The Resident 12-10-14 Issue


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The Resident’s Own State Trooper Detective Jim Brady “On The Scene” Reporting Direct from the Sayles School

story and photos

by James Brady

 

Ok folks… so let me set the scene…Picture a small hometown school over a river and train tracks, up a winding road on a side hill and you may well be at the Sayles School, Baltic CT, USA. On October 24, 2014 you would find children enjoying lunch as they would any other day…until 7th grade students Amber Discolo and Madison Gifford alerted lunch monitor Samantha Ross, a student achievement specialist, that a fellow student was choking. Ross immediately sprang into action, applying abdominal thrusts to student Tommy Smith, who was choking on his lunch.

While Ross instinctively assisted the choking student, another monitor alerted School Nurse Patrice Houle, who ran to the cafeteria. “I thank God for my other ears and eyes throughout the school,” said Patrice who has been the school nurse for more than 10 years. The District has made available funds for CPR training that more than 30 of the 70 faculty have benefited from. As a result, they are prepared. Sayles School prinicipal Jeanne Wierzbinski, noted that this is the second time since 2011 that a faculty member has assisted a choking student.

Baltic Fire Engine Company #1 member Donna Sanford and Fire Chief Les Shull appeared for today’s awards ceremony in their dress uniforms. Sanford according to the Chief is responsible for the ceremony recognizing Samantha Ross, Amber Discolo, and Madison Gifford for their selfless acts resulting in the saving of              Tommy Smith’s life…Tommy told us all so fittingly, “Ms. Ross saved my day!”

Resident Charity Update: Nikki Lee is Cancer Free!

by Christopher Annino

In the sport of Body building the athletes are chiselled titans carved out of the very Old School Iron no nonsense gyms that they are from. It takes dedication, discipline and drive of someone who super human to compete. But the strongest athlete in the world can always be at the mercy of what life will throw at them. Nationally ranked NPC Physique competitor Nikki Lee was diagnosed with cancer over a year ago.

Nikki Lee originally lived in Mystic but moved to New Hampshire at a young age. There she obtained an interest in athletics. Always being outgoing, Nikki was the first female amateur wrestler in the state of New Hampshire. Wonder Woman is one of Nikki’s hero’s growing up embodied Empowered. Nikki then trained to be a pro wrestler by Pro Wrestling Legend Ox Baker. Nikki was a success on the Indy Pro Wrestling circuit. However, Nikki decided to focus on earning a college degree and raising her children.

Despite her busy schedule as a trainer and founder of “Empowered” Nikki took time to help those in need. Nikki volunteers her time at venue’s to teach proper nutrition, she is also heavily involved as a youth coach. As a result of her service in the community Nikki was the 2014 recipient of the Connie Durfee memorial Award. Nikki has gained many friends over the years because of her kindheartedness. Therefore, when her diagnoses was made public, local celebrities such as Diana Lozowski, WWE Legend John Callahan, Roxanne Mathena, Walter Bad News Swan, Jeff Wade, Richard Cyr, Dawn Whitham, Kevin Hogan and Janet Peckinpaugh got together to help her financially. A community awards variety show was established through the CT Hall of Honor and it was hosted by The Resident Newspaper but held at the Mystic VFW. The money raised helped Nikki financially during her treatments. Nikki is now cancer free, and to show her appreciation to her hometown. Nikki Lee is stepping back into the ring for a Pro Wrestling Event and variety show to help benefit two local military veterans at the Mystic VFW. Nikki will be tagging with U.S. Champion Rescue 911 and together they have formed Tag Team “911” and they will be going against “The Outlaws” for the VPW Tag Title “when I found out these two veterans were in need I felt obligated to get back in the ring to help them. I was told once by New London strongman Joseph Mugovero “everyone has strength, but what makes you strong is when you use it for good” and I want to help these two war hero’s. “Thank you from the bottom of my heart Alexis Ann from The Resident Newspaper and The Mystic VFW for hosting my fundraiser. You helped me when the odds were against me and empowered me to beat cancer,” said Nikki Lee.

FUR ever Home for the Holidays

story and photos

by Josie Kapral

 

The holiday spirit was alive and well as Bruce Morrow, General Manager of Valenti Subaru and PAWS New England teamed up to give some furry friends a chance at finding a “FURever home” in time for the holidays. Most people who know Bruce also know his dog, Dakota, who also made an appearance at the adoption event held on November 22nd. Dakota was there to see that some of his fellow dogs and even a few kittens and bunnies would find their way to a new home.

