WNBZ Community Calendar

Aug
5
Sun
SUNY PLATTSBURGH
Aug 5 all-day

Registration Opens Aug. 5 for Non-Matriculated Students


PLATTSBURGH, N.Y. (Aug. 2, 2012) – Area residents who want to check out a degree program before applying for admission, hone skills or simply explore an interest are invited to sign up for courses at SUNY Plattsburgh.

Non-matriculated students — those not enrolled in a degree program — have from Aug. 5 until classes begin Aug. 27 to register.
To register call 518-564-2100 and request a non-matriculated student registration form or visit http://www.plattsburgh.edu/register/nonmatriculated.php.
Aug
11
Sat
CHILD SAFETY SEAT CLINIC in TUPPER LAKE
10:00 am – 2:00 pm

New York State Police, Troop “B”, along with theAdirondackMedicalCenter, Tupper Lake Police Department and the Franklin County Traffic Safety Board will be hosting a child safety seat clinic at theMunicipalPark,TupperLakeon Saturday (August 11th, 2012) from 10:00AM to 2:00PM.  Adults who are responsible for providing transportation for children of all ages are encouraged to attend.   Technicians will be on hand to inspect seats, assist with installations, provide information and answer questions regarding child seat safety.  For more information contact T/Sergeant Brian Goetz at (518)897-2023 or email brian.goetz@troopers.ny.gov

Saturday Night Ice Show @ 1932 Rink
7:30 pm – 8:30 pm

LAKE PLACID, N.Y. — The 2012 summer skating continues this weekend, Aug. 10-11, with Friday’s Freaky Friday and the Saturday Night Ice Show at the Olympic Center, in Lake Placid, N.Y.  Friday’s Freaky Friday event begins at 4:30 p.m., while the Saturday night’s show is slated to begin at 7:30 p.m.  Both events will be held in the center’s 1932 Rink Jack Shea Arena. 

 Ashley Cain (Coppell, Texas), the 2012 U.S. junior national championship silver medalist, is Saturday night’s featured skater. 

 Joining Cain will be skaters participating in the 80th annual summer skating program. The skaters will perform their individual and group numbers during this entertaining event. Admission to the show is $10 for adults, $8 for juniors and seniors. Children six and under may enter for free.

 The ever-popular Freaky Friday show will also feature skaters from the summer skating program, who create their own unique routines for this event. The skaters abandon their regular routines in favor of creativity, humor and amusement.  The routines are judged on entertainment value.  Admission is free.

 To learn more about the Lake Placidsummer skating program, log on to www.lakeplacidskating.com. For more information on ORDA’s Olympic venues and events, visit www.whitefacelakeplacid.com.

Aug
12
Sun
FINAL LP SINFONIETTA CONCERT @ Lake Placid Center for the Arts
7:30 pm – 10:00 pm

Final 2012 Concert features violin and horn soloists

“On The Orient Express” is the last concert of the Lake Placid Sinfonietta’s 2012 season.  The concert will be held at theLake PlacidCenterfor the Arts on Sunday, August 12 at7:30 PM.   The concert’s program will include a flamboyant solo by ConcertmasterDaniel Szasz(Porembescu’s “Balada”) and a double Horn Concerto by Telemann featuring Sinfonietta member David Pandolfi and his son Adam Pandolfi, both on horn.     Tickets are available through the LPCA box office, 518.523.2512, all seating is reserved.  There is no charge for students 18 and under (as available.)

Concertmaster Daniel Szaszi

The Lake Placid Sinfonietta is also using this concert as an opportunity to give back to the community. In the spring, many orchestras collect donations for local food pantries through a program called Orchestras Feeding America.  In keeping with that initiative, and in recognition of how difficult summers can be for families without enough resources to buy groceries, a food drive is being held at this concert.  Non-perishable food items brought to the August 12 concert will be collected and given to   volunteers who will deliver the food collected to the Ecumenical Charity Program’s Food Pantry.

