah told him, possibly quoting someone else, in an aphorism echo-chamber: "Forgiveness is giving up hope that the past would be different." Okay. So I didn't learn to be happy from the happiness expert when I knew him. Fine. Now what? The cure for that, Shawn said, is this: "What we have in the present is the ability to change how we thought about the past." I asked him what he would do differently now, if he were to go back in time and be in charge of a group of college freshmen again. He said he'd try to have a "gratitude wall." And to "encourage people to do meditation, tell students when they're - The contents of this guest column reflect the author's views. Comments may be emailed to Randy Pawley at rhpawley@rochester.rr.com. ■ Prayerful Thoughts By Linda Childs Special to The New York Eagle News Dear Father in Heaven, Over the last several years I have worked in earnest to develop good spiritual habits, to constantly grow in my relationship with You, Lord, to put You first and foremost in everything I do, and in all areas of my life. In doing this I have found a great deal of “rest” in You, and have relished the “peace that passes all understanding” I feel in my soul each and every day as we spend time together. I couldn’t have made through all that I had to without this. Yet recently I found myself getting stressed out over the health issue of a family member, not even realizing that I was allowing it to affect me that way. A friend reminded me that I should “cast my care into God’s hands and He would help me through it if I put my faith in Him”. I was surprised to find that I wasn’t automatically doing that. Of course, when I did put the issue in Your hands, indeed You did help me through it and relieved me of the stress and burden. In thinking about this, I have come to the conclusion that it wasn’t a matter of unbelief or my not having enough faith but rather that I simply forgot in this particular situation to bring it to You. Somehow, even though I pray every day that the Holy Spirit fill my soul with Your peace, I still forgot to turn to You in this case. I wonder how often this has happened that I was not aware of. I know that You are in EVERY thing, every arena of our lives, in every issue, every problem, always there ready and waiting to help. I just have to remember that. Sometimes this can be more difficult than having faith. Please help me Lord to always think of You first in all things. I realize that this is a habit which is not as fully formed in me as I had thought, and I ask You to help me and anyone else who needs it, to improve in this area. Philippians 4: 6-7 - Be careful for nothing; but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God. And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus. 1 Peter 5: 6-7 - Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that he may exalt you in due time: Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you. Amen ■ down to journal about a positive experience." I began to feel less cheated. I don't think I would have been able to take gratitude-writing seriously at age 18. ("I'm grateful there are cookies at this meeting, because are you kidding me with this?") But most of all, he said, "I wish I had known at the time and could have verbalized to students: Happiness is more of a choice than we think it is." When Shawn and I were living in the same dorm, we actually had more in common than I thought. Specifically, the future happiness guru and I were both unhappy. Shawn told me that he was going through depression himself in 2001 while attempting to counsel students. He mentioned this to Oprah in the final moments of what was supposed to be a one-hour interview. They talked for another hour — it turned out that depression was something Oprah had struggled with, too. Part of what got him out of his depression, he said, was using the tools of positive psychology (a useful coincidence for someone who now makes a living talking more than 