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VISIT WWW.ALLOTSEGO.COM

COOPERSTOWN AND AROUND

CCS DUO ON D.C. PANEL

COOPERSTOWN

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or Emily Greenberg, visiting friends on Navajo reservation opened her Ian Austin/The Freeman’s Journal eyes in a way that would change Stephanie Rudloff her community. “When I told pulls Jennifer Burch them that our team’s nickname and Sydnie Streek in a was the Redskins, they were red wagon during the height of the frivolity at shocked,” she said. “I realized the annual Community then that it wasn’t OK.”

The Freeman’s Journal

CCS’ Emily Greenberg and Catherine Borgstrom are on a D.C. panel.

Harvest Dinner Sunday, Sept. 29/OTHER PHOTO, A4

Greenberg, along with Hope Dohner and Catherine Borgstrom, mounted a campaign to not only change the name, but to educate the students and community. The Redskins moniker was dropped in early March, with the “Hawkeyes” taking its place in popular vote. “Emily and I supported this change from the start,” said Borgstrom, daughter of David, CCS board president. Please See NAME, A7

NATIVE DAUGHTERS AT 50

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.S. Rep. Chris Gibson, R-19, voted against Republicans Sunday, Sept. 29, then with them the following evening at the federal government moved toward shutdown. Sunday, the House bill funded government, but the bill delayed Obamacare for a year. Monday, the House funded government, but required Congress to be covered by Obamacare and to exempt citizens from penalties during 2014. The Senate rejected both bills, and the federal government shut down at midnight Monday. GET INSURED: For details on how to sign up for Obamacare in New York State as of Tuesday, Oct. 1, follow the link from WWW.ALLOTSEGO.COM

HoF INTERNSHIPS: The National Baseball Hall of Fame is accepting applications for next year’s Frank and Peggy Steele Internship Program for Leadership Development. Details at www. baseballhall.org/intern CANCER FIGHTING: The Fly Creek Cider Mill’s 14th annual “Big Squeeze Weekend” to assist cander awareness is Friday-Saturday, Oct. 5-6.

HISTORIC FIND

Attack Renewed Over ‘Redskins’ By LIBBY CUDMORE

Gibson Votes Nay, Aye Over D.C. Standoff

Newsstand Price $1

Cooperstown, New York, Thursday, October 3, 2013

Volume 205, No. 40

Jim Kevlin/HOMETOWN ONEONTA

Buzz Hesse examines the 257.4pound cannon believed to have been lost in the Susquehanna during the 1779 Clinton expedition.

One-Of-A-Kind Cannon Found In Susquehanna Artifact ‘Of Incalculable Value’ Tied To 1779 Clinton Campaign By JIM KEVLIN OTEGO

O Ian Austin/The Freeman’s Journal

Cooperstown Native Daughters – from left, Jill Robinson, Barbara La Cava, Donna Hribar, Janice Gage and Carol Butts – partake of the offerings at the organization’s 50th annual luncheon Saturday, Sept. 28, at The Otesaga. Sherlee Rathbone, Native Daughter and Town of Otsego historian, gave the presentation on the club’s history. Founded in 1963 by Eleanor Martin Bursey and Cecily Johnson Todd, 55 ladies met for dinner at Sherry’s Restaurant, $2.25 apiece/DETAILS, A6

TOURISM ABOUT TO BE PRIVATIZED

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he county Board of Representatives Wednesday, Oct. 2, was prepared to privatized the county’s Tourism Office. For a report on the outcome, see WWW.ALLOTSEGO.COM

n Aug. 11, 1779, Brig. Gen. James Clinton’s forces, en route to destroy the Iroquois, encamped between here and Oneonta, across Route 7 from Pie in the Sky. A few days before, General Clinon Aug. 7, Clinton mission: had blown up the dam ton’s Destroy the at Cooperstown, and Iroquois. water from backed-up Otsego Lake carried his 200 bateaux swiftly down the Susquehanna, past Oneonta and, eventually, to Tioga Creek. Those bateaux were flat-bottomed craft, not particularly stable, said Buzz Hesse, the Please See CANNON, A3

For A Day, Hollywood Takes Over Nicoletta’s By LIBBY CUDMORE COOPERSTOWN

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ome actors might be content to let a stunt double or tricky camera styles do the hard work, but Joseph Cross, star of “The Automatic Hate,”

got right into the heat of the kitchen. “He was in here for six days before filming began, learning to make the Cross three dishes we were serving in the movie,”

said Phil Andrews, owner of Nicoletta’s, where the crew filmed on Wednesday, Sept. 25. “I taught him to make mushroom risotto, gnocchi pasta with spicy pomodoro sauce and roasted sausage, and crab cakes with bitter green salad and sriracha.” He cooked for the actors, and even served up a few

dishes to some Nicoletta’s customers. “He got very good,” said Andrews. Director Justin Learner approached Andrews six months ago about filming in Nicoletta’s. “The length of the dining room makes it easy to film people,” he said. Please See MOVIE, A6

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


LOCALS

A-2 THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL

THURSDAY OCTOBER 3, 2013 DEVLINS WIN LEAF LAURELS

MADDY SANDLER, JOSEPH HARMON NAMED HOMECOMING QUEEN, KING

Katie Monser/The Freeman’s Journal

Queen Maddy Sandler and King Joseph Harmon, center, hold court on the football field during the Homecoming game against Masonville Warriors on Friday, Sept. 25. They are joined by the rest of the Homecoming court, from left, Fred DiLorenzo, Lucy Ford, Lucas Lyons, Tess Hitchcock, Aaron Idelson and Ellen Vibbard.

Richard J. Devlin Sr. and county Sheriff Richard J. Devlin Jr. received LEAF’s annual Robert S. Sioussat Award at the drug- and alcohol-fighting agency’s annual meeting Thursday, Sept. 26, at the Holiday Inn/Southside. At center is Julie Dostal, LEAF executive director. The father-son combination were selected for their strong commitment to youth, community safety, and DWI reduction in Otsego County.

Michael Brightman, Leslie Kaplan Catch Sharks, Announce Engagement

Michael Brightman poses with his second sand shark, caught off the waters of New Smyrna Beach, Fla.

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ichael Brightman of Oneonta was in the middle of proposing to his girlfriend, Leslie Kaplan of Cooperstown, on the sandy shores of New Smyrna Beach, Fla., when there came a tug on his fishing line. “He said, ‘Excuse me, but I have to get this’.”

The 100-pound, 5-foot long sand shark took half an hour to catch, using bluefish bait. It was the first of three sharks Brightman caught on the trip. And after finishing his proposal, he caught the other two, a smaller sand shark and a feisty 4 1/2 foot black tip that tried to bite him while he

was removing the hook. The couple has been vacationing in New Smyrna for two years and it has always been Brightman’s dream to catch a shark, said Kaplan. All three sharks were returned safely to the ocean.

