January 08, 2015
Transcription
January 08, 2015
Now ENrolliNg for immEdiatE ENrollmENt PRSRT STD US POSTAGE PAID PALMER, MA getting ready for 2015... PERMIT #22 it’s gonna be a great year! Experience the difference a high quality program makes! EDUCATIONAL PLAYCARE PRESS West Hartford www.educationalplaycare.com l 860-232-5038 iN sports High five for NWC hockey PAGE 13 L O C A L N E W S • S P O R T S • E N T E R TA I N M E N T • A N D M O R E Vol. 6, Edition 2 Thursday January 8, 2015 in the press Ollie donates to Jonathan’s Dream project Jonathan’s Dream is being reimagined at the Mandell JCC and the result will include the first inclusive Bankshot basketball court in Connecticut. One of the first inclusive playgrounds in the country is being rebuilt under the leadership of a task force. The “Dream Team” received a fundraising boost Dec. 26 when UConn men’s basketball coach Kevin Ollie announced a $50,000 donation to build Kevin’s Kourt at Jonathan’s Dream. PAGE 7 ‘Wonder’ful wintertime Photo by Abigail Albair The Noah Webster House held Winter Wonderland workshops last week as part of its school vacation programming. Pictured above, Daisy and Maya play out a scene using their newly created sock puppets during a New Year’s Eve workshop at the museum. For more photos, see page 6. Read all of our Community Publications online at TurleyCT.com The West Hartford Press • The Valley Press Valley Life • West Hartford Life • Rocky Hill Life Wethersfield Life • Glastonbury Life • Newington Life NEWS Quotes of Note Investing in the future THIS WEEK Kids 6 A&E 4 Town News 7 The Buzz 10 Business 11 Editorial 12 Sports 13 Calendar 16 Classifieds 17 Courtesy photo 5 The West Hartford-based Maximilian E. & Marion O. Hoffman Foundation, Inc. has donated $250,000 to the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University. The gift will be used to create the Maximilian E. & Marion O. Hoffman Foundation Primary Care Fellowship, which will provide full four-year financial support to an outstanding student in the medical school’s class of 2019 who is committed to pursuing a career in primary care medicine. The Hoffman Foundation was established in 1982 by Marion O. Hoffman in memory of her husband, Maximilian E. Hoffman, who died in 1981. Hoffman is known as one of the first distributors of foreign cars in the United States. The non-profit organization donates to groups, mostly in Connecticut, that further education, medicine and the arts. Pictured: Dr. Aaron Bernard, the clinical skills director at the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University, directs Georgina Pappas, a medical student at Quinnipiac, as she examines a patient at the Center for Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences on Quinnipiac’s North Haven campus. THE DOCTOR IS IN. UConn welcomes Lynn Yu, M.D. INTERNAL MEDICINE SPECIALIST Dr. Yu, a primary care physician, completed advanced training at the UConn School of Medicine. Her special interests include the health benefits of nutrition and exercise. In Simsbury, she joins John T. Cappadona, M.D., and nurse practitioner Patricia Tracey, in providing care to the community. OFFERING PERSONALIZED CARE FOR: •Adultprimaryandpreventativecare •Physicalsandvaccines OFFICE LOCATION: Simsbury, CT MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TODAY. Call 860.651.3519 or visit uconnhealth.com 720 HOPMEADOW STREET, SIMSBURY, CT uconnhealth.com 2 The West Hartford Press January 8, 2015 “I intend to use the knowledge and experience I’ve developed in the public and private sectors to build on the successes of the department under the leadership of Commissioner Rubenstein and his excellent staff,” Harris said. “Consumer Protection has and will continue to work hard ... to protect consumers and ensure that businesses have a level playing field.” –Jonathan Harris in “Harris named DCP commissioner” on page 7 Lindsay Moynihan and Nick Roberts await an answer during last year’s Kids’ Lit Quiz. The pair is competing again this year as seventh-graders. Photos by Alison Jalbert Collin Savage, center, whispers an answer to his team as Andrew Mazzatto, right, listens in during last year’s Kids’ Lit Quiz. Students delve into literature in preparation for annual Kids’ Lit Quiz By Alison Jalbert Assistant Editor A group of Sedgwick Middle School seventh-graders gather in an empty classroom during their lunch period, sitting in a circle studying a literary dictionary. The topics that come up include “Wynken, Blynken and Nod”; a summary of “The Wizard of Oz”; characters from “Winnie the Pooh”; and the legend of William Tell. The five seventh-graders make up one of Sedgwick’s three teams that will be competing in the Kids’ Lit Quiz U.S. Finals Friday, Jan. 30 at Central Connecticut State University. The Kids’ Lit Quiz is an annual literature competition for children ages 10 to 13. It is not for profit and run entirely by volunteers. The quiz was founded by New Zealand quizmaster Wayne Mills. It promotes wide reading and tests knowledge of children’s literature. Sedgwick will have a team representing the fifth, sixth and seventh grades. Other West Hartford schools participating are Duffy Elementary School, Smith STEM School, Morley Elementary School and Braeburn Elementary School. Last year’s national champions came from Sedgwick, which qualified them to travel to London to compete for the world title. The 2015 seventh-grade team – Nick Roberts, Collin Savage, Andrew Mazzatto, Jenna Kopp and alternate Lindsay Moynihan – all competed last year as sixth-graders, so not only are they looking for another Sedgwick win, but they also know what to expect from the Lit Quiz. That expectation is anything and everything. The quiz tasks teams to answer 100 questions over a three-hour period, with rounds covering topics that could include siblings, ghosts, illnesses and nonfiction. Liz Natale, an English teacher who is overseeing the Lit Quiz teams at Sedgwick, said each team meets once a week during lunch. Reading specialist Rona Berkowitz works with the teams as well and said the meetings are self-led, with the students structuring the practices. Given that the Lit Quiz covers a wide variety of topics that students can’t anticipate, the Sedgwick team revealed different strategies they’re employing to prepare. Nick said he is approaching it by taking out as many books from the library that pique his interest or what he knows his other teammates haven’t read. “I’m looking at newer books; the Kids’ Lit Quiz is on newer books that have won awards that kids in other countries are reading,” he said. Collin has been reading “random books” he comes by in the library and then asks Shannon McNeice, library media specialist, for similar books. During the lunchtime practice in the days prior to the holiday break, Berkowitz told the team that the sixth-graders have been looking at nursery rhymes and suggested the seventh-grade team see how they fared with that topic. The team correctly answered for whom were the three bags of wool in “Baa Baa Black Sheep,” as well as how many blind men de- scribe the elephant in the famous fable. “What happened that made Chicken Little think the sky was falling?” Berkowitz asked. “Something fell on his head; an acorn, I think?” Andrew guessed. One question that stumped the entire team was identifying King Arthur’s wife, but there were cries of “that’s right!” and “of course!” when Berkowitz revealed Guinevere as the answer. Ginny Connors, a Sedgwick English teacher whose classroom the team was utilizing for practice, said nursery rhymes used to be an example of cultural literacy, but now, different cultures and backgrounds are more heavily represented in our culture. “If I’m thinking globally, I would say there are kids all over the world that would hear the same nursery rhymes and that it will still be Winter Clearance Sale 10-50% OFF Most Shoes, Boots, and Booties 50% OFF Up to Most Handbags and Jewelry, including names like Vera Bradley, Brahmin and Brighton. New Balance Men’s and Women’s Sneakers starting at $39.99 Ros Hommerson Casual and Dress Shoes starting at $29.99 David Tate and Waldlaufer starting at $39.99 Designer Clearance: 50% off Selections from Stuart Weitzman, Cole Haan, Gentle Souls, Robert Zur, Donald Pliner, Cordani, Taryn Rose and Fidji. It’s a brand new year. Try a new mammography center! Dr. Julie Gershon personally meets with every patient to discuss their mammogram results and will obtain any additional imaging at the time of your exam. Same day screening breast ultrasounds are also available. No waiting. No call-backs. No anxiety. 21 Arch Rd. 860-673-8379 Avon Accepting all insurance* part of the Lit Quiz,” Berkowitz said. Connors said Aesop’s fables and fairy tales are likely topics in the quiz, too. Even though the students do not know what topics they will be tasked to answer, they said there are some strategies and tips they took away from past Lit Quizzes. Nick said he learned that even if you think a category is going to be easy, it often is not. “In our sixth-grade year, they did gods and goddesses, so we thought it would be all Greek,” he recalled. “It ended up being [all cultures].” Jenna said an important thing to remember is don’t stress. “If you’re thinking too hard about it, you’re going to get nervous and you can’t think straight. If you don’t know something, skip it.” Take An Additional 20 OFF top designer footwear $ 00 Take An Additional Take An Additional 5 OFF $ 00 1000 OFF $ valid only on Stuart Weitzman, Cole Haan, Gentle Souls, Robert Zur, Donald Pliner, Cordani, Taryn Rose & Fidji any sale priced children’s footwear of $19.99 or more any sale priced adult footwear of $39.99 or more With this coupon. Not to be combined with other sales, coupons, discounts or offers. One coupon per family per day. VP Offer expires 1/21/15. With this coupon. Not to be combined with other sales, coupons, discounts or offers. One coupon per family per day. VP Offer expires 1/21/15. With this coupon. Not to be combined with other sales, coupons, discounts or offers. One coupon per family per day. VP Offer expires 1/21/15. Footprints Newington • 860-666-3100 Footprints Newington • 860-666-3100 Footprints Newington • 860-666-3100 79 Costello Road, Newington www.jgershon.com 860-666-3100 Mon.-Sat. 9:30-5:45 Thurs. Nights to 8:45 *Division of Invision Medical, LLC January 8, 2015 The West Hartford Press 3 PRESSARTS&ENTERTAINMENT ‘A Life in 4 Acts’ Danny Cohen Marion Grodin Courtesy photos A Night of Comedy at The Emanuel Synagogue The Emanuel Synagogue, 160 Mohegan Drive, will present an evening “Enter Laughing – A Night of Comedy” with Marion Grodin and Danny Cohen Saturday, Jan. 17. As one of the country’s top emcees, Grodin’s ability to improvise has allowed her to master the art of talking with the audience. Always willing to be as self-revealing as she is probing of the audience, this affectionately edgy style has become her trademark. The result is a hilariously personal show that makes the audience feel like it was custom-made just for them. In addition to Grodin, New York-based comedian Danny Cohen first gained recognition as the co-cre- ator and co-host of “Spin Cycle Comedy,” a weekly comedy/variety show held in a laundromat. Cohen has also appeared on Comedy Central’s “Premium Blend” and was the 1st runner up in the search for America’s Wackiest Comedian. There will be a ‘martini bar,’ and specialty desserts will be served. Ticket prices range from $36-$90 and may be purchased from The Emanuel Synagogue or online at www.emanuelsynagogue. org. Doors open at 7:30 p.m. and the show starts at 8:30 p.m. For more information, contact The Emanuel Synagogue office at 860-2361275 or Fay deHaas at 860690-0998. The Mark Twain House & Museum, 351 Farmington Ave., Hartford, will present an evening with author Robert M. Dowling discussing his just-published new biography, “Eugene O’Neill: A Life in Four Acts.” The free Book/ Mark event takes place Tuesday, Jan. 13 at 7 p.m. at The Mark Twain House Museum Center. This is a major new biography of the Nobel Prize-winning playwright whose original plays revolutionized American theater. Dowling is professor of English at Central Connecticut State University and serves on the editorial board of The Eugene O’Neill Review and the board of directors of the Eugene O’Neill Society. O’Neill was an Irish American playwright and Nobel laureate in literature. The event will be followed by a book sale and signing. Reservations are recommended. Call 860-280-3130 or visit marktwainhouse.org. Horse Lincoln (pictured) will go up against SHED in the next CT Cage Match. Courtesy photo Playhouse on Park happenings The Connecticut Cage Match Series is a no holds barred competition where two improv teams compete head-to-head – and the audience decides the winner. The winner returns to defend their title at the next show of the series. Bring your friends and come vote for the best improv team in this one to one match up. CT Cage Match is the collaborative program of Playhouse on Park, Hole in the Wall Theater, the Carriage House Theatre and Hot Cocco Produc- tions. Two matches will be held at Playhouse on Park, two at Hole in the Wall Theater and two at the Carriage House Theatre. The next match, scheduled for Jan. 9 at 8 p.m. at Playhouse on Park, 244 Park Road, pits improv group SHED against Horse Lincoln. SHED is a new team out of Sea Tea Improv. Kevin MacDermott will host this month’s CT Cage Match. It is a BYOB event. Tickets are $10 each, general admission. For more information or to purchase tickets, call 860-523-5900, ext. 10 or visit thewebsite at www.playhouseonpark.org. Comedy Night Join Playhouse on Park for its fourth Comedy Night at the Playhouse Saturday, Jan. 10 at 8 p.m. and laugh off the winter weather. The event will feature Joseph Anthony, headliner; Jeff Lutz, middle act; and JT Taylor, emcee. This is a BYOB event. Tickets are $15, all seats reserved. For more information, visit playhouseonpark. org, or call by phone 860523-5900, ext. 10. The Mandell JCC helps kick off a healthy New Year with ‘A New Year, A New You’ Four motivational authors encourage readers to eat well, look fabulous and live courageously at the Mandell JCC Jewish Book Festival event, “A New Year, A New You,” Sunday, Jan. 11 from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. at the Mandell JCC, Zachs Campus, 335 Bloomfield Ave. The event will be moderated by Julie S. Gershon, M.D., of J Gershon Breast Imaging of Avon, a dedicated breast imaging center specializing in digital mammography and breast ultrasound. Eat Well – 2 Perspectives, 10 a.m.