Bristol Phoenix

Transcription

Bristol Phoenix
Bristol
Phoenix
eastbayri.com
THURSDAY, JULY 28, 2016
VOL. 180, NO. 30
$1.00
Late donor
‘would
have been
livid’
Ray Medley’s missing
estate gift was meant to
help Massasoit Historical
Society, others
BY TED HAYES
[email protected]
jobs. “I cannot think of any instance
when I would go to an employee
and say they should do something
differently, but I will mention it to
their department head. I just see
myself making sure things are efficient, and if there’s something I
observe, I will call them on it.”
Employee relations isn’t Mr. Teixeira’s only shortcoming, Mr. Contente said. He has struggled to bring
department heads together and
empower them to be leaders in the
town. He has also failed to partner
with business owners to make
them feel part of the community
and keep them in town employing
local people, specifically mentioning Bristol Toyota, which left town
last year.
“I find a total lack of caring in
retaining businesses,” Mr. Contente
said, adding he would stay in constant communication with existing
businesses and direct the Commu-
The FBI’s recent seizure of nearly $1 million in assets from a former state representative in
Bristol has hit
home at Warren’s Massasoit
Historical
Association,
which
has
found
itself
near the center
of the case
Ray Gallison
against former Rep. Raymond Gallison.
Mr. Gallison was once one of
the most powerful legislators in
the state. But the head of the
House Finance Committee
resigned his post earlier this year
when it came to light that he was
being investigated by federal
authorities. Details were not disclosed at the time, but last week
FBI officials announced they’d
seized nearly $1 million in assets
from Mr. Gallison as part of an
investigation into his handling of
the estate of Ray Medley, 65, a
Barrington man who passed away
in 2012.
Mr. Medley, a long-time member of the Massasoit Historical
Association, Federal Blues and
other Warren organizations, was a
friend of Mr. Gallison’s and
named him executor of his will. In
that will, he left 10 percent of his
estate, estimated at hundreds of
thousands of dollars, to the MHA.
Other non-profits, including the
Warren Methodist Church and
others across the state, were also
left portions of his estate.
See ADMINISTRATOR Page 8
See GALLISON Page 8
Wind power
Strong storms have pounded Bristol lately, especially last weekend, causing extensive tree damage and some house damage around the
town. Two trees were broken on Monkey Wrench Lane Friday night, one actually falling onto another’s trunk and coming to rest balancing
on top. No one was injured, but Charlotte Tracy’s brand new Chevy Trax SUV was damaged by the falling limbs. “I just brought the car home
Wednesday,” Ms. Tracy said. “Friday, I heard a loud crunch, bang. Unfortunately, I hadn’t put the car in the garage.” The tree was still balancing atop its perch as of Tuesday afternoon.
Veterans of town service square off for top job
Former deputy police
chief challenges sitting
town administrator
BY PATRICK LUCE
[email protected]
Town employees want to feel
empowered. They want the town to
succeed, and they want a say in
how that is achieved.
And it’s the town administrator’s
job to make sure they have that
chance. That has not been the case
the last four years, according to a
challenger for the position, an
opinion the current administrator
refutes.
“Morale and productivity go
hand-in-hand,” said Steven Contente, the former Deputy Police
Chief running for town administrator. “You have to listen to employees. You need to build a connection
between the employees and the
administration. You need to make
them part of the community.”
In his view, Town Administrator
Antonio Teixeira has failed in that
goal, which has prompted him to
run for the office.
“There has been a failure in leadership,” Mr. Contente said this
week, adding his experience managing 52 police
officers has prepared him for
the administrator role. “I think
he’s a micromanager. The
position needs
somebody that
employees and
townspeople
can be proud
Teixeira
of.”
The
micro-manager
label
attached to Mr. Teixeira is nothing
new. Mr. Teixeira acknowledges
there is that sentiment out there,
but it is a falsehood born of misunderstandings, he said.
“I have heard some of that; some
employees have thought I was spying on them,” Mr. Teixeira said. “But
I don’t think I’m a micro-manager.
There’s a difference between micromanagement and accountability. If
you’re doing your job, you should
never have to worry about looking
over your shoulder.”
The label comes
from a time early on in his
administration
when he was
driving around
town to check
on the progress
of road work on
Ballou Boulevard. He happened
to be
Contente
behind
a
Department of Public Works truck
as it headed in the same direction,
making frequent stops to pick up
recycling by the side of the road.
“Somehow, they thought I was
following them,” Mr. Teixeira said,
noting it’s not unusual to run into
town employees as they are all traveling around the town doing their
Page 2 Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016
NEWS BRIEFS
Amy Flynn of Middletown, Luke
Jackson of Portsmouth, and Luke
Dolan of North Kingstown in
receiving the $1,000 scholarships,
which they will receive upon completion of their senior year of high
school. The scholarships were
awarded based on school involvement, community involvement,
and the answer to an essay question.
Bristol student wins
People’s Credit Union
Scholarship
A Bristol resident is among a
handful of local students to
receive People’s Credit Union’s
2016 8th Grade Scholarship.
Cassidy Estrella Mello of Bristol
joins Abigail Mosher of Newport,
“We are pleased to help local students pursue their future goals,”
People’s Credit Union President &
CEO Ellen Ford said in a release.
“Each of the recipients is well
deserving of this scholarship and
we are confident in their success
as they continue their education.”
Headquartered in Rhode Island,
People’s Credit Union is a member-owned, state chartered, feder-
Bristol Parks and Recreation is scheduled to
hold its fifth annual William J. McCarthy Memorial Swim next weekend.
The swim — the proceeds of which support the
new Bristol Aquatic Center at the Quinta Gamelin
Community Center — is scheduled for Saturday,
Aug. 6th at 9 a.m. at the Bristol Town Beach.
The contest is made up of three events, including:
■ Half-mile mile swim - must be 14 years or
older
■ Swim relays (4x100 yards ) - ages, 14-plus
■ Fins & Floaties Fun Swim - ages 7-plus
Registration for the adult events costs $25 per
person, per event, and includes a T-Shirt. Registration for the children’s fun swim in $10. The
event will include raffles, face painting and more
family fun.
For more information and registration forms,
visit
www.McCARTHYSwim.org,
email
[email protected], or call Bristol Parks &
Recreation at 401-253-1611.
137 Child Street
Warren, RI
401-289-2852
MEATS
995
lb.
Certified
Angus Beef
Flank Steak
10.3-11.3oz.
Folgers Coffee
2/$6
699
$
lb.
Center Cut Pork
Chops. . . . $299 lb.
Chicken
Breast . . .
Certified Angus Beef
Tom’s Own Rubbed
20-30oz.
Pork Sirloin for
Kabobs . . . $299 lb.
Helman’s
Mayonnaise .
$
1
99
Tuscan Style
Chicken
Breast . . . . $299 lb.
Al Fresco Fully Cooked
USDA Fresh Boneless
Certified Angus Beef
Chicken
Thighs . . .
Fresh Hamburger
Patties . . . . $399 lb.
$
199 lb.
Chicken
Bacon. . .
$
2
99
3oz.
Oreo Cookies 2/
99
4-6oz. Yoplait
Yogurt
10/$5
$
3
$
6
49
All Varieties
Arizona Iced Tea
Gallons . . . . 2/$5
15oz. Progresso
Bread
Crumbs . . . . 2/$3
FROZEN/DAIRY
Pilsbury
32oz. Hood
Toaster Strudel . . . 2/$4
Country
Creamer
6.5oz.
¢
2/ 3
Nabisco
lb.
5oz. Bumble Bee
Solid White
Tuna
TIVERTON
1
lb.
San Marzano Save $1!
Tomatoes . . . $389
13.4oz. Jack’s Organic
2/ 3
$
$
Asparagus
299 lb.
Fresh & Crisp
Roamaine
Lettuce . .
99¢ hd.
4.4 lbs Purina Dog or
1lb. pkg. Super Sweet
Puppy
Chow . . . . . . . $499
Strawberries
50 oz. ERA Liquid
Laundry
Detergent . .
$
3
49
2/$5
Great in Salads!
Crunchy
Pickling
Cucumbers
99
¢
$
249
699
Jumbo
Steak & Cheese
Bombs . . . $599 ea.
20oz. Portland Pie Company All Flavors
9
6/$699
A real treat!
Sole
Francaise $995 lb.
Delicious Vegetable
Watermelon .
Tom’s
Lemon
69
lb.
lb.
Orzo Pasta
Salad . . . .
Award Winning
Antipasto Pasta
Salad . . . . $499 lb.
Tom’s Award Winning
Sausage &
Peppers . . . $599 lb.
Tom’s
Lobster
$
599 lb.
Bisque . . . . $599 pt.
DELI
Kretschmar
Colby Jack
Cheese . . . . . . . . $499 lb.
Boar’s Head Teriyaki Style
Chicken Breast . $799 lb.
Boar’s Head
Quahogs . . . . . . . . . . . . . .99¢ lb.
American
Cheese . . . . . . . . $499 lb.
Tom’s Market Made
Citterio Roasemary
Fishcakes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2/$3
lb.
Sauteed
Perogies. .
Fried Rice . $599 lb.
¢
499
$
Tom’s Famous
Green
Onions . . 2bn/$1
Cut
Seedless
Mile High
Eggplant
Parmesan
lb.
Fresh & Tangy
16oz. Daisy
Pizza Dough . . . . . . . . . . . . .$199 ea.
169 lb.
Potatoes . . . .
Narragansett Bay
Sour Cream. . . . . . . $179
$
New Crop! All Purpose
White
5lb. bag
Fresh Baked Multigrain, Olive
or Ciabatta Bread . . . . . . . . $399 ea.
$
lb.
Sweet & Juicy
64oz. Almond Breeze
Milk . . . . . . . . . . . . . $299
Meatballs
99
Black
Plums . . . .
Custard Pie
$ 99
WOW!
2
Jumbo
Chicken Parm
SEAFOOD
BAKERY
8in. Super Delicious Egg
lb.
TOM’S KITCHEN
1
$
Fresh Locally Caught
Swordfish
$ 95
Reddi Whip . . . . . 2/$4
Mon-Sat 8-8 • Sun 8-7
RI Grown!!
Extra Large
Tomatoes
49
Tender & Thin
26oz.Varieties
Beans . . . .
RI Grown!! Fresh
Green Beans or
Green Peppers
$
$
Excludes Decaf
USDA Fresh Split
Tom’s Famous
Each year, Saint Elizabeth Manor
awards a $500 Scholarship to a
Mount Hope High School graduate
pursuing a
degree in nursing. The 2016
scholarship
recipient is Neil
Salley of Bristol.
Neil will be
attending Salve
Regina University in fall.
Neil Salley
Saint Elizabeth
Manor is a skilled nursing and
rehab center in Bristol and has a
long history of providing quality
care. A recently completed addition/renovation project brings to
the East Bay a state of the art
Rehab Center for short term
rehab patients. For more information, visit www.stelizabethcommunity.org or call Kathy Parker at
401-253-2300.
492 Main Road
Tiverton, RI
401-816-0862
PRODUCE
GROCERY
USDA Boneless
Ground Save $2!
Sirloin. . . . $399 lb.
Saint Elizabeth Manor
Awards Mount Hope High
School Graduate
Scholarship
Fresh. Local. Exceptional.
Mon-Sat 8-8 • Sun 8-7
$
Bristol Republicans To
Host A 'Meet The
Candidates' Night
TOM’S MARKET
WARREN
Rib-Eye Steaks
— Tony Avila and Eric Hall — as
well as Republican Town Council
Candidates Mary Parella, Patrick
McCarthy, Marco Capaldi and
Roxanne Giusti-Lavoie.
With the candidate declaration
over and state and local campaigns on-going, the Bristol
Republican Town Committee is
scheduled to host a “Meet The
Candidates” night next Monday,
Aug. 1 7 p.m. at the Burnside
Building, 400 Hope St.
Set the evening of the Bristol GOP
August meeting, the event will be
the first in a series of upcoming
public gatherings to give voters
the opportunity to meet the people they can elect to state and
local offices this November.
"We are proud to educate voters
and give them the opportunity to
meet the people for state and
local offices they can vote for this
November," said Thomas Carroll,
chairman of the Bristol GOP. "This
will help voters of all parties meet
the candidates and see where
they stand on the issues."
This month, candidates set to join
include Republican candidates for
state representative in District 69
Bristol Parks & Rec to hold benefit swim races
USDA Choice
Caveman or Cowboy
ally insured, community credit
union established in 1922. Membership is open to all. For more
information about People’s Credit
Union visit www.peoplescu.com.
Ham . . . . . . . . . . $699 lb.
Legacy All Natural
Honey Smoked
Turkey
99
6
Fresh Sliced
$
lb.
German
Bologna
299
$
We accept manufacturers coupons! Prices in effect -July 27-August 2, 2016. *Not responsible for typographical errors. tomsmarket.com
lb.
Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016 Page 3
Bristol Maritime Center open for boaters
Sen. Jack Reed (center, left). Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse and Bristol
Town Administrator Antonio Teixeira cut the ribbon on the new Maritime Center on Thames Street.
Dock hands Matt DeWolf and Sean Gaffney show visitors around the new Maritime Center in the old US
Navy armory on Thames Street.
Officials cut the ribbon
Friday on the nearly $2
million facility aimed at
attracting visitors to
Bristol
BY PATRICK LUCE
[email protected]
Touting it as an "investment," an
"economic engine" and an
"anchor of activity along the
waterfront," local, state and federal officials cut the ribbon on Bristol's long-awaited Maritime Center last Friday.
And while traffic has been slow
in its early days, Town Administrator Antonio Teixeira said he
believes more people will use the
center as word spreads — and after
a major addition to the nearby
marina.
The Maritime Center, on
Thames Street, is designed as a
stopover for boaters sailing
through the bay. It is designed to
house men’s, women’s and family
bathroom facilities, an open
lounge area, laundry with washers
and dryers and vending machines,
along with the Bristol Harbormaster’s office — everything necessary
to support people visiting Bristol
by boat. There is also space available to rent for functions.
Having a place for boaters to
stop and have a rest or use the
facilities will draw more people
into the town, Mr. Teixeira said. In
fact, those people are already wait-
ing, he said.
"Build it and they will come? No,
this is built it and they're already
here," Mr. Teixeira said during the
Friday afternoon ceremony on the
dock on Thames Street. "This center will be an anchor of activity
along the waterfront."
In addition to the Maritime Center, built in the site of the old
armory, the town is planning
improvements to the Prudence
Island Ferry dock, and considering
building a new marina that would
add 110 boat slips directly in front
of the Robin Rug factory next door.
That would help eliminate the
waiting list of 90 Bristol residents
waiting for a mooring, Teixeira
said.
The project is intended as an
economic engine not just for the
town but for the state as a whole,
according to Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, who joined Sen. Jack Reed
in welcoming the Maritime Center
to Bristol. It's one of several projects, partly paid for through state
and federal grants, that have
helped revitalize the waterfront
around the state, Sen. Whitehouse
said. Others include a larger container port at Quonset, the offshore wind turbine project and
improvements to Fort Adams in
Newport that have helped attract
the Volvo Ocean Race and an
America's Cup trial run.
"You put these investments in
and good things happen," Sen.
Whitehouse said. "It's an attraction for people from far away to
come and spend their far-away
money."
Town Council members Tim
Sweeney, Mary Parella and Edward
Stuart, DEM Director Janet Coit
and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
representative Sadie Stevens
joined in the ceremony, along with
members of the Maritime Center
capital campaign.
Plans to transform the former
U.S. Naval armory built in 1896
have been underway for several
years. The $1.75 million price tag
for the Maritime Center was half
funded by Bristol, with the remainder made up of federal and state
matching grants. The funds came
from a voter approved bond for
$765,000, a town investment of
$100,000 out of the operating budget, and private sector donations
of $31,000, for a total of $896,000. A
federal grant from U.S. Fish &
Wildlife covered the remaining
$861,000. The federal Emergency
Management Agency also kicked
in $54,000 to move mechanical
equipment to the second floor to
protect it from flooding.
The project was delayed by
structural issues and has been
scrutinized for its nearly $2 million
price tag. With bond interest to pay
Bristol's share, the cost will run
well over $3 million.
To help defray maintenance
costs and recoup some building
costs, the town is seeking a tenant
that could rent some of the space
on the second floor, Mr. Teixeira
said.
Index
How to reach us
For news contact:
(USPS #065-400)
1 Bradford St, Bristol
245-6000 • 253-6055 (fax)
Mailing address: P.O. Box 90, Bristol, RI 02809
Published continuously since 1837.
A weekly publication of East Bay Newspapers,
1 Bradford St., Bristol, R.I. 02809
POSTMASTER send address changes to:
Bristol Phoenix, 1 Bradford St., Bristol, R.I. 02809
© 2014 East Bay Newspapers
Patrick Luce, Editor
424-9114
[email protected]
Matthew Hayes, Publisher
424-9140
[email protected]
For classified information contact:
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News deadline ..... noon Tuesday
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Around Town . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9
Legals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14
Library News . . . . . . . . . . . . .12
Obituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14
Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6
Police Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4
Page 4 Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016
POLICE REPORT
Foot chase ends in DUI, domestic violence, and more
The Bristol Police Department
responded to the following calls
between July 18 and July 25:
Monday, July 18
Police investigated reports of a suspicious group of people on the East Bay
Bike Path near North Farm on the Bay
condominiums around 2 a.m. The group
was walking through the area with
flashlights and started a small fire off
the path. Officers were unable to find
the group, and no crimes were reported.
Three juveniles were jumping off the
rocks into the water at Independence
Park on Thames Street around 10:30
a.m. When the kids got out of the
water, officers told them swimming is
not allowed in that area.
Ricardo J. Conclaves, 38, of 20 Thompson Ave., Bristol, was cited for driving
without a license on Wood Street.
Jason W. Rosa, 39, of 75 Wood St.,
Rehoboth, Mass., was charged with
domestic assault and domestic disorderly conduct after police were called
to a home on Etelvina Court around 5
p.m. for help removing an unwanted
man from the home.
