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MedTech selects Thurlow as new executive director
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — MedTech Association has appointed Winthrop (Win) Thurlow as the organization’s new executive director. MedTech is nonprofit trade association representing New York’s bioscience

St. Joseph’s Health adds operating room, opens second electrophysiology lab
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — St. Joseph’s Health has added a new operating room and opened a new electrophysiology (EP) lab. Operating room The new operating room

MVHS deploys da Vinci Si surgical system
UTICA, N.Y. — The Mohawk Valley Health System (MVHS) has started using the da Vinci Si surgical system. MVHS surgeons are currently using the system

Area high-school girls participate in summer camp focused on STEM fields
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Le Moyne College this week hosted about 30 high-school girls from 11 districts for a week-long summer camp focusing on science and

Syracuse Arts & Crafts Festival gets underway in downtown Syracuse
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — The AmeriCU Syracuse Arts & Crafts Festival kicked off Friday morning at Columbus Circle in downtown Syracuse. Within the first hour, dozens

HMI Metal Powders scrambles to meet demand
CLAYVILLE — Before the Revolutionary War, the village connecting Fort Schuyler (present-day Utica) and the Cherry Valley was known as Paris Furnace — named after

Hamilton College appoints Dennison as VP for advancement
CLINTON — Lori Rava Dennison, a 1987 Hamilton College graduate with three decades of experience in fundraising, volunteer management, and donor relations at her alma mater, has been named Hamilton’s VP for advancement following a national search. She served most recently as Hamilton’s interim VP for communications and development, the college said in a news
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CLINTON — Lori Rava Dennison, a 1987 Hamilton College graduate with three decades of experience in fundraising, volunteer management, and donor relations at her alma mater, has been named Hamilton’s VP for advancement following a national search.
She served most recently as Hamilton’s interim VP for communications and development, the college said in a news release. Dennison will report to David Wippman, college president, and serve as a member of the college’s senior staff. In addition to managing all aspects of the college’s fundraising efforts, she will oversee Hamilton’s alumni and parent relations programs, the career center, and the communications office.
“During her 30 years at Hamilton, Lori Dennison has been successful in a variety of roles that advance the College’s mission and priorities,” Wippman said in the release. “She has earned this opportunity to serve her alma mater in this important role, and I look forward to continuing to work with her to strengthen Hamilton even further.”
A native of nearby Rome, and the first in her family to attend college, Dennison began working in the Communications and Development Office (now the Advancement Office) in 1987 as the assistant director of GOLD (Graduates of the Last Decade) programs. She was promoted frequently, assuming responsibility for the Annual Fund and GOLD Group programs from 1992 to 1997, during which time she identified and managed a plan to double unrestricted giving to the college over a three-year period. As director of major gifts from 1997 to 2006, a period that spanned two capital campaigns, she helped secure $300 million in new contributions to Hamilton.
Dennison also served as director of campaign operations and principal gifts from 2006 to 2009 and executive director of leadership gifts from 2009 to 2011. She took on new responsibilities in 2011 when, in addition to serving as principal gifts officer, she became executive director in the President’s Office, where she served as secretary to the board of trustees and worked closely with the president and senior staff to manage the day-to-day operations of the college.
Arc of Seneca Cayuga receives $4,300 grant for computer-assisted art labs
AUBURN — Arc of Seneca Cayuga announced it has recently received a grant of $4,300 from the Cayuga Community Fund. Money from the Community Fund helps programs in education, health, social services, the arts, civic, and environmental concerns, as well as the preservation of historic resources in Cayuga County. The grant will be used for
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AUBURN — Arc of Seneca Cayuga announced it has recently received a grant of $4,300 from the Cayuga Community Fund.
Money from the Community Fund helps programs in education, health, social services, the arts, civic, and environmental concerns, as well as the preservation of historic resources in Cayuga County. The grant will be used for the purchase of computer-assisted art labs, which will soon be installed at five-day service sites operated by Arc of Seneca Cayuga, the nonprofit said in a news release.
Each site will be equipped with an art lab to include a Dell Inspiron computer with touchscreen capability, an HP Office Jet color printer, and numerous software art applications, the Arc said.
These art labs will enable about 85 individuals to create original works of art design and the touchscreen capability will be particularly helpful for those with manual dexterity difficulties.
“Computer Art Labs have already been extremely successful in Seneca County. Not only are people excited about creating original artwork, but we have seen people grow in independence and ability to work in the Art Labs with less supervision, which has increased confidence and self-esteem,” Ed Sayles, community relations consultant for Arc of Seneca Cayuga, said in the release.
Sayles added that the expectation is for each person to create a portfolio of artwork that would be displayed in an online gallery. There will also be a public exhibition held at various sites in downtown Auburn next June.
Sayles expressed his, “deep gratitude to the Community Fund Committee for making all of this possible” and he is looking forward to, “the budding of many new artists.”
Some recent tweets that came across the @cnybj Twitter feed, offering various business, career, and personal tips: Do you have an executive summary for your #smallbiz? Get tips on how to create one: http://owl.li/D5IG30dSVWi SBA @SBAgov The more work you do in understanding your business, the better you will be #business #tips #success http://bit.ly/2cILv48 Jean-Pierre
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Some recent tweets that came across the @cnybj Twitter feed, offering various business, career, and personal tips:
Do you have an executive summary for your #smallbiz? Get tips on how to create one: http://owl.li/D5IG30dSVWi
SBA @SBAgov
The more work you do in understanding your business, the better you will be #business #tips #success http://bit.ly/2cILv48
Jean-Pierre DEMURGER @pandoraskids
Do you know your elected representatives? Do they listen to your #smallbiz concerns? How to engage policymakers: http://on.nfib.com/2tmMdXW
NFIB @NFIB
21 Awesome Time-Saving Tips for Content Marketers http://hubs.ly/H089nly0 via @sejournal
Articulate Marketing @wearearticulate
http://ow.ly/gLU730dTew7 6 effective habits to be a better you #entrepreneur #business #success #Tips
Vanessa Dunford @vaniccilondon
Game On Job Seekers! How to Level Up Your Interviewing Skills http://dlvr.it/PYLTTS via @YouTern
Hannah Morgan @careersherpa
Realize you’re not everyone’s cup of tea. No matter what you do, you can’t please everyone. Be the best leader you can be. #leadership
Mitch Mitchell @Mitch_M
Baby boomers: get #retirement ready with these seven #tips: https://t.co/QfDYPqMpnJ
First Republic @firstrepublic