100 times a year about positive psychology). Journaling, exercises in gratitude — "it taught me that our behaviors actually matter," he told me. Of everything Shawn said on the phone, and in the two books of his that I read, and in the TED talk that I've now watched half a dozen times, the most useful story he told me was about what happened when he met Oprah. "She put up her hands — to be like 'Hi, Shawn' — but I couldn't tell if she meant to give me a high-five or — " Or a hug? Was Oprah hugging him? "I did this awkward — I grabbed her hands and didn't know how to let go, so did this weird high-five hug that I couldn't extricate from," Shawn says, and I can picture it, a smiling man grasping Oprah's hands, maybe swaying a bit in the California breeze. Mortified. "It was hard to bring thoughts fully together," he said, merely mortal, and awkward, and fumbling in Oprah's presence, no matter how many gratitudes one practices. As we all would be. - Rachel Dry is a features editor in The Washington Post's Style section. © 2014, The Washington Post ■ Crossbeed Dogs • Malamute + Pointer = Moot Point, owned by....oh, well, it doesn't matter. • Collie + Malamute = Commute, a dog that travels to work. ■ 24 nyeaglenews.com Spanish Gazpacho With Relish Summary: Gazpacho is a cold tomato soup associated with Spanish cuisine, with its beginnings traced back to the Andalusian region. Interestingly, a fundamental ingredient of this ancient soup, with versions dating to early Greece and Rome, is not tomato, but bread. Ingredients: • 2 pounds ripe tomatoes, peeled, seeded and coarsely chopped; or one 28-ounce can quality not too thin. 3. Cover bowl and refrigerate soup until very cold, at least a couple of hours or up to 2 days. Stir gazpacho and ladle into bowls, or pour it at the table from a wide-mouth pitcher. Garnish with Avocado and Bell Pepper Relish. Serves 6 to 8. stitute • 1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil • 3 tablespoons sherry vinegar or balsamic vinegar • 1 to 2 teaspoons hot pepper sauce • 1/2 chilled tomato juice or cold water, as needed plum tomatoes, chopped • 1 medium onion, preferably a sweet variety such as Vidalia or Walla Walla, coarsely chopped • 1 large cucumber, peeled • 2 slices of country-style white bread, crust removed • 1 1/4 cups blanched slivered almonds • 1/2 green bell pepper, seeded and coarsely chopped • 1/2 red bell pepper, seeded and coarsely chopped • 2 scallions or green onions, coarsely chopped • 3 garlic cloves • 1 teaspoon salt • 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper • 1 teaspoon Spanish paprika • 1/2 teaspoon sugar or sugar sub- By Angela Shelf Medearis and Gina Harlow The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 Steps: 1. In a large bowl, stir together tomatoes, onion, cucumber, bread, almonds, bell peppers, scallions, garlic, salt, pepper, paprika and sugar. Working in 2 cup batches, whirl the mixture in a blender until finely chopped but not pureed. 2. Return mixture to the bowl and stir in oil, vinegar and hot pepper sauce. Add enough chilled tomato juice or cold water, a tablespoon at a time, to make the gazpacho soupy but • 2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro • 1 tablespoon finely chopped purple onion • 1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice Steps: 1. Mix all ingredients together until well-combined. Top soup with the relish. © 2014 King Features Synd., Inc., and Angela Shelf Medearis ■ Avocado And Bell Pepper Relish Ingredients: • 1 ripe peeled avocado, diced • 1/4 cup finely chopped red bell pepper GROCERY GREAT DEALS IN EVERY AISLE ONE MAIN STREET Open Daily 8AM-8PM • Sunday 7AM-6PM • 5% Off Senior Citizen Day every Thursday • We issue Food Stamps • We redeem Federal Food Stamps & WIC We accept all major Credit Cards Limit 4 on all items unless stated otherwise. 