Category: Uncategorized
HISTORIC GLOUCESTER CHURCH IS GETTING A LIFT!
For the first time in its history spanning more than two centuries, Gloucester’s historic Universalist Meeting House will be able to welcome visitors with physical handicaps to its many civic and musical events as well as to its services starting later this fall.
The Gloucester Unitarian Universalist Church, which was founded in 1779 as the first Universalist church in America, is currently installing platform-lift elevators connecting all three levels of the church. Handicapped-accessible lavatories are also being built.
The project is being supported in part by generous private donors and a grant from the City of Gloucester Community Preservation Committee and the City Council, recognizing the importance of this iconic building to the community.
In addition, to help see the project through to completion, the church will be conducting an online Internet auction, called “Reaching for the Stars,” featuring restaurant deals, vacation opportunities, entertainment, art, gift items, personal services, and more.
The auction is for 10 days only, beginning Sept 20 and ending Sept. 30. Bidding is open to the public. Bidders may visit http://www.gloucesteruu.org for details and a direct link.
The 206-year-old Meeting House is on the National Register of Historic Places and is a popular venue for concerts, lectures and civic events because of its excellent acoustics and large seating capacity.
Upcoming events at the church include sea chantey concerts on Saturday, Sept. 22, by two local groups, Baggywrinkle and Three Sheets to the Wind, as part of the Captains Courageous Festival, and the Cape Ann Forum lecture series beginning Sunday, Sept. 23.
Also, on Sunday, Oct. 28, the Boston Symphony Orchestra Chamber Concert Series will make its only North Shore appearance this season at the church. Tickets are free but must be reserved in advance from the Boston Symphony Orchestra (www.bso.org).
Visitors also will be welcome for tours of the church and talks about its history during the Essex National Heritage Area’s annual Trails & Sails weekend, Friday through Sunday, Sept. 21, 22 and 23. Tours will be at 10 a.m., 1 p.m., and 3 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, and at 1 p.m., 2 p.m., and 3 p.m. on Sunday.
Here are the pictures from the "cement pour"
Identification: Todd Main Company, Inc. employees: Peter Bennett (white shirt), Carlogero Taormina (grey shirt), Sal Oliva (red shirt)
Gloucester Unitarian Universalist member: Newton Fink, Jr. (chair, Building & Grounds Committee)
All pictures taken by Church Administrator, Karen Rembert
Getting High on the Harvey Gamage
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 All shot with my new Canon SX 40 HS with its incredible 24mm to 840mm (35mm equiv.)zoom lens. The bottom two shots were hand held at full focal length.
Cape Ann Real Estate MarketWatch From Kenny MacCarthy
Open Houses This Week From Kenny MacCarthy http://www.capeanninfo.com  for your real estate needs.  Tell Kenny Joey sent ya!
Life on the Dock or….
Cape Ann Painters and Photographers Group Moves to New Location on Rocky Neck
Hello Everyone,
The next meeting of the Cape Ann Painters and Photography Group will meet on Monday, September 10, 2012 from 9:30-11:00.
The group will be meeting  at the new Rocky Neck Cultural Center at 6 Wonson Street, Rocky Neck. You can park in the lot on the right as you turn onto Rocky Neck and walk up to the Center. When you see Sailor Stan ‘s ahead, keep left and the Cultural Center is on the left (old Christian Science Church). If you would like, you can pick up coffee at the  Last Stop (on the right just before you turn onto Rocky Neck.) The Last Stop’s owner said we are welcome to come and have a social hour before the meeting if we would like.
Since the Cultural Center is charging us $25.00 for the 1 1/2 hours, we will need to ask everyone to pay three dollars at each meeting to cover the cost.
We will continue with our custom of having everyone “check in” and share what they are working on.
Thank you Henry for letting us use the lovely parlor space at the Annie.  We really appreciated your hospitality  and wish you the best in your new ventures. Hope to see you at the meeting!
It will be great to see everyone again and welcome to new members!
Alice Gardner
No Mug Up Tomorrow
Due to the major blow out Tales of Bong Tree Island backer reward (and all other friends and good people of Gloucester, Cape Ann and beyond) party Sunday from 4:00-9:00pm, there will be no Mug Up this week. Mug Up will resume next Sunday, 9/16. So for those of you who could never come to Mug Up because it interferes with your church, sleeping in or other Sunday morning activities, come to the party.
E.J. Lefavour
Alice Cooper complains that pop music is getting sadder. Really? Musicians & Fans: please weigh in on this.
This morning’s Studio 360 radio program had a piece called Why is Pop Music So Sad (listen here) in which Alice Cooper, of all people, complains that modern pop music has gotten sadder since 1965 — and he’s backed up by so-called research.