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THURSDAY-FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3-4, 2013

A3

Rare Cannon Found In Susquehanna

CANNONS/From A1 auctioneer and, as is less known, a trained and experienced archaeologist. Clinton’s army re-embarked, and some two miles downstream, near a sharp bend in the river, one of the shaky boats tipped over in the still-swift current. Hesse knows this because, about a year ago, he received a call. A fisherman, trolling along the river, had noticed a rusted object. On closer examination, it turned out to be a canon, of Revolutionary vintage. “I never saw one like this,” Hesse said the other day. “As far as I know, no one has.” Archaeologist Richard M. Gramly, who plans to collaborate with Hesse on an article for a military history journal, called the find “really rare,” and said it is of “incalculable value.” While Revolutionary

era cannons are common enough, it is most unusual that a particular piece can be put in the context of a specific military campaign, as is the case here, he said. The canon weighs 257.4 pounds. It is 2 feet, 3 inches long, and has a 2-inch-wide bore. The bore, Gramly said, is 18 inches long. The canon would have been mounted on a wooden frame, perhaps a swivel. Likely it did not fire a cannon ball, which would have done little damage to the enemy deployed in the underbrush. Conceivably, Hesse surmised, the shot could have been pebbles washed smooth by the river. Whereas a British or Dutch gun would be marked, this piece has no markings. That is further confirmation of its patriot origins, said Hesse. Making the gun, probably in the Schenectady area, the origin

of the Clinton foray, “was treason,” he said. If the British had regained control of what today is the Capital Region, “they’d be taken out and shot.” The Sullivan-Clinton Expedition was ordered by General Washington to eradicate the Iroquois threat to Upstate after the 1778 Cherry Valley Massacre and other depredations. Sullivan’s army came up from Easton, Pa., Clinton’s from the north; the two units united near Binghamton and went on to fight the Battle of Newtown, near Elmira, which broke the military might of the Six Nations. Hesse, who worked for the Office of the State Archaeologist before starting Hesse Auctions, said a couple of fallacies surround the campaign. While Clinton is credited with destroying Oquaga, the Iroquois capital near

Bainbridge, that had actually been accomplished the year before – 1778 – by a Schoharie County force under William Butler. Further, he argued that, while coincidental with the American Revolution, the Sullivan-Clinton campaign was actually part of the New York Border Wars, fought to pacify territory beyond

Unadilla Creek (then the colonial boundary) so settlers could migrate west. That would suggest a strategic prowess: That Washington could fight the Revolution and authorize a campaign that looked beyond Britain’s eventual defeat to the needs of a new nation. “My view is that the history books should be

changed,” Hesse said. Hesse has put together a personal collection of extremely unusual pieces that came into his hands – for instance, three letters, two from Joseph Brant and one from Walter Butler that surfaced in Schoharie County six years ago. He considers the cannon part of that collection.

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Perspectives

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013

A-4 THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL

EDITORIAL

It’s Up To Keator To Show He Can Fill Crowell’s Shoes

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ertainly, the Democratic Party’s effort to find a candidate for county treasurer has been a mess. But that doesn’t mean incumbent Dan Crowell isn’t the best candidate for the job. Before Crowell, who was a reservist when he was elected in 2009, was called up – he has been receiving special ops training at Fort Bragg since January – he excelled as county treasurer. While other treasurers – not all, but most – have been able, Crowell took the job well beyond efficient bill paying and bookkeeping. He is a big-picture guy. Piece by piece, he wrapped his mind around the daunting financial challenges the county faces, from a shortfall in Medicaid reimbursement to an understanding that, due to changes in state and federal reimbursements, Otsego Manor is no longer viable. He did so calmly, clearly and convincingly, winning the respect of entities as varied as Citizen Voices and Sustainable Otsego, as well as the Republican-majority county Board of Representatives. Soon he was being mentioned as a possible county manager/executive, if that were to happen, as a challenger to state Sen. Jim Seward, R-Milford, or as a candidate to replace Assemblyman Bill

Magee when the Nelson Democrat retires. On all counts, he demurred, and did so convincingly. You got the idea he had something else on his mind. • And that turned out to be the case. A Cooperstown Central grad (1994), he went on to Gettysburg College (magna cum laude), and won a Fulbright Scholarship to study rural development in Africa, Latin America and south Asia. He earned a master’s at the London School of Economics, then joined the World Bank. He then studied India’s madrasa system and became intrigued with the challenges the U.S. faces in the world’s largest democracy and neighboring Pakistan and Afghanistan. When he first ran for county treasurer in 2009, he had already applied for special-ops training – he knew he might get called up, even then, he said in an interview the other day – and was in the midst of a years-long security-clearance process that only resolved itself when he was called up a few months ago. While waiting to serve his country, you can’t expect a young man to put his life on hold. He married, took on two daughters, and he and wife Dee had a son.

FOR THE RECORD: FROM THE TOP

have been anticipated is encouraging and indicates a base of support should a town leader choose to make consolidation a source of effort by him or her. While I firmly believe that the Oneonta community will benefit from a merger, and that the facts in the report support that position, the discussion will never move forward without leadership from within the town itself. Until that day, I will continue to work with town officials in areas where combined effort will be mutually beneficial.

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irst, I applaud the fact that it has been completed and am impressed with the thoroughness and obvious hard work, as well as the number, of those involved. The fact that more people in the town are open to the idea, as expressed in the Zogby study, than might

Approached to run for treasurer, he agreed. There was no assurance the security clearance would ever be granted. Even so, just in case, he walked onto Russ Bachman’s Edmeston porch and knocked on his door. From the beginning, Crowell knew he might be called up, and Bachman, former CFO of a private company in New Jersey, former Otsego Manor manager and candidate for treasurer in 2005, was an ideal fallback, one who might never be called to serve. • Things really got complicated in July, when Crowell, returning from special-ops training and conferring with Dee, decided not to seek a second term. It turned out that it was too late to remove his name from the Nov. 5 ballot.

BOUNTIFUL CELEBRATION

enticed visitors away from using the trolley lots. Instituting paid parking at Doubleday and this summer along Main Street created more than a little negative feeling, which Jeff believes will subside. The financial outcome of paid parking is what village ratepayers should consider. “With paid parking, we saved a 10.6 percent increase in village taxes,” Jeff said. The paid-parking machines were paid for by August. Looking at all the factors, Jeff believes that paid parking is going to stay.

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he subject of paid parking was raised. Jeff recalled a conference on municipal parking issues he and Mayor Carol Waller attended in 2007. Listening to other municipal administrators, they realized the prospect of free parking on Main Street and in Doubleday parking lot

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Cooperstown’s Newspaper

For 205 Years

James C. Kevlin Editor & Publisher

Mary Joan Kevlin Associate Publisher

Tara Barnwell Advertising Director Thom Rhodes • Susan Straub Advertising Consultants

Libby Cudmore Reporter

Kathleen Peters • Dan Knickerbocker Graphics

Ian Austin Photographer

Tom Heitz Consultant

Subscriptions Rates: Otsego County, $48 a year. All other areas, $65 a year. First Class Subscription, $130 a year. Published Thursdays by Iron String Press, Inc. 21 Railroad Ave., Cooperstown NY 13326 Telephone: (607) 547-6103. Fax: (607) 547-6080. E-mail: info@allotsego.com • www.allotsego.com Contents © Iron String Press, Inc. Periodicals postage paid at USPS Cooperstown 40 Main St., Cooperstown NY 13326-9598 USPS Permit Number 018-449 Postmaster Send Address Changes To: Box 890, Cooperstown NY 13326 _____________ Gilbert Stuart’s portrait of Judge Cooper is in The Fenimore Art Museum

which she knows cannot be compromised. Beth is always available by email or by phone to explain a county Board issue or listen to a constituent’s opinion or concern. She is a regular participant in Town Board meetings, showing up to report on current matters at the County level and meet and chat with her communities’ citizens. Beth Rosenthal is a woman of intelligence and integrity. Middlefield, Roseboom and Cherry Valley are very lucky to have her as our Representative on the County Board. Middlefield Neighbors urges the citizens of District 7 to re-elect Beth Rosenthal. KIM JASTREMSKI Middlefield Editor’s Note: In all, 42 residents signed this letter.

