Gallatin Town Board Agenda November 2024 For zoom link- [email protected] … {...}
Ellen’s Weekend Picks – October 14 and beyond
All addresses in Hudson, unless otherwise indicated.
Saturday-Sunday, October 14-15
Films at TSL
Marie Curie: The Courage of Knowledge – A sweeping biographical film about the first woman to win the Nobel Prize. In French with English subtitles
Two Trains Runnin’ – In June, 1964—Freedom Summer—hundreds of college students, eager to join the civil rights movement, traveled to Mississippi. That same month, another group of musicians, students and record collectors also traveled to MS. Unaware of each other, the two groups had come with the same goal—to find an old blues singer and coax him out of retirement. Thirty years before, Son House and Skip James had recorded some of the most memorable music of their era – The film pays tribute to a pioneering generation of musicians, offering a crucial vantage from which to view the evolving dynamics of race in current day America.
Manolo: The Boy Who Made Shoes for Lizards – An in-depth portrait of legendary shoe designer Manolo Blahnik, whose impeccable dedication to his craft set a fashion standard among celebrities, stylists, and industry icons.
Dries – For the first time fashion designer Dries Van Noten allows a filmmaker to accompany him in his creative process and rich home life…This film offers an insight into the life, mind and creative heart of a Master Fashion Designer who, for more than 25 years, has remained independent in a landscape of fashion consolidation and globalization.” – In English and Dutch with subtitles
Walk With Me – “…a cinematic journey into the world of mindfulness and the Zen Buddhist master Yhich Nhat Hanh….This visceral film is a meditation on a community whose members have given up all their possessions for a monastic life in rural France.” – Narrated by Benedict Cumberbatch – In Vietnamese, French, and English, with English subtitles.
Kakehashi: A Portrait of Chef Nobuo Fukuda – Born of a strict culture, the Chef had the desire to bridge the gap between Japan and the rest of the world (known as kakehashi) –Facing many challenges, he started as a dishwasher at Benihana and went on to create a cuisine that bridged the gap
My Brothers and Sisters in the North – What do we know about the citizens of North Korea? The country seems to be inhabited by robotic soldiers and its leader’s hysterically loyal subjects. But what about the everyday life of the people? Award-winning documentary filmmaker Sung-Hyung Cho was the first South Korean director to receive an official permit to film in North Korea. Traveling the country, she accompanies ordinary people during their everyday lives and work routines, talking to them about their hopes and dreams. In German and Korean with English subtitles
The Little Hours – Bored, volatile, and sexually repressed Renaissance nuns live in a monastery under the watchful eye of Father Tommasso. Their dull lives are shaken up by the arrival of a handsome new groundskeeper, whom Father Tommasso introduces as a deaf-mute to discourage temptation. Massetto struggles to maintain his cover as the situation erupts into a frenzy of debauchery and hormones….
Ex Libris – The New York Public Library –“In his 43rd film in 50 years, Frederick Wiseman cracks open the New York Public Library, an institution eminently worthy of his immersive style. If you thought libraries are just repositories for books, you’re in for a big wonderful surprise. The magnificent Stephen A. Schwarzman building is the spine of the film, but equally vital is the role of branch libraries that act as community centers for civic life. ‘Libraries are the pillars of our democracy,’ says Toni Morrison, as Wiseman’s opus makes abundantly clear.”
