Saturday, May 31, 2008
Party postponed until June 7
may turn dangerous, and have postponed the Community Celebration to
next Saturday, June 7. Same time, same place: Kenneth Wilson State
Park, Wittenberg Rd, Mt Tremper, 4-7pm. We'll send out another
reminder during the week. The celebration is open to everyone: if
you'd like to be on the Evite list to see who else is coming and what
they're bringing, just e-mail abbearonson_at_hotmail.com
Friday, May 30, 2008
Woodstock Times on new Trustees' at work
Newly elected Onteora district school board members, Donna Flayhan, Ralph Legnini, Ann McGillicuddy and Laurie Osmond are gearing up for immediate changes as promised during their campaign, while tackling all of July's business.
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Electees in Memorial Day Parade

The Onteora High School Marching Band also participated in the Parade.
Thursday, May 22, 2008
"Pendulum swings back" says Woodstock Times
Ralph Legnini, Donna Flayhan, Ann McGillicuddy and Laurie Osmond, the block of four candidates who ran on a platform to put a moratorium on the Onteora Central School District's Grade 5-8 middle school proposal and pledged to keep the currently operating elementary schools open, secured a landslide victory over three incumbents, Mary-Jane Bernholz, Cindy O'Connor and Rita Vanacore. Osmond, the fourth place finisher, will fill the unexpired term of Herb Rosenfeld, who resigned in April.
Onteora administrators were pleased to see that all four propositions on the ballot, including the $48,215,077 school budget for 2008/2009, a 3.08 percent increase in spending, were easily approved in the May 20 election. Also meeting with voters approval was a proposition, rejected twice in the last two years, to approve $189,127.32 for the purchase of two new school buses.
District superintendent Leslie Ford was thrilled that all four propositions passed. "This is really good news for kids, we're going to be able to work on the facilities upgrades, we're going to get new buses and the child safety zone, this is really good news."
Results from the towns were tabulated at Onteora Middle/High school after the 9 p.m. closing of the polls. However, even before the last town votes from Shandaken and Lexington were called in, it was clear that the three incumbents were defeated.
Although O'Connor, Bernholz and Vanacore achieved their highest votes in their home town of Olive, it was not enough to secure a win. Fewer votes were cast in Olive (1,083) than the 1,525 in 2005, when townwide anger boiled over due to the imposition of the Large Parcel provision of state law by the school board that caused Olive taxes to rise an average of 60 percent. In contrast, more voters came out this year in Woodstock (1,001), West Hurley (738) and especially Shandaken (812), where the front running candidate Legnini outpaced the leading incumbent O'Connor, by 751-95. (Town vote totals are based on the budget proposition, a yes-or-no deal.)
Legnini totaled 2,460 votes, with Woodstock resident Donna Flayhan close behind with 2,379. Legnini appeared stunned by the result. "I am overwhelmed that the community spoke and got to vote on the direction that they want the schools to go in." He said come July, when the new school year begins and the new board members take office, that they would work on the procedure to overturn the Grade 5-8 middle school proposal. Flayhan agreed. "We have a mandate to move forward to fix the schools," she said. "That is what we promised to do and make sure we keep the student teacher ratios low...because that is the best learning environment and the people have spoken, democracy has spoken."
Of the three incumbents, O'Connor tallied the most votes, 1,446, far below the last winner, Osmond, who finished with 2,267. Bernholz tallied 1,384 and Vanacore, 1,301. Once the totals came in, all three left the High school auditorium and moved toward the cafeteria to approve the votes. They all refused to comment, with Olive Matters leader Judith Boggess and O'Connor's sister, Lisa Valvo sweeping them away. "I think you should leave them alone," said Valvo.
Vanacore said, "No comment. I am not going to comment at all to anybody."
Some cracks may have appeared in the previously monolithic Olive vote, also. Legnini, who is an Olive resident, tallied 339 votes, slightly more than 30 percent in the town. One year ago, with significantly lower turnout, Marino D'Orazio, also an Olive resident, garnered only 94 there.
The total district vote for the budget of 3,633, less than 2000, 2001, 2005 and the peak of the last decade, 2002 - the year voters unseated trustee Joseph Doan - when 4,108 went to the polls. But it far surpassed last year's total of 2,232.
A function of democracy
Ann McGillicuddy, who came in third with 2,294 votes was beaming. "The people have spoken," she said. "I am really proud to be a member of this community. It was a grass roots effort by so many members of the Onteora community and I look forward to working with everyone in the community."