Superintendent Candidate Pernat Helped Otsego Handle Flooding

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Beth Rosenthal Is Intelligent, Available, Consensus Builder To the Editor: We are writing to express our support of Beth Rosenthal for reelection as county Representative in District 7 (Middlefield, Roseboom, and Cherry Valley). She is running on the Democratic and Sustainable Otsego lines. Beth has been an important addition to the representation of district’s interests in county matters. We have found her to be fiscally minded and forward thinking, with a clear vision of what our area should be working towards to bring clean economic growth to Otsego County while maintaining our rural heritage. We have seen her work well with the other members of the county Board, striving to reach consensus among disparate views, yet remaining firm in the face of pressure over issues upon

Mayor Katz: Paid-Parking To Stay Editor’s Note: Cooperstown Mayor Jeff Katz provided this status report on paid parking to the Rotary Club recently, according to the club’s newsletter, The Oil Can.

has filled in adequately, even well, in Crowell’s absence, voters can expect that, if and when the treasurer is away, the seasoned surrogate will step in. • Crowell has been an outstanding county treasurer. He took a hum-drum position, added intelligence and strategy, and by thinking through and understanding Otsego County’s challenges, turned himself into a bi-partisan leader of highest stature. Still, as the poet had it, the best-laid schemes o’ mice an ‘men Gang aft agley – i.e., life is messy. And this is a messy situation. It’s a month until Election Day, and the Republican-backed candidate, Ed Keator of West Oneonta, who lost to Crowell in 2009, has been an able Cooperstown village treasurer. Whoever is elected, no one can predict the future. Voters have to decide whether having Crowell as treasurer for four years, minus “three to six months,” is better than having Keator fulltime. Can Keator become the leader of stature and consensus that Crowell became? If Keator can answer that question in the affirmative in the next four weeks, then he deserves election. Right now, that’s an open question.

LETTERS

Mayor Miller: City To Collaborate Editor’s Note: Here is Oneonta Mayor Dick Miller’s observations on a town study of municipal consolidation that recommended continuing collaboration, short of merger.

Can Ed Keator, left, fill Dan Crowell’s shoes? That is the question for voters.

There was an option: The party considered nominating him for a town race in, say, a Republicandominated Herkimer County town, a race he was sure to lose. That would have gotten him off the treasurer ballot. Advisedly, Crowell chose not to go that route. The Democrats scrambled to submit petitions to put Bachman on the ballot and, when challenged in court by the Republicans, acknowledged the documents would not withstand scrutiny. So Crowell is back in. His name will be on Row A, front and center, on the ballot when you go to vote on Nov. 5. Crowell’s special-ops training, including some heavy-duty tests to see how he hold up under extreme duress, ends in December so, if elected, you can expect he will be sworn in for a second term on the first of January. In the interview, he said it is “likely” he will be called to active duty during in 2014 for “three to six months.” After that, it is unlikely he will be called up again, “unless there’s another 9/11” event. Then, all bets are off – for Crowell and all of us. Crowell said he is prohibited by law from offering the treasurer’s job to anyone. And, if elected, he’ll serve. But, since Bachman

Ian Austin/The Freeman’s Journal

A long banquet table stretches along Cooperstown’s Main Street from Fair to River streets Sunday afternoon, Sept. 29, during the community’s second annual Harvest Dinner, sponsored by Growing Community.

Harvest Dinner Means Community To the Editor:

Oh, I hope the Sept. 29 photo turns out! Late on a sunny afternoon, the Cooperstown FD’s hook-and-ladder truck had wound its ladder upward to about 150 feet to take a shot down Main Street – down Main Street and down 400 feet of lined-up tables. The

tables were laden with potluck food and crowded by hundreds of folding chairs and and hundreds of seated, cheering people all waving toward the top of the ladder. Cooperstown’s Community Harvest Dinner! What an event! What a community! Jim Atwell Fly Creek

To the Editor: I am urging voters to support the election of Bryan Pernat for superintendent of highways for the Town of Otsego on Election Day, Nov. 5. Brian is an outstanding young man who was raised and educated right here in our town. I recall working with Brian in 2006 when he was appointed highway superintendent by the Town Board following the departure of our long-serving and highly respected Superintendent Spike Boyd. Bryan as a young man had some “big shoes” to fill, and he did a wonderful job. I worked closely with him at the time in my capacity as a member of the Otsego Town Board. In June 2006 when disaster hit with the worst flooding in memory, Brian rose to the occasion. He inventoried

road and bridge damage and prioritized the work to be done. Teams were created and independent contractors were called on to assist the Highway Department workers to get our infrastructure back on-line. Bryan has proven himself and demonstrated his ability to do the job and work effectively with others. However, even more important he was respected by the Highway Department workers. I do not recall any staff turnover during his time as Highway Superintendent. Please consider Bryan Pernat with your vote. You will find him on the “Safe Highways” party line. You will not be disappointed with his performance or the maintenance of our town roads. ORLO BURCH Town of Otsego

AllOTSEGO.com

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR WELCOME • E-MAIL THEM TO info@


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013

THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL A-5

BOUND VOLUMES Compiled by Tom Heitz from Freeman’s Journal archives, courtesy of the New York State Historical Association Library

200 YEARS AGO

Excerpts from the London Pilot of March 20, 1813: We lament, most deeply, to state that another British frigate, the Java, has been taken by the American frigate Constitution. The mourning of our hearts, which commenced on the first capture of a British ship by an American, has been rendered more melancholy, by every successive instance. Not a single American frigate has struck her flag – they insult and laugh at our want of enterprise and vigor; they leave their ports when they please, and return to them when it suits their convenience. The hearts of Englishmen sicken at the repeated demonstrations of our Navy being on the decline. Lloyd’s list contains notices of upwards of five hundred British vessels, captured in seven months by the Americans. Five hundred merchantmen and three frigates!! Can these statements be true and can the English people hear them unmoved? It is a melancholy fact that we are falling back, and that the enemy advance in naval power. October 2, 1813

125 YEARS AGO

100 YEARS AGO

175 YEARS AGO

Hoco poco or hocus pocus, is a most apt name for the panic Whig party. Let it be put upon them till it raises a blister. It is a good dictionary word, full of meaning, and may be found in Johnson and Junius. Junius derives it from “hoced” Welsh, a cheat, and poke or pocus, a “bag.” L’Estrange defines the term, “a juggle, or a cheat.” The application is as classic as it is pat. The Whigs are Hocos, who thrive by cheating; cheating in speculation, cheating in panics, cheating in bank trickery, cheating in politics, cheating by all manner of hypocrisy, in morals, temperance, government and religion. They are Pocos too, contriving to hoodwink the peo-

October 5, 1888 ple by all manner of lies and misrepresentations; and moreover, in all their attempts to court and seduce the people, they always get the “bag.” Let them be called ever hereafter, the Hoco-Pocos. October 1, 1838

150 YEARS AGO

The County Fair – The sun never rose on a fairer day than that of Wednesday; and, at an early hour long lines of vehicles of all descriptions, filled with the sturdy, wellto-do farmers of Otsego, their wives and

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children, were rapidly wending their way toward the County Fair Grounds, where increased accommodation awaited those who were to be competitors for premiums. The attendance on the Fair Grounds was very large. The number of entries in some departments exceeded that of any former occasion. Of cattle there was a large display, and there were a number of very fine animals. (Ed. Note: The County Fair Grounds referred to were located at the current site of the Bassett Health Center complex) October 2, 1863

