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Sullivan County Democrat is "a semiweekly newspaper in Callicoon." [1] [2] [3] The "twice weekly newspaper" [4] was established in 1891, [5] and has been "independently owned and operated by the same family since 1927."
Using a Christie 35-mm projector and platter system, the Sullivan County Dramatic Workshop, Inc. (owners of the Rivoli Theatre) continued the tradition of film. The first movie exhibited was "Madagascar 3: Europe's Most Wanted". From a grant application shortly after the Sullivan County Dramatic Workshop's purchase of the theatre:
Frank J. LaBuda (born December 15, 1949) was a Sullivan County Court Judge and a Sullivan County Surrogate's Court judge from 1997 through 2019. In 2007, he was appointed an acting justice of the Sullivan County Supreme Court in the 3rd Judicial District of New York.
The Neversink River (also called Neversink Creek in its upper course) is a 55-mile-long (89 km) [1] tributary of the Delaware River in southeastern New York in the United States. The name of the river comes from the corruption of an Algonquian language phrase meaning "mad river."
The Beaver Kill, sometimes written as the Beaverkill or Beaverkill River, is a tributary of the East Branch Delaware River, a main tributary of the Delaware River, approximately 44 miles (71 km) long, in the U.S. state of New York.
The community is located along New York State Route 97 and the Delaware River in the westernmost corner of the county, 10.4 miles (16.7 km) southeast of Hancock. Long Eddy has a hotel/bar with outdoor barbecue, a historical society, fire station, public free river landing on the Delaware River as well as a post office with ZIP code 12760. [2] [3]
Bethel Motor Speedway is a quarter-mile asphalt oval race track, located near the site of the original Woodstock Music Festival in White Lake, New York. [1] The track is sanctioned by NASCAR as part of its Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series .
The Pond Eddy Bridge is a truss bridge spanning the Delaware River between the hamlet of Pond Eddy in Lumberland, New York and the settlement informally called Pond Eddy in Shohola Township, Pennsylvania; it is the Pennsylvania community's only road connection.