Legnini, Flayhan and McGillicuddy will serve full three-year terms. Osmond, who will fill Rosenfeld's unexpired term, was sworn in during the special school board meeting and will begin serving as a trustee immediately. "It was so heartwarming to see this community come together, it was great," said Osmond. "I think this is a sign of very good things to come." She thanked all the people who helped with the campaign and said she enjoyed talking to everyone in the school community.
For nearly a year Ford followed the school board's direction to create a Grade 5-8 middle school, to be located at the current site of the shared middle/high school, although with new construction added and extensive renovations. The plan would have called for the closing of one of the three currently functioning elementary schools, likely Phoenicia Elementary, and would have studied the relative merits of remaining at Woodstock Elementary or perhaps switching back to the now closed West Hurley Elementary. It would likely have required voters to approve borrowing approximately $70 million, a sum the consultants had said would have been somewhat offset by state aid and savings from closing an additional school. Farther down the road, the potential was for having a single campus in Boiceville.
Now that a new board intends to change that direction, Ford's thoughts on starting from scratch were optimistic. "That is a feature of working with the board," she said. "That is the democratic process so that's not something to be disappointed over."
High School senior Adam Pollock who came in last at 739 votes said he was happy with the outcome. "I ran my campaign on $300, so I think I did really well, I am not disappointed at all." He plans to run again next year
A Challengers’ Sweep
"Just as recent elections have been decided by late-arriving vote numbers coming in from Olive and Marbletown voters at the Bennett School, the pendulum-like sweep victory of four challengers to incumbent Onteora board members Mary Jane Bernholz, Cindy O’Connor and Rita Vanacore had to wait Tuesday night, May 20, for the Phoenicia School to provide the final clue as to the district’s wishes.
Which seemed only right, given that the issue pulling the biggest blocks of voters out had to do with a pending decision to close at least one community elementary school in Phoenicia to create a new 5-8 Middle School on a rapidly centralizing Boiceville-based campus rather than the Large Parcel threat, or reality, that drove Olive voter turnout since 2005.
“Taking Large Parcel off the table changed the demographics,” said Ralph Legnini, the evening’s top vote-getter and a West Shokan resident, after all the tallies were counted. “I’m glad people came out and participated. They spoke out to change the way things have been going.”
Legnini received a total of 2,460 votes, with Woodstocker Donna Flayhan at 2,379, Phoenicia-resident Ann McGillicuddy at 2,294 and Willow resident Laurie Osmond getting a total of 2,267 votes.
On the incumbents side, O’Connor received a high of 1,446 votes, current board president Bernholz got 1,384 votes, and Rita Vanacore ended up with 1,301. All were from the Town of Olive, which voted for them overwhelmingly, albeit by slightly less numbers and splits than other candidates have received in recent years.
Woodstock-based High School senior Adam Pollack got a total of 739 votes but promised to try again next year.
All four propositions on the ballot passed. The budget, a proposed $48,215,077 budget representing a 3.08 percent hike in spending, won 2,468 votes to 1,165; a proposition to purchase $189,127 worth of new busses, got through 2,063 to 1,529 after several previous failures; a $1.8 million expenditure of already-there capital reserve funds was okayed 2,062 to 1,457 and finally, a request to establish a Child Safety zone requiring use of school busses to pick up and drop off kids near the high school in Boiceville passed 2,642 to 964.
“I’m just so pleased we passed a budget, a proposition to get new busses, and a child safety zone; all really wonderful things that are good for the kids of Onteora,” said District Superintendent Leslie Ford after hugging the incumbent board members who hired her, and with whom she’s worked for the last year, and welcoming their replacements warmly. “We welcome the new board and their energy… That is a feature of working with the board, that is the democratic process so that’s not something to be disappointed over.”
Asked about how she and the district would handle a series of pending decisions — some made like the decision to create a 5-8 Middle School at the high school and take that issue out for bonding in January, and others about to be okayed, such as the official closing of the Phoenicia School that had been set for mid-June, Dr. Ford spoke about process.
“The new board will decide what still stands. The new board, as it formulates, will decide the directions they want to go in. As you know, I serve at their pleasure.”
Osmond, as the lowest vote-getter of the four winners Tuesday night, was sworn into office during a terse board meeting where all results were accepted by the current board. She will be filling the vacated board seat of Herb Rosenfeld, and will be up for re-election next May.
