psa pg 7 9-22-22



Members of the boys’ prep basketball team began trickling onto the Putnam Science Academy campus two weekends ago. This week, college coaches began pouring onto campus, coming to the small gym in downtown Putnam to watch Tom Espinosa’s players and look for the next pieces for their respective teams. And about six weeks from now, the curtain will go up on the 2022-23 season, and once again Putnam Science Academy — the three-time national prep champion — will be everyone’s biggest game of the season.
It’s been that way for maybe seven or eight years now, since the Mustangs became The Mustangs. Espinosa, the basketball coach and the school’s dean of Athletics, is coming off a season in which his team went 38-0 and won that third national crown, garnering him his first National Prep Coach of the Year award. He also won his 400th career game, a wild number for a small school in Putnam, Conn. And he was named one of the 100 Most Impactful People in men’s college basketball, a list that included names you have heard of – Mike Krzyzewski, Rick Pitino, Bill Self, John Calipari, to name a few.
As Espinosa readies for the upcoming year, his 21st at PSA and 15th as coach, he acknowledged to taking some time this summer to reflect on the accomplishments of last season. And it led him to think too about the journey the school itself has been on, since long before they were The Mustangs.
“I’ve seen the good, the bad, and the ugly with this place,” said Espinosa, who was there when it opened in 2002 and eventually built up to 200 students. And he was there when the doors were going to close in May 2015 only to be rescued and reopened in the fall by a new owner.
Espinosa had the opportunity to go to another school when PSA supposed to close in 2015. After a long and emotional back-and-forth — which included literally being unable to pack his office because of the heaviness of the moment — he ultimately decided to stay with the incoming ownership.
“I’ve seen the school build up basically from scratch, twice,” Espinosa said. “And the thing that has always been true is that there is so much good in this place that people don’t know about.”
Since he decided to stay, PSA has won three national championships, in 2018, 2020, and 2022. And the smaller numbers mean more to him than the big ones. Things like winning all 38 games in a season, capturing title No. 3, or being ranked No. 1 in the country carry more weight for him than winning 400 games or being on a Top 100 list.
There are some big numbers that are meaningful to him, though.
The boys’ basketball program has helped place roughly 200 players onto college basketball teams at all levels. The girls’ basketball program has sent more than 30 players into the college ranks in just five years. And the boys’ soccer team has helped 20-plus find a college home in that same span.
“Putnam Science has its ups and downs, like any place,” Espinosa said. “But the bottom line is we’re giving kids an opportunity to be successful. And I am proud of that.”
So is Head of School Sarah Healey, who said the respect the students and staff have for Espinosa, the longest-tenured person at the school, is well-deserved.
“It takes a team to give these kids the opportunity,” she said. “The leadership that Tom brings allows the students to make mistakes and grow while always being held accountable. The student’s education comes first, and he understands and respects that when dealing with his student-athletes.”
All too often, outsiders roll their eyes at the success PSA has enjoyed (namely that of the prep basketball team) and assume the kids are athletes first and students second, which Dean of Academics Joanne Fuller disputes.
“We’re still a little scrappy,” she said, “but we are building a diverse, active, intellectual community. Most importantly our students feel nurtured and seen by the many adults in their lives from the moment they set foot on campus.” Espinosa, who highlighted the accountability charts all PSA teams use to track their players’ on-and off-court merits each week, acknowledged that being called a basketball school means you are having success, but added “basketball doesn’t have to take away from everything else that a school is supposed to be and do, and we don’t do that here. When you think about Duke University, the first thing you think about is their basketball team. But Duke is one the best schools in the country. “They’re not apologizing either. So just because we’re successful at basketball, it doesn’t take away from those other things.”
By Stephen Nalbandian
Sports Information Director
Putnam Science Academy

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happy pg 8 9-22-22


Happy 50th,
Aspinock!
PUTNAM — The Aspinock Historical Society 50th Anniversary Celebration will be held at 1 p.m. Sept. 24 in the Selectmen’s Chambers.  The program is “History of School Street Area in Putnam.” Refreshments will be served. The Research Center will be open before and after the presentation. All welcome.

