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March 22, 2014
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2014
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EGG QUEST
Indian Lk. town board talks Teleworks
This Week IN MINERVA
By Bill Quinlivan
denpubs@denpubs.com INDIAN LAKE Ñ During the March Town Board meeting, Bill Murphy, in his role as secretary of the Indian Lake Chamber of Commerce, was on hand to provide the most recent update on the ongoing success of its Adirondack Teleworks Project. Murphy updated the board on the utilization of the $100,000 grant received by the project and thanked the board for its official endorsement of the project during the grant application process. Adirondack Teleworks is using an initial portion of the grant to advertise for, identify and hire a full-time Director for the project. Murphy informed the board that interviews are expected to take place between April 5 and April 15. According to Murphy, the position will be paying a Ò mid-5 figure salary.” It is expected that the position will be filled within the month of April. The board and meeting attendees were further informed about digital literacy courses being made available to anyone interested through the Indian Lake Public Library and other local public libraries throughout the Adirondack Region. The objective of these 120hour courses is to make workforce investment. At the end of these courses, participants receive a work readiness certification that they have the qualifications to work in a telecommuting situation. The remainder of the funding will go toward expanding outreach and identifying new employers for telecommuters throughout the region. The desired qualifications and expected responsibilities for applicants are outlined at my.jobs/indian-lakeny/director-adirondack-teleworks-project/44498607/job/. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
Spring gardening workshop scheduled PAGE 2 LOCAL
Benefit slated for North Warren teenager PAGE 3 POLITICS
Participants at last years Easter egg hunt fill their baskets with the eggs they found. This year the egg hunt is a week later and there’s hope for less snow. Photo provided
Easter Egg hunt slated for North Creek By Seth Lang
seth@denpubs.com NORTH CREEK Ñ A 12,000 egg Easter egg hunt will take place at the North Creek Ski Bowl Saturday, April 19 at 10:30 a.m. The event is free and open to kids ages 2-12.
By Seth Lang
seth@denpubs.com
EDITORIAL
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ADIRONDACK OUTDOORS
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LETTERS
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CALENDAR
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CLASSIFIEDS
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Kids will be divided into age groups with equal number of eggs in their areas. Ò Dividing them by age keeps it from being too chaotic. The ski bowl is such a great location for this event because itÕ s a large area,Ó said Taylor. Drawings will be held for door prizes. Other prizes will
be found inside the eggs. The egg hunt is an annual event and this will be the third year theyÕ ve offered it. All the eggs and candy have been donated by generous individuals and families. The prizes are also donated by businesses throughout the community.
Aaron Woolf makes media rounds PAGE 6
Comedic performance slated at Tannery Pond
Index
LEGALS
Ò ItÕ s very important to us that this and other big events we host like it are free,Ó said Lead Pastor of Mountain View Community Church Chris Taylor. Some of the eggs will be stuffed with candy, others will have special prize tickets in them.
NORTH CREEK Ñ Our Town Theatre Group will host a performance of Larry ShueÕ s The Foreigner on March 21st ,22nd & 23rd at the Tannery Pond Community Center Lyle Dye Auditorium. The Foreigner has received high praise from a wide variety of audiences. “I laughed start to finish at one comic surprise after another.Ó Ñ The New Yorker Ò É a constant invitation to relax and laugh at the foolishness of lifeÉ Ó Ñ The Village Voice
Ò ShueÕ s comedy is positively antic, yet pleasantly seasoned with a few dashes of sentimentalityÉ He has raided comedyÕ s storehouseÉ Ó Ñ The Bergen Record The Foreigner brings audiences to a fishing lodge in rural Georgia often visited by Ò FroggyÓ LeSeuer, a British demolition expert who occasionally runs training sessions at a nearby army base. This time Ò FroggyÓ has brought along a friend, a pathologically shy young man named Charlie who is overcome with fear at the thought of making conversation with strangers. So Ò Froggy,Ó before departing, tells all assembled that Charlie is from an exotic foreign coun-
try and speaks no English. Once alone the fun really begins, as Charlie overhears more than he shouldÑ the evil plans of a sinister, two-faced minister and his redneck associate; the fact that the ministerÕ s pretty fiancée is pregnant; and many other damaging revelations made with the thought that Charlie doesnÕ t understand a word being said. That he does fuels the nonstop hilarity of the play and sets up the wildly funny climax in which things go uproariously awry for the Ò bad guys,Ó and the Ò good guysÓ emerge triumphant. CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
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