“I am overwhelmed that the community spoke and got to vote on the direction that they want the schools to go in,” Legnini said after it was all over. He said that come July, when he and his three other challengers take office, they would work on a proper procedure to overturn the 5/8 middle school proposal. “We have to reflect the vote that was cast by the community-we ran on those issues and the community spoke.”
“I feel like the vote was so overwhelming that it’s a mandate for the four of us,” added Flayhan. “Clearly people voted for us because of what we are against – the $70 million bond and the five-through-eight middle school. We have a mandate to move forward to fix the elementary schools and make sure we keep the student teacher ratios low.”
She added that she and her slate had also spoken about shifting away from the current committee structure, a governing style picked up from the town of Olive that the challengers feel may have insulated the defeated incumbents, and entire board, from truly hearing from the wider community about their wishes and dislikes.
...
“I think this is a sign of very good things to come,” said Osmond, soon after being sworn in as the first new board member of four.
“It was a grass roots effort by so many members of the Onteora community,” added McGillicuddy. “I look forward to working with everyone in the community.”"
WAMC hosts Vox Pop on School Boards and School Budgets
Early on in the show, Mr. Kremer says that, State Wide, voter turn-out averages 5-10%. Turn-out in the Onteora Central School District was closer to 40%. Everyone in the campaign is very grateful for this massive show of interest in the Onteora Central School District.
Daily Freeman on the election
A plan to add fifth and sixth grades to Onteora Middle School and close a district elementary school is expected to be halted by a new Board of Education majority that was swept into office Tuesday.Winning candidates for three three-year seats were Ralph Legnini with 2,460 votes, Donna Flayhan with 2,379, and Ann McGillicuddy with 2,294. A one-year term to finish a vacancy was won by Laurie Osmond, who received 2,267 votes. The school board has seven elected members.
Osmond, who was sworn immediately following the election, said the four winning candidates were successful in getting the word out on their opposition to closing schools. She compared the sweep to an election three years ago, when the three candidates defeated Tuesday won seats on the board over the "large parcel" tax issue.
"I had a few people come up to me and say it was going to be a landslide, but I felt either way that it went had to be accepted," Osmond said.
Legnini said the new majority expects to immediately stop the plan to expand Onteora Middle School and close one of the district's three remaining elementary schools.
"We have to put it into motion to change that," he said. "That's what the voters said they wanted and we have to reflect that. So it was a very simple community decision."
The incumbent trustees finished as follows: Cindy O'Connor, 1,446 votes, Mary Jane Bernholz, 1,384; and Rita Vanacore, 1,301. Newcomer Adam Pollack, an Onteora High School senior, received 739 votes.
Bernholz and Vanacore declined to comment on the result. O'Connor called the defeat "very liberating for us."
"You don't always get what you want but you get what you need," O'Connor said, quoting the Rolling Stones tune.
Superintendent Leslie Ford said issues will be addressed when the new board takes over in July.
"That's what happens with boards, that's the usual," she said. "It'll be a different set of people and they will come up with their own collective way of working together."
Ford was pleased that the $48.21 million budget was adopted by a 2,468-1,165 vote, and that all three separate ballot propositions were approved by voters.
"I couldn't be happier about the budget," she said. "We've got buses, so we've covered transportation. We're going to be working on facilities, so this is really, really good news."
Ann McGillicuddy on WAMC
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
The Vote In More Detail
Please note that this remains the unofficial vote count. Affadavit votes have yet to be counted, and the final vote will be ratified at the next Board Meeting, Tuesday June 3. That Board Meeting will be at the Phoenicia Elementary School.
Adam Pollack
SH 127
Olive 202
Wdstk 189
WH 221
Total votes: 739 (8)
Donna Flayhan
SH 743
Olive 270
Wdstk 967
WH 399
Total votes: 2379 (2)
Laurie Osmond
SH 736
Olive 186
Wdstk 927
WH 418
Total votes: 2267 (4)
Ralph Legnini
SH 751
Olive 339
Wdstk 942
WH 428
Total votes: 2460 (1)
Ann McGillicuddy
SH 768
Olive 288
Wdstk 937
WH 301 6
Total votes: 2294 (3)
MJ Bernholz
SH 91
Olive 867
Wdstk 116
WH 310
Total votes: 1384 (6)
Cindy O'Connor
SH 92
Olive 893
Wdstk 130
WH 328
Total votes: 1443 (5)
Rita Vanacore
SH 78
Olive 834
Wdstk 108
WH 281
Total votes: 1301 (7)
We are proud to announce that every one of our block of four got more votes than ANY other candidate for School Board in at least the last six years, if not longer. We are also very grateful for the true cross district support.