Concertmaster Daniel Szaszis featured in this concert in “Balada” by the composer  Ciprian Porumbescu, which he arranged himself for violin and orchestra, and in Franz Lehar’s “Hungarian Fantasy” with the orchestra. Mr. Szasz enjoys a world wide reputation as a soloist and is the founder of a spring music festival inRomania.  The “suite in F Mojor for Two Horns” will feature longtime Sinfonietta principal horn David Pandolfi with his son Adam Pandolfi, also on horn.  Both david Pandolfi andDaniel Szaszare members of the Alabama Symphony where they hold the positions of Principal Horn and Concertmaster, respectively.

Other selections on the program include Johan Strauss, Jr.’s “Vienna Blood Waltz” and Gustav Holst’s “Brook Green Suite.  The evening will end with the traditional “Finale” from Haydn’s “Farewell Symphony” which features the musicians leaving the stage one at a time, extinguishing a candle as they go until the stage is empty.

For more complete information on the orchestra, the musicians, and programs please visit the Lake Placid Sinfonietta’s website at www.LakePlacidSinfonietta.org  of call the Lake Placid Sinfonietta office at 518-523-2051.

Adam Pandolfi

 

 

 

Aug
13
Mon
ADIRONDACK MUSEUM @ Adirondack Museum
7:30 pm – 9:00 pm

“A.F. Tait: Artist of the Adirondacks” at the Adirondack Museum

Blue Mountain Lake, N.Y. - Join Adirondack Museum Senior Art Historian/Director Emerita Caroline Welsh on Monday, August 13 for “A.F. Tait: Artist of the Adirondacks.” The program is part of the Monday Evening Lecture series.

Few painters are so closely associated with images of the Adirondacks as Arthur Fitzwilliam Tait (1819-1905). Tait’s pictures of wildlife, sportsmen, landscape, and rural community life resonated with nineteenth-century Americans seeking respite from the fast pace of urban living. Tait’s iconic paintings were reproduced as prints and marketed to a mass audience, and helped to create and perpetuate an image of the Adirondack wilderness as a sportsman’s paradise, a place to find camaraderie among men and test one’s mettle against the forces of nature. His images defined what is “Adirondack” about the Adirondacks in the public imagination and introduced a new dimension to American landscape and wildlife painting by portraying the interactions between wildlife and sportsmen.

The presentation will be held in the Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. The lecture will be offered at no charge to museum members; the fee for non-members is $5.00. For additional information, please visit www.adirondackmuseum.org or call (518) 352-7311.

The exhibition: “The Adirondack World of A.F. Tait” is currently on display at the Adirondack Museum. The museum is open seven days a week, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. through October 14, 2012.

Caroline Mastin Welsh is an art historian and Director Emerita of the Adirondack Museum. She is a graduate of the Kent School and Wellesley College and was awarded a fellowship in museum studies at the Smithsonian Institution and a fellowship in museum leadership at the Getty Leadership Institute. Her work in the museum profession includes positions at the Smithsonian Institution and the Albany Institute of History and Art in addition to the Adirondack Museum, where she served as both Curator and Director. She is a consultant on museum and exhibit development, and a national peer reviewer for the American Association of Museums. She serves or has served on regional committees and arts organizations in Pennsylvania and New York State as a trustee and advisor including the Friends of the William Penn Museum, the Lake Placid Winter Olympic Museum, the Lake Placid Center for the Arts, the Society for the Preservation of American Modernists, The Exhibition Alliance, the Hale Center for the Study of the Champlain Valley, and the Hamilton College Committee for the Visual Arts.

The Adirondack Museum, accredited by the American Association of Museums, offers 65,000 square feet of exciting exhibitions housed in twenty-two modern and historic buildings. Visitors can explore how people have lived, worked, traveled, and played in the Adirondacks from the 19th century up to today. The museum is supported in part by public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts, a State Agency. For additional information, visit www.adirondackmuseum.org or call (518) 352-7311.

