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Celebrate Mother’s Day! FOR IDEAS TO HONOR YOUR MOM ON HER SPECIAL DAY, SEE PAGES A2, 3 & 7

HOMETOWN ONEONTA E!

E FR Volume 6, No. 33

City of The Hills

Family YMCA Takes On City Recreation Program

W

hether you’re just learning how to get in the deep end or ready to show off your best moves, the Oneonta YMCA has

Ian Austin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA

6 In Running For 3 School Board Seats

Complimentary

Oneonta, N.Y., Friday, May 9, 2014

By LIBBY CUDMORE

Mayor Miller presents city’s Commission on Community Relations & Human Rights’ 2014 Trailblazer Award to OHS senior Jenn Stanton during a City Hall reception Tuesday, May 6. More details at WWW.ALLOTSEGO.COM

& The Otsego-Delaware Dispatch

First Round Of Summer Programming Announced an aquatics program for you. The YMCA, which took over the City of Oneonta’s recreation programs last December, announced its first rounds of summer program-

Y members, but anyone can sign up for this,” said Kristy Lawson, operations manager for the YMCA. “You just have to be able to swim 25 yards freestyle and backstroke.” The Y will still offer swimming Please See YMCA, A7

ming this week, including synchronized swimming, swim lessons and a swim at the Briggs Pool in Wilber Park. “We’ve offered the synchronized swimming before to

SUNY-O, Hartwick Pick 7 Sites For Start-Up NY Entrepreneurial Center Among Tax-Free Plans

RUMBLE

@ Damaschke

By JIM KEVLIN

I

T

hree newcomers and three incumbents will vie for three vacancies on the Oneonta City School District Board of Education in the May 20 election. The newcomers are Amy Burnsworth, Dan Butterman and Evelina Richardson. The incumbents are Karen A. Brown, Darren Gaisford and George F. Palladino. The deadline for filing was Wednesday, April 30. PLAY BALL: The Minor League fields next to Doc Knapp Field, not Knapp field itself, have been officially named Richard Murphy Field in honor of the long-time Community Bank team coach, who will retire after this season. FIELDS READY: All city parks playing fields are playable and open for public use, the Parks Department announced. Casual users must make way for groups with permits. Also, please don’t use the fields when they are muddy. SEEK GRANTS: United Way of Delaware and Otsego Counties is offering a grantwriting workshop 9 a.m.-noon Tuesday, May 13, at First UM, 66 Chestnut. Register by noon, May 9, at 432-8006. ACT NOW: The last day that the City of Oneonta will pick up brush and bags at the curb is Friday, May 16.

The Patriot hands out American flags to Tyler Grace, PJ Grace, Eric Burton, Benjamin Schallert, all of Oneonta, and Justin Stewart, Bovina. Former City Clerk Jim Koury, now a WWE organizer, holds a proclamation from Mayor Dick Miller proclaiming May 3rd Rumble on the Mound day in Oneonta. Koury has plans for a repeat next year.

Ian Austin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA

Lucas Wust, Edmeston, in yellow, had a V.I.P seat for the opening brawl between Kenny Bengal and The Game Changer, which opened the “Rumble on the Mound” WWE event at Damaschke Field Saturday, May 3.

t looks like Otsego County may soon be ready to fully participate in Governor Cuomo’s plan to use higher education to attract new business and industry to revive Upstate New York’s long-flagging economy. SUNY Oneonta has identified six sites, and Hartwick College, a seventh – and the biggest: 24 level acres atop Oyaron Hill – that would qualify for the program. Sites identified Lewis in SUNY’s application include “the Susquehanna Regional Business Center for Entrepreneurship” on the fifth floor of 189 Main St., where the county’s “single point of contact” Sandy Mathes moved the county IDA (Industrial Development Agency) as of Monday, May 5. The center for entrepreneurship is envisioned as a collaboration Please See START-UP, A8

SUNY To Duplicate Chobani’s Soho Yogurt Bar By LIBBY CUDMORE

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omegranate and carmelized onion. Zucchini with pesto and tomato. Peanut butter and jelly. You won’t find these Chobani flavors at the grocery store, but come Monday, Aug. 25, and the start of SUNY Oneonta’s next school year, you will be able to find them

– and whatever other flavors you can dream up – at Seasons Café Fitzelle Hall. “It’s a new concept they started at the Chobani Store in SOHO,” said Diane Williams, executive director of SUNY’s auxiliary services. “You pick your yogurt, then mix in sweet and savory to make your own creation.” Seasons Café is another piece in SUNY’s Please See YOGURT, A7

Ward White, supervisor of Mills Dining Hall, shows the graphs and charts that keep track of all the waste from that kitchen. Ian Austin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA

HOMETOWN ONEONTA, OTSEGO COUNTY’S LARGEST CIRCULATION NEWSPAPER 2010 WINNER OF The Otsego County Chamber/KEY BANK SMALL BUSINESS AWARD


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