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Nanticoke

Meeting of the Mayors expands in Wilkes-Barre

Mayor Brown continues to grow a collaborative effort between leaders in Northeastern and Central Pennsylvania.

WILKES-BARRE, Pa. — Once again, Wilkes-Barre Mayor George Brown welcomes other mayors from across Northeastern and Central Pennsylvania into city hall for a “Meeting of the Mayors.”

This is something Brown started in the beginning of the pandemic in an effort to pull resources during a difficult time.

“We helped each other out during the pandemic,” explained Brown. “Someone needed masks, or they needed some. We have a health department. The city has one of only 10 in the state. If someone called us from another city saying mayor, ‘What should we do here?’ Hank Radulski and the health department was there to help them.”

The regular meeting of the Mayors began with the leaders from Wilkes-Barre, Scranton, Pittston, Hazleton, and Nanticoke.

Now it has grown to include the mayor of Williamsport and the mayor of Kingston.

“I’m excited to see what their what the organization was about what their what their challenges are, what their ideas are, and how it was working together as a team,” said Mayor Paul Roberts Jr. of Kingston. “That’s that’s the best, best way to put it.”

Mayor Brown tells Newswatch 16, now that we’re on the tail end of this pandemic, he wants to continue to bring down the borders between municipalities so that they can work together for other projects.

“And also when we work together, it’s common things that we’re working on,” added Brown. “Maybe the American Recovery Act. It may be blighted properties, maybe grants, whatever we feel that we can help each other out, but we’re tearing down the walls between the cities. Between Scranton and Wilkes-Barre, between Kingston and Wilkes-Barre, working together as a team.”

“Exactly what with this organization now is bringing…

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Lenni Lenape

Hunterdon Central wins softball championship over Pope John

Hunterdon Central wins softball championship over Pope John { window.otLocation = loc; } } ]]> -1 || gdprLoc[loc] === t; if (gdpr && !window.__tcfapi) { var OneTrustTCFStub=function(e){“use strict”;var t=function(){var o=this;this.LOCATOR_NAME=”__tcfapiLocator”,this.win=window,this.init=function(){for(;o.win;){try{if(o.win.frames[o.LOCATOR_NAME]){o.cmpFrame=o.win;break}}catch(e){}if(o.win===window.top)break;o.win=o.win.parent}o.cmpFrame||(o.addFrame(),o.win.__tcfapi=o.executeTcfApi,o.win.receiveOTMessage=o.receiveIabMessage,(o.win.attachEvent||o.win.addEventListener)(“message”,o.win.receiveOTMessage,!1))},this.addFrame=function(){var e=o.win.document,t=!!o.win.frames[o.LOCATOR_NAME];if(!t)if(e.body){var i=e.createElement(“iframe”);i.style.cssText=”display:none”,i.name=o.LOCATOR_NAME,i.setAttribute(“title”,”TCF Locator”),e.body.appendChild(i)}else setTimeout(o.addFrame,5);return!t},this.receiveIabMessage=function(a){var n=”string”==typeof a.data,e={};try{e=n?JSON.parse(a.data):a.data}catch(e){}if(e&&e.__tcfapiCall){var t=e.__tcfapiCall,r=t.callId,i=t.command,s=t.parameter,c=t.version;o.executeTcfApi(i,s,function(e,t){var i={__tcfapiReturn:{returnValue:e,success:t,callId:r}};a&&a.source&&a.source.postMessage&&a.source.postMessage(n?JSON.stringify(i):i,”*”)},c)}},this.executeTcfApi=function(){for(var e=[],t=0;t3&&!e.resolved&&(e.resolved=!0,u.emit(“xhr-resolved”,[],t)),d.inPlace(t,y,”fn-“,c)}function i(t){b.push(t),l&&(x?x.then(a):v?v(a):(E=-E,O.data=E))}function a(){for(var t=0;t Continue reading

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Delaware Tribe

A Chester County woman wants to donate a Native American burial ground. It’s a complicated process.

An aging metal sign erected by the Chester County Historical Society in 1908 stands partially obscured by a tree along a curvy rural road in tiny Newlin Township to commemorate theLenape people buried on the knoll just above.

Carol McCloskey has owned that knoll, now dense with woods, since 1987.

Now planning her estate, she wants to donate the property, preferably to Native Americans, to ensure its preservation. But finding a good steward for the land has been more complicated than she thought. So far she’s found no takers for her half-acre lot, the only officially recognized Native American burial site in Chester County.

“I thought it should go to the rightful owners,” McCloskey said, referring to the Lenape people. Previously, she had no luck trying to donate the land to a federally recognized tribe, and now is restarting the process and willing to expand the pool of potential recipients.

“I want to give it to someone who appreciates it,” she said. “I want the right people to have it.”

The burial site is a leftover wedge sliced out ofthe 170 acres, known as Indian Knoll Farm, McCloskey subdivided into 10-acre lots in 1987. The few motorists humming along Brandywine Drive each day likely don’t even notice the sign or the property as it rises steeply above the road.

McCloskey, who lives in nearby Willistown Township, has a conservation easement that ensures the land can never be developed. Because of that, it is assessed at $500 and the taxes are only a few dollars a year.

