Houghton College to Host Alzheimer’s Panel for Homecoming Weekend


Houghton, N.Y.—As part of its annual homecoming festivities, Houghton College will host a public panel titled “Alzheimer’s: Our Nation’s Next Epidemic.” This event will feature a plenary address by Bob Van Dyk ‘75, President and CEO of Van Dyk Health Care, followed by response and dialogue from an esteemed panel of local Alzheimer’s experts. The panel will be moderated by Dr. Cathy Freytag, associate dean of the faculty and education professor at Houghton College.
Respondents on the panel will include: Vaijayantee Belle, M.D., neurologist, Olean General Hospital; Katie Keith Badeau, LMSW, director of care consultation for the Alzheimer’s Association, WNY Chapter; and Dr. Paul Martino, professor of biochemistry at Houghton College.
Alzheimer’s disease is a brain disorder diagnosed in more than three million individuals each year. The panelists will discuss what we know about this aggressive disease and what research has been done into potential treatments.
Since 1994, Mr. Van Dyk has served the president and CEO of Van Dyk Health Care in New Jersey. This healthcare organization operates two skilled nursing and post-acute care facilities, as well as an assisted living community with a specialty memory impairment program. Van Dyk Memory Care provides a safe and secure setting where individuals with Alzheimer’s and related memory impairments can benefit from daily activities and programming designed to enrich “mind, body, and soul.”
Vaijayantee Belle, M.D., a neurologist at Olean General Hospital, has nearly twenty years of clinical experience in neuroscience. She is a member of the American Academy of Neurology, the Congress of Neurological Surgeons, and the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology.
Katie Keith Badeau is a Licensed Master Social Worker, and the Director of Care Consultation for the WNY Chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association. She has been with the Alzheimer’s Association since 2015, and in her current role, she provides consultations, support, and referrals, as well as overseeing the chapter’s 24/7 Dementia Helpline.
Paul Martino is a professor of biochemistry at Houghton College, as well as a member of the American Chemical Society and the American Society of Mass Spectrometry. He first became interested in Alzheimer’s research in 2006, and has been exploring possible ways to apply existing biochemical research to potential Alzheimer’s treatments. Last year, Martino gave a lecture at Houghton titled “Unraveling Protein Aggregation—Alzheimer’s Research” where he discussed his work on this topic.
Cathy Freytag serves as the associate dean of the faculty and is a professor of education at Houghton College. In 2018 she received Houghton’s Excellence in Teaching Award, one of its most prestigious honors for faculty.
The event is open to the public and will take place on Friday, October 4, 2019 from 3:30-5:00 p.m. in the Recital Hall in the Center for the Arts on Houghton College campus (Houghton, NY). Following the plenary address and responses from panelists, the floor will be open for questions from the audience.

Obituary: Norman “ Dale” Schenck, 77, Jasper

Norman “ Dale” Schenck, 77, of County Road 31, Town of Jasper, passed away Sunday (September 29, 2019) at his home.
The family will be present to receive friends on Friday (Oct. 4, 2019) from 1-3 p.m. and 6-8 p.m.  at the Brown & Powers Funeral Home, 6 Spruce St., Canisteo. Funeral services will following calling hours at 8:00 p.m. Friday. Burial will be in Jasper Cemetery. A complete obituary will be published Wednesday.

Friends may make memorial contributions to: J-T Ag Advisory Committee, % 3377 State Route 417, Jasper, NY 14855.Contribution envelopes will be available at the funeral home.

NOBLE: Collaborative Reform Initiative Technical Assistance Center (CRI-TAC)

Dear Valued NOBLE Members,
 

The National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives (NOBLE) is very pleased to join the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) and others in delivering Collaborative Reform Initiative technical assistance to law enforcement agencies across the nation.   


The Collaborative Reform Initiative Technical Assistance Center (CRI-TAC) provides free, customized technical assistance solutions designed to meet the unique needs of state, local, tribal, and campus communities throughout the United States.
  • Tailored, scalable solutions
  • Informed by cutting-edge innovation and evidence-based and promising practices
  • Designed in a collaborative manner with the agency
  • Designed in a collaborative manner with the agency
  • Delivered by subject matter experts from the field
  • No cost to the requesting agency. 
Support and guidance for the field, by the field.  NOBLE’s participation includes providing Subject Matter Experts (SME’s) to speak on a variety of topics.  Here is a list of topics that we cover through CRI-TAC:
  • Active Shooter Response
  • At-Risk Youth
  • Community Policing/Engagement
  • Crime Analysis
  • Crisis Intervention
  • Data Tracking
  • De-escalation
  • Domestic Violence
  • Drug Crime
  • Gangs
  • Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
  • Gun Violence Reduction and Prevention
  • Human Trafficking
  • Intelligence and Information Sharing
  • Juvenile Justice
  • Mass Casualty Response
  • Mass Demonstration Response
  • Officer Safety and Wellness
  • Partnerships – Prosecution
  • Partnerships – Public Sector
  • Partnerships – Private Sector
  • Policies/Procedures
  • Proactive Policing
  • Schools
  • Shared Service Models
  • Violent Crime
As always, your help and support is greatly appreciated.
 
Cerelyn J. Davis
National President
National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives (NOBLE) 

Foreign interference in internal affairs of a country

This has been on the lips on some politicians recently like it is a
national threat. It is a national threat when interference is against a
ruling govt but not the other way. And this hard truth is a historical
truth. The ruling govt of a country would not want another country to
interfere in what it is doing domestically or against its political
rivals or citizens.