Information and tickets at 518-822-8448 or www.timeandspace.org – Time & Space Limited., 434 Columbia Street
Saturday-Sunday, October 14-15
Ghent Playhouse’s presents Greater Tuna, directed by Brian Wagner – “A hilarious send-up of small town morals and mores. Two actors portray 20 characters—men, women, children, and animals—all wacky citizens of Tuna–Texas’s third smallest town.” Reservations and information at 392-6264 or www.ghentplayhouse.org – Runs on weekends through October 22 – Fri/Sat at 8 pm, Sun at 2 pm – Ghent Playhouse, 6 Town Hall Road, off Route 66, Ghent
The exhibition Incident Report: Reports at September Gallery, (See listing under “Ongoing Exhibitions” below.) will be open this weekend.– Information by email to [email protected] – September Gallery, Third Floor 449 Warren Street #3
Saturday, October 14
Hudson Farmers’ Market –The market is still going strong. – Apples, including historic varieties; pumpkins, peppers in all colors—sweet, mild, hot, and hotter; potatoes of all kinds, colors and sizes; and greens, squashes, pesto, cookies, cheeses, eggs, bread, coffee, pies and tarts, meats and fish, and beautiful cut flowers! – Information at hudsonfarmersmarketny.com – 9 am to 1 pm – Parking lot at Sixth & Columbia Streets
Third Annual Barkus Pet Costume Parade – A “Fun-Raiser” presented by United Way of Columbia and Greene Counties – Proceeds benefit local nonprofit human services agencies – 9:30 am – Registration (or register on Facebook @petcostumeparade;); 10 am – Line-up at Seventh Street Park; 11 am – Parade rolls down Warren Street to Front Street at the foot of Promenade Hill Park – All pets are welcome – A fee is charged to qualify for a prize – Information at 518-756-2155 or by email to [email protected] – 9:30 am – Seventh Street Park
Tours of the historic 1874 Hudson-Athens Lighthouse – Sponsored by the Hudson-Athens Lighthouse Preservation Society–Tour one of only seven remaining lighthouses on the Hudson River. This gem still has its spiral staircase, working fog bell, and wonderful architecture – Learn its history and what life was like for the lighthouse keeper and his family who lived on the lighthouse. The Hudson-Athens Light is still an active aid for navigation for water traffic. Tours have been available on the second Saturday of each month through October. This Saturday’s tour is the last tour for this season – Reservations are strongly recommended and can be made online at www.hudsoncruises.com or by calling 888-764-1844 – Tickets are available the day of the tour at the departure site – For general information go to www.hudsonathenslighthouse.org or call 518-828-5294 – Tours run from 11 am to 2:30 pm and depart from Henry Hudson Riverfront Park on the hour and Athens Riverfront Park on the half hour –Please arrive 15 minutes prior to tour time with confirmation of purchase and check-in. – In Hudson, board at the City dock behind the gazebo, Henry Hudson Riverfront Park, Water Street, accessed via Broad Street grade crossing past the Amtrak Station on Front Street
The Metropolitan Opera’s production of Mozart’s Die Zauberflote – Live in HD – Information at 518-822-8448 or www.timeandspace.org – 1 pm – Time & Space Limited., 434 Columbia Street
Exhibition Opening – Paintings by Joseph Yetto – Yetto’s paintings have been included in many group shows at the gallery. This is his first solo show and provides a unique opportunity to view the full range and depth of his talent and artistic concerns. Yetto is “fascinated by beautiful deterioration.” – For example, he paints sunflowers in the process of withering and drying—“ghosts of their former, radiant selves but no less worthy of appreciation.” – “Along with his sunflowers, the work in this show depicts other natural and man-made objects transformed by time and their surroundings. Yetto’s willingness to be fully present with his subjects—seeing them as they are, as well as how they were, illuminates the commonplace to reveal the sublime.” – Information at 518-392-3336 or thompsongirouxgallery.com – 4 to 6 pm – Thompson Giroux Gallery, 57 Main Street, Chatham
11th Annual Pumpkin Walk to benefit The Mental Health Association of Columbia-Greene Counties – Family entertainment followed by a stroll along a magical path of lit jack-o-lanterns artistically carved by children and artists from the community – Ample parking –Information at 518-828-4619 ext. 302 – Family entertainment from 4 to 6 pm; Pumpkin Walk at 6 pm – Columbia-Greene Community College, 4400 Route 23, Hudson