The Propositions in Numbers
Vehicles proposition: Approved, 2,063-1,529
Capital reserve proposition: Approved, 2,062-1,457
Child safety zone proposition: Approved, 2,642-964
We will publish town-by-town break-downs on everything later on today. In the meantime, you should be able to make them out on the blackboard photos below.
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
We Won!
Adam Pollack 739
Donna Flayhan 2379
Laurie Osmond 2267
Ralph Legnini 2460
Ann McGillicuddy 2294
Mary Jane Bernholz 1384
Cindy O'Connor 1446
Rita Vanacore 1301
Laurie Osmond is being sworn in at this moment, to take the seat that Herb Rosenfeld resigned from. Donna Flayhan, Ralph Legnini and Ann McGillicuddy will all be taking their seats on July 1.
All propositions passed. So did the budget.
Thank you everyone.
Monday, May 19, 2008
An Open Letter To All Voters, from the Candidates
The Board of Education incumbents, if re-elected, will saddle the district with an $70-86 million bond, and embark on the largest, most expensive construction project in the history of the district and build a Grades 5-12 Middle School/High School Building that is not educationally sound nor publicly supported.
Additionally, by the time construction begins, the original cost estimates will be 3 ½ years old and will need to be updated.
Does the Ulster County Jail ring a bell?
The incumbents are also determined to close an Elementary School, although our neighborhood Elementary Schools are thriving. They are not broken.
In short, borrow $70+ million to close a school, to build a school, to overcrowd the classrooms.
The incumbents deny that taking our youngest children and busing them further and longer to sit in overcrowded classrooms will be harmful.
They deny that there is anything troubling about putting 5th graders on the same buses and in the same building as 12th graders.
They deny that the closure of a school will have any economic impact on a town, or on property values. Talk to a local business owner or realtor and you’ll get a very different picture.
They cite predictions of a downward spiral in enrollment, while actual predicted enrollment shows a plateau, and demographic reports do not include families moving to the area.
The incumbents are ramming forward one costly solution. There are other solutions that they have refused to consider. These are solutions that can cost less, include all our communities, create vibrant, educationally sound schools for our children, keep our local businesses and property values from declining, all while being eligible for state aid.
These other solutions need to be fully explored and costed out before making any decisions and putting forth a bond.
Our block of four Onteora School Board challengers are already working on fiscally responsible, creative, educationally sound ideas that provide a positive, doable vision for our district.
We ask for your support and your help in getting out the vote on Tuesday, May 20 from 2-9pm at your town Elementary School, so that we can turn this catastrophe around and create a district that we can be proud of and that others will want to be part of.
Vote #2-5 on your ballot.
Education Matters. Money Matters. Community Matters.
Sincerely,
Donna Flayhan, Laurie Osmond, Ralph Legnini, Ann McGillicuddy
Candidates for Onteora School Board
www.saveouronteoraschools.com
Vote FOR the 4, Vote FOR the Budget
We suggest voting FOR the Budget, which comes with a promise – but not a guarantee – of a 0% tax levy increase. The current School Board was fortunate to have several teachers retire this year, and had a late increase in State Aid; the Board decided to pass these savings back to the taxpayers. Were this budget to be voted down, the District would be forced to enact a contingency budget, which would stifle all purchase of new equipment, the cancellation of field trips etc. And it would also create a painful and divisive headache across the district just as we hope to start the process of moving forward in cross-district unison. Voting for the budget does NOT mean you are voting for the Grades 5-8 Middle School plan, or for the vast sums of money that the Board needs to implement it. These are policy decisions that we trust our candidates will be able to overturn when they are elected. So even as you vote Lines 2-5 for us four candidates, we recommend you also vote FOR the budget.
As regards the four propositions, we do not have one unified opinion on them. In part, this is because we were not part of the Board (and therefore the discussion) that developed them. We invite voters to learn more about each of these issues, either via the current edition of the Onteora Schools newsletter, or by talking to neighbors and other would-be voters. Again, none of them relate to the current Board's plans for a Grades 5-8 Middle School and the immediate closure of an elementary, nor the Bond costs they would need to raise. We will note that the same Woodstock Times editorial that endorsed the four of us candidates also expressed support for all four propositions. And we would also say that if you feel you are not suitably informed on these issues, you do not have to cast a vote on them.
