Alumni pg 12 10-30-14

 
 
caption:
 
Libby Wood
 
POMFRET —  When Patrick Wood applied to Pomfret School in 1997, his future was endless.  He won a full four-year scholarship because of his outstanding grades and musical accomplishments.  He graduated as the top scholar and went on to Stanford where he graduated cum laude in math.  He became a programmer for Siemens in Berlin, traveled throughout Europe, and was accepted into Stanford’s prestigious computer science graduate program.  But his sudden death in 2006 ended his dreams.  His twin sister, Libby, is bringing them back to life through the first Pomfret School Alumni Art Show, starting Oct. 29, at the Silver Circle Art Center in Putnam.  Proceeds will benefit future “Pat Wood Scholars” at Pomfret School.
“We want to encourage students to act on their dreams and have a role model through Pat’s legacy of excellence and artistic talent,” Libby said.  “We had such a great start at Pomfret, and then when we were 23, everything stopped.  It’s like we both disappeared instead of just Pat.”
 The art show is one of many outpourings on Pat’s behalf.  “When he died, people contributed so much on their own initiative,” Libby said.  “It allowed us to begin the scholarship soon afterward.  We give $1,000 to a top incoming student to Pomfret School.  Now we want to do more.  We want hard working students to know that we’re here to make Pomfret School a reality for them.  That’s how important it was to Pat and me.”
Toward that end, Libby designed a website for Pat (www.patrickwoodprize.org) and then held a website launch party at Pomfret School last March.  She brought the fund to over $80,000.  From those successes came the idea to honor Pat’s memory through an art show with his classmates.  The response was so strong that Libby included other alumni/ae for a total of 15.  One of the donations is from Hong Kong.  
The artwork, which includes photographs, papercuttings, and woodwork, will be sold to benefit Pat’s scholarship.  It can be purchased online at www.patrickwoodprize.org or from the Pomfret School gallery at the Silver Center Art Center throughout the month of November. 

Police pg 12 10-30-14

 
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 963-0000.
Oct. 21
Samantha Villandry, 25, Mack Road, Lebanon; fifth-degree larceny.
Oct. 23
James Murphy, 29, Woodstock Avenue, Putnam; second-degree failure to appear.
Oct. 26
Hector Colon, 31, Smith Street, Putnam; disorderly conduct.

Winner pg 12 10-30-14

 
Winner
Kathy Schora won first place in the scarecrow contest for "The Bradley Pumpkin Banshee." Second went to Ann Monteiro for "Cleaning Up Putnam" and third went to Kim Miller for Mad Scientist. Courtesy photo.