-noon Esther Blum, integrative dietitian, is the and best-selling author of four books, including “Cave Women Don’t Get Fat,” a back-tobasics approach to Paleo dieting. Today’s cavewoman can enjoy protein-rich, hormone-balancing, detoxifying and satisfying foods that will help her lose those annoying extra pounds, build lean muscle mass and feel like the gorgeous goddess she is meant to be. Terry Walters, educator, consultant and clean food chef, is the author of “Eat Clean Live Well,” which is all about filling one’s plate and one’s life with foods and rituals that nourish good health and well-being. She provides over 160 new recipes and a wealth of lifestyle tips to inspire one’s healthy journey. Look Fabulous, 12:30-1:30 p.m. Andrea Pomerantz Lustig TH ! 40EAR Y IT’S 67thALL HERE! “PAPERMANIA” plus The PLUS ADVERTISING & PHOTOGRAPHY ANTIQUE PAPER SHOW January 10-11, 2015 HARTFORD, CT •Saturday 10am-5pm •Sunday 10am-4pm 140 Exhibitors • Free Appraisals Sunday Only 11-2 • PRINTS • POSTERS • MAGAZINES • ADVERTISING • PHOTOGRAPHY • BOOKS • MAPS • DOCUMENTS • DAGUERREOTYPES • GAMES & PUZZLES • POSTCARDS • TRADE CARDS • COMICS • VIEW CARDS • CAMERAS • AUTOGRAPHS • BASEBALL CARDS • MOVIE MEMORABILIA • SHEET MUSIC • POLITICAL COME - BUY BACK A MEMORY! Admission $8.00 -- With Ad $7.50 • 860-563-9975 Hillcrest Promotions, POBOX 152 Wethersfield, CT 06109 • www.papermaniaplus.com 4 The West Hartford Press January 8, 2015 known at Glamour Magazine as the “Beauty Sleuth” is the author of “How to Look Expensive,” which combines her own experience with coveted secrets she’s learned from the experts to help readers achieve red-carpet looks without putting them in the red. Live Courageously, 2-3:30 p.m. Geralyn Lucas, author of “Why I Wore Lipstick to My Mastectomy,” returns with her funny and moving novel “Then Came Life,” the story about leacing the traumatic experience of leaving cancer behind and learning to survive all the challenges of a life she thought she would not have. Lucas is an award-winning TV producer, author, lecturer and women’s health advocate. In addition to author sessions, attendees can enjoy dry hair styling with BLO Blow Dry Bar, JCC Fitness demonstrations, makeup tips with Antonia’s Hair Boutique, Q&A with Dr. Gershon, organic specialties with Adamah CSA and more. Tickets are $20 per person and include all author sessions, but feel free to enjoy the topic(s) of one’s choice. Tickets are on sale via mail, in person, or online at the Mandell JCC Box Office, 860-231-6316, tickets@ mandelljcc.org and at www. mandelljcc.org. For more information, contact Jill Ziplow at 860231-6339, or [email protected]. KITCHENS, BATHS & BUILT-INS Rooms of Distinction Quality | Smart Design | Value | Versatility 860.528.2058 www.mjmartinwoodworking.com Featured on PRESSARTS&ENTERTAINMENT Author series to liven up the library with literary visits this season By Abigail Albair Editor A mix of authors for teens and adults, some of whom have put down local roots, will be coming to the West Hartford libraries as part of the Authors LIVE! series this winter and spring. The season kicks off with a reading and book signing by author Lucy Ferriss Sunday, Jan. 11 at 2 p.m. in the Noah Webster Library Meeting Room. The event coincides with the launch of her new novel, “A Sister to Honor.” “We’re looking forward to it,” library specialist Ben Woodard said. “She’s always a good speaker when she comes to the library.” Ferriss, who was called “a masterful storyteller” by New York Times best-selling author Wally Lamb, is a native of St. Louis who now lives in Connecticut and works as a writer-in-residence at Trinity College. Appearances at the library are serving as book launches for two local authors: Lynda Mullaly Hunt and Cindy Rodriquez. A book launch party for Mullaly Hunt and her young adult novel “Fish in a Tree” will be Sunday, Feb. 1 at 2 p.m. at the Bishops Corner Library. Much of the book, Woodard said, is set at Whiting Lane School. “It’s a great book and event to have for our teen crowd,” he said. Mullaly Hunt has received a great deal of recognition for her debut novel, “One for the Murphys,” which is included on more than 20 state award lists. A second book launch party for Rodriquez and her young adult book “When Reason Breaks” will be Saturday, Feb. 14 at noon in the Noah Webster Library Meeting Room. Rodriquez, according to her bio on the Authors LIVE! webpage, is a former newspaper reporter for the Hartford Courant and Courtesy photos Pictured above, left to right: Cindy Rodriquez, Jess Row and Lucy Ferriss are three of five authors who are currently scheduled to appear this spring for book signings and readings at the West Hartford Public Library. Rodriquez is a West Hartford teacher celebrating the debut of her first novel. Row will read from his first full-length book “Your Face In Mine,” while Ferriss, a writer-in-residence at Trinity College, will read from her latest novel “A Sister to Honor.” Local author Lynda Mullaly Hunt will mark the launch of her young adult novel “Fish in a Tree” (pictured left) with a launch party and signing. Boston Globe. She now teaches at King Philip Middle School, Woodard said, which adds to her local appeal. “What’s nice is these three authors are really local, but they’re putting out these national books that are getting really great attention and really great reviews,” Woodard said. “We’re happy to be able to give them a space to help promote these books.” On Tuesday, March 24 at 7 p.m., author Jess Row will host a reading and book singing of “Your Face In Mine” at the Noah Webster Library. He is the author of story collections “The Train to Lo Wu” and “Nobody Ever Gets Lost,” and has won two Pushcart Prizes among other honors. He has appeared in “The Best American Short Stories” three times. He lives in New York and teaches at the College of New Jersey, according to his biography. “His book got a lot of attention when it came out,” Woodard explained. “It’s sort of a science fiction concept of: instead of gender reassignment, what if we could have racial reassignment? It should be an interesting conversation.” Although plans are still in the works for National Library Week events at the library in April, including an author appearance to mark the event, a final young adult author reading and book signing will be held Tuesday, April 28 at 7 p.m. at the Noah Webster Library. Author Alex London, who has written children’s, teen and adult books, will be speaking on his latest teen series “Proxy.” His past works include the adult novel “One Day The Soldiers Came: Voices of Children in War,” and the children’s book “Dog Tag Series; An Accidental Adventure series.” London was formerly a journalist reporting in conflict zones and refugree camps and now works full time as a novelist living in Brooklyn, N.Y. “At the moment we have these five events that are definitely a mix,” Woodard said. “Hopefully it brings in a nice cross section of pa- trons and people locally to the library because all these events are always interesting. …. People that attend usually do leave with some sort of gained knowledge on either the author or the idea of publishing. [The events are] usually nice and successful.” For more information visit westhartfordlibrary. org/programs_calendar/ authorslive or call the Noah Webster branch of the library at 860-561-6950. Warm up to Great Seafood Trusted Care For Your Loved One Owned & Operated by Nurse Practitioners with 25+ years of Home Care experience to keep your loved one at home Hourly Companions & Caregivers Live-In Caregivers Nurse Practitioner Visits Free 24-Hour Nurse Line 177 Day Street, Newington, CT 06111 860-953-3553 www.Newingtonvet.com Schedule your pet’s dental prophylaxis (cleaning) in February and receive a discount. LOCATED ON THE WEST HARTFORD/NEWINGTON LINE est. 1978 Please call today for your Free In-Home Consultation 860-875-3030 203-539-6169 YourFamilyHomeCare.com Serving All of Connecticut HCA.0000906 TM Reservations Suggested ~ 860-693-0034 www.SaybrookFishHouseCanton.com The Intersection of 44, 202 & 179 Lunch: Mon.-Fri. 11:30-4 • Sat. 12-4 Dinner: Mon.-Thurs. 4-9 Fri. & Sat. 4-9:30 Sun. 12-8 January 8, 2015 The West Hartford Press 5 PRESSKIDS Left: a participant examines her completed puppet. Above: Abby attaches hair to her puppet with the help of facilitator Judy. Above: a sock puppet created by a workshop participant; far right: Avery and Caitlin are hard at work on their puppets; Right: Volunteer Gwen mans the craft table. Winter Wonderland workshop fun Photos by Abigail Albair T he Noah Webster House held a series of Winter Wonderland workshops last week as part of its school vacation programming. The workshops, held for children ages 7-12, offered the chance to take part in arts and crafts activities during the holiday break. On Monday, Dec. 29 participants were invited to bake cookies and create a snowman themed treat box. On Tuesday, participants learned to crochet and weave. The morning of New Year’s Eve, children created sock puppets and played out scenes with one another once the puppets were completed. That afternoon, children created New Year-themed accessories. For more information about programs at the Noah Webster House, visit www.noahwebsterhouse.org. Make Your Marble Shine Again! 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BOX 433, AVON, CT 06001 EMAIL: [email protected] Visit us at stonepolishingct.com NOW ACCEPTING CREDIT CARDS PRESSNews KO unveils ‘2020 vision’ Committee will explore options for offsite ice hockey program when rink is repurposed By Abigail Albair Editor Courtesy photo From row, left to right: Ted Carroll, president, Leadership Greater Hartford; Amy Barzach, co-founder, Jonathan’s Dream; Sofie Turek; Jamie Roland; and Coach Kevin Ollie; back row: Leadership Greater Hartford volunteers Ollie’s charity gives $50k to ‘Jonathan’s Dream’ Reimagined playground will have inclusive basketball court By Abigail Albair Editor Jonathan’s Dream is being reimagined at the Mandell JCC, and the result will include the first inclusive Bankshot basketball court in Connecticut. Jonathan’s Dream playground, located on the Zachs campus of the JCC adjacent to the community center, was one of the first inclusive playgrounds in the country. Amy Barzach, her family and 1,000 volunteers built the original playground in 1996 to honor Barzach’s son, Jonathan, who lost his battle with spinal muscular atrophy the year prior. Barzach hoped to realize a dream of all children being able to play together and, now, nearly two decades later, the playground is being rebuilt under the leadership of “Jonathan’s Dream Team,” an alumni task force of Leadership Greater Hartford. “Jonathan’s Dream Reimagined is innovating fun once again, with revolutionary new equipment and experiences,” according to a press release. Shane’s Inspiration, a nonprofit based in Los Angeles, has donated design services for the reimagine plan and fundraising is underway to support the project. The task force is working to raise just under $1 million for the first phase of the project, according to Ronit Shoham, Jonathan’s Dream Reimagined coordinator. When roughly half of that total has been raised, equipment can be ordered. The “Dream Team” received a “big start to our fundraising efforts,” Shoham said, Dec. 26, 2014 when UConn men’s basketball coach Kevin Ollie announced that his charity, the Kevin Ollie Charity Classic, will donate $50,000 to build “Kevin’s Kourt at Jonathan’s Dream Reimagined.” “Kevin’s Kourt at Jonathan’s See COURT on page 8 Kingswood Oxford School recently unveiled a master plan for a multi-year renovation of its 29-acre campus and announced that a committee will explore options to continue the hockey program offsite. When the board of trustees approved the master plan in October of 2014, it also voted to phase out the ice hockey program at the school over the next two years. In response to pushback from members of the school community – including the formation of a Facebook page titled Save Kingswood Oxford Ice Hockey and a change.org petition to save the rink and hockey program that garnered 1,170 signatures as of press time – an offsite hockey exploratory committee was formed to “investigate options for keeping KO hockey alive after 2016, when the rink will be repurposed,” as part of the plan, according to a press release. The committee will make a recommendation to the board in April of this year. The transformation of the Brayton Ice Rink into a multi-purpose field house and fitness center is just one component of the master plan. The 35-year-old rink, which currently houses the ice See VISION on page 8 Harris named DCP commissioner Staff report Former West Hartford Mayor Jonathan Harris is the new commissioner of the Department of Consumer Protection for the state of Connecticut. Gov. Dannel Malloy made the announcement last week and, as of presss time, Harris was scheduled to take up his new post Jan. 7, the date of Malloy’s swearing in for his second term. His appointment must be confirmed by the legislature. Harris succeeds Commissioner William Rubenstein, a West Hartford resident, who announced his retirement last month. Harris has a lengthy resume in public service, including previous positions as a West Hartford Town Council member, a state senator in the 5th Senatorial District in the Connecticut General Assembly, a position he held for three terms, service as the state’s deputy treasurer under state Treasurer Denise Nappier and, most recently, service as the executive director for the Connecticut Democratic Party. He was the mayor of West Hartford for three years from 2001 See HARRIS on page 8 West Hartford Police Department detective given Polygraph of the Year award By Abigail Albair Editor For the second year in a row, a member of the West Hartford Police Department has been given the Polygraph of the Year Award by the Connecticut Polygraph Association. Detective Todd Myers was given the 2014 recognition, while Capt. Frank Fallon was honored the year before. The association recognizes only one case a year for the role a polygraph and the polygraph examiner played in closing that case. This year’s case, according to a December edition of the Town Council Briefs, began with a request from the Wethersfield Police Department to help solve a 2013 robbery investigation that was at a dead end. A suspect in the robbery, which took place in a parking lot, fired shots at the victim. Although the suspect’s vehicle was reported stolen and recovered in Hartford, the suspected driver denied involvement in the crime and no physical evidence was found. According to the briefs, the suspect agreed to a polygraph in January of 2014 and, after results revealed deception on the part of the suspect, a confession and statement were obtained in a post-test interview. The polygraph results allowed Wethersfield PD to obtain three felony warrants. The driver was recently sentenced to 10 years in prison and the shooter to 15 years. There is currently a felony warrant for the third suspect, who has fled to Jamaica. Myers has been a polygraph examiner since 2011. Both he and Fallon attended federal polygraph school in South Carolina, a fivemonth intensive program at the National Center for Credibility Assessment. He was recommended by former Police Chief Jim Strillacci for the program and had to be nominated by two senators for the school. Myers said he trained alongside Federal Bureau of Investigation agents, Central Intelligence Association agents and others at the school in areas of anatomy and physiology, psychology, interrogation, data analysis and other areas. He learned the skills necessary to run polygraph equipment and read and interpret charts in different formats. “You certainly come out of there with an amazing basis of in- formation,” Myers said. He explained that the polygraph is an investigative tool used not only for criminal investigation purposes, but also to screen new applicants to the police force. “It’s a pre-employment tool, and, for criminal purposes, it gives us just a little bit of a scientific advantage to trying to solve a case,” Myers said. “Usually, most of the cases that come to us have reached a dead end.” There are very few polygraph examiners around the state. “We’re fortunate enough that they fund the polygraph program here,” Myers said of the West Hartford department, noting that the WHPD provides mutual aid to other towns and cities in need of polygraph services. The polygraph is a voluntary January 8, 2015 The process, Myers explained, noting that not all cases fit the criteria for its use. Police Chief Tracey Gove praised Myers for his efforts in both the Wethersfield case and overall. “We have a very successful and well-established polygraph program, and we are very selective about who we train for this assignment,” Gove said. “Detective Myers has done an outstanding job as one of only two current polygraphists within the department. Although running a polygraph exam involves a significant amount of science, there’s more to it than just that. In order to be able to get a positive result such as a confession, which happened in this case, that science becomes art. Detective Myers has honed his skills over the years and we are very proud of his work.” West Hartford Press 7 HARRIS from page 7 to 2004. He began as the executive director for the state Democratic Party in May of 2012 and announced he would step down last month. A statement released by the party at the time praised him for leading the party to victories in statewide and Congressional races, for overseeing a “dramatic expansion” of the party and for building a “field of operation of unprecedented scope in Connecticut.” Malloy said in a COURT from page 7 Dream’ will help children and families of all ages and abilities discover the freedom of playing together without limitations,” said Barzach. The court will have up to nine stations created by Bankshot, an organization that has pioneered inclusive basketball play structures based on total-mix diversity and universal design, according to a press release. “I’m going to come over VISION from page 7 hockey and tennis teams, will include a state-of-the art fitness center twice the size of the current one, “a critical component in KO’s strategy to develop competitive athletes and teams to underscore the importance of lifetime fitness for all,” according to the press release. Athletic Director Sue Cabot said in a press release of the renovation – which will also include the placement of lines, nets, a retractable batting cage, basketball hoops and other equipment – that it will “breathe life and vitality statement of Harris’ political career, “During his time in office, he earned the respect of many, particularly when it came to his advocacy as chairman of the state legislature’s public health, human services and aging committees. I think he will be an excellent fit to attain the agency’s mission of protecting Connecticut consumers and ensuring a fair and regulated marketplace for all.” The mission of the Department of Consumer Protection is to ensure a fair marketplace, safe products and honest services for all Connecticut consumers in the industries that it oversees, through regulating and monitoring the marketplace, enforcing the law, and educating and empowering consumers. Under Rubenstein’s leadership, the department created and implemented the state’s medical marijuana program; created education and outreach programs to help consumers combat fraud; brought enforcement actions to halt unfair and deceptive practice in the mort- gage repair, ticket resale and travel club industries; and enhanced the state’s prescription monitoring program and created a municipal and state partnership for the disposal of prescription drugs, among other things, according to a press release. In a statement, Harris called the agency “critical to consumers, businesses and all taxpayers,” and said he was “honored and touched” by Malloy’s confidence in him appointing him to the commissioner role. “I intend to use the knowledge and experience I’ve developed in the public and private sectors to build on the successes of the department under the leadership of Commissioner Rubenstein and his excellent staff,” Harris said. “Consumer Protection has and will continue to work hard to support the vision and values of the Malloy administration, to protect consumers and ensure that businesses have a level playing field.” Harris received a B.A. from Brandeis University in 1986, and a J.D. from the New York University School of Law in 1990. He practiced law from 1990 to 2011, during which time he served for six legislative sessions as counsel to the House Democrats Office in the Connecticut General Assembly. He owned and operated a real estate and economic development firm, Harris Collaborations, from 2007 to 2011. Harris currently serves on several boards of directors, including the Children’s Trust Fund, the Greater Hartford Jewish Federation, Connecticut Humanities, Jewish Family Services and Dora’s Hope. here in the summertime, in the springtime and just take a seat on the bench and relax and watch all the kids playing. It’s going to be a wonderful and exciting thing to see this court go up,” Ollie said. Coach Ollie also announced that ‘Kevin’s Kourt at Jonathan’s Dream’ will be the first of what he hopes to be many inclusive “Kevin Kourts” to be built throughout Connecticut. “What I love about it is that, with the basketball court, even more now this will be an interactive, active, accessible playground,” Shoham said. The Bankshot Sports organization was started by a rabbi who was inspired by his cousin who uses a wheelchair. It offers an entire curriculum focused on competing against one’s self, rather than against someone else. “Bankshot Sports are family sports because players do not play against one another, but alongside one another,” the organization’s website explains. “Bankshot Sports are non-running and non-exclusionary accommodating wheelchair players, the physically and cognitively challenged, grandparents, children and everyone else at the same time.” “You challenge yourself more than you are competing against others,” Shoham said, praising the concept. “There is a lot of room for what I call ‘nice competition.’ You work more on your individual skills and being active and enjoying. It’s a wonderful philosophy.” The committee is now planning to apply for some grant funding to “move forward as fast as we can,” Shoham said. Donations to Jonathan’s Dream can be made by visiting www.jonathansdreamreimagined.org, or by mail to 335 Bloomfield Ave., West Hartford, 06117. For more information contact Shoham at [email protected]. Sofie Turek, a West Hartford first-grader, takes a shot during Ollie’s announcement. into this campus, because it will become a space used by hundreds of athletes in many different sports.” “The board believes that a multi-sport field house and state-of-the-art fitness center is critical to maintaining KO’s leadership position as the best day school in the Greater Hartford area,” said Bruce Mandell ‘82, co-vice chair of the board of trustees. “This field house will be a place for the whole KO community to interact, work out and compete.” “I am particularly excited that the project will transform an area used by a small number of students to an area used by the entire student body,” said Brad Hoffman ‘78, co-vice chair of the board. Cabot said the initial decision to phase out the ice hockey program was a difficult one, noting the “proud tradition” hockey has at the school. Mandell, who will cochair the offsite hockey exploratory committee, said he was not surprised by the pushback to dissolving the program and echoed Cabot’s thoughts about the sport and its roots at KO. “The question will be: How can we make this sport fit the realities of a school of 500?” Mandell told The West Hartford Press in an email. “The board spent a lot of time reviewing options and, ultimately, did not find an option that made sense. However, it makes total sense to revisit this and see if fresh ideas can surface.” He said the committee will “look at every feasible way to continue hockey as a sport at KO including potentially utilizing Veterans Memorial Rink in West Hartford.” The multi-year renovation project, called “Kingswood Oxford’s 2020 Vision,” is slated to begin this summer. It is the first significant capital improvement effort for the 105-year-old school since 2009, a project that resulted in a new math, science and technology building. The 2020 vision was created with James G. Rogers Architects of South Norwalk, resulting from months of research and discussion among administrators, trustees, faculty and staff and an athletic task force, according to the press release. “The goal was to examine every corner of KO to ensure that it is right-sized for 500 students – an enrollment that trustees and administrators agree is KO’s ‘sweet spot’ – and to make adjustments where necessary,” the release explains. “At this point in our history, 500 students feels right to us,” Head of School Dennis Bisgaard said. “Therefore, we must make sure we have the proper mix of people, programs and facilities to serve that number with excellence.” Mandell