Thank you to all the voters who have expressed so much interest in all these issues. This campaign has shown just how much people care about their schools.
Voting By The Numbers
There are almost 12,000 registered voters in the Onteora Central School District. When elected in 2005, the three incumbents averaged less than 2,000 votes each - barely one-sixth of the eligible vote!
BUT…
In 2005, when the three incumbents were elected on the back of a Large Parcel protest from Olive voters, Woodstock turn-out was only 25%, Shandaken turn-out was 33% - and Olive turn-out was nearly 65%.
IN OTHER WORDS…
It’s all about the turn-out! In 2008, we have to show that we care enough about our schools to vote to keep them! Woodstock and Shandaken combined have more than twice as many registered voters as Olive – and people in Olive have been telling us for weeks that they are fed up with the direction of the current board, and voting for the “challengers.”
AND REMEMBER…
Voting is at your town elementary school. (Woodstock if you live in Woodstock, Phoenicia if you live in Shandaken or Lexington, West Hurley if you live in West Hurley, Bennett if you live in Olive or Marbletown.) Voting does not take place at the local firehouse, library or wherever you may be used to voting during Government Elections. Voting is from 2-9pm. If you arrive at 9:01pm, you will not be allowed to vote. If you are a registered voter, you are already registered for the School Board Election. If you received a blue postcard from our candidates, you are registered to vote in the School Board election. If your name is not in the registrar’s books and you are certain it should be, you may request a vote by affadavit. A form will be filled out, and your name will be checked with County records the next day and your vote tallied if approved.
If you show up to vote but are not registered, you will be invited to register there and then for future elections. It’s never too late to vote!
See you at school tomorrow!
Endorsed by Every Newspaper!
“There is no choice but to vote them out,” says the Phoenicia Times/Olive Press. “We have to remember this is about the quality of our community’s education, and not just taxes. And we have to get beyond allowing one block of voters to decide all Onteora matters.”
"We believe that we give up too much by implementing the Grade 5-8 middle school plan,” says the Woodstock Times. “And thus we support those who seek a moratorium on the plan and urge you to vote for Ralph Legnini, Laurie Osmond, Donna Flayhan and Ann McGillicuddy."
“We ask our readers to support the challengers in this election May 20th so this ill-advised reshuffling of the school district does not happen without more scrutiny and the help of experts,” says the Ulster County Townsman.
We thank these papers for their support and remind you to vote Tuesday May 20, 2-9pm at your town elementary school.
Thanks! to the Olive Seniors
Indie for Beginners
Uncloseable
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Candidates on WDST Monday morning
We Interrupt This Election Campaign to Bring you a News Broadcast.
The current school board plans to close Phoenicia Elementary in three years.
You should be able to see the nine-minute video below this line. If not, click here for the YouTube link.
Multi-media Election information
Last Tuesday's 'Meet the Candidates' debate at the Boiceville Inn was filmed, and is being broadcast on Public Access TV (Channel 23) over the next few days, at midnight and 3pm in the Shandaken/Olive townships. Tune in to see what the eight candidates have to say for themselves.
Dakota Lane, who hosts the 'Dakota's Question' section of the Phoenicia Times, not only filmed Saturday night's projection art event in Phoenicia (read more about it here), she stayed up all night to edit it into a five-minute YouTube video. It should be playing in a screen right below this line; if not, you can watch it here.
Ralph Legnini writes...
Please vote for us, the candidates who will work for the whole of our four town community. Aside from deciding the BEST way to utilize our school buildings and transportation, we urgently need to make the schools better - from the inside out. They need to be energized again, as do all of us in our School District. We need to change the mindset that keeps us stuck in the mud of divisiveness. Parents with children in school have to step up and be involved, and our schools have to give back to those in the community, without kids, who pay taxes to help fund the district. Let's get everyone on the same page to roll up our sleeves, think smartly and creatively, and move forward together - trustees, superintendent, students, teachers, administrators, custodians, maintenance workers, bus drivers, aids, nurses, lunchroom staff, and community alike - to bring us all forward to a place we can be proud of. Let's make the schools we pay for be a gift to our community, the star we all revolve around - for our pre-K students taking their first steps away from home, to the seniors in our community who have walked through the world. It's your school. It's your vote.