There’s a simplistic notion among some musicians that major keys and up tempo music is happy, while minor keys and slower tempos are sad. Â This notion seems to have been taken inordinately seriously by some academics, who have produced the following chart to make their point (see below).

“Bands that want to sound deep and mysterious cannot play in major keys,” says Alice Cooper. Â “I think that we’ve gotten away from the fun in pop music.”
SOOOoooo what do you think? Â Shall we have our own local study?
MUSICIANS: Leave a comment with the number of major key songs vs minor key songs and up-tempo vs. slower songs in your repertoire.
LISTENERS: When you go out this weekend (see live music lineup here), listen carefully. Â Do you hear more happy or sad songs? Â Leave a comment and let us know.
BOTH MUSICIANS & LISTENERS: Is Alice Cooper right? Â Is pop music no longer fun?
JOEY: Should we create a poll?
Kingsley Flood Returns to The Rhumb Line tonight
In keeping it short and sweet. I am so looking forward to seeing these guys again.  If you haven’t heard then you are in for a big treat. Listen to the video below its most definitely one of my favorites.
This link says it all…http://kingsleyflood.com/press/
Bluefin Blowout 2012
Get Your Sexy Ass Down To Fort Sq Cafe For Some Muffins, Smuffins and Puffins Oh My!
Community Stuff 9/8/12
NORTH SHORE UNITED WAY LEADERSHIP AWARD HONORS TWO
LOCAL NONPROFIT LEADERS: LAFONTAINE & NORTON
Julie LaFontaine, Executive Director, The Open Door, and Kevin P. Norton, President & CEO, Northeast Behavioral Health, have been selected as this year’s North Shore United Way LIVE UNITED Leadership Award recipients. The award acknowledges the outstanding leadership, commitment and values exemplified by LaFontaine and Norton’s tireless efforts to meet the needs and challenges of building a healthy community and leading in a changing healthcare environment.
Margo Casey, NSUW Executive Director, said “both recipients of this year’s award are exemplary leaders. In an era of belt tightening, maximizing economy of scales and re-positioning in changing behavioral and health care environments, Kevin’s work as CEO of Northeast Behavioral Health spawned from the merger of CAB Health and Recovery and Health and Education Services has been truly masterful. Julie in her role as Director of the Open Door has revolutionized food pantry work with
her introduction of Mobile Markets and her relentless campaign to end hunger and build healthy lives on the North Shore. We are thrilled to honor both community partners with this year’s award.”
Julie LaFontaine as the Executive Director of The Open Door has expanded its traditional hunger-relief programs and created new programs that treat food security as a public health issue, including the nationally recognized Mobile Market. Julie’s extensive background in nonprofit work has brought innovative growth, stability and diverse funding to Open Door, which has gone from feeding a few to feeding a few thousand.
Kevin P. Norton is President and CEO of Northeast Behavioral Health, a leading non-profit provider of addiction and mental health treatment in northeastern Massachusetts. Previously, Kevin served as President and CEO of CAB Health & Recovery Services, Inc. In 2010 he successfully led the merger of CAB with Health and Education Services to become Northeast Behavioral Health., including the integration of administrative, financial, clinical and business processes for the multi-site agency and its 1,500 plus member staff.
LaFontaine & Norton will be honored at the LIVE UNITED Leadership Award breakfast sponsored by Addison Gilbert Hospital on Friday, September 28, from 7:30 to 9:00 a.m. at Cruiseport in Gloucester. The event also serves as the launch to the North Shore United Way’s 2012-2013 Annual Campaign. Tickets are $50 and can be purchased at www.nsuw.org. For more information, contact NSUW at 978-922-3966, email clippie@nsuw.rog or visit www.nsuw.org. The North Shore United Way is a local, independent United Way serving eight North Shore communities, including Beverly, Hamilton, Wenham, Ipswich, Essex, Manchester, Gloucester and Rockport.
Rockport Cub Scouts Registration
Hello Joey.
I was wondering if you could put something on your site about our upcoming registration night.
Boys in grades 1-5 are invited to the Pack 55 Rockport Cub Scout Sign Up Night on Wednesday, September 12th . Registration begins at 7 p.m. at Scout Hall, 47 Mt. Pleasant Street in Rockport.
Thanks so much. Lisa Leahy
Gloucester Resident’s designs win $15,000 Sapi: Ideas that Matter grant to help Kestrel Educational Adventures, a Gloucester nonprofit organization
Sappi Fine Paper North America announced today the 13 grant recipients for its 13th annual Ideas that Matter program, the industry’s highly respected grant program aimed at helping designers create and implement print projects for charitable causes. Among the lists of recipients is Gordon College Creative Director and Program Coordinator for Return Design, Tim Ferguson Sauder for the LOOKLOOK campaign with Gloucester’s Kestrel Educational Adventures. Both Ferguson Sauder, of Lanesville, and Kestrel Educational Adventures are working to improve science education through an exciting new educational project.
