Canstruction winning teams donate canned goods to North Country food banks
North country evening weather: Tuesday, April 15, 2025
Work on Carthage bridge project starts
Pressure grows on Trump administration to return wrongly deported man
After 34 years at the Rosamond Gifford Zoo, zoo's director plans to retire
Applications open for NYS cooling assistance program
NNYCF said nine teams combined to collect over 6,000 canned goods and other nonperishable food items or hygiene products that will help restock school-based backpack programs and community food pantries in the Tri-County area. Additionally, the winning teams will share a $1,500 grant award to present to two different school-based backpack programs that participants selected.
With almost 600 votes cast, Carthage Middle School's Builders Club & Student Government entry is the 'People's Choice Award' winner for its sculpture titled 'Let Your Love Flow.' The class also won the 'Top Collection Award' with 3,219 canned goods and other nonperishable items collected, according to NNYCF.
Alicia Anderson, the classroom teaching assistant at Carthage Middle School, spearheaded the initiative to encourage student involvement in the competition from every building in the district. According to Anderson, her pupils accepted the challenge and organized a contest to encourage classrooms across the school to assist in gathering food and hygiene supplies for their sculpture.
Lawmakers call for cardiac emergency response plans in schools
'Working on canstruction this year was a lot of fun. Our club made posters to get everyone involved and we had a competition to get students excited. Almost every classroom participated, and our top three classes each collected more than 300 cans,' eighth-grade club members Finn Anderson, Kyle Schardt, and Catherine Wilay said. 'It feels good to know that we are able to help the community and that our whole school was involved.'
South Jefferson's Junior National Honor Society is the winner of the 'Best Design Award' for its 'canstruction' of 'Walk a Mile in Someone Else's Shoes.' The sculpture of a giant Converse sneaker challenges observers to put themselves in the shoes of our neighbors in need, said the Community Foundation.
South Jefferson Instructional Coach and Junior National Honor Society co-advisor Leslie Robare said it was 'truly inspiring' to watch 'students take full ownership of the Canstruction project.'
NYS schools experience second consecutive day of state testing disruptions
'They tapped into their creativity, collaborated, and designed something incredible,' Robare said. 'None of it would have been possible without the generosity of our community, which always comes together to support our can drive and our students.'
Each of the nine participating teams will donate all items used to build their sculptures to a local food pantry or backpack program. Each award winner will receive a $500 grant for participants to distribute to a nonprofit of their choice.
Rock Charitable Fund awards $148,460 to 11 NNY nonprofits
Carthage Middle School's Builders Club & Student Government students designated the district's 'Comet Closet' backpack program to receive their collected items. Students also selected the backpack program as the recipient of two $500 grant awards they won for the 'People's Choice Award' and the 'Top Collection Award.'
South Jefferson's Junior National Honor Society students designated the district's Backpack Program, which supports students and families on the weekends, to receive the hundreds of food items they collected as well as the $500 grant for the 'Best Design Award.'
Other teams participating were:
Clarkson University's American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) Chapter with 'Golden Knight;'
Exceptional Kids and Family Therapies, Evans Mills, with 'Month of the Military Child;'
North Country Children's Museum, Potsdam, with 'Angry Betty;'
South Jefferson Central School's JCC Edge Class with 'Together we CAN stop childhood
hunger;'
Thousand Islands Central School's National Honor Society with 'Thousand Islands Pride;'
Watertown City School District's Sherman Elementary with 'Sherman Sharks;' and
Watertown City School District's Wiley Intermediate School with 'Watertown Can-Dium!'
NNYCF's Sawyer Community Fund helps improve safety for Western Town Library patrons
'Canstruction for Northern New York' encouraged tri-county students to team up and build a themed structure made of donated canned food and other nonperishable food items or hygiene products to support a local food pantry or backpack program of their choice and reduce food insecurity across the region.
