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Lenni Lenape

Wreaths of remembrance

Wreaths of remembrance | South Jersey Media Courtesy of Lenape Regional High School District
Rachel Belville, her family, and two members of the Yellow Ribbon Club – Nicole Lain and Gracie DeMaise – at Shawnee High School recently participated in Wreaths of Remembrance at the Gloucester County Veterans Cemetery. They worked along hundreds of volunteers to honor veterans by placing 4,000 wreaths on the graves while saying words of gratitude to honor the deceased veterans. Submitted Content

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Unami

Sudani: End of Coalition and UNAMI Missions Symbolizes Iraq’s Sovereignty Consolidation

Iraq’s Prime Minister Mohammed Shia’ Al Sudani declared at the Iraqi Martyrs’ Day ceremony that the conclusion of the international coalition’s mission against ISIS and the end of UNAMI’s activities signify the consolidation of Iraq’s sovereignty and the independence of its political decision-making.

Speaking at the official event, Sudani stated that over the past three years, Iraq has witnessed developments that have brought important achievements for the country, its people, and national forces. He described these changes as the result of a continuous process in political and security fields.

According to Sudani, the end of the international coalition’s mission and UNAMI’s operations is among the most prominent of these accomplishments, demonstrating that Iraq has been able to reinforce its sovereignty and make independent political decisions.

The Prime Minister referenced assessments from the United Nations and the international community, noting that these institutions have recognized Iraq’s political and security successes. He said that Baghdad has now established balanced relations with its regional and international environment and is acknowledged as a fully sovereign country with capable armed forces.

Sudani also mentioned that following these developments, Iraqi citizens contributed to strengthening the democratic process by participating in elections—a participation that, according to him, reflects the people’s support for the government’s performance and its priorities.

He described the parliamentary election participation as effective and a milestone for consolidating the country’s democratic process. In conclusion, the Prime Minister called on national forces to address their legal obligations through independent national decisions, emphasizing that social hope has returned and that the path to development continues with a welcoming approach to constructive cooperation with friendly and brotherly countries.

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Mohican

The Most Picturesque Small Towns in Ohio

With a thriving art and culture scene, beautiful outdoor landscapes, and trademark Midwestern hospitality, Ohio ranks high among the most charismatic destinations in the central United States. Although bustling metropolises like Cleveland and Columbus are the most popular, the Buckeye State offers multiple small-town enclaves with unrivaled charm. Nestled amongst rolling farmland, scenic rivers, and lush forests, these under-the-radar locales cultivate true community spirit through lively downtowns, local flavor, and pastoral serenity.

While most visitors to Ohio stick to top attractions in major cities, those venturing to the state’s idyllic fringes will discover its most picturesque towns. Overlooking quintessential landscapes, these hidden gems peppering the Buckeye countryside guarantee the absolute best that small towns in Ohio offer.

Chagrin Falls

The historic town of Chagrin Falls, OhioThe historic town of Chagrin Falls, Ohio. Editorial credit: Lynne Neuman / Shutterstock.com

The Cleveland suburb boasts one of the most beautiful downtowns in Cuyahoga County. Strolling through the Chagrin Falls Triangle Park Commercial Historic District is a surreal experience. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the neighborhood stands out for the beautiful cascades, which serve as the perfect focal point. Exquisite nature spaces complement the town’s quaint downtown, providing an escape for tourists who appreciate the company of Mother Nature. You can relax at Beartown Lakes Reservation, which features quiet trails along Spring Creek.

Chagrin Falls harbors a respectable arts community well-represented by the Chagrin Valley Little Theater. This institution has entertained the public for decades by staging concerts, musicals, plays, and other theatrical performances. It is also one of the country’s oldest community theaters.

Loudonville

City Hall and Opera House (1909), The Ohio Theatre in Loudonville, OhioCity Hall and Opera House (1909), The Ohio Theatre in Loudonville,…

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Nanticoke

HS ROUNDUP: Trojanettes’ defense too much for Seminary

  • Greater Nanticoke Areas Haley Verazin battles Wyoming Seminarys Nori Neuwirth...

    Greater Nanticoke Areas Haley Verazin battles Wyoming Seminarys Nori Neuwirth for the ball during action Friday Night December 19th 2025 at Greater Nanticoke Area. DAVE SCHERBENCO / CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

  • Greater Nanticoke Areas Navaeh Baran battles Wyoming Seminarys Stella Ruiz...

    Greater Nanticoke Areas Navaeh Baran battles Wyoming Seminarys Stella Ruiz for the ball during action Friday Night December 19th 2025 at Greater Nanticoke Area. DAVE SCHERBENCO / CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

  • Wyoming Seminarys Ellie Kersey looks to work the ball around...

    Wyoming Seminarys Ellie Kersey looks to work the ball around Greater Nanticoke Area defender Natalee Atkins during action Friday Night December 19th 2025 at Greater Nanticoke Area. DAVE SCHERBENCO / CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

  • Greater Nanticoke Area and Wyoming Seminary players scramble for the...