LOOKLOOK is a personal project started by Fergsuon Sauder which currently includes a set of animal trading cards and an accompanying research journal. After establishing the main design of the cards and the style of illustration he enlisted the help of Return Design alums and later Return Design itself to help in the ongoing production of the cards and journal. Return Design is assisting in the production of the card and journal designs and is being awarded the Sappi:Ideas That Matter grant in the amount of $15,000 to pay for the production of a set of cards and journals to be distributed to North Shore schools through Kestrel, a local non-profit.
Since 1999, Sappi’s Ideas that Matter program has awarded over $12 million worldwide in grants to designers around the globe to support their work for nonprofit programs and organizations. This year’s winning projects reflect the on-going commitment in the design community to utilize design in combination with innovative thinking to solve social problems. Grantees submitted outstanding proposals outlining their ideas, creative execution and their unique ability to instill positive social,
cultural or environmental change.
"Being awarded the Sappi grant is incredibly exciting for us," said Fergsuon Sauder after learning of today’s Sappi announcment. "It not only confirms the quality of work and ideas that are happening in Return Design but it also gives us the opportunity to more effectively support our local school systems through good design. Gordon College has from our inception been a huge support to our ideas and program – its great to now see that support mirrored by the broader design community."
Return Design is a graphic design studio located on the campus of Gordon College comprised of college students who work to deliver design solutions to nonprofit and art-related organizations. With the support of Return Design alums and a number of outside partners Return Design helps people who are doing important things more effectively serve their clientele.
"We’re committed to using design as an agent of change for the better, whether that’s supporting a non-profit or developing a system from scratch like this one," said Fergsuon-Sauder, who founded the program in 2004 while serving on the faculty at Gordon College. "We hope this project will instill in students across the North Shore a knowledge and understanding of the animals around them that translates into an ever increasingly sustainable and respectful approach to their world."
The selected Sappi proposals were determined by an independent judging panel of leaders, all widely recognized for their forward-thinking commitment to design for social good, from the design profession.
“Sappi started the Ideas that Matter program because we wanted to give back in a way that we felt could make a real and lasting impact,” said Patti Groh, Marketing Director, Sappi Fine Paper North America. “After 13 years, we are proud to see this legacy continue and to be able to recognize the critical role that good design plays in inspiring people to take action.”
For information, or to see a full listing of this year’s Sappi: Ideas that Matter grant recipients, visit www.sappi.com. To schedule an interview with Tim Ferguson Sauder and the Return Design program at Gordon College, call 978.8674284.
Cape Ann Figureskating New Season Begins
Dear Joey,
Although our skaters are on the ice year round we are back in Gloucester starting this Tuesday September 11!!
The Learn-To-Skate, Basic skills and Adult class schedule is as follows:
In Gloucester: Tuesdays: 6:00pm to 6:50pm and Saturdays noon to 12:50pm
~30 min class & 20 min practice
In Hamilton: Tuesday: 9:30am to 10:20am & 12:45 to 1:35pm
Wed. 1:30pm to 2:20pm
Fri. 9:30am to 10:20am & 12:45 to 1:35pm
Cape Ann Skating has been teaching skating to hockey and figure skaters for over 30 years!!
Please call Faye Greel at 978-546-2290 for more information and to confirm classes
For more information regarding Cape Ann Skating please visit:
http://www.facebook.com/CapeAnnSkatingClub
website: http://cafsc.org/
As always Thanks so much for sharing our information!!
Regards,
Maryanne Askwyth
Oh yeah baby. Who knows the significance of this picture taken Sept 7, 2012
Colorful Catboat
Shopping by Paddleboard
Cape Ann SUP comes through when your car is on the fritz and you need to get some lobsters from Capt. Joe & Sons for a big party. Wendie Demuth and I paddled over to pick up the lobsters for the lobster dip that people will enjoy Sunday at the book party at Khan Studio and the Good Morning Gloucester Gallery, 77 Rocky Neck Ave., G3. Everyone’s invited.
E.J. Lefavour
Are you a sculptor? Here’s a great opportunity!
This just in from Mark McDonough (you saw it FIRST on GMG, baby!)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:Â Â Serenitee Restaurant Group Commissions Three Sculptural Light Fixtures for Next Restaurant
Gloucester, MA Sept 10, 2012 Calling all North Shore “found art” sculptors. Serenitee Restaurant Group is commissioning a large scale, sculptural light fixture over the bar at its next restaurant in Salem. The new restaurant is on the site of the former Greenland Café on Washington St. in Salem.