Police were called to “keep the peace”
as a tenant was moving out of a home
on Oliver Street just after 7 p.m.
Jeffrey M. Metivier, 50, of Shaws Lane
in Bristol, was charged with domestic
assault.
Police got two more “unwanted party”
calls around 11:30 p.m. Monday night,
one at a home on Wall Street, another
at Aidan’s Pub on Thames Street. In
both cases, there was no confrontation
as the man had left.
Tuesday, July 19
A group of juveniles was reportedly
“playing basketball with traffic” at
Hope and Thames streets around noon.
The youngsters apparently moved on to
continue their games at nearby Sip ’N
Dip, but they were gone when officers
arrive.
An assault call on Brookwood Road
around 1 p.m. turned into a foot race in
a neighborhood off Metacom Avenue,
ending in the arrest of two North Providence residents. Andrew C. Lewis, 36,
of 7 Kristen Drive, Apt. 02911, North
Providence, allegedly fled the Brookwood Road home, only to be pulled
over on Metacom Avenue a couple minutes later. He then ran on foot into the
Bayview Avenue neighborhood, according to police, who eventually caught
him on Gladding Street. Mr. Lewis was
charged with driving under the influence, reckless driving, disorderly conduct, resisting arrest and failure to
obey police officers. He was not
charged with the assault that prompted
the call to police after his alleged victim declined to file charges. Mr. Lewis’
companion, Rachel L. Barnett, 23, of
1887 Smith St., North Providence, was
charged with obstructing an officer and
possession of narcotics.
An officer conducted a wellness check
on a cat at a home on Sowams Drive.
There was no immediate report on the
cat’s condition.
Wednesday, July 20
Cody James Cabral, 24, of 15 Monroe
Ave., Bristol, was arrested on St. Louis
Avenue at 12:30 a.m. on a 6th District
Court bench warrant for failure to
appear in court for an original charge
of domestic assault.
A white pickup truck was reportedly
towing a boat with a child inside at
Metacom and Bay View avenues just
before 8 a.m. Police caught up with the
truck on State Street and issued the
driver a warning.
A large rat was caught at the rear
entrance of a business on Metacom
Avenue at 8:30 a.m. It was brought to
Warren Animal Hospital to be euthanized.
A Bay View Avenue resident in a tenant/landlord dispute called police
because a chain was blocking the driveway in the home he rents. The caller
removed the chain and got into the driveway. After calling police.
Police dispersed a group of juveniles
jumping off the dock into the water at
Independence Park.
Jose Tavares, 21, of 35 Pearse Ave.,
Bristol, was arrested on a 6th District
Court bench warrant for failure to
appear in court on an original charge of
shoplifting.
Thursday, July 21
A possibly rabid raccoon was wandering around Narrows Road around 8:30
a.m. When nocturnal animals are out
during the day, that can be a sign of
rabies. Officers were not able to find
the animal.
A bicycle was reportedly stolen on High
Street. just before 5 p.m.
A resident called police on a group of
people supposedly “loitering” at Hopeworth Avenue and Viking Drive around
9:30 p.m. The group of Hopeworth
Association members had every right to
be there.
Friday, July 22
A juvenile was arrested on Wood Street
at 1:30 a.m. for underage possession of
alcohol.
A resident on Dewolf Avenue reported
a suspicious elderly man was wandering around the backyard just before
7:30 a.m. There was no problem. The
elderly man was a family member.
Police assisted with a domestic incident
on Roosevelt Drive around 1 p.m. Officers filed a report on the verbal argument.
Officers responded to a suspicious person report at Hope and State streets
around 6 p.m. Officers read a suspect
his rights, but no arrest was ultimately
reported.
Saturday, July 23
Police assisted with a car accident at
Metacom and Bay View avenues at 1
a.m. Three involved in the accident
were taken to Rhode Island Hospital
with unspecified injuries.
A resident reported his bicycle was taken from him at State and Rock streets
just before 5 a.m. Police filed a report.
There was no arrest reported.
An elderly dog was found in a yard on
Leahy Drive with what appeared to be
an injury to its back legs. Animal control responded.
A dog was locked in a car at the Sip ’N
Dip on Thames Street. An officer spoke
with the owner, but no charge was
filed. It is illegal to leave an animal in a
hot car without water and ventilation.
A Poppasquash Road resident called to
request extra patrols in the area
because a group of juveniles was
reportedly partying by the shore
around 9 p.m. Police could not find any
juveniles in the area.
Sunday, July 24
Storms in the area last weekend caused
damage to trees and some homes
around town, including one on Court
Street that had lost a window. A neighbor called police fearing a break in.
Officers secured the window.
See FACING PAGE
Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016 Page 5
POLICE REPORT
From FACING PAGE
Nicholas F. Ciolfi, 33, of 17 Maynard St.,
North Providence, was charged with
violating a no-contact order and driving
with a suspended license.
Tommy A. Couto, 38, of 90 Georgia
Ave., Apt. 2, Providence, was charged
with driving with a suspended license
on Asylum Road.
Jason R. Green, 38, of 70 Carol Ave.,
Newport, was charged with driving
with a suspended license on Metacom
Avenue.
Frank T. Faria, 33, of 34 Locust St.,
Riverside, was charged with driving
under the influence, .15 or greater,
after reportedly ramming a parked car
on Hope Street around 3:30 p.m.
Drunk driver rams car on Hope Street
Driver allegedly
registers a blood alcohol
content nearly three
times the legal limit
A couple visiting Bristol over
the weekend hadn’t even gotten
out of their car when their visit
was cut short by an alleged
drunk driver.
The couple parked at Hope
and Church streets Sunday
afternoon and were sitting in
the car planning their day when
they were rocked from behind
by a yellow Jeep that destroyed
the back end of their car. The
couple was not seriously
injured, but their car was not
drivable and had to be towed
away, according to police
reports.
Officers arrived at the scene
just before 3:30 p.m. to find
Frank T. Faria, 33, of 34 Locust
St., Riverside, sitting behind the
wheel of the yellow Jeep with
his dog, which was uninjured in
the crash. Officers immediately
noticed his red face, bloodshot
eyes and slurred speech when
they first began talking to him,
according to reports. Mr. Faria
insisted he had not been drinking that day, though officers
reported the strong odor of
alcohol emanating from the
car, reports indicate.
Mr. Faria agreed to a field
sobriety test on the sidewalk on
Hope Street, reportedly failing
all three tests. He was unable to
keep his head straight while
tracking an officer’s moving finger with his eye, broke heel-totoe contact several times during the “walk-and-turn” test,
and was unable to keep his balance during the one-leg stand,
according to reports.
Officers arrested Mr. Faria
and brought him to the Bristol
Police station, where he consented to a Breathalyzer test,
allegedly registering a blood
alcohol content of more than
.22, nearly triple the legal limit
of .08. Just before the test, Mr.
Faria reportedly admitted to
drinking four beers in about
two and a half hours while he
was on a boat. He then immediately contradicted himself,
telling police he was not under
the influence of alcohol.
Mr. Faria was charged with
driving under the influence .15
or greater, as well as roadway
violations and following too
close. He was due to be
arraigned in 6th District Court
Wednesday. Bristol Animal
Control took custody of his dog
at the scene of the accident.
Bristol sergeant
talks man off bridge's
center span
A Bristol Police sergeant likely
saved the life of a man who had
climbed to the top of the Mount
Hope Bridge Friday morning after
a tense standoff.
Bristol Police and harbor officials rushed to the area around
the Mount Hope Bridge Friday
morning on reports of a potential
jumper on the bridge. The call
came in just before 10 a.m.,
prompting police to approach the
bridge by land, the Harbor Master's office by water. Portsmouth
Police assisted, helping block traffic on the bridge.
Bristol Police Sgt. Ricardo
Mourado was among the officers
responding, finding the man
clinging to the cables on the
bridge's center span. Sgt. Maurado initiated a conversation with
the man, finally convincing him to
climb down after a tense 20 minutes, according to Bristol Police
Capt. Brian Burke.
The man was brought to the
hospital for observation, but
appeared to be unharmed, Capt.
Burke said. He declined to specify
what Sgt. Maurado said to the
man, or whether the man was suicidal. The man is not facing
charges, he said.
Opinion
Page 6 Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016
EDITORIAL
‘Farm’ horrors:
Failure all around
The police photos of the nightmare down those dirt roads off
American Legion Highway in Westport were hard to look at six
years ago. This time they are worse.
They are worse because now Westport can’t claim it had no
clue, no reason to look. This time the suffering resumed
because Westport, the state of Massachusetts, and groups that
are supposed to protect animals let it happen. The owner was
let off with a slap on the wrist and his word of better behavior
—the powers-that-be promised vigilance then ignored the
place as before. It’s as if he knew he had nothing to fear from
Westport.
Police files are packed with such episodes — down dirt lanes
off American Legion Highway, Main Road, Sodom, Bulgarmarsh in Tiverton … And they usually start the same way:
Neighbor complains of frightful odor, illegal burning, barking
dogs, visits by big trucks at all hours.
And no matter how often they see them, detectives say nothing prepares them for the horrors they encounter out there in
the woods — starving animals chained amidst trash, rats in
water buckets, filthy unlicensed slaughterhouses, a dead horse
name Momma up to her neck in freezing water, abandoned
Tiverton llama and goats …
While authorities don’t have license to poke about private
property uninvited or without cause, there are lots of legitimate reasons for town inspectors to look around from time to
time. In this instance, Westport had all the cause it needed six
years ago. This ‘farm’ gets a town agricultural tax break — that
alone is reason enough to check but nobody did. What’s going
on here has nothing to do with farming and is an insult to the
town’s ‘Right to Farm’ standard.
This time investigation must lead to charges — there is no
way to view those awful photos and not see criminal cruelty.
Other violations are apparent — tax evasion, building code,
business license, grand theft auto, weapons violations, illegal
dumping, unlicensed slaughterhouses …
And this time must lead to change. Something is badly amiss
when a Board of Health inspector can visit and find nothing
wrong, no reason to look more closely. And it is incomprehensible that after those horrors of six years ago were revealed, neither town nor state nor ASPCA kept their promises to keep a
close eye on this shady place out of sight down a dirt lane.
If it really is as aghast as it claims, Westport will send the
message that should have been delivered six years ago — those
who behave in such inhumane ways will pay dearly.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The town just keeps charging us more
To the editor:
I'm sure everyone has gotten
their new property tax bills for
2016 by now. And it looks like our
elected officials have given us all
something else to take with us
into the voting booth come
November.
Last year, it was the manipulation of your home values to
increase their tax intake. This year,
they manipulate the value of your
vehicle upwards to increase their
take from that.
Isn't the car tax supposed to be
getting phased out? Yet the politicians find ways to increase the value of a vehicle to increase the tax
they get from you. My 2002 pickup
with nearly 100,000 miles on it
was increased in value by the town
by $700 since 2014. As with the
home values, there is no way I
would get for my vehicle what this
town has it valued at.
I don't care that they are
"allowed" to do this. It's wrong!
But this is Rhode Island, the home
of legal political corruption and
thievery. As for the overall tax bill?
I'm not going to blame the town of
Warren for our 6 percent tax
increase (isn't there a 5 percent
cap?) and for doing something
that the leadership of Bristol most
certainly would've done if the circumstances were reversed.
Keep all of this in mind on election day this November.
Kenneth W. Grey, Jr.
80 Fales Road
Established in 1837
Matthew Hayes, Publisher
Patrick Luce, Editor
R. S. Bosworth Jr., Publisher Emeritus
Letters policy
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Prevent car theft
this summer with 5 tips from Amica
Summer can be prime season
for car thieves, as many people
leave their windows down and
engines running to keep vehicles
cool. That’s why Amica Insurance is offering some tips to help
prevent car theft.
According to SaferCar.gov,
there were nearly 690,000 vehicles reported stolen in the U.S. in
2014. Additionally, nearly 45 percent of stolen vehicles are never
recovered. Amica is sharing the
following tips from the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration to help prevent vehicle
theft:
■ Park in well-lit areas. If it’s an
attended parking lot, leave only
the ignition/door key with the
attendant.
■ Lock the vehicle, and always
bring the keys with you. Never
hide a second set of keys in the
vehicle.
■ Keep valuables out of plain
sight, and completely close the
windows when parking.
■ Park with the wheels turned
toward the curb, so that it is difficult to tow the vehicle away. If
the vehicle has rear-wheel drive,
backing it into the driveway will
also make it more difficult to tow.
■ Leave business cards,
address labels or other identification inside the vehicle, which
will help law enforcement recover it if it’s stolen.
Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016 Page 7
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
No time for recess in schools?
To the editor:
The Rhode Island General
Assembly recently enacted legislation mandating public schools
provide at least twenty minutes of
“free play recess” to children from
kindergarten through grade five.
This is what happens when the
political elites, investors and billionaire dilettantes decide to
“reform” public education. There
is no time for recess in “A Race to
the Top”. Even if unstructured play
was not central to a child’s cognitive, social and emotional development, autonomous interac-
tions, learning from and relating
to each other is.
How did our educators and
administrators get through college without at least an introduction to child development and the
seminal works of Piaget and
Vygotsky? What studies can these
teachers and administrative
taskmasters cite, in these ‘innovative’ and ‘successful’ reform
schools (pun intended), to support and justify the elimination of
recess?
Whatever reforms were implemented by the former Secretary of
Education Arne Duncan, they
apparently were not good enough
for his own children who attend
the University of Chicago Laboratory School.
A progressive school founded
and predicated upon the ideas
and methods of John Dewey, who
undoubtedly would be appalled
to see what constitutes public
education for the lower classes in
the 21st Century.
John St. Lawrence
1 Bend Street
Johnston
SPEAK-OUT
Parade complaints, bike rescue
I was just reading the Speak-Out
about the Bristol bands leading
the parade, and I agree wholeheartedly. But the only thing I disagree with is that if you’re going to
have the Mt. Hope High School,
then they should be dressed
WITH BETTER UNIFORMS and
the school colors. An example
would be Cranston East in this
parade. They were excellent and
they did well. So Mt. Hope should
follow suit if they want to be in the
front of the parade.
was, like, unbelievable. You have
people coming all over the place
to Bristol to enjoy a beautiful
parade, and this parade this year
was the worst.
I’m calling about the Fourth of
July Parade. I believe that the
PORTUGUESE AND BRISTOLWARREN BANDS should be the
head ones of the Fourth of July
Parade. I’m a woman of 80 years
old and OI always remember
them before being at the head of
the parade.
Town Councilman Halsey Herresmhoff’s disrespectful behavior
is APPALLING BUT NOT TOO
SURPRISING. His unannounced
depositing of several large molds
used for the manufacturing of
boats at the end of a public street
in a well-kept residential neighborhood is disrespectful to town
residents his fellow Town Council
members, town officials, the
police department and to the laws
and image of our town. Councilman Herreshoff’s response, as
quoted in the Phoenix was “It’s
I think this parade was the
WORST PARADE SINCE I’VE
LIVED IN BRISTOL for over 40
years. There’s no beautiful bands.
Everything was like, no floats. It
A heartfelt THANK-YOU TO
BRISTOL’S RESCUE 2 MEMBERS
who were doing a bike safety
check at the bike path. During our
Saturday family bike ride, our son
took a nasty fall. He will heal. We
will remember you for the comfort and attention you provided.
none of their business,” and “It’s
no big deal” in unacceptable,
reflecting his disrespectful, selfentitled attitude. The fact is they
are a danger to the public and
should have been removed immediately. Councilman Herreshoff
has been the town administrator
and a councilman for many years,
and should know better than anyone else what the town rules and
regulations are. After all, not only
did he have a hand in enacting
them, but swore an oath numerous times to uphold them. Far too
many times have some elected
officials developed the opinion
that our laws do not apply to
them, and abuse them for their
own benefit. Out public streets
and zoning laws were enacted for
the enjoyment, safety and protection pf everyone, not for the privatization of a select self-entitled
few for their own enrichment.
Laws must apply and be enforced
equally to everyone or to no one.
Or, then again, maybe as the
councilman says, it’s none of our
business what he does.
Photos of events, people, etc.
available for purchase at eastbayri.com
Bill Lizotte
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Page 8 Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016
GALLISON: Former state rep under investigtion
From Page 1
Though she said they waited
patiently for more than two years
for their funds, MHA vice president
Patricia Read said MHA leaders
started asking questions months
ago as to why they hadn’t received
money from the disbursement of
Mr. Medley’s estate.
That’s when they called in Tucker
Wright, a Warren attorney who is a
life member of the MHA. He
agreed to look into the matter, pro
bono.
“We respected that the laws of
justice grind exceedingly fine and
slow, so the first year, two years we
accepted that they were trying to
pull together all the pieces,
because the estate can only disperse once everything is accounted for,” she said. “And then about
the third year we began to ask
Tucker to kind of nose around and
see; we were suspicious.”
As Mr. Wright started researching
probate records, it became clear
that things were amiss. Though Mr.
Gallison is not licensed to practice
law in Rhode Island, he reportedly
hired a Newport attorney and former state representative, J. Russell
Jackson, to handle the estate on his
behalf. After Mr. Wright asked Mr.
Jackson for an accounting of the
state, he said things didn’t add up.
“What got me suspicious was
when I saw the contents of the
house valued at $750,” Mr. Wright
said last Wednesday, noting that a
valuable stamp and coin collection
was missing. After placing a call to
Mr. Gallison’s attorney, Mr. Gallison
walked into Mr. Wright’s office with
the coin and stamp collection, as
well as the keys to a storage unit on
Franklin Street, where the contents
of Mr. Medley’s home are stored.
The total value of Mr. Medley’s
estate is still being tallied, Mr.
Wright said. “We’re still investigating what happened to the estate
money. There’s a couple hundred
thousand in investments.”
As questions arose about Mr.
Gallison’s handling of the estate,
the Barrington Probate Court
removed Mr. Gallison as Mr. Medley’s executor; Mr. Wright was subsequently named the executor and
represents the estate. He is expected to petition the court to authorize at least partial disbursement of
funds now.
“I bet he never thought how
much pro we would be getting out
of his bono,” Ms. Read quipped of
Mr. Wright’s work. “He’s done a lot.”
