freemansjournal 5-18-12

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Cooperstown’s Newspaper

O M C O PE

FOSTER BROTHERS SEE NEW BUSINESS IN RETRO MEMORABILIA/B1

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RICHFIELD SPRINGS • CHERRY VALLEY • HARTWICK • FLY CREEK • MILFORD • SPRINGFIELD • MIDDLEFIELD Volume 204, No. 20

COOPERSTOWN AND AROUND

Cooperstown, New York, Thursday, May 17, 2012

Newsstand Price $1

Birch, Marietta Join 2 CCS Incumbents By LIBBY CUDMORE COOPERSTOWN

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ewcomer Marcy Birch of Toddsville led the balloting in the Tuesday, May15, CCS board elections. But incumbents

Tony Scalici, the president, and David Borgstrom received sufficient votes, 346 and 305 respectively, to win another term. The fourth vacant seat – one year, to replace the resigning Paula Greene, went to Andrew Marietta, with 296 votes. First-time candidates Holly Hren and Jonathan Greenberg rounded out the ballot.

The board planned to meet Wednesday, May 16, to reorganize, which could result in Scalici’s reelection as president or the selection of another. The $16,772,080 school budget, which included a 1.89 percent tax increase, passed easily, 401 to 114. “It got off to a slow start because of the rain,” Please See CCS, A8

ROUTE 31, CLOSED BY 2011 FLOOD, REOPENS

The Freeman’s Journal

Dominic Abbate escorts Christianna Fisk through The Otesaga’s lobby en route to the 54th annual Cotillion. (More photos, A7)

Resolution Of 6 Hazing Cases Near HARTWICK

East Lake Road ‘Nailed’ To Glimmerglass Hillside By JIM KEVLIN & LIBBY CUDMORE COOPERSTOWN

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fter three seasons of detours, the breach in East Lake he six court cases that Road’s pavement was being grew out of CCS hazrepaired and trafing scandal are about fic was expected to be resolved, according to to be flowing District Attorney John D. again by Friday, Muehl. May 18, on Since none of the boys the most direct facing hazing-related route between charges have records, he Cooperstown, and the six defense lawyers Hyde Hall and have agreed to ACD (adRoute 20 at East journments in contemplation Springfield. of dismissal), Muehl said. “Thank God If the accused stay out of trouble for six months, their John Reeves, they’re here,” neighbor, leans said neighbor records will be erased. on a stack of John Reeves, blocks used BRING BOOKS: The for the retain- watching the Friends of the Village work proceed ing wall. Library’s final book-colMonday, May lection day for the summer 14. “It was a killer to drive 10 miles book sake is 10 a.m.-noon over the mountain to get to CooperSaturday, May 19, at the stown – people were getting lost, library. Audiotapes, CDs, traffic was backing up, and it would Jim Kevlin/The Freeman’s Journal videos welcome; please, no have been worse if we didn’t have Sikot Mahoxay, general supervisor, Soil Nail Launcher Inc., Denver, Colo., oversees the fourtextbooks. that mild winter.” man crew sinking pilings Monday, May 16, as the East Lake Road pavement, washed out by Please See REPAIR, A8 Tropical Storm Lee, was repaired. RELAY HERE: The 2012 Relay For Life of Cooperstown/ Northern Otsego County steps out at 6 p.m. Friday, May 18, at Cooperstown Dreams Park, and continues overnight. back,” Bob Harlem Jr., By LIBBY CUDMORE Oneonta Block president Congressman Aims To Serve All Otsego GARDEN FEST: The and Citizens Voices coKid Garden at Cooperstown ONEONTA chair, instructed the 50 might connote a tendency Central School’s annual By JIM KEVLIN attendees at the Carriage toward rigidity. Spring Festival is 2:30-6 he pro-business House. “Home Rule legislaIt didn’t turn out that way. p.m. Wednesday, May 23, Citizens Voices met tion is bottled up in comCOOPERSTOWN Having to deal with all types including a sale of herb and Tuesday, May 15, to mittee – you had a hand in of people in a 24-year Army vegetable plants. assess progress made in its this.” hen Republican career taught him to “treat five-month of existence, and The state’s Home Rule Chris Gibson first everybody with dignity and acknowledged some satisdoctrine – where any powran for Congress respect,” he said. “I never The Freeman’s Journal faction. ers not claimed by the state in 2010, he won Tea Party make it personal.” U.S. Rep. Chris Gibson “Pat yourself on the Please See CITIZENS, A2 backing, which to some Please See GIBSON, A9

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Gibson Champions Rural Broad-Band

Citizens Voices Takes Credit For Bottling Up Home Rule

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A-2 THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL

THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2012

Retired IBM Exec Janet Perna, ’74. Commencement Speaker At SUNY Oneonta Perna, ‘70, commencement speaker at the 2012 SUNY Oneonta graduation Saturday, May 19, was part of the IBM team that created that DD2 mainframe, the most widely used database in the world. The SUNY

By LIBBY CUDMORE ONEONTA

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f you’ve ever used an ATM, bought anything from amazon.com or gone to a new doctor and had him or her access your file from your old doctor, you can thank Janet Perna.

Oneonta grad worked for IBM for 31 years, the last 10 as the general manager of Information Management. “We grew that business from less than $1 billion to $4 billion worldwide,� she said. As sneaky graduates update Facebook from their iPhones, Perna will be describing the technology

landscape she went into in 1974. “There is more data storage in my phone than there was in acres of databases back then,� she said. “I was lucky to be part of that evolution.� “When I started,� she continued. “We were programming with punch cards – you had to hand-write your code and feed it into

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town. She soon realized that teaching wasn’t her passion. Though women in technology were rare at the time, Perna was hired by IBM and moved to San Jose, Calif., and from there went on to lead a group building databases in Toronto. Next, she was transferred to company headquarters in New York City as general manager.

Citizens Voices Takes Credit For Bottling Up Home Rule

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a key punch machine. And if you ever dropped those cards, you were never going to get them back in order. When we could enter our program through a terminal screen, it was a huge breakthrough.� A math major, Perna spent the first four years out of college teaching in her hometown of Middle-

CITIZENS/From A1 devolve to the towns – has been the basis for bans on hydrofracking in the towns of Middlefield, Cherry Valley and, just last week, Butternuts. Milford is also considering a ban. State Sen. Jim Seward, R-Milford, had introduced legislation to affirm Home Rule, a move to protect towns that adopt bans from having to fight expensive challenges from naturalgas companies. That’s the legislation Bob Harlem was referring to. Seward’s spokesman Jeff Bishop acknowledged the Home Rule legislation is still waiting to be put on the agenda. “At this point, with the court cases in Middlefield and Dryden, that’s the rule of the land,� he said. “It’s still in with the Senate.� “I love Home Rule,� said Oneonta Town Attorney Richard Harlem, Bob’s brother. “But I don’t want anything that pits neighbor against neighbor. This Home Rule bill is designed to limit property rights.� Bob Harlem ticked off several other successes since Citizens Voices’ inception in late 2011, including slowing down the rush to controversial road-use agreements, which they see as interfering with business growth. “If Chobani has to get a roaduse agreement from Otsego County, they’re going to buy from Chenango,� he said. Moratoriums are another concern, including a 12month one against heavy industry passed by the Town of Oneonta. “When a moratorium outlaws every kind of heavy industry, including pharmaceuticals, it’s kind of scary,� said Harlem. “If you’ve got concerns about gas, voice that concern, but don’t outlaw all industry.� “The problem is overreach,� he said. “Each project should rise and fall on it’s own merits.� Oneonta Town Board member Scott Gravelin countered, “The 12-month