###

Aug
14
Tue
Invasives Workshop @ Ticonderoga Town Hall
2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Purple Loosestrife Management Workshops To Be Held

 KEENE VALLEY, NY  The Adirondack Park Invasive Plant Program (APIPP) and Cornell Cooperative Extension are hosting a new workshop series focusing on managing purple loosestrife using biological control. Biological control involves raising and releasing beetles that feed on leaves, roots or flowers of purple loosestrife plants. Workshop participants will learn how to identify purple loosestrife, map infestations and determine whether biological control is an appropriate method of treatment for their infestation. Experts will also review the process and permitting for releasing beetles as well as the monitoring protocols used to assess the effectiveness of beetle predation on purple loosestrife plants. Landowners, gardeners, landscapers, community groups and resource managers are encouraged to attend.

 Sessions will be held on Tuesday, August 14th at the Ticonderoga Town Hall from 2 p.m.- 4 p.m. and Monday, August 20th at the Wild Center in Tupper Lake from 2 p.m.- 4 p.m. Sessions are free. Please RSVP to Sarah Walsh at 518-576-2082 x 120 or sarah_walsh@tnc.org.

 Purple loosestrife is an aggressive wetland and shoreline invader that crowds out native plants and degrades habitat for wildlife and waterfowl. Managing large infestations of purple loosestrife can be difficult, but scientific monitoring and assessment of biological controls shows that it is an effective technique for reducing populations. Organizers of local control projects in Lake Placid and Schroon Lake also report great success in reducing loosestrife infestations using biological control.  “By attending this session, community members will learn the tools to assess their infestation, effectively release biological control on their lands and measure its success over time and protect wetlands for years to come,” said Sarah Walsh, APIPP’s summer educator.

 The Adirondack Park Invasive Plant Program is a partnership program whose mission is to protect the Adirondack region from the negative impacts of non-native invasive species. Find out more information about APIPP online at www.adkinvasives.com.

FILM AT VIC
7:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Historic Saranac Lake Films – On Tuesday, August 14, at 7 p.m., James J. Griebsch will present “Historic Motion Pictures of Saranac Lake’s Past” at the theater in the Paul Smith’s VIC. An award-winning, independent film and video director, Jim has digitized and edited 16 mm and 8mm spools of film from the 1920s through the 1960s which have been archived in the Adirondack Room of the Saranac Lake Free Library. The presentation is free and open to the public. A gift donation to support further restoration and preservation of the Kollecker film collection at the library would be appreciated. Call the library at 891-4190 or The VIC at 327-6241 for more information.

Aug
15
Wed
DEC Seeks Participants for Summer Game Bird Surveys
Aug 15 all-day

ALBANY, NY (08/02/2012)(readMedia)– New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Commissioner Joe Martens today encouraged New Yorkers to participate in surveys for two popular game birds: wild turkeys and ring-necked pheasants.

“Citizen science efforts such as these provide our wildlife managers with invaluable data and give people the opportunity to partner with DEC to help monitor New York’s wildlife resources,” Commissioner Martens said. “I encourage you to take the time to record your observations of turkeys or pheasants while exploring the outdoors or driving through the state’s beautiful landscapes this summer.”

Summer Wild Turkey Sighting Survey

Since 1996, DEC has conducted the Summer Wild Turkey Sighting Survey to estimate the number of wild turkey poults (young of the year) per hen statewide. Weather, predation, and habitat conditions during the breeding and brood-rearing seasons can significantly impact nest success, hen survival, and poult survival. This index allows DEC to gauge reproductive success and predict fall harvest potential.