Mr. Medley
Ms. Read said the recent controversy surrounding the MHA’s late
friend is a shame, as it sullies the
memory of what was a good man
who cared deeply for Warren and
its past.
“From what I’ve heard of Ray’s
temper, he would be livid if he
knew how this has dragged on
when all he wanted was a quiet
donation. It’s embarrassing to his
memory that he befriended and
trusted someone who was so
unworthy of his trust,” she said.
The case “is going to dribble on,
and poor Ray’s name is going to
keep bobbing up like a fishing bobber.
Mr. Medley, a fireworks enthusiast who lived alone in Barrington,
was integral to the MHA’s reformation in the 1970s, when it and other historical-minded organizations
got new life amid the Bicentennial
of 1976. The association bought the
Maxwell House, a 1752 brick structure at 59 Church St., in 1976 and
set about preserving and restoring
it. Like most old homes, it was a
money pit.
“It took money and there was
none, so it was raised in a variety of
ways,” she said.
One of his biggest contributions
to the association was his work as
organizer of a benefit carnival at
Jamiel Park.
“He really slaved over it,” Ms.
Read said of the yearly event. “He
was the kind of man who, when he
got into an organization, put all his
energies into it. Perhaps the last 10
years of his life he was not so well,
but prior to that he was very
active.”
Ms. Read said the organization
was honored to learn in 2012 that
Mr. Medley had left a significant
amount of money to the MHA.
When it finally, comes in, she said,
it will be well-used:
“Buying a house is a life sentence
of hard labor,” she said. “It’s like
maintaining an aging opera singer.
She takes a lot of upkeep just to
keep the old girl going, and we
always have a to do list.”
“We’ve always been just like the
Parson’s mouse. We only eat what
we need at the time, because we
existed for so long raising money in
small events. (The funds) will go
into a trust and will be used only
for those things that we need to do.
His gift was really a grace note in
our organizational lives; it was a
lovely, thoughtful gift and we are
very grateful to Ray and his memory.”
ADMIN: Former cop to challenge Teixeira
From Page 1
nity Development department to
find building space that could be
used for new businesses. “We want
to keep businesses, attract new
businesses and help use underutilized space. Bristol is a beautiful
place to live and work. We need to
sell that.”
That is exactly what the town has
been doing, Mr. Teixeira said,
pointing to newly full-time Economic Development Director Jessica Pflaumer as evidence of his
efforts to attract and retain businesses. Previously a part-time position, Mr. Teixera combined it with
the also part-time Community
Development Black Grant coordinator so businesses have a full-time
person in the town they can turn to.
“Whether a current or a new
business, they have someone they
can connect with,” Mr. Teixeira
said. “We’ve become much more
efficient when a new business
comes in. Zoning, permits, building
inspections — she walks them
through the whole process. We are
trying to reach out to current businesses. Jessica is making a point of
going out to them.”
Mr. Teixeira also refutes the claim
he doesn’t bring department heads
and other town leaders together. It’s
actually quite the opposite, he said,
noting a recent seminar they
attended at Salve Regina University
that focused on communication
and project management. He said
he has frequent department head
meetings that produce efficiencies,
specifically mentioning a recent
meeting during which the Water
Department and DPW realized
they could share equipment on a
catch basin project.
Not only has he brought department heads together, but has also
facilitated cooperation among other governmental agencies, Mr. Teixeira said, working with DPW, the
state Department of Transportation and National Grid to coordinate road projects so streets don’t
have to be paved and reopened
more than once.
Still, there should be more of that
type of cooperation, Mr. Contente
said. He mentioned a new Dunkin’
Donuts planned for Gooding Plaza,
which will eat into the parking
spots volunteer firefighters at Defiance Fire Company use. “Who’s
looking out for our townspeople
and volunteers,” he asked.
It’s a job he believes he can do
better. Mr. Contente spent 20 years
as a Bristol police officer, retiring as
deputy chief last September. But
he’s not done serving the town, he
said. Working directly with the public and “being in people’s houses in
the best and worst times” has built
a strong connection to the town
and its people, he said. Supervising 52 officers has given him the
management skills he needs to
be an effective administrator, he
said.
“I have experience and I have a
passion for this town,” Mr. Contente said. “I’m not a micro-manager. I will bring people together.
I have unfinished business with
this town.”
Mr. Teixeira said he won’t start
campaigning full-time until after
the primaries in September, but
said Bristol voters know the work
he has put in and he is comfortable leaning on his accomplishments to win votes.
“I think I have honorably represented the town, and we’ll let
the voters decide,” Mr. Teixeira
said. “He has provided a valuable
service to the town. I have a great
respect for him and appreciation
for his service. But, at the same
Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016 Page 9
AROUND TOWN
Hope St.
The society was incorporated in
1929 with the mission to promote
Sicilian heritage, food, music and
the arts and to help members and
the community in need. It is open
to all men of Sicilian descent. For
more information, contact Mike
Byrnes at mtbyrnes46@gmail.
com.
Downtown walking
tours are on Thursdays
On Thursdays through October,
the Bristol Historical & Preservation Society presents afternoon
walking tours downtown (weather
permitting). The seasonal walks
start at 3 p.m. at the society at 48
Court St. They are $5; free to members.
Topics include “Around the
Town Common in One Hour & 336
Years,” which explores how the
use of the town common evolved,
while retaining its primary function as open public space, on July
28; and “Byfield Street” on Aug. 4.
Call 253-7223 or visit www.bhps
ri.org for more information. Membership is open to all. There is adequate parking and the society is
wheelchair accessible.
Mt. Hope Farm farmers’
market is on Saturdays
The Mount Hope Farmers’ Market is open on Saturdays from 9
a.m. to 1 p.m. through Oct. 22 in
the south pasture just to the south
of the main entrance to Mount
Hope Farm, 250 Metacom Ave.
Then it will move into the barn for
the winter months. Admission to
See more AROUND TOWN Page 10
Racism and police
brutality are the topic
East Bay Citizens for Peace will
present “Democracy Now! The
War and Peace Report” on Thursday, July 28, at 7 p.m. at Rogers
Free Library, Herreshoff Community Room, 525 Hope St.
The topic is “Racism and Police
Brutality.” The viewing of the
broadcast will be followed by discussion and is free and open to the
public.
This is part of a series of monthly viewings of “Democracy Now!”
broadcasts sponsored by East Bay
Citizens for Peace, a grassroots
organization committed to peaceful solutions to conflict, and social
and economic justice through
open, respectful dialogue. For
more information, call 247-9738
or visit www.eastbaycitizens4
peace.org.
Art Night is tonight
in Bristol and Warren
Art Night Bristol/Warren’s free
monthly tour of artists’ studios
and galleries is on Thursday, July
28, from 5:30 to 9 p.m., with a
series of special events and
exhibits in both towns.
Locations in Bristol will include
Bristol Art Museum, 10 Wardwell
St. The featured artist at BAM is
Mary Ellen Dwyer.
A featured stop is at Blithewold
Mansion, Gardens & Arboretum,
101 Ferry Road, for music, light
refreshments and the art of
Stephen Procter from 5:30 to 9
p.m. Guests will enjoy tours
throughout the grounds to see the
site-specific display of large, bold
New art exhibit open at Rogers Free Library
A new juried art exhibit sponsored by Bristol Art Museum and Rogers Free Library, “Taking Flight,” is at
the library at 525 Hope St. through Oct. 5. Winning awards were Paul Murray for a photograph, “Seconds
Away!” (pictured), first place; David Slipp for a photograph, “Lighter Than Air,” second place; and John
Christina for a photograph, “Awaiting Breeze 2,” honorable mention.
and voluptuous ceramic vessels.
The Mint Gallery at 433 Hope St.
will feature works by Michael
Rich. Re/Max River’s Edge at 47
Bradford St. features artist Jim
Bush. Grasmere at 6 Franklin St.
will be open.
Galleries and studios also will be
open in Warren.
Parking is available in Warren at
30 Cutler St. and in Bristol at the
Robin Rug parking lot at 125
Thames St.
In addition, a trolley serves one
town each month. It’s free, but
register online at www.artnightbristolwarren.org. This month, the
trolley will tour the Bristol studios
and galleries, arriving and departing from Bank 5 on Metacom
Avenue..
For more information, and all
participating venues, visit www.
artnightbristolwarren.org.
Family Fun
Fridays at Blithewold
Blithewold Mansion, Gardens &
Arboretum, 101 Ferry Road, will
host Family Fun Fridays in the
gardens from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on
Fridays through Aug. 19, rain or
shine.
Activities on July 29 include
entertainment by Kaleidoscope
Theater from 11 a.m. to noon, followed by a nature-inspired craft
activity, face painting and a free
slice of pizza (one per person)
from noon to 1 p.m. Bring a blanket and a picnic lunch and enjoy
the show.
All activities are free with regular
admission, which is $14 for adults,
$13 seniors, $10 for full-time stu-
dents and military, $5 ages 6 to 17,
and free for members and children under 5. For more information, visit www.blithewold.org.
La Bella Sicilia Society
to meet tomorrow
The La Bella Sicilia Society will
hold a general business meeting
on Friday, July 29, at 7 p.m. at 1218
Ask Dr. Kerwin
ORAL HYGIENE AND COGNITIVE DECLINE
Q: Is there any relationship between oral
hygiene and cognitive decline?
vascular disease—are also associated
with poor cognitive function.”
A: Findings from a study conducted by
Duke University researchers found that
better oral hygiene and regular visits to
the dentist may play a role in slowing
cognitive decline. The evidence, though,
was not definitive enough to suggest
that one causes the other. The findings
were published in the Journal of the
American Geriatrics Society.
Dr. Wu and her colleagues found in
some cases that certain oral health
measures—the number of teeth, the
number of cavities, the existence of gum
disease—were associated with an
increased risk of cognitive decline, yet in
other cases were unable to confirm an
association. While the research remains
inconclusive as to a direct causal relationship between oral health and the
onset of dementia, it provides one more
reason for a person to attend to oral
health.
Some 36 percent of people over age 70
have some degree of cognitive impairment. Dr. Bei Wu, of Duke University’s
School of Nursing in Durham, N.C. put it
this way in a release issued by the journal: “Clinical evidence suggests that the
frequency of oral health problems
increases significantly in cognitively
impaired older people, particularly those
with dementia. In addition, many of the
factors associated with poor oral
health—such as poor nutrition and systemic diseases like diabetes and cardio-
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Page 10 Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016
AROUND TOWN
From Page 9
the market and other events is free
and open to the public.
Stop by for fresh local produce,
flowers, potted flowers and herbs,
meats, seafood, eggs, cheese, coffee, honey, bread, pastries, prepared foods, salsas, sauces, relishes and soaps, along with live
music and periodic workshops
and demonstrations.
Credit/debit cards, SNAP and
WIC are all accepted at the market, and Bonus Bucks are offered
to SNAP users.
Summer Yoga Fest
at Coggeshall Farm
The second Summer Yoga Fest is
on Saturday, July 30, from 10:30
a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Coggeshall
Farm Museum off Poppasquash
Road. East Bay Bikram Yoga and
Bristol Yoga Studio are coming
together to put on the free day of
yoga for the community.
All are invited. A family yoga
class is at 10:30 a.m., a bikram
yoga class is at noon, and a
vinyasa yoga class is at 1:30 p.m.
Lunch will be available from Z
Food Truck.
Classes are suited for all ages
and abilities.
While the day is free, they will be
collecting donations for the museum’s education program and nonperishable goods for the East Bay
Food Pantry.
Cornhole Tournament
by Athletic Hall of Fame
The Bristol Athletic Hall of Fame
is running a Cornhole Tournament on Saturday, July 30, beginning at noon at the Market Street
Pub in Warren. The tournament
will be double elimination and is
limited to 30 teams.
The fee is $50 per team (two
players) and includes prizes and
dinner. Contact Warren Rensehausen at [email protected] or 286-3664.
Two performances of
‘Aladdin the Musical’
Newport Children's Theatre will
presents “Aladdin the Musical” on
Saturday, July 30, at 2 p.m. and 7
p.m. at the Mount Hope High
School auditorium, 199 Chesnut
St.
General admission is $10.
Art al Fresco returns on Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the sidewalk along Hope Street in front of Linden
Place and the Bradford-Dimond House. There will be artwork in all mediums.
Art Al Fresco in front of
Linden Place on Sunday
The Bristol Art Museum and
Portsmouth Arts Guild members
are hosting Art Al Fresco once
again on Sunday, July 31, from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. in front of Linden
Place and the Bradford-Dimond
House on Hope Street.
A variety of artwork in all mediums will be on display from jewelry and textiles to woodcarving,
painting and photography.
The raindate is Sunday, Aug. 7.
Republican Town
Committee to meet
The Bristol Republican Town
Committee meets the first Monday of every month, Aug. 1, at 7
p.m. at the Burnside Building,
Hope and Court streets. All are
welcome.
Lions Club meetings;
new members welcome
Are you looking to give back to
the community? The Bristol
County Lions meet the first and
third Wednesdays of the month.
For more information, call 5957031.
Music at Sunset is at
Blithewold Wednesday
Music at Sunset returns to
Blithewold Mansion, Gardens &
Arboretum, 101 Ferry Road,
through Aug. 31.
Spread out a blanket and
unpack the picnic basket, soak up
the warmth of the summer sun,
and enjoy the sunset over Narragansett Bay, all while savoring a
kaleidoscope of musical performances.
On the schedule, from 6 to 8
p.m. each Wednesday are: Aug. 3,
Opera Providence; Aug. 10, New
To Submit Community News
BY E-MAIL (PREFERRED):
[email protected]
BY MAIL: Bristol Phoenix, Community
News, P.O. Box 90, Bristol, RI 02809
BY FAX: 401/253-6055
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
401/253-6000, ext. 107
Or stop by our office at 1 Bradford St.,
Bristol.
Photos are encouraged but cannot be
returned, unless a self-addressed,
stamped envelope is enclosed.
Milestone events, such as births, weddings, engagements, etc., must be submitted within the year following the
event.
DEADLINE: Noon on Tuesday
Providence Big Band; Aug. 17,
Paula Clare and The Mike Tanaka
Trio; Aug. 24, Magnolia, a Cajun
band; and Aug. 31, Classics Five
Jazz Quintet.
Guests are encouraged to BYOB
and a picnic dinner, and chairs or
blankets.
The cost is $10; $7 members.
Register online at www.blithewold.org or call 253-2707 for more
information.
‘Seussical the Musical!’
tickets for sale online
The Bristol Theatre Company
will present “Seussical the Musical!”, a magical, musical extravaganza.
Performances are on Thursday
to Saturday, Aug. 4 to 6, at 7 p.m.;
and on Sunday, Aug. 7, at 2 p.m. at
Reynolds School, 235 High St.
Cast members, all from Bristol,
include Phillip Pontes, Horton the
Elephant; Mia Campagna, JoJo;
Ellie Knapman, Gertrude McFuzz;
Skylar Kallman, the Cat in the Hat;
Samantha Lima, Mayzie; and Abigail Creel Phenix, Sour Kangaroo.
Tickets are available online at
http://bristoltheatrecompany.bro
wnpapertickets.com.
New exhibit at
Bristol Art Museum
Bristol Art Museum is hosting a
new exhibit, “Contemporary
Women Artists,” at 10 Wardwell St.
through Sept. 4.
Participating artists are Elizabeth Alexander, Meris Barreto,
Catherine Carter, Leigh Craven,
Wendy Edwards, Paula Martiesian, Ida Schmulowitz and Jessica Straus.
Museum hours are from 1 to 4
p.m. Thursdays to Sundays during
exhibits. Visit the website at
www.bristolartmuseum.org. Nonmembers are asked to make a $2
donation.
Lions Club to host
a pig roast on Aug. 7
The Bristol County Lions Club
will hold a fund-raising pig roast
on Sunday, Aug. 7, at 1:30 p.m. at
Colt State Park (sites 16 to 20) in
Bristol. Tickets are $20.
Call Jessica Almeida at 580-1331
for tickets or more information.
The deadline to purchase tickets is
Aug. 6 (or until they sell out).
Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016 Page 11
Recreation department has Congregational church seeks items for bicentennial exhibit
new Yoga for Runners program
The Bristol Department of Parks
& Recreation offers a variety of
programs at the Quinta-Gamelin
Community Center at 101 Asylum
Road (the entrance to Colt State
Park), along with trips and activities for all ages.
For more information, or reservations when required, call 2531611.
Yoga for Runners
Yoga for Runners with Dan is on
Sundays in July and August. Meet
at 7:15 a.m. at the QuintaGamelin Community Center for a
7:25 sharp walk/run and 8 a.m.
yoga.
Youth basketball league
Signups are being accepted for a
summer youth basketball league.
They are offering two leagues
again this summer – a coed junior
league and a boys senior league.
The junior league is for boys
and girls entering grades 5 to 8.
The senior league is for boys
entering grades 9 to 12. To register,
call league Director Kyle Valenzuela at 499-3391. There is no fee
to participate.
Both leagues will play on Sunday evenings at the Bristol Town
Beach and Sports Complex. The
junior league plays from 5 to 6
p.m. The senior league plays from
6 to 7:30 p.m.
Men’s basketball league
The rec. department wants to
know if there is any interest in resurrecting the men’s summer basketball league that played on the
town common in the past.
If you are interested in participating, players and/or teams are
asked to register by sending an
email to [email protected].
Games will be played once or
twice a week on Tuesdays and/or
Thursdays from 6 to 9 p.m.,
depending on how many signups
they get. The cost will be $50 per
player and there will be referees.
Zumba classes
Zumba classes for adults are at 9
a.m. on Monday, Wednesday (toning) and Friday; 5:30 p.m. on
Monday and Wednesday (toning),
6:30 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday, and at 8:30 a.m. on Saturdays.
Note: The classes on Wednesdays are zumba toning classes.
The cost is $5 for drop-ins or
$50 for a 12-punch card.
Vinyasa power yoga
Vinyasa Yoga Baptiste Power
Yoga is a systematic approach to
the physical discipline of yoga
poses which occur within movement or flow (vinyasa). Stop by to
pick up a schedule and take a free
class.