moratorium was put in place to give us time to develop a comprehensive plan – you have to get involved to make sure the plan is done correctly.� Job creation is still the group’s biggest concern for Otsego County. “We need to be pushing to create new jobs,� he said. Tom Armao, Bob Harlem’s co-chair and head of the Public Information working group, said, “In any economic system, scarcity wrecks it. We’ve had a scarcity of opportunity. People are taking their families and moving out of the area. We have to have a reason to stay. We need to build profitable companies we can sell to our children – or someone else – so we can retire here.� “This end of the county hasn’t had much opportunity for growth,� he added. “We need viable businesses for us to survive.� “Many of our problems will go away if we have more jobs,� said Jamie Reynolds, NBT Bank regional executive. “The more people we have working, the better we’ll be on all fronts.� Heathcare and education are on the docket for upcoming meetings. “It’s important for us to drive the bus, so to speak,� said Harlem. “We need mandate relief for the schools and health care reform.� The June 15 meeting, with Seward, Assemblyman Bill McGee, D-Nelson, and Brian Sampson, executive director of Unshackle Upstate, will focus on workers’ compensation concerns. Attendees are encouraged to bring two people with them. “When we have members of government come and share their time with us, we need to come out en masse,� said Harlem. “Small numbers don’t impress them – large numbers do.� “The battle isn’t over,� he said. “It’s an ongoing conversation.�

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THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL A-3

THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2012

Theo Dutcher escorts Alina Bischof across the lobby of The Otesaga en route to the 54th annual Cooperstown Cotillion Friday, May 11.

Rebecca Marmorato watches awestruck as sister Michaela passes by and dreams of her day to come. Maria Noto and Paige Cring share the excitement of anticipation.

THAT SPECIAL

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Mallory Arthur and Scott Segit step into the limelight toward an unforgettable evening.

Jim Kevlin/The Freeman’s Journal

Against Otsego Lake’s signature backdrop, The Sleeping Lion, begowned belles pose for that shot of memories. From left are Olivia Leinhart, Alex Russo, Caroline Gozigian, Olivia Baker, Emmy Dolan, Mallory Arthur, Elizabeth Millea, Jennifer Flynn and Demi Card.

Jane Gozigian and Will Cadwalader make an elegant couple.

Rosemarie Abbatte for The Freeman’s Journal

Scott Curtis and Molly Mooney receive the Hillman Award for best dancers from Dr. Joseph and Karen Dutkowsky, who instruct Cotillion-goers in advance of the ball.

Sadie Michaels, left, and Jenny Aswad mount the steps to The Otesaga’s veranda after a stroll along Otsego Lake’s shoreline.

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Perspectives

THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2012

A-4 THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL

EDITORIAL

Worcester School Renovations Beautiful, But Let’s Look To Future

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t’s another one of those pesky unintended consequences, a whole passel of them, actually. Who didn’t support the Campaign for Fiscal Equity (CFE), which, noting New York State’s wide range of per-pupil costs, sued, seeking to establish a uniform baseline? In 2006, the Court of Appeals, our state’s equivalent of the U.S. Supreme Court, agreed with the CFE, ordering that equal funding be done. That affirmed the rich-district, poor-district system the state Education Department uses to allocate aid. One way the state directed aid to what it defined as poor districts – a faulty definition in say, lake communities like Cooperstown, where the summer homes of the wealthy from elsewhere skew the numbers for everyone else – was through building projects, which led to construction of educational Taj Mahals throughout Otsego County, from Edmeston Central School to Gilbertsville-Mount Upton to Morris to Laurens to Schenevus to Worcester, where Saturday, May 12, the ribbon was cut on a $32.6 million expansion/renovation. We equalized spending, but did we really improve education? Still, the letter of the court decision was met and the state Education

get crisis, Albany is cutting school aid at the same time it is imposing a 2-percent ceiling on tax hikes, which created the crisis surrounding Oneonta’s Center Street School and a pinch everywhere else. Governor Cuomo is right: Localities can’t absorb 7 percent school tax increases year after year when residents’ incomes are rising only 5 percent or 2 percent or not at all. Seven percent would double taxes in 10 years, while someone getting a 2 percent annual raise would see an increase of only 20 percent. (Cuomo is wrong to Jim Kevlin/The Freeman’s Journal State Sen. Jim Seward, R-Milford, Saturday, May impose a tax cap without 12, escorts Virginia Basso, who cut the riblifting state mandates. New bon that officially recognized the completion of York City is now exempt $32.6 million in renovations to Worcester Central from the onerous 1948 School. At left in Supt. of Schools Gary Kuch. Wicks Law, requiring multiple contracts on a single job; Department could check off Stamford. Upstate should be spared a box. Because while all this as well, although too late, This is not necessarily was going on, enrollment given the orgy of school to criticize. Many of our was going through a preconstruction just coming to school buildings were old, cipitous fall – 30 percent a end.) even substandard. For inoverall in the ONC BOCES • stance, Worcester Central’s schools, and in such individStill, the obvious is obvicafeteria was in the baseual districts as Cooperstown ous. Does Otsego County, ment, a code violation that Central. Oneonta did better, with 60,000 people, need required an annual variance but others did worse. 12 school districts? Does it – dangerous, too. So, at a time we probneed 12 districts to serve 30 • ably should have been percent fewer students? The But the incentives were looking at retrenchment, answer is a ringing “probwrong, locking in place we were pouring more and ably not.” an increasingly inefficient more money into school So how many districts do status quo. One of the districts serving fewer and we need? Would two sufexpensive renovations was fewer youngsters. In other fice? Greater Oneonta at the in Jefferson, one of the words, we were investing in south end and Glimmerglass smallest schools in the ONC yesterday’s school districts, Regional at the north, perBOCES region and a prime not tomorrow’s. haps based around Richfield candidate for merger with Now, with the state’s bud-

LETTER

Springs Central, (which has an exceptionally fine plant)? Maintain the elementary schools in the population centers. Perhaps that’s extreme but, with distance learning and the BOCES, perhaps not. There was an exciting discussion about distancelearning initiatives at the CCS candidates’ debate, although as an enhancement to, not a substitute for, human contact – AP Sanskrit for all! Blue-skying it, it makes sense to put the money where we want the growth, or where the growth is going to happen naturally: Certainly, the New City of Oneonta that’s now under discussion, with two colleges, commerce parks, Southside as the regional retail magnet and three I-88 exits, is one logical educational hub. (That’s why closing Center Street School now doesn’t make sense – in a few years, the city district will need more space.) It’s true that we always have the resources to accomplish our priorities, but we have to determine those priorities. Granted, it’s a toxic subject, but the educational establishment is letting us down. If a map exists outlining the optimum school district boundaries of the future, nobody’s talking about it. Yet, it’s an essential con-

versation, otherwise we’re on an ever-more-expensive treadmill, and treadmills lead nowhere. • At the Worcester Central ribbon-cutting, state Sen. Jim Seward, R-Milford, pledged to fight for a funding formula “to better aid communities like Worcester,” to ensure state aid is distributed “in a much fairer way to rural, less wealthy communities.” That would be like saying, 60 years ago, that state aid should be applied to preserving the one-room schoolhouse. While we do look back nostalgically to those days, no one really wants to return to teaching the 3Rs – AP Sanskrit, fuggedaboutit – to the tune of a hickory stick. Our admirable senator, long a member of the Senate Education Committee, knows better. In fact, he’s the logical leader of the conversation for future-looking change in educational funding, the way he has been in recent months in rethinking economic development in Otsego County and reenergizing that conversation. Go for it! Again, there’s no intent to be churlish on Worcester Central’s accomplishment. It’s a delightful building, user friendly, much needed; district residents should be proud. But what’s the big picture?