“I tried to host this event before, but it just never worked out with the timing”, said Bruce as he sat with Dakota,” I am happy to help them out”.

Tammy Loughlin, the Westerly Animal Shelter Manager, and a team of wonderful and generous volunteers and foster families came to see the animals were cared for while several people strolled in and out of the dealership greeting the animals and playing with them. PAWS brought along a few of their star pets in all shapes, sizes, and breeds. There was really a pet for everyone. All the animals were well behaved and greeted their potential new owners with a wag of their tails.

Julie Hocking came with her foster dog, Chip described as a “huggable, lovable, snuggle bear”. Although, not quite the size of a bear, his ten pound frame held just as much love as an animal just as big. Chip, the 1 year old Chihuahua mix has been living with Julie and is ready to find a new home. When asked if she would miss him once he is adopted, Julie replied, “I will. But I will also be very happy for Chip. And that also means that I can foster another dog which is a good thing.”

If you were interested in a younger dog, Macy, an 18 week old female Shepard Mix, was also available and came ready with her “Adopt Me” bandana.

Younger dogs and puppies not your thing? Fozzie, a 5 year old Rottweiler, was also there. Fozzie was very gentle and mild mannered and sat at the feet of his handlers patiently waiting for a new home.

If you aren’t a dog person, that’s not a problem. PAWS also brought along two really adorable 12 week old kittens who just loved to be held. There were a few rabbits available too!

One of the happiest moments of the day came when Diane Gilman and Mark Perino of Westerly came in to see the dogs. They found Curry, one of the most popular dogs of the day. Curry’s friendly demeanor loveable attitude were sure to win someone over and it turned out to be them!

Some people go to dealerships for a new car or an oil change, some come for a pet, and some visit the dealership for both!

Some of the dogs are still available for adoption and if you would like to visit with them, you can visit the PAWS New England website (www.pawsnewengland.com/adopt) or contact Tammy Loughlin at the Westerly Animal Shelter (401)584-7941. PAWS New England is comprised entirely of volunteers and 99 cents of every dollar donated goes to the care of animals like these. If you would like to volunteer or make a donation to a great organization, you can also contact them via the website mentioned above.

Steve Jones: A Life Of Words and Water

by Jon Perrson

Steve Jones is known for telling a good story, but picking a single storyline about Steve Jones is another matter. His life’s voyage has taken many a tack to reach the safe harbors of his realized ambitions. The diverse views of port and starboard, of working man and intellectual, bring with them a collection of knowledge and experiences that mark a life of many satisfactions. And stories, the revered teaching tool of gathered wisdom.

To find Steve Jones on a late November afternoon, one must first find an iron gate, fashioned by a blacksmith from Mystic Seaport, topped with the letters FHP. Through this, a walkway leads to the back door which leads past a vintage wooden steering wheel and station. Stairs beckon one to the offices where Steve Jones sits waiting. There are books and boat models, and photographs, all arranged in the efficient clutter so misunderstood by the obsolescent modern time manager. Steve knows where everything is, and no one else needs to; it is the mark of a productive mind in constant motion.

Steve was introduced to boats and life on the water by his father, Edward Jones, who owned and sailed a string of sailboats throughout his life (“he swapped boats every two years,” recalls Steve.) For years the Jones crew sailed out of Essex, on the Connecticut River; there, young Steve met two men who would influence his view on life; Major William Smythe, who ran the Dauntless Shipyard, and Seth Persson, boat builder of Old Saybrook.

To honor his military service requirement, Steve joined the Coast Guard, where he served as a lighthouse keeper and crew at a lifeboat station on Delaware Bay. He recounts how there are no buoys on that lengthy stretch of water, only the lighthouses to keep the vigilant out of the surrounding shoals.

After leaving the Coast Guard, Steve worked for a time at the Mystic Marine Railway, in which his father had become a partner. These were the days of wooden boats, always in need of some amount of tinkering and tasks. But life afloat held sway, and on another tack Steve went lobstering, singlehanded on a traditional Noank boat with offset pilothouse, powered by a Lathrop engine, the local engine of choice.

