Shaker walks it off against Utica Proctor

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:14:56 GMT

Shaker walks it off against Utica Proctor LATHAM, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- The Shaker baseball team made a run to the Class AA title series last year. The Blue Bison have carried their momentum into 2023, entering Monday with a 2-0 record. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! Shaker looked to make it 3-0 against Utica Proctor on Monday. The Blue Bison jumped out to a 2-0 lead after a John Montalto RBI base hit. The Raiders stormed back, taking a 3-2 lead into the 7th. Montalto once again came through in the clutch. Down to their final out, Montalto drove in Ben Belliss to tie the game, sending it to extra innings. In the bottom of the ninth, sophomore Tye Mariano played the hero. Mariano drove in Belliss to walk it off, as the Blue Bison pulled out a 4-3 win.

La Salle downs Voorheesville 15-0

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:14:56 GMT

La Salle downs Voorheesville 15-0 VOORHEESVILLE, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- The La Salle Cadets defeated Voorheesville in dominating fashion with a 15-0 win on the road. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! Heading into the sixth inning, they already had a big lead, but the offense found another spark. With the bases loaded, William Kelly came up with a big hit to right field that allowed Christian Riegert to come in for the score, extending the Cadets' lead to 7-0.After a few walks, La Salle found another opportunity and took advantage. Daniel McCue found the sweet spot on the bat and made contact with the ball blasting it out to right field, bringing home Aiden Heffner, and the Cadets' lead grew to 11-0.The Cadets didn't take their foot off the gas and came up with another big play thanks to Derek Desanto, who sent one air born to deep center, allowing Nicholas Verdichizzi to add on another run.

Jordan Bentley earns offensive player of the Week

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:14:56 GMT

Jordan Bentley earns offensive player of the Week LOUDONVILLE, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- Siena Women’s Lacrosse redshirt sophomore Jordan Bentley continued her uber-consistent season, racking up two more hat tricks and leading the team in draw controls during this past week of competition. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! For her efforts, Bentley was named the MAAC Women’s Lacrosse Offensive Player of the Week on Monday by the conference office for the first time in her career.  It marks the team’s seventh weekly award of the 2023 season joining Sabrina Krasner (three-time winner), Mary Soures, Rebecca Gilhooley, and Grace Dobrzynski as other winners. The midfielder scored seven points (six goals and one assist) to go along with 12 draw controls in two games this past week.  Siena defeated Canisius 15-8 this past Wednesday and played at Fairfield on Saturday. Bentley has scored in 13 consecutive games dating back to the second game of the season against Pittsburg...

Ben Ferencz, last surviving Nuremberg prosecutor, dies at 103

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:14:56 GMT

Ben Ferencz, last surviving Nuremberg prosecutor, dies at 103 Benjamin Ferencz (pictured) was the last surviving prosecutor in the Nuremberg trials in Germany. He brought Nazi war criminals to justice following World War Two. He also served as an apostle of international criminal law.Ferencz was a Harvard-educated attorney who secured convictions for many German officers who led roving execution squads during World War II. The circumstances surrounding his death are not yet known. According to the New York Times, Ferencz was found dead at Boynton Beach assisted living facility.At just 27 years of age, he was appointed as a prosecutor at Nuremberg in 1947. There, Nazi defendants such as Hermann Goring were tried for crimes against humanity.Ferencz advocated for decades the creation of an International Criminal Court. This goal was achieved with the establishment in The Hague, Netherlands, of an International Tribunal. Ferencz was also a major donor to the U.S. Washington was the first home of the Holocaust Memorial Museum."Today, the world lost...

Ask Amy: Was it wrong to return these unwanted letters to the sender?

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:14:56 GMT

Ask Amy: Was it wrong to return these unwanted letters to the sender? Dear Amy: After I retired, I had time to go through boxes of personal papers that I had saved. These included letters that current friends and family had written to me over many years.It was fun rereading many of these, but at this point in my life I don’t feel the need to keep them.Instead of throwing them away, I decided that the sender might enjoy reading what they had written decades earlier, so I bundled packets of their individual letters off with notes to the effect: “Cleaning house! Here’s a blast from your past! Enjoy!”Now months later, I have not heard back from one person.I’m questioning whether I did something wrong.I know that I would enjoy reading letters I wrote many years ago, but maybe that’s just me.Related ArticlesAdvice | Ask Amy: I asked for money and she gave me a painting. What do I do now? Advice | Ask Amy: Why do people say these things at funerals? Advice | Ask Amy: Why did I end...

