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The Cayuga Collegian is the school's official student newspaper. It was first published on October 31, 1953 at Auburn Community College as the Auburn Collegian. The name was changed to the Cayuga Collegian when Cayuga County began to sponsor the college, which was then renamed Cayuga County Community College in 1975.
Cayuga Medical Center, officially referred to as Cayuga Medical Center at Ithaca and abbreviated as CMC, is a not-for-profit general hospital in Ithaca, New York, serving the residents of Broome, Cayuga, Chemung, Cortland, Schuyler, Seneca, Tioga, and Tompkins counties.
The aesthetics of Cayuga Park is largely the creation of Demetrio Braceros, an employee of the San Francisco Recreation and Park Department. Braceros worked on the park for over 20 years, transforming a barren landscape into a park that features lush vegetation, trails, "themed gardens" and, most prominently, over 375 figurines, totem poles and statues as well as several observation decks, all ...
Cayuga County is a county in the U.S. state of New York. As of the 2020 census, the population was 76,248. [2] ... New York (state) portal; Cayuga Community College;
Cayuga Independent School District is a public school district based in Cayuga, Texas in unincorporated Anderson County, Texas . In 2009, the school district was rated " recognized " by the Texas Education Agency .
Southern Cayuga High School is a secondary school (grades 7–12) in Poplar Ridge, Cayuga County, New York. SCHS is operated by Southern Cayuga Central School District. In 2003 it had some 585 students and 45 teachers. The student body was 98% white, and 24% were eligible for free lunch, higher than the state average of 15%.
Cayuga is located at the intersection of Indiana State Road 63 and Indiana State Road 234, in the northern half of the county, near the confluence of the Vermillion and Wabash rivers. According to the 2010 census, Cayuga has a total area of 1.01 square miles (2.62 km 2), all land. [10]
Cayuga was platted by Thomas F. Norton two years later, for Corydon Weed. [3] Population peaked as a village with 160 people in 1898. What would become Route 66 was built along Cayuga in the 1910s. At one point there was a school and two churches, a Presbyterian and a Lutheran. [4]