Participating students had a chance to support the needs of tri-county residents while learning values of community philanthropy and building school spirit. The project helped raise awareness about hunger and food insecurity in local communities and empowered students to collaborate and inspire their school and community.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
13 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
5 tips for a long July Fourth weekend
Write to us at . To subscribe, . TODAY'S STARTING POINT I don't know about you, but I have languished a bit this summer, also known as 'slightly warmer April.' Between a circus of end-of-school-year activities; cold, rainy weather; too much news; and weekends that are already impossibly full, it's been … not that much fun yet. But, like the British, July Fourth is coming. And it's going to be a My colleagues Billy Baker and Mark Arsenault waxed poetically in a few recent Starting Points about the highs ( Advertisement On the other hand... there are only nine weekends left until Labor Day. The gift of a long July Fourth weekend brings all kinds of activities for a region dead set on cramming all outdoor fun into three months. Below I offer some simple tips, inspiration, and alternatives for celebrating locally. Advertisement Leave now. Kidding … sort of. AAA recommends you travel in the mornings to avoid driving backups. Here are the Take it to the beach. We New Englanders were made for a spot of sand and salt air. Here is a list of Want to see fireworks and listen to the BSO, LeAnne Rimes, BBD, and Leslie Odom Jr. from 'Hamilton'? (Yes, that is a real list.) Planning to stay in and around Boston this weekend? There is Harborfest, shark week watch parties, and something called Had enough of the American festivities? On Saturday and Sunday, there are finally games that I can guarantee will be worth your time at Fenway: the Write to and tell us how you plan on spending some of these next nine weekends. We will feature some of our favorites in an upcoming email. 🧩 2 Down: 86° POINTS OF INTEREST By Ian Prasad Philbrick Landlords in Boston typically charge broker fees, adding thousands to renters' upfront costs. John Tlumacki/Globe Staff Renters rejoice: Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey said she will sign Priest removed: The Diocese of Fall River ousted the Rev. Jay Mello as the pastor of two local parishes after reviewing claims that he Local impact: Trump's tax-cut bill would chop funding for safety net programs Massachusetts relies on to feed poor residents. The newly passed state budget Still there: Daunasia Yancey, the deputy director of Mayor Wu's office of LGBTQ+ advancement, is on unpaid leave but AI apology: Police in Westbrook, Maine, apologized for using artificial intelligence to Kilmar Abrego Garcia: The Salvadoran man whom the Trump administration wrongly deported before returning him to the US suffered beatings, sleep deprivation, and psychological torture in an El Salvador prison, according to court documents. ( Advertisement Immigration: Trump can't deny entry to people seeking asylum at the US southern border, a judge ruled, but the administration will likely appeal. ( Abortion rights: The Wisconsin Supreme Court's liberal majority invalidated an 1849 law that had banned nearly all abortions in the state, which Democrats there had sought to overturn. ( Idaho student murders: A former criminology Ph.D. student confessed to having murdered four University of Idaho students in 2022. He accepted a plea deal to avoid the death penalty and will face sentencing later this month. ( Uh, what : The US is going to breed billions of flies and toss them out of airplanes over Texas and Mexico. They hope to kill the flesh-eating larva of the new world screwworm fly. ( BESIDE THE POINT 💙 Feeling blue: Meredith Goldstein finally saw Blue Man Group after putting it off for decades. With the show closing this weekend, she was 💬 Brave new world: As Chinese universities crack down on students' use of AI, a new industry of workaround tools is booming. ( 🎥 It's a bird, it's a plane: The director and the cast of the new 'Superman' movie think the world needs the Man of Steel Advertisement 💰 Falling behind: They're in the top 10 percent of US earners. They still don't feel rich. ( 😺 You've got to be kitten me: The race is on to elect Somerville's 'bike path mayor.' The candidates 🪨 That rocks: Are these streaked gray stones on the eastern shore of Hudson Bay in Quebec the oldest rocks on Earth? ( 💅 Stylin': Which Mainer recently made the New York Times' ' Thanks for reading Starting Point. This newsletter was edited by ❓ Have a question for the team? Email us at ✍🏼 If someone sent you this newsletter, you can 📬 Delivered Monday through Friday. Heather Ciras can be reached at


CNN
34 minutes ago
- CNN
Could this sculpture garden become Trump's Mount Rushmore?