The cost is $8 for drop-ins or $7
with a 10 punch card.
Yoga classes
Yoga in the new kula yoga studio is open to all levels on Mondays at 8:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
(which is a gentle, candlelight
vinyasa yoga), Tuesdays at 9:30
a.m. and 6:30 p.m., Wednesdays
and Fridays at 8:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Thursdays at 9:30 a.m. and
5:30 p.m., Saturdays at 7:30 and
9:30 a.m., and Sundays at 10:30
a.m.
The cost is $8 per class or $70 for
a 10-punch card. The first class is
free. They have mats, blocks and
straps. Just bring a bottle of water.
Personal training/Body Defined
Group personal training/Body
Defined with Lisa is on Mondays
and Fridays at 9 a.m. and Wednesdays at 8 a.m. The cost is $7 for
drop-ins or $60 with a 10-punch
class card.
GRADUATES
FELICIA LYNN VIEIRA graduated cum laude
and received a
bachelor of
science degree
in nursing
from Curry
College, where
she was a
dean’s list student all four
years. She is
the daughter
of Tony and Linda Vieira of Bristol.
EMILY DONLIN DYER of Basswood Drive, Bristol, graduated
summa cum
laude and
received a
bachelor of
arts degree in
secondary
education and
English from
the University of Maine at Orono.
She was president of Delta Phi
Epsilon sorority, participated in
Alternative Spring Break community outreach, and is a member of
Kappa Delta Phi National Educational Honors Society. She plans
to pursue a teaching career in
Portland, Maine.
JESSICA MATRONE of Bristol
received a master of arts degree
in speech language pathology
from Hofstra University.
MICHELLE DaPONTE of Bristol earned a degree from Becker
College.
CHRISTOPHER CSANADI of
Bristol received a bachelor of science degree in information technology from the University of
Massachusetts-Lowell.
Students named to
St. Luke’s honor roll
Bristol students were named to
the honor roll at St. Luke’s School
for the recently completed
trimester.
Receiving highest honors was
Hailey Osmanski, Grade 6.
Receiving first honors were
Antone Mello, Kaia Faria, Olivia
Vitale and Jillian Fitting, Grade 8;
Ethan York, Grade 7; and Dylan
Brol, Luis Raposa, Katherine
Vitale and Benjamin York, Grade
6.
Receiving second honors were
Catherine Adams, Conor Lally
and Zachary Isabel, Grade 6.
Bristol’s First Congregational
Church is celebrating the bicentennial of its Sunday school with a
rousing Rally Day to welcome
back students on Sunday, Sept. 11,
and a special bicentennial exhibit
the following week.
The church is as old as the Town
of Bristol itself as, back in the
1680s, it was necessary to form a
church before applying to be recognized as a town.
The exhibits will be open twice
— on opening night, Friday, Sept.
16, from 6 to 8 p.m. in the DeWolf
Chapel at 300 High St., and after
church on Sunday, Sept. 18, from
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. It is free and
open to the public.
Learn more about Bristol’s early
days. You may catch a glimpse of a
relative in a photo, vintage film or
a name on a roster.
Planners also are asking the
public if they have items pertaining to the First Congregational
Church Sunday school that could
be loaned for the exhibit. They will
treat items with great care and
return them safely after the Sept.
18 viewing.
Highlights of the exhibit include
a film taken in the 1950s-early
1960s showing church life (such as
a bazaar, people leaving church
on Easter Sunday, a fashion show
where women sported furs and
men cavorted dressed in drag, and
digging the hole for the “new”
1961 Sunday school wing.
A timeline shows milestones in
the church’s history against the
backdrop of world events. (Abraham Lincoln was a boy of 7 when
the Sunday school was founded.)
There also are historic documents and photographs, a present-day documentary with individuals recalling their Sunday
school days, a scavenger hunt for
children, and a letter from Senator
Ted Kennedy sent to a child whose
Children’s Day balloon flew all the
way to the Cape and landed in the
Kennedys’ yard.
If you have items to lend or
would like more information,
contact Dyan Vaughan, co-chairwoman of the FCC Historical
Properties Committee, at 2977702 or [email protected].
Page 12 Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016
Make a fairy house, wade into wetlands or take a trail walk at Audubon
Bring the brood and get a little
wet searching the wetlands for
frogs and turtles or head into the
meadow to look for butterflies,
insects, toads and more at the
Audubon Society of Rhode
Island’s Environmental Education
Center at 1401 Hope St. on the
Bristol/Warren town line.
The center also features a lifesized model of a Right Whale, harbor seal display, marine and freshwater aquarium exhibits, tide pool
tank, along with trails and a
boardwalk to the bay on the 28acre wildlife refuge. The center is
open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday to Saturday and noon to 5
p.m. Sunday.
The usual admission fee is $6 for
adults, $5 for seniors and $4 for
children 4 to 12 years (under 4 are
free). However, it is waived on the
first Saturday of each month for
Free Family Fun Day courtesy of a
grant from Citizens Bank.
For more information, call 2457500 or visit www.asri.org. To register for programs call 949-5454,
ext. 0, or register online at
www.asri.org.
■ “Fairy Beach Houses” for ages
5 and older is on Saturday, July 30,
from 10 to 11:30 a.m. Even fairies
need a day at the beach! Use natural materials to create a vacation
home for magical friends. Add
“Wading into Wetlands” is on Thursday, Aug. 4. Discover just how important this local habitat is. Keep your
eyes open for turtles, frog and ducks. Explore with nets and basins, and then use magnifying glasses and
guide books to identify what you find.
sand, shells, seaweed and more.
Perhaps a seashell bed or a sea
glass mirror? Fairy homes are
great for creative play and display.
Adults must accompany chil-
dren. Registration is required. The
cost is $14 per child; $10 member
children. Register online.
■ A free guided trail walk for all
ages is on Saturday, July 30, from 2
to 3 p.m. Join an Audubon naturalist for a leisurely walk along the
trails down to Narragansett Bay.
Stop to observe wildlife in the
field, wetland and forest habitats.
Turn in your completed entry at
the main circulation desk on the
second floor of the library. You can
submit as many entries as you
like. The more you read, the better
your chances of winning a prize.
Weekly prize drawings will be
held on Friday afternoons through
Aug. 19.
Four grand prizes (an iPad mini,
a Kindle Fire Tablet with HD and
two Garmin Fitness Trackers), as
well as door prizes, will be awarded Aug. 24 at the “Dinner and
Book Chat.” You must be present
to win a grand prize.
Prizes and dinner are courtesy
of the Friends of Rogers Free
Library.
ners.”
You never know what might be
seen! Bring your binoculars and
camera. The program is weather
dependent, no registration is
required. The walk is free. More
walks are planned this summer on
Aug. 13 and 27.
■ “Wading into Wetlands” is on
Thursday, Aug. 4, from 11 a.m. to
noon. Take a journey to the wetlands and discover just how
important this local habitat is.
Keep your eyes open for turtles,
frog and ducks.
Explore the water with nets and
basins, and then use magnifying
glasses and guide books to identify what you find. Will it be a tadpole? A dragon fly nymph? Snail
eggs? Wear clothes that can get
dirty. Adults must accompany
children. The program is weather
dependent. Recommended for
ages 6 and up. The cost is $7 per
child/ $5 member children. Register online.
■ “Beakheads and Cutwater:
Photography by Michael Cevoli”
is open through Aug. 31 during
regular hours. During the summer
of 2012, Mr. Cevoli began photographing several maritime
industries based in southern New
England as well as the land and
seascapes in which they are situated.
It is free with admission.
AT THE LIBRARY
Adult Summer Reading
The Adult Summer Reading
contest returns again this year.
Read three books or listen to three
audio books now through Aug. 19.
Write the book’s title and author
and rate each book on the entry
form.
Entry forms will be available
beginning today at the library or
on the website. Wondering what
to read? See the “Recommendation Shelves.” Children’s books
and magazines don’t count. You
must be 18 years or older to participate.
Summer reading
Boys and girls of all ages are
invited to join “On Your Mark, Get
Set, Read!!” this summer between
the hours of 9:30 a.m. and noon
every weekday through Friday,
Aug. 12. No registration is needed,
and guests are welcome.
Read books and spin for prizes.
Ask for a copy of the reading log,
and complete eight activities to
gain admittance to the special
room: “Readers are the Real Win-
Children’s special
On Wednesday, Aug. 3, children
as young as 4 are welcome to join
in the fun of a live animal show.
Bwana Iguana Reptile Adventures
is an interactive program for children to connect with reptiles and
their world.
The free show begins at 10:30
a.m. in the Herreshoff Room. No
registration needed.
Blood pressure clinic
The Visiting Nurse Services of
Newport and Bristol Counties
have a free blood pressure screening on Wednesday, Aug. 3, from 11
a.m. to noon in the main foyer. No
appointment needed. For more
information, call VNS at 682-2100,
ext. 1470.
Wednesday Chess Club
The Chess Club meets every
Wednesday from 5:45 to 7:45 p.m.
on the third floor. Teens and adult
chess players of all skill levels are
welcome to join in at any meeting.
Light refreshments are served.
Get in the Game, Read!
The 2016 Teen Summer Reading
Program is continuing until Aug.
17. Readers in middle school and
high school are asked to read two
books to enter a weekly prize
drawing. Check the website for
details or pick up a flyer. No registration needed.
Tickets to enter the contests will
be in the teen area. The weekly
prize will be a bag with books, gift
certificates to local businesses and
Amazon and more.
The last teen special is on
Wednesday, Aug. 3, at 6:30 p.m. in
the Herreshoff Room. A workshop
with Kelly Starr Omer is for
teenagers interested in finding out
more about yoga and meditation,
and how to incorporate it into
their daily lives to help with stressand anxiety-relief, mental clarity,
and overall peace of mind and
body. Bring a yoga mat (or beach
towel/folded throw blanket or
both), a notebook and pen/pencil
just in case, and a water bottle. No
registration needed.
At the final book discussion
meeting, on Wednesday, Aug. 17,
the big prizes will be awarded,
including two Nook GlowLight
Plus and a copy of “Harry Potter
and the Cursed Child” by J.K.
Rowling.
Free concert Aug. 4
On Thursday, Aug. 4, at 7 p.m.,
the Community String Project’s
Chamber Ensemble will perform
in the Herreshoff Room.
The Chamber Ensemble is the
most advanced adult string
ensemble in the Community
String Project and represents the
finest musicians trained by CSP’s
innovative program.
The ensemble is directed by
Nathan Rodriquez and performs
works by Bach, Handel, Mozart,
Vivaldi and others.
Borrow an eReader
Did you know the library lends
eReaders? Borrow a Nook or Kindle eReader. All you need is your
library card. You can borrow each
for one week. For more information, contact Kristin at kcalou
ro@bristolri. us or 253-6948.
Rogers Free Library is at 525 Hope
St. Extra parking is in the rear of
the building off Thames Street.
For more information, call 2536948 or visit the website at
http://rogersfreelibrary.org.
Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016 Page 13
Bristol High School
Class of 1951 holds
its 65th reunion
Members of the Class of 1951 at
Bristol High School met for a
65th class reunion at the S.S.
Dion restaurant on July 10.
AT THE YMCA
The Bayside YMCA offers a
variety of programs for all ages at
the Y at 70 West St., Barrington.
Stop by or call 245-2444 for more
information or to register. Online
registration is available for YMCA
members at www.gpymca.org.
Programs may be canceled due
to lack of enrollment, so register
as soon as possible. Financial
assistance is available for many
programs.
Summer camp
work on the road joining some of
the Y’s partner camps such as
farm camp, kayak camp and
extreme sports camp.
The program encourages
teamwork while promoting individual growth. There will also be
time in the day for swimming,
sports and archery. The specialty
camp is offered the week of Aug.
1.
The fee is $355; $320 for members. Call to register. Financial
assistance is available.
The Bayside YMCA’s Camp
Manitoo offers traditional and
specialty camps including preschool, teen, sailing and seamanship, farm camp, skate camp,
aquatics camp, kayak camp,
gymnastics, horsemanship and
Jam On.
Camp Manitoo is an ACAaccredited day camp on the
property in Barrington. To learn
more, stop in, call or visit the
website. Before- and after-camp
care is available as well as half- or
full-day options for preschoolers.
Volunteer opportunities
Teen Camp
The Bayside YMCA is holding a
CPR certification course on Saturday, Aug. 13, from 1 to 3 p.m.
You must be at least 16. The
The new Teen Camp for those
entering grades 6 to 8 will take its
The Bayside YMCA is looking
for volunteers to welcome members and guests. Hours are flexible.
They also need someone with
good organizational skills to
serve as a volunteer coordinator
to track the hours volunteers put
in helping staff and members.
Any needed training will be provided. Call if you are interested.
CPR and First Aid
The Bristol Senior Center has
some events planned.
At a fund-raiser on Thursday,
Aug. 18, an Art Night is at 6:30 p.m.
Come and paint your glass and
support the Benjamin Church
Senior Center Inc. The cost is $30
per person.
A trip to Foxwoods is set for Friday, Aug. 19. The motorcoach
departs at 3:30 p.m. The cost is $28
per person.
For more information, call 2538458.
Senior Citizens
Council to meet Tuesday
The Bristol Senior Citizens
Council Inc. will meet at 1 p.m.
LEGAL NOTICE
BRISTOL HISTORIC DISTRICT
COMMISSION
AGENDA
THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 2016 - 7:00PM
BRISTOL TOWN HALL,
10 COURT ST., BRISTOL, RI
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
MINUTES – July 7, 2016
APPLICATION REVIEWS
1.16-071 – 43 Byfield St., Ann Marie
Tortorice
repair/replace front porch columns
2.16-089 – 448/450 Hope St., Robert
Vanderhoof
seasonal vestibule
SENIORS
Art Night and a trip
to Foxwoods in August
course is approved for training
for Emergency Medical Services
personnel and is accepted by the
National Registry of Emergency
Medical Technicians.
A first aid certification course
is on Saturday, Aug. 13, from 4 to
5 p.m. Learn how to properly
apply first aid skills to save lives
and reduce recovery time.
The fee for a single course is
$80; $40 for members. There is a
$25 non-refundable fee for classes that are canceled within seven
days of the class start date. Those
who successfully complete the
courses, including practical and
written tests, receive a certification card valid for two years.
Registration is required. Participants must have email access
Tuesday, Aug. 2, at the Bristol
Housing community hall, 1014
Hope St. The topic of discussion
will be the installation of officers’
luncheon. The cost of the meal
will be collected at the meeting.
Members are reminded to bring
items for the penny social.
Refreshments and bingo will follow.
3.16-090 – 448/450 Hope St., Custom
House Square, LLC
1. add 3rd floor deck; 2. replace window
with door
4.16-091 – 23 Summer St., Catherine and
Gustavus Esselen
install air condenser
5.16-093 – 32 Central St., Elizabeth
McCarthy
install temporary fence
6.16-094 – 448 Hope St.
1. install heat pump; 2. change status temporary structure
STAFF REPORT
Sign-Offs – July
PROJECT MONITOR REPORTS
OLD BUSINESS
Discussion: Rules of Procedure and
Guidelines for Administrative and
Commission Review of Door &
Window Repair in the Bristol Historic
District
Oryann Lima, Chairman
July 21, 2016
for online pre-learning. For more
information, contact Brendan at
245-2444 or [email protected].
Summer memberships
A YMCA summer membership
runs through Labor Day. It
includes use of the outdoor pool,
full use of the facility, member
rates for special programs
(including summer camp) and
use of other YMCAs within the
network.
The Y is open Monday to
Thursday from 5 a.m. to 9:30
p.m., on Fridays from 5 a.m. to 9
p.m., and on Saturday and Sunday from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Outdoor pool hours are Monday to Friday from 11 a.m. to 7
p.m. and Saturday and Sunday
from noon to 6 p.m.
For rates and more information, call or stop by.
Page 14 Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016
LEGAL NOTICE
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND
PROBATE COURT OF THE
TOWN OF BARRINGTON
NOTICE OF MATTERS PENDING
AND FOR HEARING
IN SAID COURT
The Court will be in session at the
Barrington Town Hall on the dates specified
in notices below at 9:00 a.m. for hearing
said matters.
Burns, Richard; Estate – Barbara Burns
of Barrington, RI appointed Guardian of
Person and Estate. Creditors must file their
claims in the office of the Probate Clerk
within the time required by law beginning
July 27, 2016.
Healey, Robert J. Jr.; Estate - Claire L.
Boyes of Barrington, RI appointed
Executrix. Creditors must file their claims in
the office of the Probate Clerk within the
time required by law beginning July 27,
2016.
Gasbarro, Anna; Estate – Petition for
Probate of Will for Hearing on August 17,
2016.
Gasbarro, Philip L. a/k/a Gasbarro,
Philip Louis; Estate - Administration De
Bonis Non Cum Testamento Annexo for
hearing on August 17, 2016.
Goldstein, Jessie; Estate – Petition for
Probate of Will for hearing on August 17,
2016.
Medley, Ray A a/k/a Medley, Ray Arthur;
Estate – Judi Adams of Edgewater, FL
appointed Executrix. Thomas E. Wright,
Esq. of Warren RI appointed RI Agent.
Creditors must file their claims in the office
of the Probate Clerk within the time
required by law beginning July 27, 2016
Nordhoff, Galen a/k/a Nordhoff, Galen
Emery; Estate - Petition for Limited
Guardianship or Guardianship for hearing
on August 17, 2016.
Quinlan, Lorraine L.; Estate – Patrick D.
Quinlan of Westport, MA appointed
Executor. David T. Riedel of Providence, RI
appointed RI Agent. Creditors must file
their claims in the office of the Probate
Clerk within the time required by law beginning July 27, 2016
Rayner, Helen Louise a/k/a Rayner,
Helen L. a/k/a Rayner, Helen; Estate –
Michael Francis Rayner of Barrington, RI
appointed Administrator C.T.A. Creditors
must file their claims in the office of the
Probate Clerk within the time required by
law beginning July 27, 2016.