said the plan is “the natural step to match up the physical attributes of KO with the educational vision of the head of school and his dy- LEGAL NOTICE TOWN OF WEST HARTFORD TAX COLLECTOR’S NOTICE The second installment of real estate, personal property and supplemental motor vehicle taxes on the Grand List of October 1, 2013 are due and payable on January 1, 2015. Taxes may be paid on-line at www.westhartford.org, or at the Revenue Collection Center in the Town Hall, Room 109. Office hours are Monday and Wednesday 8:30 am - 4:30 pm, Tuesday 7:30 am - 4:30 pm, and Thursday 8:30 am – 7:00 pm. THE OFFICE IS CLOSED EVERY FRIDAY, except for Friday January 30th, when we will be open for business from 8:30 am - 4:30 pm. The office is also closed on Thursday December 25th, Thursday January 1st and Monday January 19th. If payment is not made by Monday, February 2, 2015, the tax becomes delinquent and subject to interest at the rate of 1 1/2% per month (18% annually) retroactive to January 1, 2015. February interest is 3% (1 ½% for January; 1 1/2 % for February). Minimum interest charge is $2.00. FAILURE TO RECEIVE A BILL DOES NOT INVALIDATE THE TAX OR THE INTEREST, so please contact the Revenue Collection Office at 561-7474 x4 if you do not receive a bill. Helene Lefkowitz Revenue Collector 8 The West Hartford Press FEDERATION HOMES Dedicated to Independent Living is accepting applications for our 2 bedroom waiting list Applicants must be 62 years of age or older, handicapped or disabled in order to apply. Income Limits restricted. Contact Federation Homes at 860-243-2535 for an application 156 Wintonbury Avenue., Bloomfield, CT January 8, 2015 Courtesy photo namic administrative team.” “Over the past few years, Dennis and his team have implemented important organizational changes at KO to continue to develop KO students to be the best they can be and prepare them for college and life,” he said. The centerpiece of the plan is the “reinvention” of the Conklin Library as a 21st century research and innovation center with room for individual study, group collaboration, small classes, meetings, conferences and special events, the release explains. Other aspects are the relocation and upgrade of the college advising offices to the first floor of the Roberts building and a facelift to the exterior of the building and the area surrounding the Trout Brook Drive entrance, which is KO’s official entrance. Director of College Advising Zaira Santiago said in the release that the office space relocation will allow the program to better meet students’ needs. “The Master Plan captures our vision of the way KO will look, feel and operate by the end of this decade,” Avery Rockefeller, chair of KO’s board of trustees, said in the release. “This will transform our campus and position KO for continued excellence in the next phase of its history.” WHFD distributing Vials of Life By Abigail Albair Editor The West Hartford Fire Department is continuing efforts to protect community members before firefighters are ever called to action. “We’re about protection, whether it’s fighting fire or protecting you from things to come by managing effective fire prevention,” Firefighter Marsha Adell has said of the department, noting that there are also resources available for those affected when tragedy does occur. The department is currently focusing on high-risk populations, through initiatives such as distributing smoke alarms. The department has also worked toward public education through a Public Service Announcement contest sponsored by the department in partnership with West Hartford Community Television last fall. A new, recent endeavor is to distribute Vials of Life to members of the community in need. The Vial of Life program allows individuals to have complete medical information on hand in case of an emergency. The Vial of Life is stored in one’s refrigerator and a sticker on the home’s front door signals emergency responders to retrieve the information from the vial, something that is particularly useful if a patient is unable to speak or remember neccesary information, Adell said. Although the program is typically utilized by senior citizens, anyone can use a Vial of Life. It contains information such as name, insurance, emergency contact, medications, allergies and other pertinent details to medical care. In West Hartford, the vials are currently being distributed at the Elmwood Community Center or through fire headquarters. “Each and every section of our fire department is trying our best to reach each and every section of the community,” Adell said. “We have just as much pride on the trucks as in the office of fire prevention. Everyone shares the same passion.” Another public outreach goal is to provide those with limited mobility lock boxes that can be placed on an outside door of their choice with a key to which only the fire department has access. Adell said the department hopes to see a “self-initiated response” from members of the community, meaning those who might benefit from a smoke alarm, Vial of Life or lock box will contact the department to document their need. For more information contact Adell at the West Hartford Fire Department Office of Fire Prevention at 860-561-8349. Mayor Scott Slifka speaks at the 2014 celebration of the life of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. File photo Town to host annual tribute to Martin Luther King Jr. The town will hold its 19th annual celebration of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s life Monday, Jan. 19 at 10 a.m. in the West Hartford Town Hall auditorium, 50 South Main St. The event pays tribute to Dr. King’s ideals and vision and is free and open to all. According to a press release, this year’s celebration will feature keynote speaker Linda J. Kelly of the Hartford Foundation for Public Giving. Since 2005, Kelly has served as president of the community foundation that serves 29 towns in Greater Hartford. “From homeless shelters and food pantries to theaters and libraries, from parks and gardens to hospitals and family centers, the Hartford Foundation works on every issue, in every corner of Greater Hartford,” the release explains. As one of the oldest and largest community foundations in the country, the Hartford Foundation has awarded $589 million in grants since its inception in 1925 and $29.5 million in 2013 alone. Audrey Washington, NBC Connecticut reporter, will serve as the emcee of the celebration, which will also feature Yale University Chaplin Frederick Streets and Mayor Scott Slifka. Kaitlyn Jones of Conard High School and Lydia Henning of Hall High School will offer the student perspectives. Musical performances will be provided by the Hall Jazz Combo, Voices of Bristow and Conard’s Voices of the World choir. In addition, art work and essays from West Hartford’s elementary schools will be on display. Event sponsors are the town of West Hartford, West Hartford public schools, West Hartford African American Social & Cultural Organization and the West Hartford Human Rights Commission. WHEN MINUTES COUNT It’s time for UConn Health “ I felt fine that morning but before I knew it, I was at UConn Health being treated for a heart attack. I’m glad I went to a place where I got the care I needed so quickly. UConn’s speed and skill saved my life.” At UConn Health, the time from arrival to life-saving cardiac care is among the fastest in the country. And at UConn Health’s Emergency Department, you’ll receive personalized care for everything from the simplest problems to complex emergencies, every single day, 24 hours a day. Learn more at uconnhealth.com 263 Farmington Avenue, Farmington 800-535-6232 January 8, 2015 The West Hartford Press 9 Panera helps the Bridge help families A Holiday Gift Drive at Panera Bread on 2542 Albany Ave. in West Hartford made the holidays brighter for children and families served by The Bridge Family Center. More than 45 presents were recently collected for the organization by Panera customers and employees. For the fifth consecutive year, Panera customers participated in the Holiday Gift Drive by simply going to the counter at the local Panera, selecting a gift tag with a specific child’s first name on it, and then purchasing the suggested “wish list” items noted. Each gift tag was special with a specific child, his/her age and a list of presents. Those participat- Soccer Shots franchise honored Soccer Shots was recently named by Entrepreneur Magazine as the #1 Children’s Fitness Franchise in America. West Hartford resident Shannon Perry, founder and owner of Soccer Shots CT, said, “The award is a source of great pride to our entire organization and shows our dedication to creating the best possible soccer experience to children ages 2-8. We think of our work as impacting children, and our vehicle hap- pens to be soccer. We aren’t about creating great soccer players, but playing a small part in creating great kids.” Soccer Shots CT has been offering its unique children’s soccer experience in schools and communities throughout Greater Hartford and Central Connecticut for approximately four years. Soccer Shots CT serves approximately 1,500 children annually and has grown by more than 38 percent in 2014. Courtesy photo Panera Bread in West Hartford recently delivered presents that were collected through its Holiday Gift Drive to The Bridge Family Center. Pictured (left to right) are: Penny Lightner, administrative assistant, The Bridge Family Center; Amanda daCunha, marketing coordinator, Panera Bread/Howley Bread Group; and Wendy Kopp, director of marketing, Panera Bread/Howley Bread Group. ing brought the gifts back to the respective cafes in a gift bag with the gift tag attached. Panera Bread/Howley Bread Group also enjoys a partnership with Feeding Get Your Tickets Today! JAN. 14 – 18 Wed. JAN. 14 Thu. JAN. 15 Fri. JAN. 16 7:00 PM 7:00 PM 7:00 PM H XL CENTER Sat. JAN. 17 11:00 AM 3:00 PM 7:00 PM Sun. JAN. 18 1:00 PM 4:30 PM 302539 Buy Tickets: XLCenter.com • 877-522-8499 • Venue Box Office 10 DisneyOnIce.com #DisneyOnIce The West Hartford Press January 8, 2015 America where all donations collected through its cafes’ ongoing Panera Cares Community Breadbo Program will go directly to Feeding America member food banks. Excel Fitness gives back Excel Fitness, an all-access personal training and massage therapy center in West Hartford, has wrapped up another year of charitable giving to support community members in need. Throughout the year, team Excel Fitness donated gift certificates for a one-month membership, two personal training sessions, a 30-minute massage, and nutrition coaching session to dozens of local organizations’ fundraising events. In October, Excel Fitness held its annual Wine Tasting and Open House to benefit the American Cancer Society Making Strides against Breast Cancer 2014 and raised over $1,500 for cancer research. In November, the business shipped its seventh box of used shoes to ReRun Shoes for refurbishing and distribution in West Africa. Additionally, Excel Fitness members and clientele donated to its annual Thanksgiving Food Drive benefiting the West Hartford Food Pantry and the annual Tons of Toys Holiday Toy Drive benefiting the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Hartford. PRESSBUSINESS People on the move Park named regional vice president New Country Motor Car Group in Hartford has announced the promotion of Timothy Parker to regional vice president last month. Parker now oversees the group’s 165 employees and three Hartford dealerships with five franchises: BMW, MINI, Mercedes Benz, Sprinter and Smart. Parker has been with New Country since 2007. Under Parker’s direction, the dealership clinched the coveted National BMW “Center of Excellence” designation, which was awarded to only 32 out of 388 BMW dealers in the country. The Center of Excellence recognition is based on a dealership’s performance for customer satisfaction, outstanding brand representation and operational excellence. The BMW business also grew to the point where MINI had to move into a stand-alone facility. The new state-ofthe-art MINI showroom increased New Country’s total square footage in Hartford to over 100,000 with revenues for the entire group more than $1.2 billion. “I am honored to be chosen to lead our organization. I learned a long time ago that the secret to being a good manager is surrounding oneself with the best people possible,” says Parker “Taking care of our employees and providing stellar service for our customers are my top priorities, along with sustained growth of all the businesses. We will also develop a more cohesive local marketing strategy.” Parker lives in West Hartford with his wife and two children. O’Brien Green joins Operation Fuel Kimberly O’Brien Green of West Hartford has joined Operation Fuel as director of development. Her responsibilities include managing all of Operation Fuel’s development, fundraising and marketing functions. O’Brien Green most recently was the director of annual giving and operations for Kingswood Oxford in West Hartford. She also has an extensive background in finance and investments. O’Brien Green has an MBA from the University of Hartford and an undergraduate degree from Hamilton College. She is a graduate of Northwest Catholic High School in West