EMPIRE STATE CARTOON

Schools Must Consider Pupils’ Future Employability To the Editor: The Chronicle Of Higher Education recently tabulated that, between 2007 and 2010, the number of Americans with masters’ degrees who received Food Stamps and other welfare benefits increased from 102,000 to more than 290,000. The number of Ph.D.s on some kind of public assistance jumped from about 10,000 to nearly 34,000. Similarly many younger college graduates are either living home and mowing their parents lawn or toiling away at fast-food restaurants. Unfortunately many of these have pursued college educational credentials that have no real world

marketable values. The recent Cooperstown Central School’s newsletter slated that both technology and business courses are to be curtailed in light of severe financial difficulties. This seems very shortsighted, as such curriculums can lead to immediate employment, especially if augmented by some additional community college attendance. The lock-step guidance •F

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James C. Kevlin Editor & Publisher

Tara Barnwell Advertising Director

ADRIAN KUZMINSKI

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Cooperstown’s Newspaper

Jamie Smith • Rob D’Aloisio Sales Associates Libby Cudmore Reporter

mantra leading each and every single high school student to college enrollment has proven to be in many cases a waste of time and money for both students and parents. Another recent study has determined that, on average, about 10 percent of a district’s yearly budget is spent on athletic programs than benefit less than 3 percent of the students. A switch to intra-mural sports programs, as has been done in many Western states, could help alleviate many budgetary problems in Cooperstown and in other schools as well. BOB O’CON Cooperstown

Mary Joan Kevlin Associate Publisher

Amanda Hoepker Office Manager Tom Heitz Consultant Ian Austin Photographer

Graphics: Scott Buchanan SUCCESSOR PUBLICATION TO The Cherry Valley Gazette • The Hartwick Review The Milford Tidings • The Morris Chronicle • Oneonta Press The Otsego Farmer • The Richfield Springs Mercury OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER FOR Otsego County • Town of Cherry Valley • Town of Middlefield Cooperstown Central School District Subscriptions Rates: Otsego County, $45 a year. All other areas, $60 a year. First Class Subscription, $120 a year. Published Thursdays by Iron String Press, Inc. 21 Railroad Ave., Cooperstown NY 13326 Telephone: (607) 547-6103. Fax: (607) 547-6080. E-mail: info@allotsego.com • www.allotsego.com Contents © Iron String Press, Inc. Periodicals postage paid at USPS Cooperstown 40 Main St., Cooperstown NY 13326-9598 USPS Permit Number 018-449 Postmaster Send Address Changes To: Box 890, Cooperstown NY 13326

OTHER VIEWS

Act Now, Before Trends Force Sustainability On Us

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our readers might be interested to know that over 100 people attended “Meeting the Energy Challenge for Otsego County: Local Solutions, Local Control, Local Jobs,” a conference put on by Sustainable Otsego Saturday, May 5, in Cooperstown. A dozen speakers did a great job in six hours covering many aspects of conservation and renewable energy. They examined everything from the big picture to nuts and bolts, from economics and money to insulation, heating, and renewable installations. A lot of new information was brought together in one place and shared with our local community perhaps for the first time in a systematic way. Powerpoints and other materials presented at the conference are available at the Sustainable Otsego website: sustainableotsego.org One of the initiatives announced at the conference is a conservation

program, “Tighten Up Cooperstown,” which is part of the sustainability initiative of the village. In an outreach effort to be coordinated by Sustainable Otsego Executive Director Antoinette Kuzminski and members of the Village’s environmental committee, in conjunction with NYSERDA, village residents will be contacted with information for financing retrofits and homes and small businesses. More details to be announced. The conference also highlighted the potential of local renewable resources, including biomass, solar, and wind. The potential of local biomass – utilizing wood processing, forest management, and agricultural biomass – is significant in our area. Local production of wood and grass pellets for heating is already underway in our area by Enviro Energy of Wells Bridge. We have plenty of sunshine to support photovoltaics and solar thermal

installations and we have a number of local businesses who install them. The Mohawk Valley Biofuels Cooperative is developing biodiesel for local use. Wind power is also available in our area. As with the other renewables, it turns out that scale is important. Moderately sized local projects strike the best balance between the production of energy we need and the protection of our other local assets. In the case of wind, properly scaled communityowned or municipalized projects seem to provide the best option for meeting this goal. Whether we like it or not, living sustainably is not going to be a choice; it is going to be something we will increasingly be forced to do as we deplete non-renewable resources. Whether that’s a messy or orderly transition depends on what policies we adopt now. Please See OP-ED, A6

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR WELCOME • E-MAIL THEM TO info@allotsego.com


THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL A-5

THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2012

BOUND VOLUMES Compiled by Tom Heitz from Freeman’s Journal archives, courtesy of the New York State Historical Association Library

200 YEARS AGO

Charleston, South Carolina – The Polly, Capt. Daniel, came in on Saturday from the fishing ground, off the bar. Whilst lying there, she was spoken with by the schooner Nancy, Capt. Holland, 14 days from La Guayra. Capt. H. informed, that the Earthquake, which happened at Carraccas, on the 25th of March, was one of the most destructive that has been known since that of Lisbon; he said that more than three thousand houses were destroyed and twelve thousand persons perished. May 16, 1812

175 YEARS AGO

Dr. Channing on Temperance – There is another prey upon which intemperance seizes, still more to be deplored, and that is woman. I know of no sight on earth more sad than woman’s countenance, which once knew no suffusion but the glow of exquisite feeling or the blush of hallowed modesty, crimsoned and deformed by intemperance. Frail woman is not safe. The delicacy of her physical organization exposes her to inequalities of feeling, which tempt to the seductive relief given by cordials. Man with his iron nerves little knows what the sensitive frame of woman suffers, how many desponding imaginations throng on her in her solitude, how often she is exhausted by unremitting cares, and how much the power of self-control is impaired by repeated derangements of her frail system. The truth should be told. In all our families, no matter what their condition, there are endangered individuals, and fear and watchfulness in regard to intemperance belong to all. May 22, 1837

150 YEARS AGO

Refreshment Rooms – Chas. B. Cooley has opened rooms of this character in the upper part of the stone building owned by the Cooley estate, south of the post office, where he will keep on hand refreshments of various kinds, fresh and preserved fruits, and in the season, ice cream, &c. The rooms have been fitted up in neat style, and the ladies and gentlemen are invited to visit them. The proprietor is a young man whose deportment and walk in life has been such during his ten years employment in the Office (the Freeman’s Journal), as warrants us in commending him to the patronage and favor of a public whose confidence and respect he has won, and we trust will ever retain. May 9, 1862

