Wed, 05/26/2021 - 7:32pm sarahp
NEW HAVEN Lynn Hoyt Bottum, 76, passed away on May 18, 2021, after a seven months’ stay at the Helen Porter Rehabilitation and Nursing Center in Middlebury.
Born in Burlington Nov. 3, 1944, Lynn was only child of Julius Hoyt Bottum and Virginia (Chase). His boyhood was spent in New Haven, where his father was the fifth generation to operate the Bottum dairy farm and where Lynn completed 9th grade at Beeman Academy. The family moved to Shelburne in 1960. Lynn graduated from Vergennes High School in 1962. He had already begun longtime memberships in the Vermont Historical Society and the Steamship Historical Society of America. He subsequently attended Lyndon State College and in 1967 received B.A. degree (major in history) from the University of Vermont. In these college years he was active with Young Republicans, and in 1968 narrowly lost a three-way race for a seat in the Vermont legislature.
Stormville Flea Market, Renaissance Faire, others announced summer dates lohud.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lohud.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Slickee Boys
Here’s another hot handful of Hudson Valley events to add to your datebook. Please check each site’s current COVID safety requirements.
Rosendale Theatre Shows Punk Documentary | through June 8
While Washington, DC, is chiefly identified as a center of government, it also has a reputation as a vital and influential bastion of punk rock.
Punk the Capital, a fascinating new documentary about the earliest years of DC punk (roughly 1976-1983), is screening virtually via the Rosendale Theater through June 8. The film is in many ways a prequel to 2014’s hardcore-oriented
Salad Days, focusing instead on the era that preceded the city’s latter wave of punk. Featured are interviews with and rare footage of the Bad Brains, Henry Rollins’s S.O.A., Minor Threat, the Slickee Boys, and more. Tickets are $12.
Cleanse, thru Sunday
Christina Franklin has been training and working in New York’s theater scene since she was eight years old. She will bring her newest play to the Irvington Town Hall Theatre this weekend, virtually. Franklin’s main character Courtney loves the internet but hates what it’s doing to her. In order to reclaim control of her offline life, she must face her online past the awkward chats, the software fads, the moments of immense discovery, and, of course, the trolls. Cleanse will be available to stream on demand from May 21-23. It contains strong language that may be unsuitable for younger audiences. Purchase your $12 per-household ticket to receive the viewing link and password at irvingtontheater.com/cleanse.