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Cover and cook on LOW for 6 to 8 hours. Mix well before serving. Good spooned over rice or pasta. Makes 4 (1 cup) servings. Nutrition: Each serving equals: 191 calories, 3g fat, 24g protein, 17g carb., 506mg sodium, 2g fiber; Diabetic Exchanges: 3 Meat, 1 Vegetable, 1/2 Starch. By By Healthy Exchanges Ingredients: • 1/2 cup fat-free Catalina or French dressing • 1 (8-ounce) can tomatoes, finely chopped and undrained • 1 teaspoon dried parsley flakes • 1/8 teaspoon black pepper • 1/2 cup chopped onion • 1 cup finely chopped celery • 16 ounces skinned and boned chicken breast, cut into bitesize pieces Steps: 1. Spray a slow-cooker container with butter-flavored cooking spray. In Summary: The chimichurri sauce that tops the flatiron steak in this recipe gets flavor from parsley, garlic, oregano and crushed red pepper. Serve the steak with romaine lettuce and grilled red peppers. Ingredients: • 3/4 cup chopped fresh parsley leaves • 2 tablespoons olive oil • 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar • 2 tablespoons water © 2014 King Features Synd., Inc ■ FROZEN DAIRY Mrs. T’s MEAT Friendship Assorted Pierogies QUALITY YOU CAN DEPEND ON Assorted Cottage Cheese Pork Shoulder Butt Steaks aks Boneless Beef Chuck Steaks or Roast 2$5 for 2 $ 79 12.84-16 oz. New York Garlic Bread Assorted Go-Gurt Also Ciabatta Roll with Cheese, Texas Toast or Pizzeria Cheese Dip’n Sticks 2 2$4 $ 99 for 12 oz. Shurfine Shurfine 2 $ 99 20.5-21.6 oz. 24 $ for Assorted Soft Cream Cheese 16-21 oz. 2 23 $ for for 16 oz. 1 99¢ $ 39 12 oz. 8 oz. 2$ 4 for 1 lb. for 6.4 oz. 5 Mars • Twix, Snickers or Outshine Fruit Bars Ice Cream Drumsticks $ 49 16-16.5 oz. Milky Way Ice Cream Bars 3$10 2$7 for Ice Cream Cookies for 6 pk. 4 Freshly Baked Stroehmann 1 Dutch Country Bread FREE 15 oz. Glazed Ring Donuts Freshly Baked Club Rolls 20-24 20 24 o oz. 2 6 ct. 6 ct. $1.29 $2.49 Thomas English Muffins FREE FREE 20 oz. 6 pk. Regular or Original Whole Grain Arnold Whole Grain Bread 10 oz. Entenmann’s Little Bites 8.25-8.8 oz. Freihofer’s Assorted Country Breads 24 oz. Lunchables 3 2 13.5-14 oz. Margherita 13.9-15.6 oz. Sahlen’s • Smoked or Cajun Style Hot Ham Capicola 5 lb. Lorraine’s 2 $ 38 4 lb. Lower Sodium Sandwich Style Swiss Cheese Deli Sliced Turkey Breast 6 6 lb. Storemade Veggie Cups $ 58 lb. lb. 3 $ 29 lb. FARM FRESH EVERY DAY Fresh Mini Carrots BUY ONE • GET ONE BUY ONE • GET ONE 2 for $5 $3.49 2 for $5 3 $ 28 Beefsteak Tomatoes 1 Fresh White Flesh Peaches $ 28 lb. 2 $ 68 each Red Ripe 1 $ 18 each Extra Large Cauliflower Stroehmann Split Top Wheat Bread Entenmann’s Pop’ems Donuts 2 Creamy Coleslaw, Macaroni or Potato Salad Fresh 16 oz. 24 oz. $ 29 6 lb. $ 88 White, Wheat, Rye, Multigrain or Sunflower 20-22 oz. $ 59 Also Polish Links, Beddar w/ Cheddar or Stadium Brats $ 38 $ 98 $ 98 $ 98 Seedless Watermelon Assorted Breads 1 Assorted $ 49 $ 99 12 oz. Deli Sliced Roast Beef Red Ripe Monks Shurfine Round or Square Bread Always Fresh 6 pk. $ 99 BUY ONE • GET ONE 3 Smoked or Polish Sausage Uploaded $ 59 16 oz. lb. Oscar Mayer $ 49 COMMERCIAL BAKERY $ 79 2 lb. Johnsonville Original Sliced Bacon PRODUCE FRESH BAKERY French Bread 5 1 lb. pkg. Bar-S Charlie’s Pride Golden Roasted Turkey Breast M&M • Ice Cream Cones or 6 pk. 8 pk. Storemade COLD CUTS AT HOT PRICES Grandma’s • Old Fashioned Edy’s lb. Bar-S DELI ICE CREAM Nestle 9 lb. Polish Sausage Ribeye Delmonico Steaks Farm Raised Sausage Links Jumbo or Patties All Meat Assorted Varieties Hot Dogs for Assorted Cookie Dough Margarine Quarters lb. Banquet • Brown & Serve Honeysuckle White • Deli Sliced 4$5 Boneless Beef E-Z Peel Shrimp 6 4 $ 48 lb. Censea • 31-40 Ct. Boneless Chicken Thighs 5$5 5$5 Shurfine Shurfine Assorted Bagels Assorted Vegetables Shurfine FREE 19-32 oz. 4 Baby Back Spare Ribss $ 28 $ 88 $ 99 $ 98 $ 88 8 pk. BUY ONE • GET ONE NE Shurfine Shurfine Fresh All Natural Sirloin Patties Flour or Wheat & Honey Tortillas Cheese or Pepperoni 2 Porkloin • Lean & Meaty $ 68 lb. Freshly Made Mex-America Assorted French Fries Thin Crust rust Pizza 3 $ 88 16 oz. Yoplait place on hot grill grate and cook 12 to 14 minutes for medium-rare, turning over once. Let stand 5 minutes for easier slicing. Spray peppers lightly with nonstick spray and place on grill with steak. Grill 10 to 12 minutes or until charred and tender, turning over once. Cut steak into 4 pieces; cut peppers into thin slices. 