Phoenicia Artists say: Don't Let Them Close Our School

The monthly Arts Upstairs gallery opening on Main Street in Phoenicia took on a special glow last night, with people from the Magnetic Laboritorium wrapping the Phoenicia Hotel (which was irreparably burned in a fire last summer) in tarps, and then projecting video imagery onto the remains of the building. Despite intermittent rain, a couple of hundred people crowded the gallery and the sidewalks as the words and phrases "Don't Let Them Close Our School," "Vote May 20" and "Keep Local Businesses Thriving" were sent spinning across the street in bright blue lights. Just one more example in a seemingly endless display of anger towards the current School Board and support for the challenging candidates. Thanks go out to everybody involved in last night's effort: Arts Upstairs, Marisela and all at Magnetic Laboritorium, and to Declan Feehan, the new owner of the Phoenicia Hotel, which we hope will rise like a phoenix from the ashes.
Ulster County Townsman Endorses the Challengers
"If you haven't heard, the Onteora Board of Education has decided to close one of the remaining elementary schools in the district. They won't "officially" say which one, until after the crucial May 20th vote that will decide who is in control of the school board.
But everyone knows that the current regime plans to shut down the Phoenicia Elementary School. Why Phoenicia? Because it is the smallest community in the district with the least amount of voters. We warned of this several months ago and now it is coming true.
Obviously, the present school board, heavily dominated by trustees from the town of Olive, is not going to shut down its own school. And it is not going to awake the sleeping giant by proposing shutting down the Woodstock Elementary School. Woodstock has more than twice the voters than Olive. To turn against Woodstock would be political suicide....
... We ask our readers to support the challengers in this election May 20th so this ill-advised reshuffling of the school district does not happen without more scrutiny and the help of experts."
The full editorial is available in print editions of the Ulster County Townsman.
Saturday, May 17, 2008
Phoenicia tonight
Thanks to the kindness of a man with a tour bus, the four candidates took a cross-district trip today, meeting shoppers and residents in West Hurley, Woodstock, Olive and Shandaken, while somehow fitting in kids' Aikido, soccer and piano recitals. Everyone was especially impressed by the Town of Shandaken Historical Museum in Pine Hill, and its display of all the old village schools that no longer exist.
The candidates will be at the Arts Upstairs on Main Street in Phoenicia tonight for its monthly opening. There will be some special art on display and plenty food and drink.
Thanks to everyone who braved the rain last night to come to the fundraiser/meet the candidates event at Levon Helm's barn. (Below: Ann McGillicuddy speaking at the event.) We raised enough funds to see us through the last few days. Thanks especially to those who donated gifts to the Silent Auction, including Levon Helm, John Sebastian, Peter Yarrow, Martha Frankel, and Happy Traum.
Friday, May 16, 2008
The Bus Is Coming!
Come to Levon Helm's this evening
Woodstock Times endorses our candidates
"We believe that we give up too much by implementing the Grade 5-8 middle school plan - we sacrifice smaller class sizes for young students; greater separation of the very young from the titanic angst of teen socialization; we would experience a painful loss of community schools - treasures that we've been able to afford (it is interesting to note that the town boards of Woodstock and Shandaken have officially opposed the plan, fearing a negative community impact).Read the entire editorial in this week's newspaper here.
And thus we support those who seek a moratorium on the plan and urge you to vote for Ralph Legnini, Laurie Osmond, Donna Flayhan and Ann McGillicuddy."
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Invite to Levon Helm's Studio this Friday
-- Donna Flayhan / Laurie Osmond / Ralph Legnini / Ann McGillicuddy --
For Some Great Food & Desserts
on Friday Evening, May 16th
7 – 10 pm
at Levon Helm’s Beautiful Studio!
A Meet the Fab Four Fundraiser Event
Participate in the silent auction to win:
A pair of tickets for a Levon Helm Ramble
Concert tickets for Dr. John and The Gipsy Kings
Kathy Anderson School for Young Artists Gift Certificates
Martha Frankel book, personally signed
Homespun Tapes Learn-to-play DVDs
Signed CDs by John Sebastian
And much much more!
Enter your special home-made dessert in our cooking contest!
Best dessert wins a special prize!
$10 Suggested Donation
DIRECTIONS FROM CENTER OF WOODSTOCK
Take Tinker St (Route 212) towards Saugerties
As you head out of Woodstock
Turn Left on Plochmann Lane, approx 1 mile to mailbox #160 (on right)
Follow driveway to house/studio. Check in at ticket “hut” at end