During the month of August, survey participants record the sex and age of all flocks of wild turkeys observed during a participant’s normal travel. Those interested in assisting DEC with the turkey survey can download a Summer Wild Turkey Sighting Survey form from the DEC website: http://www.dec.ny.gov/animals/48732.html. Detailed instructions are available with the survey form. Survey cards can also be obtained by contacting a local regional DEC office, calling (518) 402-8886, or by e-mailing fwwildlf@gw.dec.state.ny.us (type “Turkey Survey” in the subject line).

Monitoring Pheasants in the Genesee Valley Focus Area

Since 1945, farmers in the 13 counties that comprise the Lake Plains of New York have partnered with DEC to help survey wild pheasant populations and this effort will continue in the newly established “Pheasant Habitat Focus Area” in the Genesee Valley (portions of Livingston, Genesee, Wyoming and Monroe counties) see: http://www.dec.ny.gov/animals/72543.html. This new focus area was created as a part of DEC’s ten-year management plan for ring-necked pheasants. The goal of this focus area is to concentrate the efforts of public and private habitat conservation programs to benefit pheasants and other grassland birds. This survey assists DEC to monitor pheasant populations and evaluate the success of habitat management efforts in the focus area.

DEC requests that farmers in Livingston, Genesee, Wyoming or Monroe counties, consider participating in the Farmer-Pheasant Inventory. No special observations are required; just those made during normal spring and summer farming activities. Farmers interested in participating should contact DEC at (518) 402-8886 or by e-mailing fwwildlf@gw.dec.state.ny.us (type “Farmer-Pheasant Inventory” in the subject line).

Those that do not farm but would like to contribute pheasant observations from Livingston, Genesee, Wyoming and Monroe counties are asked to join the Summer Pheasant Sighting Survey. During the month of August, survey participants record the sex and age of all pheasants observed during normal travel. A survey form is available on the DEC website http://www.dec.ny.gov/docs/wildlife_pdf/summerpheasantsurvey.pdf or by calling (518) 402-8886.

For more information on Citizen Science initiatives with DEC, see: Citizen Science Initiatives at http://www.dec.ny.gov/animals/1155.html.

Children’s Acting Workshop @ Saranac Lake Free Library
2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Children’s Acting Workshop – A Children’s Acting Workshop for second to fifth graders will be offered on Wednesday, August 15, and Wednesday, August 22, from 2 to 4 p.m., in the Cantwell Community Room of the Saranac Lake Free Library,109 Main Street. Join the fun at the free workshop with games, costumes, props, skits and more! Call Autumn Buerkett at 327-3567 for more information.

Saranac Lake Adult Center Monthly Meal @ Saranac Lake Adult Center
2:00 pm – 7:00 pm

MONTHLY MEAL Wednesday August 15th

The Saranac Lake Adult Center sponsors their Monthly Meal on Wednesday August 15th. Bingo starts at 2pm, social hour begins at 4pm with dinner at 5pm. The dinner menu includes hamburgers, hot dogs, potato salad, pasta salad, ice cream sundae bars. The cost is $5.00 per person. call 891-2980 for reservations.

Aug
16
Thu
Plein Air Festival – Saranac Lake
Aug 16 – Aug 19 all-day

The Saranac Lake Art Works – Plein Air Festival kicks off this Thursday with nearly 50 artists signed on to participate. This year marks the 4th time the event has visitedSaranacLake.  It begins Thursday and runs through the weekend. Saranac Lake ArtWorks has teamed with the Village of Saranac Lake to build an experience they’re calling exciting and creative.. Through the weekend, artists will paint the views in the region and organizers say those same views inspired theHudson RiverSchoolpainters in the 19th century!

This year’s Juror of Awards is Ann Larsen, she’s recently been juried into the Outdoor Painter’s Society National Show inDallas, and was recognized with an honorable mention award.The event will be headquartered at the Adirondack Artists Guild Gallery,52 Main StreetinSaranacLakewhere organizers expect to have maps with painting locations and directions to painters..

The final day of the event includes a Show & Sale of works produced over the weekend at the event.. It will be open in the Town Hall inSaranacLakebeginning at noon on Sunday..