4. Divide romaine among 4 plates. Top with steak, peppers and sauce. Serves 4. Nutrition: Each serving: About 305 calories, 17g total fat (4g saturated), 174mg cholesterol, 405mg sodium, 8g total carbs, 3g dietary fiber, 30g protein. Good Housekeeping © 2014 Hearst Communications, Inc. ■ • 1 cloves garlic, finely chopped • 1/2 teaspoon dried oregano • 1/2 teaspoon crushed red pepper • Salt • 1 piece (1 1/4 pounds) flatiron (or blade) steak, well-trimmed • Nonstick olive oil cooking spray • 2 medium (4 to 6 ounces each) red peppers, cut into quarters • 1 head (4 cups) romaine lettuce, thinly sliced Steps: 1. Prepare outdoor grill for direct grilling on medium. 2. Prepare chimichurri sauce: In small bowl, with fork, mix parsley, oil, vinegar, water, garlic, oregano, crushed red pepper and 1/4 teaspoon salt until blended. 3. Meanwhile, sprinkle steak with 1/4 teaspoon salt to season both sides; Fresh Fresh White Flesh Nectarines 2 $ 68 lb. Fresh Celery 1 lb. bag lb. 98¢ lb. 98¢ 2 $3 for Jumbo Vidalia Onions New Crop • California Sno-White Mushrooms stalk Fresh 8 oz. pkg. Red, Green or Black Seedless Grapes 1 $ 68 lb. 26 nyeaglenews.com Barbie's Birthday Now, at long last some NEW Barbie dolls to coincide with her aging gracefully. These are a bit more realistic... 1. Bifocals Barbie. Comes with her own set of blended-lens fashion frames in six wild colors half-frames too!), neck chain and large-print editions of Vogue and Martha Stewart Living. 2. Hot Flash Barbie. Press Barbie's bellybutton and watch her face turn red! With hand held fan and tiny tissues. 3. Facial Hair Barbie. As Barbie's hormone levels shift, see her whiskers grow! Available with teensy tweezers and magnifying mirror. 4. Flabby Arms Barbie. Hide Barbie's droopy triceps with these new, roomier-sleeved gowns. Good news on the tummy front, too: muumuus with tummy support panels are included! 5. Bunion Barbie. Years of disco dancing in stiletto heels have definitely taken their toll on Barbie's dainty arched feet. Soothe her sores with the pumice stone and plasters, then slip on soft terry mules. 6. No More Wrinkles Barbie. Erase those pesky crow's-feet and lip lines with a tube of Skin Sparkle-Spackle, from Barbie's own line of exclusive age-blasting cosmetics. 7. Soccer Mom Barbie. All that experience as a cheerleader is really paying off as Barbie dusts off her old high school megaphone to root for Babs and Ken, Jr. With minivan in robin’s egg blue or white, and cooler filled with doughnut holes and fruit punch. 8. Mid-life Crisis Barbie. It's time to ditch Ken. Barbie needs a change and Fred (her personal trainer) is just what the doctor ordered, along with Prozac. They're hopping in her new red Miata and heading for the Napa Valley to open a B&B. Comes with real tape of "Breaking Up Is Hard to Do." 9. Divorced Barbie. Sells for $199.99. Comes with Ken's house, Ken's car, and Ken's boat. 10. Single Mom Barbie. There's not much time for primping anymore! Ken's shacked up with the Swedish au pair in the Dream House and Barbie's across town with Babs and Ken, Jr., in a fourth-floor walkup. Barbie's selling off her old gowns and accessories to raise rent money. Complete garage sale kit included. 11. Recovery Barbie. Too many parties have finally caught up with the ultimate party girl. Now she does twelve steps instead of dance steps! Clean and sober, she's going to meetings religiously. Comes with a little copy of The Big Book and six-pack of Continuing Education Courses For Women 1. Silence, the Final Frontier: Where No Woman Has Gone Before 2. The Undiscovered Side of Banking: Making Deposits 3. Combating the Imelda Marcos Syndrome: You Do Not Need New Shoes Everyday 4. Parties: Going Without New Outfits 5. Man Management: Discover How Minor Household Chores Can Wait Until... After the Game 6. Bathroom Etiquette I: Men Need Space in the Bathroom Cabinet Too 7. Bathroom Etiquette II: His Razor Is His 8. Valuation: Just Because It's Not Important to You . . . 