Harriette Cole: Something is wrong with my ankles, and I don’t know what to do

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:14:56 GMT

Harriette Cole: Something is wrong with my ankles, and I don’t know what to do DEAR HARRIETTE: I have noticed that my ankles swell a lot these days. I don’t know what has caused this, but it is happening with some frequency.I have the cheapest health insurance, so I don’t really want to go to the doctor. The co-pay is high, and I worry that they will either not pay close attention to me or find something terrible that’s wrong with me that I can’t afford to treat.So far, I have not done anything about it. I’m sure that’s not the way to handle this. What do you recommend? Swollen AnklesDEAR SWOLLEN ANKLES: Of course you should go to the doctor, preferably your own primary physician if you have one. That is because a doctor who knows you may have a better sense of your overall health than someone you are just meeting.Even if you have to pay a hefty co-pay, that’s lower than having to deal with an emergency situation.Related ArticlesAdvice | Harriette Cole: I felt so awkward on this trip with a co-worker Ad...

Focus on coaches as Madrid hosts Chelsea in Champions League

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:14:56 GMT

Focus on coaches as Madrid hosts Chelsea in Champions League MADRID (AP) — The latest encounter between Real Madrid and Chelsea in the Champions League will put a spotlight on their coaches.Chelsea will travel for Wednesday’s first leg in Madrid with Frank Lampard trying to win for the first time since being named interim coach.Madrid will play still surrounded by doubts about Carlo Ancelotti’s future amid rumors of him taking over Brazil’s national team.The outcome could potentially help Lampard reclaim a permanent job with the English club, or influence Ancelotti’s decision on whether to accept the Brazil job.Chelsea appointed Lampard to replace Graham Potter and lost its first game with him in charge in the Premier League over the weekend. The club enters the match at the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium on a four-match winless run. It has won only two of its last 11 matches in the Premier League, where it sits in 11th place.“We have an opportunity against a fantastic team and we just have to attempt to make the most of the opportunity — go...

Chesapeake Bay eagle population has recovered, but now there’s competition for territory

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:14:56 GMT

Chesapeake Bay eagle population has recovered, but now there’s competition for territory The Chesapeake Bay’s bald eagle population has seen an unexpected spike in growth over the past few decades, going from nearly endangered, with just 60 breeding pairs, to about 3,000.“The population has just had an astounding recovery,” said Bryan Watts, the Center for Conservation Biology director at Virginia’s College of William and Mary. He’s been researching bald eagles for decades. He said in the 1970s, when the chemical DDT was outlawed, the population’s low point reached a turning point.More Local NewsMore Science NewsIn the 1980s, that population growth’s impact became more visible. The eagle population began to grow in the bay at a rate higher than anywhere else in North America, but evidence of food stress became more evident.Food supply for eagles hasn’t been able to keep up and infighting has become common, the professor said. Watts added that the population began to reach its limits.“So it sets up a class warfare bet...

Md. General Assembly caps session passing top Democratic priorities, renewed partnership with governor

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:14:56 GMT

Md. General Assembly caps session passing top Democratic priorities, renewed partnership with governor This content was republished with permission from WTOP’s news partners at Maryland Matters. Sign up for Maryland Matters’ free email subscription today.An angry Republican walk-off in the House of Delegates and a photo finish in the Senate ended the 2023 session of the Maryland General Assembly on Monday night.As both chambers adjourned sine die, the legislature’s teenage pages dumped boxes of confetti and trash bags full of balloons from the galleries above onto the rostrums and floors of the Senate and House, sending flashes of color raining down on the president and speaker below, in the traditional celebratory close.When all was said and done, legislative leaders in the Democratically controlled houses, along with the state’s new governor, declared victory, taking bows for an exceptional session and ignoring their stumbles and defeats.“It’s not only the most successful first session for any new governor… [but] we’d argue that it’s the most successfu...

WNBA Draft: Terps Miller, Meyers selected in 1st round; Mystics trade 4th overall pick

Published Fri, 27 Dec 2024 09:14:56 GMT

WNBA Draft: Terps Miller, Meyers selected in 1st round; Mystics trade 4th overall pick The Minnesota Lynx made Diamond Miller the highest-selected Maryland Terrapin in the WNBA Draft since 2009, while the Dallas Wings took Abby Meyers with the 11th overall pick. Washington Mystics traded away their fourth overall pick in a star-studded event in New York Monday night.Miller was the second overall pick in the 2023 draft, tying Marissa Coleman for the highest-drafted Terp. The versatile 6-foot-3 All-Big Ten performer led Maryland to its first NCAA Tournament Elite 8 appearance since 2015.The moment Diamond Miller’s draft dreams came true pic.twitter.com/eGdpNQP0YP— Maryland Women’s Basketball (@TerpsWBB) April 10, 2023Meyers, coming off a season in which she set career highs in 3-point accuracy and assists, was thought to be a second-round selection coming into the draft. Still, the Wings picked the Maryland guard after selecting UConn guard Lou Lopez Sénéchal with the fifth overall pick.The Mystics selected injured Iowa State center Stephanie Soares with the fourt...