Past Issues of the Putnam Town Crier
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Pomfret Recreation programs
POMFRET — The Recreation Department is offering the following programs:
Information and registration forms for all programs can be found on the town’s website at www.pomfretct.gov under the Recreation Department programs section.
Interactive Hoop Dancing Class: February 19th & 26th, March 5, 12, 19, April 2nd. Ages 15 and up at the Pomfret Community School Gym.
Babysitter Safety Course 101: Fridays, March 13th and March 20th in the Pomfret Community School Café. For Boys and Girls ages 10 and up.
Player Development Basketball Clinic: Saturday, March 21,2015 from 2:00 to 5:00 pm. Boys & Girls ages 6-14. Located at the Pomfret School Field House.
Easter Egg Hunt: Saturday, March 28th, 2015 at 11:00 am. For Pomfret Boys & Girls ages 1-10. Located at the Wolf Den State Park.
Red Sox-Blue Jays Game and Niagara Falls Bus Trip: May 8-10, 2015. Includes hotel and transportation. Register on-line at www.thompsonrec.org or Pomfret Rec. Dept.
Boston Red Sox VS Oakland Athletics: Friday, 6/5/15. Includes Bus trip to Fenway Park.
Kinky Boots: Sunday, June 14, 2015 at 1:00 pm. Thompson and Pomfret Rec. present a trip to Providence Performing Arts Center, Providence, RI to see this award winning musical.
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Public Hearing/
Legal Notice
Town of Pomfret
Planning and
Zoning
Commission
The Pomfret Planning & Zoning Commission will hold the following Public Hearings on Monday, February 23, 2015, starting at 7:00 PM at the Pomfret Senior Center:
1. An application by Pomfret Little League, 63 Hampton Road, for the replacement of existing dugouts and snack shed
2. An application by Pomfret Little League, 63 Hampton Road, for the addition of outdoor sports lighting
Dated this 5th day
of February 2015
Town of Pomfret
Planning &
Zoning Commission
Lynn L. Krajewski,
Clerk
Feb. 11, 2015
Feb. 18, 2015
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caption:
Awards
Members of the Quest Martial Arts in Putnam attended a tournament recently, taking home many awards. Courtesy photo.
PUTNAM — Students from Quest Martial Arts in Putnam attended the Ed Vargas scholarship Tournament in Meriden, taking many awards:
Colby Babbitt 3rd in Forms, 2nd Sparring, 3rd in Breaking
Nicholas Boligan 3rd in Forms, 1st in Sparring,
2nd in Breaking
Mathew Card 2nd in forms, 3rd in Sparring 3rd in Breaking
Arianna Garnsey 1st in Forms, 1st in Sparring,
1st in Breaking
Jeff Gibbs 3rd in Forms,Sparring and Breaking
Diedrea Hanshaw 3rd in Forms, 1st in Sparring,
3rd in Breaking
Sebastian Hanshaw 3rd in Forms, 1st in Sparring,
3rd in Breaking
Jacob Mainhart 1st in Sparring
David May 1st in Sparring
Molly McKeon 1st in Forms, 2nd in Breaking
Kyle Pazienza 2nd in Forms,1st in Sparring,
3rd in Breaking
AlishiaThompson 1st in Forms, 2nd in Sparring,
3rd in Breaking
Isabella Selmecki 1st in Forms, 1st in Sparring,
3rd in Breaking
Scott Selmecki 3rd in Forms, 3rd in Sparring,
2nd in Breaking
Zach Rainville 2nd in Sparring
Watts Herideen-Woodruff 2nd in Forms,
2nd in Sparring, 2nd in Breaking
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Centaur hockey win
WOODSTOCK — The Woodstock Academy ice hockey team (8-5) defeated Hall/Southington Feb. 14, 5-2
First period:
WA Nathan Deluca assist Austin Beaupre 10:53
Hall Ocean Curling assist Kyler Cubbage 6:15
WA Ryan Black assist Deluca Beaupre 2:53
WA Deluca unassisted (shorthanded) 1:26
Second period:
WA Deluca assist Zack Burnham, Black 9:21
WA Will Liscomb unassisted :58
Third period:
Hall Cubbage assisted Jeremy Fortin
Tucker Johns made 29 saves on 31 shots for the win for the Centaurs.
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By Ron P. Coderre
I initially met Joan Scraba when I was a seventh grade student at St. Mary School. At the time I was proud to know her, but looking back, I was probably just another kid to her.
The time was the spring of 1954, she was a 21-year-old, first-time mother and I was a basketball player for the St. Mary’s Crusaders coached by Joan’s husband Stanley Scraba. The occasion was a spaghetti dinner at their apartment on Livery Street (pre-Flood of 1955) in honor of the team.
Despite the newborn baby, Susan Scraba, who had just been brought home from the hospital, Joan and Coach Scraba were hosting seven junior high school players as a reward for the recently completed season. As I recall, the spaghetti dinner was plentiful and delicious and went off without a hitch.
Over the years I came to know Joan Scraba much better. Everything she did in life, she did just like the spaghetti dinner. No problem. No obstacles. Joan Scraba was a humble person, always with a smile and a welcoming hello, whatever the situation.
Sadly the news of Joan Scraba’s death in Stuart, Fla., on Sunday, February 8 reached Putnam. It was shocking to those of us who knew and appreciated her.
The memories of accompanying a gang of developmentally disabled teens and adults from the Dempsey Center to the Scraba cottage on Lake Alexander were just like the spaghetti dinner. Joan was waiting, smile on her face, sandwiches piled high waiting to be devoured, swimming area roped off and no matter how boisterous or noisy the group, the ever-present smile was there.
As I moved on to adulthood our relationship changed but Joan never did. Whether it was walking into the Delaney or Archambault Insurance agencies as an alderman, Joan Scraba was pleasant and always had time an interest in the kid who played for St. Mary’s and was at the spaghetti dinner.
Later in life, my phone would ring and it would be Stan and Joan Scraba calling from Florida or the lake, just to talk. Positive and upbeat the conversation would always end with the pair saying, “Say hello to your sister Dee and tell Donna we said hi.” Dee and the Scrabas became friends when she toured them through the Pentagon, a deed they never forgot.
Joan Scraba like many other s had her down moments in life. She lost her eldest son Stanley Thomas in a tragic automobile accident. Although I’m certain she hurt inside, she maintained her positive upbeat nature. The loss of her husband in 2013 was surely heart breaking for her and probably partly to blame for her demise.
She was proud in a non-boastful way of her children, Susan and Paula, who forged exemplary careers in education and Mark, Christopher and Sean, who like their dad are proud military men. But despite all the things she had to be proud of, with Joan Scraba it was always about you and your family.
She was a great wife, mother, grandmother, employee and even a public servant. It was however, never for her benefit. It was always about helping her family and helping others. There will never be a statue in the square of Joan Scraba but those who knew her will have a portrait of her etched in their minds that will remind them of a good woman and citizen.
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