These experiences continue to chart his life, and his work, the line between vocation and avocation often difficult to discern. Into this stream, a love of literature joins in, words flowing with the wakes of time spent working on lobsterboats, the waters of his cruising grounds reflecting passages of Shakespeare’s verse and rhyme.

At the University of Connecticut, Steve earned his degree in English, and acted out the world of Shakespeare’s words. His story remains on course with the university, as he continues a now decades long career as Professor Stephen Jones, at UConn’s Avery Point campus. There he teaches English, the works of Shakespeare, and courses in Coastal and Maritime Studies, which he championed into existence. His depth of knowledge and experience, coupled with his flair for storytelling, have earned him the highest praise a teacher may receive; that of his students, who rate him (at ratemyprofessor.com) as “the best English professor ever,” saying they “still think about things he taught me everyday.” And, a life’s lesson, “don’t be afraid of going on boats.”

Professor Jones continues his double-life as a literate boatman, being a founding co-owner of the West Mystic Wooden Boat Co. Here, people with an attraction to the wooden hulled boats of yore find a place to work on their prized projects, away from the mass production dreams of fiberglass and chrome.

Steve recounts how a young business-school type once defamed the old time boatyards of Steve Jones’ enlightened youth, an encounter which played a part in the founding of the boatyard. He has of late been inspired to write the story of his old fashioned boatyard, enough for the makings of a book on the subject.

There are other stories at this boatyard, filled with weathered characters also, and a boatyard cat, it seems; and, there are the old books of nautical feats and mariner’s lives, no longer published for the informing of younger generations.

And so it was, on another tack, that Steve and fellow mariner Robert McKenna formed Flat Hammock Press in 2001. The independent publishing company revives and reprints the maritime stories of the past, beginning with a series on the Prohibition rum runners of another era. Work continues on an extended story of The Real McCoy, a teetotaling boatbuilder turned rum runner who brought a mariner’s integrity to the smuggler’s trade.

Steve also edits books for some of the characters turned authors of his world; and he writes books, about the 1883 oyster boat Anne, restored and stewarded by the boatyard . There are illustrated children’s books about a boatyard cat named Scratch. And, due for publishing next year, a book on the timeless boatyard Steve and a cast of non-conforming characters have carved out on the Mystic River.

Words and action are a short tack away from film, a venue where Steve has enjoyed considerable and ongoing success. A series of documentaries have aired on Public Television, with a work on the rum running Real McCoy winning five Emmy awards. Next year, a documentary will air on the ferry boats of the Connecticut River, including the nation’s oldest at Rocky Hill.

On this now cool November evening, Steve Jones leads the way out of the offices of the Flat Hammock Press, located in the brick building which once housed part of the Lathrop Engine manufacturing plant. The buildings now house a restaurant and stores, and a link to a time when engines and boats were both local products. Across the street, Schooner Wharf hosts an array of vessels, the schooner Argia, the Alden cutter that Ed Jones sold in 1947 as a vessel too old to keep. At pier’s end is a rectangular vessel with handrails at each rail, an actor that with props and makeup plays the role of several generation’s ferry boats in Steve’s upcoming documentary.

Steve is as often at work on projects which carry the historic into a new round of living memory. Often he has personal connections to the public service her performs. For most people, a lighthouse is a picturesque and vaguely romantic structure on a lonely, windswept coast. For a former lighthouse keeper, lighthouses are both the apparatus of a sacred mission, and the home of fond and dramatic memories. When Groton’s Avery Point Light was under restoration, Steve and his son donated the labor to rebuild the lantern room, lighting if momentarily a beacon once again to the sailors and sightseers of the professor’s favored seas.

To some, Steve Jones may seem a paradox, a man always intent on present and future projects which tell the tales of the salt and earthy past. The purpose is clear, though; to keep memory alive of course, but also to bring a time of simple living to the complex lives of his young readers and students.

To post your comments, visit www.theresident.com or follow us on Twitter @Resident_News.

Postal Customers Get Expanded Services for the Holidays. Package Delivery, Sunday Holiday Retail Services Start Sunday

The U.S. Postal Service wants the season to be merry and bright for our customers this year. To help with the hustle of the holidays, select Post Offices in Connecticut will open for four hours on the three Sundays leading up to Christmas Day —Dec. 7, 14 and 21, from 1 p.m.to 5 p.m. – for full retail services, including stamp sales and package acceptance.

Offices with Sunday hours during the holidays can be found on the attached list.