Hartford. Operation Fuel is a private, nonprofit program that provides emergency energy assistance through its statewide network of fuel banks to lower-income working families and individuals, the elderly, and disabled individuals who are in financial crisis and not eligible for energy assistance from government-funded programs. For more information, go to www.operationfuel.org. Cronin and Company hires three Cronin and Company, LLC, the largest full-service independent marketing communications agency in Connecticut as well as the state’s “Top Shop” as declared by Adweek Magazine, has hired three new employees. Sonny Gamboa of West Hartford joined the agency’s Creative team as a senior interactive designer. He previously worked for Traveler’s Insurance Company and is a graduate of Central Connecticut State University. Janet Malloy of West Hartford joined the agency’s Account Service team as a senior account supervisor. She previously worked for Arnold Worldwide in Boston. Malloy earned her bachelor’s degree in communications from the University of Connecticut. World of Beer slated to open this month in Blue Back Square Featuring the best local craft beers and a large selection of brews from around the globe, World of Beer Franchising, Inc. is opening its second tavern in Connecticut this month in Blue Back Square. The rapidly expanding tavern franchise currently operates more than 65 taverns in 19 states. This tavern will employ 70 people. According to a press release, WOBWest Hartford will feature a 4,000-squarefoot tavern and will offer one of the world’s widest selections of craft beers bottled and on tap — more than 500 bottles and 50 rotating taps — inviting guests to discover the best in local and international beers. WOB-West Hartford will serve lunch and dinner daily and host live music performances Friday and Saturday nights each weekend. This location will partner with local breweries, including: Two Roads Brewing Co. out of Stratford, City Stream Brewery out of Hartford and Olde Burnside Brewing out of East Hartford. Signature craft spirit cocktails, ciders and wine along with nonalcoholic beverages also are available. WOB pairs its craft brews with the franchise’s signature “Tavern Fare” menu. “We’re thrilled to be bringing the one-of-a-kind World of Beer experience to West Hartford and neighboring communities,” Matt Sousa, WOB-West Hartford general manager, said in a press release. “Whether you’re a passionate beer lover or simply looking for a friendly place to gather for great casual food and a drink, we hope to see you here.” Happy Hour at West Hartford is hosted Monday through Friday, 4 to 6 p.m., and Tuesday is Loyalty Day, when all Loyalty Club members receive 25 percent off all bottled beer all day long. “We are pleased to open our second location in Connecticut,” World of Beer CEO Paul Avery said in the release. “We look forward to providing local guests with the opportunity to kick back with their favorite craft beer or other beverage, sample our Tavern Fare and maybe experience something new that they can’t find anywhere else.” Since opening its first tavern in Tampa, Fla., in 2007, WOB has grown to more than 65 locations in 20 states. What began as a neighborhood tavern to sample great craft beers and swap beer talk for co-founders Scott Zepp and Matt LaFon is becoming a unique cultural phenomenon celebrating the world of craft beers, great food and camaraderie. WOB-West Hartford will be open from 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. Sunday through Thursday and 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Friday and Saturday. For more information, visit worldofbeer. com/locations/West-Hartford. We always place your interests first With Pinnacle, that is more than an empty phrase. As a trusted fiduciary and independent investment advisor, we always place our client’s interest before our own in all wealth management, investment management and financial planning services we provide. Pinnacle or its employees were: Read West Hartford PRESS www.TurleyCT.com • Named four times to Worth Magazine’s list of Top Financial Advisors • Included four times in Medical Economics list of Top Financial Advisors for Doctors • Included three times in Bloomberg Wealth Manager’s list of Top Wealth Managers •Named twice to JK Lasser’s list of Top Professional Advisors in Estate Planning for Baby Boomers This should not be construed as an endorsement of Pinnacle by any of its clients. Nor should they be construed as a guarantee that any client will experience specific results. The selection criteria for inclusion in any list or publication is based upon criteria established by those organizations and may be based upon information prepared by and submitted by organizations or individuals selected for inclusion to the lists. Pinnacle Investment Management Inc. Greystone Court West, 573 Hopmeadow Street, Simsbury 860.651.1716 • [email protected] www.Pinnacle-Investment.com January 8, 2015 The West Hartford Press 11 PRESSOPINION Capture the Moments! West Hartford PRESS www.turleyct.com 540 Hopmeadow St. Simsbury, CT 06070 Phone: 860-651-4700 Fax: 860 606-9599 Click on the SmugMug link on our home page to see EDITORIAL albums of photos that have Take the plunge appeared in the newspaper Letters policy Letters to the editor should be 400 words or less in length. Guest columns will be published at the discretion of the editor and should be no more than 650 words in length. No unsigned or anonymous opinions will be published. We require that the person submitting the opinion also include his or her town of residence and a phone number where they can be reached. We authenticate authorship prior to publication. We reserve the right to edit or withold any submissions deemed to be libelous, unsubstantiated allegations, personal attacks or defamation of character. Send opinion submissions to: our editor, Abigail, via email at [email protected] or via mail to 540 Hopmeadow St., Simsbury, 06070. Deadline for submissions is Friday at noon for the following week’s edition. Call our office, 860-651-4700, with questions. 12 The West Hartford Press It isn’t just penguins that make a difference every January. Chickens make an impact, too. As in the first month of every year, local residents will be “freezin’ for a reason” and that reason is to benefit Special Olympics Connecticut. There is a lot of talk about plunging penguins, and it’s true they get the glory with their bowtie identifiers of money raised and their chance to take a costumed dive into Dunning Lake at Winding Trails in Farmington, but chickens have their place and can make equal contributions. If you’re too “chicken” to plunge yourself, or unable to for any reason, cheer on a plunger, donate to a team or raise pledges on your own: support comes in all forms and makes a mark on the movement to raise awareness for the Special Olympics Connecticut mission. This year’s Farmington Penguin Plunge will take place Jan. 25. It is the largest grassroots fundraiser to benefit the organization and provide financial support for year-round training and competition in 27 sports by more than 14,000 athletes – both children and adults – with intellectual disabilities. Not everyone is an athlete, but everyone should have the chance to participate in athletics because, after all, sports are about so much more than competition. It’s about hard work, accomplishment and purpose. It’s about heads held high, not just medals worn around the neck. Ask anyone associated with the Special Olympics, and they’ll tell you it’s about being “brave in the attempt.” The bravery Special Olympics Connecticut athletes show every day is inspiring; certainly inspiring enough to prompt a quick winter splash. Every year in Farmington, “penguins,” individually and in teams, put on costumes, carry team banners and run screaming but smiling into the icy water. People of all ages and capabilities take the plunge alongside both strangers and friends. Each dollar they raise and every dive that they take makes a difference. Be a penguin or be a chicken, but give with your human heart in any way possible – be it through monetary or moral support – and make a contribution or take the plunge. Form a team, cheer for friends, be “cool” and join a group that shows off some school spirit. Registration for the Penguin Plunge begins at 8 a.m. at Winding Trails Jan. 25. The public plunge is at 10 a.m. followed by the Cool Schools plunge. For more information visit www.soct.org/ ways-give/penguin-plunge/. Read www.turleyct.com The West Hartford Press is a publication of TurleyCT Community Publications Delivering local news, sports, entertainment and more to the West Hartford community Keith Turley Publisher Abigail Albair Editor [email protected] David Heuschkel Sports Editor Melissa Friedman Advertising Director 860-978-1345 [email protected] Barbara Ouellette Classified Sales [email protected] West Hartford PRESS www.TurleyCT.com January 8, 2015 FIND US ON PRESSSports Gray Matters By Scott Gray Photos by David Heuschkel Taking a pass from senior Mark Ehnot, Conard sophomore Zach Polo (28) finished this 2 on none with an easy goal as the Chieftains flattened the Farmington Valley Generals 9-0 Dec. 31 at Avon Old Farms. Conard shooting and scoring By David Heuschkel Sports Editor Neither of Greg Raymer’s first two years as hockey coach at Conard started ideally. The same cannot be said for his third season on the bench. Two years ago, in a season-opening 8-4 loss to Notre Dame of Fairfield, senior Danny Kycia sustained a knee injury that sidelined Conard’s all-conference forward for two months. Last winter, Conard lost its first three games and finished 4-16. But the Chieftains began this season with convincing wins over Northwest Catholic and Trinity Catholic, 5-1 and 8-1, respectively. The scores were indicative of the shots on goal. In the two games, Raymer said his team had a 91-21 advantage. The shots and goals kept coming. Follow- ing a 7-0 win over Rockville/Bolton/Coventry/ RHAM, the Chieftains had outscored their first three opponents 20-2. Last winter, it took nine games for Raymer’s team to score 20 goals. Much of the offense has been generated by the first line of Mark Ehnot, Jordan Fongemie and Zach Polo. The unit combined for 22 goals and 25 assists, led by Fongemie with 10 goals and nine assists. At 4-2, Conard has already equaled its total number of wins last season. And with 33 goals in those six games, the Chieftains are on pace to easily surpass last year’s total (51). With the top line clicking, Raymer needed to find a spot for Grayson Lacroix, who sat out the first two games with an injury. Lacroix skated on the top line along with his brother, Quinn, who graduated, each of the last two years, but Raymer wants to keep his top two lines together. So, he put Lacroix on the blue line. “It’s a chemistry thing,” Raymer said recently. “It’s hard when you’ve had the success we’ve had through two games to bring someone else in and get him in the lineup. Obviously, those first two lines have done well. You don’t want to mess with that.” Raymer prefers to keep freshman Paul Wilson with juniors Jack Alissi and Matt McCormick on the second line. P.J. Melly has been paired with Declan Flaherty and Ebbett Couchman on one defensive pairing. Jake Reynolds and Patrick Corcoran have skated on the other in front of sophomore goalie Alexander Kahn, who started in net last year. Raymer anticipated his goalie would be tested more in a three-game stretch against Simsbury, Glastonbury and Xavier from Jan. 3-10. See SHOOTING AND SCORING on page 14 A high five for Northwest Catholic hockey By Tim Jensen Correspondent Photo by Tim Jensen NW Catholic junior J.J. Foster In a rebuilding year, the Northwest Catholic boys ice hockey team has experienced some peaks and valleys in the early going. The young Indians dropped four of their first five contests, with the only win a 2-1 shocker over perennial power and CCC North foe Glastonbury Dec. 23. Jesse McLain, last year’s top scorer with 25 goals, was one of six seniors to graduate from the 2013-14 squad that finished 10-8-2 in a highly-competitive Division I. Demitri Yao and Zeke Angelini, who skated on the first line with McLain, and defenseman John Arel also graduated. The four players accounted for 47 of the team’s 68 goals last winter. So, as expected, the new lineup has struggled a bit, scoring just 11 goals in the first five games, but the offense finally broke out in a big way Jan. 2. In a 5-0 road win over South Windsor, Northwest Catholic got goals from four different players. The five goals were a season high for the Indians, who improved to 2-4. South Windsor dropped to 0-5. “We have a young team, and a few things clicked that we’ve been working on in practice,” Northwest Catholic coach Don See HIGH FIVE on page 15 January 8, 2015 Happy New Year “Coach Rizz” and “Coach Gal.” It’s that wonderful time of the year when the calendar turns and the preliminaries come to a screeching halt. Now it’s for real for mid major college basketball teams whose best, in most cases only, chance of earning a berth in the NCAA tournament comes with winning their own league title. So it is for the University of Hartford mens and womens basketball teams, who begin conference