Mon - Fri 9 to 5:30 Thu 9 to 7 • Sat 9 to 5

In Our Town: The Cooperstown post office seems to be inhabited by prize-winners. Charles A. Schneider received notice this Tuesday morning that he had been awarded sixth prize – $25 in cash – in an amateur photographic contest conducted by the Ansco Company of Binghamton. The photograph was of little Kenneth Schneider, son of George Schneider, sitting on a fence in the act of taking a snapshot. The picture will be used in future Ansco advertising matter. Mr. and Mrs. J. Fenimore Cooper and family left Fynmere Sunday and returned to their winter home in Albany. J. Fenimore Cooper, Jr. will spend the winter in Arizona. F. Ambrose Clark and family, with their guests, H.B. Stokes and Mr. and Mrs. Erastus Teftt with Miss Edith Wellman returned to New York on Tuesday by special train. October, 1, 1913

75 YEARS AGO

A total of 143 persons, for the most part residents of Cooperstown and vicinity, accepted the invitation to visit the National Baseball Museum on Saturday, the first of the free days this season. A similar and very cordial invitation is extended for the remaining Saturdays of October when the

doors of the famous museum will be open without charge from 9 a.m. to 12 noon, 2 to 6 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. Every resident of Cooperstown and Otsego County should become thoroughly acquainted with this famous collection of relics connected with the development of the national game, and the Hall of Fame with its plaques of the immortals donated by the Major Leagues. October 5, 1938

50 YEARS AGO

Seven school districts in central and northern Otsego County would get more for their education dollars if a proposed consolidation of the districts were to be brought into being, according to Harry W. Langworthy, associate in the Bureau of Rural Administrative Services of the State Education Department. Langworthy was speaking to a meeting at the Cooperstown Elementary School of members of the Boards of Education and administrators of the schools involved. This year, the districts of Cooperstown, Milford, Edmeston, Springfield, Cherry Valley and Van Hornesville plus the Westville common district, are spending $3,052,412 to operate their educational programs. October 2, 1963

25 YEARS AGO

Excerpt from “Cooperstown Space Odyssey,” a poem by Patricia Merker: “How often have we heard it said ‘Your Main Street’s really charming.’ And don’t we all just love to hear a tribute so disarming. We glow with pride to know our town is seen above reproach. But wait is that a flaw I see, beginning to encroach? Now, I’m not one to quibble, nor stretch a point too far, but folks, I’m aging rapidly just trying to park my car!” October 5, 1988

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NETWORK OF ONEONTA • CLINTON PLAZA LAUNDRY • COMMUNITY BANK • COPPER FOX • CRAZY GIFTS • CRYSTAL PHOENIX • CRYSTAL PALACE BARBER SHOP • DAVIES LOCK SHOP • DOMINO’S PIZZA • DENIM AND DIAMONDS • FIN AND FEATHER • DONNA DECKER SCHOOL

THEATRE • DOWNTOWN DELI • OTSEGO OUTFITTERS • PRIME 289 • PRINCIPALLY PRINTS • SEARS • RAZZLE DAZZLE • RED CABOOSE • RUFF HOUSE • ROSE AND LAUREL BOOKS • RUFFINO’S PIZZERIA & RESTAURANT • SUBWAY • SIMPLY THAI • SAL’S PIZZERIA • THE VAULT • SHAKEDOWN

BALLET • GREATER ONEONTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY • ISD • DOWN UNDER HAIR DESIGN • EIGHTH NOTE MUSIC • FIESTA BAR AND GRILL • MUSIC SQUARE • GARY’S FLOWERS AND GIFTS • GREEN EARTH • GOLDEN GUERNSEY • GOLDEN LOTUS • GREEN TOAD BOOKS • HOLLYWOOD

STREET • SILKS AND TREASURES • STANLEY & WADE DANCE STUDIO • THE VAULT • STELLA LUNA RISTORANTE • STEWART’S SHOPS • TELEKY’S JEWELER • THERESA’S EMPORIUM • TIME TO TAN • TINA MARIE’S SALON • TOKYO TAVERN • TWILIGHT BOUTIQUE • VIC’S AUTOMOTIVE

BARBER SHOP • HOSPICE THRIFT SHOP • INDELIBLE INK • JIMMY T’S COCKTAIL LOUNGE • KELLY’S KANDIES • LATTE LOUNGE • LIBERTY TREE CHOCOLATES • LOLLIPOP BODY PIERCING • HUNTINGTON MEMORIAL LIBRARY • MAGIC NAILS • KARMA SPA & BOUTIQUE • MAIN VIEW

• TRANSITIONS BOUTIQUE • HALF PINT PRINTING • WOLF WILDE GOLDSMITH • BANK OF DELHI • YELLOW DELI • ONEONTA SPICE CO. & MARKET • HOSPICE THRIFT SHOP • PROJECT ANTHOLOGIES • COLLAGE FOOD BOUTIQUE • MONKEY BARREL TOYS • CREATIVE DRESS BOUTIQUE

GALLERY • LEGENDS FILLING STATION • MCLAUGHLIN SHOES • MANE STREET CUTTERS • MAXWELL’S/OTHERSIDE

• KEY BANK • ONEONTA LASER DERM • MCLAUGHLIN DEPARTMENT STORE • MURPHY HOME CARE

SUNY Oneonta intern Emmet Rozelle tunes a bass at Music Square.


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013

A-6

At 50th Meeting, Native Daughters Learn Of Original Luncheon: $2.25 Apiece At Sherry’s By LIBBY CUDMORE COOPERSTOWN

I

t was a chance to catch up with old friends, donate to a charity and celebrate the history of Cooperstown women – for the 50th time. The Native Daughters of Cooperstown celebrated its 50th anniversary at the club’s annual luncheon Saturday, Sept. 28, at The Otesaga. With 150 Native Daughters in attendance, it was the largest meeting

Rathbone

they’d ever held. “It’s a wonderful event,” said Mary Winnie. “You get to see people you haven’t seen

17 new members received pins. “We have a lot of new members this year,” said Kay Pierro. New this year was fundraiser raffles, two baskets of goods donated from local businesses, and a 50/50, raising $698 for the Cooperstown Food Bank. Sherlee Rathbone, a member and Town of Otsego historian, gave the presentation, a look back at the club’s history. It was founded in 1963 by Eleanor Martin Bursey and Cecily Johnson Todd, when “55 met for dinner at Sherry’s Restaurant for the price of $2.25,” Rathbone said. “The committee could not decide what to charge for dues, so subsequently, there were none!” The next year, dues were raised to 25 cents and con-

in years” To be a Native Daughter, you have to be born in Cooperstown and be at least age 50 years old, or lived in the area for 50 years. The 42 honorary members who were 80 years or older were given carnations, and

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tinued that way for 11 years. “These girls were no-nonsense,” she said. “We meet once a year to introduce new members, remember those who have passed, take a treasurer’s report and have lunch. It’s wonderful for these folks.” At The Otesaga, the Daughters mingled with old friends between tables and at the buffet line on the Lake Room porch, where they lunched on roasted chicken and pork loin, mixed vegetables and oven-roasted potatoes, and a whole bevy of desserts. “I’d never even had pecan pie until I got married!” said Louise Allen as she helped herself to a slice. There were even some mother-daughter Natives, including Beverly Hensle, who now lives in Milford,

Ian Austin/The Freeman’s Journal

Julie Talbot Delaurentis attends the 50th Native Daughters of Cooperstown luncheon with her mom, Alice Talbot, one of 42 honorary members designated for their seniority.

and her daughter Patricia Shockley, who came out from Rochester. For Diane Bunn, the Native Daughters’ meeting was a chance to make friends a second time around. “You get a glimmer of someone