125 YEARS AGO

The Village Building Project was submitted to the free-

75 YEARS AGO

Green College in Cooperstown, New York. Abner Doubleday, the man who invented the game, if you call it an invention, came to our school and interested us boys in his idea. We went out on the college campus, and Doubleday drew the diagram of his game in the sand. It was much like the diamond of today, but the distance between bases was longer, and the distance from pitcher to batter was shorter. We played 11 men in those days; two shortstops and four outfielders.� May 22, 1912

50 YEARS AGO

Members of the Cooperstown Rotary Club were luncheon guests Tuesday of Louis Busch Hager, president and developer of the Woodland Museum north of Cooperstown at the Copper Top Restaurant on the grounds of the village’s newest of five museums. The Woodland Museum will open for its inaugural season on Memorial Day. Rotarians were taken on a guided tour by Mr. Hager of the 12 and a half acre museum complex devoted to nature exhibits, Cooper lore, and history. Starting at the gate house at the entrance to the museum grounds, the guests went along the quarter-mile Nature Trail, first to the Cooper building where dioramas and a topographical map of the Otsego Lake May 19, 1937 countryside depict scenes from James Fenimore Cooper’s “The Deerslayer.� Along the trail there are 100 varieties of holders and taxpayers of Cooperstown on Monday last, wild flowers, unusual root and vine formations, magnificent the polls being open from 12 noon to 3 p.m., and unusual evergreen and hardwood trees, brooks and waterfalls. pains were taken to inform all interested of the fact. Those May 16, 1962 who pay only a poll tax were not deemed to be voters under the special act providing for this election. There are 355 residents on the corporation (85 of whom are women) Genevieve Smith and Ellen Beebe have each completed who are voters, and of these 176, about 50 percent, availed swimming 1,000 miles at the A.C.C. Gym. It takes 36 laps themselves of the privilege on Monday – 109 voting for and 67 against the project. A special effort was made by the or 72 lengths of the pool to make a mile. Over a number of years at two different facilities, the two ladies have each opponents of the project to rally the women voters against completed 36,000 laps – no small feat. it and with so much success that of the 23 votes cast by May 20, 1987 them, 18 were against. So, 104 men voted for, and 49 voted against the project. May 20, 1887 An exhibition on Martin Luther King that is touring the country has strong ties to Cooperstown. Gretchen Sullivan Sorin, the director of the Cooperstown Graduate Program, Baseball Originated Here – More evidence bearing upon was the principal curator of the exhibit titled “In The Spirit the claim of Cooperstown as the birthplace of baseball is of Martin: The Living Legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, presented by J. Arthur Eddy of Chattanooga, Tennessee Jr.� The exhibition featured works of art inspired by the who sends a clipping from the Denver Post of May 9. Mr. words and the life of Martin Luther King, Jr. Recently, Eddy suggests that a monument to the National Game be Sorin was honored for her work with the exhibition when erected in Cooperstown. The article recounts an interview she received the State University of New York Chancellor’s with Abner Graves, a participant in the first game of baseAward for excellence in scholarship and creative activities. ball ever played in the United States. “I was a student at May 17, 2002

25 YEARS AGO

100 YEARS AGO

10 YEARS AGO

S HARE YOUR GOOD MeMorial daY weekend NEWS WITH Honoring Those who Served is there a better reason to buy american? YOUR NEIGHBORS Beginning our 4th Year on Main Street! Thank You!

Great new products for our new Season! Made in new York and Made in america, of course. SNY owner Brenda Berstler

171 Main Street, Cooperstown, New York 547-1870 Open Daily 10am-5pm

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For the latest news, go to

AllOtsego.com


A-6 THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL

THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2012

As Current Power Sources Become Scarcer, We Will Be Thrown Back On Own Resources OP-ED/From A4 Absent the easy availability of concentrated sources of power from fossil fuels, and from other problematic sources such as nuclear power, we will be thrown back increasingly on our own resources. One of the

conclusions which presents itself is that sustainable practices will by and large be local. This means that our communities should have a central role to play in deciding public policy on environmental matters. If that is the case, we

will have to close the gap between the energy we need and the non-polluting energy that is actually available largely by conserving energy in running our homes and businesses and vehicles, and by developing renewables from the sun,

wind, earth, and biomass in our own backyards. Sustainability, it should be added, is not about undermining property rights, but about protecting them. That’s also the best way to protect the environment and our resources. If

Parents & Kids Get ready for summer! Summer Programs

The Decker

corporations and governments can come in and do as they please, we will be the victims not the beneficiaries, and our resources will be lost, not protected. If you didn’t make the conference, you missed a great experience. My

thanks again to the participants, supporters , and to our co-sponsors: OCCA, Brewery Ommegang, and Otsego 2000. Adrian Kuzminski, Fly Creek, is Sustainable Otsego moderator.

GOT KIDS? GET CAMP!

OVERNIGHT CAMP OPEN TO ALL YOUTH 8-16 YEARS OLD

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Camp Open: July 1-August 10, 2012 Call 607-865-6531 for more information or check out our website:

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Summer Summer Fun Fun

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Senior Summer Ballet Workshop July 16 through August 10

SHAKESPEARE (AGES 13 – 19) JULY 10 – AUGUST 3 • 1 – 5 PM

THEATER GAMES (AGES 6 – 9) JULY 16 – 20 • 1 – 4 PM

INTRODUCTION TO ACTING/PLAYWRITING (AGES 9 – 12) JULY 17 – July 20 • 10 AM – 1PM

Fairy Ballet Camp August 13-17

INTRODUCTION TO ACTING (AGES 9 – 12) JULY 24 – AUGUST 3 • 11 AM – 3PM

TECHNICAL THEATER (AGES 12 – 19) JULY 24 – AUGUST 3 • 11 AM –3 PM

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JULY 24 – AUGUST 3 • 1 – 5 PM

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Contact us for a Full Brochure Phone: 607-436-2484 Fax: 607-436-2664 www.oneonta.edu/development/childcenter E-mail: childcenter@oneonta.edu

“Patrick Calleo...is a find. His voice is firm and bright... one of the best American singers now working abroad.” --New Yorker Magazine, Andrew Porter, Oct. 29, 1979

“There is so much un-tapped talent in our area. With some formal training, there are many people in the area that will be able to take their talent to the next level”. --Patrick Calleo

Contact us if you have an interest in • Improving your vocal ability • Receiving professional instruction from one of the best in the industry • Learning how to audition--the ins & outs • Learning stage acting and interpretation ...and much more... NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR Summer claSSeS!

For more information, go to www.patrickcalleopresents.com ScholarShipS available

A TWO-WEEK THEATRE DAY-CAMP for CHILDREN and TEENS, WHERE PARTICIPANTS WILL SHARPEN THEIR SINGING, DANCING & ACTING SKILLS, WHILE HAVING FUN! DIRECTED & INSTRUCTED by THEATRE PROFESSIONALS together with FABULOUS CAMP COUNSELORS, PARTICIPANTS will WORK ON SETS, COSTUMES, and VOCAL MUSIC, as well as SCENES and CHOREOGRAPHY for a CULMINATING PERFORMANCE! SPACE IS LIMITED, REGISTER EARLY! Children’s Group - Grades 1-6* Teen Group - Grades 7-12* Fee Required - 25% family discount for multiple family members *grade level as of June 1st 2012


LOCALS

THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2012

THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL A-7

ROTARY EXCHANGE STUDENTS READY TO TRAVEL

Leti’ts do ain! ag

Sat., May 19.., ...and then the 3rd Sat. of each month!