Rolnick, Ruth; Estate – Dr. Charles
Sherman of Barrington, RI appointed
Executor. Creditors must file their claims in
the office of the Probate Clerk within the
time required by law beginning July 27,
2016.
Rosener, Joan S.; Estate - Andrew L.
Rosener of Barrington, RI and Thomas J.
Rosener of Centreville, VA appointed CoExecutors.
Andrew L. Rosener of
Barrington, RI appointed RI Agent.
Creditors must file their claims in the office
of the Probate Clerk within the time
required by law beginning July 27, 2016
Tortorice, Bernard L.; Estate – Petition of
Sale or Mortgage of Real Estate for
Hearing on August 17, 2016.
Tortorice, Bernard L.; Estate Bernard M.
Tortorice of Sarasota, FL appointed
Administrator. Alfred R. Rego, Esq. of
Bristol, RI appointed RI Agent. Creditors
must file their claims in the office of the
Probate Clerk within the time required by
law beginning July 27, 2016.
Veteran teacher blasts system of seniority
BY JOSH BICKFORD
[email protected]
Barrington resident Michael
Marra has taught in public schools
for 30 years.
And for many of those years, he
has watched in frustration as the
system of seniority and tenure has
left good young teachers unemployed. Mr. Marra, who teaches at
Portsmouth High School, said the
system is weighted in favor of
"time served" while failing to
reward young, talented teachers.
In May, Mr. Marra penned an
op-ed, which blasted the teachers'
union's system of seniority. It stated, in part, "Looking back over the
past three decades I’ve been
repeatedly dismayed while I
watched another young (usually),
innovative, well-respected teacher
end the year in search of another
teaching position because he or
she happens to be low on the coveted seniority list," Mr. Marra
wrote. "What can we be thinking?
Would any of us use such a model
to hire (or dismiss) a contractor,
physician or lawyer? Why dismiss
a superb professional you’ve hired
because he or she has been in the
profession fewer years than
most?"
In an interview, Mr. Marra said
he has long been frustrated with
the seniority system and recently
found himself with the time needed to write the op-ed.
"I am fed up seeing young, talented teachers — rising stars who
are dedicated and well-liked —
and they're the ones shown the
door," he said.
Mr. Marra is proposing a
teacher evaluation system that
would reward good teachers and
eliminate those who are failing
their students. The system would
have a series of checks and balances and employ reviews from
four different groups of people —
fellow teachers, administrators,
community members and students.
"This can be done," said Mr.
Marra.
Larry Purtill is not so sure.
The president of the state's
teachers' union believes in the
current system.
"… Seniority and tenure does
protect teachers from arbitrary
actions and provides due
process," Mr. Purtill wrote in a
recent email. "That does not
mean that an administration cannot remove a teacher or staff
member they feel is not qualified.
If left without this, districts might
opt for the least expensive teacher,
thus denying students of a highly
qualified experienced teacher. It
should not be a popularity contest
or which teacher is the least
expensive. I will agree that the
evaluation process can be better,
less time consuming, but eliminating seniority and/or tenure is
not the answer."
Mr. Marra said rewarding a
teacher, or preserving their position, simply based on the amount
of years they have worked fails to
OBITUARIES
Angelo A. Mascena
World War II veteran
Angelo Anthony Mascena, 96, of Bristol, was
born on Nov. 18, 1919.
On Tuesday, July 19, 2016, the
good Lord called him home. He
was a loving husband, father and
great-grandfather.
Angelo, also known as Mascy to
friends, was predeceased by his
three wives, Rose Mary, Madeline
and Laurie; his daughter Sandra;
and his grandson Matthew. He
leaves his children, Rose Marie
Dyer, Patricia and Richard Kingsbury, Anthony and JoAnne Mascena, TerryLyn Mascena and her
partner Michael Moen, Connie
and Scott Taylor, and Veronica
Mascena. He was lovingly known
as Granddad by his 18 grandchildren, and known as Grandpa by
his 19 great-grandchildren.
After more than 20 years,
Angleo retired from the Singer
Sewing Machine Company as a
District Supervisor and had his
own sewing machine repair com-
pany. He was a World War II Army
veteran.
The family would like to thank
the staff of the Bristol Veterans’
Home for the care he received. A
memorial service will be held at 10
a.m. Monday, August 1, in the
Smith Funeral Home, 8 Schoolhouse Road Warren, RI. Burial will
follow in St. Mary's Cemetery,
Bristol. The family asks that in lieu
of flowers, a contribution be made
to a charity of your choice.
See www.wjsmithfh.com.
Joseph G. Oliveira
World War II, Korea,
Vietnam veteran
Lt. Col. Joseph G.
Oliveira, United States
Army
(retired),
of
Nashua, died on July 21, 2016. He
passed away at home surrounded
by his loved
ones.
Mr. Oliveira
was born in
Bristol on June
11, 1926. He
was the son of
the
late
Thomas and
Alexandrina
Oliveira. He
was a graduate of the University
of Rhode Island and received an
MBA from Southern New Hampshire University.
Mr. Oliveira was an Army veteran and served in World War II, the
Korean War and the Vietnam War.
His decorations included the
Bronze Star, the Combat Infantry
Badge, the Korean Order of the
Military Merit INHUN, the Army
Commendation Medal and the
Joint Services Commendation
Medal.
He is survived by his wife of 50
years, Irene Oliveira; and his
daughters and sons-in-law, Irene
and Robert Wadley, Lisa and Jeffrey Barrett and Susanne and
Brent Morrill. He also leaves eight
grandchildren, Lindsey Barrett,
Joseph Wadley, Steven Barrett,
Stephanie Wadley, Maison Morrill, Jillian Wadley, Alexa Wadley
and Kendall Morrill.
Besides his parents, he was
predeceased by his sisters, Mary
Ferreira, Laura Andrade and
Alexandrina Greene, and is survived by his sister, Helen
Andrade.
Visiting hours will be held at
the Davis Funeral Home, 1 Lock
St., Nashua, NH, on Sunday, July
24, 2016 from 4 to 6 p.m. A Mass
of Christian Burial will be celebrated at the Parish of the Resurrection, 449 Broad St. Nashua, on
Monday, July 25, 2016 at 11 a.m.
Friends are invited to attend.
Interment prayers and burial will
follow at St. Louis Cemetery,
Nashua.
The Davis Funeral Home, 1
Lock Street, Nashua, NH, has
been placed in charge of arrangements,
www.davisfuneralhomenh.com, 603-883-3401.
recognize the skills and effort
involved in teaching students.
He agreed that some veterans
teachers have worked hard to
maintain or improve their trade…
"But we all know veteran teachers
who understand how the system
works and do precious little that
would be considered high-quality
work. They are impostors. And
they are protected to the detriment of our students. And this is
simply unacceptable," he wrote in
his op-ed.
Mr. Marra said most professions
work to retain talent while eliminating those who don't "pull their
weight." But teaching in a public
school, under the protective
umbrella of a powerful union, is
different.
"If I’m clearly an underperforming teacher why am I not on the
short list to be shown the door?,"
he wrote.
"Seniority illuminates a fundamental disconnect between
teachers and students. I’ve listened to some well-intentioned
colleagues as they defend seniority. The usual defense comes back
in the form of a question. How can
we really decide who is a better
teacher than another? Therefore,
the only fair way is by seniority. We
know how to measure that. It’s
simple and it has worked for a
long time."
Mr. Purtill, meanwhile, offered
some alternatives to removing
seniority.
"If you really want to improve
the educational experience for
students, we need to be sure that
every district has quality mentoring programs, staff driven professional development, access to
programs and resources for every
student, regardless of zip code,"
he wrote. "The same opportunities a community such as Barrington can provide needs to be available to the poorest urban setting.
On that note, if we are going to
provide incentives for teachers,
they should be in cities with the
most challenges due to poverty
and hard to staff schools."
North Burial Ground &
The Cremation Garden
Hope Street, Bristol, Since 1822
Traditional and Cremation Burials
for Families of All Religious Beliefs
Offering pre-need purchase
options for both ground and
cremation burial
Please contact the Cemetery
Superintendent, Enzly Ramsay at
401-253-6426
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thecremationgarden.com
bristolri.us/459/North-East-Burial-Grounds
Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016 Page 15
East Bay
BUSINESS
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Isabella’s Boutique has the
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Though every hospital in the
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women who are experiencing
hair loss or thinning hair from
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conditions to get the right kind
of help with the purchase of
wigs. It’s no surprise, then, that
when Isabella’s Boutique opened
in June, a very grateful clientele
from all over the Rhode Island
and Massachusetts areas took
notice of this striking new retail
shop on Mineral Spring Avenue
in North Providence. They were
very surprised at the rare level of
service, top quality selection and
advantageous pricing they found
in this caring spot dedicated to
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“There simply aren’t enough
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Eileen understands that her
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which includes the ins and outs
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wig cost with a cancer diagnosis), the differences in wigs, how
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Page 16 Bristol Phoenix July 28, 2016
Parkinson’s patients punching through the pain
Some may find irony in the
idea that people with Parkinson’s
are training in a sport that is
believed to have led boxing legend Muhammad Ali to develop
the disease.
But many in Bristol are doing
just that, finding therapy in boxing at Icon Boxing Club on Gooding Avenue, though the program
is a bit less violent than the actual sport. The “Rock Steady” fighters take no hits. Rather, the boxing drills largely focus on developing coordination, strength and
endurance.
The boxing classes adapted for
people with Parkinson's give
local patients new hope as they
battle the debilitating disease,
according to Jesse Amarelo, owner of the boxing club. Some
patients who take part in the
boxing therapy see improvements in their symptoms,
including better mobility and
strength. Vigorous exercise like
boxing demands is thought to be
therapeutic for those suffering
from Parkinson’s Disease.
Parkinson’s disease is a neurological disorder that affects
movement. It is progressive, and
there is no cure. But it doesn’t
have to be a death sentence.
Research links regular, vigorous
exercise with a delay in the disease’s progression.
Rock Steady Boxing uses pro-
Rock Steady Patient Eleni Porto spars in the ring with Icon Boxing Club owner and teacher Jesse Amarelo. Photo by Tim Marshall
fessional boxing techniques to
slow and even reverse the effects
of Parkinson’s, the club said in a
release. The workouts target different muscles affected by the
disease. The boxers confine
punching to a heavy bag and jab-
bing to the speed bag in order to
strengthen their shoulders and
help with tremors. Jumping
improves motion in the lower
body and stretching relieves stiffness.
Icon offers the Rock Steady
Boxing class Thursdays at 11:15
a.m. The class costs $50 a month.
Members also have access to
open gym time and use of the fitness center. More classes are
expected to be offered in the
future.
Melinda Allaire, director of the
RI Rehabilitation, partnered with
Mr. Amarelo to launch the program in Bristol. Robin Ness, a
certified Rock Steady Boxing
trainer and therapist at RI Rehabilitation, will lead the classes.
To learn more about the Rock
Steady boxing program at ICON
Boxing Club, visit iconboxingclub.com.
Obstacle racers to attack
Colt State Park course
“
The second Trident Race
is slated for July 30
From hundreds of miles
away, we had the peace of mind
knowing our Dad was in great
care, with a team of people who
looked after him, perhaps
spoiled him and greeted him
every day with warmth, smiles
and hugs.
”
– STUART
AND JEFF
FINE
Hundreds of extreme obstacle
course racers are expected to
climb and crawl their way into
Bristol this weekend for the second Trident Race at Colt State
Park.
The race, scheduled for July 30
at 9 a.m., is four miles long, beginning at the Bristol Town Beach
and running through Colt State
Park’s trails. It features 17 obstacles for runners to overcome,
including wall climbs, crawls, a
log carry, a bucket brigade and
more. There is also a quarter-mile
kids race that was one of the high-
lights last year, according to race
organizer Ethan Tucker.
More than 500 racers have
already registered, and Mr. Tucker
expects the number to exceed 600
by race day. Registration costs $80
for adults and $30 for kids, and is
available on the race website,
www.thetridentrace.com, or at
Town Beach on July 30.
As part of the festivities, the
National Guard will be on hand
with a zip line for visitors to ride,
and RE/MAX hot air balloon rides
are available from 9-11 a.m. The
balloon rides cost $5, the proceeds of which will be donated to
the Wounded Warrior Project, Mr.
Tucker said.
East Bay Life
Pages B1-B8
East Bay Life July 27-28, 2016 Page B1
Worth the wait: a great story, finally told
Local journalist Tim
White partners with his
late father's colleagues to
tell the story of the
'biggest single payday in
the criminal history of the
Northeast.'
BY CHRIST Y NADALIN
[email protected]
Stories have been central to Tim
White's life as long as he can
remember—and as an investigative journalist with WPRI he is as
adept at deconstructing them as he
is at crafting them. This week, with
the release of his book "The Last
Good Heist", co-authored by Randall Richard and Wayne Worcester,
he's reaching the end of a story
four decades in the telling.
You probably know Tim. Maybe
you know him as the neighbor over
the fence in Bristol, where he lives
with his wife Melissa, daughter
Eliza, 9, and son Dylan, 8. Maybe
you are a policy wonk who gets up
early on Sundays to catch him on
"Newsmakers"; or you may know
Investigative reporter Tim White teamed up with Randall Richard and Wayne Worcester to write the book
on the 1975 Bonded Vault heist, the biggest in RI history. “The Last Good Heist” will be in stores August 1.
him as that guy on TV who got former Rep. Ray Gallison to say "talk
to my attorney" a dozen times in a
40-second face-to-face. Maybe you
know him from his repeated
appearances at the Bristol Warren
Education Foundation's Bodacious Bee fundraiser, at which he
has served variously as emcee, pronouncer, and judge—a role that
has, at times, been nearly as
treacherous as digging up dirt on
criminal syndicates.
"The competitors are serious,
they are all out for that ugly tro-
phy," he says. "But I've gotten really good at shaming people for
buzzigans (cash
donations that
buy a team
another chance
after a missed
word.) I've only
failed to get a
table to open
their
wallets
once. I think it
was a table of
reporters, people from a local newspaper."
You may also know Tim as the
son of Jack White, a Pulitzer Prizewinning investigative journalist
whose reporting of Richard Nixon's
underpayment of taxes led the disgraced president to utter his
immortal quote, "I am not a
crook."
"I'm in the news because of
Dad," Tim says.
Tim gained an incredible wealth
of knowledge about story telling,
truth telling, crime and government directly and indirectly grow-
See WHITE Page 7
Page B2 East Bay Life July 27-28, 2016
ALONG THE WATERFRONT
STRAIGHT UP THE MIDDLE
J/Fest bringing big fleet to the bay
A
fleet of 75 boats is expected to compete when the
Bristol Yacht Club hosts
the first New England J/Fest
Regatta on Saturday and Sunday,
August 13-14.
Sponsored by East Coast Yacht
Sales and North Sails, the regatta
is limited to
J/Boat owners
and crew with
racing
taking
place on upper
Narragansett
Bay.
Regatta organizBruce
er Bill Kneller
says that the
BURDETT
event is modeled
after similar successful J/Fest
Regattas held in other US regions
where participation has exceeded
over 70 boats.
When numbers warrant, there
will be one-design starts — it is
already anticipated that five classes will qualify, among them the
J/22 (Bristol Yacht Club alone has
a big fleet of these).
Narragansett Bay is considered
“home waters” for many of the
high performance J/Boats that
were built at the former TillotsonPearson, Pearson Composites, US
Watercraft and CCF Composites.
The boats have a strong following and very active class associations that include world class
champion sailors.
The 2016 New England J/Fest
regatta is scheduled the weekend
between Buzzards Bay Regatta
(August 5-7) and the Ida Lewis
Distance Race (August 19-20)
This regatta has also been designated as a special event for certain
J/Boat classes:
■ J/30 - Southern New England
Regional Championship
■ J/70 - Narragansett Bay
Championship
■ J/105 - Fleet 14 Event
■ J/109 - Part of the East Coast
Regatta Series Championship
There will be two full days of
racing along with the regatta par-
One trade
that needs
to happen
E
The bow section of the old fishing
boat Rick & Joe rests at Bristol
Marine before being set upright
for its new career as a boatyard
objet d’art.
ty, dinner and award ceremonies.
For signup, sponsorship information and more, visit the regatta
web site at http://jfestnewengland.com. Sponsorship opportunities are still available. Contact Bill Kneller, Regatta Organizer
@ [email protected].
Rick & Joe cut short
Her fishing days are done, but
the venerable and now-abbreviated wooden dragger Rick & Joe has
found new work by the Bristol
waterfront.
Crews at Bristol Marine, where
Rick & Joe has rested since sinking
at a town dock several years ago,
recently took demolition grade
Sawzall blades to the stout wooden hull. — it was a challenging cut
through thick timbers, bolts and
concrete ballast. All that now
remains is the bow section.
Andy Tyska, Bristol Marine owner, said the plan is to stand the
bow up (bow pointing skyward)
and into a boatyard objet d’art.
The cut-off end was first reinforced with bolted together strips
of plywood. Inside, bronze portholes, an old pipe berth and more
will be preserved.
He’s not sure where inspiration
came from — “a bit of Cadillac
Ranch in Texas” (where old Cadillacs are planted vertically in the
ground for artistic purposes).
The bow of Rick & Joe being carefully raised into position as Bristol
Marine’s new objet d’art.
“And partially a belief in the
need to repurpose things of
importance — a locally built fishing boat is something of importance,” Mr. Tyska said.
Original owner Rick Correira of
Bristol built Rick & Joe with his son
Joe, Mr. Tyska said, and it served
the family well for many years. Mr.
Correira eventually built a new
boat, the 37.8-foot Rick’s Star that
fishes today out of Bristol.
After Rick & Joe was sold, the
boat’s condition declined and it
sank at the docks at least once and
was beyond repair.
“I couldn’t bring myself to just
dispose of the whole thing,” Mr.
Tyska said. “I think it will be a nice
addition here,” a part of our town’s
fishing past.
very year I spend much
of my wedding anniversary checking the internet and Twitter for trade news.
