A
LL IN THE
a vehicle Before you buivye us a chance g anywhere elseo,ur best deal! to beat y , nY RStown , Coope wn.com h t u o S o 8 Route 2 mithcooperst www.s 9 -9 24
Volume 8, No. 34
City of The Hills
HOMETOWN ONEONTA E!
E FR
W
Mayor Wants ALL Of Cuomo’s Downtown Money declared Oneonta “a cool town.” That caused dad (and mayor) Gary Herzig to focus even more intently on the prize: $10 million in downtown rehabilitation money
Governor Cuomo intends to spend in the Mohawk Valley Economic Development Region. Herzig had to act quickly. He only learned three weeks ago the
READ THE REPORT, ”Authentically Oneonta: City On The Rise,” at
AllOTSEGO.com
www.
application was due at 4 p.m. Tuesday, May 24. Collaboration Please See REPORT, A7
President’s Contract Extended Until 2024
2015 Challenges Fade, Enrollment Is On Rise Again
MORE ON RELAY, A4
Suspect Still Sought After County Heist
Complimentary
Herzig Seeks $10 Million To Revive ‘Cool’ Oneonta hen his daughter, Sasha, a lawyer in Brooklyn, departed with friends after a recent weekend at home, she
Jim Kevlin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA
& The Otsego-Delaware Dispatch
Oneonta, N.Y., Friday, May 27, 2016
By LIBBY CUDMORE
Girl Scout Amethyst Gardner, Troop 30728, Oneonta, carries the flag in the Northern Otsego Relay for Life opening ceremonies Saturday, May 21, at Cooperstown Dreams Park. Behind her is Scout Jillian Lahood/
AMILY
PORTLANDVILLE FAMILY INCLUDES 3 GENERATIONS OF NAVY NON-COMS/B1
ve a $ d n a l a c o buy l 607-547
F
By JIM KEVLIN
T
his spring’s faculty challenges to Hartwick College President Margaret L. Drugovich are settled. The college’s Board of Trustees announced t press time, law Tuesday, May 25, that it had enforcement officials approved a new contract with throughout Otsego Drugovich – an eight-year one; County were asking the her third, after two four-year public for help capturing the ones – that will extend her leadsuspect in the Monday, May ership on Oyaron Hill until 2024. 23, robbery at the NBT Bank “The board is confident that in Edmeston. Dr. Drugovich will continue to For photos, plus updates inspire and to lead this commuas they happen, visit nity of dedicated scholars, teachwww. OTSEGO.com ers, administrators and students and that she is the right leader for this time in NEVER FORGET: The Hartwick’s history,” said Francis D. Landrey, a city’s Memorial Day parade New York City attorney and chair of the trustees, down Main Street begins in announcing the extension. at 10 a.m., Monday, May Please See PRESIDENT, A3 30, followed by an 11 a.m. ceremony at the Veterans ►85TH HARTWICK GRADUATION Ian Austin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA Memorial Walkway in Nicole Marie Barown, Hartwick, receives her Bachelor of Science degree from Neahwa Park. UNDER OYARON HILL TENT/B3
A
All
TOP HONOR: OHS senior Sarah Brackett received this year’s $3,000 Parisian Foundation scholarship in honor of State Trooper Ricky Parisian, killed in 1994 trying to stop a robbery at a Southside supermarket. FEEL THE BURN: As part of his “Life & Safety” class at OHS, OFD Capt. Brad Smith set a mock dorm room on fire for collegebound seniors Monday, May 23, to demonstrate how quickly flames can spread. The furniture burned in less than three minutes.
Hartwick College President Margaret L. Drugovich at the Saturday, May 21, during commencement exercises on Oyaron Hill.
With ‘Others’ Award, Salvation Army Ceremony Surprises 42-Year Stalwart she asked them to join her at the luncheon. “I haven’t been feeling well, so I thought they had come hen Sharon Haines, to help me around the house,” she Salvation Army office said. manager and 42-year Then, Maj. Timothy Higgins, soldier in the cause, was invited Empire Division representative, to the corps’ volunteer celebration began talking about the “Others” reception, she didn’t think anyAward, one of the Army’s highest thing of it. honors. HOMETOWN ONEONTA Her son Gordon and her “I won’t tell you her name yet,” Award thrilled grandchildren were in town, so Please See HAINES, A2 Sharon Haines. By LIBBY CUDMORE
W
SUNY Undergrads ‘Save The Children’ In Bolivia By LIBBY CUDMORE
T
he e-mails started arriving the other day from Cochabamba, Bolivia. “We spend an hour in the classroom, and when they see us later in the day, they yell, ‘When are you coming back?’” wrote SUNY
Oneonta student Meghan Smith. “It’s such a happy thing to walk into a classroom knowing you’ll be greeted with open arms and smiles on their faces and hugs,” wrote Lucy Holecek, another of SUNY poly-sci professor Brett Heindl’s students. “So many of these kids Please See BOLIVIA, B7
HOMETOWN ONEONTA, OTSEGO COUNTY’S LARGEST CIRCULATION NEWSPAPER 2010 WINNER OF The Otsego County Chamber/KEY BANK SMALL BUSINESS AWARD