Glow Golf is back due to Popular Demand! • Starting an 8 week Friday Nights Couples League, organizational meeting May 20 @ noon. • Women’s beginner & competitive league starting soon! CALL FOR MORE INFORMATION Mike (607) 434-9065 or League Director Neil (607) 436-9945 Try Edgewood Golf Course 216 Crow Hill Road Laurens (607) 432-2713 or (607) 434-9065

something different!

Tom Heitz/The Freeman’s Journal

Looking for Fresh Organic Locally Grown Produce This Summer? Love to try new veggies with your

The outbound Rotary Exchange students for 2012-13 are, from left, Grace Livermore (Brazil), Haley Hohensee (Belgium), Taylor Bayes (Germany), Amelia Bruss (Argentina), Ashley Bliss (France), Alicia McArdle (Japan) and Grace Heneghan (Hungary). The students attended Cooperstown Rotary’s Tuesday, May 15, meeting.

old standbys? Join the Susquehanna

Community Supported Agriculture (CSA). Weekly Wednesday deliveries in Cooperstown!

KATZ GRADUATE: Nate Katz, son of Mayor Jeff and Karen Katz, Cooperstown, graduated Saturday, May 12, from SUNY Cobleskill.

20 weeks - starting June 1st - for $350 Work-shares are available!To join Call 638-9016, email info@bigskyfarm.org, or go to www.bigskyfarm.org

NEW ROTARIAN: Brigitte Priem, proprietor, Diastole Lakeview B&B, was inducted into the Cooperstown Rotary Club Tuesday, May 15.

BIG SKY FARM

Wanted

Miracle-Ear Hearing Centers is looking for qualified people to test their latest product, the Open,for for FREE FREE *!! Miracle-Ear® Open,

have Here’s the catch: You must have ding difficulty hearing and understanding your in background noise, and your hearing must fall in the range of thethe hearing aid. People that areare selected will evaluate Miracle-Ear’s Ear’s latest advanced digital hearingring solution – the Miracle-Ear Open. pen. You will be able to walk in to ourour office and walk out hearing †!

Candidates will be asked to to evaluate our instruments for 30 30 days (risk free*). At the end of the the 30 days, if you are satisfied with the h the improvement in your hearing and wish to keep the instrument, youand may do so at tremendous savings.you ngs. But this is only for a limited time! You must schedule yourme! th your 2531, appointment before May March 31, 2012. Don’t wait! Miracle-Ear Hearing Aid Center 440A Main St., Oneonta, NY Miracle-Ear Hearing Center 1-800-909-9910 nter Upper Valley Mall Miracle-Ear Hearing Aid Service Center Inside Springfield SearsNY 29 Pioneer St., Cooperstown, Open Fridays;322-7538 Toll Free: 1-855-258-9368 rs (937)

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6

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Support the Folds of Honor campaign www.foldsofhonor.org

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For Appts. call 432-0400

ADAMS AHOY: Cooperstown’s Sam Goodyear, touring Washington State with his one-man John Adams performance, was grand marshal at the May 1 Loyalty Day parade in Long Beach, Wash., on the Pacific. He recently participated in a naturalization ceremony at Washington’s headquarter’s in Morristown, N.J., an event reported in the Newark StarLedger. WINS PRIZE: Kristin Pullyblank of Fly Creek has received SUNY Oneonta’s Corning Microbiology Award for excellent performance. She is daughter of the Rev. Thomas and Kristin Pullyblank.

Career & Job Fair

Thursday May 17 • 1pm - 5 pm • Holiday Inn • Oneonta

Visit the following companies during our Career & Job Fair and meet with businesses seeking to hire! MAJOR SPONSORS

Century 21 Chesser Realty Bassett Hospital SPONSORS Hometown Oneonta/ The Freeman’s Journal Townsquare Media Key Bank Holiday Inn OPT Sidney Federal Credit Union The Farmers’ Museum Oneonta Daily Star Utica School of Commerce Otsego Delaware JSEC

veNdORS

veNdORS

Mirabito Energy Products Butternuts Beer & Ale Norwich Aero CDO Workforce Fidelis Care Manpower Inc. Berkshire Farm Center & Serv. for Youth Covidien Hampshire House SCORE Precision Pipeline Solutions The Child Care Connection Catskill Area Hospice

CHOBANI, Inc. Oneonta Job Corps SUNY Cobleskill Fox Hospital Nat’l Tractor School Fly Creek Cider Mill Springbrook Otesaga Hotel SUNY Delhi Acco Brands (Mead/Westvaco) Staffworks Robynwood Home Care Opportunities for Otsego

 

Oneonta Country Club

An inviting experience...

Open to the Public! $795 Golf Memberships Still Available

Now the general public can play and enjoy a Semi-Private course with Private course amenities here at the Oneonta Country Club. We are pleased to introduce the addition of our new Director of Golf, Bradley Hess, and that our restaurant has taken new management as the Roundhouse Pub and Grill.

$35 for a golf cart, food & beverage

9 Country Club Drive, Oneonta NY 13820 (607) 432-8950


A-8 THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL

THURSDAY, MAY 17, 2012

In Just 8 Days, Novel Technique Repairs Breach In East Lake Road REPAIR/From A1 The washout occurred last September, during Tropical Storm Lee, nine months or three seasons ago. “The side of the hill just had jets of water shooting through it,” said Reeves. “The water overflowed the ditch and it looked like a raging river. The guard rail was suspend-

ed in the air.” Using a novel technology, it was only expected to take eight days for a crew from Soil Nail Launcher Inc., Denver, Colo., to literally nail the road back up against the sandstone wall on the east side of the road. The nails, 58 of them, were 20feet long, said Sikot Mahox-

ay, the company’s general supervisor. The four men supervised by Mahoxay then shot fastdrying Shotcrete against the bank, and held it in place with a steel mesh while they drove 75 “micro-piles” vertically along a 75-foot path on the lake side of the road. A concrete-block wall

Mondays at 5:00pm First Baptist Church 19 Elm Street, Cooperstown

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was then built atop those piles to the road grade, more Shotcrete filled the gap between the wall and embankment, and the road was repaved. At a cost of $250,000 – Otsego County pays 20 percent – the work began Wednesday, May 9, and was to be completed in a week and a half, according to Ron Tiderencel, the county highway superintendent. Because of the steep drop from East Lake Road to Otsego Lake, Tiderencel said that at first, he wasn’t sure how to proceed. “It was like, ‘Oh boy,’” he said. One idea was to rebuild the hillside. Another, said Reeves, was to span the hole with a bridge. Then, over the winter, Tiderencel and his deputy, Kevin Flint, attended the County Highway Superintendent Association’s winter conference in Albany and saw a program on the naillauncher technology. They said to each other, “This may be the answer’,” Tiderencel said. Two other cracks on East Lake Road need repairing, but that will be done by the county crew. Soil Nail Launcher’s crew had just come from repairing I-75 in Tennessee, one section of which had been extensively washed out by

AllOTSEGO.homes

You Can See for MileS and MileS exCluSivelY offered bY don olin realtY at $749,000. High on a mountaintop 3 miles from Cooperstown 127 acres of privacy awaits. This unspoiled natural setting offers open meadows – hardwoods - pond and stream. The contemporary house offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living & dining room, kitchen, laundry room, 2-car attached garage, front & rear decks, with expansion opportunity for 2 additional bedrooms on the 2nd floor, walk-in shed. Views from the house are breathtaking. Create a nature preserve here for enjoyment for generations to come.