“My daughter and I have been trying to donate this for a couple of years,” McCloskey said. “But the Lenape group years ago moved out west. So there’s no one around to talk to or deal with in Pennsylvania. As a burial ground, you can’t do anything with it. It’s overgrown….

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Mohegan

Foxwoods, Mohegan Sun wade into post-pandemic era

Foxwoods Resort Casino on Wednesday was requiring all patrons and employees to continue wearing masks while Mohegan Sun was mandating that masks only be worn by those who have not been vaccinated against the coronavirus.

Jeff Hamilton, Mohegan Sun’s president and general manager, said the casino was asking employees to show proof of vaccination in order to work without a mask.

“We are checking vaccination cards among team members,” Hamilton said. “If they can’t prove they’ve been vaccinated, they have to wear a mask or they can’t work.”

He said it would be “impossible” to verify patrons’ vaccination status.

About 70% of Mohegan Sun employees — more than 3,000 of them — have been fully vaccinated, said Hamilton, who’s hopeful the lifting of the mask-wearing requirement will help convince those who have not gotten the COVID-19 vaccine to do so. He said he hoped to get more than 90% of Mohegan Sun’s workforce vaccinated.

Jason Guyot, Foxwoods’ president and chief executive officer, said Wednesday his casino still was requiring patrons and employees to wear masks, at least for now.

“We are reviewing the new CDC guidance and will have an announcement by the end of the week,” he wrote in an email. “Safety of our guests and team members remains paramount and we want to ensure our plans are clearly laid out prior to lifting the masking policy.”

Foxwoods has discontinued or removed most other COVID-19 protocols, including temperature checks of patrons and plexiglass barriers that had been erected between slots positions and between table-games players and dealers, Guyot said. All slot machines, some of which had been turned off to create physical distancing, have been activated, and all capacity restrictions pertaining to table games, restaurants, theaters, events and retail shops have been lifted.

Advanced cleaning of high-touch areas will continue,…

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Algonquian

Letters: Biden; Democrats; Russia

Biden administration wants to ensure growth, progress

Mitch McConnell and his sycophants are at it again, blocking progress and relief for the working population while defending a recent massive tax reduction for corporations and the wealthy. That 2017 tax bill is exactly the error made by the last four Republican administrations. The repeated assertion that “trickle down” economics will work, has in every case added to significant government tax revenue loss, increasing the debt. In this instance, $2 trillion according to the CBO and several independent institutes.

Now comes President Biden with a plan that addresses the critical needs of the nation’s infrastructure and the need to supply a secure workforce.  He proposes to spend about $2 trillion. But the Biden plan puts money into the economy for the purpose of purchasing goods and services, stimulating the economy, not giving it to investors, who will hopefully finance increased productive efforts.  That is a repeatedly disproved theory.

President Biden proposes to pay for his bill by increasing taxes on corporations and the wealthy. Specifically he would increase the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28%, still lower than the 35% before the 2017 reduction. McConnell’s immediate reaction was to block any thing that invaded the tax havens Republicans have built for the upper strata of income.

The Republican Congress has as a primary interest in all things of the economy: protection of the rich and continued reluctance to support the workers of the country. Meanwhile the administration and Congressional Democrats want to ensure growth and progress by putting Americans to work doing the things they successfully did from World War II through the 1970s. I lived through that time when we built the greatest economic engine in history with corporate tax rates at 50%, individual rates as high as 90%.

John…

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Unami

UN mission in Iraq extended, widened to observe October vote

Muslim Brotherhood’s true colors on display as Arab Islamist party joins Jewish nationalists in Israeli coalition

DUBAI: To govern is to choose, they say. Mansour Abbas, leader of Israel’s United Arab List, is likely to face a few difficult decisions over the coming weeks and months if, as seems likely, he and his party form part of a new governing coalition in Israel.

Late on Wednesday, it was announced that Abbas had agreed to join a coalition jointly led by Yair Lapid, of the centrist Yesh Atid party, and Naftali Bennett of the right-wing Yemina. The irony of an Islamist political party eagerly closing ranks with Yemina, an alliance of Jewish nationalist parties, has not been lost on Palestinians or the wider Arab world.

Analysts see the development as yet another example of a Muslim Brotherhood-inspired party putting power and self-interest above principles when it comes to the crunch.

The head of the Arab Israeli Islamic conservative party Raam Mansour Abbas (R) signing a coalition agreement with Israel’s opposition leader Yair Lapid (L) and right-wing nationalist tech millionaire Naftali Bennett in Ramat Gan near the coastal city of Tel Aviv. (AFP/File Photo)

“The news was not surprising. Brotherhood affiliates have always used all means to achieve their political goals,” Dr. Hamdan Al-Shehri, a political analyst and international relations scholar, told Arab News.

“This cooperation is just another episode in a long-running drama that will continue to demonstrate the extent and willingness of the Muslim Brotherhood to cooperate with anyone except the governments of their own countries.”

Whether the marriage of convenience will last long enough is another matter. If approved in the Knesset, the coalition will bring an end to the 12-year premiership of Benjamin Netanyahu….