Hollywood Moviemakers Discover Cooperstown’s Nicoletta’s MOVIE/From A1 Andrews was tasked with finding 31 extras, and used friends, family, even staff. He also had to ready the kitchen for filming. “We had to turn all the cans of tomatoes around so you couldn’t see the labels,” he said. Because the movie takes place in Boston, Andrews could wear his Red Sox cap in the kitchen. “I had some improv lines,” he said. “Just banter like you’d hear in a kitchen, what we were making, what we did the night before. I don’t know if any

The Freeman’s Journal

Nicoletta’s layout proved perfect for the movies, said owner Phil Andrews.

of it will make it into the movie.” The crew filmed from 6 a.m. to 3 p.m.. “It was so intense to see what goes into making a movie,” he said. “It can take 25 takes to shoot one little thing,” he said. The crew also spent four days filming in Andrews’ apartment, above Christmas Around The Corner. “There’s a scene where he gets kicked out, and that was filmed in my living

Private, beautiful 1900 sf contemporary home sits on 26.5 acres with pond surrounded by state and county forest with trails. Gorgeous kitchen with stainless steel appliances, new bathrooms, central air-conditioning, family room with laid-up stone fireplace, hardwood floors and a 30’x40’ pole barn with oversized overhead doors. Between Cooperstown and Oneonta.

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room,” he said. “They used it as two apartments, and I just finished getting it back together.” He also played host to the cast and crew. “We took them around to The Otesaga, Cooley’s, shopping downtown,” he said. “They were the nicest group of people.” The movie will premier at Sundance in 2015. “Hopefully we’ll get a chance to show it here,” said Andrews.

Otsego Lake Living

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you used to know, and you find out they go to the same places you vacation and you make plans to meet and get together,” she said. “It’s a lot of pride,” said Patricia Taugher-Shultz.

Land Listing #91002 $40,000 New Lisban

Perfect timing for hunting season! All properties close to State-owned Land Just minutes away from Oneonta, these properties are perfect for hunting! They have hill and mountain views as well... Perfect for building your dream home or camp.

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Brand New Listing—Tucked into Frog Hollow, this completely renovated 3 BR turn-of-the century home is in delightful move-in condition with all amenities top notch. Offering 2100+- square feet of living space, this home offers LR w/ charming built-ins, new eat-in kitchen with lots of cupboards and granite countertops, powder room, mudroom/ laundry, and newly added family room off the kitchen with a fireplace, wood floors, open staircase to the upper level. On the second floor are two nicely appointed BRs, a full bath with clawfoot tub & shower as well as newly done master suite including walk-in closet and lovely bath with tub, shower and double sinks. Walk-up Attic and newly done front porch with stone steps. Located just a block from downtown and the hospital, this home is in the perfect village location. Offered Exclusively by Ashley Connor Realty $439,000

Visit us on the Web at www.ashleyconnorrealty.com • Contact us at info@ashleyconnorrealty.com For APPoiNtmeNt: Patti Ashley, Broker, 544-1077 • Jack Foster, Sales Agent, 547-5304 • Nancy Angerer, Sales Agent, 435-3387 Donna Skinner, Associate Broker, 547-8288 • Amy Stack, Sales Agent, 435-0125 • Chris Patterson, Sales Agent, 518-774-8175

Home of the Week

Beautiful valley views! Spacious home w/12 acres in Oneonta School district. 4 nice-sized BRs w/double closets and 2 baths. Bright LR w/stone fireplace. Formal DR offers hardwood floors, radiant heat and views of the valley. Spacious kitchen w/island and radiant heat as well. Basement is dry could be remodeled. Oversized, attached 2-car garage has electric w/ storage above. Grounds are well maintained w/stone walls, large yard, deck, above-ground pool and apple trees. Close to Oneonta, shopping, restaurants, entertainment and I-88. $209,000 MLS#91498

locally owned & operated single & multi-family homes commercial property & land oneontarealty.com office 607.441.7312 fax 607.432.7580 99 Main Street, Oneonta

Lizabeth Rose, Broker/Owner • Cricket Keto, Lic. Assoc. Broker • Stephen Baker, Lic. Assoc. Broker • Peter D. Clark, Consultant • Paula George, Lic. Real Estate Agent


THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2013

A-7

Advocates Of ‘Redskins’ End To Tell Story In Washington NAME/From A1 Now, the Oneida Indian Nation has invited Greenberg and Borgstrom to speak on a panel at the Ritz Carlton in Washington D.C. on Monday, Oct. 7. The tribe will

pay their airfare and overnight accommodations. The Oneida Nation asked Superintendent C.J. Hebert for a representative. Since Borgstrom was already planning to be in

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D.C. for a surgeon’s conference, Hebert suggested he take the two girls. “Hope is in college at CarnegieMellon, and they wanted someone who had been seen the before and after of the change,� said Greenberg. It’s a debate that has sparked across the country, with pressure on the Washington Redskins to change their team name. Some news outlets, including Slate and Mother Jones, have boycotted printing the name, referring to the team as “Washington� or “Washington’s pro-football team�

instead. “We believe that with the help of our fellow professional football fans, we can get the NFL to realize the error of its ways and make a very simple change,� said Ray Halbritter, Oneida Nation president. Though the full roster of guests has not yet been revealed, Greenberg says a Senator and a member of the Smithsonian will be in attendance. “It will be really cool to see what they’re doing and what we can do to help out,� added Borgstrom.

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SAT., OCT. 12, 10 A.M. - Preview: 9-10 A.M. Auctioning on location to the highest bidder regardless of 20131007, Hometowndisplay Oneonta,cases, 2x4 rope beds, price: Furniture: Store counters, Editions:Freemans Journal Cherry Valley wardrobe, Mah. server, Empire Mah. dressing table, corner cupboards,Section: banquet tables, Wal. Vict. whatnot, Wal. Vict.hall trees, music cabinets, Empire chairs, Architectural Fireplace manRun Date:10/2 tels, doors, shutters, curved glass display cases; Collectibles: Melodeion, books, signs, fishing lures, globe, transferware, crock/ jugs w/blue, Oriental carpets, coverlets, primitives, antique clothing, lamps, chandeliers, pottery bowls, paper goods, pictures/ prints/frames; paintings, wicker, Pyrexware, Aunt Jemima items, sleds, quilts, store items, Derby hats, toys & games, Dazy churn, brass nozzles, cast ironware, weight driven clocks, bath tub, Black Giant No.36 Albany, NY General Store Stove, Alligator hand bags, trunks, columns/newel post, spinning wheel; Glassware: Bohemian, Noritake Azalea China set, Colored, Depression, & Cut glass, Art glass; plus more! Terms: Cash, Visa, MasterCard, Discover or Debit Cards. No Checks. Ten percent buyer’s premium. All items sold in “AS IS� condition. Subject to errors and omissions. Refreshments available. Driver’s license required for bidding number. All statements made day of auction take precedence over printed material. Held Under Tent with Chairs! Auction: #6648/13. Auction continues on Sun., Oct. 13, 10 A.M. if necessary!