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police pg 8 9-22-22



The following charges were listed in the Putnam Police Department logs.  The people charged are innocent until proven guilty in court. The Town Crier will publish dispositions of cases at the request of the accused. The dispositions must be accompanied by the proper documentation. The Putnam Police Department confidential Tip Line is 860-963-0000.
Sept. 9
Davey Teo Stimans, 24, homeless; two counts of risk of injury to a minor, second-degree breach of peace, third-degree criminal mischief, sixth-degree larceny and third-degree trespass.
Michael DiGiulio, 21, Lyons Street, Putnam; disorderly conduct.
Sept 11
Robert Piligian III, 28, Bailin Circle, North Grafton, Mass.; operating without a license.
Sept. 12
Heide Sargent, 56, Dockery Hollow Road, Sevierville, Tenn.; second-degree larceny.
Sept. 14
Rebecca L. Nadeau, 41, Woodstock Avenue, Putnam; disorderly conduct, third-degree assault on disabled person.
Sept. 16
Codey E. Rogala, 25, homeless; operating under the influence, interfering with a police officer, use of a cell phone while operating a motor vehicle, unregistered motor vehicle.
Sept. 17
Brian K. Johnson, 36, A Street, Johnston, R.I.; failure to obey traffic signal.

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Coca-Cola pg 1 9-29-22





Serendipity Plays a Role
Coca-Cola mural will be less 'ghostly'

By Linda Lemmon
Town Crier Editor
PUTNAM — Starting this week the Coca-Cola mural on the Bradley Playhouse brick wall will go from “ghost sign” to a vibrant shining star of the Putnam skyline.
Sheila Frost, co-owner of the Courthouse Bar and Grille and former Putnam Business Association coordinator, said they’ve told their employees not to park their vehicles in the alley behind the restaurant. That alley is home to the ghost sign. Lifts for artists to work will be moving in to restore the mural.
Jennifer Brytowski, producer of Jennerate LLC which is behind the project, said the team of hand letterers estimated that it would take them three to five days to completely restore the mural to Coca-Cola specs. “We’ve got some talent behind this,” Brytowski said.
“It all felt like the right time.”
Brytowski happened to be talking to Frost about the mural and Frost said, “Let’s re-approach this. It’s a good time to resurrect this.”
After decades of less-than-successful inquiries for funding to restore the ghost sign, Frost said, as it happened, the family of her husband James Frost’s roommate from UConn happened to be connected to the Coca-Cola Company. They happened to be talking to him and happened to mention the ghost sign. The former roommate told them, as it happened, that Coca-Cola was looking to restore its ghost signs.
The grant from Coca-Cola, after negotiations, is $10,000 and the Putnam Area Foundation kicked in the remaining $5,000 for the $15,000 budget for the project. And if the work starts this week, it will make the hoped-for goal of being finished by the Great Pumpkin Festival Oct. 15.
Frost said this project means a lot to her personally. It took a lot of networking and connecting with the right people. “Personally, I knew the right contacts.”
“We needed to embrace this. We’re refurbishing history.”
The restoration of the ghost sign has been on the radar for the Putnam Business Association for a long time. Former PBA coordinator Chris Coderre, years ago, had worked on the idea. The restoration idea has popped up regularly in the ensuing years and it was the PBA spearheading it this time when it all fell into place.
More than 100 years ago The Coca-Cola Company and its local bottlers “painted” America with a broad brush stroke of “ghost signs.” As many as 16,000 of the huge Coca-Cola wall murals caused one producer to boast that a “motion picture could not be made anywhere in America without capturing the image of a Coca-Cola wall mural advertisement.”
The first Coca-Cola sign was done in 1894 in Gainesville, Ga., and she believes the Putnam ghost sign was created around 1905.
Coca-Cola has very specific guidelines for colors, designs, etc. Brytowski said that Coca-Cola is sending information on the correct colors to be used and “pounce patterns” which are like stencils. Those will ensure that the words being painted are absolutely correct, sharp and authentic. The original colors, according to Frost, were vibrant.
Brytowski added a “great group of hand letterers” have been assembled and they are “really invested in the original,” staying true to Coca-Cola’s guidelines. The letterers will use lifts and a permit for the work is already granted.
Also excited is The Coca-Cola Company which is planning to bring its “hug machine” to the Great Pumpkin Festival for the reveal of the restored mural. Brytowski said the machine gives you a Coke when you give it a hug.
Originally plans included power washing and a seal against graffiti. But the power washing idea was scrubbed. “We don’t want to lose what’s there,” Brytowski said. And because the sign is so high up on the wall a graffiti seal should not be necessary.
She said a restoration has been attempted before as “you can see the pattern of the letters ‘moved over’,” (slightly overlapped).
Said Frost: “This will be the shining star on Putnam’s skyline, on Putnam.”

caption:

Restoration of the Coca-Cola "ghost sign" slated to begin soon. Linda Lemmon photo.


 

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