Exhibition Opening – Selection ’17 – Concepto Hudson presents the first juried exhibition of its six-year run – Twenty artists were chosen from an extensive number of submissions – The quality of the submitted works was exciting and unexpected, with a diversity of emerging, mid-career and self-taught artists. The result is an exciting representation of present New York area artists in and around our region. – On view through November 19 – Information at [email protected] – 5 to 8 pm – Concepto Hudson, 741 Warren Street
Exhibition Opening – John Davis Gallery presents the work of six artists in its Main Galleries, Sculpture Garden and Carriage House, including constructions by the featured artist–La Wilson – This is the 16th exhibition of Ms. Wilson’s work that the artist and dealer have presented together. It also marks Ms. Wilson’s eighth exhibition in Hudson. She visits Hudson, New York from Hudson, Ohio where she lives. Her work has been shown extensively in the mid-west and in New York City. The other works being shown are: recent work by Brandt Junceau, photographs by Paul Hamann, and paintings by Brian Rego, Tine Lundsfryd, and Priscilla Derven. All on view through November 5 – Information at [email protected] or 518-828-5907 – 6 to 8 pm – John Davis Gallery, 362 ½ Warren Street
Exhibition Opening – Life’s Rich Pageant, a group exhibition of paintings, drawings, sculpture and photographs by 33 artists – On view through November 26 – Information by email to [email protected] or call 518-828-6680 – 6 to 8 pm – Jeff Bailey Gallery, 127 Warren Street
Exhibition Opening – Eric Rhein: 360 Moons – Eric Rhein has gained international recognition as a significant and widely exhibited artist, whose artwork embodies themes of love, sexuality, and identity through his ever-evolving experience of HIV. Rhein tested positive in 1987 at age 27; 360 Moons now honors his three decades of creating artwork through this profound experience. The selected works of photography, sculpture, and wire drawings evoke the physical, ethereal, and mystic, and his personal connection to the natural world. Resilience and vulnerability, loss and survival co-exist in these light and shadowed works, reflecting Rhein’s spiritually driven understanding of being human. – On view through November 19 – Information by e-mail to [email protected] or call 518-828-4539 – 6 to 8 pm – BCB ART, 116 Warren Street
VOLUME is a free reading and music series featuring prose, poetry, and a short DJ set happening every second Saturday at 7 pm at Spotty Dog Books & Ale in Hudson, NY – Featured writers this month are Rebecca Wolff, A. Balkano, and Lucy Ives.
> Rebecca Wolff is the author of one novel and four poetry collections, including the recently released collection One Morning–. She is the founder of the renowned literary journal Fence and the imprint Fence Books. She is a fellow at the New York State Writers Institute at the University at Albany.
> A. Balkano (rhymes with volcano) has published work in Fence, Harper’s and American Poetry Review. He is the author of The Book of Dumb, a novel. He lives with his family in the state of New York.
> Lucy Ives is the author of the novel Impossible Views of the World. Her writing has appeared in Artforum, Vogue, and elsewhere. She is a graduate of Harvard University and the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, and holds a Ph.D. in comparative literature from NYU.
> The readings are followed by book signing and DJ Jackie Goss. Volume is hosted and curated by Hallie Goodman and Dani Grammerstorf French. Information at 917-535-8225 or www.facebook.com/volumehudson – 7 pm – Spotty Dog Books & Ale, 440 Warren Street
HRC Showcase Theatre, dedicated to staged readings by professional actors of prize-winning plays, opens its 27th season with Child of Lions by Jared Delaney – In this play, “an American reporter heads to Ethiopia to investigate an impossible story and instead is made to face his past and look to an uncertain future in a strange land. The lions, meanwhile, are waiting.”. Directed by Artistic Director Barbara Waldinger – The performance is followed by a reception and a talkback with the playwright, actors, and director – Information and reservations at 851-2061 – Suggested donation at the door – 7:30 pm – Auditorium, First Reformed Church of Hudson, 52 Green Street
Sunday, October 15