play this week in America East. The Hartford women were picked to finish fourth in the league after struggling through last season, undermanned in the post in most games. The pre- conference games did little to offer hope for better than a fourth place finish, though coach Jen Rizzotti went into the season with good reason to expect more from her interior game with senior Cherelle Moore coming off a year in which the numbers alone pressed her into an unfamiliar position under the hoop, with Bloomfield’s Alyssa Reaves now a sophomore, with a year of experience on her résumé, and highly regarded freshmen Janelle Harrison, Cassidy Bundy and Darby Lee on board to add depth to the post. “If Katie comes back and does what she did two years ago,” Rizzotti said, in reference to senior Katie Roth, who had been recruited five years ago as the heir apparent to all-conference players Erica Beverly and Danielle Hood, “all of a sudden we have multiple options.” Early in the season, Roth suffered a third torn ACL, further truncating an already injury-shortened career. Injuries to Lee and Harrison forced Rizzotti to put more responsibility on Bundy, who, late in 2014, started to respond well to the challenge. Still, Rizzotti was left to rely heavily on the guard play, which, going in, she thought would serve her well, with seniors Amber Bepko and Shanise Bultron, and sophomores Morgan Lumb and Deanna Mayza returning experienced depth in the backcourt. It was that backcourt, however, that let her down in the final pre-holiday game, an ugly loss to Quinnipiac in which the Hawks gave up a lot of size underneath. “There are times when we’ll be able to (match up with bigger teams),” Rizzotti said after the loss, “but not when our guards are playing bad. Some of that is healed by making open threes.” Lee and Harrison are expected to be good to go for league play and that gives Rizzotti cause for optimism. “A lot will depend on Darby and Janelle. Darby will give us some physicalness in the post, and Janelle gives you athleticism and quickness. If those guys can be healthy for us for the next two months, I feel like we’re moving in the right direction.” The Hartford men reached the holidays looking better prepared to take a run at the America East’s automatic berth. Despite a couple of stumbles in the early going, most notably a home loss to Central Connecticut, the Hawks, at 7-5 heading into their final two pre-conference games at Notre Dame and at Texas A&M, both major Division I challenges, were off to the best start in their Division I history. Despite giving up size in the middle, they finished off the pre-holiday slate with an impressive double- digit home win over Florida International in which five players hit for double figures and coach John Gallagher judiciously used freshman John Carroll in a defensive role against 7-footer Adrian Diaz. In the win, the backbone of the team, the senior class of Mark Nwakamma, Corban Wroe, Wes Cole, Yolonzo Moore III, Nate Sikma and Jamie Schneck, looked more than ready to attack the conference schedule. “We’re one of the top four teams in the league,” Gallagher said after being picked second in the preseason. “Where we finish I don’t know, but we’re in the top half of the league.” “It’s an ownership win,” Gallagher said of the win over FIU. “The whole team has ownership in the program, the seniors on down to the freshmen,” and he feels good about the team that will now attack the America East. “The mindset is very good because we’re playing well. We’re getting contributions from everybody. “I think we’ve served a message to ourselves,” he said after the FIU win. “If we can play that way every night, I’d take those performances every night. We just have to look at it like we have been, ‘Are we getting better every day?’ That’s what we have to do.” The 2014 half of the 2014-15 season now becomes ancient history for the University of Hartford basketball teams. All that will matter when the final chapter is written is what they did in 2015 and whether or not they’re still playing in March. Happy New Year “Coach Gal” and “Coach Rizz,” ready or not. Next week, the year that was. The West Hartford Press 13 Photos by John Nestor Left: Conard coach Jared Leghorn draws up a play during a timeout in the closing minutes of a 53-34 loss to South Windsor last weekend. Right: Conard sophomore Aidan Maloney (13) moves along the perimeter trying to escape a defender. Conard boys look to rebound in ‘15 By David Heuschkel Sports Editor The Conard boys basketball team was happy not to step foot on the gymnasium floor at Maloney High School for a third straight game. The Chieftains began the 2015 portion of the schedule Jan. 3 on their home court, marking just the second such occasion in the first six games under first-year head coach Jared Longhorn. Conard ended 2014 with back-to-back losses to Newington and Maloney, the latter a 54-point blowout to the host Spartans Dec. 30 in the third-place game of a holiday tournament played in Meriden. Leghorn said a 100-46 loss to Maloney in a CCC inter-division game was a “good reality check.” He was less discouraged with a 71-61 loss to Newington, regarded as a preseason favorite in the CCC West. “We were in it. It was back and forth,” Leghorn said. The difference, he said, was Newington grabbed 26 offensive rebounds. In the previous game, a nine-point win over Southington Dec. 23, Leghorn said the winless Blue Knights grabbed 27 offensive rebounds. Playing at home Jan. 3 against South Windsor, Leghorn was hoping his team could rebound against the undefeated Bobcats. The Chieftains failed on both counts. Conard shot poorly and was outmuscled by South Windsor’s Jeffrey Czapla (21 points) in a 53-34 loss. The 34 points was a season low by the Chieftains and their lowest total since a 52-31 loss to Newington two years ago. Conard was outscored by South Windsor in each of the four quarters. A five-point deficit after one grew to 13 at halftime. Leading by 14 to start the fourth, the Bobcats started the quarter with a 7-0 spurt to take their biggest lead, 5625, with five minutes remaining. Following a three-pointer by Conard’s Kyle Ortiz (16 points), Leghorn called a timeout with 3 ½ minutes left even though the game was out of reach. Knowing this, he implored his team to stay together the rest of the game. “I keep preaching we’ve got to keep trying to come together as a team,” Leghorn said. “I told them before the game basketball is not really about playing basketball. It’s about being one unit together, playing for each other, being positive, playing with energy. When you do those things, basketball takes care of itself. We’re working on that.” There is much work to do, particularly on the boards. The Valley’s only Full Service Hand Car Wash Before the season, Leghorn acknowledged that rebounding was an area of concern because the team’s two biggest players, Caleb LaRosa and Will Simons, had graduated. It remains a concern. “Watching film of our games,” Leghorn said after the loss to South Windsor, “we do a really good job most of the time – not all the time – on getting the first stop, making them take a contested shot, making them miss the first shot. Then we just have to gang rebound as a team.” With league play beginning in earnest this week, there is no better time to start. After playing New Britain Tuesday, Jan. 6, Conard is scheduled to play at Northwest Catholic on Friday. After that the Chieftains play Farmington, Newington and Simsbury before finishing the first half of their CCC West games against Hall Jan. 23. Leghorn said he’s been preaching the importance of doing the little things. “Being in the right position, anticipating where the ball is going to go, the team playing hungry and aggressive, it’s a process. It’s going to be a transition period. Like I said in the beginning of the year, we have so many news guys in new roles. Each day we’re just trying to learn from the mistakes we make and get better for the next time.” SHOOTING AND SCORING from page 13 “By Jan. 10 we’ll know what we’re made of,” Raymer said. Certainly, beating Northwest Catholic was a nice way to open the season. The following week Raymer watched Don Melanson’s young Northwest team beat Glastonbury 2-1. Raymer predicted Simsbury and Glastonbury will be at the top of the CCC North. “I don’t think we’re going to have a runaway winner of the conference,” Raymer said. “It’s going to be push and shove right through to the end of the season. It’s anyone’s game this year.” Heating.Air Conditioning Sales & Service 860-621-6295 Serving the local community for over 20 years. Connecticut • Florida • Nebraska • Ohio Full Service TJ Maxx Works Hand Wash 1949 Rt. 44 Russell Speeder’s Car Wash Wal-Mart 14 The $ Commuter Lot Save $4.00 with this coupon. reg. $23.49 Big Y West Hartford Press Includes: full service hand wash, undercarriage wash, foam wax, clean wheels, shine tires, vacuum carpets and mats, clean all glass inside and out, towel dry exterior, wipe dash, Russell Speeder’s console and dry door jambs. 1-18-15 Car Wash Exp. 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HIGH FIVE from page 13 Melanson said. “It hasn’t been an easy first quarter of the year, so it’s kind of neat that we started the New Year with a win.” Sophomore Tucker Alissi led the way with a pair of goals, including the only score the Indians would need in the opening minute of the second period. He took a pass from behind the net by Anthony Ceolin and fired a shot, which was stopped by Bobcats goaltender Scott Skenyon, but Alissi banged home his own rebound to break a scoreless tie. Ceolin scored at the 3:53 mark off another rebound, assisted by Tyler Noll. After a South Windsor goal was disallowed due to a hand pass, the Indians regained the momentum. Alissi netted his second of the period on a power play following some outstanding threeway passing involving Noll and Paul Arel. Brett Baker, assisted by Alissi, scored off a faceoff in the first minute of the third period. Nick Alzugaray concluded the scoring with a hard slap shot over Skenyon’s left shoulder with less than two minutes to play. Despite the offensive outburst, which saw the Indians score more than three goals in a game for the first time all season, the game’s top star was goaltender Mike Camasso. In the first period, the junior netminder stopped scoring bids by Patrick Lawson, Joseph O’Brien and Tyler Dowdy, then thwarted golden opportunities by O’Brien and Scott Swan in the middle period. Joshua Stumpf, one of just three seniors on Northwest, anchored the defense in front of Camasso. “They had some good chances, but our goalie played very well,” Melanson said. “He stayed focused throughout the game and really came up well. He’s starting to get some of that confidence back that he had last year, and our defense was able to remove some of those rebound chances and clear the net in front of him.” The upcoming schedule does not get any easier for the Indians with games against CCC North rival East Catholic (Jan. 10), Notre DameWest Haven (Jan. 14), Smithfield, R.I. (Jan. 17) and Notre Dame-Fairfield (Jan. 24). Photo by David Newman Kingswood Oxford’s Isaiah Wright (7), Sharrieff Grice (8) and Koby Quansah (15) were named to the NEPSAC’s All-New England football team. There were 10 players on the 2014 Kingswood Oxford football team that earned league and conference honors following one of the most successful seasons in program history. Wide receiver Isaiah Wright, linebacker Koby Quansah and defensive back Sharrieff Grice were named to the NEPSAC’s All-New England team. Grice has verbally committed to attend Boston College next year. Grice, Quansah and Wright were also named to the All-Fairchester Athletic Association Team along with Nye Deskus, Andrew Lemkuil and Jacob Hallenback. Mason Harvey, Payton Krupp, Luke Swanson and Andrew Watson received FAA Honorable Mention. “It is a tremendous honor to be recognized as a top player in the league,” said KO head coach Jason Martinez. “These young men have given everything to our program and have really set the standard here at KO. None of this would be possible without the hard work and sacrifices made by the entire team, our football family.” KO finished 6-2, sharing the FAA title for the second year in a row, and advanced to the Mike Atkins New England Championship Bowl. It was the first time KO played in a bowl game. “These honors are a testament to the players’ commitment and tenacity on the field and in the weight room,” said KO Athletic Director Sue Cabot. “The team’s success and these individual honors are the culmination of years of hard work throughout the season and in the off-season, as well.” Information from press release WEST HARTFORD LITTLE LEAGUE West Hartford Little League is open to boys and girls between the ages of 4 and 12, and known state-wide for its firm commitment toward fairness in sports. Register today! Register Now for the Spring 2015 Season Questions? Email us at [email protected] www.westhartfordlittleleague.com January 8, 2015 The West Hartford Press 15 check it out Newcomers events The West Hartford Newcomers Club events include: monthly bunco Thursday, Jan. 8, 7:30 p.m., $10 buy in; monthly guys night out to watch the NFL playoff Saturday, Jan. 10; and monthly book club