Additionally, in many communities, packages will be delivered on these days as well.

During Holiday 2013, the Postal Service delivered 434 million packages and 6.4 billion pieces of First-Class Mail across the nation. Due to continued e-commerce growth and improvements to the Priority Mail product line, the Postal Service is expecting double-digit growth in its package business this holiday season, likely in the range of 450 to 470 million packages. That equates to roughly 12 percent growth over the same period last year.

Improved Priority Mail tracking and text alerts introduced this year are important enhancements to the free insurance, free tracking and date-specific delivery introduced last year.

“It’s all about customer service and convenience – especially during our busiest time of year,” emphasizes the Postal Service’s Connecticut Valley District Manager David Mastroianni, who oversees postal operation in CT, MA and RI. “Our goal is to exceed the high standard of service we set last year by delivering on our core promise of timely, affordable, and trackable delivery for our customers,” Mastroianni noted.

Post Offices offering Sunday hours from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday, December 7th, 14th and 21st include:

  • Stratford Postal Store at 411 Barnum Avenue Cutoff
  • Glastonbury Post Office at 145 New London Turnpike
  • Torrington Post Office at 185 East Elm Street
  • Fairfield Post Office at 357 Commerce Drive
  • Enfield Post Office at 31 Palomba Drive
  • Manchester Post Office at 111 Sheldon Road
  • West Hartford Post Office at 102 La Salle Road
  • Groton Post Office at 100 Plaza Court
  • Cheshire Post Office at 210 Maple Avenue
  • Guilford Post Office at 60 Shoreline Drive
  • Milford Post Office at 300 Pepes Farm Road
  • Monroe Post Office at 270 Monroe Turnpike
  • Wallingford Post Office at 4 South Main Street
  • Danbury Post Office at 23 Backus Avenue
  • Greenwich Post Office at 29 Valley Drive and
  • Westport Post Office at 275 Post Road East

DJ Snake to Release Single — “You Know You Like It” With AlunaGeorge on December 8th

FANS CAN VISIT NEW WEBSITE TO UPLOAD AND SHARE SELFIE SINGLE ART

SANTA MONICA, Calif., Nov. 26, 2014 /PRNewswire/ — French DJ and producer DJ Snake, AKA William Grigahcine, will release single, “You Know You Like It,” with UK Garage duo AlunaGeorge, on December 8th via Island Records UK/Interscope Records. The track will be available across all digital and streaming platforms. A video for the song will be released in December.

DJ SNAKE TO RELEASE SINGLE - "YOU KNOW YOU LIKE IT" WITH ALUNAGEORGE - ON DECEMBER 8TH

Fans can now visit http://www.djsnake.fr/youknowyoulikeit/ and take a “selfie” using their web camera, in essence recreating the “You Know You Like It” cover art with their own likeness. Users will be given the option to submit the photo and share it to Facebook and Twitter.

In addition, fans can now snap a selfie at bus stops featuring the “You Know You Like It” poster, which has a mirror in the center, in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, and Miami and share it to Facebook or Twitter with the hashtag #YouKnowYouLikeIt.

For “You Know You Like It,” DJ Snake teamed up with London’s AlunaGeorge, which is singer Aluna Francis and producer George Reid. Since being posted on DJ Snake’s SoundCloud, “You Know You Like It” has received over six million plays.

The Grammy-nominated producer and artist’s previous single “Turn Down for What,” with Lil Jon, climbed to No. 1 on Billboard‘s Hot Dance/Electronic Songs and Rhythmic charts and No. 4 on the Hot 100, and has sold more than five million copies in the U.S. alone. The music video for “Turn Down For What,” which won an MTV VMA for “Best Direction,” has racked up more than 141 million views on VEVO.

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/djsnake.fr
Twitter: https://twitter.com/djsnake
Instagram: http://instagram.com/djsnakeparis
Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/djsnake-king
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/DJSnakeVEVO

DJ SNAKE TO RELEASE SINGLE - "YOU KNOW YOU LIKE IT" WITH ALUNAGEORGE - ON DECEMBER 8TH

 

DJ SNAKE TO RELEASE SINGLE - "YOU KNOW YOU LIKE IT" WITH ALUNAGEORGE - ON DECEMBER 8TH, FANS CAN VISIT NEW WEBSITE TO UPLOAD AND SHARE SELFIE SINGLE ART


The Resident 11/26/14


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Carpenters Christmas Performance – A MUST See!

by Maya Jung

Three songs by the Carpenters – “We’ve only just begun”, “Close to you”, “Rainy days and Mondays”. Took a moment to come back from a trip down memory lane didn’t it? And therein lies the magic of the music created by sister and brother Karen and Richard Carpenter – it is timeless, forever touching, sealing moment in time and place to lyric and melody. Now for the greatest of news for Carpenters fans – Mohegan Sun has again come through with a major booking coup! Save the date of Friday, December 5th, get to the Wolf Den early, because at 8:00PM – The sound of the Carpenters lives again!