I share my anniversary, July
31st, with the trade deadline
(and my sister — but that’s different story) and so the day is
frequently consumed with
“what ifs” about the Red Sox.
This year, my
refrain will be
“what if another team could
use Buchholz
and we could
get another
starter without
trading away
Cara
CROMWELL our young
guys?” Perhaps
it’s too much of a fantasy, but
that’s a trade move I’d like to
see.
There’s a more important
trade in Rhode Island that really should come to fruition this
year. For only the second time
since 2008, Representative
John Carnevale will be
opposed in an election, giving
voters of “his” district the
chance to trade up for a new
representative. While much of
the case against re-electing
him involves the word alleged
— he allegedly beat his wife, he
allegedly raped a woman, he
allegedly does not live in his
district, there’s one thing that
is certainly true — he is a disgrace to “his” district, the
House and our state.
When the grand jury charged
him with rape in 2011,
Carnevale was the 4th Rhode
Island lawmaker to face criminal charges that year (for those
keeping score at home others
were Dan Gordon, Bob Watson
and Leo Medina). At that time,
the House was being run by
Speaker (now federal prison
inmate) Gordon Fox. Speaker
Mattiello seems to run a tighter
ship and moved quickly to get
Ray Gallison out of his chamber and off his leadership team
when news broke of the investigation into Gallison’s wrongdoing. Although Mattiello waited until this week to remove
Carnevale from leadership, I
can’t help but think that another bad apple is making life difficult in the House and continuing the narrative of corruption and bad government that
no one in Rhode Island needs
to perpetuate.
More than anything else, we
all deserve better. Resident of
Carnevale’s district deserve to
be represented by someone
who lives where they live,
understands their needs and
doesn’t think that their neighborhood is beneath his standards. House members deserve
to serve alongside someone
who has a moral compass and
doesn’t think of himself first.
And all Rhode Islanders
See CROMWELL Page 4
East Bay Life July 27-28, 2016 Page B3
NO FLUKE
How to land the big one; fluke, bass fishing strong
A
s you start to catch larger
fish the issue of how to
land them successfully
becomes more important. So here
are some tips on how to land fish
if you gaff, net or swing them into
the boat.
Gaffing large fish (you aim to
keep)
I spoke with Capt. Rick Bellavance of Priority
Too charters out
of Pt. Judith who
often takes customers fishing
for large striped
bass, tuna and
sharks said, “If
we are going to
keep the fish we
Capt. Dave
always gaff the
MONTI
larger striped
bass.”
Although he and his customers
often practice catch and release,
Capt. Charlie Donilon of Snappa
Charters said, “Gaffing is the best
way to land a large fish you are
going to keep. Try to get the fish
horizontal to the boat so you have
a larger target for the gaff and
bring the gaff toward the boat.”
Getting the fish horizontal to the
boat also gives you a good shot at
the best place to gaff the fish
which is in its back behind the gill
plate. Start your gaffing swing out
of the water bringing the gaff
towards the vessel and continue
the swing after gaffing the fish
bringing the fish up, out of the
water and into the boat.
Be prepared for a bloody mess
when gaffing a fish and the chance
that you may destroy some of the
best meat on the fish. Be safe and
very careful not to have fellow
angler’s arms in the water when
gaffing and be sure no one is in
the area you are going to start or
end your swing.
Swinging fish into the boat
This method is reserved for
smaller keeper fish (not catch and
release) and can be risky as the
fish can get away; particularly at
the outer edge of your swing (it
may swing right off the hook).
Grabbing the leader close (about
two feet) from the fish with a
glove is important and never grab
braid line as it will cut your hand
particularly when the weight of a
struggling fish is added).
I often use this method when
trolling with tube & worm for
striped bass or blue fish. I bring
the fish as close to the boat as I
can and grab the rubber
tube…with large fish I take the
second hand and grab the fish
under the gill plate and lift/swing
the fish into the boat. I often use
this method when fishing myself
with summer founder and tautog
but have lost fish in the process.
Make sure no one is the area
where you plan to bring the fish
over the gunnel and into the boat.
That includes your own leg. I
have punctured my leg with the
dorsal fin of striped bass using
the method hitting my leg with
the fish as it swings into the boat
rather that stopping the swing as
the fish hits the deck of the boat.
Netting fish a safe bet
I have found netting fish the
First scup of the day: Joe Lamarre (eight years old) of Cranston with a scup caught while fishing with his
grandfather and father this weekend off Jamestown.
safest and most effective way to
boat a fish but it is often difficult
to do when by yourself. Additonally, netting fish allows you to practice catch and release no matter
what species you are targeting. I
have found rubber nets to be most
effective in capturing fish (the wet
rubber is less abrasive to the fish
and better for catch and release)
and the rubber avoids time-wasting tangles with tackle, hooks, fish
teeth and sharp fins.
Netting tips include leading the
fish into the net head first (as I
have never seen a fish swim backwards at capture). Move or swing
the net towards the boat. Netting
large fish often becomes a two
person job leading the fish into
the net head first and then lifting a
large fish in the net out of the
water and into the boat.
Make sure the fish is ready
Making sure the fish has given
up and is ready to be taken is
important. If the fish is diving
downward, making a run, etc.
hold off trying to land it as it may
not be ready to come in. However,
if you should see a fish surface and
sort of roll on its side a bit it is generally ready to land.
New owner at the Tackle Box
Long time Tackle Box employee,
Tom Giddings, has purchased the
shop from Greg Burning. Tom
said, “It is great to own the Tackle
Box. I am keeping things pretty
much the same as Greg, the for-
mer owner, had things set up pretty good.” The Tackle Box is located
at 443 West Shore Road, Warwick.
Where’s the bite
Summer flounder. Angler Bob
Murry on Skipjack reported great
fluke fishing off the south side of
Block Island last week. Bob said,
“We caught fish to 8.4 pounds on
Thursday and did well on Friday
too.” Capt. Frank Blount of the
Frances Fleet said, “It was a great
week for fluke fishing with one of
the best trips in at least the past
three or four years last Thursday
with everyone on the boat limiting
out with eight fish per angler. Sixty
fish were between five and eight
pounds.” Matt Conti of Snug Harbor Marina, South Kingstown,
said, “Fishing at the wind farm
south of Block Island has been
good. Fishing along the coastal
The Tides*
Wednesday, July 27
Thursday, July 28
Friday, July 29
Saturday, July 30
Sunday, July 31
Monday, August 1
Tuesday, August 2
Wednesday, August 3
Thursday, August 4
shore has been less productive
with some nice fish being taken in
60 to 70 feet of water with smaller
fish in the low water.”
“Striped bass fishing remains
fairly strong on the southwest side
of Block Island. Fishing at night
has been better.” said Conti. Giddings said, “Chris Catucci (of Warwick) who works here at the Tackle
Box caught a 40 pound striped
bass on his kayak fishing top water
lures at the mouth of Narrow River
last week. We also have reports of
large bass still being caught in the
Providence River.” “The striped
bass bite off Newport is good.
Anglers are catching them with
eels at Block Island. Sunday we
weighed in a 48 pound Block
Island bass. Anglers are also catching them with eels and trolling
tube and worm off Newport using
red and orange tubes… the bass
bite has slowed greatly in the Bay,”
said Manny Macedo of Lucky Bait
& Tackle, Warren.
Black sea bass and scup fishing
remain strong just about everywhere. I fished with the Lamarre
family (led by eight year old Joe)
Saturday and they had no trouble
catching a dozen nice keeper scup
to 18” on the west side of
Jamestown north of the bridge in
an hour and half. Anglers continue
to catch their limit (3
fish/angler/day) of black sea bass
when fishing for summer flounder.
Capt. Frank Blount of the Frances
Fleet said, “The number of black
sea bass varied from trip to trip last
week but many limits were
observed which made a nice compliment to customers fluke fishing.” “Scup are everywhere and
they are large this year. We
weighed in three fish over two
pounds,” said Giddings.
Macedo said, “Scup are all over
from the Warren River to Independence Park, Bristol as well as Ft.
Adams in Newport and Ft. Wetherill, Jamestown. Shore anglers are
doing good and the guys that have
boats even better.”
“The bluefish bite has been very
good in the mid Bay area with
large fish being taken at Ohio
Ledge, Warwick Light and at Conimicut Light,” said Giddings.
Offshore. “The bluefin bite
improved last week with a number
of fish in the 50” to 60” range being
taken at the northwest corner of
the Dump and a few school size
bluefin in the 27” to 45” range
being taken south of Montague.
However the full moon seemed to
slow down the yellowfin and big
eye bite further off shore. There
were plenty of mako and thresher
sharks being caught last week,”
said Conti.
Fresh water fishing. “We continue to see an increased interest in
carp fishing. We have had several
Barrington residents come in with
visitors from Europe wanting the
participate in our carp fishery as it
has gained in stature thanks to
Dave Pickering and others,” said
Macedo.
Captain Dave Monti has been
fishing and shellfishing for over 40
years. He holds a captain’s master
license and a charter fishing
license. He is a RISAA board
member, a member of the RI Party
& Charter Boat Association and a
member of the RI Marine Fisheries
Council. Contact or forward
fishing news and photos to Capt.
Dave at [email protected] or
visit his website at
noflukefishing.com.
HiAM
HiPM
LoAM
LoPM
Sunrise
Sunset
2:21 (4.3)
3:20 (4.2)
4:24 (4.1)
5:30 (4.2)
6:30 (4.4)
7:25 (4.7)
8:15 (4.8)
9:03 (4.9)
9:49 (4.9)
2:54 (4.8)
3:55 (4.8)
5:01 (4.9)
6:05 (5.1)
7:01 (5.2)
7:53 (5.3)
8:41 (5.3)
9:26 (5.1)
10:10 (4.9)
7:26
8:31
9:39
10:43
12:29/11:40
1:16
1:59
2:36
3:08
9:13
10:38
11:38
—
—
12:31
1:20
2:08
2:54
5:34
5:35
5:36
5:37
5:38
5:39
5:40
5:41
5:42
8:08
8:07
8:06
8:05
8:04
8:03
8:02
8:01
7:59
New Moon August 2 — Full Moon August 18
* Information is based on tides in Bristol Harbor.
Page B4 East Bay Life July 27-28, 2016
CROMWELL: Time to make
the Carnevale trade
From Page 2
deserve to live in a state free
from public corruption. Let’s
hope the voters of District 13
make the trade this year.
Cara Cromwell is a public
affairs consultant with more
than twenty years experience
managing issues campaigns for
corporations, non-profits,
associations, coalitions and
candidates on both sides of the
aisle. An unaffiliated voter,
serial ticket-splitter and
enthusiastic Red Sox fan, she
believes that in politics—and
baseball—game changing
action occurs in the middle,
creating opportunity on the
ball field and compromise
and coalition-building in the
halls of power. Visit her blog,
Straight Up The Middle, at
straightupthemiddle.blogspot.c
om and follow her on Twitter
@cmcromwell.
2016 LITTLE
C O M P TO N
ANTIQUES
F E S T I VA L
a benefit for
NEW LOCATION!
548 West Main Road, Little Compton, RI
Preview Party:
Friday, August 5, 6:00 pm-8:00 pm
Enjoy early buying privileges, light supper, jazz combo & wine.
Tickets: $50 per Person in advance • $55 per Person at the Door
(Includes Saturday Admission)
Festival-Saturday, August 6, 10 am - 5 pm
Admission: $10.00 ($8.00 with this card)
Kids 12 & under free!
Purchase at: www.PreserveRI.org or call 401-272-5101 x205
Show Managed by Ferguson & D’Arruda
508-674-9186 / E-mail: [email protected]
TRASH OR TREASURE?
Campaign memorabilia a growing market
I
nterested in collecting
political related objects
in view of the tumultuous and colorful election
year we have been having?
Like all types of mass-produced collectibles, the
rarer the better.
You will want
to buy the
smaller batch
produced
objects that
may have been
Karen
WATERMAN made for a
local event,
the conventions or perhaps a
high-end fundraiser. The more
unusual and better made with
quality materials the better.
This year the marketplace is
full of unique and downright
weird selection of souvenirs.
There are the standard bobble
head dolls, T shirts and pins
but also the Donald Trump
fake money, the Hillary Clinton nut cracker “Its crunch
time America - no more nuts
in the White House,” Trump
breath mints stating “We Shall
Overcomb” and I saw a bust of
Trump for sale at the Republican Convention made of dryer
lint.
Depending on how the election goes, who knows? Controversy attracts collectors. A
period of time may need to
pass as opinions are formed
on each of these candidates.
They do not have to be popular, they just have to be memorable. In 1920, Eugene Debs
was a Socialist candidate for
president that ran his campaign from a prison cell. Anything associated with Debs is
highly sought after.
Generally, winning candidates memorabilia does sell
better than the losers. Handsigned autographs, and photographs taken of future presidents while on the campaign
trail sell for more than those
from when they were in office.
Overall the market for political memorabilia has grown,
and with some auction houses
specializing in it. Heritage
Auctions in Dallas,Texas is the
largest. Recently a rare cloth
banner featuring James Polk
and his running mate George
Dallas sold for a whopping
$185,000. At the same auction,
a James Cox/Franklin Roosevelt campaign pin sold for
$20,000. A pin given to guests
at a 1980 Reagan/Bush
fundraising dinner recently
sold for around $500.
With over 200 years of presidential elections, the inventory is huge. Early presidential
political items were the domi-
nant means of conveying what
a candidate looked like and
what his political message may
be. Everything had the name
and campaign slogan printed
on it. Just the objects and the
materials they were made of
are interesting on their own:
Photos of events, people, etc.
available for purchase at eastbayri.com
snuff boxes, buttons, sheet
music, ceramics, and paper
broadsides.
Karen Waterman is a fine art,
antique furniture and
decorative arts appraiser in
the East Bay area and will
answer as many questions
regarding your “hidden
treasures” as possible. By
sending an email with a
question you give full
permission for use in the
column. Names, addresses or
e-mail will not be published
and photos will be returned if
requested. Send e-mails
(digital photos preferred ) to
[email protected]
m.
East Bay Life July 27-28, 2016 Page B5
POLI-TICKS
BOOK REVIEW
Leaving Lucy Pear: An historical
novel ripe for the picking
CNBC puts a hurt on the state
C
NBC recently named
Rhode Island as the
worst state for business.
The designation certainly was
not the first time. Forbes Magazine, for example, parceled
out the dubious
distinction in
2009. While
republicans and
democrats are
haggling over
Arlene
Republican
VIOLET
Chair Brendon
Bell’s recitation
of the ranking at last week’s
Republican convention, the fact
is that the governor, at least, is
trying to change the metrics and
she deserves credit for her
efforts. She also deserves financial backing from the General
Assembly for similar future
efforts.
Governor Gina Raimondo recognizes that there is a skills gap
and has taken action steps to
match jobs with necessary training. In May 2016 she announced
a real jobs partnership with
Electric Boat which is preparing,
it says, to hire 4000 new employees in the upcoming decade.
This initiative awarded $369,000
for area career technical schools
to teach welding and ship fitting
skills to students. Over the next
2 years about 180 students will
enter the program which hopes
to eventually graduate around
350 students each year. Electric
Boat also expects to train its pre-
sent workers this fall for
advanced skills. New England
Tech is also enrolling students
for certification programs for
the naval work.
One can be skeptical and
eschew using state money to
train for jobs—what Electric
Boat should be doing—but the
governor has taken the bull by
the horns. It is refreshing to see
that she is a realist and is
revamping career education to
match actual job needs. The
governor has also correctly
addressed the need to identify
solutions for transportation
issues occasioned by the Quonset location.
With General Electric poised
to hire employees for what it
claims are high paying tech jobs,
the effort to develop the techsavvy workforce of Rhode
Islanders also looms ahead.
Again, purists could claim that
the multi-billions corporation
should fund its own training but
it obviously is not doing so. Governor Raimondo is putting her
sights on such training in order
to make the jobs available to the
home crowd first.
On one level, I could argue
until the cows come home
about financial incentives for
companies who should be
putting their own money on the
line. I feel the same way when I
read about the tax credits being
See POLI-TICKS Page 7
A
nna Solomon grew up in
Gloucester, Massachusetts at the end of a long
dirt driveway in
the middle of the
woods. Below
her house was a
large field with a
few pear trees in
it which always
seemed to disappear just as they
Laura
were ripening.
LaTOUR
Solomon laughs,
“My father used to joke that
giraffes came in the night to steal
the pears.”
This vision of mysterious pear
thieves lingered in Solomon’s
imagination for years to come. She
uses the idea to set the plot of her
latest novel into motion. The
result is Leaving Lucy Pear, a skillfully constructed novel which tells
the story of two very different
women linked to a young girl
named Lucy Pear. Solomon uses
her “intimate sensory relationship” with her hometown to paint
a very visceral picture of Prohibition-era Gloucester.
Beatrice Haven is the daughter
of a wealthy Jewish family. A gifted pianist on her way to Radcliffe
College, she finds herself pregnant
and unwed. She retreats in shame
to her uncle’s summer home on
Cape Ann. Bea is unwilling to give
her child to an orphanage, so she
leaves the infant under a pear tree
to be found by the family of
thieves who come each year
under cover of darkness to strip
the orchard of its fruit.
The consequences of Bea’s decision are long-lasting to both herself and to
Emma Murphy,
the woman
who adopts
Lucy Pear
despite already
having nine
children of her
own. The
daughter of
Irish-Catholic
immigrants,
Emma deals with an unreliable
husband, a meager income, and
her own questionable desires.
When a rum-runner and manager
of the local quarry brings the two
women together, each grapples
with secrets from their past that
could derail Lucy Pear’s future.
Leaving Lucy Pear is ultimately a
story about motherhood; the
desire for it, the absence of it, and
the choices you make when raising a child. The mother of an
eight-year-old girl and four-yearold boy, Solomon says that she
wouldn’t “have been able to depict
the complexity of motherhood”
without her own personal parenting experiences.
Though set in the past, the
author manages to make Leaving
Lucy Pear feel very personal and
relevant to the modern day. During her extensive research into the
Prohibition era, Solomon was surprised at how “virulently nativist
[the country] was at the time” and
how it had a “resonance to the
mood of today.” Fans of historical
fiction will appreciate the realistic
depiction of the era and readers
who like complicated relationship
stories will revel in the incisively
written characters.