    Greater Nanticoke Area and Wyoming Seminary players scramble for the loose ball during action Friday Night December 19th 2025 at Greater Nanticoke Area. DAVE SCHERBENCO / CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

  • Greater Nanticoke Areas Navaeh Baran drives to the hoop guarded...

    Greater Nanticoke Areas Navaeh Baran drives to the hoop guarded by Wyoming Seminarys Ellie Kersey during action Friday Night December 19th 2025 at Greater Nanticoke Area. DAVE SCHERBENCO / CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

  • Wyoming Seminarys Kaeleen Dougherty passes over Greater Nanticoke defenders under...

    Wyoming Seminarys Kaeleen Dougherty passes over Greater Nanticoke defenders under the Seminary net during action Friday Night December 19th 2025 at Greater Nanticoke Area. DAVE SCHERBENCO / CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

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Greater Nanticoke Areas Haley Verazin battles Wyoming Seminarys Nori Neuwirth for the ball during action Friday Night December 19th 2025 at Greater Nanticoke Area. DAVE SCHERBENCO / CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

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The Nanticoke Area girls basketball team used strong defense…

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Mohegan

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Lenni Lenape

Boys Bowlers of the Week in every conference, Dec. 12-18

The number of 300 games this season continues to rise across the N.J. boys bowling community.

Kingsway senior Jason Bonapfel and St. Peter’s Prep junior Aidan Mack each joined the 300-club this season on Dec. 17, making it now seven bowlers who have recorded a 300 game on the lanes this season.

As Bonapfel and Mack recorded perfection, St. Joseph (Met.) senior Kai Strothers (801 series) joined teammate William Cunningham on Tuesday as the only two boys bowlers this season to record an 800 series on the lanes.

Take a look to see who else starred on the lanes this week in our conference bowlers of the week for Dec. 12 through Dec. 18.

Each week, NJ Advance Media will select Bowlers of the Week in every conference for both boys and girls, highlighting the best individual efforts around the state. Any matches bowled on Dec. 19 will be included in next week’s honors unless otherwise noted.

Big North Conference

Brett Fischbein, Pascack Valley, Jr.

Fischbein has recorded back-to-back stellar performances to help Pascack Valley improve to 5-0 on the lanes. The junior dialed up a high game of 279 and a high series of 706 during the team’s victory over Tenafly on Dec. 12. On Thursday, Fischbein recorded a high game of 275 and a high series of 675 to help Pascack Valley roll to a 7-0 win over Westwood.

Burlington County Scholastic League

Jimmy Rayfield, Medford Tech, Sr.

Rayfield tallied his best performance so far this season on Dec. 15, rolling a high series of 688 to lead Medford Tech to a 4-0 victory over Pennsauken. At the Olympic Conference Holiday Bowl on Wednesday, Rayfield tallied his best game this season (254) and a three-game set of 677 to help Medford Tech place fifth in the team standings.

Greater Middlesex Conference

Kai Strothers, St….

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Unami

UNAMI ends mission in Iraq: A fragile state left behind

The termination of the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI), established in 2003 by a UN Security Council resolution following the fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime, marks a significant moment in today’s Baghdad.

The mission, designed to guide Iraq through its transitional phase by providing political advice, supporting national dialogue and reconciliation, overseeing elections, enhancing human rights, monitoring violations, coordinating humanitarian aid, and restoring stability after sectarian violence, cited a “request from the Iraqi government” for its departure. This decision suggests that the UN’s work over two decades of Iraq’s democratic transition remains unresolved.

The formal request, submitted by Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani in a letter to the UN Secretary-General on May 8, 2024, coincides with parallel demands by his political allies within the Coordination Framework – a coalition of Shiite political forces closely linked to armed factions – for the end of the US-led international coalition’s mission and the withdrawal of American forces, scheduled for September 2026.

Observers interpret this synchronized push as an attempt to eliminate remaining international oversight over Iraq’s political, security, and humanitarian landscape. This is particularly notable given the discomfort of Iraq’s ruling establishment with reports presented to the UN Security Council by Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Iraq, highlighting democratic stagnation, corruption, unchecked militia power, Iranian influence, and the killing of protesters during the October 2019 uprising.

Hennis-Plasschaert’s remark that “the political system in Iraq is unsustainable” positioned the UN mission as a perceived threat to forces controlling power, weapons, and financial resources – factors contributing to the urgency behind ending the mandate.

While the Iraqi government framed the termination as a reclaiming of sovereignty, the reality suggests little achievement. Democratic setbacks persist, trust in institutions is declining, political participation is limited, and militias maintain near-total control over decisions. Freedom of expression is under…

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Munsee

Evert Wendell Account Books Reveal Life in 1695-1789

Evert Wendell Account Book (New York Historical Society)Evert Wendell Account Book (New York Historical Society)The New York Historical Society has digitized their Evert Wendell collection, including five account books in Dutch and English covering the period from 1695 to 1758 and one docket book (in English).