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Munsee

North Coast Journal | Humboldt County

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Mohican

The Old Badger: Automobiles led to the last of the Mohican

Editor’s note: This column was first published March 31, 1976.

In the summer of ’32, Mrs. Charles Coleman Jr. was running strong in the Cooperstown merchants popularity election, President Herbert Hoover was running scared against Franklin D. Roosevelt and the 27-year-old Mohican was running out of steam.

When the Mohican was first launched, automobiles were scarce and unreliable novelties at best. Roads were dusty or muddy depending upon the weather. The stage from Fort Plain off-loaded at Springfield Landing and passengers could continue to Cooperstown by boat . The many hotels in the village filled with tourists each summer, cottages and camps were springing up on both sides of the Lake. An excursion around the Lake was a much sought-after diversion, and moonlight cruises were long remembered. Many a night saw the lights of the Mohican shimmering on the Glimmerglass and heard the strains of music and laughter floating to shore as a birthday or even a “hole-in-one” was celebrated.

The Mohican steamed right on through the ’20s, a delightful convenience, but it was beginning to age when the ’30s arrived. Wall Street was emptying the hotels, but Detroit was filling the roads.

In July of ’32, the Otesaga didn’t open, and the Mohican was facing increasing losses in the face of motor car competition. The Mohican also leaked. When it leaked too fast, manure and straw were thrown in the lake around it to get sucked into the large cracks; the pump could handle the rest. On alternate years it was hauled out, patched and left to stand in its cradle at the foot of Fair Street. The Lakefront Motel was not there. Andrews boat livery and Fish’s landing were -unpainted and ramshackled. The lighthouse wasn’t there. There was no…

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Nanticoke

Woman charged with delivering prescription drugs to SCI-Dallas officer

NANTICOKE — State police at Wilkes-Barre charged a Nanticoke woman with delivering controlled substances to a correctional officer who collapsed while working at the State Correctional Institution at Dallas, Jackson Township, last year.

Nicole Megan Hagenbach, 33, of East Noble Street, delivered Percocet and Adderall pills to Robert Bath at the main gate at SCI-Dallas on July 24, 2020, according to court records.

Bath collapsed while working at the prison about one hour after meeting with Hagenbach, court records say.

Bath was found dead inside his residence on July 27, 2020, with evidence of drug use near his body.

State police allege surveillance cameras recorded Hagenbach meeting with Bath, including bank documents showing Bath had transferred more than $20,790 to Hagenbach from Jan. 1 to July 26, 2020.

Investigators also uncovered text messages between Hagenbach and Bath that referred to the delivery of prescription pills.

According to the criminal complaint:

Hagenbach and her infant daughter were observed meeting with Bath at the prison’s front gate at about 5:30 p.m. July 24, 2020. Bath was employed as a sergeant at the prison.

About 70 minutes after Hagenbach left, Bath collapsed while working and was transported to Geisinger Wyoming Valley Medical Center where he was given NARCAN. When Bath regained consciousness, he refused further treatment and was given a ride home by a co-worker.

Bath failed to show up for work from July 25 to July 27. A prison lieutenant and a deputy warden went to Bath’s residence finding him dead on July 27.

Investigators say they found a mirror with a white powdery substance, a red straw, bags with white residue, a drug pipe and two Oxycontin pills in…

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Lenni Lenape

H.S. softball: Knasiak a show stopper in the circle for Lenape

CLOSELenape’s Maya Knasiak delivers a pitch during the opening round game of the South Jersey Group 4 softball tournament between Lenape and Vineland, played at Lenape High School on Tuesday, June 1, 2021. Lenape defeated Vineland, 4-1.Buy Photo

Lenape’s Maya Knasiak delivers a pitch during the opening round game of the South Jersey Group 4 softball tournament between Lenape and Vineland, played at Lenape High School on Tuesday, June 1, 2021. Lenape defeated Vineland, 4-1. (Photo: Chris LaChall/Courier-Post)

MEDFORD – With a potent lineup that generated plenty of offensive fireworks, the Vineland High School softball team has the ability to put on a show.

Lenape’s Maya Knasiak proved to be the show stopper.

Making her first postseason start, the sophomore right-hander fired a three-hitter with 12 strikeouts, guiding Lenape to its first postseason win in over a decade with a 4-1 triumph over Vineland on Tuesday.

Seventh-seeded Lenape (14-6), which had lost its previous four playoff games by a combined five runs, will travel to second-seeded Jackson Memorial for Friday’s quarterfinal game.

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More: H.S. softball: South Jersey Group 4 preview

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Going up against a Vineland buzzsaw that averaged a tick under 10 runs per game this season, Knasiak took the fight right out of the Fighting Clan, limiting them to three singles and only one baserunner to advance past second base.

“Maya was outstanding,” Lenape head coach Eric Krastek said. “She’s been very consistent all season. She really hasn’t had a bad outing. We’ve lost six games and we’ve scored a total of two runs in those games. We’re never out of a game with Maya in the circle. She’s that dominant.”

Knasiak’s batterymate couldn’t agree more.

“Maya is just a lights-out pitcher,” said sophomore…

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