Anna Solomon is a graduate of
Brown University and the Iowa
Writers’ Workshop. She is the
author of The Little Bride, editor of
Labor Day: True Birth Stories by
Today’s Best Women Writers and
winner of two Pushcart Prizes for
her short fiction.
The author will be appearing at
Books On the Square in Providence, Rhode Island on Saturday,
July 30 at 7 p.m. and Partners Village Store in Westport, Massachusetts on Sunday, August 7 at 4 p.m.
Go to annasolomon.com for a
complete listing of her events.
Laura LaTour is an avid reader, a
former bookseller and authorevents coordinator, and is
currently working as a freelance
writer and publicist. Drop hera
line, and tell her what you are
reading:
[email protected]
Page B6 East Bay Life July 27-28, 2016
&
Food Dining
NIBBLES
Have any food and dining
news you want to share? Send it
to us at [email protected].
Food Truck Fridays
Enjoy Roger Williams Park with
a variety of food trucks, every Friday from 5 to 8 p.m. through
October. At Carousel Village in
Roger Williams Park, 1000 Elmwood Ave., Providence. The event
is free to attend, but there are
nominal fees for the carousel,
pony rides, and bounce house.
Food Trucks at City Hall
Come to historic City Hall in
Providence July 28 from 5 to 8
p.m. and experience the streets
lined with local food trucks. This
new monthly event is held the
4th Thursday of each month
from May to September.
Experience summer in the city,
explore the downtown shops and
bars, and eat from your favorite
local food truck or try something
new. Food trucks accept cash,
credit, or debit. Admission is free.
See the full list of food trucks
attending
at
foodtrucksin.com/events/foodtrucks-city-hall.
Clambake in Westport
The Westport Point United
Methodist Church will hold their
35th Annual Clambake on Saturday, July 30. The menu includes
New England clams, sausage, hot
dog, potato, corn, sweet potato,
stuffing, and brown bread. The
cost is $40 or $50 to add lobster.
Chowder and drinks will be
served at noon and the bake
begins at 1 p.m. Tickets can be
purchased at Partners Village
Waterfront Dining
M a r i o ’s
Lebanese Syrian Bakery
Dinner for 2
with a bottle of House Wine
34*
$
(Cannot be combined
with any other offer.
Not valid on holidays)
Full selection of
Seafood, and authentic
Italian and Portuguese dishes
Like us on Facebook
OUTSIDE PATIO NOW OPEN
508-677-2180 • lepagesseafood.com
Meat Pies • Spinach Pies • Chourico Pies
Maneech • Open Cheese, Meat or Spinach
Chourico w/Peppers & Onions
ALL PIES
$
$
Spinach w/Cheese
1.35- 1.40
Homemade Kebbe Tray . . . .$9.00
Homemade Hummus . . . . . .$2.00
Homemade Taboule Salad $6.00 lb.
Party size cheese pizza . . . .$9.00
Spinach & meat pies . .$9.00 per doz
MONDAYS: FREE Pie w/$10 order
Wed 7am-12pm • Mon-Sun 5:30am-4pm
508.672.8218
260 Harrison St, Fall River, MA
marioslebanesebakery.com
Accepting MasterCard • Visa & Discover
Rte. 6 Fall River/Westport Line
Store or by leaving a message at
the church office at 508/6362036. The Clambake is held at
the church at 1912 Main Road in
Westport Point.
My Chef Lara’s '3 Ring Circus'
Join My Chef Lara on Thursday,
August 4 for the second 3 ring
circus. This will be a Mediterranean inspired evening you will
never forget where you will learn
knife skills, taste fabulous wine,
be involved in cooking a wonderful dinner AND then get to eat it.
Doors open at 5:30 p.m. and sessions begin at 6 p.m.; $70. Dinner
follows immediately after the
sessions and will be served by the
chefs. At Sandywoods Center for
the Arts, 43 Muse Way, Tiverton.
Come enjoy a night you will never forget! For more information
visit Mycheflara.com.
Summer BBQ in Tiverton
Holy Trinity Church, 1956 Main
Road, Tiverton, will hold their
next summer BBQ on Saturday,
August 6 following the 5 p.m.
Holy Eucharist. All are warmly
welcome. For more information
call 401/624-4759.
Cool Jazz at Mount Hope Farm
Join MHF on Sunday, August 7
for an afternoon of good food &
fun at Mount Hope Farm’s Cove
Cabin. Featuring music by Nancy
Paolino & The Black Tie Band;
Raw Bar, New England Clam
Chowder, Lobster, Steak and All
the Fixin’s. Cash Bar; $75 members; $85 non-members. For
more information visit mounthopefarm.org.
A taste of the Azores
Barrington Community School
is offering a walking tour of Fall
River's Portugalia, which will be
led by cookbook author Maria
Lawton. This Azorean and Portuguese specialty market offers a
little slice of Europe, and is part
of Cindy Salvato's walking tour
offerings. Participants will meet
at Portugalia, 489 Bedford St.,
Fall River on Wednesday, August
10 at 2 p.m. for the 2 1/2 hour
tour. Directions will be mailed to
registrants. The fee, payable to
BCS is $50 BCS members and $58
non-members, and includes the
tour and samples galore. Call
BCS at 401/245-0432 for more
information.
R.I. Seafood Festival
in Providence
Come to India Point Park in
Providence this September for
the annual Rhode Island Seafood
Festival—two days of great food,
drinks, and music; Saturday, September 10 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.,
and Sunday, September 11 from
11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission is $5
for adults, with free entry for
children under 12 years of age.
The ticket price includes entry
for one day of the festival, with
several hours of live music and
entertainment for all ages. Food
is not included in the ticket price,
but is for sale separately at various restaurant vendors. For more
information
visit
riseafoodfest.com.
HEALTHY EATING
Summer storms can kill your grocery budget
T
he summer heat can
bring strong storms. Not
only can these storms be
dangerous, but they can also
cause power
outages. No
power is the perfect environment for bacteria to grow, leading to spoiled
food. Here are
some food safeEmily
DELCONTE ty tips to help
you through
your next storm.
Before the outage
■ Make sure your refrigerator
and freezer have a thermometer.
■ The temperature of your
refrigerator should be less than
41°F.
■ The temperature of your
freezer should be less than 0°F.
During the outage
■ Keep the refrigerator door
closed as long as possible.
■ Your refrigerator should keep
food cold for about two hours.
■ A full freezer will keep its'
temperature for about forty-eight
hours.
■ If your freezer is not full,
group food as close together as
possible.
■ Place meat or poultry on the
shelf closest to the bottom.
After the outage
■ Keep note of the time when
your power goes out.
■ Throw away any items that
have been above 40°F for longer
than two hours.
■ Throw out anything that has
come into contact with raw meat
juices.
■ Frozen food should be
checked for ice crystals. If the
food still has ice crystals, or is
below 40°F, it can be refrozen.
■ Throw out any food that is
warm to touch.
Bacteria is more likely to grow
on foods like meats, eggs, soft
cheeses, and milk. Hard cheeses,
salad dressings, and uncut fruit or
vegetables are usually safe. When
in doubt, throw it out!
Information gathered & adapted
from usatoday.com.
Newport County’s Largest Selection of Seafood
Family Style Dining
Baked • Grilled • Fried • Boiled
Seafood Market
Live Lobster
Native, Sea Scallops & Fresh Fish Daily
Raw Bar & Seafood Specialties
EAT IN or TAKE OUT
$1.00
Taco
Tuesday
KIDS E
AT
FREE
EVERY
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AY
963 Aquidneck Ave. • Middletown • 401-846-9620
(Minutes from Downtown Newport) • www.anthonysseafood.com
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Not to be combined with any other offer. Expires 8/31/16
Valid Sunday-Thursday. 1 coupon per table
Sun-Thurs 11am-10pm • Fri & Sat 11-11pm
BAR OPEN TIL LATE
213 Taunton Ave (in the Ramada Inn)
Seekonk, MA • 508-557-1320
SUMMER MENUS
featuring
Fresh Seafood, Oysters
Burgers, Sandwiches
and more
215 Water Street, Warren, RI
(401) 289-2524
www.thewharftavernri.com
BUY ONE DINNER ENTRÉE
GET THE SECOND FOR 1/2 PRICE
DINE IN ONLY
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and try our new
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DINNER Tues - Sun 5-10pm
Now Serving Lunch Thurs-Sunday 11:30am - 3pm
East Bay Life July 27-28, 2016 Page B7
POLI-TICKS:
Mystery ride raises money for ill children
BY JOAN D. WARREN
[email protected]
Hearing the sounds of laughter
and seeing smiles on the faces of
children playing at the imPOSSIBLE DREAM playground is all it
takes to turn motorcycle enthusiast
Tony Santos' heart to mush. So
much so that he is in the final planning stage for the 24th annual mystery motorcycle ride to benefit the
Rhode Island organization that
aids chronically ill children. The
ride is scheduled for Sunday,
August 7 with a rain date on August
14.
Mr. Santos of Swansea started
the ride 23 years ago as a way to
raise money for the imPOSSIBLE
Dream. A carpenter, he worked on
construction jobs with John Florio,
the founder of the imPOSSIBLE
DREAM and wanted to get
involved.
“I just wanted to help out. I have
been involved with different charity groups like the East Providence
Elks Lodge and The East Providence Elks Riders, but this ride has
been the longest fundraiser for
imPOSSIBLE DREAM and keeps
getting bigger and better,” he said.
Over the past 23 years, the ride
has raised more than $154,000.
The money has gone for upkeep
at the integrated playground located on Centerville Road in Warwick
as well as making “dreams” come
true for chronically ill children in
Rhode Island.
The non-profit group has sent
children to see the “mouse” at Disney World, trips to meet members
of the Yankees baseball team, paid
for lodging for families accompanying sick children out of the area,
room makeovers and more.
The imPOSSIBLE DREAM was
started in 1982 by Mr. Florio, a Warwick native. At the time, there
weren’t many charitable groups
helping children with chronic illnesses and according to his daughter Diane Ponce, the current executive director of the organization,
her father’s dream was to build a
playground where all kid and their
families could enjoy- regardless of
their physical and mental capabilities.
After fundraising for years and a
persistence presence at city hall, in
1990 Mr. Florio signed a 99 year
agreement with the city to lease
more than 5 acres of land near Tollgate High school for a fee of one
dollar per year.
With volunteer help, including
motorcycle club members, the
playground was built and is ranked
the 16th most popular privately
owned playground in the country
and number one in New England.
The playground has safety surfacing that can support wheelchairs
and swings that are designed for
children with an array if handicaps
and limits.
The initial cost to build the playground was about $300,000 and
since then about a half a million
dollars has been invested for its
upkeep and additional updated
equipment. The safety surfacing
cost $250,000 alone.
In keeping with Mr. Florio’s
dream, Mr. Santos continues to
organize the ride to raise money for
the organization.
The Mystery Ride
The motorcycle mystery ride
starts at the East Warren Rod & Gun
Club in Warren and ends at the
FOP Lodge 21 in Middletown. As
the title states, it’s a mystery as to
the route from point A to point B.
“I can tell you that it goes
through some back roads in
Rehoboth, Swansea and Seekonk
then heads down through Warren
and Bristol into Middletown,” he
said.
Members of the Bristol Police
motorcycle unit participate and
lead the pack, helping to clear
intersections and manage traffic.
“Without the Bristol Police, we
couldn’t do this. They have been so
helpful to the ride,” he said.
The ride begins at noon and lasts
about 90 minutes. They are hoping
to have at lest 400 bikes registered.
At the finish, riders and guests will
feast on a pasta and salad buffet
and have the chance to win door
prizes and a 50/50 raffle. There is a
mileage pool and the winner who
guesses the exact mileage of the
mystery ride wins the pot.
Tammie Luther, a mystery ride
committee member said local
businesses have been very generous with sponsorship and donations of goods and services.
"We get donations from local
restaurants like Crossroads, Lauren's and Tito's. Other raffle items
can be t-shirts from Hot Leathers
in East Prov, to $100 gift certificate
to Cardi's Furniture. 1776 in Bristol, is always good to us, they have
given us charcoal grills, coolers,
patio umbrellas and an inflatable
raft to name a few items. East Bay
Pet Fence started our "buck a bike"
sponsorship a few years ago and
sponsors like Twigg's Automotive
have pledged it every year since,"
she said.
WHITE: Dad ‘loved working on this story’
From Page 1
ing up as Jack White's youngest
son. Of all Jack's stories, Tim's
favorite was probably the story of
the Bonded Vault heist.
On August 14, 1975, thieves
broke into 148 safe deposit boxes at
the Bonded Vault building, a secret
mafia bank in Providence. It
remains one of the largest heists in
U.S. history, and led to the longest
and most expensive trial in Rhode
Island history. Co-author Wayne
Worcester broke the story in the
Providence Journal the following
day. But the story was far from told.
Jack White and Tim's other coauthor, Randall Richard, partners
in the ProJo investigative unit, continued to chip away at the story.
Ultimately, they decided to write a
book. They worked on it for many
years, but never finished it.
Then, in October, 2005, Jack
White died of a heart attack at the
age of 63.
The next year, 2006, brought Tim
to Providence from the Boston
market where he had been working in broadcast journalism for
several years, notably covering the
Whitey Bulger case. "I knew the
news director at 12, and they wanted me to come on board. But I really didn't want to be the poor sap
who tried to fill Jack White's shoes,"
Tim says. Before long, Tim would
fill his shoes in more ways than
one. He couldn't get the Bonded
Vault story out of his head. So he
called Wayne Worcester, now a professor emeritus at the University of
Connecticut School of Journalism,
and Randall Richard, Jack's former
partner, now retired.
"I want to be Randy when I grow
up. He's incredibly frugal—he travels the world on a ProJo pension."
"You would think three authors
on one book would be an horror
“After 40 years the
truth has a way of
getting out.”
TIM WHITE
show, but it worked great," says
Tim. "Randy and I did most of the
research and reporting, while
Wayne did most of the writing. And
some of the reporting on this was
done 40 years ago."
According to Tim, the most difficult part of it was finding Wayne's
voice. "Two months before the
book was due last June, Wayne
became very sick. Randy and I had
to finish the book without him, and
Wayne's an incredible writer. Finding his voice was challenging. I'm
not sure we pulled it off."
For Tim, working on telling the
Bonded Vault story became an
important part of his own story
with his father, something he
thought ended in October, 2005.
"I got to bond with Dad again,
interviewing, pulling up his old
work. He loved working on this story." And Tim got to work with two
great journalists from a different
generation. "I learned a lot about
Dad, interacting with people who
knew him from a different time. I
felt like I got closer to him."
It was tough shopping a book
about a 40 year story as the economy contracted, but sell it they did.
Tim has saved the voice message
he got from Wayne when "The Last
Good Heist" found a publisher.
Called "An incredibly entertaining true crime saga," by Shelley
Murrphey, who co-wrote "Whitey
Bulger", and "a page-turning truecrime thriller" by Mike Stanton,
author of "Prince of Providence",
"The Last Good Heist" will be in
bookstores August 1, and is available on Amazon now.
Though Tim is not likely to come
across a project with as much personal meaning anytime soon, he
would be open to writing another
book. While there were sacrifices of
both money and family time as he
jetted around the country following leads—most notably the day he
told his wife, Melissa, "Randy and I
have to fly to Las Vegas and find a
hooker"—he would do it again for
the right project.
"It wasn’t me, but someone once
said that Rhode Island is a
reporter's playground," Tim says.
That's a good thing. There's
always room for another great storyteller in the sandbox.
Although it is a big undertaking
to get the ride organized, Mr.Santos admits he can't do it alone.
"I have a terrific committee of
about 30-40 including Tammie, my
wife Christine, Danny Francis, The
Arruda's, Madeline Toste and
many more. It is a little known fact
that many bikers are involved with
charities and helping others. Wee
may look tough but we have heart.
I plan to continue this ride as long
as I'm breathing" he said.
Tony Santos was awarded a RI
State Senate and RI House of Representatives citation at the 20th
year's ride for all his hard work and
all the money that his ride has generated for the Dream over the
years.
Ms. Luther said that he doesn't
do it for personal notoriety, he does
it for the kids.
"Tony literally works on this ride
all year. He is always coming up
with new ideas and ways to make it
better. I've been proud to help
him and call him a friend for years.
He surrounds himself with the best
people and the ride is lucky to have
our Sponsors (some who have
been with Tony since the 1st ride)
volunteers, cooks, servers and riders who come back each and every
year," Ms. Luther said.
The cost to enter a bike is $25
and passengers are $20. Registration begins at 9:30 am and the ride
roars off at noon. Helmets are
required. To attend the celebration
at the FOP Lodge that includes the
buffet and cash bar, the cost is $20.
Visit their webpage for more information at www.mysteryride.info.
Ramp up skills
for jobs now
and in future
From Page 5
doled out under the auspices of
the Commerce Commission for
projects that the developers
should be fronting. But, to
quote my late Aunt Mary,
“What’s a body to do?”
Some projects are easier than
others to divine. The Pawsox
stadium grab was rank opportunism and money for low-paying employment. I certainly
don’t think that credits should
be given to companies like A.T.
Cross to leave one RI town and
go to another. The Job Lot argument that it was going to exit
the state was a blatant con job
and I rue that it got credits. Certainly, construction jobs are
generated by these proposals
but so would build a pyramid in
downtown Providence. There
has to be some stronger nexus
like actual skills training for
existing well-paying jobs
which seems like what the governor is doing.
So, let the finger pointing
cease on Brandon Bell’s remarks
and let’s work together to ramp
up the job skills for the real jobs
now and in the future.
Arlene Violet is an attorney and
former Rhode Island Attorney
General.
Columban Fathers’
Family Festival
Sunday, July 31, 2016
65 Ferry Rd, Rte. 114 - Bus Route
Bristol, RI
12 - 6pm
$1500 Grand Prize
and other drawings!
