Friday, September 30, 2016

Bottle flipping becomes the rage with middle schoolers

Craig F. Walker/Globe staff
Brendan O’Brien, 12, landed a bottle on its cap while showing off his skills with James Tobin in West Roxbury.
Posted by Wayne G. Barber

Meghan Enwright had reached her limit. Exasperated by her young sons’ maddening new habit of flipping half-filled water bottles into the air in an effort to land them upright, the Marshfield mother pecked out a quick Facebook post voicing her displeasure.
“If my kids flip a water bottle one more time. . .”
Advertisement Almost immediately the responses from other parents started rolling in.
“Thought it was just my kids!”
“IT IS DRIVING ME MAD!!!!!!!”

“All. Summer. Long.’’
It’s not hard these days to find kids flipping bottles: at bus stops, at middle-school lunchroom tables, inside Little League dugouts, even on national television. At one point during last week’s Patriots broadcast, a camera cut to some kids in the Gillette Stadium stands, absent-mindedly bottle flipping as the home team rolled to victory.
“It’s an epidemic,” Alyssa Lefrancois of East Taunton said recently, as one of her four children attempted to flip a bottle into the cup-holder of her car. “My son went to the Little League World Series, and they were teaching the kids from Japan how to do it.”
For kids, the draw is simple. Even in an age of digital distractions, this diversion is quick, it’s portable, and while the science behind it is actually fairly elaborate — water, angular momentum, and gravity paving the way for a soft landing — it requires no training.
As Nolan Barry, 13, a seventh-grader from Foxborough, earnestly explains, “It’s something you have to experience.”
For those wondering how this started — or simply in search of a target for their ire — a good place to start would be Michael Senatore, an 18-year-old from Charlotte, N.C., who could be described as the Godfather of bottle-flipping.
Last spring, finding himself without an act for his high school talent show, Senatore decided to try his hand at bottle-flipping, a hobby he and his classmates had dabbled in a year earlier. Armed with some dramatic music and a good amount of swagger, the teen strolled on stage and, with a flip of the wrist, landed a small, partly filled plastic bottle upright onto a nearby table.
The brief performance, which sent those in the audience into hysterics, was captured on video, and you can guess what happened next: 5 million YouTube views, a trove of gushing blog posts, an appearance by Senatore on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.”
Not least of all, it brought the previously underground art of bottle-flipping to the masses. Since then, legions of participants have pushed it forward, adding twists along the way.
No longer, for example, does a traditional flip like Senatore’s cut it. “Capping” — that is, flipping a bottle so it lands balanced on its cap — might now be the quickest path to school-yard glory. YouTube, meanwhile, is filled with videos of Senatore acolytes attempting increasingly creative and challenging flips: off trampolines, atop hoverboards, through basketball hoops.
“Across the street,” says West Roxbury resident John P. Chojnowski, whose 12-year-old son Jed has become obsessed with bottle flipping, “[one] landed on the neighbor’s cat.”
Despite the glowing reviews of adolescent flippers, parents have been far less enamored.
There’s the incessant thump thump thump of partly-filled bottles crashing through their homes. And the cost. Enwright stopped buying bottled drinks altogether, she says, after her kids began tearing through $20 or $30 worth of bottled drinks a week to facilitate their habit.
Parents complain that they find half-filled bottles cluttering the house and throw them out.
“The other day, [my son] got a brand new Poland Spring bottle and poured half of it down the drain,” says Jennifer Barry of Foxborough. “I was like, ‘Noooo!’”

Thursday, September 29, 2016

State Department approves Rutland, VT as new home for refugees

Posted by Wayne G. Barber
Vermont Refugee Resettlement Program Director Amila Merdzanovic, left, and Stacie Blake, director of government and community relations at the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants, speak at a meeting in Rutland. File photo by Elizabeth Hewitt/VTDigger

Our neighbors, Rutland,VT has been selected as a resettlement site for 100 Syrian and Iraqi refugees, according to a State Department spokesperson. The announcement comes after five months of heated debate over whether this small city has the capacity to take in refugees fleeing violence in the Middle East.

“I’m delighted that the Department of State has the faith in our community to be a host city for refugee resettlement,” said Mayor Chris Louras after the announcement Wednesday. “We understand it’s not going to be easy, that there will be challenges, but this community is at its very best when it rises to the challenge.”
Stacie Blake, director of government and community relations for the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants, said she believes the first families will arrive in mid-December or early January. Blake said USCRI will open an office in Rutland and have two full-time staff members. Staff will undergo an intensive training process that includes working in the agency’s Colchester office, Blake said.
A State Department spokesperson said that although the proposal for 100 refugees has been approved, the number is subject to change. Once refugees arrive in the United States they are free to live wherever they choose.
Since Louras announced in late April that Rutland was being considered for refugee resettlement, he has been sharply criticized for a lack of transparency during the application process. The Board of Aldermen formally withheld support of the program and had the city attorney investigate whether the mayor’s actions violated the city charter. The city attorney, whose report was released last week, found that he did not.
Blake said the agency pursued Rutland as a resettlement site because of the housing and employment opportunities as well as the robust volunteer effort to welcome refugees.
“From the beginning we’ve been overwhelmed by the depth and expression of volunteer support to welcome refugees, and we look forward to working with the community when it’s time for families to arrive,” Blake said.
The mayor also expressed faith in the community.
“Now that we have a resolution from the Department of State, I know that the community will come together,” said Louras. “And the divisiveness that we’ve experienced will abate.”

