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Volume 38, No.39<br />

Southington’s only locally produced newspaper<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

A queenly hug<br />

Bobcats sighted around<br />

Southington, Page 2<br />

NORTHEAST ROOFING, LLC<br />

30<br />

YEARS<br />

IN SERVICE<br />

Chamber of Commerce hosts debate<br />

for Town Council candidates, Page 3<br />

TAMMI NAUDUS<br />

Sarah DiBenedetto, who was named the Apple Hostess Queen at the Apple<br />

Harvest Festival gala last week, hugs her mother Patricia shortly after the coronation.<br />

Council creates Beecher Street subcommittee<br />

By LISA CAPOBIANCO<br />

STAFF WRITER<br />

In response to the public<br />

outcries against the proposed<br />

selling of the Beecher<br />

Street property during a<br />

public hearing last month,<br />

the Southington Town<br />

Council created a bi-partisan<br />

“ad hoc” subcommittee<br />

to obtain additional information<br />

before making a<br />

final decision on the former<br />

home of the school system’s<br />

administrative offices.<br />

The ad hoc Beecher<br />

Street Use Subcommittee<br />

will consist of four voting<br />

members: two sitting members<br />

from the Town<br />

Council—one from each<br />

party and two sitting members<br />

from the Planning and<br />

Zoning Commission—one<br />

from each party. They will<br />

recommend and analyze all<br />

issues of 49 Beecher St.,<br />

including remediation,<br />

additions, demolition and<br />

See COMMITTEE,<br />

page 15<br />

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By LISA CAPOBIANCO<br />

STAFF WRITER<br />

The Department of<br />

Energy and Environmental<br />

Protection (DEEP) met with<br />

Southington Town Manager<br />

Garry Brumback and other<br />

municipal water pollution<br />

control authorities of surrounding<br />

communities on<br />

Monday to take the next<br />

step in reducing phosphorus<br />

levels of non-tidal surface<br />

waters from municipal<br />

wastewater treatment plant<br />

discharges.<br />

This collaborative<br />

approach stems from<br />

Public Act 12-155, which<br />

calls for the collaboration<br />

Membrino wins third race, claims<br />

SK Light points title at Stafford,Page 36<br />

Working on the phosphorus issue<br />

Brumback chairs coordinating committee<br />

between DEEP and chief<br />

elected officials of<br />

Southington, Danbury,<br />

Meriden, Wallingford,<br />

Waterbury and Cheshire to<br />

evaluate and make guidelines<br />

for the reduction of<br />

phosphorus in accordance<br />

with United States<br />

Environmental Protection<br />

Agency (USEPA) standards.<br />

According to the DEEP,<br />

phosphorus becomes a<br />

threat to water safety in the<br />

state because excess<br />

amounts can lead to a<br />

reduction in water clarity,<br />

and even depletion of oxygen<br />

as well as fish kills.<br />

In response to the<br />

Roofing<br />

Public Act, the DEEP has<br />

developed a Coordinating<br />

Committee co-chaired by<br />

Brumback, along with<br />

Macky McCleary, the<br />

Deputy Commissioner of<br />

Environmental Quality at<br />

DEEP. Both Brumback and<br />

McCleary plan to guide<br />

three established workgroups<br />

to discuss three<br />

major elements of the issue<br />

at hand, including the<br />

state-wide response to<br />

address phosphorus nonpoint<br />

source pollution,<br />

methods to measure cur-<br />

School board against BFL proposal<br />

By ED HARRIS<br />

Editor<br />

Citing safety concerns,<br />

the Board of<br />

Education has gone on<br />

record against the Bread<br />

for Life proposal to establish<br />

a new home next to<br />

Derynoski Elementary<br />

School.<br />

“We do not support<br />

the proposal,” Board of<br />

Education Chairman Brian<br />

Goralski said at last week’s<br />

school board meeting.<br />

“Our priority will always be<br />

the safety of students and<br />

the schools.”<br />

Goralski said the<br />

school board supported<br />

Bread for Life’s efforts, but<br />

not this particular proposal.<br />

The school board<br />

chairman said Planning<br />

and Zoning Commission<br />

Chairman Michael<br />

DelSanto had emailed him<br />

asking for the board’s<br />

stance on the issue.<br />

“ Our priority will<br />

always be the safety<br />

of our<br />

students and the<br />

schools<br />

“<br />

Brian Goralski<br />

Board of Education Chairman<br />

Goralski told the school<br />

board that he would<br />

respond to DelSanto’s<br />

inquiry with details in the<br />

near future.<br />

Bread for Life is a nonprofit<br />

<strong>org</strong>anization that<br />

helps provide food to the<br />

needy in town. The <strong>org</strong>anization<br />

is seeking to utilize<br />

See PHOSPHORUS,<br />

page 18<br />

a 3,200 sq. foot building on<br />

296 Main St., next to the<br />

school.<br />

Parents have come out<br />

against the proposal,<br />

expressing safety concerns.<br />

In a press release on<br />

its website, Bread for Life<br />

Executive Director Eldon<br />

Hafford said the <strong>org</strong>anization<br />

was open to hearing<br />

people’s concerns.<br />

“We have a tremendous<br />

relationship with the<br />

Southington School<br />

System, including recently<br />

launching the successful<br />

breakfast program,”<br />

Hafford said in the press<br />

release. “We know this relationship<br />

will grow in the<br />

future and have begun to<br />

talk about ways to deepen<br />

the bond.”<br />

Residents will have an<br />

opportunity to voice their<br />

views on the Bread for Life<br />

proposal at a Planning and<br />

Zoning Commission public<br />

hearing on <strong>October</strong> 15.<br />

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The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

Bobcats sighted around Southington<br />

By ED HARRIS<br />

Editor<br />

Several residents have<br />

reported seeing a bobcat<br />

prowling around town the<br />

last few weeks.<br />

Michelle Allaire was<br />

on the phone with her sister<br />

when she noticed the<br />

animal sitting in the garden<br />

at her Lazy Lane<br />

home.<br />

“The bobcat was just<br />

sitting there, blending right<br />

in as if it belonged there,”<br />

Allaire said. “It looked like<br />

some African jungle safari.<br />

I told my sister on the<br />

phone that I had a lion in<br />

my yard because it looked<br />

so big. It just didn’t look<br />

real.”<br />

Allaire said the bobcat<br />

sat in the garden for about<br />

ten minutes before it<br />

walked off into the nearby<br />

woods. Allaire said this was<br />

not the first time she has<br />

seen a bobcat in her backyard,<br />

but the animal was<br />

never as big as the present<br />

sighting.<br />

A week or so prior to<br />

the sighting at the Allaire<br />

residence, Greg Godston<br />

and his family came across<br />

one on their way home<br />

from church.<br />

The family stopped<br />

the car and watched the<br />

large cat stalk a woodchuck.<br />

The woodchuck<br />

escaped into a nearby hole,<br />

while the bobcat waited<br />

about ten minutes in front<br />

of the hole before leaving.<br />

It is not clear if the two<br />

families spotted the same<br />

bobcat.<br />

Southington Animal<br />

Control Officer Dave<br />

Ireland believes there are<br />

multiple bobcats in town.<br />

He said that he has seen a<br />

couple of them himself.<br />

Ireland said that bobcats<br />

generally eat smaller<br />

animals, though noting<br />

that it is more likely that a<br />

coyote would attack and<br />

kill small household pets,<br />

like cats.<br />

“They’re not known to<br />

go after people,” Ireland<br />

said of the bobcat.<br />

Comments? Email<br />

eharris@southingtonobserver.com.<br />

New names set for Wall of Honor<br />

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By LISA CAPOBIANCO<br />

STAFF WRITER<br />

Southington High<br />

School will soon induct<br />

four local individuals from<br />

different walks of life into<br />

its Wall of Honor.<br />

Two of the honorees<br />

are Rosemary and James<br />

Champagne, who remain<br />

active in local community<br />

service projects including<br />

Relay for Life.<br />

When the Champagnes<br />

found out that the Wall of<br />

Honor chose them this<br />

year, the honorees said<br />

they felt surprised and<br />

honored at the same time.<br />

“Once we learned<br />

more about the wall, we<br />

were more proud to be a<br />

part of it,” Jim said. “I am<br />

extremely honored,”<br />

Rosemary said.<br />

As <strong>org</strong>anizers of Relay<br />

for Life, the Champagnes<br />

said the event is always<br />

“close” to their hearts.<br />

Rosemary said she has<br />

been a cancer survivor for<br />

over 20 years, and she finds<br />

joy in bringing the community<br />

together during the<br />

event.<br />

“My goal was to teach<br />

people that you can live<br />

with cancer,” she said.<br />

Rosemary also recalls<br />

that as a student, she had<br />

no idea how she would<br />

make a positive impact on<br />

the community in the<br />

future.<br />

“When you are in<br />

school, you never know<br />

what you will accomplish<br />

as an adult,” she said.<br />

Other honorees<br />

include Christopher Jones,<br />

a biomedical research<br />

chemist and Karl Pytlik, an<br />

environmental activist who<br />

works in the U.S. Virgin<br />

Islands.<br />

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said Bob Brown, the Wall of<br />

Honor chairman at the<br />

high school. “Both Chris<br />

and Karl have an impact<br />

that goes far beyond our<br />

community.”<br />

He also said the ceremony<br />

marks a special<br />

moment for the town that<br />

reminds students how they<br />

can make a difference in<br />

the future.<br />

“Many significant and<br />

well-known townspeople<br />

have been put on our wall,<br />

from veterans to famous people<br />

to professors to inventors<br />

to scientists,” he said. “Often<br />

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they do not see the future in<br />

what they do, but this shows<br />

them bright, positive possibilities,”<br />

he said.<br />

The ceremony will take<br />

place Monday, Oct. 21 at 6<br />

p.m. in front of the high<br />

school auditorium.<br />

Michelle Allaire snapped this photo of a bobcat in her<br />

garden last month. Another resident has also reported<br />

seeing a bobcat in town a few weeks earlier.<br />

Southington The Observer, USPS# 025-218, is Published weekly by The Step Saver, Inc.,<br />

213 Spring St., Southington, CT 06489. Phone: 860-628-9438 Fax: 860-621-1841<br />

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced by<br />

any means, mechanical or electronic, without the expressed consent<br />

of the publisher. Opinions expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the views of the<br />

publisher, staff or advertisers of The Observer. The return of unsolicited<br />

manuscripts or other material cannot be guaranteed. Periodicals postage paid<br />

at Southington, CT and additional offices. Free by request to local residents.<br />

Postmaster: Send changes of address to Southington The Observer:<br />

213 Spring St, Southington, CT 06489<br />

SUBMITTED


Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

•Police Log.........page 5<br />

Our Town<br />

•Healthy Living.........page 10<br />

•Good Times........page 16<br />

Chamber hosts Town Council candidate debate<br />

By LISA CAPOBIANCO<br />

STAFF WRITER<br />

Republicans and<br />

Democrats running for Town<br />

Council came face-to-face<br />

last week during the first<br />

Q&A session, hosted by the<br />

Southington Chamber of<br />

Commerce.<br />

Both parties addressed<br />

key issues of the town,<br />

including property taxes,<br />

open space and the environmental<br />

cleanup of superfund<br />

sites. However, Republican<br />

and Democratic candidates<br />

shared opposing visions on<br />

the solutions to these issues.<br />

Democrats said the<br />

most significant issue of<br />

Southington today is the<br />

“continuing reliance on<br />

property taxes.”<br />

“Eighty percent of our<br />

general revenue is generated<br />

by property tax from homeowners,<br />

and that is a major<br />

issue that has to be<br />

addressed,” said Democratic<br />

Town Councilor and running<br />

incumbent John Barry. “We<br />

are also at a seven-year high<br />

in our mill rate, and with a<br />

high mill rate, it affects your<br />

car taxes.”<br />

Chris Kelley, a<br />

Southington native and the<br />

youngest candidate on the<br />

Democratic slate, said his<br />

vision of the town in the next<br />

two years involves reducing<br />

the mill rate “as low as possible.”<br />

“What we need to do for<br />

Southington is work across<br />

party lines, taking the best of<br />

both worlds,” Kelley said.<br />

“We really need to come<br />

together.”<br />

Republican candidate<br />

Michael Riccio, the current<br />

chairman of the Parking<br />

Authority who served eight<br />

years on the council, said the<br />

town should develop more<br />

commercial land to take the<br />

burden off residential taxpayers.<br />

“We can’t keep putting<br />

the burden on the residential<br />

homeowners,” Riccio said.<br />

“We have hundreds and<br />

hundreds acres of undeveloped<br />

commercial<br />

land…[and] we need to focus<br />

on getting that land developed,<br />

getting the businesses<br />

in there…and take a look at<br />

how to grow that tax base, so<br />

we can continue to provide<br />

the services to our residents.”<br />

While both parties<br />

agreed that Southington’s<br />

biggest asset include its centralized<br />

location filled with<br />

businesses and spirit of volunteerism,<br />

they disagreed on<br />

the town’s biggest burden.<br />

Republicans said the town<br />

should examine vacant<br />

buildings and improve infrastructure.<br />

“When infrastructure<br />

collapses, so does the economy,”<br />

said Republican candidate<br />

Paul Champagne, who<br />

currently serves on the<br />

Planning and Zoning<br />

Commission. “We have to<br />

keep up with the economic<br />

development team, and raise<br />

the tax base of commercial<br />

buildings—not put the burden<br />

only on residences.”<br />

Meanwhile, Democrats<br />

expressed their concern<br />

about the cleanups of superfund<br />

sites in town.<br />

“We need to secure<br />

money not only from the<br />

state but also from the federal<br />

government,” said<br />

Democratic candidate David<br />

Rinaldi, who previously<br />

served eight years as an<br />

alderman in Waterbury. “We<br />

need to get that cleaned up,<br />

and once we do that, we will<br />

be in much better shape.”<br />

Republican and<br />

Democratic candidates also<br />

shared several goals if their<br />

party becomes the majority<br />

in November. Cheryl<br />

Lounsbury, a running<br />

incumbent from the<br />

Republican Party, said she<br />

would like to see the council<br />

continue enhancing economic<br />

development in order<br />

to downsize taxes and leveraging<br />

spending.<br />

“In order to do that we<br />

need to develop a town-wide<br />

strategy,” Lounsbury said.<br />

“You do not know where you<br />

are going unless you plan for<br />

it.”<br />

In contrast, Democrats<br />

said their goals would<br />

involve preserving open<br />

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enhance the education system.<br />

“We need to focus on is<br />

trying to preserve the community<br />

that we have, and<br />

promote sustainable development<br />

that comes in, so we<br />

don’t have abandoned buildings<br />

that are taking up valuable<br />

real estate here,” Kelley<br />

said. “We also need to focus<br />

on…bringing foreign language<br />

down to the elementary<br />

school levels.”<br />

Later in the week,<br />

Republicans held a press<br />

conference to address their<br />

list of accomplishments they<br />

have achieved in the past<br />

four years. Town Committee<br />

Chairman Brian Callahan<br />

addressed these accomplishments<br />

in response to reported<br />

“misinformation” about<br />

certain Republicans running<br />

for office. Although he did<br />

not say where this misinformation<br />

came from or what it<br />

entailed, Callahan said the<br />

Republican party will “run an<br />

election campaign focused<br />

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strategies based on reliable<br />

facts.”<br />

The Republican slate<br />

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incumbent Stephanie Urillo,<br />

along with Victoria Triano<br />

and Thomas Lombardi. The<br />

Democratic slate also features<br />

a mixture of new and<br />

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The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

Apple Valley AARP named <strong>2013</strong> Chapter of the Year<br />

By LISA CAPOBIANCO<br />

STAFF WRITER<br />

From collecting donations<br />

for the Rocky Hill<br />

Veterans Home and troops<br />

overseas to donating used<br />

books to the American<br />

Legion Auxiliary to funding<br />

two annual $500 scholarships<br />

for local graduating<br />

seniors, the Apple Valley<br />

Southington Chapter of<br />

AARP Connecticut has<br />

served all members of the<br />

community, young and<br />

old.<br />

The chapter’s involvement<br />

in a variety of community<br />

service projects<br />

served as a key factor for<br />

the AARP to choose Apple<br />

Valley as the winner of the<br />

<strong>2013</strong> Chapter of the Year<br />

Award, according to Nora<br />

Duncan, the state director<br />

of AARP Connecticut.<br />

“Their ability to keep<br />

235 members actively<br />

engaged is really impressive,”<br />

Duncan said. “It is<br />

about taking care of people<br />

right here at home.”<br />

Last week AARP<br />

Connecticut awarded the<br />

chapter with a plaque during<br />

a ceremony, where<br />

State Senator Joseph<br />

Markley, State<br />

Representative David Zoni<br />

and State Representative Al<br />

Adinolfi also recognized<br />

the chapter’s contributions<br />

to the entire community.<br />

Josephine Theriault,<br />

the new volunteer president<br />

of the chapter, said<br />

she feels proud that the<br />

AARP chose her chapter<br />

out of all 34 chapters that<br />

applied for the award.<br />

“It is really exciting to<br />

be singled out as doing a<br />

good job,” Theriault said.<br />

“Our motto is to serve and<br />

not to be served, and the<br />

group lives up to that every<br />

day.”<br />

Every year an AARP<br />

Connecticut Chapter<br />

receives an award in recognition<br />

of its community<br />

service and advocacy and<br />

its participation in activities<br />

that fulfill the lives of<br />

older individuals. Other<br />

service projects of Apple<br />

Valley include saving box<br />

tops and labels for the<br />

town’s schools, supporting<br />

Bread for Life through a<br />

$400 donation for food and<br />

providing Christmas gifts<br />

for 40 senior citizens.<br />

Volunteers have also provided<br />

a free will donation<br />

to victims of the Sandy<br />

Hook tragedy through<br />

United Way and donating<br />

$200 toward the high<br />

school’s all-night graduation<br />

party.<br />

Rachel Wache, the former<br />

volunteer president of<br />

the chapter, applied for the<br />

annual award this year.<br />

Calling the award an<br />

“honor,” Wache said the<br />

chapter won this yearly<br />

award for the first time,<br />

and she feels proud of the<br />

impact that her chapter<br />

has made on all members<br />

of the community.<br />

“Whatever we do here<br />

affects everyone,” Wache<br />

said. “We touch all of those<br />

lives.”<br />

Wache also said she<br />

hopes that all volunteers of<br />

the chapter will continue<br />

serving the needs of people<br />

throughout the town<br />

and the state.<br />

“I hope that for the<br />

future, they continue to<br />

grow, to continue to be<br />

active in the community,”<br />

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Besides participating<br />

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Chapter volunteers<br />

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to support issues<br />

that matter to<br />

Connecticut’s elderly population<br />

in Hartford.<br />

Anyone over age 50 interested<br />

in becoming a member<br />

of AARP can call toll<br />

free at (866) 295-7279.<br />

Comments? Email<br />

lcapobianco@southingtono<br />

bserver.com.<br />

Bread for Life to host Soup Nite<br />

Soup Nite, a major<br />

fundraiser for Bread for Life,<br />

is set for Wednesday, Oct. 16,<br />

from 4:30 to 7 p.m., at<br />

Southington High School.<br />

The event has grown over<br />

the years thanks to the<br />

donations of soup, breads<br />

and donations from various<br />

local restaurants and eateries.<br />

There will also be raffles<br />

and a silent auction. Tickets<br />

can be purchased at the<br />

door. “It is a wonderful community<br />

event and we look<br />

forward to seeing many of<br />

our supporters there,” said<br />

Eldon Hafford, Bread for Life<br />

executive director.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit the website<br />

www.southingtonbreadforlife.<strong>org</strong><br />

or call the office at<br />

(860) 276-8389.<br />

LISA CAPOBIANCO<br />

Southington’s Apple ValleY AARP was recently named the <strong>2013</strong> Chapter of the<br />

Year.<br />

Pictured, Volunteer President of AARP Connecticut Laura Green poses with<br />

Rachel Wache, the former volunteer president of the Southington Apple Valley<br />

Chapter and Josephine Theriault, the current volunteer president of the chapter.<br />

Send us your letters!<br />

We welcome letters to the editor from all of our readers. Send your letter to editor Ed<br />

Harris at eharris@SouthingtonObserver.com. Deadline is 5 p.m. Friday for the following<br />

week’s edition. The editor reserves the right to edit all letters for length or grammar.<br />

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Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

Local man charged with stealing a car and going for a joyride<br />

A local man surrendered<br />

to police following an arrest<br />

warrant stemming from a<br />

stolen car that was taken for a<br />

joyride.<br />

On Wednesday, Sept. 25,<br />

Domenic Luongo, 18, of<br />

Southington, surrendered to<br />

police. He was charged with<br />

first degree larceny, third<br />

The Southington Police<br />

Department has reported the<br />

following arrests.<br />

Jesse R. Nealon, 38, of 68<br />

Walnut St., was charged on<br />

Sept. 17 with violation of a<br />

restraining order. Bond was<br />

set at $10,000 with a Sept. 17<br />

court date.<br />

Kimberly Bouchard, 28,<br />

of 307 Stonegate Road, was<br />

charged on Sept. 17 with disorderly<br />

conduct. Bond was<br />

set at $500 with a Sept. 18<br />

court date.<br />

Sharone Patterson, 27,<br />

of 20 Quaker Lane, Bristol,<br />

was charged on Sept. 17 with<br />

violation of a protective<br />

order. Bond was set at $2,500<br />

with a Sept. 18 court date.<br />

Emily A. Seeley, 23, of 27<br />

Leominster Rd., Bristol, was<br />

degree burglary, using a<br />

motor vehicle without the<br />

owner’s permission, second<br />

degree criminal trover, interfering<br />

with an officer, evading<br />

responsibility, operating a<br />

motor vehicle without a<br />

license and failure to drive in<br />

a proper lane. He was held on<br />

a $5,000 bond with an Oct. 7<br />

court date.<br />

The warrant stems from<br />

an investigation into an accident<br />

that took place on Sept.<br />

12, at approx. 12:30 a.m. in the<br />

area of 300 West St. A police<br />

investigation revealed that<br />

earlier in the evening Luongo<br />

stole a vehicle from the area of<br />

Round Hill Road. after finding<br />

Police Blotter<br />

charged on Sept. 18 with third<br />

degree larceny. Bond was set<br />

at $5,000 with a Sept. 18 court<br />

date.<br />

Timothy Ribolla, 30, of<br />

92 Eden Ave., was charged on<br />

Sept. 16 with disorderly conduct,<br />

interfering with an officer<br />

and first degree criminal<br />

trespass. Bond was set at<br />

$5,000 with a Sept. 17 court<br />

date.<br />

Jesse Julia, 31, of 35<br />

Darling St., was charged on<br />

Sept. 18 with DUI and failure<br />

to drive right. Bond was set at<br />

$1,000 with a Sept. 30 court<br />

date.<br />

Justin R. Weber, 33, of<br />

191 Queen St., was charged<br />

on Sept. 19 with disorderly<br />

conduct. Bond was set at<br />

$1,000 with a Sept. 20 court<br />

date.<br />

Heather Landrie, 31, of<br />

191 Queen St., was charged<br />

on Sept. 19 with disorderly<br />

conduct. Bond was set at<br />

$1,000 with a Sept. 20 court<br />

date.<br />

Adam R. Madore, 26, of<br />

90 Cherrybrook Rd., Canton,<br />

was charged on Sept. 20 with<br />

DUI and operating an unregistered<br />

motor vehicle. Bond<br />

was set at $500 with a Sept. 30<br />

court date.<br />

John Lindsey, 50, of 3610<br />

Yacht Club Dr., Adventura,<br />

FL, was charged on Sept. 13<br />

with first degree larceny and<br />

possession of less than an oz.<br />

of marijuana. Bond was set at<br />

$75,000 with a Sept. 16 court<br />

date.<br />

Vincent Glorisos, 66, of<br />

Southington’s History<br />

With the aid of the<br />

Southington Library’s<br />

online archive of historic<br />

Southington papers, we<br />

will give you a look back<br />

at some of the town’s history<br />

this week.<br />

75 years ago this<br />

week…<br />

Fire Prevention Week<br />

Will Be Observed Here<br />

“Fire Prevention<br />

Week will be observed<br />

here from Oct. 9 to 15 as<br />

it will in all other parts of<br />

the United States,” Fire<br />

Chief Thomas J. Murphy<br />

stated here today. He<br />

announced that the<br />

Southington Fire<br />

Department will be glad<br />

to answer any and all<br />

questions concerning<br />

proper procedure for<br />

observation of the week.<br />

-The<br />

News<br />

Southington<br />

50 years ago this<br />

week…<br />

SHS Newspaper<br />

Calls On Student Body To<br />

Beat Problem Of<br />

‘Overcrowding’<br />

The Emblem, school<br />

newspaper<br />

at<br />

Southington high School,<br />

called on students this<br />

week to use their “will” to<br />

try to adjust to overcrowding<br />

in the classrooms.<br />

The newspaper<br />

said overcrowding is<br />

threatening the quality of<br />

education.<br />

-The<br />

News<br />

Southington<br />

25 years ago this<br />

week…<br />

Forum raises athletic<br />

issues<br />

An open forum held<br />

last week on a report of<br />

the Athletic Review Task<br />

Force drew a small contingent<br />

of Southington<br />

parents and coaches prepared<br />

to wage battle for<br />

their booster clubs and<br />

athletic programs.<br />

The comments of the<br />

parents and coaches<br />

Wednesday night were<br />

most often directed at the<br />

task force, but at times<br />

skirmishes broke out<br />

among members of the<br />

forum audience over the<br />

issues of athletic program<br />

funding and<br />

staffing and the participation<br />

of athletes in gym<br />

class during their respective<br />

team’s season.<br />

-The Southington<br />

Observer<br />

the keys on the front seat of<br />

the vehicle. Luongo drove the<br />

vehicle around the town and<br />

while driving on West Street,<br />

he lost control of the vehicle.<br />

The vehicle struck two utility<br />

poles and ultimately flipped<br />

on its side. After the crashing<br />

the vehicle, Luongo fled the<br />

scene.<br />

157 Burritt St., Plantsville, was<br />

charged on Sept. 18 with DUI<br />

and two counts of illegal possession<br />

of narcotics. Bond<br />

was set at $1,500 with a Sept.<br />

30 court date.<br />

Allyson Algarin, 18, of<br />

257 Columbus Ave., Meriden,<br />

was charged on Sept. 21 with<br />

third degree criminal mischief.<br />

Bond was set at $500<br />

with an Oct. 7 court date.<br />

Justin DelBuono, 24, of<br />

60 Merrell Ave., was charged<br />

on Sept. 22 with disorderly<br />

conduct. Bond was set at<br />

$2,500 with a Sept. 23 court<br />

date.<br />

Betsy Fisher, 26, of 15<br />

Sherman St., Old Saybrook,<br />

was charged on Sept. 22 with<br />

disorderly conduct. Bond<br />

was set at $2,500 with a Sept.<br />

23 court date.<br />

Jason C. Monahan, 37 of<br />

973 Flanders Rd., was<br />

charged on Sept. 22 with DUI,<br />

operating a motor vehicle<br />

under suspension and failure<br />

to obey a traffic signal. Bond<br />

was se tat $500 with a Sept. 30<br />

court date.<br />

James Labbe, 21, of 170<br />

Miller St., Meriden, was<br />

charged on Sept. 22 with sixth<br />

degree larceny and conspiracy<br />

to commit sixth degree larceny.<br />

Bond was set at $500<br />

with a Sept. 30 court date.<br />

Brian Labbe, 24, of 170<br />

Miller St., Meriden, was<br />

charged on Sept. 22 with sixth<br />

degree larceny and conspiracy<br />

to commit sixth degree larceny.<br />

Bond was set at $500<br />

with a Sept. 30 court date.<br />

Marcin P. Szwedo, 25, of<br />

63 Terrace Lane, Meriden,<br />

was charged on Sept. 23 with<br />

second degree breach of<br />

peace and third degree<br />

assault. Bond was set at<br />

$1,500 with an Oct. 7 court<br />

date.<br />

As the vehicle was being<br />

removed from the scene,<br />

police found identification<br />

within the debris linking<br />

Luongo to the vehicle. When<br />

he was initially interviewed<br />

Did you miss our<br />

Weddings <strong>2013</strong><br />

section?<br />

5<br />

Luongo denied any involvement<br />

with the theft of the<br />

vehicle or the accident.<br />

Luongo later admitted to<br />

being involved in this incident.<br />

Police investigating<br />

a purse snatching<br />

Southington police<br />

are investigating a purse<br />

snatching that occurred at<br />

the Cumberland Farms on<br />

Queen Street late last<br />

month.<br />

Police were called to<br />

the Cumberland Farms on<br />

909 Queen St. on<br />

Wednesday, Sept. 25 for a<br />

reported purse snatching.<br />

According to police, the<br />

63-year-old female victim<br />

exited the store and was<br />

walking towards her vehicle<br />

when she was<br />

approached by the suspect.<br />

The suspect grabbed<br />

the victim’s purse and a<br />

struggle ensued.<br />

The suspect was able<br />

to get the victim’s purse<br />

and then he fled the area<br />

on foot in a southeasterly<br />

direction towards Ruby<br />

Tuesday’s and TJ Maxx. A<br />

Police K-9 unit followed<br />

the suspect to<br />

Rethal Street area and surrounding<br />

neighborhoods.<br />

The suspect is<br />

described as a black male,<br />

about six feet tall with a<br />

slender build wearing all<br />

black clothing including a<br />

black ski mask. It is<br />

believed the black male<br />

suspect may live and/or<br />

frequent the northeastern<br />

section of Southington<br />

because he appeared to<br />

have knowledge of the area<br />

when he fled the scene.<br />

The female victim sustained<br />

a dislocated left<br />

shoulder and a fractured<br />

left arm, among other<br />

injuries as a result of this<br />

incident.<br />

Anyone with information<br />

is asked to contact<br />

Detective Kyle Dobratz of<br />

the Southington Police<br />

Department (860) 378-<br />

1654.<br />

Have news you want to get into<br />

The Observer?<br />

Email it to<br />

eharris@southingtonobserver.com.<br />

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6 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

•Second Look Column.......page 8<br />

•Neighbors...................page 9<br />

ED HARRIS editor<br />

Established in 1975<br />

Published weekly by The Step Saver, Inc.<br />

213 Spring St., Southington, CT 06489<br />

editorial: 860-621-6751<br />

advertising: 860-628-9645<br />

circulation: 860-628-9438<br />

fax 860-621-1841<br />

e-mail eharris@southingtonobserver.com<br />

All editorials are intended to reflect the position of the publisher and not that of<br />

any individual editorial writer. Signed columns, on the other hand, reflect the position<br />

of the author and not necessarily those of the publisher.<br />

www.SouthingtonObserver.com<br />

www.StepSaver.com<br />

Creating a harvest<br />

full of memories<br />

We are asking that you tell your neighbors and<br />

friends to tell their neighbors and friends and everyone<br />

else that they know from out of town about this weekend’s<br />

Apple Harvest Festival. The ever popular event has<br />

no problem drawing in local residents, but we would like<br />

to share the early fall classic that is the Apple Harvest<br />

Festival with everyone in the state and beyond.<br />

The festival kicks off this evening, Friday, Oct. 4. It<br />

runs, through Sunday and next weekend, Oct. 11-13.<br />

See our special insert in this week’s Observer for<br />

information on times and events for the festivities.<br />

The festival has become synonymous with<br />

Southington. The festival is known for attracting anywhere<br />

from 75,000 to 100,000 people, depending on the<br />

weather.<br />

The events and activities featured during the festival<br />

have taken on a life of their own.<br />

There are the bed races, which draws a substantial<br />

crowd every year. Each year, residents dress in somewhat<br />

outlandish costumes and push each other down<br />

the street in a bed.<br />

Then there are the apple themed eating contests. Be<br />

it apple pies or other apple based items, residents line<br />

up to bite into the fruity goodness.<br />

Also, do not f<strong>org</strong>et the fritters. It would not be an<br />

Apple Harvest Festival without the fritters. The long,<br />

long lines are there for a reason. Due in large part to<br />

popularity, the fritter booth is the only one open during<br />

the week.<br />

There is also the annual parade, which always draws<br />

a big crowd as families gather to watch the floats and<br />

marchers passed by along the parade route.<br />

The ever popular fireworks are also making a return<br />

this year. The fireworks will blast off Saturday evening.<br />

Though it can no longer be considered a new addition<br />

to the festival, the annual Harvest the Arts event has<br />

created a name for itself. The Harvest the Arts event will<br />

play out during the second weekend (Oct. 11-13) of the<br />

festival.<br />

Harvest the Arts is now placed under the umbrella<br />

of the Apple Harvest, but the event was conceived independently<br />

of the festival. Originally spearheaded by local<br />

artist Mary DeCroce, this year’s parade grand marshal<br />

(we’re hoping she rides in style in the Batmobile) it is a<br />

partnership between several downtown businesses and<br />

those hoping to put their creativity on display.<br />

Another popular returning event is Connecticut<br />

Icon. The competition is the brainchild of Melissa<br />

Ericksen, sponsorship coordinator of this year’s festival.<br />

Auditions were held at Derynoski Elementary School<br />

on Saturday, Sept. 21. The 12 finalists were recently<br />

announced.<br />

Competitions will be held on each of the six days of<br />

the festival, with the group of contestants narrowed<br />

down after each day. By the time, the festival is over, the<br />

fourth “Connecticut Icon” will be chosen.<br />

This year the Apple Harvest Festival celebrates its<br />

45th anniversary. Over the years festival goers have definitely<br />

created a harvest full of memories. We think more<br />

will be made this year.<br />

The Apple Harvest Festival has a lot to offer. We look<br />

forward to seeing you down there the next two weekends.<br />

Our Views<br />

•Good Times........page 16<br />

Welcome home to our soldiers<br />

Recently, Madison Howes and<br />

awaiting her that night. Shortly after<br />

Jasmyne Engman had the surprises<br />

being presented the award and giving<br />

a few remarks, Wache was told<br />

of their young lives, thanks to a<br />

returning Staff Sergeant Michael<br />

that there was one more person that<br />

Howes.<br />

wanted to congratulate her.<br />

Mike had recently returned to<br />

In walked Augelli, with a bouquet<br />

of flowers for his grandmother.<br />

Southington following his fourth<br />

tour of duty in Djibouti, Africa. He<br />

This was the first time that Wache<br />

had been stationed at Camp<br />

had seen her grandson since his<br />

Lemonnier since last November.<br />

return from Afghanistan.<br />

Along with the help of his wife<br />

“This completes the most wonderful<br />

and memorable night of my<br />

Isabela and the staff at Flanders Ed Harris<br />

Elementary School and Southington<br />

life,” Wache said after composing<br />

High School, Mike was able to surprise<br />

both his daughter and step-<br />

story on the tear filled reunion.<br />

Thoughts around town herself, according to an Observer<br />

daughter and provide moments that<br />

Back in June 2009, a then<br />

none of them will ever f<strong>org</strong>et.<br />

After all eight veterans were Southington High School graduate<br />

Madison had started the day lined up in front of the class Howes received a very special graduation<br />

like any other, taking part in a reading<br />

celebration at Flanders. A<br />

him over to give him a hug.<br />

United States Marine.<br />

walked in. Jasmyne nearly bowled present: the return of her brother, a<br />

teacher asked Madison to read her Southington has had its fair<br />

Shortly after receiving her<br />

book aloud to her fellow third grade share of surprise returns over the diploma, Jennifer Policki was surprised<br />

by her brother Andy, who<br />

classmates, when her father walked years.<br />

through the doors of the gymnasium.<br />

Rachel Wache was surprised by her lier that day. Andy, in his full uni-<br />

Last February, local volunteer had returned from Afghanistan ear-<br />

Madison sprung from her chair grandson Staff Sergeant Nicholas form, had waited patiently behind<br />

and jumped into the waiting arms Augelli, who had just completed a members of the school’s faculty.<br />

of her father. She even brought the tour of duty in Afghanistan.<br />

Andy had been stationed in<br />

book she was reading aloud with<br />

In late 2011, Wache was given Afghanistan for several months.<br />

her, in her excitement.<br />

the Southington YMCA’s Unsung However, a vehicle he was driving in<br />

Earlier that day Howes had surprised<br />

his stepdaughter Jasmyne at and other awards was held at the his injuries were minor, Andy was<br />

Hero award. The banquet for this ran over a roadside bomb. Though<br />

Southington High School. Eight veterans<br />

were brought in as cover,<br />

Wache, who said she was sur-<br />

Jennifer’s family had been try-<br />

Aqua Turf this past February.<br />

sent home.<br />

there pretending to take part in a prised by the YMCA honor, did not<br />

lecture.<br />

know she had another surprise<br />

See COLUMN, page 14<br />

Will helpline help? I wouldn’t bet on it<br />

Bill Dunn<br />

Laugh or Death<br />

In recent years politicians in<br />

Ohio approved the construction of<br />

new gambling casinos and horse<br />

tracks. Anticipating a surge in gambling-related<br />

problems, the state also<br />

set up a phone service known as the<br />

“Gambling Helpline.” However,<br />

instead of seeking help for gambling<br />

addiction, most of the calls to the<br />

helpline went something like this:<br />

Operator: “Gambling Helpline.”<br />

Caller: “Yeah, I need help with<br />

gambling.”<br />

Operator: “That’s why we’re here.<br />

What is the nature of your problem?”<br />

Caller: “Well, you see, I keep losing<br />

money at the blackjack table, and<br />

I need some help. If I have 15, and<br />

the dealer has a four showing, should<br />

I take another card, or should I<br />

stand?”<br />

Operator: “What are you, stupid?!<br />

Of course you don’t take another<br />

card! Oh, wait a minute. I’m sorry.<br />

This is not a gambling advice line. It’s<br />

a helpline, for people who are addicted<br />

to gambling and want to quit.”<br />

Caller: “Quit? I don’t wanna quit.<br />

I just wanna win some money once<br />

in a while.”<br />

Other callers to the Gambling<br />

Helpline wanted to know who was<br />

performing in the casino lounge and<br />

what was being served at the buffet. I<br />

guess leaving the words “addiction”<br />

or “problem” out of the Gambling<br />

Helpline title kind of made the mission<br />

of the phone service somewhat<br />

ambiguous.<br />

Does anyone besides me<br />

remember a time in the not-too-distant<br />

past when gambling was considered<br />

a vice, and government policies<br />

focused on preventing people from<br />

gambling at all, rather than treating<br />

gambling as a cash cow that can fill<br />

the state’s coffers? Instead of seeking<br />

needed revenue from gambling, why<br />

doesn’t the state raise the income<br />

tax, the sales tax, the cigarette tax,<br />

and the gasoline tax? Oh wait, never<br />

mind. Here in Connecticut they<br />

raised all those taxes, plus all the<br />

money from the casinos and the lottery,<br />

and they’re still hemorrhaging<br />

red ink in Hartford.<br />

I admit I’m probably not in a<br />

position to judge, since I recently<br />

wrote a column describing my<br />

monthly poker game with friends<br />

from church.(As the Gospel of John<br />

says, “Let he who is without sin cast<br />

the first poker chip.”)<br />

Gambling is one of the few<br />

things to which my addictive personality<br />

has not been attracted. On the<br />

other hand, booze and drugs and<br />

donuts and TV and baseball and a<br />

bunch of other stuff are, well, let’s<br />

put it this way: I think I might be<br />

addicted to 12-step groups, too.<br />

But gambling has never interested<br />

me. Even with the monthly poker<br />

games, I attend mostly for the camaraderie<br />

and the snacks. Losing a<br />

bunch of nickels and dimes during<br />

the actual poker playing, in my view,<br />

is simply the cover charge.<br />

So a monthly low-stakes poker<br />

game where you might lose ten or<br />

twenty dollars is one thing; while<br />

state-sanctioned gambling, where<br />

people routinely lose their entire<br />

weekly paychecks in a few hours, is, I<br />

do believe, quite a different thing. But<br />

officials have set up a helpline phone<br />

service, and at the end of each glitzy<br />

lottery commercial the announcer<br />

says, “Please play responsibly,” so<br />

apparently that washes state leaders’<br />

hands of any culpability when gambling<br />

addiction causes countless people<br />

lose their jobs and marriages and<br />

homes and will-to-live.<br />

There’s an old expression: “You<br />

can’t legislate morality.” People are<br />

going to screw up their lives regardless<br />

of whether it’s illegal. True, but<br />

do we really want the government<br />

actively promoting and profiting<br />

from the self-destructive behavior of<br />

citizens?<br />

Of course, what the heck do I<br />

know? With a 15 in my hand and the<br />

dealer showing a four, I’d probably<br />

take another card.<br />

Bill Dunn is a freelance writer<br />

who resides in Torrington. He can be<br />

reached at<br />

MerryCatholic@gmail.com.


Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

Southington says<br />

Your Views<br />

7<br />

What are<br />

you looking<br />

forward to<br />

the most<br />

about the<br />

Apple<br />

Harvest<br />

Festival?<br />

“Walking around<br />

downtown to see<br />

all of the people<br />

that I know.”<br />

“The apple fritters.”<br />

“I love to see all<br />

of my old friends<br />

in town.”<br />

“I’ve been part of the volunteer<br />

crew for the festival<br />

for 31 years now. I<br />

love being social and<br />

seeing my friends and<br />

meeting new ones.”<br />

“Being with friends plus<br />

I know it is probably the<br />

generic answer, but I<br />

would have to say the<br />

apple fritters.”<br />

Photos by<br />

Tammi Naudus<br />

Judy Miceli<br />

Southington<br />

Ana Aquino<br />

Southington<br />

Letters<br />

BFL proposal is supported<br />

To the Editor,<br />

It was with dismay that I<br />

read about the worries<br />

voiced by some residents<br />

concerning a permanent<br />

location for our community<br />

services food program<br />

known as Bread for Life.<br />

I felt the same emotion<br />

of fear of the unknown when<br />

my own daughters attended<br />

North Center Elementary<br />

School. Transients would<br />

walk the tracks during the<br />

day while school was in session<br />

and traffic coming off<br />

Hobart Street onto North<br />

Main was another concern<br />

as the children had recess<br />

very close to the road and<br />

there had been previous<br />

“close calls” with out of control<br />

autos. Strangers would<br />

walk by the school during<br />

the day as well.<br />

Now they are young<br />

adults and I have lived in<br />

town for many years. Nothing<br />

terrible happened to them<br />

despite my hand wringing.<br />

Of course, we live in an<br />

increasingly violent society,<br />

with lots of desperate souls<br />

around. I respect the concerns<br />

of the parents and residents<br />

who have come forward.<br />

I respect the large<br />

community that continues to<br />

support our most at risk and<br />

homeless population. Bread<br />

for Life and our local community<br />

services agency, in<br />

conjunction with partnerships<br />

with non-governmental<br />

agencies and our state<br />

social services department,<br />

are doing a superb job with<br />

minimal paid staff and<br />

increasingly complex caseloads.<br />

These community agencies<br />

serve the elderly, at risk<br />

families and individuals that<br />

have problems with substance<br />

abuse and joblessness.<br />

The list could go on.<br />

Our local police department<br />

uses a community policing<br />

model which enhances their<br />

ability to interact with the<br />

entire community so they<br />

know where the problem<br />

areas in town exist. The<br />

Board of Education and the<br />

local school administration<br />

are very receptive to the concerns<br />

of parents and residents.<br />

Planning and zoning<br />

welcomes diverse discussion<br />

prior to controversial votes. I<br />

am happy parents and residents<br />

will be able to express<br />

themselves. I hope they<br />

come prepared to offer constructive<br />

criticism and be<br />

willing to compromise on<br />

the issue of the new facility<br />

for Bread for Life.<br />

Personally, as long as<br />

safety concerns are adequately<br />

addressed and the<br />

local law enforcement plan<br />

includes extra vigilance of<br />

the area before, during and<br />

after lunch activities, I do not<br />

think the decision to place<br />

the facility in the chosen<br />

locale will be a detriment to<br />

the school children or their<br />

environment.<br />

I would like to see our<br />

local faith communities<br />

more visible and involved in<br />

the conversation as well.<br />

What is the opinion of the<br />

Clergy Association?<br />

How about STEPS and<br />

the YMCA weighing in on the<br />

controversy developing? The<br />

Southington Chamber of<br />

Commerce, where are your<br />

comments?<br />

The most important<br />

action parents and residents<br />

can take is to visit the Bread<br />

for Life program during the<br />

day, sit and have a meal,<br />

break bread with fellow<br />

human beings and look them<br />

in the eyes. Only then will<br />

you be able to make a decision<br />

based on the true facts<br />

of what the new location will<br />

mean for the beautiful children<br />

of our community. We<br />

all need to operate from a<br />

position of concern and love<br />

for our fellow travelers. As the<br />

“Lutheran Book of Prayer”<br />

encourages in a portion of<br />

one of its prayers, “Help us to<br />

see the needs of the people<br />

on our street, in our community<br />

and throughout the<br />

world. Kindle in our hearts a<br />

love that radiates sympathy,<br />

kindness, concern and generosity<br />

to all humanity.”<br />

Jacqueline Willametz<br />

Southington<br />

Let’s have a campaign on the issues<br />

To the Editor,<br />

We have had four years<br />

of progress lead by people<br />

of strong conviction and<br />

strong integrity. We have<br />

seen improvements to our<br />

infrastructure, schools, senior<br />

center and much more,<br />

all while lowering our taxes.<br />

Please do not fall victim to<br />

a character assassination<br />

campaign with false innuendo<br />

and rhetoric.<br />

Examples of this have<br />

already begun with people<br />

making accusations but not<br />

including all of the facts.<br />

This is the worst form of<br />

negative politics for it tries<br />

to unfairly and untruthfully<br />

affect a person’s reputation.<br />

Let’s have a campaign<br />

based on issues and each<br />

party’s plans for the next two<br />

years. Let’s keep Southington<br />

moving forward.<br />

Deborah Leonard<br />

Southington<br />

Patricia Tellerico<br />

Southington<br />

Kathie Stevens<br />

Southington<br />

Danielle David<br />

Southington<br />

Aresimowicz demands NU<br />

tells public if its outsourcing<br />

House Majority Leader<br />

Joe Aresimowicz (D-Berlin &<br />

Southington), Deputy<br />

Majority Leaders Sandy Nafis<br />

(D-Newington) and Russ<br />

Morin (D-Wethersfield), and<br />

Energy Committee Co-Chair<br />

Lonnie Reed (D-Branford)<br />

joined with other state lawmakers<br />

today to demand<br />

that Northeast Utilities (NU)<br />

tell the public if they are<br />

going to outsource hundreds<br />

of information technology<br />

jobs.<br />

Aresimowicz, who represents<br />

Berlin where the<br />

electric company is headquartered,<br />

met with NU<br />

twice in the past two weeks<br />

to discuss reports that the<br />

company plans to send hundreds<br />

of Connecticut jobs<br />

offshore. However, NU has<br />

refused to publicly confirm if<br />

they are outsourcing<br />

Connecticut jobs.<br />

The Majority Leader<br />

said that it is simply unacceptable<br />

that NU refuses to<br />

publicly disclose their plans<br />

immediately and that the<br />

state’s utilities should be fully<br />

The Southington<br />

Parks & Recreation<br />

Department is offering<br />

beginner and intermediate<br />

ballroom dance lessons<br />

for the fall of <strong>2013</strong>.<br />

These eight classes will be<br />

held on Wednesday<br />

evenings, Oct. 9, 16, 23<br />

transparent. He noted the<br />

company’s already atrocious<br />

record on storm response.<br />

“Sacrificing middle-class<br />

jobs to increase pay for CEOs<br />

is shameful. We are increasingly<br />

becoming a society<br />

where ‘business as usual’<br />

means laying off workers<br />

while executives cash in—<br />

and while it may benefit the<br />

‘one-percenters,’ what does<br />

that mean for the rest of us<br />

who go to work every day to<br />

build a better life for our children?”<br />

said Aresimowicz.<br />

Aresimowicz added,<br />

“Shipping these good-paying<br />

jobs away will not just hurt<br />

Connecticut’s economy, but<br />

it could also pose a serious<br />

security threat. How would<br />

outsourcing jobs—possibly<br />

to foreign countries—help<br />

better protect our electric<br />

grid against cyber-attacks?”<br />

asked Rep. Aresimowicz.<br />

“There are numerous questions<br />

that need answering,<br />

but first and foremost is NU<br />

outsourcing jobs?<br />

Connecticut citizens have a<br />

right to know and they must<br />

and Nov. 13 and 30, from<br />

6:30-7:30 p.m. in the<br />

Plantsville Elementary<br />

School cafeteria, 70<br />

Church St., Plantsville.<br />

A $50 fee is charged<br />

per couple. Class size is<br />

limited. Pre-registration<br />

and payment is required.<br />

tell us.”<br />

This is not a new fight<br />

for Rep. Aresimowicz. In his<br />

first term he introduced legislation<br />

requiring companies<br />

seeking to do business with<br />

the state to identify whether<br />

services would be performed<br />

outside the United States.<br />

The legislation which passed<br />

the House, was never taken<br />

up for a vote in the Senate. If<br />

it had been approved, it<br />

would have also given preference<br />

to contractors with supplies,<br />

materials and equipment<br />

produced, assembled<br />

or manufactured in the<br />

Connecticut or United States<br />

and to services originating<br />

and provided in the state or<br />

United States.<br />

“When NU and<br />

NorthStar first talked merger,<br />

top executives promised that<br />

any downsizing of the workforce<br />

would come through<br />

attrition and retirements, not<br />

layoffs,” said Rep. Reed. “This<br />

is not the first complaint<br />

lodged that claims violation<br />

of that agreement. NU needs<br />

to live up to their word.”<br />

Parks and Rec Dept. to host<br />

ballroom dance lessons<br />

Please contact the Parks &<br />

Recreation Dept. at 860-<br />

276-6219 to register or for<br />

more information.<br />

Program details and<br />

online registration are<br />

also available on the<br />

department’s webpage at<br />

www.southington.<strong>org</strong>.<br />

Political Letters to the Editor info<br />

The upcoming municipal elections take place on Tuesday, Nov. 5. We will no longer print<br />

any political themed Letters to the Editor past our Friday, Oct. 25 edition. As always,<br />

please get your letters to us by noon the Friday prior.


8 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

Tailgate and fundraise at the SEF gala<br />

By LISA CAPOBIANCO<br />

STAFF WRITER<br />

The Southington<br />

Education Foundation welcomes<br />

the public to its fifth<br />

annual Fan of the<br />

Foundation Gala on Friday,<br />

Oct. 25.<br />

With a theme of<br />

“Tailgate at the Turf,” the<br />

event gives attendees an<br />

opportunity to dress in their<br />

favorite sports gear and<br />

apparel while eating tailgate-style<br />

appetizers and<br />

entrees. The gala will also<br />

feature the new STEM<br />

University Lounge, a dormstyle<br />

reclining area that has<br />

a pinball game and a professional<br />

photographer to take<br />

photos of all attendees.<br />

“It is a fun, informal<br />

evening,” said SEF Chair<br />

Dawn Miceli. “Every year we<br />

have some different things<br />

going on.”<br />

Besides the new STEM<br />

University Lounge, the<br />

event will feature live entertainment<br />

from local DJ<br />

Butch Gray along with open<br />

bar and silent auctions.<br />

Miceli said the auction<br />

items are “unique,” and<br />

include student artwork,<br />

principal and gym teacher<br />

for the day opportunities,<br />

Graduation <strong>2013</strong> seating<br />

and more.<br />

Tickets cost $75 each,<br />

and all proceeds will benefit<br />

the Southington public<br />

schools. Currently, the SEF<br />

has warded nearly $100,000<br />

to local classroom initiatives<br />

that increase educational<br />

opportunities. The SEF has<br />

also started a new initiative<br />

with its long-term commitment<br />

to advancing STEM<br />

education within the entire<br />

school district.<br />

Miceli said the community’s<br />

presence at the gala<br />

will play a role in these new<br />

classroom initiatives.<br />

“The education budget<br />

Former governor to speak at Chamber breakfast<br />

Art Secondo<br />

Second Look<br />

When the Chamber of<br />

Commerce schedules its<br />

lineup of speakers for our<br />

series of Celebrity<br />

Breakfasts, the intention<br />

is to provide a speaker<br />

who can keep attendees<br />

interested in their subject<br />

matter for a minimum of<br />

30 minutes.<br />

Over the years we<br />

have selected speakers<br />

from the state government,<br />

state police, presidents<br />

of large corporations,<br />

utility company<br />

leaders and others. Now<br />

we return to a former<br />

Chamber speaker who<br />

was eloquent and informative.<br />

His name is John G.<br />

Rowland.<br />

We asked John to<br />

return as our “Celebrity<br />

Speaker” at our next<br />

breakfast on Wednesday,<br />

Oct. 9 at the Manor Inn.<br />

Rowland is still touting his<br />

political quips and opinions<br />

on WTIC-AM drivetime<br />

radio. He’s as knowledgeable<br />

about state government<br />

as any former<br />

governor.<br />

John was the 86th<br />

governor, from 1995 to<br />

2004. He resigned from<br />

office during a corruption<br />

investigation. He served<br />

his time and paid his<br />

dues.<br />

Since then, Rowland<br />

has become a highly successful<br />

commentator and<br />

speaker, which is always,<br />

was as Governor. The<br />

Waterbury native has<br />

The Southington Education Foundation gala mixes fundraising with tailgating.<br />

can only do so much,” she<br />

said. “Our teachers want<br />

innovative programming for<br />

the students.”<br />

Superintendent Dr.<br />

Joseph Erardi said he feels<br />

appreciative of the work<br />

that SEF puts into the entire<br />

school, and hopes to see<br />

members of the community<br />

changed his life. His 10<br />

months in prison seven<br />

years ago opened him to a<br />

new awakening on what<br />

really is important in life.<br />

Even his sharpest critics<br />

will attest to Rowland’s<br />

sharp wit and understanding<br />

of human<br />

nature. Due to his extension<br />

political background,<br />

Rowland has shuffled<br />

through a maze of jealousy,<br />

personal attacks and<br />

some vicious enemies.<br />

Yet, this writer does not<br />

condone his actions when<br />

he overstepped his<br />

authority as Governor and<br />

was found guilty of several<br />

serious tax, mail and<br />

fraud.<br />

Those who followed<br />

his career from 1980 when<br />

he was elected to the State<br />

House of Representatives<br />

at age 23 and then to<br />

Congress in 1984, point to<br />

his uncanny ability as a<br />

public speaker. He seldom<br />

used notes and was<br />

able to provide a mix of<br />

seriousness and gentle<br />

waves of political jabs<br />

when necessary.<br />

Rowland refused to go<br />

away and now his talk<br />

show during the day has<br />

impressed even some of<br />

his critics who say he has<br />

mastered a fresh<br />

approach to what he sees<br />

as the inefficiency of government.<br />

The noted<br />

Republican has bounced<br />

back from earlier criticism<br />

that he was using his<br />

radio seat to endorse his<br />

chosen candidate in the<br />

Fifth Congressional<br />

District.<br />

Rowland’s personal<br />

website glares of his<br />

accomplishments. “His<br />

exceptional public service<br />

career resulted in a renaissance<br />

throughout the<br />

cities of Connecticut.<br />

Rowland’s vision made<br />

technology, education and<br />

attend the event.<br />

“I am hoping the community<br />

recognizes just how<br />

hard this group works,”<br />

Erardi said. “I look forward<br />

quality of life issues driving<br />

forces to meet the<br />

challenges of the new millennium.<br />

John Rowland’s<br />

leadership can inspire and<br />

motivate those who<br />

attend leadership forums,<br />

corporate meetings and<br />

educational roundtables,”<br />

one remark reads.<br />

Anyone, politician or<br />

not, who can inspire others<br />

to think out-of-the-box<br />

gets my attention. Anyone<br />

who does wrong and pays<br />

the price of that wrong<br />

deserves another chance.<br />

And, anyone who can<br />

fight through personal<br />

setbacks to find solace in<br />

maintaining his previous<br />

talents and skills gets my<br />

attention.<br />

Putting politics aside<br />

and Rowland’s previous<br />

problems, I like others,<br />

should look forward to<br />

welcoming the former<br />

Governor to Southington<br />

and prepare to hear his<br />

FILE PHOTO<br />

to being there.”<br />

Anyone interested in<br />

buying tickets or sponsoring<br />

the event can contact Dawn<br />

Miceli at (860) 681-8006.<br />

remarks with an open<br />

mind. I’ve heard John<br />

Rowland speak many<br />

times, and never has he<br />

bored me or insulted my<br />

own intelligence.<br />

Once again,<br />

Wednesday morning Oct.<br />

9 at the Manor Inn.<br />

Arrival time is 8 a.m. with<br />

breakfast at 8:15 a.m., followed<br />

by Rowland’s talk.<br />

Thank you to Curtis<br />

Robinson of C&R<br />

Development for being a<br />

co-sponsor. Curtis is an<br />

excellent judge of character<br />

and has supported<br />

Rowland as a good<br />

Christian and friend.<br />

Tickets are $15 for<br />

Chamber members and<br />

$20 for guests.<br />

Art Secondo is the<br />

president/CEO of the<br />

Southington Chamber of<br />

Commerce. The opinions<br />

expressed do not necessarily<br />

reflect those of the membership.<br />

Get Your<br />

Local<br />

News<br />

Online!<br />

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Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

•Southington Listings.........page 14<br />

•Good Times........page 16<br />

9<br />

Faces in the Crowd<br />

How long have you<br />

been connected to<br />

Southington?<br />

My grandparents and<br />

great grandparents on one<br />

side of my family are from<br />

town.<br />

What do you like<br />

about the town?<br />

I feel very safe here. It<br />

is also a very pretty town.<br />

What is your favorite<br />

movie?<br />

“Wizard of Waverly<br />

Place, The Movie.” I love<br />

Lillyanna Miceli<br />

Be yourself<br />

TAMMI NAUDUS<br />

Each week we interview a ‘regular person’ like you for<br />

our Faces in the Crowd. This week we meet DePaolo student<br />

Lillyanna Miceli.<br />

Selena Gomez, she is my<br />

role model.<br />

What is the best piece<br />

of advice that you have?<br />

Be yourself, no one<br />

should judge you.<br />

If you could meet anyone<br />

in the world, who<br />

would you like to meet?<br />

Like I said before,<br />

Selena Gomez is my role<br />

model- so I would love to<br />

meet her. I admire her<br />

confidence in what she<br />

does.<br />

SUBMITTED<br />

Taking the backpack challenge<br />

The Giving Back Girls present Marsha Jordan<br />

from Dr. Carol Grant’s practice with an award for<br />

“The Backpack Challenge.” Dr. Grant and her<br />

staff donated several filled backpacks for the<br />

Smart Start Program that helps children in<br />

Southington who are in need. This year The<br />

Giving Back Girls filled and handed out 352 backpacks.<br />

Our Friends<br />

•Sports............Page 36<br />

Southington’s Winterberry Garden<br />

helps Bristol Adult Resource Center<br />

A memorial garden<br />

that was planted several<br />

years ago in honor of a<br />

client of the Bristol Adult<br />

Resource Center recently<br />

received new life when a<br />

Winterberry Garden crew,<br />

from Southington, provided<br />

some much-needed tender<br />

loving care. BARC provides<br />

services and programs for<br />

individuals with disabilities,<br />

helping them to maximize<br />

independence and achieve<br />

inclusion in the community.<br />

Larry’s Park is an integral<br />

part of one of the agency’s<br />

home locations. “It is an<br />

amazing setting for our<br />

clients to take a peaceful<br />

stroll, get some exercise on a<br />

bike, play an outdoor game,<br />

or relax and enjoy the outdoors,”<br />

said Ivonne Daigle,<br />

BARC director of day services.<br />

Winterberry Landscape<br />

and Garden Center, located<br />

at 2070 West St. in<br />

Southington, had originally<br />

designed and installed<br />

Larry’s Park. During the last<br />

few seasons the park had<br />

become overgrown and<br />

unusable.<br />

A Winterberry Garden crew relaxes after revitalizing Larry’s Garden for the<br />

Bristol Adult Resource Center.Winterberry Garden, a Southington landscape and<br />

nursery business, originally designed and planted the memorial park.<br />

“We had been discussing<br />

how we could<br />

approach the huge undertaking<br />

of weeding all the<br />

flower beds, and trimming<br />

the shrubs and trees. We<br />

were anticipating it taking<br />

weeks and requiring lots of<br />

manpower,” Daigle said.<br />

Then the <strong>org</strong>anization<br />

received a call from Scott<br />

Leavitt, co-owner of<br />

Winterberry Garden, offering<br />

to donate the services to<br />

clean up Larry’s Park. “We<br />

were thrilled,” she said.<br />

“When we realized that<br />

clients at BARC were no<br />

longer able to use Larry’s<br />

Park for outdoor activities<br />

because of how overgrown it<br />

had become, we knew we<br />

needed to get involved and<br />

bring the beauty and functionality<br />

back to this muchneeded<br />

space,” Leavitt said.<br />

Photo courtesy of Winterberry Garden<br />

It took eight Winterberry<br />

Garden professionals<br />

to clean the grounds and<br />

flower beds, trim shrubs<br />

and trees, and plant dozens<br />

of beautiful geraniums,<br />

which they donated to the<br />

project.<br />

“We love our refreshed,<br />

revived park and our clients<br />

are definitely taking every<br />

opportunity to enjoy some<br />

time outside,” Daigle said.<br />

Dick Clark tribute set at Aqua Turf<br />

Plantsville welcomes<br />

the extraordinary Latshaw<br />

Pops Orchestra concert and<br />

tribute to the Legendary TV<br />

and Radio icon Dick Clark<br />

with “American Bandstand- A<br />

Tribute To Dick Clark” coming<br />

to Plantsville Monday<br />

Oct. 7, from 12 p.m. to 3:45<br />

p.m. for a lunch and show.<br />

It will be held at Aqua<br />

Turf- 556 Mulberry<br />

St.,Plantsville. Tickets are $57<br />

and can be purchased by<br />

calling Latshaw Productions<br />

at 1-800-528-7429.<br />

Some of the songs<br />

included in this tribute<br />

show include: “Run Around<br />

Sue,” “ Why Must I Be A<br />

Teenager In Love,” “ Twist,”<br />

Put Your Head On My<br />

Shoulders,” “ These Boots<br />

Were Made For Walking,” “<br />

Mrs. Brown You Have a<br />

Lovely Daughter,”<br />

“Kokomo,” “Spooky,”<br />

“Unchained Melody” and<br />

many more.<br />

The Latshaw Pop<br />

Orchestra, singers, and<br />

dancers will take listners<br />

through the ages of time with<br />

favorite America Bandstand<br />

Group seeks those that served<br />

in the 3rd Marine Division<br />

The Third Marine<br />

Division Association<br />

invites anyone who served<br />

with/ or in direct support<br />

of the 3rd Marine Division<br />

at any time to join the<br />

The Latshaw Pop Orchestra, singers, and dancers will take listners through the<br />

era of bandstand music.<br />

group.<br />

For a membership<br />

application or more information,<br />

contact Ray Kelley<br />

at (508) 459-9937 or<br />

mgkm60@yahoo.com.<br />

music that never grows old.<br />

They have performed in the<br />

U.S. and Canada, headlining<br />

at the Tropicana in Atlantic<br />

Photo courtesy of Latshaw Productions<br />

City. The Orchestra features<br />

30 professional musicians,<br />

singers and dancers in a two<br />

hour show.<br />

www.SouthingtonObserver.com<br />

Point & Click<br />

Read it all on the Web.<br />

www.SouthingtonObserver.com


10 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

Our Healthy Lifestyles<br />

I’m all in. How about you? Are you in?<br />

I have had the pleasure<br />

and honor to be involved<br />

with STEPS since the beginning.<br />

Our community had<br />

been tragically awakened in<br />

a short period of time when<br />

a number of our young people<br />

in the community took<br />

their own lives. We had two<br />

simple choices: We could<br />

continue on and rationalize<br />

that we’re no different than<br />

other communities and this<br />

happens everywhere. Or,<br />

we could say no, not in our<br />

community. We chose the<br />

latter and f<strong>org</strong>ed forward<br />

on a relentless mission to<br />

nurture and help protect<br />

our local children.<br />

I think this is an appropriate<br />

time to provide some<br />

info about STEPS. STEPS<br />

(Southington’s Town-wide<br />

Effort to Promote Success)<br />

is a community coalition<br />

located right here in<br />

Southington. We are an<br />

asset based prevention<br />

coalition that is following<br />

the Search Institutes 40<br />

Developmental Asset<br />

Model.<br />

We are made up of<br />

leaders from every sector of<br />

the Southington community,<br />

all with the same intentions<br />

of ensuring our youth<br />

grow up to be caring, competent<br />

and successful individuals.<br />

Our members<br />

come from the following<br />

sectors: Substance<br />

Prevention programs, our<br />

local media, the<br />

Southington Board of<br />

Education and school system,<br />

our local government<br />

and Town Council, healthcare<br />

professionals, several<br />

civic and volunteer groups,<br />

the United Way of<br />

Southington, religious and<br />

fraternal <strong>org</strong>anizations, the<br />

Have you ever heard<br />

stories of people who lose a<br />

leg but still feel that leg? It<br />

is called phantom pain and<br />

occurs because the person’s<br />

brain doesn’t realize that<br />

their limb is gone and still<br />

imagines it is there. I think<br />

this is a great topic and<br />

should be explored further.<br />

If I asked you how you<br />

feel cold or what you see<br />

with or how you hear, you<br />

would probably answer, I<br />

feel cold with my hands, I<br />

see with my eyes and hear<br />

with my ears. In reality,<br />

however, those answers are<br />

wrong. We actually feel, see<br />

and hear along with every<br />

other sensation with our<br />

brains. Well, how does that<br />

work?<br />

Our nervous system is<br />

like a highway. We have<br />

northbound and southbound<br />

traffic. The northbound<br />

traffic starts at our<br />

extremities or <strong>org</strong>ans or<br />

John Myers<br />

Southington<br />

YMCA<br />

Southington Police and Fire<br />

Departments,<br />

the<br />

Southington YMCA,<br />

Southington Youth Services,<br />

the Southington Chamber<br />

of Commerce, parents, PTO<br />

groups and most importantly,<br />

our youth.<br />

We are all very dedicated<br />

to work together to make<br />

Southington a better place<br />

for youth.<br />

I would like to personally<br />

and publically thank<br />

the following for serving on<br />

our STEPS Advisory Board.<br />

Heather Barley, Garry<br />

Brumback, Nancy Chiero,<br />

Chief Buddy Clark, Chief<br />

Jack Daly, Kaye Dave, Rev.<br />

Jim Debner, Kelly<br />

DelDebbio, John Dobbins,<br />

Dr Joseph Erardi, Mihaela<br />

Fodor, Richard Fortunato,<br />

Tom Gallo, Jim Garstang,<br />

Brian Goralski, Justine<br />

Griffin (student) Kristen<br />

Guida, Trish Kenefick, Sarah<br />

Lamb (student) Shane<br />

Lockwood, Chris Palmieri,<br />

Trevor Rogers (student),<br />

Sue Saucier, Jackie St. John,<br />

Victoria Triano, and Rachel<br />

Wache. Of course a big<br />

shout out and thank you to<br />

our Youth Prevention<br />

Coordinator Kelly Leppard<br />

end units. The receptors,<br />

for example in our fingertips<br />

travel through our<br />

hands up our arms up our<br />

neck to our brains where<br />

the brain then interprets<br />

what we just touched. The<br />

brain then send impulses<br />

southbound back to the<br />

receptors to make what<br />

ever adjustments need to<br />

be made.<br />

For example, you touch<br />

who is assisted by Evelyn<br />

Ciaburri.<br />

Together this dynamic,<br />

passionate, and talented<br />

group help fulfill our STEPS<br />

mission with the following<br />

expected outcomes:<br />

Prevent and reduce substance<br />

abuse in the<br />

Southington Community,<br />

youth will build core competencies,<br />

youth will<br />

engage in healthy activities<br />

and our community will<br />

offer safe outlets for recreation.<br />

Through the support of<br />

the Town of Southington<br />

and from funds through the<br />

Drug Free Community<br />

Grant we have been able to<br />

develop a foundation and<br />

framework that keep this<br />

movement of protecting<br />

our children sustainable for<br />

future generations. But our<br />

work is far from over. In fact<br />

we need more help and the<br />

good news is that helping or<br />

being part is not hard at all!<br />

Let’s take a look on how<br />

folks can help support our<br />

children by building assets<br />

in our children through regular<br />

every day interactions<br />

in their neighborhood.<br />

A neighborhood is<br />

more than a place where<br />

people sleep or grab a bite<br />

to eat. A neighborhood can<br />

and should be an important<br />

community in which people<br />

of all ages feel cared for<br />

and secure. This kind of<br />

neighborhood isn’t the<br />

norm in most communities,<br />

but with a focus on asset<br />

building it could be. Two of<br />

the 40 Developmental<br />

Assets (#4: caring neighborhood;<br />

and #13: neighborhood<br />

boundaries) focus<br />

specifically on the important<br />

role neighbors have in<br />

a hot iron. The heat is<br />

sensed by the heat receptors<br />

in your fingers, quickly<br />

traves up to the brain by the<br />

pathway I described, the<br />

brain interprets heat as a<br />

bad thing and quickly sends<br />

impulses down the southbound<br />

path way to cause<br />

you to move the hand away.<br />

And this happens in fractions<br />

of seconds.<br />

Another example<br />

would be if a friend was<br />

calling to you. And that<br />

friend is on your right. The<br />

hearing receptors in the ear<br />

send the sound to the auditory<br />

part of the brain which<br />

interprets that the sound is<br />

coming from the right and<br />

the brain sends impulses to<br />

the muscles in your neck to<br />

cause you to turn your<br />

head to the right.<br />

But just like in real<br />

highway life, traffic jams<br />

can occur and traffic can<br />

slowdown or stop. Certain<br />

building assets. Here are<br />

ideas on how neighbors can<br />

build assets. And we have<br />

learned through ‘tons of<br />

data’ that the more assets<br />

our kids have the better<br />

chance they have for success.<br />

Individuals: Learn the<br />

names of kids who live<br />

around you. Find out what<br />

interests them.<br />

Treat neighbors of all<br />

ages with respect and courtesy;<br />

expect them to treat<br />

you with respect and courtesy<br />

too.<br />

If you live in an apartment<br />

or condominium,<br />

spend time in gathering<br />

places, such as front steps,<br />

courtyards, meeting rooms,<br />

pools, laundry rooms, and<br />

lobbies. Greet and talk with<br />

others there. If you have a<br />

front yard, hang out there<br />

once in awhile.<br />

Take personal responsibility<br />

for building neighborhood<br />

boundaries. When<br />

you see someone in the<br />

neighborhood doing something<br />

you think is inappropriate,<br />

talk to her or him<br />

about why it bothers you.<br />

Find other neighbors<br />

who want to make a longterm<br />

commitment to asset<br />

building. Begin developing<br />

strategies for working<br />

together to build assets in<br />

your neighborhood.<br />

Take time to play or<br />

just be with the young people<br />

on your block or in your<br />

building. Encourage them<br />

to talk and then listen to<br />

what they have to say:<br />

Invite neighbors (especially<br />

those with children and<br />

teenagers) to your home.<br />

Get to know each other and<br />

find out what you have in<br />

common.<br />

diseases like Multiple<br />

Sclerosis causes damage to<br />

the nerves themselves and<br />

cause the transmission of<br />

impulses to slow and stop.<br />

Interference of nerve<br />

impulses can also occur<br />

with trauma, such as<br />

whiplash. If anything<br />

occurs to irritate the<br />

nerves, that will change the<br />

ability of the sensation to<br />

transmit to and from the<br />

brain. So if your head is<br />

whipped back and forth,<br />

the vertebrae can get twisted<br />

or tilted and that can<br />

irritate the joints and<br />

nerves. So, while the receptors<br />

will pick up the information<br />

and send it up the<br />

northbound highway, as<br />

soon as it gets to the intersection<br />

in the neck, a traffic<br />

jam can occur.<br />

Then the brain is not<br />

getting the correct input, so<br />

it cannot send out the correct<br />

output. And various<br />

results can happen.<br />

Maybe pain will be<br />

sensed, maybe tingling or<br />

numbness. Maybe ringing<br />

in the ears or constipation<br />

will be felt. Maybe muscle<br />

spasm or muscle weakness<br />

will be noticed. The interference<br />

needs to be<br />

removed for the body to<br />

Once in a while, leave<br />

messages (with chalk on<br />

sidewalks or by hanging<br />

notes on doors) saying how<br />

much you appreciate a certain<br />

neighbor. Do this for<br />

neighbors of all ages.<br />

If you have children,<br />

talk to other parents about<br />

the boundaries and expectations<br />

they have for their<br />

children. Discuss how you<br />

can support and respect<br />

each other.<br />

Figure out what you can<br />

provide for young people in<br />

your neighborhood. Can you<br />

set up a basketball hoop?<br />

Can you offer some space for<br />

a neighborhood garden? Can<br />

you give one hour of your<br />

time on weekends to shoot<br />

baskets with young people<br />

who live near you?<br />

If you have concerns<br />

about your neighborhood,<br />

talk with other neighbors<br />

about your feelings. If others<br />

share your concerns,<br />

gather a group to work on<br />

addressing them. Even if<br />

you don’t solve all of the<br />

problems, you’ll strengthen<br />

your neighborhood<br />

through the process.<br />

Attend a game, play, or<br />

event that a neighborhood<br />

child or teenager is involved<br />

in. Congratulate the young<br />

person after the event.<br />

Be aware of graduations<br />

and other major<br />

events in the lives of children.<br />

Once you know your<br />

neighbors, find out more<br />

about their extended family<br />

and friends. Some elderly<br />

people have grandchildren<br />

who visit. Or parents may<br />

have custody of their children<br />

on certain days of the<br />

week. Get to know these<br />

young people who periodically<br />

visit.<br />

Pay attention whenever<br />

you see a young person.<br />

Take time to smile and say<br />

hello. If you have a few<br />

moments, stop and visit. Do<br />

this while you’re walking,<br />

waiting for a bus, or waiting<br />

in line somewhere.<br />

Groups: Start a neighborhood<br />

group. Focus on<br />

safety, neighborhood<br />

improvement, or just having<br />

fun.<br />

Organize a neighborhood<br />

book swap. Ask neighbors<br />

to donate books<br />

they’ve already read and<br />

have everyone come to find<br />

new books.<br />

Start a neighborhood<br />

check-in program. Form<br />

small clusters and check in<br />

with each other on a regular<br />

basis. If someone needs help<br />

or support, gather a group to<br />

pitch in and help out.<br />

If you have problems<br />

with crime or safety in your<br />

neighborhood, regularly<br />

talk with your local police<br />

department to find out what<br />

is being done to address the<br />

issues. Ask them what you<br />

and other neighbors can do<br />

to make a difference.<br />

See? That’s not too hard<br />

at all!! If you can help out with<br />

any of the ideas above – you’re<br />

in. On behalf our STERPS<br />

Advisory Board and staff<br />

thanks for being part our<br />

STEPS Coalition. If you are<br />

interested in becoming more<br />

involved in STEPS, please<br />

contact Kelly Leppard at 860-<br />

275-6285. If you’d like more<br />

information on what’s going<br />

on at the Southington<br />

Community YMCA please<br />

contact John Myers, YMCAs<br />

Executive Director at 860-<br />

621-8737 or jmyers@sccymca.<strong>org</strong>.<br />

We feel, see, hear and touch through our brains<br />

Dr. Carol Grant<br />

Alternatively<br />

Speaking<br />

work correctly. And that is<br />

what a chiropractor does.<br />

Dr. Carol Grant, a local<br />

chiropractor, does not<br />

intend this column to substitute<br />

for medical advice.<br />

She urges you to always<br />

consult with your personal<br />

physician before changing<br />

any current program.<br />

www.SouthingtonObserver.com<br />

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Now Available Through<br />

Web Site<br />

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Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

11<br />

Local woman battles ‘rhino horn poachers’ in South Africa<br />

By KAITLYN NAPLES<br />

STAFF WRITER<br />

In South Africa last<br />

year, 618 rhinoceroses lost<br />

their lives after being the<br />

victims of the act of “rhino<br />

horn poaching,” or having<br />

their horns cut off to be<br />

sold on the black market or<br />

for Asian medicinal purposes.<br />

Southington resident,<br />

formerly from Bristol,<br />

Patricia Futoma had the<br />

opportunity to recently<br />

meet a rhino that had been<br />

poached, and survived. As<br />

a fourth year veterinary<br />

student at Iowa State<br />

University, with a bachelor’s<br />

degree from the<br />

University of Connecticut<br />

in Animal Science, Futoma,<br />

26, had the opportunity to<br />

participate in a study<br />

abroad program this summer<br />

called “Vets Go Wild,”<br />

held in the Amakhala<br />

Game Reserve in South<br />

Africa, East of Port<br />

Elizabeth.<br />

The program allowed<br />

veterinary professionals<br />

from around the world to<br />

attend the program that<br />

was put on by veterinarian<br />

William Fowlds, Futoma<br />

said in an email interview.<br />

It is a program designed to<br />

educate students about<br />

wildlife medicine topics.<br />

Futoma said, on the<br />

trip, the students witnessed,<br />

firsthand, the result<br />

of rhino horn poaching and<br />

its impact on South Africa<br />

and the rhinos. In particular,<br />

they learned how it<br />

Patricia Futoma, of Southington, spent two weeks in South Africa this summer<br />

working with rhinos who are potential victims of poaching.<br />

affected a rhino named<br />

“Thandi.”<br />

“After working with<br />

Thandi, a recent poaching<br />

victim, we were inspired to<br />

make a difference,” Futoma<br />

said, adding that she and<br />

her peers started a fund<br />

raising group to raise<br />

awareness about rhino<br />

horn poaching.<br />

Futoma said rhinos are<br />

poached for their horns<br />

because they are worth<br />

their weight in gold on the<br />

black market.<br />

“They are commonly<br />

used in traditional Asian<br />

medicine despite the fact<br />

that they offer no medicinal<br />

value (and its use is illegal),”<br />

she said. “Sadly, most<br />

rhinos that are poached<br />

eventually die and have a<br />

slow, painful death,” she<br />

said, because they suffer<br />

massive blood loss.<br />

“The value of the horn<br />

has increased, and it may<br />

bring in as much as<br />

$100,000 per kilogram,” she<br />

said. Poachers are often<br />

linked with highly <strong>org</strong>anized<br />

crime.<br />

SUBMITTED<br />

Her fundraising group<br />

is called “One Rhino” and<br />

can be found at<br />

www.gofundme.com/onerhino.<br />

Futoma said the proceeds<br />

will benefit the<br />

Reserve Protection Agency,<br />

which is a group that uses<br />

military-grade technology<br />

to monitor and survey the<br />

rhinos to prevent poaching,<br />

and also will benefit<br />

the Interjection Fund, a<br />

group that provides medications<br />

to rhinos that have<br />

survived. She said she is<br />

also hoping to have $20<br />

Tunxis to raise awareness on<br />

National Depression Screening Day<br />

By LISA CAPOBIANCO<br />

STAFF WRITER<br />

An estimated one in<br />

10 adults in the U.S. has<br />

reported feeling<br />

depressed, according to<br />

the Centers for Disease<br />

Control and Prevention<br />

(CDC).<br />

Of the 19 million<br />

Americans who suffer from<br />

depression each year,<br />

many experience their first<br />

symptoms just before or<br />

during college, the<br />

University of Michigan<br />

Depression Center reported.<br />

In response to this<br />

mental health issue, Tunxis<br />

Community College in<br />

Farmington plans to hold<br />

its National Depression<br />

Screening Day on<br />

Thursday, Oct. 10 from 10<br />

a.m. to 2 p.m. for a free<br />

mental health check-up,<br />

along with anonymous<br />

informational screenings<br />

for depression and other<br />

mood disorders including<br />

anxiety, bipolar disorder,<br />

and post traumatic stress<br />

disorder (PTSD).<br />

The public will have<br />

the opportunity to take a<br />

five-minute questionnaire<br />

that addresses mood disorders<br />

as well as to speak<br />

with a counselor and<br />

screeners. Vivian Craven, a<br />

counselor at Tunxis who<br />

helps coordinate the<br />

event, said the screening<br />

has helped so many people<br />

since it started at the<br />

college ten years ago.<br />

“We decided that it<br />

was worth the funding,”<br />

Craven said. “These disorders<br />

are treatable, usually<br />

with a combination of<br />

therapy and medication.”<br />

Dr. Frances O’Neil, a<br />

psychologist at Tunxis who<br />

helps recruit volunteers to<br />

help out with the event,<br />

encourages people to<br />

undergo the screening so<br />

they can become aware of<br />

the symptoms they may<br />

experience.<br />

“Many people may be<br />

experiencing listlessness,<br />

lack of energy and enthusiasm…and<br />

interpret the<br />

symptoms as due to physical<br />

or maybe even economic<br />

problems,” Dr.<br />

O’Neil said. “Yet these can<br />

be just a few of the indicators<br />

of depression.”<br />

Dr. O’Neil also said<br />

that with the onset of the<br />

fall and winter, residents<br />

in the northern climate<br />

may experience Seasonal<br />

Affective Disorder.<br />

“The lack of sunlight<br />

may cause them to sleep<br />

more, put on weight and<br />

feel blue,” she said. “This<br />

condition can be remedied.”<br />

According to the CDC,<br />

an individual who feels<br />

depressed may exhibit<br />

sadness or anxiety for<br />

weeks at a time. Other<br />

signs of depression include<br />

feelings of hopelessness<br />

and guilt, irritability, loss<br />

of appetite or overeating,<br />

insomnia, fatigue and<br />

decreased energy, persistent<br />

aches or pains,<br />

headaches, digestive problems<br />

that do not improve,<br />

lost of interest in activities<br />

that were once enjoyable<br />

and thoughts of suicide.<br />

Craven said everyone<br />

may experience these<br />

signs at certain points in<br />

their lives, especially when<br />

they lose a loved one or a<br />

job. But she reported that<br />

these signs become serious<br />

when they interfere<br />

with everyday activities for<br />

a long period of time.<br />

“Everyone will go<br />

through situations,”<br />

Craven said. “It [becomes<br />

serious] when it goes<br />

beyond a certain period of<br />

time, when it is affecting<br />

your life.”<br />

National Depression<br />

Screening Day takes place<br />

annually in <strong>October</strong> to<br />

spread awareness of<br />

depression and other mental<br />

health disorders, and to<br />

inform the public about<br />

treatments and symptoms.<br />

www.SouthingtonObserver.com<br />

Point & Click<br />

Read it all on the Web.<br />

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Rhino Force bracelets be<br />

brought to the United<br />

States to raise more awareness<br />

about poaching. Right<br />

now the bracelets are not<br />

available in the U.S., and<br />

are locally made in South<br />

Africa.<br />

When she arrived in<br />

South Africa, Futoma said<br />

she never knew anything<br />

about rhino horn poaching.<br />

After meeting Thandi<br />

and working with her,<br />

Futoma said she wanted to<br />

raise awareness for others<br />

who probably don’t know<br />

what it is.<br />

“Although rhinos have<br />

a ‘tough’ exterior, they are<br />

gentle creatures at heart,”<br />

she added.<br />

Thandi was poached in<br />

March of 2012, and Futoma<br />

said she is still in recovery<br />

mode, especially since her<br />

face was re-injured by a<br />

male rhino that she was<br />

being re-introduced to.<br />

Futoma said the experience<br />

showed her what<br />

these rhinos, who survive,<br />

go through and introduced<br />

her to “many compassionate<br />

people that are working<br />

to save her (Thandi) and<br />

other rhinos.”<br />

“Overall, I saw the<br />

worst side of humanity,<br />

and then the best side of it.<br />

It gives me hope that things<br />

will get better,” she added.<br />

Being a veterinarian is<br />

something Futoma said she<br />

always wanted to do, and<br />

would bring home any animal<br />

she could when she<br />

was younger. She worked at<br />

the humane society in<br />

Meriden, and became<br />

involved in animal rescue.<br />

She is enrolled in the Iowa<br />

State, College of Veterinary<br />

Medicine, as a Connecticut<br />

contract student, which is a<br />

program out of University<br />

of Connecticut.<br />

In the future, she said<br />

she wants to stay involved<br />

in nonprofit groups,<br />

because it is what she is<br />

passionate about.<br />

“I love animal rescue,<br />

low cost spay and neuter,<br />

and now conservation<br />

medicine. I would actually<br />

love to do international<br />

relief work if the opportunity<br />

came up,” she added.<br />

Comments? Email<br />

knaples@BristolObserver.<br />

com.<br />

HAPPY BIRTHDAY<br />

in<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

2 Lucky Birthday<br />

Winners Each Week<br />

CONGRATULATIONS:<br />

BIRTHDAY CAKE<br />

WINNER!<br />

Andrew Narus<br />

<strong>October</strong> 7, age 7<br />

Raffi<br />

Blocher<br />

<strong>October</strong> 5, age 5<br />

$25 Gift Certificate<br />

courtesy of<br />

Miracle Creative<br />

Hair Design<br />

Believe in Miracles<br />

26 Bristol St., Southington, CT<br />

(860) 426-9890<br />

Randy<br />

Denoto<br />

<strong>October</strong> 6, age 6<br />

Karen<br />

Jankavich<br />

<strong>October</strong> 10, age 65<br />

HAIR DESIGN<br />

WINNER!<br />

Carol Roberts<br />

<strong>October</strong> 6, age 75<br />

Timothy<br />

Hughes<br />

<strong>October</strong> 8, age 11<br />

Cake<br />

(Value up to $10)<br />

courtesy of<br />

213 Spring St., Southington, CT<br />

(860) 628-9645<br />

www.stepsaver.com<br />

To enter, call, email, fax or mail name, age and birth date of your special person from Southington to:<br />

Southington Observer • 213 Spring St., Southington, CT<br />

Phone: (860) 628-9645 • Fax: (860) 621-1841<br />

Email: nthompson@stepsaver.com<br />

Entries must be received prior to birth date. 2 winners will be drawn at random from<br />

all entries. All birthday entries will be listed. Winners will be contacted by phone.