This sculptural art piece will serve as a principal focal point much the way the sculptural octopus functions over the sushi area at Latitude 43 in Gloucester. In addition, unlike the octopus sculpture, it will serve a critical functional and marketing role in the bar area. The primary functions of the piece include the following:
- Creates stem glass and wine or liquor storage accessible to bartenders
- General lighting (LED) and visual interest which creates richness and sparkle but no glare
- Incorporates found objects related to the bar trade and liquor manufacture, past and present
- Captures the visual variety and richness of the craft of mixology
- Creates a memorable impression both from within the restaurant as well as from the street
- Contributes to the brand and overall aesthetic experience in the restaurant
The approximate size of the piece will be roughly 4 to 5 feet high and 2 to 3 feet wide. It will be hung approximately 6’-6” above the floor.
Depending upon cost, two related chandeliers may also be commissioned for the front windows.
Please contact the owner Mark McDonough immediately to discuss the design if you are interested in submitting a proposal. Collaboration between artists with complimentary talents is encouraged but not essential. Proposals are due by Sept 28 and the winner will be announced Oct 1. The restaurant opens the first week in November. All artists will be given each other’s contact information.
Contact:
Mark McDonough
Owner
northshorerestaurantgroup@gmail.com
Serenitee Restaurant
185 Main St.
Gloucester, MA 01930
Dog Bar
Good Harbor Winter
Community Stuff 9/7/12
Hi Joey ,
We pick and choose when we go over the bridge and my one volunteer thing I do is with the Boston Children’s Museum. They serve our North Shore kids well and this weekends event is a great way for families, especially Grandparents to have a wonderful off island experience!
Another connection Gloucester has with the BCM is that they have invited our own Docksiders to play a concert there in the spring!
The BCM is also partnering with the about to be opened Container Store at the North Shore Mall in October. 10% of the opening weekend sales will go to the Boston Childrens Museum , so when shopping down the line , think helping all our kids too . There , I used ,"over the bridge", "off island" and "down the line" all in one tiny emal !
Best regards ,
Kathy Slifer
Smoking Cessation programs at Beverly Hospital at Danvers
The Lifestyle Management Institute, located at Beverly Hospital at
Danvers, 480 Maple Street, Danvers, is now offering two programs tailored for your needs.
Individual Counseling with a certified tobacco treatment specialist.
One-on-one counseling designed for those that may need a more
individualized approach and may want to consider pharmaceutical aids.
$35. for 30-minute sessions (some insurance carriers cover this, check with yours).
Please call 978-304-8301.
American Lung Association "Freedom From Smoking Program"
This is a group program which provides different smoking cessation techniques.
Group support is a key part of this program. The next class begins on Monday, October 15th, and consists of eight-sessions over the course of seven weeks. The fee for program is $125.
Week 1: Mon., 10/15
Week 2: Mon., 10/22
Week 3: Mon., 10/29
Week 4: Mon., 11/5
Week 4: Wed., 11/7
Week 5: Mon., 11/12
Week 6: Mon., 11/19
Week 7: Mon. 11/26
The program will include studying your smoking habits, building motivation, winning strategies, stress management, weight control, active fun and exercise and assertive communication.
This program will be held at Beverly Hospital at Danvers, 480 Maple Street, Danvers, MA
in Conference Room A located inside the main entrance. Sign up for either program NOW!
To register for either program, please call 978-304-8020.
Salty Dog Day at the Essex Shipbuilding Museum, Saturday, September 15th – 11:00 am – 3:00 pm
The Essex Shipbuilding Museum will be holding its popular Salty Dog Day on Saturday, September 15th, from 11:00 am – 3:00 pm (rain date Sunday, September 16th).
All are invited, with their 4 legged friends, to participate in this wonderful day filled with activities for people and dogs alike, and to learn a little of the unique history between dogs and our maritime past. This year the museum will have special events which will be kicked off at noon by the Salty Dog Costume Parade (for the dogs not the people). Prizes will be given for the Best Nautical Costume, Best Dressed, and Judges’ Choice. Daisy Nell will introduce her new book “Rocky at the Dockside”. There will be agility demonstrations, live music by Kathy Corneau, consultations with Will Horton on Canine Behavior and Training, and the Schooner Adventure introducing “Skippy’s Adventure”.
For those wanting to wander and try new things there will be lots of additional activities for kids and dogs, and for adults, kids, and dogs there will be the Barque Avenue marketplace.
If hunger strikes, wander over to the Salty Dog Galley.
















