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Volume 214, No. 24
Crafts, pickleball, and art! Photos on page 7 VISIT www.
AllOTSEGO.com, OTSEGO COUNTY’S DAILY NEWSPAPER/ONLINE
Cooperstown, New York, Thursday, June 16, 2022
Newsstand Price $1
Clark Foundation gives $750,000 in first-year scholarships
Brothers Isaac (l) and Clayton (r) Carpenter had dinosaurs on their minds as they jumped in to one of the family-friendly outdoor art activities in Cooperstown’s Pioneer Park on June 11 celebrating the park’s new mural that tips its hat to the Fenimore Art Museum’s Drawn from Life: Three Generations of Wyeth Figure Studies summer exhibition. More photos, page 7.. INSIDE ►POSTER CHAMP IN ONEONTA: An Oneonta Middle School student is the national standout in cybersecurity poster contest, page 6. ►MUSEUMS FOR ALL: Cooperstown’s museums join national program expanding access to cultural institutions, page 3. ►TIME FOR ‘SUMMER DREAMS’: This week, we go to MunsonWilliams-Proctor Institute in Utica for its outstanding Rockwell exhibit and meet an Oneonta resident whose love for music led to a worldwide reissue of ‘Sinatra’s Favorite Saloon Singer’ (insert). ►A FEW THOUGHTS ON IMPORTANT THINGS: Our columnists this week look at the ongoing war on poverty, offer pointers for over-curious Labrador Retrievers, give a shoutout to Dad and dads everywhere, preview ‘love for the land,’ and caution against overpromising. Plus letters to the editor, pages 4,5, and 6. Follow Breaking News On
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Clark Foundation President Jane Forbes Clark announced this week that the Foundation’s Board of Directors approved first-year college scholarship grants totaling more than $750,000 to 197 area students preparing for higher education in the fall. The Clark Foundation Scholarship Program includes the school districts of Cherry Valley-Springfield, Cooperstown, Edmeston, Gilbertsville-Mount Upton, Laurens, Milford, Morris, Mount Markham, Owen D. Young, Richfield Springs, Schenevus, Worcester, and the Otsego Area Occupational Center-BOCES. “The Board and I are very pleased to recognize the accomplishments of this distinguished group of graduating seniors by assisting them in their undergraduate studies,” Miss Clark said. “Despite having to navigate and manage the impact of the COVID crisis, each of these exceptional young men and women have compiled excellent records at their schools. As we welcome them to The Clark Foundation Scholarship Program, we wish each of them a most successful college experience.” Students receive Clark Foundation Scholarships based on academic achievement, citizenship qualities and service to their communities and schools. Approximately 700 students presently attending institutions of higher learning will be eligible for renewal of Clark Foundation grants for the next academic year. The Foundation anticipates providing over $4.1 million in scholarships for the coming year. Close to 14,800 students have participated in the Program since its inception in 1961. The Freeman’s Journal/Hometown Oneonta will publish the full list of recipients of initial grants for the 2022-23 academic year in an upcoming edition.
Cooperstown and Oneonta mayors join forces to promote benefits of the ‘corridor’ The mayors of Cooperstown and Oneonta opted to take regional economic and cultural development into their own hands this month with the debut of a project they’re calling “The Cooperstown Corridor,” highlighting what they see as reasons businesses and people would want to relocate in Otsego County. “Clearly Cooperstown has name and brand recognition all over the world,” Oneonta Mayor Mark Drnek said in a discussion with The Freeman’s Journal/Hometown Oneonta. “When we’re talking to people about bringing their businesses here or moving here, they like to know about Cooperstown and our connection to the village.” “Think of all the people who come to Cooperstown All-Star Village,” he said. “We want to get them while they’re here. Find out about our main streets. See what that short drive between Oneonta and Cooperstown has to offer.” Cooperstown Mayor Ellen Tillapaugh agrees, as evidenced by her longstanding observation that businesses and localities throughout the county benefit from the ‘Cooperstown’ brand. “I’ve said it so many times,” she said.
“Cooperstown seems like the only place around here that doesn’t have a baseball village with the word ‘Cooperstown’ in its business name. The Cooperstown name extends all over Otsego County.” The two mayors — securing the support from their respective local legislative bodies — collaborated on a fullcolor brochure calling out to ‘retirees, young families, and businesses,’ bosting, “Now visualize yourself as a member of a welcoming community, Cooperstown Mayor Ellen Tillapaugh and Oneonta Mayor Mark Drnek surrounded by some of the the marketing piece reads. “We love it here. We most scenic landscapes in all the country, where a small city and quaint local know that you will, too. This is your invitation villages provide entertainment, dining, shop- to join us.” The two localities sponsor the brochure and ping, and recreational and educational opportuits corresponding website — cooperstownnities galore.” “This is our shared quality of life in the corridor.org — with the support of the Otsego ‘Cooperstown Corridor’ — the 25-mile long County Chamber of Commerce, OtsegoNow, sceneic stretch from the city of Oneonta to and Destination Marketing. Continued on page 9 the villages of Milford and Cooperstown,”
THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA, OTSEGO COUNTY’S LARGEST PRINT CIRCULATION 2010 WINNERS OF The Otsego County Chamber/KEY BANK SMALL BUSINESS AWARD