Real Estate Corner: A Weekly Message

SIGNS SELL. Real estate agents know from experience that yard signs are one of the most important elements in selling a home. While it is very important to take advantage of all the marketing tools available to you and your agent, don’t overlook this simple device. Prospects generally choose a neighborhood first. Once they find the best neighborhood for their family, the yard signs announce which homes are for sale. When the prospective home buyers see an exterior they like, they will make an appointment to see the interior. At this point, sellers know the prospect has genuine interest.

For reliable, honest answers to any of your real estate questions, Don Olin Realty at 607.547.5622 or visit our website www.donlinrealty.com

For Appointment Only Call: M. Margaret Savoie – Broker/Owner – 547-5334 Marion King – Associate Broker – 547-5332 Don Olin – Associate Broker – 547-8782 Eric Hill – Associate Broker – 547-5557 Don DuBois – Associate Broker – 547-5105 Tim Donahue – Associate Broker – 293-8874 Cathy Raddatz – Sales Associate – 547-8958 Jacqueline Savoie -Sales Associate -547-4141 Carol Hall - Sales Associate -544-4144

Don Olin REALTY

Make yourself at home on our website, www.donolinrealty.com, for listings and information on unique and interesting properties.We'll bring you home! 37 Chestnut st., Cooperstown • phone: 607-547-5622 • Fax: 607-547-5653

www.donolinrealty.com

PARKING IS NEVER A PROBLEM

Make yourself at Home on our website http://www.donolinrealty.com for listings and information on unique and interesting properties. We'll bring you Home!

Thinking of Remodeling? Think of Refinancing!

LGROUP@STNY.RR.COM www.leatherstockingmortgage.com 607-547-5007 (Office) 800-547-7948 (Toll Free)

New Purchases and refinances • Debt Consolidation Free Pre-Qualification • Fast Approvals • Low Rates Registered Mortgage Broker Matt Schuermann NYS Banking Dept. Loans arranged by a 3rd party lender. 31 Pioneer Street, Cooperstown (directly next door to Stagecoach Coffee)

Jim Kevlin/The Freeman’s Journal

Soil Nail Launcher crew members Pat Navasack, William Yaden and Toui Thammassene drive 75 “mini-piles” on a 75-foot path alongside East Lake Road. At the bottom of the steep slope is Otsego Lake. The west side of the lake is in the distance.

recent rains. “There’s been a lot of rain,” said Mahoxay, who is headquartered in Denver. “That’s our job security.” Added his assistant, Patrick Ross, a Tennessean, “We used to hate rain.” And everyone smiled. Once East Lake Road (County Route 31) was complete, the crew planned to cross the lake and firm up sections of West Lake Road

Birch, Marietta Join CCS Board CCS/From A1 said Wendy Lansing. “But it was pretty steady all night. And most people came out – of the 525 votes, only 24 of them were absentee ballots.” It appeared to be a

29 Pioneer St., Cooperstown, NY

ASHLEY

R E A LT Y

CONNOR

(State Highway 80) damaged last summer’s storms. Tiderencel said the most significant projects still remaining from the flood are the repairing the washedout County Route 50 bridge near the Roseboom Town Barn, replacing a wing wall on a bridge in the Town of Otsego, and stabilizing roads undermined in the Town of Oneonta.

607-547-4045

Patricia Ashley – Licensed Real Estate Broker/Owner

Brand new Listing On the market for the first time in almost 50 years, this Colonial style 1929 Village home is on a large lot and offers just about 2,000 square feet of living space. In a very nice location, this four bedroom, two bath home has a lovely entryway with brick steps as well as a brick floored glassed in area leading into the center hall with open staircase. French doors lead to the dining room on the right and French doors lead to the large living room on the left with a brick fireplace. A side door leads to a charming porch. A den is tucked in at the rear and the eat-in kitchen, mudroom and three-quarter bath are at the back of the house. Upstairs are four sunny bedrooms and a full bath. A full walk-up attic offers the possibility of more space. A back porch overlooks the pretty yard and the two-story carriage barn serves as parking and storage. Hardwood floors, original doors and hardware throughout. In need of updating, this very well built, well laid out home has the potential of being a village jewel.

Offered Exclusively by Ashley-Connor Realty $339,000.

slightly higher turnout than last year, she said. Scalici, who has served on the school board for 18 years, said, “This is not a game for an individual,” and predicted “the board, as a group, will come up with goals this summer.” Among the immediate challenges at hand are implementation of more rigorous APPRs, annual professional performance reviews, required by the state Education Department. “They’re very regulated and very demanding,” Scalici said, “and it changes the whole dynamic by formulating structures and applying very specific benchmarks so administrators have better control over teachers who aren’t meeting expectations.” With the campaigning done and the school year almost finished, Scalici knows it’s time to start planning. “We’re going to figure out our priorities – what we did last year, what we’ve got coming down the pike.” There were no proposals on the ballot.

Visit us on the Web at www.ashleyconnorrealty.com • Contact us at info@ashleyconnorrealty.com

For APPoiNtmeNt: Patti Ashley, Broker, 544-1077 • Jack Foster, Sales Agent, 547-5304 •

Nancy Angerer, Sales Agent, 435-3387 Donna Skinner, Associate Broker, 547-8288 • Amy Stack, Licensed Sales Agent, 435-0125

Home of the Week Traditional style Fly Creek ranch on 9+ serene country acres price improved on this lovingly maintained and highly energy efficient 4200sq ft. 7 bedroom & 3 bath home. Room for the whole family and more! Offering sunny spacious rooms with lower level suitable for mother-daughter, w separate kitchen, entrance and parking. Currently is used as dreams park rental for income, or could be annual lease. Too any amenities to list in this quality built home.

Offered at $475,000

Dave LaDuke Broker 435-2405; Mike Winslow Broker 435-0183; Tony Gambino 516-384-0095; Rob Lee 434-5177; Mike Swatling 435-6454; Joe Valette 437-5745; Laura Coleman 437-4881

216 Main Street, Cooperstown NY • 607-547-8551 • fax: 607-547-1029


Thomas

THURSDAY-FRIDAY, MAY 17-18, 2012

AllOTSEGO.life B-9

OBITUARIES Homer O. Fassett, 91; Farmer Ran Equipment Dealership, Sugarbush

Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About Pairing Burgundy With Food

BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK!

EAST SPRINGFIELD – Homer O. Fassett, 91, the oldest family member in the area and author of “Homer’s Book,” a history of the historic farm where Fassetts lived for generations, passed away at home May 13, 2012, following a long illness. He was born July 19, 1920, at the family homestead in East Springfield, son of Owen and Iva (Richards) Fassett. He graduated from the East Springfield Union School in 1939. Homer worked for his father on the farm and for the Fassett Farm Machinery, purchasing the dealership from his father in 1948. He operated the dealership until he sold it to his son in 1984. He and brothers Kermit and Myron continued repairing Case balers after his retirement. For decades, he was very active in his family’s maple syrup business, and longtime residents remember him retrieving sap buckets in late winter on a horse-drawn sled from his sugarbush on Van Alstine Road. In summers, he could be seen splitting wood in preparation for the next season. Sugaring ceased in 2000, after 90 years, but this past season, when he remarked he would like to see sugaring underway again, family members and volunteers tapped trees and boiled off sap for his enjoyment. He was a charter member of the Springfield Fire Department, which merged in 1946 from the Springfield

May Burgundy Wine Tasting • Friday, May 25th Uncorks at 5:30PM • Templeton Lounge

Only $25.00

(including tax & service charge) Reservations are required.