Friday, September 23, 2016

Green Dragon Comics Event

Posted by Wayne G. Barber
For every event you enter into you a chance to win the promo !
- Each event is $25.00 per person

The Events are as follow's
Saturday Sept. 24th
Sealed
sign ups at 12:30pm
Start at 1pm

Two-Headed Sealed (teams of 2)
sign ups at 5:30pm
Start at 6pm...

Sunday Sept. 25th
Sealed
sign ups at 12:30 pm
Start at 1pm

For every event you enter into you a chance to win the promo poster of emrakul from eldritch moon !
- pre signups are welcome for each event
- We will have food and drink, door prizes,
and of course prize support

Call 401-949-2076 for more info!  Green Dragon Comics 401 Unit 1, Putnam Pike RT.44 Harmony, RI

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Burrillville Town Council

Posted by Wayne G. Barber

SPECIAL MEETING of the Burrillville Town Council to be held Thursday, September 22, 2016 at 7:00 p.m. in the Auditorium of the Burrillville High School, 425 East Avenue, Harrisville, for and within the Town of Burrillville.

PRESENT: Council President John F. Pacheco III and Councilors Stephen N. Rawson, Nancy F. Binns, Michelle D. Bouchard, Kimberly Brissette Brown, Donald A. Fox and David J. Place
MEMBERS ABSENT:

RE: Invenergy Thermal Development LLC’s Application to Construct the Clear River Energy Center Power Plant in Burrillville, RI
  1. Consider and act on a motion to adopt a resolution opposing Invenergy Thermal Development LLC’s Application to Construct the Clear River Energy Center Power Plant in Burrillville, RI, to authorize Council President John F. Pacheco III to testify before the Energy Facility Siting Board to present the position of the Town of Burrillville and to approve the Council President’s testimony as presented to the Town Council on September 22, 2016 as it may be amended.
  2. Adjournment

Friday, September 16, 2016

Burrillville Arts Festival this weekend

Posted by Wayne G. Barber



The Burrillville Arts Festival is scheduled for September 17 & 18 on the beautiful grounds of the Assembly Theater. 

Over 120
vendors, great entertainment, food and plenty of kids activities!

The big day is almost here, I hope everyone comes out to get some early Christmas shopping done, and enjoy the laser light show on sat night we have tons of raffle prizes, and tons of stuff for the whole family, hope to see you all this weekend !!!!!!!!!!


Wednesday, September 14, 2016

“RUST TIDE” IN LOCAL WATERS POSES NO RISK TO PUBLIC HEALTH, SHELLFISH CLOSURES

Posted by Wayne G. Barber

“RUST TIDE” IN LOCAL WATERS POSES NO RISK
TO PUBLIC HEALTH, SHELLFISH CLOSURES
 
Caused by Naturally Occurring Phytoplankton, Expected to Decline with Cooler Temperatures
 
PROVIDENCE – The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) has observed and received reports of rust-colored patches of water (known as “rust tide”) in Narragansett Bay, Mt. Hope Bay and coastal salt ponds. Rust tide, not to be confused with Red Tide, poses no public health risk and will not lead to shellfish closures.  It is expected to decline as water temperatures fall to 60°F or lower.
 
Recent water sampling reveals the rust tide is being caused by a large bloom of naturally-occurring phytoplankton called Cochlodinium polykrikoides.  This organism contains red photosynthetic pigments which cause the rust color visible on the water surface. Rust tide is not harmful to humans; however, Cochlodinium can damage delicate finfish and shellfish exposed to concentrated populations.  Rust tide is not associated with the red tide that caused shellfish closures in other New England states.
 
Accumulations or blooms of Cochlodinium appear to be a regional phenomenon this summer. Rust tide has been observed in Peconic Bay in New York off the eastern end of Long Island, in Buzzards Bay, and off Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts. DEM will continue to monitor the bloom over the next several weeks.
 
For more information on DEM programs and initiatives, visit http://www.dem.ri.gov/index.htm. Follow us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/RhodeIslandDEM or on Twitter (@RhodeIslandDEM) for timely updates.

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Glocester Voter Information

Posted by Wayne G. Barber



Join the Secretary of State’s Elections Division on:

SEPTEMBER 15, 2016 GLOCESTER SENIOR CENTER 1210 PUTNAM PIKE FROM 1:00 P.M. TO 2:30 P.M.

For a demonstration of the State’s new voting machine and ballot layout that will be used in the the General Election on November 8, 2016. 

The Elections team will be on hand to register new voters, help update voter registration information, along with providing Voter ID’s for those registered voters who need one.
GLOCESTER  BOARD  OF  CANVASSERS Jean M. Fecteau, CMC, Town Clerk