12 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

National Guard unit led by<br />

local man returns home<br />

HARTFORD, Conn.<br />

(AP)-An aviation unit of<br />

the Connecticut Army<br />

National Guard returned<br />

recently, after a yearlong<br />

deployment to<br />

Afghanistan.<br />

Some 60 soldiers from<br />

the 2nd Battalion, 104th<br />

Aviation Regiment of<br />

Windsor Locks arrived on a<br />

recent Saturday afternoon<br />

at the Army Aviation<br />

Support Facility in Windsor<br />

Locks.<br />

The unit uses Chinook<br />

helicopters to move supplies<br />

and personnel for the military.<br />

It deployed previously<br />

to Afghanistan in 2003 and<br />

to Iraq in 2009.<br />

The unit is led by<br />

Capt. Evan Lock of<br />

Southington.<br />

The Connecticut<br />

National Guard now has<br />

more than 70 soldiers and<br />

airmen deployed in support<br />

of operations in<br />

Afghanistan.<br />

An aviation unit from the Connecticut Army<br />

National Guard, commanded by Capt. Evan Lock of<br />

Southington, recently returned home.<br />

Above, a welcome home poster hangs on Lock’s<br />

house.<br />

Removal of Almost Anything!<br />

• Rubbish • Appliances<br />

• Furniture • Junk<br />

• Basements • Garages<br />

• Estate Move Outs<br />

SUBMITTED<br />

Cannot be combined<br />

with any other offer.<br />

SOUTHINGTON (860) 628-1013<br />

Fully Insured • Family Operated • Free Estimates<br />

We would like to Welcome<br />

to our Practice<br />

Dr. Aniello Picone • Dr. Joseph Picone • Dr. Gino Brino<br />

Welcoming New Patients Of All Ages<br />

Early morning and evening hours available<br />

Obituaries<br />

Diane Porter, will be missed by those who knew her<br />

Diane (Korczyk)<br />

Porter, 54, of Southington,<br />

passed away after a courageous<br />

battle with cancer<br />

on Tuesday, Sept. 24, at<br />

the Masonic Home &<br />

Hospital in Wallingford.<br />

She was born on Oct.<br />

24, 1958 in Chicago, IL,<br />

the daughter of the late<br />

Lester L. Pierson Jr., 48,<br />

of Southington passed away<br />

on Sunday, Sept.29, at<br />

Home, surrounded by his<br />

loving family after a courageous<br />

battle with cancer.<br />

He was the husband of<br />

Violet (Depa) Pierson.<br />

He was born on Nov.<br />

30, 1965, in Waterbury, and<br />

was the son of Rita (Drouin)<br />

LaChance of Waterbury and<br />

the late Lester L. Pierson Sr.<br />

He was an account<br />

manager for Cartus in<br />

Danbury and will be<br />

remembered by his many<br />

friends he made there. He<br />

was a soccer coach for various<br />

Southington Youth<br />

leagues for over 10 years.<br />

He loved his dogs, to travel,<br />

Bruno and<br />

Mary<br />

(Surzyn)<br />

Korczyk.<br />

Porter is<br />

survived by<br />

her sister and<br />

brother-inlaw,<br />

Bee and<br />

Porter<br />

Michael Riccio of<br />

play golf and<br />

go fishing.<br />

Lester was an<br />

eternal optimist<br />

who<br />

could always<br />

find the best<br />

in people. He<br />

Pierson<br />

was passionate<br />

about many things<br />

including politics, social<br />

issues, the Boston Red Sox,<br />

Dallas Cowboy and Boston<br />

Bruins but most importantly<br />

he was passionate about<br />

his wife and two sons.<br />

Southington, nephews<br />

who were like brothers to<br />

her, Brian, Larry, Greg,<br />

Steven and wife Erika,<br />

David and wife Joyce and<br />

Paul, a niece, her godchild,<br />

Janice Brunetti and<br />

husband Tom. She also<br />

leaves special great nieces<br />

and nephews, Nicholas,<br />

In addition to his wife<br />

and mother, he is survived<br />

by his children, Nicholas<br />

and Jonathan Pierson of<br />

Southington, his step father<br />

Robert J. LaChance of<br />

Waterbury, a brother Robert<br />

M. LaChance of Meriden,<br />

four sisters, Wendy Pratt of<br />

New Hampshire, Tracy<br />

Bette of Southbury, Robyn<br />

Bergin of Terryville and<br />

Brady LaChance of<br />

Waterbury, his mother and<br />

father-in-law Wieslawa and<br />

Wladyslaw Depa of<br />

TURBO TURF<br />

HYDROSEEDING<br />

New Lawn Installations<br />

Overseeding & Repairs to Existing Lawns<br />

Dethatch & Aerate<br />

Small Tractor / Back Hoe Work • Power Sweep Lawn<br />

Spreading of Topsoil, Stone & Mulch<br />

Stone Bases for Sheds<br />

Senior<br />

DISCOUNTS<br />

TIRED<br />

of<br />

Pushing<br />

your<br />

Sara, Olivia, Jack,<br />

Stephanie and Michael.<br />

Donations may be<br />

made in Diane?s name to<br />

the Susan G. Komen<br />

Breast Cancer<br />

Foundation, 74 Batterson<br />

Park Road, Farmington,<br />

CT 06032.<br />

Lester Pierson, coached soccer in youth leagues<br />

control<br />

Bob Semrow Jr.<br />

Lic. # B-1714<br />

2000<br />

Mice, Bees, Ants,<br />

other creepy insects<br />

and termites<br />

(860)<br />

628-8783<br />

In Loving Memory<br />

Hank Germaine<br />

May 9, 1960 - Oct 1, 2012<br />

A whole year has gone by<br />

without you by our side. We<br />

were not ready to say goodbye.<br />

Not ready to live our lives<br />

without you. Your kindness,<br />

generosity, warmth and sense<br />

of humor made you the man<br />

that we love. Missing you<br />

every minute of the day.<br />

Denise, Ryan and Danielle<br />

Hey You!<br />

Deadlines for submissions<br />

are Fridays at<br />

noon for the following<br />

week’s edition.<br />

Email items to:<br />

eharris@southington<br />

observer.com.<br />

J B<br />

Auto<br />

& Repair<br />

LLC<br />

OIL CHANGE<br />

Safety<br />

$19.95<br />

Inspection<br />

& Courtesy Vac (Synthetic Add $20)<br />

25 Darling Street, Southington, CT 06489<br />

860-480-8474<br />

• AUTHORIZED<br />

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WHOLE HOUSE CARBONE FILTERS<br />

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Cannot be combined with any other offer.<br />

Expires 12/31/13<br />

Southington. He also leaves<br />

several nieces and nephews<br />

and many loving and longtime<br />

friends.<br />

Donations may be<br />

made in his memory to the<br />

American Cancer Society,<br />

825 Brook St., I-91 Tech. Ctr.<br />

Rocky Hill, CT 06067.<br />

IN MEMORY OF<br />

Hank Germaine<br />

5/9/60 - 10/1/12<br />

It’s been a year since you’re<br />

been gone. Why does it feel<br />

like it was only yesterday?<br />

We miss your teasing and<br />

the pranks you loved to<br />

pull on us. What wonderful<br />

memories we have. You are<br />

in our thoughts always.<br />

Love you and miss you<br />

Mom J., Michele, Jarrid<br />

For More Information Please Visit<br />

http://PlumberinSouthingtonCT.com<br />

NS3 SALT<br />

FREE WATER<br />

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PC600 WHOLE HOUSE<br />

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ESTIMATES<br />

LAWN MOWER?<br />

Now Accepting New<br />

Lawn Mowing Accounts<br />

The Observer is now on<br />

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Look us up and help spread the<br />

word around town.<br />

954 South Main St, Plantsville, CT 06479 • (860) 628-4761<br />

www.southingtonfamilydentistry.com<br />

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Providing quality and reliable service since 1996<br />

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Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

Home is among the orchards<br />

Sarah Johnson<br />

A Place<br />

of Our Own<br />

Last week was my 29th<br />

birthday. I know… how exciting!<br />

But really, my birthday is<br />

not the highlight of the season<br />

for me, it just happens to<br />

correlate with all the fun<br />

autumn stuff going on. So, as<br />

I’ve done for every birthday<br />

since the dawn of (my) time,<br />

I headed off to Rogers<br />

Orchards in Southington for<br />

various apple-related treats.<br />

I’ve always gone to the store<br />

on the New Britain side of<br />

town, having grown up in<br />

that area. While there, lovingly<br />

petting the local bunnies<br />

near the big rock, I thought<br />

that if this place felt so much<br />

like home and warm memories<br />

for me, it must certainly<br />

hold some for the family who<br />

Southington<br />

Southington<br />

has run the orchard for<br />

decades.<br />

Peter Rogers is the son<br />

of the current family owners,<br />

running the farm, stores and<br />

orchards with his mother,<br />

father, sister, and brother-inlaw.<br />

He is currently one of<br />

two vice presidents of the<br />

local company.<br />

“My great, five times<br />

back, grandfather Chauncey<br />

Merriman started planting<br />

Baldwin apple trees on<br />

Merriman Farm over 200<br />

years ago,” Peter said, sharing<br />

some history of the orchards.<br />

“For three generations, there<br />

were only daughters born to<br />

the Merriman family until<br />

finally, Sarah Merriman married<br />

Elijah Rogers, who<br />

owned nearby Lakeview<br />

Farm and started what we<br />

now know as Rogers<br />

Orchards. My father is the<br />

seventh generation of Rogers<br />

to run it.”<br />

Peter shares vice president<br />

responsibilities with<br />

Greg Parzych, who has a science<br />

background to complement<br />

Peter’s business background.<br />

“We work well<br />

together,” Peter said. “Greg<br />

works on plant science and<br />

production. I handle wholesale,<br />

retail and accounting.”<br />

Peter attended school in<br />

Southington then went on to<br />

Trinity College in Hartford,<br />

where he studied economics<br />

then briefly worked in that<br />

industry before returning to<br />

the family business.<br />

The Rogers family themselves<br />

aren’t the only generational<br />

group involved in<br />

operations around the<br />

orchard. According to Peter,<br />

many Southington families<br />

have had members going<br />

back decades working in the<br />

fields and in the stores.<br />

Families like the Huttons, of<br />

which father Rick is the general<br />

manager as well as the<br />

Smedbergs from town, have<br />

kids who come back to work<br />

on vacations and visit regularly.<br />

In peak harvest season,<br />

See REAL PEOPLE,<br />

page 14<br />

SARAH JOHNSON<br />

Rogers Orchards’s general manager Rick Hutton and<br />

vice-president Peter Rogers sort baskets of apples in<br />

the Long Bottom Road showroom on a busy Sunday<br />

morning<br />

BRISTOL-THIS LOVELY CENTER hall Colonial has<br />

been lovingly cared for through the years boasts 4 BRs,<br />

3.5 baths, FDR, a front-to-back LR w/fireplace,<br />

remodeled eat-in kit., 1st floor laundry & den, mud<br />

room, a finished FR in the LL that has a walk-out, a<br />

g<strong>org</strong>eous sun rm and large deck overlooking a private<br />

yard, workshop, newer roof, windows, furnace & so<br />

much more. Call for the details. REDUCED TO<br />

$289,900. www.78westwoodrd.com<br />

BRISTOL-A CHARMING Cape w/beautiful front porch<br />

w/trex flooring & vinyl railings, a nice breezeway/<br />

mudroom, eat-in kitchen flows to the FDR, LR and 1st<br />

floor FR w/pellet stove, with bi-level deck that leads to<br />

the kidney shaped 16x26 in ground pool, 2 baths, 2 car<br />

garage. REDUCED TO $234,900<br />

THE BEST AT<br />

WHAT WE DO!<br />

860-589-2100<br />

cmrbristol.com<br />

Selected home offerings from:<br />

Southington, Bristol, Plainville<br />

Hot Properties<br />

13<br />

BRISTOL-IT’S AN AWARD WINNER!! This one-of-akind<br />

rustic Colonial with thumb latch doors, beautifully<br />

decorated & updated, 4 BRs, a huge MBR, unique floor<br />

plan, the FR features a gas fireplace, 2 car garage and<br />

neat as a pin. ASKING $239,900.<br />

BRISTOL-TOTALLY REMODELED ALL NEW this nice<br />

Ranch home offers 3 BRs, 2 baths, an eat-in kitchen,<br />

and a fireplaced LR, 2 car garage, all on a private lot.AN<br />

UNBELIEVABLE HOME FOR THE MONEY. $229,900.<br />

BRISTOL-THIS NEW CONSTRUCTION is ready for<br />

your finishing touches. 3 bedroom Cape w/1 BR on the<br />

1st floor, has 2 full baths, one on each floor, tiled baths<br />

and beautiful sod lawn. THIS CHARMING HOME<br />

COULD BE YOURS FOR ONLY $184,900.<br />

Divine Delahunty Built Ranch<br />

Light & Bright with open floor<br />

plan; cathedral ceilings; everything<br />

updated & modern; 3 BRs;<br />

2 full baths; formal living room<br />

with fireplace; g<strong>org</strong>eous Italian<br />

granite kitchen with stainless<br />

appliances; oversized great room<br />

with gas fireplace; C/Air, sliders<br />

to composite deck overlooking<br />

serene back yard; gleaming<br />

hardwood floors throughout;<br />

closets galore; heated sun room;<br />

2 car garage... Much More...<br />

Come See!! $359,900<br />

G<strong>org</strong>eous Victorian<br />

Updated throughout, 4 BRs with<br />

option for Huge master suite<br />

with oversized walk-in closet;<br />

2 large full baths, gleaming<br />

granite kitchen with stainless<br />

appliances, Huge Dining Room,<br />

Huge Great Room above<br />

oversized 2-car attached garage,<br />

tons of closets and storage<br />

space, 2 concrete block patios,<br />

underground sprinklers...<br />

This House Is A Must See !!!<br />

$349,999<br />

Rachel Mayo 203-910-3448<br />

Landmark Realty Company<br />

PO Box 628 ◆ Southington CT ◆ 860-621-9171<br />

Bannon & Hebert<br />

PROPERTIES, L.L.C.<br />

(203) 758-1300 (203) 267-1301<br />

BRAND<br />

NEW HOUSE!<br />

NEW<br />

TO MARKET<br />

22 Pine Grove Road, Southington, CT<br />

Price: $89,280<br />

Agency: JENSEN communities<br />

Contact: Jan (860) 793-0281<br />

CSSales@jensencommunities.com<br />

Features: Brand New Home Waiting for you!! Eat<br />

in Kitchen features electric smooth self-cleaning<br />

Range, Pot scrubber Dishwasher, Garbage Disposal<br />

and range hood microwave. Open floor plan to<br />

large living. Master bedroom with walk in closet.<br />

Guest bedroom with private bath. 8’x24’ Procell<br />

deck with 9’x26’ awning. 10’x10’ utility building.<br />

With electricity. Enjoy comfort and energy efficient<br />

year round with gas heat and central air. Whether<br />

you are looking to move to a retirement<br />

community or just right size your life, move to a<br />

Jensen Community and Get In On The Good Life!®<br />

WOLCOTT<br />

Waterfront Luxurious, spacious,<br />

tastelfully appointed in desirable<br />

Arrowhead. Ease right into this lovely<br />

water front unit w/custom touches<br />

throughout; moldings, raised panels,<br />

built-ins & more. Fabulous chef’s kit<br />

is open to LR/DR all overlooking<br />

sparkling water. Amenities galore!<br />

Call today! S390,000<br />

PLANTSVILLE<br />

Sparkling 2 BR condo in<br />

desirable Summer Ridge.<br />

Updated and tastefully<br />

decorated it features a<br />

spacious LR w/FP open to DR,<br />

updated kitchen, 21/2 baths,<br />

garage & more. S173,500<br />

PLAINVILLE<br />

Great starter home offers<br />

2 BRs, LR w/charming FP,<br />

HW floors thoughout,<br />

private back yard, one car<br />

garage. Great Location.<br />

S150,000<br />

RENTALS AVAILABLE. PLEASE CALL FOR DETAILS<br />

www.bannonandhebert.com<br />

187 Manor Road, Southington, CT<br />

Price: $250,000<br />

Agency: Berkshire Hathaway - New England<br />

Properties<br />

Contact: Carrie (860) 378-3220<br />

Features: NEW TO THE MARKET. Oversized Bilevel<br />

fea turing attached 2-car garage, 3 bedrooms, gas<br />

heat, cair, FR w/wood stove. Priced to SELL!<br />

Brought to you by:<br />

213 Spring St., Southington, CT<br />

138 Vera Road, Bristol, CT<br />

Price: $149,900<br />

Agency: Century 21 Bay-Mar Realty Inc.<br />

Contact: Christine M Mac Rae (860) 478-4133<br />

Features: BRISTOL-Sought-after 4 bedroom Cape.<br />

Fully appliance, Eat in kitchen, Living room w/FP,<br />

Full basement partial finished, Large level fenced in<br />

yard. Move in condition.<br />

10/04/13<br />

To feature a home in Hot Properties, call our Advertising Dept., 860-628-9645<br />

www.SouthingtonObserver.com • www.StepSaver.com • www.BristolObserver.com


14 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

SATURDAY OCT 5<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

CLASS OF 1983 REUNION.<br />

At Hawk’s Landing.<br />

Addresses of classmates<br />

needed. Email shs1983classreunion@gmail.com<br />

with<br />

information.<br />

SATURDAY OCT 12<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

CAN AND BOTTLE DRIVE. 8<br />

a.m. to noon at Rec Park, 25<br />

Maxwell Drive. Sponsored by<br />

Junior Miss Southington<br />

Haley Derwin, in association<br />

with the Junior Miss<br />

Southington Scholarship<br />

Organization. All proceeds<br />

will benefit Southington<br />

Community Services and<br />

Connecticut Children’s<br />

Hospital.<br />

MONDAY OCT 14<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

SHS CHEER CLINIC. 8:45<br />

a.m. to 3 p.m. $40 per child,<br />

includes shirt, lunch and a<br />

snack. For grades 1-8, no<br />

experience necessary. For<br />

more info contact Lisa Mueller<br />

at lisamariemueller1@cox.net.<br />

SATURDAY OCT 19<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

ITALIAN NIGHT DINNER. 6:30<br />

p.m. at St. Thomas School<br />

cafeteria, 99 Bristol St.<br />

Sponosored by the St. Thomas<br />

Ladies Guild. Five course dinner.<br />

$30 tickets. Contact Kathy<br />

at 203-439-0105 or Jean at<br />

860-628-7913.<br />

Miscellaneous listings<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

CAR FIT. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at<br />

the Calendar House, 288<br />

Pleasant St. Trained volunteers<br />

will help senior drivers<br />

find the best fit for their personal<br />

vehicles.<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

BOTTLE AND CAN DRIVE. 9<br />

a.m. to noon at Grace<br />

Nursery School, 121 Pleasant<br />

St.<br />

SUNDAY OCT 20<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

CLASS OF 1950 REUNION.<br />

Noon to 4 p.m. at the Back<br />

Nine Restaurant, 150 Savage<br />

Street at the Southington<br />

Country Club.<br />

TUESDAY OCT 22<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

FINANCIAL AID NIGHT. 7<br />

p.m. at the Southington High<br />

School auditorium. Carolyn<br />

Karno, of Education Funding<br />

Strategies, will present.<br />

Aimed at grade 12 students<br />

and parents, but all parents<br />

and students of SHS welcome<br />

to attend.<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

GENEALOGICAL SOCEITY<br />

MEETING. 7:30 p.m. at The<br />

Orchards in Southington, 34<br />

Hobart St. Maryanne LeGrow,<br />

of the French-Canadian<br />

Genealogical Society of<br />

Connecticut, will have brief<br />

remarks.<br />

WEDNESDAY OCT 23<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

TRAVEL TALK PRESENTA-<br />

TION. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Benefit<br />

for Bread for Life.<br />

Presentation by Bill Lynch<br />

from Largay Travels presents<br />

Travel Talk. Even is held at<br />

Cork and Brew Banquet<br />

Facility, 26 Norht Main St. $5<br />

donation. TO reserve a space<br />

or for questions call 860-877-<br />

4248 or emial bill@largaytravel.com,<br />

no later than Oct. 16.<br />

SUNDAY NOV. 3<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

MOHEGAN BUS TRIP.<br />

Sponsored by the Wonx Tribe<br />

#28. Bus leaves Riccio Way at<br />

1 p.m. and the Mohegan<br />

Casino at 7:30 p.m. Tickets<br />

available by calling 860-628-<br />

7535 or 860-621-4200.<br />

SATURDAY NOV 29<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

SHS CLASS OF 1993<br />

REUNION. For more information<br />

go to the group’s<br />

Facebook page, Southington<br />

HS-Classs of ‘93-20th reunion-<br />

11/29/13 or email southingtonhsclassof93@yahoo.com.<br />

SATURDAY DEC. 7<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

HOLIDAY BOUTIQUE. 9 a.m.<br />

to 3 p.m. at St. Paul’s Church.<br />

Holiday and general themed<br />

items. Crafters are needed.<br />

Contact the church at 860-<br />

628-8486.<br />

Real People: Life amongst the orchards<br />

From page 13<br />

Rogers Orchards employees<br />

90 to 100 locals. “We work<br />

with the Vo-Ag School in<br />

town to find kids interested<br />

in farming and plant science,”<br />

Peter explained.<br />

“They are strong employees<br />

with an interest in what we<br />

do. People who live around<br />

here always know the time<br />

of year to come down and<br />

get applications. In fact, this<br />

weekend is a good example<br />

of our busiest time. The varieties<br />

and fall favorites as well<br />

as late season sweet peaches<br />

are all ready.”<br />

Keeping employment<br />

local isn’t the only thing<br />

Rogers does in this way. “We<br />

are huge advocates of buying<br />

local,” Peter said. “We<br />

practice what we preach. If<br />

you can buy it local, you<br />

should and many of our customers<br />

do. We buy other<br />

farms’ produce that we don’t<br />

grow and have many partnerships<br />

in and around<br />

Southington where we turn<br />

Free collage workshop for kids<br />

There will be a free children’s<br />

Collage Workshop<br />

sponsored by Southington<br />

Arts and Crafts Association<br />

on Saturday, Oct. 12, from<br />

10:30 a.m. to noon. The<br />

event will be given by Joan<br />

Shackford and held at the<br />

Orchards Community Room,<br />

34 Hobart Street,<br />

Apartments Available for Rent!<br />

• Heat & Hot Water Included<br />

• Fully Applianced<br />

• Walking Distance to Shopping,<br />

Restaurants, Pharmacies & Churches<br />

for advice, comparisons and<br />

opinions.”<br />

Life on an orchard in<br />

the fall was always busy for<br />

Peter and his siblings. “The<br />

work we do in the fall represents<br />

the whole year,” Peter<br />

said. “We always have to<br />

make sure that we’re picking<br />

at the right times. As a little<br />

kid, coming up here with<br />

everyone we had to observe<br />

how things worked. Even<br />

when we were young on<br />

school vacations, we learned<br />

how to do what was needed<br />

around the farm and store.”<br />

Being all grown up now<br />

and able to look back and<br />

reflect on his own happy<br />

memories of the orchards,<br />

Peter appreciates hearing<br />

everyone’s positive associations.<br />

“When I’m in the store<br />

it’s great to hear about others’<br />

traditions. They always<br />

talk about coming in for<br />

whatever it is they love…<br />

cider, donuts, petting the<br />

bunnies… The traditions of<br />

coming to Rogers Orchards<br />

has been in their families for<br />

Southington.<br />

Using materials such as<br />

torn or cut paper, children<br />

will have fun creating their<br />

own colorful images without<br />

worrying about having<br />

drawing skills. Participants<br />

are welcomed and encouraged<br />

to bring some favorite<br />

cut out images or copies of<br />

171 Laurel Street, Bristol, CT<br />

Call 860-940-6757 and<br />

visit us at www.riverviewbristol.com<br />

decades much like mine and<br />

people can recall coming<br />

down with their grandparents.:<br />

My personal tradition<br />

was always to leave church<br />

in the fall in New Britain and<br />

drive to the orchard for a<br />

bag of apples and a cup of<br />

cider from the machine,<br />

which was perilously guarded<br />

by honey bees.<br />

Around the home, Peter<br />

said the family has heard all<br />

the recipes and tried them<br />

too. “There are always people<br />

trying new things,” he<br />

said. “It’s constantly open for<br />

debate which apples make<br />

the best pastries and pies.<br />

It’s fun to interact with customers<br />

and experiment. My<br />

favorite apple is the Macoun<br />

because of the flavor and<br />

great crisp snap when you<br />

bite into it.”<br />

Neighbors of the<br />

orchards have largely lived<br />

there for generations as well<br />

and raised their families in<br />

the countryside areas of<br />

town. The open air spaces<br />

photos to include in their<br />

collage piece. Materials will<br />

be provided free of charge.<br />

Wear old clothes or bring a<br />

smock.<br />

Contact Joan Shackford<br />

at 203-699-9497 or at<br />

LilMoeStudio@aol.com to<br />

sign up for this workshop.<br />

Enrollment will be limited.<br />

• 2 Laundry Rooms on each floor<br />

• Lighted Secure Parking<br />

• Radiant Heat<br />

• Handicap Access<br />

For Adult Residents 55 and older<br />

RiverView is a private, nonsubsidized,<br />

family owned and operated facility<br />

1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments<br />

& Efficiencies<br />

From page 6<br />

ing to make the surprise<br />

happen for some time<br />

prior to graduation. Not<br />

even a changing graduation<br />

date was able to stop<br />

The Putnam Agency is proud to<br />

announce their 50th Anniversary!<br />

OPEN<br />

SUNDAY<br />

12:30 - 2:00<br />

SOUTHINGTON - 33 RUSTLEWOOD DR<br />

Lovely Brick Ranch located on a cul-de-sac,<br />

one owner home in absolutely superb condition,<br />

master bedroom suite with Jacuzzi whirlpool<br />

bath, formal living and dining room, 1st floor<br />

family room with fireplace, six panel doors,<br />

Anderson windows, central vacuum, central air,<br />

two car attached garage. $389,900<br />

DIR: Rt. 10 to Curtis to 33 Rustlewood Drive<br />

NEW<br />

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SOUTHINGTON<br />

"Fantastic Buy" A perfect time, this 5 room<br />

Ranch is great for the 1st time buyer with an<br />

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beautifully updated kitchen with appliances<br />

and details, hardwood flooring, outside<br />

screened gathering patio, one car detached<br />

garage. $218,000<br />

the surprise reunion.<br />

Here at The Observer<br />

we are thankful for the<br />

chance to cover the<br />

reunions and thank the<br />

families for allowing us to<br />

NEW<br />

PRICE!<br />

BRISTOL<br />

This one owner Contemporary home is<br />

"A Must See" Unique with "In-Law Potential"<br />

four bedrooms, three baths, living room with<br />

cathedral ceiling and fireplace, dining room with<br />

cathedral ceiling, wrap around deck for you to<br />

relax and enjoy the tranquil views. $229,000<br />

PLANTSVILLE<br />

Great price on this six room Cape with a<br />

beautifully groomed back yard, this home is<br />

filled with fabulous features, g<strong>org</strong>eous fully<br />

applianced kitchen, four bedrooms, central air,<br />

large deck with pergola and hardwood floors,<br />

one car garage. $200,000<br />

draw families, Peter said.<br />

“The area is really beautiful.”<br />

And good neighbors are<br />

important, as sometimes<br />

normal homestead activity<br />

can take a back seat to the<br />

orchard operations. “You<br />

know it’s busy season when<br />

the grass on the front lawn<br />

goes unkept,” Peter said,<br />

laughing. “But it’s overlooked<br />

in favor of the beautiful<br />

fall foliage and special<br />

feeling around the<br />

orchards.”<br />

The neighborly feeling<br />

extends outside the immediate<br />

reach of the orchard too.<br />

There are restaurants in the<br />

area that use Rogers’ apples<br />

in their cooking and apple<br />

wood to flavor in their<br />

ovens. Schools from all<br />

around take advantage of<br />

the learning opportunities<br />

on Friday field trips to pick<br />

apples in the fall.<br />

In the many decades<br />

Rogers has been in operation,<br />

not a lot has changed<br />

aside from some technological<br />

conveniences. “It’s a real<br />

hats off to the older generations<br />

who started this business,”<br />

Peter said. “They<br />

taught us to be cautious,<br />

especially in leaner years, so<br />

that we can withstand. It’s a<br />

great model. We hope each<br />

season that there’s no huge<br />

surprises, but you can’t predict<br />

the weather. Regardless,<br />

we’ve withstood economic<br />

hazards. We stick to the varieties<br />

we know and feel that<br />

being conservative, traditional<br />

will keep us going<br />

strong like it has for over 200<br />

years.”<br />

After working 70 to 80<br />

hours a week in the peak fall<br />

season, Peter said it’s a huge<br />

sigh of relief to pick and<br />

store that last apple. “Fall is<br />

full of long days for everyone<br />

here,” he said. “It’s really nice<br />

to accomplish all the hard<br />

work and have many varieties<br />

stored late into the season<br />

for people to enjoy<br />

later.”<br />

Current fall favorites<br />

like Macoun, Empire, Red<br />

and Golden Delicious and<br />

Granny Smith are coming<br />

out now. Picking is available<br />

at both locations on Fridays<br />

and weekends and both<br />

orchards have a store and<br />

bakery on site. If by some<br />

chance you haven’t made<br />

memories at Rogers<br />

Orchards, like Peter and<br />

myself and so many others,<br />

make sure you get there this<br />

fall. (And no, I’m not a paid<br />

spokesperson for the<br />

orchard, I just truly love it<br />

that much.) Happy picking!<br />

Visit<br />

RogersOrchards.com or one<br />

of two locations in<br />

Southington: 336 Long<br />

Bottom Rd., Southington<br />

(860) 229-4240 and 2975<br />

Meriden Waterbury Tpke.,<br />

Southington (203) 879-1206.<br />

Column: Soldiers return home<br />

join in for these emotional<br />

reunions. We hope families<br />

in Southington and<br />

across the nation continue<br />

to enjoy these reunions<br />

as our troops come home.<br />

Voted one of the top<br />

two Real Estate Agencies in<br />

Southington in 2012!<br />

BRISTOL<br />

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electrical, refinished hardwood flooring ,<br />

3 bedrooms with a possible 4th & 5th bedroom<br />

formal living & dining room, eat in kitchen, full<br />

basement, tons of storage, large porch, two car<br />

detached garage. $138,000<br />

ACREAGE<br />

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Located in Wild Oak Ridge this<br />

4.5 acres captures the beauty of<br />

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SOUTHINGTON<br />

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HOW MUCH IS YOUR HOME WORTH?<br />

Call one of our real estate professionals for a market evaluation of your property.<br />

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Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