Weimar New York – Actor-comic-writer-activist-musician Kate Rigg is pretty sure we’re in a Weimar time zone, and she hosts a cabaret revue called Wiemar New York, which makes the parallels explicit, and features talented performers who recall the wild excesses of Weimar culture – Featured are musical genius and downtown New York legend Phoebe Legere; opera singer, writer, actor and performance artist Joseph Keckler; composer and “Negrogothic performance artist M. Lamar; banjo-wielding force of nature Curtis Eller; and upstate drag queen Isis Vermouth. Joining these U.S.-based artists are a trio of Montrealers, providing a glimpse of the Canadian utopia we all crave, and others – This is the program that knocked them out at Bard Spiegeltent for six seasons in a row, playing to sold-out houses. Now the whole crew comes to Helsinki! – 21+ – Information at 518-828-4800 or helsinkihudson.com – Doors open at 6 pm; show at 8 pm – Club Helsinki, 405 Columbia Street
Monday, October 16
Citizens Climate Lobby Monthly Meeting – Agenda includes selections from the CCL monthly talk—this one by Barbara Love, Professor Emeritus at UMASS Amherst, known for her work on diversity and justice; small group discussions on climate issues; updates on the House Climate Solutions Caucus (now at 60 members), carbon pricing efforts; the annual January event in Hudson; liaison work with representative and senators; and more – Information at 518-672-7901 – 6 to 8 pm (If you are new to this group, we suggest you come at 5:30 pm for a short orientation) – Chatham Town Hall, 488 Route 295, Chatham
Tuesday, October 17
Helsinki Open Mic – Try out new material on the big Helsinki stage – Hosted by Cameron Melville and Ryder Cooley – Information at 518-828-4800 or helsinkihudson.com – Sign-up begins at 6:30 pm – Performance from 7 to 10 pm – Club Helsinki, 405 Columbia Street
Wednesday, October 18
Taconic Toastmasters Open House – All are welcome – Meet club members and learn how Toastmasters can help you gain confidence and find your voice – Experience a sample meeting, followed by Q&A and refreshments – Information at taconic.toastmastersclubs.org or 518-828-7520 – 5:30 pm – Columbia County Chamber of Commerce, 1 North Front Street
Free Movie Night – Twilight Zone Double Feature – Information at @houseruleshudson or call 518-828-5938 – House Rules Café, 757 Columbia Street (corner of Eighth Street)
FUN & GAMES
House Rules Café – Hudson’s first board game café offers a variety of games at a number of levels, for both children and adults. – Information at 518-828-5938 – House Rules Café, 757 Columbia Street (corner of Eighth Street)
Samascott’s Corn Maze – Now that the corn is as high as an elephant’s eye, its time to find your way through Samascott’s seven-acre corn maze. Bring a friend to keep you company and help find all hidden stations. Get a punch on your card at every station, and win a free ice cream! The path can be muddy, so be prepared – Information at 518-758-9292 – 11 am to 5 pm on Saturday and Sunday through October 29 – Samascott’s Garden Market, 66 Chatham Street, (Route 9), Kinderhook
Think Ahead to Halloween – Hudson Halloween festivities will happen on Sunday, October 29:
> Trick or Treating at businesses on Warren Street from 2 to 4 pm
> Gathering in Seventh Street Park at 4 pm for a Halloween Parade down Warren Street to the Hudson Opera House at 327 Warren Street
> A Costume Contest at Hudson Hall at the Hudson Opera House, 327 Warren Street at 4:30 pm.
The Hudson Area Library’s Ghostly Gallop race, taking place on Sunday, October 22, also involves a Costume Contest. So those who come in last, could still be winners! Find all the details at http://www.ghostlygallop.info/
Apple Picking – The “U-Pick” signs are up in Columbia County, so its time for a family trip to the orchard. Look for pumpkins along the way. – Here are two suggestions:
> Philip Orchards at Route 9H, Claverack, 9 am to 5:30 pm daily through October – Phone 518-851-6351
> Fix Brothers Fruit Farm, 215 White Birch Road, – Open now through the end of October – Phone 518-828-4401
Hip-Hop Dance – The Hudson Opera House and Operation Unite NY offer an ever-popular weekly hip hop dance workshop taught by Alicia Salvatore on Wednesdays from 4:30 to 5:30 pm for ages 6 and up. No experience necessary. Information at 518-822-1438 – To accommodate demand, classes take place at the Hudson Youth Center, 18 South Third Street
HUDSON CRUISES, INC.
*Hudson-Athens Ferry – Hudson Cruises has suspended its ferry runs until next spring.
*Hudson Cruises’ Sightseeing Cruises are offered on Wednesdays and Saturdays through the month of October. – Views of the Catskills, Mount Merino, Olana and the Hudson-Athens Lighthouse are on the route.– Fall foliage tours will be offered as soon as the leaves turn. Information and tickets at www.HudsonCruises.com or call 888-804-9716 – Tickets may be purchased on board, if there is room – Boarding at 12:30 pm, cruise from 1 pm to 2:30 pm – City dock behind the gazebo, Henry Hudson Riverfront Park, Water Street, access via Broad Street grade crossing past the Amtrak Station on Front Street.