9. Communication Skills I: Tears - The Last Resort, Not the First 10. Communication Skills II: Thinking Before Speaking 11. Communication Skills III: Getting What You Want, Without Nagging 12. Driving a Car Safely: A Skill You CAN Acquire 13. Party Etiquette: Drinking Your Fair Share 14. Telephone Skills: How to Hang Up 15. Introduction to Parking 16. Advanced Parking: Reversing Into A Space 17. Overcoming Anal Retentive Behavior: Leaving the Towels on the Floor 18. Water retention: Fact or Fat 19. Cooking I: Bringing Back Bacon, Eggs and Butter 20. Cooking II: Bran and Tofu are Not For Human Consumption 21. Cooking III: How Not to Inflict Your Diets on Other People 22. Compliments: Accepting Them Gracefully 23. PMS: Your Problem . . . Not His 24. Dancing: Why Men Don't Like To 25. Sex - It's For Married Couples Too 26. Classic Clothing: Wearing Outfits You Already Have 27. Household Dust: A Harmless Natural Occurrence Only Women Notice 28. Integrating Your Laundry: Washing It All Together 29. Ballet: For Women Only 30. Oil and Gas: Your Car Needs Both 31. Learning to Go in Public Rest rooms 32. Appreciating the Humor of the Three Stooges 33. "Do These Jeans Make My Butt Look Big?" Why Men Lie 34. TV Remotes: For Men Only 35. Sexy Lingerie For Any Occasion Diet Coke. 12. Post Menopausal Barbie. Poor Barbie wets her pants when she sneezes, forgets where she puts things, and cries a lot. She is sick and tired of Ken sitting on the couch watching the tube, clicking through the channels. Comes with Depends and Kleenex. As a bonus this year, she comes with the book, "Getting In Touch with Your Inner Self." ■ Continuing Education Courses For Men 1. Meaningful Communication: Where No Man Has Gone Before 2. The Undiscovered Side of Baking: You Do It 3. Combating the Couch Potato Syndrome: Surprise, The NFL (NBA, etc) Does NOT Require Your Nightly Patronage to Remain On-air! 4. Parties: How to Go Home with Whoever You Came With 5. Woman Management: Discover How Minor Household Chores Can Be Done By You Too! 6. Bathroom Etiquette I: Putting Down the Seat 7. Bathroom Etiquette II: Toothpaste, On the Brush, Not in the Sink 8. Valuation: Just Because It's Not Important to You . . . 9. Communication Skills I: How to Speak Intelligibly 10. Communication Skills II: Keeping Your "Word" 11. Communication Skills III: Getting/Keeping The Girl You Want Requires the Removal of These Words from Your Speech Pattern... 12. Driving a Car Safely: You Can DO it! 13. Party Etiquette: Avoiding Alcohol After You Can't Stand Upright 14. Telephone Skills: How to Use One, and NOT Two Weeks After Receiving Her # 15. Introduction to Parking 16. Advanced Parking: Reversing Into A Space 17. Overcoming Stupid Behavior: Don't Treat Her Differently When Your Friends Are Around 18. Liquid Grain Storage: On Your Stomach, It is Fat 19. Cooking I: How to Eat IN 20. Cooking II: How to NOT Have Heart Attack By Age 21 21. Cooking III: How to Inflict a Diet on YOURSELF 22. Compliments: How to Give Them 23. PMS: You Try It 24. Dancing: Why Men Ought To 25. Sex - How to Slow Down 26. Classic Clothing: How To Match 27. Cleaning: She Is Not Your Momma 28. Laundry: How to Do It 29. Intense Discussion About the Functions of Your Car: For Men Only 30. Oil and Gas: Your Hair, Your Intestines. Problems NOT for Public Demonstration 31. Learning to Ask Directions 32. Appreciating Soaps, Colognes, etc... 33. "How Was I?" - Why Women Lie 34. TV Remotes: Not Your Personal Property 35. Sexy Lingerie: The Difference Between SEXY and Risqué ■ Ponderisms • To steal ideas from one person is plagiarism; to steal from many is