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HOMETOWN ONEONTA
& The Otsego-Delaware Dispatch Oneonta, N.Y., Friday, March 9, 2018 Visit www.AllOTSEGO.com E!
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Volume 10, No. 22
City of The Hills
Nancy Kleniewski’s Legacy: Help Neediest $250K Raised For $300K Scholarship In President’s Name
By LIBBY CUDMORE ONEONTA
A
t SUNY Oneonta, 42 percent of students are the first in
their family to go to college. And with the endowed Dr. Nancy Kleniewski Scholarship, the retiring SUNY Oneonta president can ensure many of those
first-generation students will graduate with less debt and a strong start on careers. “This scholarship is consistent with one of her four wishes for her students,”
said Paul Adamo, vice president for College Advancement. “She has emphasized to us, as an institution, that it is a priority that our students graduate without
20 NEW JOBS IN ONEONTA
Ian Austin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA
Adrian Essendelft dips wife Heather during one of Incognito’s final numbers at the second annual Masquerade & Casino Night fundraiser Saturday evening, March 3, at the Oneonta Boys and Girls Club.
Tentrr Opens LOCAL PLANT Tentrr Director of Manufacturing Jim Hanley shows off a “glamping” suite being produced in Oneonta. Below, Tammy Fletcher, Oneonta, is one of company’s 20 new employees.
ONEONTA
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CHILD ARRESTED: An 8-year-old was arrested by Delaware County Sheriff’s deputies and charged with the felony of making terroristic threats after he allegedly threatened to burn down the Charlotte Valley Central School. NEW PASTORS: Main Street Baptist has voted to call Rev. Kenneth J. Zulkosky and Rev. Philip J. Livermore to the positions of senior pastor and executive pastor, respectively. Their appointment comes following the retirement of Rev. Gary Bonebrake last year.
Hartwick: D-1 Teams At An End Drugovich: Money Will Help To Make Tuition Affordable By JIM KEVLIN ONEONTA
Students Show Solidarity With Parkland March tudents from across Otsego County are being invited to join in a sister march to the Parkland, Fla., students’ March For Our Lives at 10 p.m. on Saturday, March 24, in Washington, D.C. The local march will start at the Oneonta High School and proceed to Muller Plaza, where there will be speakers and a letter-writing campaign. For more information, email Abbey Koutnik at marchforourlivesoneonta2018@gmail.com.
extremely high debt.” President since 2008, Kleniewski will retire June 30, and $247,786 has already been raise to establish the $300,000 namesake scholarship. Please See LEGACY, A2
Ian Austin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA
‘Glamping’ Pioneer Locates At Pony Farm By LIBBY CUDMORE ONEONTA
B
y the time a naked girl ran through Michael D’Agostino’s campsite, he’d had enough. “She was yelling that she had seen a UFO,” he said. “There were 40 people on the site across from where my wife and I were trying to camp, and it was nuts.”
It was that disastrous camping trip that inspired D’Agostino to create Tentrr, which, far from the madding crowd, provides people with private campsites, complete with tent, bedding, outdoor toilet and bathing facilities, a kitchen and chairs, designed and installed by the company and ready for use. Please See TENTRR, B7
NY Senate Creates School-Resource Officer Program
Developer Plans Luxury Rentals In Cooperstown By PARKER FISH COOPERSTOWN
Ferrara
A
ll the glamour of Manhattan living, with the clean air and pristine views of
Otsego Lake. Perry Ferrara, who cut the ribbon on The Railroad Inn, 28 Railroad Ave., last Nov. 9, is in the early stages of developing upscale apartments in the Key Bank building that he owns at 103 Main St.
F
ormer SUNY controller Dick Miller arrived as Hartwick College president in 2003 on a financial rescue mission. One of his first steps was to announce the college’s two Division I teams – soccer and water polo – would be shifted to Division III. Reignite Drugovich the Wick – alumni inspired by memories of 1977, when 4,000 fans would pack Elmore Field as the Hartwick then-Warriors battled to a national title – organized, lobbied and prevented the move. In 2007, his retirement year, Miller and Karl E. Mosch, ’69, then trustee chair, tried again. Reignite the Wick caught fire again and began fundraising, and Please See DECISION, A7
Nonetheless, Ferrara, who operates a construction company on Long Island in addition to his local enterprises, hopes to have the apartments ready to rent by the end of the year. “What I’m going for is sort Please See FERRARA, B8
W
ith state Sen. Jim Seward’s support, the state Senate Monday, March 5, passed a package of bills that allows the creation of “school resource officers” to bring down in-school shooters, and money to pay for the program. The Senate bill was sent on to the Assembly. Details at
AllOTSEGO.com
www.
HOMETOWN ONEONTA, OTSEGO COUNTY’S LARGEST CIRCULATION NEWSPAPER 2010 WINNER OF The Otsego County Chamber/KEY BANK SMALL BUSINESS AWARD