————

For event questions, contact the Adirondack Artists Guild, 518-891-2615 or email: guild@adirondackartistsguild.com.

The 2011 Best in Show:  Nikolay Mikushkin,Syracuse

Opening reception for “Views at the VIC”, plein air paintings by Nancy Brossard & Sandra Hildreth, from 5 – 7 at the Paul Smith’s College VIC on Friday Aug. 17, followed by a CD release party for Celia Evans.

3RD THURSDAY ART WALKS
5:00 pm – 7:00 pm

SaranacLake’s 3rd Thursday Art Walks will continue this Thursday. The Village of Saranac Lake will again host the talents of regional and local artists of various genres from 5:00 to 7:30pm.

Beginning a self-guided tour through Downtown and a couple of outer-lying venues, visitors can go to any participating venue, get a schedule and map, see and experience at their own pace established artists’ work and emerging talents from all over the North Country. There will be more than 30 venues this time marked with festive balloons.

This event will extend from Pendragon Theatre on Brandy Brook Rd., off of River St., to the Saranac Laboratory Museum on Church St. and then on Main St. between River and Church Streets, up Broadway to BluSeed Studios on Cedar St. and then on Bloomingdale Ave. between Broadway and Depot St. at the new Adirondack Carousel.

At Pendragon Theatre, visitors can enjoy the works of photographer, Burdette Parks, and next learn about “The Story of Saranac Lake” in the John Black Room at theSaranacLaboratoryMuseumonChurch St.  The Adirondack Artists’ Guild will be showing Marylou Reid’s new clay work, “Totems and Vessels,” as well as works of other members. The Cantwell Room in the Saranac Lake Free Library will host the “Summer Show” of the Paint and Palette Association with a “Meet the Artist” reception that evening. Visitors to the NorthWinds Fine Arts Gallery on Broadway will see its members’ works plus “Cutting Corners,” the current show of local artist, Heidi Gutersloh. Up onCedar St., BluSeed Studios will showcase Jack LaDuke’s new photography, “Sun and Shadow,” and visitors can enjoy a  “Meet the Artist” reception there from 6-8pm.

Please note that fine arts photographer, Mark Kurtz, now has his studio upstairs in The Annex, above the Adirondack Artists’ Guild, along with the drawing and sculpting studios of Maria DiAngelo and Matt Paul.

Art Walk visitors will also be able to enjoy many types of music Thursday evening throughoutDowntownSaranacLake. Soulful singer-songwriter, Theresa Hartford will grace the Berkeley Green stage while several other musicians entertain visitors along the sidewalks, including the sax quartet, “Adirondack Saxes,” indie-folk group, “The Lemmon Drops,”Potsdampianist, Matt Bullwinkel, folk singer, Michael Shepard, the trio, “Dust Bunnies,” and accordionist, Hannah Huber. At The Waterhole’s “Party on the Patio,” Rusty Dovos will perform starting at 6pm.

In addition, various other artists contributing to this event include 6 members of the Lake Placid Poets’ Guild; woodcarvers, Rachel Lamb and Mark Paul; artist, Charlene Deleel and young friends; string instrument builder, Charlie Marshall; rug hooking demo by Judy O’Toole; artist, Cal Rice; children’s photographer, Kristin Parker; wildlife photographer, Craig Dickey; photographer, Shaun Durant; crafter, Sarah Humphreys and 2nd-grade photographer, Cade Corris.

SaranacLake’s 3rd Thursday Art Walks 2012 also has a Facebook presence so please find us and Like the page to get more information.