ONGOING EXHIBITIONS
*Sanford R. Gifford In The Catskills – Explores the work of the Hudson River School artist, Sanford R. Gifford – Curated by Kevin J. Avery, Senior Research Scholar at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue. It explores the artist’s creative process and for the first time brings the original paintings to a venue just a few miles from the sites that inspired them. – Information at http://thomascole.org/events/ – New Studio Gallery, Thomas Cole National Historic Site, 218 Spring Street, Catskill
* The Coffins of Paa Joe and the Pursuit of Happiness at Jack Shainman Gallery / The School – , Two inter-related shows at the gallery’s Chelsea location and The School, located in Kinderhook. –“ Serving as the centerpiece of the large-scale exhibition, The Gold Coast Slave Castles of Paa Joe honor the Ghanaian legacy of abebuu adekai, or fantasy coffins. The ornate sarcophagi celebrate death and the afterlife, sculpted in the form of objects representative of the deceased and their interests….” –– Information at [email protected] – Open Saturdays from 11 am to 6 pm – The School, 25 Broad Street, Kinderhook
*Incident Report: Reports – Incident Report is an experimental viewing station that has been located in Hudson for the past ten years. It offers an interface between the many publics on the street, and the concepts and issues generated by visual thinkers. It engages in formally arranged projects, as well as improvised situations. In this exhibition September Gallery presents a framework for looking at Incident Report overall. IR has been an unpredictable series of projects; a storefront space that is sensitive to a constantly shifting town. For this exhibition, IR migrates up the street and into the gallery to present new works and the entire archive of all past 100 projects. Artist Tyler Rowland has constructed a replica of the storefront to scale, and incorporated his original project within it. Reports also includes works by IR artists Nancy Shaver, Allyson Strafella, Maximilian Goldfarb, Tyler Rowland, Carla Herrera-Prats, Taylor Davis, Joan Linder, Nick Tobier, Edna Arloween, Chris Lee, and Helen Mirra, and an accompanying publication documenting this project and including all participants and projects over the course of ten years. Concurrently, Incident No.101 will be installed by Bruce Dow in the IR viewing station at 348 Warren Street. Dow installed Incident No.1 in 2007. The exhibitions will be on view through October 15. Events will be programmed at September Gallery for subsequent Saturday afternoons – For information about the exhibitions visit SEPTEMBER or send email to [email protected] – 6 to 8 pm – September Gallery, 449 Warren Street, #3.
*Kiki Smith: From the Creek – This is the second annual exhibition in the series “OPEN HOUSE: Contemporary Art in Conversation with Cole” which connects artists and ideas across centuries. This year, the internationally acclaimed contemporary artist Kiki Smith creates a unique multidisciplinary exhibition inside and out of the 200-year old home of the artist Thomas Cole. Across time, both artists are responding to the Catskills, which so captivated Cole and inspired America’s first major art movement, the Hudson River School of landscape painting. The exhibition is curated by Kate Menconeri in collaboration with the artist and will be on view at the historic site through Sunday, October 29 – Thomas Cole National Historic Site, 218 Spring Street, Catskill
*Catherine Howe: Monoprints – An exhibition exploring the artist’s recent collagraphic monoprints and the objects they have inspired. – While this body of work is process-based, it emerges from Howe’s expressionistic brushwork that balances both abstraction and representation. The works potentially resemble still life references such as Dutch flower painting, botanical illustrations and American post-war abstraction. These sources eventually take on a life of their own. – On view through November 19 – Information at 518-610-5549 or [email protected] – 5 to 7 pm – Inky Editions, Door 21, 112 South Front Street (large white building behind the Basilica)
*Overlook: Teresita Fernandez Confronts Frederic Church at Olana – An innovative collaboration between The Olana Partnership and the Coleccion Patricia Phelps de Cisneros, artist Teresita Fernandez examines Fredric Church and his contemporaries’ response to the cultures and landscapes they experienced during their 19th century Latin American travels. Visitors will have the opportunity to explore Fernandez’s perspective and respond to her provocative installation in Olana’s Sharp Family Gallery – On view through November 5 – Information at 518-828-1872 x103 – Olana State Historic Site, 5720 State Route 9G, Hudson