Evert Wendell (1681-1750) was a Dutch-descended Albany merchant, fur trader, and attorney, who conducted business with Native Americans in upstate New York and with colonists in Albany, Schenectady, New York City, and Boston.

One account book, 1695-1726, records Wendell’s transactions with Native Americans in New York and Canada including Muhhekunneuw (Mahican, Mohican), Nishnaabeg (Odawa, Ottawa), and Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) with whom he traded goods including rum, clothing, and ammunition for furs and corn; in addition to recording their names, Wendell includes their nations and clans and identifying physical features.

Evert Wendell’s Account Book of the Fur Trade with Indians in Albany, New York, 1695-1726 was previously published by Lightning Rod Press. Interested readers should also check out Munsee Indian Trade in Ulster County New York 1712-1732, which includes the full, annotated translation an account book.

The other account books now available online record Wendell’s merchant activity with European settlers chiefly in the Albany area but also New York City, Schenectady, and Boston, and transactions related to his legal practice and his grist- and sawmills; they include accounts for the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and a few transactions related to enslaved persons.

Later accounts were kept by Wendell’s son Abraham (1715 – to about 1789). The docket book documents cases in which Evert Wendell was involved as an attorney including notes on the cases and fees and damages related to the cases.

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Delaware Tribe

United Sorghum Checkoff elects Kim Baldwin as chair

The United Sorghum Checkoff Program elected Kim Baldwin of McPherson, Kansas, U.S., as chair during its annual board of directors meeting in December.

Baldwin brings 15 years of farming experience and previously served as vice chair of the board. She farms alongside her husband and their two children while also playing an active role in her family’s wholesale and retail popcorn and sorghum business.

She holds a bachelor of science in agricultural extension education from New Mexico State University and a Master of Education in educational leadership and administration from William Woods University. Baldwin is a graduate of the Kansas Agriculture and Rural Leadership Program.

Originally from New Mexico, Baldwin is a citizen of the Delaware Tribe of Indians and the Cherokee Nation. She spent nearly two decades in public education and now serves her community through multiple local boards.

“The board plays a critical role in shaping the future of the sorghum industry,” Baldwin said. “Sorghum offers real opportunity, from supporting human health to expanding value-added innovation and I’m excited to work with the board to help position this crop for long-term growth and relevance in the marketplace.”

Norma Ritz Johnson, executive director of the United Sorghum Checkoff Program, said Baldwin brings a rare combination of producer experience, leadership and education to the role. “Her perspective and commitment will serve sorghum farmers well as the board continues to invest in research, markets and demand for U.S. sorghum,” added Johnson.

Additional officers elected include vice chair Zack Rendel, secretary Scott Irlbeck and treasurer Dale Stoltzfus.

The organization also recognized outgoing board members and past chairs Kendall Hodgson and Jeff Zortman for their service.

The 13-member board includes nine sorghum farmers representing Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, the nation’s top sorghum-producing states, along with four at-large national representatives. More information about the board is available through…

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Mohican

Mohican Can’t Accept More Children Amid State Probe

Filed 11:00 a.m. EST

12.18.2025

Ohio investigates Mohican Young Star Academy.

By The Marshall Project – Cleveland

This is The Marshall Project – Cleveland’s newsletter, a digest of criminal justice news from around Ohio gathered by our staff of local journalists. Want this delivered to your inbox? Sign up for future newsletters.

State suspends admissions at Mohican Young Star Academy

Weeks after The Marshall Project – Cleveland found escalating violence at Mohican Young Star Academy, Ohio officials have suspended admissions to the embattled youth treatment center.

The move leaves juvenile court judges and local children’s services agencies that rely on the facility — including in Cuyahoga, Summit, Hamilton and Lucas counties — reassessing contracts or preparing to relocate youth, many of whom have complex behavioral and mental health needs.

An aerial photo shows the campus of a residential treatment facility with a light green roof during sunset. The facility is surrounded by a forest and hills.

Mohican Young Star Academy, a youth residential treatment facility an hour northeast of Columbus, Ohio, is surrounded by a state forest. Nate Smallwood for The Marshall Project

The youth treatment facility “has demonstrated a pattern of serious noncompliance and/or committed violations that pose a substantial risk to the health and safety of residents in its care,” Eric Wandersleben, a spokesperson for the Ohio Department of Behavioral Health wrote in an emailed statement to The Marshall Project – Cleveland.

The pause on admissions will remain in place until the violations are corrected, Wandersleben said.

Read the story here.

If you have information about a child living in an Ohio youth treatment center, contact Brittany Hailer at bhailer@themarshallproject.org.

– Brittany Hailer

Why a public record cost Cuyahoga…

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