So you’re having friends over for dinner and you want to be sure to serve the correct wines throughout your meal. Join Sommelier Chad Douglass at The Otesaga’s May Burgundy Wine Tasting on Friday, May 25th at 5:30PM. Learn everything you ever wanted to know about pairing Burgundy with food. $25.00 includes the one-hour wine tasting with paired small plate samplings. Of course you must be at least 21 years old to participate.

To make Wine Tasting or Main Dining Room reservations, please contact Maitre d’ Lori Patryn at (607) 544-2519. For Hawkeye reservations call (607) 544-2524.

OUR FOUR COURSE MENU APPETIZER Grilled Oyster with Fennel Butter Domaine Jean-Claude Bessin “La Foret” Chablis 1er Cru, 2008 SALAD Asparagus and Smoked Salmon Salad Georges Dubœuf Pouilly Fuisse, 2009 ENTRÉES Chicken with Morel and Tarragon Cream Françoise & Denis Clair Côte-de-Beaune Villages, 2009 Estouffade de Noël Dominique Laurent Gevrey-Chambertin, 2009

PLEASE… STAY FOR DINNER! After our Wine Tasting, we hope you’ll enjoy dinner in our Hawkeye Grill or The Hotel’s Main Dining Room.

O v e r 1 0 0 Ye a r s o f G r a c i o u s H o s p i t a l i t y ® THE OTESAGA RESORT HOTEL 60 LAKE STREET, COOPERSTOWN, NY • OTESAGA.COM

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30 HWY MPG!

ONLY $329/mo ONLY $349/mo 2012 Honda Odyssey EX 2012 Honda Pilot EX-L 4WD 8 Passenger, Power Seat, Power Doors, #12236 MSRP $32,235 27 HWY

MPG!

Lease for 36 mos./36k miles

ONLY $379/mo

24 HWY MPG!

8 Passenger, Moon-Roof, Heated Leather, #12316 MSRP $37,150

Lease for 36 mos./36k miles

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**Based on 2012 EPA mileage estimates. Use for comparison purposes only. Do not compare to models before 2008. Your actual mileage will vary depending on how you drive and maintain your vehicle

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OPEN FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE: mon. tues. & thurs. 9am-7:30pm • wed. & fri. 9am-5:30pm • sat. 9am-5pm

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65 Oneida St. • Oneonta • NY

607-433-1251

Owego • Bainbridge • Sidney • Oneonta

Family of Dealerships Owego • Bainbridge • Sidney • Oneonta

Steve Scoville

t

Jim Meno

2012 Chrysler 200 Touring Sedan Heated Seats, Remote Start, U-Connect MSRP: $22,875 Stk 51

18,994

$

Pay $299 72 mos

31 HWY MPG!

2012 Dodge Grand Caravan

U-Connect, Stow n Go, A/C MSRP: $24,520 Stk T2534

Pay $369 $23,957 72 mos 25 HWY MPG! 2012 Jeep Compass 4WD Auto, Power Eqp., Cruise MSRP: $23,025 Stk T2577

2012 Jeep Wrangler Sport 4 WD Hardtop, V6, A/C, Auto MSRP: $25,895 Stk T2594

$21,415 $24,907 Pay $329 72 mos

Pay $379 72 mos

2012 RAM 1500 Reg. Cab 4WD SLT Auto, 5.7V8, Hitch MSRP: $32,675 Stk T2563

2012 RAM 1500 Quad Cab 4WD SLT

$27,692 $30,367 Pay $429 72 mos

Pay $459 72 mos

2011 Dodge Ram Quad SLT 4WD V8, Pwr. Eqp., Prev. Rental Stk# B4245, 18k miles

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2008 Jeep Liberty Sport 4WD

$23,999

Pay: $379 / 72 mo.

Moon, Pwr. Eqp, Cruise Stk#2601A, 45k miles

$14,999

Pay: $249 / 66 mo. *new pricing includes all applicable rebates. Must qualify for payments - $1,500 down plus tax and tag fees. MPG based loyalty where applicable - must own ‘99 or newer Chrysler product. qualify for payments plus tax72 and tag fees. lease signing, taxon and tags extra. All traditional financeMust payments based upon- $1,500 $1500down down for months. 2011 EPA estimates.

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Automatic, Moon, Heated Lthr. #12203 MSRP $28,325

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Center and East Springfield companies, and he remained active as a firefighter, then with the fire police, until recent years. He was seventh-degree Granger and member of the First Presbyterian Church of Springfield. He enjoyed hunting deer and turkeys, fishing with his friends in Canada, and traveling with his family. Summer found him weeding his garden or working with his beautiful flowers. Survivors include his wife Evelyn Huntley Lundholm Fassett, son Loren (Beth), sister Velma Armstrong, brothers Kenneth (Julia), Kermit (Irene), Myron (Madeline), grandchildren Terry (Jodi), Mary, Scott (Andrea), great grandchildren, nieces and nephews. He was predeceased by his wife Leola Styles Fassett, brother Ervin, sisters Erma (Leland) Vunk and Dorothy (Farron) Benjamin, and a step-daughter Ruth Lundholm. Calling hours are 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. Wednesday, May 16, at the Ottman Funeral Home, with services at 11 a.m. Thursday, also at the funeral home. Burial will follow in the Springfield Center Cemetery. Memorial donations may be made to Catskill Area Hospice, 1 Birchwood Drive, Oneonta, NY 13820 or Springfield Fire Department, P O Box 358, Springfield Center, NY 13468. Arrangements are entrusted to the Ottman Funeral Home, Cherry Valley.

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Bob Haywood

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B-10

AllOTSEGO.life

OBITUARY

THURSDAY-FRIDAY, MAY 17-18, 2012

Oneonta Native Bill Yates, 84; Civil Rights, Anti-War Activist, Tried With ‘Buffalo 9’

Bill Yates

ONEONTA – William John Yates, 84, an anti-war and civil rights activist, passed away on May 9, 2012, in his native Oneonta. After serving 1943-46 in the Navy, he began his college career, becoming an assistant professor of English at SUNY

Buffalo, then a counselor at SUNY Brooklyn. Aside from his passion for literature, poetry and the English language, his greatest contributions were in civil rights, labor rights and justice for people. An early civil rights activist with the original Congress on

Racial Equality, Yates was in the heat of the movement registering voters and spreading literacy in the Deep South and Louisiana. The Ku Klux Klan hung him in effigy, and he was repeatedly beaten for working on behalf of impoverished blacks.

AllOTSEGO.

He went back to the SUNY Buffalo campus as a student and became active in the resistance against the Vietnam War. The organizer of the Students for a Democratic Society, Yates Bill was convicted at what became known as the “Buffalo Nine” trial, where he

was also cited for contempt of court for refusing to stand when the judge entered. He served three years in prison. After his released, he returned to SUNY Brooklyn, helping inner city youth. He retired and moved back to his hometown of Oneonta.

auto

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May is Your New Ride Month at Country Club Motors!

2012 GMC Sierra SLE Ext Cab 4x4

TEST DRIVE THE ALL NEW

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MSRP CC Discount Trade Assist Rebate Cash Down

Buy For

$37,360 – $2,158 – $2,000 – $2,500

$30,702 Lease For

42642

$

$

PER MONTH

0% - 72 mos.