Christine’s Cookie Shoppe settles into new home, eyes growth
UTICA — Christine Meeker says she’s a dreamer, but even she wasn’t dreaming this big. The sole owner of Christine’s Cookie Shoppe, LLC moved the growing specialty cookie business this spring into a 2,000-square-foot space on the first floor of 171 Genesee St. in downtown Utica. The building is home to @171 Events, which holds
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UTICA — Christine Meeker says she’s a dreamer, but even she wasn’t dreaming this big.
The sole owner of Christine’s Cookie Shoppe, LLC moved the growing specialty cookie business this spring into a 2,000-square-foot space on the first floor of 171 Genesee St. in downtown Utica. The building is home to @171 Events, which holds wedding receptions, showers, and other events on the fourth and fifth floors of the five-story building.
Christine’s Cookie Shoppe opened to customers on March 29 and held a formal ribbon-cutting event with the Greater Utica Chamber of Commerce on April 28.
Meeker says her 2,000-square-foot space has three main components. A storefront to display and sell the cookies is the largest space, and the second-biggest area is the kitchen where the cookies are prepared. Christine’s Cookie Shoppe also has a party room for kids where they can decorate their own cookies. Meeker says she has booked events for the entire month of August.
The space also has a shipping room to process orders for shipment, and a small business office for Meeker.
Meeker says she received her business certificate and home-processing license in 2011 and operated as a home-based business before moving into the space of Sugarbabes Cupcakes at 46 Genesee St. in New Hartford in 2012, where she was for four years.
She started with a few family recipes and later expanded into a variety of specialty cookies and “sweet gifts.”
Meeker leases her new space from Christine Martin and C. Edward Schmidt, who co-own the five-story building at 171 Genesee St.
“Last August, I was going through a lot of transition personally and with the business. I met Christine and Ed… We stayed in touch for months. When the first-floor location became available, we met again,” Meeker explains.
Though she didn’t originally plan on getting 2,000 square feet, Meeker says “based on my vision for the business, it’s a good fit.”
The goal is to expand to all kinds of parties all year-long. One person recently inquired about having her 30th birthday party at Christine’s Cookie Shoppe.
Meeker’s popular cookies, which she calls Christine’s Collection, include a cannoli cookie sandwich, chocolate chip peanut butter dream, and vanilla buttercream blossom. The BFF Cookie is another popular item Meeker is proud of, saying it took a year for her to create.
Christine’s Cookie Shoppe has three employees total. That includes Meeker working full time, plus one full-time hire and one part-time hire. She expects to hire two more people to staff parties and could add a seasonal work crew for seasonal events.
Providing cookies and sweet treats for wedding receptions, including those held at @171 Events, is currently the biggest generator of revenue for Christine’s Cookie Shoppe, Meeker says. She declined to disclose revenue information but says the business is growing. It just launched a curbside pick-up service, where her staff will run the order out to the customer’s car.
Meeker says things are “pretty incredible” at her new location and she’s looking forward to the future.
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