FRIDAY, OCT. 4<br />

BRISTOL<br />

THE JOHN E. TAVERA BIRTH-<br />

DAY CELEBRATION. 5 p.m.<br />

Scholarship fund raiser. Rain or<br />

shine and includes a picnic buffet,<br />

free draft beer, a cash bar,<br />

raffle prizes and live entertainment.<br />

The pavilion at the St.<br />

Joseph’s Polish Society, East<br />

Main Street, Forestville. Tickets<br />

are $25 per person and will be<br />

available at the door, or by contacting<br />

Joseph Tavera at<br />

(860)582-2878,<br />

Joe.Tavera@comcast.net, Frank<br />

Tavera at Ftavera@snet.net or<br />

Lee Santorso at 150 Central<br />

St., downtown Forestville.<br />

Donations to the John E. Tavera<br />

Memorial Fund can be mailed<br />

to: P.O. Box 1262, Bristol CT,<br />

Committee: To look at options for Beecher Street property<br />

From page 1<br />

sale of the property,<br />

according to a news<br />

release from Town<br />

Manager Garry Brumback.<br />

“It became very clear<br />

after the September 9<br />

meeting that there needs<br />

to be more bipartisan discretion<br />

on this,” said<br />

Council Chairman John<br />

Dobbins during Monday’s<br />

Town Council meeting.<br />

During the meeting,<br />

the Democratic Party<br />

agreed on the establishment<br />

of the subcommittee,<br />

but expressed concerns<br />

with it. Minority<br />

Leader Chris Palmieri said<br />

06011-1262.<br />

PARISH EUCHARISTIC ADO-<br />

RATION. Part of the 40 Days for<br />

Life Campaign. Join between 9<br />

a.m. and 7 p.m. Nocturnal<br />

Adoration from 7 to 8 p.m. St.<br />

Anthony Church, 11 School St.,<br />

Bristol.<br />

‘FORTY DAYS FOR LIFE.’<br />

Following the noon Mass and<br />

will continue to midnight. St.<br />

Stanislaus Church will participate<br />

in the international prayer<br />

movement, praying for the end<br />

to abortion. St. Stanislaus<br />

Church, 510 West St., Bristol.<br />

Public welcome.<br />

OCT. 4, 11, 17, 18, 19,<br />

24, 25, 26<br />

his party knows a local<br />

resident who qualifies to<br />

serve on the subcommittee.<br />

“They have a great<br />

sense of community down<br />

there, and we think it<br />

would be a valuable component<br />

of this committee<br />

to have a resident be a<br />

part of it, and that is not<br />

included here,” Palmieri<br />

said during the meeting.<br />

Palmieri and his party<br />

also expressed their concern<br />

about serving as<br />

members on the subcommittee.<br />

“I also communicated<br />

directly…that the three of<br />

Area miscellaneous listings<br />

OTHER<br />

GRAVEYARD SHIFT GHOST<br />

TOURS. 6, 7, 8, and 9 p.m.<br />

Mark Twain House, 351<br />

Farmington Ave., Hartford. $20<br />

for adults, $16 for members,<br />

$13 for children 16 and under.<br />

(Recommended for ages 10<br />

and up.) Reservations required.<br />

(860) 280-3130.<br />

OCT. 4 to NOV. 3<br />

BRISTOL<br />

THE WITCH’S DUNGEON<br />

CLASSIC MOVIE MUSEUM.<br />

Fridays to Sundays. Weekend<br />

evenings, 7 to 10 p.m. 47th<br />

year. Longest running<br />

Halloween attraction in the<br />

country. Tribute to the actors<br />

and makeup artists from classic<br />

us, on behalf of my caucus<br />

are not able to serve on<br />

this committee,” Palmieri<br />

said.<br />

Dobbins agreed to<br />

add the resident as a<br />

horror, science fiction, and fantasy<br />

films. Not recommended<br />

for children under 6. Not handicapped<br />

accessible. Non-profit<br />

museum. 90 Battle St., Bristol.<br />

$2 donation all ages.<br />

PreserveHollywood.<strong>org</strong>. (860)<br />

583-8306.<br />

SATURDAY, OCT. 5<br />

BRISTOL<br />

GRACE BAPTIST CHURCH<br />

FREE TAG SALE. 9 a.m. to<br />

noon. Multiple families with<br />

books, toys, household items,<br />

clothes. All items are free.<br />

Grace Baptist Church, 736 King<br />

St., Bristol. (860) 582-3840.<br />

THE 13TH MEMORIAL HELEN<br />

COUGHLIN WALKATHON<br />

FOR PARC. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.<br />

50+ active adult rental community.<br />

Apple Grove, 639 Lake Avenue, Bristol, CT 065010<br />

860-314-2695 • www.LiveAppleGrove.com<br />

Each office is<br />

independently owned<br />

and operated<br />

Chili cook-off. Norton Park,<br />

Plainville. Download a team<br />

registration at<br />

PlainvilleARC.<strong>org</strong>. (860) 747-<br />

0316,<br />

PARC.Plainville@gmail.com<br />

‘DESTINED TO BECOME<br />

GLORIA DEI.’ 1 p.m. Bristol<br />

Historical Society President<br />

Tom Dickau will make a multimedia<br />

presentation about the<br />

found of the Bethesda Lutheran<br />

and Lebanon Lutheran<br />

Churches of Bristol, the influences<br />

of the Swedish culture,<br />

and how world events affected<br />

their growth. The two churches<br />

merged to become Gloria Dei<br />

Lutheran Church. Part of the 50<br />

year celebration of the church<br />

on Camp Street. Free. Bristol<br />

member of the subcommittee,<br />

but disagreed with<br />

Palmieri’s second concern.<br />

“I agree with you on<br />

the resident…I’ll make it<br />

an ex-officio as a nonvoting<br />

member, but this truly<br />

has to be a bipartisan<br />

board,” Dobbins said.<br />

“The criteria have always<br />

been a sitting council<br />

member.<br />

15<br />

Historical Society, 98 Summer<br />

St., Bristol.<br />

A WILDERNESS SURVIVAL<br />

AND WELLNESS FIELD DAY.<br />

10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Presenters<br />

from various backgrounds and<br />

expertise will share various<br />

wilderness-related skills. Indian<br />

Rock Nature Preserve, 501<br />

Wolcott Rd., Bristol. $5<br />

entrance fee. Family friendly<br />

event.<br />

OTHER<br />

MAKING STORIES OUT OF<br />

EXPERIENCE WITH OKEY<br />

NDIBE: A WRITING WORK-<br />

SHOP. 1 to 4 p.m. Mark Twain<br />

House, 351 Farmington Ave.,<br />

Hartford. $40. Register. (860)<br />

280-3130.<br />

Dobbins said the Town<br />

Council would determine<br />

who would serve as members<br />

of the subcommittee<br />

during a regular meeting<br />

later this month.<br />

FEATURED WITH EACH UNIT:<br />

• Hardwood and tile floors<br />

• Fully equipped with stove, refrigerator,<br />

dishwasher, washer and dryer.<br />

• Amenities on one floor: Master bedroom and<br />

bath, laundry area, great room, kitchen, and<br />

sliders leading out<br />

to private deck<br />

area.<br />

• Units are equipped<br />

with central air.<br />

• Heat and hot<br />

water are included<br />

with rent.<br />

BRISTOL<br />

Nice 2 bedroom, 2.5 bath Condo.<br />

One of the few units with a fully<br />

finished walkout basement, 2 decks,<br />

one off dining area and the other off<br />

the master bedroom, Private rear<br />

yard, Fireplace in living room, Formal<br />

dining room, Large eat in kitchen<br />

$169,900<br />

BURLINGTON<br />

A little updating is all you need for<br />

this 3 bedroom, 2 bath, Raised<br />

Ranch, Central air, Eat in kitchen,<br />

Formal dining room, 2 car garage,<br />

Deck overlooking large private lot.<br />

$169,900<br />

BRISTOL<br />

Move right into this 3 bedroom, 2.5<br />

bath, Raised Ranch, Living room<br />

with gas fireplace and cathedral<br />

ceilings, Kitchen/Dining area. Open<br />

floor plan, Finished family room,<br />

Deck off dining area overlook the<br />

pool in the level rear yard.<br />

$199,900<br />

BRISTOL<br />

Sought-after 4 bedroom Cape,<br />

Fully applianced eat in kitchen,<br />

Living room with fireplace, Full<br />

basement partial finished, Large<br />

level fenced in yard<br />

$149,900<br />

BRISTOL<br />

Only 5 years old! 4 bedroom, 2.5<br />

bath Colonial, 2 of 4 bedrooms are<br />

masterbeds, Nice open floor plan,<br />

walk out basement awaits your<br />

finishing touches, Double deck<br />

overlooking private rear lot, Large<br />

open yard<br />

$319,900<br />

BRISTOL BRISTOL<br />

Stunning oversized Cape on<br />

secluded quiet cul-de-sac, 8<br />

rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, Great<br />

room, Cathedral ceilings, Walking<br />

distance to nature trails & Birge<br />

Pond, Exceptional home<br />

BRISTOL<br />

$299,900<br />

Well maintained 2 family,<br />

Hardwood floors thought out, 1st<br />

floor had 3 (possible 4) bedrooms,<br />

2nd floor has 3 bedrooms, All<br />

seperate utilities, Excellent for owner<br />

occupy. Home is move in condition<br />

$159,900<br />

BRISTOL<br />

Custom built home, 9 rooms, 4<br />

bedroom Colonial,Great room with<br />

fireplace, Eat in kitchen with granite<br />

countertops, 1st floor masterbed<br />

with fill bath, Whirlpool tub,<br />

Inground pool with brick patio, 3<br />

car garage, Over 1.3 acres of land<br />

$449,900<br />

TORRINGTON<br />

Solid 3 family home offers 4 rooms,<br />

2 bedrooms on first and second<br />

floors. 3 rooms, 1 bedroom on the<br />

third. Seperate utilities and electrical<br />

services, Front porches, roof and<br />

some windows updated 4 years ago<br />

$89,900<br />

BRISTOL<br />

Picture Perfect Townhouse, Open<br />

floor plan, Living room, Dining<br />

room combo with fireplace, Sliders<br />

to patio, Eat in kitchen, 2 large<br />

bedrooms, Plenty of closet space,<br />

Basement storage area, 1 car<br />

garage, Just move in<br />

$129,900<br />

BRISTOL<br />

Exceptional Victorian Style Colonial,<br />

Move in condition, Entry foyer, Eat in<br />

kitchen with appliances, Formal<br />

dining room, Office area, Deck of<br />

kitchen, 1 car detatched garage, A<br />

must see!<br />

$124,900<br />

BRISTOL<br />

2 LOTS FOR SALE, 1.5 acres approved building<br />

lot, Wooded with a private setting, City utilities<br />

available, Great price for a nice parcel<br />

$ 35,000 EACH


16 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

•Observing the Arts.........page 17<br />

•Tasty Bites..........pages 19, 20<br />

Our Night on the Town<br />

•SHS Sports............page 36<br />

Stills from some of the films at the New England<br />

Underground Film Festival. From the left, ‘Hangdog,’<br />

‘My Brother Jack,’ and ‘Common Misconception.’ All<br />

three films are part of the New England Underground<br />

Film Festival on Saturday.<br />

Up from the underground and onto a Nutmeg screen<br />

By MIKE CHAIKEN<br />

EDITIONS EDITOR<br />

The underground of<br />

cinema is opening up in<br />

Connecticut this Saturday.<br />

And locally-generated<br />

filmmakers are making<br />

some noise.<br />

Meriden-based Jared<br />

Marmitt, Middletownbased<br />

Kelly DiMauro, New<br />

Haven-based Stephen Dest,<br />

and Woodbury native<br />

Kieran Valla (currently in<br />

California) are among the<br />

underground filmmakers<br />

showcasing their work at<br />

the New England<br />

Underground Film Festival<br />

to be held Saturday from<br />

noon to 6 p.m. at the<br />

University of Hartford.<br />

Jared will be showing<br />

“Common Misconception.”<br />

Kelly will be showing<br />

“Protector of the Kingdom.”<br />

Stephen will be showing<br />

“My Brother Jack.” And<br />

Kieran is represented with<br />

“Hangdog.”<br />

What exactly do filmmakers<br />

mean when they<br />

say they are “underground?”<br />

Jared explained in an<br />

email interview,<br />

“Underground films may<br />

not be mainstream or high<br />

budget. But, like many<br />

indie films, I think that they<br />

can be just as good or even<br />

better, and they show a<br />

more unique, personal<br />

point of view.”<br />

“I feel the term ‘underground<br />

filmmaking’ can be<br />

interpreted in a multitude<br />

of ways,” said Kieran via<br />

email. “My best definition<br />

would be anything that is of<br />

a non-traditional nature.<br />

Whether that means in the<br />

way it’s made or the actual<br />

content itself.”<br />

“An underground film<br />

is often defined as being<br />

against the mainstream,”<br />

said Stephen in an emailed<br />

interview, “but it’s a term<br />

that in many ways doesn’t<br />

apply all that much anymore,<br />

with all the creative<br />

filmmakers out there and<br />

more importantly creative<br />

audiences that are looking<br />

for something ‘different.’<br />

But in one very important<br />

regard the term ‘underground’<br />

still holds very true<br />

today and that is in (terms<br />

of limited) finances/ budget.”<br />

Kelly said, “I would<br />

define an ‘underground’<br />

film as a film that does not<br />

reflect the technical values<br />

that say a medium or large<br />

budget film might reflect.<br />

Not that it doesn’t strive for<br />

those values. But realistically,<br />

it cannot achieve those<br />

heights. On the other hand,<br />

from a story telling perspective,<br />

an underground<br />

film can be just as relevant<br />

socially, politically, and<br />

emotionally as any film out<br />

there.<br />

The filmmakers were<br />

asked, given their own definition<br />

of an “underground”<br />

film to explain how their<br />

own work reflects that<br />

term.<br />

“(In) the case of<br />

‘Protector Of The Kingdom,’<br />

there was no budget,” said<br />

Kelly. “There was virtually<br />

no ‘crew’ to speak of. There<br />

was no formal lighting and<br />

sound. Aside from the editing<br />

facilities, it was a raw<br />

production.”<br />

The small budget also<br />

helps define his own work<br />

as underground, added<br />

Stephen.<br />

“It was shot locally<br />

with a small crew,” said<br />

Jared, “without big budgets<br />

or Hollywood influences.<br />

Everyone who was involved<br />

is a friend of mine.”<br />

Kieran said, “I think my<br />

film would fit this definition<br />

in the sense that the<br />

content is polarizing. It<br />

doesn’t have a ‘traditional<br />

ending.’”<br />

For two of the filmmakers,<br />

being raised in<br />

Connecticut, had an influence<br />

on his filmmaking<br />

either by inspiring content<br />

or by providing the<br />

machinery to make it happen.<br />

For another, the state<br />

had less of an impact.<br />

“I think Connecticut<br />

has influenced me as a<br />

filmmaker in a variety of<br />

ways,” said Kieran. “My<br />

subject matter is often<br />

inspired by people I grew<br />

up with or interacted with<br />

while living in Connecticut<br />

and the backdrops of my<br />

films are generally set in<br />

rural areas that match the<br />

landscape I was raised in.<br />

Also, the social dichotomy<br />

of the community I grew up<br />

in is represented in many of<br />

my films.”<br />

“Connecticut also provided<br />

a wonderful place to<br />

let my imagination flourish,”<br />

continued Kieran. “I<br />

grew up on 18 acres of land<br />

where I could run around<br />

and play make-believe all<br />

day long. There wasn’t a lot<br />

going on so I had to make<br />

up stories.”<br />

Stephen’s presence in<br />

Connecticut also provided<br />

the structural support for<br />

his effort. “From the very<br />

beginning, in the early<br />

stages of pre-production, I<br />

got the state and more<br />

importantly for me, the city<br />

of New Haven involved.<br />

Reaching to local businesses<br />

and media, I was able to<br />

build a strong support<br />

group for the film, hosting<br />

events (kickstarter launches,<br />

art exhibits, concerts)<br />

that all linked to the film.<br />

This is something I don’t<br />

think I would have been<br />

able to do in a larger city. I<br />

was even awarded ‘Artist of<br />

the Year’ by the Arts<br />

Council of Greater New<br />

Haven. So needless to say<br />

the city and the community<br />

certainly help foster the<br />

making of my film.”<br />

However, Kelly said, “I<br />

am still developing my<br />

approach to film making.<br />

And I am not sure that my<br />

approach would be any different<br />

if I was working in<br />

any other part of the country.”<br />

Like Stephen, Kelly<br />

explained, “All of the<br />

resources that are at my<br />

disposal for film making are<br />

rooted here in Connecticut.<br />

I am primarily a stage<br />

actor/director/producer.<br />

And the pool of talent and<br />

expertise that are at my disposal<br />

come from that background.”<br />

“That being said, both<br />

Caroline V. McGraw (the<br />

screenwriter) and Mariah<br />

Sage (Rini, in ‘Protector”)<br />

are from Cleveland originally<br />

(just coincidentally).<br />

But their ties to<br />

Connecticut are strong.<br />

Caroline is a Yale graduate,<br />

having just competed her<br />

master’s in playwriting and<br />

has taught playwriting at<br />

Wesleyan University. And<br />

Mariah is a theater educator<br />

in Connecticut, having<br />

taught at Hartford Stage<br />

Company (where I met<br />

her), Fairfield University.<br />

and as a freelance acting<br />

and performance coach.<br />

She is also a founding<br />

member of Theatre 4 of<br />

New Haven... Our editor,<br />

Colin Stevenson, is a<br />

Connecticut native and has<br />

now edited two of my films.<br />

The company he worked<br />

for at the time the editing<br />

was done, Anderson<br />

Productions, is based out of<br />

Bristol, and provides a lot<br />

of the editing work for<br />

ESPN.”<br />

Just like many industries,<br />

the rise of the internet<br />

has had its impact on the<br />

film business… for good<br />

and bad. YouTube and<br />

other streaming video services<br />

have changed how<br />

films are consumed. The<br />

filmmakers if the changes<br />

have had an impact on<br />

them.<br />

“Video outlet sources<br />

like YouTube or Vimeo…<br />

are great for filmmakers like<br />

me,” said Jared. “Its an easy<br />

platform to release our<br />

work. In most cases, it’s our<br />

only option to get our work<br />

known without the tremendous<br />

amount of capital<br />

needed for a DVD release.”<br />

“If anything it has<br />

solidified my approach<br />

towards filmmaking,” said<br />

Stephen. “Tell a good story<br />

and let the world know<br />

about it.<br />

Kieran, however, was<br />

less enthused. “It has obviously<br />

changed the way people<br />

see content for better<br />

and for worse. More access,<br />

less theatrical distribution.<br />

You lose that amazing feeling<br />

of seeing movies<br />

together. You lose a certain<br />

sense of wonder that you<br />

get in the cinema.”<br />

“But a good story will<br />

always be a good story,”<br />

said Kieran. Also there are<br />

more careers geared<br />

towards producing online<br />

content and fewer careers<br />

in making cinema. Many<br />

indie film directors now<br />

make web content to supplement<br />

their income.”<br />

“To be honest,” said<br />

Kelly, “(the new technology)<br />

has been somewhat disappointing.<br />

Oh, I guess that<br />

the internet affords me the<br />

ability as a filmmaker to<br />

reach a larger demographic<br />

and increase the audience<br />

base that might be interested<br />

in my work. And there is<br />

the convenience of timely<br />

access to films that I may<br />

want to see at any given<br />

moment.”<br />

“But I am also finding<br />

that the films I grew up<br />

on— and truly love to<br />

watch over and over<br />

again— are almost completely<br />

inaccessible in the<br />

world of streaming on-line<br />

access,” said Kelly. “I mean,<br />

I haven’t been able to find<br />

‘The Sand Pebbles,’ one of<br />

my all-time favorites, since<br />

the demise of the video<br />

store industry.<br />

“Finally,” explained<br />

Kelly. “there is nothing like<br />

watching a movie on the<br />

big screen, in a big theater,<br />

with all of the whistles and<br />

bells that come with a theater<br />

(ambiance, popcorn,<br />

crowds and their reactions,<br />

etc.). I guess maybe I’m an<br />

old school traditionalist<br />

when it comes to performance,<br />

whether it is on<br />

screen or on stage.”<br />

“And I must say that I<br />

am so looking forward to<br />

sitting in the Wilde<br />

Auditorium at The<br />

University of Hartford, in<br />

the dark, with my peers and<br />

watching the light from<br />

‘Protector Of The Kingdom’<br />

fill the screen for their<br />

enjoyment … and criticism,”<br />

said Kelly.<br />

The Wilde Auditorium<br />

is one of the reasons why<br />

the New England<br />

Underground Film Festival<br />

is back for another year. Its<br />

previous venue in Hartford<br />

shuttered earlier this year,<br />

leaving the festival without<br />

a location.<br />

“Rather than cancel the<br />

event, I did a quick search<br />

and was able to secure the<br />

Wilde Auditorium at the<br />

University of Hartford’s<br />

Gray Conference Center - it<br />

is a handsome venue and I<br />

am happy that our festival<br />

has its new home in this<br />

setting,” said Phil Hall, the<br />

festival’s <strong>org</strong>anizer.<br />

With the roadblock to<br />

the festival’s return, why<br />

was it important for Hall to<br />

ensure “the show goes on?”<br />

“Underground cinema<br />

represents both a pool for<br />

new talent and an ocean for<br />

iconoclastic considerations<br />

See FILM, page 18


Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

Local singing stars compete to become ‘Icons’<br />

Kellie Lambert<br />

McGuire<br />

Observing<br />

The Arts<br />

Local singer superstars<br />

will enter the final<br />

round of competition this<br />

weekend at the Apple<br />

Harvest Festival in<br />

Southington.<br />

The finalists of The<br />

CT ICON competition will<br />

start squaring off on<br />

Saturday. A dozen finalists<br />

were selected from more<br />

than 100 competitors. The<br />

final 12 include<br />

Jacqueline Legere of<br />

Bethlehem; Nodjela Cole-<br />

Stefco of Wolcott; Erin<br />

Gibney and Autumn Eliza<br />

Sheffy, both of<br />

Southington; Joey<br />

Antonios of Thomaston;<br />

Taina Echevarria of<br />

Meriden; Katelyn Sneed,<br />

and Tracy Coit, both of<br />

Waterbury; Mira Lena of<br />

Danbury; Amanda Lee<br />

Brenkus of New Britain;<br />

Jessica Giannone of<br />

Madison; and Alexandra<br />

Hernandez of Naugatuck.<br />

The final competition<br />

takes place during the<br />

Apple Harvest Festival in<br />

Southington, from 5:15 to<br />

6:45 p.m. Saturday; 4 to<br />

5:30 p.m. Sunday; 6:30 to<br />

7:30 p.m. Oct. 11; and<br />

1:45 to 2:45 p.m. Oct. 12.<br />

The finale will be from<br />

12:45 to 1:45 p.m. Oct. 13.<br />

Past CT ICON winners<br />

and finalists will<br />

come back for the last<br />

competition.<br />

This is the fifth year<br />

of the singing competition,<br />

which is for state<br />

residents ages 9 years and<br />

older. Contestants are<br />

eliminated based on audience<br />

voting and judges’<br />

input, until the winner is<br />

announced on the last day<br />

of the fest.<br />

The CT Icon winner<br />

will receive $1,000 cash<br />

and the opportunity to<br />

record at Onyx Soundlab<br />

Recording Studio in<br />

Manchester with the possibility<br />

of recording submitted<br />

to several record<br />

companies. Winners also<br />

receive the chance to sing<br />

at various venues or<br />

Cher is coming to the<br />

Mohegan Sun in April<br />

2014 for her ‘Dressed to<br />

Kill’ tour.<br />

restaurants.<br />

For more information,<br />

contact Melissa Ericksen-<br />

Salmon at (860) 276-1966,<br />

or e-mail info@connecticuticon.com,<br />

or visit<br />

www.connecticuticon.co<br />

m.<br />

PHOTOS IN TWAIN’S<br />

HOUSE: A rare opportunity<br />

to have a family portrait<br />

taken in Hartford’s<br />

Mark Twain House has<br />

opened up. The Mark<br />

Twain House & Museum<br />

has invited 100 families to<br />

have a professional family<br />

portrait taken on the<br />

Grand Staircase in the<br />

entry hall, which could be<br />

a perfect setting for a holiday<br />

family photo.<br />

Cost is $500 for a 20-<br />

minute session with up to<br />

eight subjects; families<br />

receive a DVD within on<br />

week of the results.<br />

Hunter Neal Photography<br />

will take the shots.<br />

Proceeds from this event<br />

will support the restoration<br />

of Samuel Clemens’<br />

actual sleigh.<br />

Only 100 families will<br />

be allowed this unique<br />

opportunity. Sessions can<br />

be booked on specific<br />

days throughout <strong>October</strong><br />

and November. To book a<br />

sitting, call Lynn Gregor at<br />

(860) 280-3104.<br />

CHER, REVEALED:<br />

Cher is heading back on<br />

the road for a 49-city<br />

“Dressed to Kill” tour,<br />

which stops at Mohegan<br />

Sun Arena in Uncasville at<br />

8 p.m. April 5.<br />

Tickets are $154.75<br />

and $124.75 and go on<br />

sale Oct. 11 at all<br />

Ticketmaster outlets,<br />

charge-by-phone at (800)<br />

745-3000, or any<br />

Ticketmaster outlet.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit Cher.com or<br />

MoheganSun.com, or call<br />

888-226-7711 ext. 27163.<br />

MORE TSO: Trans-<br />

Siberian Orchestra just<br />

announced another show<br />

in the state in addition to<br />

its Dec. 19 performance at<br />

Mohegan Sun Arena. The<br />

group will also perform at<br />

the XL Center on Nov. 16.<br />

Tickets are $33, $41, $51<br />

and $71 and are available<br />

at www.XLCenter.com, by<br />

calling 877-522-8499, or<br />

by visiting the Public<br />

Power Ticket Office.<br />

Tickets are still on<br />

sale for the Dec. 19<br />

Mohegan Sun Arena show.<br />

Tickets are $70 and $50.<br />

Visit any Ticketmaster<br />

outlet, call (800) 745-3000<br />

or www.ticketmaster.com.<br />

DOME SHOW: Third<br />

Eye Blind will perform at<br />

7:30 p.m. Nov. 3 at The<br />

Dome at the Oakdale<br />

Theatre in Wallingford. All<br />

tickets are $37 and are<br />

general admission; $40<br />

day of show. Visit any<br />

Ticketmaster outlet or<br />

ticketmaster.com.<br />

FARMER’S MARKET:<br />

Hill-Stead Museum’s<br />

Farmers Market will finish<br />

up its season this<br />

month, from 11 a.m. to 2<br />

p.m. Sundays through<br />

Oct. 20 at the museum, 35<br />

17<br />

Mountain Road,<br />

Farmington.<br />

The market features<br />

locally-sourced food, live<br />

music, special events and<br />

family fun. On Sunday,<br />

live music will be provided<br />

by Dr. Charles Kaplan<br />

and Dick Blick will be on<br />

hand to host a free art<br />

project.<br />

Guitarist/singer Chris<br />

Sheehan performs Oct.<br />

13; Dave Donaldson Jr., a<br />

local coffeehouse musician,<br />

will provide tunes on<br />

Oct. 20.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit www.hillstead.<strong>org</strong> or<br />

call (860) 677-4787 ext<br />

110.<br />

MUSIC BOOK SIGN-<br />

ING: World-renowned<br />

music photographer<br />

Jeremy Saffer will host<br />

two signings for his book<br />

“Till Death... A Guide to<br />

Love and Loss” on Oct. 12<br />

at Monte Cristo Bookshop<br />

in New London and Oct.<br />

18 to 20 at Rock and<br />

Shock in Worcester, Mass.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit<br />

www.jeremysaffer.com/ro<br />

ckandshock.<br />

Send your entertainment<br />

news and arts happenings<br />

to<br />

kellmcguire@yahoo.com.<br />

NOW<br />

OPEN<br />

Hours 10am-4pm<br />

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in our new location at<br />

Come Visit Us<br />

830 South Main Street • Cheshire<br />

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Supported by Implants for Best Retention<br />

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18 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

Phosphorus: Committee to submit a report<br />

From page 1<br />

rent phosphorus levels<br />

and municipal options to<br />

meet water quality standards.<br />

Each workgroup<br />

consists of co-chairs: an<br />

elected official of one participating<br />

community and<br />

a DEEP official.<br />

“We are trying to take<br />

a step back a little bit, and<br />

not only stop the focus on<br />

just one element, but also<br />

to look at the entire<br />

watershed, and define<br />

what success is for a<br />

healthy watershed,”<br />

Southington Community Theatre schedules auditions next week<br />

Auditions for Sout-hington<br />

Community Theatre’s<br />

November production of<br />

David’s Ives collection of oneacts,<br />

“All in the Timing,” will<br />

take place on Tuesday, Oct. 8<br />

and Wednesday, Oct. 9 from 7<br />

to 9 p.m. at Southington<br />

From page 1<br />

of what filmmaking should<br />

represent,” said Hall. “If<br />

you want shoot-’em-ups<br />

and vulgar slapstick, the<br />

multiplex can keep you<br />

busy. But if you want films<br />

that challenge and provoke<br />

your intellect, and<br />

which dare to look and<br />

sound different from the<br />

Hollywood cookie cutter<br />

machinery, then this event<br />

is for you.”<br />

The filmmakers agree<br />

the festival is important<br />

for the region.<br />

Kieran said,<br />

Brumback said during the<br />

meeting.<br />

Denise Ruzicka, the<br />

director of Bureau of<br />

Water Protection and<br />

Land Reuse said the<br />

establishment of the three<br />

workgroups serves as a<br />

“logical next step” to<br />

address the issue of phosphorus<br />

levels.<br />

“We can come up<br />

with a collaborative<br />

approach that comes from<br />

both sides of the equation,”<br />

Ruzicka said.<br />

During the meeting,<br />

McCleary, Brumback and<br />

Community Theatre Hall,<br />

1237 Marion Ave. (the old<br />

Marion Firehouse), Marion.<br />

Those who audition should<br />

come prepared to read from<br />

the script. Parts are available<br />

for ages 25 and up.<br />

The production will be<br />

“Connecticut needs something<br />

like this festival<br />

because Nutmeggers are<br />

wonderful patrons of the<br />

arts. There’s no better way<br />

for people to come together<br />

than sitting in a theater<br />

watching films together<br />

and discussing them afterwards.”<br />

“Film festivals play a<br />

vital part in the growth<br />

and awareness of independent<br />

films,” said<br />

Stephen. “Without ‘marquee’<br />

names above and<br />

below the line, it’s an<br />

extremely difficult process<br />

getting your film seen and<br />

for that matter even taken<br />

seriously. Film festivals<br />

help with all of that. But<br />

honestly, the most important<br />

reason to have film<br />

directed and produced by<br />

Amanda Savio Guay, Heidi<br />

Bass Lamberto, and Peter E.<br />

Pristic. The show will run Nov.<br />

21 to 23.<br />

The world according to<br />

David Ives is a very odd place,<br />

and his plays constitute a virtual<br />

stress test of the English<br />

language — and of the audience’s<br />

capacity for disorientation<br />

and delight. Ives’s characters<br />

plunge into black holes<br />

called “Philadelphias,” where<br />

the simplest desires are hilariously<br />

thwarted. Chimps<br />

festivals here in<br />

Connecticut and elsewhere<br />

is to provide the<br />

storytellers with an audience.”<br />

“A few years ago,<br />

Connecticut offered huge<br />

tax incentives for film makers<br />

to make their films<br />

here,” said Kelly. “That generated<br />

a lot of activity in the<br />

Ruzicka presented an<br />

overview of each workgroup<br />

and its desired<br />

goals. The first workgroup<br />

serves as a state-wide<br />

response to phosphorus<br />

nonpoint source solution,<br />

according to Ruzicka.<br />

The second workgroup<br />

evaluates and<br />

quantifies the role of<br />

phosphorus in stream<br />

impairment and to determine<br />

phosphorus reductions<br />

as needed.<br />

The third workgroup<br />

will develop a technology<br />

assessment of new stateof-the-art<br />

resources to<br />

find possible treatments<br />

of phosphorus reductions.<br />

Calling the establishment<br />

of these workgroups<br />

a “huge step,” Brumback<br />

said working with other<br />

local communities and<br />

DEEP will “yield better<br />

results” altogether.<br />

“It means a lot,”<br />

Brumback said. “We are<br />

embarking upon a new<br />

way of doing business<br />

that takes into consideration<br />

all aspects of the<br />

decision-making process.”<br />

Throughout the decision-making<br />

process, the<br />

Coordinating Committee<br />

will also communicate<br />

with EPA, and will hold<br />

quarterly meetings with<br />

the co-chairs of each<br />

workgroup.<br />

According to<br />

McCleary, each co-chair is<br />

responsible for schedules,<br />

<strong>org</strong>anization and meeting<br />

agendas.<br />

“I am excited to move<br />

this process forward,”<br />

McCleary said during the<br />

meeting. “I think we can<br />

continue to provide a<br />

model for the nation.”<br />

named Milton, Swift, and<br />

Kafka are locked in a room<br />

and made to re-create<br />

“Hamlet.” And a con man<br />

peddles courses in a dubious<br />

language in which “hello”<br />

translates as “velcro” and<br />

“fraud” comes out as “freud.”<br />

industry within the<br />

Connecticut borders and<br />

more and more film artists<br />

began producing films<br />

here. It would only be fitting<br />

for those films to have<br />

a local outlet for screening.”<br />

The New England<br />

Underground Film Festival<br />

will be held Saturday, Oct.<br />

5 at the Wilde Auditorium<br />

The committee must<br />

submit a report on the<br />

committee’s progress to<br />

the legislature by <strong>October</strong><br />

1, 2014.<br />

Earlier this year,<br />

Southington, Meriden,<br />

and Wallingford, whose<br />

sewage plants discharge<br />

into the Quinnipiac River,<br />

won a negotiation with<br />

DEEP for a higher phosphorus<br />

discharge limit in<br />

the next five years, bringing<br />

the limit up to .7-milligram-per-liter<br />

and cutting<br />

millions of dollars in<br />

capital costs.<br />

SCT will present an evening of<br />

comedies that combines wit,<br />

intellect, satire, and just plain<br />

fun. For more information,<br />

visit www.southingtoncommunitytheatre.<strong>org</strong><br />

or email<br />

southingtoncommunitytheatre@gmail.com.<br />

Film: New England Underground Film Festival is this Saturday<br />

Have news you want to get into<br />

The Observer?<br />

Email it to<br />

eharris@southingtonobserver.com.<br />

in the University of<br />

Hartford’s Gray<br />

Conference Center, 200<br />

Bloomfield Ave, West<br />

Hartford from noon to 6.<br />

General admission is $10<br />

and students with school<br />

ID can pay $5.<br />

The full festival schedule<br />

is online at newenglanduff.webs.com.<br />

FREE RESIDENTIAL HOUSEHOLD<br />

Hazardous Waste & Paper Shredding Event<br />

• Sensitive documents only<br />

• 3 box or<br />

3 bag limit<br />

• 1 drive-through only<br />

• No medical or institutional<br />

files, no businesses &<br />

no regular mail or paper<br />

• Paper event ends when shred truck full


Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

19<br />

Tasty Bites<br />

Photos<br />

and text by<br />

Stacey McCarthy<br />

Pesto’s Pizzeria<br />

Each week, The<br />

Observer hits up the local<br />

restaurant scene, offering<br />

you an inside look at the<br />

culinary delights in central<br />

Connecticut.<br />

The Basics<br />

Pesto’s Pizzeria<br />

Open Tuesday<br />

through Thursday from<br />

11:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.,<br />

Friday and Saturday from<br />

FRIDAY, OCT. 4<br />

BRISTOL<br />

ANNUAL WINE TASTING. 6 to<br />

8:30 p.m. Benefit for Bristol<br />

Community Organization’s Dial-<br />

A-Ride program. Includes silent<br />

auction, Italian table, hors<br />

d’oeuvres. Nuchie’s Restaurant,<br />

Central Street, Forestville. $25<br />

in advance, $30 at the door.<br />

(860) 584-2725.<br />

PLAINVILLE<br />

PIZZA PARTY FUND RAISER.<br />

For the Plainville Democratic<br />

Town Committee. A variety of<br />

pizzas, salad, dessert, soda,<br />

and coffee. Capri Restaurant,<br />

161 Woodford Ave., Plainville.<br />

PlainvilleDTC@gmail.com,<br />

(860) 402-3873.<br />

OCT. 4, 5<br />

OTHER<br />

SUN BREWFEST. Tasting session<br />

1, Friday from 7 to 11 p.m.<br />

in Uncas Ballroom. Tasting session<br />

2, Saturday from 7 to 11<br />

p.m. in the Uncas Ballroom.<br />

BrewBunch, Sunday from 11<br />

a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Sunburst<br />

Buffet. Live entertainment.<br />

Home brew demonstrations,<br />

interactive games. $25 for each<br />

tasting, $75 for BrewBrunch.<br />

Mohegan Sun, Uncasville.<br />

MoheganSun.com,<br />

A chicken pesto pizza in Pesto’s Pizzeria.<br />

11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., and<br />

Sunday from 12 to 9 p.m.<br />

Dine-in, take-out, and free<br />

delivery within Plainville.<br />

5 Stillwell Dr.,<br />

Plainville<br />

Phone: (860)747-5333<br />

www.pestospizzeria.<br />

com<br />

The Buzz<br />

The former owners of<br />

Fiore IV recently opened<br />

Sunbrewfest.com<br />

SATURDAY, OCT. 5<br />

BRISTOL<br />

‘RAISE YOUR GLASS.’ Fund<br />

raiser for the Charity Cycling<br />

Challenge, Inc. of Bristol. 6 to 9<br />

p.m. Wine, beer, spirits, appetizers,<br />

taste samplings, and live<br />

jazz. Benefits the Connecticut<br />

Burn Center at Bristol Hospital.<br />

Waverly Inn, 286 Maple Ave.,<br />

Cheshire. $35.<br />

CharityCyclingChallenge.com<br />

PASTA DINNER AND YOUTH<br />

SERVICE AUCTION FUND<br />

RAISER. 5:30 p.m. Fund raiser<br />

for the Youth Mission Trip 2014<br />

for Asbury United Methodist<br />

Church. Pasta with sauce,<br />

meatballs, salad, bread,<br />

dessert and beverages. Youth<br />

Service auction begins immediately<br />

following dinner. $10 per<br />

person. Children 4 to 10, $5. 3<br />

and under free. Asbury United<br />

Methodist Church, 90 Church<br />

Ave., Forestville. (860) 584-<br />

0529.<br />

PLAINVILLE<br />

ROAST PORK DINNER. 4:30<br />

to 7 p.m. Glazed roast pork with<br />

fresh potatoes, vegetable,<br />

assorted breads, and apple<br />

crisp for dessert. Silent gift basket<br />

auction. Plainville United<br />

Bishop Farms<br />

500 South Meriden Road, Cheshire, CT 06410<br />

• Hay Rides<br />

• Train Rides<br />

Weekends<br />

Call for Times<br />

8” Hardy Mums<br />

3 for $11.99<br />

• Apple Cider<br />

• Field Trips • Donuts<br />

(203) 272-8243<br />

www.bishopfarmsofcheshireconnecticut.com<br />

Pesto’s Pizzeria. Pesto’s<br />

Pizzeria has two every day<br />

specials: buy three<br />

grinders and get the fourth<br />

free and four large pizzas<br />

and get the fifth free. They<br />

have an additional special<br />

on Sunday: buy two large<br />

pizzas and get a free<br />

cheese pizza.<br />

The Scene<br />

The dining area is<br />

Methodist Church, 56 Red<br />

Stone Hill Rd., Plainville. $12<br />

for adults, $6 for children. 4 and<br />

under free. Reservations<br />

strongly suggested. (860) 747-<br />

2328.<br />

SUNDAY, OCT. 6<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

THE LIONS CLUB PANCAKE<br />

BREAKFAST. 7:30 to 11 a.m.<br />

Giving Back Girls will hold bake<br />

sale to raise funds for a community<br />

person who suffered<br />

injuries following a car accident.<br />

Monetary donations will go<br />

back to pay medical bills. Baked<br />

goods can be dropped at the<br />

Calendar House Friday, Oct. 4<br />

decorated with sports<br />

memorabilia. There are a<br />

few tables and a counter<br />

area. Customers can also<br />

sit at the outdoor patio.<br />

In Your Glass<br />

Pepsi products and<br />

water.<br />

Dining listings<br />

from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Calendar<br />

House, Pleasant Street,<br />

Southington.<br />

PLAINVILLE<br />

PLAINVILLE LIONS CLUB<br />

PANCAKE BREAKFAST. 8<br />

a.m. to noon. Our Lady of<br />

Mercy Parish Hall, 19 South<br />

Canal St., Plainville. Prizes.<br />

Visit from Rocky The Rockcat.<br />

$6. Children under 7 free<br />

AMERICAN LEGION<br />

WOMAN’S AUXILIARY POST<br />

33 BBQ CHICKEN DINNER.<br />

12 to 4 p.m. Tossed salad,<br />

three types of cold salads,<br />

baked beans, corn on the cob,<br />

714 West Street • Southington, CT 06489<br />

www.giovannissouthington.com • 860-621-2299<br />

GIOVANNI’S MEAL DEAL $<br />

3.00 OFF<br />

BUY ONE XL SPECIALITY<br />

Orders $ 25 00 Or More PIZZA GET A<br />

– Or –<br />

SMALL CHEESE PIZZA<br />

One Ex-Large Cheese Pizza<br />

One Large Chef Salad<br />

12 Buffalo Wings • (1) 2 Ltr Soda<br />

Only $ 26.95 + tax<br />

Must Mention Coupon<br />

When Ordering.<br />

Coupons may not be combined with<br />

any other offer. Expires 10-31-13<br />

free Appetizer:<br />

Crab Rangoon or Spring Roll<br />

With Dinner Order. Not to be combined<br />

with any other offer. Expires 10-15-13<br />

$<br />

5.00 OFF<br />

Orders $ 35 00 Or More<br />

Must Mention Coupon<br />

When Ordering.<br />

Coupons may not be combined with<br />

any other offer. Expires 10-31-13<br />

Chef Song<br />

A tomato and broccoli pizza at Pesto’s Pizzeria.<br />

FREE<br />

DELIVERY<br />

MIN. $12<br />

FREE<br />

Must Mention Coupon<br />

When Ordering.<br />

Coupons may not be combined with<br />

any other offer. Expires 10-31-13<br />

$<br />

5 off Order<br />

of $35<br />

or More<br />

Not to be combined with any other offer.<br />

Expires 10-15-13<br />

181 Main Street • Southington, CT 06489<br />

www.thaikitchen4.com • 860-863-5994<br />

On Your Plate<br />

Pizza (Italian style<br />

with a thin crust), appetizers,<br />

hot and cold grinders,<br />

calzones, salads, and<br />

Italian dishes. The dough<br />

is made fresh daily and the<br />

sauces are made from<br />

scratch.<br />

Your Wallet<br />

Appetizers start at<br />

$3.50 for garlic bread with<br />

cheese and go up to $7.95<br />

for 10 Buffalo wings.<br />

Pizzas range from $8<br />

desserts. 50/50 raffle. 7 Race<br />

Ave., Plainville. $7. Tickets sold<br />

in advance or at the door.<br />

THURSDAY, OCT. 10<br />

BRISTOL<br />

BRISTOL ELKS FAMILY<br />

NIGHT DINNER. 5 to 6:30 p.m.<br />

Chicken masala or stuffed fish.<br />

Soup or salad, potato, vegetable,<br />

bread and butter, coffee<br />

or tea and dessert. Bristol Elks<br />

for a small cheese pizza to<br />

$17 for a large Meatlover’s<br />

pizza (sausage, bacon,<br />

meatballs, and pepperoni.)<br />

Dinners start at $12.95<br />

for chicken Parmigiana<br />

and go up to $13.95 for<br />

eggplant rollatini.<br />

If you’re interested in<br />

being featured in a future<br />

“Tasty Bites,” email<br />

mchaiken@BristolObserver.<br />

com.<br />

Club, 126 South St., Bristol. $8<br />

per person, all inclusive. Call<br />

ahead for fish, (860) 583-3350.<br />

SATURDAY, OCT. 12<br />

BRISTOL<br />

DAV BBQ AND PIG ROAST<br />

WITH D.J. AL. 1 to 7 p.m. 191<br />

Riverside Ave., Bristol. Tickets<br />

available at DAV canteen or at<br />

the door. Facebook.com, DAV<br />

chapter Bristol.<br />

Bishop Farms<br />

500 South Meriden Road, Cheshire, CT 06410<br />

• Hay Rides<br />

• Train Rides<br />

Weekends<br />

Call for Times<br />

8” Hardy Mums<br />

3 for $11.99<br />

• Apple Cider<br />

• Field Trips • Donuts<br />

(203) 272-8243<br />

www.bishopfarmsofcheshireconnecticut.com<br />

Voted<br />

“Best Pizza in Bristol”<br />

by Bristol Residents<br />

and<br />

“Best Pizza in Town”<br />

by Bristol Press Readers<br />

Daily<br />

Lunch & Dinner<br />

Specials<br />

240 Park St. (Rte 72)<br />

Bristol • 860-582-5766<br />

Homestyle Italian Cooking...<br />

Like Mom Used to Make!<br />

VOTED BEST<br />

Italian Restaurant in Bristol<br />

THIN OR THICK CRUST<br />

BRICK OVEN PIZZA<br />

• Seafood • Steaks<br />

• Chops • Pasta<br />

OUR ENTIRE DINNER MENU IS AVAILABLE FOR TAKE-OUT!<br />

50% OFF<br />

LUNCH OR DINNER<br />

With This Coupon • Dine In or<br />

Take Out • Food Only<br />

Buy 1 Lunch or Dinner & Receive<br />

the Second of Equal or Lesser Value<br />

at 50% Off. Entrees Only. Not Valid<br />

with Other Offers. Expires 10/11/13<br />

PICK UP ONLY<br />

2 LARGE PIZZAS<br />

1 ITEM<br />

$<br />

17 95<br />

Cannot be combined with any<br />

other offers or discounts.<br />

Expires 10/11/13<br />

$2.00 Budweiser Bottle<br />

During Happy Hour<br />

Bar Only<br />

Catering<br />

& Private Party<br />

Room Available<br />

www.sabinosrestaurantct.com • Closed Mondays<br />

$<br />

5 00 OFF<br />

ANY PURCHASE<br />

OVER $25<br />

With This Coupon • Dine In or<br />

Take Out • Food Only<br />

Not Valid with Other Offers.<br />

Expires 10/11/13


20 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

Tasty Bites... Second Helping<br />

By STACEY MCCARTHY<br />

CORRESPONDENT<br />

Cottage Restaurant and<br />

Café<br />

Open for lunch<br />

Tuesday through Friday<br />

from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and<br />

for dinner seatings, Tuesday<br />

through Saturday from 5<br />

p.m. to 9 p.m. Dine-in and<br />

catering. Large parties are<br />

welcome.<br />

427 Farmington Ave.,<br />

Plainville<br />

Phone- (860)793-8888<br />

www.cottagerestaurantandcafe.com<br />

Full service bar. Wine<br />

by the bottle and by the<br />

glass. They are known for<br />

their Manhattan and<br />

Martini list created by coowner,<br />

Dave Queen.<br />

Executive chef and coowner,<br />

Patty Queen, puts<br />

her signature on the menu<br />

by combining classic dishes<br />

with seasonal ingredients<br />

to create contemporary,<br />

one-of-a-kind dishes.<br />

Appetizers start at $7.<br />

Dinner entrees range from<br />

$18 to $28.<br />

Thai Kitchen 4<br />

Dine-in, take-out, and<br />

catering. Open for lunch<br />

Monday through Friday<br />

from 11:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.<br />

Dinner is from 4:30 to 9:30<br />

p.m. on Monday through<br />

Thursday and 4:30 to 10<br />

p.m. on Friday. Open on<br />

Saturday from noon to 10<br />

p.m.<br />

181 Main St.,<br />

Southington<br />

(860)863-5994<br />

www.thaikitchen4.com<br />

Thai cuisine.<br />

Traditional ingredients<br />

include: lemon grass,<br />

galangal (relative of ginger),<br />

krachai root, peppers,<br />

coconut milk, and basil.<br />

Customer favorites such as:<br />

spicy eggplant (stir fried<br />

basil, bell pepper, onion,<br />

and fresh eggplant with a<br />

garlic sauce), Ocean plate<br />

(stir fried mixed seafood<br />

and assorted vegetables<br />

with basil and mixed fresh<br />

spices) and Tamarine Duck<br />

(crispy marinated duck<br />

with a tamarine sauce.)<br />

Appetizers start at<br />

$4.95.<br />

Lunches start at $8.95.<br />

Dinners start at $11.95.<br />

One Fifty Central<br />

Dine-in and take-out.<br />

Open for lunch Monday<br />

through Saturday from<br />

11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.<br />

Dinner is from 5 to 9 p.m.<br />

Monday through Thursday<br />

and 5 to 9:30 p.m. on Friday<br />

and Saturday. Reservations<br />

accepted for parties of five<br />

or more.<br />

150 Central St., Bristol<br />

Phone: (860)261-7009<br />

www.onefiftycentral.co<br />

m<br />

Owner, Gary Santorso<br />

managed The Silo<br />

Restaurant in Farmington<br />

for 40 years before opening<br />

One Fifty Central on May<br />

20.<br />

All of the wines on the<br />

menu are served by the<br />

glass or by the bottle.<br />

Specialty martini menu.<br />

American cuisine with<br />

an Italian influence. Chefcreated<br />

specials (risotto,<br />

pasta, fish, chicken, and<br />

beef) every day using seasonal<br />

ingredients.<br />

Appetizers start at<br />

$7.75.<br />

Pasta dishes range<br />

from $10.25.<br />

Sandwiches start at<br />

$4.50.<br />

Entrees range start at<br />

$10.25.<br />

Zheng’s<br />

Dine-in and take-out.<br />

Open Tuesday through<br />

Thursday from 11 a.m. to<br />

9:30 p.m., Friday and<br />

Saturday from 11 a.m. to<br />

10:30 p.m. and Sunday<br />

from 12 to 9:30 p.m.<br />

2211 Meriden-<br />

Waterbury Turnpike,<br />

Marion<br />

Phone: (860)426-9929<br />

and (860)426-2889<br />

www.zhengsfood.com<br />

Take-out counter and a<br />

few tables for dine-in customers.<br />

The mint green<br />

walls are decorated with<br />

artwork and black and<br />

white photographs.<br />

Appetizers, soups,<br />

chow mein, lo mein, sweet<br />

and sour, chicken dishes,<br />

seafood, beef dishes,<br />

Cantonese dishes,<br />

Szechuan specialties, vegetarian<br />

dishes, and a special<br />

health and diet menu.<br />

Appetizers start at<br />

$1.30.<br />

Combination plates<br />

include an egg roll and<br />

roast pork fried rice. They<br />

start at $7.50.<br />

Cantonese dishes start<br />

at $9.75.<br />

Health and diet dishes<br />

start at $7.90.<br />

Anthony Jacks<br />

Dine-in, take-out,<br />

curbside pickup, private<br />

parties, catering, and outdoor<br />

dining. Open for<br />

lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 4<br />

p.m. on Monday and<br />

Wednesday through<br />

Saturday. Dinner is from 4<br />

to 9:30 p.m. on Monday,<br />

Wednesday, and Thursday,<br />

from 4 to 10 p.m. on Friday<br />

and Saturday, and 4 to 9<br />

p.m. on Sunday.<br />

30 Center St.,<br />

Southington<br />

Phone: (860)426-1487<br />

www.anthonyjacksrestaurant.com<br />

Anthony Jacks has<br />

been family-owned and<br />

operated for the past 12<br />

years. They have won<br />

numerous awards including:<br />

Best American and Best<br />

Fine Dining by the<br />

Southington Observer<br />

Full service bar. Eight<br />

beers on tap that rotate<br />

seasonally.<br />

Wood-fired, grilled<br />

steaks, burgers, and<br />

seafood, house specialties<br />

(cranberry chicken, Yankee<br />

pot roast, and shrimp jambalaya<br />

with rice), sandwiches,<br />

and salads.<br />

Appetizers start at<br />

$7.50.<br />

House specialties range<br />

from $9 to $22.<br />

Wood fired specialties<br />

with a vegetable, choice of<br />

potato, and choice of garden<br />

or Caesar salad start at<br />

$18.<br />

Burgers served with<br />

french fries start at $8.50.<br />

The Hot Spot<br />

Take-out. Open<br />

Monday through Friday<br />

from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.<br />

1032 Meriden<br />

Waterbury Rd., Southington<br />

(diagonally across from<br />

Southington Drive-in)<br />

860-335-4555<br />

One of the only places<br />

in Connecticut that serves<br />

the Canadian side dish,<br />

Poutine (fresh cut French<br />

fries covered in gravy and<br />

cheese curd.)<br />

A brief encounter with restaurants that previously had been featured in ‘Tasty Bites’<br />

STACEY MCCARTHY<br />

An Ocean Plate at Thai Kitchen 4, 181 Main St., Southington. (860) 863-5994. www.thaikitchen4.com<br />

Soda, iced tea, and<br />

water.<br />

Hummel hotdogs,<br />

Hummel Red Hots (spicy<br />

sausage type hotdog) chili<br />

cheese dogs, Philly Steaks,<br />

Philly Chicken, Poutine,<br />

sausage and peppers, and<br />

hamburgers.<br />

Burgers start at $4.<br />

Philly steaks and Philly<br />

chicken are $7.<br />

Sausage and pepper<br />

grinders are $5.<br />

Hot dogs start at $3.<br />

Poutine is $6.<br />

Spiga D’Oro<br />

Dine-in, take-out, and<br />

catering. Open Tuesday<br />

through Thursday from 11<br />

a.m. to 9 p.m., Friday and<br />

Saturday from 11 a.m. to 10<br />

p.m., and Sunday from<br />

noon to 9 p.m.<br />

25 Middle St., Bristol<br />

Phone: (860)583-3354<br />

Specialty pizzas, calzones,<br />

stuffed breads, soup,<br />

salad, wraps, grinders,<br />

pasta, vegetable dishes,<br />

chicken, veal, steak, and<br />

seafood. The soups and<br />

sauces are all made from<br />

scratch. The menu has classic<br />

Italian/American dishes<br />

such as: penne carbonara,<br />

penne ala vodka, chicken<br />

picatta, veal saltimbocca,<br />

and shrimp fra diavolo.<br />

Appetizers start at<br />

$3.50.<br />

Pasta dishes start at<br />

$9.95.<br />

Steak ranges starts at<br />

$17.95.<br />

Dinners start at $12.95.<br />

Pizza ranges start at $7.<br />

Parker’s<br />

Take-out.Open<br />

Monday through Saturday<br />

from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.<br />

109 East Main St.,<br />

Plainville (parking lot of<br />

flea market)<br />

Phone: (860)485-5117<br />

Burgers, hotdogs,<br />

Philly steak and cheese,<br />

grilled cheese, alligator<br />

sandwiches, chicken sandwiches,<br />

seafood sandwiches,<br />

seafood baskets, New<br />

England clam chowder, salads,<br />

hush puppies, corn<br />

dogs, onion rings, fried<br />

pickles, coleslaw, Cajun<br />

fries, French fries, chili<br />

cheese fries, and garlic<br />

parmesan fries. The food at<br />

Parker’s is prepared to<br />

order. Many of the items<br />

are made from scratch<br />

including: freshly battered<br />

clam strips, New England<br />

clam chowder, hush puppies,<br />

onion rings, fried<br />

pickles, coleslaw, tartar<br />

sauce and cocktail sauce.<br />

Southington/Plantsville<br />

Farmer’s Market<br />

Open Fridays from 3 to<br />

6 p.m. from now through<br />

Oct. 25.<br />

The Town Green- 1003<br />

South Main St.,<br />

Southington<br />

Freshly picked fruits<br />

and vegetables from<br />

Southington’s Lewis Farms,<br />

Gresczyk Farms in New<br />

Hartford, and other<br />

Connecticut farms.<br />

Gresczyk Farms has a<br />

Community Supported<br />

Agriculture program (CSA).<br />

Customers can join the CSA<br />

by purchasing a share of<br />

the farm. Each week, they<br />

receive a prepackaged box<br />

of vegetables, fruit, and<br />

eggs. Bradley Mountain<br />

Soap Company sells handcrafted<br />

soaps.<br />

Baked goods, eggs, and<br />

just picked fruits, vegetables,<br />

and herbs. Lewis<br />

Farms is growing many<br />

varieties of vegetables<br />

including: 10 of squash, 10<br />

of eggplant, 40 of peppers,<br />

and several of heirloom<br />

tomatoes. Each week, they<br />

bring fruit, vegetables,<br />

herbs, and baked goods to<br />

the market. Gresczyk Farms<br />

sells: fruits, vegetables,<br />

herbs, eggs, and shares of<br />

their CSA. Better Baking by<br />

Beth sells: stuffed breads,<br />

artisanal breads, cupcakes,<br />

cookies, pastries, fruit pies,<br />

and pot pies.<br />

Market price for fruits<br />

and vegetables can vary.<br />

The Farmer’s Market of<br />

Plainville is located on the<br />

lawn of Plainville High<br />

School on Fridays from 3 to<br />

6 p.m. now through<br />

Sept.13.<br />

The Bristol Farmer’s<br />

Market is located at 99<br />

Farmington Ave., Bristol.<br />

They are open now through<br />

Oct. 26 on Wednesdays<br />

from 3 to 6 p.m. and<br />

Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 1<br />

p.m.<br />

Christina’s Gourmet<br />

Cookies, Classes and<br />

Parties<br />

Open to the public<br />

Friday from 11 a.m. to 5<br />

p.m. and Saturday from 10<br />

a.m. to 2 p.m. Call any day<br />

to place a special order for<br />

all types of events.<br />

35 North Main St.,<br />

Southington. (860)426-9499<br />

www.cg-cookies.com<br />

Over 40 varieties of<br />

cookies for special events,<br />

client gifts, party trays and<br />

party favors. Several flavors<br />

of cookies including:<br />

peanut butter bliss, dark<br />

chocolate chip and pecan,<br />

caramel pecan turtle and<br />

season flavors such as:<br />

lemon drop, chocolate covered<br />

banana, white chocolate<br />

apricot oat, and campfire<br />

delight. Gourmet cookies<br />

are $2 each, $11 for a<br />

half dozen, and $21 for a<br />

dozen.<br />

The Super Natural<br />

Market and Deli<br />

Counter service, takeout,<br />

party platters, and<br />

catering. Open Monday to<br />

Friday from 8 a.m. to 6<br />

p.m., and Saturday from 9<br />

a.m. to 5 p.m.<br />

430 North Main St.,<br />

Bristol<br />

Phone: (860)582-1663<br />

www.supernaturalmarket.com<br />

The Super Natural<br />

Market and Deli is a familyowned<br />

business that has<br />

been open since 1980.<br />

All of the hot food, salads,<br />

soups, and baked<br />

goods are made from<br />

scratch on the premises.<br />

Breakfast sandwiches are<br />

served until 10:30 a.m.<br />

Other house-made breakfast<br />

options include: Greek<br />

yogurt parfaits, muffins,<br />

bagels, and scones.<br />

Sandwiches are available<br />

from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. and<br />

can be made on a hard roll,<br />

bread, wrap, or French roll.<br />

Steamed cheeseburgers<br />

and their famous macaroni<br />

and cheese is available<br />

from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. The<br />

hot meal specials are<br />

updated daily.<br />

Breakfast items start at<br />

85 cents for a bagel.<br />

Sandwiches start from<br />

$3.95.


Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

21


22 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

Transportation<br />

Sport utility<br />

Healthcare<br />

Help wanted Help wanted Help wanted Help wanted<br />

Auto for sale<br />

2004 SUBARU OUTBACK WAGON<br />

Good cond. 167,000 miles. $5,300,<br />

leather int. well maint. 860-621-2467.<br />

BMW 00 740IL 4 dr, V8, AT, all power,<br />

cold AC, 140K, real nice $3750. Call<br />

203-217-2676<br />

BMW 2002 330xi, AWD, 89k. xenon,<br />

nav, silv/bl, mint. $10,900/BO. 203-<br />

264-3073<br />

BUICK 91 Park Ave. Exc cond., 1 owner.<br />

69K orig. mi. Asking $3900. Call<br />

203-645-8474<br />

CHEVROLET '96, S10, 68K, Cap. One<br />

owner. Very good condition. $4,500<br />

or best offer. 860-302-3231.<br />

CHEVY DUMP TRUCK 1987, 3 yd.<br />

w/plow. $2,500 or BO. Call 860-945-<br />

0359.<br />

CHRYSLER 03 PT Cruiser 4cyl, AT, 79K<br />

very clean, runs/looks exc. $3500.<br />

203-232-5270<br />

HONDA 96 Civic LX, 4dr, 1.6 5spd,<br />

40MPG, very clean, exc cond. $2500.<br />

203-232-5270<br />

PONTIAC FIREBIRD '96. 55,000 mi.<br />

Runs, needs work. $1,500 or best offer.<br />

Call 860-426-8087 for more info.<br />

SUBARU 02 Forester wgn AWD, 4cyl,<br />

AT, 110k, one owner, exc cond.<br />

$3995. 203-232-5270<br />

SUBARU 98 Legacy Wgn. AWD, 156K,<br />

wtr pump, tim. belt, AT, AC $2350.<br />

203-982-8780<br />

TOYOTA 03 Matrix, 4WD, XR, 4DR, AT,<br />

4 cyl. great cond. $5300. 860 919-<br />

7531.<br />

VOLKSWAGEN 99 Passat, runs well,<br />

regular maint, new parts, body dmg<br />

129K 1 owner. $2200 neg 203-206-<br />

7427<br />

Motorcycles<br />

Motor Bikes<br />

HONDA 03 Goldwing, 1800. candy orange,<br />

110,000 mi., asking $6000. 203-<br />

939-3739.<br />

WE BUY USED<br />

HARLEY-DAVIDSON<br />

MOTORCYCLES<br />

Get TOP $$$ for your H-D<br />

call, email pics or ride in to<br />

Phone: (203) 730-2453 x14<br />

sales@hdofdanbury.com<br />

Harley-Davidson of Danbury<br />

51 Federal Rd, Danbury, CT<br />

Sport utility<br />

2011 CAN-AM ATV OUTLANDER<br />

Max XT, asking $6,600. 2003 Skidoo,<br />

4-stroke, Grand Touring<br />

snowmobile, asking $2,500. Call<br />

860-997-2649.<br />

CHEVROLET 99 Trailblazer 4x4, 4dr,<br />

V6, AT, lthr, loaded, 105k, exc. cond.<br />

$2500. 203-232-5270<br />

GMC 01 Jimmy Blazer 4dr, V6, AT,<br />

loaded 4x4, AC, like new $2650. 203-<br />

217-2676.<br />

JEEP 95 Grand Cherokee Ltd, red, 6cyl<br />

AT, all power 4x4, AC, like new $3250.<br />

203-217-2676<br />

JEEP 97 Grand Cherokee, Laredo,<br />

black, 6 cyl, AT, 4x4. Runs like new.<br />

$2250. 203-217-2676<br />

Parts & Repair<br />

BED LINER Hi Cap Windows Ford<br />

Ranger short bed $350. 860-628-<br />

8538.<br />

OLDS 02 Intrigue bronze, blown eng.<br />

For parts. Asking $600 obo. 203-509-<br />

5325.<br />

Automotive<br />

wanted<br />

CASH FOR CARS: Any Make, Model<br />

or Year. We pay more! Running or<br />

not, sell your car or truck today. Free<br />

towing. Instant Offer: 1-800-871-<br />

0654.<br />

Recreational<br />

Vehicles<br />

Airplanes & services<br />

Boats & accessories<br />

Campers & trailers<br />

Snowmobiles<br />

Boats &<br />

accessories<br />

BOAT/CAR STORAGE Inside, dry &<br />

secure. $375. Now through June 1, 2014.<br />

Call 860-567-8562<br />

Careers<br />

Healthcare<br />

APRN/PA busy primary care general<br />

internal medicine practice in Waterbury<br />

looking for a PA or APRN with at least 5<br />

years experience in adult care.<br />

Competitive salary, and full benefit<br />

package. If interested please send<br />

CV/resume with refs. to: noonemedicaloffice@gmail.com<br />

BILLING SPECIALIST<br />

Come join our Dynamic Home Care<br />

Agency! We are seeking a Billing<br />

Specialist with 3 or more years<br />

experience in a Homecare setting.<br />

This position is responsible for billing<br />

Private Insurance, Medicare and<br />

Medicaid.<br />

Competitive salary and benefits, along<br />

with mathcing 401K are just some of<br />

the reasons to join our fantastic<br />

team!<br />

Email your resume to<br />

elaine@aayct.com or<br />

Please call or come in to fill out<br />

application:<br />

ALL ABOUT YOU HOME CARE<br />

21 Church Street<br />

2nd Floor<br />

Naugatuck, CT. 06770<br />

203-720-9383 ext. 123<br />

203-720-1113 (fax)<br />

FRONT DESK PERSON FT for busy internal<br />

medicine practice in Wtrby.<br />

Responsible for greeting patients,<br />

taking insurance information & co-pays,<br />

answering phones & filing. Computer &<br />

insurance knowledge a must. At least 3<br />

yr previous exp. Send resume to:<br />

noonemedicaloffice@gmail.com<br />

LIVE-IN COMPANIONS PT/FT, Wknds.<br />

Wtby, Wtwn. Start Now. Spanish a+ Exp.<br />

203-891-8243<br />

PT, Access Rehab Centers, an evergrowing<br />

therapy company based in<br />

Waterbury, is seeking an energetic staff<br />

Physical Therapist to fill a FT position.<br />

Rich benefit pkg. includes generous<br />

paid time off, insurances, 401k and<br />

Educ. Reimb. Access is affiliated with<br />

Waterbury Hosp. and Easter Seals, has<br />

an excellent reputation, and is CARF<br />

accredited. We offer a supportive<br />

environment, do-able benchmarks, and<br />

a competitive salary. Please call Karen<br />

at (203) 598-0500 ext. #15 or send<br />

resume to<br />

kpicard@<br />

accessrehabcenters.com EOE<br />

RN SUPERVISOR Grove Manor Nursing<br />

Home, a 60 bed facility, is looking for<br />

an exp'd dependable, 7-3 wknd<br />

Supervisor. Fax resume to: Janet<br />

Alicience @ 203-753-6177<br />

Help wanted<br />

AUTO MASTER TECH Also A&B Tech<br />

immed. start. Top pay $3000 sign-on<br />

bonus. 914-715-5558.<br />

AUTO PARTS delivery driver PT. clean<br />

DMR. Apply LoStocco Auto Parts, 2558<br />

E.Main St., Wtby<br />

AUTO TECH Experienced PT/FT. Excellent<br />

wages & benefits. Call 203-284-8989 or<br />

fax 203-269-1114<br />

AUTOBODY TECH Exp'd in all aspects of<br />

the job, but all will be considered. Pd.<br />

holidays, vac, & med. bens offered.<br />

Apply Quality Autobody, 516 Oxford Rd.,<br />

Oxford 203-888-0297<br />

banking<br />

PART TIME –<br />

CUSTOMER SERVICE SUPPORT–<br />

MORTGAGE SERVICING<br />

Torrington Savings Bank has an immediate<br />

need to fill a part time customer<br />

service support position in our very<br />

busy and fast paced mortgage servicing<br />

department. Ideal candidate will<br />

have experience dealing with customer<br />

over the phone and in person,<br />

basic computer skills, analytical abilities<br />

and an aptitude for figures.<br />

Interested parties may send a resume<br />

to HR@torringtonsavings.com or they<br />

can fill out an application on our website<br />

www.torringtonsavings.com.<br />

Torrington Savings Bank is an equal<br />

opportunity employer and a drug free<br />

workplace<br />

CARPENTER - LEAD<br />

own tools and transp.<br />

Call 203-237-0350 9am-3pm<br />

City of Waterbury<br />

Accepting applications for:<br />

➤ HUMAN RESOURCES<br />

GENERALIST<br />

➤ HUMAN RESOURCES<br />

GENERALIST-EDUCATION<br />

Accepting Applications: Civil Service<br />

Office, Chase Municipal Bldg,236<br />

Grand St., Wtby, CT 06702. EOE<br />

M/F/H/V<br />

Visit our website at<br />

www.waterburyct.<strong>org</strong><br />

for detail copy of this posting<br />

CNC MACHINIST<br />

Established, growing manufacturer of<br />

Precision Parts has openings on day<br />

and night shifts for full/part time<br />

experienced Machinists capable of<br />

setting and operating CNC lathes.<br />

Applicants must be able to work independently,<br />

read blueprints and all<br />

measuring devices. Only qualified<br />

applicants will be considered.<br />

We offer the following:<br />

Excellent Starting Wages<br />

401K Retirement Plan<br />

Co.Paid Med & Dental (100%)<br />

Modern Air Conditioned Plant<br />

Uniforms Supplied<br />

11 Paid Holidays<br />

Apply in person only<br />

(No Phone Calls) to:<br />

Precision Aerospace, Inc.<br />

88 Cogwheel Lane<br />

Silvermine Industrial Park<br />

Seymour, CT. 06483<br />

EOE<br />

DENTAL ASSISTANT<br />

Specialty Practice seeking experienced<br />

assistant 4 days per wk. Requires skills<br />

to manage surgical patients and<br />

procedures in a fast paced and caring<br />

environment. Must be able to multi<br />

task. Immediate holiday and vacation<br />

pay. Rate commensurate with exp. If<br />

you would like to become a member of<br />

our team, Call 203-596-7788<br />

DENTAL ORTHO ASST PT/FT prior<br />

ortho exp pref. Resume to: dentaljobct31@gmail.com<br />

DRIVER Looking for Class B CDL Hazmat<br />

Driver for nights & seasonal. Call Joe<br />

203-755-7400.<br />

DRIVER Quality Vending is seeking a<br />

driver to service a vending route. Some<br />

mechanical ability helpful. Company<br />

will train. Starting time is 3:30 am. Full<br />

time position, vacation & other fringe<br />

benefits. Apply 645 Emmett St. Bristol 1-<br />

800-254-2649.<br />

E2 for immediate opening. Licenced<br />

Only.<br />

Call 203-879-6367<br />

Education<br />

The Glenholme School, a specialized<br />

therapeutic boarding school for<br />

students with special needs ages 10 -21,<br />

is expanding and seeks enthusiastic<br />

and engaging individuals for the<br />

following positions:<br />

*Boarding Faculty: 7a-4p, 3-11 and 11p -7a<br />

shifts<br />

*CT Certified Math Teacher or Long Term<br />

Sub<br />

*CT Certified Technology Teacher or<br />

Long Term Sub<br />

*Robotics Instructor<br />

*Transitional Life Coach (p/t)<br />

*Director of Milieu Treatment<br />

*BCBA Behavior Specialist<br />

*RN & LPN (full and part time)<br />

*Food Service p/t<br />

To apply go to jobs.devereux.<strong>org</strong> or<br />

contact Mary Beth Peacock in<br />

Human Resources at<br />

mpeacock@devereux.<strong>org</strong><br />

Devereux is a drug-free workplace, drug<br />

screen and pre-employment physical<br />

required. EOE<br />

Place Your<br />

Classified Ad<br />

Online<br />

stepsaver.com<br />

Help Wanted: Office assistant looking to work School<br />

Hours. Local Painting Company looking for overqualified<br />

individual looking for flexibility in a workplace, should<br />

have bookkeeping experience with QuickBooks, Data<br />

entry, CRM, but must have excellent phone skills.<br />

Knowledge of Social Media and some marketing skills are<br />

a plus. Ability to establish priorities, work independently<br />

and proceed with objectives without supervision. 25-30<br />

hours work week. Must be able to pass full background<br />

check and drug test. Starting pay is $14-$16 per hour<br />

depending upon experience.<br />

Please respond with resume to<br />

southingtonpainting@gmail.com include phone number.<br />

All applicants will receive a return call.<br />

Electrical<br />

Maintenance Technician<br />

Specialty Minerals Inc., a division of<br />

Minerals Technologies Inc., a globally<br />

recognized, manufacturing leader<br />

seeks motivated individual to join our<br />

team as an Electrical Maintenance<br />

Technician at our Canaan, CT location.<br />

Resp. include troubleshooting & repair<br />

of complex process & motor controls<br />

and installation/repair of new electrical<br />

systems & components of typically<br />

480v, leading major electrical<br />

projects & more. PC skills is required<br />

to perform mechanical skills such as<br />

welding, rigging, and the use of pipe<br />

threading machines, etc.<br />

HS diploma or equivalent, formal electrical<br />

trade training & electrical<br />

license are required. At least five yrs<br />

exp in an industrial environment with<br />

knowledge of equipment such as:<br />

PLC’s, variable speed drives, DC<br />

drives, motors, controls, generators,<br />

induction heating equipment, fire<br />

alarms and high voltage are required.<br />

The successful candidate must be<br />

highly motivated self-starter, display<br />

integrity, have outstanding interpersonal<br />

skills, be a team player, be<br />

results oriented and extremely<br />

dependable. Strong leadership traits<br />

desired. Exp w/electronic instrumentation,<br />

programmable controllers,<br />

electronic test equipment &<br />

control theory/modes preferred.<br />

Lean manufacturing exp is a +.<br />

We offer a variety of benefits, including<br />

med/dental/vision, life/AD&D<br />

insurance, 401(k) & more. Email<br />

resume to<br />

trinh.huynh@<br />

mineralstech.com,<br />

fax 610 882-1385 or mail to Trinh Huynh<br />

– Shared Services Dept., Specialty<br />

Minerals Inc., 1 Highland Ave,<br />

Bethlehem, PA 18017. No phone calls<br />

please. Only those meeting our<br />

requirements will be contacted.<br />

www.mineralstech.com<br />

EOE/M/F/D/V<br />

No Phone Calls Please<br />

ELECTRICIAN E-2 to work full time on<br />

commercial and residential projects.<br />

Competitive wages. Fax resume to 203-<br />

759-0987<br />

ELECTRICIAN E-2 to work full time on<br />

commercial and residential projects.<br />

Competitive wages. Fax resume to 203-<br />

759-0987<br />

FOOD SERVICE MANAGER for elderly<br />

nutrition program. Must have knowledge<br />

& experience with quantity cooking,<br />

ordering, inventory control and staff<br />

supervision. Cornucopia Food Service<br />

call Joe 860-489-5446.<br />

HAIRSTYLIST exp'd only with clientele.<br />

FT/PT. 2 chairs avail.<br />

A Cut Above, 203-525-6275<br />

HELPER WANTED to build shelves for<br />

handicapped woman. Call 860-261-<br />

5567.<br />

Homemaker days and evenings,<br />

weekends required, clean, meals,<br />

laundry & errands. Car/driver lic.<br />

Background check. Apply 10am to 3pm<br />

Extra Hand, Inc. 10 Old Schoolhouse Rd.<br />

Prospect AA/EOE<br />

Homemakers/<br />

Companions/<br />

PCAs Wanted<br />

Greater Bristol Area<br />

Flexible Hours<br />

To apply, call:<br />

FAV Home Care LLC<br />

860-314-1653<br />

HCA # 0000125<br />

HVAC<br />

Service Tech w/S2 lic.<br />

Tune-up Tech w/S2 lic.<br />

Installation Tech w/S2 lic.<br />

Sales Comfort Specialist<br />

We are a residential light commercial<br />

service and installation company. For<br />

application materials please respond<br />

to: 860-283-0316 or<br />

gary@pelletierms.com<br />

Maintenance Supervisor<br />

Full time<br />

❖❖❖❖<br />

Non-profit agency in the Torrington area<br />

is looking for a maintenance supervisor<br />

for our 30+ group homes. Primary<br />

duties: supervise/coordinate<br />

maintenance /upkeep of homes,<br />

evaluate and prioritize immed.<br />

maintenance issues as well as long term<br />

capital needs. Work with contractors, in<br />

terms of developing work specs,<br />

bidding and project management. The<br />

candidate should have several years of<br />

similar experience, good timemngt/<strong>org</strong>anizational<br />

skills and ability to<br />

use computers. This is a full time<br />

position with excellent benefits.<br />

If interested please complete an<br />

application on-line at<br />

Communitysystems.<strong>org</strong> and specify<br />

MAINTENANCE in the “applied for” field.<br />

Resumes may also be faxed to 860-482-<br />

2678. CSI is an EEO, Affir. Action<br />

employer supporting workplace<br />

diversity.<br />

DENTAL RECEPTIONIST/SCHEDULER<br />

FT front desk position available, experience required.<br />

Busy, 2 doctor, practice located in Bristol. Looking for<br />

a dedicated, <strong>org</strong>anized and energetic person to join<br />

our team. VERY competitive rate of pay for a qualified<br />

candidate along with medical benefits, vacation time<br />

and 401K plan. Applicants should be experienced in<br />

scheduling/confirming appointments along with<br />

other duties. Knowledge of Dentrix a plus. The right<br />

candidate must be a self-starter, team player and be<br />

able to deliver excellent customer service. Please<br />

email resumes and references to: dciquera@snet.net


Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

Help wanted<br />

MANUFACTURING<br />

★★★★<br />

Microbest has experienced continued<br />

growth year over year which has resulted<br />

in an opening in our Manufacturing<br />

Engineering Dept.<br />

We seek a highly qualified individual<br />

with a can do attitude who is willing to<br />

share their expertise as we share our<br />

expertise with them.<br />

The successful candidate will enjoy<br />

working in an open, challenging,<br />

rewarding, and fast paced environment.<br />

Career Experience Requirements:<br />

·Minimum 5 yrs hands on experience in<br />

high level CNC milling and CNC lathe<br />

trouble shooting..<br />

·Good understanding of G and M code<br />

CNC program structure, creation and<br />

editing.<br />

·Experience utilizing and implementing<br />

“Lean” concepts in a high volume manufacturing<br />

environment..<br />

·Extensive experience creating and<br />

implementing<br />

Continuous<br />

Improvement initiatives.<br />

·Highly developed computer skills<br />

including MS Office products and<br />

CAD/CAM products, Surfcam exp. a<br />

plus..<br />

·Gage and fixture design exp.<br />

·Understanding of and exp. with QA<br />

requirements and Document Control<br />

processes utilized in World Class manufacturing<br />

environments.<br />

Compensation based on exp.<br />

Team environment, Competitive Salary<br />

and Benefits.<br />

Please apply in person or<br />

fax resume to<br />

Microbest, Inc.<br />

670 Captain Neville Dr<br />

Waterbury, Ct 06705<br />

tclukey@microbest.com<br />

Fax: 203 597-0655 or call Teresa @<br />

(203) 597-0355 ext. 225 EOE<br />

MANUFACTURING<br />

PRESS DEPT.<br />

FOREPERSON<br />

Bridgeport Fittings, in business 88<br />

years, is an industry leader in the<br />

manufacture of conduit and cable fittings.<br />

You will manage and supervise<br />

overall press operations. Able to lift<br />

up to 50 lbs; read basic blueprints.<br />

Duties include: policy/procedure<br />

instructions; schedule/assign work;<br />

machine check maintenance; set<br />

up/troubleshoot experience with<br />

progressive dies; stamping machine<br />

experience; maintain die card system;<br />

write work orders, keep production<br />

and quality records; train<br />

employees, etc. H.S.<br />

Diploma/Equivalency; and must have<br />

good interpersonal skills. Contact:<br />

Jim Connor, Director, HR, Bridgeport<br />

Fittings, 705 Lordship Blvd., Stratford,<br />

CT 06615, Fax: 203-378-9818, E-mail:<br />

jimc@bptfittings.com<br />

EOE<br />

MECHANIC Small Engine 4 cycle, 2 cycle.<br />

Experience preferred. Schmidts &<br />

Serafines, 237 East Aurora S. Waterbury.<br />

Apply in person.<br />

NAIL TECH up to 32 hrs for experienced<br />

nail<br />

tech.<br />

www.DefiningMomentsCT.com<br />

Newspaper Home Delivery<br />

PCF, Inc. is seeking Delivery Service<br />

Providers (DSPs) for routes in Beacon<br />

Falls, Naugatuck and Oxford. Mon-<br />

Sun. 2-3 hours daily, starting around<br />

3am. $400-$500/bi-weekly. No $$<br />

collections. Must be 18+. DSPs are<br />

independently contracted.<br />

Call 1-800-515-8000<br />

PARALEGAL MEDICAID/TITLE 19<br />

Experienced; sought for small, busy New<br />

Milford law firm. Benefits avail. Salary<br />

commensurate with experience. Fax<br />

resume to 860-350-1118.<br />

Part Time Sales & Market<br />

Research Analyst Assistant<br />

Primary Duties Include<br />

but are not limited to:<br />

*Market identification for compressed<br />

gas cylinder<br />

requalification<br />

*Identify companies needing periodic<br />

requalification.<br />

Identification and follow-up of info<br />

obtained from trade publications,<br />

Thomasnet, web directories, &<br />

DOT/TC listings.<br />

*Setup database to identify co. that<br />

use our products<br />

*Setup & monitor social media programs<br />

to help expand market presence<br />

for Cyl-Sonic Ultrasonic<br />

Evaluation Equip.<br />

*Entry Level, Approximately 20 hours<br />

per week<br />

Email resume to:<br />

hrnordco@gmail.com<br />

Part-Time<br />

Service Representative<br />

A Waterbury credit union has opportunity<br />

for individual to join our team as<br />

a service representative working 15-<br />

20 hours a week in the afternoon,<br />

with additional hours as needed and<br />

Saturday mornings. Primary responsibilities<br />

include processing<br />

deposits, withdrawals and loan payments,<br />

along with promoting our<br />

products and services. If you have an<br />

outgoing personality with cash-handling<br />

experience, and strong math<br />

and sales skills, we would like to talk<br />

to you. Many of our members are<br />

bilingual, so speaking Spanish is a<br />

plus. Forward résumé and wage<br />

requirements to<br />

hr@fdcommunityfcu.<strong>org</strong><br />

Equal Opportunity Employer.<br />

Help wanted<br />

PET GROOMER 5 year exp. Hand<br />

scissoring. Weekends a must.<br />

Call 203-263-5128<br />

Plant Process<br />

Maintenance Engineer<br />

A leading manufacturer of building<br />

products designed for energy conservation<br />

is actively seeking a hands-on,<br />

innovative, and detail oriented individual<br />

to lead our plant engineering<br />

function. Key responsibilities include<br />

maintaining operation at peak efficiencies,<br />

developing and implementing<br />

automation, & leading improvement<br />

efforts to increase productivity<br />

& reliability of plant resources. A<br />

bachelor’s degree in electronics,<br />

electrical or mechanical engineering<br />

or similar discipline, along with 3-5<br />

years of experience is required.<br />

Interested candidates can view further<br />

information about this position,<br />

as well as company benefits information<br />

and application instructions at<br />

www.polarcentral.com\jobs<br />

Regional Planner Starting salary<br />

$42,000–$46,000 depending on qualifications.<br />

The Council of Governments of<br />

the Central Naugatuck Valley, a regional<br />

planning <strong>org</strong>anization serving the<br />

greater Waterbury, CT, area (pop.<br />

288,000), is seeking a self-motivated,<br />

clear-thinking individual to develop<br />

plans, studies, and analyses under<br />

COGCNV’s regional planning and transportation<br />

planning programs. Exp. with<br />

land use policies, local zoning regulations,<br />

and comprehensive plans is pref.<br />

Position may also include work in<br />

transp. planning, environmental planning,<br />

and emergency planning. Exc.<br />

analytical, report writing, and communication<br />

abilities, and proficiency in<br />

personal computer applications are<br />

essential. GIS, data visualization,<br />

and/or graphic design capabilities are<br />

desirable. Requires a Master’s degree in<br />

city or regional planning or related field<br />

and one year of planning exp., or a<br />

Bachelor’s degree in city or regional<br />

planning or related field and three years<br />

of planning exp. Valid driver’s license<br />

and own transportation also required.<br />

Send resume to Executive Director,<br />

Council of Governments of the Central<br />

Naugatuck Valley, 49 Leavenworth<br />

Street, Suite 303, Waterbury, CT 06702.<br />

Email: lrizzo@cogcnv.<strong>org</strong><br />

EOE<br />

REST line cook, exp. FT/PT. comp. pay,<br />

busy Southington rest. Fri. & Sat. PM a<br />

must. 860-919-9434<br />

RESTAURANT WAITSTAFF exp FT & PT.<br />

Flex. Apply Fairways Tavern @ Heritage<br />

Village Country Club, 137 East Hill Rd.,<br />

Stby<br />

SALES CLERK must be avail some Thurs<br />

nite & Sat day, good w/computers,<br />

math & people. Entry level w/pot. 203-<br />

573-9898<br />

SALES<br />

EARN THE MONEY YOU DESERVE<br />

Looking to add a Comfort Specialist to<br />

our outside Sales team. This<br />

commission based position includes<br />

residential HVAC Sales presentations<br />

with our prospective clients. HVAC<br />

experience is not required. For<br />

application materials 860-283-0316 or<br />

gary@pelletierms.com<br />

SALESPERSON<br />

Excellent Opportunity<br />

Will train qualified person. Requires<br />

occ. travel. College educ. preferred.<br />

Good phone & computer skills a must.<br />

Fax or Email (see below) Or better,<br />

apply in person.<br />

SWISS SCREW MACHINE<br />

Operator/Setup Person<br />

On cam style Bechler mach.<br />

Min. 5 yrs exp. M-F 7a-3p<br />

Good benefits. EOE<br />

APPLY IN PERSON:<br />

Devon Precision Industries<br />

251 Munson Rd., Wolcott, CT<br />

EOE.<br />

yvondes@aldn.com<br />

Fax: 203-879-5556<br />

Help wanted<br />

School Age Programs:<br />

Site Coordinator, Head Teacher,<br />

Asst.Teacher, Subs: After school prog<br />

@ local pub schl sites. Degree &/or<br />

exp. w/ children req. Send resume to<br />

pesce@<br />

educationconnection.<strong>org</strong><br />

or EDUCATION CONNECTION #19 -14,<br />

P.O. Box 909, Litchfield, CT 06759.<br />

EOE/AA<br />

School Bus Drivers<br />

All-Star Transportation<br />

Hiring NOW<br />

BURLINGTON-TORRINGTON<br />

★★★<br />

Immediate openings for school bus<br />

drivers. Paid training starting now to<br />

get your school bus license. NO<br />

experience necessary. 20 to 30 hours<br />

per week on average. Clean driving<br />

record required. Perfect attendance<br />

bonus, dental, life insurance and 401<br />

K available.<br />

Please apply in Person<br />

★<br />

268 Technology Park Drive<br />

Torrington<br />

860-489-3444<br />

227 Spielman Highway<br />

Burlington<br />

860-673-0272<br />

Section 8 Certification Specialist<br />

The Waterbury Housing Authority has<br />

an immediate opening for a full-time<br />

specialist to assist in the administration<br />

of the Section 8 Housing Choice<br />

Voucher Program. The position will<br />

include processing annual recertification’s,<br />

interim recertification’s,<br />

determination of client eligibility,<br />

maintain computerized records, prepare<br />

reports, and other related work<br />

as required. Bi-lingual is preferred<br />

but not necessary. Excellent<br />

Benefits. Equal Opportunity<br />

Employer M/F/V. Position is open<br />

until filled. Qualified applicants send<br />

resume with cover letter to: Kathleen<br />

Noble, Housing Authority of the City<br />

of Waterbury, 2 Lakewood Road,<br />

Waterbury, CT 06704.<br />

No phone calls please.<br />

TELEPHONE SALES / DISPATCHER Hivolume<br />

logistics company seeking<br />

telephone sales dispatcher. Salary plus<br />

commission. Reply to<br />

info@<br />

valuelinetransportation.com<br />

Place Your<br />

Classified Ad<br />

Online<br />

stepsaver.com<br />

10/04/13<br />

Help wanted<br />

The Town of Bethlehem is accepting<br />

applications for a full-time<br />

maintainer for the Public Works<br />

Department.<br />

Duties: Responsible for the general<br />

maintenance of the Town’s roads,<br />

drainage, bridges, land, buildings,<br />

and equipment as directed by the<br />

Public Works Director.<br />

Requirements: High school graduate<br />

or trade school graduate, valid Class<br />

A CDL Connecticut drivers license.<br />

Requires the ability to operate safely<br />

and proficiently Town vehicles and<br />

equipment, including dump truck for<br />

plowing and salting roads, front-end<br />

loader, mini excavator, tractor, roadside<br />

mower, chipper, chain saws,<br />

hand saws, other small tools, and<br />

powered weed cutters. Must be<br />

capable of working in arduous<br />

weather conditions at all hours as<br />

needed.<br />

Please send application and resume<br />

to:<br />

Mark Piccirillo,<br />

Director of Public Works<br />

36 Main Street South,<br />

PO Box 160<br />

Bethlehem, CT 06751-0160<br />

Applications are available from the<br />

Selectmen’s Office or Public Works<br />

Department, and will be accepted<br />

through Friday, <strong>October</strong> 11, <strong>2013</strong> at<br />

12:00 noon.<br />

TRUCK DRIVER CDL Class A Fedex Ground<br />

contract, PT, $600/wk FT $1000/wk<br />

home daily 1 yr exp dbl Hazmat, clean,<br />

lic. 203-410-2752<br />

WANTED: Personal Care Assistant(s)<br />

for man with quadriplegia. Three<br />

positions: Monday through Friday<br />

8:30p to 9:30p; Sat. & Sun. 8:30p to<br />

9:30p; Sat. & Sun. 7:00a to 10:00a. $13<br />

hr. Must have strength, humor, optimism.<br />

Please be local to<br />

Unionville/Farmington. Call Scott<br />

860-675-9331.<br />

CLUES ACROSS<br />

1. Most favorables<br />

7. 23rd Greek letter<br />

10. Rated higher<br />

12. Immature herring<br />

13. Malignant skin<br />

neoplasm<br />

14. Orange-red spinel<br />

15. Hunted beings<br />

16. Be obedient to<br />

17. Excavate with<br />

a shovel<br />

18. = to 100 cauris<br />

19. Lose hold of<br />

21. Highest card<br />

22. Western Union<br />

message<br />

27. The "Show Me" state<br />

28. Early photo process<br />

33. A public promotion<br />

34. A group of statues<br />

36. A single thing<br />

37. Ireland<br />

38. A raised speaking<br />

platform<br />

39. Leavened bread<br />

40. Farm animal shelter<br />

41. Oral polio vaccine<br />

44. Chinese fine silk<br />

silver<br />

45. Chocolate-colored<br />

acidic pulp pod<br />

Schools &<br />

instruction<br />

AVIATION MAINTENANCE Training,<br />

financial aid if qualified. Job placement<br />

assistance. Call National Aviation<br />

Academy Today! FAA approved.<br />

Classes starting soon. 1-800-292-<br />

3228 or NAA.edu<br />

Situations<br />

wanted<br />

PCA CAREGIVER I'm available on<br />

weekends with personal care,<br />

cleaning and companionship. Also<br />

avail. afternoons, 3pm-7pm weekdays.<br />

860-585-9818. Nancy.<br />

Financial<br />

Business<br />

opportunities<br />

BREAD ROUTE Premium Bread Route for<br />

Sale $140,000. Contact:<br />

breadroute4sale@gmail.com<br />

WATERBURY Barber Shop/Beauty<br />

Parlor w/all chairs incl, $500/mo. call<br />

203-479-2218<br />

Merchandise<br />

Articles<br />

for sale<br />

ART and articles for sale. Call for appointment,<br />

860-567-2167<br />

48. ____ off<br />

49. Hagiographa<br />

50. Manuscripts, abbr.<br />

51. Over the sea<br />

CLUES DOWN<br />

1. Stare impertinently<br />

2. Address a deity<br />

3. Converts hide into<br />

leather<br />

4. Matrimonial response<br />

5. 13th Hebrew letter<br />

6. Dentist's <strong>org</strong>anization<br />

Uncle Ted’s<br />

1. What state is nicknamed the Pelican<br />

State?<br />

2. What is alloyed with steel to make it<br />

stainless?<br />

3. Who was the subject of the 1968<br />

biography Always On Sunday?<br />

4. In WWII American army slang, what was<br />

a GI Moe?<br />

5. How long did the Battle of Waterloo last?<br />

6. James Brown was called the "Godfather "<br />

of what?<br />

7. Which golfer said "Grey hair is great,<br />

Ask anyone who's bald"?<br />

8. Who was Sir Galahad's father?<br />

9. Who won an Academy Award for his<br />

performance in "The African Queen"?<br />

10. What is the softest mineral known?<br />

Look inside The Classifieds every week for Uncle Ted’s Trivia<br />

Find answers in these Classifieds.<br />

7. Fleshy fungus caps<br />

8. Kill violently<br />

9. License & passport<br />

10. Refereed<br />

11. Arbor framework<br />

12. Luxuriant dark<br />

brown fur<br />

14. Group purchasing<br />

protest<br />

17. Insecticide<br />

18. An island group of<br />

the S Pacific<br />

20. A wooden hole plug<br />

23. A purine base found<br />

in DNA and RNA<br />

24. Spanish park<br />

25. Atomic #18<br />

26. Married woman<br />

29. And, Latin<br />

Got Smarts?<br />

10/04/13<br />

23<br />

30. Cantonese dialect<br />

31. Causing physical<br />

hurt<br />

32. Short trips or tasks<br />

35. Small craving<br />

36. Paddled<br />

38. Leuciscus leuciscus'<br />

40. Parting phrases:<br />

good-____<br />

41. Figure skater Yuka<br />

42. Opera song<br />

43. Create social or<br />

emotional ties<br />

44. Opposite of LTM<br />

45. Icahn's airline<br />

46. Air Reserve base<br />

(abbr.)<br />

47. Russian manned<br />

space station


24 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

Articles<br />

for sale<br />

Articles<br />

for sale<br />

Feed & fertilizer<br />

Tag/estate<br />

sales<br />

Apartments for<br />

rent<br />

Apartments for<br />

rent<br />

Apartments for<br />

rent<br />

BALL CANNING JARS, 45, all sizes, extra<br />

lids and covers. Quilted jam jars,<br />

new/used, 45 cent a jar. 860-583-<br />

9632.<br />

BEDDING SET queen pillowtop<br />

new must sell $150 call-txt 860-<br />

402-8007<br />

BEIGE WAFFLE BLIND Inside mount<br />

50"x99 3/4", can also mount on outside<br />

of frame. Exc. cond. $90. 860-<br />

582-6298.<br />

BROWN JORDAN Outdoor furniture.<br />

Tamiami style. 8 pcs. $450. Call 860-<br />

621-3362.<br />

BUNK BED Maple w/drawers & dresser,<br />

mirror, $200. Maple desk w/shelf,<br />

$100. Rocking chair, $25. OBO 203-<br />

232-8192.<br />

CABINETS Solid oak and counter<br />

tops. Complete kitchen. $1200. 203-<br />

758-4327<br />

CABINETS Solid oak and counter<br />

tops. Complete kitchen. $800. 203-<br />

758-4327<br />

CAMERA Pentax K1000 35mm camera<br />

w/bag, flash, zoom lens $100.<br />

860-276-8823 noon to 6 pm.<br />

CELL PHONE Motorola Android<br />

MB520 ATT w/case, charger, manual,<br />

exc. cond. $25. 860-314-1211<br />

COAT RACK Ethan Allen 78" high<br />

x 40 wide. $600. Call 203-723-<br />

2433<br />

DESK Glass top mahog. desk 60x30<br />

$135. Unique vintage din rm set, early<br />

1900s, 6 chrs, leafs and pads. $500.<br />

203-527-9605<br />

DINING RM SET Dark pine. Trestle<br />

table, 2 lvs, 6 chairs, hutch. $375<br />

203-263 8549<br />

FRANCO BELGE COAL STOVE $500.<br />

Very orante. Call 203-525-5204<br />

FURNACE Coal/wood Harman SF150<br />

like factory new $1800. Call 203-560-<br />

7861.<br />

GLASS 5 GALLON CARBOYS, good<br />

condition, $13. each. Call 860-747-<br />

8371.<br />

GUITAR (YOUTH) 33 inches long. Plus<br />

guitar stand. Both $40. Great Xmas<br />

gift. Call 860-966-6466.<br />

HOT TUB 5 person, thermal spa. Concord<br />

Elite. 57 jets, 3 pumps, used<br />

one season. Stored indoors up to<br />

last year. Comes with cover and<br />

stairs. Mint cond. $3,000 or BO. 860-<br />

276-7831.<br />

JASON ALEXANDER TICKETS Comedian<br />

(Ge<strong>org</strong>e from Seinfeld) @<br />

Bushnell, Fri., Oct 4th. 2 Tix only $85!<br />

860-716-4377<br />

KEURIG Programmable brewing system<br />

black $65.00<br />

860-747-4390<br />

KITCHEN SET Oak table with 4 chairs<br />

$60/best offer. 203-879-5675 after 6pm.<br />

wkdays; anytime wknds; cell (203) 217-<br />

5259<br />

LOVESEAT Dark blue fabric<br />

material, never used $125 or best<br />

offer. Call 203-879-5675 after 6pm.<br />

wkdays; anytime weeknds; cell<br />

(203) 217-5259<br />

MOST ITEMS LIKE NEW! Flat top elec.<br />

range $200. 7 pc patio set w/umbrella<br />

$200. Century fire safe, cube style<br />

