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ECRWSS PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE PAID DENTON PUBLICATIONS/ NEW MARKET PRESS PO Box 338 Elizabethtown NY 12932 Postal Patron

Saturday,ÊD ecemberÊ19,Ê2015

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www.SunCommunityNews.com

In NEWS | pg. 4

City waterfront concepts discussed Presentation zones in on four waterfront areas

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In FEATURES| pg. 14

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In SPORTS | pg. 16-17

Yama Sushi Winter sports opens downtown in full swing Restaurant offers variety of sushi and more

Basketball, wrestling and bowling starts

CCC valedictorian: “Just remember that you can”

144 earn degrees at Clinton Community College winter commencement By Pete DeMola

pete@suncommunitynews.com

PLATTSBURGH — Krista White didn’t get the jitters until she surveyed the stage at graduation rehearsals. After that, reality set in for the Clinton Community College valedictorian who managed to rack up a long list of accolades and accomplishments in just three semesters: Presidential scholar. Student senator. Member of Phi Theta Kappa, the prestigious

international honor society for two-year college students. White, 19, also served as a member of the college’s student activity board and communications council. The Champlain resident said she wouldn’t trade the experience for anything. White, who graduated alongside 143 others on Friday with an AA in Liberal Arts: Humanities and Social Science, said the school was a perfect fit for her. Following her graduation from Northeastern Clinton Central, White was unsure of her career path. The faculty and staff guided her in the right direction with hands-on advice. Their accessibility helped, as did the tightly-knit student

body, whom White hailed for getting her to think in new ways. Now, she’s off to the University at Albany: SUNY, where she plans to double major in political science and criminal justice. “I think it is safe to say that most of us will agree when I say Clinton Community College was a perfect place to begin this voyage,” White told her classmates at her commencement speech on Friday. White has already spent a semester in the state capital, having participated in the state senate undergraduate assistants program, where she interned for Sen. Joseph A. Griffo of the 47th district. The grad became animated when discuss>> Story Continued | pg. 9

CandyÊ Kingdom

For graduates of grueling fire safety course, profession is a call to community service

CCRS Drama Club play to take place Dec. 19-20

>> Story Continued | pg. 12

Photo provided

“Stay low and go for the glow”

CinderellaÊ andÊ the CHAZY — The Chazy Central Rural School Drama Club invites parents, friends and sweet lovers to their play Cinderella and the Candy Kingdom. The plays will take place Dec. 19 at 7 p.m. and Dec. 20 at 2 p.m. — putting a Teah sweet, dental hygiene twist on the classic Dowling fairy tale. Writer As Cinderella tries to attend the Gum Ball, she is forbidden by her evil stepmother and stepsisters. With the help of the fairy tooth godfather and his trusty assistants the peeps, Cinderella goes to the ball and shares a special moment with Prince Reese. As time runs out, Cinderella loses her hiking boot, leaving the prince to search the Candy Kingdom to find her. “The kids picked this play out,” said Kathryn Brown, director of the play and adviser of the drama club. “They wanted to do a unique fairy tale story.” Under the direction of Brown, 38 students from 7th to 12th grade, ages 12 to 19, came together to make this play possible as actors and stage crew. After five weeks of preparing and working around auditorium and basketball schedules, the play is coming together as aspiring actors are remembering their lines and the set of

Clinton Community College valedictorian Krista White delivered the commencement speech to her classmates on Dec. 11. “Where do we go from here?” White asked. “The answer to that question varies from student to student.”

By Pete DeMola

pete@suncommunitynews.com

CCRS Drama Club will be presenting Cinderella and the Candy Kingdom Dec. 19 and 20. The play features 38 students from 7th to 12th grade both on stage and backstage. Photo provided

AU SABLE FORKS — They broke down doors, crawled through tunnels, jogged up stairs, searched smoke-filled rooms and extinguished blazes. When they got home after a searing day spent in the latesummer sun, they hit the books. Over a dozen recruits from Clinton, Essex and Franklin counties graduated from the Firefighter I training program last week. The grueling 104-hour course ran for three months. Now, fighters will be released into the service of their local departments, where they will receive more training customized to each community. For Jamie Hart, of Black Brook, becoming a fireman is the continuation of a long family tradition. Hart, 24, joins his father, Michael Sr., and brother, Michael Jr., as a member of the Au Sable Forks Fire Department. “It’s good to do something for the community,” said Hart as he prepared to accept his diploma. As a kid, Hart remembers when the sirens would go off. His dad, the former chief, would buckle the boys into car seats >> Story Continued | pg. 10


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