research. • Hell hath no fury like the lawyer of a woman scorned. • I'd kill for a Nobel Peace Prize. ■ The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 OBITUARIES FROM PAGE 11 _________________________ 21 Sturbridge Lane, Pittsford, NY 14534. *** Dorothy M. Lincoln Naples, NY - Dorothy M. Lincoln, age 90, passed away on February 11, 2014. Family and friends of Dorothy would like to invite you to a celebration of her life on June 21st at the Naples Baptist Church in Naples at 11:00am. Following the service there will be a luncheon at the Church. Dorothy was buried on the family plot at Rose Ridge Cemetery in Naples. Arrangements are with the Baird-Moore Funeral Home, Naples. *** Martha Anne Parker Naples, NY - Martha Anne Parker, age 85, passed away June 2, 2014. She was born on October 12, 1929 in Rochester, NY, the daughter of Dr. Arthur C. and Anna Cooke Parker. Martha was a graduate of Cornell University and Buffalo State. She majored in agronomy and elementary education. During her lifetime she taught at various elementary schools and Wagner College on Staten Island, NY. While living in Naples, NY she volunteered at the Naples Library and was a valued member of the local emergency squad for 20 years. She had a passion for nature and was a strong advocate for land preservation. Martha is survived by her partner and companion, Betty Ann Engstrom of Chatham, NY, devoted friend DANCE CAMP FROM PAGE 15 _________________________ through Dance Masters of America and says that having this certification not only furthers her dance education but also allows her to keep up with new teaching methods and techniques to enhance her students’ dance education. Though she is currently employed at two studios, Samantha says, “It’s always been a dream and goal in life to own and operate my own studio/studios—it would truly be a dream come true! I love to create a friendly, encouraging atmosphere that will allow my students to succeed above and beyond. There's nothing more gratifying than to watch the kids you’ve taught conquer one basic step, and be so proud of themselves.” If you have dance shoes from previous classes feel free to bring them otherwise sneakers and moveable clothing are recommended. Samantha says, “I look forward to meeting all of you! Come have some dance fun!” ■ Merilyn Hiller of Well Fleet, MA and childhood friend Martha Reddout of Alden, NY. Arrangements were with the Fuller Funeral Home, Canandaigua. *** Wayland, NY Charles Alton Morsch Wayland, NY - Charles Alton Morsch, age 94, passed away June 2, 2014 at The Vincent House in Wayland. Charles was born in Patchinville on July 15, 1919, the 3rd child of the late Stephen and Irene Morsch (Zimmer). He married Helen Gross on September 20, 1947. Helen predeceased Charles after a wonderful 65 loving years together in marriage. Charles was a decorated World War II veteran. He served in the Army from 1941 through 1945 in the 2nd Armored Division, also known as “Hell on Wheels.” Charles saw action in many crucial points of the war, including northern Africa, D-Day and the “Battle of the Bulge.” He received the Bronze Star for his brave service and was honorably discharged after the war. Upon returning home after the war, he married Helen and settled in Wayland. They raised 5 children, cared for grandchildren and entertained friends and relatives in the same home for all of their 65 very special years together. Charles served as Fire Chief of the Perkinsville Fire Dept in the late 1940s, then spent many years working at Atlantic Refining Company and Shay’s Service as a truck mechanic before retiring in the early 1980s. Charles had many friends and loved his local surroundings. He loved keeping abreast of local happenings at Shep’s Hardware and the American Legion Hall. Charles also spent his time pursuing his interests in gardening, baseball and Notre Dame Football. Charles was predeceased by his parents Stephen and Irene Morsch; his son, Gerry Morsch; his