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A-8 THE FREEMAN’S JOURNAL & HOMETOWN ONEONTA

AllOTSEGO.homes

THURSDAY-FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3-4, 2013

4914 State Hwy. 28, CooperStown 607-547-5933 75 Market Street, oneonta 607-433-1020

MLS#91370 - Looking to downsize? This great home features 2 BRs, 2 baths, newer windows, newer 1-car garage all on 1 floor. Cooperstown School System. $249,000 Call James Vrooman @ 603-247-0506 (cell)

MLS#90906 - 3 - 4 BRs, 3 baths, 4+/- acres, 2-car garage, paved driveway, Cooperstown Schools! Wood-burning fireplace, sunroom w/skylights and pellet stove, 1st floor laundry, central air, covered stone patio and deck. Finished basement, large fenced yard, set back from the road. $199,900 Call Katherine L. Fistrowicz @ 607-267-2683 (cell)

MLS#89491 - Bungalow home features 4 BRs, 3 baths original woodwork and doors,hardwood floors, eat-in kitchen, formal DR, French doors, LR, office and family room. New natural gas boiler, insulation, renovated baths. Upstairs could be large master BR suite. Walking distance to Canajoharie schools. Easy commute to Albany-Syracuse. $95,000 Call Michelle A. Curran @ 518-469-5603 (cell)

MLS#89932- 2 BR, 1 bath quaint cottage! Country living! New roof, new kitchen. $69,900 Call Gabriella Vasta @ 607-267-1792 (cell)

MLS#89460 – Southside Drive acreage! 161+/- private acres of woods w/2 open fields: build, hike, hunt! Old shale mine on property. Come take a look and make your offer now! $390,000 Call Linda Wheeler @ 607-434-2125 (cell)

MLS#88997 - 3 BR, 2½ bath home on 56.4 acres w/ panoramic views. Large LR w/stone fireplace, eat-in kitchen, formal DR, master suite w/sunroom, family room, decks, patios, 2 ponds, barn and 2½-car garage. Includes 2 parcels. Surrounding acres also available. $875,000 Call Michelle A. Curran @ 518-469-5603 (cell)

MLS#87014 - Well maintained building w/4 apts + in-law suite on 4 acres in Sharon Springs. Perfect for owner to occupy. Let your tenants pay your mortgage. $179,000 Call Michelle A. Curran @ 518-469-5603 (cell)

E ! IC CED R P DU RE

E ! IC ED PRDUC RE

MLS#90825 - 3 BR, 2 bath home w/1490 sq ft on 1st floor and options for 2nd and lower level finishing. Passive solar, slated entry, hardwood floors, crown molding, cherry kitchen w/island, gas fireplace, French doors, deck, patio. Master BR w/2 closets, laundry and bath. 2-car garage w/built-in workbench. 5 mins to Cooperstown. $329,000 Call Katherine L. Fistrowicz @ 607-267-2683 (cell)

MLS#84430 - This parcel includes 4 other parcels to be sold together. Close to Oneonta and Cooperstown. Road frontage for 10 possible bldg lots if subdivided. All offers considered. $211,999 Call Linda Wheeler @ 607-434-2125 (cell)

New Listing! MLS#90713 – Beautiful country setting close to Stamford and Oneonta. Owner financing available. With a little elbow grease make this house a home. $59,000 Call Adam Karns @ 607-244-9633 (cell)

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New Listing! MLS#90345 – Classic farmette w/outbuildings is just off I-88. Large outbuilding was once a wood-working shop. Inside features hardwood floors, woodstove and the craftsmanship of yesteryear. $149,000 Call Adam Karns @ 607-244-9633 (cell) MLS#90828 - Well maintained Village home on Irish Hill features 3 BRs, 2 baths, newer appliances, large finished room in basement, newer windows, vinyl siding, large deck. New shed, off-street parking. Cooperstown Schools. $209,900 Call James Vrooman @ 603-247-0506 (cell)

MLS#90042 - Your chance to restore this 7 BR, 2 bath home back to its charm. Set up as a 2-family, but could be converted to a single-family residence. Only $110,000 Call Carol A. Olsen @ 607-434-7436 (cell) MLS#88772 – 4500+/- sq ft contemporary home w/views of Otsego Lake. 4 BRs, 3½ baths, gourmet kitchen, dual fireplace, 1st floor BR w/private entrance and full bath, master w/private office, Jacuzzi tub/shower, fireplace and balcony. Finished basement, 2+ attached garage and 2+ detached garage. Secluded 40+/- acres surrounded by state land. Sun porch, deck, waterfall. Cooperstown Schools. $699,000 Call Katherine L. Fistrowicz @ 607-267-2683 (cell)

MLS#91480 - Beautiful views! Milford Schools. 3 BR, 2 bath ranch, pond on 4.25 acres. A must see! Call Carol A Olsen @ 607-434-7436 (cell)

for complete listings visit us at realtyusa . com

All

Well maintained home w/62 acres and 2-stall barn/garage. 3 BRs, 2 baths, eat-in kitchen, formal DR, wide-plank wood floors, built-in cabinets and bookshelves in library/office. LR has open-beam cathedral ceilings and mountain views. Covered back porch, plenty of room for entertaining and outdoor recreation. Mix of woods and open fields w/plenty of walking paths and trails! Pond site w/stream. $269,000 MLS#90765

TO ADVERTISE IN REGION’S LARGEST

Lizabeth Rose, Broker/Owner

REALTY SECTION!

Cricket Keto, Licensed Assoc. Broker Stephen Baker, Licensed Assoc. Broker

MORE LISTINGS

Peter D. Clark, Consultant

ON PAGE A-6

Paula George, Licensed Real Estate Agent

HUBBELL’S REAL ESTATE 607-547-5740•607-547-6000 (fax) 157 Main Street Cooperstown, NY 13326

For Appointment Only Call: M. Margaret Savoie, Broker/Owner – 547-5334 Marion King, Associate Broker – 547-5332 Eric Hill, Associate Broker – 547-5557 Don DuBois, Associate Broker – 547-5105 Tim Donahue, Associate Broker – 293-8874 Cathy Raddatz, Sales Associate – 547-8958 Jacqueline Savoie, Sales Associate – 547-4141 Carol Hall, Sales Associate – 544-4144 Michael Welch, Sales Associate – 547-8502

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Thinking of Remodeling? Think of Refinancing!

nEwEr Family HomE

(7440) Fascinating 3 BR/2+ bath home w/valley views on 2+ acres. LR w/gas fireplace, large family/rec room, master BR w/tiled bath and walk-in closet. Custom kitchen, DR, large yard and deck, cement-board siding, 3-car garage. 3-zone hot water heat. Cooperstown Schools. Hubbell’s Exclusive–$289,900

$269,900 Call Sarah Eberly at 607-435-0251

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Gorgeous home sitting on 11+ acres! Enjoy the front porch w/beautiful views of the mountains! Some of the many features are: 4 BRs and 4 full baths, w/Jacuzzi tub in master, eat in kitchen w/center island, oak cabinets, slider doors leading out to the 10’X 44’deck, cathedral ceilings in living room and foyer. Natural light from the many windows and dormers creates bright and cheery atmosphere! Call today!

Exit Team Advantage Realty 5366 Main Street, Oneonta

REALTY

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Beautiful Colonial Style Home!

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Registered Mortgage Broker Matt Schuermann NYS Banking Dept. Loans arranged by a 3rd party lender.