Tuesday, Jan. 13, 7:30 p.m., to discuss “To Kill a Mockingbird” by Harper Lee. For more information, go to [email protected]. Senior Center events/programs West Hartford Senior Center, 15 Starkel Road, 860-561-7583 • Thursday Afternoon Movies at 1 p.m.: Jan. 8, “The Fault in Our Stars” and Jan. 15, “The Jersey Boys” • Opera class Fridays, 2-3:30 p.m., Jan. 9-Feb. 13, $18/$20/$22 • Bagel Breakfast Tuesday, Jan. 13, 9 a.m., Protecting Your Eyes As We Age with Michael Mominee, Primary Eye Care • Soup and Stories: Jewish Tales of Wit and Wisdom Wednesday, Jan. 14, 1 p.m., chicken soup with matza balls and Sara deBeer, teller of international folktales, $2/$3 • Trip to New Britain Museum of American Art Thursday, Jan. 15, depart 10 a.m., return 3 p.m., $24/$26/$27 Elmwood Senior Center, 1106 New Britain Ave., 860-561-8180 • How to … Cumba Semana Friday, Jan. 9, 11 a.m., with Ernie Recato teaching the Latin line dance, register • Movies & Munchies Fridays, 1-3 p.m.: Jan. 9, “The Secret Life of Bees” based on book by Sue Monk Kidd, and Jan. 16, “The Man Who Knew Too Much” • Cooking with Kathy Tuesday, Jan. 13, 11 a.m., with Kathy Payne, admissions director at Reservoir Care and Rehabilitation, in a cooking demo with recipes and samples, register Special needs friends ring in 2015 Special needs friends high school and older will ring in 2015 with DJ Paulie Friday, Jan. 9 from 7-9 p.m. at the Elmwood Community Center, 1106 New Britain Ave., Celebrate the end of 2014 while dancing one’s way into 2015. Party hats, noise makers and lots of sparkle and pizzazz will end the holiday season. For more info call 860-561-8160. Holy Family retreat Holy Family Retreat, 303 Tunxis Road, 860-760-9705, www.holyfamilyretreat. org, will hold a Men’s Weekend Retreat Friday-Sunday, Jan. 9-11 beginning with dinner at 6 p.m. The weekend explores how individuals can discover deep and enduring joy in God’s presence no matter the situation, how to cultivate resilience amid life’s inevitable challenges and the central spiritual insights necessary to experience lasting joy. Beth El Temple events Beth El Temple, 2626 Albany Ave., 860-233-9696, will offer the following: • Friday Night Family Shabbat Service Jan. 9, 5:45 p.m., geared to students in grades 3-6 – All religious school and SSDS students invited to lead prayers. Children who play a musical instrument and want to accompany one of the Shabbat prayers should contact Rabbi Garber at [email protected]. Shabbat hors d’oeuvres will follow services. • Shabbat Family Experience Saturday, Jan. 10, 11 a.m. – All children grades K-2 are invited to join an age-appropriate Shabbat Service. Families will learn about the weekly Torah portion and enjoy special activities. • Junior Congregation (grades 3-6) Saturday, Jan. 10, 11 a.m. – Students of all ages interested in participating in reading from the Torah should contact Rabbi Howard Rosenbaum at 860-233-9891. • Tumbling with Torah Saturday, Jan. 10, 11 a.m., for children up to age 5, Kiddush and treat at noon • Shabbat Yoga Saturday, Jan. 10, 10:30 a.m.-noon, with Adriana Matozzo and Rabbi Garber, all levels, free and open to the community • Red Cross Blood Drive Sunday, Jan. 11, 8:30 a.m.-1:15 p.m., give blood and 16 The West Hartford Press receive a $5 gift card from Dunkin Donuts, call 1-800-733-2767 for appt. • Lunch and Learn Tuesdays at noon, Jan. 13, with Rabbi Rosen exploring the Hebrew Bible • Talmud Study Wednesdays at 10:30 a.m., Jan. 14 First Baptist Church open house First Baptist Church – Our Children’s Center, 90 North Main St., will hold an open house Saturday, Jan. 10 from 1:303 p.m. at its De Colores Leaning Center. Meet the teachers and see the language enrichment model in action. Upcoming Spanish language enrichment classes start Jan. 24. To enroll, call 860-2364773 or email decoloresearlylearning@ gmail.com. College financial aid/Night of Comedy On Sunday, Jan. 11 at 9 a.m. at the Emanuel Synagogue, 160 Mohegan Drive, college-bound students, their parents and grandparents will be provided with a discussion about the financial aid system to avoid mistakes when saving for college and planning for financial aid. Jeffrey Noll, CEO of College Planning of Connecticut, will present the topic while allowing an open forum for Q&A. Noll’s discussion will include an overview of a free application for federal student aid, college scholarship service, an understanding of expected family contribution, financial aid options, and the pros and cons of 529/ CHET plans. The program will include a full breakfast buffet and is free and open to everyone. For more info, go to [email protected]. On Saturday, Jan. 17 beginning at 8:30 p.m., there will be a Night of Comedy featuring Comedy Central’s Danny Cohen and Marion Grodin. For tickets call 860-2361275. National Blood Donor Month January is National Blood Donor Month. There will be blood donation opportunities Sunday, Jan. 11, 8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. at Beth El Temple, 2626 Albany Ave., and Wednesday, Jan. 14, 1:30-6:30 p.m. at St. Thomas the Apostle Church, 872 Farmington Ave. To schedule an appointment visit redcrossblood.org or call 1-800-733-2767. Theater class at Playhouse on Park A class called Introduction to Improvisation for adults who want to perform, improve their public speaking or try something new will run Mondays, Jan. 12-March 2, from 7-10 p.m. Registration is required. Fee is $200. For info, visit www.playhouseonpark.org, or call 860-523-5900, ext. 10. Watkinson School Freshly Squeezed with Colin McEnroe forum Watkinson School announces the second forum of the third season of Freshly Squeezed with Colin McEnroe. Titled “Can a Song Change the World? Stories of Musical Activism,” it will take place Wednesday, Jan. 14 in the Foisie Family Amphitheater at Watkinson, 180 Bloomfield Ave., Hartford. Panelists will be Neely Bruce, composer, conductor, pianist and scholar of American music; Lara Herscovitch, folksinger, recording artist and former state troubadour; and Self Suffice, rap poet. Tickets are $20 each. All ticket buyers invited to a complimentary pre-show light meal at 5:30 p.m. Seating is limited. Purchase tickets at brownpapertickets.com or by calling 1-800-838-3006. Prostate cancer seminar “Prostate Cancer: Is it all the same? Treatment vs. Surveillance” will be the subject of the January Art and Science of Graceful Aging series Thursday, Jan. 15 at 3 p.m. at Duncaster Retirement Community in Bloomfield. Attendance is free and open to the public, but pre-registration is required. The discussion will be led by Stuart Kesler, M.D., attending physician of urology, robotic surgery and minimally invasive urology in Hartford Hospital’s Department of Urology. To January 8, 2015 To submit an event for the calendar, e-mail Sally at [email protected] register, or for more information, contact Fran Kent at 860-380-5006 or fKent@ Duncaster.org. New older parenting: is it right? Are you in your late 30s, 40s or 50s and considering midlife mothering/new older parenting? Is later motherhood right for you? Join a panel of experts discussing IVF, surrogacy, adoption, fostering, etc., Thursday, Jan. 15, 7-8:30 p.m. at the Elmwood Community Center, 1106 New Britain Ave. The class is now being offered at a discount. Call 860-561-8160 for more information or to register. Boy Scout Troop 146 open house West Hartford Boy Scout Troop 146 will hold an open house Thursday, Jan. 15 from 7:30-8:30 p.m. at the West Hartford United Methodist Church, 1358 New Britain Ave. All interested boys between the ages of 10 and 17 are welcome, and no past Scouting experience is required. Troop 146 has been an active troop for over 50 years and participates in outdoor, community service and leadership activities, including “High Adventure” trips to New Mexico and Florida. Speak Up: ‘Pride and Prejudice’ An evening of true stories centered on the theme of “Pride and Prejudice” will take place Friday, Jan. 16, 7:30-9:30 p.m. at The Roberts Theater at Kingswood Oxford School, 170 Kingswood Road. Tickets are $12 general admission, $8 members of KO community. For more information, go to [email protected] or call Sheri Shea at 860-233-9631, ext. 5032. Ct. Center for Healthy Aging program An educational program focusing on resources and assessment services available through the Connecticut Center for Healthy Aging will be held Wednesday, Jan. 21, from 1-2 p.m., at the West Hartford Senior Center, 15 Starkel Road. A complimentary lunch will be provided by Cedar Mountain Commons and Jefferson House. Seating is limited and RSVPs are requested. For more information or to reserve a spot, call 860-561-7583. Income tax preparation A free IRS-certified tax assistance program – AARP Foundation Tax-Aide – is available for low-to-moderate-income taxpayers, especially those 60 and older. The program will begin Feb. 2 at West Hartford Fellowship Housing, 24 Starkel Road, and Feb. 5 at the Elmwood Senior Center. To schedule an appointment, call the West Hartford Senior Center at 860561-8583, or the Elmwood Senior Center at 860-561-8180. At the Library Noah Webster Library, Noah Webster Library, 20 South Main St., 860-561-6980 • West Hartford Fiction Writers meeting Thursday, Jan. 8, 7 p.m. • Family Concert Series Saturday, Jan. 10, 2:30 p.m., with the Riverboat Ramblers, American jazz for kids, free tickets required – John Banker conducts the four-piece ensemble as it celebrates a slice of the American jazz heritage • Weekly New Yorker Discussion Group Friday, Jan. 11, 11 a.m. • Friday Night Magic: The Gathering Jan. 11, 4 p.m. • Author Talk: Lucy Ferriss, writer-in-residence at Trinity College, Sunday, Jan. 11, 2 p.m. – Ferris reading from her new novel, “A Sister to Honor” and book signing • Gallery exhibit: Industrial Planes of Michael Hanna thru Jan. 31, 2015 Arts & Events Juried Instagram Exhibit in the West Hartford Art League’s Saltbox Gallery, 37 Buena Vista Road, West Hartford, opening Thursday, Jan. 8, 6-8 p.m. and continuing thru Feb. 8 (860-231-8019) M.D., of J Gershon Breast Imaging of Avon, tickets $20 by calling 860-2316316, [email protected]: Eat Well – 2 Perspectives, 10 a.m.-noon; Look Fabulous, 12:30-1:30 p.m.; Live Courageously, 2-3:30 p.m. At Infinity Music Hall and Bistro: 20 Greenwoods Road North, Norfolk, 860-542-5531: Jan. 9, 8 p.m., Dave Mason’s Traffic Jam; Jan. 10, 8 p.m., Funky Dance Party featuring a DJ spinning music of the ‘70s, ‘80s and ‘90s; Jan. 11, 7:30 p.m., Cherry Poppin’ Daddies; Jan. 15, 8 p.m., Jeff Daniels with The Ben Daniels Band 32 Front St., Hartford: Jan. 8, 8 p.m., Balkun Brothers – CD release party with special guest West End Bland; Jan. 9, 8 p.m., Ronnie Earl & The Broadcasters; Jan. 10, 8 p.m., Back in Black (AC/DC tribute) Hartt Schools Connecticut Children’s Chorus: Younger Choirs Concert Sunday, Jan. 11, 2-3:30 p.m., St.Thomas the Apostle Church, 872 Farmington Ave., West Hartford Second Saturday for Families: Quest Stories Jan. 10, 10 a.m.-1 p.m., at the Wadsworth Atheneum, 600 Main St., Hartford – look at Greek myth of Jason and his quest for the Golden Fleece as shown on the museum’s 18th century tapestries Comedy Night Saturday, Jan. 10, 8 p.m., at Playhouse on Park, 244 Park Road, West Hartford, $15 reserved seating and a BYOB event, call 860-523-5900 Mike Agranoff at Sounding Board Coffeehouse Saturday, Jan. 10, 8 p.m., at The Universalist Church of West Hartford, 433 Fern St., West Hartford, [email protected], or call Janet at 860-635-7685 PAPERMANIA Plus Antique Paper Show of more than 140 dealers Saturday, Jan. 10, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., and Sunday, Jan. 11, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., at the XL Center, Hartford, general admission $8, senior citizens and college students half price on Sunday only; free appraisals Sunday, up to 5 items, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Jewish Book Festival events, “A New Year, A New You.” Sunday, Jan. 11, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., at Mandell JCC, Zachs Campus, 335 Bloomfield Ave., West Hartford, moderated by Julie Gershon, Baby Grand Jazz Series featuring the Nicholas Di Maria Quintet Sunday, Jan. 11, 3-4 p.m., in the library atrium of the Hartford Public Library, 500 Main St., Hartford Connecticut Women’s Chorale open rehearsals for spring concert in May, Mondays, Jan. 12 and 26 at 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Church in Bloomfield, all welcome, info: 860 243-0556 or email [email protected] BOOK/MARK: “Eugene O’Neill: A Life in Four Acts” Tuesday, Jan. 13, 7 p.m., at the Mark Twain House Museum Center, 351 Farmington Ave., Hartford, rescheduled from Nov. 4, reservations recommended at 860-280-3130 or marktwainhouse.org and click on Events – author Robert M. Dowling discussing his just-published new biography Sigal Plays Carmen Fantasie with the Hartford Symphony Orchestra Thursday, Jan. 15, 7:30 p.m., Friday and Saturday, Jan. 16 and 17 at 8 p.m., and Sunday, Jan. 18 at 3 p.m. in Belding Theater of The Bushnell, Hartford, pre-concert talk by Daniel Hege, guest conductor, one hour prior to each performance “FORM & VOID” at The Golden Thread Gallery, 303 Tunxis Road, West Hartford, thru Saturday, Jan. 10, gallery hours: Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Thursday, noon6 p.m. and Saturday, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., 860-760-9766 PRIMO, WEHA Artists Emporium premier Collaborative Show thru Jan. 25 at Salon Medusa, 13 South Main St., West Hartford West Hartford PRESS read the paper or visit us online... TO ADVERTISE: 860.651.4700 • www.TurleyCT.com Classifieds Gambling Problem? Gamblers Anonymous can help you. Take back your life. 