The visages of presidents past were looking down upon Donald Trump as he made a fiery speech excoriating his political foes for waging what he called a 'merciless campaign' against the traditional values, heroes, and culture that underpin American greatness. It was 2020, and there, in the shadow of Mount Rushmore, the then-45th president vowed to commission a monument 'to the giants of our past' that would 'feature the statues of the greatest Americans to ever live.' From there, the concept of the 'National Garden of American Heroes' was born – a sculpture park of 250 life-size artworks that would pay homage to the likes of Kobe Bryant, Amelia Earhart, Abraham Lincoln, Muhammad Ali, Christopher Columbus, and Sally Ride, among others, and would stand as new monuments in the American landscape. Two election cycles, one ballot-box defeat, and a rescinded – and then reinstituted – executive order later, artists are finally sketching 3D models, various localities are vying to be the site for the sculpture garden, and Congress is looking at setting aside millions of taxpayer dollars for the project. In his second term, Trump is pushing forward on plans for his great American sculpture garden. But the project – a personal endeavor of the president's now five years in the making– is facing an uncertain future amid serious questions about the timeline, cost, location, and reception within the art community, threatening to sacrifice the quality and delivery of the project meant to debut at the nation's big 250th anniversary celebration in July of 2026. 'No one wants an outdoor Madame Tussauds museum and it appears that the administration is taking the right steps to make sure that we get beautiful, inspiring works of art,' Justin Shubow, president of the National Civic Art Society, tells CNN. Mount Rushmore took over a decade to complete, and was not without controversy, but stands now as a hugely recognizable American monument. Can Trump's Garden of Heroes equal its renown? To be sure, the requirements for the project are serious and ambitious. In April, the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), a federal agency that acts as the nation's largest funder of public humanities projects, began soliciting artist proposals for the garden. According to its solicitation announcement, proposals had to be sculptures in the classical style, lifelike, and created from marble, granite, bronze, copper or brass. Statues should be 1.2 times the historical height of the individual, so standing figures should be between 6.5 feet and 8.5 feet tall. Artists had until July 1st to submit their applications, which was to include two-dimensional or three-dimensional graphic representation of the preliminary concepts for up to three statues they would like to create, as well as the historical and scholarly sources that informed their design. The NEH estimated it would take artists 60 hours to complete just these requirements. Artists were also asked to disclose any outstanding debts, including student loans, taxes and child support payments they currently have. If chosen, they would need to provide evidence that they have entered into a repayment agreement, the NEH said. Artists are required to be US citizens. The winning designs and artists are to be announced by September, though it is unclear how the artists will be chosen – the NEH did not get back to CNN's questions about the process for review and selection, nor to confirm if there is a selection committee. 'They are thumbing their nose at both standard processes and historical expertise,' said James Grossman, executive director emeritus of the American Historical Association, describing the process as abnormal, apparently without a clearly communicated plan and time for peer review. Those commissioned have until June 2026 – just nine months to complete and deliver their work – on a budget of $200,000 per statue to cover the cost of materials, design, and transportation. The timeline and the budget – very modest for artworks of this size and ambition – may have been enough to put off some serious artists. It can take 10 years for a project like this to be done right, said Melissa Walker of Carolina Bronze Sculpture, a foundry. 'People that are really serious about their art are just looking at this and saying that they don't really want any part of it.' 'There's so many variables that go into a project like this, and it just doesn't seem like anybody has thought it – it's just not a well thought-out plan,' she said, adding: 'If you just wanna have somebody sculpt these digitally and 3D print them and send them to China and have them done on the cheap, yeah, you might be able to get it done in in less than a year.' Paula Slater, a sculptor who has worked for 30 years in the industry, said that, on the other hand, it could spur lesser-known artists to apply. 