Aug
17
Fri
Freaky Friday Ice Show – 1932 Rink
4:30 pm – 6:00 pm

Summer skating continues in the 1932 rink this weekend..,

Lindsay Davis and Mark Ladwig make up one of the most promising pairs heading into this year’s season.. They’ll headline The Saturday Night Ice show.  The two have been skating together since May and before that, Davis claimed the 2010 U.S. junior bronze medal and Ladwig is a 2010 Olympian, a two-time U.S. pairs silver medalist and a 2012 U.S. pairs bronze medalist. Admission to the Saturday Night Ice show is $10 for adults, $8 for juniors and seniors. Show time at the 1932 rink is 7:30..  Friday’s show is free and opens at 4:30pm..

 

To learn more about the Lake Placidsummer skating program, log on to www.lakeplacidskating.com.

For more information on ORDA’s Olympic venues and events, visit www.whitefacelakeplacid.com

Aug
18
Sat
Satuday Night Ice Show – 1932 Rink
7:30 pm – 9:00 pm

Summer skating continues in the 1932 rink this weekend..,

Lindsay Davis and Mark Ladwig make up one of the most promising pairs heading into this year’s season.. They’ll headline The Saturday Night Ice show.  The two have been skating together since May and before that, Davis claimed the 2010 U.S. junior bronze medal and Ladwig is a 2010 Olympian, a two-time U.S. pairs silver medalist and a 2012 U.S. pairs bronze medalist. Admission to the Saturday Night Ice show is $10 for adults, $8 for juniors and seniors. Show time at the 1932 rink is 7:30..  Friday’s show is free and opens at 4:30pm..

To learn more about the Lake Placidsummer skating program, log on to www.lakeplacidskating.com.

For more information on ORDA’s Olympic venues and events, visit www.whitefacelakeplacid.com

Aug
20
Mon
Invasives Workshop @ Wild Center, Tupper Lake
2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Purple Loosestrife Management Workshops To Be Held

 KEENE VALLEY, NY  The Adirondack Park Invasive Plant Program (APIPP) and Cornell Cooperative Extension are hosting a new workshop series focusing on managing purple loosestrife using biological control. Biological control involves raising and releasing beetles that feed on leaves, roots or flowers of purple loosestrife plants. Workshop participants will learn how to identify purple loosestrife, map infestations and determine whether biological control is an appropriate method of treatment for their infestation. Experts will also review the process and permitting for releasing beetles as well as the monitoring protocols used to assess the effectiveness of beetle predation on purple loosestrife plants. Landowners, gardeners, landscapers, community groups and resource managers are encouraged to attend.

 Sessions will be held on Tuesday, August 14th at the Ticonderoga Town Hall from 2 p.m.- 4 p.m. and Monday, August 20th at the Wild Center in Tupper Lake from 2 p.m.- 4 p.m. Sessions are free. Please RSVP to Sarah Walsh at 518-576-2082 x 120 or sarah_walsh@tnc.org.

 Purple loosestrife is an aggressive wetland and shoreline invader that crowds out native plants and degrades habitat for wildlife and waterfowl. Managing large infestations of purple loosestrife can be difficult, but scientific monitoring and assessment of biological controls shows that it is an effective technique for reducing populations. Organizers of local control projects in Lake Placid and Schroon Lake also report great success in reducing loosestrife infestations using biological control.  “By attending this session, community members will learn the tools to assess their infestation, effectively release biological control on their lands and measure its success over time and protect wetlands for years to come,” said Sarah Walsh, APIPP’s summer educator.

 The Adirondack Park Invasive Plant Program is a partnership program whose mission is to protect the Adirondack region from the negative impacts of non-native invasive species. Find out more information about APIPP online at www.adkinvasives.com.

Aug
21
Tue
Insurance Open House at CVPH @ CVPH Medical Center
10:00 am – 7:00 pm

Fidelis holds Health Insurance open house at CVPH

 Plattsburgh, NY (August 3, 2012) – On Monday, August 20 and Tuesday, August 21, from 10 A.M. to 7 P.M., Fidelis Care will provide a free Health Insurance Open House at CVPH Medical Center in the front lobby.