359 MO./39 MOS.

2012 Buick Verano 4 Door Luxury - Economy - Class Leather, Loaded, ALL NEW

MSRP CC Discount Cash Down

32

MPG HWY

399

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359 MO./39 MOS.

2012 Chevy Malibu LS 4 Door 32

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MSRP CC Discount Chevy Rebate Cash Down

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273

$

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MPG HWY

$23,370 – $644 – $3,000 – $2,500

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2012 Cadillac CTS All Wheel Drive All Power, Ultraview Roof

MSRP CC Discount Dealer Cash Cash Down

Lease For

$

379

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2012 GMC Terrain All Wheel Drive

28

MPG HWY

SLE, 4 Cyl., Power Options, OnStar-XM

MSRP CC Discount Your Price Cash Down

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$24,838 Lease For

393

$

$

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299

MO./39 MOS.

LS, 4 Cyl., Power Options, OnStar-XM

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29

MPG HWY

$22,764 Lease For

360

$

$

PER MONTH

$36,408

26

MPG HWY

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$43,530 – $1,750 – $2,500

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$

$39,280

499

MO./39 MOS.

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512172 2008 Silverado Reg Cab - W/T pkg, 4x4, 8 ft. box...........63k...$16,395...$219 512361 2007 Envoy SLE 4x4 - all power, AC, loaded...................66k...$16,395...$219 720141 2008 Silverado Reg Cab - W/T pkg, 4x4, short box.........50k...$19,395...$267 313221 2008 Envoy SLT - 4x4, leather, 6 cyl, OnStar....................53k...$19,995...$276 120041 2009 Equinox Sport AWD - V6, leather, sunroof, loaded. .40k...$20,995...$280 711021 2007 Acadia AWD SLE - all power, AC, OnStar...............54k...$21,495...$300 313531 2009 Acadia AWD SLE - V6, all power..........................60k...$22,395...$301 320191 2008 Silverado Ext Cab - W/T pkg, 4x4, AC...................48k...$21,695...$303 711411 2007 Envoy Denali AWD - sunroof, Navigation, leather.....43k...$21,895...$306 711391 2007 Silverado 2500 Reg Cab - 4x4, LT power options...35k...$21,995...$308 320841 2010 Equinox AWD LT - auto, power options, V6.............34k...$22,895...$309

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MSRP CC Discount Cash Down

38

MPG HWY

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238

$

PER MONTH

MO./39 MOS.

MSRP – $30,690

249

2012 Chevy Cruze LS

Loaded, Luxury from Cadillac

$42,785 – $1,877 – $2,000 – $2,500

28

MPG HWY

$26,090 – $826 – $25,264 – $2,500

MO./39 MOS.

2012 Cadillac SRX All Wheel Drive

359

2012 Chevy Equinox All Wheel Drive MSRP CC Discount Your Price Cash Down

$28,265 – $927 – $27,338 – $2,500

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$

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2011 BUICK REGAL TURBO SEDAN NEW Sunroof, 2.0 DOHC 4 cyl. Turbo, leather seats, 6 speed manual transmission, full power options, heated seats, OnStar, XM Radio, Auto Temp AC, cruise control. LEFTOVERS LUXURY SEDAN WITH LUXURY COMPONENTS IN AN ECONOMY CAR. PER MONTH

$

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$38,930

MO./39 MOS.

$343

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42532

25,995

$37,295 – $2,172 – $2,000 – $2,500

$30,623

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720320 2010 Aveo LS Sedan - 5 speed, AC, OnStar, 4 cyl............32k. . .$11,995...$143 120581 2011 Aveo LS Sedan - 5 speed, OnStar, 4 cyl....................6k...$13,995...$173 112211 2008 Malibu 2LT - V6, loaded, OnStar, AC.......................52k...$15,895. . .$211 720031 2009 Buick Lucerne CXL - leather seats, all power.........46k...$19,395...$256 520451 2009 Buick Lucerne CXL - leather seats, all power.........27k...$19,695...$260 720390 2012 Impala LT Sedan - V6, all power, sunroof................11k...$19,995...$263 420151 2008 Buick Lucerne CXL - V6, leather seats, all power....29k...$19,495...$268 720400 2012 Impala LTZ Sedan - V6, sunroof, leather seats........17k...$21,995...$293 410631 2011 Buick Regal CXL - leather, sunroof, loaded.............22k...$22,795...$305 610151 2009 Cadillac CTS - All wheel drive, sunroof, V6...............53k...$23,495...$316

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3,200

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MSRP CC Discount Trade Assist Rebate Cash Down

with eAssist

$25,385

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2013 MALIBU • 37 MPG HWY • 2.4 Liter 4 Cyl. Engine • Regenerative Braking

2012 Chevy Silverado 1500 Ext Cab 4x4

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5692

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610371 2010 Equinox AWD LT - auto, power options, 4 cyl..........20k...$23,395...$316 320931 2009 Sierra Ext Cab 1500 SLE - all power, 4x4............47k...$24,895...$339 313751 2009 Sierra 1500 Ext Cab SE - all power, 4x4...............46k...$24,895...$339 410351 2009 Enclave CX AWD - V6, all power, OnStar...............50k...$24,895...$339 312721 2010 Silverado 1500 Ext Cab LT - Z71, 4x4, all power. .32k...$25,995...$356 312761 2009 Acadia SLE 4x4 - V6, all power, AC.......................43k...$25,995...$356 313011 2010 Silverado 1500 Ext Cab LT - 4x4, power options...29k...$26,295...$360 520032 2009 Silverado 1500 Ext Cab LT - 4x4, power options...28k...$26,295...$360 320421 2008 Silverado Ext Cab LT - 4x4, Z71 pkg., OnStar........14k...$25,895...$369 512261 2009 Envoy Denali AWD - leather, sunroof, Navigation.....24k...$26,995...$371 520611 2008 Yukon 4x4 SLE - dual power seats, loaded..............44k...$25,995...$371 112341 2010 Sierra 1500 Ext Cab SLE - all power, 4x4.............26k...$27,195...$374 520491 2010 Sierra 1500 Ext Cab SLE - 4x4, all power............21k...$27,395...$377 320851 2008 Yukon Hybrid - leather, sunroof, MPG!....................80k...$26,395...$377 520561 2010 Yukon SLE 4x4 - Tow Pkg., V8, loaded...................55k...$29,595...$410 520301 2009 Silverado 2500 Crew Cab - pwr. options, tow pkg. .19k...$29,995...$416 313738 2008 Suburban 4x4 CT - 3 rows of seats, loaded............58k...$28,995...$419 321091 2009 Sierra 3500 Reg Cab - 4x4, Duramax Diesel..........53k...$30,395...$422 320111 2008 Tahoe 4x4 LT Pkg - V8, all power.........................44k...$29,895...$433 320101 2010 Silverado 2500 Ext Cab LTX - 4x4, loaded..........40k...$31,095...$433 520601 2010 Silverado 1500 Ext Cab LTZ - 4x4, leather..........18k...$31,995...$447 111873 2007 Escalade EXT - 4x4, all power, sunroof, Navigation....52k...$32,895...$480 520011 2009 Silverado 2500 Crew Cab - 4x4, Duramax Diesel. .37k...$38,995...$553


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