brothers, Vincent, Robert and Norman Morsch; and his sister, Mary Kame. Charles is survived by his oldest daughter Jeanne Hunt and husband Leslie of Wayland; son Donald Morsch and wife Val of Wayland; daughter Mary Morsch of Prescott, AZ; daughter Bonnie Rasmussen and husband Kent of Maineville, OH; daughter-in-law Maureen Morsch of SanFrancisco, CA; his grandchildren, Jacqueline Hunt, Christopher Hunt, Ashley Hunt, Julie Hunt and Hannah Rasmussen; his brother, Arthur Morsch and wife Marge of Dansville; along with several nieces and nephews. Funeral services were held on June 7, 2014 at the St. George-Stanton Funeral Home, Wayland, NY. Committal prayers, military honors and internment were set for St. Joseph’s Cemetery, Wayland. Memorial contributions in Charles A. Morsch’s memory may be made to The Vincent House, 310 Second Ave., Wayland, NY 14572. ■ The NY Eagle News | June 12, 2014 nyeaglenews.com 27 EAGLE NEWS Real Estate Penn Yan - 201 E. Elm St. - 315-536-7446 Bath - 7434 State Route 54 - 607-776-7446 Broker/Owners: Dale Lane 315-374-0017 Dan Morse 315-719-7372 KENN MURRAY COUNTRY LIVING! COUNTRY LIVING! 2 bedroom, 2 bath, on just over an acre with new 2 car garage. Nice deck, quiet setting. $102,900 3 bedroom country home, central air, some updates, cheaper than renting! $83,300 Licensed Associate Broker William Hunter Reed, PC Attorney at Law 11 Water Street, Hammondsport, NY 14840 607-569-2213 email: whreed@rochester.twcbc.com For All Your Real Estate Needs Naples, Prattsburgh & the Finger Lakes Areas 139 S. Main (PO Box 730) Naples NY Cell: (585) 734-7868 Of�ice: (585) 396-5239 Fax: (585) 348-2024 Email: kmurray@nothnagle.com Website: www.nothnagle.com COLLECTING FROM PAGE 13 _________________________ ers waltzing, ships at sea, fruits and flowers, Dutch children skating. I lined them all up on a wall in my rustic barn and loved the contrast. I paid no more than a few bucks for each. You are probably thinking of more serious brass, but keep in mind, there are no rules when it comes to the kind of collecting I love. And, no, it doesn't matter that there's no brass in your home. Just start finding a place for it, as I know you will! Q: Can you recommend a wall color that would complement creamcolored cabinets? A: Are we in the kitchen? I'm guessing we are. If you have subtle-colored cream cabinets, I think I would go for white walls or find some kind of interesting wallpaper that picks up on Call Jan 315-694-1213 Call Renee O. 315-436-2464 WWW.KeukaRE.com D.G. Marshall, Inc. Building Contractor • Custom built Homes • Modular homes • Home Improvements 30 years experience • Real Estate: - Representing Buyers & Sellers in both Residential & Commercial transactions for over 20 years - Bank Closings including Bank Refinancing & Title Insurance Services • Estate Planning: - Wills & Trusts, Living Wills & Powers of Attorney • Corporation Formation including LLC & Subchapter S • Uncontested Divorces • Town & Village Municipal Representation Take advantage of a no-fee real estate consultation by mentioning this ad! Honeoye, NY 585-229-2954 the cream. You don't want to overpower them. Q: I dislike cut flowers, and have green plants in my house. Most of the rooms do not have enough light for greenery, so I would like to add Areas of Practice Include: artificial flowers to the decor. What is your opinion of artificial flowers? I have seen some expensive ones that look real. A: There are some truly remarkable fakes out there; just use them spar- ingly and place them in a unique container. I have some great red poppies I bought for a table in our living room in New York. I plunked them into a yellow pottery pitcher, a gift from a friend in Spain. They are surrounded by piles of my favorite books and still are blooming after 10 years, at least! I also have a little pot of fake green herbs that sits in the center of our little wooden table in our cozy kitchen. Go for your own personal garden. © 2014, The Washington Post. ■