Plainfield pg 1 11-6-14

 
Football Wrap-up
Plainfield &
Hyde still
posting big
victories
By Ron P. Coderre
As the 2014 high school and prep school football season moves rapidly toward Thanksgiving Day and the postseason, the Plainfield Panthers and Hyde-Woodstock Wolfpack continue as the area’s banner carriers.  
The Panthers displayed a strong offense in an Eastern Connecticut Conference interdivisional contest easily handling Large Division Fitch in a road contest.  Hyde-Woodstock also playing on the road dispensed of host Portsmouth Abbey.
The Quinebaug Valley Pride, following a 0-3 start, has managed to fight its way to .500 with a big win in Meriden against Wilcox Tech.  Pomfret School, Woodstock Academy and Killingly all lost again this week despite putting up courageous efforts.
Killingly Loses 
in a Seesaw Humdinger
Killingly High School football took another loss on the chin despite playing in one of the most interesting and exciting games of the season.  They were edged by Montville 45-38 in a high scoring game that witnessed seven lead changes.  The loss drops Killingly to 1-7 in what can best be described as a tough luck season.
The contest started in raucous fashion as the two teams put a combined 36 points on the scoreboard in the first period with Montville on top 20-16.  The offenses quieted down in the second stanza with the Indians going to halftime in front 26-22.  
Killingly’s Austin Caffrey, who had three touchdowns and ran for 116 yards on 17 carries for the game, had touchdown runs of one and three yards in the first half.  The other Killingly score came on a 26-yard Spencer Lockwood run.  Lockwood, who was a work horse for Killingly, had a banner evening, rushing for 203 yards on 31carries and accounted for 20 of his team’s 38 points.  He had two touchdowns and four two-point conversion runs.
Quarterback Kyle Derosier completed three of nine passes in the game for 62 yards.  All three completions were to Vasileios Politis.
In the final analysis, Killingly was unable to hang on to the lead when it had it and a high risk fourth down pass play in the waning minutes of the game by Montville spelled gloom and doom for coach Chad Neal’s valiant troopers.
Plainfield ran out to a 35-0 halftime lead on Fitch High School and coasted to its sixth win against one defeat in a 48-15 victory over the Falcons at Dorr Field in Groton.  The Panthers offense was paced by quarterback Steve Jankowski, who was 6-for-9 in the air for 116 yards and two touchdowns, while also contributing 92 yards on the ground on five carries.  
Jordan Federer (9-104 rushing) produced three touchdowns.  The first came on a 73-yard pass-run play from Jankowski and the last two on scampers of 8 and 10 yards.  Kade Amster contributed TD runs of 4 and 5 yards and a pair of two-point conversions.  Cody Alday had the other tally, a 24-yard pass from Jankowski.  Amster was Plainfield’s leading ground gainer with 144 yards on 19 totes of the pigskin.
The Quinebaug Valley Pride demonstrated a solid defense and a steady offense as it shutout Wilcox Tech 24-0, lifting its record to 4-4.
Raif Santerre with touchdown runs of 3 and 4 yards paced The Pride victory.  He added to his rushing total with 135 yards on 19 carries as he approaches the 1000-yard plateau for the second season in a row.  Sandwiched between Santerre’s TD plunges was a 2-yard sneak by signal caller “Chuckin” Charlie Innes.  
The final Pride score came from the defense as Cody LaScola zeroed in on a Wilcox Tech aerial for an interception that he ran back for a 25-yard touchdown.
Woodstock Academy, looking to pick up its second football victory in three years, fell just short against Vinal Tech/East Hampton/Goodwin Tech in a game played under frigid conditions on the Centaurs home field.  The game, which ended with Woodstock driving down the field, was a 16-13 heartbreaker.
After falling behind to the Hawks 14-0 after one period of play it appeared that Woodstock was in for another long afternoon.  However, the Acads rallied in the second half, outscoring the visitors 6-2 but it just wasn’t enough to pull off the victory.
Woodstock’s Holden Cote closed the first half with a 3-yard touchdown burst, as the teams went to the locker room with VT/EH/GT up 14-7.  Quarterback Trent Appleton scored the lone touchdown of the second half on a 5-yard run, which pulled the Centaurs within one point until a fourth quarter safety produced the final margin of victory.
Kameron Janice with 73 yards on 21 carries was Woodstock’s top offensive threat.  The loss drops coach Clay Killingsworth’s charges to 1-6 on the season. 
Jimmy Murphy Up to His Old Tricks
The Jimmy Murphy show took to the road this week as the Hyde-Woodstock Wolfpack traveled to Portsmouth, R.I., for a contest with Portsmouth Abbey.  Thanks to a four-touchdown performance by the indomitable “Murph” the Wolfpack came away with a 26-16 victory.  The win lifted Hyde-Woodstock’s record to 6-1 overall and in the Evergreen League.
Murphy, who had 162 yards on 17 carries scored on runs of 51, 49, 12 and 1 yard.  The remaining two points came on a two-point conversion pass play from Harrison Smith to Justin Allard. 
Pomfret School fell to 2-5 on the season and 2-5 in the Colonial Conference when it lost at home to Williston 18-6.  The Golden Griffins lone score came in the second period on a 75-yard Maguire Crouse to Obim Okeke pass play.  The play knotted the score at 6-6 but Pomfret was unable to cross the goal line in the second half as it went down at the hands of the 6-1 Wildcats.
 
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