$175. Assorted tools, 30 ft. ext. alum.<br />

ladder. Oil paintings & artwork. Mini<br />

fridge $75. Much more. Best offer on<br />

all. Call after 5pm. 860-846-0569.<br />

MOWER John Deere LT 155 Lawn<br />

tractor. Exc. cond. $1,000. 860-582-<br />

5887.<br />

PAPER END ROLLS<br />

Starting at $4.00 up. Various sizes<br />

and weights. Great for packing,<br />

wrapping, children's art projects<br />

etc. Available at Step Saver, 213<br />

Spring Street, Southington. Mon.-<br />

Fri. 8:30am-5:00pm.<br />

PATIO SET Glass top table, 6<br />

chairs, with pads plus swivel<br />

rocker. $120. 203-723-2433<br />

PATIO SET Wooden Patio set-2 fold<br />

up tables & 4 chairs. Stainable $100<br />

203-707-6589<br />

PICNIC TABLE, 38"x 60" with 4 chairs,<br />

white resin, great condition. $60.<br />

860-677-6809.<br />

POOL PUMP 3 pool covers, solar<br />

blanket for 28 round pool. $25. 860-<br />

620-3824.<br />

REFRIGERATOR Kenmore 24CF.<br />

Sidexside w/water/ice dispenser<br />

$350. 203-879-0325<br />

REPLACEMENT WINDOWS (2),<br />

36Wx34H - 32Wx46H, asking $150.<br />

for both. Call 860-997-2649.<br />

SOFA BED $250; Oak TV/storage armoire<br />

$200 Noritake (Lorene) 12pc<br />

setting $150; All in good cond 203-<br />

266-4131<br />

SOFA,LOVESEAT AND ELECTRIC RE-<br />

CLINER $350.00 OR BEST OFFER, 203-<br />

578-6403<br />

STEREO JVC Compact Stereo, MP3<br />

Playback, 3 CD, Quality Sound! Only<br />

$45. 860-716-4377<br />

TOYS Harwinton Small Barn<br />

filled with used toys. Under<br />

$500. 860-485-1844<br />

TREADMILL excellent condition, $300<br />

or best offer.<br />

Call 203-758-5107<br />

WOOD STOVE All Nighter w/half cord<br />

of wood. $450. 203-509 6177<br />

Building materials<br />

DUMP TRUCK Sand, Fill, Stone, Loam,<br />

Process Gravel, Pool sand, Stonedust,<br />

Mulch. 203-758-3057<br />

Furniture<br />

BEDROOM SET $500, 5 piece solid<br />

pine. 860-351-5641.<br />

BUFFET HUTCH Excellent condition.<br />

Light to medium pine.<br />

63wx21dx84h. $500 or BO. 860-845-<br />

2660 or 860-329-3040.<br />

BUNKBEDS, light pine, excellent condition,<br />

will deliver $135. Call 860-384-<br />

2097.<br />

FRAME Full size bed frame w/head<br />

and foot boards $100. Beautiful condition.<br />

860-276-8823 noon to 6 p.m.<br />

MUST SELL 2 light oak 30" bar stools<br />

w/cushions. Orig. price $125 each.<br />

now both for $100. In very good<br />

cond. Hardly used. 860-681-6923.<br />

OFFICE DESK $50. Solid wood top,<br />

29"H x 30"D x 60"W, 1 file drawer, 4<br />

side. Top drawer locks all. Pick up<br />

only. 860-747-5238.<br />

TABLE 36" round table w/11.5" leaf, lt.<br />

oak, no chairs, $60 great condition.<br />

860-276-8823 12 to 6 pm.<br />

Household<br />

Goods<br />

HEATER Welbilt portable electric<br />

heater RW700, 1500 watts. $10.<br />

860-793-2083<br />

Musical<br />

merchandise<br />

VIOLIN, FLUTE, CLARINET, TRUMPET<br />

Trombone, amplifier, Fender guitar<br />

$69 each. Cello, upright bass, Saxophone,<br />

French horn, drums $185<br />

each. Tuba, Baritone horn. Hammond<br />

<strong>org</strong>an, others 4 sale.<br />

1-516-377-7907.<br />

Tag/estate<br />

sales<br />

ASK FOR Your free "TAG SALE KIT"<br />

which includes Balloons, Tag Sale<br />

Signs, Pencils, Tip Sheet and Inventory<br />

Sheet when you place your Tag<br />

Sale Ad in the Step Saver/Observer<br />

reaching nearly 98,000 readers in<br />

Southington, Plainville, Bristol! Call<br />

today! 860-628-9645.<br />

PLAINVILLE 53 Maple Street, Sat 10/5<br />

from 9am-3pm. Steam radiators,<br />

furniture & misc items.<br />

PLAINVILLE Moving Estate Sale: 16<br />

Black Birch Rd, Oct. 4th, 4-8pm, Oct.<br />

5th, 9am-12pm. Rain or shine.<br />

Fridge, stove, furniture, clothing,<br />

books, household/kitchen items.<br />

Any questions call 860-874-2887.<br />

SOUTHINGTON, 15 Belleview Ave.<br />

10/5, 10/6. 8 -3pm. Hshold, furn,<br />

tools, hockey net, skis & more.<br />

SOUTHINGTON: Multi-family,<br />

Shweky Lane and Scarano Rd. Sat.<br />

Oct. 5th, 8am-2pm. Raindate<br />

Oct.12th. Household items, books,<br />

Beanie babies, tools, furniture, dog<br />

carrier and much more.<br />

SOUTHINGTON Neighborhood Sale,<br />

Oct. 4 & 5, 9-3. Rain-shine. Strawberry<br />

& Blueberry Lane. off Meriden<br />

Ave. Some neigbors will do 2 days,<br />

others 1 day. Tons of stuff at #33<br />

Blueberry. Remainder of parents Estate-antiques-furniture,<br />

old fishing<br />

stuff, old toys etc.<br />

Wanted<br />

to buy<br />

Antiques/Collectibles/Old Items<br />

Jwlry, Art, Signs, Toys, Slvr, Gold Call<br />

about anything 203-828-8129<br />

Wood &<br />

fuel<br />

FIREWOOD 3½ cords.<br />

Oak, Cherry and Maple. $550<br />

Call 203-597-9134<br />

FIREWOOD All oak seasoned 16-18<br />

months Cut, split, del. $250/cord;<br />

$140/½ cord. 860-283-0350<br />

FIREWOOD all seasoned hardwood<br />

$225/one cord; $425/two cords. Rich 203-<br />

305-5842.<br />

HEATING COAL 10-5 gal. pails $2.00<br />

each. Call 860-589-7778.<br />

Pets &<br />

Animals<br />

Accessories/<br />

services<br />

WANTED: FREE AQUARIUM or<br />

terrarium, 20 gallons or larger,<br />

will pick up.<br />

Call 860-826-5242 lv. msg.<br />

Household pets<br />

LAB MIX Tan, n/m. 10 wks. angora kitten,<br />

3 mo. peach. Pit bull mix, 2yrs. f/s. 203-<br />

233-9912<br />

Real Estate<br />

For Rent<br />

Apartments for<br />

rent<br />

BEACON FALLS lg. 1BR, quiet area, off-st.<br />

prkg, sec, ref, crdt chk lease $800 incl<br />

heat. 860-464-0138<br />

FOR RENT<br />

BRISTOL<br />

1 BEDROOM APARTMENTS<br />

• SECURE BUILDING<br />

• FULLY APPLIANCED AND<br />

CARPETED<br />

• 700 SQ. FT.<br />

$700/MONTH<br />

ACCESS TO ROUTE 72 & I-84<br />

860-584-2800<br />

EXT. 210<br />

BRISTOL: 1300 sq. ft. 2BR apt., 9 ft.<br />

ceilings, ceiling fans, gleaming<br />

hardwood floors, brand new carpeting<br />

& paint, new kitchen & baths<br />

(1.5 baths), new ceramic tile, washer/dryer<br />

hkups, stove & refrigerator,<br />

large living-room, huge bedrooms<br />

w/walk-in closets, economical gas<br />

heat, garage, Federal Hill, no dogs,<br />

nonsmoking, 995./mo. 860-810-3452.<br />

MIDDLEBURY 3br, 1 bath, nice unit, yard,<br />

and location, garage. $1375. Call 203-<br />

560-4401.<br />

NAUGATUCK 14 Neagle St. Modern 1st flr.<br />

2 BR, W&D, appls., quiet area, no pets,<br />

$700. 860-945-3479.<br />

NAUGATUCK 1BR, 2nd flr. lg brite sun rm,<br />

w/d hkup, off st. pkg, yd, Exc area No<br />

pets 1 yr lease. $725+sec 203-217-8817<br />

NAUGATUCK 2 bedroom 1st foor, just<br />

remodeled, nice area, no pets.<br />

$950/month. 203-525-7871.<br />

NAUGATUCK 3BR, 2nd FL. newly remod.,<br />

w/w carpet, off str prkg, yard, No Pets,<br />

Sec 8 OK, $975 + Deposit call 203-758-<br />

0039<br />

NAUGATUCK 4RMs, 2nd flr, appl, W/D<br />

hkup, inside prkg, $750/mo. sec. & refs.<br />

203-720-1278<br />

NEW BRITAIN 3BR 1st flr. $1200, 3BR 2nd<br />

flr. $1125. EIK, pantry, storage, off st<br />

prkg. 860-997-0284<br />

PLYMOUTH Main St. Country, 2<br />

family, 2bdrm, 2nd flr. $800.<br />

203-729-2266, 203-805-1680<br />

THOMASTON- 1 BR, downtown, $575/mo<br />

+ sec. Cred. check req.<br />

860-283-7496<br />

WATERBURY 1,2,3&4BR avail immed. $50<br />

cash back <strong>October</strong> special won't last!<br />

203-510-0125<br />

WATERBURY 2/3br, $750. Near Reed<br />

School North End. Section 8 ok. No pets.<br />

203-525-6005<br />

WATERBURY 2 BR, 2nd flr, East End. appls,<br />

H&HW, no pets, $800 1st, last & 1 mo.<br />

sec. 203-758-3363<br />

WATERBURY 2BR, 1st flr., w/d hk/up,<br />

off str. prkg, Sec 8 OK, $700/mo. No<br />

Pets. 203-568-5115<br />

WATERBURY 2nd flr. 3BR, Near school,<br />

Newly renov., Must see! $800 Sec 8 ok<br />

203-725-5339<br />

WATERBURY<br />

3/4BR<br />

860-930-0393.<br />

WATERBURY 616 Washington Ave, Town<br />

Plot, 5RM, 2BR, 3rd flr., $700/mo. Call<br />

203-228-1166<br />

WATERBURY 861 Baldwin 2nd flr., 3br<br />

$675 & 34 Hickory 2nd fl 3rm. $550. 203-<br />

228-0131, 475-235-7020<br />

WATERBURY cozy studio apt. Utils. incl.<br />

$600/mo. 1 mo. sec. req'd. Sect. 8<br />

accepted. 203-754-0261<br />

NAUGATUCK- 4th flr, off st. parking, 1<br />

BR, no pets. $580/mo., 1 mo. sec. Call<br />

203-206-9139 WATERBURY East End 3 rms, 1BR,<br />

fridge/stove, carport, clean & quiet. no<br />

OAKVILLE Upper Buckingham, lg 1br, 1st<br />

flr., w/w carp, appls. clean, WD hkup.<br />

$650/mo gar. avail. Nice loc. 860-274-<br />

9922<br />

PROSPECT 2nd flr, 2 BR, WD hkup, no<br />

pets/smoke No utils. $900/mo 203-758-<br />

4923, 203-768-9012<br />

TERRYVILLE 2BR 2nd flr., sm. pets ok.<br />

$800/mo. + sec. Avail. immed. 203-430-<br />

7561<br />

TERRYVILLE 3 BR/1BA, Off Street, Yard,<br />

Rcnt Update, 1st Flr, Quiet Nghbrhd,<br />

$925/mo; 203-417-2022<br />

WATERBURY 23 Plaza Ave. 2 apts., 3BR,<br />

LR< DR, & kit. $700-$850. Heat & hot<br />

water incl. Sect. 8 ok. 718-974-9925<br />

WATERBURY 2BR $750, Town Plot bus<br />

line. No pets. Ready to move in! Call<br />

617-461-7332<br />

WATERBURY 2BR great location, private<br />

deck, heat/hot water included $850<br />

.203-757-1911<br />

WATERBURY 3 BR 199 Chestnut Av 2nd flr,<br />

LR, Kit, DR $700 +dep. No pets. 203-565-<br />

4083, 310-936-9460<br />

WATERBURY Baldwin St. large 2 BR, W/D,<br />

prkg, 1 mo. rent/1 mo. sec. $775. Call Ed<br />

914-433-2818<br />

WATERBURY East End. 2 bdrm. Appl.<br />

H&HW incl. 2 car tandem garage, no<br />

pets. $900 mo. coin laundry. Call<br />

Mary 203-232-9564.<br />

dogs, no utils, $550 ref & sec. 860-384-<br />

2418/ 860-621-9518<br />

WATERBURY East Side *Large bright*<br />

*2BR, 5 rm apt, 1st flr in priv house.<br />

Quiet neighborhood, front porch, big<br />

yard, street pkg, close to hwys and<br />

park. $700/mo + sec. No pets, no smokg.<br />

Cred/ref call 203-574-1840<br />

WATERBURY Efficiency. Appls., utilities<br />

included. 2nd floor. $600/month. Call<br />

203-537-3149<br />

WATERBURY Hopeville section. clean,<br />

updated & renovated. (2) 1 BR's $600<br />

& $620. (2) 2 BR's $795 & $925 incl. util.<br />

secure bldg., off st prkg.<br />

East End 1 BR $725<br />

203-729-2266, 203-805-1860<br />

WATERBURY Thomaston Ave 3rd flr.<br />

studio $500. Waterville 2nd flr. 3br $825.<br />

3rd flr, 2BR $600. Johnson St. 1.5 BRs, 2nd<br />

flr., $650. heat incl. 203-510-9583<br />

WATERBURY Town Plot 3RM, 1BR, 2nd flr.,<br />

appls., heat & utils. incl. no pets 800+sec<br />

203-510-5682<br />

WATERTOWN 163½ Echo Lake Rd.<br />

studio apt. 1st flr., off st prkg. $550. 203-<br />

768-8218<br />

WATERTOWN 68 Main St. 1st flr., 2br, off<br />

st prkg., storage, close to town hall.<br />

$895. Mon-Fri., 9-5. 203-574-1166, or 203-<br />

993-5655<br />

WATERTOWN 860-483-1482 eff., Utils<br />

included, furnished, appl'd.<br />

washer/dryer, off st prkg. $550/mo<br />

WATERTOWN duplex, 3br, off st prkg.,<br />

no pets lease Sec. $900.<br />

Call 203-217-0551.<br />

WATERTOWN lower price, $1200<br />

Renovated 2BR, 1.5BA,Heat/HW incl.<br />

Nancy Stokes, Prudential CT, 203-206-<br />

0138<br />

WEST SIDE 1st fl. 1 bd. Very spacious.<br />

Appliances. Washer & dryer hookup.<br />

Call 203-723-1386<br />

WOLCOTT 3BR, appls., WD hkup,<br />

beautiful 2nd flr.. $950/mo.<br />

Sec. & refs. No Pets. 203-525-6773<br />

WOLCOTT lrg apt incl. all utils. $950/mo.<br />

203-879-9092 Email<br />

wcountryrentals@gmail.com<br />

WOLCOTT private inlaw with seperate<br />

entr. Off st prkg. Avail. 10/1. Refs. $700.<br />

203-879-2560<br />

Condos for rent<br />

BRISTOL 2BR, 1 bath, ranch, $875.<br />

Twnhse 2br.1.5 ba., fin. bsmt. $1100.<br />

917-346-3594<br />

BRISTOL CONDO<br />

FOR RENT<br />

TOWN HOUSE CONDO<br />

2 BEDROOMS WITH LOFT<br />

1.5 BATHS; EASY ACCESS<br />

TO ROUTES 72 & 84<br />

FORESTVILLE<br />

$1,100/MONTH<br />

ALL APPLIANCES<br />

860-584-2800<br />

EXT. 210<br />

PLAINVILLE Newly rebuilt 5 rm, 2BR<br />

1-1/2 bath townhouse. 20 unit complex.<br />

Carport Nov. 1. $1,300. 2 mos.<br />

sec. 860-919-9903.<br />

WATERBURY 2 br 1.5 ba w/d hkups,<br />

parking space. Mark Lane. Call 917-<br />

399-1362.<br />

WATERBURY 2 story, 2 BR, 1½ bath, close<br />

to shopping, min. to Rt. 8/84, no pets,<br />

non-smoking, $780/mo. 1st & last mo.<br />

sec. 203-417-1012<br />

WATERBURY 2BR good loc. town plot.<br />

462 Highland Av. 2nd flr. $875 +sec 203-<br />

887-9498; 203-597-1884<br />

LADIES SPORTO BOOTS, brand new,<br />

size 9, asking $20. Call 860-384-1183<br />

local cell number.<br />

SHINGLE BACKER Board, 17 pieces<br />

3/8" x 15" x 48" $25 for all or $2 each.<br />

860-589-0865. Ask for John<br />

SOUTHINGTON, 71 Beechwood Dr,<br />

Sat. Oct. 5, 9-3. Fishing equip. small<br />

boat & trailer, hshld & Xmas items.<br />

BEACON FALLS CUTE 2BR 1st fl WD Close<br />

to Rte8, I84 Eik yard $900- Cats ok 203-<br />

231-5333 Avail Now<br />

TERRYVILLE Heat & elec incl. 1bd. eff, 3rd<br />

fl. no pets. $695. Litchfield RE 860-459-<br />

9193 Sec.& lease.<br />

WATERBURY- Town Plot 2 BR, 2nd Fl. $700.<br />

W/D hk-up. Nr school, bank, park. Harry<br />

203-597-0328<br />

WATERBURY twnhse 2br , 1.5 ba., WD,<br />

patio, Wolcott line. $1300. all included.<br />

860-845-7174


Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

Garages<br />

for rent<br />

WATERBURY 1 car garage, dry storage<br />

only, East end, $120/ month.<br />

Call 203-758-3363<br />

Houses<br />

for rent<br />

OAKVILLE 4BR Colonial. $1395<br />

WATERTOWN 3br, near Taft School. on 1<br />

ac. off st prkg, nice nghbrhd. $1050 Sol,<br />

203-574-1166 (Mon-Fri. 9-5). or 203-993-<br />

5655<br />

PROSPECT 2br ranch, 23 Hydelor Av<br />

Avail now no pets.$1000 203-758-5180<br />

www.agiprospect.com<br />

SOUTHINGTON HOUSE: 3 bdrm. 1 1/2<br />

bath. cozy home, quiet st. $1250 mo.<br />

Sec. 8 accepted. Call 860-621-0008.<br />

TERRYVILLE 4 bd. 2 full baths. Formal<br />

Dining Rm. Breezeway. half of 2 car<br />

garage. C.A, oil heat, on half acre lot.<br />

1,800 sq. ft. Completely remodeled.<br />

1st mon + 1 mon sec. Reference req.<br />

& checked. Minimum 6 mon. lease.<br />

Avail Nov.1. $1,500 + util. 203-565-<br />

6776<br />

WATERBURY TOWNLINE<br />

Twhse, 5 rms, flex 3 BR 2 bath, free H/HW,<br />

near all $1160 203-441-4130<br />

WATERTOWN 3 bedroom, 1 bath, lg.<br />

fenced backyard, 2 car garage $1200.<br />

203-841-8565<br />

WOLCOTT Country charmer, 2 BR, w/<br />

garage. $1300<br />

203-729-2266/203-805-1680<br />

Roommates<br />

ROOMMATE WANTED: Bristol, large<br />

bedroom in beautiful home. $500.<br />

mon + deposit. Util. incl. with washer<br />

& dryer hookup. 860-216-8749.<br />

WOLCOTT roomate to share house. $650.<br />

Everythingt included. 203-725-2393<br />

Rooms<br />

Vacation rentals<br />

Real Estate<br />

For Sale<br />

Service<br />

Directory<br />

Appliance Sales/Repair<br />

APPLIANCE REPAIR washers, dryers,<br />

stoves, refrigerators. Call John, 203-<br />

228-3750.<br />

Asphalt<br />

paving<br />

SPINO'S PAVING<br />

Comm'l and resid'l driveways, parking<br />

areas, plow damage repair and curbing<br />

replaced. Free estimates. Ct Lic #579761.<br />

203-574-2547 ★ 203-537-3151<br />

Chimney<br />

sweeping<br />

Cleaning<br />

services<br />

IF YOU DON’T<br />

HAVE TIME<br />

to clean your house,<br />

call me. I will do<br />

everything you wish<br />

for a good price.<br />

Good references.<br />

Fully insured.<br />

Call Renata<br />

860-538-7963 or email<br />

roniowa@wp.pl<br />

Domestic<br />

services<br />

WATERBURY rooms Town Plot start @<br />

$135/wk H/HW, 2BR $750. Sec 8 203-223-<br />

2397 HOME CARE exp aide with flex schedule<br />

live-in avail housekeeping local ref.<br />

Christina in Woodbury 203-598-9123<br />

WARM WEATHER is year around in<br />

Aruba. The water is safe and the<br />

dining is fantastic. Walk out to the<br />

beach. 3-bedroom weeks available.<br />

Sleeps 8. $3500. Email: Carolaction@aol.com<br />

for more information.<br />

LOYALTY CHIMNEY Stainless reliner,<br />

cleaning, repair, flashing, cap. CT<br />

563100. 203-596-7935<br />

POLISH-ENGLISH SPEAKING WOMAN<br />

Can clean your house/office with<br />

care. 3rd cleaning 50% off. Satisfaction<br />

guaranteed. Insured, bonded,<br />

references. 860-538-4885.<br />

Electrical<br />

CICCHETTI ELECTRIC 39 yr exp ins. No job<br />

too small/ Gen. Install. Lic E-1, 103809.<br />

203-754-2537<br />

Home<br />

improvement<br />

BARTLETT CONTRACTING LLC Remod,<br />

addition, carpentry, kitchens, windows,<br />

deck, bsmts, 203-558-1696 lic#83561<br />

Home<br />

improvement<br />

HOME IMPROVEMENT Electrical,<br />

Plumbing, Painting, Carpentry &<br />

Drywall. No job too small. Ask for<br />

Shawn 860-302-3350. Lic. # 103217.<br />

MR. REFINISH Bathtub & tile reglazing.<br />

Don't pay thousands to replace!<br />

Refinish! Lic. #630547. 203-574-2950.<br />

www.mrrefinish.com<br />

RICH'S HOME IMPROVEMENT<br />

Drywall, paint, trim, tiles, flrs, decks.<br />

Lic566055 Ins 203-757-1717<br />

T.A. PRONOVOST Remodeling Additions,<br />

Kitchens, BR's, Repairs<br />

#0626472 860-261-7414<br />

Landscaping<br />

& lawns<br />

ABILITY FALL CLEANUP trim hemlocks,<br />

mowing, sm trees, gutters cleaned,<br />

shrubs 203-753-2870<br />

Masonry<br />

A-1 JIMMY'S MASONRY #604550. Walls,<br />

brick/ blue stone, steps, sidewalks,<br />

repairs & more. Free est. 203-982-<br />

0145/860-628-0455<br />

Painting<br />

DEL'S PAINTING Room painted $50. Trim<br />

$50. Ceilings $50. #563174<br />

2 0 3 - 2 2 8 - 8 5 1 2<br />

ROCCO's PAINTING<br />

Res. Free est & cleanup. CT# 561112. 30+<br />

yrs exp 203-574-1906<br />

Plumbing<br />

CAPINERA PLUMBING & HEATING<br />

Repairs, New install. MC/Visa OK.<br />

#202962. 203-575-1551/560-9680<br />

Roofing<br />

BUSYBEE ROOFING LLC<br />

Afford. Quality, Lic. & Ins, BBB<br />

visit: busybeeroofingllc.com<br />

203.206.6157 Lic. 0628690<br />

N & I ROOFING Complete roofing, repairs,<br />

chimneys, counter flas-hing<br />

etc. Reasonable prices. Free est.<br />

BBB, #603956. 203-725-2400<br />

Tree care<br />

ALLIED TREE REMOVAL<br />

Chipper Service ~ Stump Grinding. Call<br />

203-808-2695<br />

Wood<br />

refinishing<br />

KITCHEN CABINETS RESTORED TO NEW<br />

cond Chair repair-furn refin trim<br />

#563142 Gary 203-754-1092<br />

Absolutely free<br />

WOODEN PALLETS Assorted sizes.<br />

You pick up anytime at Step<br />

Saver/Observer, 213 Spring Street,<br />

Southington.<br />

Lost &<br />

found<br />

FOUND CD HOLDER with CD's found<br />

on Rt. 322 Southington 9/21/<strong>2013</strong>.<br />

Owner can identifyPat 860-637-7527<br />

Legals<br />

Legal -<br />

public notice<br />

NOTICE TO CREDITORS<br />

ESTATE OF Elsie B. Anctil, Southington<br />

(13-0513)<br />

The Hon. Matthew J. Jalowiec, Judge<br />

of the Court of Probate, Cheshire-<br />

Southington Probate District, by decree<br />

dated September 26, <strong>2013</strong>,<br />

ordered that all claims must be presented<br />

to the fiduciary at the address<br />

below. Failure to promptly<br />

present any such claims may result<br />

in the loss of rights to recover on<br />

such claim.<br />

Margherita Bergstrand<br />

Chief Clerk<br />

The fiduciary is:<br />

Sheryl Hatheway<br />

c/o John F. Kania, Esq., Kelley,<br />

Crispino & Kania, LLP,<br />

133 Main Street, P.O. Box 71,<br />

Southington, CT 06489.<br />

NOTICE TO CREDITORS<br />

ESTATE OF Harry J. Thies, Southington<br />

(13-0519)<br />

The Hon. Matthew J. Jalowiec, Judge<br />

of the Court of Probate, Cheshire-<br />

Southington Probate District, by decree<br />

dated September 26, <strong>2013</strong>,<br />

ordered that all claims must be presented<br />

to the fiduciary at the address<br />

below. Failure to promptly<br />

present any such claims may result<br />

in the loss of rights to recover on<br />

such claim.<br />

Margherita Bergstrand<br />

Chief Clerk<br />

The fiduciary is:<br />

Brian Thies<br />

c/o William F. Tynan, Esq.,<br />

Tynan & Iannone,<br />

250 Wolcott Rd,<br />

Wolcott, CT 06716.<br />

NOTICE TO CREDITORS<br />

ESTATE OF Helen Tessier, Southington,<br />

AKA Helen R. Tessier<br />

(13-0532)<br />

The Hon. Matthew J. Jalowiec, Judge<br />

of the Court of Probate, Cheshire-<br />

Southington Probate District, by decree<br />

dated September 25, <strong>2013</strong>,<br />

ordered that all claims must be presented<br />

to the fiduciary at the address<br />

below. Failure to promptly<br />

present any such claims may result<br />

in the loss of rights to recover on<br />

such claim.<br />

Margherita Bergstrand<br />

Chief Clerk<br />

The fiduciary is:<br />

Henry R. Tessier<br />

c/o Atty. Kenneth J. Laska,<br />

Segal & Laska,<br />

63 East Main St., Drawer A,<br />

Plainville, CT 06062.<br />

Legals/<br />

public notices<br />

NOTICE TO CREDITORS<br />

ESTATE OF Kathleen S. Martin, Plantsville<br />

(13-0529)<br />

The Hon. Matthew J. Jalowiec, Judge<br />

of the Court of Probate, Cheshire-<br />

Southington Probate District, by decree<br />

dated September 23, <strong>2013</strong>,<br />

ordered that all claims must be presented<br />

to the fiduciary at the address<br />

below. Failure to promptly<br />

present any such claims may result<br />

in the loss of rights to recover on<br />

such claim.<br />

Margherita Bergstrand<br />

Chief Clerk<br />

The fiduciary is:<br />

Margaret S. Barra<br />

c/o Michael D. Lynch, Esq.,<br />

106 Upper Main Street<br />

P.O. Box 1776<br />

Sharon, CT 06069<br />

NOTICE TO CREDITORS<br />

ESTATE OF Patricia E. Marrrone<br />

Southington<br />

(13-0522)<br />

The Hon. Matthew J. Jalowiec, Judge<br />

of the Court of Probate, Cheshire-<br />

Southington Probate District, by decree<br />

dated September 30, <strong>2013</strong>,<br />

ordered that all claims must be presented<br />

to the fiduciary at the address<br />

below. Failure to promptly<br />

present any such claims may result<br />

in the loss of rights to recover on<br />

such claim.<br />

Margherita Bergstrand<br />

Chief Clerk<br />

The fiduciary is:<br />

Susan Contri Skarvinko<br />

119 Rockwood Drive<br />

Southington, CT 06489<br />

SOUTHINGTON ZONING BOARD OF<br />

APPEALS<br />

LEGAL NOTICE<br />

At their Regular Meeting of September<br />

24, <strong>2013</strong>, the Southington Zoning<br />

Board of Appeals voted to take the<br />

following actions:<br />

A. CONTINUED PUBLIC HEARING - AP-<br />

PEAL #6017A, Application of Timothy<br />

Sena for a 5' variance to allow an<br />

above ground pool 5' from the side<br />

property line in the rear yard under<br />

Section 2-01.A.6 of the Zoning Regulations,<br />

14 Jody Lane, property of<br />

Joseph A. & Dolores L. Faraone and<br />

Timothy M. & Deanna M. Sena in an<br />

R-20/25 zone.<br />

B. WITHDRAWN - APPEAL #6018A,<br />

Application of Donny Wirt for a variance<br />

to allow a 53 sq. ft. wall sign<br />

where 38 sq. ft. is allowed under Section<br />

13-07.A.1 of the Zoning Regulations,<br />

750 Queen Street, property of<br />

Southington/Route 10 Associates<br />

Limited Partnership c/o Cornerstone,<br />

in a B zone.<br />

C. APPROVED WITH STIPULATIONS -<br />

APPEAL #6019A, Application of<br />

Daniel & Marzena Grabowski for special<br />

exception approval to allow the<br />

keeping of a family flock of chickens<br />

under Section 3-01.31.B of the Zoning<br />

Regulations, 560 Burritt Street, property<br />

of Daniel J. & Marzena K.<br />

Grabowski in an R-20/25 zone.<br />

D. APPROVED WITH STIPULATIONS -<br />

APPEAL #6020A, Application of Jennifer<br />

DiLungo for special exception<br />

approval to allow the issuance of a<br />

liquor permit under Sections 4-01.32<br />

& 11-04 of the Zoning Regulations, 16<br />

Eden Avenue, property of Eden Ave.<br />

LLC in a CB zone.<br />

Dated this 25th Day of September,<br />

<strong>2013</strong><br />

ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS<br />

Robert Salka, Chairman<br />

Advertise in the......<br />

Real<br />

Estate<br />

Section<br />

ANSWER:<br />

Uncle Ted’s<br />

Got Smarts?<br />

1. Louisiana, state bird is the Pelican<br />

25<br />

Reach over 118,000 readers<br />

by placing your ad<br />

in all 3 of our editions:<br />

Southington - Bristol<br />

- Plainville.<br />

This is a great way to reach<br />

potential home buyers!<br />

Call Patty Conway today to place<br />

your real estate ad<br />

860-628-9645<br />

Ext. 226<br />

10/04/13<br />

Houses<br />

THOMASTON ~ AUCTION<br />

337 CHAPEL ST.<br />

AUCTION OCT.6 NOON<br />

Cute bungalow home on 1.3 acres<br />

Needs lots of work!<br />

Go to<br />

www.litchfieldrealestateauctions.com<br />

Mary Helen Levine Broker: 203-525-4753<br />

BUSY BEE REMODELING<br />

Additions, Decks, Baths & More.<br />

CT 628690 Call Scott 203-217-5556<br />

HANDYMAN, Absolutely anything<br />

needing doing, small, large. carpentry,<br />

painting, plumbing, electrical,<br />

appliances. Faucets, toilets, disposals,<br />

water damage, popcorn ceilings,<br />

gutters, windows, lights,<br />

switches, outlets, fans, floors, sheet<br />

rock, tiling, more. Quality, fair<br />

prices, Since 1995. HIC563707,<br />

204029P-1, 124032E-1. Bob's Home<br />

Services, 860-738-0860.<br />

Announcements<br />

Absolutely free<br />

FREE TO GOOD HOME Adult Chihuahua.<br />

Great companion for older<br />

person. Very sweet. 860-840-9693.<br />

www.Stepsaver.com<br />

Point & Click<br />

Read it all on the Web.<br />

www.Stepsaver.com<br />

2. Chromium<br />

3. Ed Sullivan<br />

4. An Army Mule<br />

5. About 9 1/2 hours<br />

6. Soul<br />

Commercial<br />

For Sale, Rent<br />

or Lease<br />

Commercial<br />

Property<br />

TORRINGTON 3000SF office and<br />

warehouse light mfg. 12x12 OH door, 16'<br />

ceil. add'l Mezzanine storage. $120,000<br />

or $1000/mo. 860-489-1456 ext. 104<br />

WOLCOTT 1400 sf comm'l space for<br />

lease $1250 incl. all utils<br />

203-509-8187<br />

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10/04/13


26 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

Southington<br />

High School<br />

Football<br />

Southington 38,<br />

Simsbury 0<br />

Friday, Sept. 27<br />

At Southington<br />

Simsbury 00 00 00 00 — 00<br />

Southington 00 14 21 03 — 38<br />

First Quarter<br />

No scoring.<br />

Second Quarter<br />

SoHS–Alex Jamele 12 pass<br />

from Stephen Barmore (Kyle Smick<br />

kick), 8:52.<br />

SoHS–Jasen Rose 11 pass<br />

from Barmore (Smick kick), 3:51.<br />

Third Quarter<br />

SoHS–Tyler Hyde 1 run (Smick<br />

kick), 9:18.<br />

SoHS–Kyle Borawski 42 pass<br />

from Barmore (Smick kick), 6:45.<br />

SoHS–Jamele 4 pass from<br />

Barmore (Smick kick), 0:00.0.<br />

Fourth Quarter<br />

SoHS–Smick 19 FG, 4:15.<br />

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS<br />

RUSHING—Simsbury (35-52):<br />

Brad Helmkamp, 10-33; James<br />

Hermsen, 9-13; Nathan Craine, 7-2;<br />

Jacob Cassano, 6-5; Sam Collins, 1-0;<br />

James DeMaio, 2-(-1). Southington<br />

(24-109): Tyler Hyde, 13-54; Stephen<br />

Barmore, 8-43; Zach Maxwell, 1-0;<br />

Jasen Rose, 1-13; Team, 1-(-1).<br />

PASSING—James Hermensen,<br />

3-8-2 0 yards; Stephen Barmore,<br />

Southington, 25-38-1 329 yards.<br />

RECEIVING—Simsbury (3-0):<br />

Eric Bedson, 1-6; Nathan Craine 1-(-<br />

2); Brad Helmkamp 1-(-4). Southington<br />

(25-329): Alex Jamele, 10-114; Jasen<br />

Rose, 7-87; Kyle Borawski, 6-79; Joe<br />

Daigle, 2-49.<br />

Records—Simsbury, 1-2 (0-1).<br />

Southington, 3-0 (1-0).<br />

Girls Volleyball<br />

Simsbury 3,<br />

Southington 1<br />

(15-25, 25-20,<br />

25-20, 25-15)<br />

Monday, Sept. 23<br />

At Simsbury<br />

DRIVEWAYS<br />

BY DIAMOND PAVING<br />

Parking<br />

Lots &<br />

Curbings<br />

HIGHLIGHTS—Southington:<br />

Kateri Downes, 6-for-8 serving, 1 ace,<br />

2 attacks, 4 digs; Maryssa Romano,<br />

14-for-14 serving, 3 aces, 31 attacks, 8<br />

kills, 7 digs; M<strong>org</strong>an McCarthy, 12-for-<br />

15 serving, 2 aces, 23 assists, 5<br />

attacks, 1 kill, 1 block, 16 digs;<br />

Samantha Lohneiss, 7-for-10 serving,<br />

1 ace, 1 attack, 2 digs; Michelle<br />

Stublarec, 1 assist, 19 attacks, 7 kills, 1<br />

block, 1 dig; Sylwia Lewkowicz, 22<br />

attacks, 5 kills, 2 blocks, 2 digs; Julia<br />

Tinyszin, 15 attacks, 7 kills, 1 block, 4<br />

digs; Caroline Barry, 8-for-13 serving,<br />

3 aces, 1 assist, 24 attacks, 5 kills, 1<br />

block, 6 digs; Danielle David, 1 attack;<br />

Kelsea Allen, 2-for-3 serving, 1 ace, 1<br />

attack, 1 dig; Allison McCormick, 8-for-<br />

11 serving, 1 ace, 8 attacks, 2 kills, 19<br />

digs. Simsbury: no stats available.<br />

Records—SoHS, 4-3 (3-2).<br />

SiHS, 6-0 (5-0).<br />

Southington 3,<br />

Newington 1<br />

(25-22, 24-26,<br />

25-18, 25-13)<br />

Wednesday, Sept. 25<br />

At Southington<br />

HIGHLIGHTS—Southington:<br />

Kateri Downes, 8-for-10 serving, 1<br />

ace, 1 attack, 8 digs; Maryssa<br />

Romano, 15-for-16 serving, 1 ace, 33<br />

attacks, 11 kills, 1 block, 11 digs;<br />

M<strong>org</strong>an McCarthy, 16-for-18 serving, 2<br />

aces, 32 assists, 3 attacks, 1 block, 17<br />

digs; Samantha Lohneiss, 26-for-26<br />

serving, 5 aces, 3 assists, 7 digs;<br />

Michelle Stublarec, 2 assists, 16<br />

attacks, 7 kills, 1 dig; Sylwia<br />

Lewkowicz, 3-for-3 serving, 1 assist,<br />

20 attacks, 4 kills, 3 digs; Julia<br />

Tinyszin, 1-for-1 serving, 21 attacks,<br />

11 kills, 1 block, 3 digs; Caroline Barry,<br />

3-for-4 serving, 9 attacks, 4 kills, 1<br />

block, 1 dig; Danielle David, 1-for-2<br />

serving; Kelsea Allen, 1-for-3 serving,<br />

19 attacks, 5 kills, 1 dig; Allison<br />

McCormick, 14-for-16 serving, 3 aces,<br />

16 attacks, 32 digs. Simsbury: Carly<br />

Wanner-Hyde, 2 aces, 18 assists, 7<br />

attacks, 2 kills, 1 block, 14 digs; Gabby<br />

Gratchev, 3 aces, 27 attacks, 8 kills, 1<br />

block, 16 digs; Amy Blair, 8 attacks, 2<br />

kills, 18 digs; Natalia Rozio, 4 attacks,<br />

1 kill, 1 block, 2 digs; Amanda Loffredo,<br />

5 attacks, 1 kill, 1 dig; Paulina<br />

Baclawska, 1 assist, 5 attacks, 1 block,<br />

2 digs; Lexi Souza, 1 ace, 26 attacks, 4<br />

kills, 3 blocks, 4 digs; Stasha<br />

Greenalch, 1 assist, 32 attacks, 5 kills,<br />

1 block, 18 digs,<br />

Records—SHS, 5-3 (4-2). NHS,<br />

4-4 (3-3).<br />

860-582-2244<br />

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Scoreboard<br />

Cross Country<br />

Boys Results<br />

Simsbury 15,<br />

Southington 50<br />

• • •<br />

Southington 16,<br />

Newington 47<br />

• • •<br />

Simsbury 15,<br />

Newington 50<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 24<br />

At Wallace MS, Newington<br />

1, Phillip Brown, Simsbury,<br />

17:30; 2, Conall Hughes, Simsbury,<br />

17:55; 3, Joe Adorno, Simsbury, 18:01;<br />

4, Andrew Gutierrez, Simsbury, 18:06;<br />

5, Daniel Schmetterling, Simsbury,<br />

18:13; 6, Tommy Durst, Simsbury,<br />

18:27; 7, John Sacala, Simsbury,<br />

18:31; 9, Colin Murphy, Southington,<br />

18:50; 12, Damiean Florian,<br />

Southington, 19:17; 14, Sean<br />

Garrison, Southington, 19:25; 15, Jack<br />

Myers, Southington, 19:26; 16,<br />

Newington, 19:27; 18, Kyle Summa,<br />

Southington, 20:04; 19, Dan Kane,<br />

Southington, 20:10; 20, Andrew<br />

Bielecki, Southington, 20:11; 26, Syed<br />

Asar, Newington, 20:27; 27, Josh<br />

Brown, Newington, 20:30; 29,<br />

Newington, 20:42.<br />

Records—SoHS, 2-2.<br />

Girls Results<br />

Simsbury 15,<br />

Southington 50<br />

• • •<br />

Southington 15,<br />

Newington 50<br />

• • •<br />

Simsbury 15,<br />

Newington 50<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 24<br />

At Wallace MS, Newington<br />

1, Sarah Mattison, Simsbury,<br />

20:43; 2, Caroline Smith, Simsbury,<br />

20:44; 3, Abby Hotaling, Simsbury,<br />

21:32; 4, Abby Grasmus, Simsbury,<br />

21:32; 5, Sarah Soja, Simsbury, 22:11;<br />

6, Haley Denninger, Simsbury, 22:33;<br />

7, Amanda Hamel, Southington,<br />

22:33; 8, Lauren Perkowski,<br />

Southington, 22:34; 9, Callie Corbett,<br />

Simsbury, 22:35; Gabi Napoli,<br />

Southington, 22:57; 12, Catherine<br />

Myers, Southington, 22:57; 15, Raquel<br />

Romano, Southington, 23:48; 16,<br />

Margaret Meehan, Southington, 23:54;<br />

24, Mariah Mendes, Newington, 24:49;<br />

26, Tina Sawyer, Newington, 25:04;<br />

31, Laura Buonocore, Newington,<br />

25:31; 35, Selina Mendes, Newington,<br />

25:39; 40, Nicole Lacasse, Newington,<br />

25:54.<br />

Records—SoHS, 2-2.<br />

Co-Ed Results<br />

3rd Annual<br />

Sloper Relays<br />

Friday, Sept. 27<br />

At YMCA Camp Sloper<br />

Overall winners: Bristol Central (Josh<br />

Signore, Justin Zaino), 32:43.<br />

SELECTED<br />

INDIVIDUAL RESULTS<br />

Two Girls Division—1, Bristol<br />

Central A, 39:03; 2, Southington A<br />

(Megan Albert, Amanda Hamel),<br />

41:20; 3, Bristol Central C, 41:38; 4,<br />

Bristol Central D, 43:05; 5, Newington<br />

A, 43:18; 6, Southington B (Julia Reilly,<br />

Christina Trovato), 43:31; 7, Newington<br />

C, 46:38; 8, Newington B, 47:05. Two<br />

Boys Division—1, Bristol Central A,<br />

32:43; 2, Southington A (Damiean<br />

Florian, Colin Murphy), 33:24; 3,<br />

Bristol Central B, 34:07; 4, Bristol<br />

Central C, 34:36; 5, Newington A,<br />

35:18; 6, Southington B (Brandon<br />

Bayron, Dan Kane), 35:24; 7,<br />

Newington B, 36:22; 8, Newington D,<br />

36:34; 9, Bristol Central H, 36:42; 10,<br />

Bristol Central, 36:44; 11, Terryville A,<br />

37:25 ; 12, Terryville B, 37:25; 13,<br />

Plainville B, 37:52; 14, Newington C,<br />

38:42; 15, Bristol Central E, 38:48; 16,<br />

Bristol Central, 39:13; 17, Southington<br />

C (Adam Cormier, Jon Tumolo), 40:20;<br />

18, Kennedy E, 43:15; 19, Newington<br />

F, 45:07. One Boy/One Girl<br />

Division—1, Bristol Central A, 36:17;<br />

2, Plainville A, 36:50; 3, Southington B<br />

(Andrew Bielecki, Catherine Myers),<br />

37:11; 4, Terryville A, 38:03; 5,<br />

Southington A (Matt Albrecht, Abby<br />

Guthrie), 38:38; 6, Southington C (Finn<br />

Gordon, Katherine Mellitt), 38:44; 7,<br />

Terryville B, 41:27; 8, Terryville C,<br />

42:14; 9, Bristol Central B, 43:02. Four<br />

Girls Division—1, Southington B<br />

(Nickolina Doran, Margaret Meehan,<br />

Alize Rodriguez-2 laps), 42:26; 2,<br />

Bristol Eastern A, 44:01; 3,<br />

Southington C (Lili Bernabe, Nicole<br />

Cova, Emily Csuka, Emily Sargent),<br />

45:15; 4, Southington D (Payton<br />

Chiaro, Lyndsey Giudice, Abby Heller,<br />

Gaby Zuk), 46:59; 5, Plainville B,<br />

47:02; 6, Plainville A, 47:09; 7,<br />

Wethersfield A, 48:04; 8, Southington<br />

A (Taylor Brown, Jenna Chubet, Casey<br />

Devin, Helen Dinnan), 48:47; 9, Bristol<br />

Central A, 49:27; 10, Southington E<br />

(Annelise D’Abramo, Victoria<br />

Donovan, Allie Hair, M<strong>org</strong>an<br />

Maccione), 51:07; 11, Bristol Eastern<br />

B, 54:31. Four Boys Division—1,<br />

Cheshire C, 33:02; 2, Cheshire B,<br />

33:04; 3, Cheshire A, 33:28; 4,<br />