CHICKEN BAR-B-Q
Chowder • Clam Cakes • Hamburgers
Hot Dogs • Chicken Fingers
Fries • Doughboys
Beer & Wine Garden
YARD SALE
Bingo • Games • Bouncer
Face Painting • Music
Page B8 East Bay Life July 27-28, 2016
The
Weekender
A weath of additional event listings can
be found under the East Bay Life header
at EastBayRI.com, accessible to both subscribers and non-subscribers. Updated
daily, our new online calendar is simple to
use, and community members are free to
post their own events in an easy-to-navigate online form.
Any questions?
Please email
[email protected].
TOP PICKS THIS WEEKEND IN THE EAST BAY
5$
under
10
Summer Yoga
Fest in Bristol
Art al fresco in downtown Bristol
O
nce more the fence and lawn of Linden Place and the Bradford Dimond Norris house on Hope Street in Bristol will be
graced with the work of talented artists from Southern New
England.
All are invited to stroll along the shaded walk to view the inspirational art on Sunday, July 31 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (rain date August 7).
WHERE: Bristol, Hope Street between State and
Wardwell streets
WHEN: Sunday, July 31; 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
COST: Free
Wading into Wetlands
T
ake a journey to the wetlands and discover just how important this local
habitat is. Keep your eyes open for turtles, frogs, and ducks! We’ll explore the water
with nets and basins, and then use magnifying
glasses and guidebooks to identify what we
find. Will it be a tadpole? A dragon fly nymph?
Snail eggs? Wear clothes that can get dirty.
Adults must accompany children.
WHERE: Coggeshall Farm, 1 Colt Drive, Bristol
WHEN: Saturday, July 30
COST: Free
MORE INFO: Find them on Facebook
Navy Band Northeast to
perform in East Providence
WHERE: Audubon Environmental Education Center, 1401
Hope Street, Bristol
WHEN: Thursday, August 4; 11 a.m. to noon
COST: $5/member child, $7/non-member child
MORE INFO: asri.org
Cultural Survival Bazaar in Tiverton this weekend
T
he Cultural Survival Bazaars are a series of
cultural festivals that provide indigenous
artists, cooperatives, and their representatives from around the world the chance to sell their
work directly to the American public.
Each event features traditional and contemporary
crafts, artwork, clothing, jewelry, home goods, and
accessories from dozens of countries. In addition, the
Bazaars offer cultural performances and presentations, including live music, storytelling, craft-making
demonstrations, and the unique chance to talk directly with makers and community advocates. This year,
the bazaar will be featuring traditional cuisine by
Mashpee Wampanoag chef Sherry Pocknett.
The Weaver Library is proud to
present an outdoor performance
of Navy Band Northeast. Based in
Newport, Navy Band Northeast
attracts top-notch musicians from
all over the country. They perform
a variety of musical styles from
patriotic to pop to jazz and swing.
Bring the whole family along with
your lawn chairs to one of the
best summer concerts Rhode
Island has to offer. Frisky Fries, a
popular food truck, will be serving
from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Enjoy barbecued chicken and pulled pork
over the best fries in the state.
WHERE: Weaver Library, 41 Grove Avenue,
East Providence
WHERE: Tiverton Four Corners Art Center, 3852 Main Road, Tiverton
WHEN: Saturday and Sunday, July 30 and 31; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
COST: Free • MORE INFO: Bazaar.cs.org
Bristol's Arsenault starring in 'Avenue Q'
W
This event, launched last summer
in collaboration with Bristol Yoga
Studio, will be held at Coggeshall
Farm Museum and will be joined
by Z-Food Truck for lunch, making
a great day even better. There is
no admission fee for this event
and it is open to the public. All
classes will be beginner-friendly!
We ask that you bring a cash
donation for Coggeshall Farm's
Education Program and/or a nonperishable donation for the East
Bay Food Pantry. Family yoga will
be held at 10:30 a.m., Bikram at
noon, and Vinyasa at 1:30 p.m.
Please RSVP to the event on Facebook.
ho are the people in your neighborhood? Well we can assure you
they aren't the residents of Avenue Q. The laugh-out-loud musical,
featuring Bristol native Elise Arsenault, tells the timeless story of a
recent college grad named Princeton who moves into a shabby New York apartment all the way out on Avenue Q. He soon discovers that although the residents seem lovely, it's clear that this is not your ordinary neighborhood.
WHERE: Ocean State Theatre, 1245 Jefferson Boulevard, Warwick
WHEN: August 3 to 21
COST: $39 to $59
MORE INFO: 401/921-6800;
OceanStateTheatre.org
WHEN: Wednesday, August 3, at 6:30 p.m.
COST: Free
MORE INFO: 401/434-2453
'FringePVD' returns
to Providence
Modeled after fringe festivals
throughout the country, as well as
the original Edinburgh Fringe Festival, FringePVD brings over 100
performing artists from Providence and the New England to
perform at the AS220 Black Box
Theater, Aurora, The Avenue
Concept, Better Off, Big Nazo Lab
, Mathewson Street Black Box
Theater, RISD Museum, The Steel
Yard, and The Wilbury Theatre
Group, along with other non-traditional performance spaces, including an expanded Family Fringe
Day at Riverside Park in
Olneyville, site-specific performance inside The Dean Hotel,
and various pop-up performances
throughout the city.
WHERE: Venues throughout downtown Providence
WHEN: Through Saturday July 30
COST: Varies, with most events under $10
MORE INFO: Fringepvd.org
Concert Series in Warren
The Church Street Coffeehouse
has teamed up with the Warren
Recreation Department and the
Town of Warren in bringing back
you a broad spectrum of music
from the folk, Celtic, classical, jazz,
blues, country, and western swing
genres to good old rock & roll.
Schedules are available online at
churchstreetcoffeehouse.com, The
George Haile library, The Coffee
Depot, and Warren House of Pizza.
Performing Wed. July 27th 6pm Ten Rod Ramblers; Wed. Aug. 3rd
6pm - East Bay Wind Ensemble;
Wed. Aug 10th 6pm - Glass Bottom Boat; Sun. Aug 14th 5pm Atwater-Donnelly; Wed. Aug 24th
6pm - The Rusty Mikes; Wed. Aug
24th 6pm - The Western Stars;
Sun. Aug 28th 5pm - The Lisa
Martin Band. The rain dates for
most shows will be the following
day; please leave your four-legged
friends home.
WHERE: Burr's Hill Park, Warren
WHEN: Wednesdays at 6 p.m.
COST: Free
MORE INFO: churchstreetcoffeehouse.com
Blithewold's Music
at Sunset Summer
Concert Series
Spread out a blanket and
unpack the picnic basket, soak
up the warmth of the summer
sun, and enjoy the sunset over
Narragansett Bay, all while
savoring a kaleidoscope of musical performances. A perfect way
to celebrate the summer with
friends and family! Guests are
encouraged to BYOB, picnic dinner, and chairs or blankets. The
schedule: July 27, Superchief
Trio; August 3, Opera Providence; August 10, New Providence Big Band; August 17,
Paula Clare and The Mike Tanaka Trio; August 24, Magnolia
Cajun Band; August 31, Classics
Five Jazz Quintet.
WHERE: Blithewold, 101 Ferry Rd., Bristol
WHEN: Wednesdays through August 31; 6 to 8 p.m.
COST: Members $7, non-members $10
MORE INFO: Visit Blithewold.org to register
East Bay Real Estate
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2745 sq. ft.
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Live on the water! Art studio, sunroom, wood stove,
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Page C2
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Page C4
East Bay Classifieds !"#$%&'(&)*%&+,-
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"!&
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0 Craig Drive
Sunday, July 31 11 am-1 pm Colonial
4
4
$695,000
Residential Properties
Nancy Weaver
401-245-9600
11 Bowden Ave.
Sunday, July 31 11 am-1 pm Colonial
3
2
$650,000
Residential Properties
Janet Maloy
401-245-9600
3 Court Ave.
Sunday, July 3111:30 am-1:30 pmRanch
3
1
$269,000
Residential Properties
Nancy Ryan
401-245-9600
21 Preston Drive
Sunday, July 31 12-1:30 pm Colonial
4
2.5
$749,000
Residential Properties
Ceci Sartor
401-245-9600
15 6th St.
Sunday, July 31 12-1:30 pm Colonial
4
3.5
$595,000
Residential Properties
Ceci Sartor
401-245-9600
52 Nayatt Road
Sunday, July 31
12-2 pm
Victorian
5
4.5
$1,475,000
Residential Properties
Patty Deal
401-245-9600
20 Briarfield Road
Sunday, July 31
12-2 pm
Colonial
4
2.5
$797.00
William Raveis
Phyllis Ibbotson
401-297-8450
!#$)'(*
423 Hope St., Unit C
Sunday, July 3111:30 am-1 pmOne Level
2
2.5
$774,000
Residential Properties
Morgan Lowis
401-245-9600
423 Hope St., Unit D
Sunday, July 3111:30 am-1 pmOne Level
3
2.5
$829,000
Residential Properties
Bonni Koppelman
401-245-9600
423 Hope St., Unit M
Sunday, July 3111:30 am-1 pmOne Level
2
2
$659,000
Residential Properties
Morgan Lowis
401-245-9600
423 Hope S., Unit P
Sunday, July 3111:30 am-1 pmOne Level
2
2.5
$1,295,000
Residential Properties
Morgan Lowis
401-245-9600
423 Hope St., Unit N
Sunday, July 3111:30 am-1 pmOne Level
3
2.5
$1,375,000
Residential Properties
Lisbeth Herbst
401-245-9600
17 Sandy Lane
Sunday, July 3111 am-12:30 pmColonial
6
4.5
$930,000
RE/MAX River's Edge
Jazzmine Napolitano
401-225-7070
227 Thames St. #2
Sunday, July 31
1
1
$299,900
RE/MAX River's Edge
Anne Kellerman
401-524-8433
1-3 pm
Condo
+")',-#(.$/+%0+
61 Milburn Road
Sunday, July 31
1-3 pm
1 New Road #D5
Saturday, July 30 11 am-1 pm
Colonial
3
1.5
$269,900
RE/MAX River's Edge
Matt Sousa
401-662-3924
Condo
2
2
$267,900
RE/MAX River's Edge
Corleen Law
401-263-8893
*$''*+,0(1-'(%
56 Maple Ave.
Saturday, July 30 11 am-1 pm
80 B. Long Highway
Saturday, July 30 11 am-12 pm Colonial
86 South of the CommonsSaturday, July 30 12-2 pm
Other
Colonial
3
2.5
$649,000
T. L. Holland
Terry Holland
401-265-3578
3
3
$459,000
T. L. Holland
Jim Holland
401-640-5545
3
3
$1,400,000
Spinnaker Properties
Kathy Hall
401-418-0886
42 Long Highway
Saturday, July 30 10-11:30 amRaised Ranch
3
2
$399,000 Welchman Real Estate GroupAmanda Nickerson Toste401-835-8967
41 Peckham Road
Saturday, July 3011:30 am-12:30 pmRanch
2
2
$459,000 Welchman Real Estate GroupAmanda Nickerson Toste401-835-8967
116 South of Commons Saturday, July 30 10 am-12 pmContemporary 3
3
$549,000 Welchman Real Estate Group Renee Welchman
401-649-1915
$339,000 Welchman Real Estate Group Renee Welchman
401-649-1915
$730,000
35 West Main Road
Saturday, July 3012:30-1:30 pm Cottage
2
1.5
2 Butts Rock Road
Saturday, July 30 11 am-1 pm
3
2
Ranch
Little Compton Real Estate
Janet Myrin
401-635-2786
T.L. Holland
Jim Holland
401-640-5545
RE/MAX River's Edge
Jean Clarke
401-374-5039
-(#')1(2'3
345 Riverside Drive
Sunday, July 31
1-2 pm
Bungalow
2
1.5
$339,000
#214(#/
8 Haliburton Road
Sunday, July 31
12-2 pm
Ranch
2
1
$210,000
'$.+#'(%
184 Sawdy Pond Ave.
Saturday, July 30
1-2 pm
Ranch
2
1.5
$275,000
T.L. Holland
Jim Holland
401-640-5545
267 Village Road
Sunday, July 31
1-3 pm
Townhouse
3
3.5
$629,000
Century 21 Topsail
Barbara Hanaway
508-776-8773
281 Village Road
Sunday, July 31
1-3 pm
Townhouse
3
3.5
$639,000
Villages at Mt. Hope
Meg Little
401-245-4098
77 Watermark Drive Sat. & Sun., July 30 & 3111 am-4 pmTownhouse 2
2.5
$660,000
Villages at Mt. Hope
Bridget Torrey
401-575-6522
87 Forand Lane
Saturday, July 30
1-2 pm
Cottage
3
1
$215,000 Welchman Real Estate GroupAmanda Nickerson Toste401-835-8967
5+)'-(#'
8 Tupelo Road
Sunday, July 31 11 am-1 pm
Cape
4
2.5
$689,000
T.L. Holland
Jim Holland
401-640-5545
!"#$%&'(&)*%&+,-% East Bay Classifieds Page C5
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EAST PROVIDENCE
New Price! Lovely renovated Cape in desirable location! Hardwood floors throughout, updated furnace,
roof & windows, first floor laundry, nice deck, large
rear yard, 2 car garage, freshly painted interior and
more!
$ 239,900
EAST PROVIDENCE
New Price! 3 bedroom 1 ½ bath Cape in wonderful
Waddington neighborhood. Fireplaced living room
and formal dining room. Stainless steel kitchen.
Warm bonus family room in basement with fireplace. Updated electric, roof and heat. Sun porch
overlooking quaint yard. Quiet street. One car
garage. $ 244,900
BRISTOL
Escape to your waterfront get-a-way on the tranquil
Kickemuit River! Perfect vacation spot or enjoy sunrises from the deck of this sweet cottage all year
round. Fishing boating and quahogging just steps
from your door. $ 319,000
BRISTOL
This once elegant gothic revival style house called
"Longfield" was designed by famed 19th c. architect
Russell Warren. It is down to the studs waiting for
someone with vision and passion to finish the work
that has begun. The potential is magnificent!
$ 577,000
WARREN
Sunny corner 4 bedroom unit w/ master suite on 1st
floor over-looking the Association Pool. Living
room w/ hardwoods and fireplace. Private patio and
covered porch. Easy access to water and East Bay
Bike Path. 2 car garage.
$ 449,900
EAST PROVIDENCE
Quality built Waddington/Riverside Ranch boasting
3 ample bedrooms, 1 ½ baths, 2 fireplaces and
garage. Floor plan offers kitchen with granite island
open to dining and living rooms. Finished lower
with walk-out. Enjoy your private enclosed deck and
¼ acre yard abutting conservation. $ 264,000
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!"#$%&'#()'*)+',$!"#$%&'
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$237,000! 1st flr Master BDRM, bth & laundry.
3bdrms, 2.5bths, dningrm, Great rm off lg Kitch, w/eating island & breakfst nook. Full bsmnt. 1,800 sq.ft. living
space. Price incl. house & all standard sitewk.-util.-septic-architectural plans. Entire pkg.to be built on your land
by our skilled local craftsman or choose one of our lots
w/additional lot cost added to price.
New list. Stunning sunsets from this 10
rm 3 bed 1.5 bath home. Lovely redone
kitchen w/granite counters & SS appl. FP
liv rm & Family room. 4 car garage.C/A
$549k
www.migneaultsells.com
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Lovely 3 Br, 2.5 Ba condo at North Farm.
Master suites on 1st & 2nd floors, updated
kitchen, hardwood floors, fireplace, water
views from balcony, patio on grass and
meadow, Central air, Privacy! $385,000
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3-4 Bd, lg kit., open flr plan, wood fp, lg attic, lg
deck, nice yard & gardens, 2 acres, commercial
grade flat driveway, cost efficient & meticulous!
Nature trails, ocean, fishing ponds, athletic fields,
Tiverton Four Crnrs. Seller's downsizing. $585,000
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Laundry Aide/Housekeeper
Part Time
Join an innovative team committed to providing
high quality care. Saint Elizabeth Manor, a leader in
providing long term and rehabilitation care is
looking to fill a part time Laundry Aide position.
We offer excellent wages and benefits including
health, dental, etc.
If you are interested please come in to fill out an
application at One Dawn Hill, Bristol, RI 02809.
No calls please.
/3;O?<43??+<3O2=4;4[
CA>>Z2;4<0
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C34438B0/O;>>07>3;60?:=2B0dHX
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EOE
professional
challenge
fewer
headaches
RN/Charge Nurse
3-11pm/ PT
11-7/PT
Saint Elizabeth Manor, a leader in providing long
term and rehabilitation care is looking to fill some
part time Nurse positions on our sub-acute and
long term care units. Current RI RN license required
and experience preferred.
If interested please come in to fill out an application or send resume’ to Saint Elizabeth Manor, One
Dawn Hill, Bristol, RI 02809, Attn: Kim Amaral or
email to [email protected].
EOE
FIND THE JOB
YOU WANT.
Certified Nursing Assistant
PT/3-11pm
PT/7-3pm/Weekends
Join an innovative team committed to providing high quality care. Saint Elizabeth Manor, a leader in providing long term
and rehabilitation care is looking to fill some part time C.N.A
positions.
We offer excellent wages and benefits including health,
dental, on-site subsidized day care, retirement plan, etc.
If you are interested please come in to fill out an application or send resume’ to Saint Elizabeth Manor, One Dawn Hill,
Bristol, RI 02809, Attn: Kim Amaral or email resume to [email protected]
EOE
WHAT ARE
YOU
LOOKING FOR?
The ideal job is waiting for you. Find it at RIjobs.com. With a
wide variety of job postings from companies throughout Rhode
Island, we’re able to connect employers and job seekers across
the state. We update daily, giving you the opportunity to find the
right job quickly. Which means you don’t need to look any fur-
Thousands of postings from local
newspapers, updated every day.
East Bay Classifieds is a participating affiliate in RIjobs.com.
ther than RIjobs.com.
East Bay Classifieds is a participating affiliate in RIjobs.com.
Page C10
East Bay Classifieds July 27-28, 2016
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