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COOPERSTOWN AND AROUND
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Volume 206, No. 46
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1808 BY
VISIT THE
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Cooperstown’s Newspaper
O M C O PE
AFTER VIETNAM WAR, NOTHING EVER SAME For 206 Years
WWW.ALLOTSEGO.COM Newsstand Price $1
Cooperstown, New York, Thursday, November 13-14, 2014
PROPOSED 2015 BUDGET DEBATED
County Considers End To Cooperstown DMV Frank Rollins’ Images Available To All
Showdown Likely At Special Meeting By JIM KEVLIN
The Freeman’s Journal
Springfield Center Troop 47 Scouts Jeb Magruder, left, and Larry Korrn flank Scoutmaster Ken Ainslie at Veterans Day ceremonies Tuesday, Nov. 11, in Cooperstown/MORE
COOPERSTOWN
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t may not happen, but one option on the table right now as the Otsego County Board of Representatives completes its budget deliberations is closing Sinnott Gardner the Department of Motor Vehicles’ Cooperstown office and consolidating DMV operations in Oneonta. It’s one of a few unresolved issues – in addition to merging Oneonta’s two senior citizen sites into one, at Nader Towers, giving department heads raises, and eliminating six janitorial positions assigned to Otsego Manor. The county board plans to meet at 9:15 a.m. Please See DMV, A7
PHOTOS, A4
Ag, Markets Commissioner Due At Forum COOPERSTOWN
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ichard Ball, state Agricultural & Markets commissioner, will keynote Saturday, Nov. 15, at “A Celebration of Our Agricultural Community,” a first-time conference planned 9 a.m.-5 p.m. at The Farmers’ Museum. Public welcome. Other speakers include Jason Evans, SUNY Cobleskill agriculture professor, discussing food systems, and G&T Farm’s Doug Thompson, speaking on farming and local economies. MORE DETAILS, A7
2ND HEARING: Responding to public concern, FERC has scheduled a second hearing on the Dominion New Market gas line project at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 20, at Morrisville-Eaton High School, Morrisville. ADULT TUTORING: Literacy Volunteers of Otsego & Delaware Counties is seeking students for free and confidential tutoring in Basic Adult Education, English as a Second Language, and Computer Literacy. More information at 353-7099.
Jim Kevlin/The Freeman’s Journal
Jim Kevlin/The Freeman’s Journal
John Lambert (now county judge) and Diana Nicols (now president of the Cooperstown Rotary Club) are among the people Frank Rollins captured in a half-century of snapping photos. But hundreds of other images will be available for public perusal and purchase Saturday-Sunday, Nov. 22-23 in the 22 Main ballroom.
Here’s A Chance To Recapture Memories Of Graduation, School Plays, Sports Feats By JIM KEVLIN COOPERSTOWN
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rank Rollins joined Cooperstown High School in 1957 as a vocal teacher. That was his career. But he also spent the next halfcentury with a camera around his
Frank Rollins
neck recording village life, sports matches, graduations, school plays, weddings, community life, tens of thousands of images. That is his legacy. He retired in 1974 from teaching, but continued shooting, with negatives piling up in the rooms of his bachelor’s house at Linden Avenue, a few steps away from the high school Please See ROLLINS, A7
Wednesday, Nov. 5, was Sal Grigoli’s birthday, and what present did he find in front of his restaurant? A tree, now planted, part of Cooperstown’s sidewalk rehabilitation project.
With Plants, Fences Sidewalks Half-Done COOPERSTOWN
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s you stroll along the north side of Main Street, examining the 17 newly planted trees and newly installed knee-high wrought-iron fencing, you’ll also notice some fledgling plantings amid the mulch. They are hosta and sedge, two plants that, with the trees, will comprise the “rain gardens” that were one basis for the village’s $2 million sidewalk replacement, now more than half done. “We were looking for something on this side of Please See SIDEWALKS, A7
THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA, OTSEGO COUNTY’S LARGEST PRINT CIRCULATION 2010 WINNERS OF The Otsego County Chamber/KEY BANK SMALL BUSINESS AWARD