Plainville A, 35:22; 5, Northwest<br />

Catholic A, 35:29; 6, Bristol Eastern C,<br />

35:44; 7, Southington A (Ben Chasse,<br />

Jacob Chasse, Josh Makles, Kyle<br />

Summa), 36:10; 8, Newington B,<br />

38:18; 9, Bristol Eastern D, 38:19; 10,<br />

Southington B (Jake Aparo, Adam<br />

Kingsbury, Nathan Simard, Adam<br />

Theriault), 38:40; 11, Southington C<br />

(Michael Balaoing, Nicholas Benham,<br />

Dylan Breutzmann, Liam Guthrie),<br />

38:45; 12, Wethersfield A, 38:45; 13,<br />

Wethersfield C, 38:58; 14, Plainville C,<br />

39:43; 15, Southington D (Nick<br />

Mauriello, Luke Nichols, Gabe Papura,<br />

Brett Swanson), 40:15; 16,<br />

Wethersfield B, 40:34; 17, Newington<br />

C, 40:36; 18, Southington F (Jonathan<br />

Gray, Jack Hammersley, Joe Nocera,<br />

Jason Soltys), 40:40; 19, Newington A,<br />

41:25; 20, Bristol Eastern B, 42:24; 21,<br />

Newington D, 42:51; 22, Southington E<br />

(Anthony D’Abramo, Josh Miller, Joe<br />

Nocera, James Weil), 43:33; 23; Bristol<br />

Eastern A, 44:00; 24, Kennedy A,<br />

44:49; 25, Newington E, 45:54; 26,<br />

Kennedy B, 45:55. Co-Ed Four<br />

Person Division—1, Southington A<br />

(Sean Garrison, Jack Myers, Gabi<br />

Napoli, Lauren Perkowski), 35:01; 2,<br />

Wethersfield D, 35:43; 3, Northwest<br />

Catholic, 37:19; 4, Bristol Eastern A,<br />

37:22; 5, Southington B (Chris Falk,<br />

Faith Ritchie, Raquel Romano, Dylan<br />

Sperry), 37:35; 6, Wethersfield B,<br />

37:53; 7, Kennedy A, 38:22; 8,<br />

Wethersfield E, 39:09; 9, Kennedy B,<br />

39:40; 10, Southington D (Mark Murdy,<br />

Tom Murdy, Kim Stafko, Michelle<br />

Woodruff), 40:19; 11, Southington C<br />

(Jordan Corey, Kali Pliego, Jason<br />

Ross, Samantha Schiffer), 40:30; 12,<br />

Kennedy C, 41:17; 13, Wethersfield A,<br />

42:45; 14, Newington A, 44:33; 15,<br />

Kennedy D, 44:49; 16, Bristol Central<br />

B, 45:43; 17, Terryville B, 45:59; 18,<br />

Wethersfield C, 49:52; 19, Newington<br />

B, 50:55.<br />

Boys Soccer<br />

Southington 2,<br />

Simsbury 2<br />

(Overtime)<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 24<br />

At Simsbury<br />

Southington 0 2/0 — 2<br />

Simsbury 0 2/0 — 2<br />

First half—no scoring.<br />

Second half—1, Tom DelBuono<br />

(Kyle Sisco), SoHS, 36:23; 2, Spencer<br />

Ralphs, SiHS, 20:44; 3, Sisco, SoHS,<br />

19:20; 4, Jack Sullivan (Keegan Rice),<br />

15:03.<br />

First overtime—no scoring.<br />

Second overtime—no scoring.<br />

Shots—SoHS, 14. SiHS, 14.<br />

Saves—Brian Falco, SoHS, 12;<br />

Peter Sconzo, SiHS, 12.<br />

Corners—SoHS, 4. SiHS, 10.<br />

Records—SoHS, 3-2-1 (2-2-1).<br />

SiHS, 2-2-2 (1-2-2).<br />

Southington 0,<br />

Newington 0<br />

(Overtime)<br />

Friday, Sept. 27<br />

At Southington<br />

Newington 0 0/0 — 0<br />

Southington 0 0/0 — 0<br />

First half—no scoring.<br />

Second half—no scoring.<br />

First overtime—no scoring.<br />

Second overtime—no scoring.<br />

Shots—SHS, 9. NHS, 7.<br />

Saves—Brian Falco, SHS, 7;<br />

Long Du, NHS, 9.<br />

Corners—SHS, 5. NHS, 4.<br />

Records—NHS, 4-2-1 (3-2-1).<br />

SHS, 3-2-2 (2-2-2).<br />

Field Hockey<br />

Conard 4,<br />

Southington 0<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 24<br />

At West Hartford<br />

Southington 0 0 — 0<br />

Conard 2 2 — 4<br />

First half—1, Cassie Falvey,<br />

CHS, 13:51; 2, Lizzy Christensen,<br />

CHS, 10:34.<br />

Second half—3, Ali Abels,<br />

CHS, 18:43; 4, Maggie Falvey, CHS,<br />

15:07.<br />

Shots—SHS, 5. CHS, 13.<br />

Saves—Val Szmurlo, SHS, 10.<br />

Emma Everett, CHS, 4.<br />

Corners—SHS, 5. CHS, 14.<br />

Records—SHS, 1-3. CHS, 3-<br />

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Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

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28 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

Our Athletes<br />

Membrino: <strong>2013</strong> SK Light points champion<br />

From page 36<br />

ing. With minor adjustments,<br />

Membrino climbed<br />

up to third place at the start<br />

of his heat race to earn a<br />

seventh place finish in the<br />

20-lap feature. They fixed a<br />

stearing issue in the practice<br />

rounds, made a few<br />

slight adjustments in the<br />

heat race, but Membrino<br />

needed to finish at least<br />

three spots ahead of Chase<br />

Dowling to catch up in the<br />

standings on the final race.<br />

Membrino said that he felt<br />

good about his chances at<br />

the starting line of the feature<br />

race.<br />

“Winning the race was<br />

my only objective,” he said.<br />

“I knew that the points<br />

would take care of themselves.<br />

I had a ton of people<br />

there to support me. My<br />

grandfather made his first<br />

appearance at the track this<br />

year, along with a bunch of<br />

family members and a ton<br />

of my friends. There were<br />

probably around 20 people<br />

just at our pit before the<br />

race started, let alone all the<br />

other family and friends<br />

that were in the stands for<br />

the race.”<br />

From the drop of the<br />

green flag, Membrino had<br />

his hands full. Going into<br />

Turn 3, the car in front of<br />

him made a three-wide<br />

move and tangled up into a<br />

melee right in front of<br />

Membrino. Luckily, he saw<br />

it unfold. Membrino<br />

squared his front bumper<br />

with the tangle ahead, stood<br />

on the gas, and pushed<br />

through it to claim fourth<br />

place as the caution flag fell.<br />

On the restart, it<br />

became a two-man race<br />

with Membrino and Tyler<br />

Hines as caution flags<br />

began to fall on the group<br />

behind them like a parade<br />

at the United Nations. Hines<br />

and Membrino survived the<br />

multiple restarts, including<br />

a 20-minute cleanup on lap<br />

13 that cooled the tires<br />

before the final push to the<br />

finish. Suddenly,<br />

Membrino’s steering issues<br />

returned.<br />

“There was just something<br />

I wasn’t liking with the<br />

right rear tire,” he said. “The<br />

car wasn’t sliding or pushing.<br />

It just felt like it wanted<br />

to take the wall down off the<br />

corners, but it was actually<br />

better with longer green flag<br />

laps than it was on restarts.<br />

So when it was time to go<br />

back to green with seven<br />

laps to go, with cooler tires<br />

and speedy dry all over the<br />

track, I didn’t know what to<br />

expect.”<br />

He was able to hold<br />

onto the lead as Hines continued<br />

to challenge him<br />

from behind. With two laps<br />

remaining, the two were<br />

locked in a dogfight at the<br />

front of the pack. Membrino<br />

protected the bottom of the<br />

track to try to force him to<br />

pass him on the top, and<br />

the gamble paid off. Hines<br />

tried to pass him on the<br />

right. The two raced sideby-side<br />

into the final two<br />

turns, but Membrino pulled<br />

away at the end to win by<br />

half a length.<br />

“It was one heck of a<br />

race, and one heck of a<br />

win—not an easy one by<br />

any means,” Membrino<br />

said. “Tyler kept me on my<br />

toes. He’s a hockey player<br />

and those guys go all out, so<br />

I knew he wasn’t going to<br />

make it easy on me.”<br />

It wasn’t until Dowling<br />

pulled up alongside him<br />

and flashed the thumbs-up<br />

sign that Membrino realized<br />

that he’d regained the<br />

points title. Dowling finished<br />

fifth overall.<br />

Membrino captured the<br />

checkered flag. When the<br />

dust settled, Membrino<br />

scored the points victory by<br />

a slim, four point margin.<br />

“It was just pandemonium<br />

from there. All those<br />

people that were at our pit<br />

earlier were all around me<br />

screaming, cheering, clapping,<br />

and throwing water all<br />

around,” he said. “It was<br />

unreal…It just overwhelmed<br />

me. I thought to<br />

myself, ‘All this for me?’ It’s a<br />

feeling I can’t describe, but I<br />

wish everyone could experience<br />

just once.”<br />

Although the Stafford<br />

season is finished,<br />

Membrino still has one<br />

more race before he hangs<br />

up his gloves. He’s currently<br />

ranked fifth in the NASCAR<br />

Whelen All-American Series<br />

Division III national standings,<br />

and he’s ranked second<br />

in the NASCAR Whelen<br />

All-American Series state<br />

standings. Now, Membrino<br />

will try to improve his overall<br />

rankings with a final<br />

regional race.<br />

“While we don’t know<br />

what lies ahead of us for<br />

next year just yet, we have<br />

one more stop in our schedule<br />

this year,” he said.<br />

“We’re going to try and wrap<br />

the year up with another<br />

win at the World Series of<br />

Speedway Racing at<br />

Thompson International<br />

Speedway on <strong>October</strong> 19.”<br />

For now, Membrino will<br />

celebrate his victory with<br />

his local sponsors:<br />

Equipment Services,<br />

CWPM, Richards<br />

Corporation, TD Homers,<br />

Napa Valley Auto Supply, Jay<br />

Pahl Auto, Steve Greer, JMW<br />

Construction, Embroidery<br />

Works, and Membrino<br />

Electric.<br />

To comment on this<br />

story or to contact sports<br />

writer John Goralski, email<br />

him at jgoralski@<br />

southingtonobserver.com.<br />

Scoreboard<br />

From page 26<br />

Southington 2<br />

(Overtime)<br />

Friday, Sept. 27<br />

At Southington<br />

Farmington 1 1/1 — 3<br />

Southington 1 1/0 — 2<br />

First half—1, Lauren Zazzaro,<br />

SHS, 26:22; 2, Jenny Bruzik (Caroline<br />

Berkowski), FHS, 16:39.<br />

Second half—3, Joan Bosma,<br />

FHS, 20:30; 4, Gaby Baker, SHS, 3:33.<br />

Overtime—5, Rachel Andreanna,<br />

FHS, 1:09.<br />

Shots—FHS, 11. SHS, 6.<br />

Saves—Emily Hogan, FHS, 4;<br />

Val Szmurlo, SHS, 8.<br />

Corners—FHS, 6. SHS, 10.<br />

Records—FHS, 6-0. SHS, 1-4-<br />

0-1.<br />

Girls Soccer<br />

Southington 0,<br />

Simsbury 0<br />

(Overtime)<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 24<br />

At Simsbury<br />

Southington 0 0/0 — 0<br />

Simsbury 0 0/0 — 0<br />

First half—no scoring.<br />

Second half—no scoring.<br />

First overtime—no scoring.<br />

Second overtime—no scoring.<br />

Shots—SoHS, 9. SiHS, 16.<br />

Saves—Margaret Mellitt and<br />

Janelle Mangassarian, SHS, 9. Carly<br />

Heintz, SiHS, 3.<br />

Corners—SoHS, 3. SiHS, 6.<br />

Records—SoHS, 2-3-1 (1-3-1).<br />

SiHS, 3-2-2 (2-2-2).<br />

Newington 1,<br />

Southington 0<br />

Friday, Sept. 27<br />

At Newington<br />

Southington 0 0 — 0<br />

Newington 1 0 — 1<br />

First half—1, Madison Lewicki,<br />

NHS, 30 mins.<br />

Second half—no scoring.<br />

Shots—SHS, 3. NHS, 19.<br />

Saves—Margaret Mellitt and<br />

Janelle Mangassarian, SHS, 16. Abby<br />

Benner, NHS, 3.<br />

Corners—none.<br />

Records—SHS, 2-4-1 (1-4-1).<br />

NHS, 5-2 (4-2).<br />

Girls Swimming<br />

Southington 93,<br />

Manchester 82<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 24<br />

At Manchester<br />

200 med relay—1, SHS (Aly<br />

Schroeder, Aly Baribault, Sam<br />

Sagnella, Laurel Dean), 2:05.13; 2,<br />

MHS; 3, SHS. 200 free—1, Rosie<br />

Mendynski, MHS, 2:07.5; 2, Marisa<br />

Matthews, SHS; 3, Bailey Potter, SHS;<br />

4, Ashley Christensen, SHS; 5, Sam<br />

Valentine, MHS. 200 IM—1, Dean,<br />

SHS, 2:27.7; 2, Alex Sanchez, MHS; 3,<br />

Kristen Loose, SHS; 4, Sagnella, SHS;<br />

5, Rachel Morris, MHS. 50 free—1,<br />

Schroeder, SHS, 28.32; 2, J<strong>org</strong>ia<br />

Wittaker, MHS; 3, Bethany Greenlaw,<br />

SHS; 4, Lexi Segueira, MHS; 5, Joy<br />

Blanchet, SHS. 100 fly—1,<br />

Mendynski, MHS, 1:06.66; 2,<br />

Sagnella, SHS; 3, Loose, SHS; 4,<br />

Baribault, SHS; 5, Brenna Crockwell,<br />

MHS. 100 free—1, Matthews, SHS,<br />

59.82; 2, Whittaker, MHS; 3, Kerry<br />

Buchanon, SHS; 4, Christensen, SHS;<br />

5, Taylor McCoy, MHS. 500 free—1,<br />

Schroeder, SHS, 6:03.7; 2, Potter,<br />

SHS; 3, Sam Valentine, MHS; 4,<br />

Sheriden Meek, MHS; 5, Shannan Hill,<br />

MHS. 200 free relay—1, SHS<br />

(Matthews, Loose, Greenlaw,<br />

Baribault), 1:52.07; 2, MHS; 3, SHS<br />

(Tia Jones, Jen Monte, Becca<br />

Tsangarides, Sagnella). 100 back—<br />

exhibition. 100 breast—exhibition. 400<br />

free relay—exhibition.<br />

Record—SHS, 3-1.<br />

Stafford<br />

Motor<br />

Speedway<br />

SK Light Division<br />

Carquest Fall Final<br />

Saturday, Sept. 28<br />

20 Laps at Stafford Motor Speedway<br />

Race 18 of 18<br />

1, Tony Membrino, Jr., CWPM/<br />

Equipment Services, Cadillac; 2, Tyler<br />

Hines, Hines Motorsports, Chevrolet;<br />

3, Glenn Griswold, Kimmer Racing,<br />

Chevrolet; 4, Bob Charland, Shark<br />

Cycle, Pontiac; 5, Chase Dowling, S&S<br />

Asphalt Paving, Chevrolet; 6, Ronnie<br />

Williams, Advice One, Chevrolet; 7,<br />

Jay Goff, Goff Motorsports, Chevrolet;<br />

8, Joey Ferrigno, Brothers Pool,<br />

Oldsmobile; 9, Rich Hammann,<br />

Tolland NAPA, Chevrolet; 10, Dave<br />

Nordman, Shark Cycle, Chevrolet; 11,<br />

Dylan Campbell, Campbell Racing,<br />

Chevrolet; 12, Wesley Prucker,<br />

Prucker Motorsports, Chevrolet; 13,<br />

Pete Lopuch, Lopuch Motorsports,<br />

Chevrolet; 14, Fred Nees, Jr., LaJoie’s<br />

Scrap Metal, Chevrolet; 15, Nick Salva,<br />

D&D Autoworks, Chevrolet; 16, Dylan<br />

Menditto, Darrin’s Electrical Services,<br />

Chevrolet; 17, Tony Santangelo, Jake’s<br />

Way Burgers, Chevrolet; 18, Payton<br />

Henry, Johnson Motorsports,<br />

Chevrolet; 19, Robert Palmer, Palmer<br />

Motorsports, Chevrolet; 20, Jason<br />

LaFayette, CT Hometown Realty,<br />

Chevrolet; 21, Rick Dyer, Dyer Racing,<br />

Pontiac; 22, Todd Douillard, Flamingo<br />

Motorsports, Ford; 23, Geoff Boisjolie,<br />

Industrial Heating Systems, Chevrolet;<br />

24, Troy Talman, Digital Federal Credit<br />

Union, Chevrolet.<br />

SK Light Final Standings<br />

Effective Saturday, Sept. 28<br />

Driver Pts +/-<br />

1, Tony Membrino, Jr. 780 —<br />

2, Chase Dowling 776 -4<br />

3, Troy Talman 678 -102<br />

4, Jay Goff 670 -110<br />

5, Bob Charland 648 -132<br />

6, Ronnie Williams 642 -138<br />

7, Joey Ferrigno 596 -184<br />

8, Payton Henry 552 -228<br />

9, Rich Hammann 552 -228<br />

10, Dylan Menditto 536 -244<br />

11, Glenn Griswold 502 -278<br />

12, Tyler Hines 480 -300<br />

13, Geoff Boisjolie 430 -350<br />

14, Wesley Prucker 374 -406<br />

15, Dylan Campbell 368 -412<br />

16, Fred Nees, Jr. 366 -414<br />

17, Rick Williams 312 -468<br />

18, Todd Douillard 306 -474<br />

19, Tony Santangelo 212 -568<br />

20, Jason Lafayette 206 -574<br />

21, Pete Lopuch 148 -632<br />

22, Rick Dyer 136 -644<br />

23, Cam McDermott 130 -650<br />

24, Shayne Prucker 120 -660<br />

25, Nick Salva 118 -662<br />

26, Rit Dulac 102 -678<br />

27, Mike Parolo 80 -700<br />

28, Robert Palmer 78 -702<br />

29, John Studley 46 -734<br />

30, Dave Nordman 32 -748<br />

31, Victoria Bergenty 24 -756<br />

*50 points are awarded for first place, and<br />

points decrease by 2 points per position.<br />

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THE EARLY YEARS ARE THE LEARNING YEARS!<br />

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NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR FALL ENROLLMENT


Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

APPLE HARVEST<br />

ROAD RACES<br />

All races are sponsored by the<br />

Southington<br />

Community<br />

YMCA and the<br />

Greater<br />

Southington<br />

Chamber of<br />

Commerce.<br />

Forms are available for pre-registration<br />

(by Sept. 27) at the<br />

YMCA membership desk or<br />

online at www.sccymca.<strong>org</strong>. All<br />

pre-registered applicants<br />

receive a free t-shirt. Plenty of<br />

refreshments for athletes with<br />

music on the course. Race day<br />

registration from 7 a.m.-8 a.m.<br />

Babysitting is available at the<br />

YMCA (need to pre-register).<br />

Pre-race packages will be available<br />

on Friday, Oct. 4 and<br />

Saturday, Oct. 5 from 8 a.m.-6<br />

p.m. at the YMCA. Contact:<br />

Southington YMCA, (860) 621-<br />

8737.<br />

5 MILE ROAD RACE—Sunday,<br />

Oct. 6, 8:30 a.m., beginning on<br />

Columbus Blvd. Race divisions:<br />

10 to 15; 16 to 19; 20 to 29; 30<br />

to 39; 40 to 49; 50 to 59; 60 to<br />

69; 70 to 79; 80 & over. Awards<br />

will be presented for the first<br />

Southington male and femal<br />

(Dave Gworek Memorial Award)<br />

and the first SHS soccer player<br />

(Chris Sanchez Memorial<br />

Award). Cost is $20 ($25 on<br />

race day).<br />

5K ROAD RACE—Sunday, Oct.<br />

6, 8:30 a.m., beginning on<br />

Columbus Blvd. Sponsored by<br />

the Southington Community<br />

YMCA and the Greater<br />

Southington Chamber of<br />

Commerce. Race divisions: 6 to<br />

7; 8 to 10; 11 to 13; 14 to 16; 17<br />

to 19; 20 to 29; 30 to 39; 40 to<br />

49; 50 to 59; 60 to 69; 70 to 79;<br />

80 & over. Cost is $20 ($25 on<br />

race day).<br />

2 MILE WALK—Sunday, Oct. 6,<br />

8:30 a.m., on the Southington<br />

rail trail. Cost is $10 ($15 on<br />

race day).<br />

LITTLE FRITTER FUN<br />

RUNS—Sunday, Oct. 6, immediately<br />

following the road race,<br />

at the Town Green. Variety of<br />

kids races run around the town<br />

green. Cost is $10 ($15 on race<br />

day).<br />

MUSIC ON THE COURSE—<br />

Interested in providing music on<br />

the course for the athletes?<br />

Contact John Myers at the<br />

YMCA for details.<br />

Special Notice about the<br />

<strong>2013</strong> Apple Harvest Road Race<br />

The Southington Police department will have several<br />

officers at strategic intersections<br />

of the course and the YMCA<br />

will supply over 60 other course<br />

volunteers to support these efforts.<br />

Residents living or traveling in and<br />

around the race course can expect<br />

some delays and/or detours on Sunday, Oct. 8.<br />

• The race begins at 8:30 a.m. on Columbus Blvd (near the<br />

town green).<br />

• All runners continue through Berlin Ave. intersection.<br />

• All runners go left at the intersection of Berlin Avenue<br />

and Berlin Street<br />

• At Berlin and Pleasant Street:<br />

5K runners take a left onto Pleasant Street<br />

5 mile runners continue on Berlin Street<br />

• (5 mile) Runners take a left onto North Stone Gate.<br />

• (5 mile) Right onto Old State Road.<br />

• (5 mile) Left onto East Street.<br />

• (5 mile) Left onto Spring Lake Road.<br />

• (5 mile) Right onto Pleasant Street.<br />

• All runners take a left onto Woodruff Street.<br />

• All runners take a right onto Berlin Avenue<br />

• All runners take a right onto Main Street toward the<br />

finish line.<br />

Flyers will be distributed to residents along the course.<br />

Additional lawn signs will be put on the course informing<br />

drivers of upcoming race and race in progress. For<br />

questions, contact John Myers, (860) 919-1193.<br />

FUNDRAISERS<br />

BLUE KNIGHTS AT TD<br />

HOMERS—Wednesdays at TD<br />

Homer’s Sports Grill, Queen<br />

Street. Mention that you would<br />

like to support Southington<br />

Athletics. A portion of the proceeds<br />

will benefit the entire<br />

Southington High School<br />

Athletic Program.<br />

PAVERS FOR POSTERITY<br />

(BLUE KNIGHT BRICKS)—<br />

The Turf Committee is offering<br />

an opportunity<br />

to<br />

purchase<br />

bricks to<br />

help defray<br />

costs for<br />

the artificial<br />

turf field at Southington<br />

High School. Bricks cost $125<br />

and can be engraved with three<br />

lines of type (14 characters per<br />

line). Bricks will be displayed as<br />

part of a walkway and patio at<br />

the entrance to the turf field<br />

complex. Bricks can be purchased<br />

at the Southington<br />

Chamber of Commerce, the<br />

Parks & Rec Department, or at<br />

the Southington High School<br />

Athletic Department.<br />

SOUTHINGTON UNITED<br />

(BOYS SOCCER)—Friday, Oct.<br />

4, 6:30 p.m., at Fontana Field<br />

during the varsity<br />

boys soccer<br />

game against<br />

Windsor. Cost is<br />

$5 per person<br />

and proceeds will<br />

benefit the United<br />

Way of Southington. Fans are<br />

also asked to bring non-perishable<br />

food items to benefit the<br />

Southington Community<br />

Services Food Pantry.<br />

PINK NIGHT (FOOTBALL)—<br />

Friday, Oct. 11, 7 p.m., at<br />

Fontana Field.<br />

The Blue Knights<br />

will be holding<br />

their ‘Pink Night’<br />

fundraiser during<br />

the varsity football<br />

game against New Britain.<br />

Proceeds benefit breast cancer<br />

awareness.<br />

TOURNAMENTS<br />

MEMORIAL GOLF<br />

TOURNAMENT—Saturday,<br />

Oct. 12, 7 a.m.-7:30 a.m. registration<br />

with an 8 a.m. shotgun<br />

start, at Hawks Landing CC.<br />

Cost is $90 and includes continental<br />

breakfast lunch buffet,<br />

and awards. Cost is $40 for buffet<br />

with no golf. Sponsorships<br />

($75) are available. Contact:<br />

Pete Montana, (860) 757-3118<br />

or (860) 634-4258.<br />

SOUTHINGTON<br />

YMCA<br />

Registration for the following<br />

classes and programs, unless<br />

otherwise noted, can be made<br />

at the Southington Community<br />

Deadline for Display<br />

Advertising is now<br />

Fridays by 2pm<br />

Sports Calendar<br />

YMCA Membership Services<br />

Desk at (860)<br />

628-5597 or<br />

on-line at<br />

www.<br />

southingtoncheshireymca.<strong>org</strong>.<br />

OSTEOPOROSIS AND<br />

OSTEOPENIA FITNESS<br />

CLASSES—Southington<br />

Community YMCA is offering<br />

classes for people with<br />

Osteoporosis or Osteopenia.<br />

Classes are for all fitness levels<br />

and help improve balance, build<br />

strength, and lengthen the<br />

spine. Classes follow the Meeks<br />

Method, a safe and effective<br />

method which emphasizes the<br />

reversal of postural change.<br />

YMCA trainers work in conjunction<br />

with Community Physical<br />

Therapy. Early afternoon,<br />

evening, and weekend classes<br />

are available. For more information,<br />

please call Janice<br />

Freeman, (860) 628-5597, ext<br />

368.<br />

PRESCHOOL & YOUTH<br />

GYMNASTICS—For children<br />

ages 16 months and up in a<br />

state-of-the-art facility located<br />

at 26 Putnam Place, Plantsville.<br />

The programs are designed to<br />

enhance the child’s strength,<br />

flexibility, hand eye coordination,<br />

and social and listening<br />

skills. The YMCA also offers a<br />

competitive gymnastics program<br />

where participants compete<br />

in YMCA and USAG<br />

meets.YMCA instructors<br />

encourage and support children<br />

and serve as positive role models.<br />

Contact: Nancy Bauman,<br />

(203) 272-7688.<br />

PARKS & REC<br />

Registration for the following<br />

classes and programs, unless<br />

otherwise noted, can be made<br />

at the Southington Parks &<br />

Recreation Department at (860)<br />

276-6219. Checks should be<br />

payable to<br />

Town of<br />

Southington.<br />

To learn more<br />

check out the<br />

activity schedule<br />

at<br />

www.southington.<strong>org</strong>.<br />

SOUTHINGTON YOUTH<br />

BASKETBALL<br />

REGISTRATION—Tuesday,<br />

Oct. 8, 6 p.m.-8 p.m., or<br />

Thursday, Oct. 10, 6 p.m.-8<br />

p.m., or Saturday, Oct. 12, 9<br />

a.m.-1 p.m., at Derynoski<br />

Elementary School. The program<br />

is open to Southington<br />

boys (grades 3-12) and<br />

Southington girls (grades 3-8).<br />

Cost is $60 per player ($125<br />

family maximum). Any player<br />

who is a member of a team that<br />

is sanctioned by the CIAC is<br />

ineligible to play in the Youth<br />

Basketball League.<br />

MISCELLANEOUS<br />

SHS INDIVIDUAL, FAMILY &<br />

SENIOR GOLD CARD<br />

PASSES—Available at the SHS<br />

Athletic office, 10<br />

a.m.-3 p.m.<br />

Family passes<br />

for regular season<br />

contests<br />

cost $110 and<br />

includes immediate<br />

family members for<br />

boys/girls volleyball, football<br />

with the exception of the<br />

Thanksgiving game, boys/girls<br />

basketball, wrestling, and night<br />

baseball. Individual passes cost<br />

$45 ($30 for students). Senior<br />

gold cards are free for<br />

Southington residents ages 62<br />

and over and are good for all<br />

regular season home games.<br />

Those who already have gold<br />

cards do not need new ones.<br />

Contact: SHS Athletic Office,<br />

(860) 628-3229 x 425.<br />

SOUTHINGTON SPORTS<br />

PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD<br />

ONLINE<br />

Visit Us at<br />

www.stepsaver.com<br />

29<br />

HALL OF FAME INDUCTION<br />

DINNER—Thursday, Nov. 14, 6<br />

p.m., at the Aqua Turf,<br />

Plantsville.<br />

The<br />

Southington<br />

Sports Hall of<br />

Fame will<br />

induct 10 athletes,<br />

one<br />

coach, one press member, two<br />

teams, and a posthumous<br />

member into the Class of <strong>2013</strong>.<br />

Inductees include Athletes<br />

include Ernie Blue (Basketball),<br />

Kristy Dougan (Gymnastics,<br />

Diving), Ryan Glasper (Football,<br />

Basketball), Paige Kopcza<br />

(Softball), Scott Mackie<br />

(Baseball), Megan McNicholas<br />

(Soccer, Basketball, Softball),<br />

Scott Otis (Football, Track),<br />

Michael Ryan (Cross-Country,<br />

Track, NFL Trainer), Brian<br />

Solomon (Wrestling), Joseph<br />

Testa (Soccer), Coach Bob<br />

Wittneben (Wrestling), former<br />

sports writer and radio<br />

announcer Jim Senich, the<br />

1978 SHS wrestling team, and<br />

the 2005 SHS gymnastics<br />

team. Cost is $50. Contact: Jim<br />

Verderame, (860) 621-1841.<br />

THE SPEEDWAY LINE<br />

REPORT WITH GARY<br />

DANKO—Mondays, 6 p.m.-7:00<br />

p.m., April-November, on WATR<br />

1320 or on-line at www.speedwaylinereport.com.<br />

The call-in<br />

radio show focuses on the<br />

world of auto racing with in-studio<br />

guests. Southington’s Gary<br />

Danko leads the discussion and<br />

provides results from local<br />

tracks and periodic vintage historical<br />

shows. Call-ins: (203)<br />

757-1320.<br />

If you would like to your event<br />

announced in The Observer,<br />

please e-mail information to<br />

jgoralski@southingtonobserver.com.<br />

The Observer reserves<br />

the right to edit for content and<br />

space.<br />

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30 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

Cross<br />

Country:<br />

taking a<br />

break<br />

From page 36<br />

was shifted to her co-ed<br />

race, it caused Alize<br />

Rodriguez to run two legs<br />

of the four-girls division<br />

race, but she teamed with<br />

Nickolina Doran and<br />

Margaret Meehan to capture<br />

the division title<br />

(42:26).<br />

Niro said that the relay<br />

is a good way to create a<br />

competition for an off-day<br />

workout, and that should<br />

benefit everybody down<br />

the road.<br />

“To run one and a half<br />

miles is easier than any<br />

other race,” said the coach.<br />

“Even if you run two laps,<br />

it’s still shorter than a full<br />

5,000 meters. We use a flat<br />

course. It’s a beautiful<br />

place to run at a beautiful<br />

time of year. You really can’t<br />

lose.”<br />

Simsbury dominates<br />

Southington’s only varsity<br />

race was a mis-matched<br />

tri-team meet in Newington<br />

against powerhouse<br />

Simsbury and the<br />

Newington host team.<br />

Simsbury placed nine of the<br />

top 10 finishers in the boys<br />

race. The Trojans scored the<br />

top six finishers in the girls<br />

race. Southington crushed<br />

Newington in both competitions,<br />

15-50 (girls) and 16-<br />

47 (boys), but Simsbury<br />

swept everybody.<br />

“It was a meet of disparities,”<br />

said Niro.<br />

“Simsbury’s boys and girls<br />

are both top 10 teams, and<br />

we are just not quite there<br />

yet. We’re still a little young<br />

to compete with teams at<br />

that level right now, and we<br />

were able to beat<br />

Newington solidly. That<br />

enabled us to conserve our<br />

legs a little bit for the end of<br />

the season. They didn’t have<br />

to run quite as hard, but<br />

they still worked together to<br />

have a great workout. Down<br />

the road, when we’re looking<br />

at the end of the season,<br />

SKI SWAP<br />

I think this will be an<br />

important day for us.”<br />

With his ninth place<br />

finish, Colin Murphy (18:50)<br />

was the only boy to place in<br />

the top 10. Amanda Hamel<br />

(22:33) edged Perkowski<br />

(22:34) to claim seventh<br />

place in the girls race.<br />

Damiaen Florian<br />

(19:17), Garrison (19:25),<br />

Jack Myers (19:26), and Kyle<br />

Summa (20:04) scored for<br />

the boys. Catherine Myers<br />

(22:57), Raquel Romano<br />

(23:48) and Margaret<br />

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Catherine Myers races through the woods at<br />

YMCA Camp Sloper at a recent meet.<br />

Our Athletes<br />

Meehan (23:54) scored for<br />

the girls.<br />

Both teams are holding<br />

their own at 2-2 overall.<br />

To comment on this<br />

story or to contact sports<br />

writer John Goralski, email<br />

him at jgoralski@<br />

southingtonobserver.com.<br />

Warm Your Home,<br />

Not The Planet.<br />

On the road again<br />

Lady Knights have to fight for every point<br />

By JOHN GORALSKI<br />

SPORTS WRITER<br />

Margaret Mellitt and<br />

Janelle Mangassarian dove,<br />

elbowed, and fought for<br />

every one of their nine<br />

saves. Five Lady Knights<br />

used their bodies to deflect<br />

Simsbury shots.<br />

On Tuesday, Sept. 24,<br />

Simbury’s offense sent wave<br />

after wave of players at the<br />

Southington net, but the<br />

Lady Knights spoiled each<br />

and every attempt.<br />

Girls Soccer<br />

“It was as good of a<br />

team performance as we've<br />

had over the last two years.<br />

When you talk about<br />

defending, it wasn't just<br />

with the back four. It was the<br />

whole team,” said Lady<br />

Knight soccer coach Sal<br />

Penta. “From the top forward<br />

to the last back, we<br />

defended great. Every time<br />

that they had a ball, we<br />

closed down the space.<br />

Every time they went to take<br />

a shot, our defenders got in<br />

the way.”<br />

For 90 minutes, the<br />

teams battled for a scoreless<br />

tie. Southington didn’t<br />

score, in either half or in<br />

overtime, but Penta was<br />

glad to get out of there with<br />

a tie.<br />

The Lady Knights are in<br />

the middle of a six-game<br />

road trip that would send<br />

shivers down the spine of<br />

the most experienced teams<br />

in the state. That’s why the<br />

tie was so important to<br />

Penta. Any time that you<br />

can secure a tie or a win on<br />

the road, it is huge. For the<br />

Knights, it broke a threegame<br />

losing streak.<br />

“Whenever you go into<br />

Simsbury and get a point,<br />

you tell the bus driver to<br />

hurry up and start the bus<br />

and let’s get out,” said Penta.<br />

“That’s a huge point, not<br />

only because it gets us one<br />

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“<br />

It was as good of a team<br />

performance as we’ve had<br />

over the last two years.<br />

When you talk about defending,<br />

it wasn't just with the back four.<br />

It was the whole team.<br />

“<br />

Sal Penta,<br />

SHS girls soccer coach<br />

point closer, but because it<br />

builds confidence.”<br />

Penta points out that<br />

his young team is still gaining<br />

experience as they try to<br />

navigate their tough conference<br />

schedule. An extended<br />

road trip doesn’t help, so<br />

every point counts.<br />

On Friday, the Knight<br />

effort fell short in<br />

Newington. The Indians<br />

scored in the first 10 minutes<br />

and held on for a 1-0<br />

win. Once again, Mellitt and<br />

Mangassarian rallied at the<br />

net, collecting 16 saves to<br />

keep the Knights close, but<br />

Southington’s offensive<br />

struggles continued.<br />

“In the second half, we<br />

did everything but put it in,”<br />

said Penta. “It’s a little bit<br />

too bad. I thought we were<br />

past that-gettting out flat in<br />

a game-but on the other<br />

hand I was happy with the<br />

way we finished.”<br />

To make matters worse,<br />

Southington lost one of<br />

their most experienced<br />

scorers, Sarah Palko, to a<br />

head injury, and that’s<br />

another tough blow to the<br />

team’s inexperienced offensive<br />

unit. Since starting the<br />

season with four goals in<br />

their first two games, the<br />

Knights have failed to score<br />

in their next six contests.<br />

Sept. 24 (OT)<br />

Southington 0<br />

Simsbury 0<br />

Sept. 27<br />

Newington 1<br />

Southington 0<br />

“When you take away<br />

players like Haley Kolesnik<br />

and Sarah Palko from the<br />

front, it puts a lot of pressure<br />

on the other girls,” said<br />

Penta. “But no one’s going to<br />

feel sorry for us. We just<br />

have to keep going.”<br />

Penta said that he still<br />

wasn’t worried, and his<br />

team remains on track to<br />

meet his preseason expectations.<br />

To account for the<br />

injuries, coaches are modifying<br />

the offensive system,<br />

and that should help to<br />

aleve some pressure for the<br />

Knights’ young scorers as<br />

they continue to develop.<br />

“This doesn’t change<br />

anything at all,” said the<br />

coach. “I said at the beginning<br />

of the seaosn that this<br />

is going to be a team that<br />

continues to get better as we<br />

go along, and we’re already<br />

seeing it. Just compare this<br />

week to a few weeks ago.<br />

We’re getting better.”<br />

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Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

Our Athletes<br />

31<br />

By JOHN GORALSKI<br />

SPORTS WRITER<br />

Conard swept past the<br />

Knights with two goals in<br />

each half. Farmington struggled<br />

against Southington’s<br />

defense, but finally broke<br />

through in overtime.<br />

Losses continue to pile<br />

up for the Lady Knight field<br />

hockey team, but Coach<br />

Erin Luddy isn’t worried.<br />

Her team is right on track.<br />

“We’ve still got a lot of<br />

games left, and we still have<br />

an opportunity to win our<br />

conference,” she said. “We<br />

play a lot of tough teams in<br />

the beginning, but that will<br />

only prepare us for down<br />

the stretch. It’s nothing but<br />

good things coming.”<br />

That’s why the overtime<br />

loss was so important for<br />

the young team. In field<br />

hockey, the losing team still<br />

gets a point for the tie in regulation.<br />

More importantly,<br />

the Knights proved again<br />

that they’re closing the gap<br />

on some of the better teams.<br />

Southington scored<br />

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Aiming at the postseason<br />