'There aren't 90 good portrait sculptors out there that have a body of work; I don't know where they're going to be getting all these sculptors,' she said. Slater herself decided to submit to the project, applying for three figures: Native American prima ballerina Maria Tallchief, author Herman Melville and actress Ingrid Bergman, who Slater has proposed to sculpt as Joan of Arc from her iconic movie role. Normally, each sculpture would take over a year individually, she said. In anticipation of possibly being chosen, she's already contacted sculptor friends who could help her in some of the preliminary work before she does the finishing work. Slater is not a supporter of the president or the quick timeline but said she is not going to let that stop her from participating in what could become an important piece of history. 'I'm doing this in spite of the president being involved,' she said. That the project is Trump's vision has, perhaps unsurprisingly, given it controversy from the beginning. Plans for the sculpture garden have had many fits and starts. From the moment Trump signed the executive order for its creation, eyebrows were raised over the list of names included – a grab-bag of historical and contemporary figures that run the gamut from Billie Holiday and Susan B. Anthony to Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Barry Goldwater, Billy Graham, Shirley Temple and Alex Trebek, among others. 'I don't really take it all that seriously,' Ken Lum, a sculptor and professor at the University of Pennsylvania, said. 'It has a kind of carnival quality to it.' Lum took issue with the Americans chosen to be immortalized in the statue, a list that has drawn controversy in the past. 'There's a high degree of arbitrariness to it, which tells me that it's not all that serious,' he said. Then, there is the politics. Trump's original order was revoked when he was voted out and President Joe Biden took office. It was reinstituted again when Trump returned to the White House in January, and this time, he vowed to fund the project with a $40 million allocation from the Department of the Interior for land and construction. This week, that provision was included in the 'big, beautiful bill' approved by the Republican-led Senate, and is likely to come to fruition when the legislation is reconciled through the House. This comes as the president has called for unprecedented gutting of federal support for arts and humanities, pulling money from NEH grants, the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and the Institute for Museum and Library Services (IMLS), and redirecting federal funding towards cultural initiatives he backs – like the National Garden of Heroes. Aside from the $40 million in the budget bill, the NEH and NEA have jointly set aside $34 million to fund the art commissions. 'Donald Trump has a track record of vanity projects and there is a real concern that the resources that were stripped from NEH, ILMS and similar are being put toward his self-serving purposes,' a former NEH official, who has served in multiple administrations, told CNN. Beyond the timeline and the politics, the practicalities can weigh on artists. Sculpting lasting art of the size and scope being commissioned is expensive business. 'The artist would have to go basically $100,000 into debt before they even get paid by the federal government,' said Micah Springut, CEO and Founder of Monumental labs, a foundry in New York that produces marble sculptures. According to Springut, it costs as much as $25,000 to buy the quantity of marble needed for life-size sculptures, and shipping and installation could be some $20,000. There are enormous labor and facilities costs. 'You have to have a huge risk tolerance or you have to be wealthy or ignorant or idealistic to even get into this,' he said. Bronze is slightly cheaper, but foundry space for bronze works can fill up a year in advance, experts say, making it hard for artists to get on the books. Moreover, detailed planning is required to properly devise sculptural designs. 'You can't just plop sculpture down in the middle of a field. You have to have engineering done for the type of land that is going to be sitting on and the climate is going to be in,' said Walker, the project manager at Carolina Bronze Sculpture. How will people interact with the statues? Will children be dangling off arms or climbing onto pedestals? Artists need this kind of information at the start to fully realize their work, she said. Yet a chance to be a part of history can be enough of an enticement. 'I see this as an opportunity to give back to our country to have an opportunity to have some great artwork in place by some of the greatest artists in America,' said Matt Glenn, an artist in Provo, Utah who specializes in bronze statues. 