*David Eustace: notes from the sky and other material — Curated by Victoria Anstead – David Eustace is a Canadian artist currently living and working in the Hudson Valley. For this work, Eustace prepared his canvases by exposing them to three years’ worth of local wind and weather. He “works the canvases as is they were hides, scraping and beating them…and then adds materials including salt, ammonia, oil and iron filings before exposing them to the natural elements. Intention and accident collide during this ‘curing’ process….” – On view by appointment through October 29 – Information at 917-902-6667 – Third Floor Gallery, 341 Warren Street (above Hudson Wine Merchants)
*Not Just Flowers: New Photography by John Lipkowitz – Also exhibiting gallery artists – On view through October 29 – Information at 518-822-0510 or www.510warrenstreetgallery.com – – 510 Warren Street Gallery, 510 Warren Street
*Remembering Marvin Hamlisch: The People’s Composer: Photographs by Len Prince – Len Prince’s photographs of the composer and conductor Marvin Hamlisch chronicle the life and work of one of America’s cultural icons. Hamlisch is one of only twelve people to win all four major U.S. performing awards. His score for A Chorus Line earned him a Pulitzer, making him one of two (the other being Richard Rodgers) to have won a “PEGOT” (Pulitzer, Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony award.) A prolific composer, Hamlisch wrote the music for more than forty motion picture scores including The Way We Were, The Sting, and Sophie’s Choice. –Exhibition on view through November 26 – A musical salute to Marvin Hamlisch takes place on October 21 – Information at 518-822-1438 – Hudson Hall, Hudson Opera House, 327 Warren Street
*Works by Filiz Soyak – Soyak’s work draws from places and experiences to create abstracted landscapes. A number of pieces incorporate symbols, relics and other found objects of the places she’s been recalling in the work. – Information at 828-0033 or valleyvariety.com – Valley Variety, 705 Warren Street
* Mixed Media: Painting & Sculpture – James O’Shea’s abstract paintings will be the focus of Carrie Haddad Gallery’s front room this fall, as part of Mixed Media: Painting & Sculpture, an exhibit that also includes paintings by Adam Cohen and Ginny Fox, with encaustic pieces by Susan Stover and wall sculptures by Dai Ban. – On view through November 12 – Information at http://carriehaddadgallery.com/ or 518-828-1915 – Carrie Haddad Gallery, 622 Warren Street
* Identity in America: Who are we?: Two Solo Exhibitions and a Portfolio Showcase – The city of Hudson in upstate New York (population 6,700 est.), home of the Davis Orton Gallery, is a diverse community. Twenty-five percent of our population is African American, 7% Asian (predominantly from Bangladesh), and 8% Hispanic. In 2016, the Davis Orton Gallery presented its first show highlighting questions of identity in America. Now, a year later, the gallery presents four artists who address the conversation with vibrant portraits of young American Muslims, video portraits of older Bangladeshi women who fought in their country’s war for independence, a Peruvian-American artist’s journal of her life story in photocollage, and light-filled photographs of Quaker Meetinghouse interiors that convey the artist’s love for the religion’s tenets. All on view through November 12.
> Two Exhibitions:
America 2.0 – Mark Bennigton, photography
Women Fighters, Hidden Memories – Carlos Saavedra, video portraits and photography
> Portfolio Showcase:
The Journey (el vieje) – Claudia Ruiz-Gustafson, photocollage
The Witness Within – Jean Schnell, photographs
> Information at davisortongallery.com or 518-567-4056 – Davis Orton Gallery, 114 Warren Street
* BRESCHI: Acrylic Paintings on Canvas – “Crisp geometric shapes and a Mondrian-like emphasis on negative space are at the core of Breschi’s non-objective compositions, softened by meticulously executed gently shifting color spectra.” – On view through November – Information at frgdesignart.com or 646-483-9109 –FRG Objects & Design Gallery/Art, Second Floor, 217 Warren Street
*All Roads to the River: The 1799 Columbia Turnpike and Historic Tollhouses – The summer exhibition of the Roeliff Jansen Historical Society, comprised of an exhibition and video installation – The exhibition tells the story of the Columbia Turnpike and its role in the development of early Hudson and Columbia County. It was the first turnpike in Columbia County and became part of a giant network of roads designed to promote commerce after the American Revolution. – The video installation consists of a presentation on the same topic, given by Peter Cipkowski, President of the Roeliff Jansen Historical Society. – Both are on view through the month of November and are viewable during library hours – Information by email to [email protected] or call 518-828-1792, ext. 101 – Hudson Area Library, 51 North Fifth Street
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