 To provide community members of the Champlain Valley with low-cost or free coverage, Fidelis Care has become partners with CVPH Medical Center.  Fidelis representatives will be available at the open house to provide information, answer questions and to discuss options for your health-care.   

 Fidelis Care offers New York State’s Child Health Plus, Family Health Plus, and Medicaid Managed Care programs.  Children under the age of 19 will be eligible for Child Health Plus, which may be free or $9 a month per child.  Adults between the ages of 19 and 64 are eligible for the low-cost health coverage through Family Health Plus.  Eligibility is based on the size of the household and gross monthly income.  Regular checkups, preventive care, hospital and emergency care, eye exams and dental are all covered under Fidelis Care.  In order to apply for enrollment, please provide identification of age, income and address.  

 CVPH is a regional medical center dedicated to providing the Champlain Valley with quality healthcare and services.

Aug
22
Wed
Children’s Acting Workshop @ Saranac Lake Free Library
2:00 pm – 4:00 pm

Children’s Acting Workshop – A Children’s Acting Workshop for second to fifth graders will be offered on Wednesday, August 15, and Wednesday, August 22, from 2 to 4 p.m., in the Cantwell Community Room of the Saranac Lake Free Library,109 Main Street. Join the fun at the free workshop with games, costumes, props, skits and more! Call Autumn Buerkett at 327-3567 for more information.

Aug
23
Thu
Saranac Lake’s Summer Concert Series
6:00 pm – 9:00 pm
August 23
•  Saranac Lake Area Chamber of Commerce and Cape Air’s Summer Concert Series Presents:
Bees Kneez
Berkeley Green in Saranac Lake 6-9pm
FREE
Aug
24
Fri
WILMINGTON HISTORICAL SOCIETY @ Wilmington Community Center
7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

WILMINGTON HISTORICAL SOCIETY TO PRESENT “LINKS, CHAINS AND THE MALLORY GRANT” —August 24

The Wilmington Historical Society will present the program “Links, Chains and the Mallory Grant” with Essex County Clerk Joseph Provoncha as the speaker, to be held on Friday, August 24th at 7 pm at the Wilmington Community Center. The program on the history of surveying and property ownership in Essex County includes a display of actual “links and chains” used in land measurements and other historical objects related to surveying. The program is free and open to the public. Refreshments will be provided by the Country Bear Bakery in Wilmington. For further information, contact Karen Peters at (518) 524-1023 or Merri Peck at (518) 946- 7627

Wilmington Historical Society – “Links and Chains”
7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

WILMINGTON HISTORICAL SOCIETY TO PRESENT “LINKS, CHAINS AND THE MALLORY GRANT” —August 24

WILMINGTON – The Wilmington Historical Society will present the program “Links, Chains and the Mallory Grant” with Essex County Clerk Joseph Provoncha as the speaker, to be held on Friday, August 24th at 7 pm at the Wilmington Community Center. The program on the history of surveying and property ownership in Essex County includes a display of actual “links and chains” used in land measurements and other historical objects related to surveying. The program is free and open to the public. Refreshmentswill be provided by the Country Bear Bakery in Wilmington. For further information, contact Karen Peters at (518) 524-1023 or Merri Peck at (518) 946- 7627. 

Jazz Ensemble Debuts – Northwood School
7:30 pm – 9:00 pm
JAZZ EMSEMBLE DEBUTS
The North Country Jazz Ensemble will present a concert next Friday night, August 24, 7:30 at the Northwood School in Lake Placid.  Admission will be free.  The ensemble is a full big band—saxophones, trumpets, trombones, piano, guitar, bass, and drums. The musicians are of all ages, high school to retired, and come from Keene, Lake Placid, and Saranac Lake.  The band includes both professional and amateur musicians. This will be its first public performance.  The music will consist of 10  big band arrangements in various styles (swing, Latin, ballad, funk) by great jazz composer/ arrangers like Sammy Nestico, Benny Carter, and Les Hooper.