Stone Mill Acres, a historic homestead sits on 9.51 acres in Fly Creek. Built in 1794, the post-and-beam farmhouse has been totally modernized. The kitchen has chef-style gas range, Silestone counters and room for casual dining. Laundry room with ½ bath, large pantry. Family room w/vaulted ceiling, exposed beams, tile flooring, lots of sunlight. Updates include a handsome Federal mantel in LR and embossed tin ceilings in LR, DR and kitchen. There are 2 BRs w/refinished wide pine floors. Detached 2-car garage w/attached room, front porch, and bath. Three solar panels cover 85% of the cost of electricity. Small barn w/second story, chicken house and garden shed. The property is fronted by Oaks Creek and Fly Creek. Steps and a path lead to wooded site w/firepit and picnic spot. Exclusively offered by Don Olin Realty at $349,000 For reliable, honest answers to any of your real estate questions, Don Olin Realty at 607.547.5622 or visit our website www.donolinrealty.com

E-Mail: info@hubbellsrealestate.com Web Site: www.hubbellsrealestate.com

(7623) Custom 3 BR/3 bath Dutch Colonial w/valley views on 9.58 acres. Formal LR and DR, 2 fireplaces, finished basement, working kitchen w/eating area and keeping room. Gracious 4-season room w/pellet stove, patio, large deck. Hand-hewn beams, period hardware, wide pine flooring. One-owner. Cooperstown Schools. Hubbell’s Exclusive–$399,000

HistORic OtsEgO cOunty HOmEstEaD!

CALL 547-6103

99 Main Street, Oneonta office 607.441.7312 fax 607.432.7580 www.oneontarealty.com

Enticing coopErstown HomE

MLS#90131 - 3 BRs, 2½ bath home on 2.67+/- acres. 3 levels of living space w/open floorplan, deck, balconies. Main floor w/vaulted ceiling, kitchen, DR and LR, 2 BRs and full bath. 2nd floor master suite w/full bath and balcony. 2-car detached garage w/workshop and storage space. $219,000 Call Katherine L. Fistrowicz @ 607-267-2683 (cell)

OTSEGO. homes

Locally owned and operated Single and multi-family homes Commercial property and land

(7408) Engaging 4 BR/2 bath home near sports center and school. Formal DR, hardwood flooring, private office, pantry, laundry/mud room, newer appliances, zoned hot water heat, 2-car garage, new roof. See this lovely place featuring comforts galore. Cooperstown Schools. Hubbell’s Exclusive–$245,000

MLS#91373 - Beautiful property in the Glimmerglass Historic District. Separate artist’s studio, 3-story barn, 3 BRs, 2½ baths. Walk to hospital sports center. Call Carol A Olsen @ 607-434-7436 (cell)

Lis Ne tin w g!

MLS#90435 - Charming home, move-in ready, on a corner lot in Cherry Valley. Home features 3 BRs, 1 full bath, mature landscaping, detached garage and shed. Priced to sell. $160,000 Call James Vrooman @ 603-247-0506 (cell)

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REMEMBERING RICKY

THURSDAY-FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3-4, 2013

AllOTSEGO.life C-1

At Robbery Scene, Customers Panicked, But Officer Took Action mentarily stunned. Coming out of BROTHERS/From B1 had left his gun locked in his OPD it, “Rick grabbed the gun as they wrestled. It went off.” locker. He and wife Deb offered “Even after Rick was hit,” the to buy the required food for the brother recounted, “he hung onto gathering: “We’re going to go the guy so hard, that when they to the store. We’ll be back in 45 arrested him in Colorado, he had minutes.” Next thing Sid rememblack and blue marks under his rib bers, the phone rang. It was Deb. cage.” “I think Rick was shot,” she said. Sid picked up Deb and “And it’s not good.” met the rest of the family at Immediately, Sid drove Fox Hospital’s emergency to the scene. As he crossed room. “They came out and Lettis Highway, an ambutold us, ‘Rick’s gone’.” lance, lights flashing, came Speechless, they were racing from Southside. escorted in. There lay their Through his rear view mirloved one on a gurney, his ror, “I could see them in body covered, only his head the back window, perform- Dick Ovens, “a big showing. ing CPR.” man with • As Sid later learned, gentle Within two hours of the Ricky and Deb had been words,” shooting, the whole city was at the back of the former there locked down. En route back Grand Union, near where was for Sid. to the Grand Union to pick OfficeMax is today, when up their brother’s car, Sid they heard “a big bang.” and Steve were stopped at three A mom came running down the roadblocks. aisle in a panic, one kid on each They arrived at a parking lot hand. The supermarket was being filled with police cruisers, from robbed. the state police, county Sheriff’s Rick took control. “Get everyDepartment, the OPD. In a daze, one out of the store. Call 9-11,” Sid crossed the police tape. A big he told the employees. Said Sid, tall trooper – Sid didn’t recognize “They recognized Rick. They him; he must have been from out knew who he was.” One woman of the area – sought to block his later told the brother, “I wanted way. “Suddenly I heard a voice.” so bad for him to help us. But I A familiar drawl. “Don’t you KNEW something was going to touch him,” the voice of command happen to him.” ordered. Rick sidled toward the front of It was Commander Mike Corthe store. He saw the perpetrator, pin, the brothers’ BMO. He had 5-foot-8, 180 pounds, at the courbeen reassigned to from the acadtesy counter, sawed-off shotgun emy to the top job at the Richfield in hand, demanding money from Springs barracks. terrified managers. The brothers returned to BelHe waited. As the robber mont Circle, where the shocked headed toward the door, the offamily was contemplating its loss. ficer plunged. Ricky tackled the At 2 a.m. on the 21st, there suspect so hard he flattened him, was a knock on the door. It was but then skidded into the plate James W. McMahon, superinglass window so hard he was mo-

outside,” he told Sid, “and throw some chairs around.” After a mass that overflowed St. Mary’s on Elm Street – 10,000 officers attended from around the state – and a huge reception at SUNY Oneonta, Sid returned to his empty home. There was Dick Ovens. They walked over to a pile of 250-pound blocks the brothers had been using to build a retaining wall. Sid, effortlessly, would put them in place one at a time; sometimes, he would haul two over, one in each hand, he told Ovens. That afternoon, Sid had been one of the pallbearers, along with HOMETOWN ONEONTA In the years since May 20, 1994, the Parisian family turned Ricky’s pal Steve Havens, brothers Randy, Terry and Steven, and their tragedy into service to the community, winning such brother-in-law David Currie. The accolades at St. Mary’s School 2011 Distinguished Educasket was heavy, real heavy, Sid cation Partner Award. Patriarch Al Parisian, who passed said. He and Ovens computed away later that year, is surrounded by family. Standing, from left, are Lisa Parisian, Jennifer McGrath, Edythe Parithe weight each man had to bear: sian, Scott Georgia, Janice Parisian Currie and her husband About 250 pounds. Why do you David, Mark “Sid” Parisian, Deb Parisian and Steve Parithink it felt so heavy? Ovens sian. In front with her granddad is Cheryl Parisian. asked. Sid didn’t know. “Because you didn’t want to carry it,” said tendent of the New York State community grief followed. At Ovens. the viewing, mourners waited Police, the first officer to rise up Said Sid, “these are the things four hours outside the Lester R. the ranks from trooper to the top that Dick Ovens did for me.” Grummons Funeral Home to job. He had been appointed only • pay their respects. There were the month before, in April 1994. The ordeal wasn’t over. law-enforcers and law-breakers, “Rick was the first trooper killed Three days after the shooting, including two young men, often under his watch,” said Sid. “I Colin Hyde, a 24-year-old from arrested, who Ricky had always saluted him. I welcomed him to Morris, flew to Colorado. In treated with respect. The brothers Denver, he tried to pass bills spotour home.” had sought to treat the law-biding Sid remembers McMahon’s ted with blood and was arrested. and less law-biding with consider- DNA testing, then in its infancy, words: “We are going to find out ation; as locals, they would have who did it. We’re going to go to made the connection: Ricky had to live with the aftermath. “Do the end of the earth to find him. bled into Hyde’s knapsack and you realize how much it took for And we’re going to be here for onto the stolen money. them to walk into this place?” Sid you every step of the way.” With Hyde was arrested and brought said. him were two men, Dick Ovens back to Otsego County, charged As the person most familiar – “a big man who spoke gentle with robbery and murder, second with his family and Deb’s, Sid words” – and Mike Kirby. McMadegree. It turned out Hyde had stood between the survivors, intro- been fired by the supermarket. hon had just created an employee ducing the long line of mourners assistance program for just these “He was angry at the Grand Union who knew one family but not the kinds of situations, and appointed and needed money,” said Sid. other. At one point, he snapped at “This was his way to get money those two men to staff it. an organizer, and Dick Ovens was and revenge.” • suddenly at his side: “Let’s go An outpouring of personal and Please See BROTHERS, C2

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Southside Mall presents the

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C-2

REMEMBERING RICKY

AllOTSEGO.life

The Pit Run has become such a part of community life, elementary students depicted it when they painted murals in the walkway between Main Street and the parking deck, as Sid points out.