Boys Soccer secures ties against Simsbury, Newington<br />

By JOHN GORALSKI<br />

SPORTS WRITER<br />

Winning isn’t everything.<br />

Ties can also get the<br />

job done.<br />

The Blue Knight soccer<br />

team took two more steps<br />

toward the playoffs last week<br />

with ties against Simsbury<br />

and Newington. At 3-2-2,<br />

Southington needs just five<br />

more points over the final<br />

nine contests to secure a<br />

return to the postseason.<br />

Boys Soccer<br />

“I’m really proud of<br />

them,” said Blue Knight<br />

coach Dave Yanosy. “They’re<br />

working really hard, and I’m<br />

getting really excited about<br />

our prospects.”<br />

Knights lose in overtime<br />

Field Hockey still on track for the postseason<br />

Field Hockey<br />

Sept. 24<br />

Conard 4<br />

Southington 0<br />

Sept. 27 (OT)<br />

Farmington 3<br />

Southington 2<br />

first. They pushed the game<br />

to overtime in the final minutes<br />

and in the extra period<br />

until a Farmington rush<br />

ended the chance for an<br />

upset.<br />

“Even though we lost, it<br />

was a definite motivation.<br />

Farmington always has a<br />

really strong program, so to<br />

compete with them for<br />

almost 70 minutes? To score<br />

two goals? It’s a shift of our<br />

momentum,” said Luddy.<br />

“We’ve had some blow-out<br />

games where we struggled<br />

to score. To score some<br />

goals here is definitely going<br />

to help us.”<br />

Lauren Zazzaro opened<br />

the scoring with 26:22<br />

remaining in the first half,<br />

and it took Farmington<br />

almost 10 minutes to return<br />

the favor. The Indians outshot<br />

the Knights, 11-6, in the<br />

contest, but Southington<br />

had multiple chances to<br />

score.<br />

With 3:33 remaining in<br />

the game, Southington sent<br />

a rush at the net and Gaby<br />

Baker scored on the<br />

rebound to force the extra<br />

period. The Knights<br />

embraced the 7-vs-7 format<br />

in the extra period. Ali<br />

Abacherli had two shots in<br />

the extra period. Meg Asklar<br />

nearly scored in overtime,<br />

but Farmington scored with<br />

1:09 remaining.<br />

“We kept the ball down<br />

on their side of the field for a<br />

long time,” said Luddy.<br />

“Even in the beginning of<br />

overtime, we kept it down<br />

there for a while.<br />

Unfortunately, the ball<br />

sometimes bounces your<br />

way but sometimes it doesn’t.”<br />

Southington dropped<br />

to 1-4 with the loss.<br />

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Both teams managed 14<br />

shots on goal. Both team’s<br />

goalies came away with double-digit<br />

saves. On Tuesday,<br />

Sept. 24, the Blue Knights<br />

went ahead twice in the second<br />

half, but Simsbury<br />

answered both times.<br />

Southington went on the<br />

road, but came away with a<br />

2-2 tie.<br />

“I know I’ve said it<br />

before, but I can’t stress<br />

enough how good our<br />

defense and goalkeeping has<br />

been,” said Yanosy. “They’ve<br />

done a fantastic job marking<br />

some very dangerous players,<br />

and I think it starts with<br />

that. We know that we’re<br />

going to be in a ball game. It<br />

just comes down to finishing<br />

opportunities.”<br />

Neither team scored in<br />

the first half, but Kyle Sisco<br />

connected with Tom<br />

DelBuono in the first five<br />

minutes of the second half to<br />

give the Knights a short, 1-0<br />

lead. Simsbury countered<br />

Allie Abacherli battles<br />

a Farmington player<br />

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midway through the half, but<br />

Sisco within a minute. simsbury<br />

tied the game with 15<br />

minutes left in regulation.<br />

Scoreless vs. Indians<br />

Defense was the story on<br />

Friday when Southington<br />

defenders held Newington to<br />

just seven shots in 90 minutes.<br />

Brian Falco made seven<br />

saves. Both teams had scoring<br />

opportunities, but<br />

Soutington held on for a 0-0<br />

tie.<br />

“I’m really happy with<br />

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“Newington’s been knocking<br />

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in our conference and just<br />

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They’ve been having success<br />

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Topper returns<br />

The Knights were excited<br />

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Friday’s game against<br />

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Brian Topper has been<br />

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Topper was on crutches,<br />

but the Knights were energized<br />

by his return to the<br />

sidelines.<br />

“We were really pumped<br />

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32 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

Athletes of the week<br />

Ally Schroeder<br />

kicked her way<br />

through a flurry<br />

of arms and legs to outtouch<br />

her opponent in the<br />

50 freestyle sprint. Later in<br />

the meet, she outlasted<br />

every Manchester swimmer<br />

with a victory in the<br />

500 freestyle race.<br />

Schroeder does it all.<br />

Against Manchester, she<br />

won a sprint and a distance<br />

event. The week<br />

before, she qualified for<br />

states in the backstroke.<br />

No matter where coaches<br />

put her in the meet,<br />

Schroeder is making<br />

waves.<br />

“I attribute that to her<br />

mentality and her drive<br />

and desire to improve at<br />

every practice aqnd every<br />

meet,” said Lady Knight<br />

swim coach Evan Tuttle.<br />

“That’s not something that<br />

you can teach or coach<br />

into kids. That’s something<br />

that has to come from<br />

within, and she’s got it.”<br />

As a sophomore,<br />

Schroeder has already<br />

earned her spot in the center<br />

of Southington’s lineup.<br />

She leads off relays and<br />

paces individual races. In just her second<br />

varsity season Schroeder has<br />

become a leader in the pool, but Tuttle<br />

said that her leadership continues long<br />

after the race has ended.<br />

“She’s a genuinely good natured kid<br />

that always works her tail off, and she’s<br />

never shy about helping others when<br />

TOP FEMALE PERFORMANCES<br />

• Laurel Dean,<br />

SHS girls swim team:<br />

Captured wins in the 200 IM (2:27.7) and<br />

the 100 backstroke (1:11.88) with wins in<br />

2 relays during a win over Manchester.<br />

Ally Schroeder<br />

Southington High School girls swimming<br />

Sophomore<br />

they need it,” said the coach. “She’s<br />

always there to help me, too. She picks<br />

up after practice. She’s always the first<br />

one here and the last to leave. That type<br />

of character helps a lot.”<br />

It certainly pays off in the pool.<br />

For her outstanding athletic accomplishments,<br />

Schroeder is our highlighted<br />

female athlete of the week.<br />

• Val Szmurlo,<br />

SHS field hockey team:<br />

Collected 18 saves over two games last<br />

week, including 8 saves against Farmington<br />

to push the game to overtime.<br />

Mike Rogalski<br />

zeroed in on<br />

the ball deep<br />

in Southington’s zone and<br />

sent it spinning out from the<br />

net. Newington regrouped<br />

for a second attack, but they<br />

never had a chance. Rogalski<br />

slid into the loose ball and<br />

broke up the play for the<br />

second time in 10 seconds.<br />

In a scoreless battle<br />

against Newington, Rogalski<br />

was an iron wall.<br />

“Mike is a really hardworking<br />

kid, and he gives<br />

you everything he has,” said<br />

Blue Knight coach Dave<br />

Yanosy. “He does whatever<br />

you want him to do and<br />

plays as hard as he can.”<br />

It’s hard to single out<br />

just one player in<br />

Southington’s steel curtain<br />

defense, but Rogalski is a<br />

great representative. He battles<br />

in the shadows, and he<br />

doesn’t look for credit. In<br />

Southington’s defense, it’s all<br />

for one and one for all.<br />

“It’s all those guys out<br />

back. I have to give credit to<br />

them all,” said Yanosy.<br />

“They’ve been lights out all<br />

year. They’ve all had games<br />

where they’ve been the<br />

unsung heroes. Defensemen don’t get a lot<br />

of those accolades, but as a unit I can’t say<br />

enough about them.”<br />

Against Newington, it was Rogalski’s<br />

turn to shine, but it was no surprise to<br />

Yanosy. He’s come to expect that from his<br />

senior defenseman.<br />

“He’s a smart player. He wins a lot of<br />

TOP MALE PERFORMANCES<br />

• Tony Membrino, Jr.,<br />

Racecar driver:<br />

Scored a victory at the Carquest Fall Final<br />

on Sept. 27 to win the SK Light points<br />

title at Stafford Motor Speedway.<br />

The Week Ahead in Southington Sports<br />

Mike Rogalski<br />

Southington High School boys soccer<br />

Senior<br />

50-50 balls and a lot of headers,” he said.<br />

“He tracks players extremely well, and he<br />

always makes good decisions. He knows<br />

when he has to put his foot on the ball and<br />

clear it, and he knows when he has a little<br />

time. He does it all back there.”<br />

For his outstanding athletic accomplishments,<br />

Rogalski is our highlighted<br />

male athlete of the week.<br />

• Stephen Barmore,<br />

SHS football:<br />

Went 25-for-38 passing for 329 yards and<br />

4 touchdowns with 8 carries for 43 yards<br />

on the ground in a win over Simsbury.<br />

Fri<br />

6:00).<br />

Sat<br />

Boys Soccer vs. Windsor (JV-3:45, V-6:30).<br />

Field Hockey vs. Hall (V-3:45, JV-5:15). Girls<br />

Soccer at Windsor (JV-3:45). Girls Swimming<br />

vs. Hall (V/JV-4:00 @ Southington YMCA). Girls<br />

Volleyball vs. Bristol Eastern (JV-/FR5:00, V-<br />

No games scheduled.<br />

Do you want to advertise on<br />

our Athletes of the Week page?<br />

Contact our ad rep at (860) 628-9645<br />

Mon<br />

Boys Soccer vs. Conard (V/JV-3:45). Girls<br />

Soccer at Conard (V/JV-3:45). Girls Volleyball<br />

at Northwest Catholic (JV/FR-5:00, V-6:00).<br />

Wed<br />

Thu<br />

Boys Soccer at Northwest Catholic (V/JV-3:45).<br />

Girls Soccer vs. Northwest Catholic (V/JV-<br />

3:45). Girls Volleyball vs. Farmington (JV-5:00,<br />

V-6:00).<br />

Football vs. New Britain (FR-3:45). Boys<br />

Soccer vs. Bristol Eastern (FR-3:45). Field<br />

Hockey at Newington (FR-3:45). Girls Soccer<br />

at Bristol Eastern (FR-3:45).<br />

Sun<br />

<strong>2013</strong> Apple Harvest Road Race (5 Mile, 5K, 2-<br />

Mile Walk, Little Fritter Fun Runs - 8:30),.<br />

Tue<br />

Boys Cross Country vs. New Britain (V/JV-4:00<br />

@ YMCA Camp Sloper). Girls Cross Country<br />

vs. New Britain (V/JV-4:30 @ YMCA Camp<br />

Sloper). Field Hockey vs. South Windsor (V-<br />

3:45, JV-5:15). Girls Swimming and Diving at<br />

Farmington (V/JV-7:00 @ Miss Porters School pool).<br />

Weather/Delays: Unforeseen schedule changes or weather<br />

conditions may cause a change in the schedule.<br />

You may call (860) 628-3229, ext. 425 to<br />

check the status of a contest. For afternoon<br />

contests, call after 1:30 p.m. and for evening<br />

contests, call after 4:30 p.m.<br />

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Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

Our Athletes<br />

33<br />

Growing up<br />

Knights are still looking<br />

for the right combination<br />

By JOHN GORALSKI<br />

SPORTS WRITER<br />

On Wednesday, Sept.<br />

25, the Knights were clinging<br />

to a 10-9 lead midway<br />

through game four, and<br />

finally it clicked. M<strong>org</strong>an<br />

McCarthy served a 6-0 rally.<br />

Kelsea Allen scored another<br />

point, and Sylwia<br />

Lewkowicz scrambled off<br />

five straight points to set up<br />

a win.<br />

Southington struggled<br />

in a four-game stretch<br />

against Simsbury at the start<br />

of the week. The struggles<br />

continued into the middle<br />

contests during a four-game<br />

series against Newington,<br />

but a 15-4 rally at the end of<br />

the game could be a signal<br />

of things to come.<br />

Have the young Knights<br />

turned the corner? Is this<br />

the start of something new?<br />

Only time will tell.<br />

Volleyball<br />

“I think it’s a work in<br />

progress,” said Lady Knight<br />

coach Rich Heitz. “I’m trying<br />

to get them to compete<br />

day in and day out, and I<br />

think that you’ll see us compete<br />

by the end of the season.<br />

I’m really trying to get<br />

them to understand that,<br />

when somebody pushes<br />

you, you have to push back<br />

even harder. That’s what<br />

we’ve been trying to teach<br />

them. Tonight, I thought we<br />

did pretty well.”<br />

For the Lady Knights,<br />

regular season struggles are<br />

something new. But with<br />

just one senior player on the<br />

varsity lineup, Southington<br />

is still looking for the right<br />

combination. Heitz shuffled<br />

in four different lineups in<br />

four different games on<br />

Friday. At one point in the<br />

contest, Southington fielded<br />

a team of four sophomores<br />

as Heitz continues to<br />

tinker with different looks.<br />

“I thought it was a nice<br />

night for them,” he said<br />

about his underclassmen<br />

players. “It was a good<br />

chance to play them against<br />

a competitive team and give<br />

them a chance to be successful.”<br />

The girls responded<br />

with their best balanced<br />

attack of the season.<br />

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Maryssa Romano scored 11<br />

kills, but newcomer Julia<br />

Tinyszin matched her with<br />

11 kills and a higher kill percentage<br />

(52.4). Sophomores<br />

Michelle Stublarec (7 kills)<br />

and Kelsey Allen (5 kills)<br />

contributed as the Knights<br />

scored 42 kills with just 28<br />

errors.<br />

McCarthy distributed<br />

the ball well with 32 assists<br />

and helped anchor the back<br />

row with 17 digs. Senior<br />

Libaro Allison McCormick<br />

scored 32 digs. Romano collected<br />

11, and newcomer<br />

Kateri Downes scored eight<br />

digs in the back row.<br />

Southington won the<br />

first game, 25-22, before letting<br />

the second one slip<br />

away, 26-24. Southington<br />

rebounded with a 25-18 win<br />

in game three and countered<br />

with a 25-13 game to<br />

clinch the series.<br />

That’s the competitiveness<br />

that Heitz is looking for<br />

from his young team, and it<br />

was a fight that was missing<br />

in a 3-1 loss in Simsbury at<br />

the start of the week.<br />

“The challenge has<br />

been to get them to compete<br />

rather than just to<br />

play,” said Heitz. “There is a<br />

difference, but we knew that<br />

we would have some growing<br />

pains during this<br />

process.”<br />

That showed against<br />

Simsbury on Monday. The<br />

senior-laden Trojans<br />

entered the game with a<br />

perfect, 5-0, record. Nobody<br />

has been able to win a single<br />

game as Simsbury collected<br />

five straight shutouts to<br />

start the season.<br />

Southington did a good<br />

job keeping the ball away<br />

from Simsbury hitter<br />

Caroline Hendershot, but<br />

the Knights seemed to kill<br />

their rallies with unforced<br />

errors. Romano led the hitters<br />

with eight kills, but<br />

Southington committed 29<br />

errors at the net with only 34<br />

kills. At the line, they committed<br />

more errors (17) than<br />

aces (12) as the team managed<br />

just 77 percent serving.<br />

Even in the back row,<br />

Southington struggled with<br />

13 serve receive errors in the<br />

series.<br />

The Lady Knights won<br />

the first game, 25-15, but fell<br />

in straight sets, 25-20, 25-20,<br />

and 25-15.<br />

“I felt that, truly, if we<br />

went out and played the<br />

way we are capable of, we<br />

could have taken the<br />

match,” said Heitz. “I know<br />

that they have a lot of seniors<br />

over there, but I felt that<br />

we had some good matchups.<br />

You have to compete<br />

for every point when you<br />

play against teams with seniors<br />

or teams as good as<br />

Simsbury. Momentum is so<br />

critical, but we really didn’t<br />

seize the opportunity and<br />

grab it when we had the<br />

chance.”<br />

Despite the growing<br />

pains, Southington remains<br />

at 5-3 overall, but the team<br />

is approaching <strong>October</strong><br />

without a single shutout on<br />

their resume. Still, Heitz is<br />

enjoying the ride. With all<br />

their ups and downs,<br />

Southington continues to<br />

improve.<br />

“It’s been a very fun<br />

group to be associated<br />

with,” he said. “They’re<br />

eager. They want to play. We<br />

may have had a few more<br />

growing pains than we’re<br />

used to, but we’re having<br />

fun with this group.”<br />

To comment on this<br />

story or to contact sports<br />

writer John Goralski, email<br />

him at jgoralski@<br />

southingtonobserver.com.<br />

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Back with a<br />

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Knights play for pride<br />

By JOHN GORALSKI<br />

SPORTS WRITER<br />

One by one, the Lady<br />

Knights left their mark on the<br />

Manchester pool. Aly<br />

Schroeder built a lead in her<br />

leg of the opening relay. Aly<br />

Baribault extended it even<br />

further. Sam Sagnella and<br />

Laurel Dean seemed to<br />

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On Tuesday, Sept. 24, the<br />

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Swimming<br />

The Southington foursome<br />

won the 200 medley<br />

relay by almost 10 seconds.<br />

Manchester won the next<br />

race but three Knights were<br />

right on her heels.<br />

Dean won the 200 IM by<br />

more than 15 seconds.<br />

Schroeder edged the Indians’<br />

top sprinter to claim the title<br />

in the 50 freestyle.<br />

Southington entered the<br />

break with an 18-point lead,<br />

and Coach Evan Tuttle alread<br />

knew that his team had the<br />

win. Coming off a tight loss<br />

to Bristol Eastern,<br />

Southington wanted to quiet<br />

any critics.<br />

They did it before the<br />

break.<br />

“The girls wanted to<br />

come back with a vengeance<br />

after the loss at Bristol<br />

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Southington swept the<br />

relays. Marisa Matthews,<br />

Kristen Loose, Bethany<br />

Greenlaw, and Aly Baribault<br />

won the 200 freestyle race<br />

(1:52.07). Matthews, Bailey<br />

Potter, Schroeder, and Dean<br />

combined for a win on the<br />

last race (4:15.09), winning<br />

by more than 15 seconds<br />

even though the contest had<br />

already turned to exhibition.<br />

Southington had something<br />

to prove. Dean was a<br />

double winner in the 200 IM<br />

(2:27.7) and 100 backstroke<br />

(1:11.88). Schroeder was a<br />

double winner in the 50<br />

freestyle (28.32) and the 500<br />

freestyle (6:03.7).<br />

Matthews took first<br />

place in the 100 freestyle<br />

(59.82) and Baribault scored<br />

a victory in the breastroke<br />

(1:13.37).<br />

Southington built a 49-<br />

point lead with three races<br />

remaining before turning to<br />

exhibition races for a 93-82<br />

win. Tuttle hopes that the<br />

momentum carries into the<br />

conference opener against<br />

Hall this Friday.<br />

“We have to continue to<br />

find those little things that<br />

we need to improve and get<br />

better,” said Tuttle. “The season<br />

gets more and more difficult<br />

from here.”<br />

With the win,<br />

Southington improved to 3-1.<br />

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34 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

Hall of Fame<br />

Just give me the ball, coach<br />

Lenny Clements raised the bar for scoring in the early 1960s<br />

By JOHN GORALSKI<br />

SPORTS WRITER<br />

The year was 1962. The<br />

Southington High<br />

School football team<br />

was riding an 18-game winning<br />

streak, and Lenny Clements made<br />

a rare defensive mistake that<br />

allowed the Croft quarterback to<br />

complete a pass for a large gain.<br />

No matter how tough they<br />

might have been, the Croft linemen<br />

must have been nervous<br />

when they lined up for the next<br />

play. The quarterback must have<br />

felt Clements’ presence as he<br />

dropped back for the pass. That<br />

poor receiver was probably worried<br />

about getting hit when he<br />

stretched out for the ball…<br />

Clements was already returning<br />

the interception the length of<br />

the field. Lenny Clements rarely<br />

made a mistake on the gridiron.<br />

But when he did, he made you pay<br />

for it.<br />

Hall of Fame<br />

“We ended up 8-1 that year,<br />

but if he didn’t play for us we<br />

probably would have been 1-8,”<br />

said former Southington High<br />

School football coach Joe Orsene.<br />

“He was that good. He punted,<br />

and he received the punts. He<br />

kicked off, and he received the<br />

kickoffs. He played defense and<br />

offense for us. He led the state in<br />

scoring that year. He did everything.”<br />

The fact that Clements was<br />

good came as no surprise to<br />

Southington fans. After all, his<br />

father was an all-American player<br />

in Pennsylvania at the turn of the<br />

century. Clements was the<br />

youngest of seven brothers and his<br />

older brothers had already raised<br />

the bar for Southington football by<br />

the time that Lenny reached the<br />

high school. Football was in his<br />

blood, and Lenny was one of the<br />

best.<br />

“All you had to do with Lenny<br />

is tell him what you wanted to do,<br />

and he’d do it,” said Orsene. “I<br />

would work with the defensive<br />

ends for hours, but all I’d have to<br />

do is tell Lenny once. Then, f<strong>org</strong>et<br />

everything else. They weren’t<br />

going around his end. That was it.<br />

That was the kind of guy that he<br />

was.”<br />

On both sides of the ball,<br />

Clements was dominant. He<br />

caught three interceptions in his<br />

senior season. He rushed for 1,022<br />

yards in nine games and averaged<br />

6.5 yards per carry. He caught<br />

seven passes and threw for three<br />

completions, including one for a<br />

touchdown.<br />

Clements scored 18 touchdowns<br />

in 1962, and he converted<br />

eight extra point plays. He led the<br />

state in scoring with 124 points.<br />

With his combined offense,<br />

defense, and special teams,<br />

Clements accounted for 1,559 allpurpose<br />

yards. His efforts earned<br />

him a first team selection for the<br />

Class B all-state football team, and<br />

he went on to score the winning<br />

touchdown in the 1962 East vs.<br />

West all-star football game.<br />

“He always gave 100 percent.<br />

He always gave everything that he<br />

had, and he never let anyone<br />

down,” said his older brother Jerry,<br />

a star on the 1953 hall of fame<br />

team. “He had such intestinal fortitude.<br />

Joe Orsene used to always<br />

say that he wished he had 11 guys<br />

Southington<br />

Sports Hall of Fame<br />

Inside the Numbers<br />

July 28, 1944 - December 23, 2008<br />

Football<br />

•4 Varsity Letters (1959, 1960, 1961, 1962)<br />

•Captain (1962)<br />

•Class B All-State (1962)<br />

•Led the state in scoring (124 points in 1962).<br />

•Scored the winning touchdown in the 1962<br />

East vs. West All-Star Football Game.<br />

1962—Rushed for 1,022 yards, 6.5 yds/carry,<br />

caught 7 passes, threw 3 passes, scored 18<br />

touchdowns, converted 8 extra point plays,<br />

and finished with 1,559 all-purpose yards.<br />

Basketball<br />

•4 Varsity letters (1959-60, 1960-61,<br />

1961-62, 1962-63)<br />

•Member of the 1961 conference<br />

championship team.<br />

Outdoor Track<br />

•1 Varsity letters (1963)<br />

Baseball<br />

•2 Varsity Letters (1960, 1963)<br />

1963 CHRONICLE YEARBOOK COURTESY OF THE SOUTHINGTON PUBLIC LIBRARY<br />

Lenny Clements crashes through the defensive line during the 1962 season.<br />

like Lenny.”<br />

And why not? Clements was a<br />

top defender. He led the state in<br />

scoring, but he wasn’t just limited<br />

to football. He earned four varsity<br />

letters in basketball, two in baseball,<br />

and one in track.<br />

Former sports writer Art<br />

Secondo was Lenny’s teammate<br />

on the high school basketball<br />

team, and he still marvels at<br />

Clements’ competitiveness.<br />

Football was his primary sport,<br />

but Clements could make any<br />

team better. He wasn’t worried<br />

about looking good or collecting<br />

stats. Clements just wanted to win.<br />

“He didn’t possess the agility<br />

of a basketball player, but he was a<br />

tremendous rebounder. He was a<br />

key player in our league championship<br />

run in 1961,” said Secondo.<br />

“What you saw with Lenny<br />

Clements was an old-fashioned<br />

athlete who put sports ahead of<br />

just about everything else. He<br />

demonstrated an intense desire to<br />

always do his best even though<br />

there were times on the court that<br />

he looked like a fullback blasting<br />

through the line.”<br />

Clements was known for<br />

doing whatever he could to make<br />

his teams successful, and that carried<br />

into every season. Clements<br />

just loved to compete.<br />

“After his junior football season,<br />

he came up to me—I was the<br />

track coach at the time—and he<br />

told me if there was any way that<br />

he could help me in track to just<br />

let him know,” said Orsene. “That’s<br />

the type of guy that Lenny was. He<br />

was a great ballplayer and a great<br />

guy. Everybody loved him.”<br />

Clements earned a varsity letter<br />

for the track team as a statelevel<br />

sprinter but returned to<br />

baseball to earn another letter in<br />

his senior year.<br />

After graduation Clements carried<br />

his athleticism into a 35-year<br />

career with the Meriden Fire<br />

Department. He continued to play<br />

in town leagues and on firehouse<br />

teams, but he never pursued football<br />

at the collegiate level. Still, his<br />

competitive spirit made him an<br />

excellent fireman.<br />

“<br />

He punted, and he<br />

received the punts.<br />

He kicked off,<br />

and he received<br />

the kickoffs.<br />

He played defense<br />

and offense for us.<br />

He led the state in<br />

scoring that year.<br />

He did everything.<br />

“<br />

Joe Orsene,<br />

Former SHS football coach<br />

“He used to give 150 percent<br />

in everything that he did. If he<br />

couldn’t give 100 percent, he<br />

wouldn’t even try,” his brother<br />

Jerry said. “He would never complain.<br />

He was a fireman for 35<br />

years, and when he went into a<br />

house, he had no fear at all. If<br />

there was somebody in there, he’d<br />

go in and get him. There were stories<br />

about him in the fire department<br />

that were just unbelievable.”<br />

Clements passed away in 2008<br />

after a long battle with cancer, but<br />

his memory still lingers on local<br />

sports fields an in sports discussions<br />

by long-time Southington fans. He<br />

continues to be a measure for high<br />

school athletes, and it can be argued<br />

that his sports dominance in 1962<br />

has yet to be duplicated.<br />

Perhaps that’s why the<br />

Southington Sports Hall of Fame<br />

selection committee selected<br />

Clements to be inducted posthumously<br />

into the local sports hall of<br />

fame. According to Orsene, it is long<br />

overdue.<br />

“If he isn’t in the hall of fame, I<br />

don’t know who should be in it,”<br />

said Orsene, a member of the Class<br />

of 2010. “I’m really glad that he’s in. I<br />

think he would have loved this. If<br />

Coach [Walt] Lozoski was alive, he<br />

would tell you that he loved Lenny.<br />

We all did.”<br />

On Thursday, Nov. 14,<br />

Clements will be honored in an<br />

induction ceremony at the Aqua<br />

Turf in Plantsville. To reserve tickets,<br />

contact Jim Verderame at (860)<br />

628-7335.<br />

“I think it’s great that he’s<br />

finally getting the recognition. I’m<br />

sure that he would have loved<br />

this,” said his brother Jerry. “He<br />

deserves a spot in the hall of fame,<br />

and I’m sure that everyone that<br />

knew him would certainly agree.<br />

He was a heck of an athlete.”


Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong> The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

Our Athletes<br />

35<br />

The shutout<br />

Knights hold Simsbury<br />

to 52 yards of offense<br />

By JOHN GORALSKI<br />

SPORTS WRITER<br />

Southington was forced to<br />

punt on their first drive. The<br />

Knights’ second possession<br />

ended with a fumble. Moments<br />

after recovering an interception<br />

late in the second quarter, the<br />

Blue Knights coughed it back up.<br />

Quarterback Stephen Barmore<br />

left the game for one play with a<br />

sore knee, and penalties backed<br />

up the Knights on their first trip<br />

into the red zone.<br />

On Friday, Sept. 27,<br />

Southington’s offense committed<br />

just about every mistake in the<br />

book during the opening half, but<br />

the Blue Knight football team still<br />

entered the break with a 14-0<br />

lead. Why? Because offense is fun<br />

to watch, but defense wins<br />

games.<br />

Football<br />

Simsbury scrambled for 30<br />

yards of offense on their opening<br />

drive, but managed just 22 yards<br />

the rest of the game.<br />

Southington’s defense was just<br />

too good. Simsbury’s tripleoption<br />

offense can leave most<br />

teams scratching their heads. The<br />

Knights were ready.<br />

“We had to really pay attention<br />

to details. We had to be very<br />

disciplined with what we do. It’s a<br />

little bit different than the style<br />

that we do. We like to be more of<br />

an attacking style of defense by<br />

bringing pressure, but you really<br />

can’t do that as much with a team<br />

like this,” said Blue Knight coach<br />

Mike Drury. “We had to change<br />

our defense up for this week, and<br />

our kids responded. They were<br />

extremely disciplined with their<br />

reads. They tackled great, and it<br />

was a tremendous effort out<br />

there.”<br />

Simsbury converted just<br />

three passes in the game, but finished<br />

with no yardage when<br />

Knight defenders swarmed two of<br />

the three receivers behind the<br />

line of scrimmage. Six Simsbury<br />

runners combined for just 52<br />

yards on the ground as<br />

Southington’s defense held them<br />

to less than one yard per carry<br />

(0.67).<br />

Zak Jamele (9 tackles) and<br />

Zach Maxwell (8 tackles) led the<br />

blitz at the line of scrimmage.<br />

Steven Hamel finished with five<br />

tackles, while Matt Maxwell and<br />

Michael Lange scrambled for four<br />

tackles apiece. Matt Thomson<br />

recovered a fumble. Mike Lange<br />

and Peter Majchrzak intercepted<br />

passes. When the dust settled, 18<br />

defenders combined for 58 tackles,<br />

and Simsbury never knew<br />

what hit them.<br />

“We knew that they were running<br />

the triple option. It’s a tricky<br />

offense to stop, but it’s all about<br />

assignment defense,” said senior<br />

co-captain Zach Maxwell. “All<br />

week we focused on who would<br />

have which assignment, and<br />

“<br />

We had to change<br />

our defense up<br />

for this week, and<br />

our kids responded.<br />

They were<br />

extremely<br />

disciplined with<br />

their reads.<br />

They tackled great,<br />

and it was a<br />

tremendous effort<br />

out there.<br />

“<br />

Mike Drury,<br />

SHS football coach<br />

everybody was really good at<br />

keeping their assignment.”<br />

Offensively, the Knights finally<br />

settled into gear. Alex Jamele<br />

led the receivers with 10 passes<br />

for 114 yards and opened up the<br />

scoring with a 12-yard touchdown<br />

in the second quarter. Jasen<br />

Rose caught an 11 yard pass to<br />

give the Knights their halftime<br />

lead. Then, came the assault.<br />

Barmore completed 25 passes<br />

to four different receivers in<br />

the game as Southington<br />

receivers scrambled for 329 yards.<br />

Rose finished with seven catches<br />

for 87 yards. Kyle Borawski had six<br />

catches for 79 yards, and Joe<br />

Daigle averaged caught a pair of<br />

passes for 49 yards.<br />

Jamele scored twice.<br />

Boroawski scored once, and Tyler<br />

Hyde (13 carries, 54 yards) scrambled<br />

for a one yard score to open<br />

the second half.<br />

“There are definitely still<br />

some things that we need to tighten<br />

up on,” said Barmore. “If we<br />

want to continue winning, we<br />

can’t have as many penalties as<br />

we had tonight. We had a lot of<br />

minor setbacks that set us back in<br />

the first half, hence only scoring<br />

14 points, but I think once we<br />

minimized mistakes in the second<br />

half we showed that our<br />

offense s potent when it’s mistake-free.”<br />

Kyle Smick closed out the<br />

scoring with a 19 yard field goal in<br />

the fourth quarter, but the damage<br />

was already done. For the second<br />

week in a row, Southington’s<br />

varsity players left the field with a<br />

shutout, and the Knights held on<br />

for a 38-0 win.<br />

Once again, the battle was<br />

won in the trenches.<br />

Southington’s offensive line beat<br />

off Simsbury’s attack. The Trojans<br />

managed to recover a fumble<br />

down field and intercepted an<br />

errant pass in the first quarter,<br />

but Southington’s linemen dominated<br />

where it counted.<br />

“It all starts at the line of<br />

scrimmage. It all starts in the<br />

trenches, and we want to come<br />

out and just dominate the defensive<br />

line,” said senior lineman Jim<br />

Nardi. “We have four seniors on<br />

the offensive line right now. That’s<br />

obviously a big help, but it helps<br />

to have a quarterback that can<br />

scramble the way that Stephen<br />

does and a running back that can<br />

hit the hole like Hyde does.”<br />

With the victory, Southington<br />

improved to 3-0 and enters their<br />

bye week as one of six undefeated<br />

teams in the Class LL rankings.<br />

The Knights will return to action<br />

on Friday, Oct. 11 with a home<br />

contest against New Britain. The<br />

Hurricaines (1-1) are coming off<br />

of a 36-6 loss to Manchester, but<br />

will try to regroup against Conard<br />

this Friday.<br />

“It’s always a huge rivalry<br />

every year. They’re coming here,<br />

and they’re going to be fired up,<br />

coached up, and ready to go,” said<br />

Drury. “We’ve just got to do our<br />

thing and prepare the way we do<br />

to come out here and put a great<br />

effort onto the field.”<br />

JESSICA SCHRODER<br />

Kyle Borawski drags three Trojan defenders during a 38-0 win over Simsbury on Friday,<br />

Sept. 27. The Knights (3-0) head into their bye week as one of five undefeated teams in<br />

the Class LL rankings.<br />

Sept. 27<br />

Southington 38<br />

Simsbury 0<br />

A look ahead<br />

New Britain<br />

Record: 1-1<br />

vs<br />

Southington<br />

Record: 3-0<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 11, 7 p.m.<br />

at Southington High School<br />

Behind the numbers...<br />

LAST SEASON<br />

Southington beat New Britain in Week Two, 32-7.<br />

Manchester, 36-6 (W)<br />

Toby Taradeina:<br />

8-for-20 passing, 213 yards,<br />

4 interceptions, fumble.<br />

Kyle Anderson:<br />

55-yard TD reception.<br />

Team:<br />

New Britain’s offense<br />

committed 6 turnovers.<br />

Last week’s highlights<br />

Simsbury, 38-0 (W)<br />

Stephen Barmore:<br />

25-for-38 passing, 329 yards,<br />

4 TDs, 8 carries, 43 yards.<br />

Alex Jamele:<br />

10 catches, 114 yds, 2 TDs.<br />

Defense:<br />

Held Simsbury to 52 yards,<br />

1 fumble, 2 interceptions.<br />

Kick-off is scheduled for 7<br />

p.m. on Oct. 11.<br />

To comment on this story or to<br />

contact sports writer John<br />

Goralski, email him at jgoralski@<br />

southingtonobserver.com.


36 To advertise, call (860) 628-9645<br />

The Step Saver/ The Observer<br />

Friday, <strong>October</strong> 4, <strong>2013</strong><br />

Our Athletes<br />

•SHS Field Hockey, Soccer...pages 30-31<br />

•SHS Swimming, Volleyball...page 33<br />

•Hall of Fame - Lenny Clements...page 34<br />

•SHS Football Blanks Simsbury...page 35<br />

Capture the flag<br />

Membrino wins his 3rd checkered flag<br />

to claim the SK Light title at Stafford<br />

DRISCOLL MOTORSPORTS PHOTOGRAPHY<br />

Tony Membrino Jr. celebrates in the winners’ circle with<br />

a victory in the Carquest Fall Final that clinched the SK<br />

Light points title at Stafford Motor Speedway on Sept. 28.<br />

By JOHN GORALSKI<br />

SPORTS WRITER<br />

Tony Membrino circled<br />

the track in a victory<br />

lap, drinking in the<br />

cheers from the grandstand at<br />

Stafford Motor Speedway. On<br />

Saturday, Sept. 28, a crowd spilled<br />

out of their seats to circle the<br />

black and purple car, and<br />

Membrino jumped onto the hood<br />

to get a better look through the<br />

mob.<br />

He scanned the crowd and<br />

zeroed in on his target.<br />

Car Racing<br />

Membrino brushed past celebrating<br />

fans. He pushed through<br />

the other drivers and race officials<br />

to find his father, Tony Membrino,<br />

Sr. The two embraced in a wild<br />

hug to celebrate their SK Light<br />

division title. The cheering faded<br />

into white noise, and the fatherson<br />

team drank in the moment.<br />

“Without him, I wouldn’t be<br />

here,” Membrino said. “We don’t<br />

have a lot of money or excessive<br />

sponsorship dollars behind us, so<br />

there’s a lot of penny pinching<br />

involved. For everything we do,<br />

“<br />

For everything we do,<br />

and everything<br />

we go up against,<br />

to come out<br />

on top again is a<br />

million dollar feeling.<br />

“<br />

Tony Membrino, Jr.,<br />

Racecar driver<br />

and everything we go up against,<br />

to come out on top again is a million<br />

dollar feeling.”<br />

Membrino has a racing pedigree<br />

that reaches back three generations.<br />

He has short track legends<br />

offering advice in the pit and<br />

a growing fan base at the Stafford<br />

track, but car racing is a big-budget<br />

commitment with high-priced<br />

equipment, tires, and quick turnarounds<br />

for major repairs. Still, the<br />

father-son duo have been holding<br />

their own on a shoe-string budget.<br />

“He sacrifices so much just so<br />

we can go racing, and there aren’t<br />

enough words to describe my<br />

gratitude for everything he does,”<br />

Membrino said about his father’s<br />

commitment as his crew chief.<br />

The two work side-by-side all<br />

week in a garage and tinker with<br />

the racecar long into the night.<br />

“We put ourselves through the<br />

ringer so we can succeed, and<br />

sometimes it seems we’re in over<br />

our heads. I am beyond ecstatic<br />

that we can share this together.”<br />

Membrino’s victory at the<br />

CarQuest Fall Final was his third<br />

one this season at the Stafford<br />

Motor Speedway. The points title<br />

championship is his third one in<br />

the past five years in two different<br />

divisions. The local driver has captured<br />

17 top 10 finishes in 18 races<br />

this year. Twelve times, he’s finished<br />

in the top five, but his third<br />

victory didn’t come easily.<br />

The car handled well in the<br />

practice rounds on Friday morn-<br />

See MEMBRINO, page 28<br />

Blue Knights mix it up<br />

Cross Country shines at co-ed Sloper Relays<br />

By JOHN GORALSKI<br />

SPORTS WRITER<br />

Parents and boosters<br />

huddle around gas grills at<br />

the edge of the pavilion,<br />

while groups of athletes stroll<br />

around the field in a wash of<br />

fall colors. On Friday, Sept.<br />

27, YMCA Camp Sloper<br />

looked more like a fall festival<br />

than a competitive racing<br />

meet, and that’s just what<br />

officials want at the <strong>2013</strong><br />

Sloper Relays.<br />

Cross Country<br />

The mid-season challenge<br />

has become an oasis<br />

for distance athletes, and it’s<br />

a chance for good-natured<br />

ribbing among teammates<br />

and across programs. The<br />

unique co-ed meet has<br />

swelled to 10 teams with<br />

almost 200 athletes competing<br />

across five divisions, and<br />

it has grown into a good<br />

team-building exercise in a<br />

sport that celebrates the individual.<br />

“The athletes say that<br />

they love to come out here<br />

because this is for fun,” said<br />

Blue Knight cross country<br />

coach Rich Niro. “It’s great to<br />

take the time to enjoy running<br />

for fun and racing just to<br />

see how good you are without<br />

having to worry about<br />

team scores. It’s a really nice<br />

change for a lot of these athletes<br />

with all the pressure<br />

that’s put on them during the<br />

season.”<br />

Don’t misunderstand.<br />

This is a fierce competition,<br />

but it’s unlike anything else<br />

on the cross-country schedule.<br />

Instead of herding teams<br />

of boys or girls onto 5K courses,<br />

the Sloper Relays consists<br />

of four 1.5-mile loops on a<br />

special flat-course designed<br />

for speed.<br />

Two and four-person<br />

teams challenge the course<br />

with boys and girls teaming<br />

up against all-boy teams or<br />

all-girls squads in a mad dash<br />

for supremacy. Niro said that<br />

there’s something for everybody,<br />

and it’s a good chance<br />

to pair up mis-matched athletes<br />

to see how they compete<br />

or load a relay team to<br />

try to dominate the field.<br />

Winners claim plates of<br />

cookies instead of trophies,<br />

and bragging rights become<br />

the biggest prize.<br />

“I really like the coed<br />

teams. When do you ever get<br />

to do that in high school?”<br />

said Niro. “It allows them to<br />

work with their teammates in<br />

a different way, and it’s sometimes<br />

teammates that you<br />

never get to work with.”<br />

Take senior co-captain<br />

Andrzej Bielecki and up-andcoming<br />

freshman Catherine<br />

Myers. When an illness<br />

scratched Bielecki’s teammate<br />

from the competition,<br />

Myers was thrust into an<br />

unlikely pairing, but the two<br />

rallied for a third place finish<br />

in the one boy-one girl division.<br />

Their time of 37 minutes,<br />

11 seconds came within<br />

30 seconds of the fastest<br />

time.<br />

Or look at the four person<br />

co-ed division. Niro<br />

stacked a relay with state<br />

level runners. Sean Garrison,<br />

Jack Myers, Gabi Napoli, and<br />

Lauren Perkowski finished<br />

their relay in 35:43 to set a<br />

new division record (35:01)<br />

and beat their nearest competitors<br />

by almost 45 seconds.<br />

Other programs did the<br />

same thing. Bristol Central<br />

stacked their two-boys team,<br />

and Josh Signore and Justin<br />

Zaino ran two legs apiece to<br />

post the best time of the day<br />

(32:43). Cheshire won the<br />

four boys division, and<br />

Bristol Central edged Megan<br />

Albert and Amanda Hamel<br />

(41:20) for the two girls division<br />

title.<br />

When Catherine Myers<br />

See X-COUNTRY, page 30<br />

At right, Colin Murphy<br />

races across the gravel<br />

surface at YMCA<br />

Camp Sloper during a<br />

recent Blue Knight<br />

race.<br />

JOHN GORALSKI

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