Should any citizen of

Cherwell.org: W. G. Still: The Forgotten American Tchaikovsky

William Grant Still (1895-1978)


Student Newspaper of Oxford University

30th September 2019

By Kurien Parel

Even the most enthusiastic classical music listeners probably have never come across the composer William Grant Still, who was at one time considered among America’s leading composers. A Time cover story in 1940 on Disney’s rendition of the Rite of Spring casually lists Still in the same category as Hindemith and Prokofiev.

According to The Cambridge History of American Music, “No composer plummeted from authentic prominence to an eclipse more total than endured by William Grant Still.”

Referred to by some as “the Dean of Afro-American composers”, was arguably America’s most successful symphonist of his time. His first symphony (1930) was performed by 38 different orchestras in its first 20 years, making it, according to musicologist Edith Borroff, the most popular American symphony until the 1950s. On being shown a recording of the symphony, Sibelius simply remarked: “He has something to say.”

It was therefore not surprising that Still was awarded a commission by the League of Composers for a piece on a patriotic theme during World War II. According to Still, his “thoughts turned to the colored soldiers around the world.” Still himself had served in World War I in the US Navy and would have been cognisant of the particular challenges faced by black soldiers.

He titled his piece ‘In Memoriam, the Colored Soldiers who Died for Democracy’ emphasising the often-overlooked sacrifices of non-white soldiers in the war. The piece is solemn and is based on a black spiritual theme with a fanfare – a blend of Afro-American music with European classical idiom. The piece is not convolute but is, as Olin Downes of the New York Times reviewed it, “with simplicity and feeling”.

The US army at this time was segregated, with black soldiers relegated predominantly to menial roles and inferior facilities, subject to daily slights and injustices. Black American soldiers were at times even required to give up their seats to Nazi prisoners. Still would have been aware of the irony of black soldiers fighting and dying for the ideal of democracy when they themselves were denied basic freedoms. Like much of his music, the purpose of this piece was to dignify the marginalised.

The “In Memoriam” piece was premiered by the New York Philharmonic in 1944 to much critical acclaim. A review in the New Yorker called it “one of the most successful works on war themes commissioned by the League of Composers”. John Briggs of the New York Post wrote: “Mr. Still may well become the American Tchaikovsky.”

Statement Regarding the Passing of International Opera Star Jessye Norman

Jessye Norman

(New York, NY — September 30, 2019) — It is with deep sadness and sorrow that we announce the passing of international opera star Jessye Norman, in a statement issued by Norman’s family through the family’s spokesperson, Gwendolyn Quinn.
 
Norman, 74 years old, passed away today, Monday, September 30, 2019, at 7:54 a.m. ET at Mount Sinai St. Luke’s Hospital in New York, NY, where she was surrounded by loved ones. The official cause of death was septic shock and multi-organ failure secondary to complications of a spinal cord injury she had sustained in 2015.
 
Norman was the eldest of two remaining siblings, James Norman and Elaine Sturkey, from a total of five children. “We are so proud of Jessye’s musical achievements and the inspiration that she provided to audiences around the world that will continue to be a source of joy. We are equally proud of her humanitarian endeavors addressing matters such as hunger, homelessness, youth development, and arts and culture education.”
 
Funeral arrangements will be announced in the coming days.

Canaseraga man has more trouble in his life after new charges while in jail

VILLAGE OF GENESEO: Livingston County Sheriff Thomas J. Dougherty reports of an Allegany County resident on felony charges after an investigation by the Sheriff’s Office. On January 31, 2019 Gordon L. Cassidy, age 47 from Canaseraga New York, was an inmate in the Livingston County Jail and was allegedly found to be in possession of eight (8) bags of an unknown white powder. As a result, members of the Sheriff’s Office Jail Division and Criminal Investigations Division conducted a drug investigation which included sending the unknown powder to the Monroe County Public Safety Lab for testing. The lab testing identified the powder as heroin and fentanyl. On September 26, 2019 Sheriff’s Investigators arrested and charged Cassidy with felony Promoting Prison Contraband in the 1st Degree and Criminal Possession on a Controlled Substance in the 7th Degree. Cassidy was turned over to Central Booking Deputies at the Livingston County Jail for processing and pre-arraignment detention. The District Attorney’s Office was contacted in regards to bail due to the felony level charge. It was advised that Cassidy should be held without bail due him having multiple prior felony level convictions. Cassidy was later arraigned at the Livingston County Centralized Arraignment Part (LC-CAP) at the Livingston County Jail before Town of Groveland Justice Jenean Love. The Judge did remand Cassidy to the custody of the Sheriff without the chance of bail.

New Fund to Support Whitesville Cemetery

A beautiful setting that serves as the resting place for its community’s founders and generations of beloved citizens, and a spot where many local residents take a peaceful walk, the Whitesville Cemetery faces the challenges common to many rural cemeteries – fewer burials, expansive grounds, and keeping up with costs for regular maintenance and upkeep.

Working with the Allegany County Area Foundation (ACAF), Whitesville native Elton Harris has established a fund that will provide annual assistance to the Cemetery – to supplement the Cemetery Association’s own resources. The Lester and Dorotha Harris Fund for the Whitesville Rural Cemetery honors Mr. Harris’ parents while helping to keep the cemetery a beautiful, well-kept place for remembrance and for Whitesville citizens to walk.  
Lester and Dorotha Harris were well-known in the community through their maple syrup production and involvement in numerous civic organizations, including the Grange, 4-H, and the historical society.
The first distribution to the Cemetery Association will be made in summer 2021. Interested persons may contribute to this fund through the Foundation.
With assets of $10 million, ACAF manages over 50 scholarship and grant funds. If you would like to donate to an existing fund, or establish a fund to support students or your community, contact Bruce Campbell at 585-296-5616 or director@acafny.org Donations to the foundation are tax deductible.
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