An act that has sold out in Las Vegas, New York, and everywhere else it has performed is “We’ve Only Just Begun: Carpenters Remembered”. It is the result of incredibly gifted musicians coming together in common love of two of the greats of the past and the music they created.

Front and center and the Star of the show is the immensely gifted solo vocalist Michelle Berting Brett. Blessed with the same rare three octave range voice as was Karen Carpenter, Michelle is wondrous to hear and enjoy. Her stage presence is mesmerizing, her rapport with the audience embracing, and her knowledge of and devotion to the creators of the songs she sings endearing.

Michelle voice is backed by a seven member assemblage of amazingly talented musicians! To play the incredibly complex compositions created by Richard Carpenter requires rare talent and mastery of diverse and thus seldom used elsewhere Instruments such as the French Horn and Oboe.

THE RESIDENT had a chance to speak with Michelle Berting Brett from her busy Tour schedule last week, she is charismatic and modest. “I am honored to be able to sing the songs that Karen and Richard created and sold over 100 million records of,” Michelle stated. “Every performance we do I see tears of joy and remembrance in the eyes of the audience!” Michelle also paid tribute to her musicians, “Immensely gifted and the nicest of professionals to Tour with!” and her Husband Mark, “My Love, My Best Friend, My Producer!”

THE RESIDENT will be at The Wolf Den on December 5th! As do all of you, We LOVE the music of the Carpenters! See you there!

Dr. Stephen Coan is Distinguished Crawford Awardee

by Alexis Ann

Foxwoods Resort Casino rolled out the red carpet for the Chamber of Commerce of Eastern Connecticut’s William Crawford Distinguished Service Award recipients from earlier years to this year’s honoree, Dr. Stephen M. Coan, President and CEO Sea Research Foundation, which operates Mystic Aquarium. The Chamber gives this award to an outstanding member of the community who exemplifies the spirit of service and who contributes to the quality of life in Eastern Connecticut.

Tony Sheridan, President and CEO, CCECT, states, “The Crawford Award has a long history of honoring those among us who have contributed a great deal to our region, and this year’s winner is no exception. Steve follows in the tradition of those who came before him.”

As an officer of Sea Research Foundation since 2001, Dr. Stephen Coan was appointed chief operating officer in 2004, and completed a radical restructuring of the organization’s financial platform, including reduction of $20-million in debt. He became president and CEO in 2006. Under his stewardship, the foundation boasts record-setting fundraising and took over the management of JASON Learning from National Geographic Society in 2010. In 2014, Mystic Aquarium was awarded the National Medal for Museum and Library Service at the White House in recognition of its unique array of community and national programs serving at-risk youth and people with special needs.

The Boys and Girls Club of the Lower Naugatuck Valley presented the guest of honor with a handcrafted sign, “We Love Immersion mentoring”.

Chairman Rodney Butler, Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation, recalled that the Tribe’s work with the Aquarium dates back to the 1990’s. “I’m grateful for the people you’re touching,” announced Rodney. A story blanket and wampum necklace were gifted to Steve by two young Tribal members participating in the Jason Learn Program.

The common theme of all speakers who participated in honoring Steve during this gala was that of accomplishing the mission with his tireless efforts for conservation and marine research. “He’s got a mission and a vision…He’s an educator and visionary who gets things done,” said George Milne,Trustee, Mystic Aquarium.

Exclusive to THE RESIDENT is a reporting by evening security staff at the Mystic Aquarium that at the exact moment that Dr. Coen received the Crawford Award the following occurred – Belugas sent up salutatory spouts, Penguins danced, Seals applauded with their flippers, and fishes formed up to spell out “Proud of You, Doc!” Nature knows all THE GOOD NEWS as does THE RESIDENT!