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[email protected] There is no extra cost when purchasing insurance through a Servicing Agent PROFESSIONAL TILE/MARBLE INSTALLATION Floors, custom showers, backsplashes, fireplaces, repairs, etc. 30 years plus experience. Prompt courteous responses to all inquiries. Matt J. Mulhall Tile 860-488-1464 [email protected] CT HIC# 604758 At Your Service PUBLISHER’S NOTICE with our New Year special $15.00 off first time cleaning DRAPERY CLEANING TAKE DOWN & REHANG HOME or OFFICE All real estate advertised in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968, revised March 12, 1989, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, handicap, or familial status or intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination; and is also subject to the State of Connecticut General Statutes Sections 46a-64c which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, creed, color, national original, ancestry, sex, sexual orientation, marital status, age, lawful sources of income, familial status, or physical or mental disability, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate or for the sale or rental of residential property which is in violation of these laws. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. TRAVELING MUSIC TEACHER WEBSITES Websites done right JCWeb makes professional business websites and gets you listed on Google and up to 90 different directories. Save 20% before Dec.31st. Call James at 860-940-8713 or visit www.jcweb.org Music lessons in the comfort of your own home. Musician Billy Romanos offers piano and guitar lessons for all levels, ages, and styles of music. Over 40 years experience. Graduate of Berklee College of Music in Boston. Billy 860-978-3333 PUBLIC NOTICES INTERIOR PAINTING Complete prep work. Ceilings and Trim call for free estimate Cell:860-916-6287 Home 860-523-4151 LEGAL NOTICES HOUSE CLEANING Deadlines for legal notices is Friday at noon. Notices may be faxed to 860-606-9599 POLISH /ENGLISH SPEAKING WOMAN CAN CLEAN YOUR HOME. 3RD CLEANING - 50% off. Satisfaction guaranteed. Insured. Bonded. Call 860-538-4885 For questions about rates or placing a notice please call 860-651-4700 Help Wanted - At Your Service - Rentals Line Ad - 50 words or less - $29/1 wk, $49/2 wks, $59/3 wks. Call Barbara at 860-264-5523 January 8, 2015 The West Hartford Press 17 Home Improvement BUSINESS & SERVICE DIRECTORY $29-1 week $150- 6 weeks $300-13 weeks Add THE VALLEY PRESS for 1/2 Price! BATHROOMS BATHROOMS CARPET CLEANING Remodeling Your Bathroom? BATHROOM Bathroom Pros Baths & Tiling Our Specialty Full & Partial Remodels Also...Kitchens, Floors, Painting, General Repairs & more West Hartford 232-8002 Suffield 668-8000 bathroompros.com HIC #613103 CT’s Bathroom Remodeling Experts REMODELING CT LIC #0673079 CHIMNEY CLEANING CEILINGS More Like A Friend Than A Company “WE SHOW UP” ALISTAR SERVICE CO. A Professional Cleaning Service • Commercial & Residential 860-895-9301 Carpets & Upholstery No Hidden Charges • No Over Wetting Pet Stains & Odors Floors DO IT NOW Affordable Remodeling 203.434.0021 860.505.8537 CEILINGS Specializing In: Cracked And Water Damaged Ceilings • Textured Ceilings • Drywall & Plaster Repair • Ceiling Painting • Interior & Exterior Painting & Refinishing • New Ceiling Installation • Bathtub Reglazing Tile • Slate • Linoleum • Stone • Stripping Refinishing • Waxing & Polishing CT License #557873 Call SPRAY-TEX for FREE estimate 860-749-8383 • 860-930-7722 Fully Insured • Free Estimates • Locally Owned & Operated Over Three Decades of Service CHIMNEY CLEANING CHIMNEY CLEANING $20 OFF Insured • Prompt Service STOVE CLEANING $20 OFF CLEANING OF ONE FLUE PELLET STOVE CHIMNEY REPAIR & CLEANING Offer Expires 1/30/15 CLEANING & SERVICING Offer Expires 1/30/15 VALLEY CHIMNEY SWEEP LLC 220 Albany Tpke., Rte. 44, Canton Village, Canton, CT 06019 Since 1984 HIC License #0674006 860-693-3404 WWW.VALLEYCHIMNEYSWEEPLLC.COM ELECTRICAL ELECTRICAL GUTTERS GUTTERS www.JPCountryBuilders.com Brannack Electric Inc. Residential * Commercial * Industrial Call today for your FREE, no obligation consultation & estimate. 860-242-6486 35 Peters Road Bloomfield HOME IMPROVEMENT Since 1988 24 Hour Emergency Service • Generator installations • Interior & Exterior Lighting • Remodeling & Additions • Service Upgrades • Telephone, Cable TV, & Computer Network Wiring • Repair & Upgrades • Pool & Spa Wiring Old Fashioned Quality You Can Live With Remodeling •Additions • Baths •Kitchens License #103858 & 103859 • Fully insured 860-738-1502 www.brannackelectric.com John T.Yacawych HOME IMPROVEMENT HOME IMPROVEMENT 860-250-1715 [email protected] DESIGN AND REMODEL YOUR HOME HOME IMPROVEMENT HOME IMPROVEMENT BARRETT ENTERPRISES LLC Home Improvement Contractor So Many Amateurs . . . So Few Professionals!! • Complete Basement Renovations • Kitchen & Bathrooms Updated • Windows/Doors Installed • Pre-Finished Floorings • Custom Ceramic Tile • Maintenance-Free Decks • Finish Carpentry • Complete Painting Service • Custom Countertops Jim Barrett, Owner CT. LIC. #602130 • Office (860) 796-0131 18 The West Hartford Press January 8, 2015 HOME IMPROVEMENT McNally’s MODERN MAINTENANCE, LLC • Gutter Cleaning, Installation and Repairs Professional and • Interior Painting and Wallpaper Courteous • Kitchen and Bathroom Restoration • Carpentry Work • Additions Free Estimates Insured • Grab Bar Installation Lic#569912 • Odd Jobs - no jobs too small! West Hartford Connecticut 860-561-9654 Email: [email protected] www.mcnallysllc.com Replacement •Windows & Doors • Siding • Decks 860-589-2267 Pat Collin Lic#0621710 HOME IMPROVEMENT Nieves Home Improvements LLC Quality Above The Rest Carpentry • Roofing • Decks Siding • Porches • Windows • Masonry All Forms of Home Repairs • Snow Plowing Available We Get The Job Done! Free Estimates! Lic #619073 860-379-4594 • 860-307-5592 Fully Insured HOME IMPROVEMENT Home Improvement BUSINESS & SERVICE DIRECTORY $29-1 week $150- 6 weeks $300-13 weeks Add THE VALLEY PRESS for 1/2 Price! HOME IMPROVEMENT HOME IMPROVEMENT JUNK REMOVAL JUNK REMOVAL Junk Removal $149 For single truck load up to 1 Ton ONE CALL DOES ALL HOME IMPROVEMENT LLC There’s nothing we can’t do! Jobs done right the 1st time! Free Estimates • Senior Discounts PINNACLE MAINTENANCE, LLC. Mattress & Box Springs $50 extra. “Building Trust By Doing Jobs Right!” P.O. Box 791 [email protected] Farmington, CT 06034 www.pinnaclemaintenancellc.com T 860-284-8975 Fax: 860-255-7900 860-502-9527 JUNK REMOVAL JUNK REMOVAL FREE Scrap Metal Removal Washers, Dryers, Stoves, Grills, Propane Tanks, Refrigerators, Microwaves, Dishwashers, Hot Water Tanks, Furnaces, Boilers, Car Batteries, Bicycles, A/C Units, Metal Car parts, Old VCR’s, DVD’s, Wires, Stereos, Computers, Lap Tops, All Electronics, Mowers, Tractors, Weed-Wackers, Blowers, Snow Blowers, Exercise Equipment, Metal Bed Frames, Sinks, Cast Iron Tubs, Heavy Equipment, Heavy Machinery, and much more. If it contains metal or a cord - we take it. Give us a call for FREE PICK-UP. Point it out and we take it out. Need your basement, attic, or garage cleaned out? We also do junk removal. Call for FREE estimate. REDUCE LJ Home Improvement & Recycling LLP RECYCLE REUSE CT HIC LIC#0637925 Call for an appointment: 860-595-6612 MASONRY PAINTING JUNK REMOVAL KITCHENS Pro House Cleanouts & Dump Runs • Cabinets • Countertops • Design • Remodeling • Installations • Contractor Discounts • Downsizing • Moving • Foreclosures Dump Trailer Rentals Fully Insured • Senior Discounts Call Rich 860-881-4745 Serving the Farmington Valley and beyond. PAINTING PAINTING PAINTING & CEILING REPAIR KC MASONRY Stonewalls • Brick Walls Bluestone • Steps Fireplaces • Chimneys Patios • Sidewalks We can also do all Masonry Repairs! Small renovations, home repair, carpentry & painting. Complete prep. T.C. Home Improvement Fully Insured Quality Workmanship Cell 860-916-6287 Free Estimates Home 860-523-4151 Free Estimates • Lic#0604514 Ken (203) 558-4951 PLUMBING PLUMBING MARK’S PLUMBING 860-236-8450 Complete Plumbing Service AFFORDABLE, PROMPT & DEPENDABLE Repair or Replace all your plumbing needs. Lic. #277593 & Insured For immediate response anytime call 860-712-9461 ROOFING ZB PAINTING Interior & Exterior • Aluminum, Vinyl & Wood Siding & Shingles • Good painting preparation, trim, window painting & glazing, shingle repair • Power Washing. Interior work: walls, trim, molding, Interior work:repair repairceilings, ceilings, walls, trim, molding, baseboards, doors, windows baseboards, doors, windows. Exterior work: Small masonry repair Free estimates. You can count on us for a precise & excellent job! 20 years experience. HIC #0575928 Call: Zenon 860-518-0630 Bogdan 860-518-2625 PLUMBING ANDY WOTTON PLUMBING & HEATING, LLC (860) 833-8153 Old fashion, honest, reliable service at a reasonable price. All residential plumbing, repairs done from leaky faucets to snaking your main drain. TREES ROOFING ROOFING • SIDING • WINDOWS • & more... HARMONY Call now. Roofing & Siding Sale! Home Improvement (860) 645-8899 Call today and we will show you quality still makes a difference! Creating HARMONY between customer, contractor & community TREES Fully Insured FREE Estimates Lic. #604200 WINDOWS When It Comes To Tree Service We Run Rings Around The Competition. TREE CARE OR TREE REMOVAL Grimshaw Tree Service and Nursery Company grimshawtreeco.com 68 19 Call 860-521-8858 for a free estimate or for more information Central Connecticu on how we can r th t si No nc g e in help your trees. rv Lic #:HIC0607969 Se Price includes dump fees, labor and fuel cost. We will remove junk from basements, attics, and garages January 8, 2015 The West Hartford Press 19 HALL’S MARKET Black Angus Ground American Cheese Sirloin or Meatloaf Mix $ LESS THAN lb. $ ESTABLISHED 1935 WWW.HALLSMARKET.NET 2.49 2.99 1/2 PRICE 8.99 Steaks $ $ Thick Sliced Hall’s Store Made 3.99 $ Slab Bacon Italian Sausage 2.99 lb. lb. Ready to Cook Stuffed Peppers Buy 1 Get One FREE ! Ten 1” Filet Mignon Apple Crumb 3.99 $ 8” ea. Cookie of the Week Oatmeal Raisin $ 10 pack 2.49 Assorted Bagels .............. $1.99/pkg, excludes asiago Fresh Baked French Parisian Bread......... $1.99/loaf Black & White Mini Cookies........................$2.99/pkg. Pecan or Cheese Danish Ring............................$4.99 each PRODUCE SUNKIST NAVEL ORANGES...................4/$2.99 FLORIDA RED GRAPEFRUIT..................4/$2.99 D’ANJOU PEARS................................ $1.49/lb. ROMAINE HEARTS...............................$2.99/3 ct. YUKON GOLD POTATOES..............$2.99/5 lb. bag SPAGHETTI SQUASH.................................99¢/lb. 331 Park Road, West Hartford, CT • 860-232-1075 Convenient parking in the rear & our lot to the east of Hall’s 20 The West Hartford Press January 8, 2015 49 $ ea. 99 ea. 6 oz. avg. Store Made Fresh Chicken Sausage 9.99 lb. Hall’s Gourmet Hand Pressed Flavored Burgers Buy 2 Get One FREE ! Mix and Match Flavors Buy 1 Get One FREE ! Boneless Boneless Pork Chops Pork Roasts 2.99 $ lb. 2.99 $ lb. 2.49 Fresh Atlantic LESS THAN 1/2 PRICE lb. 1 lb. min. OVEN ROASTED TURKEY BREAST ......... $6.99/lb HONEY MESQUITE SMOKED TURKEY BREAST .................................. $5.99/lb HONEY HAM ......................................... $4.99/lb BOLOGNA ............................................. $2.99/lb OLD FASHIONED SMOKED HAM ........... $4.99/lb MEUNSTER CHEESE ............................. $4.99/lb SLICING MOZZARELLA ......................... $5.99/lb ALL WHITE MEAT CHICKEN SALAD ....... $5.99/lb HALL’S EGG SALAD............................... $4.99/lb HALL’S MEATLOAF................................ $5.99/lb HALL’S BLT PASTA SALAD .................... $4.99/lb HALL’S HAM SALAD.............................. $4.99/lb Prices good from January 8 through January 14th, 2015. 15.95 ea. SEAFOOD Land O Lakes Pre-Sliced American Cheese $ 5 lb. box Flash Frozen 1/4 lb. Patties $ DELI BAKERY Pie of the Week Boneless Rib Roasts lb. Chicken Cordon Bleu Chicken Breast Buy 1 Get One FREE ! $14.90 9.99 lb. $ 10 lb. bag All Natural Boneless Skinless Ready to Cook Oven Fresh Boneless Ribeye Steaks Beef Tenderloins Custom cut and freezer wrapped free of charge 9 lb. 5+ lbs. 1 lb. min. Whole Peeled Fresh $ Hall’s Freshly Ground In Store Land O Lakes Pre-Sliced Salmon Fillets $ 4.99 lb. Fresh Swordfish Steaks $ 12.99 lb. Sandwich of the Week TURKEY $1.99 ea. +tax Grinder of the Week Italian Meatball $3.99 ea. +tax Gourmet Sandwich Cheesy Reuben Melt $5.99 ea. +tax Our store made corned beef melted with swiss cheese topped with sauerkraut and 1000 island on toasted marble rye Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9am to 6pm; Sat. 8am to 6pm; Closed Sundays Follow us on facebook and visit hallsmarket.net and sign up to receive our specials in email! Not responsible for typographical errors. We reserve the right to limit quantities