Hometown Oneonta 05-12-22

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Ion S DIvIS m e t S Sy atIon Inform y

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VISIT www.

►cooperstown 2022 junior ballroom cotillion, pictures on page 3. ►A FEW THOUGHTS ON IMPORTANT THINGS: Our columnists this week tackle local school district budgets, moms who avoid traffic, and a new strain of Omicron, page 4. ►more on local school budgets and polling places, page 6.

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The League of Women Voters of the Cooperstown Area held a candidates’ debate for the two open seats on the Cooperstown Central School District Board of Education last week. There are three candidates running, Alicia Chase, Peter Iorizzo, and Cody Moore. Maureen Murray, Co-president of the LWV of the Cooperstown Area, moderated the event. The school board elections are non-partisan; candidates do not run as members of a party. On Election Day, May 17, voters will also vote on the 2022-2023 district budget. The election will be held at the Cooperstown High School, 39 Linden Ave., Cooperstown from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Any citizen, 18 years of age or older who has been a resident of the district for 30 day preceding the election is qualified to vote. Absentee ballots

are available at the district office. Contact Wendy Lansing at 607-547-5364.

use the VOTE411 guide 24/7 beginning May 8 to compare statements and

The League of Women Voters of the Cooperstown Area also invites voters to use the League’s online voters’ guide, VOTE411, for the upcoming Cooperstown Central School District budget vote and election of members of the school board. All candidates will be invited to participate in VOTE411. The guide will include biographical information about the candidates, candidates’ responses to questions related to school issues, and information on the budget. Voters may

positions among the three candidates. “The League is so pleased to be able to return to inperson candidates’ forums for school board this year,” said Patty MacLeish, Copresident, LWV of the Cooperstown Area. “Those who are unable to attend can learn more about the candidates on our online voters’ guide, VOTE411.” VOTE411 is supported by the League of Women Voters of New York State Education Foundation and the LWV of the Cooperstown Area.

Approach history differently at Hyde Hall with block party and drag show

►need help with local child care? Catholic Charities teams with The Barnyard Swing in Cooperstown for child care event, page 2.

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Use VOTE411 as candidates guide

Jim Kaat made a pre-induction visit to the National Baseball Hall of Fame on Tuesday. “This is humbling. Very humbling; there are so many great players in the Hall of Fame,” Mr. Kaat said. “I know how special this is to be honored. I’m honored to be here as a representative of longevity. When I got the call from Jane Clark, as soon as you hear that name, you know what it’s about. Then Sandy Koufax gave me a piece of advice — keep your speech short!”

►Fly creek Veterinarian julie huntsman shows her art at PrattMWP Gallery in Utica, page 10.

ONEONTA

Oneonta, N.Y., Thursday, May 12, 2022

Left to right: Jane Forbes Clark, Chairman of the Board of Directors for the Baseball Hall of Fame, Margie Kaat, Inductee Jim Kaat and Josh Rawitch, president of the Baseball Hall of Fame

►news briefs from oneonta, cooperstown and gilbertsville-mount upton, page 9.

08 - 2022

AllOTSEGO.com, OTSEGO COUNTY’S DAILY NEWSPAPER/ONLINE

Kaat visits Hall of Fame

►Boston marathon runner from Oneonta crosses the finish line, page 2.

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Local school budget information, page 6

Volume 14, No. 30

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Hyde Hall, at Glimmerglass State Park, hits the ground running with the “Hyde Hall and Glimmerglass State Park Block Party and Opening Day” from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. on Saturday, May 28. The history-filled mansion invites the community for a day of crafts, food, animals and music to kick off an exciting 2022 season, and the park will have camp safety programs, a band on the beach, birdhouse building and a bird hike/tour. “I think you’ll see a lot of changes at Hyde Hall this year,” said John Aborn, Marketing Manager. “We’ve got some really great, new innovative events planned throughout the year.”

The Hall’s board of directors adopted a new, condensed mission statement: Preserve and share Hyde Hall; promote research, and develop inclusive educational programs and events that help diverse audiences to explore, understand, and appreciate history. “We’ve been able to introduce a number of programs this season that are going to allow us to keep to our new mission,” Mr. Aborn said. Among the new events: a drag show! Mr. Aborn said “Hyde Hall in Drag,” set for August 6, will be a “new way to present history and how early agricultural development happened in our region, by using an entirely different artistic approach and scheme to present that story.” “This evening will allow visitors to, through the art of drag, experience an evening of fun and artistic expression that follows the history of Hyde Hall,” he said. “It’s filled with laughter, tears, and oversized wigs.” “We will no longer have any passive engagement experiences here; our programs will be full engagement in experiences that emulate, as close as possible, what history was actually like,” he said. Hyde Hall’s fabulous “Get Lit” event, in July, is always a favorite amongst visitors. “It’s basically a historic cocktail and lighting event,” Mr. Aborn said. “We could have done something as simple as a lecture on the evolution of lighting, but we wanted something more exciting!”

Hyde Hall will pair historic lighting devices on site with a historic cocktail or culinary treat that correlates to the lighting device. “When we featured the argon lamp, which was developed by a Swiss/French chemist in the 1780s, we served a cocktail named Syllabub which is a whipped cream and wine dessert,” Mr. Aborn said. “It’s nice when you can listen to a lecture on lighting and enjoy a new food or drink.” “We’re trying to change the visitor experience and the socio-cultural landscape of what this site can do. We want to make sure we’re presenting Hyde Hall in a very equitable, diverse, and interesting way so we get visitors to come in,” Mr. Aborn said. Hyde Hall, in the past, had been hidebound with a reputation for being boring and dry. That’s about to change. “We are bringing it into more of a modern landscape of what museums should be doing to make sure we have a diverse audience so they have an opportunity to approach history as they’ve never done before,” Mr. Aborn said. “Our new menu of programming isn’t just something the audience will notice, it’s something Hyde Hall as an institution will see differently as well,” he said. “It opens up this entire new world with potential for us as a site. That way we can start thinking about transforming the site and how we present history to local audiences, audiences in central New York and beyond.”

THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA, OTSEGO COUNTY’S LARGEST PRINT CIRCULATION 2010 WINNERS OF The Otsego County Chamber/KEY BANK SMALL BUSINESS AWARD


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Hometown Oneonta 05-12-22 by All Otsego - News of Oneonta, Cooperstown & Otsego County, NY - Issuu