Designer

Smi les AllOTSEGO.life

Jim Kevlin/

Birds Sing, And Survivors Remember BROTHERS/From C1 Hyde went on trial the following summer in highceilinged Courtroom #1 in the historic county courthouse in Cooperstown. Sid attended every day of the trial. “I never cared what he got as a penalty,” he said. “I wanted to make sure the process worked – and it did.” At the sentencing, Sid had the chance to say his piece. “I saw the defendant laughing. I saw him being able to hug his mother.” Because of Hyde’s actions, Ricky would never experience those everyday pleasures again. “We cannot keep him from smiling. We cannot keep him from laughing. But we can keep him from doing it outside a prison cell.” The packed courtroom broke into applause. Hyde received 25 to life for the murder, 12 1/2 to life for the robbery. “It was 37 1/2 years before he would be eligible for parole,” Sid said. • A few weeks later, Sid was invited to a meeting at the former state police barracks on Southside, next to where Airgas is today. It was organized by then-Lt. Kevin Molinari – as major, he retired last spring as Troop C commander – and Tim Catella, a boyhood friend of Ricky’s from the Belmont Circle neighborhood. About two dozen of Ricky’s longtime pals were there. The idea of a 10K memorial race emerged, and planning began for what became the Pit Run, which will be run for the 20th time on Sunday, Oct. 6. It was a 10K, which attracts only the most ardent runners. October is late in the year; the 10K season had passed. One of the organizers, a marathoner, tried to cushion the others not to expect too much. But that October morning, when Sid arrived at Neahwa Park, many hundreds of people had gathered between Hodge Pond and the swimming pool; 849 ran the grueling race. While cooler than August, the first run included “The Frying Pan.” A map shows the route passing other sites important to Ricky: St. Mary’s, the junior high school when it was on Academy Street, OHS, SUNY Oneonta, where he met Deb. Brooks’ BBQ has been an annual staple since the beginning. John Brooks was ill, and – as Sid tells it – son Ryan, back from Atlanta to help out his dad, was stunned by the turnout. “To see how this community responded to this, I don’t want to be anywhere else,” Ryan said, and he’s running the House of BBQ today. The first run was so successful, “we formed a foundation.” While he didn’t have any of his own, Ricky loved kids, his brother said. So, for 20 years now, the Ricky J. Parisian Memorial Scholarship Foundation has been helping local boys and girls get through college. Presentations are made at an annual dinner, usually in January.

THURSDAY-FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3-4, 2013

• Sid believes the Pit Run shows Oneonta’s community character, which he describes this way: If a stranger from out of town pulls up to Stewart’s and goes in for a cup of coffee, all the regulars will ignore him. If he drives into Stewart’s parking lot with a flat tire, all the regulars will be out there, helping him change the tire. In 1995, Binghamton Patrolman Lee Barta was shot and killed. In 1996, Ithaca officer Scott Padula died from stab wounds received in the line of duty. Memorial runs were organized in their honor, and the three events were promoted jointly. After a half-dozen years however, only the Pit Run continued. Oneonta didn’t forget Ricky Parisian. A 2-mile stroll was added, then a 5K and, finally, a fun run. The record is 1,800 runners, with participation settling into the 1,6001,800 range. That defies bad weather. Remember the 2008 flood? A week before the run, high water closed Neahwa Park. Sid showed up at 5:34 a.m., asking himself, “Why am I doing this? Nobody’s going to show up.” At 10:05, “I looked out into that field; it was full. 1,500 people showed up.” Sid has run all 19 runs, and plans to run the 20th. Brother Steve does the heavy lifting organizationally; you’ll see him there Sunday as well. Three years later, the annual Law Enforcement Benefit Ride began. At first, it was limited to police and firefighters and drew 30-35 riders, but it was soon expanded to the general public. This August, it attracted 220 motorcyclists, who gather at the Oneida Street barracks, ride up Route 28 to Cooperstown and Glimmerglass State Park, returning to Wilber Park for a Brooks BBQ feast. Ricky got his Harley after all. • After things settled down, Sid and Deb went separate ways, only to find themselves sitting next to each other six years later at a family barbecue. “I remembered we had once been close friends,” Sid said. Today, the two are inseparable. Still, what ifs tortured the family, particularly in the early years. What if Ricky had his gun with him? It had been a little chilly the night of the 20th, and Ricky stopped by the house to pick up a sweatshirt for Deb. Driving on to the Grand Union, “every single

AllOTSEGO.life

Cooperstown’s Josh Edmonds accepts the first-place plaque after winning the 2012 Pit Run.

traffic light was green,” she later told Sid. “If they had hit one red light, they would have missed it.” What if? “If I was there, would something have been different?” Sid asked himself. What if? A year and a half after Ricky’s passing, the New York State Trooper Association began annual Survivors Weekends, which feature grief workshops and a memorial service. Most important, it enables families united by that single experience to meet, talk and share. “You meet people who have gone through what you’re going through,” said Sid. The community that had been a comfortable home for the Parisians was suddenly different. Once, at a family dinner in the crowded backroom at Ruffino’s, the Parisians broke into laughter. Suddenly, they realized the rest of the room had fallen silent. “Are they questioning why you’re laughing?” Dick Ovens asked Sid when he raised the matter. “Or are they looking for permission?” “They” – a community that had also suffered a trauma – “were looking for permission,” Sid concluded. “You laughed before this all happened. Why not laugh after,” said Ovens. Ricky’s mother, Margaret, passed away on June 21, 2009, at age 81. Dad Alvin, 86, was honored by St. Mary’s School as Distinguished Partner In Education in 2011 for the raffles the couple had organized for years to benefit the school. He passed away that Sept. 9. At one Trooper Foundation session, the counselor asked the gathering, “Why do birds sing?” No one knew the answer. So the session continued and, 90 minutes later, Ovens asked again, “Why do birds sing?” Again, no answer. “Birds sing because they have a story,” Ovens said. “However you tell your story, that’s your loved one singing.” • Four years after being sentenced to a maximum-security prison in the Hudson Valley, Colin Hyde attacked his guard while being treated at a Kingston hospital and escaped. He was recaptured in the parking lot and, after trial, received another sentence. Later, he fashioned a shiv, stabbed his cellmate and was put in longterm solitary confinement. He suffered a stroke and died in prison on May 16, 2004. If Hyde’s forgotten, Ricky is not. In addition to the run, and the memorial ride, and Ricky’s memory alive in the people who received his scholarships, there’s a memorial on OfficeMax’s cinderblock west wall, a simple plaque. Four times a day, Southside Mall security officers make their rounds, swiping magnet cards to record their passage. At some point, mall management put a card swipe next to the plaque. “So four times a day, they check Rick’s plaque,” Sid said with some satisfaction.

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