'Presidents will come and go. History has been written and for us to be able to be a part of that and preserve that history and have that for generations to come.' Glenn has applied to sculpt Whitney Houston, Steve Jobs, and Chief Red Cloud, with a full war bonnet in his traditional clothing. He plans to carve the music star singing with her arms up to capture the essence of her motion, while the Apple founder is in a more stoic pose in his signature turtleneck. He and his team of ten artists are prepared to clear their plates and 'put in the long days to make sure everything is done' should they be chosen, Glenn said. Artist John Belardo, based in New York, has applied to create two sculptures: architect Cass Gilbert, who designed the Woolworth Building, and Herman Melville, which he intends to carve from white marble to connect to the idea of Moby Dick as the white whale. 'In 20, 50 years nobody will even remember that it was Trump who did it and it's beyond beside the point,' Belardo said. 'It's more than just your lifetime; it's kind of this bigger idea – it could be there for thousands of years.' If he is chosen, Belardo plans to make his sculptures at Monumental Labs, the New York foundry run by Springut, who has said he will front up to $100,000 to help artists who are selected with start-up costs that can be paid back when they get their government checks. The foundry uses robotic fabrication in its workshop to cut the stone to scale, reducing the time it takes to complete a sculpture. 'We have seven robots, we have 20 carvers who could work on this,' Springut said. 'We could do the whole thing in a few years. On that shortened timeframe, we're just lucky to get a couple dozen out.' Amid a deluge of concerns, CNN has learned that Trump's plans are now being reworked. A source with knowledge of the project tells CNN that the Trump administration is now coming to terms that they will not be able to achieve their goal for all 250 statutes to be completed in a year. The new, informal goal is to try to get 25 to 50 statues completed by July 2026 so that the garden can open on time, with a smaller collection of statues that would serve as an early teaser of what the garden could become. The intention would be to add the rest of the statues in subsequent years as they are completed. This recalibration of Trump's original goal is a tacit admission by the administration, this source says, that the project was risking being a collection of rushed, mediocre art. The statues, whenever they are made, will likely end up in South Dakota, very near the spot where Trump stood to announce his vision in the first place. South Dakota has been pushing hard to bring the sculpture garden to their state. Governor Larry Rhoden and members of Congress have been on calls with the White House monthly, sources tell CNN, to lobby for the project to be brought to the Black Hills, in the shadow of Mount Rushmore. The governor has already identified the land for the proposed site – a 40-acre area of land in sight of Mount Rushmore. The Chuck Lien family, a four-generation South Dakota family, has offered to donate their strip of land. The mockups of the proposal, provided to CNN, show seven distinct areas of the garden, with seven groupings for the statues: 'The Presidents,' 'The Founders,' 'The Brave,' 'The Servants,' 'The Visionaries,' 'The Storytellers,' and 'The Reformers' among landscapes of water, greenery and small footpath bridges. There is confidence in the inner circles of South Dakota government that Trump understands that vision and they are hopeful for a decision soon. Philadelphia and the National Mall are also being considered, but neither seems to have as detailed plans for the garden as South Dakota. Comparable mock-ups could not be found for other cities mentioned as possible sites. The National Park Service, the mayor's office in DC and the governor's office in Pennsylvania did not respond to CNN's requests for comment. 'I'm incredibly optimistic that this is the right place for the Garden of Heroes and every conversation I have with the administration they let me know that they understand the benefits of this location,' Congressman Dusty Johnson of South Dakota told CNN. 'The White House has a bias for action they understand the importance of making material progress before we get to America's 250th birthday.' 'The Black Hills mark the perfect location to achieve your vision for the National Garden of American Heroes,' Governor Rhoden said in a letter to President Trump in March. 'Together, we will make this project happen in a way that honors America's heroes, takes advantage of South Dakota's natural beauty, and incorporates the most iconic monument to our greatest leaders: Mount Rushmore National Memorial.'


Boston Globe
43 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
What would Edward R. Murrow think of CBS parent company caving in to Donald Trump?
You can chalk up a lot of its popularity to its star, George Clooney, who plays the legendary newsman and who wrote the play with Grant Heslov, based on But no doubt some measure of the success of the play is also rooted in its relevance and resonance today. Advertisement Murrow enhanced his credibility, and that of CBS, and showcased journalistic and personal courage by exposing McCarthy's anti-communist witch hunt as a reckless abuse of civil liberties and civility. Murrow wouldn't back down in the face of McCarthy's threats or pressure from his corporate bosses after the loss of a major network sponsor. Given all this, one has to wonder what Murrow would make of the decision by Paramount, CBS' parent company, to Advertisement Trump's lawyer had claimed Trump suffered 'mental anguish' from a '60 Minutes' interview last October of then-Vice President Kamala Harris, Trump's Democratic opponent in the presidential election. Trump and his lawyers maintained the editing of the interview made Harris appear more coherent and intelligent than she really is, that it amounted to false advertising, or deceptive trade practices. Trump attorney Edward Andrew Paltzik said that beyond the mental anguish the interview caused Trump, it misled voters and led them to pay less attention to him and his regular assertions on Truth Social. How Counselor Paltzik would prove this in a court of law where there are, unlike on Truth Social, rules of evidence would have made for some entertaining lawyering. Alas, we'll never know. While CBS and Paramount initially came out swinging, insisting Trump's case was entirely without merit, the beancounters had the final say, as they are wont to do. Paramount caving isn't very surprising, if still very depressing. Paramount chair and controlling shareholder Shari Redstone had made it clear she favored a settlement. Surely, her position had nothing to do with the fact that the Meeting with shareholders Wednesday, George Cheeks, Paramount's co-CEO, Somehow, Mr. Cheeks did not find the time to mention the word principle. My only surprise is that he didn't try to suggest the capitulation constituted a bargain, given that Advertisement In a statement announcing the settlement, Paramount executives went to great length to portray their actions as somehow not amounting to a capitulation, pointing out that, aside from paying Trump's legal fees, the $16 million goes not to Trump but the fund to build his presidential library. Oh, and they were not required to apologize to Trump. They might want to apologize to Murrow's memory and current 60 Minutes correspondents and viewers. In May, those CBS is hardly the only media giant to turtle in its shell rather than stand up to a bully. Last year, ABC's parent company, Disney, agreed to donate $15 million to Trump's presidential library rather than go to trial after Trump sued them for defamation. Trump's claim was based on the fact that ABC News anchor George Stephanopoulos had said on air that Trump had been found liable for rape when he was actually found liable for sexual abuse. At the time, media law experts had warned that Disney's capitulation to Trump would embolden him and others to file dubious lawsuits against media companies that would rather settle than go all the way to trial. One month later, So, if you're keeping score at home, Trump has taken $56 million off craven media companies who don't have the guts to take him on in court. He'd be a fool to not keep suing. Advertisement US Senator Elizabeth Warren has likened these payoffs to bribes. She wants US Senator Ed Markey called Paramount's settlement 'a blow to journalistic independence.' US Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont didn't pull any punches. 'It is a dark day for independent journalism and freedom of the press, an essential part of our democracy,' Sanders said. 'It is a victory for a president who is attempting to stifle dissent and undermine American democracy.' Congress can investigate all it wants. Nothing will change until the big media companies care more about their audiences than their shareholders. Meaning nothing will change. All this on the eve of July 4th, when we celebrate our country's independence, an independence that was underwritten by a free press which today is demonstrably less free that it was just a year ago. Good night, and good luck. Kevin Cullen is a Globe columnist. He can be reached at